Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA)

 - Class of 1972

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Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1972 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 296 of the 1972 volume:

1972 EPITOME w O i— i Oh w CM l N C3 u CO I— I E- D U 2 O I— l E- U Q W P w S o I— I Oh W CM IX A fine professor is often defined by the number of articles he has produced or books he has written, or in terms of his effectiveness as a teacher, or in the man- ner he has served the university community. It is unusual to find a man who com- bines two of these qualities, but it is truly rare to find the man who combines all three. It is to just such a man, though, that this book is being dedicated. He has been described by the students in his department as being the best professor I ' ve had here, as a man who has a sincere interest in the student ' s welfare. Fellow members of the Lehigh community respected him enough to elect him chairman of Forum II. Here, his concern for the student was again paramount, and Forum representatives have characterized him as always willing to listen to the student view, as involved with the student. He came to Lehigh in 1955 after receiving his B.S. from Bucknell University in 1947 and his Ph.D. from Carnegie-Mellon in 1954. Since then he has successfully combined community service with scholarly and teaching excellence. It is my pleasure to announce that the 1972 Epitome is dedicated to Professor of Chemical Engineering, Dr. Curtis W. Clump. Presentation made at Flagpole Day Ceremonies, May 15. 1972 a w a n o z n G H CO n C -a  - CD 1 DO W i— i O a w a n H i— i o z CONTENTS INTRODUCTION This book is similar to the sign on the left in that it symbolizes a departure. It is a break with the tradi- tional yearbook of the past, though this does not mean that the book is radical or freaky . The hope is that this book, through its changes, can better capture some of your feelings about Lehigh. Obviously it can- not mirror everyone ' s tho ughts on the varied aspects of university life, but it is hoped that a few of the di- verse ideas present at Lehigh will be portrayed within the 1972 Epitome. The premise of this book is that there is a single un- ity to Lehigh that cannot readily be subdivided into residence halls, sports, seniors, administration, and the like. However, it is necessary to lend some rationality to the book in order to make it readable, thus these groupings must survive to some extent. This book, then, attempts to link these arbitrary groupings through the use of magazine-style articles. Addition- ally this book will group faculty, graduating seniors, and course societies together according to their re- spective departments. That is, seniors will be arranged alphabetically within the department of their major. Croup shots of that department ' s faculty will then be included on the same page as the senior portraits. An alphabetical listing of all graduating seniors who paid their senior assessments may be found in the senior directory beginning on page 270 of this book. The articles mentioned above will cover a variety of subjects beginning with an essay on cultural opportu- nities at Lehigh on the next page. Other articles in- clude a somewhat humorous look, though not without its serious comments, at the total undergraduate ex- perience at Lehigh. Entitled It Was Four Years, it be- gins on page 94. Of course, the most obvious change at Lehigh this past year was the introduction of coedu- cation. On page 166 first-year coed Andrea Siegel gives her rather animated view of the first year of co- education at Lehigh. Immediately following this article is an interesting article by Dave Ingram on Lehigh spirit, a phenomenon noticeably absent from the apathetic campus in past years. Following the essay on Lehigh ' s sports ' year Dave discusses the intramural program, a more spirited interest at Lehigh, from the view of a most interested participant-the IM manager. Next Year: The President ' s Cup begins on page 206. The concluding articles are of a more serious nature. The first on page 226 by John Gaughan takes a look at the Lehigh University Volunteers, a group of students which is effecting important changes in the Lehigh Valley. The final article is The Forum: Struggle to Sur- vive in which author Steve Clickstein poses some im- portant questions for both the present Lehigh commu- nity and we as the alumni, in addition to providing valuable insights into the first two years of the Forum ' s operation. Hopefully the diversity of these articles will com- plement the more traditional groupings of college yearbooks— the faculty senior section (page 19), living groups (page 113), sports essay (page 178), and clubs (page 232). Within these changes I hope you find the expanded format (11 x 14 as opposed to 9 x 12 ), the larger pictures, and the increased copy to be meaningful de- viations from the traditional yearbook. The purpose of the yearbook remains the same however, and I hope that twenty years from now you will be able to pick up the ' 72 Epitome and recall your years at Lehigh. TLF CULTURAL CENTER OF THE LEHIGH VALLEY Lehigh may once have been a haven where engi- neering students could avoid any contact with culture for four years, but that has not been so this year. Groups have been fighting for dates to present their aspect of culture to the university community, usually free of charge. CPA brought the National Players, the Cuarier String Quartet, the Danzi Woodwind Quintet and other classical concerts to Lehigh. FVLC spon- sored talks by William Kunstler, Byron Bloch, Russel Kirk and other notables. The Berman, Blaustein and Globus series continued to bring interesting and mem- orable programs to the campus. And the Concert Committee actually made money on a concert. An unhappy turn of fate caused the William Kunstler lecture to be the best attended and most topical event in this year ' s calendar. Civil rights attorney William Kunstler was well-known for his defense of the Chi- cago 7, but the Attica Prison uprising, three weeks be- fore his lecture in mid- September, brought his name to the headlines once more. Kunstler ' s lecture told of his part as arbitrator between the rebelling prisoners and the prison officials. He spoke with frustration con- cerning the unfruitful negotiations and angrily termed the ensuing deaths inexcusable homicide and offi- cial murder . Kunstler held his audience of over 2500 in their seats for over an hour with stirring descriptions of prison inequities and the Attica tragedy. The National Players returned to Lehigh this year with two plays. The Miser , Moliere ' s brisk and whimsical satire, was presented on Friday, October 1. The play is the story of an eccentric penny-pincher who attempts to thwart his daughter ' s love affair through miserly means only to have love triumph over money in the end. The Players successfully brought the 1 7th century humor to the modern audience and provided an enjoyable evening of entertainment. Counterclockwise starting at left, speakers (his year included Joseph Heller of Catch 22; former Secretary of the Interior, Stewert Udall; William Kunstler, attorney for the Chicago 7 and arbitrator at the Attica tragedy; and this year ' s Berman lecturer. Arthur Okun, chair- man of the President ' s Council of Economic Advisors under Johnson. PORTABLE NEWPORT FOLK FESTIVAL The Festival included such names as John Jack- son (left), Michael Cooney (above), and Pete See- ger (above right). Another CPA sponsored event was the performance of Ruth Laredo, nationally acclaimed pianist. She dem- onstrated her affinity for impressionistic music with her excellent readings of Schuman, Ravel, Debussy, and the Russian composer Alexander Scriabin, who has been discovered by Miss Laredo. The Mustard and Cheese had many successful pro- ductions this year, but the most popular of their per- formances was the Pulitzer-prize winning Our Town by Thornton Wilder. Grovers Corners, New Hamp- shire, was brought to life once more by a skillful group of actors in Grace Hall this year. The homey humor, the backyard philosophy and the colorfully human de- scription of small town America, which make Our Town a great play were all brought across by the tal- ented M C troupe. James Cunningham and the Acme Dance Company arrived on campus this spring as part of the Globus Series in Creative Arts. The group presented two major performances and two master classes in modern dance. The evening performances were actually a combination of performance and instruction. In the first half of the program Cunningham led more than 100 volunteers from the audience through a series of limbering exercises which culminated with the entire group dancing about the floor of Grace Hall. The per- formance was entitled The First Family . It involved the unlikely juxtaposition of Walt Disney and Isadora Duncan. Their performance, as the Village Voice wrote, resembles the course of a dream with all its sudden transformations, eccentricities, magic and seeming aimlessness. Another group that came to Lehigh with an enter- tainment-instruction program was the Portable New- port Folk Festival. For the past ten years the Newport Folk Festival has been an annual musical event, held in Rhode Island. Its purpose has been to keep the spirit of traditional American folk music alive and to edu- cate people in the origins of the sounds. This year the show took to the road to bring the music to the people. Featured performers of the Festival included some of this country ' s best folk artists— authentic traditional performers from rural America and city-bred revival singers , including Michael Cooney, Elizabeth Cotton, the Putnam County String Band, and a last minute ad- BLAUSTEIN LECTURE SERIES 1972 HAROLD WILSON dition, Pete Seeger. To note that Seeger did not domi- nate the performance says much for the other performers. On April 19, 20, and 21, the Lehigh University lec- ture season culminated with the Jacob and Hilda Blaustein Lectures in International Relations. The sev- enth annual lecturer was the Right Honorable Harold Wilson, leader of Great Britain ' s Labour Party and Prime Minister of Great Britain from 1964 to 1970. Dur- ing the time he headed the British government events occured which have changed the world. Among them were the negotiations to enter the Common Market (which were initiated and failed), Great Britain ' s re- evaluation of her colonial situation, and the handling of the Rhodesian crisis which resulted in the strength- ening of the British Commonwealth of nations. The titles of Wilson ' s lectures were: Britain and the Transition from Imperialism, Studies in International Cooperation, and Britain and the European Com- mon Market. Concerning the general world situation, Wilson stated: We now have a situation in which the world does not revolve around No rth America and Europe, but is dominated by the vast majority. The basic issues are race, freedom, and the dignity of man. Describing the British Commonwealth, Wilson stated that it had progressed from colonial status to independent sovereign nationhood in barely a quarter of a century. He called the granting of independence to India, Burma, and Ceylon, an act of faith in a doubting world. As Prime Minister, Wilson attempted to put an end to the colonies and to establish nations in their place. Wilson stated: When I formed the labor government in 1964 I appointed a secretary of state for the colonies and gave him as his overriding instruction that he should work himself out ot a job. Complaining about American-Rhodesian relations, Wilson stated: Sanctions undoubtedly hit the Rhode- sian economy . . . but there were a number of breaches even more serious at this time . . . has been the decision of the American Congress to dishonor the United Nations mandatory resolution so far as chrome shipments are concerned. Wilson felt that the British government had no al- ternative but to intervene in Northern Ireland, which has been racked by what may be characterized as a religious war. He supported President ' s Nixon ' s trip to China saying, I think all of Britain welcomed that he went to China. I was pleased that United States was at the point where it could recognize that China exis- ted. At leat it opens a dialogue, although I don ' t know how deep. In his final lecture Wilson defended the present La- bour party stance against entry into the Common Mar- ket. The matter comes down to a question of terms; the terms negotiated by Wilson in 1968 were good, but France rejected Britain ' s entry. The Labour party thinks that the present terms would be harmful to Brit- ain in the long run. Finally, the Pops Concert topped off the year ' s cul- tural calendar. The Lehigh Concert Band performed their usual array of light classics with obvious relish and enthusiasm. The program was highlighted by this year ' s soloist, the famed bass-baritone John T. Steck- beck. This year also saw the first performance of Le- high ' s Stage Band, a recently formed group devoted to the big band sound of the thirties. A wasteland of culture for dull engineers? No. In fact, Lehigh may be on its way to becoming the cul- tural center of the Lehigh Valley. PEOPLE Paul J. Franz, Jr. Vice-President— Development Eric V. Ottervik Vice-President, Vice-Provost W. Deming Lewis, President Albert C. Zettlemoyer, Provost Preston Parr, Vice-President, Dean of Student Affairs Joseph F. Libsch, Vice- President, Research Charles W. Brennan, Dean of Students William L. Quay Dean of Student Life Clarence B. Campbell, Dean of Residence Halls Ruth A. Hurley, Assoc. Dean of Student Life Arthur H. Mann, Ass ' t. Dean of Students Nathan W. Harris, Ass ' t. Dean of Student Life Joseph H. Reynolds Ass ' t to the Dean of Student Life 15 Health Center: Howard C. Pieper, M.D.; P. Laurence Krieder, M.D.; Duane E. Stackhouse, M.D.: Doris Transve; Dorothy Delp; Sherri Cummings; Debbie Smalley; Jim Mathews; Lucille Pleiss James H. Wagner, Registrar Joseph A. Petronio, Bursar Samuel H. Missimer, Director of Admissions 16 . ■■MT 17 Elmer W. Glick, Treasurer William E. Stanford, Financial James D. Mack, Director of Aid Director Libraries Everett A. Teal, Director of Placement Service Post Office Staff: William P. Dwyer, Director; (ames C. Wiltraut; Frank Bold; Eerwin Fry Front row: O. Devlin, B. Smackey, B. Litt, E. Schwartz; Back row: H. Willis, E. Schmitt BUSINESS ECONOMICS ACCOUNTING Thomas A. Acker John M. Briggs W. David Eisemann Richard Eisenberg r Herbert L. Campbell Douglas L Finch ■ Richard H. De Moll )erald Hurwitz George W. Dennis III Bruce C. Hyde it David M. Kols M. Stephen Smith III |ohn C. Voaden ]ohn C. Abbott (arnes Beattie 19 Roger G. Bast Carl A. Boe, III Glen G. Frank Michael A. Guzzardi Charles H. Heist, III BETA ALPHA PSI: R. Anthony, |. Aylsworth, Pres.; L. Baer, D. Brockway, Jr., B. Brown, M. Friess, P. Gielen, |. Gill, |. R. McGeary Jr., ). McGrew, C. McKibben, H. Maguire, W. Maher, D. Mitrano, D. Railsback, D. Reese, D. Sagman, R. Siegfried, R. Wachtenheim. A. Cohen, J. Aronson, A. Weintraub, F. Jensen, ). Keefe, W. Pillsbury. Andrew M. Hitz Alan R. Johnson Joseph D. Lloyd - I Joseph J. Lodge, III John A. Pawlick Andrew R. Bresler Jeffrey D. Frey Brian E. Gaddis Peter E. Cadkowski Glenn B. Higbie Garry L. Scheib Samuel W. Schiff John P. Stupp, )r. Craig W. Reynolds Philip F. Rivers Jr. Roy S. Succa Steven M. Weitz d M Am A James E. Abel Kerry S. Adams James J. Alexander diM M Robert E. Anthony John S. Alylsworth Lewis J. Baer Bruce J. Brown William R. Conner Peter I. Friedman Michael ). Friess Joseph S. Carufi Lawrence Gash James R. Houck Richard P. Junker Lawrence I. Kessler George F. Kurteson Peter G. Langseth _ 23 J. David Gill Charles A. Gilmartin William E. Golab James M. Goldberg Thomas D. Hipszer Peter N. Louras, Jr. Herbert A. Maguire William P. Maher Roderick C. McGeary James R. McGrew A 4 A Craig L. Mckibben Stewart I. Metosky A 4: ' M 4 M Daniel |. Mitrano )ames E. Popham David A. Stalker Thomas M. Newman D. Jeffrey Ralph Thomas R. Wise Robert Wachtenheim James S. Pennington David A. Reese Donald M. Sagman 24 Greenleaf, M. Snider, L. Krouse, ). Hobbs, C. Beidleman, C. Vihon, B. Brockway 25 Mark G. Allen Robert B. Barkhorn Stephen F. Bayer David P. Cameron Paul C. Coppock FINANCE CLUB M. Keith Huzyak John G. Evans Michael C. Impink Gregory Falkenbach Ronald E. Jacobs Thomas ). Gellas (ames L. Kurtz David D. Glenn, Robert C. Lieberman Jeffrey J. Gilbert 26 Andrew B. Mills z a 4u Charles H. Howell, III Richard S. Johnson Paul H. Legrand, Jr. Donald C. McVay Bruce D. Miller Franklin K. Moone William T. Payne, Jr John M. Rust Frederick E. Schea James E. Skok Gary D. Crabel Stanley R. Griffiths James H. Hamilton Howard J. Harmatz 27 James P. Swartz William A. Toscani Jeffrey W. Wald John E. Welsh, III Richard A. Woodruff John R. Rizzo Wanye S. Reisner R. Mills, A. Koch, F. Luh Richard Livingston ■■■■[ B Ife; f P TW a 7 ._ . i Vj Robert C. Logan Michael P. Lysak Alan I. Margolies ]oel P. Menzzopane F. Brady, C. Moore, W. Trumbull •• 28 L. Tripp, ). DeRooy, N. Balbakins, R. Gonce, G. Garb, R. Thornton, E. Schwartz ]ay H. Rosenfeld Gary S. Rowe Kenneth I. Saler Walter ). Stiver, Jr. Stanley H. Taylor GOVERNMENT Henry L. Chandler Michael S. Chuhinka Donato M. Diorio Terence L. Faul John M. Fields Thomas W. Hammond, Jr. Gerald F. Hesch Philip C. Hunt Perry A. Kupietz Vito C. Magdelinskas Paul L. Maloney )ohn N. Mayo, Jr. Paul F. McHale, |r. Charles E. Sieger, Jr. )ohn F. Sise Thomas B. Stoup 30 Charles D. Sultzer Charles C. Terry Robert J. Tootell Richard C. Vaillant Hector R. Velazquez S. Shaber, C. Brownstein, H. Whitcomb, L. Ruchelman, F. Colon, D. Barry. HISTORY B. Machobane C. Graf Standing: A. Johnston Timothy C. Bayer Ben H. Becker W. Shade, R. Cowherd, J. Saeger; Standing: L. Leder, chairman, Dowling. Charles L. Board, )r. W. Stephan Comstock Jeffrey L. Diamond Oldrich Foucek, III Richard B. Gallagher Top to bottom: Robert ). Garbosky K. Doyle George David K. Goodman Irvine B. Johnstone, III Richard H. Koby G. Ellis, W. Douves, R. Sim Seated: S. Cutcl Gregory L. Landvater Robert |. Thomas 33 ™ 2 01 . 01 C - 1 3s UJ Q. ♦J •- P o — to 5 fO • — — i 3 00  1 s C ro i at ro 2 2 Q c Eh . o v J t -sir J 03 C 03 E o- x c ™ E a e o DO— -■Q «.