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i ' . 1 mn (CROSS GenMAXWaLaiAYLOR ' CONVOCATION w EPITOME NINETEEN SIXTY-FOUR LEHIGH UNIVERSITY BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANI A. f53| DEDICATION There is in every college or univer- sity a man whose mere presence is an asset to the institution. This type of person commands both the sincere re- spect of students and the admiration of his colleagues, and his figure on campus lends both color and quiet dig- nity to university life. Such a man is Dr. Charles A. Seidle, Vice-President of Lehigh University. Through his sixteen years of unend- ing service to Lehigh, first with the Office of Admission, then as its direc- tor, and now as Vice-President, Dr. Seidle has been both a friend of the student and an extremely able admin- istrator. A phrase often heard is that if something should be done. Dr. Seidle is the man to see. Lehigh, as a university, owes quite a lot to Charles A. Seidle, and in this spirit we dedicate to him the 1964 Epitome. CONTENTS ADMINISTRATION AND FACULTY Administration Arts and Science Business Administration Engineering Military Graduate School HONORARIES AND SOCIETIES GRADUATES SPORTS Physical Education Spring Sports Autumn Sports Winter Sports CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS LIVING GROUPS Residence Halls Fraternities COMMUNITY Advertisers Senior Directory Acknowledgments and Staff Index 48 50 58 74 80 96 100 102 118 170 172 176 186 196 222 260 262 292 358 360 383 396 398 LEHIGH UNIVERSITY BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA A University is comprised of many things that are necessary to make it a place of learning, but most of all it is comprised of people. People: and their activities and their entertain- ment and their search for that elusive something called a better life which college is supposed to represent. The following pages are an attempt to capture glimpses of these people at Lehigh University. Buildings are more than a protec- tion from the elements and a place to store one ' s possessions. They reflect the people in and around them and are reflected, in turn, onto the char- acter of their residents. Lehigh gradu- ates will perhaps remember some of the buildings here long after they have forgotten the people within their walls. The old stone, the trees and gross, the bulk of South Mountain all per- meate the thoughts of the scholar and indelibly mark him with knowledge of values beyond his finite human existance. i J ' K Sr HUGH TAYLOR $  • i C: - This year the Lehigh community was offered a rare chance to join the search for knowledge and a better life guided by prominent persons from all walks of life. The Centennial Convoca- tion was well-planned and executed, with extreme care and ottention token to moke participants and audience aware of the subtle strength and good taste of a modern University. Unfor- tunately, the productive release of edu- cated discussion was never realized. Worse yet was the poor attendance from an intellectuol community that should have greeted such an experi- ment with enthusiasm. For left: the Keynote dinner with President Neville speaking. Above: the panel for the symposium on Production and Human Resources. Although the results were perhaps less than desired, the Convocation was a worthwhile experiment into dissemi- nation of knowledge on a large and somewhat personal scale between men proven in their fields and those desir- ous of knowing what is happening hround them. Top left: One of thirteen Lehigh Val- ley residents accepting a medal from President Neville for service to the community. Bottom left: Lord Shawcross. Below: The panel for the third sympo- sium, World Communications. Right: The panel for the first sympo- sium, Peace and War. Far right: Dr. Edward Teller. Near right: The panel for the fourth symposium, Man ' s Incredible Powers. -J . « ' kWllilAM POLUSO ti 10 ' f f iMcCLOY EMILIO G. COLLADO Lord SHAWCROSS 6enJ IA)0 f N T E N N 1 A L IEH6H CONVOCATION .EHIGH ' - Perhaps it is its great diversity that mai .es the University so unique among human institutions. Even relaxation is remari ably diversified. It may come through music, either folk or classical, such as is offered at the Bach Festival, it may come through attendance of a lecture by a visiting scholar, or it may come through the quiet pursuit of one ' s own thoughts in laboratory or room. K Many are the programs that are presented at Lehigh over a school year. Many are part of a weekend ' s social activities. Some ore traditional parts of University life. A few provide an oportunity for Lehigh students to show their skill in fields far distant from their courses, but all find an eager audience at Lehigh. The opportunity for on education beyond that of the classroom presents itself to the University student in two different fashions. First, he can be a spectator, taking advantage of the in- tellectual atmosphere of the University to sample some of the more unusual branches of some fields, or he may become a member of an active organi- zation. It is the college student who provides the time, the energy, and often the know-how for many groups today. 18 So mony diversified activities take place at the University that to the outsider it must often seem that nothing at oil can be accomplished in the apparent confusion. However, it is the constant exposure to such a great number of events that produces in the student on ability to order his thoughts, to concentrate effectively, and thus to prepare himself for his future. 1 1 An important part of life is relaxa- tion, especially when you are supposed to spend long hours each week improv- ing your mind. The weekends come as a blessed relief and allow rejuvenation for the rigors to come with the follow- ing days. Modern college youths are not the decadent hell-raisers they are so often pictured to be by the parents of im- pressionable young girls. They are simply young men and women with a partial realization of the responsibili- ties that the world is waiting to place on their shoulders, and they are deter- mined to relax hard whenever they get a chance. Perhaps relaxation con be carried to extremes, but the caliber of men produced by Lehigh and the responsi- bilities they accept seem to prove that they live their youth hard and fast in order to be prepared for the long years ahead, years in which they must make the decisions, the responsibility which they so casually assume today. The Lehigh Campus was stunned at the news of the death of President Kennedy. All plans for Lafayette Weekend were cancelled, and the an- nual football game was postponed. The challange of combat reaches into all aspects of college life from the classroom to the gridiron. Lehigh hates to lose at either endeavor, and all through the disappointing foot- ball season could be heard shouts of Wait till wrestling season! Despite the feelings of the fans, the heart- ache and triumph of the players and coaches remained a stark drama acted out once a week before the community. 28 29 The emotion of competition re- mains with the competitor no matter what the scoreboard says. The Lehigh fan is a hard one. He sits morosely during football gomes thinking more of the score than of the gome being played, so silently at times that the players must feel like actors perform- ing before an empty theater. I It is wrestling and only wrestling that brings out the Lehigh rooter. For some reason the Lehigh wrestling fan achieves an emotional release close to catharsis. The Engineer sup- porters have been called bad sports time and again for their complete and noisy partisanship, yet could it be that such partisanship is not only what turns out some of the best wrestlers in the East but also some of the best leaders in years to come? 32 33 The less violently oriented student con still find much to occupy his time outside his texts. Lehigh draws people with a wide variety of interests and many of these men find the time to engage in activities not all of which heap glory upon Lehigh, but all of which can add a sense of personal accomplishment. jirmiafjs mm mm 34 ' 36 Living groups rightly look upon themselves as an integral part of a student ' s education at Lehigh. No per- son can live with a group of fellow men and fail to come out of the experience richer in some way. The very concept of a university education demands many intro-personal contacts and sorry is the mon who decides he can ' t be bothered. 37 ecMS An unfortunote situation on this campus is the meaningless rivalry be- tween dormitory and fraternity men. The struggle has gone on for so long that no one on either side knows how it started or whether there is actually any reason behind it. This rivalry, mirrored in similar ones be- tween individual living groups, has simply become an unquestioned way of life into which new arrivals unfor- tunately slip. 39 Lest it be forgotten, Lehigh is an institution of higher learning and much time must be spent away from activities and distractions, time de- voted only to careful deciphering of the oft cryptic printed page. I ' I It is in the classroom that the whole complex of a college education reaches its culmination, the passage of knowledge from one mind to ano- ther. The success of this passage is often open to question, with the stu- dent being the questioner only part of the time. It is just as frustrating to stand up and lecture to a bunch of uninterested students as it is to listen to an uninteresting lecturer. 42 43 1 J 1 ■' • f W| M - M ■JI bK B jm ■r . BRB C--- r i W KHi. jM M P n sasT , ■L pp Hi P - ' % 1 1 f rV The classroom is the place to look for the spirit that makes Lehigh the particular school that it is, and the evidence is rather strong here. Present seniors will often look back on their four years at Lehigh and wonder what it was all about, but they will also wish that they could once again set- tle back comfortably in their desks and ponder academic questions. How- ever, it is rather unfortunate that an education does its most good when it is being used, and not while it is being received. As the graduation exercises come to on end and before the realization appears that a way of life has just reached an end, the graduate feels a deep feeling of relief that the whole thing is over. Somewhere within him, however, is the feeling that it was more than worth it and although he is now ready to go out and take port OS a leader, one of the best and most exciting periods of his life is now gone. ADMINISTRATION A 11 y •4- -■■■' v. ir ■■vC 5 «i c 9 sp ' ■' ' ' HrA V ' ■-.. B5 4 ir M - ?4 .42-1 ' ■ti ND FA ' V ' - ' 1 ' - fit . ' . I x CUT Providing Lehigh with dynamic guid- once during Its current period of ex- pansion, President HARVEY H. NEVILLE has a background both as an administrator and a teacher. T he effectiveness of higher education in the present is measured by how well knowledge and wisdom of the past can be adopted and extended to meet the anticipated needs of the future. But it must constantly be kept in mind that education has no separate existence in itself, even as an ab- straction. Education is what happens to people; and our concern is especially with young people. The content of higher education is, of course, very important and demands our continued atten- tion; but the object of higher education in terms of people is what it does to and for them — the devel- opment of the habit of thoughtful analysis, of a feeling for quality, of an ethical sense and strength, of a realization of personal responsibility. If this view of higher education is accepted, the purpose of a university and the role of the teacher, the educator, ore thereby defined. A university is the community of scholars — teachers and students, the repository and conservator of knowledge, the agency for seeking new knowl- edge and extending the interpretation or application of knowledge. The ideal educator must live in several worlds at once. He must be a master of his own discipline and should be a creative contributor to its content and meaning. He must be a patient teacher, meet- ing the requirements of a diversity of young minds with the widest variety of questions, ideas and needs. Finally, he must be a responsible citizen, conscious of and responsive to the needs of his community and of the whole of society. Lehigh University proposes to operate in terms of these objectives and definitions. The University functions through its faculty of educators who work within the limits of available resources and of pos- sible accomplishments, and who find satisfaction — not in the complete fulfillment of the goals set forth — but rather in conscious progress toward these goals. Quoted from Lehigh University Publication, Vol. 37, No. 6, November, 1963. 50 BOARD OF TRUSTEES Corporate Members Emeriti William L. Estes, Jr. Nevin E. Funk Corporate Members Monroe J. Rothbone Andrew E. Buchanan, Jr. Alfred V. Bodine Frank L. Magee Leonard M. Norton Robert E. McMath Frank W. Sterrett Edward A. Curtis Albert B. Maginnes H. Randolph Moddox Kenneth L. Isaacs Howard S. Bunn Members Elected by Alumni Ralph L. Wilson S. Murray Rust, Jr. Edwin H. Snyder Hugh P. McFadden Joseph A. Fisher, Jr. Arthur B. Homer W George Sowtelle Frederic Colclough Frank C. Roboid Appointed Trustees Edwin H. Gott Allen C. DuBois Francis M. Huffman Executive Committee Monroe J. Rathbone, Frank L. Magee, Edword A. Curtis, Leonard M, Horton Albert B. Maginnes Chairman First Vice Chairman Second Vice Chairman MONROE J. RATHBONE, the Chair- man of the Board of Stondord Oil Comfxiny of New Jersey, is on able leoder of the University Boord of Trustees. SI GLENN J. CHRISTENSEN holds the position of Vice-President and Provost of the University, after serving as the Dean of the College of Arts end Science. Directing the present expansion of the University is the task handled by PAUL J. FRANZ, Vice-President for Development. The Vice-President for Administration is CHARLES A. SEIDLE, known to mony students because of his former position as Director of Admissions. 52 Dean of Students J. D. LEITH handles those facets of administration that deal directly with the students. From his office in the University 4 Center, PRESTON PARR, Associate Dean, aids most of the student activities at the University. Associate Dean CLARENCE B. CAMP- BELL is kept busy these days following the building of the new dorm, besides keeping his eye on the present resi- dence halls. HOWARD C. TROY helps solve the problems of many students as an Assistant to the Dean. Assistant to the Dean WILLIAM QUAY acts as the liaison between th( odministration and the many social organizotions on compus. jj 1 V V klT ' ' R i i r— •-  p yr George R. Jenkins, Director; ond Paul C. Paris, of the Institute of Research, coordinate the ample amount of research done by many departments at Lehigh. Coordinating the octivities of an active alumni organization are Robert A. Harrier, Executive Secretary of the Alumni Association and Horry B. Ramsey, his assistant. James D. Mack, Heod Librarian and Robert S. Taylor ore in charge of the University Library. The Library Staff is available to help any student find the information he is looking for. Left to right: Edwin W. Reichard, Margaret L. Dennis, Ruth C. Pace, Polly F. Orsagh, Elizajane K. Bauer, Catherine R. Flecksteiner, Georgia E. Raynor, Mary E. Gruber, Anne Flannery, Oscar Sein. Members of the staff of Buildings and Grounds, responsible for keeping Lehigh ' s physical plant in good operating condition, ore Kenneth E. Orben, Robert W. Numbers, Director; Paul T. Miller, James Boyle. There isn ' t o student who knows her who doesn ' t like Mrs. Morgaret Bird, University Center receptionist. A student examines o model of the Lehigh compus-to-be. No longer offering blue slips, the Health Center seems deserted these days. Left to right: James P. Mathews, Physiotherapist; Mary C. Ryan, Lois R. Benson, Dr. Joseph G. Pomponio, Dr. George W. McCoy, Barbaro Symons, Wilhelmina Sandella, Lucille H. Pleiss, Jacqueline I. Verba. Missing is Dr. Ladd E. Hoover. The Registrar ' s Office keeps track of the huge pile of statistics that is Lehigh. Left to right: Frederick E. Ressler, Rodney E. Ressler, James H. Wagner, Registrar. To the Admissions Office falls the difficult job of choosing Lehigh ' s freshmon class every year. Left to right: Theron L. Kropp, James W. McGeody, Samuel M. Missimer, Bruce C. Wittmaier, The Office of Public Information keeps the outside world aware of happenings on campus. Left to right: Alexander F. Bodner, George W. Armold, Lucille Barrett, Samuel I. Connor, Director; Richard C. Brusie. THERON L. KROPP is known to all students seeking financial aid at Lehigh through his position OS Executive Secretary of the Com- mittee for Under-graduQte Financial Aid. The university ' s finances are handled by the Treasurer ' s Office. First Row: Edith A. Seifert, Bursar; Elmer W. Click, Treasurer; Albert C. Molter, Second Row: Karl L. Werkheiser, Lee H. Gackenbach, William M. Close, Wilber J. Blew, Stonley F. Heffner, Donald W. Schmoyer. Lehigh ' s future is guided by the Development Office, Warren Gould, Director; and Robert M. Holcombe. Job-hunting seniors are very familiar with the staff of the Placement and Counseling Service. Left to right: Michoei A. Ciavarella, Vernon G. Williams, Reuben R. Rawls, Everett A. Teal, Director. Publishing the Alumni Bulletin and the univer- sity catalog are just two of the tosks of George Doty, Director; and John W. Murphy of the Publications Office. Dean W, Ross Votes COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCE We want to make Lehigh Univer- sity just what the name implies — o university . . . This is part of a statement made early this year by Dean W. Ross Yates, dean of the College of Arts and Sci- ence. This must be done, he went on, by strengthened emphasis on the basic arts and sciences in a constant dialec- tic with the professional schools. The primary responsibility for arts and sci- ences resides within this college. An important distinction to be in- ferred from the above statement is that between the College of Arts and Science and the other colleges of this university. It is obvious that the business administration and engineer- ing fields are what Dean Yates has called professionol fields, while arts and sciences can hardly be described as such. The relationship of such a nonprofessional college to the other two, their mutual interdependence and ougmentations, should be the heart of the educational process at Lehigh. It has probably been said in every yearbook and university publication issued since students began to study arts and sciences at this school, that the college, as a part of the educa- tional structure, has come a long way or is advancing rapdily. This would naturally lead one to believe that the College of Arts and Science was at one time an inferior educa- tional institution. Let it be said that this is a gross misrepresentation of the facts. From the time of former Presi- dent Coppee to the present, there have always been excellent faculty and stu- dents teaching and studying in the college. Perhaps balance in number was not quite there, but this was to be expected. The College of Arts and Science is expanding, naturally, as is the rest of the university, and, for that matter, our entire educational system, but at perhaps a little faster rote. In Lehigh ' s expansion of the College of Arts and Science, to attain the goal stated by Dean Yates, there are two principles to be followed. First, in the selection of new faculty, new programs, and new courses, quality is emphasized as much as quantity. This principle is easily seen in practice in the new Division of Social Relations. Sheer numbers, states the dean, is no guar- antee of getting the universe of knowledge hoped for. There must, however, be large enough additions to offer training in the major disci- plines. The second principle, and perhaps the more important one to be relied on in expansion, is the respect for the excellence which we have now in all parts of the university. The college must never lose sight of the fact that the assets held by the component parts of this university hove an equally great effect on the respect given the other parts. The College of Arts and Science is doing its part to make Lehigh a univer- sity, and we hope the goal will be re- alized in the not too distant future. There ore some people who actually seem to enjoy all that gore. BIOLOGY Already recognized as one of the stronger departments in ne arts college, the Biology Department is constantly under- oing change and improvement. The department has acquired several new faculty mem- €rs this year. One presently engaged in obtaining his doc- Drate at Yale is Frederick McG. Williams. Taking over in ' rofessor Saul B. Barber ' s absence is Stewart L. Swihart, one f Lehigh ' s own graduates. He is presently doing research on he neurophysiologicol processes connected with light sensi- ivity in the eyes of moths. The department has also lost one of its members, although nly for one year. Professor Barber has received a National Health Institute research grant and is in Oxford, England, working on the physiology of flight muscles in insects. Despite these changes, the biology department remains a ery demanding one for both majors and people naive inough to believe there are any biology guts. To balance iff the disadvantages of all the hard work, there is the de- )artment ' s fine reputation with medical and graduate schools iround the country. The writing and giving of reports is an important part of many courses. First Row: Bradford B. Owen, Bosil W. Porker, Heod of Deportment; Sidney S. Herman, Wilbur F Hayes. Second Row: Frederick Goll, Jr., Byron H. Knopp, Richard G. Malsberger, Stewart L. Swi- hort, Frederick M. Williams. Missing: Francis J. Trembley, Edward J. Benz, Soul B. Barber. ENGLISH QjI Actually, this Is about the only kind of research you can do when you ' re an English professor! First Row: Robert E. Layden, Peter G. Beidler, William J. Weinberger, Franklin L. Shenk, Donald Ross, Jr., Donald D. Horine, Paul M, Moisiades, Dudley C. Brown. Second Row: Bruce Zabawo, Paul Marx, Douglas A. Burger, E. Anthony James, John R. Baker, George R. Keiser, Paul S. Schwork, Robert L. Johnstone, William A. Digel. Sometimes the student learns more in the five minutes after class than in the preceding hour. -. ' i.vr3 ' I M I ngfr « ' ■«V ' - First Row: John A. Hertz, Albert E. Hortung, J. Burke Severs, Head of Department; Ernest N. Dilworth, Ray L. Armstrong, Carl F. Strauch, Albert A. Rights. Second Row: Robert J. Sullivan, Don K. Wright, Robert H. Hop- kins, James R. Frakes, Frank S. Hook, David M. Greene, H. Barrett Davis. Third Row: Cloyd Criswell, Thoburn V. Barker. Missing: John F. Vickrey. To satisfy increasing student demand for instruction in ie disciplines of English, Lehigh ' s English Department has ugmented its program on the freshman, upperclass end raduate levels. Beginning spring semester, the freshman composition aurse was supplemented by a Master Lecture Plan. Each ' eek a different senior professor from one of the various sec- ons of the English Department expounds on his respective ranch of study. The purpose of the plan is to instill a basic nowledge of literature of the world in students who would therwise receive only instruction in the mechanics of com- osition. The plan has met with mixed student reactions. In the junior and senior departments, the study of 20th ientury writing has been broken down and intensified. 20th entury American Literature is now divided into pre-WWII nd post-WWII periods. Contemporary European Literature as been treated similarly. As a special offering for English majors and graduate fudents, an English colloquium was inaugurated last year. it three of the four colloquia in a year, a member of the Eng- sh Department discusses his current research. For the last leeting of the year, the principal sp eaker is a nationally out- ' onding scholar from the faculty of another university. The urpose of these colloquia is to keep students and faculty like abreast of recent developments in the world of literature. Over last year and this year, the department as a whole as been enriched and expanded. More students have been ccepted to the graduate school than ever before, and the umber of courses offered to graduates has increased propor- onotely. As a result of this change on the graduate level, the umber and scope of junior and senior English courses offer- igs has increased. Although poorly attended by the student body, the Friday Afternoon Poetry readings are usual- ly quite interesting. EDUCATION The Education Department has a unique structure among departments at the University. The department is comprised largely of fully certified elementary and secondary teachers who are earning credits toward their Master ' s degree, or, in some coses, their Doctorate, while employed full-time in area schools under the new teaching intern program. A small number of students are working full-time for a degree. This year, for the first time, no undergraduate major was offered in education. The undergraduate program was discontinued because of the growing need for graduate courses and the lock of student interest in the undergraduate school. In its place a program of intern teaching has been introduced. Under this program, a person with a baccalaur- eate degree, but without a teacher certification, may enroll in a course consisting of two summer sessions and the inter- vening academic year. One semester and the summer sessions consist of classroom instructions. The student may either con- centrate his academic studies solely in education courses, or specialize in a content course. The former leads to an M.Ed, and an elementary teacher certification. The latter leads to an M.A. in education and a secondary teacher certification. Professor Stoops ponders o point made by a student in a seminar. A professor and a student listen while c report is made during class. First Row: Albert J. Mazurkiewicz, James F. Strome, Andre Cartwright, Ellis A. Hagstrom, Bryan V. Fluck, Robert L. Peter J. Cistone, John F. O ' Neol. Third Row: John S. T. Meade, Norman H. Sam. Second Row: Edward C. Scanlan, Leight. Fourth Row: Philip G. Hilaire, Ronald S. Narzisi, Charles J. Versacci, John A. Stoops, Heod of Deportment. GEOLOGY Dr. Whitcomb explains something in a little more detail for one of his students. Geology is a brood field of science which includes the studies of rocks, minerals, fossils, oceanography, mining and the earth ' s origin, and Lehigh ' s Department of Geology is well prepared to cover it all. Professor J. Donald Ryan, the head of the department, believes each student should discover the diversity of geological phases so that he will be able to intelligently choose a fieid of specialization. Since geology is dependent on chemistry, biology, and physics, one-half of the required courses concern these fields, and the other half are actual geological subjects. Many majors in these other closely related fields of science may switch to geology or geophysics in graduate school, with little time loss. The natural earth processes ore stressed now instead of the history and evolution, although both ore important aspects. The processes are dealt with in the most modern way, utilizing new equipment and knowledge, and emphasizing field studies. Research is important, too, and graduates and undergraduates are deeply involved. This branch of the Arts and Science College is therefore extremely interested in producting not young men with a paper degree, but men with real knowledge who will grow in the field of geology. The most horrible sight in the world when you ' re giving o report is a pro- fessor with an attentive look on his face. He might ask questions. First Row: Jored D. Hoselton, Bruce N. Kaliser, A. Conrad Newmonn, Keith E. Chave, J. Donald Ryan, Head of Deportment. Second Row: Bradford Willord, Lawrence Whitcomb. Third Row: J. Stewort Nagle, Paul B. Myers, George L. Adair, Dale R. Simpson. Missing: Robert T. Gollogher. 63 In the Classical Language Department, students learn tc appreciate the Greco- Roman culture through their basic work, comprised of readings in the languages supplemented by study of the history, archaeology, philosophy, art and other cultural aspects of those civilizations. This study is pursued under the guidance of Professor Joseph A. Maurer, head of the department; his assistant. Professor Douglas D. Feaver, and instructor Mrs. Edna S. deAngeli. Lehigh University is a con- tributing institution of the American School of Classical Studies of Athens. Graduates of Lehigh receive free tuition at the American School. Classical language majors thus have excellent opportunity for further study in the classics. The classical languages honorary society. Eta Sigma Phi, one of the oldest on campus, is now in its thirty-sixth year, Any student in his third semester of Latin or Greek is eligible for membership in the society, which has a reputation for be- ing quite active in bringing prominent lecturers in classics and archaeology to the Lehigh campus each year. Edna deAngeli, Joseph A. Mourer D. Feaver. Head of Department; Douglas Roger P. Lovell, John S. Tremper, Head of Department; Ralph C. Wood, Karlis Somtins, Arthur P. Gardner, John H. Ubben. The Department of German offers a considerable variet of courses, including Scientific German, a combination o complex scientific writings, and even more complicated Ger man. Presiding over this class is the department ' s chairman Professor John S. Tremper, who hails from upstate New York Sporting sunglasses and a lively sense of humor, Professo Tremper also instructs several courses on the history of Ger man literature. An expert on Germanic dialects and Pennsylvania Dutch i Professor Ralph C. Wood, who is widely regarded as the em bodiment of the American image of the good stout Bavarian He attracts many students to his classes on pronunciation dialects and linguistic history. He has also spoken and writtei on such fascinating topics as On the Hunt in America fo Traces of German Language. Speaking with a hearty Masurian accent, Professor Johi H. Ubben teaches elementary courses in German, offering th. student his introduction into the culture, thinking and herit age of the German-speaking countries. A graduate of Harvard, and genuinely liked and respecter by the student body, is Professor Arthur P. Gardner. Professo Gardner, who speaks impeccable German, is widely regarded as a sincere friend of the student, either individually or col lectively. Considered a hard marker, he nevertheless a1 tracts many students and the result is pleasant, thoughl provoking and enriching. The newest member of the department, Roger P. Lovel is a midwesterner who also teaches Russian. In fact, h teaches Russian with such great ardor that he addressed N German students for roughly three weeks as gospodin, Russian form of greeting, until he realized the reason for th puzzled expressions on students ' faces. The department is expanding its scope and depth, wit greater emphasis on pronunciation and understanding the on dull repetition of endless conjugations. The result is Teutonic challenge to the intellect and neural stamina of th Lehigh student body. ROMANCE LANGUAGES The budding Von Gogh finds his mas- terpiece wasn ' t quite so masterful after all. John A. Van Eerde, Allen Barthold, M. Volenzuela, George D. Fame, J. Head of Department; Victor Roberto Guzman. FINE ARTS The Department of Fine Arts serves three purposes. It is, irst of all, responsible for providing its students the best voilable programs for developing their abilities in one of the ine arts or a related field, important in securing a well- Dunded liberal education. Beyond its scholastic responsibility, the department brings urrent exhibitions of contemporary art to the University for oth campus and community enjoyment. These exhibitions rovide an opportunity to see what is happening in art and Iso bring artists into contact with prospective buyers. The department is thirdly responsible for the University ' s ' ermanent Collection which includes the Grace, Isaacs, Vilson, Rosenbaum, Prasse and anonymous collections. Al- hough the collection is relatively small, it is rapidly becoming ecognized for its exceptional quality. Paintings from the .ehigh Collection have been borrowed for exhibitions in major nuseums and galleries. Huddled between the band room, which was at one time a dining hall, in Lomberton Hall and the classics and German departments upstairs, is the Department of Romance Language. Here, the significance of Roman culture is kept alive for the Lehigh scholar in a hot-house of knowledge and intellectual activity. Heading the department is Professor Allen J. Barthold, a specialist in 19th century French literature. His office, wood paneled, lined with books, is a focal point of I ' esprit gaulois at Lehigh, just as Dr. Barthold is its chief proponent. He works behind his desk smoking what one likes to think is Gaulloise (it ' s a Phillip Morris), smiling a bonjour in a very authentic French. Professor John A. Van Eerde occupies one-fifth of an office next door. He is one of the most active writers for publication at Lehigh and his tests on Auto-do-fees are the nightmare of the undergraduate trying to complete distribution. Professor George D. Fame completes the French depart- ment and Assistant Professor Victor M. Volenzuela and Messrs. Patricio J. Gonzales and V. Alfredo Lueje-Marcos handle Spanish and Portuguese. Francis J. Quirk, Head of Department; Richard J. Redd. MATHEMATICS The Department of Mathematics is one of the largest departments on the campus, employing 26 full-time teachers and 26 part-time teachers. These part-time instructors in- clude not only graduate assistants, but also a number of graduate students who have fellowships at Lehigh. To be a permanent math professor here, it is necssory to have a Ph.D., and genuine interest in research. As Professor A. Everett Pitcher, head of the department, likes to say, Ail teachers of mathematics ore also students of mothematics. Professor Pitcher notes, however, that the faculty is for- tunate in having a highly select body of students, who have been chosen not only for the amount of mathematics intro- duced to them in high school, but also for their aptitude in mathematics. Professor Pitcher is strongly in favor of having these students move ahead as rapidly as they possibly can through advanced placement, anticipatory and special exami- nations, independent study and honors work. Although they maintain a broad field of good subjects, Lehigh University ' s Mathematics Department is especially well suited to the student who plans to obtain his Ph.D. in differential geometry or in functional analysis. A National Science Foundation grant for studies in the field of differential geometry has been received by the de- partment. The project will be headed by Profssor Chuan- Chin Hsiung, a recognized authority in this field. The department also had a volleyball team, on the graduate level, further showing its diversity and interest in geometrical forms. First Row: Frederick W. Hartmonn, Stephen B. Leonord, Larry R. Mugridge, Gerald E. Cozzolino. Second Row: Stanley S. Leroy, Gerhard Rayno, Norman D. Hazzord, Naeem Khalid, Andrew K. Snyder, Dale F. Oexmann. Third Row: Clarence D. Kern, Robert E. Powell, Burgess H. Rhodes, George C. Klingman, Clifford W. Sloyer, Stuart Goff. Most problems start off easy and don ' t get complicated until you ' re off your guard. Not all the mathematics courses are offered solely for the undergraduote. A professor often ponders long ond hard when distributing semester grodes. Firsf Row: Ralph N. Von Arnam, A. Everett Pitcher, Head of Deportment; Peter A. Lappan, Jerry P. King, Albert Wilonsky, M. Rajogopalon, Edward H. Cutler. Second Row: Chuon- Chin Hsiung, George E. Roynor, Clarence A. Shook, Mario Petrich, Pui-Kei Wong, Edward Pollack, Wil ' liom H. Ruckle. Third Row: Voris V. Lotshaw. Missing: Frank S. Beale, Bhaskar K. Ghosh, Theodore Hailperin, Somir A. Khobboz, Gilbert A. Stengle. 4 . u TV ' ■Ernst B. Schuiz, Henry P. Brubaker, Charles E. Patterson, Jr., Donald D. Barry. Missing: Rocco J. Tresolini, Heod of Deport- ment; W. Ross Yates. The Department of Government, since its formation lost year, has been in o constant state of growth and change. A new faculty member. Professor Donald D. Barry, an authority on the Russian governmental system, has been added to the department. Professor Berry, among his other duties, has token over the foreign governments course, taught by Dean W. Ross Yates before his elevation to Dean of the College of Arts and Science. Professor Rocco Tresolini, head of the department, recently published a book Justice and the Supreme Court, and took a first semester leave to complete a study of the Supreme Court and civil liberties. His book is a reaffirmation of the idea that judicial protection of individual freedom is not a new court invention, and that it is vitally needed in today ' s administration oriented age. While on leave. Professor Tresolini ' s duties as head were parcelled out among the faculty. Most of his work was token over by Professor Ernst B. Schuiz, former head of the department. GOVERNMENT Social Relations — a new concept about to emerge with departmental status at Lehigh University. This is perhaps the best way to look at the new division of the Department of Government, which was itself a division of the Department of History a scant two years ago. Presently including the related fields of sociology, social psychology, and cultural anthropology, the division appears to be on attempt by the University to get a foot into that important area of study encompassing the complex relations of man in a developing society. Previously, sociology, the only aspect of the study actually taught at Lehigh, came under the auspices of the Department of Economics. Supposedly, sociology was related closely enough to the social science of economics and the related business courses included within that sphere. It can be readily seen that the business field is becoming more mathematically oriented, and that the study of social relations has so in- creased in importance in today ' s society that it should rightly stand alone as an independent field. Social relations has come into its own at Lehigh, and no longer will lethargy in arts and business students rely on Soc courses as good guts. There is now a three-member faculty, and a place at Lehigh for Social Relations. The lecture is the most often used method of getting information across to the student. Robert C. Williamson, Director of Social Relations: Frank Baker, Barton M. Schwartz. 68 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Paul W. Green, Aurie Dunlap, Corey B. Joynt, Head of Depart- ment; D. G. A. Jones, Henderson B. Broddick, Oles M. Smolansky. It is an unfortunate misconception that international rela- tions is an unhearlded major at engineering-strong Lehigh. Since its revival under Professor Carey B. Joynt, the depart- ment has consistently placed its majors in the best graduate schools, law schools and international branches of American businesses. While there was a time when the chief goal of an I.R. major was to go to Law school, the propensity today is to do graduate work. Lost summer, seven students, either graduates of Lehigh or graduate students, received fellow- ships or graduate assistantships. Among these were two National Defense Foreign Language Fellowships, one at Harvard and one at Princeton, and a Ford Fellowship at Princeton. The International Relations Department has 66 majors this year. It is noteworthy that of this year ' s freshmen cur- rently enrolled in international relations, half of them came to Lehigh with that expressed intention. The staff has been bolstered this year by the addition of Professor Oles Smolansky, a graduate of Columbia, who has been a Rockefeller fellow in the Middle East, and who has taught at UCLA. Professor Smolansky, whose speciality is Russian diplomacy in the Middle East, and who reads and speaks Russian and reads Arabic, is teaching both Russian diplomacy and the Arab World. Professor Dunlap remains the very popular commentator on U. S. - Soviet relations. Prof es- sor Broddick lends his New England accent to the seminar on International Organizations. Professor Joynt, head of the department, has recently returned from England where he lectured and researched his upcoming book on aspects of American foreign policy since Korea. As a John Guggenheim fellow. Professor Joynt views his semester in England and the opportunity he hod for association with political leaders and university dons as a tremendous experience. Professor Dunlap makes a telling point in a lecture. A student finds some time before lecture to review his notes. 69 First Row: George D. Harmon, Head of De- portment; John H, Cory, Jerome I. Fischmon. Second Row: George W. Kyte, Roger A. Fortin. Third Row: Richord D. Kane, Raymond G. Cow- herd, H. Benjamin Powell. Missing: Joseph A. Dowling, John McV. Haight. The Department of History in many ways reflects the growth and spirit of the college of arts and science. Profes- sor Joseph A. Dowling ' s fifty-man seminars are only one in- dication of the expansion of history at Lehigh, and while such popular courses naturally present problems, the faculty is working to expand its curriculum to meet the challenge. Professor Dowling continues to delight freshman engi- neers in his legendary History 11 and 12 lectures as well as filling in for Professor John McV. Haight in his absence by teaching History 25 and 26. Professor Raymond G. Cowherd ' s scholarly studies of English history appeal to the more con- servative student and are most helpful for close interest in Europe and for law school hopefuls. Spice for the depart- ment is often provided by Professor Jerome I. Fischmon, who just will not accept the fact that South America is a jungle and that Spain is an American air base. Besides erecting new courses, he spends his time assuring dubious seniors that he can get them into graduate school and lur- ing European history majors south of the Pyrenees. Special mention is due to Professor John H. Cory, whose core and enthusiasm has in a few years begun an expansion of the curriculum so necessary in a growing field. An in- troductory course in American Civilization to be given next year for the first time is one example of the expansion which will enable history to remain important at Lehigh, HISTORY Dr. Gipson, Lehigh ' s Pulitzer Prize winner, continues work on his definitive history of the British Empire. Students who can stond the cigar smoke find Professor Dowling more than willing to clear up any doubtful points. Jonothon B. Elkus, Robert B. Cutler, Head of Deportment. MUSIC The Music Department offers courses in a variety of fields, ranging from Music 20, described as on Intro- duction to Musical Literature and requiring no previous musical training, to Aesthetics and Criticism of Music, which encompasses questions concerning a composer ' s mean- ing, intent and capability of conveying an idea to an audience. Since the installation of Professor Robert B. Culter as head of the department in 1954, the Music Department has steadily grown and improved. The most significant single change has been the removal of the administrative offices and the rehearsal room from the basement of Grace Hall to enlarged quarters in Lamberton Hall in 1958. At that same time, music classes were transferred from the University Library browsing room to the old rehearsal room in Grace Hall. The same room houses the department ' s recently ac- quired record player and an increasing library of records and music scores. In 1957 the band received a new director and the de- partment an assistant professor in the person of Professor Jonathan B. Elkus. Professor Elkus, in addition to his directorial duties, conducts an opera course, emphasizing the dramatic effects of music. It must be noted here that Professor Elkus, aside from being one of the finest directors in the east, is a very com- petent composer in his own right. His Song, The Dorados, was published this year, and among his other works ore three operas and several chamber pieces. PHILOSOPHY Although the Department of Philosophy is one of the smaller ones at Lehigh (it contains four men) and one whose very existence at an engineering school is a sur- prise to some people, it is one of the most vital ones, not only because of the many diversified courses it offers, but also because of its outstanding work in connection with the Center for the Information Sciences. The department, which has moved this year into the little brick building sandwiched in between the chapel and Packer Avenue, offers a selection of ably taught courses ranging from a survey of ethics and morality to a critical examination of the theory of the scientific method, a sub- ject unfortunately too often ignored by the student doing some form of research. A good deal of the research done by the members of the department themselves is in the field of information retrieval and storage. Dr. Donald J. Hillmon, the head of the department, is an expert in the subject, and has presented many lectures on his work, including one for the NATO Institute for Advanced Studies in Venice, Italy. Unphilosophic as it may seem, the University ' s GE 225 computer gets a good workout from members of the de- partment testing their schemes for retrieving information. Thomos M. Haynes, Donald J. Hillmon, Head of Depart- ment; Norman P. Melchert, James F. McCue. John Alden, A. Roy Fuessel, University Chaplain. RELIGION Just what is the place of a Department of Religion at a school like Lehigh? This is a question that may cross the mind of many a student here, and one which can be answered in quite a few ways. Professor Ray Echardt, head of the department, took c leave of absence from the University to conduct European Studies on Contemporary Jewish-Christian relations. This type of research has, it could be said, interesting connections with the fields of international relations and sociology and the results of this can be used by those respective fields nearly as well, possibly, as by religion as an area of intellect- ual persuit. Taking Dr. Eckhcrdt ' s place for the year is visiting Assist- ant Professor of Religion John Alden. Given to tweeds and detailed lectures on the mythopaeic mind. Professor Alden was born in England. As a part of the Lehigh community, the Department of Religion plays a two-fold role. The first role, illustrated by the applicability of Professor Eckhardt ' s research to other fields, is to provide additional cultural history and konwiedge to the student of liberal arts. The second is to provide an academic basic for men interested in the ministry. A student in a class in Industrial Psychology asks his professor about some point of his lecture. PSYCHOLOGY Arthur L. Brody, Josef M. Brozek, Head of Department; Eugene A. Craig, Theodore Millon, Francis J. Wuest. The Psychology Department is reducing their required number of hours and courses in psychology in order to pro- duce a more varied program of studies for majors. This will also help transfer students into psychology moke the change with few credit hours lost, and enable psychology majors to do undergraduate research and to work in more percise areas of study. Specific changes in curriculum occurred at the 300 level where courses were added and expanded to aid undergraduate research and further the experimental outlook of psychology. At present, the department is working on a three year U. S. Public Health Service grant. Professor Josef Brozek, Professor Eugene A. Craig and several undergraduates are studying the effects of flickering lights on human perform- ance. Other Health Service grants are being considered. The doctoral program in psychology is being given re- newed emphasis, and graduate courses are being added and expanded in order to achieve a firm framework for doctoral studies. Graduate students and Professor Francis J. Wuest are co-operating in a program of interdisciplinary study. They are working with the Information Sciences Center on the use scientists m ake of information. MARINE SCIENCE CENTER Professor J. R. Merkel separating chromo- proteins on a column with a fraction collector. These colored compounds are used to evaluate the enzyme activity of marine bacteria. The Marine Science Center is an interdepartmental organ- ation headed by Professor Kieth E. Chave and comprised F men from the departments of biology, chemistry, and sology. The emphasis of the Center is on practical research t the graduate level in oceanography. The Center is com- rised almost entirely of graduate students with only Geology 3 given on the undergraduate level. Two years old, the enter works closely with the Bermuda Biological Station le year round, including a National Science Foundation jmmer graduate course offered in Bermuda. Professors Chave, Sidney S. Herman and A. Conrad leumann ore currently heading research projects that require jmerous trips to Bermuda for gathering of specimens and imples. Professor Chave heads an American Chemistry Soci- •y sponsored study of the chemistry of ocean water around ermuda. Professor Herman is studying organisms under a ant from the Notional Science Foundation, and Professor leumon is doing research on the settlements on the ocean oor. Professor S. S. Hermann removing a sample from the plankton set. The tiny floating organisms in the sample ore at the base of the oceanic food chain. Professor Kieth E. Chove bringing o Von Veen sompler over the side in Bermuda. It contains o sample of mud from the bottom at 1 000 fathoms. R V PANULIRUS, research vessel of the Ber- mudo Biological Stotion. Used for several rebcorch projects in the Marine Science Center. Acting-Dean Herbert M. Diamond. Dean L. Reed Tripp COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION At Qfiy given time of the day you con see many business students (com- monly referred to as Lehigh ' s B.S. ' s) circulating around the nucleus of the School of Business Administration, Drown Hall. It takes a trained eye to spot them since they do not wear such identify- ing caste marks as a low-slung slide rule or a copy of the latest esoteric novel by J. D. Salinger, The signs of a business student range from the ever- present but never-opened copy of the Wall Street Journal to the more subtle but just as significant observ- ance of George Romney ' s birthday. As is stated in the recent University catalogue, the College hopes to teach the student to cope with the problems that increasing executive responsibili- ties will bring him in later life. In an attempt to successfully consummate this aim, the College of Business Ad- ministration requires that courses be taken in such diverse areas as English, natural science and social sciences as well OS courses indigenous to the study of the managerial and financial world. Having gained tremendously in stat- ure over the post few years, the College is now recognized as among the top undergraduate business schools in the United States. Tomorrow ' s J. Paul Gettys graduate from Lehigh prepared to make their first million . . . which, of course, they will, out of sheer grati- tude, give to Lehigh ' s Alumni Fund. During the Fall Semester, the Col- lege of Business Administration was ably headed by Acting Dean Herbert M. Diamond, a professor of many years at Lehigh and previously the Head of the Department of Economics. At the start of the Spring Semester, Dr. L. Reed Tripp, previously a pro- fessor of economics at the University of Wisconsin, became the Dean and the first faculty member at Lehigh to hold the title of Frank L. Magee Pro- fessor of Business Administration, Under the capable leadership of these men, the College has expanded both in course topics and faculty. No longer will you hear the following con- versation on campus: What school ore you in? Business. Oh really? What position do you play on the football team? When two Finance profs get together, they ' re usually plotting the destruction of either o cor- poration or a student. Finn B. Jensen, Eli Schwartz, Frederick A. Bradford, Head of Department; Leon E. Krouse, Walter H. Cressman. For the arts, business or engineering student, the Depart- ment of Finance provides basic and detailed background in the various aspects of finance. Whether it be in the realm of financial institutions, investments or public finance, the student is prepared for the financial intricacies of modern business. Although the Department of Finonce remained much the same this year with no great changes in curriculum, it has expanded its progressive character by entering the field of financial literature. Professor Eli Schwartz ' s book on corpora- tion finance is now considered a standord text on that subject, and Professor Finn B. Jensen is currently engaged in research for his projected book on the European Common Market, attesting to the department ' s concern for financial areas of increasing import on the domestic and foreign levels. As advisor to the investment council, Professor Leon E. Krouse has enabled students to acquire practical experience in investment. FINANCE A closer look at the honorory key on his necktie would show the wearer to be o member of Beto Gamma Sigmo. 75 ACCOUNTING Why Can ' t we get accountants from Lehigh? ask many stultified representatives of industrial accounting depart- ments who come to Lehigh and find no aspirants at their interview offices. The case seems to be that, at Lehigh, the prevailing opinion among accounting majors leans toward the area marked C.P.A. Those who do not join C.P.A. firms often go to law school. Where does this leave industry? It leaves industry out! The accounting department at Lehigh is a good one — so hard, in fact, that many engineers in search of a nice accounting course to take on the side are horrified to find they are flunking at mid-term. At any rote, the department is good and industry knows this. The Federal Tax Forum held at Lehigh in the fall, and attended by executives from all over the east, is a further indication of the status of the department. This was largely conducted, however, by C.P.A. ' s and attorneys, with limited industrial representatives. Why don ' t students want to go into industrial positions? Professor Francis M. Brady has expressed concern over this question, and does not know the answer. Will this over-preponderence of interest in public account- ing result in the loss of industrial job possibilities for future accounting majors? Let us hope not. 9 -- The University is a place of study for student and faculty alike. When your roommate gets too noisy, the study rooms of Drown Hall are an ideal escape. 76 Up until this year, an engineer would have laughed if you men- tioned business man and computer in the same sentence. m mi Hi;! El i -}i k -: H iWll n p B In the deep, dark corners of Drown Hall the future of some tycoon-in-training is decided. Wendell P. Trumbull, Head of Department; Carl E. Allen, Carl L. Moore, Francis M. Brady, Jr., Ralph M. Krous, Brian G. Brockway. m%  - % - a SSa; ' The statistics laboratory is a room all too fomlliar to some business students. An instructor pauses a moment in Drown Hall ' s faculty lounge before heading for his class. ' Sure went over Distributive Income fast, didn ' t he? ' ' First Row: Richard J. Kalish, John D. Keefe, Elmer C. Bran, Head of Department; N. Paul Loomba, Robert J. Hall. Second Row: Kevin F. Winch, Sherman R. Krupp, Anthony J. Bryski, Wells, H. Keddie, Alvin Cohen. Third Row: John R. Moroney, Max D. Snider, Frederick N. Firestone, C. James Reilly, Thomas J. Orsagh. Missing: Herbert M, Diamond, John H. Urban, Nicholas W, Bolabkins, Lawrence A. Leonard. ECONOMICS The Department of Economics, under Professor Elmer C. Bratt, has continued in its movement toward a more mathe- matical treatment of that social science. The division of the introductory courses, Economics 3 and 4, into four con- tingent courses, two with the some title as before plus Eco- nomics 3x and 4x, has been done so that students who have had the advantage of calculus may study the origins of economic theory as they should be studied, mathematically. The study of microeconomics has been returned to its previous position as the first area to be covered, with macroeconomics given in the second semester. By far the most theoretical of the branches of the College of Business Administration, economics is often included with the subjects covered in the College of Arts and Science in the minds of Lehigh business men. How often the comment is heard, Eco. major? An arts man, you mean. Economics is vital to the understanding of the basis behind the opera- tion of modern business, and Lehigh ' s department accepts this responsibility. The pamphlet Study Reports for College Students, put out this year by the University ' s Data Clearinghouse Project, and directed by Professor Elmer C. Bratt, head of the Depart- ment of Economics, points out this acceptance. The pamphlet, designed to give college and university students the benefit of ideas which are evolving in the business world, has been distributed to the business administration deans in 460 uni- versities throughout the country. A student gets o troublesome point cleored up by his professor after class. 79 Associate Dean Charles W. Brenn- an and Dean Alan S. Foust. COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING The engineering major is often the butt of campus jokes. His slide rule is a point of humor, his class schedule has been known to make arts and business men fly into uncontrollable fits of laughter. He is asked, So who needs a Universal Testing Machine, anyway? This is perhaps part jealousy on the part of the non-engineers. All too many start with illustrious technical ambitions; a large percentage fail out, OS is predicted yearly at meetings of Uniform Freshman Year. Secondary school scholars suddenly become col- lege casualties — advanced math, or chem or physics, having struck again. Yet Lehigh was originally founded OS a University stressing engineering, as well as the liberal arts. For the life of the University, now almost one century, the College of Engineering has enjoyed the finest reputation. The very name Lehigh will to many people suggest only a technical institution. Historically, therefore, it is under- standable that the non-engineers should subject their more technical fellows to some ribbing, self-conscious though it may be. The slide rule is a necessary tool, a crowded schedule is the only way to take the needed courses, and as for the Universal Test- ing Machine, well ... it certainly is Universal Testing Machine. But there comes a time when the engineer con return the laughter, knowing that the adage about laugh- ing last is completely valid. Sometime during senior year, certain people arrive on campus, their coming heralded on the bulletin boards of Christmas-Saucon. The company re- cruiters hove begun their work. Electrical Engineers g e n e r a 11 overage the highest offered wages with other engineers and scientifi personnel not far behind. Someho for all of their laughter, arts oni business men often don ' t fore as wel But that doesn ' t stop the jokes. The business majors vow that the will hire and fire the engineers, an the liberal arts people plan to tell th( ones in business who, when and hov to hire and fire. One hears tha engineers ore narrow, shallow persons having hod no grounding in eithe business or liberal arts. Who is to say! Is it worth it, all of this mockery good-humored though it may be: Check the number of engineerinc graduates on the Board of Trustees Examine the pay scales. Ask ar engineer. You ' ll see. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Chemical Engineering laboratories give the student valuable training in such fields os lawn watering and car washing. First Row: Alan S. Foust, Curtis W. Clump, Fred P. Stein, Second Row: William E. Schiesser, Morton P. Moyle, Leonard A. Wenzel, Head of De- portment ' . Since they take only two Chemical Engineering courses and seven Chemistry courses in their first two and a half years at Lehigh, students in the Chemical Engineering Depart- ment often wonder if they really are to be chemical engineers. However, this question is soon answered for them in their last year and a half. The reason for this emphasis on other fields of engineering lies in the diversified nature of the chemical engineer. Actually, he is a combination of a chemist, a mathematician and a physicist for he must be trained for work in research, development, design, construction, operation, plant-management and sales. Lehigh sees that he has adequate training in these areas by generously offering him such courses as organic and physical chemistry, mechanics, statistics and an electrical engineering series as well as such chemical engineering courses as unit operations, thermodynamics and process control. With this schedule, it is no wonder that the chemical engineer fills his electives with philosophy, psychology, religion, fine arts and government. The chemical engineer soon learns thot he will spend as much time sweat- ing over a hot computer as he will over o hot distillation column. CHEMISTRY The Chemistry Department is one of the major faculties of the University. Staffed by some thirty professors and in- structors, the department offers courses in nearly any field of chemical science an aspiring chemist or researcher might want to pursue. The department differs from that of many technologically- oriented universities in that it is separate from the Depart- ment of Chemical Engineering. Since this distinction was mode early in the history of the University, the Department of Chemistry has tended to emphasize the science itself to a larger degree than its technical applications. These are left OS the special province of the chemical engineering depart- ment. Major enlargements to the physical size of the department of chemistry ore in the offing as part of the University ' s Centennial Development Program. As soon as the Chemical Engineering Department moves into its new quarters in the projected Chemical Engineering-Metallurgy Building, whose construction on its site across Packer Avenue was scheduled to begin this spring, the Chemistry Department will take over the whole of the Chemistry Building. With approximately double the space available at present, the department is ex- pected to expand its teaching facilities considerably. The importance of research to the chemistry department con be seen from the fact that in November three members of the department announced important results from their research into weather control. The three men. Professor Albert C. Zettlemoyer, Professor John Chessick, and Professor Noubar Tcheurekdjian, invented a series of highly efficient cloud seeding agents significantly cheaper than the now used silver iodide. They also disproved the 17-year-old theory that silver iodide is a water-accepting agent, and discovered a new concept that nucleating agents can be freely prepared from numerous materials (various abundant inorganic substances), which possess a proper water-repelling balance. The pose is the some, only the settings are different. r It ' s easy to become lost in a moze of glassware in a freshman lab. :7r ) J B2 ' ' p _ m S i m, wthm m im First Row: Robert D. Billinger, Jerome Daen, Irving J. Borowitz, Robert S. Sprogue, Velmer B Fish. Second Row: James E. Sturm, Roymond R. Myers, A. James Diefenderfer, Charles S. Kraihanzel. Missing: Edword D. Amstutz, Head of Deportment; Roland W. Lovejoy, Joseph R. Merkel, Thomas E. Young, Albert C. Zettlemoyer. Few students foil asleep in the chemistry lecture it ' s too uncomfortoble. Then there ' s the story obout the freshmon who inhaled PHYSICS Sometimes it con be down-right dangerous if you try to get a little closer to your work. With the large number of journals published today, the physi- cist finds that more and more of his time is devoted to just keep- ing up with the work of others. First Row: Donald R. Beck, Irwin S. Goldberg, Miles L. Lampson, Dennis W. Baum, Thomas Ammirati, Peter D. Von Dyke, Michael M. Rea, Edward A. Roeder, Jose H. Fueyo. Second Row: James W. Dufty, Albert B. Kunz, Bruce A. Ryan, Grant S. Anderson, Barry Gilbert, Richard B. Hoffman, Charles T. Grant, James H. Shea, Paul T. Herman. Third Row: Timothy L. S. Nee. ,f Cassius W. Curtis, James A. McLennan, Jr., Wesley R. Smith, Roger Grismore, Raymond J. Emrlch, Head of Department; Wesley J. Van Stiver, Roymond B. Sawyer, Shelden H. Radin, Robert T. Folk, Peter Hovas. Missing: Lawrence R. Holland, Wilber deV. B. Spatz, Donald B. Wheeler, Jr. The Physics Department is now operating under a pro- gram designed to prepare the undergraduate for graduate school. On the assumption that more students were going on to graduate school then before, great changes were made in the curriculum several years ago to prepare for this development. This year ' s seniors are the first to groduate under this new program, which is based on a theoretical core of study and allows for open subject matter in the senior year to develop studies more widely. Changes were mode in the curriculum to meet the needs of the program. Courses were added in atomic physics, nuclear physics, physics of solids and of fluids and analytic mechanics. Lab sequence was changed to allow more indi- vidual research in the senior year. Quite extensive research is being carried on in many sections of the department. In the field of physics of solids, research ranges from fundamental studies of how creom gets mixed with coffee to how new chemicals are produced in one-millionth of a second. In high energy physics, the fundamental structure of matter and production of exotic new particles are investigoted in connection with the atom smasher at Princeton. Some people are wi lling to go to o lot of work for a good cup of coffee. 85 CIVIL ENGINEERING A great deal of practical training is one of the trade-marks of the civil engineering department. As opposed to chemists, civil engineers perform their experi- ments in a big way. First Row: Theodore V. Galambos, Clinton H. Gilkey, Willie P. Isaacs, Arthur W. Brune, George C. Driscoll, Jr., Alexis Ostapenko, Le-Wu Lu, Albert A. Guilford, Lynn S. Beedle, Second Row: Bung-Tseng Yen, Robert Bodaliance, Robert P. Kerfoot, Cornie L. Hulslos, David A. VanHorn, John W. Fisher, William J. Eney, Head of Department; George A. Dinsmore, Lambert Toll. Missing: John B. Herbich, Benjamin K. Hough, Roy J. Leonord, John O. Liebig. ■4i Ask the man on the street to describe on engineer, and chances are he ' ll describe the type of person found in Fritz Lab. The civil engineer occupies this unique position because his projects are usually more immediately noticeable than those of engineers of different specialties. Be it a large suspension bridge, a super-highway or the rising skeleton of an apartment building, the civil engineer has played a large and vital role in its conception. Starting out in his sophomore year with a careful exam- ination of almost every tree on campus through a surveyor ' s transit, the aspiring civil engineer at Lehigh soon gets to play with all sorts of impressive devices, including chain hoists and testing machines, both large and small. Some upperclassmen in the department have an oppor- tunity to take part in a few of the many and nearly infinitely •cried research projects constantly under way, generally in conjunction with industry. These projects range from the bending and breaking of huge steel beams in the universal testing machine to the crashing of old cars into steel guard rails to see just how much protection steel roils have to jffer. It was this latter program that accounted last year for the appearance of the mysterious old cars painted with 3 coat of flat white point seen in the Fritz Lob parking lot. In the classroom, the civil engineering student has a tvide variety of courses before him, ranging from such immed- iately practical workshop courses at Structural Welding to abstruse courses in Advanced Structural Theory. Through long and intense studying,, engineers soon rise to high places. An integral part of evaluating data Is learning how to introduce the proper fudge factor. 87 NDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING Representing one of the largest branches of engineering, the Department of Industrial Engineering has continued to gain steadily in enrollment. Today the number of students being graduated from this department is in the high forties, a twenty-five per cent increase during the last ten years. In fact, this growth rate is considerably higher than the all- university rote. Perhaps one reason for this substantial increase in enroll- ment is the challenging and expansive curriculum in Indust- rial Engineering. This field requires not only scientific apti- tude but also business ability, a combination that is character- istic of many Lehigh men. Knowledge of scientific principles behind manufacturing processes is essential, but there is also much emphasis on statistics and factors of probability con- cerning industrial processes. Because industrial engineering is founded on the dynamics of manufacturing systems, these engineers must understand both the science behind the processes and the economical feasibility of such systems. The opportunities for industrial engineers are continually expanding, especially in chemical industries and metals man- ufacturing; in fact, the demand for trained graduates con- tinues to exceed the supply. To keep pace with these trends, the Department of Industrial Engineering has expanded its facilities; and within the last few years it has added a manu- facturing process laboratory and a new computer to its inventory. Surely this department will continue to provide challenging and interesting work for the increasing number of men pursuing this broad career. Two students locate the rooms in which their next semester dosses will be held. Arthur F. Gould, Head of Department: Wallace J. Richordson, Charles W. Brennan, Leopold B. Willner, William A. Smith, James W. Muir, Dorothy H. Moron, Sutton Monro, George L. Smith, Clark D. Sachse. Missing: George E. Kane, Paul M. Loomba. Behind that window is a computer busy find- ing mistakes in the program just submitted. Those things in the back are not to supply soothing mustic to the student body, they ' re to supply numbers to the computer. The lotest word from Lehigh ' s computer is carefully perused by its keeper. 89 First Row: David E. Setzer, Nicholas J. Pagano, Charles C. Taylor, Richard G. Warnocl , Cheton L. Kama, James R. Rice. Second Row: William C. Len- nox, Robert G. Sorubbi, Ferdinand P. Beer, Head of Departmenl-; Albert W. Deneufville, Joseph C. Osborn. Miss- ing: Paul C. Paris, George C-M Sih. The tremendous amount of data collected in an Engineering Mechanics lab makes a cal- culator an important tool. ENGINEERING MECHANICS Many students upon entering Lehigh are somewhat be- wildered by the existence of the two separate departments, Engineering Mechanics and Mechanical Engineering, and often wonder exactly what the difference is. Unless they major in one or the other, they usually stay bewildered. Those who finally do moke out the difference, though, soon see that Engineering Mechanics is a much more theoretical field, and is in fact a highly developed branch of physics, so devel- oped, in fact, that it well deserves to be considered a separate department. A major in Mechanics is ideal for the engineer with a theoretical bent, and for those who cannot seem to get enough mathematics (yes, Virginia, there are such creatures as engineers who can ' t seem to get enough mathematics). The sophomore engineers are introduced to this field through Mech. 1, a course called Statics, and from that time on, seem unable to get out a coherent sentence without saying the word moment at least twice. Also, these same students take part in a Material Testing Laboratory, and for weeks their rooms overflow with paperweights consisting of the victims of their oft-destructive tests. Professor Ferdinand P. Beer, head of the department, is well-known in the field as a writer of textbooks. A Mech major need only to trip into the supply bureau to see the fruits of the professor ' s labor. Labor, as it were, is a good word to describe the amount of work to be done by the Mechanics Major — Specialization is necessary, but so hard to learn. 90 First Row: Robert D. Stout, Joseph F. Libsch, Heod of Department. Second Row: Richard A. Moll, Stephen K. Tarby, Alan W. Pense. Third Row: George Krauss, John R. Thompson, R. Wayne Kraft, Ted E. Torok. Fourth Row: Darryl L. Albright, Lawrence R. Graham, Wal- ter C. Hahn, Sander A. Levy, John D. Wood. We don ' t know if it ' s o student or an instructor, but with all that glare, it must be a metallurgist. METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING Metallurgy concerns itself with the extraction of metals from their ores, the design, treatment and testing of alloys, and the correlation of the structure of metals with their physi- cal properies. At the present time research is being done in the fields of physical, mechanical, and process metallurgy. Although much of this work is done by the graduate students in the department, some research is also done by seniors taking the research option. Besides the research option, a practice option is also available to seniors. This option places an emphasis on the application of metallurgy to plant prac- tice and allows the student to obtain actual work experience in the Bethlehem Steel Plant. Aside from technology, perhaps the most thought about event is that day in the near future when the new Metallurgical Engineering - Chemical Engineering Building will be finished, allowing the depart- ment to move from its crowded quarters in Williams Hail. A professor hos to work out the problems ossigncd to his students before he con correct their work «;£. iialMi JH I  Nikolai Eberhardt, Arthur I. Larl y, Donold L. Talhelm, T. B. Romachondran, Ivon J. Sacks, John J. Karakash, Head of Department; Daniel Leenov, Richard M. Sigley, Willard J. Pearce, William F. Hollabaugh, Leslie G. McCracken, Rheinhard H. Knerr. Missing: Joseph Teno. For some odd reason, no one ever seems to sit down in on E.E. lab. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING The Electrical Engineering Department, the largest under- graduate engineering department on the Lehigh Campus, maintains a good fundamental theory of education. By striving for a strong base of mathematics and physical sciences, electrical engineering majors are able to build a foundation for knowledge and improvement in electrical engineering. Not only are E.E. courses, humanities and socio! sciences offered, but studies in other engineering fields are recommended. From past experience this department realizes that no matter what the major, success depends only on how well these basic courses in mathematics and science hove been mastered. A word should be said about Lehigh ' s unique Digital Systems Laboratory. The laboratory, which provides undergraduates with the opportunity to work on projects which ore a port of a real system, rather than conceived exercises, has recently received an N.S.F. grant supporting advanced undergraduate studies. Professor John J. Karakash, head of the department, does not want students to specialize while in college. The first three years of study follow this philosophy closely and contain mostly science, mathematics and introductory electronics courses. Many laboratory sessions utilizing the latest equip- ment and scientific knowledge are now part of the work load. In the senior year, the many elective courses facilitate further study into various fields of more specific interest. The electives are not confined only to this department, but may be chosen from any field which will help the student in this introduction to further education. 92 At times the E.E. student finds himself foced with a very difficult decision: whether to use o red wire or a black one. Two students contemplate the possible results before making the irre- vocable decision ond throwing the switch. But how was I to know that all that smoke meant something was wrong . . . First Row: Jerzy A. Owczarek, Russell E. Benner, Thomas E. Jackson, Fred J. Fisch. Second Row: Ralph H. Long, Jr., Head of Department; Robert A. Lucas, Jam es V. D. Eppes, Douglas H. Yano. Third Row: Benjamin E. Nevis, Richard C. Progelhof, Dudley M. Jones. Fourth Row: Fazil Erdogan, Theodore A. Terry, Charles D. Morgan. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING The Department of Mechanical Engineering is presently stymied by lack of funds in their attempt to improve labora- tories, research facilities and personnel salaries. One way to get the necessary monies is through research grants. The department now has a National Science Foundation research grant for studies in the area of Wave Action Between Nozzles and Blades, under the direction of Dr. Jerzy A. Owczarek. The object of this research will be to examine and verify experimentally a theoretical prediction dealing with the vibration stimulus produced by pressure waves in turbine machinery. The research will be conducted with a view to providing design criteria for turbine stages which will elimin- ate such vibration stimulus. The department also has small grants from the Institute of Research here on campus. Within the scope of courses offered to students, the areas of gas dynamics, heat transfer, vibration and control systems are all being strengthened. M.E. 10 has been en- larged to include more introductory work with computers. The hope is to get students interested in computer work early so that they can plan to study in the area and do research. Many experiments require the student to fill page after page of his notebook with nothing but data. Packard Lob provides a vast orroy of equipment for the laboratory student. MATERIALS RESEARCH CENTER The zone melting furnace can be used to achieve fantastically high degrees of purity in metals. Advancement in many fields of engineering depends upon iw materials and a better understanding of the properties id behavior of existing materials. This is as true in the sign of bridges and automobiles as it is in the new fields nuclear energy and space technology. With this in ind an interdisciplinary Materials Research Center has been tablished at Lehigh with Professor Joseph F. Libsch as rector. To accomplish this ambitious project, the center co- dinates and integrates all activities pertaining to materials ience and technology at Lehigh. It has attempted to estob- h a climate in which faculty members, post-doctoral re- arch associates and graduate assistants will develop on soreness of materials requirements and the underlying ndamental problems. The center has also arranged for e physical facilities and space required to conduct inter- jciplinary research, particularly facilities too large for dividual departments. Materials research has played an important role at high University for the past two decades. Presently, approx- iQtely 125 people, including graduate students, are engaged research in this area, whose influence is being felt outside is community more and more. The seminar service, in ich visiting specialists conduct programs, coupled with the nter ' s new materials Liaison Program, add scope and depth the work of the center. The latter program illustrates lite a broodening of function in the extensive current rvices beyond the university to industry, and is unusual such among college and university materials research nter activities. Sitting: Robert T. Gollagher, Joseph F. Libsch, Director. Standing: Paul C. Paris, Fazil Erdogan, Leonard A. Wenzel, Lambert Tall, George R. Jenkins, Morton P. Moyle. Missing: Cassius W. Curtis, John J. Karakosh, R. Wayne Kraft, T. B. Romochondron, Robert D. Stout, Albert C. Zettlemoyer. The University ' s electron microscope will be utilized by several departments in conjunction with the Materials Re- search Center. 95 Lt. Col. Fred. W. Schumacher ARMY ROTC He ' s smiling because the photographer can ' t shoot bock. Two ROTC instructors supervise octivities at the rifle range in the bosement of Lamberton Hall. 5 Sgt. Donald E. Greene, Spc 5 George W. Burpee, Lt. Col. Henry R. Beganie, Lt. Col. Fred W. Schumacher, Heod of Department; Dorothy M. Weaver, Capt. Theodore D. Risch, SFC. Eugene D. Webb, M Sgt. Theodore J. Podolsky. Missing: S Sgt. Jesse M. Snyder, Jr., S Sgt. Charles P. McTigue. At ease, private, sit down. I would like to ask you some lestions. Y-y-yes sir. ' Now private, you ' ve been enrolled in our ROTC program r three months. Just off hand — one army man to another -what have you gotten from it? Well, sir, hmm, hmmm, excuse me, sir — I have learned XDut the organization of the navy — oh, I mean army, sir — id of course, sir, l-l-I ' ve become more self-confident about y position in life, sir. I understand, soldier. I thing Lt. Colonel Fred W. humacher of the Army and Lt. Colonel James W. Caskey the Air Force are doing a terrific job or as we say in the rvice — they ' re A-ok. HmphI Thots a joke, soldier. Sorry, sir. Do you thing our expanded program which now in- udes such things as use of weapons, history and strategy war coupled with o study of current events will be of any d to you? Oh yes, sir. Besides making me aware of our military t-up ond preparation for certain problem, I feel that this formation has helped me in such oreos as when I will get arried, sir. Oh, oh, I see. Well, soldier, I want to thank you for opping in and giving me such frank answers. I ' ve gotten ime very good reports about you from the officers in charge ■your platoon There is just one thing I wanted to comment XJUt which one officer brought to my attention the other ay Yes, sir? When you ' re out on maneuvers, private, don ' t wear your ink!!! Some seniors get reody to declare wor on o compony of iunicrs on Upper Taylor Field. 97 If he thinks inspections are rough now, wait until he gets in the real Air Force. A AFROTC student works towards his pilot ' s license on o Cessna. The Queen ond her court at the an- nual Military Boll. 98 AIR FORCE ROTC The Air Force ROTC Flight Instruction Program has recently been approved by the Board of Trustees at Lehigh University for Senior Cadets. As a result, this program is now part of the regular Air Science curriculum at Lehigh. The FIP, as it is known, is a process that works both ways. The Air Force is evaluating the raw material it hopes some day to turn out as an F-106 or B-58 pilot. At the same time the senior cadet is investigating his flying interest and his pilot potential as the man who can fly the Air Force aircraft of the future. The FIP provides 36! 