- = c N _r- OJ i co PHIL- OSPHY INFOR- MATION SCIENCE Blake R. Heffner 34 ■k CLASSICS ). Maurer, chairman E. DeAngeli L u Y Cfni nr D. Feaver RELIGION H. Flesher, chaplain A. Eckardt, chairman Thomas C. Middleton 35 MUSIC R. Cutler, chairman I. Elkus Thomas D. Arner A. James Cameron John M. Divinchi Thomas P. Kokura Andrew D. Lazar R. Williamson, chairman; J. Mcintosh, R. Herronkohl, D. Amidon, Jr. 36 Gary ). Torres George K. Weber Joseph Strickland, Jr. Michael D. Whitehouse SOCIAL RELATIONS URBAN STUDIES John D. Rohal Ronald E. Wilsker Philip A. Nastassee Glenn G. Wilson 37 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Gene L. Collette Harry L. Delp, Jr. Tony M. Edwards O. Smolansky, A. Dunlap, H. Braddick, C. Joynt, Chairman 38 Frank X. Caughen, III Stephen |. Hoerner Mark A. Miller Warren ). Smith, II William E. Wells Left to right: L. Hicks, F. Quirk, T. Althouse, C. Alvare, R. Redd, Chairman Frederick Coker, Jr. Glenn L. Colehamer ■ A..V Eugene L. Goldfeder Douglas A. Sheffer Olev Taremae FINE ARTS Peter A. Weismantle Left to right: G. Rayna G. McCluskey, Sr. G. Stengle R. Silverman E. Assmus MATHEMATICS Gustav Palm 40 Thomas O. Potts, Jr. Michael S. Rosen Dennis L. Smith Theodore ). Zubulake lk4 Left to right: D. Trutt H. Skerry J. King F. Brenneman M. Schechter (seated) R. Bennett, E. Shortess; seated: W. Newman, A. Brody fcLfc Robert A. Brodie Robert H. Coad, )r. Robert Anderson Raymond A. Duda Anthony Baran David A. Ford Stuart W. Bayne John F. Heil 42 PSYCHOLOGY William ). Keating Richard ). Schmierer Ross H. McMillan Charles S. Steele Frank C. Puzio C. Cuditus R. Mullin M. Gaffney W. Davis L. Tuscher J. Stoops, Dean T. Fleck, Jr. A. Rinehart A. Castaldi R. Leight EDUCATION W. Stafford, M. Grandovic, P. VanMiller, ). Lutz, A. Palmo, J. Mierzwa, J. Kender, A. Castaldi, E. Warfel, T. Fleck, Jr., T. Lifland. ENGLISH TOP: P. Tinker C. Kowalski A. Solomon MacDonald L. )acobson ). Baker BOTTOM: Standing: ]. Hahn ). McCullagh Sitting: V. Weiss E. Baus Roger H. Ford Michael P. Shay Edward R. Fritchrnan, )r. Mark Schwartz Michael Golden Kenneth A. Schiller Roger E. lackucewicz Francis R. Santoro Left to right: ]. McFadden R. Sullivan T. Barker I. Schnaible Sitting: ). Vickery R. Harson Standing: P. Beidler E. ]ames C. Criswell ). DeBellis Richard T. Strunk Michael M. Wilson Thomas R. Swan E. Dilworth F. Hook D. Greene C. Strauch A. Hartung R. Armstrong Sitting: ). Bischuff J. McCormick P. Smith Standing: R. Kafka R. Crummick MODERN LANGUAGES Charles Burlington Robert C. Burns Jpl Ronald K. Kemmerer William K. Perkins Left to right: A. Romero A. Herz V. Valenzuela A. Waldenrath 50 Left to right: S. Ritter A. Ellis C. Mikongomi E. Rockwell Left to right: ). Van Eerde A. van der Naald B. Kuball W. Marshall William N. Brodine John P. Collins, Jr. Richard Chefetz S. James Corsa, III James M. Christian Michael P. Criss Wayne J. Coddington William P. Dey BIOLOGY Left to right: F. Trembley S. Barber, Chairman S. Krawiec E. Landis B. Owen Michael Eisenhard William S. Ettinger Leland J. Foshag Edward Freyfogle, ]r. Robert Golden f £« - Nelson K. Lytle William Marshall, )r. )ay E. Melman Olaf T. Mueller Robert, W. Lamparter Glenn M. Hirsch Steven H. Leifheit 53 John Root Edward L. Ruden William A. Schiavone Thomas A. Stoneback Seated: B. Parker, R. Malsberger, Standing: T. Cheng, H. Pritchard, S. Herman t Philip A. Sweet, III Neal I. Tarulli Paul L. Urban David Van Voorhees S. Clarke Woodruff Gregory C. Arnold Clifford H. Dodge Michael D. Emmerling ). Craig Huntington Franklin Bell William C. Burgy, II Left to right: ). Everett, C. Dodge, R. Sassen, I. Price, L. Schultz, ). Tiffert Richard D. Kimmel Larry D. Schutts Jeffrey J. Waltemyer Left to right: P. Myers, A. Richards, ). Parks, B. Carson, ). Ryan, Chairman; C. Sclar, R. Simpson R.O.T.C. R. Brace, J. Marsh, D. Britton, S. Shellenberger, ). Surico, D. Podoll, C. Young Top: ). Kress, E. Becker, W. Malich, D. Weaver Bottom: S. Schmidt, |. Ellison, D. Kunkel, ). Dannenfelser Bruce Branchini Andrew J. Buck Richard B. Carter) William A. Creelman Lance Deutsch CHEMISTRY G. Simmons A. Diefenderfer T. Ortolano D. Smyth R. Lovejoy 58 Loius A. Janey David C. Kartzman Roderick T. Kaufmann Gary Lange Clifford E. Dietz Gregg Forry Francis G. Gerberich H. Leidheiser ). Sturm M. Hulbert J. Manson K. Klier Walter S. Milinichik Richard A. Morgan Donald B. Miselis Robert B. Reuther 60 Victor R. Risch David S. Shindell John R. Weir R. Sprague, T. Young, N. Heindel, F. Fowkes, Chairman; C. Kraihanzel Thomas A. Balliett Keith ). Barker Peter Blum John K. Clement, |r. Lewis U. Davis METALLURGY MATERIALS SCIENCE Sitting: R. Hertzberg T. Dinsmore Standing: |. Goldstein D. Hasselman D. Smith M. Notis £r ■■ « Sitting: C. Conard, II, Chairman W. Hahn, Jr. Standing: J. Bowker, S. Tarby, Y. Chou Ronald H. Gailey Francis Goyanes, III Paul M. Kroninger, |r. Michael L. Lasonde James S. Myers James F. Stein Walter A. Zanchuk C. Hill, |. Wood, A. Popichak, D. Krohn, R. Penty Five o ' clock shadow is an electron micrograph showing the structure of the MnBi-Bi unidirectionally solidified eutectic. The MnBi-Bi eutectic forms long rods of MnBi, less than a micron in width, parallel to the growth direc- tion. Magnification is 5600x. 65 PHYSICS Right to left: First row-). McLennan, Chairman, Y. Kim, E. Bergmann, Second row-W. Van Sciver, W. Nelson, R. Folk, S. Radin, W. Fowler, F. Feigl, Third row-D. Wheeler, W. Smith, C. Borse, R. Shaffer, J. Garhammer, Fourth row-D. Kaslow, ). Matta, D. DiMaria, D. Strome, S. Laucks, Fifth row-). Modla, ). Cope, A. Moren, R. Shirk, C. Curtis, V. Kapook, Sixth row-C. Wong, N. Chan, L. Wu, P. Corkum, Seventh Row-R. Verhanovitz, R. Lorenze, K. Lewis, Eighth row— F. Minotto, C. Chiu, Standing— R. Emrich, K. Klenk Franklin Boyle Walter E. Damuck, Jr. David W. Greve Robert W. Grzywacz Marc D. Mermelstein Laurence D. Pike David C. Uhle James L. Vorhaus Noel F. Dudley Roger A. Lowlicht mth Jeffrey C Halle Paul A. Roth James S. Kolodzey Frederick Schroeder C. Clump, R. Coughlin, L. Sperling, A. McHugh Richard C. Alloway Clifford K. Deakyne Jean P. Archambault Glenn K. Douma Michael B. Davis Gerald F. Dziedzic 68 Louis E. Montero Larry E. Miller David B. Lebowitz Robert ). LeBar Joseph R. Kreiser John K. Craybill, Jr. Thomas K. Hersh William Hubiak Allan F. Kapteina |ohn W. Eckman, II William A. Erbrick Lawrence A. Gilbert CHEMICAL ENGINEERING L. Wenzel, G. Poehlein, A. Foust, F. Stein Gary L. Munn Joseph C. Nazzaro Bruce F. Nolte William E. Osborn, II 70 Philip K. Savage John H. Simenson Bruce R. Shafer Mark A. Sisco Paul W. Sigmund Charles P. Steiner Richard F. Stoisits lames F. Stine Scott R. Strock Raymond Tripodi, |r. David C. Trumbore Douglass R. Wagner Robert E. Watkins, Jr. William K. Wong Godfrey M. Yenwo Jon B. Abbey Peter C. Andersen Spyro A. Argeros Thomas E. Bankson Christopher Bennett CIVIL ENGINEERING 72 Front row: R. Slutter, D. VanHorn, chairman; ). Fisher, C. Driscoll, L. Lu, L. Beedle; Second row: S. Desai, T. Huang, T. Hirst, G. Dinsmore, A. Ostapenko, A. Richards, Third row: B. Yen, H. Fang; Fourth row: S. Iyengar, R. Johnson, ). Daniels, C. Kostem, W. Chen; Fifth row: A. Collins, F. Mansour, R. McDonal d, J. Rosenfarb, M. Hunter, A. Chen. 73 CHI EPSILON- ) Leibig, advisor; J. Deal, R. Steinmann, T. Knocke, M. Perlow, E. Planck, ). Abbey, M. Wolfe, M. Roth, S. Fritzinger, D. Wilson, M. Parsons, B. Moyer, J. O ' Hara, J. Dittmier, E. Matukonis, R. Kutz, |. Swartout, C. Loeh ' r, P. Williams, A. MacGregor, G. Lazorchick. 74 A.S.C.E.: M. Parsons, President; ). Dittmeier, J. O ' Hara, F. Sorosky, A. Miller, R. Buscanini, R. Romansky, P. Schneidkraut, S. Fritzinger, M. Boone, R. Hayssen, C. Patelunas, ). Brown, A. MacCregor, M. Zipf, C. Schmall, L. Schofield, B. Haxall, ). Deal, G. Jetty, P. Kenny, R. Kutz, L. Lopresti, B. Johnson, S. Mutchler, J. Swartwout, W. Tar- box, M. Tamm, W. Green. 75 Thomas R. Knoche Charles R. Kubic Robert H. Marmon Todd S. Morgan William ). Greiner Michael C. Harrison Robert Hayssen III Michael C. Irwin William H. Ivey Gordon I. )etty Gregory S. Kelly Patrick B. Kenny 74 S. Scott Nicholas )ames K. Orben Michael Perlow, Jr. Edward C. Plank Paul J. Ponturo Mark C. Roth Richard P. Steinmann Richard P. Wells William H. Tarbox, )r. William Z. Westcott Wesley Winterbottom dJb £k It 4 tfe 77 INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING C. Kane E. Zimmers, Jr. M. Shively M. Groover A. Gould W. Smith, Jr. W. Richardson S. Munro T W II Laurence A. Clements Steven B. Cox Gregory W. Cram Top to bottom: Randall D. Baker William H. Baker, II Gordon A. Brandon, Jr. ). John Cardamone Robert L. Carter, )r. Gregg B. Deehan Richard A. Dockray John Espenschade, Jr. James ). Falatek Glen R. Ganssle A.I. I.E.: R. landoli, ). Plesa, C. Kramer, S. Bromfield, J. Nazemetz, R. Baafi, D. Jackley, P. Slaski, H. McChesney, W. Hardy, W. Pickel, N. Papson, H. Stryker, B. Natarajan, N. Bansal, D. Garfine, D. Scatton, D. Miller, H. Koplin, G. Ganssle, R. Lambert, R. Heiser, ). Severson, P. Pfeifer, K. Scott, W. Baker, L. Clements, R. Dockray, G. Brandon, O. Meyers, ). Lynch, M. Rayford, P. Shelley, W. Charlton, S. Ainey, W. Baldwin, J. Hay, J. Maguregui, R. Pirn, V. Pagano, ). Miller. 1 1 i Stanford L. Glasgow John S. Hill Malcolm A. Hill, II David S. Howe George T. Hutchinson Raymond C. landoli David B. jackley Ronald A. Lambert Harold J. Koplin Orrin ]. Meyers 80 John R. Paul Jonathan W. Pearce William H. Pickel, Jr. Robert N. Pirn, Jr. John J. Plesa Left Column: Walter F. Barcz, Jr. Richard A. Beil John R. Bereuter James N. Biddle, Jr Mark S. Biser MECHANICAL ENGINEERING A+A James R. Auman Terry H. Baker Right column: Robert L. Black Joseph S. Boka Scott H. Cragle Arthur C. Diefenbach Cordon Diefenderfer 87 Front row: R. Hartranft, R. Lucas, A. Kalnins, A. MacPherson, R. Benner; Remainder, left to right: F. Brown, R. Rob- erts, F. Erdogan, ). Eppes, R. Sarubbi, K. Arin, F. Beer, chairman; T. Terry, A. Stenning, T. Jackson, J. Osborn, R. Wei. James C. Franke John E. Gantzhorn, Jr. R. Eric Cerhart Robert C. Gist, Jr. Robert E. Grant Peter A. Helt Stephen H. Hogan Craig R. Kauffman David H. Kirkpatrick 84 TAU BETA PI- P Anderson, ). Aumen, T. Baliett, R. Black, R. Carten, L. Davis, ). Deal, E. Deyoe, ). Espenschade, R. Essington R Forman T. Hersh, D. Howell, M. Kaminskas, D. Kirkpatrick, ). Kreiser, M. Kroboth, R. Lamparter, C. Lytle, M. Mermelstein, O. Meyers, L. Miller, S. Miraglia, V. Pagano, E. Planck, P. Roth, G Roulston P. Savage , H. Schenkel F Schroeder, A. Stefanski, R. Steinmann, S. Tomkiel, ]. Vorhaus, F. Wilk |. Gantzhorn, President; C. Kubic, P. Sigmund, L. Gilbert, C. Stine, T. Knoche, T. Cheung, D. Clark R. Diemer J. Dittmeier G. Downey, W. Hardy , M. Kohler, ). Kreider, R. Kutz, W. Miller, ). O ' Hara, M. Parsons, R. Radcl.ffe, H. Sh.mp, D. Sting, C. Zvanut; Adv.sors- Eppes, Richardson, Stein, Wenzel. 65 4%m fk k Austin C. Klopp Michael Kowalski Michael E. Kroboth Richard W. Lusignea Ceroge C. Lytle, Jr. Joseph R. Moles, Jr. Joseph A. Plunkett lames W. Rettburg Gregory A. Raffauf Thomas ). Roberts 84 A M Gary H. Roulston Richard P. Stern John W. Sibole, Jr. Gibson E. Stine, )r. Frank ). Wilk, Jr. Alexander ). Willman John P. Strehle Robert P. Struble John E. Swanger, Jr. A Robert B. Swartz Joel L. Toof John E. Wasilewski Gerald R. White ELECTRICAL ■ ENGINEERING Leonard P. Baker David E. Bickford Daniel Chaply Gerald D. Clark Frank Decker, Jr. D. Talhelm, B. Fritchman, A. Larky, D. Leenor, F. Hielscher, A. Susskind, chairman; W. Dahlke. r?s . Douglas ). DeVitt Edgar A. DeYoe, III Kenneth ). Dull Joseph H. End, III Raymond W. Essington r Si K. Tyeng, C. Holyinger, D. White, P. Talbot, W. Barrett, N. Eberhart w H. Gnerlich, H. Schuty, K. Spadt, F. Ziegler, Jr., K. Sassaman Joseph H. Feindt, Jr. Louis Filo, III Robert B. Forman 90 Allen C. French William R. Haller Allen R. Gerhard, Jr. Richard Harbolovic Christopher W. Hall Ralph D. Hawes Robert W. Hessler Dennis S. Howell Steven A. Janes Alfred O. Johnson Michael J. Kaminskas F Stephen C. Roseman Howard S. Schenkel Harry B. Rath, Jr Robert M. Seitz Joseph D. Monteiro Thomas E. Nagy Richard F. Pell, )r. 92 Stanley A. Tomkiel Kenneth Weisensale Charles B. Winn Donald R. Walling Richard A. Williams, Jr. Philip M. Yoder Thomas W. Youngblood Andrew J. Zetlan n IT WAS FOUR YEARS I finally received my diploma the other day— via a long cylindrical tube with 48c postage. I remarked to my mother that I probably wouldn ' t ever open it to look at it. She said that I probably would. I did. In spite of myself, I looked at the culmination of four years of education— or should I say residence? Someday I may view it as an education, worthwhile and time well- consumed. Presently, however, my four year ' s residence at Lehigh appears as a unique, enjoyable escape, somewhat irrelevant and not wholly utilized. Graduation was not as absurd as I thought it might be. I got a kick out of the manner in which we received our de- gree. Dean Yates solemnly presented the College to Presi- dent Lewis, who solemnly pronounced us graduates of Le- high University. We accepted our degrees— not so solemnly— by standing up en masse and sitting down en masse. Our unknown speaker, John Pittinger, gave what was admitted to be a good speech, short and without the frills of do a good job, John , work hard , success is yours for the asking , or any of the other cliches associated with commencement speakers. He was concerned with quality education for all who desire it in the future and he intoned this desire to us. Marching out of Grace Hall I had to admit that the ceremony was truly a rite of passage — one that makes little rational sense but lends a necessary order to our life. What passage had I made? The naive freshman to the wordly senior? The small town hick to the Bethlehem urba- nite? Struggling student to learned scholar? A boy to a man? It was a little of each, but it would be preposterous to claim that any transitions were completed. It was a learning process, mostly impractical, mostly in- troductory, incomplete as learning is, satisfying mainly 94 95 .- . % AYS BEAT LAFAY ETf F through its human elements and it certified that I could en- ter society with the proper credential— a college diploma. I come to Lehigh believeing in motherhood, apple pie, and Richard Nixon. My second night in Drinker I told my roommate that I would graduate from Lehigh without ever drinking or getting laid. (I didn ' t even know drugs existed.) My New York City roommate nearly rolled off the top bunk laughing. Surprisingly, I kept all my promises— for a semester. The first weekend in the quad was a test of my resolve. Saturday 23 of the 26 in my section went to bed drunk, all neatly tucked in by myself. I became the mother of the section, a position I recommend to no one. Desiring to break that image second semester I decided to chug a can of Bud during a section party— my first real taste of beer. I broke out in hives the next day. I felt guilty. Who had ever heard of a Lehigh man being allergic to beer? Playboy had rated us a professional drinking school, not in the same league with other col- leges. It became a matter of pride for me to drink beer- even though I couldn ' t stand the taste. I decided to try hard stuff to determine whether I was allergic to alcohol or just beer. My pounding head the next morning told me that I wasn ' t allergic to it but I certainly wasn ' t able to handle it. Within the next year I not only learned to handle hard stuff but discovered my allergy to beer had dis- appeared—my pride was saved. We were all struck with the novelty of college ex- perience. We tested our wings. Other experiences flood back as I recall those first few weeks. I was the last guy to arrive in my section and it seemed as though everyone knew everyone else. I couldn ' t believe it, but I actually thought that I might get homesick. Seeking company I headed to the center room where all the noise seemed to be coming from. I knocked and went in. I al- most left Lehigh right there. My classmates, my peers, my future friends(?) were sitting on the floor playing poker, drinking beer, and smoking (cigarettes in ' 68). I had left home for good. I had a dream of what college was supposed to be. It was to be an ivory tower quietly seething with ideas and discussion, full of learned men, scholars, and seeking stu- dents. During the first week I met a student who finally ap- peared to be the true Lehigh scholar. Finding an apt lis- tener in myself, he spoke on various philosophical, historical, and religious topics for nearly three hours. I went away enthralled— confirmed in my conviction that Lehigh was a community of scholars. I later discovered that I had been conversing with one of the best artists on campus— truly skilled in the art of Bullshit. My education had begun. Christ! during those first few weeks we even liked U.C. food. We thought the campus was beautiful. Not having parents around was great. Then the first round of hourlies hit. Freshman year, the spirit of the freshmen quad, the quality food of the U.C., the fascinating lectures in Packard Lab Auditorium. I had always considered myself a good math student. I understood the material Professor Ricketta was giving us, and I approached that initial 4 o ' clock quiz without trepi- dation. At 5:10 I was a nervous wreck, in a state of shock. Did you believe it? I couldn ' t have answered them with the book open. I ' m transferring to the Business school! When the grades came out we verified our stupidity— the average score for nearly 700 well-qualified college fresh- men was 23%. My score of 40% classified me as a brain, but logic told me that this was not education. After this first round of hourlies we began to notice little things— like the walk up to the quad, the repetitive nature of U.C. food, the perrennial gray skies of Bethlehem with their fresh smell of sulfur, and the lack of girls. I realized when I applied to Lehigh that it was an all-male school. I realized it was an all-male school when I decided to come to Lehigh. However, I never understood that it was all-male until I came to Lehigh. I wasn ' t really too con- cerned about the fact when I made application. Girls had been in every class I had ever been in and though I ac- cepted their absence at Lehigh in theory, I never realized the reality of the situation. Besides, my girl was going to school not too far away, so why did I need other girls? My girl came up for parent ' s weekend that fall and I dis- covered why I needed other girls. I was horny as hell and for some reason my girl didn ' t feel that the only thing to do was to go to bed. Petty disagreements have a way of maturing and by Thanksgiving my best reason for toler- ating an all-male school was gone. There was no my girl any longer. It was about this time that I took out my first Cedar Crest girl. For a frosh this was easier said than done. Luckily a guy on the hall lived in Bethlehem and had access to a car. Being chauffered to a Cedar Crest date was an auspicious beginning. Her I never kiss anyone on the first date was a rather less auspicious ending. Yes, that first semester was something else. What with the dinks, the Psi U firetruck, our first houseparty and the weekly drunks, we began to adjust to Lehigh. However, through it all there pervaded the feeling of an upcoming decision. The decision was where to live for the remaining three years at Lehigh. The choice of fraternity, residence hall, or apartment would shape our Lehigh years. I knew Lehigh was a fraternity school and I always sort of figured that I ' d get into a fraternity. I didn ' t think about it until some Gryphons started the S.U.R.E. movement— Stu- dents United for Residential Equality. It seemed logical that exclusiveness was wrong and that random selection would produce more diversity and a more open campus. Fresh- men sections were determined this way and they seemed great. Besides there didn ' t seem to be any fraternities inter- ested in me. It was at the start of second semester that the body rush started-contacting. For a full week and-a-half we were subjected to nightly visits from suddenly friendly frat-clubbers. All of a sudden everyone seemed inter- ested in me. All of a sudden S.U.R.E. didn ' t seem like such a good idea. I didn ' t accept the first pre-bid, as I waited to see where my friends would go. Nightly phone calls con- firmed Sig Ep for one, Theta Xi for another, and when my best friend went Sigma Nu, I figured it was time to accept their pre-bid. For a week we were kings and pledge party was a night for few to forget— though only vaguely remembered. I should have realized that a pledge party was another of those rites of passage and that there was a catch to it. It was brought home the following Monday when the won- derful frosh became those f pledges. Looking back now my choice of a fraternity rather than a residence hall or an apartment, I can better see the reason- ing behind the S.U.R.E. campaign. There is an isolating of various groups after that first semester. I don ' t know if this is just a result of the natural process of finding you ' re own kind, or whether Lehigh ' s residence structure is primarily responsible. I suppose it ' s open to question as to how frag- mented the Lehigh campus is, but there seems to be no mistaking that it is. It begins in the freshman year when all freshmen are placed in the quad. Our freshman year was more a list of limitations than freedoms. Fortunately, this is changing and freshmen are being integrated into university life. This may be due, in part, to the introduction of coeds. Regardless, sometime during freshman year we each made a decision which determined our circle of future friends and activities. Though living choice obviously did not prevent anyone from pursuing his personal goals, peer pressures and group goals often circumscribed activities. These pressures were not only the providence of fraternities as some might sus- pect, but were the result, to a large degree, of the ster- eotyping which went on. Apartment residents were ex- The decision of where to live— fraternity, residence hall, or aparf- ment— shapes the final three years at Lehigh. Sophomore year saw the inauguration of the catacombs, the Sly and the Family Stone Concert at Fall Houseparty, and a winning college bowl team. 1 1 MH Spring! 1970— A demand for a student voice in the governance of the school resulted in four days of cancelled classes and the Forum. A week later Cambodia erupted, four students were killed at Kent State and there were new demands for a student strike. The campus didn ' t settle down untii after graduation. pected to be non-conformists, fraternity members were expected to make the scene and generally be where the action was and residence hall people were out of it. Of course it wasn ' t true, but the image of the the fra- ternity man for the social scene was still strong. Once in the system we tended to cling to residence identities, de- scribing people as Beta ' s, Fiji ' s, Crows, Delts, etc. The only contacts (and this is overstating it) that people had outside of their residence group were those from freshman section and through sharing the same major. The stereotyping has begun to disappear and I have noticed a lessening of the divisions on campus. Nonetheless, in some way Lehigh must begin to view itself as a unified body. Sophomore year we came back to a changing Lehigh. It began innocently enough as the football team still lost more games than they won, fraternity kegs still rolled down the hill, pledges ran the hill and the minor activism of S.U.R.E. seemed to have abated. It may have only been my personal experience but it did seem that the fraternities be- gan to respond to the attacks of S.U.R.E. that fall. It was not so much an outward change as an opening up within the fraternities. Pledges, who in years past were expected to be fully subservient, began to demand an end to the shit . Pledge activities were to have a broader goal than the amusement of the brotherhood. In Lehigh ' s limited way an independence of thought and action was beginning to grow. Nonetheless, most pledge classes got at least a taste of the old way the night or week they were initiated. Though Delta Upsilon had broken from the traditional fall initiation and the limited hazing sociated with it, the re- mainder of the houses continued to provide such entertainment. I recall the various allusions made to our final pledge meal and the reminiscent talk of the upperclass brothers in the house of when we were pledges. It was absolutely amazing what the upperclassmen had gone through to be- come brothers, and listening to them talk you were assured that you were only half a man because you refused to try to pick an olive off a block of ice with your ass cheeks. I remember the agony with which we waited for the broth- erhood to decide to initiate us. There was the pledge trip Thad Turner was hired in the FaJJ of 1970 to reverse the ail- ing-fortunes of the wrestling team. and always one more pledge project to complete, or one more initiation fee to come in. And while we waited one more pledge class on the hill could be seen wearing coats and ties for a week. The longer we waited the more stories we heard of Hell week at Theta Xi or Hell night at Kappa Sig. Needless to say this did nothing for our composure. Finally in early November the hints became stronger— to the point of blatancy: a special chapter meeting tuesday, suggestions that we not plan anything for friday, ordering steak for friday meal. Steak! Maybe they had finally de- cided to treat us as human beings. Maybe, for initiation, they would welcome us in style to the fraternity. It seemed too good to be true. It was. Friday was uneventful in what we all attended as many classes are we normally did; lunch was served without irre- gularity; and the only premonition seemed to be the un- mitigated joy of every junior and senior. We checked with the cook to see what she was cooking— it was steak. Ques- tions began to arise. Perhaps we were going to have steak. Perhaps we weren ' t really going to be initiated. As we filed down for dinner the roof fell in. A senior suggested that all the pledges would forego this meal in order to better instruct themselves in the ways of the house. Without go- ing into all the gory details it can be safely said that we did learn more about the ways of the house. Much later we did get to sit down for dinner. In front of each man was a can of unopened dog food. We had threatened a pledge revolt if we were served such a meal, and as I looked around the room I wondered who would be the first to bolt. Fortunately, the dog food was but a practical joke, and the ensuing meal was technically steak, though the quality made some desirous of the dog food. At the close of the meal we were initiated, though not without the grumbling of upperclassmen who felt we had had it too easy. Looking back I sometimes wonder if we didn ' t. Of course, in our three years the change has contin- ued and we ' ve become the grumbling seniors. Full mem- bership is still not a free ride, but the requirements beyond payment of membership dues continue to decrease. Fraternity life was not all that was changing at Lehigh, though the thought of that traditional group undergoing change should have forewarned the university community that deeper, more important changes were afoot. Cheerleaders came from Ceder Crest, only to be replaced by Lehigh giris in the Fall of 71. junior year saw the glories of a 5-day week— no Saturday classes— of course, monday classes met on thursday, tuesday classes on friday, Saturday classes on Wednesday night . . . 103 Arcadia, the student government, was woefully weak, and its members finally got sick of the whole process. In protest they simply disbanded to demonstrate their impo- tence. A student meeting was called by the former leaders of Arcadia to explain their decision. Whether it was the spring weather as cynics maintain, or the touching of a responsive chord in the student body, the turnout was extremely large. Held initially in a section of the U.C the crowd continued to grow until the entire main lounge area was literally covered with people. With each speaker a new electricity seemed to run through the gath- ering. Heretofore apathetic students were coming down to hear what was being said, and the room bulged. Sometime during the evening the idea of a student strike was men- tioned. The idea was seized upon, and the first action by the students was to remain in the U.C. past closing time-to symbolically claim the U.C. as ours. How many were in- volved is hard to determine. The greatest single gathering at any one time was probably about 500 students, but at least 1,000 different students were present at one time or another. It became apparent that the university was not going to dislodge the students from the U.C, and the first skirmish had been won. A student strike was initiated the following day with what seemed to be only limited effectiveness. Though I found myself on the picket line (How the Hell did I get here?), my resolve was on the wane. It was then that the administration came to our aid. Viewing the restive, somewhat militant, mood of the campus, the administra- tion felt it would be better to relocate the planned trustees ' meeting in New York City. The resulting furor of the stu- dents that the trustees were running away ultimately led President Lewis and the faculty to declare a 3-day morato- rium on classes. In their stead there were to be daily ses- sions in volving the entire student body, faculty, and admin- istration in a discussion of the Lehigh governance structure. The scope and depth of campus feeling was exhibited at the first of these general meetings. The normally apathetic student body responded so that almost 2000 of the 3200 undergraduates appeared; nearly two-thirds of the faculty were present, and a majority of the administration showed. Clearly this was of more than passing concern. It was at this 104 point that President Lewis manifested his strongest lead- ership at Lehigh. In what could only be considered the scapegoat position, he addressed the crowd jammed into Grace Hall. The words were not world-shaking, neither were they condescending or platitudinous. Rather, he spoke frankly and turned a violently hostile gathering into one where dialogue could begin. At the outset there were tempers unleashed, and name- calling was not uncommon; but as the days dragged on, and the sessions continued the common interests surfaced, hatchets were buried, and the concept of the Forum emerged. It was an amazing compromise, and though there were probably fewer than 200 students at those final sessions, a functional plan has emerged. Of course, the student strike and consequent morato- rium were not supported by every student, and the 5-day weekend created by the cancellation of classes became simply a vacation period for some. They took off for the shore, for the city, or used the time to brush up on theii frisbee skills. The common refrain was, So what if Arcadu has a new name, the same people will be in it. It will be th( same bullshit as before. Only time will tell how workable and meaningful thi: change was. Only time will tell if the student strike for ; larger role in the university governance structure resultec in a stronger school. The accomplishment of the Forum did not signify an enc to that hectic spring for within the following week Presi dent Nixon announced the invasion of Cambodia Campuses across the U.S. erupted, and the tragedy at Kent State, where four protesting students had been killed by National Guardsmen, brought new demands for a univer- sity strike. The campus was not quite ready for another strike, but a liberal policy of exam postponements and grade deferrals was adopted by the faculty, for all those who desired it. This last policy had a longer-lasting effect on my Lehigh career than any other occurrence of that spring. It was not until the middle of my senior year that I completed one course in which I had my grade deferred, and, in fact, I never completed another incomplete from Senior year saw coeds, ecoscuJpture, and a new dining hail-Rathbone. The bonfire was revived in the Fall of 71 for the Lafayette game and almost 2000 people showed up for the event. that spring semester. My Lehigh experience consisted of two stages— before and after the strike. Before the strike I was the concerned, interested, socially-conscious liberal. With the start of jun- ior year I assumed a more reflective stance. Part of this change was attributable to my taking advantage of one of Lehigh ' s many off-campus programs, and I thus removed myself from direct involvement in the campus community. Nonetheless, I noted on visits back on the campus during the fall term and upon my return in January that my per- sonal feelings were mirrored in the student body as a whole. It seemed as though the campus had been emotio- nally drained, that we were taking stock of what had oc- curred. The issues had disappeared and the most exciting thing was the rejuvenation of the wrestling team. Thad Turner had been hired to return Lehigh to the glory of the Caruso years . Turner, a former Lehigh wrestling star, waited until Easterns to reveal the full turnabout in Le- high fortunes. There Lehigh surged to third with two EIWA champions, after having been shut out the year before. At the regional qualifying matches in Princeton, we placed four men in the top position, and would have garnered the John Tizzo led Lehigh to its third victory in four years over La- fayette, rushing for 313 yards in the 48-19 victory. team crown had team totals been kept. Individual stars Su- renian, Campbell, Shields, Christie, and Hutchinson were the talk of the campus. Lehigh was back. The only other exciting conversation that year revolved around the imposition of Wednesday night classes. In re- sponse to a Forum decision the registrar had re-scheduled all second semester classes from the original six-day format to a five-day format. Suddenly, Wednesday classes met on monday, thursday classes on tuesday, friday classes on Wednesday, Saturday classes on Wednesday night ... It was a interesting mess, and for a while campus debate re- volved around the topic of the lesser of two evils— Wednes- day night classes or Saturday morning classes. A student poll firmly resolved the issue in favor of the evening classes. Spring came and went our junior year, and for the first time in four years there were no rallies, no threatened dis- ruptions, and few vocal malcontents. Now, the warnings were of a return to the innocence and apathy of the Fifties. Senior year may not have been the life of the Fifties, but the change in the student body was notable— so much so that Brown and White columnists took to dedicating col- umns to the change in attitude. Coeducation was cited as the major influence on this rejuvenation of spirit. This fought-for goal had been achieved in 1970 with the trustees ' adoption of coeducation, and the fall of 71 was the changeover period. It may have been coincidental, but with the girls came a winning football team and a rah-rah spirit reminiscent of the Fifties. The coeds weren ' t the only additions to the campus as tuning forks sprang up near the Mart, vertical I-beams near ATO, and other ecosculp- tures blossomed on campus. The attitude of this ain ' t a bad place made the year a good one— unless you wanted a job after graduation. In my fraternity alone there were only two firm job offers for ten graduating seniors. That ' s probably overstating the case, a number of seniors didn ' t really apply for jobs. Some did, though, including my roommate. At the beginning of the year he filed a computer card with the GRAD II system to determine the availability of the type of jobs he was interested in. He got back a list of some twenty companies with possible openings for gradu- ates with his qualifications and interests. (As his Artsy roommate my printout was returned with the information that there were no companies interested in my quali- fications.) The list noted the dates on which the various companies would have representatives on the Lehigh campus. At least twice a week during that first semester I ' d wake up to find him putting on a coat and tie for another interview. He started of well with two yes ' s and one maybe after his initial interviews. Then the tide turned. He received a no from Proctor and Gamble. It was like a stampede to see who could rush their rejection letters to him first. Finally, he was asked to make two plant trips— the opportunity was upon him. The first was to Virginia, and he came back mildly shaken— he hadn ' t even understood the technical questions thrown at him. The second was to Con- necticut, and his enthusiasm was on the wane. Both letters came in the same week. He said he hadn ' t really wanted to become an engineer anyway. There were others like him, including one guy who pa- pered his wall with rejection letters. Another was able to recite job-interview letters without opening them— Dear Tom: Your fine qualities and abilities suggest great poten- tial, however Of course, this was only one side of the coin, and there were many who did finally land Surprising additions in 1971. included the squash courts in Saucon Valley and the tun- ing forks between the Mart Library and Ma- guinnes Hail. Graduation saw unknown John C. Pittinger, Penn- sylvania Secretary of Education, (below) deliver a well-received address on the future of education. jobs— over 90% of those who applied according to the Placement Office. And in all fairness to my roommate I should add that by Christmas he had pretty firmly decided to postpone starting a career for at least a year. For those of us who claimed disinterest in the almighty dollar and the corporate rat race, (and were secretly enjoy- ing the frivolous security of collegiate life) the outlook was nearly as bleak. Medical schools, law schools, and grad schools were swamped with applications. A good friend applied to 17 med schools, heard from 12 of them, and was accepted at one. Another applied to over 10 law schools and was accepted at none. Very few had the option of picking and choosing— Harvard was only a dream to most. But, of my ten fraternity brothers they all found some- thing—two found jobs, another an overseas post, five con- tinued schooling, and two continued to seek life in what- ever haphazard way presented itself. Thus it all ended at graduation— the place where it all be- gan four years ago. Was it worth it? Had I grown? Had I made the most of it? Would the good times linger— that one party, the first beer, the first joint, that one girl? I don ' t know. It was four years. no Ill 112 I.F.C. Larry Salerno. President John Stupp, Vice-President James Hamilton. Treasurer Robert Forman, Secretary Alpha Chi Rho L. Archibald . Finn M. Mactas . Reynolds M. Barth D. Foster D. Mitrano . Root . Behot G. Ganter . Nicholson R. Ru png J. Boyer T. Gelias K. Noll W. Sanders F. Boyle 0. Gonzalez A. Pedecine T. Sarno K. BrotvnJie C. Knupp J. PJesa . Sherman W. Campbell C. Koser D. Ralph R. Solomon D. Clark P. Kroninger B. Rapp S. Spey P. Cornell G. Lazorchik W. Reisner J. Strong V. Fasalino R. Lewandoivski T. Ress F. Zawafski 114 Alpha Sigma Phi S. Wlasuk ]. Magagna K. Adams G. Emish }. Swanger P. Kramrine D. Finch D. Kelleher W. Paliwoda T. Fisher L. Pors W. Schmidt B. Wise D. Miller R. Greene T. Peterson P. Housman G. Dohanich D. Troxel R. Sebastian W. Goodwin }. Hofmann S. Jensen R. Roe R. Adikes A. Dickensheets ). Lynch T. Smith M. Rayford G. Griffith }. Bucci D. Desalyo J. Layser M. Kroli 115 Alpha Tail Omega . BciLsis M. Ryan M. Bowers G. Smith R. Christian W. Spengel P. DeCoursey S. Sterner W. Hobbes D. Swaye W. Jacques W. WigJey N. Liedtke W. Barbow H. Mohrmann T. Benfield R. Muir . Bergdoi; D. Mullhol and R. Ferrie R. MuJ hoJJand G. ones E. Purdy M. Manci ' n; . McCauley R. Miller R. Rausom E. Rider W. Ruccius W. Shakespeare H. Weber D. Cahoon D. G enn R. Lamparfer R. McVay B. MiJ er . Voaden 116 Beta Theta Pi T. Acker C. Hamilton S. Pfaff W. Brady M. Harmatz E. Plank M. CaJtagirone . Henning ]. Price H. Campbell A. Johnson N. Radies W. Coddington . Kasschau C. Reimer R. Dempsey D. Kirk wood E. Resch B. Dixon M. Kirk wood C. Reynolds D. Diorio T. Kouschak J. Rhinehart C. Eby W. Lazoration . Ronca P. Gielen S. Lessmann C. Sieger R. Goldsmith D. Miller R. Stucky M. Grant R. Mitzner N. Tarulli B. Grathivohl T. Morgan L. Thomas . Hamilton L. Warren 117 Chi Phi A. Abels E. Gerhart . Maguregui M. Allen . GusneJJ L. Montero R. Apple W. Greene . Parker }. Bassanni R. Humphrey G. Peiffer H. Chandler . lannoni R. Penferson D. Depaoli S. Ingram M. Prince D. Dougherty M. Jupiter . Purse W. Egge G. Landvater D. Reed W. Eisemann P. Legrand G. RouJston R. Ernst W. Lock . Sprout D. Eshbach R. Lucard A. Stefanski W. Foppert G. Miller 118 Chi Psi . Flood W. Maher W. Wagner M. Jmpink T. Gatanis M. Actis-Grande T. Nagy A. Porter R. Baker T. Bayer . Kraemer P. D ' Afoisio D. George M. Koch R. Dunn . Hill T. Lopiano L. Gray R. McGeary R. Nixon D. Koons L. Salerno . Summa P. Kramer K. Scott . Thompson T. Reidy R. Thomas T Spokas M. Reppert P. Louras P. Sturz D. Reynolds C. McKibben C. Rahmes W. SchJegeJ T. Steele S. Rahmes G. Baldwin S. Bayne C. Succop D. Mancosh 119 Delta Chi B. Carll S. Zsoicsak R. McJnnes A. Diefenbach T. Bayiey M. Neff J. Divinchi R. Brotvn W. Perrin T. Meek R. CJemence C. Bowers N. Papson R. Dennis R. Boyer W. Pickel W. Deutsch R. Byren A. Sakamoto ]. Everett B. Cook M. Sisco W. Hardy P. Friend T. Strunk D. Hoy R. Holland W. Tank D. Kasting N. Morrel L. Van Der Veer S. Kobylarz R. Riddett . Wa temyer J. Luizer S. Schlumph 120 Delta Phi F. Barber C. Piitz R. Sedlak W. Hart D. Manieri P. Murphy R. Swain . Johns S. Herbein S. Detar S. Bedeian ]. Wilmott R. Humphrey W. Criqui C. Fn ' etag M. Ryan W. Yale M. Grahm A Spear F. Castellino . Federowicz T. Crosby D. Leidel D. Sinclair D. Rupp S. Kemmerer . Proven P. Rohrbach R. Manville . Hooper 121 Delta Sigma Phi D. Baldwin D. Ghiiardi B. Leonard M. Tutin M. Boyle L. Goughan R. Nester R. Veilekamp . Buonincontri C. Hayle J. Phelps . Vorh a us J. Dreibelbis R. Heckenkamp D. Sechler S. Wagner R. Duda R. Henricks B. Silberberg