2 hours of flying time. It also in- cludes 50 hours of ground school, navigation, weather and civil air regulations. The ground school is taught by the regu- lar detachment 715 Air Force ROTC instructors. The senior cadets at Lehigh are fortunate in having detachment officers who ore all rated pilots and navigators, thus they will be receiving reliable and accurate information In their ground school. Cadets who complete the 35 hours of instruction and pass the FAA written examination and the final flight check, may receive an FAA private pilot ' s license. A large per- centage of students do receive such certificates, but this is not a requirement for successful completion of the FIP itself. This private pilot ' s license is really a bonus and the fact that so many participants are able to qualify attests to the quality of instruction they receive. Lt. Col. James W. Caskey. Firft Row: Moior Robert F. Wotson, Lt. Col. Jomes W Coskey, Heod of Department; Major Lynn E. Atwood. Second Row: T Sgt. Donald L. Cockburn, S Sgt. Arthur H. Hess, Copt. Potrick C. Sesso, T Sgt. John D. Govoro, S Sgt. Theodore J. Mohoffey. Dean Robert D. Stout THE GRADUATE SCHOOL The Lehigh Graduate School has been trying to get increased financial support for its students in the form of fellowships and sc holarships. This is especially true for fields usually passed over when these monies are handed out — the humanities, for instance. Not only would this enable Lehigh to attract good students who are per- haps financially embarassed, but it would also cut down on the number of graduate students who work part time. These students who must work while attending school prolong their education and lengthen the time be- fore they con put their knowledge to work outside the academic environ- ment. This attempt to get more finan- cial aid is port of a larger emphasis on shortening the time required for graduate degrees. Increasing the rate of a students progress enables Lehigh to turn out trained people quickly with- out enlarging the graduate school. Another way to increase progress is superior teaching methods. An ex- ample of this is the trend towards in- terdisciplinary projects and study, such OS the Materials Research Cen- ter. Students work on governmental and industrial projects under the di- rection of members of various depart- ments, thereby broadening their knowledge and subject area in both study and application. Work on proj- ects is often augmented by courses in other departments. Changes in the curriculum of the graduate school have increased the areas of study offered to students. Teacher education has moved entirely to the graduate school, with no more undergraduate courses offered. The Teacher Intern Program offers a mas- ters degree in education and a teach- er ' s certification from the state of Pennsylvania, while the student is ac- tually earning money as a part-time teacher. In December, the faculty ap- proved two new degrees, a masters de- gree in philosophy in the specific area of logic and systematics, and a mas- ters degree in the information sci- ences, also a division of philosophy. Summer is a prime time for grad- uate students to do research and work on papers. Laboratories are not clut- tered with undergraduates and the pro- fessors are usually able to give the graduates a little more time than dur- ing the year. During the summer ac- tual courses on the graduate level are usually only offered by the Education Department. The graduate school is looking for- ward to the addition of new academic buildings on campus so that they will have room to alleviate their often cramped condition as well as to ex- pand in new areas. One good thing about having a grad student for o lab instructor is that he or she is usually too busy to watch you. Sometimes it seems to a grod student that everything is just the same as it was a few years ago. A graduate instructor gives some individual instruction to a student in a biology lob. HONORARIES } SIS SOCIETfES c-atf r?? -:. •r - •; ' • ' •V .r?5 s . J?Cj Lehigh has always had o strong tradition of scholarship, a fact that is mirrored in the many honorary fra- ternities having chapters at the Uni- versity. They are distributed among all three Colleges, and included in their ranks are chapters of such na- tionally famous groups as Phi Beta Kappa in the Arts College, Tau Beta Pi, which was founded at Lehigh, in the Engineering School, and in the Business Division, Beta Alpha Psi. Also, Phi Eta Sigma honors freshmen in all three colleges who hove attained high scholastic overages. Lehigh can take pride itself in the diversity of the honoraries on campus. They range from Scabbard and Blade for super- ior military students to Eto Sigma Phi and Pi Delta Epsilon, which honor stu- dents interested in the classics and the members of the various student pub- lications, respectively. The following pages ably present the many ways in which the successful Lehigh student can receive the honors he deserves for his efforts. First Row. Conyers, Zarins, Richard G. Malsberger, Advisor; Pastor, Williams. Second Row: Spindler, Smith, Mayer, Upton, Delvillano, Marcus. Third Row: Denlinger, Berger, Schnei, Potyka, Vornum. Membership in this pre-medical honorary society is privileged to those pre-medlcal students who hove completed three semesters of satisfactory work. Its purposes are: to encourage excellence in pre-medical studies, to bind together similarly interested students, end to aid in developing an adequate program of pre-medical education. ALPHA EPSILON DELTA ' • t: IT I i« • ■y li? . -: ALPHA KAPPA PSI First Row: Bovington, Lankford, R. P. Lentz, Shevchik, Bitler, Aronson, Frew, R. T. Lentz, Fischer. Second Row: Griffiths, Rigg, Gordon, Copron, Musick, Cressman, Francis M. Brady, Carl E. Allen. Third Row: Bingler, Harper, Long, Zimring, Reed, Brogowski, Tiefenbrunn. Fourth Row: Burgess, Werner, Smith, McGough, Pond. Alpha Kappa Psi is a notional honorary professional fraternity. Its object is to foster the business education of its members both in college and after. Membership is limited to students pursuing a degree in the College of Business Administration and hoving o 2.3 cumulative average. Diglio, Lamport, Salerno, Shumofsky, Neimeier, Gardner, Chomberlin, Orlando. Alpha Pi Mu is the honorary industrial engineering society whose purposes ore to give recognition of qualified industrial engineering students, to foster and maintoin high professional standards in the field, and to assist the industrial engineering department in its preparation of important innovations in the field. Membership is open to outstanding juniors and seniors. ALPHA PI MU Zj ' i K, -H ARNOLD AIR SOCIETY First Row: Captain Patrick C. Sessa, Advisor; Snyder, Potterton, Draper, Sieike, Myers, Dutt, Stone, Schneider. Second Row: Goetz, Brown, Becker, George, Egelston, Lichtenauer. The Arnold Air Society is composed of those Air Force ROTC Cadets who have an interest in furthering the purpose, mission, tradition, and concepts of the United States Air Force. The AAS provides the Cadet with an opportunity to obtain a closer look at the operation and organization of the Air Force and to create a close and more efficient relationship among the cadets and personnel. First Row: Bavington, Rigg, Gordon, Bitler, Shevchik, Pettebone. Second Row: Harper, Haacke, Griffiths, Mattson, Silversin Third Row: Carl L. Moore, Advisor; Yeakel, Belletti, Johnson, Lang, Brown, William P. Trumbull, Advisor. This is a national honorary society which fulfills the needs of students to become acquainted with the different phases of accounting. A 2.5 cumulative average and a B average in accounting courses are necessary for membership. BETA ALPHA PSI 106 1 H lili B. iH ' B r H CYANIDE First Row: Casper, Hobson, Helpert, Stiles, Thomas. Second Row: Dawson, Chomberlin, Bulliner, Potyka, Grunfeld, Grosz. Cyanide ' s object is to recognize those members of the Junior Class who have attained high proficiency in the scholastic and extra-curricular work and to offer to the University the services of these men. Cyanide carries out its oims by being on hand during Freshman Week to participate in the orientation of the incoming class and by organizing the Freshman Cabinet to give the freshmen a voice in their government. Membership is available to all members of the Junior Closs who hove a 2.5 cumulative scholastic average. Smith, Joseph A. Maurer, Advisor; Weise, Blunt, Hogan, Kucharz, Muendel, Hobson, Shotola, Stevenson, Dunlevy. Eta Sigmo Phi is strictly a classical society established to foster a greater appreciation of classical culture. Membership is limited to those students with an acodemic average of 3.00 or better with two years of study of Greek and or Latin. ETA SIGMA PHI _l . ' H 1 ' i H M iMpi J ' 1 V. mm M ■L Mill 1 WtKml. E 1 V — — ' ' ' ' 1 S E H ' r Jl V 2 UlJjj LAMBDA MU SIGMA First Row: Dugan, Riley, Kass, Harrington, Silva. Second Row: Feigenbaum, Lacke, Meyer, Antonides, Potterton, Hughes. This society was established with the oim of fostering a closer relationship between those men who major in marketing and have a definite interest in marketing, advertising, selling, and sales management. Junior or senior students at Lehigh with a 1.5 cumulative average and either an A or B in marketing are eligible for membership. George F. Halfacre, Wistar, Rabinow, Bird, Decker, Mattson. Second Row: Mackerer, Digilia, Enck, Zarins, Eckbreth, George P. Conrad II, McKay. OMICRON DELTA KAPPA PERSHING RIFLES First Row: Wiedl, Blair, Schmidt, Horstmann. Second Row: Lisle, Lane, Schellhoss, Bonine, Choppeil, Lieberman. Third Row: Fulmer, Kanet, Schlang, Fourth Row: Laveson, Bender, Davidson, Werner, McGown. Pershing Rifles is a national military society organized to preserve the higher ideals of the military profession and to provide appropriate recognition of a high degree of military ability among the cadets of the R.O.T.C. units. First Row: Rev. F. Kettle, John J, W. Alden, Raymond G. Cowherd, Advisor; Joseph A. Mourer, Jocobi, Bloir, Hoeveler, Lawrence H. Gipson, George D. Hormon, Jellenik. Second Row: Neely, Holt, Ramsey, Grazer, Bowden, Clemens, Cumming, Myers, Miller, Berk. Phi Alpha Theto is an honorary history fraternity which encourages excellence in the study of history. Members must compile a minimum average of 3.00 in twelve credit hours of history for eligibility. PHI BETA KAPPA Seated: B. Fry, P. Grudin, H. Spindler, C. Zarins. Standing: Thomas M. Hoynes, Roymond L. Armstrong, President; Frank S. Hook. This fraternity, the oldest of the Greek Letter honorary fraternities, offers membership each year to outstanding seniors ond a limited number of juniors who have excelled in studies devoted principally to the knowledge, understanding and appreciation of man and of the world in which he lives. First Row: Zacharias, Wise, Johnson, DeMoyer, Rothenberg, Mor, Simpson. Second Row: Billinger, Early, Womer, Winkler, Conyers, Stecker. Phi Eta Sigma is the national freshman honor society. Eligibility for membership is based solely on scholarship. Phi Eta Sigma is open to all freshmen who have overages of 3.5 or better at the end of the first semester or ot the end of the first two semesters combined. PHI ETA SIGMA •f PI DELTA EPSILON First Row: Hill, Casper, Davis, Feissner, White, Morse, Tenthoff. Second Row: Lewandowski, Freedmcn, Willis, Tedesko, Dulicai. Pi Delta Epsilon ' s purpose is to honor the achievements of the men working In Lehigh ' s three publications: the Brown and White, Epitome and WLR-WLRN. New members are elected in their sophomore or junior year for extra-ordinary contribution to the publication with which they are affiliated. Davis, Sterner, Argersinger, Wilson, Bittrick, Persson, Garrett, Bowman, Bornett, Valentine, Tofel Pi Tau Sigma is the national honorory mechanical engineering fraternity. The objective of the fraternity is to foster the high ideals of the engineering profession, to stimulate interest in departmental activities, to promote the professional welfare of its members, and to develop in students of mechanical engineering leadership abilities. Members are elected on the basis of scholarship ond character. . M B I PI TAU SIGMA SCABBARD BLADE First Row: Fegley, Danko, Elsberg, Somodi, Wilson, Wiedl, Holf. Second Row: Wampler, Turner, Lamport, Crutchfield, Davenport, Estelle. Scabbard and Blade is open to any member of the advanced Army ROTC or Air Force ROTC. Its purposes ore to raise the standard of military education in American colleges and universities and to encourage and foster the essential qualities of good officers. 112 An oft-heard complaint of those who hire college graduates is that al- though they may have an excellent grasp of the classroom aspect of their subject, they lack knowledge of its practical side. At Lehigh, this is rarely the case, due to the many active course societies on campus. These so- cieties are In many instances associ- ated with a national professional so- ciety, such as the Institute of Elec- trical and Electronic Engineers, and membership in the student chapter leads to membership in the parent organization. By means of speakers, trips, and annual projects often based on actual industrial problems, the so- cieties provide an insight into the non-academic aspects of his career for the student member. They pro- vide him with a chance to become ac- quainted not only with the other men in his curriculum, but also with those who are now earning their living in the profession that he has chosen. Finally, and perhaps most important, they recognize the student who pos- sesses enough interest in his major subject to seek out such societies. First Row: Shevchik, Pettebone, Silversin, Gordon, Rigg, Bavington. Second Row: Griffiths, Goidston, Haacke, Bitler, Wendell P. Trumbull. Third Row: Carl L. Moore, Advisor; Brown, Whittaker, Mattson, Lang, Harper. Fourth Row: McGough, Burgess, Belletti, Yeakel, Johnson. This society is a course society having as its objective the development of the student as a participont and leader in professional accounting groups. He will have an opportunity to meet and hear men who are leaders in the field of accounting and allied subjects and to participate in programs planned and conducted by the students. Membership is open to all interested students. ACCOUNTING SOCIETY ' e 9 r ■' T ■k ALPHA PHI OMEGA First Row: Neimeier, Harrington, Moose, Myers, Libsch, Knight, Tschampion, Booth, Earthy. Second Row: Whittaker, Kendig, Bender, Spencer, Graf, Kosel, Reichard, Collopy. Third Row: Boiyn, Vines, Petl e, Leininger. Alpha Phi Omega is a national service fraternity dedicated to serving the student body and faculty, the community, and the nation. To carry out its alms, APO assists in freshman week, conducts the used book sale, ushers at public functions, officiates at campus elections, and maintains a list of students to be called upon os blood donors. Membership is open to any student who is Interested in rendering service to others, and who has maintained o satisfactory scholastic average during the pledge period. First Row: Peskin, Viola, Baker, Levy, Kaplan, Jones. Second Row: Olsen, Lightner, Kasch, Harrington, Filbert. Third Row: Depew, Asam, Enck, Day, Heintzelman. This course society exchanges ideas pertinent to chemical engineering. Membership is open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors In the Chemical Engineering curriculum. AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERS |||ik: 1 ' in. t T  AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERS First Row: Davis, Solerno, Nielson, Mockerer, Baum. Second Row: Wollace J. Richardson, Advisor; Hecht, Jackson, Bennett, Carlson, Wiedl, Chamberlin, Tucker. Third Row: Penhaile- gon, Forbrich, Male, Shumofsky, Digilio, Rainbow, Smith. Fourth Row: Minetti, Lamport, Riemondy, Jones, Seiden, Vines, Mormon. This course society helps the Industrial Engineering student understand how he will apply his education in industry and to see what type of work on Industrial Engineer does after groduotion. First Row: Casolo, Masker, Markiewicz, Bottiger, Graack, Burrell, Foshag, Zissell, Feit. Second Row: Guth, Moose, Smith, Isenberg, Soscia, Kuzniar, Besch, Riling, Raymond B. Sowyer, Advisor. Third Row: Roymond J. Emrich, Advisor; Eckbreth, Crowder, Huebner, Morris, Cotton, F. Smith. This orgonizotion is designed to enable the Physics student o sociable association with fellow members of the department on an out-of-the-classroom basis. Several lectures ore conducted throughout the yeor by eminent men in the field. These lectures allow the student an opportunity to get a broad perspective of his profession and help him to choose o definite field of research. Membership is open to students enrolled in any of the several ollied Physics and Engineering Physics curricula. AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS First Row: Dietz, Teisher, Pennington, Rizzo, Gregory, Segal, Merz. Second Row: Scholz, Theodore V. Galambos, Advisor; Pfischner, Denlinger, Ripple, Clegg, Gruner. Third Row: Pierfedeici, Royce, Burke, Von Atfen, Creed, Birdsoll, Cooper. Fourth Row: Anderson, Byl, Lentz, Phillips, Osoba, Polevich, Armstrong. The purpose of this society is to organize the students in the civil engineering depart- ment into a strong unit and to help prepare them for professional civil engineering work. An additional aim is the preparation of men for membership in the parent society. Membership is open to any student enrolled in the Civil Engineering curriculum at Lehigh. Davis, President; Breckley, Vice-president; Schell, Treasurer; Boston, Secretary. The student branch of ASME helps the engineering student to understand how he will apply his education in industry and to see what type of work a mechanical engineer does after groduotion. To promote this end, the Society invites engineers from industry to speak at the monthly meetings, and sponsors on annual ASME student papers contest. Undergraduate membership is open to any registered engineering student. AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS First Row: Harris, Gunn, Haines, Lucioni, Cassaday, McCarthy, Marsh, Schoepps, Lokerson, Steitz. Second Row: Womer, Weigel, Bridges, Metzger, Ralston, Bender, Drai e, Feinberg, Miller. Third Row: Green, Ludwig, Moore, Jackson, Kratt, DiStefano, Petro, Said, Brink. Fourth Row: Gresho, Heist, Mitschele, Foley, Simsak, Bushner, Wyand, Horvoth, Houtz. Fifth Row: Honchett, Herr, Maerz, Winter, Bilesky, Willioms, Young, Raughley, Louver, Sixth Row: Houston, Donald L. Talhelm, Branch Counselor; Woolley, Hermonsdorfer, Kreck, Leighton, Heinz, Hecht, Edwards, Jagers, Smythe, Orendorf, Cornell, Knight. The Student Branch of the IEEE brings speakers from the electrical engineering pro- fession to the campus. Through the branch the student in the Electrical Engineering Curriculum gains knowledge of the field he has chosen for his life work. Plant inspection trips, paper contests, and other activities acquaint the student with the parent organiza- tion. Membership is open to all students in the curriculum. First Row: Musick, Frost, Leon E. Krouse, Advisor; Martin, Cressman. Second Row: Shotola, Rex, Lanctot, Riley, Goldston, Lermon, Fischer, Post. Third Row: Ballenzweig, Kelly, Doo- little, Mcllmoyle, Weiner, Jackson, Huse. The Student Investment Council enables Lehigh business students to apply their studies to the monagement of a Dryfus Fund invested by the senior classes. STUDENT INVESTMENT COUNCIL ? .-n,t -w , w «9 .« %M fe :;, -,. wV • ' ' • ' IS ■l i [ |bM« p g a i 4 o ' mii i ■IFI « « r 1 s il. J H IF Sll mS T B M ■;j i£ !?; B P ' ' r? : at-- -: ' !S ' ■•V ; i . - li •v : - ij i. ' - Ail fi ' ' ' S, f: J lfe ' f m .1 2; .- ii ft-- I M V. ' M ' . a - m. - ' m y ■y. «- 1— ??4 = : . ' :: ■ii -A ' w ' t [ Gibby, Treasurer; Wistar, Vice-President; Griffiths, Secretary; Hess, President; Howard C. Troy, Advisor. THE CLASS Four victories against Lafayette . . . commit- tees . . . Miss Henry ... we love it here ... 8 o ' clock phys. ed . . . hurdles . . . the guys in this room have got to study . . . phoons . . . IHTFP . . . three EIWA championships . . . Saturday classes . . . Dink hop . . . shinning shoes Monday afternoons our Freshman year . . . pop quizes . . . getting served at the Ho . . . not getting served at the Grotto ... 8 weeks of rushing . . . Valentines . . . U.C. rolls . . . first wrestling match . . . staying awake in History 12 only for Prof. Dowling ' s jokes . . . meals during finals . . . discovery of Health Center blue slips . . . Houseparty in a fraternity at last . . . Bobby Num- bers . . . blind dates from the Crest . . . hitch- hiking across town for classes . . . beer, beer, and always more beer . . . Lafayette Weekends . . . panty raid on Moravian . . . smell of rotten eggs First Row: Reich, Griffiths, Secretary; Decker, Runcie, Mattson, Brogow- ski. Smith, Mitchell, Sperakis, Wistar, Vice-President; Burakoff, Frank. Second Row: Gibbv, Treasurer; Beck, Tyson, Pastor, Reed, Carlson, Lau, I OF 1964 from Beth Steel ... icy walks . . . the Rat Lady . . . parking tickets . . . bull sessions . . . townies . . . J. H. Beers . . . study dates . . . Roy Charles . . . the slide rule six gun . ..afternoon labs . . . all-nighters . . . snatch bar waitresses . . . always behind in your work . . . L.C.B. . . . Lehigh Larry . . . the seedy snack bar world problem solver . . . the cool conformer . . . Joe Average . . . Superior Sam . . . interviews with J.D.L. . . . drizzling rain . . . PP M . . . Spring Sunday-afternoon girls in convertibles . . . term paper due the next day and not yet begun . . . the hill in the Spring . . 7:00 A.M. Spring Houseparty Sunday . . . two weeks of rushing . . . plants trips . . . the Rose and Briar , may it rest in peace . . . LSAP . . . blue slips retracted . . . job interviews . . . November 22, 1963 . . . senioritis . . , compre- hensives . . . registering for a degree . . . grad- uation . . . memories. Several somber moments marked the yeor. Frost, Davis, Heist, Orlando, Boll. Third Row: Wompler, Indoe, Kievit, Jacoby, Stout, Feffer, Eckbreth, Hess, President; Houtz, Allport, Jennings, Hesselman, Johonson. Tr m w Tiifi 1 f r T 1 mA ' ' s ft j L t ' .: ' m ' 1 H . 1 w 11 i f , - ■y r m L S i iw fe L. - L t) A M  ,..t Thomas R. Abbey Management Robert H. Adams Accounting Pongpol Adireksorn International Relations Jk Anthony J. Arcangelo Psychology James R. Baker Finance George M. Bonino Geology Santo A. Agati Accounting Richard D. Agree Chemical Engineering George H. Allport, Jr. Social Relations Robert H. Baker Mechanical Engineering Robert V. Borger Finance Robert C. Bomett Mechonical Engineering Wesley M. Bennett Industrial Engineering Richard W. Berg, Jr. Chemical Engineering Williom C. Berg, III Metallurgicol Engineering Robert W. Betz International Relations Raymond S. Bieak Accounting John M. Bilesky Electrical Engineering 124 John C. Bennett, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Jay B. Berger Biology David W. Best Finance Timothy B. Bird Internotionol Relotions Harold Paul Bitler, Jr. Accounting Roger S. Blair Applied Science Warren S. Blair, Jr. History Howard E. Blunt Greek Robert J. Brckrath Industrial Engineering William J. Bowman Management David C. Boyd Metallurgy Brooks T. Brierley Finance ik Roger M. Buckhout Industrial Engineering W. Paul Brogowski Management Donald J. Buffey Electronics John S. Brookover, Jr. Finance Steven J. Burakoff Psychology Charles A. Buck, Jr. English MUHfh Warren H. Buck Chemistry Robert G. Burch Metollurgicol Engineering Pefer S. Burgeis Accounting C. Frederick Burrell Physics Edward M. Burt History D. Stephen Butler Metallurgical Engineering Harry H. Carothers, III Biology Stephen L. Cheadle Business Patrick J. Clark History Charles W. Clemens Government Albert R. Comly, Jr. Metallurgical Engineering Joseph R. Concilio Accounting Gary L. Conyers Biology 4fk Joseph F. Coffrey Engineering Physics Ronald C. Cheek Monogement Miles S. Copron Management S. John Chipser Electrical Engineering 129 Robert N. Carlson Industrial Engineering Williom J. Claffey Chemistry James M. Clouser Lawrence P. Cohen Philip R. Colwell Electrical Engineering Accounting Industrial Engineering William L. Cook B. Decker Corwin Clifford W. Cotton Mechanical Engineering Mothemotics Industrial Engineerini iC? f Fredrick W. Cotton Physics James R. Crompton Civil Engineering Douglas C. Creed Civil Engineering Joseph W. Crooks Government William W. Crouse, III Management Bruce H. Crowder Engineering Physics William R. Cumming History Robert M. Curtice Mathematics Torger N. Dahl Civil Engineering John M. Donko Engineering Physics John H. Davenport Mechonicol Engineering G. Sander Dovi is Government IP r 1 P 1 [ f f Henry C. Crutchfield, Jr. Industrial Engineering William F. Dale Dana B. Danielson Eskil S. Danielson Chemical Engineering Industrial Engineering Government Kenneth C. Dovit Marion B. Davis, III Richard C. Davis, Jr. Accounting Mechonical Engineering Electronics Richard M. Davis Industrial Engineering David R. Decker International Relations John R. Delaney Geology Thomas H. Di Stefano Electronics Dennis A. Domchek Metallurgy Lawrence T. Dougherty Accounting David H. Dresher Accounting Robert- J. Duchynski Engineering Physics James F. Duh ' coi Journalism J. Kenneth Denlinger Civil Engineering John R. Denoia Accounting Emory Depew Civil Engineering Thomas R. Dowler Monogement James D. Dunleovy International Relations James A. Dunlevy Economics Edward L. Dunn Metallurgical Engineering Edward J. Dwyer Metallurgy Jeffrey J. Elenewski Psychology William P. Dwyer Accounting Nicholas M. Elsberg Government Gordon C. Everstine George F. Eynon Gerald A. Feffer Mechanical Engineering Metallurgy Foreign Careers William F. Filbert, Jr. Steve S. Fink Walter E. Fink, Jr. Chemical Engineering Accounting Management kdCk Alon C. Eckbreth Engineering Physics Allen Edelstein Mathematics Jeffrey W. Enck Chemical Engineering Fred Feigenbaum Marketing C. Lee Fischbeck Mothemotics William B. Edwards, III Chemistry Ira H. Ensinger German James E. Estelle Management Richard C. Fisher Geology Michael D. Feit Physics G. Duncan Fletcher Electrical Engineering A. Colin Freund Accounting James D. Foley Electrical Engineering Robert A. Frew, Jr. Finance Dan iel T. Franceski Electrical Engineering A. Veil Frost, III Finance W. Lee Fry Edward P. Fulmer Charles E. Gaba Metallurgical Engineering Mechanics Finance Lawrence W. Garrett Robert E. Gatti Mechanical Engineering Industrial Engineering  K t Chester A. Frank Accounting Albert R. Gee, II Government William H. Gaik Accounting Harold F. Gardener Industrial Engineering John O. Gardner Chemistry Edward R. Geiger Accounting Andrew R. Gemza Mechanical Engineering Robert B. Gibby, Jr. Mathematics v Jm Alfred J. Graser History John Grason Electrical Engineering Allon E. Greenberg Electrical Engineering Roger K. Gregory Civil Engineering Barclay H. Griffiths Accounting Thomas W. Grim Economics Robert C. Hoag Accounting Robert J. Gross! Civil Engineering Robert J. Haehnle, Jr. Civil Engineering Peter W. Gruner Civil Engineering Nelson K. Gofhie Civil Engineering Douglas E. Gould Chemistry Richord C. Graf Government Barry W. Haacke Accounting Richord S. Halberstein Government William D. Hamilton Arthur J. Homm Metollurgicol Engineering Robert W. Honce Arts Thomas S. Hoy Accounting William L. Horpel Chemical Erfgineering John G. Hazard Economics Denver W. Herr Electrical Engineering Michael B. Histond Engineering Physics John H. Harrington, Jr. Chemical Engineering George M. Hebbard, Jr. Chemical Engineering Robert P. Hess Economics E. Jackson Holt History David P. Heinfzelman Chemical Engineering Stephen B. Horris Science Vern E. Hawkins Management Robert D. Hay Electrical Engineering R. Kenneth Heist Electrical Engineering Robert V. Hcnning, Jr. Economics Parry L. Hesselman Electrical Engineering Leonard C. Highley Industriol Engineering Ronald S. Hill German Stanley B. Horowitz Economics Vincent V. Horvath Electrical Engineering K. Edward Jacobi History Kenneth R. Johanson Economics John H. Houtz Electronics Daniel A. Huse Management N. Peter Jacoby Electrical Engineering Floy C. Jones Industrial Engineering ' Mm H. Douglas Huebner Robert J. Hummel Physics Chemical Engineering William F. Indoe Donald M. Jackson Electrical Engineering Industrial Engineering J. Lee Jagers Electrical Engineering David W. Jonsson English Frederick E. Jockson Electrical Engineering Andrew Jansons Engineering Physics Roger B. Jellenik Government David S. Jennings Geology Lane L. Jorgenien Industriol Engineering Charles A. JiMlelson Accounting Robert H. Kasch Chemical Engineering Ikl Frederick W. Kersens Metallurgical Engineering tflk H. John Kligora Electrical Engineering Peter K. Klingensmith Mechanical Engineering Douglas W. Koch Management Edward J. Krott, III Electrical Engineering Robert D. Krotzer Economics Robert F. Kreusser Finance Dean C. Krouse Metallurgical Engineering David A. Krone Industrial Engineering Richard E. Krout Economics D. Eugene Kiehl Mathematics Roy E. Kievif, Jr. Accounting Dean P. Kinard Electrical Engineering Robert E. Krone Joseph J. Kruse Accounting Kenneth M. Kucharz Biology Joseph S. E. Kuznior Engineering Physics ?V h k JiMAi Jay C. Locke Morketing Rene E. Laguerre, Jr. Economics Simon Levin Economics Richard H. Lipstein History Kenneth J. Lamport industrial Engineering John J. Levko, III Mathematics John F. Loeber Mechanical Engineering « ' John D. Landes Mechanical Engineering Ira W. Lieberman Arts Robert C. Lokerson Electrical Engineering Thomas T. Lankford, III Monagement Andrew Lorko Business Michael B. Leibowitz Philosophy Peter J. LeidI Chemistry Bruce E. Leinster Economics Bryon L. Lightner Chemicol Engineering Charles F. Lorn Economics Kenneth A. Lill International Relations Rene P. Lopez-Duprey, Jr. Business t i n Robert F. Lorentz Civil Engineering Gabriel A. Lovosz Metallurgicol Engineering William H. Low Industrial Engineering Mark M. Moinordi Electrical Engineering E. Leiand Maki Mechanical Engineering Stephen H. Male Industrial Engineering Charles A. Mantell Accounting David L. March Mathematics 148 John A. Mohon, III Metallurgical Engineering Gordon R. Mollett Accounting Walter Momchur, Jr. Arts Michael B. Mangon English Briant R. Marsh Accounting Wayne R. Martin Monogement A. John Mason Mafhemotics Thomas E. Mason Biology Carl L. McConnell Geology H Harold C. Mattesky Mechanical Engineering David H. McCracken, II Economics tl! Donald W. Mattson Accounting William J. McDowell Chemical Engineer ing Michael W. McKay E. Bruce McLeod Russell L. McTague Engineering Physics Management English Charles G. Mefzger, Jr. Gary D. Metzger John C. Miles, 11 Electrical Engineering Accounting Industrial Engineering Lawrence J. Mayer English Paul F. Mayland Management H. Bruce McCloren Finance Fred C. Merkel, Jr. Metollurqicol Engineering Jomei A. Miller Industrial Engineering James D. Miller Finance Michael W. Miller Chemistry John A. Mindler Accounting John O. Mitchell Electrical Engineering Timothy S. Mock Industrial Engineering Corbett J. Monica Foreign Careers Donold R. Morganson, Jr. Manogement Edwin P. Morin Finance R, Graham Morrison, Jr. Chemistry H. Edward Muendel Sociology Thad R. Murwin Industrial Engineering Thomas J. Musick Finance Alostoir G. S. Morton Metallurgy George F. MoHer, IV Monogement E. Dieter Mueller International Relations Joseph T. Nonovic Marketing Neol T. Neomond History Henry A. Neimeier Industriol Engineering Richard D. Nilson Finonce Robert J. Olson Chemical Engineering Stephen Orlando, Jr. Industrial Engineering William M. Ottinger Business Ted A. Orner Civil Engineering Michael S. Ornstein Mothematics W. Keith Overgoaid Metallurgy Bruce M. Pastor Biology Joseph F. Petrozelli Civil Engineering Robert D. Penhollegon Industriol Engineering Joseph R. Perella Accounting Eric J. Persson Mechonical Engineering B. Frank Pettebone, Jr. Accounting Walter H. Pfau Business Ronald A. Pfeiffer Industriol Engineering R kjI ' ' mM. M Frederick L. Pfischner, Jr. Civil Engineering Michael R. Plgnkett Mechanical Engineering Walter A. Polashenski Chemical Engineering M Douglas M. Price International Relations Robert I. Psyck Metallurgical Engineering Richard W. Robenstein Metallurgy S. David Ramsey Arts Richard A. Rabinow Mechanical Engineering Alfred J. Ranieri, Jr. Chemical Engineering Christopher N. Raiser Marketing L. Michael Rayeur Accounting ■G. Barry Pratt Finance Alan C. Preble Metallurgical Engineering Sterett R. Prevost Marketing Richard W. Ralston Electrical Engineering Tod Reobuck Government David M. Reed Philosophy Thomas E. Reed Accounting ! dx % Michael H. Reich Finance George R. Reinhort Sociology Peter K. Reinhart English Russell T. Rigg Accounting Barry E. Ripple Civil Engineering Thomas C. Roberts Mechanical Engineering John F. Runcie Sociology David B. Salerno Industrial Engineering George T. Rushforth Mechanical Engineering J. Linden Sanders, Jr. Electrical Engineering James P. Renaldi Industrial Engineering Richard J. Rex Finance David A. Riemondy Industrial Engineering Thomas J. Rockwood Accounting Robert C. Rollings, Jr. Mechanical Engineering John F. Rovegno Accounting Franklin A. Rushong Chemicol Engineering Michael R. Russell Economics Richard T. Safer Marketing Robert E. Sawyer Chemical Engineering John D. Sayer Finonce Norman K. Scorpullo Language 159 Noel J. Schochner Industrial Engineering Wayne V. Scheil, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Robert A. Schmidt Electrical Engineering Alan W. Schneit Biology F. Donald Schoeps Electrical Engineering Robert Y. Schoff Mechanical Engineering Frederic J. Schragger Biology Robert D. Schuman Mechanical Engineering Antony J. Schweitzer Metallurgical Engineering James W. Selgas Psychology Waldimir M. Semenyna Mechanical Engineering Bill E. Serfass Civil Engineering Robert R. Scholz Civil Engineering George W. Seofon, III Chemical Engineering Howard W. Segal Civil Engineering Howard A. Seid Electronics Arthur L. Shearer Chemical Engineering John E. Shepard Economics Raymond G. Shepard, Jr. Finance J. Albert Sherk, Jr. Biology Daniel R. Shevchik Accounting R. Lee Sholley Metollurgicol Engineering Douglas W. Smith Government Martin R. Simsak Electrical Engineering Robert H. Sinclair Mechanical Engineering Frederick W. Smith Physics Richard B. Sindel English John C. Smith Industrial Engineering Christopher L. Snyder, Jr. Economics Melvin A. Snyder English John S. Somodi Mechanical Engineering Donald L. Shotola Finance Allan P. Shumofsky Industrial Engineering Louis Silversin Accounting Michael A. Smith Chemistry Donold L. Speakmon Thomas A. Sperakis Henry A. Spindler, Jr. Manogement Metollurgy Chemistry Edwin L. Staley, Jr. Government James E. Stehlik Industrial Engineering Robert W. Stout Civil Engineering Lanning D. Steitz Electronics Robert W. Strickler Accounting Philip A. Tagley Mechanical Engineering Edward J. Temos Mechonical Engineering Barry B. Teutschbein Metallurgical Engineering Charles B. Tillson, III Accounting Jocob H. Toews Civil Engineering James R. Steltzer Management Donald H. Sterner Mechanical Engineering W. Allen Sullivan Accounting David E. Sunderland Industrial Engineering John W. Sundlie Industrial Engineering Charles J. Tommor Electrical Engineering Peter J. Templin Industrial Engineering James D. Toth Civil Engineering John D. Tench, Jr. Civil Engineering EST ? - li J. Jeffrey Stives Journalism Edward J. TenthoH English Kenneth E. Turner Finonce ■:- . ' ' ft f,.. Thomas E. Tyson Science George M. Vlosits History Donald T. Walton Civil Engineering Philip F. Welch Chemical Engineering William J. Valentine Mechanical Engineering Lorry C. Walker Accounting Edwin S. Volliant, ill Accounting Thomas J. Walker, Jr. Biology A. Willis Wampfer Economics John M. Watt Industrial Engineering Lawrence E. White Electrical Engineering William H. Whittaker Accounting Paul R. Vines Industrial Engineering James R. Walter, Jr. Psychology Donald J. Weber Mechonicol Engineering Charles H. Weidner Civil Engineering Chorles W. Weigel Electrical Engineering Robert A. Wiedl Industrial Engineering Howard A. Wiener Civil Engineering Edward H. Williams English Poul E. Winter Electrical Engineering Hamilton Williams, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Richard T. Williams Electrical Engineering Charles M. Wistar Finance Robert E. Williams, Jr. Marketing William J. Wood International Relations H. Allen Wurzbach, Jr. Jeffrey A. Wyand Gory Yosumuro Darryl W. Yeokel Economics Engineering Physics Electrical Engineering Accounting Richard A. Young Milan C. Yovanovich Robert A. Zacharda Frederick J. Zak Engineering Physics Management Government Chemical Engineering Wfc Stephen J. Willis Economics Donald R. Wilson Management James N. Wilson Civil Engineering William S. Yesler Business Christopher Zorins Biology Paul A. Zdrodowski Marketing Jack H. Zweig Government Wmp W ATHLETICS Paul E. Short, Assistant Director of the Division of Athletics. John S. Sfeckbeck, Assistant Director of Phy- sical Education and Director of Intramural Sports Program. Director of the Division of Athletics and Physical Education, William B. Leckonby. PHYSICAL EDUCATION I Under the leadership of William B. Leconby and John S. Steckbeck, the Division of Athletics and Physical Edu- cation has made great strides the past year. These two men ore constantly striving for more opportunities in ath- letics for both the intercollegiate ath- lete and the average Lehigh student. Professor Steckbeck has helped the intramural program grow into one of the finest programs of its kind in the country. Throughout the year the phy- sical education faculty meets with rep- resentatives of the campus living groups to organize and schedule more than two thousand events in seventeen different sports with championships on all levels of competition. In 1963, the first year of this program, more than sixty-six per cent of the student body participated in the program. On the intercollegiate scene, the opening of the Saucon Valley athletic plant has been a great step forward this post year. These new fields, not to mention the locker room, hove been of great use in the intramural program OS well as in the intercollegiate sports. The fields ore now being used fulltime by the football, soccer, tennis, lacrosse and track teams. They are also avail- able for intramural football, track and Softball. The Division of Athletics and Phy- sical Education ' s continuing goal has been to offer the finest opportunities for physical exercise and at the same time to develop qualities of high char- acter and good sportsmanship through fair competition both on the intercol- legiate and intramural level. 172 Lehigh ' s Intramural Wrestling Championships are the best in the nation. Working out for the Wrestling Championships. Getting in shape for the Turkey-Trot. Intramural Badminton in the upper gym. 173 -i «K - . Emil Havach, Head Trainer. Prep Tournament Championships are sponsored by the Athletic Department each yeor. Intramural Basketball in the upper gym. Good refereeing is the highlight of Intramural Wrestling. Gene Sheska, Equipment Manager. Students admiring some of Lehigh ' s many trophies in Taylor Gym. Skins and Shirts in the upper gym. 175 BASEBALL Southpaw Ed Winchester burns one in. Walt King crosses the plate with another run for the Engineers. VARSITY RECORD LEHIGH OPPONENT 7 Swarthmore 1 6 Penn State 88 8 Univ. of Penn. 2 4 Colgate 3 5 Rutgers 6 7 Bucknell 10 3 Wogner 2 4 Lafayette 3 4 Muhlenberg 3 1 Temple 12 6 Gettysburg 7 7 Columbia 6 4 Lafayette 1 1 Ursinus 9 Rutgers 7 FRESHMAN RECORD An Engineer trys to beat out an infield hit. LEHIGH OPPONENT 4 Trenton Jr. College 6 3 Rutgers 7 5 Univ. of Penn. 2 5 Lafayette 6 Trenton Jr. College 9 1 ) Univ. of Delaware 7 Univ. of Delaware 2 3 Lafayette 8 1 Rutgers 2 176 After a disappointing season in 1962, Coach Tony Packer ' s charges came back in 1963 with a nine-five record. The comeback was due in large part to a new hitting machine and a group of versatile seniors. With intensive training in hitting, batting averages and runs-batted-in were on the rise. Leading their teammates in RBI ' s were Pete Bennett with 12, Ed Winchester with eight, and Fred Braun with five. Bennett was the leading hitter at .403. Behind him were Braun (.320) and Winchester (.288). Pitching was rather inconsistent. Junior Ben Rushong and senior Ed Winchester were expected to be the mainstays, but both were plagued by arm injuries during the season. Filling in was a junior, Vern Hawkins. As a freshman first-baseman, Hawkins distinguished himself; he did this again as a relief hurler, bailing the team out many times. In one of the better games of the season, Lehigh de- feated its traditional rival, Lafayette, 4-1. This marked the Engineers ' second win over the Eoston team. Claiming the in over Lafayette was right honder Rushong, who evened 3ut his season record at 4-4. This was the fourth complete gome for Rushong and his second consecutive win. Besides Ditching well, Rushong helped his cause with two singles and ■wo RBI ' s. Senior shortstop Pete Bennett drove in the first ■un with a triple and senior third-baseman Braun brought in ■he final run with a single. To help their batting overages, ienior second-baseman Walt King had one hit and first- jaseman George McMeons hod two. Much improved hitting, a nucleus of well-rounded seniors, Dnd good baseball accounted for the successful se ason. Coach Packer has a discussion with the umpire during the Rutgers game. First Row: R. Gifford, E. Winchester, W. King, F. Braun, G. McMeons, B. Rushong, E. Remig. Second Row: Anthony W. Pocker, Coach; J. DeNoia, K. Woodcock, W. Bowman, D. Stanton, R. Mannik, V. Hawkins, P. Bennett. Tim Miller trys to maneuver into position for a feed. Dick Smith dodges opposing defenseman. With solid victories over Franklin Marshall, Penn State and Lafayette, the varsity lacrosse squad completed its fifth consecutive winning season and tied for the Middle Atlantic Conference with Stevens. Coach Harry Bush ' s stickmen kicked off the season with a 13-4 triumph over Franklin Marshall. Senior attackmon Carl Euker led the scoring with four goals and one assist. Captain Dick Smith netted two tallies in spite of a switch from attack to midfield. Senior attackmon Dave Ritterpusch also netted two goals for the winning cause. Goalie Tony Arcesi, a former second team all-Pennsylvania-Delaware selection, had 16 saves. To end the season with its sixth win against four losses, the team mopped up Lafayette 19-5. Captain Smith led the nineteen goal barrage with seven tallies and one assist. For the second year in a row, he was high scorer with twenty- five goals. He was followed by Euker, who garnered six goals in the game to finish the season with eighteen. Two sopho- mores, Eric Yonker and Dick Born, also added to the scoring column with one goal apiece. In his second season as head coach, Harry Bush could rely on the consistently fine play of seniors Tony Arcesi, Pete Anderson and Captain Smith. Arcesi was outstanding in the nets. He had a total of 180 saves for the season with a game high of 31 against Penn State. Anderson was a strong performer on defense and received an honorable mention in the All-Americon selections. Smith led the Brown White in goals with 26 from a midfield position. He was named to the North All-Stars in the annual North-South All-Star Gome. Three other players also helped. Tim Miller hit the nets for six goals and 1 1 assists and Dave Rittenpusch ripped the opponents for 16 goals. Carl Euker led the squad in assists with 17. LACROSSE Dickey brings the ball down to the offense. . ' « A ,-- ai VARSITY RECORD .EHIGH 1 OPPONENT 13 Franklin Marshall 4 3 Univ. of Penn. 6 3 Colgate 10 7 Univ. of Delaware 6 9 Drexel 3 3 Swarthmore 6 12 Stevens 9 11 Penn State 7 3 Rutgers 6 19 Lafayette 5 FRESHMAN RECORD 4 Pingry School n 4 Maplewood Lacrosse Club 12 6 Penn State 12 9 Drexel 7 13 Lofayette 4 Hill School 3 10 Rutgers 16 w ' ■' . Coach Bush tries to straighten out a few points during half-time. First Row: R Lucos, A. Thiel, H. Barr, A. Flint, J. Mohon, R. Bom, J. Hudson, R. Yonker, B. DelVillono, C. Sturcke. Second Row: M. McKay, H. Castle, T. Miller, T. Sperokis, J. Dickey, G. Vlasits, D. Howell, R. Lipstein, P. Anderson, D. Butler. Third Row: C. King, Assistant Manager; C. Harvey Bush, Coach; A. Arcesi, R. Smith, C. Euker, D. Rittenpusch, W. Medford, J. Pidutti, P. Klingensmith, J. Wilson, G. Hanhouser, Monager. Tom Boyer looks back up at the bar hopefully. An Engineer strides toward the tape in the high hurdles. Led by co-captains Lew Parker and Norm Owsley, the 1963 Lehigh track team worked its way through a long and tedious spring season. Plagued by injuries and losses due to graduation, the squad ended its first year on Saucon Valley ' s new all-weather track with a dismal 3-7 record. The most impressive effort of the year was a victory over Gettysburg and Muhlenberg in a triangular meet which saw the Engineers win seven first places. These two victories, plus a win over Haverford, were the only shining team efforts in a year marked mostly by personal achievements. Junior Paul Mayland was the most impressive trackman on the squad, scoring two triple victories in his specialties, the 100 and 220 yard dashes and 220 yard low hurdles, ten season first places, and one second and two thirds in the Middle Atlantic Conference Championships. Lehigh ' s big threat in the field events was sophomore John lllengwarth. Placing either first or second in every meet, lllengwarth went on to capture a second place in the javelin and a fourth place in the discus in the MAC. Other standouts for the Engineers were senior Ed Pringle in the mile, Parker in the 440 and 880 yard sprints, and Tom Boyer in the pole vault, Boyer ' s best effort of the season came when he broke a 26 year-old record by half an inch in the Lehigh-Lafayette meet. First Row: R. Ardern, C. Falcone, P. Mayland, N. Owsley, L. Parker, J. Davenport. Second Row: T. Boyer, A. Moss, A. Schweithelm, W. Lory, R. Bushner, H. Carothers, R. Haulenbeek. Third Row: George F. Halfacre, Coach; E. Pringle, W. Low, W. Hotchkiss, J. lllengwarth, J. McCleery, E. Heimberg, Michael Buonassi, Freshman Coach. VARSITY RECORD LEHIGH OPPONENT 37 West Chester 103 55 St. Joseph ' s 80 77 Haverford 53 44 Univ. of Delaware 96 37 Temple 94 68 Gettysburg 62 Muhlenberg 43 56 Lafayette 75 16 Rutgers 83 ' a Colgate 84 2 •Triple Meets FRESHMAN RECORD 61 West Chester 70 82 Univ. of Delaware 49 82 Lafayette 48 63 Rutgers 86 Beyer tries for the record. TRACK Poul Mayland takes an easy victory in a tri-meet. Bill Hotchkiss strains at the shotput. )8I Drent prepares to return the ball dur- ing the Gettysburg match. TENNIS Led by two Middle Atlantic Conference doubles champions, junior captain Ken Turner and sophomore Archie Robertson, the varsity tennis team finished the 1963 season with a 4-6 record. The team, composed entirely of sophomores and juniors, hod its most decisive victory, 9-0, at the expense of Muhlen- berg. Robertson, Turner, Bob Drent, Dave Hoeveler, Bob Varnum and Jim Dey all won their singles matches as did the doubles teams. Later in the season, Turner and Robertson captured the Middle Atlantic Conference doubles title with a victory over a duo from Lafayette in three sets. Robertson also made a gallant bid in the singles competition by reaching the semi- finals only to lose to the eventual tournament champion. In a 8-1 rout of Temple, Dey won all three of his singles matches, and Drent, Hoeveler and Varnum each won two of three matches. Turner and Robertson combined for three wins in the doubles competition to assure the fourth and last victory of the season. In spite of a singles victory by Dey and doubles victories by the two teams of Turner and Schell and Hoeveler and Varnum, the racketmen dropped a 6-3 match to Lafayette. VARSITY RECORD LEHIGH OPPONENT 4 Dickinson 5 3 Rutgers 6 Vi Univ. of Penn. 81 2 5 Bucknell 4 4 Hoverford 5 9 Muhlenberg 6 Swarthmore 3 4 Gettysburg 5 8 Temple 1 3 Lofoyette 6 FRESHMAN RECORD First Row: J. Dey, D. Hoeveler, R. Drent, W. Schell. Second Row: R. Stever, Manager; R. Varnum, K. Turner, A. Robertson, Ralph A, Jellc, Coach. 6 3 8 ' 2 Rutgers Hill School Lofoyette GOLF In attempting to achieve a sixteenth winning season for loach Bill Leckonby, the Lehigh linksmen fell short. The )olfers had five wins, eleven losses and one tie. However, he team did come through with an outstanding showing at he Annual Middle Atlantic Conference Golf Championships It Temple. Sparked by fifth place sophomore Byron Hertslet, .ehigh won third place, behind first place St. Joseph ' s by 20 xDlnts and second place Dickinson by only eight points. Many matches were close, some even decided by playing ine or two extra holes. In one triangular meet decided on on xtrc hole, the team bowed to Rutgers 10-9 and then lost o Swarthmore IOV2 to 71 2. Sophomores Hertslet, Ernest ' atten and Rick Penske all won their matches against Rutgers. Hertslett won and Patten tied against Swarthmore. The team nedalist was Hertslet with a 74. Hertslet not only punctuated the MAC tourney and the lutgers-Swarthmore match, but the rest of the season as well. Vith an average score of 77, he was the Lehigh medalist in lost of the matches. Hertslet and sophomores Patten and [lein led the team in scoring. .i ! Hertslet drives one far out onto the foirwoy. VARSITY RECORD EHIGH OPPONENT 9 Franklin Marshall 10 151 2 Haverford 21 2 17 Temple 1 1 Princeton 6 2! 2 Colgate 4 ' 2 3 Penn Stote 4 101 2 Gettysburg 71 2 51 2 Univ. of Delaware 121 2 9 Bucknell 9 71 2 Lafoyette 10 2 Penn State 7 2 Villanova 5 16 Muhlenberg 2 9 Carnegie Tech. 9 7 2 Sworthmore 101 2 9 Rutgers 10 Edward J. Homer, Assistant Coach; E. Potten, R. Klein, A. Yots, G. Hogstoz, A. Crecco, B. Hertslet, A. Neuwirth, R. Penske, William B. Leckonby, Coach. -i2 ' ' SAILING CLUB First Row: Gross, Mooss, Cameron, Mc- Allister. Second Row: Stringer, Broege, Haacke, Kettenring. Third Row: Marlatt, Robertson, Perry, Lee. First Row: Templin, LeidI, Reinhart, Nechwort, Treasurer. Second Row: N. Smith, Light, Reed, R. Smith, Hovik. Third Row: Murwin, Davidson, Miller, Crutchfield, Matthews, Jackson, Rodkey. 185 Coach Mike C o o I e y is mobbed by jubilont Engi- neers ofter victory over Laf- ayette. FOOTBALL The locker room was quiet except for the constant hiss of the steaming showers. On the floor lay damp brown and white jerseys and scattered here and there were pieces of tape wrung in anguish from a bad knee or ankle. The heavy armor hung carelessly from the locker doors. Meanwhile, the Monday morning quarterbacks filed noisily out of the stadium: Will they ever win a game? This was one of the most disastrous football seasons in Lehigh history. The 1963 team set a season ' s record for losses with eight. It allowed its op- ponents to score almost as many points in the second quarter (82) as the En- Captoin Joke LaMotta gineers scored all season (83). No one reason con be given for such o poor showing; but lack of size, inexper- ience and poor defense are three which probably hurt the most. Lehigh has never been known for big linemen. This season the line av- eraged only about 190 pounds with three sophomores, Tony Hrincevich, Floyd Koch and Bob Adelaar, on the right side. Seniors Bill DeVinney and John Tench and juniors Joe Walton and Chuck Ortlom comprised the rest of the line. Big lines such as Dela- ware ' s Blue Hens, led by All-Americon center Paul Chesmore, were simply too tough. The score, 30-0, was indicative. Quarterbock Les Kish holds his Most Valuable Player trophy after the Lafayette game. FROSH RECORD LEHIGH OPPONENT Delaware 27 8 Rutgers 15 7 Bucknell 6 Pennsylvania 6 7 Lafayette 6 Fullback Mike Noel (11) looks for a hole as guard John Tench (65) takes out a Davidson defender. Jake LaMotta drives for yardage. SaSL.. Davidson back is greeted by a host of Engineer tacklers; Tony Hrincevich (77), Howard Hop- son (38), Chuck Ortlam (88), Hal Yeich (33) and Jake LaMotta (45). Quarterback Bob Draucker (22) fires one to George Budd (84) os Mike Noel (11) runs interference. The following Saturday the Engi- neers traveled to Ithaca with a new offense, featuring captain Joke La- Motta at a slot halfback position, to meet Jake Wood and his Red Raid- ers. Although the defense held up well in the first half, it crumbled ear- ly in the third period when the Big Red came through with a few sur- prises of their own — a draw-trap and an 88-yard return by Wood on the second half kickoff: Cornell 24, Le- high 0. The gridders then returned home to meet Gettysburg. The first half looked like a repeat of the Delaware game: the Engineers went into the locker room down by 1 8 points. But they came through in the second half with their first scores of the season to take a momentary lead. The first touch- down was due to the heads-up play of LoMotta, who snagged an apparently incomplete pass after a Gettysburg de- fender hod batted it out of the hands of Joe Walton in the Bullet end zone. The second score was set up by Ade- laar ' s 52-yard runbock of an inter- ception. The Packers recovered a fum- ble and took the lead. But an 84- yard pass from Vance Johnston tc flankerbock Dale Boyd gave the Bul- lets a 24-20 victory. The 0-3 Engineers then met the Scarlet Knights of Rutgers. In spite of 13 of 20 pass completions by soph- Jake LaMotta skirts the right end. VARSITY RECORD LEHIGH OPPONENT Delaware 30 Cornell 24 20 Gettysburg 24 6 Rutgers 30 21 Columbia 42 6 Colgate 20 3 Davidson 7 12 Bucknell 34 15 Lafayette 8 Mike Noel (11) finds room up the middle after a hand-off from Bob Draucker (22). First Row: Draucker, Tucker, Miller, DeVeau, Noel, DeNoia, LoMatto, Weis, Merchant, Ortlam. Second Row: Evans, Yeich, Adams, Yots, Rizzo, Rushong, Hopson, Kish, Fegley, Holt. Third Row: Wompler, Koch, Tench, Frazier, Bockrcth, Smith, Meadowcroft, Peters, Barnes, Adelaar. Fourth Row: Resslar, McCleery, Shane, Hrincevich, Ericson, Rees, Nisch- witz, Thorpe, Korff. Fifth Row: DeVinney, Lindemuth, Lyons, Wendlandt, Hirschhorn, Mayhew, Palevich, Budd, Walton. Sixth Row: D. King, Student Manager; Edward G. Win- chester, Assistant Freshman Coach; Francis J. Shields, Freshman Coach; George F. Halfacre, Bockfield Coach; C. Horry Bush, Line Coach; Michael T. Cooley, Head Coach; Edward Hudak, Interior Line Coach; Ralph A. Jelic, End Coach; D. Sterner, Student Manager; Emil A. Havach, Head Trainer; Michael W. LoPorto, Assistant Trainer. 188 Hal Yeich (33) drives up the middle with blocking from Tom Barnes (53), John Tench (65), Wil Wompier (63) and Bob Adelaar (59). George Budd (84) fights for poydirt as Steve Palevich (86) follows up. 22 1 3, 30 -IB,,. omore quarterback Les Kish, who piled up 175 yards total offense, the En- gineers succumbed 30-6. The Packers then moved on to Co- lumbia and Archie Roberts. Junior Mike Noel ran a kickoff back 80 yards for a touchdown in the first quarter, and later Noel took a hand- off from LaMotta and scampered 85 yards for another score. In the third quarter LaMotta weaved 40 yards to score on a punt return, but it wasn ' t enough: Columbia 42, Lehigh 21. The following week the team re- turned home from the sunny South with a 7-3 loss to Davidson. The Pack- ers led most of the way on Walton ' s 20-yard field goal in the first period. The climate was even worse in Lew- isburg where Bucknell romped to a 34-12 victory. One of the few bright spots was the play of Kish who hit for six of eight passes on an 89-yard scoring drive in the fourth quarter. It was Kish again as the Engineers won their first gome of the season and their fourth straight victory over Laf- ayette, 1 5-8. The Leopards tried ev- erything, including a single wing, but they could not stop the Packers, who rolled up 301 yards on the ground. Behind 8-0, Kish drove the Engineers :j Guord John Tench Joe Walton (80) crashes through to crush Davidson back. SiW End Joe Walton J- « Fullback Mike Noel Bob Draucker (22) lets one fly while Jake LoMotta (45), Russ Lyons (85) and Mike Noel form a protective pocket. Tockle Bill DeVinney Les Kish runs the option. End Chuck Ortlam Jake LoMotta (45) looks for running room after hand-off from Bob Draucker (22) and block from Will Wampler (63). Tony Hrcnevich (77) spins off to help Chuck Ortlam (88) as Joke LoMotta (45) moves up. 191 78 yards for eight points early in the third period. In the fourth quarter, four plays after a recovered fumble, LaMotta hit off right tackle for the winning touchdown. Kish was the unanimous choice for the Outstand- ing Player award, the first sopho- more to win the coveted trophy. He also led the team in total offense for the season with 508 yards, followed by sophomore quarterback Bob Drauc- ker with 389 and LaMotta with 273. LaMotta was also high scorer with 18 points. Some say that a win over Lafayette makes for a successful season, but Coach Mike Cooley, his staff and the team agree only to a point. Only eight seniors are leaving, and next year co- captains Chuck Ortlam and Joe Weis will certainly be out for more than a lone triumph over the Leopards. The Monday morning quarterbacks are not the only ones tired of losses . . . and quiet locker rooms. Lehigh Frosh close in on a Delaware boll carrier. v C . Little Engineer snags poss against Deloware. Tom Barnes (53) watches Hal Yeich (33) thwart David- son tackier. Mike Noel (11) breaks into the open after block from Joe Weis (46) as Lehigh team looks on. 192 CROSS COUNTRY Tough competition best describes the 3-5-0 season record )f the 1963 cross country team. Delaware, Pennsylvania and specially Rutgers proved more than Coach Ed Homer ' s larriers could handle. Contributing to the poor performance was a lack of depth. The season began with a nucleus of only nine men. Of hese nine, co-captain Larry Succop brought in four first jiaces and sophomore John Davenport had two first places, iuccop also posted a 27:58 Lehigh team record for the iaucon Valley course which he earned against West Chester itate College. Ralph Young was invaluable to the team. He added ■nough points to give the Engineers a winning margin in ;everal meets. The Brown and White missed the services of Bob Bav- ngton. Sidelined with an ankle injury, Bavington saw action )nly twice in the season. By beating the Leopards, the team closed out in good ityle. Succop took first place, co-captain Davenport was ;econd. Young was third and Nick Kotow finished thirteenth. fter the victory. Homer exclaimed: This win made our leason. Two Lehigh cross-country men work out Ground the hill. HV y 5 ' - • w. • {1 ' ir r . ' - ' _ ■- in : , - ' ; A group of Lehigh horriers and opponents pre- pare for a trot around the scenic Saucon Valley. VARSITY RECORD LEHIGH OPPONENT 50 Deloware 5 23 Muhlenberg 32 50 Rutgers 15 39 West Chester 20 23 Eostern Baptist 32 29 Haverford 28 50 Pennsylvania 15 25 Lofoyette 32 First Row: Bavington, Dovenport. Second Row: Edword J Homer, Cooch; Young, Weiksner, Koton, Succop. SOCCER Headed by fullbacks Carter Daum and Wal ter Fink, and powered by a strong contingent, the Lehigh soccer team compiled a 5-2-3 record this post season. Landing a second place in the MAC right behind a powerful Elizobethtown squad, the booters scored eighteen goals while allowing only nine, an average of only .9 goals per contest. Falling behind their 7-2-1 record for the previous season, the team was hurt by the inexperience of the sophomores on the squad; but with the return of the bottle-hardened sophomores plus the availability of men from the undefeated freshman team, coach William Christian ' s men should be strong contenders for the top honors next year. The most lopsided contest of the season was the 5-0 victory over Muhlenberg in the opening game of the year. Junior forward Dove Korff and goalie Pete Klingensmith were the heroes of the shutout. Korff ' s three goals and Klingensmith ' s eleven saves added to the points scored by Eric Yonkers and captain Howie Segal gave Lehigh its first shutout of four for the season. Lehigh ' s best effort of the year was against powerful Swarthmore, in which the previously unbeaten, untied, and nationally ranked Swarthmore team had to settle for a tie before 3,000 disappointed homecoming fans. Sophomores Tom Best and John Mashologu were the scoring heroes of that game. George Sherwin tries to steal the ball from on opponent. Howard Segal fallows up o shot. VARSITY RECORD LEHIGH OPPONENT 5 1 Muhlenberg Gettysburg 1 Hoverford 3 2 Delaware 1 4 Stevens 1 Rutgers 2 Bucknell 1 1 Lafayette 2 2 Swarthmore 2 Ursinus ■8i:ta C ' f Lehigh defender moves up fast to block a shot. John Moshologo misses a close one. First Row: Boyne, Sherwin, Yonker. Second Row: Stevens, Hodgson, Segol, Louis, Cunes, Moshologo, Korff. Third Row: Dicderich, Manager; Williom T. Christion, Cooch; Klinglng- smith. Boll, Fink, Daum, Kocsemeyer, Hollister, Assistant Manager. aiiRi im iw mm ' «; LEII6S ,. 1EHI6! v HHM , UHI6H , .EHIG; 1 ma f First Row: Warnke, Stuart, Koch, Ferguson, White. Second Row: Gerald G. Leemon, Coach; Schlenker, Smith, Bushner, Giodish, lllengarth, Dwyer, Manager; Edward J. Homer, Freshman Coach. WRESTLING If there is any one time or place when the spirit of Lehigh University con be observed, it is at Grace Hall on any Saturday evening when the Engineers lay their books aside and take time to cheer on one of the finest inter- collegiate wrestling teams in the country. Year in and year out Lehigh has been noted for two things, its fine academic programs and its superb wrestling. The 1963-64 season was no exception. After a slow start Coach Gerry Leeman ' s grapplers fought hard to pave their way to their seventeenth Eastern Intercollegiate Wrest- ling Association Championship and to re-earn their title as First in the East. This year ' s success could be considered as nothing less than a team effort in every sense. There was no Kirk Pendleton on this team, there were only good wrestlers who had to fight constantly for victory. No better example of this fact could be found than in 147-pound EIWA champion and captain of the team Doug Koch. Koch finished the dual meet season with a 11-0-1 record. He compiled all his victories with takedowns, rever- sals, escapes and riding time. He got only one near fall and that was in his 9-2 rout of Larry Nelson of Columbia on his way to his Eastern title. Koch ' s championship bout with George Edwards of Penn State was typical of his hard fought victories throughout the season. With everything tied up LEHIGH 16 10 22 25 27 28 1 1 21 13 30 17 17 LEHIGH 26 34 21 20 23 24 21 22 VARSITY RECORD OPPONENT Cornell 16 Oklohoma 18 Syracuse 11 Penn State 6 Princeton 8 Yale 3 Navy 20 Army 13 Pittsburgh 19 Franklin and Marshall 2 Rutgers 14 Bloomsburg , , . 13 A great coach gives a concerned look. FROSH RECORD OPPONENT Cornell 11 West Chester State , 3 Penn State 12 Princeton 12 Navy 6 Army 13 Franklin and Marshall ... 11 Rutgers 9 Captain Doug Koch is on the woy to another victory in an undefeated season. Freshman Coach Ed Homer adds needed body English. Coptain Doug Koch. Harley Ferguson drives for five points. Rich Warnke going on escape. Harley pushes toward a win over the 1964 Pennsylvania College Champion. at the end of regulation time, Koch quickly escaped in the first overtime period and added a takedown to surge to a 3-0 lead; but Edward escaped twice to move within one point. Having been warned for stalling midway in the second overtime period, Koch proceeded to toke Edwards down again. Although Edwards managed o lost second escape, Koch had won his Eastern crown with a 4-3 decision. The unsung hero of this team was junior 157-pounder Harley Ferguson. Finishing the dual meet season with a 5-4-1 record, Ferguson did not figure to be a threat in the Easterns; but quick wins over Mike Marcontonio of Colum- bia and Joe Eremus of Penn State put him into the semi- finals against last year ' s runnerup Dave Carey of Navy. Then Ferguson pulled one of the biggest upsets of the season and the tournament by soundly trouncing the Middle, 11-2. He wasted no time and quickly took down Carey and rode him for the remainder of the first and most of the second period before Carey escaped. Ferguson escaped in three seconds of the third period and scored a takedown, a predicament and a near fall before Corey could break loose. Although he fin- ished second to Dick Slutzky of Syracuse in the finals, Fergu- son ' s earlier wins were essential to the Lehigh victory. A stalwart throughout the dual meet season was sopho- more Bill Stuart at 130. Finishing the year with a 9-2 log, Stuart won nine straight until he lost to Mike Johnson of Pitt, to whom he later finished second in the Easterns. In the 1963 West Point Plebe Tournament Syracuse ' s Terry Captain Doug Koch receives the 147-pound Eastern Chan pionship Cup. Surprising the eventual Eastern Champion, Ron Bushner keeps the crowd cheering and Franzen working. w Bill Stuort settles bock on his oppo- nent for o pin. Haise beat Stuart by one point, but when the two met in December of this eason, it was all Stuart. He avenged the loss with four takedowns, an escape, predicament points and time advantage; Haise could manage only three escapes. This 9-3 upset was one that led the Engineers to their 22-1 1 route of the 1963 Eastern Champs. Junior Rich Warnke was a consistently fine performer at 123-pounds with an 8-4 record. Although plagued with a shoulder injury throughout the later part of the season, he remained always quick on his feet as was evidenced by his four takedowns in a 12-8 triumph over Joel Melitski of Bloomsburg State in the final dual meet of the season. Another Lehigh grappler was clearly evident in this 17-13 victory, junior John lllengwarth. Big John pinned Tom Vorgo in 7:07 with a cross body hold, to make the fifth time in his career that he had won or tied a match for the Engineers — he has never let them down in the clutch, lllengwarth had a 10-2 record in the regular dual meet season and finished third in the Easterns. His season was high- lighted by eight falls which fell one short of Eddie Eichle- burger ' s record. After his team had won the EIWA Championship, Coach Leeman remarked, John Gladish wrestled under more pres- sure than any other wrestler since I ' ve been at Lehigh with the possible exception of Kirk Pendleton at the Nationals last year. Leeman was talking about his junior 191 -pound wrestler who rode Steve Spears of Temple to a 3-2 victory to clinch the Eastern title for the Engineers. The wrestlers were even on their feet during the first period. Speers was on top to start the second period, but Gladish quickly re- versed him. Speers escaped, but Gladish rode him throughout the third period until Speers escaped with two seconds re- A determined John Gladish gets set during the finals of the Easterns while a discouraged Steve Speers has visions of second place. Freshman Mort McClennan rides his way to another Doug Koch stacks up his opponent. 200 John Gladish applies pressure for that all-important pin. Horiey Furgeson tries to scoot away from his opponent. Freshman Mike Caruso rides out his Rutgers opponent while Coach Gerry Leemon fills in for the missing referee. Trio pf National Champions watch an Engineer on the Kirk Pendleton, Ed Hamer, and Gerry Leeman. Rich Warnke maining. But it was too late. Gladish won, and Lehigh was the 1964 Eastern Champion. There were several other wrestlers that aided the team ' s 8-3-1 dual meet record. Junior Ron Bushner come through with several key victories at 177 including a 6-3 win over Dave Stuemple of Bloomsburg to set the stage for llleng- warth ' s pin. In spite of his 4-5-1 record, junior Bill Lachen- mayr also figured in several important victories. Sophomore John Huff did a fine job at 137 until he was declared scholas- tically ineligible early in the second semester. Senior Larry White and sophomore Dick Smith both did fine jobs by filling in crucial points during the season. The wrestling picture would be incomplete without men- tioing Ed Homer ' s undefeated freshman team. Five of the frosh finished undefeated end two suffered only one loss. Glenn Amsbough had a 7-0 log with four falls at 147; Bob Hartenstine at 157 tied Amsbough in match points with 29, having an identical record. The 177-pounder Larry Gebhordt finished the season with a 7-0-1 record, and Mort McClennon ended the season with a 4-0-1 log at heavyweight by decis- ioning Walt Stosiak of Rutgers in a 23-12 bout. Mike Caruso finished 5-1, Joe Perritore 4-0 and Tony Norducci with a 4-1 slate. It is easy to see why this team has been hailed as the best in the nation. The freshman team finished its season by winning the An obvious bad call brings disapproval from Big John and other team members. John Gladish on his way to an outstanding victory over Rutger ' s Bob Rader. Bill Lachenmoyr looks over one of his oppo- nents in the Easterns. John Gladish Bill Stuart Larry White Bill Stuart plays the takedown game with Mike Johnson of Pitt. Harley Furgeson. John Gladish rides Steve Speers during the finals of the Easterns. John lllengworth. Speed and perfect timing give Harley Furgeson one of his favorite takedowns. John lllengworth works on his Penn State opponent. Bill Stuart works hard to set up his pancGl e. Glen Amsbaugh drives for a pin over his Penn State opponent. The latest in a string of dependable captains, Doug Koch comes in for two. Doug Koch counters the reversal attempt. Ron Bushner Bill Stuart looki over his oppenent, and vice versa. Doug Koch follows his man during a preliminary bout at the Eosterns. j .■3 C; Rich Warnke rides out his opponent. 208 In an upset bout, John Huff comes out as he defeats his highly favored opponent. A proud coach ond a happy captain smile as they receive Lehigh ' s 17th EIWA championship trophy. A look of anguish comes over Ron Bushner ' s face OS he drops his first match in the East- erns to Jerry Franzen of Navy. Hoppiness is the quickest pin. Freshman Joe Coprio has done just that. Plebe Tournament at West Point with four firsts and three seconds. Mike Caruso, Glenn Amsbaugh, Joe Perritore and Mort McClennan took individual championships and Bob Dietz, Bob Hortenstine, and John Bisset captured seconds. Caruso gained the Most Outstanding Wrestler Award mainly on the basis of his 10-4 rout of Garth Fowler. The Army 123-pounder hod nine consecutive falls (including one over Caruso) before succumbing to the Engineer lightweight. The varsity wrestlers ended their season with an eleventh place in the NCAA championship tournament. Only Doug Koch and John Gladish placed, with John lllengwarth and Bill Stuart advancing to the quarter-finals before being eliminated. Gladish took a sixth place at 1 91 pounds. The highlight of the Nationals for Lehigh was an im- pressive third place finish by Doug Koch. Koch won five and dropped one on his way to third place and finished the season with a 20-1-1 record, the loss and tie coming to NCAA chomp Jerry Stanley of Oklahoma. Koch decisioned Jim Jioio of West Virginia 3-2, Clayton Beattie of Illinois on a referee ' s decision and Terrell Hays of Arizona State 5-4 to reach the semi-finals. He dropped a 6-2 decision to Stanley but moved into the consolation round where he routed Jim Crider of Colorado State College and decisioned Veryl Long, Iowa State, 3-0 to take third. Undoubtedly, the success of the 1963-64 team was due to an all around team effort. This is what the student body goes to see on those Saturday evenings at Grace Hall. In spite of this team effort, the wrestler is all alone when he steps out onto the mat, and it goes almost without saying that the spirit of the fans is one of the big reasons for the confidence and determination that, when combined with that of his teammates, bring victory. A tired, but completely successful Doug Koch. Freshman Team — First Row: McClennon, Caprio, Amsbaugh, Hortenstine. Second Row: Dietz, Keller, Caruso, Peritore, Gyllenhaol, Stewart. Third Row: Schoumonn, Bisset, Gebhardt, Goss, Borrows, Dietrich, Edward J. Homer, Coach. VtH f lEHIwI 1 i. t t i I mm l-EH J ' « LEHIGH EHIGI LEHIGi ' UKIGB %GH ' Captain Alber stretches out. 6 p 0 First Row: Liedel, Meszon, v onr, Snerman, Yonner. Second Row: Shore, Manager; Sparks, Shearer, Alber, Crooks, Williamson, Koch, John Pocze, Coach. FENCING A young Lehigh fencing team, which will be losing only one senior, finished its season strongly in an 18-9 rout of Muhlenberg in spite of an overall 4-6 record. The squad had o 3-3 record in the Middle Atlantic Conference, losing two meets by the close scores of 14-13 and 15-12. The Engineers finished in fifth place in the conference championships. In the Muhlenberg triumph, the team captured the foil class 7-2, and the saber and epee competition 5-4 and 6-3, respectively. Two victories by junior captain Joe Alber increased his season ' s record to 21-8. Three wins by senior Joe Crooks and a pair each by two other juniors, Eric Yonker and Pete Meszoli, made the victory a runaway. At the Middle Atlantic Conference Championships, two individual medals were awarded to the Engineers in the foil ond epee events. Yonker, with a 9-3 record in the meet, captured the silver medal in foil, which was marked by an unprecedented five-way tie for first place. Alber won the bronze medal as a result of his fine 8-4 performance. Crooks also exhibited good form in capturing seven victories. The most exciting meet of the year, however, was the opening one against Johns Hopkins, the 1962-63 Middle At- lantic Champions. Losing 13-7 and only one bout from defeat, the Engineers swept the last six bouts to eke out a 14-13 victory. Junior Art Shearer turned the tide by cap- turing a 5-3 victory in the saber division. Another junior, Paul Sparks, clinched the win with a 5-4 decision in a bout featuring tw o double touches. The bout was decided in an overtime period since regulation play ended in a 4-4 tie. Too close for comfort as the bout opens up. VARSITY RECORD LEHIGH OPPONENT 14 Johns Hopkins 13 12 Rutgers 15 15 Brooklyn 12 7 Univ. of Penn 20 15 Hoverford 12 12 Drew 15 12 Temple 15 13 Lofoyette 14 13 Stevens 14 18 Muhlenberg 9 The Lehigh Hockey Club finished its 1964 season with three wins and eight losses. The team started slowly due to lack of practice time and failed to win in its first six gomes. The competition against such experienced opposition as Princeton, Lawrenceville and Hill proved invaluable practices and the club finished the season strongly with three victories in five games. Particularly gratifying was a 4-1 win over Lafayette, a consistently tough opponent. The Leopards got their revenge in the last game of the year, a hard-fought contest which Lehigh lost 3-0. Other wins were against Bucknell and the Allentown Huskies. Leading scorer for the season was Mike Paris with nine goals and three assists. His first line produced a total of eleven goals, outpacing the second and third lines which accounted for six goals apiece. John Gundersdorf, a fresh- man defenseman, scored a surprising three goals. Goal- tending chores were shared by senior Dave Ball and sopho- more Dave Seabury. Both turned in fine performances. Boll making 205 saves and Seabury 180. The team continues to suffer from lack of depth. Last year ' s dearth of defensemen was relieved this year by two freshmen, John Gundersdorf and Ed Nowicki, who should strengthen the team for three more years. This year ' s prob- lem was in scoring and in finding adequate personnel to staff three good lines. This year the club received partial support from the Uni- versity, but it still bears the heavy burden of financing its games and travelling expenses. The team looks forward to the day when it will no longer require dues from its play- ers so that it can concentrate on the game of hockey. In the meantime prospects look good for next year since only two members of this year ' s club are graduating seniors. VARSITY RECORD LEHIGH OPPONENT 2 Fronklin and Marshall 6 1 Lawrenceville 3 2 Princeton 13 2 Hill 6 3 Franklin and Marshall 7 1 Bucknell 2 2 Rutgers 4 4 Lafayette 1 5 Bucknell 2 6 Huskies 2 Lafoyette 3 HOCKEY First Row: Seabury, Paris, Burt, Gerstein, Gross, McKay, Morton, Ball, Davis, Manager. Second Row: Ktoepter, Nowicki, Unwin, Gundersdorf, Gates, Morgan, Barker, Henriquez, Johnson. 1 ¥ VARSITY RECORD LEHIGH OPPONENT 1386 Lafayette 1305 1393 U. S. Merchant Marine Academy .... 1396 1350 Bucknell 1411 1389 Drexel 1366 1396 Georgetown 1348 1396 Penn State 1386 1386 1379 1386 Army .... 1457 1381 1444 1401 Villonova .... 1384 In spite of the fact that the Rifle Team hod only four returning lettermen and hod o noticeable lack of sophomores on the squad, it had an impressive 7-4 record. Captain Al Wurzbach led the team in impressive victories over Penn State and VilJanovo. Against Villonova Wurzbach shot a 281 and senior Lan- ning Steitz a 280 to pace the Engineers to what Wurzbach called the highlight of the season. During the fall semester the team narrowly edged Penn State by ten points to give Lehigh its first win over the Nittany Lions in six years. Bob Coates, a junior, fired a 284, while another junior, Paul Donnelly, and senior Bill Valentine both shot ninety-nines from the prone position. Junior Bill Draper held the high match score for the season with a 289. ' As the Epitome goes to press the team still has three matches remaining: the National Champion- ships at Kingsport, Scronton, and Princeton. RIFLE A rifle team member practices for competition at the range in the basement of Lomberton Hall. First Row; Theodore J. Podolsky, Coach; Pennallegon, Val- entine, Homm, Wurzbach, Charles P. McTigue, Assistant Coach. Second Row: Donnelly, Steitz, Cootes, Yesler. Third Row: Knowles Droper. T Dick Ardern lays one up against Rutgers. BASKETBALL Looking back on his fourteenth season as a Lehigh coach, Tony Packer must wonder why he ever took his boys out of Grace Hell. To be sure, there is no place like home where the Engineers posted a fine 5-5 record. On the road the team was unable to win a single ballgame. Although this year ' s squad posted the least number of victories of any squad under Coach Packer ' s tutelage, it was a sophomore- junior dominated team and can look for much improvement next year. The final record (5-17) was not indicative of the de- velopment of the young Engineers. After a poor start in which they dropped their first nine games, they finished well, winning five of the last thirteen games. Important to Lehigh fans was the improvement of Jock Air as the season progressed. Big Jack began to get maximum use of his height and midway through the season he showed signs of developing into a big scorer. On four occasions he hit 24 points and on three others he topped 20 points. With an added season of experience, he should be the power needed to drive the Engineer machine next year. Some milestones were reached in the course of the season. Most significant was the selection of junior guard Dick Ardern for the weekly all-East squad in January. Ar- , dern earned this distinction with his outstanding play against ( Colgate and Franklin and Marshall on successive evenings. Against Colgate, Ardern hit for 30 points including six foul shots in the last minute to preserve the first Engineer victory. The 30 points represented the season high for a Lehigh ballplayer. The next eveing he added 18 points to his total, and broke up the Dips full court press with his excellent ball handling. Ardern was the first Engineer to be accorded this honor since Norm Brandl. Closing their season against Rutgers in Grace Hall, the Big Brown continued their dominance over the Scarlet five, taking their fourteenth consecutive home victory by a score of 76-69. Paced by the 6 ' 8 Air who had 23 points, the Engineers grabbed an early lead and hung on to end the season on a winning note. Rather than put a full team of inexperienced under- classmen on the court together. Coach Packer turned to his VARSITY RECORD LEHIGH OPPONENT 38 Army 75 65 Delaware 68 38 Temple 66 61 Muhlenberg 66 40 LaSalle 68 41 lona 66 46 Lafayette 56 22 Gettysburg 44 46 St. Joseph ' s 66 81 Colgate 78 78 Franklin Marshall 54 40 Penn State 79 56 Columbia 53 56 Lafayette 74 45 Gettysburg 50 58 Lafayette 71 53 Rutgers 71 66 Muhlenberg 80 68 Bucknell 72 69 Delaware 87 62 Bucknell 51 76 Rutgers 69 FROSH RECORD 79 Delaware 72 71 Muhlenberg 57 62 Gettysburg 68 55 St. Joseph ' s 107 76 Franklin Marshall 55 69 Lafayette 62 62 Gettysburg 68 58 Lafayette 79 77 Rutgers 103 84 Muhlenberg 83 57 Bucknell 88 59 Delaware 66 57 Bucknell 88 80 Rutgers 104 Jim Clancy drives for two points. John Delaney and Phil Bulliner scrap for the ball with Bucknell. Jack Air tries to stop Gettysburg. two seniors, John Delaney and Tim Mock. Both responded ably. Moci , a guard, took some of the pressure off his run- ning mate, Dick Ardern, and enabled the latter to gradually accustom himself to the role of playmoker. Mock carried his share of the offensive burden and in crucial situations, be- came the man to whom the Engineers turned for the one shot. Delaney, though hampered by a pulled thigh muscle the entire season, gave a good account of himself as a re- bounder and defensive player. At times the Big Brown was its own toughest opponent. The inability to organize into a smooth running unit took much of the pressure off rival defenders. Instead of balanced scoring, one or two individuals carried the brunt of the at- tack and defensing it became less difficult. When a balanced attack was put together, the results were gratifying. Against the N.l.T.-bound Hawks of St. Joseph ' s, sound team play kept Lehigh in the running until the Philadelphia quintet ' s superior height and bench strength took the game out of reach. For once graduation will not strip the team of its high scorer and rebounder. The nucleus of a winning squad will return with added experience. Additional help is expected from the members of a talented freshman squad. Such out- standing frosh as Bill Washychyn and Barry Frey along with Tom Bennett and others con be counted on to give an extra touch of brightness to the future basketball picture. The combination of young talent and accomplished hardcourt veterans should make Lehigh a team to reckon with next season. At least the prospects for a successful season ore better than they hove been in quite a while. Fighting for the ball under the boards. First Row: Mclnerny, Pryimo, Ardern, Feinberg, Budd. Second Row: Ackermon, Manager; Deloney, Air, Bulliner, Mock, Anthony Packer, Coach. Tim Mock tries a layup against Muhlenberg. Dick Ardern drives past Columbia defenders for two points. Jock Air finds himself between Laf- ayette defenders. John Delaney fights for the rebound. Jock Air pulls the boll down from o Gettysburg defender John Deloney goes for two ogoinst Lofoyette. 