P. Ward . Eckenrode B. Holden ]. Steckel R. WilJiamson G. FrabJe R. Lazarus D. String J. ZeJechoski 122 Delta Tau Delta K. Adams . FarreJJ C. Reed R. Alpago F. Gusmer R. Ross D. Brockway R. Heintz F. Sanske B. Brown R. Iandoli P. Schmitt T. Buchinski F. Jamieson K. Schroder G. Bruke M. Kumnikar D. Stires R. Cox T. Kokura K. Terchun B. Davis R. Lustica B. UJissi W. Day R. McFiilin R. BanEtten N. Emper ]. MuJIen B. Wade 123 Delta Upsilon J. Aitchenson E. Fre yf og J e J. Klocksin G. Pitonak T. Bankson J. Fulton R. Logan M. Pitonyak A. Cannon P. Gadkowski A. Margolies R. Rothrock P. Cardone D. Gallagher A. Mayer P. Savage R. Ciciale M. Harrison T. McKenna R. Soperburg S. Cragle R. Hayssen R. Meinhart W. Stiver D. Czerny C. Hefner T. Middleton R. Stern T. Clemente R. Hesseler . Mormak R. Suetz A. Dravuschak S. Hoerner W. Nell W. Wilczynski R. Erdman W. Kaplan H. Nelson V. Wilt M. Eva- s D. Kidd B. Nolte G. Wheeler R. Ferrara C. Wol e 124 Kappa Alpha G. Abyad W. Clevenstine D. Hetticb D. Reese ]. Aiello B. Coad D. Howe |. Riley R. Anthony B. Da vies R. Huffsmith J. Scharff F. Bechtel R. Dickray D. Ingwerson S. Smith F. Bodine T. Drosback ]. Joako L. Stebbins R. Bundani B. Drummond A. Knoll T. Stoneback D. Bruder J. Grant f. Krupicka V. Sumner C. Bupp K. Hartman }. Loughhead R. Van Scheik B. Carter K. Hebson R. Pecsek D. Van Zandt L. Clements C. Heller B. Post I Zapf 125 Kappa Sigma R. Abadessa G Gillie R. Paul R. Sine S. Ainey R. Hoag R. Peterson T. Sine F. Auch H. Hunter E. PetrozefJi M. Starr R. Barkhorn R. Husted D. Poole J. Stupp . BlakesJee R. Junker B. Roach B. VanNimwegin L. Boone B. V. Kiefer W. Ryan . Vincent G. Brandon, Jr. B. T. Kieffer K. Shaffer R. VitaJe W. Cintani M. Kroboth R. Shaiv C. Weiner G. Cram K. LeFevre W. Sheppard F. Wieners M. Duguid A. MacGregor H. Shimp R. Winkier F. Eick W. Martin D. Sickle Lambda Chi Alpha M. Boone T. Hipszer D. Brode D. Howell J. Caso E. enschke T. Dahne T. Keating E. DeYoe G. Megasko G. Dziedzic M. MiJfer R. Essington . Pinciotti R. Fleming W. Szinyei E. Goldfeder R. Voorhees T. Grancey D. Walling R. Green F. Whatlon D. Hill R. Wood 127 Phi Gamma Delta 12V A. Beeken J. Gonazles C. Miner T. Rom key A. Benedict P. Graham C. Minucci C. Searight R. Biggs P. GuiifoyJe B. Moe . Schuberth B. Ciraldo P. Hondru B. Mosconi ]. Spahr J. Cuppia B. Hyde . Osborne T. Stathos G. Deehan F. Kail D. Pecora K. Steil es B. Dethloff G. Kara bin G. Pedersen T. Straehie M. Danjzcek P. Kiester B. PoWot C. Waters }. Frey T. Marti E. Pskowski T. WeiJs D. Gallo B. McCarthy . Rhoads E. Zabor J. Gantner B. Milier j. Rizzo Phi Kappa Theta M. Adelman G. Arnold G. Hesch }. Barabas C. Barton L. Beaumont . Bosco K. Brown P. Caster H. Chassey. Ill S. Coates R. Crawshaw ]. Dethoff W. Erbrick G. Falasca R. Form an R. Gailey R. Gist D. Green berg W. Grefner M. Hamilton W. Harlow T. Healy G. Angeli R. James M. Kaminskas C. Kauffman R. Kaufmann M. Kohler N. Logothetis R. Manslow J. McDermott, Jt j. Menzzopane D. Prideaux D. Rohn M. Softer J. Slaby R. Strosser C. Winn 130 Phi Sigma Kappa W. Baker C. Boe, I I S. Cox ]. Fritz ]. Gilbert S. Griffiths, II C. Heist, III I. ohnstone, III j. Miller ]. Strickland, ]r ). Wald M. Gray . Brown R. Grott, III R. Fuchs H. Gustafson, ]r A. George ). Lindberg D. Gould G. McCIune . Katsaros }. Plunkett J. Pearce E. Schulz S. Senkowski G. Sylvestri . Stein , Wheeler S. Diamond R. Wintner . Galletly 131 % J PS- 1 i N w l- e Si s Fr S£ J3-  ««■ jb- m •®r |$ 1f vl $  ► Tp5? !! « . ife Pi Lambda Phi J. Abbey S. Alfano ]. Bierer D. Brugler B. Cieri G. Cleaves N. Cowley D. Culbreth C. Dietz ]. Giammarra T. Good G GrabeJ . Graybill N. Hager B. Heffner P. Humbert T. Johnston G. Kelly B. Kerler G. Kline J. Kratzer M LecJerc A. Lowande A. MacDonaJd B. Marmon A. Mick . Nuss G. Pateiunes P. Pfeifer E. Ratkoski S. Rituper L. Schappeler B. Schiavone F. Sorosky . Stadnik B. Stephenson . Vitcavage G. Weimann B. VV sser 133 Sigma Alpha Mu R. Agatstein D. Eisenberg M. Langweber B. Scheler N. Axelrod K. FJatto S. Latsios P. Schneidkraut N. Axelrod P. Gach A. Lazar R. Schrier E. Bachrach ]. Gilbert S. Leigh . Schwartz W. Berman M. Goldstein G. Lemie A. Shmerier E. Bernstein K Goldworm G. Levine M. Sterling S. Cohen R. Hoddeson D. Mack R. Stern T. DeLitto D. Kagan D. Most P. Strelitz J. Duray R. Kaufman B. Novick . Sivartz D. Duryea P. Kline T. Pinto P. Turkell D. Edgcumbe D. Kols K. Saler R. Vaillant M. Kramer . Schaff M. Zale R. Zam 134 Sigma Chi B. Tootell J. Moles V. Magnelinskas B. Ivey T. Stoup R. Succa P. Timashenka R. Wilsker D. Gill . Evans A. Hitz J. Heil C. O ' LaughJin F. Gaughen J. Mahon K. Huzyak M. Mitravich ]. Ay s worth B. Derivin C. Sultzer M. Strockbine B. Surdan W. Calvert G. Drizos T. Garland B. Daniels D. Reagan B. Jewett M. Evans M. Wetzer J. Gallagher J. Dannhauser B. Bieble S. Scott G. Sherback R. Sultzer D. Sotak D. Bleckman M. Long T. Collins N. Noel H. Barker K. Gill S. Loizeaux T. Wright 13S Sigma Nu R. Burns C. GiJmartin . McEiven E. Ruden J. Butt . Hall . Miller . Sanders G. Colehamer E. Hickey R. Millinghausen H. Schultz R. Colgrove G. Howey W. Montgomery P. Steacy W. Conner ]. Huntington S. Noble P. Stavrou M. Emmeriing D. Ingram R. Nolte G. Stine T. Eng O. ones W. O ' Brien E. Wallace T. Foul ). Kamens P. Off R. Watkins, r J. Gaughan, III B. Kiefer D. Pike A. Wroe S. Glickstein M. Larronde H. Polsky M. Zavoda T. Luntz . Popham Sigma Phi C. Adams . Elliot M. Kubinec R. Arneil }. Falatek P. Langseth P. Blum T. Hammond F. Lewis A. Bonfantini M. Healy R. Long D. Campbell B. Huebner D. Pace E. Carlstedt R. Huebner J. Palme S. Comstock . Jelly R. Ryder G. Confair }. Katrick L. Schiff L. Dudman J. Kilwy W. Toscani ). Eckman S. Kitson T. Wise Sigma Phi Epsilon T. Andruskevich M. Finch M. Kendig M. Pekarski fi. Arons J. Gantzhorn C. Kubic R. Pirn W. Clarke, 111 R. Gerry M. Lasonde J. Powell P. Coppock L. Gilbert W. McCarthy G. Rippel S. Corsa W. GoJab J. McDermott C. Schmoll T. Davies A. Hill E. Miller J. Spannaus D. DeVitt R. HoJtgrieve T. Miller S. Springer W. Dove P. Hopper A. Milis S. Szabia D. Dowse T. Hutchinson J. Moose C. Waltz R. Ehrenfeld R. Johnson B. Mulder W. Winterbottom M. Evans W. Johnson J. Pearce R. Woodruff 138 Tail Epsilon Phi A. Becker S. Janes E. Nagel P. Bellus . Kurtz N. Person D. Brand K. Leff L. Pilzer E. Caine E. Livingston P. Ponturo L. Chonko • Long . Reuben . Dittmeier D. Macinskas G. Rhine B. Douglas W. Mann E. Schoomer T. Fedynyshyn M. Markotvitz D. Shindei! G. Franck T. Massoth A. Stricoff M. Galler K. Mendelsohn E. Morton, r. M. Sussman Theta Chi K. Andrews E. Freyfogie R. Mitch R. Bovard P. Friedman P. Maco D. Brackett W. George E. Page J. Cardamone R. Grzywacs J. Rosamilia F. Coker )■ Hagg S. Ryan D. Duxbury . Hoover D. Smith C. Dodge S. Hopkins ]. Stine D. Eckardt C. Husic H. Suttler j. Ebeling C. Jaeger P. Waides ]. Feindt D. Levi K. WeisensaJe W. Field ]. Lippitt W. Whitney O. Foucek C. Loehr P. Maloney S. Workinger 140 Theta Delta Chi 1 . Alexander S. Metcalf D. Bench H. Miller D. Carpenter G. Neumann W. Charlton W. Roper . Corbett G. Scheib G. Downey P. Shelly P. Ellis B. Trout T. Fritchman K. Simons ]. Horn H. Wisniewski R. Johnson D. Dieter J. Keating O. Meyers B. McKinley T. O ' Nei 1 D. Meehan Theta Xi C. Andreasen N. DudJey P. Hunt R. Robertson W. Beam . Espenschade W. Jameson A. Rush K. Beard G. Fegely M. KowaJski W. SaJsgiver J. Briggs R. Fergusson S. Leifheit . Skok W. Burgy W. Foster R. Luppy B. Smith F. Clowes G. Forry S. Marcussen K. Spitznagel ]. Coco . Franke . Men ' tt D. Stare W. Crawford R. GaJJagher ). Myers T. Voystock S. Dickinson F. Gerberich T. Numbers N. Watkins D. Dilettuso F. Goyannes W. Payne A. Zetian R. Donaldson C. Heeg C. Richard K. Schiller 142 Greek Week 143 Alpha Lambda Omega . Hajdinyak P. Ciauser B. Donchez T. Hersh L. FiJo G. Fair T. Anewait . Kiucsik G Kotz P. Donchez D. Kutz R. Racosky T. Laidman F. Pondo M. Coughfin B. Baur W. Morkowchuk G. Confaione R. KraJik D. She bo L. Reiser S. Koczirka D. Siegfried L. Wagner C. Se ranek W. Keiiy B. Rudzki C. Durbin S. Fried J. Lazar R. Petryk D. LaudensJager T. Anderson . Gorman, Jr. A. Murphy . Kusiak R. ZiegJer G. Bacak W. Musseiman R. Barthoid Beardslee R. Biel L. Miller R. Black W. Rankin R. Conway P. Roth K. Dull R. Seitz T. Emma J. Shipkowski G. Gray R. Steinmann K. Heaton S. Strock P. Hell R. Struble B. ones S. Tomkiel . Kancuchoki G. White N. Lytle S. Schiff us Congdon P. Muller M. Farnsworth E. Simpson J. Cameron J. Butler W. Mack W. Alexander R. Robinson R. Lieberman H. Schenkel J. Deviin R. Clark H. Maguire W. Wong W. Facinei i S. CJark K. Shintaku C. Ermert W. Pirk T. Newman D. Brown P. Weber F. Huff A. Lowe P. Vaughn J. Ca houn R. Reidy T. Osmanski A. Smith S. Tomkinson W. Osborn B. Eisenhart . Friedman L. Horey R. Buscarini W. ones J. Pearsail . Weise) A. Olivetti Emery G. Leander S. Ellis G. Krystal L. Thomas T. Avakian J. Fa wis }. Lewis J. Toof P. Bachert . Fisher G. McCormick R. Treiss S. Bailey G. Frederick G. Moll G. Van Sickle M. Barnhart D. Frey C. Mueller D. Van Sickle W. Baum J. Hoffman A. Nicoletta K. Vollherbst R. Bolitsky M. Holtz R. Noble D. Wascavage A. Brown R. Huddy G. Pierce fi. Williams E. Dzenis J. Kiddon D. Pizarro A. Willman S. Eisner A. Klopp S. Segal T. Yagerhofer H. Koplin P. Sigmund . Zmuda Leavitt S. Bast R. Fry M. O ' Neil P. Ryberg J. Benge W. Hobert }. Oransky . Schofer S. Bliss R. Hoerner E. Patch S. Shallcross V. Bournique D. Homiak ). Pawlik . Simensen S. Buchinsky P. Hummel J. Peters G. Smar G. Clark W. Johnson S. Petrucelli . Stephens K. Dieter T. Kent G. Pierce G Weber G. Douma R. KimmeJman L. Pike S. Wehler D. Drecksage T. KJonick G. Pogoda R. Wells R. Focht F. Laico D. West C. MerolJa R. Zuk K. Michael McConn D. Appel M. Brelucki ]. Bleiberg K. Boyer A. Bresler P. Bronecke R. Bucks S. Caldwell G. Collette ]. Deal D. Fleming R. Gallagher T. Kurtz A. Shortall W. Grant R. Latshaw J. S teele W. Holier }. Marguardt P. Tomaszeski }. Heller M. Minetola B. Toole F. Horvath B. Moyer J. Warren J. Howard G. Munn K. Wasch R. Hull W. Orem W. Westcott }. Imundo M. Parsons W. Whiteneck B. Jones R. Remaley G. Wilson D. Knorr j. Rettberg T. jamula T. KueseJ F. Santoro R. Mclnemey 149 M-M A3 F. Kasproivicz R. Angerer R. Ford G. Lange P. Toll C. Gingher S. Roseman M. Taum T. Lubrano B. Shafer R. Kerr R. Anfhes E. Matukonis G. jetty C. Vantyne C. ohnson G. Kramer J. Vitacic T. Ba Jiet K. Sama i B. Kaplun B. Ackerman . Kreiser K. Williams S. Laracuente D. Hoch G. Dean B. Gaston C. Orndoff T. Lewzs C. W. Leung B. Amaducci D. Sudal J. Halle R. Plesko R. Waiters A. Chong J. Roth R. Kutz E. Silverman N. Johnson C. Bennett F. Schroeder W. Wood G. Stauffer 150 Smiley R. Balmer W. Ettinger W. Lukshides R. Szufeivski R. Bitting J. Ferrucci T. Messinger W. Tarbox C. Brand D. Given W. Peach R. Tripodi C. Burlington M. Grossman J. Pirchner J. Weir J. Clark ]. Grubb M. Rakoski D. Wengen S. Daly D. Hampson M. Reim P. Williams S. Davis R. Jacobs M. Roth E. Wojdylak C. Deakyne D. Keating C. Sabo G. Yee P. Degen T. Koehler M. Sawcbuk K. Yu }. Dulcey T. Laws B. Smith J. ZaJewski J. Ellwanger R. Leon J. Swartout W. Smith a. Carothers B. Adams J. Manns K. Brown |. Haneman B. Bauer C. Mannwiller K. Bronkhorst O. Jackson M. Blacher L. Marancik S. Butler K. Kane R. Cowell M. Muendel T. Connell L. Maurer R. Hager S. Nothstein M. Cummings M. Mullane V. Hanast M. Stoudt L. D ' Apolito C. McCoy R. Kapikian K. Stuckey C. DeFelice P. Oertle D. Kodish P. Teller V. Gebhard J. Scagnelli K. Kutler J. Wilf P. Coodis H. Van Wiemsky N. Lattin E. Wynn L. Gottdenker W. Wright K. Liss W. Brower J. Griscom A-l R. Cummings F. DeCrimm J. Engelsson E. Cregorie R. Kovics A. Massarra W. Nachtraub T. Nehring G. Ondra B. Paterson G. Stobben B. Thompson F. Walton A-2 J. Basiago S. Beegle M. Detweiler S. Doorr S. Dornblaser C. Farina S. Gilbert J. Johnson H. Kelley R. Klein ). Latimer A. Pepik G. Wagner Dravo A-3 D. Hansen C. Steck K. Curson B. Kaufman G. Levine D. Edgecumbre A. Lee ). Monroe T. Horn D. Voight C. Kerr B. Parker R. Mieklos D. Bennett ). Berman D. Leland ■ A-4 J. Boyle S. Brahimy ). Fagen A. Hutnikoff C. Lashlee M. Copez P. McGeehan B. Metter D. Miller B. Nadler P. Shea W. Spenhalski D. Trueblood B-2 G. Yarnall S. Chang T. Delitto S. Zuch J. Herr C. Peck R. Bernstein B. Ballard M. Maidu S. Yin P. Hagan D. Stephens D. Haddad P. Baker R. Schwartz B-3 W. Sturgis J. King J. Bick J. Ceorgiadis L. Konkoly S. Wiser A. Scarselletti C. Hoover R. Heckman D. Misenhimer E. Moyer D. Murphy J. Janiszewski R. Balestrieri D. Becker R. McCarthy L. Miller T. McGeehan R. Baker B-4 ). Chaya T. Carla P. Finelt S. Kuhls W. Sherman L. Smathers S. Csrnko T. Linneman ). Whitmer P. McDonough D. Oravetz D. Brown R. Wilder D. Hoh B. Doremus R. Gill K. Buck R. Anderson K. Miller E. Haws B-5 G. Hiller B. Cambony R. Hall B. Foley K. Pape ). Caluchie R. Gramlich M. Mendelsohn B. Campanella C. Haber R. Stowell C. Deaven R. Fuss T. Van Lenten T. Becker B. Haviland D. Roderick C. Grubbs M. Kron D. )ohnson C-3 C. Berrier ). Ewing M. Fleming M. Fletcher ). Hartley D. Leach H. Maher D. Newman D. Peterson R. Pollack E. Schaefer T. Tracy R. Whitney T. Whitten F. Notchi D-2 W. Bittle, R. Brown, R. Dunst, K. Freeman, ). Cammage, J. Griffin, S. Haines, P. Hartzell, S. Heim, F. Howie, W. Hunt, W. Kling, D. Mann, D. Reppert, L. Ring, G. Shropshire, G. Stevens, M. Whitfield D. Vesco, D. Danahy, K. Holley, B. Kitto, M. Maskeleras, K. Kuhn, K. Flanagan, T. Daniels, ). Eng, M. Linder, R. Drake, J. Bacon, M. Zaborowski, ). Perry, L Roberts, ). Gilbert, ). Sozio, M. Graves, H. Winful D-3 158 A-2 ). Batrig G. Maloney J. Briggs T. Nolan T. Cole ). Oslislo P. Danish K. Peterson D. Decker M. Pierce L. Eddins A. Plushauski F. Flohr R. Pyatek V. Florenza E. Reed S. Friedman P. Rimbos B. Gingrich G. Titus K. Hastings P. Tust B. Hewit P. Wingert P. Jeronis P. Zereca B. Kendi B-2 T. Hazlett B. Asarnov G. Peters M. Anderson R. Jordan K. Sewell A. Gebhart K. Van Buskirk K. Ludlum J. Gerber R. Cohen T. Lenthe F. Markosky R. Seidel P. Brandis B. Weber ). Deighan S. Greer W. Gustavson E. Weisel ). Mackevich H. Maser J. Ricci H. McGrath L. Adasko M. Condict Drinker W. Hemelt J. Siciliano G. Engelman T. Kyritz R. Barton R. Krevald J. Duke S. Knezo C. Schaeffer J. Alliva W. Caffey M. Lechner M. Bracaglia J. Schaff S. Klasko R. Mingione R. Lopatin M. Kearney K. Jones T. Betzweiser P. Angert J. Scalise A. Notary B. Practico P. Grady D. Klawitta G. Bays P. Bier K. Merrick W. Bennett T. Nilsen E. Troy ). Barnes J. lagnlli J. Peschenes R. Berlin 159 Palmer E. Rockwell R. Schott D. Schwartz R. Tyzskiewicz S. Ritter M. Menk ). Stuart A. Reisteter M. Sculley S. Anisfield M. Barron J. Gottesman A. Satuloff K. Larger P. Cilroy B. Schlerf S. Grennwald L. Velardi P. Bender A. Huhnergarth A. Siegal C. Higgins S. Stys M. Orth B. Baugh M. Biegel R. Muendel C. Diehl B. Bruzgo C. Offerdahl D. Bartels 1. Balog A. Schwartz K. Helwig O. Holtz W. Haft D. Creadore S. Sinclair J. Burke S. Adam N. Wilson D. Desborough G. Wainer 160 W. Abendschein T. Boileau L. Herrick R. Scheutz T. Reid G. Hilbert N. Axelrod M. Hoke B. Sailer C. Oye C. Hafer B. Earon D. Hunter D. Reynolds R. Paul S. Berman B. Cain E. Skabowski ). Thompson K. Huston G. Fisher D. Gauger D. Ruppert C. Stout P. Bishop M. Helmus P. Porter A-2 A. Khalifa R. Taylor B. Frasier G. Cook R. Roemer P. Farsetta D. Vinson M. Hoffman T. DeStito T. Yates M. Albers T. Hirsch L. McDermott H. Brodbeck C. Wintjen S. Conrad M. Friedman A. Rosenbaum K. Goldworm R. Stein G. Hart J. Funk K. Kiniry J. Pellman C. Lavine P. Hofman |. Shillack R. Sheeler D. Howitt ). Besemer ). Berenato T. Hamilton B-2 L. Torlizzi E. Ruckert L. Burke R. Volpe D. Hiller T. Oshnock R. Gluckman D. Detra ). Addarizio K. Unangst J. Snow P. Lozar J. Fugett C. Lisman K. Keefer G. Walters E. Scviano D. Foltz ). Riley T. Carchidi W. Boyes L Mayer M. Ziegler E. Orth Richards A-3 S. Skeen M. Arezina P. Beyrodt S. Turoscy R. Davis ]. Donavan M. Scanlan G. Smith R. McNinney R. Wyroush M. Kulva J. Cuth G. Ricci G. McCarthy N. McMichael G. Brier M. Ronan D. Racciopi J. Aadland G. Gleason D. Sullivan B. Mongon S. Moore P. McCarthy B. Scott T. Dimm ). Murphy R. Carlson G. Einhaus K. Speicher - L± % m H. Bersert R. Naunes ). Flatoner G. Paradis , ..- ma R. Fox W. Pineault Twl L. Freeman M. Saliba 7 ). Gass ]. Walsh y M. Grady W. Willersdorf |. Kline L. Wolf t MwM ' E. Laposky D. Wynn S. Mueller M. Ziatyl B-3 L. Loviza M. Eyerly C. Allison S. Folson C. Meyer J. Descho nes S. Sherman M. Edwards M. Lynn D. Caprio D. Aronson S. Plate G. Peterson D. Powers A. Poehner W. Throp D. Roeding M. Sheard K. Wickham M. Stadnick M. Menza K. Douglass D. Wesner ]. Zahnser B. Pawelka P. Weist F. Busci A. Garde ). Schwartz R. Schmoyer 162 Stoughton P. Snyder M. Koch ). Palestine K. Lazarus M. Tuteban R. Stock T. Regan P. Brown )■ Frey M. Zumas B. Smith C. Papa C. Sessoms W. Tutelian M. Galloway P. Brown N. Oressie L. Schwinger A. Jackson C. Varrichio L. Succop A. Martinson R. Scriptumas R. Saxon M. Stoll S. Fischman L. D ' Andrea F. Savran L. Flynn C. Yauma C. Scharer B. Phillips F. Whitehead L. Stewart B. Landau K. Crockford A. Marks K. Hanse B. Winkler S. Wexler P. Holt C. Steinman W. Beard D. Sprang S. Willets Taylor l-W C. Northacker, C. Thomas, R. Lovelett, T. McCuinnes, C. Tater, R. Bockart, V. Battistelli, B. Young, S. Could, H. Creller, E. Mier, W. Shipley, M. Stenko, R. Grant, M. Joffe, ). Robinson 2-E C. Ferrio, D. Olmstead, H. Wildblood, T. Craziano, M. Deutsch, F. Din, K. Zipf, D. Davis, ). Robbins, B. Pauling, R. Krombel, D. Tayne, E. Maher, P. Zimmerman, L. Wildman, C. Hunt, D. Mullane, R. Fucci, J. Tempos, S. Carber, K. Cole, T. Sultzer, E. Orth, R. Stern 164 Phi Eta Sigma ). Arencibia, Jr. M. Helmus D. Vinson E. Bond R. Hill, Jr. S. Wisser P. Bowman G. Hitler S. Zuch P. Bertz G. Hovanec R. Bryen, pres ident K. Elovitz B. Kirby J. Trzeciakowski D. Erb S. Nowick S. Alfano |. Fletcher A. Romig W. Kerler E. Gregorie C. Siegrist M. Sawchuk, Jr. R. Hall E. Skabowski A. Mann, faculty advisor G. Hart Coed? The rest of the world is coed. Why should Lehigh be different? So commented a Lehigh male. While the ratio of men to women in the world is not Lehigh ' s 30 to 1, the University has made a start at be- coming like the rest of the world. Granted, 150 girls cannot revamp this institution, but they have made what one male called a noticeable difference. So what exactly is coeducation at Lehigh? Is it John Steckbeck chanting Steck for co-red ? Or professors curbing their language in class? Or a handful of girls running the Turkey Trot? (Steck ' s original idea was to ask two coeds to walk the turkey on a leash around the course prior to the race.) Or having someone complain: If M M was good enough for me, why isn ' t it good enough for them? — or saying it yourself. Maybe it isn ' t any of these. Maybe it ' s all of them. Or maybe those are just symptoms, and maybe coe- ducation at Lehigh goes deeper than powder-puff football. It is difficult to assess this first year of coeducation. And especially difficult for someone who was unfamil- iar with Lehigh prior to a Freshman year here. The hell and horny description is not too helpful. Yet, the first year of any situation similar to this means adjusting. Some have adjusted, some have not. And the process continues. There are no real con- clusions to draw. If I had to describe the Lehigh community ' s reaction to the girls— and vice-versa— in a single word it would be mixed. A consensus exists on very few points, the most noteworthy being that coeducation is a shock which the University has not as yet recovered from. This applies to the student body as well as the faculty, staff, and administration. As late as March, girls talking to male students in the Snack Bar received the line— Oh, my God, you mean you go to school here? Really? But to start back in September . . . ii OH, MY GOD, YOU MEAN YOU GO TO SCHOOL HERE! When the girls first arrived in early August, the new quad was nowhere near compJetion. Few girls knew what to expect when they arrived here Labor Day. Many had come to the University for a weekend of orientation in August. They were housed in Centennial I because, although only three weeks re- mained until the fall semester was to begin, the new quad was not near completion. The weekend was mainly informative