219 SWIMMING A tired notator nearing the finish. Sophomore Chorlie Lane. H jjirT- t -un 3=SP Shouting encouragement to a teammate are the other mem- bers of the swimming team. VARSITY RECORD Getting off to o good stort. LEHIGH OPPONENT 621 2 Delaware 32 ' 2 35 Colgate 60 35 Army 60 32 Pittsburg 63 31 Syracuse 64 25 Bucknell 70 57 Lafayette 38 41 Rutgers 54 43 Univ. of Pennsylvania 51 56 Columbia 39 X u ■The start of the 200-yard medley. For the second straight year the swimming team foiled to appear impressive in the won and lost column, but led by Captain Ken Heist and sophomore Charlie Lone, the Engineers continued to rewrite the record books. Bucknell soundly trounced the Engineers 70-25, but not before Lane smashed two Lehigh records in the 200-yord individual medley relay and the 200-yard backstroke. Lone was on outstanding performer throughout the season. Later in the year he combined with Dove Trogesser, Andy Jansons, and Heist to set a pool and school record in the 400-yard medley relay against Lafayette. In the Pittsburg meet, which also spelled defeat for the Brown and White, 63-32, another sophomore, Stewart Early, swam the 500-yard freestyle in a record time of 6;02.7. One of the few real bright spots for the entire team during its 3-7 season was o 57-38 triumph over Lafayette. Along with the record breaking effort of the relay team. Early grabbed o second and sophomore Charlie Whittmon a third in the 200-yard freestyle. Early also finished second and Craig Kozlowski third in the 500-yard freestyle in which Lafayette ' s Tom Bement set a new record. Sophomore Bruce Steever took a first in the 50-yard freestyle, and junior Joe Lollande followed him up in second. Heist won the 200-yard butterfly, in which he holds the school record: John Naughton finished third in the event. Laird Doubenspeck and Linton Sheppard placed second and third, respectively, in the diving compe- tition. Finally, in the Middle Atlantic Conference Swimming and Diving Championships, Lehigh tied the Leopards for third place in the University division in competition held in the MyrI Jacobs Memorial Pool. First Row: Naughton, Kozlowski, Tragerer, Prutzman. Second Row: Doubenspeck, Jansons, Heist, Zarins, Scholz, Brewer. Third Row: Brozmon, Manager; Lane, Steever, Wittman, Lolande, Early, John DeBa. ' ' badillo, Assistant Coach; Williom Christian, Head Coach. n p r f ; •, ii ' ' ORGANIZATIONS w- forced -j-°  JS v ' V.fstdir:us, be ob,e ,o institution, or at best musry. . q . exercise his specie, f V university ' s so-called academic interests. It ' . e ds are fulfilled. extra-curricular ° g°- ° ' °:; . ' ' a ' nations which provide Lehigh maintams a f . ,f every interested varied activity schedule to f. ' 1 ' ' ° ,nd musical student. These run the 9°7 ° .J° , ' ,d well coordinated organizations all the way up to lectve and student-faculty standmg ° J ' ' ' l e desires or is participate in whatever type of ° - J , qualified for at a time level which he ca , ' Several facets of Lehigh ' s systern o- P- ent . _ elemental stage of f. j fored French Club, but ;-:-- t: : ::;osUh- ° erhaps the one realty ' ;- ,[:;;, ude .e seen within the system is the ro er apath. , , toward many of the already w student body in general ; When the organizations at Lehigh P . general, the Student Activities Committee mus ?n particular. This joint -° ' , ° ,„ subordinate system itself, acts as the - f ton Par, the Student groups. Under the direction of Dean Piston , Ltivities Co - -prop lates nnoney :i?hT;trs;st:m. Cnrzat,ons ore its subjects and orgoni- zation its function. 224 ARCADIA Seated: Meszoly, ZaII, Digilio, Kahlow, Harper Erb, Early, Poscover, Mor. Standing: Mormon, Poyne, Anagnoson, The fall Arcadia elections were rocked by the develop- ment of a political party, and its marginal victory. The party, which went under the guise of the Lehigh Student Action Party, was organized to combat the growing apathy in Arcadia, and was actually an outgrowth of the student rights subcommittee of the governing body itself. Whether the liberalizing trend of Arcadia recently is a result of the development of the party is hard to say. It is probably not the sole cause, but a contributing factor. The fact remains that this year ' s Arcadia appears so far to have done for more than the usual spring group. Arcadia has taken a stand on the issue of civil rights, on a notional plane, ond this is a novelty in Lehigh student government. This change con perhaps best be described as a result of the gradual transformation coming about over recent years. The institution of a student rights committee a few semesters ago is indicative of this trend. Out of it came LSAP and a more active Arcadia. 225 Every governing body needs a group of workers, and Arcadia Associates ore the workers for the Lehigh stu- dent body. This group of interested students does as much in the way of assistance for Arcadia as the student-faculty committees do for the student body in general. Before there can be a resolution made on any subject, say discipline, there must be extensive research done and the facts thus obtained must be coordinated. This job is done by the associates. The Arcadia Food For Freedom campaign, for which much collection had to be done, was handled in part by the associates in their function of lessening the burden on the elected officers of the student governing body. First Row: Casolo, Root, Miller, Poscover. Second Row: Deckman, Schneider, Schaeffer Kemp, Jennings. Third Row: Pond, Evans, Swortz, Shepard, Edmunds. ARCADIA ASSOCIATES Town students at most universities are at a dis- advantage when it comes to many campus activities. Because they live at their separate homes and not in groups as do the residence halls and fraternity men, they lack the chance to get to know each other well. Because they are usually away from the campus in the evening when most of the extra-curricular activi- ties take place, they lack the opportunity to become acquainted with these activities. However, due to the presence of Town Council, such a disadvantage does not exist at Lehigh. Town Council, more im- portant to the town student than IFC is to the fra- ternity man or RHC to the dorm resident, is open to all students of Lehigh who reside in the Lehigh Val- ley. It gives its members a voice on Arcadia, an and a chance to engage in intramural sports as a group. Town Council is also of great help to the town student when it comes to taking part in an active col- lege social life. At such times as houseparty and Lafayette Weekend, Town Council organizes parties and picnics for its members. To the average resident student at Lehigh, Town Council means some or- ganization that has something to do with the locker room in the basement of the U.C. To the town stu- den, though. Town Council is one of Lehigh ' s most important organizations. TOWN COUNCIL First Row: Payne, Schrontz, Kontrovich, Dutt, Magyarics, Wiedl. Second Row; Asam, Hoffner, Horvath, Schweitzer, Grim, Sugra. Third Row: Bieok, Rush, Chipser. The junior class can boast of having the largest treasury held by any class at Lehigh at any equivalent point in its career. This accumulation, according to President John Harper and the other class officers, is due largely to the very successful Ray Charles concert held in the fall, coupled with other such ventures in previous years. This money goes for various uses, among them various campus causes, and the annual class banquet. This year the class cabinet gathered for a dinner at mid-term with the new dean of the Col- lege of Business Administration, Dean Tripp, as guest speaker. At the end of the year at the class banquet, a nationally known figure was asked to speak to the class. In its sponsoring of Spring Houseparty, the class attempted a new activity to re place the tra- ditional dance on Friday evening, poorly attended in recent years. Held instead was a combination folk music concert and informal dance. This was thought to hove a greater appeal, at the same time to be more economical. The Class of 1965 so far has been a success- ful and united group. CLASS OF 1965 228 Hobson, Treasurer; Miller, Vice-President; Har- per, President; Kampmeinert, Secretary. First Row: Root, Miller, Vice-President; Tedesko, Komm, Rizzo, Daubenspeck, Bingler, Skinner, Casolo, Lipton. Second Row: Petti- sonl, Ditlow, Riley, Forbrich, Henderson, Hatab, Grosz, Siegel, Silva, Hobson. Third Row: Farina, Schweithelm, Stever, Myers, Harper, President; Kampmeinert, Secretary; Allyn, Roman, Kelly. Fourth Row: Goettge, Parsons, Mosher, Lauer, Frutchey, Weiner, Sturcke, Leicht, Evans. Fifth Row: Lindergren, Bulliner, Bernstein, Day. 229 McAllister, Secretary; Goldman, President; Etzel, Treosurer; Rlzzo, Vice-President, CLASS OF 1966 First Row: Culver, Robbins, Anselmo, Lister, Rizzo, Sheppord, Lentz, Goldmann, Poscover, McAllister. Second Row: Adelaor, Popek, Van Kirk, Baird, Fields, Adams, Ulrich, Kemp, Fuller, Stevens. Third Row: Early, Newton, Etzel, Underkoffler, Rothermel, Long, Campbell, Nelson, Single- ton, Evans. After completing a banner freshman year, the Centennial Class of 1966 went on to more suc- cessful endeavors as sophomores. The Class had the distinction of being the first class to write and put into effect a constitution, outlining the prin- ciples upon which the class government will act. Another first for the Centennial Class was its participation in the Centennial Convocation in early fall. Members of the class served as ushers to insure the smooth running of the Con- vocation. On the social side of class activities, the pro- gram of the Centennial Class was very enter- taining and also a financial success. The Josh White Concert was shrewdly scheduled on the some weekend as the Army wrestling match, and resulted in a record turnout. Fun was hod by all as Josh White presented additional entertain- ment in the form of the Just Four and Alix Dobkin. Concluding the activities of the class, a Ban- quet was held in the spring for all members. The guest speaker was Judge Ganey, a Lehigh grad- uate of the Class of 1920 and U. S. circuit court judge who handed down the decision in the Gen- eral Electric price fixing case. Following his speech, members of the class questioned Judge Ganey on many topics of current interest. With valuable experience gained by another year at Lehigh, the Centennial Class is looking forward to two more successful years at the University. ' ■' ♦ ' , %, , i % «. .1 t ' f ? ?• 231 Schulman, Treasurer; York, Vice-President; Brumberg, President; Casale, Secretary. CLASS OF 1967 The class of ' 67 rushed headlong Into its col- lege career on September 7, 1963 and some of its members haven ' t been seen since. However, the majority decided to stick around to see what Lehigh had to offer. They found that the first thing Lehigh provided was the inevitable dink, which made what probably was its most abbre- viated appearance in years. Cyanide energetic- ally did nothing to correct the situation. For some unknown reason, these frosh decided to study and pulled an exorbitantly high class average their first semester. This situation was thoroughly investigated and a return to normal is expected soon. Under the capable leadership of President Dennis (Rebel) Brumberg and the Class Cabinet, the class of ' 67 did itself proud in several areas. One huge success was the Class Banquet at which Lehigh ' s President Neville spoke on education and future Lehigh expansion. In an attempt to fertilize the barren social life of the frosh, open sections were instituted on an experimental basis at the beginning of Spring semester. These entail the entertaining of women in the freshmen dorms from 4-6 on Sat- urday afternoons. Naturally, these tete-a-tetes are supervised by those fothers-away-from-home, the Gryphons. 232 First Row: Simpson, Schulman, Nunemacher, Pfunder, Casale, York, Levy, Zug, Ciompa. Second Row: Bradley, Dietrich, Goss, Weseman, Beam, Coulston, Peterson, Barr. Third Row: Duchynski, Bott, Oyler, Lee, Sirota, Van Der Ave, Gunwaldsen, Snyder, Donnelly. v First Row: Neimeier, Harrington, Moose, Myers, Secretary-Treasurer; Libsch, President; Knight, Vice-President; Tschampion, Booth, Earthy. Second Row: Whittcker, Kendig, Bender, Johnson, Graf, Kosel, Reichard, Collopy. Third Row: Bolyn, Vines, Petke, Leininger. ALPHA PHI OMEGA Were it not for the Lehigh chapter of Alpha Phi Omega, quite a few organizations would have a hard time putting on concerts and lectures, since an adequate ushering force would be hard to find. Yet, providing the necessary ushers for university sponsored functions, is merely one of the many service functions APO performs for Lehigh. The semester used book sale, sponsored by APO, attracts many students, and saves them, quite often, a great deal of money on the cost of needed books. APO as a service fraternity does its job well, and is to be thanked by all students. ,ffr Seated: Grudin, David M. Greene, Chairmon; Ripple. Sta nding: Dawson, Stever, John A. Von Eerde, Bennett. Seated: Clarence B. Campbell, Preston Porr, Robert S. Sprague, Kligora, Digilio. Standing: Nicholas W. Bolobkins, Wallace J. Richardson, Choirman; Richard J. Redd, Lang, Goldmonn. The group of student-faculty com- mittees at this university is perhaps one of the most worthwhile groups that have been instituted. These commit- tees are generally made up of both students and faculty members, all of whom have equal voting privileges. They cover such areas as student life, student activities, performing arts, the University Center and publications. Besides giving the student body a voice in Lehigh affairs, the commit- tees themselves offer their student members the opportunity to get to know well members of the faculty, understand better how a university community exists, and contribute their talents, in a constructive way to the university. Membership on combined commit- tees gives an element of experience to the student which is helpful in later committee contacts. In sharing in the problems of organization and the de- velopment of a program, taking the Committee on the Performing Arts for instance, the Lehigh student member learns how contacts ore mode and events arranged. STUDENT LIFE COMMITTEE COMMITTEE ON PERFORMING ARTS STUDENT ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE First Row: William L. Quay, William A, Smith, Jr Arthur P. Gardner, Burakoff. Second Row; Evans, Blair. BOARD OF PUBLICATIONS Seated: Robert J. Sullivan, Ernest Dilworth, Chairman; George P. C-jnrad. Standing: Matt- son, Ceilings. 236 UNIVERSITY CENTER ADVISORY COMMITTEE Seated: Freund, Sundlie, Vornum. Standing: Kontrovich, Belletti, Digilio. DISCIPLINE COMMITTEE Seated: Voris V. Latshaw, John A. Hertz, J. Doulgos Leith. Standing: Marmon, Decker. 237 Editor Ned Tenthoff and Managing Editor George Feissner pause in their discussion long enough to grimmace at the photographer. Business Manager Rich Davis spends long hours trying to keep the Epitome out of the red. The wearing of the green is the rule when Publisher ' s Rep- resentative Bill O ' Connor shows up. He and Scheduling Editor Ints Kampars try to track down people for group pictures. The Business Staff knows darn well thot there was more money lost time they looked. Left to right: Steve Schreiber, Iro Polon, Ted Loguerre, and Sandy Miller. Managing Editors Don Wood and Ron Casper try to look busy. We all like to cry the blues, and an article on one ' s own staff provided the perfect opportunity. There are many blues to be cried — lock of credit, a lack of incentive to attract a large staff, a staff that is willing to work on the lower levels, etc. — but now that the book is done, why cry? Publishing a yearbook is an experi- ence not soon to be forgotten, as edi- tor Ned Tenthoff has found out. The worry of getting the book to the stu- dents by Flagpole Day, the perennial goal, the problem of keeping together well-coordinated staffs, and the big worry of doing all of the work that must be done, while maintaining a decent scholastic average — all con- front the editorial staff of the Epitome. What is the outcome of the whole mess? The end product is one four hundred page book for the Lehigh student and a feeling of great accomplishment. Bob Brown and Identificotion Editor Al Dugon wonder where they will get on identification for those pictures. J. Jeffrey Stives, Editor-in-Chief. Dulicai, Pheian, Reomy, Gutsche. BROWN AND WHITE The Brown and White is Lehigh ' s only major opinion media. Heretofore the paper has been criticized on many sides for its reluctance to take a stand on issues either local or outside cam- pus. This image is being shattered through the efforts of such people as this year ' s editor, J. Jeffrey Stives, and James Dulicai. A column written by Dulicai, called the Lookout, added on element of constructive criticism to the paper that it had never before hod. Dulicai dealt cynically with subjects ranging from freshman dating at Lehigh to civil rights on the notional scene. Al- though the column jabbed at quite a few people at the school, Dulicoi ' s experiment has worked, and it has gotten some favorable results. It is, we can hope, just a beginning, and it is a good one. The Brown and White is an excel- lent newspaper (an Associated Collegi- ate Press All-American ), and it is rapidly developing into on effective organ of opinion. Gorr, Ross, Hammond. 240 Hylton, Marshall, Lewan- dowski, Gee, Wentworth. Anderson, Marshall, Robert J. Sullivan, Advisor; Tschampion. Marshall, Wentworth, Lewondowski. Don Reynolds, Station Manager. Mark Matig, Progrom Director. WLRN The campus radio station offers men who are interested in communi- cations, electronics, sales or speech an opportunity to practice their avocation in a realistic circuit system on campus. WLVR, its subsidiary, operates on a pseudo-FM format. Due largely to the fact that the radio station has no license, it cannot broadcast except over a closed circuit, and thus its listening audience is very limited. It is unfortunate, in a sense, that this is the case, since a college radio station could be an effective opinion medium. Each year, however, more steps are made toward the goal, and it may yet be realized. In the WLRN shop, one engineer assembles a new remote unit, while the other two try to figure out why the station went off the air the last time. .VLRN jozz expert Bill Lowe checks out the latest ship- -;nt of LP ' s. First Row: Foshog, Wright, McCloud, Morse, Matig. Second Row: Silva, Grossman, Mixson, Kratt, Lowe, Szulborski. Seated: Bricker, Gorber, Standing: Rust, Feinberg. ENDOR Reinhart, Sindel. Lehigh has two literary publications, Endor, which exists for the publication of poetry and prose fiction, and the Lehigh Review, in which are published articles of an informative nature, technical expositions and so forth. Endor is the most recent addition to Lehigh ' s family of publications. The magazine is handicapped unfortunately, by a sort of apathy which exists at Lehigh. The contributions are written by a minority of students and faculty members. Fortunately, this year showed a marked number of new contributors, mainly from the student body. If the number continues to grow, Endor may in a short time become a really excellent literary magazine. The Review, on the other hand, has been a firmly estab- lished publication for quite some time. The articles and reviews in it have been of consistently high quality, and the photography, especially on the cover, is often excellent. The Lehigh Review is easily a fine publication, and people inter- ested in critical journalism can take advantage of the opportunity to publish in it. LEHIGH REVIEW Dowson, Jansons, Russ, Fry, Gordon. Rockwood, Bender, Davis, Montgomery, Westhorp, Day, Blunt, Vines. CHRISTIAN COUNCIL CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION First Row: Middleton, Vannan, Itzel, Robert B. Cutler, Advisor. Second Row: Wackermann, Schopbach, Rockwood, Rein, Watson, Schick. First Row: Levy, Monson, Kaplan, Doniel. Second Row: Mishkin, Shumofsky, Kutzen, Neuman. H I I I Fl FOUNDATION INTERFAITH COUNCIL First Row: Montgomery, Shumofsky, Ludt, Monson. Second Row: Day, Gorski, Brink, Blunt, Lipton. LEHIGH CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP Firsf Row: Laverty, Denlinger, President; Massey, Clouser, Widman, Beltz. Second Row: Boder, Treasurer; Stamoolis, Stewart, Douglas, Trevethan, Nace. Seofed: Lynch, Rev. Donald R. Good, Advisor; Paul Vines, President. Standing: Bender, Burg, Vice-President; Knudson. LUTHERN STUDENT FELLOWSHIP 247 METHODIST STUDENT MOVEMENT First Row: Lucuski, Brown, Bender, Davis. Second Row: Neimeier, Kendig, Petke, Laverty. First Row: Mascavage, Voelcker, George L, Smith, Jr., Advisor; Goetz, DeAngelo, Kitlas, Rev. Gerard J. Lavery, Chaplain; Tiefenbrunn, Brink, Kotow, Reiily Second Row: Ludt, Romig, Carroll, Keeney, Pansini, Morel, DeBenigno, Morrison, Harrington, Goski, Kuebler. Third Row: Zukoski, Abromoitis, Kotrobo, Szabo, Winter, Weiskopf, Weber, Johnson, Oyler, Walsh. NEWMAN CLUB SKI CLUB First Row: Cameron, Tedesko, President; Hall, Miller, Rizzo. Second Row: Cavanaugh, Best, Sturcke, Vice-President; Dobkin, Von Seelen. Third Row: Fales, Hovik, Sawyer, Orban. Fourth Row: Hastings, Van De Velde, Walsh, Walton. First Row: Stanley, de Egan-Wyer, Persson, Ericson, Dorlington. Second Row: Sterling, Mc- Gough, Wallaert, Long, De Paul, Seaman, Kern. Third Row: Wick, D ' Huy, Rathke, Jalazo, Greenberg, Ornstein, Lentz. Fourth Row: Hartranft, Nutt, Wolfert, Albright, Heffner, Adams, Corrado. DAMES CLUB LEHIGH OUTING CLUB First Row: Attermeyer, Marx, Morton, Scarpulla. Second Row: Libsch, Mock, McNickle, Vesper, Hafler, Jones. First Row: Hsiang, Grant, Parekh, Zito, Bonard, Weston, Bird, Skiba, Molter, Molter. Second Row: Fueyo, Yen, Seshan, Seshan, Shroff, Ho, Hansen. Third Row: Hylton, Roy, de la Moro, de la Mora, Miksitz, Tomerler, Sawyer. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB Close up of Benvolio and Mercutio in Romeo und Julia. First Row: Arthur P. Gardner, Advisor; Stever, Zarins, Histond, Eckbreth, Henkel. Second Row: Libsch, Anderson, Peduzzi, Zerdy, Williams, Hoeveler, Hansen. The Germon Club hos continued its emphasis on special interest activities. One regular activity is a weekly German Table Wednesday evenings in the Asa Packer Room. A traditional German Christmas party, a concert outing to hear the Philadelphia Orchestra, and a presentation of a German film version of Buddenbrooks have highlighted the year. In May the Club plans to present its fourth annual dramatic production, a play by Swiss dramatist Friedrich Durrenmatt. GERMAN CLUB The Uuke and his court watch as Thesbe mourns over her dead Pyramus in the lost act of Shakespeare ' s Ein Sommer- nochtstroum, presented by the members of the German Club lost April together with scenes from Act II of Romeo und Julio and from Schiller ' s Wilhelm Tell. A versotile Lehigh student as Thesbe in Ein Sommernochtstraum. 251 The Lehigh University Glee Club has continued to uphold its fame as a fine musical organization, deserving of its reputation as a fine interpreter of choral music. Perhaps the outstanding performance of the year was Christmas Vespers at which the group, in combination with the Vassar College Choir, sang Anton Vivaldi ' s Gloria. The capacity audience learned that a University with no music major does not have to be void of fine musical groups. The Glee Club did not prepare a big work for the Spring semester this year, since it had the honor to be chosen to perform at the Hollins College workshop for sacred music, which was directed this year by Dr. G. Wallace Woodworth, conductor emeritus of the Harvard Glee Club. This proved to be one of the most rewarding experiences of the entire year for the men in the club. During Spring vacation, as usual, the Glee Club toured Puerto Rico. This, the third trip of its kind by the group, was no less of a thrill than the others. By now the Club is fairly well known on the island, and its reputation has been firmly established. The lack of Freshman Week next year, and thus the lack of time for a camp and freshman recruitment, may make director Robert R. Cutler ' s job more difficult. Let us hope that this problem will not affect the quality of this fine organization. The Glee Club had time for relaxation as well as singing on their trip to Puerto Rico last Spring Vacation. First Row: Crawford, Peduzzi, Clemens, Brong, Hall, DeVore, Lambert, Decker, Goldman. Second Row: Falusy, Sellman, Simonsen, Fletcher, Best, Schildknecht, Alper, Roca. Third Row: Grayson, Lewis, Martin, May, Franceski, Vlasak, Dahl, Evens, Miller, Underkoffler, Buck. Fourth Row: Zachery, Nordt, Dempsey, Allport, Varnum, Simsak, Miller, Kriedler, Kligora, Roberts, Galloway. rt ' V GLEE CLUB A rehearsal in Grace Hall before a con- cert. Professor Cutler spends most of his time shaking his fists at the Glee Club for one reoson or onother. 253 ■? Ik 1 ■1 - n j[ jpR H fF - . ' The last rehearsal before Christmas Vespers with the Vassar Glee Club. Professor Robert B. Cutler, traveling incognito perhaps? Puerto Rico has many sights and at- tractions for the adventurous Lehigh man. BAND The Lehigh University bond on the field during half time. The Lehigh University Band is generally considered the !st band in the East. This year the marching band, led by urn major Bob Sawyer, thrilled crowds wherever it went, id the concert bond proved its capabilities in numerous incerts. Perhaps the dominant factor in the success of the band its director. Professor Jonathan Elkus. Elkus, a composer in s own right, has been able to create on outstanding bond a school in which music is a purely extracurricular activity. This year the bond received an invitation to play at the Bw York World ' s Fair next October. Considering the usuolly (Qvy football schedule, this concert would moke the semes- r even busier than this year ' s. In the spring the band ' s ncert schedule included concerts in the Lehigh Valley and Goucher College. A special feature initiated several years ago by the wood- nd group from the band, an educational tour of area iblic schools, was continued this year by William Gaik and group of brass musicians. This program, done in connection th the Bethlehem School District, has been immensely ccessful. Bond Comp during Freshman Week is a time of concentroted musical effort with moments of relaxation and shop talk.  f4 s f 257 MUSTARD AND CHEESE Some members of M C rehearse for the spring production, Henry IV, Part 1. First Row: Culver, Johnson, Stev- enson, Wood. Second Row: Vargo, Johnson, Schuck, H. Barrett Davis, Advisor. When people attend a play they enjoy the performance usually without realizing the amount of work, and sometimes heartache, which goes into its production. What also gen- erally remains unrealized is the fact that at Lehigh the vast majority of work, especially at the preliminary planning stages, is done by one man, Professor H. Barrett Davis. From the early selection of ploys for the coming year In the summer to the selection of costumes and the designing of sets, Davis is the coordinator. In the fall, in spite of the unexpected loss of the leading man. Mustard and Cheese Dramatics Club sucessfully staged the contemporary play Mr. Roberts. Bob Karpinsky, a freshman, steped into a leading role at the last minute and did a marvelous job of acting. The spring production, Shakespeare ' s Henry IV, Part I, was staged in April, with Red Culver cast as Folstoff, a part which fit his comic ability beautifully. Prince Hal was Bob Karpinsky, with another freshman, Joe Vargo, cast as the villian. Hotspur. In the year of the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare ' s birth, the play was a fitting tribute to the bard. There is a lot of work to putting on a play, to be sure, but when it is all over, when the audience has been satisfied, the for greater satisfaction goes to the members of Mustard and Cheese in the realization of the completion of their creation. Part of the M C technical crew prepare the scenery for the spring production. Thoburn V. Barker, Technical Ad- visor; Van Den, Chase, Mascavage. 258 The large doors on Lomberton Hall facilitate the construction of sets for the M C plays. M C ' s production of Mr. Roberts was one of the high points of the fall semester. ' ' : :f. ' :■■' ' ■• ' ■' ' l}Vl:iili i 259 ' - 5 ' S.V - ' - ISnp ' ' ' J- , ■■-, .r jiiJ. ' V ' „ . - ' S ' JL ' liJ iJ ' -S • ; .f5f • •MJ - ' ■LIVIKG GROUPS ? , , 2 K 9. £ - Vr - _V:? i i ? The Residence Halls Coun- cil is one of the most vigorous organizations on campus, tak- ing part in most happenings at Lehigh, Besides supporting so- cial events in the dorms, such as the Parents ' Weekend and the Lafayette Weekend cock- tail parties, RHC also serves as a liason between Dean Camp- bell ' s office and the house governments and manages the residence halls concessions system. Outside the immediate en- vironment of the dormitories RHC has in recent years sup- ported such projects as Cross- roads Africa, sending a resi- dence halls student to Africa to take part in that program, and the Concert Lecture Ser- ies, bringing men outstanding in various fields to Lehigh to speak. In closing, the residence halls system is increasing in importance at Lehigh each year, and RHC has shown itself eminently capable of handling the larger role in the University that has come upon it. Architect ' s drawing of the new upper-class dorm complex. RESIDENCE HALLS COUNCIL Sullivon, Treasurer; Meson, President; Hamm, Secretory; McClaren, Huse, Vice-President; Seiden, Meszoly, Bender, Social Chairman. Organized to provide counseling services for the freshman residence halls, the Gryphon Society has become a generally valuable addition to the Lehigh community. Original criteria for selection to the group included scholastic attainment and financial need, but more recently such factors as loyalty to the residence halls program and ability to attract fraternity bids seem to be significant also. In addition to their normal duties, the Society also con- tributed heavily to overall freshman program by conducting reviev sessions before important hour quizzes, supervising freshman soci al life, organizing the Freshman Discussion Series, and initiating the Arcadia Freshman Life Commission, The Society ' s social program consisted of the usual parties as well as combined functions with the Greek element on campus. Gryphon unity was also fostered by the regular din- ners in the Asa Packer Room and the more or less unsched- uled convocations at the large table at the east end of the Johnson Room for all other meals. Although still primarily a local phenomenon, inquiries from other campuses indicate that additional Gryphon organi- zations may be established. First Row: Mor, Del Villano, Bogia, Stiles, Kappler, Yonker, Holt, Almeida, Chamberlin. Second Row: Rather, Underkoffler, Enck, Digilio, Rabinow, Evans, Henderson, Hsiang, Tittle. Third Row: Thomas, Kozlowski, Kish, Doering, Denlinger, Brodish, Yori, Schaefer, Evans, Dowson. Fourth Row: Stecker, Mason, Lover, Dugon, Phillips, Lewis, Palevich, Heiser, Deitrich, Callahan, Early, Bowman. GRYPHON SOCIETY e .« The residence hall on the Lehigh University Campus named in honor of the Dravo brothers is much more than walls of plaster. Contained with- in these walls exists the true spirit of a university, the students. And Lehigh is no exception. This house in partic- ular provides for the freshmen the best possible environment to study and play as well as sleep. Close knit grouping is accomplished by dividing the men into small sections on partitioned split-level floors. This arrangement supplies the freshmen with a small group of close friends. These friendships ore made quickly and usually are held dear throughout life. Along with just merely providing friends and a suitable place to live while at school, the house creates a stiff but gentlemanly competition among the residence halls. Included within this competition is both scho- lastic and extracurricular activities. Intramural sports are not the only phases available. During Lafayette Weekend, although the freshmen did bond together to protect the tradition- al weekend bonfire, they did, however, shave a band of Lafayette freshmen ' s heads. Once again the members of Dravo showed to the University that Dravo is the biggest and the best. DRAVO HOUSE First Row: Schopboch, Bruce, Spector, Chappelle, Graack, Musser, Smyth, Long, Guest, Pierce, Hunter. Second Row: Schaejer, Martucci, Finstermaker, Nunemacher, Mullins, Morrisette, Wright, Goss, Duncan, Kepner, Third Row: Brumberg, Hall, Noce, Hollowoy, Frey. DRAVO A-1 m 1111= inn U %- ' DRAVO A-2 First Row: Kanet, Salny, Glenn, Korlberg, Lovell, Jackson, Lebor, Mohrer, Wood, Mandell, Foshcg. Second Row: Enck, Gsell, Yochum, Kiehl, Reid, Hostler, Doehne, Sporrow, Kulle, Gill. Third Row: ' . r- D.-: - i . : - :- ' ■- - - iifll r L ' L ii liitL If f ilfl K mJ g ' U jp i Hl l Sj vti m . B HO Brf iA H First Row: Voelcker, Keller, Walters, Maskew, Wilson, Tolotti, Schroeder, Brown, Grimes, Hell, Kotsanis, Reamy. Second Row: Barr, Opdyke, Zug, McMann, Schneider, Derum, Schisler, Holtz, Salter, Platte. Third Row: Grube, Reilly, Davis, Stecker, Johnson, Williams, Agnew, Denlinger, Renninger. Fourth Row: Orban, Steinberg, Allen, Dovidson, Haskell, Coppins, Walsh, Massey. DRAVO B-1 DRAVO B-2 First Row: Bailey, Roe, DeVore, Taylor, Brown, Jones, Hoffheins, Weingarten, Ash, Sturman, Dawe, Goll, Brunner, Kuzon, Evans. Second Row: Gunwoldsen, Mason, Sommer, Shumeyko, Quick, Nixon, Fullilove, Polak, Hershey, Johnson, Pansini, Davis, Williams, Third Row: Miller, Kleintop, Washychyn, Abromaitis, Evans, Whittlreey, Robertson. First Row: McCoy, Myers, Straus, Noonan. Second Row: Steele, Grossman, McLean. DRAVO C-GROUND DRAVO C-1 First Row: Kappler, Engle, Koslow, Benigno, Frantz, Cohen, Powers, Gross, Brooks, Blonshine, Smith, Campbell, Putney. Second Row: Barrows, King, Byers, Scott, Findley, Coulston, Rickards, Ture, Coleman, Evans, Reo. Third Row: Von Der Aue, Goodwich, Russ. 131 ( 1(. 1 f f ' ¥ fW '  WW 1% 1 9. ttt ' W J w 1 mm. 1 267 DRAVO C-2 First Row: Goldberg, Black, Feror, Bold, Simpson, Mcintosh, Kahn, FIchter, Talmas. Second Row: Evans, Woodson, Nebiker, Bliss, Baber, Templeton, Kingsley, Gllckman. Third Row: Hirsch, Houser, Schaumann, Rust, Dorrance, Zimmerman, Richardson, Mcintosh, Kniel. First Row: Linder, Sauer, Azond, Andrews, Searfoss, Auerbach, Millstein, Redline, Abrams, Burkey, Turner. Second Row: Honig, Lawson, Weinberg, Johnson, Sturz, Lieberman, Jaffe, Fales, Flowers, Fofigati. Third Row: Digilio, Greco, Scotch, Smith, Kronich, McCuuz, Kritzer, Vosburgh, Oyler, Knudson, Middleton. DRAVO D-1 DRAVO D-2 First Row: Marin, Weitz, Zurlo, Peritore, Williams, Smith, Ciampa, Sips, Johnson, Bartman, Christensen, Golden, Holt, Gorton. Second Row: Deitrich, Champagen, Berrian, Nordenson, Lenna, Sherwood, Ross, Houik, Gurda, Peck, Walker, Freeman. Third Row: Gerhart, Choppell, Glosheen, Crawford, Strandfeldt, Nowicki, Gilbert, Larrabure, Summerville, Chose. 269 Drinker House withstood another nine-month invasion by almost two hundred green freshmen. The frosh — most of them in their first home- away-from-home — immediately start- ed redecorating to their own tastes with signs and pictures to relieve the sterile atmosphere. Some of the re- decorating ideas, including removal of building structures, did not meet with the approval of the powers that be, and certain young men of the house received bills for their efforts. Drinker 4, the Animal Floor, held fewer wrestling matches in the hall than in previous years and thereby raised its scholastic average. How- ever, it continued to be a terror in in- tramural sports, especially in touch football. The residents of Drinker set up a unique study schedule that was not appreciated by Gryphons and those who had 8 o ' clock classes. They stud- ied from 7 to 1 1 and started bull- sessions, card gomes, hallway foot- ball games and hootenonneys until early morning. The lounge was the scene of a few attempts to increase freshman social life, including a small mixer with the University of Pennsylvania. ' ■dr .ii— DRINKER HOUSE DRINKER 1 First Row: Reinert, MacGuffie, Gilbride, Wottner, Moser, Styer, Roth, Second Row: Eorle, Tunick, Title, Goetz, Lundruist, Karl, Third Row: Bowden, Yori, Roper, Weber, Schwoyer, Snyder, Grubb. Fourth Row: Stewart, Gutzwiller, Snyder, Candisky, Gladding, Schlesing, 270 When the year is finished, the Drinkerites will be happy to get out of their first Lehigh home and to go to the residence of their choice. Yet in years to come they will remember Drinker as a place where new friends were mode and new experiences en- joyed, a place of study or relaxation, depending upon their individual incli- nations. DRINKER A-2 First Row: Schotzman, Sather, Morshall, Turley, Casale, Dellavia, Gilpin, Aumon, Batiste. Second Row: Doering, Hatstings, Lane, Stein, Grossberg, Berger, Lauer, Barbi, Wilson, Heiser. Third Row: Swanson, Simonsen, Miller, Sirota, Hallock, Frey, Allen. 271 DRINKER B-2 First Row: Word, Hoase, Smith, Isenberg, Edwards, Utke, Knauer, Evans, Daniel, Pace, Corneliusen. Second Row: Thorogood, Leach, Lore, Turner, Haines, Ritter, Gower, Burke, Potter. Third Row: Vondrasek, Gaines, Brucher, Ingrahcm, Sylvester, Squier. First Row: Innes, Mink, Vanderwerker, Underkoffler, Clark, Schulman, Spivak, Hobbs, George, Bailey, Berseth. Second Row: Miller, Gigon, Weaver, Lee, Patrick, Stern, Skill- man, Geary. Third Row: Feiat, Dempsey, Fatzinger, Elble, Evans, Litzenberger. DRINKER A-3 272 There ' s only one slight problem outside during the spring . . . ith studying When it comes to the LCB, new heights in the art of hanging in effigy ore reached. First Row: Von Bargen, Klein, Janis, Egelston, Beam, Griffin, Glascock, Dieol, Hamlin. Second Row: Mueller, Agrin, Stomoulis, Carson, Parker, Claypoole, Silber, Harvey. Third Row: Lombardi ' , Pechulis, Baumgartner, Lee, Sanderson, Sandvoss, Willis, Fickes. DRINKER B-3 273 DRINKER 4 First Row: Pollack, Thayer, Shopiro, Underwood, Brown, Jeremloson, Spencer, Linder, Besogni, Wallace. Second Row: Levy, Doreau, Leininger, Baretord, Brodish, Wolpert, Hansen, Kipp, Arkin, Bosch. Third Row: Drchker, Walsh, Sapperstein, Herold, Farrell, McClennon, Turton, Kneedler, Michael, Kutzen. Fourth Row: Elsdon, Paul, Block, Baggeloqr, Dolon, Kish. Pote.jid, Cuihicrts.jn Bivct, Cleorwater, McFodden. 274 SCd-rr Ejtx ie.—. RICHARDS HOUSE Richard ' s House, named for Le- high ' s sixth President, Charles Russ Richards, houses more than 180 fresh- men. The oldest of the freshman res- idence halls, built in 1938, it has withstood the strain of each freshman class since then. This year was no exception. Although the work load was in- creased two or three fold, there was still time for wrestling matches, bowl- ing in the halls and all-night card gomes. Toward the middle of the year, the rooms were given o new coat of green point to spruce things up. A new innovation, to enliven the sparse social life of the freshmen, was the institution of the open sec- tion. After home football gomes and on special weekends with the proper choperones, girls were allowed in the rooms until dinner time. Richards House took full advantage of this to do something besides study. Throughout the year, during the time spent cramming for quizes, en- tering bull-sessions, and picking up the laundry, many lasting friendships hove started and prospered in the halls of Richards House. RICHARDS 1 First Row: Sechrist, Triolo, Tepper, Sartori, Shumbota, Joseloff, Jaunch, Zongaro. Second Row: Zimmer, Wogner, Peterson, Bezer, Corbiebe, Larson, Cameron, Karpinski. Third Row: Nesbitt, Olsen, Thornton, Hortzell, Pugley, Spindel, Palmar. Fourth Row: Eddy, Vorgo, Widdop, Bobitt, Breyer. 275 RICHARDS A-2 First Row: Pierce, Biddelmon, Goldsmith, Koczmanszky, Kunkle, Kobot, Feltman, Siegel, Harry. Second Row: Weintraud, Covicchi, Cooties, Learned, Weseman, Lang, Henderson, Shroga. Third Row: Blumberg, Schildkhecht, Tschompion, Hibbert, Leard, Sunosrison, Miller. Fourth Row: Brown, McNickle, Krause, Skinner, Kreidler, Vesper, Schuyler, Funk, Colwell. 1 rrrrrTTTi ; t i , . «. i 1 1 I I ■j RICHARDS B-2 First Row: Schocllcs, Holbert, Choitin, Ditord, Lambert, Gyllenhorl, Ross. Second Row: Deane, Woldman, Fox, Wrigley, Narducci, Schrogen, Gundersdorf, Uhle. Third Row: Can Cleve, Wist, Morrison, Adams, Gladstone, Humphries, Brown. Fourth Row: Farlnacci, Corter, Gorber, Duchynski, Funk. First Row: Bishop, Hsiory, Steinfeld, Reichert, Tinker, Kachel, Damm, Denholtz, Boeder, Dobkin, Feineman. Second Row: Stone, Reck, Krauss, Edwords, Vihardi, Fletcher, Wood, Dugon, Bonine, Roosa. Third Row: Mishkin, Bradley, Weiskop, Raskin, von Seelen, Watson, Mixsell, Ovadia, Tessier. Fourth Row: Ramsey, Johnson, Arnold, Livingston, Eisenstoedt. RICHARDS A-3 The annual Ugly Man ' s Contest with proceeds going to charity and the winning living group = T ' ' i getting first choice at seats for the Lafoyette game. RICHARDS B-3 First Row: Bogia, La Monica, Umberger, Karow, Morgan, van den Beemt, Maschvage, Swag, Nauhous. Second Row; Wilcox, Hanna, Novo, Santer, Demarest, Engle, Anderson, Blackwood. Third Row: Bonks, Morris, York, Mussler, Birch, Smith, Dawson. Fourth Row: Hertller, Pfunder, Hurton, Bochcller, Helies, Schneider. 278 Although their absence inconveniences the cafeteria a little, the trays are put to good use in winter. Preparations are mode for a celebration in the frosh dorms. RICHARDS 4 First Row: Dietz, Colen, Booth, Alexander, Langstaff, Fletcher, Skoriak, Hoover, Collopy, Merz, Bottiger, Miyashin. Second Row: Monforte, Rutherford, Shepard, Amsbaugh, Bowen, Bott, Riker, Howell, Allen, Weed, Downing. Third Row: Kaufman, Ullmann, Whiteford, Szabo, Early, Martin, Nies, Chambers, Trabin, Benfield. Fourth Row: Suiter, Pochmon, Moehring, Russell, Gibby, Reed, Osborne, Kochanczyk. 279 This year one section of M M, A-3, has been converted into a freshman section. But this does not mean that the social life of the rest of the house has changed. On the contrary; in ad- dition to the regular band parties after football games and wrestling matches and cocktail parties on big weekends, several stag beer parties have been added to the social calendar right be- fore vacations. The occasion before Christmas was a stag party complete with wrestling films and good beer (for a change). Individual sections also hold their own parties, as well as other social functions. In fact, this year for the first time, M M was permitted to hold open sections during certain hours when dates ore allowed in the dorm. M M was permitted these open sections in part because the house had for the post several semesters main- tained a scholastic average that is con- siderably above the all-university av- erage. In recent years the individual sec- tions have contacted and rushed fresh- men to enable the sections to be com- posed of men by choice, not by chance M M is active in university intra- murals and has inter-house tourna- ments in ping pong and bridge. =3 ; xrx!r - ' 1-% - y , McCLINTIC-MARSHALL tA8.S A-1 First Row: Bender, Lodge, Mandelbaum, Jenkin, Aronson, Neely, Trotta, Rushforth, Brilkman, Restuccia, Weiner, Weiss. Second Row: Sarka, Young, Jellenik, Jankuro, Sparks, Davis, Show, Van Gilder, Olive, Baird, Kaplan. Third Row: Jacobi, Oney, Womock, Chuo, Morez, War- insky, Sicgcl, Eichberger, Levy, Lengyel. Fourth Row: Mounier, Zausner, Creek, Heinz. H ui - K|Rto IVf H Ir MC ' M B JhU yi iSr mV h| 11 2 1 wM i WB ' Pi H iir wi f M «wi fr S; A 1 9 ii i ff l twiH t Ih i JUi f t 1 M If 1 1 ' « i 1 f ' f 4 nj ' 1, f ill ■iui 280 hA hA B-1 First Row: Depew, Monn, Winter, Johnson, Howland, Bennett, Groy. Second Row: Ruppel, Harris, Marsh, Patten, Baker, Bitler, Gordon, Snyder, Smith, Goldstein, Rigg. Third Row: LIghtner, Zimring, Shore, Mole, Beuder, Kendig, Milan, Thee, Hartmon, Minoff. Fourth Row: Cohen, Yaissle, Long, Mieth, Tutt, Allyn, Ramig, Truby, Ookey, Best. Fifth Row: Lessig, Archibald, Heidorn, Mathews, Manns, Davis, Semenyna, Frost, Brooks, Tiefenbrunn. 281 M M A-2 First Row: Arensberg, Peduzzi, Tafel, Walters, Boyd, Ralston, Luclani, Assenhclmer, Houston, Kibler. Second Row: Niley, Young, Donowski, Arnts, Becher, Johnson, Llchtenouer, Zerdy, Rettigiew, Jacobsen. Third Row: Robertson, Spear, Bernhardt, Penskei, Mantel, Jacobsen, Morton, Forstali, Weidner, Gumming, Myers. Fourth Row: Skillman, Davidson, Hoddlnott, Williams, Anognoson, Teutschbein, Schuiz, Feigenbaum, Sleike, Potterton. 282 First Row: Gunn, Kaufmann, Kuznior, Campbell, Sin ' s, Forbrich, Enyeast, Bollenzweig, Zissell, Monson. Second Row: Shumofsky, Braunstein, Green, Mallett, Herr, Best, Scher, NewHouse, Penhollegon. Third Row: Gee, Frederick, Mack, Allcock, Tarrant, Soccio, Lentz, Cobb, Kleir Fourth Row: Mitchell, Schmidt, Cook, Homilton, Gavoghan. tAS SA B-2 M M A-3 First Row: Lane, Yingling, Gross, Burns, Fleck, Counselor; Kanes, McKay, Wolfe, Hyde. Second Row: Holladcy, Martin, Lightner, Fulmer, Coladonato, Boghosian, Weil. Third Row: Brothers, Trapp, Tamerler, Prentiss, Silverman, Miller, Peek, Spahoggler. Fourth Row: Hamilton, Kline, Zukoski, Dinger, Varnum, Harlond, Johnson, Phelan. 283 M M B-3 First Row: Krumholz, Raughley, Hammond, Schwartz, Felmeister, Agree, Pennington, Shot- well, Mindler, Powlette, Morchand. Second Row: Pilon, Goodwin, Eisenhower, Bowman, Stetson, Michener, Blazejewski, Brody, Chodosh, Teacher. Third Row: Kloepfer, Ludwig, Heist, Slopp, Griener, Orendorf, Burba, Shearer, Wells, Simpson, Seid. Fourth Row: Monteard, Coates, Walsh, Wascher, Meloon, Alspach, Hubbs, Davidson, Fritsch, Peorce, Allison, Sawyer. :yt, 1 In IP if a £ S Sr v!i ft. ,S. t . '  l 4 4lii 1 T. J f ff JL t ' f , WS 9|f l 1 n M St 1 iSr  A .81 ? (9I iiNS M w 1 ' s f! IT S . film IP .A. V M f m KiflRi .ik. «9 ' W V 7 !•% V } ; m i h y i 1 ■■i ■■■■■■■O 1 ' ■TT ' SI 0% •£- . ■i KS8 S 1  c.«- X-S ' i: 284 First Row: Wyatt, Laveson, Leute, Morel, Perkins, Schlong. Second Row: Kilmoy.er, Reichard, Diclisle, Bushort, Johnson. Third Row: Eiger, Lewis, Honsen, Balfour, Lubin, Carroll. Fourth Row: Matthes, Reilly, Idzal, Quickel, Perry. PARK HOUSE Park House is no longer a scholar- ship section, which is evident in the way in which it dropped from its customary first place among living groups. As usual, students passing by wonder what is holding the old place, up while residents dodge falling ce- ment and point to the more pleasant aspects of their residence hall, such as the fraternity-style sleeping ar- rangements and a rather large social area complete with ping-pong table on the first floor. Park House no longer holds the enviable position of being the only freshman residence hall with a bar in the basement; Price Hall, now serving as a freshman sec- tion also, boasts one. However, lucky residents of Park may still watch the Gryphons making good use of their bar any time they wish. 285 Lehigh ' s Old Gray Lady, Taylor Hall, remains the home of the upper- class dorm residents who can ' t bring themselves to live in M M ' s look-alike rooms. Inhabiting double rooms, three man triples, and a few closet-like sin- gles, these men represent all three colleges of the University, and are members of a large number of campus organizations, including Band, Glee Club, Epitome and Brown and White. Scholasticolly, Taylor almost always has at least one section among the top five living groups, and in the spring of 1963 placed four of its five sec- tions there. Taylor-A took first place and received the University Trustees ' Scholarship Cup, previously held by Pork House. Taylor men take an active part in the University ' s intramural program and in the warm months can always be seen tossing a football or a frisbee back and forth in the quad. (Towards May, the number of frisbees in the air at any given time becomes positively astonishing). Taking advantage of the ample space in the rooms, many residents hove built extensive hi-fi systems and these addicts can usually be found TAYLOR HALL TAYLOR A First Row: Hecht, Rolls, Iredell, Felssner, Lynch, Filbert, Wood, Frank, Downes, Edelsteln. Second Row: Womer, Burg, Reid, Sullivan, Cotton, Franceski, Dunlevy, DiStefano, Neumon. Third Row: Stringer, Leighten, Buck, Dodge, Heintzelmon, Werst, Londes, Vines. 286 TAYLOR B First Row: Bancale, Currell, Forstall, Morriaon, Kotow, Spindler, Lewin, March, Masker, Hahn. Second Row: Roth, Freund, Doughty, Ferris, Kratt, Moose, Schuman, Lusi, Kosel. Third Row: Gothle, Ambler, Klide, Swift, Zenz, Weber, May, Wyand. Fourth Row: Bardner, Caron, Day, McElroy, Moss, Petke, Osobo. U J 1 i 1 . O 1 1 Pr_ L L 1 3 i f I 1  p kkV - - SB i mm. i I .-.-- - -J f . . . : . Vi 287 huddled together in tight little groups bragging about their new tape deck or amplifier and listening reverently to test records. However, this year, the Taylor basement was taken over by the Lehigh Model Train Club, and now the hi-fi systems are being forced to compete with train whistles. It can be pretty grim at times for those inter- ested in neither. TAYLOR C First Row: Laverty, Mead, Bridges, Gutsche, Bartholomen, Brink, Wentworth, Neimeier, Miller, Morse. Second Row: Sawyer, Clouser, Freeman, Lone, Stearns, Serrell, Ludt, Kemp. 288 TAYLOR D First Row: Christenfeld, Pettebone, Gentry, Elsberg, Volentine, Wise, Haines, Romberger, Blair, Paternoster Second Row: Holz, Raper, Boucher, Boder, Wurzbach, Dudan, McFadden, Klopp, Nadas. Third Row: Silber, Huse, Sellman, Widman, Wacl , Clouser, Fergus, Whittaker. First Row: Lokerson, Heitz, Lefferts, Knowles, Stueck, Rockwood, Hamm, McCicren, Second Row: Linnemuth, Ressier, Good, Huebner, Hay, Kersens, Fuller, Overgaard. TAYLOR E 289 Leonard Hall is unique among stu- dent residences at Lehigh. Set in the residential area of Fountain Hill, it is the first residence hall located off campus. Established in 1907 by the Rt. Rev. Ethelbert Talbot, Bishop of Bethlehem and Lehigh trustee, to pro- vide a Christian home for men pre- paring for Holy Orders in the Episcopal Church, it is the only institution of its kind in the country. Leonard Hall houses mostly pre-theos, but many of its members belong to other cur- ricula. The hall is actually open to any pre-theo student in the Lehigh Va lley. In reality, Leonard Hall is a fra- ternity with Greek letters Alpha Chi Epsilon. Similarities exist in that res- idents must go through a pledging pe- riod and an initiation as well as simi- larities in social and campus octivites. LEONARD HALL First Row: Croneberger, Campbell, LeidI, Boyle, Wesfhorp, Bird, D ' Alesandre. Bowden, Montgomery, Ludwig, Blunt, Trotter, Gromley. 290 The Unversity seems to enjoy cul- tivating small freshman residence halls, to judge from the continued ex- istence of Price Hall and Park House. An especially distinguishing mark of Price is the fact that of its thirty-five rooms, thirty-four are singles. This mokes the social areas of the dorm exceedingly important; they keep the residents of the ancient building from going crazy looking at the holes in the plaster over their desks. One advan- tage possessed by this group of fresh- man to compensate for their iron maiden-like rooms is the building ' s close proximity to the lower campus. There is a very direct route from Price to the U.C, as well as to the Physics Building and Coppee Hall, not to men- tion to Grace Hall, a great advantage for any student living there who hap- pens to be in either Army or Air Force ROTC. PRICE HALL First Row: Lennon, D ' Alessandro, McDonald, Stiles, Tllles, Downing, Couiso. Second Row: Fleegol, Meckley, Leitner, Stewart, Hemingwoy, Verbalis. Third Row: Spinny, Fisher, Unger, Golding, Scott, Lef. 291 TAK TOWN HOUSE One year ago, o unique group was formed at Lehigh. This is TAK, now officially called TAK Town House. The forming group consisted of members of the class of 1966, thirteen in num- ber, and now includes several members of the classes of both ' 65 and ' 64. The goal of the group at large was to live together in a permanent spirit of brotherhood, and to foster this feeling among all its neighbors and friends. This goal has now been realized, with twelve men living at the TAK house at 471 Vine Street, and several other in their apartments. The TAK idea was a simple and yet common one: the desire to learn how to live in our modern world; to gain practical experience in running a house and living with all types of peo- ple. We therefore hold no preference to any particular group, and TAK membership is open to all Lehigh stu- dents. We have and hope to maintain a well-knit yet varied group. TAK ' s are active in many organi- zations on the campus, including re- ligious clubs, sports, academic honors groups and societies and the Lehigh Radio Network. We have also played our port in the extensive intramural program of the University, participat- ing in everything from volleyball to bowling. And, as every other living group on campus, we have had our parties although Fall Houseparty was our only attempt at a major one. TAK rushes freshmen in order to keep the house filled for subsequent years. First Row: Bothe, Rochlin, Seib. Second Row: Fishmon, Compbell, O ' Brien, Schultz, Simpson, Matig. Third Row: Hendrix, Hydusik, Geller, Klocker, Morcus, Brozmon. Alpha Lambda Omega Fraternity has unique position at Lehigh. In 1936, a group of Allentown students organized a social club known as the Allentown Lehigh Organization. The purpose of this club was to provide Allentown men with a means of more fully enjoying college social life. The organization quickly became a success and all interested students residing off campus were admitted. In 1942, A.L.O. was formally chartered and rec- ognized as a social fraternity by the University. The Greek letters, Alpha Lambda Omega, were chosen in or- der to retain the initials of the Allen- town Lehigh Organization. Today A.L.O. ranks as one of the largest or- ganizations on campus. Its fifty-five brothers are active in almost all fa- cets of University life, including var- sity sports, Arcadia, and many hon- orary and professional societies. Many remember the 1963 Houseporty theme of Mix ' n Match with many imagi- native costumes devised solely by the brothers. Another highlight was the annual Christmas Blast, a cosmo- politan event attended by representa- tives from thirty colleges. The only thing lacking was a sufficient number of chairs. Along with these events, the brothers also recognize the importance of academics, as the study lamps burn- ing late throughout the valley indicate. ALPHA LAMBDA OMEGA AAO First Row: Horvath, Presidenf; Asam, Vice-President; Chip- ser, Social Chairman; McCarthy, Corresponding Secretary. Second Row: Copies, Recording Secretary; Talotta, Athletic Manager; Cassaday, Treasurer. First Row: Rush, Chipser, Wingott, McCarthy, Schoeffer, Emig, Bokonyi, Payne, Wiedl, Feit, Rights. Second Row: Cassaday, Schrantz, Grim, Sugra, Bieak, Talaber, Breisch, Magyarics, Milliard, Wilt. Third Row: Hoffner, Kapo, Horvath, Fritch, Blackstone, Kon- trovich, Schweitzer, Horwath, Talotta, Smith. Fourth Row: Monica, Rickunas, Hagemeyer, Korpics, Bushner, Burkhart, Sovecka, Szep, Tanzos, Asam, Zelezen, Metzger. NTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL The Interfraternity Council at Lehigh performs a rather dubious function. It does not hove the governing power that similar groups possess at other schools and, as of this year, it has no Spring social function to sponsor. Its function appears to be that of a deliberating body which mokes reso- lutions in the form of suggestions, and merges into a judicial body at certain times of the year to review social rule infractions among the thirty fraternities. The judicial function is a necessary and well- carried-out one. In order that Lehigh ' s fraternities can maintain an ordered and disciplined social life, they need this curb. Rules have to be set up, and it is far better that IFC do it effectively than have the hand of administration wield the axe. As long as Lehigh ' s fraternities need no outside jurisdiction they can remain autonomous. This year IFC, in cooperation with RHC and Campus Chest, decided to support a Cuban refu- gee as a full-time student at Lehigh. IFC is not on aloof body, as it could have been by the very nature of its position in student life. It is not aloof nor should it ever become so. First Row: Hummer, Anselmo, Coulston, Young, Van Nostrand, Feick, Baker, Reich, Rowles, Ricco. Second Row: Swersky, Crouse, Mattson, Vice-President; Born, Cooper, Ralston, Cosper, Griffiths, Treasurer; Goldmonn, Popek, Helpert. Third Row: Ardem, Feffer, Harper, Smyth, Edmunds, Van Atten, Walton, Creed, Lou, Secretary; Frederick, Beard. Fourth Row: Lucas, Loranger, Harriss, Mosher, Rothermel, Keller, Cameron, Etzel, Baum, Ponzini, Kahlow, Nelson. ih J ' fa W ' W ¥. Ifti- ' f ' 1 ip nj | % ' TO M mm. r ' f Pi I } 9 ir =-:!$: ALPHA CHI RHO The fraternity system in general has many enemies, and an equivalent number of faults. Some have said that fraternity life leads naturally to a limiting of social intercourse, and that becouse of its clannish nature, a fraternity develops a relatively nar- row set of social norms. Still others point out that fraternity life stifles what little academic drive the average college student has. Lehigh is what could be considered a strong fraternity school. What, then, is the place of the thirty or so fra- ternities here, why do they prosper, and whot do they give to the school? This, needless to soy, is a difficult thing to answer. It can, however, be answered, at least in part, by the system itself. Ideals, and aims are not to be discussed; they have been gone AXP 298 First Row Jorczak, Stevens, Caine, Hummel, Pfeiffer, Unwin. Second Row: Hermansdorfer, Harlow, Gross, Crouse, Brooks, Nelson. Third Row: Kruse, Delfini, DeHuff, Laun, Hagelin. Fourth Row: McCullough, Bochmon, Cloussen, Moylond, Lysak, Davis. v a fESBM ALPHA SIGMA PHI A2$ • ff -f i; i( -;:;; ; ' ' vg= ■' f :. ■1 ? ? First Row: Ncughton, Eveland, Payaris, Evans, Peterson, Bean, Shuffle, Schlauch. Second Row: Nilsson, Jonato, Pond, Sunderland, DiPietro, Lorentz, Frew, Diederich, Eroege. Third Row: Lewis, Carpender, Doniel- son, Carothers, Rusche, Harilond, Miles, Williams, Besch, Volp. Fourth Row: Young, Conklin, Griffit hs, Hoeveler, Cornell, Williamson, Earthy, Anderson, Heinz, Drohan. . -, V ijC ALPHA TAU OMEGA over many times before, always to no avail. The thing which immediately strikes a reader of the Senior section of this book is the great number of fraternity men, in contrast to those from other living groups, who participate in and are leaders of the various campus ac- tivities. With this in mind, each house was asked by the Epitome to submit a fifty word statement concerning its Dort in the year at Lehigh. The result of this was interesting. The gist of every article was, the brothers of . . . participated in many and varied activities and did many good things. Unfortunately this is the only attribute seen in fraternities by too many peo- ple. There are others less obvious. A university exists on o variety of stimuli, among them the students, the First Row: Britt, Lentz, Price, Tench, Nonovic, McKeemon, Ness, Oloham. Second Row: Eckbreth, Evans, McCleery, Root, Lucos, Gompf, Casolo, Schneider, Sowyer, Johnston, Knight, Borssvek. Third Row: McKoy, Moyer, Newton, Jogers, Shone, Tabet, Roman, Psyck, Adey, Sanders, Deckman, McGowin, Welch.  303 1 ! 1 H ' ■. •IflH ■1 0 Bi 1 s yvK S m r C ■en- 1 1 B H BETA THETA PI 304 First Row: Beacher, Schmidt, Warnke, Leinster, Leek, Hobson, Mea- dowcroft. Second Row: Low, Hess, Histand, McConnon, Wampler, Horper, DeNoio, Daubenspeck. Third Row: Sphar, Dwyer, Bingler, Wimmer, Schlenker, Smith, Marchont, Thomas. Fourth Row: Von Valkenberg, Scholz, Etzei, Gladish, Beard, Turner, Johnson, Ethridge, Scholz. CHI PHI X$ faculty, and the great body of alumni. Here the last class seem to be the most powerful. Their time was one of fraternity ascendence, they were at the school when the now-outlawed practices of hazing were in full swing, when, perhaps, the fraternity was more than a social organization, al- though we doubt that there ever was such a time. Isn ' t it natural, then, that these men, the stable base of alumni, would want the structure to remain basically the some? The fra- ternity system seems to have emerged with a rising middle class college pop- ulation in the 19th century. This en- vironment is particularly evident when one looks at the makeup of most mid- western schools, in which the frater- nity system is strongest. The same type of person attends Lehigh. He ' L First Row: Kasch, Denney, Coulston, Seobury, Wingfield. Second Row: Davenport, Smith. Third Row: Miceli, Borner, Fischer. Fourth Row: Hanchett, Uinch, Montbach. Fifth Row: Baum, Manry, Feick. Sixth Row: Cressman, Barger, Euker, Schoedinger. Seventh Row: Williams, Fulton, Rex, Olsen. Eighth Row: CrutcPifield, Daum, Stanton. ' ::ii. ' i;iiiiiiiifliHj H ' H CHI PSI 308 First Row: Farmer, Berg, Munson, DeVeau, Succop, Van Kirk, Sheppard, Draucker, Winter. Second Row: Barwise, Hawkins, Thiele, Fisher, McCluskey, Homiller, Maitbie, Berg, W. Bolton, Fry. Third Row: Stuart, Shepard, Lachenmayr, Hesselman, Mitschele, Lory, Kampmeinert. comes largely from a middle to upper- middle class home, generally from the suburbs or large towns, and hos at least one parent who has had part of a college education. He joins a fra- ternity at school because it is the thing to do. The fraternity becomes sort of status symbol. Attitudes and motives change quickly, however, once he has lived in the fraternity at Lehigh for some time. Fraternity politics, the petty squab- bles that constantly occur, the con- stant pressure to improve, scholastic- ally as well OS socially, to get the best pledge class, all have their effects on a man living in a fraternity. These effects, moreover, do perhaps more good for some men than the rest of their schooling could hope to accom- plish. If he learns nothing else from DELTA CHI 310 First Row; Ty3cn, Gceftget, Hoy, Carlson, Roberts. Second Row: Knecht, Stevens, Eyer, Prutzman, Jones, Corwin, Dinneen, Sterner, Kiehl, Clark Third Row: Sanders, Louyer, Kennedy, Hochreiter, Quayle, Kraemer, Sutton, Letterman. Fourth Row: Locke, Hill, Zim- mers, Toth, McCrocken, Morgonson, Luss, Komlim, Wogenhols. Fifth Row: Houg, Thieme, Mohon, Toews, King, Horstmcnn, Ayers, Mosher. DELTA PHI 312 8 9 f i First Row: Feose, Kegense, Oiko, Wright, Keenan, Jones. Second Row: Adrreksarn, Smith, Meyer, Sutton, Cooper. Third Row: Von Buren, Crowell, Pratt, Vannan, Lilley, Warfield, Ebner, Dietz, Adams. Fourth Row: Guyer, Riley, Gruner, Eichorn, Merkle, Lallande, Shour, Wheadon, Furst, Harrington, Ralston, Hertslet. his social contact at college, he will come out of it having learned to live and cope with the problems of, and to handle, people. This is something that isolated dormitory living cannot foster. One might say, well, look at the Ivy League, at Swarthmore, here are places where the fraternity system is not nearly so important, and yet these schools turn out people equally as good as come from Lehigh. Before this statement can be made another dif- ference must be pointed out. These schools all hove an elaborate system of semi-exclusive societies and clubs which take the place, so to speak, of fraternities. Lehigh has no such so- cieties, no eating clubs such as are found at Stanford and Princeton, no quasi-fraternal social-academic clubs. $ DELTA SIGMA PHI ' ( ii E !f r s iiHP ' HuKll ' n m ' .■?ij« V  J. I .!ltf ' %1L 1 ' - First Row: Roberts, Freund, Frederick, Buckhout, Olstra, Steever. Second Row: Davis, Curto, Ditlow, Fry e, Van Nostrono, Chbosky. Third Row: Hodgson, Curtice, Culver, Markezin, Schoeps, Baker. Fourth Row: Marsh, Foley, Pearson, Bremer, Giuliano, Blair. Fifth Row: Bittrick, Fahnoe, Hazard, Sochting, Foley. 315 DELTA TAU DELTA 316 First Row: Smith, Estelle, Wilson, Grimm, Mattson, DeVinney, Kiln- gersmith, Cosper, Bail, Orlando, Brogowski, Donko, Sottosanti. Sec- ond Row: Mossih, Deakins, Beard, Mariani, Adebar, Thomas, Geb- hordt, Dugon, Leicht, Yeich, MacLeod, Tucker, McGregor. Third Row: Koch, Wendlandt, Mclnterney, Smith, Mayhew, Miller, Single- ton, Hughs, Smyser, Bubp, Erb, Kalisch, Boder. DELTA UPSILON Lehigh has only its fraternity system to take care of the personal develop- ment of its students, only its fraterni- ties to fulfill the natural urge to form a group. As soon as a man moves into a fra- ternity he takes on a responsibility to perpetuate the group which he has joined. At first glance this may not appear to be too great a responsibility, but it is great and often difficult. In this sense the fraternity is little dif- ferent from the company he will later work for, his own business or partner- ship, or, even more important, his own home. The fact that thirty or forty other men share this responsibility makes little difference, since the group is only as strong as the individ- uals who make it up. First there are the financial respon- 318 J First Row: Watt, Gansen, Swanson, Edmunds, Krouse, Trace, Korff, Wright. Second Row: Riddell, Tomalesky, Verdier, Workman, McDowell, Polashenski, Henderek, Morris, Young- ling. Third Row: Kerr, Shepard, Alber, Beeman, McGory, Vitale, Mattesky. Fourth Row: Cameron, Cook, Moroz, Swalm, Maki. OJ .if A ' ihrn m KAPPA ALPHA TV t- First Row: Kampors, Stravers, Andrews, Boyne, Goldmann, McAllister, Lister, Wilbur, Lentz. Second Row: Croft, Beckner, McGinnis, Shevchik, Reed, Decker, Zarins, Moore, Grosz, Woldron. Third Row: Smith, Gessner, Forino, Orgonek, Monson, Komm, Griffiths, Togley, Templin, Hoenes. Fourth Row: Rogognetti, Dohl, Kirchort, Antonides. Fifth Row: Weigel, Kohlow, Sensenich, Clememsen, Jonsson, Lutz, Coldwell, Choberko. KAPPA SIGMA sibilities to be taken care of. There are both fixed and variable costs to be considered in this area. The house must be kept up and improvements must be made, including expenditures for heat, electricity, gas, water, re- pairs, and so forth in a seemingly end- less stream. There are no accountants employed by the university to cate- gorize and charge the members for these expenses; there is not just one bill to pay to a machine for room and board at the beginning of each se- mester. These things must be taken care of by each man, working through the treasurer he and the others have elected as coordinator. The treasurer has perhaps the most difficult and per- haps the most rewarding job of all. It is up to him to keep finances straight, to deal directly with the outside, and. 322 lU m ■H First Row: Hutchinson, Sinclair, McCord, Harris, Rodkey, Volenfine. Second Row: Smith, Hindon, Brierley, Tragesar, Walton, Schneider, Strohm, Weidman, Fortmann, Bodholt, Krout, Hicks, Sherk, Brower. Third Row: Fornasiero, Weiss, Steane, van Lier, Lorn, Allison, Reed, Sawyer, Adams, Gould, van Doren. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA 324 w M ■■Bk, . B tECi m ' fl El i i!  mm KH i ■11 1 : ' if] JT tf First Row: Ridler, Popek, Klein, Burk, Boston, BrecUoy, P ' lschncr, Hance. Second Row: Pierce, Kelly, Fink, Heiser, Smith, Huntress, Stout. Third Row: Kinnier, Barber, DeMoyer, Martin, Monley, Small, Banino, Speakman. Fourth Row: Hemler, Schell. PHI DELTA THETA d J r7-t: '  r. G.C often, to help individual members in difficulty or confusion. Lucky is the man who is named treasurer, for it is he who really sees what it is to main- tain an organization. Second, there is the institution by which the group perpetuates itself, called rushing. A comment made by a senior recently illustrates that there is a value in rushing behind the obvious. He said after on interview that, due to his experience, through rushing, in meeting strange people in a strained atmosphere with the express purpose of selling himself, he was far more at ease when put on the spot by a professional interviewer. The short period in which the fraternity must choose future members necessitates the formulation of standards by which personalities con be evaluated quickly c:) H The contractors found their renovations of the Phi Delt house so pleasing that they couldn ' t resist using the new facilities. First Row: Stuort, Maass, Tedesko, Sherwin, Issel, Weise. Second Row: Butler, Sperry, Loper, Winkler, Moyer, Sturcke, Proctor. Third Row: Kreusser, Corbett, Hudson, Born, Larsen, Roush. Fourth Row: Mead, Crist, Staley, Henning, Swerhelm, Utzinger. 327 J r PHI GAMMA DELTA 328 First Row: Weaver, Jackson, Rizzo, Howes, Rothermel, Warren, Evans. Second Row: Medford, Murwin, Bockrath, Oskin, Wistar, Valliont, Kievit, Tate. Third Row: Beck, Muendel, Dolben, Hoare, Rizzo, Miller, Miller, Sawyer, Piwonko, Swartz Fourth Row: Murlless, Drobnyk, Rushong, Milligan, Franzier, Yots, Walton. A1 ' - irV PHI KAPPA THETA $K© and effectively. The individual eval- uations of men seen at short intervals are thrown together in rushing meet- ings, compared, and a consensus reached. Here one learns the way those who live around him differ in thought and opinion, learns to com- part his own personality with a stand- ard set up by the group and by this, perhaps, learns to understand himself better. When a group of freshmen is picked who are desired as living mates, there comes the period in which the fraternity must sell itself to them. It is not the group collectively, how- ever, but each individual member who must sell himself. The failures com- bined with the successes give each man a clue to his good and weak points as a personality and allow him to improve before other and more im- portant meetings in his life take place. 330 First Row: Smith, Concilio, Russell, MinettI, Froncesconi. Second Row: Gresho, Cavallari, Mainardi, Unterrelner, Tifft, Varady. Third Row: Agati, Frederick, Zak, Piaget, Eckert. Fourth Row: Morico, Elenewski, McKellar, Lovenduski. Fifth Row: Donnelly, Passante, Rademoekers, De Angelo, Lewandowski, Graser. Sixth Row: Kelly, Staliek, Perella. 4 :■ir i ' - First Row: Mathews, Dougherty, Miller, LaMotta, Brookover. Second Row: Wolff, Mather, Meek, Fotherlnghom, Sterne, Walton, Cramp- ton. Third Row: Roper, Selgas, Hearn, Johnson, Hemphill, Stine, Davagian, Frank, Betz, Crowd er, Wriggins. Fourth Row: Moog, Vlasak, Hull, Boker, Brown, Penzini, Pennauchi, Brassell, Barnes, Sloan. ST r ™ ■' i c« m PI KAPPA ALPHA Third, in living with a group of peo- ple in o fraternity there is little op- portunity for complete withdrawal. This is not to soy that there can be no privacy, for that is possible, and, as a matter of fact, easy. Withdrawal, however, which can be disastrous later, is impossible. Each member has to con- tribute to the group if he is to live a happy life in it. There is no room for the closet case in a fraternity, just as there is no room for him in active society. Those who prefer to be clone can well live alone — for good. In connection with this third point comes the old problem of scholarship. Most of the most violent attacks on the fraternity system come from those who compile statistics which show fra- ternities for below other types of liv- ing groups scholosticolly. Scholastics are on individual thing, and a man ' s K A First Row: Skuzinski, Moore, Hnot, Mandell, Logan, Reeves. Sec- ond Row: Skinner, Foster, Reynolds, Mendola, Colla, Nordi. Third Row: Williamson, Kyle, Flinchbaugh, Gardener. Fourth Row: Lo- ronger, Schweitzer, Birdsoll, Adams. Fifth Row: Lewis, Hotob, Allport, Jennings, Hills. Sixth Row: Lindegren, Maskomick, Jacoby, Mcllmoyle, Bertelson, Indoe, Sipe. Believe it or not, those are two heads blocking the TV screen, and only one belongs to the male gender. PI LAMBDA PHI O 336 First Row: Thames, Smit, Segal, Marmon, Polon. Second Row: Weinstein, Davis, Lasky, White. Third Row: Smith, Silva, Cuneo, Festger, Tucker, Louis, Trough. Fourth Row: Rothenberg, Gates, Hirshborn, Goodstein, Fink, Willis. Fifth Row: Dresher, Lachman, Alper, Swersky, Miller, Edwards, Feinberg, Holberstein. PSI UPSILON education is his own responsibility. If he wonts it, it is available to him. He should not have to be fed it on a golden platter. It is true that the possibility of diversion is far more prevalent in a fraternity than in many other types of groups, but the student is not going to live and work in a diversion-free society. The fraternity is in this sense a microsociety, and its members have to perform a double function — live an active life and learn. A man who can perform this dual function will enter society better prepared than one who has had only to perform the latter function of leorn- ing(books). The fourth responsibility in frater- nity living is closely related to the third. In order to be successful in his group venture each man must learn to accommodate for the individual ■i ' ! ; . i«4AVt f-.-ii Row: Renz, Schoenfelder, Hayes. Second Row: Dowler, Hurely, Viling, Smyth, Krone. Third Row: Bittner, Schneider, Jones, Gould, Boker, Shevlin. Fourth Row: Gurlle, Moore, Reither. 339 A SIGMA ALPHA - MU 340 First Row: Shaheen, Pastor, Schachner, Berk, Frohlich. Second Row: Levitt, S. Bernstein, Kahn, Shepard, Henderson, Green. Third Row: Gross, Wiener, Cohen, Weiner. Fourth Row: Solomon, Fet- terman, Hewmon, Wittmon, Greenbaum, Fields. Fifth Row: Yesler, M. Bernstein, Freedman, Shotoff, Dorrow. traits of the others. Individualism is in no way stifled, but merely kept from mushrooming into extreme pro- portions. Ideas, no matter how radi- cal, find an audience, but they sel- dom remain uninfluenced by the opin- ions of others. There is always a meet- ing place in the fraternity house, whether it be the kitchen, library, or a popular study room, and it is in such an area that discussion occurs. A man who refuses to accept criti- cism and discussion of his views de- serves to remain forever wrong, One may say that anyone, anywhere, can find people to whom he can express himself. In a close-knit group such as a fraternity, however, this sort of intercourse is unavoidable and it is the responsibility of the individual to use it profitably. Without these four responsibilities SIGMA CHI First Row: Preble, Rabenstein, Schramm, Viola, Burke, Eynon, Schiavo, Matthews. Second Row: Nieberle, Weis, Kolias, Kluy, Creed, Feldmann. Third Row: Dovis, Cupolo, Pettisanr, Royce, Arcangelo, Frutchey, Von Atten, Tullo. Fourth Row: Fischer, Korff, J. Clancy, Doolittle, Woodcock, Dey, Cheadle, Weiner, M. Clancy, Mcckerer, Buffey. ■! ' •. I -. ' . M- ' SIGMA NU : - First Row; Lennan, Lee, Hemingway, Fisher, Downing. Second Row: Ringo, Bonard, Winters, Pierce, Beebe. Third Row: Craze, Riley, Woolbert, Viasits, Buff, Jorgenson, Flint, Havell, Whitt. SIGMA PHI being accepted the group will fall opart, completely decadent. If each man fails in his responsibility toward any one of the above, both he and the group will suffer, and in this re- spect the member is like a pillar hold- ing up his own bridge to society. It can be assumed, then, that fra- ternities are an integral part of the organism, Lehigh, and that they are more than likely here to stay for quite some time. But what is the nature of the fraternity system here, what are the fraternities themselves, and do they differ from those of other schools? There are few activities like run- ning around a block hundreds of times for the march of dimes carried on at Lehigh. This sort of thing appears to be limited to coed schools. The closest recently was perhaps done by Lambda Chi Alpha this year for the campus 346 A 1 -y : Bl ' M JH dj P 1 1 f i |d 11 i i 0ilf i -■' 1 f 3 Lf « -f- J T ' 9 1 : r f §! % J f t r ¥ X li ■41 ' 11 f T 31 fc First Row: Sawyer, Hofstetter, Pfou, Strickler, Lou Baumgardt, Csonadi, Moron. Second Row: Bergman, King, Beck, Mitchell, Long, Saori, Agnew, Melillo, Williams. Third Row: Brown, Turner, Harrison, Feffer, Kligoro, Soyer. 2Z2 222 SIGMA PHI EPSILON $E 348 I First Row: Lentz, Johnson, Bufton, Viola, Anselmo, Tutschulte, Dunham, Weiksner. Second Row: Musch, Antich, Everstine, Lonkford, Elliott, White, Lamport, Anderson, Capron, Jack- son. Third Row: Domchek, Craven, Simmons, Keller, Schnack, Kitson, Houtz, Mannik, Young, Vernoy, Tindall, Hoefler, Somodi. Fourth Row: Wolker, Ronieri, Ceilings, Cooke, Hogan, Boiner, Gross, Eustice, Rushforth.  — ' ' J TAU DELTA PHI chest when they auctioned off their pledge doss for an afternoon of work. Here the type of publicity gained by benevolent stunts adds little to the reputation of a house. More often Lehigh ' s fraternities help the community in a quiet, un- assuming manner. The Theta Chi party for underprivileged children, Chi Phi ' s Christmas party for the children at Allentown General Hospital, and Phi Delta Theta ' s Community Service Day go on with more success each year, but with little or no campus recognition. It would appear from these activities that the degeneracy of the fraternity sys- tem seen by so many takes a rather odd form here. Today it can be said that each fra- ternity at Lehigh has its own distinc- tive character: that is, each group has its own character reflecting the sum o mm llii S -J- ■i f t Mia ' Y ' ■iJr Tni«K 1l.- :;r j- L5-ji«x E f£Ti iLir? ' .5 iK First Row: Plotkin, Robbins, Poscover, Schneit, Ottinger, Ames, Unger, Berger, Click, Squire. Second Row: Shaw, Klein, Ingber, Lerman, Goldberger, Globmon, Lowe, Borger, Miller, Goldston, Schreiber. Third Row: Paris, Meyers, Simmerman, Siegal, Levin, Konner, Brown, Helpert, Silberberg. 351 H THETA CHI f 352 First Row: Stever, Tenthoff, Libsch, Burt. Second Row: Kophan, Fuller, R. Morris, Gaik, Sundlie, Dunleavy, Hilborn. Third Row: Barnes, Huth, Roca, Edwards, Stehlic, Geiger, Shuck, Seaman, P. Morris, Bulliner. Fourth Row: Hopkins, Henkel, Walter, Acker- man, Potyka, Nelson, Kucharz, Geoghegan, Blair, Yasamura. of the personalities of its individual members. This sum, moreover, is the sum of the one common element pos- sessed in each personality. Thus while on the surface fraternities here seem typed, it is only the one common ele- ment that gives such an illusion. Each man is on individual in his own right, and this is recognized as the case by each person as soon as he enters upon fraternity life. Which one of these groups is the bestf ' That question can be answered easily. There is no best fraternity at Lehigh, there con be no such distinc- tion if a spirit of individualism is to prevail. A man chooses the group with whom he wants to live, he exerts an effect on that group, and it is a necessary mark, and he should be- come a better individual because of it. THETA DELTA CHI H HB f M « Hfj ' ' S j t IB Mk First Row; Berg, Johnson, Salerno, D. Lyons, Fegley, Adorns, Stevens. Second Row: Sfout, Bulato, Downes, Butler, Ardern. Third Row: Pulfz, Budd, Burch, Burch. Fourth Row: R, Lyons, Pidutti, Ortlam, Air. Ml 1 • 1 m- ' ■■Jb J i i w ML, 1 r . - ■' ft r 1 ' mi f ©a THETA XI 356 First Row: Comstock, Wagner, Poindexter, Brown, Tammy Fitz, Young, Bandert, Nordt. Second Row: Young, Ruhl, Dale, Darkoch, Erhard, Whittle, Iden, Delbridge. Third Row: Krone, Rowles, Pratt, Metagve, Highley, Norclr, Kinord. Fourth Row: Phillips, Peterson, Doxey, Rovegno, Sharp. p W i j t - - rr n B - - ' ' - - Ht ' = ' -r ' ° T B H ' -A I Bn k ' S - PROGktbS IN STEEL ... In the foreground is the new Chemistry Building, latest addition to the $40,000,000 Homer Research Laboratories. In these superb facilities on South Mountain new steels, improved steel products, and new processes are being developed. BETHLEHEM STEEL Hard work and lots of elbow grease make the Hotel Beth- lehem o delightful place for parents and dates of Lehigh students. J span The friendly people at the First Notional Bonk are willing to serve the Lehigh Student ' s banking needs. Bob ' s Photo Shop supplies photographic ma- terial to the Epitome and Brown end White as well as to many Lehigh students. Central Plumbing and Heating Co. installed the kitchen plumbing in the Kappa Sigma Fraternity on the Lehigh campus. The tonsorial artists at Derrico ' s Barber Shop help to keep the Lehigh man well-grommed. Many Lehigh men depend on the Electric Laundry to keep them in clean shirts. hi i H 1 1 - v { .; i( ((( ; ■llitnk c-fi idUiiii ALLENTOWN AIR CONDITIONING CORP Much of the equipment in the UC as well as in fraternity houses has been supplied by the Ace Hotel and Bar Supply. Summer students especially appreciate the quality product of the Allentown Air Condi- tioning Corporation. Freeman ' s Dairy supplies the milk used by the Lehigh Din- ing Service. 363 Brown Borhek supplies the building ma- terials for many construction projects at Lehigh. Friendly and efficient service makes Devers Drugs a favorite with Lehigh students. No matter what kind of car you have, if it ' s in this shape, you need Kresge Auto Repairs. Lehigh Stationery Company carries every- thing for the college student from pencils to slide rules. Writing and typing paper is supplied to Le- high by the Lehigh Valley Paper Corp. Paper products of all kinds ore supplied to the University by the Miller Wholesale Co. If you can ' t find a pony in the library, try the Moravian Book Store. They have other books too. Lehigh students are grateful for the many handy vending machines of the Moller Vend- ing Corp. 364 For all party weekends, the Allen Towne- House on Union Boulevard offers modern fa- cilities for the dates of Lehigh men. The quality meats served in Lehigh ' s frater- nities are supplied by Evans Heeps of Al- lentown. Bethlehem Fabricators have prepared building materials for many of the projects undertak- en by Lehigh in recent years. 365 Fresh fruit and produce is supplied to the University doily by the Eatmore Fruit Com- pany of Allentown. Charles Eisenhart rarely finds time to rest from his duties as the guardian of the huge Lehigh plumbing system. The Union Bank and Trust Company of Eastern Pennsyl- vania offers University stu- dents a wide variety of services with friendliness and speed. 366 The proposed Arts and Science Center will be located on the north side of Packer Avenue in front of the present campus. The University ' s Chemical and Metallurgical En- gineering Laboratory will be across the street from Fritz Lab. Lehigh University prepares for its second century of service, directing its major efforts to expansion of educa- tional programs at both the graduate and undergraduate levels. Lehigh will observe its Centennial Anniversary in the academic year 1965-1966. To provide for this expanded edu- cational program, the University has announced a Centennial Fund Goal of $22,000,000, of which more than $12,000,000 already has been achieved. The f unds will be directed to faculty salaries, scholarships, fel- lowships, student residences, academic buildings, playing fields and special equipment. The first academic building to be erected in the Centennial Program will be the new Metallurgy and Chem- ical Engineering Laboratory, which was started this Spring. Soon to fol- low will be a College of Arts and Sci- ence Center and an addition to the University Library. Dr. Harvey A. Neville, President of the University, said in his Annual Re- port of 1963: The effectiveness of higher education in the present is meosured by how well the knowledge and wisdom of the past can be adapted and extended to meet the anticipated needs of the future. J. J. Morello Inc. has installed and repaired many of the rooms on the Lehigh Campus. The Grotto is known all over Lehigh for the finest in Italian food, as well as free delivery service. mmmr Heimbach ' s Bakery provides the qual- ity breads used in the University Cen- ter as well as numerous fraternities. t , The luxurious Holiday Inn offers rooms for dates of Lehigh men when that big weekend rolls around as well as cocktail lounge and banquet room. The Hajoca Corporation of Bethlehem supplies much of the plumbing and heating equipment for Lehigh ' s frater- nities, dormitories and public buildings. Lehigh ' s modern Fritz Civil Engineering laboratory was constructed by E. C. Machin Inc., Allentown contracting firm. 369    Almost all needs of Lehigh students can be found at the popular Supply Bureau. I V COOPERATIVE -J V Lehigh Valley Cooperative Farmers supplies dairy products to the University from farms In the area. Seven-Up for a refreshing lift. Lehigh students rely on nationally famous Seven-Up. To fraternities. University dining halls, and individual students, Ference ' s Cheese Shop supplies a wide variety of cheeses and related foods. 370 The Howard Johnson ' s Motor Lodge, located on route 22, has a good reputation for serv- ice and fine accmmodations. Lauffer ' s Hardware offers fraternity men a wide variety of tools and essentials for the decorations for the big weekend. Suncrest Farms ' trucks are a familiar sight around the Uni- versity as they supply the milk machines on the campus. For fast, expert care, most Lehigh men rely on the Allen Laundry for their laundry and dry clea ning needs. 