and provided an opportunity to meet several members of the school ' s higher ech- elons, in addition to the other girls. There were few men around. The prevailing thought was— There are a lot of boys here, not too many of us. Hmm. We ' d bet- ter stick together. An attitude, I might add, which dis- appeared before the leaves fell off the trees. As late as springtime, few girls knew coeds outside of their dorms and classes. To put it delicately, those tirst few weeks were hec- tic. The reporters and television cameras were around so often that the girls wondered if this wasn ' t the most exciting new thing to happen in the Lehigh Valley since Bethlehem Steel erected a new office building. Life was a mirrored goldfish bowl for the ladies. Say it today, read it tomorrow. The question was always what made you decide to come to Lehigh? And girls answered it in many differ- ent ways. To study history, to learn Math. To be an en- gineer; to marry an engineer. The campus is pretty. Didn ' t get in to Franklin Marshall. The notoriety of being the first. And so on. The new quad was a gathering place during fresh- man orientation for obvious reasons. I think the Uni- versity was almost as anxious for the men to meet the new arrivals as the men were. Cookies were pro- The new quad was a gathering place during freshman orientation for ob- vious reasons. vided without an end. And there was Butch Cassidy and Cool Hand Luke. The country club lasted several days— I doubt too many people could have handled it for much longer— but the excitement clung for another few weeks. As Dean Quay said, For the first few weeks, it was a great new thing to see women on campus constantly. Then things started to adopt a more normal pace and settle down. Looking back, it was a zoo. Looking for- ward, I wonder if it will happen again next year. There was applause for the ladies. Also hissing and booing. The girls are enjoying school so much! Look at those rooms— carpeting and full-length mir- rors! The coeds are handling everything so well. It ' s gone up to their heads— one great big mass ego- trip! Hard workers, those girls are. People are fall- ing all over them. Special treatment . . . Who is to be believed? Everyone. The reaction was mixed. What of the men here? They were overly friendly, and helpful, and extremely polite. It changed when the novelty wore off. Oh, they still are friendly and helpful and polite, but not to the point where it is a disease. I ' ve heard it said that seniors had the worst time of it. They were too used to the hell and horny Lehigh, and found it hard to accept the ladies. I did not notice this, but I did see that seniors were not part of the in- vading mob, for the most part. Some boys made little sister -style friends out of the girls. It made for an easy-going relationship-close friends, like any other close friends , but of different sexes. It was not uncom- mon tor a boy to have a girlfriend at another school, and a female best friend here. And, of course, dating. That ' s self-explanatory. The University did not concern itself with this until it was discovered that several couples were living together in residence halls. Even then, the University simply said that it didn ' t buy the arrangement and a few idle threats were made. In-class competition between men and women was not too strong. It was rare for a professor to make the comparison of grades or classwork by sex. The faculty has seemingly done the best job of ad- justing. One contributory factor may be that many had previously taught at coed schools. Faculty reactions ran from the girls are more vocal in class to they try to get away with murder. Some professors said they watched their language more carefully and wondered if i n the long run it was really necessary. I didn ' t want to slip and embarass anyone, smiled one professor. But in class it was hard to ignore the fact that there were girls. It was in some way or another rather ob- vious. Still, some professors attempted to ignore the new situation. Still others joked about it, and another bunch teased. They would ask for the ladies ' point of view or a feminine opinion, or Why don ' t we ask the ladies about a double-standard? And there were a few professors who picked on the girls and com- plained. Yet, when asked if they would rather see the school all-male again, most said no. Those who complained that the girls got special treatment would probably not find that the faculty agreed with them to any noteworthy degree. But, the difference in treatment at the Health Center infuriated women as well as men. I was about ninth in line for a thermometer during the busy l-think-l-have-the-flu-season. The nurse went down the row saying Open your mouth, then promptly shoving in the thermometer. When she reached me, she said, Now please open your mouth dear, and lift up your tongue a little so I can slip this underneath. It will only be for a minute. I was amazed. It was funny but absurd. As if a thermometer was foreign to me because I ' m a girl. The doctors were the same way, but not to that ex- tent. Unusually careful is the best way to describe Rathbone Hall, the new dining facility, was part of the new quad package for the giris. They came for a variety of reasons— to study history, to learn math, to be an engineer, to marry an engineer. them. They were extra-worried when a girl caught a cold. You ' re so fragile, one of my friends was told. Girls, said the administration, have special needs. So new people were hired to take care of ladies, the two most outstanding being-in no special order— an assistant dean of student life and a gyneco- logist. The gynecologist is not always around. He ' s by appointment only. Dean Ruth Hurley is always around, but students are advised to make an appoint- ment anyhow if they expect to find her in. Don ' t let her title fool you; she ' s really here for the girls. She watches over each girl carefully; she has a personal file on each individual, befriends the coeds, and sticks up for them in places they cannot. Dean Hurley is always there to talk to. A strange combination of supposed friend, mother, and the C.I. A. The girls wanted to be a part of the University in every way. Fraternities were rushing— girls helped. Alumni were arriving— ladies were there to greet them. Mustard and Cheese was putting on a play-coeds were in it. Equal, yes; but different. It meant so much to be accepted. Special treatment? I don ' t think so, not to any great degree, but a lot of special efforts. All things, then, being equal . . . but they weren ' t. De- spite Dean Quay saying that he and the administration were just trying to ease the girls ' way (and the coeds knew it) and that they were not giving the coeds spe- cial treatment, complaints could still be heard. Noth- ing was denied the coeds— supposedly. Enter the Lehigh Marching Band which declared that it had room for 97 males, but no females. Cer- tainly girls could be in the band; they simply had to stay off the field. They could sit in the stadium and play, which isn ' t so bad. Or so the band claimed. The official statement was followed by outrage on the part of many coeds, although the issue affected fewer than could be counted on one hand. The gripe? A desire to be treated as equals, to be awarded the same rights and privileges as any male student. To many, the Marching Band issue became a symbol of more than male chauvinism. It meant being denied an active role in campus life. It meant being a girl at a boys ' school. It meant discrimination. It meant war. The question was brought to the Forum and bounced through several committees. On November 8, 1971 the Forum passed a recommendation that tryouts for the Marching Band be open to all Univer- sity students. In mid-May, the Band appealed this to President Lewis. It is still up in the air. One rarely hears the subject now. How many people really care? The excitement over it has died. It has been said with some resentment that the girls have broken Lehigh ' s traditions, but I don ' t consider being an all male institution a tradition. All of the old traditions are continuing, Lehigh still plays Lafayette in football and kegs still roll down the hill. The Marching Band— It meant being a giri at a boys ' schooi. it meant discrimination. It meant war. f s As the girls get more and more involved they will develop their own traditions. This prospect meets, and has met, with some disapproval as in the case of the Fraternity Composite Cancer Drive Fiasco. In an at- tempt to institute a tradition found at many co-ed schools, some spirited Carouther ' s girls took com- posites from 28 fraternities and held them for ransom. The money was to go to the Cancer Drive. More than a handful of fraternities were outraged by the event. So much for one attempt at starting a tradition. But there are others, such as the Lehigh-Lafayette Powder- Puff football game, and there will be more. These tra- ditions will not replace the old ones, they will add to them and combine with them. Has Lehigh changed that much because of co-edu- cation? I doubt it. The girls don ' t feel that they have revolutionized Lehigh, maybe just made it a little more like the rest of the world. Assistant Dean of Student Life, Ruth Hurley— A strange combination of supposed friend, mother, and the CIA. A Little More ' Like The Rest Of The World ' IN SEARCH OF LEHIGH SPIRIT Nobody knows exactly what happened, one day it just seemed to appear and envelop the whole Lehigh scene. We left 1970 ' s Lehigh-Lafayette game laughing and joking about our football team, fumbling twice in- side the thirty to give the Leopards two touchdowns and still only losing by a final period field-goal. Some- how, one year later, we found ourselves attending a bonfire and pep-rally in the rain and cheering deli- riously the next day as OUR TEAM smashed the La- fayette gridders. Spirit, school spirit, returned to Le- high during the 71 football season! We won games, actually coming out ahead of the .500 mark for the first time in ten long years. The fans came, and the team played great for them. The team played great, and more fans came. Rizzo, Diorio, Hill, and the soph, McQuilken, were being mentioned everywhere. The season began hopefully, with the finest line-up Lehigh has seen in quite a while. The opener was against Hofstra. They were downed 28-0, with Rizzo 172 and Diorio both averaging over five yards per carry and McQuilken doing better than 16 yards per com- pletion. The next week good defensive playing and some second-half scoring gave us the C.W. Post game 28-14. There it was, September 25. By this time in any other year the glamour of college football would have worn off for the freshmen; no one would have been cheer- ing anymore. This year saw us optimistically predicting a victory over Penn that day, a team Lehigh hadn ' t beaten since 1889. Although Lehigh lost 28-14 we brought a crowd to Franklin Field. That crowd left the game without the defeatist attitude that traditionally followed Lehigh losses. Lehigh came back tremendously to defeat Vermont, Rutgers, Drexel, and Gettysburg in succession. The momentum was here to stay. Not even our dis- appointing loss to Colgate or the expected defeat by Delaware succeeded in dampening it in the slightest. The game against Bucknell appeared to be no more than a warm-up for the real thing coming up the next week. It seemed natural when they announced that there was going to be a bonfire the night before the Lafayette game. It seemed natural that everyone was going. And everyone went, despite the rain. Al- most 2000 people came and listened and cheered. The game itself was a free-for-all where Lafayette stepped back and let Lehigh ' s stars perform the tricks they had been practicing all season. The 48-19 score does nothing to describe the euphoria that reigned in the Lehigh stands throughout the game. Yes. it was there, spirit in quantities long unknown at Lehigh. Where did this spirit come from? Detractors claimed that it was just the result of finally having a winning team, but those involved with this new spirit Was the new spirit the result of a winning football team, or some- thing more basic? Almost 2000 people showed up for the bonfire before the Lafayette game, the first such bonfire in three years. The Marching 97 , according to one bandie, has all the spirit on campus. movement claimed it was something else, something more basic. Look at the Band. They ' ve had this spirit all along. Where do they say it came from? There are as many different answers as there are bandies, but they all seem to fit together to say one thing. Just listen: The Band has the most spirit of any group on campus. Rick Nolte 74 The Band has all of the spirit on campus. Howard Polsky 73 The Band is GREAT! Bob Watkins 72 The Band is the closest-knit group at Lehigh when they are practicing together. When they leave Lamber- ton Hall they all go their own very separate ways but when they are together they are unified by a goal. That goal is excellence. The Band has a reputation of ex- cellence to maintain and they are very much aware of this at all times. This produces the great group spirit. Rick Huddy 73 That problem with Band going coed really helped to unify the Band. Everyone was against it. The march on the Centennial II Quad showed the solidarity and spirit of the Band. The Band likes to have a good time and they enjoy putting on a good performance. Just getting 110 people together like that builds a lot of spirit. Val Zanchuck 72 The Band becomes such a spirited group because of Band Camp. It ' s three days of living, eating, sleep- ing, playing and drinking, all for the Band. At Camp the Frosh first learn to carry the upper- classmen ' s luggage. Then comes dinks. Frosh are never to remove their dinks. NEVER! Frosh must carry yardmarkers. Frosh must never forget their yard- markers. Then the Frosh learn fear of the Quest of the Naked Lunch. (The rest is secret!) At Band Camp the Frosh look around and they re- alize that the guy at their side is as good or better than they are. They get a feeling of belonging to something really great. The nature of the school, being all-male, and the nature of the surrounding area caused the Lehigh community to turn inward for their activities. The people that came to Lehigh were active in high school, in athletics, music, student government, and academ- ics. These two factors led to the spirit and the success of the Band. The Band is constantly doing crazy, spon- taneous things. This is because of the spirit. Tom Voystock 72 The Band has always been gross, it ' s part of their tradition. Grossity is a result of the psych and spirit of the Band. You will find that the people who eventually become the leaders are the ones that excelled in being gross. Besides, it ' s fun cause there ' s no girls. Bob Watkins 72 % «X-! Gene Goldfeder 72 The Band has so much spirit because they repre- sent the school at many activities. When we went to the Colts game we felt like we were representing Le- high to the whole country. You have to have a lot of pride in Lehigh to do that. Howard Polsky 73 The Band does so much for Lehigh spirit. There was 100% support from the Band for the Bonfire. The money for Hoopla and the cheerleaders comes out of the Band ' s budget. The Band is always badgering people to get them off their asses this year it finally worked. Rick Huddy 73 This year ' s change in spirit cannot be accredited solely to the Band. The Band has remained a constant. The coeds added much enthusiasm to athletics this year, that made a big difference. Tom Voystock 72 The Band will probably continue to be the finest in the East and the most spirited group on campus. Funk and Wagnall ' s defines esprit de corps as a spirit of enthusiastic devotedness to and support of the common goals of a group. That is what the Band has, that is why they are what they are rather than just an- other marching band. That is why the Band is the focal point of any school spirit that exists. It is also why the Band cannot be the reason for the increase in Lehigh ' s school spirit this year. It is necessary to be in the Band to get caught up in their spirit, outsiders aren ' t affected that much. Maybe it was the coeds that made the difference this year, as Voystock suggested. Six of the coeds were cheerleaders. Could they have affected the Lehigh Spirit? According to Wes Winterbottom, 72: This year we had an all-Lehigh squad. We would have had a few Cedar Crest girls back from last year, but the Coeds wanted to make up the whole squad. That is the major difference this year, the girls have a strong sense of belonging to Lehigh and are very proud of their school. I don ' t think the Coeds are the reason for the in- crease in spirit, its the whole freshman class. They ' re straighter than past classes have been. The freshmen men have a lot more spirit and it has affected the rest of the school. The cheerleaders have been doing the same type of things for the past few years, we couldn ' t have been the reason for the change in spirit. The crowd has cheered back at us more this year than any other year that I ' ve been here. As one would guess from watching any game the cheerleaders haven ' t been a large force in creating spirit, they act primarily to focus existing spirit into cheers. Wes ' s comment about freshmen could be an important lead though. It should be kept in mind as we look further for the causes of Lehigh Spirit. What of the biggest manifestation of Lehigh Spirit in over three years, the Bonfire Pep Rally. The forces that caused the Bonfire were probably the same ones that shaped all of Lehigh. HOOPLA was the first to mention reinstituting the Bonfire. Hoowhat? Keith L. Snyder, 73, is HOOPLA: Lehigh HOOPLA is an organization of students in- terested in promoting Lehigh Athletics and the Lehigh University Band. The group was formed in 1970 by a spirited company of bandsmen and cheerleaders. The clubs activities include: painting pep signs, organizing trips to away games, formation of student cheering sections, and the sale of Lehigh HOOPLA buttons. I got the idea HOOPLA from Lehigh ' s tradition. My father and brother went to Lehigh and I have lived in the area all my life. There used to be tremendous fra- ternity displays preceding the Bonfire and pajama pa- rade. My freshman year the cheerleaders were in charge of rallies and other spirit activities. They stopped because there was too little support. HOOPLA was created to fill this vacuum left by the cheerleaders. I suggested the Bonfire early this year, and various groups, especially IFC, provided most of the money and manpower since HOOPLA is so small. The reason that it worked is that there is a new bal- ance of views, students are fully cognizant of issues, but still allow cheering. It was no longer un-cool to stand up and cheer. The man who actually did the work for the Bonfire was Hank Hamilton, 72, treasurer of the IFC. He talked to Bethlehem City Council concerning the site, finally placing it a few feet from Bethlehem city line. He arranged for the busses for transportation. He said, There was a lot of random enthusiasm around, but there was no all-university event in the fall where it could be expressed. The amazing fact about the bonfire was that it ever got started in the first place. When Snyder first sug- gested it and the idea was not ridiculed into obscurity, it was picked up by the IFC and organized into some- thing that could really happen. And then there was the turn-out. There was much more than the usual apathe- tic Lehigh crowd in attendance. Not just freshmen, ei- ther. Over 500 cars had to be parked by astonished at- tendants. There was obviously a change in everyone ' s attitude towards Lehigh spirit. Of course, not everyone was affected by the Lehigh Spirit It was no longer un-cool to stand up and cheer. There was the Father of Lehigh Spirit in the middle of the crowd leading the cheers, trading comments with the band. The man seemed to know the most about how the Bonfire should be run, both from per- sonal experience and deep emotional feeling. John S. Steckbeck, who has seen more than a generation of Lehigh Spirit, had much to say concerning the reasons for this year ' s phenomenon: There are a number of factors that have caused the upswing in spirit this year. First of all the entire athletic program has been improving; Football, Tennis, Soccer and Cross Country were all winning and getting better. The fact that the entire campus started out this year without the usual defeatist attitude affected the teams also. A subtle change in attitude has taken place inside the student body this year. Other things, important is- sues, forced sports into the background in the past years. This year there is a forward-looking attitude about the whole campus. There is a new image of Le- high moving in the right direction. There has been an upswing in attitude toward eve- rything on campus, chapel, lectures, art shows, and athletics. A positive attitude is replacing the negative attitude of the past few years. This has been bolstered by the coeds. They are the bravest pioneers in the his- tory of Lehigh. Lastly, the student body has lost a lot of selfishness, everyone is more aware of other people. They are finding that great things can be accomplished together and much fun can be experienced by all. Students are re-discovering the good things of the past. They are no longer afraid to do something that might be fun be- cause of the way they will look. They had to discover these good things for themselves but they finally have. I ' d simply like to see Lehigh be a good campus where each could truly have a good time while going through this learning experience. I ' m very optimistic about the future of today ' s young people. What else could it have been but a basic change in outlook throughout the whole Lehigh scene. School spirit is not an isolated phenomenon, it appears when students are happy about their situation and proud of their school. This pride in Lehigh has developed over the last two or three years during which Lehigh has adapted to be- come more responsive to the desires of the students and in some areas has even changed entirely in ac- cordance with student requests, as in co-education. In addition to the pride in the school there has been an overnight change in student attitude toward their own actions. The radical chic is dead, that negativistic attitude is no longer a guideline for student behavior. Many alternatives are being explored without social stigma being attached to different behavior. Stu- dents sought a means of expressing their satisfaction with their school, and the rah-rah spirit of the fifties presented itself as the best and most enjoyable man- ner of doing so. So they did it. After three mediocre autumns at Lehigh, the seniors were treated to a thrilling fall sports sea- son. The highest scoring football team in school history and championships in soccer and cross- country combined to give Lehigh its finest fall sports season ever. The football team set 20 team and individual records while compiling an 8-3 record— its first winning season since 1961. The soccer team became the winningest Engineer team ever with a 10-3-1 record, and walked off with its first Middle Atlantic Conference University division championship. The cross-country team was 10-1, and won an unprecendented third straight IC4A college division championship. In football, it was the year Fred Dunlap answered his critics, and the way he did it was most convincing— eight wins in an expanded eleven game schedule. For coach Dunlap, the season represented a culmination of the building program begun upon his arrival in 1965. More than anyone he had shouldered the blame for the football team ' s past failures, but in this past fall he was the phoenix risen from the ashes. People were now hopeful of a new era of Lehigh football. In the 107th renewal of college football ' s most played rivalry, Lehigh was never more impres- sive. Their 48-19 rout of Lafayette in the season ' s finale was indicative of how proficient the Lehigh scoring machine had become. With senior fullback Jack Rizzo carrying 31 times for 313 yards and four touchdowns, and running-mate Don Diorio adding 194 yards on 32 carries and two TD ' s, the team racked up a record 506 yards rushing and 664 yards in total offense. Rizzo ' s 313 yards, a single game record, gave him 1,143 for the season, also a record. He scored record numbers of points for a season (129), game (25) and touchdowns (21). More impressively, the team broke a record set in 1889 (13 games) by scoring 362 points during the season. Rizzo also had a hand in setting a seasonal rushing standard for a Lehigh team of 2,418 yards and combined with sophomore quarterback Kim McQuilken in the longest TD pass of 81 yards. McCuilken, who many felt was the key man in opening up the attack, set season and game records for passes attempted, completed, and yardage gained and helped set individual (1,987) and team (4,638) records for total offense. A celebrity since the day he arrived at Lehigh, McQuilken fumbled twice and was intercepted two more times in the opening quarter of the season ' s premier against Hofstra, but then dazzled the Dutchmen with an aerial exhibition they would long remember. He hit 12 for 24 and showed signs that he indeed was the man to lead Engineer football out of the wilderness. Penn, however, remained a thorn in Lehigh ' s side. In the annual fiasco in Philadelphia, the Engineers succumbed again to the Franklin Field jinx . Jack Rizzo scored twice to keep the visitors even in the first half but the Quakers were not to be victimized and pulled out to win 28-14. It was at this point of the season that the Engineers finally began to realize their true worth. In four successive weeks they romped four times. Vermont fell first 49-8 as even Lehigh ' s reserves ran up the score. Junior Bob Stewart, who was finding playing time short in back of Rizzo and Diorio came off the bench to score twice and pick up 53 yards in less than a quarter of action. He was back on the bench in New Brunswick, however as both Diorio and Rizzo gained the century mark in rushing yardage as the Scarlet Knights were downed 35-14. A hometown crowd on October 16 saw a bewildering offensive show against Drexel. The Engineers scored four touchdowns in the first period. Jack Rizzo scored on an 81 yard pass thrown by Kim McQuilken who, with the aid of Cliff Eby, set a new school passing yardage mark of 338 yards eclipsing the 180 old record of 294. The total yardage mark also fell by the wayside as Lehigh gained 574 yards. The defense, un- sung, yet the backbone of the team, shutout a previously powerful Gettysburg attack 50-0. The standouts on de- fense were many all season— Tom Shaughnessy at cor- nerback, ends Mike Impink and Larry Coffman, tackles Ed Romanow and Tom Benfield and linebackers Blake Johnstone, Roger McFillan and Mike Barth. Colgate ' s scrappy quarterback Tom Parr ran wild as the Red Raiders upended the Engineers 30-21 on Octo- ber 31 and ended all Lehigh hopes of capturing the Lam- bert Cup. Delaware ' s Blue Hens simply overpowered the Engineers, dealing Lehigh its final loss of the season 49- 22. Seven members of the football team were given post- season recognition including center John Hill, who was named to the Little Ail-American team and played in the East-West Shrine game in San Francisco. He was also named to the New York Times all-East team. Probably Hill ' s most rewarding moments, however, came later when he went to the New York Giants in the sixth round of the professional football draft and received consid- erable attention in the New York papers. Moreover, he received additional recognition when he was given the Exemplary Player Award by Football Roundup Magazine at a dinner at the Downtown Athletic Club in New York. Hill and Nebraska quarterback Jerry Tagge won the award with Tagge representing the university division and Hill the college division. Besides Hill, Jack Rizzo was named to the All-Pennsyl- vania first team. Defensive end Mike Impink was on the second team and linebacker Blake Johnstone, defensive tackle Ed Romanow, defensive safety Mark Mitravich, and McQuilken were honorable mention. Impink and flanker John Aylsworth were honorable mention Little All-Americans. The soccer team, after wrapping up the MAC west di- vision title, met Temple, the east champion, in a playoff and won 2-1 on Tom Klonick ' s game-winning goal in the final six minutes of plav. Klonick, halfbacks Mike Perlow and Chip Gaughen and goalie Joe Strickland were all members of the all- MAC team and Bill White gained honorable mention. Again, however, the coach seemed to be the story of the season. Tom Fleck had come to Lehigh to coach frosh soccer in the year the class of 1972 entered. As those Freshmen became sophomores, he moved up to the varsity coaching spot. After five straight wins from his freshman team and eight in a row out of his predominantly sophomore team in 1969, Fleck had a dry spell up until 1971. The MAC title that had narrowly escaped them two years before was clearly in sight when they met Lafayette in Easton in early November. The Leopards carried a 1-0 edge into the fourth quarter, but the Engi- neers bounced back in the final period. Realizing that a loss would destroy their hopes tor the MAC title, they fought harder than they had all season. The booters took twelve shots in the quarter, compared to two for Lafayette. After about five minutes had elapsed, Lehigh scored on the same play the Leop- ards had used in the first quarter. Klonick raced down the side and swung the ball to Alex Monchak, who applied his golden head perfectly and placed the ball into the goal. Nine minutes later, Monchak was tripped up by a Lafayette player in the pen- alty box. A penalty kick was awarded and specialist Mike Perlow put it in for the come-from-behind victory. In toto, it was a year which saw a slow start, but then turned around abruptly with four straight shutouts over Gettysburg, Delaware, Rutgers and Drexel. Riding high at midseason, the Engineers were brought down to reality with losses to Penn and West Chester. Again, the booters turned it around to win the remainder of the sched- ule, including exciting victories over Rider (2-1), Lafayette (2-1), Swarthmore (1-0), Bucknell (4-2 in overtime), and the cham- pionship game against Temple. It was a year in which the defense could not keep itself out of the newspapers. Bill White, Bill Post, Jay Stiver, and co-captains Mike Per- low and Chip Gaughen were stalwarts on defense all year and, Goalie Joe Strickland made headlines for the third year in a row with his dynamic style of play. Nicknamed hands by his fellow players, he was just that: anything in the box became his pos- sesion. No goalie can score five shutouts in 182 ■ wwm ■H ■ I . -v BBI mm ——  ..- w a season without the support of a solid defensive line. Perlow, Post, White, Gaughen and Stiver took care of that department. They were always there, clearing out balls, backing the offense- forming an impenetrable wall. The Lehigh offense took a while to get started, but once they got going they always managed to get the points. At center forward, Alex Monchak, a freshman, became the conversation piece of the coaches. Monchak was the team ' s high scorer with eight goals. Not too far behind was sophomore Tom Klonick with seven goals and four assists. The cross country team, although hit hard with injuries, took the IC4A title led by John Heil ' s sixth place finish Heil placed first in the MAC meet, but the Engineers failed to win their fourth straight title. Heil clipped almost eight seconds off the MAC record set last year by Tim Steele. Steele, one of the east ' s finest distance men, could not compete this year because of an ankle infection, and several other top performers were also injured and not up to par. The IC4A meet, however, was the important win for the Engineers, who edged out West Chester and American University for the title. Out of the 38 schools in the meet, the Engineers totaled 91 points to 100 for American and 109 for West Chester. 187 The times for the meet were generally slow due to the terrible conditions under which the meet was held. The Van Cortlandt Park course in New York was muddy and treacherous, and it poured throughout the meet. The key to the Engineer victory was the fine ninth place finish of Mike Strockbine which balanced poor showings by other Lehigh runners. Strockbine had been recovering all season from an injury but had run well at Lafayette the week before, and had peaked for the important meet. In the annual Turkey Trot, Phi Delta Theta copped the team honors and the bird, but it was the exciting individual dual that electrified a large crowd at the finish. After taking the lead at the health center on the way up the hill, senior Rick Wells was caught by Phi Delt Billy Altenpohl in front of Grace Hall, 250 yards from the finish, the two sprinted the final distance with Wells the winter by a nose at the fin- ish. It was the first time a senior had won the annual Thanksgiving event in years. Some of the momentum created by the fall sports teams carried over into winter, but only for about a week. The wrestling team was unbeaten in its first five dual meets, but was probably the youngest ever at Lehigh and had trouble when it got into the meat of its schedule. Its wins were over Lock Haven, Cornell, Rutgers, and Syracuse while tying Maryland 16-16. As many as five fresh- men were in the starting lineup along with an untested sophomore and a couple of inexperienced upperclassmen. In December ' s annual quadrangular tournament on campus, Lehigh finished a distant second to favored Ore- gon State but was Vi point better than Pitt and 1 point ahead of Indiana State in the final standings. The grapplers completed the season 7-5-1, which was Lehigh ' s 20th straight winning season. They also placed third in the EIWA tournament behind Tom Hutchinson ' s second straight championship. Hutchinson, who was a sur- prise Eastern titlist at 190 pounds last year, returned at 177 and won another crown with a last second takedown in the finals. Freshman Terry De Stito was second at 167 after injuring a knee and being forced to default in the final. Junior Greg Karabin was third at 158, senior Mike Danjczek was third at Heavyweight, senior Herb Campbell was fifth at 150 and sophomore Tom Sculley was fifth at 134. _ % MaW J ., ' fi r . j.;i T ' De Stito, the best of many fine freshmen who comprised half of Lehigh ' s young varsity, made it as far as the quarter-finals in the NCAA Tourney, but lost to the national champion Andy Mat- ter of Penn State, Matter was also the winner of the Eastern title. Another freshman, Mike Lieberman turned in a strong season at 190, and provided one of the best individual performances of the year when he beat eventual national runnerup Emil Deliere 9-7 after trailing 8-1 at one point in the match. The following Saturday Lieberman drew with Army ' s highly-touted senior Dale Morgan 3-3, after Morgan had been undefeated in 12 straight bouts The year ' s most memorable bout was the home opener against Lock Haven. Someone, apparently had forgotten to tell Lehigh ' s wrestlers it was a rebuilding year. After spotting Lock Haven seven points, the Engineers swept weight classes 134 through heaveyweight to massacre the Eagles 28-7 before more than 3,000 screaming fans in the Snakepit. Perhaps the best per- formance in the highly impressive effort was Tom Scullev ' s at 134, the one that turned the meet around. The sophomore made his varsity debut by running up an incredible 29-12 margin over Lock Haven ' s John Mapes. Then another freshman, Jeff Duke, sandwiched two takedowns around a near fall to win 13-11. Herb Campbell, as he had done so many times before in his ithree-year career, got going in the third period, narrowly missing a pin while win- I90 i p V is ning 7-0. Lehigh ' s first pin of the year did come at 177 when John Rhinehart put away John Blackwell in 6:39. If not totally successful in the win-loss department, the year showed the great promise of the young Lehigh team. When N.J. high school superstar Mike Frick announced his intention to come to Lehigh in the fall of 1972, it looked as if Coach Turner was finally restoring Lehigh ' s great tradition of Eastern wrestling supremacy. The basketball team, after upsetting LaSalle at the Penn Palestra in its opener, followed with a last second win over Gettysburg, but dropped its next three games and then headed for a tough nine-game road trip. After 11 games its record was 5-6, including losses in three out of four games in a southern trip. The basketball team finished the season with a 10-13 record with the bright spots being a pair of upset wins in conference play and a new re- bounding record being set by senior Greg Falkenbach The team spent the last part of the season helping Lafayette get into the MAC playoffs. The Engineers upset the MAC west division leaders Dela- ware and Rider and dropped a pair of wins to Lafayette. Falkenbach broke Bob Fortune ' s old career rebounding record of 823: he had already set his rebounding records for one game (25), and season (360). Big junior Hank Wisniewski was the team ' s leading rebounder and scorer for this pa t season and will return with sophomore guard Norm Liedkte to form a strong nucleus for the 1972-73 team. Liedtke, one of the vanishing breed of three-sport athletes, switched his interest from football to basketball when he had to takeover the starting guard duties early in the season and sparked the offense for the remainder of the season. It was his last-second basket which clipped Delaware. The swimming team, behind a couple of record setting performances by Alan MacGregor, won its first four meets handily and then edged eastern 195 power Syracuse to remain undefeated. A funny thing happened on the way the MAC championship, however, as the team lost four of its last six outings including defeats by nationally ranked Penn and eventual MAC champion Bucknell. MacGregor, a Junior, first started setting records at the Fordham meet where he set a pool record of 5:10.2 in the 500 freestyle. A double winner in that meet, Mac- Gregor also won the 200 yard individual medley. He was also a double winner in the Miami Dade meet in which he set a new university record in the 1000-yard freestyle with a time of 10:42.8. His second victory in the meet came in the 100 yard freestyle. Against Gettysburg, MacGregor ' s 1000 yard freestyle record came to its short- lived end. Co-captain Bob Sine swam 10:40.5 for the new record, but MacGregor was not to be outdone, his 5:03.2 was a pool record for the 500 yard freestyle. The hockey team compiled a 5-1 record in MAHL play, but outside its league had little success and finished with a 7-10 record under first year coach Gary Bishop. Their two wins against Lafayette late in the season (7-5) and (8-5), allowed them to share the MAHL title with Rutgers, with whom they split a pair of games. The Hockey team ' s biggest win of the year came when they nipped the Newark Brewers, 5-4. The victory was significant in that the Engineers were the first colle- giate team to beat the semi-pro Brewers this year. As it was all year, the skaters depended on a team effort. Five different players scored for the Engineers. Steve Johnson, Charlie Miner, Jeff Frey, Ned Wadkins, and Bill McCarthy all beat the Brewer goalie once. Coach Bishop also had fine praise througout the year for defensemen Pete Gadowski, John Barrows and goalie Paul D ' Aloisio. The rifle team, whose season stretches over the whole year, again got off to a fast start by mowing down its first 17 opponents. The team annually is the squad with the best record on campus. In the IINRA meet, the team took both team and individual honors as Doug Lowerer fired a 274 and the team 1.062. Larry Clements was the low ROTC scorer in the event with a 267. Le- high ' s number two team finished fourth in the standings. On March 18th the riflemen won their 18th straight to cap their undefeated season. The match was the closest ever for the shooters, as they defeated Kings College in a thrilling match, 1317 to 1316. There was hope that the lacrosse team could also come up with an extraordinary effort to have an