372 Among other projects com- pleted on the Lehigh Campus by Duggan and Marcon is the refurbishing of the Physics Building. Lee M. Machemer, Allentown contracting firm, helped to refurbish the seating accom- modations at the baseball area of Taylor Stadium. Norbeth Dairy supplies milk and other dairy products with a smile to many Lehigh fra- ternities. High quality canned goods are supplied to the University Cen- ter by the Harold Stephens Co. Frank Piff has supplied the Lehigh campus for many years with beverages for all occa- sions, all supplied with friendly, prompt service. W. S. Reichenbach Son installed the com- plex oil burner in the power house at Lehigh and now services the unit in addition to those in fraternities. Not only does the Quaker Sfate Coca- Cola Bottling Co. bottle Coke, but they also deliver it. Saves walking. When the Lehigh man feels like pro- crastinating he often heads for the Ritz Bowling and Billiard Center. M. W. Wood Dining Service operates the popular snack bar as well as the University din- ing halls with high quality foods and services. 375 One of the most popular bar- bers in the Lehigh community is the master of the New Mer- chant ' s Barber Shop, specializ- ing in personal service. Heating units installed by Reber-Korn Co. keep the University Library and other campus buildings warm during the v orst v inters. Trans-Bridge Lines, Inc. transports comfort- ably and quickly students participating in various Music Department and athletic ac- tivities. The Hotel Traylor in Allentown has always been a favorite of Lehigh men and their parents. Schlecter ' s Printing provides the high quality and efficient service which helped the Brown and White earn a national Pacemaker award. The Royal Restaurant on Fourth Street is famous for fine food and quality service as well as student discounts for Lehigh men. Poultry and other farm products ore shipped daily to the University Center by the trucks of Sanbrook Farms. Lehigh Lithographing Inc. handles ex- pertly much of the large printing needs of the University. n ' ■■•• ' •I ' 377 For those delicious sundaes at the Snack Bar, Sealtest Ice Creom is the prime ingredient. For that luxurious Sunday meal or a wonderful dinner, the Lehigh man goes to Walp ' s. The Penn Coat and Apron Supply Co. trucks are a familiar sight at Lehigh, making deliv- eries throughout the week. Weekly, Lehigh students resid- ing in the residence halls re- ceive spanking white sheets and towels from the Penn Coot and Apron Supply Co. For a fabulous Chinese cuisine meal, Lehigh men dine at Rube ' s in Allentown. Weinland ' s Hordware on Broad Street offers fraternities a tremendous variety of hard- ware and sporting goods for all occasions. One of the favorite traditional night-spots for the dry students of Lehigh is the famous Tally Ho. 380 Allegheny Beef Company of Allegheny, Penn- sylvania, supplies many Lehigh fraternities with quality meats at quality prices. For delicious barbecued food and an evening of cocktails, Lehigh men prefer the Fireside Restaurant and Lounge. The modern, air-conditioned Patio Court Motel in Quaker- town houses the dotes of many Lehigh men on the big party weekends. 381 liHSi Catering to the men of Lehigh since 1911 Tom Bass ' s Tiger Hall. Guests staying over for Lehigh Parents ' Week- end frequently stay at the Americus Hotel in Allentown. The senior portraits in this book were token by Merin Stu- dios of Philadelphia. SENIOR DIRECTORY THOMAS RAY ABBEY Management Smithport, Pa. THETA DELTA CHI; secretary, pledgemaster, athletic manager. ROBERT HARVEY ADAMS Accounting Ocean City, N. J. KAPPA SIGMA; president, treasurer; IFC Representative; Class cabinet, sophomore; Beta Alpha Psi; Swimming, freshman, varsity; Accounting Society treasurer. PONGPOL ADIREKSARN International Relations Bankok, Thailand DELTA PHI; corresponding secretary; Soccer, freshman; Cosmo- politan Club; I.R. Club. SANTO A. AGATI Accounting West Pittston, Pa. PHI KAPPA THETA; treasurer; Marching Band; Accounting Society; Newman Club. RICHARD D. AGREE Chemical Engineering Scotch Plains, N. J. GEORGE HOBART ALLPORT II Social Relations Bethlehem, Pa. PI KAPPA ALPHA; assistant rush chairman; Song Director; Town Council, freshman; Class Cabinet, sophomore, junior, senior; Glee Club; Soccer Manager; Perishing Rifles, freshman; Canterbury Club, president. WILLIAM MARPLE AMBLER Mechanical Engineering Cortland, N. Y. M-M B-2; athletic chairman; Pi Mu Epsilon; Intramural Softball, basketball; German Club; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s list. ROGER JON AMES Management South Orange, N. J. TAU DELTA PHI; president, secretary, pledgemaster, social chair- men . JOHN MATTHEW ANDERSON Journalism Marblehead, Moss. CHI PHI; BROWN AND WHITE, copy editor; Pi Delta Upsilon. ANTHONY JOSEPH ARCANGELO Psychology Philodelphio, Po. SIGMA CHI; rushing chairman; Freshman Section president. EDWARD HENRY ASAM Chemical Engineering Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. TOWN; social chairman; vice-president; WLRN; Publicity Director; AICHE. FRANCIS JOSEPH AZZARTO Metallurgy New York, N. Y. THETA CHI, ENDOR art editor; Phi Eto Sigma; MUSTARD AND CHEESE. RICHARD JOHN BABIN Government Plainfield, N. J. M-M A-2; president; RHC; Arcadia, class cabinet, freshman, sopho- more, junior, senior; PSA, freshman; Discussion Series choirmon. PAUL ALEXANDER BAITER Electrical Engineering Sea Girt, N. J. DELTA PHI; house manager; Swimming, freshman; IEEE; Arnold Air Society, commander. Air Force Drill Team, commander. JAMES REGNELL BAKER Finance Douglaston, N. Y, M-M 8-1; intramurols. ROBERT HARVEY BAKER Mechanical Engineering Toms River, N. J. PHI SIGMA KAPPA; IFC representotive, doss cabinet; WLRN; Honors, freshman. DAVID M. BALL Mechonical Engineering Montoursville, Po. DELTA TAU DELTA; class cabinet; WLRN; Soccer, varsity; Hockey, varsity; Boseball, vorsity; Metallurgical Society. WALTER C. BALLARD Mechonicol Engineering Philadelphia, Pa. TAU DELTA PHI. RICHARD JOHN BANCALE Marketing Floral Pork, N. Y. TAYLOR B. GEORGE MICHAEL BANINO Geology Saddle River, N. J. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA; athletic monoger; Geophysics Club; Air Force Drill Teom. ROBERT VINCENT BARGER Finance Garden City, N. J. CHI PHI; sociol choirmon; BROWN AND WHITE; track, freshmen; Investment Council. ROBERT COULSON BARNETT Mechonicol Engineering Ocean Grove, N. J. TOWN; Pi Tou Sigma, president; Tou Beta Pi; ASME; Honors, sophomore; Deon ' s list. RICHARD DAVID BARWISE Marketing Plainfield, N. J. CHI PSI; sociol chairman; BROWN AND WHITE; Lambda Mu Sigma, Hockey Club, treosurer. ROBERT WALTER BASS Mechanical Engineering Scorsdale, N. Y. TOWN; ASME; MUSTARD AND CHEESE; Newman Club. JOHN ROBERT BAUM CHI PHI; vice-president, pledgemaster; IFC; Glee Club; Bond, manager; AIIE; secretary; Chamber Music Society. BRENT MARTIN BAUMGARDT Accounting Monticello, N. Y. SIGMA PHI; pledge czar, steward, IFC representative; Fraternity Representative to IFC; Accounting Society; Ski Club. STEPHEN ROBERT BECK Chemical Engineering Union City, N. J. SIGMA PHI; rushing chairman; class cabinet; Arcadia, vice- president; Houseparty Judiciary Committee; Basketball, freshman; American Institute of Chemical Engineers; Newman Club. ROBERT BURNS BEGG History Rochester, N. Y. SIGMA PHI EPSILON. RONALD JOSEPH BELLETTI Accounting Bethlehem, Pa. TOWN; Beta Alpha Psi; Accounting Society; Honors, sophomore; The McCloin Progress Award in Art; Dean ' s list. JOHN CARLTON BENNETT JR. Mechanical Engineering Montoursville, Pa. M-M B-l; Tou Beta Pi, corresponding secretary; Pi Mu Epsilon, vice-director general; Bond; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s list. WESLEY McCRACKEN BENNETT Industrial Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. TOWN; Bond; AIE; Delta Chi. RICHARD WILLIAMS BERG JR. Chemical Engineering Mt. Lebonon, Po. CHI PSI; rushing chairman; Phi Eto Sigma; Wrestling, freshman, varsity; AICHE; Honors, freshman; Dean ' s list. WILLIAM CONRAD BERG III Metallurgical Engineering Pittsburgh, Po. CHI PSI; doss cabinet; Wrestling, freshman, varsity; Honors, sophomore. JAY BENNETT BERGER Biology Bethlehem, Pa. TAU DELTA PHI; editor, historian; Alpha Epsilon Delta, secretary; WLRN, sports director; R. W. Hall Pre-Med Society; Dean ' s list. PETER KIDD BESCH Physics Springfield, N. J. ALPHA SIGMA PHI; phi eto sigmo; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s list. DAVID WARG BEST Finance Bethlehem, Pa. M-M B-I; Swimming. ROBERT W. BETZ International Relations Baldwin, N. Y, PHI SIGMA KAPPA; Inductor; Glee Club; Bosketboll, freshman; International Relations Club. RAYMOND STEPHEN BIEAK Accounting N. Cotosouquo, Pa. TOWN. JOHN M. BILESKY Electrical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. TOWN; IEEE. TIMOTHY BROWN BIRD Internotionol Relations Allentown, Po. LEONARD HALL; Arcadia XVI; Arcadia Associates, secretory, treasurer; Class Cobinet, freshman, junior; Endor staff; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Phi Alpha Theta; Glee Club; Chapel Choir, librarian; International Relations Club, president; Cosmopolitan Club, vice-president; Politicol Science Assembly; Operation Cross- roads Africa; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Deon ' s list. HAROLD PAUL BITLER JR. Accounting Pottstown, Po. DRAVO B-l 12; Class cabinet; Arcadia Associates; RHC, con- cessions business monoger; Beta Alpha Psi, treasurer; Alpho Koppo Psi, president; Bond; Jozz Moderns; Accounting society; Student investment council; Honors, sophomore; Deon ' s list. ROGER SPROUL BLAIR Applied Science Pittsburgh, Po. THETA CHI; Assistant treasurer; Closs cobinets; Arcadia Associates; Student Activities committee; Crossroods Africo Committee; Cyanide; Bond, student conductor and publicity chairman; AIIE; Lofayette Weekend Chairman; Student Library Survey Committee, chairman. 383 WARREN SMITH BLAIR JR. History Haddonfield, N. J. TAYLOR D; Phi Alpha Theta, secretary; Fencing Team, freshman; Pershing Rifles, commander; Pershing Rifle Drill Team, commander; Acolytes Guild. HOWARD ELTON BLUNT Greek Providence, R. I. LEONARD HALL; vice-president; Eta Sigma Phi; Glee Club. ROBERT J. BOCKRATH Industrial Engineering Huntingdon Volley, Pa. PHI GAMMA DELTA. DONALD ROBERT BOSTEN Mechanical Engineering Garden City, N. Y. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA; secretary, vituolist; Arcadia; Soccer, fresh- man; ASME, secretary. LARRY STEPHEN BOTHE Management Orelond, Po. TOWN; Army ROTC. JOHN LUTZ BOWMAN JR. Mechanical Engineering Denver, Po. M-M B-3; Pi Tau Sigma, corresponding secretary. WILLIAM JACOB BOWMAN Management Neiffer, Po. DRINKER 3B; Class Cabinet, junior; Basketball, freshman; Baseball, vorsity; Gryphon Society, freshman counselor; Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship, treosurer; Student Investment Committee; Honors, sophomore; Deon ' s list; Theodore B. Wood Prize. DAVID CHARLES BOYD Metallurgy Penn Hills, Pa. M-M A-2; Metallurgicol Society; ASM; AIME; MUSTARD AND CHEESE, secretary; Lehigh Christian Fellowship. BROOKS TOMLINSON BRIERLEY Finance Morris Plains, N. J. KAPPA SIGMA; House Manager; BROWN AND WHITE; Arnold Air Society. THERMAN PAUL BRITT JR. Economics Abington, Po. ALPHA TAU OMEGA; treasurer; Class cabinet, junior; Arcadia Associotes, sophomore; Swimming, freshman, varsity; Newman Club; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s list. W. PAUL BROGOWSKI Monogement Bogota, N. J. DELTA TAU DELTA; Stewart; Assistant treasurer; Class cabinet, junior, senior; Band; Art society. JOHN SHARTLE BROOKOVER JR. Finance Fromingham, Moss. PHI SIGMA KAPPA; president, vice-president; Class cabinet, senior; IFC; Endor, ossistont business auditor; Spanish Club; Hockey Club, student investment club. CHARLES ABNER BUCK, JR. English Bethlehem, Pa. PHI DELTA THETA; BROWN AND WHITE; Racquet; Ski Club; MUSTARD AND CHEESE. WARREN HOWARD BUCK Chemistry Freehold, N. J. TAYLOR B-6; Glee club, executive committee; Student Affiliate, American Chemistry Society; Student Chemistry Society; Honors, freshman, sophomore. ROGER MONTFORT BUCKHOUT Industrial Engineering Glen Head, N. Y. DELTA SIGMA PHI; president; Rushing Chairman; House manager; IFC representative; AIIE. DONALD JAMES BUFFEY Electronics Rutherford, N. J. SIGMA CHI; Chapter editor; IEEE. STEVEN JAMES BURAKOFF Psychology Forest Hilis, N. Y. SIGMA ALPHA MU; Steward; Student activities committee; Arcadia Associates; Class Cabinet, junior, senior; Political Science Assembly; Young Democrats; Allentown Volunteers. ROGERT GIENN BURCH Metallurgical Engineering Choppoqua, N. Y. THETA DELTA CHI; IFC, junior, senior; Class Cabinet, freshman, junior; Metallurgicol Society; ASM. DAVID RICHARD BURG Mothemotics Bethlehem, Po. TAYLOR A; president; Athletic monoger; Arnold Air Society, commander; Pi Mu Epsilon, director-generol; Computer Society; Lutheron Student Association; Honors, freshman, sophomore. PETER SANDER BURGESS Accounting Old Greenwich, Conn. TOWN; Accounting Society. CHARLES FREDERICK BURRELL Physics Shamokin, Pa. TAYLOR B; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Mu Epsilon; AlP, treasurer; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s list. EDWARD MAHADY BURT History Waban, Mass. THETA CHI; EPITOME, Senior Editor; Hockey Club, president; Sailing Club; W3AEQ; MUSTARD AND CHEESE. DONALD STEPHEN BUTLER Metallurgical Engineering Drifting, Pa. THETA DELTA CHI; president; Social Chairman; Class Cabinet, junior; IFC ; Lacrosse, varsity, captain; Metallurgical Society, vice- president. JOSEPH FRANCIS CAFFREY Engineering Physics Plymouth, Pa. TOWN; Lehigh Radio Society, president; Honors, freshman, sopho- more; Dean ' s list. MILES SNOWDEN CAPRON Management Milwaukee, Wis. SIGMA PHI EPSILON; Alpha Kappa Psi; Student Investment Council; Dean ' s list. ROBERT N. CARLSON Industrial Engineering Nutley, N. J. DELTA CHI; President, vice-president; IFC representative; National Convention Delegate; IFC; Class Cabinet, freshman, junior, sopho- more, senior; Class Gift Team Captain; EPITOME; WLRN; Soccer, freshman; AIIE. HARRY H. CAROTHERS III Biology Motowon, N. J. ALPHA SIGMA PHI; Track, varsity; AFROTC. STEPHEN L. CHEADLE Business Huntington, N. Y. SIGMA CHI. RONALD C. CHEEK Management Fonwood, N. J. TOWN; town council; Lambda Mu Sigma; Honors, sophomore. STEPHEN JOHN CHIPSER Electrical Engineering Allentown, Pa. ALPHA LAMBDA OMEGA; Treasurer; Social Chairman; Town Council; IEEE. WILLIAM JOSEPH CLAFFEY Chemistry Ridgefield, Conn. TOWN; American Chemical Society; Student Affiliate. PATRICK JOSEPH CLARK History Peckvllle, Pa. TAYLOR D. CHARLES WHITFIELD CLEMONS Government Bethlehem, Pa. TOWN; Lehigh Review; Glee Club; Spanish Club; Houseporty Judiciary Committee Deputy; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s list. JAMES MONROE CLOUSER Electrical Engineering Reading, Pa. TAYLOR D; Marching Band; Concert Band; IEEE; Lehigh Christian Fellowship, secretary, librarian, missionary secretary. LAWRENCE PHILLIP COHEN Accounting Morristown, N. J. M-M B-1; Accounting Society; Investment Council. PHILIP ROBERT COLWELL Industrial Engineering Rumford, R. I. RICHARDS 2-A; president; Marching Bond; Gryphon Society; Swimming, freshman and varsity; AIIE. ALBERT RULON COMLY, JR. Metallurgicol Engineering Philadelphia, Po. TOWN; Sociol Chairman; Class Cobinet; Fencing, freshman; Metallurgical Society; ASM. JOSEPH ROBERT CONCILIO Accounting Sparta, N. J. PHI KAPPA THETA; Steward, vice-president; Class Cabinet, sopho- more, junior, senior; Glee Club. GARY LEE CONYFRS Biology Bethlehem, Po. TOWN; Alpha Epsilon Delta; R. W. Hall Pre-Med Society; Germon Club; Arnold Air Society; AFROTC; Crock Drill Team; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s list. WILLIAM LANDY COOK Mechanicol Engineering Baltimore, Md. M-M B-2; president; ASME; Honors, sophomore. BURTON DECKER CORWIN Mathematics Bethel Park, Po. DELTA CHI; Pi Mu Epsilon; Lehigh Computer Society, treasurer; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s list. CLIFFORD WILLIAM COTTON Industrial Engineering Laurence Harbor, N. J. TOWN; AIIE. 384 FREDRICK WRIGHT COTTON Physics Carmel, Indiana TAYLOR A; Secretary, treasurer; Secretary Student Chapter; AlP; MUSTARD AND CHEESE. JAMES RICHARDS CRAMPTON Civil Engineering Westfield, N. J. PHI SIGMA KAPPA; Secretary, vice-president; Class Cabinet, sopho- more- Tau Beta Pi; AICE; Honors, freshman; Dean ' s list. DOUGLAS CALHOON CREED Civil Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. SIGMA CHI; Rushing Chairman; Chapter Editor; Chi Epsilon, vice- president; ASCE, vice-president; Campus Chest, chairman. KIRK A. CRESSMAN Finance King Of Prussia, Pa. CHI PHI; Athletic Chairman, House Manager, IFC representative; Class Cabinet, senior; Student Investment Council; Intramural executive Committee; WLRN, business manager. JOSEPH WILLIAM CROOKS Government Washington, D. C. TOWN; Town Council; Fencing, varsity; Political Science Assembly, treasurer; Sailing Club; Canterbury Club. WILLIAM WILMOT CROUSE III Management Middlesex, N. J. ALPHA CHI RHO; Executive Committee, sergeant at arms, delegate to notional convention; IFC; EPITOME, identification editor junior year. BRUCE HOUCK CROWDER Engineering Physics Morristown, N. J. PHI SIGMA KAPPA; Steward; Class Cabinet, freshman, sophomore, junior, senior; AlP; Secretary, vice-president. HENRY CARLTON CRUTCHFIELD JR. Industrial Engineering Ho-Ho-Kus, N. J. CHI PHI; Historian; Scabard and Blade, Soccer, freshman, varsity; Newman Club, executive committee; Rugby Team. WILLIAM ROOT GUMMING History Arlington, Va. History A-1; President; Class Cabinet, junior; EPITOME; Phi Alpha Theta; Track, freshman; Soccer, freshman; Dean ' s list. ROBERT MORRIS CURTICE Mathematics Fort Lee, N. J. DELTA SIGMA PHI; Social Chairman, pledgemaster. TORGER NILS DAHL Civil Engineering Brooklyn, N. Y. KAPPA ALPHA; Chorister; Glee Club, stage manager; Soccer, varsity; Lacrosse, freshman; AICE. WILLIAM FRANKLIN DALE Chemical Engineering South Charleston, W. Va. THETA XI; Secretary; Modern Jazz Sextet; Student Chemical Society, secretary, treasurer; AICLE; Alpha Phi Omega; Honors, freshman. DANA BAXTER DANIELSON Industrial Engineering Windham, Conn. ALPHA SIGMA PHI; Vice-president; AIIE. ESKIL STUART DANIELSON Government Dover, N. J. TOWN; President Class Cabinet, senior, secretary; BROWN AND WHITE; WLRN; Eta Sigma Phi; Arnold Air Society, provost. JOHN MICHAEL DANUKO Engineering Physics Lotrobe, Pa. DELTA TAU DELTA; Steward; Rifle, freshman, varsity; AlP. JOHN HARRY DAVENPORT Mechonicol Engineering Stanhope, N. J. CHI PHI; IFC; Scabbard and Blade, treasurer; Track, freshman, versify; Cross Country, varsity, coptoin. GEORGE SANDER DAVIS Government Great Neck, N. Y. PI LAMBDA PHI; Secretary; Arcadia, orcadia improvement com- mittee, chairman; Crossroods Africa Committee Coordinator; BROWN AND WHITE; WLR; Pi Delta Epsilon; Crossroods Africa Conference Chairman; Hillel Society; PSA. KENNETH CHARLES DAVIS Accounting North Plainfield, N. J. M-M B-1; Arnold Air Society; Methodist Student Fellowship, treosurer, president. MARION BOSTWICK DAVIS III Mechonicol Engineering Bel Air, Md. ALPHA CHI RHO; Ritual Officer, House Monager, vice-president; Pledgemaster, Copital chairman; Closs Cobinet, senior; ASME, president, treasurer; Honors, freshmon, sophomore; Dean ' s List. RICHARD CROSBY DAVIS JR. Electronics Nutley, N. J. SIGMA CHI; Pledgemaster; IEEE. RICHARD MARTIN DAVIS Industrial Engineering Jamaica Estates, N. Y. PI LAMBDA PHI; Comptroller Class Cabinet; EPITOME, business monoger, administrative manager; Pi Delta tpsilon; Boxing Club; Track, intramural; AIIE, treasurer. DAVID ROYAL DECKER Internationol Relations Pelham Manor, N. Y. KAPPA ALPHA; president, steward, Christopher; IFC; Class Cabinet; University Discipline Committee; Cyanide Society, vice- president; Omicron Delta Koppa, treasurer; Glee Club, manager; Baseball, freshman; International Relations Club. JOHN R. DELANEY Geology Charlotte, N. C. THETA DELTA CHI; Basketball, vorsity. JOHN KENNETH DENLINGER Civil Engineering Smoketown, Pa. TOWN; Tou Beta Pi; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Chi Epsilon, treasurer; Gryphon Society; ASCE, president; Inter-Varsity Christian Fellow- ship, president; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s List; ASTM Student Membership Prize. JOHN RICHARD DENOIA Accounting Scotch Plains, N. J. BETA THETA PI; Pledgemoster, rushing chairman; BROWN AND WHITE; EPITOME; Alpha Koppa Psi; Football, freshman, varsity; Baseball, freshman, varsity. EMORY DEPEW Civil Engineering Wayne, N. J. M-M B-1; AICE; Lutheran Student Association, secretary; Folk Music Club. WILLIAM FLOYD DEVINNEY Management Springville, N. Y. DELTA TAU DELTA; vice-president; Football, freshman, varsity. JAMES T. DEY History Short Hills, N. J. SIGMA CHI; Tennis, varsity. VICTOR RODGER DIGILIO International Relations Philadelphia, Po. Industrial Engineering DRAVO D; Arcadia, secretary; Class Cabinet; Student Life Com- mittee; Alpho Pi Mu Secretary; Cyanide; Bond; AIIE; International Relations Club; Gryphon Society; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Arcadia, president. ARTHUR EDWARD DIPIETRO Government Queens Villoge, N. Y. ALPHA SIGMA PHI; Class Cobinet, freshman, sophomore; IFC; Rushing Committee; BROWN AND WHITE; Baseball, freshman. THOMAS HERMAN DISTEFANO Electronics Hershey, Pa. TAYLOR A- Eta Koppa Nu; Pi Mu Epsilon; IEEE, vice-chairman. DENNIS ANTHONY DOMCHEK Metallurgy Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. SIGMA PHI EDSILON; Rushing Chairman; Marching Band, varsity bond- Metallurgical Society; ASM. LAWRENCE THOMAS DOUGHERTY Accounting Great Neck, N. Y. PHI SIGMA KAPPA; Treasurer; IFC representative; Football, fresh- man; Spanish Club. THOMAS RAYMOND DOWLER Management St. Cloirsville, Ohio PSI UPSILON; Secretary. DAVID HARRISON DRESHER Accounting Mt. Penn, Po. PI LAMBDA PHI; Rushing Chairman; Bridge Club. ROBERT JOSEPH DUCHYNSKI Engineering Physics Reading, Pa. TOWN; Commander, lieutenant commander; IFC Representative; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s List. JAMES FRANCIS DULICAI Journalism Cronford, N. J. M-M B-2; Social Chairman; BROWN AND WHITE; Pi Delta Epsilon; WLRN, educational programing director. JAMES DANIEL DUNLEAVY International Relations Short Hills, N. J. THETA CHI; Treasurer; Fencing, freshman, varsity; Cut ond Trust Society, treasurer, vice-president; Cosmopolitan Club; Honors, sopho- more. JAMES ALLAN DUNLEVY Economics Ho-Ho-Kus, N. J. TAYLOR A- Vice-President; Eto Sigmo Phi, secretary. EDWARD LYON DUNN Metallurgical Engineering Lebanon, N. J. THETA XI; Scholarship officer; ASM; Camera Club. EDWARD JOSEPH DWYER Metallurgy , Dunmore, Pa. TOWN; EPITOME; Metollurgicol Society; South Mountain bports Car Club. 385 WILLIAM PATRICK DWYER Accounting Bethlehem, Pa. BETA THETA PI; Steward; BROWN AND WHITE; Wrestling, fresh- man, varsity, manager; Accounting Society; Alpha Kappa Psi. ALAN CHARLES ECKBRETH Engineering Physics West Caldwell, N. J. ALPHA TAU OMEGA; Arcadia, vice-president, freshman, vice- president, sophomore, corresponding secretary, junior; Class Cabi- nets, sophomore, junior, senior; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi; Omicron Delta Kappa, president; Cyanide, chairman fresh- man week; AlP, president; German Club, treasurer; Honors, fresh- man, sophomore; Dean ' s list; Wilbur Scholarship Prize; Scott Paper Company Foundation Award for Leadership. ALLEN EDELSTEIN Mathematics Mf- P ' ' ' ' P°- TAYLOR A- Phi Eta Sigma; Dean ' s list; Wilbur Scholarship Prize. WILLIAMS. EDWARDS III Chemistry Philadelphia, Pa. TOWN; WLRN-WLR; Marching Band; Varsity Band. JEFFREY JOHN ELENEWSKI Psychology Trenton, N. J. PHI KAPPA THETA; Social chairman; WLRN. NICHOLAS MARK ELSBERG Government Springfield, Mass. TAYLOR D; Secretary, treasurer; Scabbard end Blade; Pershing Rifles. JEFFREY WALTER ENCK Chemical Engineering Massapequa Park, N. Y. GRYPHON; Vice-President; Executive Board Member; Cyanide, pre- sident; Scabbard and Blade; Wrestling, freshman, J. V. Lacrosse, freshman; AICHE; Honors, freshman. IRA HAYES ENSINGER German Pennsauken, N. J. TOWN; Dean ' s list. JAMES EDWARD ESTELLE Management Spring Lake, N. J. DELTA TAU DELTA; Sergeant at Arms; Student Investment Coun- cil; Sailing Club; Campus Chest; Scabbard and Blade, president; Dean ' s list. GORDON CARL EVERSTINE Mechanical Engineering Baltimore, Md. SIGMA PHI EPSILON; Steward; Pi Mu Epsilon; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s list. GEORGE FRANKLIN EYNON Metallurgy Scranton, Pa. SIGMA CHI; Treasurer, house manager; Class cabinet, sophomore, junior- Wrestling, freshman; Student Metallurgical Society. GERALD A. FEFFER Foreign Careers Paris, France SIGMA CHI; IFC representative; Arcadia, vice-president; IFC; Class Cabinet; Ski club; Political Science Assembly. JOHN KITRIDGE FEGLEY Marketing West Lawn, Pa. THETA DELTA CHI; Steward; Class Cabinet, sophomore; Lambda Mu Sigma; Scabbard and Blade; Football, freshman, varsity; Market- ing Society, secretary, treasurer. FRED FEIGENBAUM Marketing Pittsburgh, Po. M-M-A-2; Secretary, treasurer; Delta Omicron Theta; Marching Band- Varsity Band; Lambda Mu Sigma. MICHAEL D. FEIT Physics Allentown, Pa. Alpho Lambda Omega; Recording secretory, vice-president; Town council; Time Math Honorary; AlP, student chapter; W3AEQ; Honors freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s list. WILLIAM FREDERICK FILBERT JR. Chemical Engineering Woodbury, N. J. TAYLOR A; AICHE; Methodist Student Fellowship. STEVEN SANFORD FINK Accounting West Hempstead, N. Y. PI LAMBDA PHI; athletic chairman, steward, treosurer; BROWN AND WHITE; EPITOME; Pi Delta Epsilon; Lambda Mu Sigma; Accounting Society; Journalism Society; Marketing Society; Student Investment Fund; Ski Club. WALTER EDWARD FINK JR. Management New Milford, N. J. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA; Vice-President; Soccer, J. V. CHARLES LEE FISCHBECK Mathematics East Orange, N. J. TAYLOR C; Bridge Club, vice-president. RICHARD CHRISTIAN FISHER Geology Bradford Woods, Pa. CHI PSI; Vice-president, treasurer; Class cabinet; Phi Eta Sigma; Rugby Team; Geology Society; Sailing Club; Ski Club; Honors, freshman; Dean ' s list. G. DUNCAN FLETCHER Electrical Engineering East Orange, N. J. TOWN; IEEE. JAMES DAVID FOLEY Electrical Engineering Palmerton, Po. DELTA SIGMA PHI; Scholar- ship Chairman; Phi Eta Sigma, vice-president; Pi Mu Epsilon; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi; IEEE; Christian Council; Honors, freshman, junior, sophomore; Dean ' s list; Eta Kappa Nu Award. DANIEL THEODORE FRANCESKI Electrical Engineering Winfield, N. J. TAYLOR A; Glee Club; IEEE. CHESTER ALAN FRANK Accounting New York, N. Y. M-M-B-2; RHC Film Chairman; Class cabinet; WLRN, business Manager; THE BROWN AND WHITE, advertising manager; Ac- counting Society. ROBERT IRVING FREEDMAN Government Yonkers, N. Y. SIGMA ALPHA MU; Social chairman. Alumni Recorder; WLRN- WLR, general manager; Pi Delta Epsilon, secretary; Cross-Country, freshman; Political Science Association, president; Intercollegiate Broadcasting System, executive secretary; LVSGA, flight chairman. A. COLIN FREUND Accounting Scotch Plains, N.J. DELTA SIGMA PHI; Treasurer; Bond, marching, concert; Jazz moderns. ROBERT ALLAN FREW JR. Finance Cedar Grove, N. J. ALPHA SIGMA PHI; Corresponding secretary, treasurer; Class cabinet; Alpha Kappa Psi, secretary; MUSTARD AND CHEESE, business manager, secretary; Dean ' s list. AARON VAIL FROST III Finance Allentown, N. J. TOWN; Class cabinet; town council; BROWN AND WHITE; Stu- dent Investment Council. BARRY JAMES FRY Chemistry Bethlehem, Pa. GRYPHON; Lehigh Review, editor-in-chief; Glee Club; Chapel Choir; Phi Eta Sigma; Cyanide; Fencing, J. V., varsity; Student Chemistry Society, president; Honors, freshman, sophomore, junior; Dean ' s list; Biology Curriculum Prize; Chemistry Curriculum Prize. W. LEE FRY Metallurgical Engineering New Freedom, Po, CHI PSI; Pledgemaster; Boseboll, freshman; Football, varsity. EDWARD PAUL FULMER Mechanics Bethlehem, Pa. TOWN; Dean ' s list. CHARLES ELWIN GABA Finance Caldwell, N.J. ALPHA CHI RHO; Vice-president; IFC; Honors, Sophomore. WILLIAM HENRY GAIK Accounting Atlanta, Ga. Theta Chi; Assistant House manager. Social choirmon; Bond. HAROLD FRANK GARDENER Industrial Engineering Lima, Peru PI KAPPA ALPHA; Soccer, varsity; Basketb all, varsity; AIIE; Cos- mopolitan Club, secretary; Spanish Club; MUSTARD AND CHEESE; Newman Club. JOHN OTIS GARDNER Chemistry Ellicott City, Md. TAYLOR B; Chemicol Society. LAWRENCE WADE GARRETT Mechanical Engineering Grosse Point, Mich. PI KAPPA ALPHA; Vice-president. ROBERT E. GATTI Industrial Engineering Flemington, N. J. DELTA CHI- Sergeant ot Arms; Baseball, varsity; AIIE. ALBERT ROSS GEE II Government Pittsburg, Pa. M-M-B-2- Social chairman; Rugby Club; Canterbury Club. EDWARD R. GEIGER Accounting Williamport, Pa. THETA CHI; Secretary, Steward; Class Cabinet, freshman, sopho- more junior, senior; Student Investment Council. ANDREW RONALD GEMZA Mechanical Engineering Clifton, N. J. ALPHA CHI RHO; Ritual Officer; ASME. ROBERT BUDD GIBBY JR. Mathematics Hillside, N. J. GRYPHON; Class Officer, treasurer. ROBERT D. GOODSTEIN Economics New York, N. Y. PI LAMBDA PHI. 386 FRANK JOSEPH GORSKI Chemistry Scranton, Pa. B-3; SAME, vice-president, secretary; Student Chemical Society; American Chemical Society; Inter Faith Council; Newman Club, president, vice-president; Religious Life Committee; MUSTARD AND CHEESE. NELSON KIMBALGOTHIE Civil Engineering Camp Hill, Pa. TAYLOR B; Social Chairman. DOUGLAS EUGENE GOULD Chemistry Boonton, N. J. KAPPA SIGMA; Pledgemaster; National Honor Society. RICHARD CHARLES GRAF Government Tenafly, N. J. TAYLOR A; Band; Alpha Phi Omego; Bethlehem Tutorial Project. ALFRED JACOB GRASER History Port Washington, N. Y. PHI KAPPA THETA; Secretary; BROWN AND WHITE, sports edi- tor; Phi Alpho Theta; Rugby Club, secretary. JOHN GRASON Electrical Engineering Fullerton, Pa. TOWN; Town Council, freshman, sophomore. Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu, vice-president; Glee Club; IEEE; Honors, freshman, sophomore, junior; Dean ' s list; William A. Aiken Award; Eta Kappa Nu Prize. ALLAN E. GREENBERG Electrical Engineering New York, N. Y. TOWN ROGER KARL GREGORY Civil Engineering Norwalk, Conn. M-M- B-3; ASCE; Camera Club. WILLIAM MILAN GRESHO Electrical Engineering Hellertown, Pa. PHI KAPPA THETA; Secretary; BROWN AND WHITE, assistant sports editor; Eta Kappa Nu, secretary; IEEE; Honors, Sophomore; Dean ' s list. BARCLAY HALL GRIFFITHS Accountings Hunington, N. Y. KAPPA ALPHA; Arcadia; IFC, treasurer; Class Officer, secretary; Cyanide; Beta Alpha Psi; Omicron Delta Kappa; Alpha Kappa Psi, counting Society; Houseparty Judiciary Committee, chairman; Flag- pole Day, chairman; Dean ' s list. THOMAS WILLIAMS GRIM Economics Allentown, Po. TOWN; Town council, treosurer; Pi Mu Epsilon; Honors, freshmon, sophomore. ROBERT JOSEPH GROSSI Civil Engineering Philadephia, Po. TOWN; Baseball, freshman, varsity. PETER WILLIAM GRUNER Civil Engineering Summit, N. J. DELTA PHI; Soccer, freshman, varsity; Model Railroad Club, vice- president. BARRY WAYNE HAACKE Accounting Manhosset, N. Y. TOWN; Beta Alpha Psi; Accounting Society; Sailing Club. ROBERT CHRISTY HAAG Accounting Philadelphia, Pa. TOWN; Secretary. ROBERT JAMES HAEHNLE JR. Civil Engineering Bethlehem, Po. ALPHA LAMBDA OMEGA; Secretary; Town Council, secretary; ASCE. RICHARD S. HALBERSTEIN Government Marion, Ohio PI LAMBDA PHI; BROWN AND WHITE; Pi Sigmo Alpha, vice- president; Washington Semester Program; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s list. WILLIAM DEANE HAMILTON Electronics Westfield, N. J. M-M; IEEE. ARTHUR JOSEPH HAMM Mefollurgical Engineering Williamsport, Pa. TAYLOR E; Vice-president; RHC, secretary; Rifle Teom, varsity, manoger. ROBERT W. NANCE Arts Little Silver, N. J. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA WILLIAM LESTER HARPEL Chemicol Engineering Bethlehem, Po. PI KAPPA ALPHA; President of Pledge Closs; Town Council; Alpha Lombda Omega; Student Chemical Society; ASCHE. JOHN HENRY HARRINGTON, JR. Chemical Engineering New Hyde Pork, N. Y. TAYLOR A; Band AICHE; Alpha Phi Omega, secretary, treasurer; Campus vice-president; Newman club, treasurer; Honors, sopho- more; Dean ' s list. STEPHEN BATEMAN HARRIS Science Warrington, Pa. KAPPA SIGMA; Secretary; Dean ' s list; Honors, sophomore. VERN E. HAWKINS Management Pittsburgh, Pa. CHI PSI; Secretary; BROWN AND WHITE; Baseball, varsity. ROBERT D. HAY Electrical Engineering Washington, D. C TALYOR E THOMAS SOUTHARD HAY Accounting Edgeworth, Pa. DELTA CHI; Vice-President, Social Chairman; Track, freshmon; WLRN, business manager; Accounting Society. JOHN GIBSON HAZARD Economics New York, N. Y. DELTA SIGMA PHI; Investment Council. GEORGE MILLER HEBBARD JR. Chemical Engineering Lakeland, Florida TOWN; Airforce Rifle Teom, freshman; Ski Club; Camera Club. DAVID PAUL HEINTZELMAN Chemical Engineering Hazelton, Pa. TAYLOR A; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Band; AICHE; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s list; William H. Chandler Prize in Chemistry; AICHE award. RAY KENNETH HEIST Electrical Engineering Woylond, Moss. M-M B-3; President, Social chairman; Class cabinet; Swimming, freshman, varsity, captain; IEEE. ROBERT VALENTINE HENNING JR. Economics Garden City, N. Y. PHI DELTA THETA; Scholarship chairman, IFC representative. His- torian; BROWN AND WHITE; Pi Delta Epsilon; Football; Basketball, Volleyball; Softball. DENVER WILHELM HERR Electrical Engineering Palmyra, Pa. M-M B-2; Vice-President; Eta Kappa Nu, Corresponding secretary; IEEE. ROBERT PRATT HESS Economics Durham, N. C. BETA THETA PI; Treasurer; Arcadia, treasurer; Class officer, pre- sident; Cyanide, treasurer; Omicron Delta Kappa; Soccer, freshman; Wrestling, freshman, intramural; Honors, sophomore. PARRY LEO HESSELMAN Electrical Engineering Rosemont, Pa. CHI PSI; President, Steward; Class officer, Vice-President; Class cabinet, freshman, sophomore, junior, senior; IFC, junior, senior; RHC, President; Rugby Team; IEEE. LEONARD C. HIGHLEY Industrial Engineering Bethel Pork, Pa. THETA XI; Sociol chairman. RONALD STEPHEN HILL German Bethlehem, Pa. TAYLOR E; Vice-President; Marching Band. MICHAEL BENJAMIN HISTAND Engineering Physics Buckingham, Pa. BETA THETA PI; Secretary; Class cabinet; Tau Beta Pi, secretary; Wrestling, freshman; German Club, President; Honors, freshman, sophomore, junior. E. JACKSON HOLT History Scotch Plains, N. J. GRYPHON- Class cabinet; Footboll, freshman, varsity; Ski club. JOHN BERND HOLZ Chemistry New York, N. Y. TAYLOR D; vice-president; Pi Mu Epsilon; American Chemical Society, vice-president; Pershing Rifles, officer; Hillel Society; Na- tional Science Foundation, undergraduate; Honors, freshman, sopho- more; Dean ' s list. STANLEY B. HOROWITZ Economics Allentown, Pa. TAU DELTA PHI; Athletic Chairmen, Assistant Rushing Chairman, Porliomentorian; Class cabinet; Educotionol policy Committee, Co- chairman; Arcadia; EPITOME; Lacrosse, freshman; Accounting Society; AIESEC, U. S. President of Lehigh Unit; Student Investment Society; Honors, freshinan. VINCENT V. HORVATH Electricol Engineering Bethlehem, Po. TOWN; Town council; Eta Kappa Nu; IEEE; Alpha Lambdo Omega, president; WLRN; AFROTC Drill Team, Arnold Air Society; Honors, freshman. Bernardsville, N. J. JOHN HUGH HOUTZ Electronics SIGMA PHI ELSILON; Class cabinet; IEEE. HARLEY DOUGLAS HUEBNER Physics Allendale, N. J. TAYLOR E; AlP. ROBERT JAMES HUMMEL Chemical Engineering Yeadon, Pa. ALPHA CHI RHO; President; IPC; JAACS; Honors, freshman. WILLIAM PARKER HURLEY JR. Finance Louiseville, Ky. PSI UPSILON; Coordinotor of Boxing Club. DANIEL A. HUSE Manogement Morris Plains, N.J. TAYLOR D; Social chairman; RHC, treasurer, vice-president; Stu- dent Investment Council. WILLIAM FRANCIS INDOE Electrical Engineering Allendale, N. J. English PI KAPPA ALPHA; Assistant Rushing Chairman, vice-president, president; IFC; Class cabinet; Honors, sophomore, junior, freshman. DONALD McCREDIE JACKSON Industrial Engineering Manhasset, N. Y. SIGMA PHI EPSILON; Social chairman; IEEE, publicity director; Computer Society, secretary. FREDERICK EUGENE JACKSON Electrical Engineering Williamsport, Pa. M-M B-2; Rifle Teom, freshman; IEEE; M-M Student lecture dis- cussion committee. KARL EDWARD JACOBI History Little Silver, N. J. M-M A-1; Phi Alpha Theta, president; PSA; Chess Club; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s list. NICHOLAS PETER JACOBY Electricol Engineering Furlong, Pa. PI KAPPA ALPHA; Class Cabinet; IEEE. JOSEPH LEE JAGERS Electricol Engineering Pennsville, N. J. ALPHA TAU OMEGA; Worthy Sentinel; Arcadia; Band, concert, marching, student conductor; IEEE, choirmon. ANDREW JANSONS Engineering Physics Brooklyn, N. Y. CHI PSI; Class cabinet; Endor, art editor; Lehigh Review, Editor; Tau Beta Pi, president; Pi Mu Epsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; Swimming, freshman, varsity; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s list; Wil- liam Whigham Award; Tau Beta Pi Freshman Award. ROGER BRUCE JELLENIK Government Philadelphia, Pa. M-M A-1; RHC, student activities chairman; Houseporty Judiciary Committee; Academic and Social Policy Committee; LEHIGH RE- VIEW; Pi Sigma Alpha, secretary-treasurer; Phi Alpha Theta; Glee Club; Bethlehem, Tutorial Project, chairman, treasurer; Centennial Convocation Personnel Committee; Dean ' s list; Honors, sophomore. DAVID STEVANE JENNINGS Geology Lonsdale, Pa. PI KAPPA ALPHA; president, pledgemoster; Arcadia; Class cabinet; IFC; Trustee ' s Scholarship. KENNETH ROBERT JOHANSON Economics New Providence, N. J. M-M B-1; President, vice-president; Class cabinet; Honors, fresh man, sophomore, junior; Deon ' s list. FLOY CARLETON JONES Industrial Engineering Kittonning, Pa. TOWN; AIIE; Astronomy Club. DAVID WILLIAM JONSSON English Hoddonfield, N. J. KAPPA ALPHA; Soccer, freshman. LANE LOUIS JORGENSEN Industrial Engineering Sherman, Conn. SIGMA NU; Secretary; IFC; Lacrosse, freshman; AIIE. CHARLES ALLEN JUDELSON Accounting Middletown, N. Y. TOWN; Lehigh Review, editor; Phi Eta Sigmo; Tennis, freshman; Beta Alpha Psi; Accounting Society; Hillel; Honors, freshman, sophomore, junior; Dean ' s list. ROBERT HERMAN KASCH Chemical Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. CHI PHI; AICHE. FREDERICK JOHN KASS JR. Marketing Delmar, N. Y. DELTA CHI; Secretary, Steward; WLR-WLRN, general manager; Board of Directors, Intercollegiate Broadcasting System; Pi Delta Epsilon, president; Lambda Mu Sigma, president; Alpha Kappa Psi. DAVID HAMILTON KERR Psychology Verona, N. J. DELTA UPSILON; Social chairman; Band; Jazz Moderns; Hockey Club. FREDERICK WILLIAM KERSENS Metallurgicol Engineering Beachwood, N. J. TAYLOR E; Metallurgicol Society. DONALD EUGENE KIEHL Mathematics Brecksville, Ohio DELTA CHI; IFC; AIIE. ROY EDWARD KIEVIT JR. Accounting Dayton, Ohio PHI GAMMA DELTA; Historian; Swimming, freshman, varsity; Accounting society. DEAN PALMER KINARD Electricol Engineering Red Lion, Po. THETA XI; Pi Mu Epsilon; IEEE. HARRY JOHN KLIGORA Electrical Engineering Maplewood, N. J. SIGMA PHI, Secretary; Student Life Committee; Cyanide; Gfee Club, manager; Lacrosse, freshman; Newman Club, secretary; Arcadia. PETER KENT KLINGENSMITH Mechanical Engineering Wynnewood, Po. DELTA TAU DELTA; Secretary; Soccer, varsity; Lacrosse, varsity; Scabbard and Blade, secretary; Militory Honorary Society. DOUGLAS WILLIAM KOCH Management Bethlehem, Pa. THETA DELTA CHI; Wrestling, varsity, captain. EDWARD JACOB KOTCHER Chemistry Northampton, Po. TOWN; ACS; AICHE. EDWARD JOHN KRATT III Electrical Engineering Kinnelon, N. J. TAYLOR B; WLRN, recording director; IEEE. ROBERT FOSTER KREUSSER Finance Luzern, Switzerland PHI DELTA THETA; President, steward; Class cabinet. DAVID A. KRONE Industrial Engineering Winnetko, III. THETA XI; House manager. Steward, Rushing chairmen; AIIE. ROBERT E. KRONE Business Hockensock, N. J. PSI UPSILON ROBERT D. KROTZER Economics Livingston, N. J. TOWN; Vice-president; BROWN AND WHITE; Debate Club; Hon- ors, freshman sophomore; Dean ' s list; Williams Debate Runner Up. DEAN CHARLES KROUSE Metallurgical Engineering Caldwell, N. J. DELTA UPSILON; Class Cabinet; IFC; Metallurgical Society. RICHARD EUGENE KROUT Economics Horrisburg, Po. KAPPA SIGMA. JOSEPH JOHN KRUSE Accounting Livingston, N. J. ALPHA CHI RHO; Treosurer; Soccer, freshman. KENNETH MICHAEL KUCHARZ Biology Somerville, N. J. THETA CHI; Steward; Eta Sigma Phi, president; Band marching, varsity; R. W. Hall Pre-Med Society; Junior Impromptu Honors. JOSEPH S. E. KUZNIAR Engineering Physics Wyomissing, Po. M-M B-2. JAY CHARLES LACKE Marketing Scorsdole, N. Y. DELTA CHI; Athletic Manager, Social Chairman; IFC Represento- tive; Couront Editor; Pledge Class President; IFC; Closs Cobinet; Lambda Mu Sigma; Intromurols; Alpha Koppo Psi; Spanish Club. RENE EOMONO LAGUERRE JR. Economics Glen Rock, N. J. PHI DELTA THETA; President, Vice-president; Class Cabinet; EPITOME; Pi Delto Epsilon. KENNETH JOSEPH LAMPORT Industriol Engineering Mossopequo, N. Y. SIGMA PHI EPSILON; Secretary; EPITOME; AIEE; Sailing Club, president. 