undefeated season. They had nearly everyone back from last year ' s 8-3 squad plus freshman attackman Steve Skeen, a Baltimore area star. Disaster, however, struck early. After dropping their opener to Amherst, the team lost four straight games by 196 197 one goal. The luck that they had had under Coach Jacobsen had suddenly turned sour. St. Law- rence beat the stickers 6-5 on a goal with 1:40 to go, Delaware won 9-8 in sudden-death over- time, Bucknell came from behind and scored their winning tally with 1:17 to play, and Drexel scored three time in the last minutes of a rain-soaked game in Philadelphia to make the Engi- neers record 0-5 with a 6-5 defeat. Against Swarthmore it looked like the same old story, but as suddenly as it had left them, their luck returned. With the Engineers down 2-1 in the second period, Steve Skeen was put out of the game after a violent collision, and the stickers came out of the daze— Kevin Stelljes, who had been making big plays all year bounced a ball off Jim Reid ' s helmet into the goal to tie the game, and several minutes later put Lehigh ahead to stay, scoring what would be his first of seven goals that day on a feed from Reid. The rout was on, and when it had finally ended the score was 17-3. John Bassini, one of the point leaders in the MAC scored 10 of his season ' s total of 41 points in the game on 3 goals and 7 assists. Swarthomore didn ' t stop the rest of the Engi- neers either, as Bryan Dunn, Ollie Foucek, Ken Scott and freshman Bill Cochran all added tallies. Billy Altenpohl and Mike Barth played extremely well on the mid-fields all year and were ' m possibly the team ' s most improved players. The key to Lehigh ' s victories was its fine defense. Paul Sturz, a sure all-MAC choice, was joined by Jim Gallagher and Devoe Reagan in defensive wall that played well protecting goalies Bob Vitale and Rich Demoll. The university racketeers-the tennis team, had a hard season. The team won only two of their first eight matches. They did, however, man- handle Drexel 9-0 in Philadelphia early in May. Lehigh swept through the singles as first man Jeff Rueben won 5-7, 7-5, 6-4, and the rest of the team all won in two sets. Bill Dethloff, Alan Wroe, Steve Jonsson, Bruce Smith, and Bruce Caryl all crushed their opponents. In the doubles it was just as easy as Detloff and Jonsson, Reuben and Jerry McClune, and Smith and Caryl all won handily. Things went better on the links as Lehigh ' s golfers finished their season at 9-6. The bright spot for Lehigh and a hope for the future was freshman Tom Sultzer, the last in the long line of Sultzer brothers to play a sport at Lehigh. In what Coach Roy Heckman called a really remarkable performance, Sul- tzer shot a 78-75-135 to finish fifth in the Eastern Inter- collegiate Golf League tournament at Yale. The Engineers, however, finished 11th out of 22 teams in the tournament with a four man score of 648. Aside from Sultzer, other Le- high qualifiers were Al Beeken (83-81-164), John Stupp (82- 83-165), and Al Yurko (85-81-166). In order to compete at New Haven, the linksmen had to pass up the MAC the tour- nament, in which they would have been a top contender. After dropping their first two games, the baseball team won six straight, to put them in contention for the MAC title. It was a see-saw year throughout as the sackers were imme- diately halted by Lafayette in a double header 9-1, and 3-0. The team then jumped right back to clip Delaware ' s Blue Hen ' s in a doubleheader 3-2. and 5-3. A week later, after win- ning its third in a row behind the strong arm of Joel Men- zzopane, 5-2 against Rider, the Eng ineers dropped the sec- ond game of the doubleheaders to dim their hopes for an MAC title. In the first game, Menzzopane scattered six hits among the Broncos, one of them, however, was a first inning homer by Rich Bender, and it gave the Broncos and early 1-0 lead. The Engineers nullified that in the second though, with two runs of their own. Walks to Chip Rahmes and Billy Barry, followed by a Ron Wilsker single, knotted the score, and the, two walks forced the tiebreaker. Catcher Frank Zawatski continued his extra base barrage in the third as he slammed a double to center. Rahmes walked again, and again Wilsker singled for the score. Rider an- swered this tally in the fourth on a triple and an error, though, to stay close at 3-2. The Engineers put the game away in the fifth. Bob Van Et- ten reached first on a bunt single, and Barry proceeded to bang a home to right to plate the final runs of the game. For Barry, a freshman, it was his first roundtripper of the year. The track team ' s hope for a second undefeated season went down the drain in late April as they lost their first meet in two years as West Chester State beat them 83-62. Only three days later, however, freshman miler Wayne Rogers and triple-jumper Orrin Meyers set Lehigh marks in their respec- tive events at the nationally-renowned Penn Relays in Philadelphia. 202 203 Mini i 204 4fcJML 205 Rogers shattered Tim Steele ' s old three-mile mark by 15 seconds. His time of 13:56.2 placed him fifth among the major competitors. In the college division triple jump, Meyers just missed notching the championship by Va of an inch in placing second. His jump of 48-5 broke Dave McCartney ' s old mark of 46-10. Facing some of the best university and small college competition, the Engineers notched four places in the college division events and two in the university division competition. Earlier in the year, the team stunned the Barbados Na- tional team, 113-64. The highlights of the meet were Ro- ger Jackucewicz ' s victory in the 10,000 meters, (a new Barbados all-comers (island) record), and the Engineers surprise win in the 400 meter relay. The race was close with Jack Rizzo nosing out his opponent at the finish line. The upset was the talk of the meet, according to Coach Covert- They were still talking about it next day. NEXT YEAR: THE PRESIDENT ' S CUP I ' m coming back next year. Forget jobs and grad school, I ' m coming back. I have something left to do. I meant to do it this year, but somehow it just never happened. I got waylaid somewhere along the line. Next year I ' ll do it right from the start, that ' s the way it has to be done. I have to get everyone into the right frame of mind in September and keep them there for the whole year. I have it all planned out, it ' s perfect. Next year we ' re going to win that President ' s Cup. I had a helluva time as athletic manager this year. There were times when everyone was out working for the house, having a great time, and winning. There were tough times, too. Times when it seemed I was the only one that cared about intramurals, and why did I care anyway? There was that football game one afternoon, it was cold and I had hoped that the rain would come and cancel the game. What a pain, going from room to room begging everyone to come out on a typical Bethlehem bad day. I finally got eight, nine if you count Jim, who is smaller around the waist than the football. We got there and it started to drizzle. The other team had only eight players, too. Jim thus be- came the only ref for the whole game. Both teams were in a hurry to fulfill their obligation and get the game over. The game started off poorly, there was a fumble on the first play. Both teams were making lots of mis- takes, but the play was even. Then everyone forgot about the rain and concentrated on genuine friendly competition. The beautiful plays came, the ones that unfold perfectly with the ball floating effortlessly through the pandemonium of scurrying players into the hands of waiting receivers. Who cared that they came on third down— just in time to bring us back to where we started on first down. It didn ' t seem strange when the other team, down 12-0, set up and ran a play with less than ten seconds left in the game. That ' s what ' s great about sports, if you have ever played with any team you ' ve felt that same group spirit, the joys of competing and winning, and the pure exhilaration of physical exertion. These are the great times, but I don ' t have to be the athletic manager to enjoy them. There ' s a lot of work I have to go through to try to keep my team on top, usually I ' m even re- sented for it, too. I ' ve got to be the one who cares. I got to the track meet late, I had a lab and I wound up leaving before it was over anyway. Today was the relays. I looked through the scattered clumps of run- ners on the infield of the track trying to find our team. Nobody that I knew was in sight. I saw Steve ' s car coming down the driveway, he had Bruce with him. Where is everybody? I asked. They must be here, there ' s nobody back at the house. We finally got Al from the tennis courts and had a team for the first two relays. We finished 17th and 29th. Our other team would be able to run with a few other teams that couldn ' t get in today for the final event. I returned to the house furious. Wayne, Tom, Pete, where were you? What do you mean what track meet? I announced it at meals for the last three days, you were even there when I made up the entries. We had a chance of being in the top ten in the meet I quit!! Yes, my organization was pretty poor at times, but A wrestling school all the way, File Nile may find former state champions pitted against each other for the intramural championship. I ' ll fix that for next year. I was talking to Pi Lamb ' s manager, Jerry Cleves. He was telling me how it is there. The big thing about Pi Lamb ' s success in intramurals is that everyone is interested in athletics. There is full participation in everything from football to badmin- ton. Jerry only has to find a captain for each sport and the captain does all the work. Not that there ' s much for the captain to do except schedule practices. There ' s tough competition to be on the first team on every sport. The second team, called the bandi squad, is always trying to move up to the starting po- sitions, and they have frequent intersquad games be- tween the bandit squad and the first team. Jerry keeps careful statistics on all sports, he ' s within 20 points of the IM office total at all times. He also keeps individual records which are used in determin- ing the winner of the Pi Lamb Jock of the Year award. They don ' t have any outstanding teams, their best was a second place in volleyball, but they are in every- thing; and with their bandit squad on hand to cheer and keep up morale they have enough enthusiasm to field a good team in every sport. I ' m sure that it could work here. We get psyched-up like that every year for wrestling. Last year we had a man entered at every weight class and with the few lucky breaks we got, we came in second. In the lower weights, where we were strong, there were even a few people who got left out. I was one of THEY ' RE OUT THERE JUST TO HAVE A GOOD TIME. IT ' S JUST GREAT, IF NOT THEY HAVE A GOOD Theta Delta Chi again triumphed in basketball, this year de- feating McConn in the championship game, (right) five people who signed up for 165. I came in third in the wrestle-offs but I wound up wrestling at 180 be- cause we were short in the heavier weights. When the wrestling starts almost half the house camps out in Grace Hall for the whole week. Once, when we had four pins in a row, the spectators were almost as tired as the wrestlers. Two of our wrestlers made it to fight night. We went down to see their bouts and left immediately after, heartbroken because they both lost. There are plenty of funny things to remember about wrestling. Ed was our 140-lb. wrestler. He barely knew what the referee ' s position was, but he was strong as an ox. He held his first opponent for the entire match with a tight-waist, not knowing what else to do with him. He got pinned early in his second bout, but didn ' t realize what the call was and started wrestling as soon as his opponent released him. Lehigh is a wrestling school, though. Everyone is naturally psyched about wrestling. I ' m not sure I could get the guys in our house psyched-up like that for any- thing else, let alone everything. They ' re out there just to have a good time. If we win, they think it ' s just great; if not, they have a good time playing anyway. I ' m in there to win, the same as everyone else, but I ' d also like to get everybody to try it so that they can see the great times that can come of it. Take the Turkey Trot. Just ask people how they would like running three miles up and down hills, and you know what kind of reply you would get. There they were though, decked out in their various multi-colored attire, 600 of Lehigh ' s craziest people lined up waiting for the signal to begin from Professor John Steckbeck. The Turkey Trot is a typical Steck operation in his own words. Steck is the pervading factor at the Turkey Trot, as he is at all intramural events. Three times Steck attempted to start the impatient mob on their headlong run about the hill and three times he misfired. Finally, everyone just started run- ning away. The Turkey Trot differs from year to year only in the exact type of confusion that exists, never in the degree of confusion. Many of the runners skillfully dodged the potholes (that were later to become Le- high ' s famous tuning forks) while others weren ' t as ag- IF WE WIN, THEY THINK TIME PLAYING ANYWAY. ile. The pace was quick from the start, and only when the frontrunners passed the Sayre Park gates did the Mob start to resemble the winding snake of ex- hausted, none too enthusiastic, cross-country aspirants that finished the race a short twenty-five minutes later. Why were they all there? Rick Wells was there to win, and he did. Bullit Bill was there to lose and he did. How about everyone else? Steck explained that to me, and in doing so he kind of wrapped up the whole rea- son for intramurals. First there ' s the turkey. The way that the point system works there are quite a few teams that are really in sight of winning that turkey. In fact, the point system is what makes the whole in- tramural set-up what it is here at Lehigh. Everyone can compete and get something for their house, and for the same reason there ' s always someone else there that is as bad as you are. That ' s the way Steck plans it. He wants everyone to have fun doing the things that they like to do. He wants to provide competition in as many sports as possible at every level of competency. I know its hard to believe that Steck plans anything, so just think of it as if it just happens that way and Steck approves of the results. Well, I ' ve calmed down now, I ' ll graduate and go to work. Intramurals are just a lot of fun and good friendly competition. In the words of our beloved President Lewis, by participating in this program you will increase your health and well-being while at Le- high and you will be developing a habit which can give you lifetime vigor and enjoyment. But, if I come back on Lafayette weekend and find that we ' re not in the top ten, I ' m coming back! John Steckbeck (left) is the patron of Lehigh intramurals, and his pride and joy is the Turkey Trot (above) in which over 600 of Lehigh ' s craziest people compete annually. 211 Final Intramural Standings Upperclass Living Groups Unit Trophy Points Unit Trophy Points 1. ThetaXi 2,225 27. Phi Gamma Delta 896 2. Pi Lambda Phi 2,093.5 28. Pi Kappa Alpha 896 3. Sigma Phi Epsilon 1,900 29. Delta Upsilon 856 4. Emery 1,742 30. Tau Epsilon Phi 807.5 5. Sigma Chi 1,719 31. Phi Sigma Kappa 794 6. McConn 1,714 32. Gryphon Society 777 7. Kappa Sigma 1,590 33. Theta Delta Chi 739 8. Alpha Chi Rho 1,542 34. Apha Tau Omega 705 9. Delta Chi 1,464 35. Lambda Chi Alpha 677 10. Smiley 1,412 36. MMB-1 650 11. ChiPsi 1,382 37. MMES-2 635 12. Sigma Nu 1,358 38. Thornburg 634 13. Congdon 1,352 39. Alpha Lambda Omega 630 14. Phi Kappa Theta 1,313 40. Beardslee 618 15. Phi Delta Theta 1,288 41. Sigma Alpha Mu 577 16. MMA-3 1,253 42. Theta Chi 556 17. Taylor 1,248 43. Independents I 547 18. Delta Sigma Phi 1,216 44. Williams 498 19. Delta Phi 1,169 45. Stevens 465 20. Beta Theta Pi 1,163 46. Chi Phi 380 21. Delta Tau Delta 1,098 47. Independents II 352 22. Leavitt 1,097 48. Sigma Phi 346 23. Alpha Sigma Phi 1,052 49. MMB-3 269 24. Kappa Alpha 1,002 50. Tau Delta Phi 242 25. Taylor 1 932 51. Taylor 3 208 26. Psi Upsilon 920 52. Town 98 Freshman Living Groups Unit Trophy Points 1. MMA-1 1,845 2. Drinker 4 1,613 3. Dravo A-2 1,560 4. Richards 3-A 1,523 5. MMA-2 1,373 6. Richards 4 1,277 7. Richards 2-B 1,268 8. Dravo A-1 1,259 9. Richards 2-A 1,190 10. Dravo D-2 1,081 11. Richards 3-B 1,041 12. Drinker 2-A 982 13. Dravo B-2 909 14. Dravo C-1 868 15. Drinker 2-B 743 16. Drinker 1 675 17. Town 603 18. Carothers 565 18. Drinker 3-B 565 20. Dravo D-1 564 21. Dravo B-1 420 22. Richards 1 417 23. Dravo C-2 391 24. Independents (women) 276 25. Drinker 3-A 180 26. Stoughton 140 27. Palmer 100 212 FOOTBALL 1st row: McQuilken, Jaques, Kail, Eby, Hill, co-capt.; Scheib, co-capt.; Warren, Howard, Mitravich, Gallo; 2nd row: Thomas, Schlegel, Emper, Barth, Nixon, Schroder, Farrell, Schmitt, Bowers, Stewart, Stucky; 3rd row: Diorio, Aylsworth, Rizzo, Shaugnessy, Liedtke, Pirn, Smith, Merolla, Johnstone, McFillin; 4th row: Romanow, Camber, Derwin, Huzyak, Wells, Cielen, Purdy, Grathwohl, Lo Piano, Benfield, Buchinski; 5th row: Pohlot, Marti, Resch, Mulholland, Abeltin, Harmatz, Ronca, Coffman, Davis, Johnson; 6th row: Zielinski, Kirkwood, Impink, Rhoads, Gill, Riddett, ass ' t. mgr.; Van Tyne, ass ' t. trainer; Dull, mgr.; Susski, equip, mgr.; McNaron, trainer; 7th row: Fetterman, ass ' t. coach; Glueck, ass ' t. coach; Dunlap, head coach; Whitehead, ass ' t. coach; Shreiner, ass ' t. coach; Gilburg, ass ' t. coach. ri ,J%ll t tg k m SOCCER: 1st row: Fleck, head coach; Rahmes, Tootell, Stiver, Frey, Post, Cerhart, Cappiello, Klonick, Altenpohl, Tinfow, Cicale, Spahr, Mooney; 2nd row: Laitala, ass ' t. coach; Schultz, trainer; Richter, Fetters, Monchak, Perlow, Strickland, Caughen, Degen, Pizarro, White, Lucard, Sotzing, mgr. CROSS-COUNTRY: 1st row: Ryan, Nicholas, Jackucewicz, Heil, capt.; Dieter, 2nd row: Pasquini, Rohn, Rogers, Barnes, Amish, Hummel, Mingione, Covert, head coach. top IT 1 7 IP, We They 1 Lock Haven 28 7 Maryland 16 16 Cornell 30 3 Rutgers 37 8 Quadrangulai : Oregon St. 90 Lehigh 51 Pittsburgh 50 ' 2 I Indiana St. 50 Syracuse 39 3 ; 1 Southern Illinois 15 16 Iowa State 7 31 I 1 Cornell of Iowa 40 I 1 University of 1 owa 3 33 ; j Navy 8 26 | 1 Princeton 21 15 i 1 Army 22 13 1 Penn State 10 26 E. I.W. A. 3rd 1 Team Record (7-5-1) V WRESTLING: 1st row: Trimmer, Hirsh, Biggs, Richie, Lynn; 2nd row: Destito, Duke, Campbell, co-capt.; Hutchin- son, co-capt.; Sculley; 3rd row: Turner, head coach; Leeman, ass ' t. coach; Karabin, Lieberman, Danjczek, Suess, mgr.; Havach, trainer. 216 East Stroudsburg Colgate Delaware Fordham Syracuse DadeJ.C. Miami, Fla. Rutgers Gettysburg LaSalle Lafayette Penn Bucknell M. A. C. ' s Team Record (8-5-0) We 75 73 73 71 58 50 43 38 69 52 65 20 47 They 37 40 40 42 55 45 70 75 36 61 46 90 66 2nd T ' ' ' I SWIMMING: 1st row: MacGregor, Ferrio, LeFeurr, Sultzer, Thomas, Stephens; 2nd row: Nichols, head coach; Hof- mann, Brobson, Eisner, Long, O ' Loughlin, Folsom, Nagy, Hill. 217 k ' to l LaSalle Gettysburg Bucknell Colgate Delaware Elizabethtown Drexel Georgia Southern Stetson Loyola, La. Washington Lee Bucknell Rider No. Carolina St. Muhlenburg Rutgers Rider Lafayette Gettysburg George Washington Delaware East Stroudsburg Lafayette Albright overtime Team Record (10-14-0) V1V| «fc fll We They 69 64 61 60 69 78 91 102 64 83 96 86 74 72 72 82 57 58 66 73 66 63 62 64 84 91 64 97 72 66 76 108 85 82 74 87 54 56 74 84 BASKETBALL: 1st row: Kennedy, ass ' t. coach; Lebowitz, mgr.; Heller, mgr.; Jeffers, mgr.; Heckman, head coach; 2nd row: Martin, Morris, Kramer, Drew, co-capt.; Zelickson, D ' Agosta, Summer, Dickerson, Falkenbach, co-capt; Wisniewski, Bechtel. ' !