388 JOHN DAVID LANDES Mechanical Engineering Sellersville, Pa. TAYLOR A; Lehigh Christion Fellowship, secretary; Honors, fresh- men, sophomore; Dean ' s list. THOMAS TALMADGE LANKFORD III Monagement Baltimore, Md. SIGMA PHI EPSILON; Comptroller; Phi Eta Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi; Student Investment Council; Honors, freshman, sophomore, junior; Dean ' s list; Clifford B. Scott Memorial Key. ANDREW LARKO, JR. Business Forty Fort, Pa. THETA DELTA CHI SCOTT PHILLIP LAU Industrial Engineering Solon, Ohio SIGMA PHI; Vice-president; Arcadia, vice-president; IFC, secretary; Track, freshman; AIIE. J. JEFFREY LAVERTY Psychology Fort Washington, Pa. TAYLOR C; Social Chairman; Model Railroad Club; Lehigh Chris- tian Fellowship. MICHAEL BARRY LEIBOWITZ Philosophy West Lawn, Pa. TOWN; Hillel Society; Williams English Composition Prize, fresh- man and sophomore; Dean ' s list. PETER JANOS LEIDL Chemistry Paterson, N. J. LEONARD; Treasurer; Soccer, freshman; Cosmopoliton Club. BRUCE EDWARD LEINSTER Economics Endwell, N. Y. BETA THETA PI; Steward; Arcadia Associates; Class Cabinet; Glee Club; Boseball, varsity; Wrestling, manager; Scabbard and Blade Society. SIMON LEVIN Economics East Orange, N. J. THETA CHI; Historian; Class Cabinet, President, freshmon, sopho- more, junior, senior; Scabbard and Blade; Alpha Kappa Psi; Tennis, freshmon; Hillel Society; Ski Club; Distinguished Military Student. JOHN JAMES LEVKO III Mathematics Bethlehem, Pa. TOWN; Basketball, freshman. IRA W. LIEBERMAN Arts Brooklyn, N. Y. SIGMA ALPHA MU. BRYON LEE LIGHTNER Chemical Engineering Newport, Pa. M-M- B-1; Social chairmen; BROWN AND WHITE; AICHE; ACS. KENNETH ALFRED LILL International Relations Cliffside Pork, N.J. THETA CHI; German Club; Internotional Relations Club; Cosmopo- liton Club, Dean ' s list; Williams Extempore Speaking Contest Win- ner; Woshington Semester Student. JAMES MICHAEL LINK Psychology Bethlehem, Pa. TOWN; Phi Koppo Theto. Richard harold lipstein History Moplewood, N. J. TOWN; Arcadia; Football, freshman, vorsity; Lacrosse; Political Science Club. JOHN FREDEDICK LOEBER Mechanical Engineering White Plains, N. Y. THETA CHI; Secretary, Scholarship Chairman; Tou Beta Pi; Phi Eto Sigma, Secretary; Pi Mu Epsilon; Glee Club; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s list; Pi Tau Sigma Prize; Engineering Honors Program. ROBERT CLAYTON LOKERSON Electrical Engineering Chevy Chose, Md. TAYLOR E; Social Chairmen; Wrestling, bronze medal; WLRN, secretary; IEEE, Publicity Committee. CHARLES FERDINAND LOM Economics Philadelphia, Go. KAPPA SIGMA; Ski Club RENE P. LOPEZ-DUPREY, JR. Business Puerto Rico M-M- A-3. RO BERT FRED LORENTZ Civil Engineering New Providence, N. J. ALPA SIGMA PHI; vice-president; ASCE. GABRIEL ANDREW LOVASZ Metollurgicol Engineering Bridgeport, Conn. TOWN; Phi Eto Sigmo Freshman Honorary; Metollurgicol Society; Honors, freshmon, sophomore, junior; Dean ' s list. WILLIAM HUGHEY LOW Industriol Engineering Oronge, N. J. BETA THETA PI; Housemanoger; Football, freshman; Wrestling, J. v.; Track, vorsity; AIIE; Ski Club. STEPHEN GEOFFREY LUDT Economics Torrytown, N. Y. TAYLOR C; President, vice-president; Newman Club, secretary; Interfaith Council; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s list. THOMAS GERBER LUDWIG Electronics Reading, Pa. M-M B-3; Vice-President, Athletic Chairman; Eto Kappa Nu; Tou Beta Pi; Pi Mu Epsilon; Pi Eto Sigma; Bond, marching, concert, varsity; IEEE; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s list. DAVID GATES LYONS Mechanical Engineering Choppaquo, N. Y. THETA DELTA CHI; Social Choirmon, House manager; Class cabinet; Wrestling, freshman; ASME. ROBERT ALBERT MACHERER Industrial Engineering Eoston, Po. SIGMA CHI; Vice-president, secretory, editor; Town Co uncil; IFC; Class Cabinets; Houseporty Judiciary Committee; Alpha Pi Mu, secretary; Tau Beta Pi, vice-president; Track, freshmon; AIIE, president; Newman Club; Honors, freshman, sophomore, junior; Dean ' s list; Alpha Pi Mu freshman prize; Sigma Chi Scholarship Award. JOHN A. MAHON III Metollurgicol Engineering Lutherville, Md. DELTA CHI; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity; Metollurgicol Society. MARK MICHAEL MAINARDI Electrical Engineering Foir Lown, N. J. PHI KAPPA THETA; secretory; Wrestling, freshmon; Honors, fresh- man. EUGENE LELANDMAKI Mechanical Engineering Newfield, N. Y. DELTA UPSILON; Vice-president; Class Cabinet; ASME. STEPHEN HENRY MALE Industrial Engineering Port Chester, N. Y. M-M B-1; EPITOME; AIIE; Bethlehem Tutorial Project; Political Science Assembly. GORDON RICHARD MALLETT Accounting Painted Post, N. Y. M-M B-2; Accounting Society; Securities and Investments Council; M-M Parking Committee. WALTER MAMCHUR, JR. Arts New Brunswick, N. J. SIGMA PHI EPSILON. MICHAEL BRIAN MANGAN English Bethlehem, Po. PHI KAPPA THETA; Dean ' s List. CHARLES ALLEN MANTELL Accounting Cedarhurst, N. Y. PI LAMBDA PHI. DAVID LEE MARCH Mothemotics Camp Hill, Pa. TAYLOR B; Treasurer, president. Bond, morching, concert, section leader. GARY JAY MARCUS Biology , Bethlehem, Po. TAU DELTA PHL Editor, historian; Alpha Epsilon Delta, treasurer; Bosketboll, freshmon; R. W. Hall Pre-Med Society, executive committee; Dean ' s List. BRIANT RICHARD MARSH Accounting Clifton, N. J. DELTA SIGMA PHI; Bond, marching, concert. WAYNE ROGERS MARTIN Manogement Newtown Square, Pa. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA. ALAN JOHN MASON Mothemotics Oradell, N. J. M-M A-2; Sociol Chairman; Town Council, president; MUSTARD AND CHEESE, president, light technicion. THOMAS EMMETT MASON Biology Ballentine, S. C. GRYPHON. HAROLD CHARLES MATTESKY Mechonicol Engineering - ' ' ? ? ' ' Tc ,c ' ' ' ' DELTA UPSILON; IFC Representative; Wrestling, J. V.; AbMb. DONALD W. MATTSON Accounting , Glens ide Pa. DELTA TAU DELTA; President, treasurer; IFC, vice-president; Class Cobinet; Arcadia; Board of Publicotions; Alpha Kappa Psi; Beta Alpha Psi; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Koppa; Phi Eta Sigma; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s List. 389 LAWRENCE JAMES MAYER English Palmerton, Pa. ALPHA TAU OMEGA; Vice-president; Class Cabinet; Arcadia Associates; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Cyanide; Basketball, freshman, captain; R. W. Hall Pre-Med Society; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s List. PAUL F. MAYLAND Management Merrick, N. Y. ALPHA CHI RHO; Secretary; IPC; Track, varsity, captain. HERBERT BRUCE McCLAREN Finance Pittsburgh, Pa. TAYLOR E.; president; RHC Representotive to Arcadia. CARL LEE McCONNELL Geology Elmira, N. Y. BETA THETA PI, president; Arcadia; IFC, president; Phi Eta Sigma; Omicron Delta Kappa; Cyanide; Geology Club; Bethlehem Tutorial Project; Honors, freshman, sophomore, junior; Dean ' s List. DAVID HARLAN McCRACKEN II Economics Pittsburgh, Pa. DELTA CHI; Pledgemaster; Baseball, varsity. WILLIAM JOSEPH McDOWELL Chemical Engineering Scottdale, Pa. DELTA UPSILON; Basketball, varsity, manager; ACS. CHARLES RICHARD McGOWIN Chemical Engineering Wynnewood, Pa. ALPHA TAU OMEGA; Class Cabinet; Band, marching, concert; AICHE, treasurer, vice-president; Honors, freshman. MICHAEL WARREN McKAY Engineering Physics Medford, N. J. ALPHA TAU OMEGA; president; Arcadia; IFC, rushing chairman; Class Cabinet; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity; Football, freshman; AlP; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s List. ELWOOD BRUCE McLEOD Management Havertown, Pa. CHI PHI; Secretary, rushing chairman; IFC, chairman; President ' s Manual Committee; Class Cabinet; Band; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity. RUSSELL LEE McTAGUE English Glen Ridge, N. J. THETA XI; Song Chairman, ticket chairman; Class Cabinet; Fencing, freshman. FRED CHARLES MERKEL JR. Metallurgical Engineering Abington, Pa. DELTA PHI; ASME; SAME. CHARLES GIBSON METZGER JR. Electrical Engineering Norristown, Pa. TAYLOR D; Athletic Chairman; Band, marching, vorsity; IEEE; Intervorsity Christian Fellowship. GARY D. METZGER Accounting Wauseon, Ohio TOWN. JOHN CARLEN MILES II Industrial Engineering South Portland, Maine ALPHA SIGMA PHI; MUSTARD AND CHEESE; AIIE. JAMES ALBERT MILLER Industriol Engineering Metuchen, N. J. PHI GAMMA DELTA; House Manager; Football, varsity; AIIE. JAMES DAVID MILLER Finance Sinking Spring, Pa. PHI SIGMA KAPPA; Sentinel; Football, freshman; Student Invest- ment Club, secretary-treasurer, vice-president. MICHAEL WALTER MILLER Engineering Chemistry Allentown, Pa. TOWN; Town Council; Student Chemical Society. JOHN ALBERT MINDLER Accounting Princeton, N. J. M-M B-3; Social Chairman; Accounting Society. JOHN ORVILLE MITCHELL Electrical Engineering Coraopolis, Pa. M-M B-2; Intramurals; IEEE; Phiico Coop; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s List. WILLIS HALL MITCHELL Finance Rochester, N. Y. SIGMA PHI; Social Chairman; Class Cabinet; Soccer, varsity. ROBERT F. MITSCHELE Metallurgical Engineering Morris Plains, N. J. CHI PSI; vice-president; Class Cabinet, president; Basketball, fresh- man; Track, freshman, varsity, co-captain; Basketball, varsity; Metallurgical Society. PAUL ERIC MIXSON Accounting Bridgeport, Conn. TOWN; WLRN; BROWN AND WHITE; Pi Delta Epsilon; Fencing, freshman; Debating Club. TIMOTHY STEPHEN MOCK Industrial Engineering Somerville, N. J. THETA DELTA CHI; Basketball, freshman, varsity. CORBETT JAMES MONICA Foreign Careers Livingston, N. J. TOWN; Social Chairman, president, vice-president; BROWN AND WHITE, monaging editor; Pi Delta Epsilon; Newman Club, executive committee; MUSTARD AND CHEESE. MICHAEL ALLAN MONSON Government Boston, Moss. M-M B-2; Class Cabinet, sophomore, junior, senior; Hillel Society, president; Interfaith Council, president; Student-Faculty Committee on Religious Life. JAMES STUART MONTGOMERY Civil Engineering Hanover, Pa. LEONARD; president, vice-president, treasurer, Newman Club, chair- man, historian; Acolytes guild, president; Interfaith Council, vice- president, president; Christian Council, vice-president, president; MUSTARD AND CHEESE; Canterbury Club; Committee on Religious Life. PETER A. MOOG English East Aurora, N. Y. PHI SIGMA KAPPA. GERALD EVANS MOORE Electrical Engineering Riverton, N. J. KAPPA ALPHA; vice-president; Lacrosse, freshman; IEEE. DONALD RALPH MORGANSON JR. Management Chatham, N. J. DELTA CHI; Steward; Class Cabinet; Lambda Mu Sigma; Football, freshman; Arnold Air Society, administrative officer; WLRN, as- sistant business manager. EDWIN PETER MORIN Finance Waynesboro, Va. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA; Student Investment Council. REGINALD GRAHAM MORRISON JR. Chemistry Berryville, Va. TAYLOR B; Secretory-treasurer; Student Chemical Society; Newman Club. ALASTAIR G. S. MORTON Metallurgical Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. TOWN. GEORGE FEDERICK MOTTER IV Management Bethlehem, Pa. DELTA PHI; Secretary, president; WLRN, operations director; BROWN AND WHITE, national advertising staff; Pi Delta Epsilon. ERNST DIETER MUELLER International Relations New Cumberland, Pa. TOWN; Bethlehem Tutorial Project; DOT; German Club. H EDWARD MUENDEL Sociology tasking Ridge N_ J. PHI GAMMA DELTA; Secretary-treasurer; Class Cabinet, ll-U, Eta Sigma Phi, vice-president, president; Band, varsity, marching, concert, assistant manager; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity; WLRN. THAD ROLAND MURWIN Industrioi Engineering , ' f ' ' ° Trnlt- PHI GAMMA DELTA; Social Chairman; Football, freshman, I rack, Rugby; AIIE. THOMAS JOSEPH MUSICK r„„„ „ Pottstown, Pa. Finance □ ■n u TOWN; Investment Council; Sailing Club; Boxing Club. JOSEPH THOMAS NANOVIC Marketing Palmerton Pa. ALPHA TAU OMEGA; Arcadia Associates; EPITOME; Soccer, fresh- man; Honors, sophomore. NEAL THOMAS NE.AMAND History Bethlehem, Pa. TOWN; Dean ' s List. HENRY ALAN NEIMEIER Industrial Engineering Flushing L. I., N. Y. TAYLOR C; president; AIIE; Alpha Phi Omega; Camera Club; Methodist Student Movement; W3AEQ; Honors, sophomore; Dean s List; College Honors Program. HOWARD CHARLES NEWMAN Industrial Engineering Kingston, Pa. SIGMA ALPHA MU; vice-president; IFC; Football, freshman, manager; AIIE; Hillel Society; Williams Debate Competition, first prize; Williams Extempore Speaking Competition, first prize. 390 RICHARD DONALD NILSON Finance Buffalo, N. Y. TOWN; Tennis, freshman. ROBERT JON OLSEN Chemicol Engineering White Plains, N. Y. CHI PHI; Steword; Soccer, freshman; Lacrosse, freshman; AICHE. JOHN EDWARD OLSTA Mathemotics Bloomfield, N. J. DELTA SIGMA PHI; Secretory, vice-president; Band, marching, concert. STEPHEN ORLANDO JR. Industrial Engineering Linden, N. J. DELTA TAU DELTA; IPC; Class Cabinet; Student Life Committee; Chairmen Fall Houseparty; Cyanide; Alpha Pi Mu, president; AIIE; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s List. TED ARNOLD ORNER Civil Engineering Biglerville, Pa. M-M A-2; Baseball, freshman; ASCE. MICHAEL S. ORNSTEIN Mathematics Long Beach, N. Y. SIGMA ALPHA MU; Pledgemasfer. WILLIAM WALKER OSKIN JR. Management Williamsville, N. Y. PHI GAMMA DELTA; Recording secretary, othletic choirmon, pledgemasfer, social and administrative committee; IFL; Class Cabinet; Richards House, secretary, president; Baseball, freshman; WLRN. WILLIAM M. OTTINGER Business Valley Stream, N. Y. TAU DELTA PHI. WALTER KEITH OVERGAARD Metallurgy Lancaster, Pa. TAYLOR E; president; Metallurgy Society. BRUCE M. PASTOR Biology Hillside, N. J. SIGMA ALPHA MU; president; Arcadia; IFC; Class Cabinet; Board of Publications; Alpha Epsilon Delta, vice-president; Honors, fresh- man, sophomore. ROBERT DAY PENHALLEGON Industrial Engineering Timonium, Md. M-M B-2; Bond; AIIE; Model Roilrood Club, president. JOSEPH ROBERT PERELLA Accounting Union, N. J. PHI KAPPA THETA; Rushing Chairman; Class Cabinet; Accounting Society. ERIC JOHN PERSSON Mechanicol Engineering Union, N. J. TOWN; Pi Tou Sigma, secretory; ASME; Honors, sophomore. DAVID RICHARD PESUIT Chemicol Engineering Steubenville, Ohio TOWN; Bond, assistant manager, publicity manager; Woodwind Ensembles, student director; ASCHE; Honors, sophomore, junior; Dean ' s List. FREDERICK DAVID PETKE Chemistry Cincinnati, Ohio TAYLOR B; Alpho Phi Omega, executive vice-president; Bond; Student Chemicol Society; American Chemical Society; Methodist Student Movement; Christian Council; Nationol Science Foundotion Undergraduate Reseorch Fellowship. JOSEPH FREDERIC PETROZELLI Civil Engineering Plainfield, N. J. SIGMA NU; Social Chairman, house manager, vice-president, presi- dent. B. FRANK PETTEBONE JR. Accounting Arlington, N. J. TAYLOR D; Treasurer, president; Delta Alpha Psi secretory; Accounting Society, vice-president; SAME; Pershing Rifles, ossistant finonce officer; Dean ' s List. WALTER H. PFAU Business Mountain Lakes, N. J. SIGMA PHI. RONALD A. PFEIFFER Industriol Engineering Levittown, Po ALPHA CHI RHO; Steword. FREDERICK LOUIS PFISCHNER JR. Civil Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA; treosurer, president, editor; IFC Represen- totive; ASCE, secretary. MICHAEL ROY PLUNKETT Mechonicol Engineering Woodstown, N. J. TOWN; Soccer, freshmen. WALTER ALBERT POLASHENSKI Chemicol Engineering Drums, Po. DELTA UPSILON; AICHE; Newman Club. GEORGE BARRY PRATT Finance Cootsville, Po. DELTA PHI; vice-president; Class Cabinet; BROWN AND WHITE; Swimming, varsity; Houseparty Judiciary Committee. ALAN CURTIS PREBLE Metallurgical Engineering Western Springs, III. SIGMA CHI; Class Cabinet; Metallurgical Society. STERETT RIDGELY PREVOST III Marketing Elizabeth, N. J. TOWN; Lombdo Mu Sigma; Soccer, freshman; Baseball, freshman, varsity, manoger; Arnold Air Society, commander. DOUGLAS MocCAULEY PRICE International Relations Livingston, N. J. ALPHA TAU OMEGA; Arcodio Associates; Class Cobinet; Soccer, freshman; International Relations Club; Class Gift Committee. ROBERT IRVING PSYCK Metallurgical Engineering Syracuse, N. Y. ALPHA TAU OMEGA; Metallurgical Society; Newman Club. JOHN THOMAS PUSEY Management Berwyn, Po. KAPPA SIGMA. DOUGLAS QUAYLE Psychology Ridgewood, N. J. DELTA CHI; housemonoger, president; WLRN, chief announcer, progrom director; Pi Delta Epsilon; Allentown State Hospital Volunteer. RICHARD WILLIAM RABENSTEIN Metallurgy West Long Beoch, N. J. SIGMA CHI; onnototor, recording secretary; IFC Representative; Metallurgical Society, president. RICHARD A. RABINOW Mechonicol Engineering Moplewood, N. J. GRYPHON; president, executive board, recruiting chairman; Arcadia Associates; Class Cabinet; Lehigh Review, editor; EPITOME, scheduling editor; BROWN AND WHITE; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Hillel Society; Special Commission on Rushing; Honors, f reshman. CHRISTOPHER NEWBOLD RAISER Marketing Wynnewood, Po. TOWN; Town Council; WLRN, assistant station manager, program director; ACM; Lombdo Mu Sigma; Computer Society. RICHARD WELLS RALSTON Electrical Engineering Southington, Conn. M-M B-1, secretory-treasurer; Phi Eto Sigmo; Eta Koppo Nu; Tau Beta Pi, treasurer; IEEE, treosurer; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s List S. DAVID RAMSEY ;s rts Pittsburgh, Po. TOWN. ALFRED JOSEPH RANIERI JR. Chemicol Engineering Hocksensock N. J. SIGMA PHI EPSILON; Lofoyette Disploy Choirmon; IFC; Soccer, freshmon; AICHE; ACS. LOUIS MICHAEL RAYEUR Accounting Ed ' N. Y. PHI GAMMA DELTA; Football, freshman, coptain; Accounting Society. TOD REABUCK Government Allentown, Po. TOWN. DAVID MILLER REED Philosophy , , Telford, Pa. TOWN; Eta Sigma Phi; Allentown Stote Hospital Volunteers; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s List. THOMAS EARLE REED Accounting , Dunkirk, NY. KAPPA ALPHA; vice-president; Houseparty Judiciary t-ommittee, secretary; Class Cabinet; Hockey Club. MICHAEL H. REICH Finance Riverdole, N. Y. SIGMA ALPHA MU; rushing chairman, alumni recorder; Arcadia, president; IFC Judiciary Committee; Class Cabinet; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Koppo; Representative to Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce; Advisory Committee; Sigma Alpha Mu Notional Under- graduote Achievement Award; Lehigh Williams Debote Prize. GEORGE R. REINHART Sociology Son Jean Cop Ferret, A.M., Fronce M-M A-2; Sociol Chairman; Class Cabinet; RHC, social chairmen; Sponish Club. 391 PETER KEITH REINHART English Wyomissing, Pa. TOWN; Class Cabinet; Endor, editor, business manager; Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman Rifle Team; MUSTARD AND CHEESE; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s List. JAMES P. RENALDI Industrial Engineering Eoston, Pa. DELTA TAU DELTA; Corresponding Secretary; IFC Representative; Basketball, freshman, varsity; Baseball, vorsity; AIIE. RICHARD JOEL REX Finance Paris, Texas CHI PHI; Investment Council. DAVID ANTHONY RIEMONDY Industrial Engineering Fleetwood, Pa. GRYPHON; Executive Board Member; Class Cabinet; AIIE. RUSSELL THOMAS RIGG Accounting Old Greenwich, Conn. M-M B-1; athletic chairman, treasurer; Alpha Kappa Psi; Account- ing Society; Student Investment Council. BARRY EDWIN RIPPLE Civil Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. TOWN; Committee on Performing Arts; Chi Epsilon, president; Bond, marching, concert; ASCE; APO. THOMAS CHRISTINE ROBERTS Mechanical Engineering Washington, N. J. DELTA CHI; Corresponding Secretary, Head of Pledge Tribunal, IFC Representative; ASME; Arnold Air Society, secretary, provost marshal, wing secretary; Air Force Drill Team, supply sergeant; Chicago Tribune Award; Outstanding ROTC Cadet. THOMAS J. ROCKWOOD Accounting Mt. Lebanon, Pa. M-M A-3; Accounting Society; IEEE; ASME; ASM; Interfaith Council, secretary; Christian Council, president, secretary-treasurer; Christian Science Organization, president. ROBERT CHARLES ROLLINGS, JR. Mechanical Engineering Wilmington, Del. TOWN. JOHN FREDERICK ROVEGNO Accounting Bridgeport, Conn. THETA XI; treasurer; Accounting Society. JOHN FRYER RUNCIE Sociology Moplewood, N. J. TOWN- Class Cabinet; BROWN AND WHITE. GEORGE THOMAS RUSHFORTH Mechanical Engineering Chatham, N. J. SIGMA PHI EPSILON; ASME. FRANKLIN ANDERS RUSHONG Chemical Engineering Camp Hill, Pa. PHI GAMMA DELTA; Baseball, freshman, varsity; Football, fresh- man, varsity. MICHAEL ROBERT RUSSELL Economics Bristol, Conn. PHI KAPPA THETA; rushing chairman, president; IFC. RICHARD TODD SALER Marketing Merion, Pa. PI LAMBDA PHI; Marshal; Lambda Mu Sigma. DAVID BAVER SALERNO Industrial Engineering River Edge, N. J. THETA DELTA CHI; treasurer, corresponding secretary; Class Cabinet; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Mus Epsilon; Phi Eta Sigma, treasurer; Soccer, varsity; AIIE, vice-president; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s List. JAMES LINDEN SANDERS JR. Electricol Engineering Philadelphia, Pa. ALPHA TAU OMEGA; IEEE, vice-chairman. ROBERT EDWIN SAWYER Chemical Engineering Nazareth, Pa. SIGMA PHI; Steward; Arcadia Associates; Band, drum major. JOHN DORSEY SAYER Finance Ho-Ho-Kus, N. J. SIGMA PHI; BROWN AND WHITE. NORMAN KENT SCARPULLA Language Durham, N. H. TOWN; BROWN AND WHITE; Outing Club, president. NOEL J. SCHACHNER Industrial Ennineering Roslyn Heights, N. Y. SIGMA ALPHA MU; secretary, athletic chairman; AIIE; Hillel Society. WAYNE VINCENT SCHELL JR. Mechanical Engineering West Newton, Mass. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA; Tennis, varsity; ASME, treasurer; AFROTC Flight Training. ROBERT ALAN SCHMIDT Electrical Engineering Chatham, N. J. M-M A-3; Pershing Rifles, executive officer; IEEE. THEODORE ALLEN SCHNEIDER Chemical Engineering Union, N. J. ALPHA TAU OMEGA; Cabinet; IFC; Arcadia Associates, president; AICHE, secretary; Air Force Drill Team; Ski Club. ALAN WARREN SCHNEIT Biology Manhasset, N. Y. TAU DELTA PHI; secretary, treasurer; Alpha Epsilon Delta; R. W. Hall Pre-Med Society. F. DONALD SCHOEPS Electrical Engineering Scranton, Pa. TOWN. ROBERT YOUNG SCHOFF Mechanical Engineering Moycan, Po. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA; Football, freshman, varsity; Track, fresh- man; ASME. ROBERT ROYER SCHOLZ Civil Engineering Washington, D. C. BETA THETA PI; alumni secretary; ASCE; Wrestling, freshman; Dean ' s List. FREDERIC JAMES SCHRAGGER Biology Trenton, N. J. TOWN; president; RHC; Class Cabinet; Tennis, freshman; R. W. Hall Pre-Med Society. ROBERT DWIGHT SCHUMAN Mechanical Engineering Scranton, Pa. TAYLOR B; ASME. ANTHONY JOHN SCHWEITZER Metollurgical Engineering Allentown, Pa. TOWN; Town Council; Metallurgical Society. GEORGE WILLIAM SEATON III Chemical Engineering Sparta, N. J. KAPPA SIGMA; secretary; EPITOME; AICHE; Newman Club; WLRN; President ' s Award. HOWARD W. SEGAL Civil Engineering Teaneck, N. J. PI LAMBDA PHI; vice-president; Soccer, varsity, captain. HOWARD A. SEID Electronics Moplewood, N. J. M-M B-3; Pi Mu Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu, recording secretory; ' IEEE, recording secretary; Wilbur Mathemotics First Prize; Dean ' s List. JAMES WALTER SELGAS Psychology Baldwin, N. Y. PHI SIGMA KAPPA; social chairman; Soccer, freshman; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity, captain; Spanish Club, president; Allentown State Hospital Student Volunteers. WALDIMIR MICHAEL SEMENYNA Mechanical Engineering Hampton, N. J. M-M B-1; ASME; SAME, vice-president; ROTC. BILL ELMER SERFASS ALPHA CHI RHO; ASCE, secretary; MUSTARD AND CHEESE. ARTHUR LEWIS SHEARER Chemicol Engineering Morrisville, Pa. M-M B-3- Pershing Rifles; Fencing, freshman, varsity; Lacrosse, freshman; ' AICHE; SAME, secretary; Sailing Club; Westminster Fellowship; Advanced ROTC. JOHN EDGAR SHEPARD c Oreland, Pa. Economics CHI PSI; Class Cabinet; Class Officer. RAYMOND GEORGE SHEPARD JR. [:.„ ,.„ Bryn Mawr, Pa. Finance ' DELTA UPSILON. JACOB ALBERT SHERK JR. Biology Palmyra Pa. KAPPA SIGMA; steward; Arnold Air Society; Air Force LracK Drill Team. DANIEL RONALD SHEVCHIK Accounting Greensburg Pa. KAPPA ALPHA- treasurer, rushing chairman, house manager; Class Cabinet, freshman, sophomore, junior; BROWN AND WHITE; Beta Alpha Psi, president; Pi Delta Epsilon; Alpha Kappa Psi, treasurer; Accounting Society. RUSSELL LEE SHOLLEY Metallurgical Engineering Selinsgrove, Pa. DELTA UPSILON; corresponding secretary; Metallurgical Society; WLRN. 392 DONALD LOUIS SHOTOLA Finance Riverside, IN. M-M B-2; Eta Sigma Phi, secretary; Student Investment Council, president; AFROTC Drill Team; Sabre Society; Air Force As- sociation. ALLAN PHILIP SHUMOFSKY Industrial Engineering Fairfield, Conn. M-M B-2; Interfaith Council, vice-president; Tou Beta Pi; Alpha Pi Mu; Pi Mu Epsilon; AIIE; Hillel Society, secretary-treasurer, vice- president, president; MUSTARD AND CHEESE, vice-president; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s List. LOUIS SILVERSIN Accounting Ventnor, N. J. TAU DELTA PHI; treosurer; Beta Alpha Psi, vice-president; Ac- counting Society, president. MARTIN REAGLE SIMSAK Electrical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. TOWN; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Mu Epsilon; Eta Kappa Nu, president; Glee Club; Chapel Choir; IEEE; Alpha Phi Omega; Honors, fresh- man; Dean ' s List. ROBERT HENRY SINCLAIR Mechanical Engineering Hershey, Pa. KAPPA SIGMA; GMC; ASME. RICHARD BRUCE SINDEL English Bethlehem, Po. Pi Lambda Phi; Endor, business manager; Wrestling, freshman. DARRELL HEVENOR SMITH III English Scranton, Pa. PHI KAPPA THETA, recorder, executive secretary; Golf, varsity; German Club. DOUGLAS WILLIAM SMITH Government Philadelphia, Pa. M-M A-3; treasurer, athletic manager; Political Science Assembly; Ski Club. FREDERICK WILLIAM SMITH Physics Huntington, W. Vo. ALPHA LAMBDA OMEGA; president; Class Cabinet; Chess Club; Alpha Lombda Omega; Honors, freshman, sophomore. JOHN CARLTON SMITH Industrial Engineering Trenton, N. J. M-M B-I; secretary; Class Cabinet; AIIE. MICHAEL ALAN SMITH Chemistry Brooklyn, N. Y. TAU DELTA PHI; social chairman; Class Cabinet; IFC; Houseporty Judiciary Committee; WLRN; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Student Chemical Society; Air Force Drill Team; Honors, freshman; Dean ' s List. CHRISTOPHER LYNAM SNYDER JR. Economics Plainfield, N. J. M-M A-2; Chaplain; BROWN AND WHITE; DOT; Arnold Air Society. MELVIN A. SNYDER English Easton, Pa. TOWN. JOHN STEVEN SOMODI Mechonical Engineering E. Poterson, N J. SIGMyV PHI EPSILON; Scabbard and Blade; ASME. DONALD L. SPEAKMAN Management Yordley, Po LAMBDA CHI ALPHA, pledgemoster, rush chairman. THOMAS ANTHONY SPERAKIS Metollurgy Long Island City, N. Y. TOWN; Class Cabinet; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity; Metallurgical Society. HENRY ARTHUR SPINDLER JR. Chemistry Wood-Ridge, N. J. TAYLOR B; Class Cobinef; Phi Eta Sigma, Pi Mu Epsilon; Alpha Epsilon Delto; Rifle Team, freshman; ACE; Ski Club; German Club; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s List; Alumni Prize; Chondler Chemistry Prize; American Chemical Society Aword. EDWIN LEWIS STANLEY JR. Government Horrisburg, Pa. PHI DELTA THETA; steword, alumni secretary; Arcodio As- sociofes; IFC; Cyonide; Class Cobinet, freshman, sophomore, junior, senior; Pi Sigmo Alpha, Political Science Assembly; Honors, sopho- more; Deon ' s List. JAMES E. STEHLIK Industrial Engineering Glodwyne, Pa. THETA CHI; president, vice-president, rushing chairman; Librorian; Class Cobinet; IFC, scholorship choirmon; AIIE, publicity chairman; Alpho Pi Mu, Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s List. LANNING DENNIS STEITZ Electronics Bethlehem, Pa. SIGMA PHI EPSILON; Jr. marshal; Rifle Team, varsity; Pershing Rifle Drill Team; WLRN. JAMES RICHARD STELTZER Management Forty Fort, Pa. SIGMA NU; Football, freshman. DONALD HENRY STERNER Mechanical Engineering York, Pa. DELTA CHI; Football, freshman, varsity, manager; ASME; WLR; WLRN; Alpha Phi Omega; Model Railroad Club. J. JEFFREY STIVES Journalism Little Silver, N. J. TAYLOR E; Academic and Social Climate Committee, secretary; WLRN; BROWN AND WHITE, editor-in-chief, managing editor, assistant news editor; Pi Delta Epsilon; ROTC, executive officer; Ski Club. ROBERT WILLIAM STOUT Civil Engineering Delmor, N. Y. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA; Class Cabinet; ASCE, treasurer. ROBERT WILLIAM STRICKLER Accounting Bear Creek, Pa. SIGMA PHI; president; Arcadia Associates; IFC; BROWN AND WHITE; Rifle Team, freshman; Accounting Society; Chairman Student Handbook Committee. WILLIAM ALLEN SULLIVAN Accounting Randolph, Moss. TAYLOR A; social chairman; RHC, treasurer; Accounting Society; Investment Council. DAVID E. SUNDERLAND Industrial Engineering Mineolo, N. Y. ALPHA SIGMA PHI; secretary, IFC representative; Class Cabinet; Soccer, freshman, varsity; AIIE. JOHN WRIGHT SUNDLIE Industrial Engineering White Plains, N Y. THETA CHI; morshol, athletic chairman; Class Cabinet; Advisory Committee, chairman; Houseporty Committee; Tennis; AIIE; Ski Club. PHILIP ALAN TAGLEY Mechanical Engineering Garden City, N. Y. KAPPA ALPHA; Basketball, freshmon. EDWARD JOHN TEMOS Mechanical Engineering Nazareth, Pa. TOWN. PETER JOHN TEMPLIN Industrial Engineering Palmyra, N J. KAPPA ALPHA; AIIE; Computer Society, secretary. JOHN D. TENCH, JR Civil Engineering Springfield, Po. ALPHA TAU OMEGA EDWARD JOHN TENTHOFF English Bethel Park, Pa. THETA CHI; EPITOME, ossistant to the editor, monoging editor, editor; Pi Delta Epsilon; Wrestling, freshman. BARRY B. TEUTSCHBEIN Metallurgical Engineering Arlington, Va. McCLINTIC-MARSHALL; ASM; AIME; Metallurgical Society. CHARLES BURRITT TILLSON III Accounting Pittsburgh, Pa. TOWN; Intramural Sports; Accounting Society. JOCOB HENRY TOEWS Civil Engineering East Petersburg, Pa DELTA CHI; chaplain, scholastic chairman; ASCE. CHARLES JOSEPH TOMMOR Electrical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa TOWN; Town Council; Alpha Lambdo Omego; AIIE; AlP. JAMES D. TOTH Civil Engineering Coatesville, Po. DELTA CHI; social chairmen; ASCE; Radio Club. KENNETH ERIC TURNER Finance New Rochelle, N. Y. BETA THETA PI; Tennis, freshman, varsity; Captain, Co-coptoin. THOMAS EDWARD TYSON Science York, Po. DELTA CHI; treosurer, sergeont-ot-arms; Class Cabinet; BROWN AND WHITE, desk editor, ossistant news editor; Cooperative Lecture Series. WILLIAM JAMES VALENTINE Mechanical Engineering Ridgewood, N. J. TAYLOR D; vice-president; Pi Tou Sigma; Rifle Team, varsity, treosurer. Honors, sophomore. 393 EDWIN STEPHENS VALLIANT III Accounting Centreville, Md. PHI GAMMA DELTA; treosurer; Class Cabinet, freshman, sopho- more, junior; Phi Eto Sigmo; Beta Alpha Psi; Accounting Society; Honors, freshman, sophomore, junior; Dean ' s List. PAUL RAYMOND VINES Industrial Engineering Chatham, N. J. TAYLOR A; WLR-WLRN; Arnold Air Society, operations officer; Band; Chapel Choir; Soccer, freshman, manager; AIIE; FPO; Computer Society, vice-president; LSA; Christion Council, secretary- treasurer; Model Railrood Club. GEORGE MARTIN VLASITS History Paramus, N. J. SIGMA NU; treasurer, steward, pledgemaster; Class Cabinet; Phi Eta Sigma; Cyanide; Football, freshman, varsity; Track, freshman; Lacrosse, varsity; German Club; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s List. LARRY CARL WALKER Accounting York, Po. PSI UPSILON; treasurer, steward; Class Cabinet; BROWN AND WHITE; Track, freshman. THOMAS J. WALKER JR. Biology Arlington, Vo. SIGMA PHI EPSILON; Tennis, freshman. JAMES RUSSELL WALTER JR. Psychology Coopersburg, Pa. TOWN; Endor; German Club, president; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s List. DONALD TUCKER WALTON Civil Engineering Middletown, N. Y. PHI SIGMA KAPPA; sentinel. ATLEE WILLIS WAMPLER Economics Westminster, Md. BETA THETA PI; vice-president; Class Cabinet, freshman, junior, senior; The Villagers; Football, freshman, varsity; Scabbard and Blade. JOHN MARTIN WATT Industrial Engineering Butler, N. J. DELTA UPSILON; secretary, IFC representative; AIIE; Newman Club. DONALD JOSEPH WEBER Mechanical Engineering Scranton, Pa. TAYLOR B. CHARLES HAROLD WEIDNER Civil Engineering New Hyde Park, N. Y. M-M A-2; ASCE. CHARLES WHITE WEIGEL Electrical Engineering Zelienople, Pa. KAPPA ALPHA; first attendant; IEEE. PHILIP FREDERICK WELCH Chemical Engineering Sewickley, Pa. ALPHA TAU OMEGA; Band, senior representative; AICHE. LAWRENCE EDWARD WHITE Electrical Engineering Massopequa, N. Y. THETA DELTA CHI; steward; Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu, treasurer; Pi Mu Epsilon; Wrestling, freshman, varsity; IEEE; Student Invest- ment Fund; Computer Society; Honors, freshman, sophomore; Dean ' s List, WILLIAM HARRY WHITTAKER Accounting Woodbourne, N. Y, TAYLOR D; president; RHC; Accounting Society; Alpha Phi Omego; Christian Council; Interfaith Christian Fellowship; Bible Study Leader; Christ ' s Ambassadors, president. ROBERT ANTHONY WIEDL Industrial Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. ALPHA LAMBDA OMEGA; Town Council; AIIE; Pershing Rifles; SAME; Scabbard and Blade; Computer Club. HOWARD ALEXANDER WIENER Civil Engineering Clifton, N. J. TOWN; Chi Epsilon, secretary; Band, concert, marching, ossistant librarian; Dean ' s List. EDWARD H. WILLIAMS English Hightstown, N. J. TOWN; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s List. HAMILTON WILLIAMS JR. Mechanical Engineering Scotch Plains, N. J. ALPHA SIGMA PHI; ASME; MUSTARD AND CHEESE. RICHARD THIESS WILLIAMS Electrical Engineering Evanston, III. M-M A-2- Class Cobinet; IEEE; Radio Club, treasurer, president. ROBERT EDMOND WILLIAMS JR. Morketing Youngstown, Ohio CHI PHI; Cheerleader; ASCE; Marketing Society; Sailing Club. STEPHEN JON WILLIS Economics Portlond, Maine PI LAMBDA PHI; Class Cabinet; IFC Representative; BROWN AND WHITE, business manager, financial manager; Pi Delta Epsilon, treasurer. DONALD RICHARD WILSON Management Buffalo, N. Y. DELTA TAU DELTA; rushing chairman; Scabbard and Blode, vice-president. JAMES NEWTON WILSON Civil Engineering Montcloir, N. J. PHI DELTA THETA; Football, freshman, varsity; Lacrosse, fresh- man, varsity; Track, varsity; American Society of Civil Engineers. PAUL ERNEST WINTER Electrical Engineering Wayne, N, J. M-M B-1; IEEE, corresponding secretary; Newman Club, executive committee, chairman; M-M Lecture Discussion Series. BRUCE ALLEN WINCOTT Government Harrison, N. Y. ALPHA LAMBDA OMEGA. CHARLES M. WISTAR Finance Pittsburgh, Pa. PHI GAMMA DELTA; rushing chairman, president; Class president, class vice-president, IFC. WILLIAM JAMES WOOD Internotional Relations Ramsey, N. J. TOWN; Arcadia XVII; NSA coordinator; Crossroads Africa Com- mittee, chairman; International Relations Club; MUSTARD AND CHEESE; Cosmospolitan Club. LOUIS ARNOLD WOOLLEY Electrical Engineering Allentown, Pa. TOWN; Bond, marching, concert; IEEE. H. ALLEN WURZBACH JR. Economics Port Washington, N. Y. TAYLOR D; social chairman; Rifle Team, varsity, captain; Outing Club. JEFFREY A. WYAND Engineering Physics Hogerstown, Md. TAYLOR B; IEEE. GARY YASUMURA Electrical Engineering Lakewood, N. J. THETA CHI; scholarship chairman; IEEE; Honors, sophomore; Dean ' s List. DARYL WILLIAM YEAKEL Accounting Quokertown, Pa. TOWN, Beta Alpha Psi; Accounting Society; Honors, sophomore; Deon ' s List. WILLIAM S. YESLER Rumson, N. J. Business TOWN. RICHARD A. YOUNG Engineering Physics Pittsburgh, Pa. THETA XI- vice-president, president, IFC representative, rushing chairman; IfC; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Mu Epsilon; AlP; Honors, fresh- Rosemont, Pa. man, sophomore; Dean ' s List. MILAN CURTIS YOVANOVICH Management KAPPA SIGMA. ROBERT ALLAN ZACHARDA r- Easton, Pa. Government _, . L GRYPHON; executive board, vice-president; Eta Sigma Khi; Base- ball, freshman; Campus Chest Drive, executive board. FREDERICK JOSEPH ZAK Chemical Engineering „r, . M AMn,° ' A uiTP- PHI KAPPA THETA; pledge manager; BROWN AND WHITE, AICHE. CHRISTOPHER ZARINS „. . Brooklyn, N. Y. Biology _ , ' , KAPPA ALPHA; secretary; Arcodia; Class Cabinet, sophomore, junior senior; Phi Beta Kappa; Omicron Delta Kappa, vice-president; Alpha Epsilon Delta, vice-president; Cyonide, secretary; Phi bta Sigma; Swimming, freshman, varsity; German Club, vice-president. Honors, freshman, sophomore, junior; Dean ' s List. PAUL ADAM ZDRODOWSKI Marketing South River, N. J. TOWN; Honors, sophomore; Deon ' s List. JACK HENRY ZWEIG Government Shaker Heights, Ohio THETA XI; Hillel Society; Political Science Assembly. 394 New single and multi-color offset presses assure the utmost in quality printing. Quality and Service Unexcelled HUNTER PUBLISHING COMPANY 333 Indiana Avenue Winston-Salem, North Carolina Printers of the 1964 EPITOME 395 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS for making this book possible, I extend my thanks To Managing Editor RON CASPER for attending to all the little details that I could never be found to do, and to Managing Editors GEORGE FEISSNER and DON WOOD who not only at- tended to details, but also helped with the photography work. To Business Manager RICH DAVIS and his staff who kept the book out of the red. To Photography Editor RICK SEAMAN who spent long hours behind a camera and longer hours in the darkroom; and to KEN MAXON for his photographic effort. To Literary Editor DON STEVER for the reams of paper he sweated over to produce the copy in this book. To Sports Editor JOHN DAVAGIAN without whom there would have been only a two-page sports section. To Scheduling Editor INTS KAMPARS who scheduled (and sometimes rescheduled) and rounded up the many groups whose pictures appear in the book. To Senior Editor TED BURT who mananged to be the only one to finish his section on time. To Advisor DON HORINE for all of his anxious moments. To Publisher ' s Representative BILL O ' CONNOR for putting the book together after the rest of us gave up. To BOB BROWN and TOM BAUMGARTENER for all the coolie labor without which we would have been even less organized. To all those who cooperated with us in any way to make the job of producing the 1964 EPITOME just a little easier, my sincere thanks, ... , -j:i.M. Edward J. Tenthoff 396 EPITOME 1964 •t ■k . editor-in-chief EDWARD J. TENTHOFF business manager RICHARD M. DAVIS I ' l Y Managing Editors T. RONALD CASPER GEORGE F. FEISSNER DONALD K. WOOD Scheduling Editor INTS KAMPARS Photography Editor A. FREDERICK SEAMAN Staff; Kenneth R. Maxson George F. Feissner Donald K. Wood George E. Nugent Literary Editor DONALD W. STEVER Sports Editor JOHN S. DAVAGIAN II Senior Editor EDWARD M. BURT Identification Editor ALAN H. DUGAN Financial Manager RENE E. LAGUERRE JR. Administrative Manager STEVEN A. SCHREIBER Assistant: Saul A. Miller Sales Manager STEPHAN R. GOLDSTON Advertising Manager IRA H. POLON Accounting 76 Accounting Society 113 Acknowledgments 396 Admissions Office 54 Advertisers 360 Air Force ROTC 98 Alpha Chi Rho , 298 Alpha Epsilon Delta 1 04 Alpha Koppa Psi 105 Alpha Lambda Omega 294 Alpho Phi Omego 234 Alpha Pi Mu 105 Alpha Sigma Phi 300 Alpha Tau Omega 302 Alumni Association Secretary 56 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 114 American Institute of Industrial Engineers 115 American Institute of Physics 115 Americon Society of Civil Engineers 116 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 116 Arcadia 225 Ardadia Associates 226 Army ROTC 96 Arnold Air Society 1 06 Arts and Science, Dean of 58 Athletics 1 72 Contents 3 Cross Country 1 94 Cyanide 107 Dames Club 249 Dean of Students Deans, Associate Dedication , , . Delta Chi Delta Phi . , . Delta Sigma Phi Delta Tau Delta Delta Upsilon Development . . . Drovo Drinker 53 53 2 310 312 314 316 318 55 264 270 Economics 78 Education 62 Electrical Engineering 92 Endor 244 Engineering, Dean of 80 Engineering Mechanics 90 English 60 Epitome 238 Epitome Staff 397 Eta Sigma Phi 107 Bond 255 Baseball 176 Bosketball 214 Beta Alpha Psi 1 06 Beta Theta Pi 304 Biology 59 Board of Trustees 51 Board of Trustees, Chairman 51 Brown and White 240 Buildings and Grounds 57 Business Administration, Dean of 74 Chemical Engineering 87 Chemistry 82 Chi Phi 306 Chi Psi 308 Christian Council 245 Christian Science Organization 245 Civil Engineering 86 Class of 1 967 Cabinet 232 Class of 1966 Cabinet 230 Class of 1965 Cabinet 228 Class of 1964 Cabinet 120 Classical Languages 64 Cosmopolitan Club 250 Fencing 211 Finance 75 Fine Arts 65 Football 186 Geology 63 German 64 German Club 251 Glee Club 252 Golf 183 Government 68 Graduates 120 Graduate School, Dean of 100 Gryphon Society 271 H Health Service 57 Hillel Society 246 History 70 Hockey 212 398 J. Industrial Engineering 88 Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers 117 Institute of Research 56 Interfaith Council 246 Interfroternity Council 296 international Relations 69 Pi Koppo Alpha Pi Lambda Phi Pi Tou Sigma Placement Office President Price Hall Psi Upsilon Psychology Publications, Office of 334 336 111 55 50 291 338 72 55 K Kappa Alpha Kappa Sigma 320 322 Lacrosse 1 78 Lambda Chi Alpho .__. 324 Lambdo Mu Sigmo I 08 Lehigh Christian Fellowship 247 Lehigh Outing Club 250 Lehigh Review 244 Leonard Hall 290 Library Staff 56 Lutheran Student Association 247 M M M 280 Morine Science Center 73 Materials Research Center 95 Mathematics 66 Mechanical Engineering 94 Metallurgical Engineering 91 Methodist Student Movement 248 Music 71 Mustard and Cheese 258 N Neumon Club 248 Office of Public Information 54 Omlcron Delta Kappa 108 P Park House 285 Pershing Rifles 1 09 Phi Alpha Theto 1 09 Phi Beta Koppo 110 Phi Delta Theto 326 Phi Eta Sigmo 110 Phi Gommo Delto 328 Phi Koppa Theto 330 Philosophy 71 Phi Sigma Koppo 332 Physics 84 Pi Delto Epsilon 1 I 1 Receptionist, University Center 54 Registrar ' s Office 54 Religion 72 Residence Holls Council 270 Richards 275 Rifle 213 Romance Languages 65 Rugby 185 Sailing Club 184 Scabbard and Blade 112 Scholarship and Self-Help 54 Senior Directory 383 Sigma Alpha Mu 340 Sigma Chi 342 Sigma Nu 344 Sigmo Phi 346 Sigma Phi Epsilon 348 Ski Club 249 Soccer 194 Student and Faculty Committees 235 Student Investment Council 112 Swimming 220 TAK Town House 292 Tau Delta Phi 350 Taylor 256 Tennis 1 82 Theto Chi 352 Theto Delta Chi 354 Theto Xi 356 Town Council 227 Track 180 Treasurer ' s Office 55 Vice-Presidents w WLRN Wrestling 52 242 196 .A Vs. 1 ' V-5.- L 1 ' Ttp-V Mm ■' hm CXILT STEWART S.CORT CLARENCE L LARS LHieH r r i A A A JOSEPH a McFADDEN _ 1 C A T ! K ' 3 -?. n. . ' .
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