• mm Brockport Wesleyan Connecticut N. Penn Eagles Connecticut Rutgers Trinity New Haven State Babson Villanova New Haven State Rutgers Newark Villanoug Lafayette Rutgers N. Penn Eagles Lafayette Team Record (7-11-0) We 5 4 2 6 1 3 2 1 5 2 8 5 8 7 3 5 8 HOCKEY: 1st row: Watkins, Frey, D ' Aloisio, Miner, Hoernor, co-capt.; 2nd row: McCarthy, Cadkowski, co-capt.; Barrows, Hansen, Brockway, Bishop, coach; 3rd row: Clement, Hayssen, mgr.; 4th row: White, Sturz, Jonsson, Guilfoyle. H i P E W «. SliWM A I We They P.C.P.S. 1298 1167 Kutztown 1322 1151 Delaware 1322 1185 Harrisburg Poly. 1320 903 Kings 1319 1307 Delaware 1320 1219 Bucknell 1305 1269 Bucknell 1324 1182 Scranton 1321 1254 Scranton 1335 1183 Penn State 1339 1330 P.CP.S. 1352 1172 Harrisburg Poly. 1321 1033 Kutztown 1317 1169 Kings 1317 1316 Team Record (15-0-0) H A RIFLE: kneeling: Lafollette, Harwood, Savage, capt.; Clements, Miller; standing: Kress, coach; Aitcheson, Dorogy, Ermert, Bupp, Hibbing. BASEBALL: 1st row: Noble, mgr.; Edwards, Wilsker, co-capt.; Van Etten, Deschler, Steinmann, mgr.; 2nd row: Menzzopane, Von Thaden, Dempsey, Barry, Rahmes, Wheeler; 3rd row: Schultz, head coach; Knoll, Zawatski, co- capt.; Ulissi, Kraemer, Romkey, Anderson, ass ' t. coach. GOLF: Sine, Petrozelli, Beeken, Yurko, Stupp, co-capt.; Kenny, co-capt.; Sultzer, Rupp, Miller, Heckman, coach. TENNIS: 1st row: Dethloff, Wroe, co-capt.; Smith, McClune; 2nd row: Hott, ass ' t. coach; Reuben, co-capt.; Thompson, Nichols, head coach. We They Amherst 2 7 St. Lawrence 6 7 Delaware 8 9 Bucknell 5 6 Drexel 5 6 Swarthmore 17 3 Gettysburg 10 F M 5 14 Lafayette 6 5 Stevens 11 1 Penn State 5 12 Lebanon Valley 4 2 ovprtimp UVtl 11 1 1 1 VI Team Record (5-7-0) «r r ' £- a LACROSSE: 1st row: Skeen, Reid, Thompson, Stelljes, Vitale, Bassani, Barth; 2nd row: Scott, Dunn, Altenpohl, Hamilton, De Moll, co-capt.; Sturz, co-capt.; Tutin, Riddett, mgr.; 3rd row: Clueck, ass ' t. coach; Susski, equip, mgr.; Brunkhorst, scorer; Foucek, Cochran, Gallagher, Zimmerman, Kelly, Welsh, Reagen, Mc Naron, trainer; Gil- burg, head coach. We They Barbados 113 64 Rochester 112 33 Temple 75 70 St. Josephs 95 50 West Chester 62 83 Lafayette 104V2 40 V4 MAC ' S 2nd Team Record (5-1 -0) TRACK: sitting: Scheib, Kilroy, Strockbine, Ferrie, Heil, Koons, Stauffer, Ryan, Deiter, Shelley; kneeling: Barnes, Jackucewicz, Rogers, Bayer, Gulash, Clark, Meek, Tarulli, capt.; Rizzo, Derwin; standing: Steckbeck, fac. mgr.; Probst, Bigach, Spengel, Corbett, Poole, Meyers, French, Albetin, Hull, Resch, Gielen, Hill, capt.; Covert, coach. L.U.V.-CALL FOR A NEW KIND OF PERSON On the second floor of the University Center, there is a small semi-cluttered office which serves as the center for the Lehigh University Volunteers Council. It is stuffed with paper, people, and problems. It has not always been so. In fact, the Lehigh Univer- sity Volunteers Council has a comparatively short his- tory. Prior to 1968 an organized effort for providing volunteer services to the community did not exist. It was in the early spring of that year that Cornell Univer- sity hosted a conference, which was given the name Beyond The Ivory Tower. It was at that conference, at which two Lehigh students were present, that the idea for a unified, expanded, and more com- prehensive volunteer program arose. The rationale for such a program was stated in the L.U.V. Council report of 1970-71: At Lehigh the idea of this unification seemed com- pelling for a number of reasons: 1.) An integrated program would bring together many different students interested in community services promoting cooperation and innovation. 2.) Coordinated multi-purpose programs could be de- vised for specific areas of the community. 3.) Sustained recruiting, orientation, and evaluation efforts could be made. 4.) Students interested in becoming volunteers and community agencies in need of them would have one organization to go to; reducing confusion and facil- itating the implementation of new ideas. 5.) Such an organization would have more flexible fi- nancial and transportation arrangements. With these ideas in mind, the Volunteers Council began with four projects and perhaps fifty volunteers. Today it has over fifteen projects and over two-hun- dred volunteers. The growth figures themselves show L.U.V. ' s out- 226 Chuck Steele, former project head at Wiley House, will continue to work with the emotio- nally disturbed chil- dren there after his graduation in ' 72. standing progress. These figures become particularly phenomenal when one realizes the particular prob- lems that were presented to the Volunteers Council by the community and the university. When talking to Barbara Solt, the full-time staff coordinator for the Vol- unteers Council, one finds that many of the projects had difficulty just getting off the ground. This is quite understandable, says Miss Solt, but our reasons are quite unique. The Lehigh Valley, and in particular the Bethlehem Community, are quite ' well-stocked ' with volunteers and agencies for han- dling civic projects. In order for a project to survive, we had to gear most of them through existing agencies. This posed a three-fold problem. Some of the agencies were reluctant to use the volunteers on the basis that: first, the volunteers could not be used all year round; second, extra supervision for them would probably be necessary; third, in some areas the agencies had enough volunteers and did not wish to waste time and money on duplication. In fact, she continues, When a Big Brother pro- ject was attempted at South Terrace, it was rejected strongly. We had the same disappointment in our first attempt to work with the emotionally disturbed chil- dren at Wiley House. It was with these two projects that Barbara Solt be- gan to realize what we were with— competition. In- deed, it was here that the Lehigh University Volunteers received their first taste of it; for in setting up these projects the Volunteers Council soon realized that not only were the agencies to be taken into consideration, but also the presence of numerous other community volunteers was not to be overlooked. Even allowing for such considerations, there was still yet another source of competition— that of the other colleges in the Lehigh Valley area. Cooperation with The opening of the new Cen- tennial School, Lehigh ' s ex- perimental grammar school, provided the occasion for a party for L.U.V. volunteers and the students. 228 the other colleges in the area was not particularly diffi- cult to establish, admits Miss Solt. However it was only when we could convince the agency personnel that we were to serve as an ' extra arm and leg ' were we finally successful in establishing our own programs. Chuck Steele, former project head and now Central Board member, had this to say about the project: the 1970-71 Wiley House Project has had as its main objective: to change the opinion of the Wiley House Staff Members, with regard to the sincerety, com- petence, and commitment of the Lehigh Volunteers. As former Project Head, I feel that this has been ac- complished, based on the encouraging letters which Miss Holt received at the end of the fall semester. We are looking forward to even better things next year un- der the direction of the new Project Head, Pete Fuller. Aside from these projects, the majority of programs that have been initiated by the L.U.V. council are in the area of tutoring and educational assistance. One of the original projects was established at Parkridge, a public housing project in Bethlehem. John Mraz, who has been with the project since its inception, stated: When we first started working at Parkridge in the Community. Programs similar to the Parkridge Study Center were set up at Broughal Junior High School and at Holy Ghost Parochial School. The establishment of these projects proved to be a much easier task. At Broughal Junior High, the Volunteers Council proved its willing- ness to cooperate with existing groups. Bill Dempster, head to these projects, noted that: With the advent of a Volunteer from the American Association of University Women, the program func- tioned more smoothly than before. The A.A.U.W. vol- unteer was able to devote more time to the program than the guidance counselor who had previously as- sumed the responsibility along with his other tasks. The Volunteer s Council also involves itself with two government projects; one of these is the nationally known ' Head Start ' and the other is the Centennial School Project. The Centennial School is the Educa- tional Department ' s experimental grammar school. Dr. Thomas Fleck, Principle of the school was most grateful for the assistance. Assistance does seem to be the by-word of this organization because there are also many other projects that the Volunteers Council has initiated which are orientated towards assistance in a variety of areas. Included are such services as In- come Tax information, Legal Aide help and Ecology Projects. Their influence is even felt at the Allentown State Hospital and at the Y.M.C.A. To keep such a wide-spread organization from tripping over its own feet has certainly not been an easy task for Miss Solt. It has always been my philos- ophy to try to maintain a balance between structure and non-structure Officially this is how the organiza- tion is described: The Central Board meets weekly to consider pol- icy, issues and the effectiveness of each project. (Of- ficers for the 1971-72 school year are: Chairman— Rich Chefetz, Co-chairman and Corre- sponding Secretary— Chuck Steele, Recording Secre- tary—Tom Bracy, Treasurer— John Cragin, Publicity and Newsletter Editor— John Wittmann( The Project Board, which consists of all the student project coordinators plus the Central Board, will meet at least semi-monthly to share information on the projects and to promote feedback in the heirarchy. All of this sounds terribly structured; it really isn ' t, but it gives us something to look to. Miss Solt went on to point out that this kind of set-up gives her a free spring of 1969, we tutored elementary school children on an assigned, one-to-one basis. The project was quite successful, according to all sides. In the fall we shifted to the junior high and high school ages, as the high school students were supposed to tutor the ele- mentary ages. L.U.V. had even greater plans for this project. The Council wanted to set up a Drop-In center which would be staffed by Lehigh Students. The idea was, to have a place where the Parkridge Students could go for help in the evening. However, as John Mraz ad- mits: the program was a massive failure. It was fur- ther noted that the local high school students never began their part of the project and adjustments had to be made in the program to cover the loss. In spite of this, all connected with the project feel that it has been run successfully and the Study Center has become an integral part of the services offered to the Parkridge hand. It allows her to oversee all of the projects with MV Recycling of scrap pa- per is one of many other projects L.U.V has pursued. equal interest, rather than limiting her scope of oper- ations by being a member of the Central Board. Thus, Miss Solt is the official liason and trouble-shooter, and, as she readily admits, she prefers it that way. When it gets to the point that I ' m running things; then there is something wrong. In spite of L.U.V. Council successes the organization has one glaring defficency. It has been unable to es- tablish an effective Drug Program on campus. In Touch , the name given to this project, is not primarily a L.U.V. Council project; however they are the major proponents of the project on campus. Most of Univer- sity community is willing to admit that this failure lies within the administration. The L.U.V. Council claims (and rightly so), that the administration has been un- cooperative in its stance against the program. The ad- ministration also states that such a precaution is neces- sary in order to handle law suits that might feasibly arise as a result of the program. By way of rebuttal the L.U.V. Council stiffly points out that such a pro- gram would be costly and unnecessary. As proof of this statement the L.U.V. Council has shown that such programs have already been established at over thirty large Universities on the East coast alone; all without elaborate legal programs, all with university sanction, and all with great success. Yet despite the facts that have been presented by the Volunteers, the adminis- tration refuses to accept the program as a valid part of University functions. Thus, the In Touch program re- mains in a technical limbo. Wally Hilton, project head of In Touch admits that he is dissappointed by the response that has been given to the program, both from the administration in particular, and from the University in general. Wally frankly states that, because of the treatment they (the project volunteers) have received, ' In Touch ' has been 230 Barbara Soil is the energetic full-time coordinator for the L.L .V. council. left in a demoralized state. Wally further pointed out that his volunteers have trained hard for this project by attendance and study at various Drug Clinics. With so little results for so much work, the In Touch pro- gram remains forced to operate as half an idea. To this Wally could only say It ' s just frustrating. How- ever such a beginning seems to be typical for the L.U.V. Council projects. Yet, in the final analysis how does one determine the value of such programs? How can one tell whether a new project, struggling to establish itself, is as valu- able as a previously established one? In short, what are the criteria used to determine the success of any project? Without hesistation Miss Solt replied: To the extent that it develops the individuals connected with the project, is the extent to which it is successful. At that, Barbara turned to her bulletin board and pointed to a quotation from the Irish author O ' Banion. It reads: The call is for a new kind of person who is hard- headed enough to survive the battles that rage in the academics, and yet a person warm-hearted enough and deeply committed to the full development of hu- man potential. I believe that is what we are all about. 231 THE CALL IS FOR A NEW KIND OF PERSON WHO IS HARD-HEADED ENOUGH TO SURVIVE THE BATTLES THAT RAGE IN TH E ACADEMIES, AND YET A PERSON WARM-HEARTED ENOUGH AND DEEPLY COMMITTED TO THE FULL DEVELOPMENT OF HUMAN POTENTIAL. O ' Banion EPITOME Bill Wong, Senior Editor Dave Ingram, Literary Editor Gordon Brandon, Managing Mike Duguid, Scheduling Editor Editor Bill Conner, Business Manager 232 Bob Vitale, l.D. Editor Rich Lusignea, Associate Editor Fran Santoro, Ass ' t. Senior Editor Terry Faul, Editor-in-Chief Unfortunately Absent from Picture: Jim Reid, Sports Editor Sales Manager; Goodloe Suttler, Photo Editor; Jim Houck, Administrative Manager; Joe Mormak, Advertising Manager; Marilyn Blacher, Layout Editor. Lehigh University BETHLEHEM, PA _ STEVE GLICKSTEIN Editor-in-Chief BILL WHITE Editorial Page Editor TOM SWAN Managing Editor Entered as second class matter at the post office at Bethlehem, Pa., under Act of March 8, 1789. subscription price: $10.00 per academic ear Circulation: 5,000 The BROWN and WHITE University Center Offices _ Telephone 866 -0331 JACK WELSH Business Manager PAT HENDRICK Associate Editor JOHN KLUCSIK GLEN CLARK News Editors PAT FEKULA BILL GEORGE Desk Editors DAVE MORRISON Editorial Asst. GENE SMAR DONALD MURPHY Photo Editors Published semi -weekly, except during vacation and holiday periods, during the school year bv students of Lehigh Uni- versity. KATHY KANE Feature Editor BOB GOLDICH Sports Editor JEFF MACKEVICH DAVID WILSON Makeup Editors Printed bi Lehigh Valley Offset, tnc, Bethlehem, Pa. Represented for national ads tiv National Educational Advertising Services, 18 E. Sothstreet, New York City. BROWN WHITE 235 Wide OfBa Focus Brown anil White Sun and Fun At Lehigh Lafayette devoured 48-19 The mad ticket scramble Marijuana Reform Graup lach Claims VW Stresses Decriminalization Most Unsafe Car Navy Beats Grapplers Pulitizer Prize wir In Convincing Manner Lawrence GipSOn Engineering Blues B|ack Hutch Wins Eastern Crown Education Heckman Resigns as Head Coach o n ±± •• • -i Four Students Rams Batter Cindermen; charged, Held p j p . First Loss in Two Years in Drug Raid ca ■ ■ Lewis Withholds Article f u S t f e Berman Le Submitted for LU News Agister Asks Econ Alumnus Asserts UrbanRenewalPlanned Direct, Right to Know For South Side Distrjct H B £ Snack Bar Security Parasitic Blood Fluke Target Team Battling ' Snail Fever i in fraternities is contrary U Forum is product iversity policy, says Quay of decade of activity Trusiees Approve All U Complex ice tions bate The News and Alumni All University Complex Crest girls Jobs scarce deleted in close Forum vo . ■ says E.A. Teal pane s L ew j s Praises Forum Stability riZt: At Forum III Spring Convocatio in U security Emery to Inhabit Tau Delta Pi eclining, v™ y gridders Forum Does Not Take Acth _ ,. top opponents is Benefit m every phase On Tau Delta Phi Question laking Last Hour Effort Forum Ponders Scheduling revisio Jumni Officers May 9 L ° nguage p ° lic ' _ .. c 7 Three Year B.A QpprOVed Dy ForUI IW School ' Appropriate ' The Forum ?r Okun P.P. R. Questions L,V Reform Len! 9 n Law Schoo At the Crossroa ) Lehigh plays, Conscription unlikely to er ikes Final Bow m L ' ROTC enrollment increase kcGovern, Muskie , . . u U si luse in the Valley motivated by new draft bil BAND Walter Zanchuk Manager Robert Watkins Senior Rep. Bradley Utz Publicity Manager Scott Cragle Student Conductor Thomas Voystock Drum Major Prof. J. Elkus Director 239 GLEE CLUB Henry Chandler David Kent Thomas Avakian Richard Vanschoick John Krupicka Prof. Robert Cutler Manager Ass ' t. Manager Publicity Manager Stage Manager Student Conductor Director W.L.R.N. W.L.V.R. Anthony Baran General Manager Steven Bliss News Director Scott Reber Chief Engineer Kenneth Wasch Business Manager A.P.O. D. Angel, P. Bowman, G. Brier, B. Dean (corr. sec), D. Hampson (2nd V.P.), ). Hay, D. Kent, R. NcNinney, T. Oshnock, D. Peterson (rec. sec), R. Kutz (pres.), R. Pettigrew (1st V.P.), J. Shipkowski, D. Stamman (treas.), F. Tomko, P. Wil- liams, W. Wong ARNOLD AIR SOCIETY R. Angerer, S. Bliss, D. Contant, J. Coughlin, C. Follweiler, D. Goodman, C. Hall, B. )enschke, P. Luff, D. Peterson, T. Regan, P. Roth, A. Schmoyer, R. Schutz, ). Sibole, W. Smith, G. Steuben, L. Teer, D. Tich, E. Wallace, M. Whitehouse, W. O ' Brien, S. Doerr, W. Barbour STUDENT ACTIVITIES COUNCIL 1 jv z 1 (J Bk ' F l .C y 7 m W W- • V r i ■ r 4 , ... _k I 8 ' ' x J If? 1 1 V i 1 1 Til L President, S. Leigh; Secretary, B. Smith; Treasurer, K. Snyder; Con- cert Chairman, A. Licata; Lecture Chairman, T. Steele; Represent- atives: J. Berman, M. Blacher, A. Martinson, D. Noble, B. Schelier, R. Schneider, D. Wascavage CROSSROADS AFRICA MUSTARD CHEESE William Keating Raymond Essington James Pinciotti John Schubert John Lawson Gerald Megasko Prof. H. Barrett Davis President Vice-president Treasurer Secretary Stage Technician Light Technician Director Kols Krazy Karnival, sponsored by SAC and Sigma Alpha Mu. THE FORUM: STRUGGLE TO SURVIVE i Curtis CJump, Chairman of Forum 1 As the Forum enters its third year of existence it has be- come painfully clear that it will not gain for several years, if ever, the decision-making authority for which its founders had hoped. Nor will the organization spell a ruinous end to professional educational standards, as many skeptics had claimed. Between these extremes, lies the reality the University must live with. The Forum is one of several decision related bodies at Lehigh. Its scope is both infinite and limited. The organization may consider any matter having the slightest connection to the University, but only in the rarest of cases will it have the most important voice. In academic matters it must share its authority, and is, in- deed, constitutionally subserviant to the faculty. In long- range planning and budgeting the view of the administra- tion will predominate. The Interfraternity and Residence Halls Councils usually claim sovereignty within their own areas of jurisdiction. Despite these shortcomings the Forum has played a defi- nite and positive role. It has provided a vehicle for broad student input where previously there was little or none. It has opened up at least one aspect of the University ' s deci- sion-making machinery to the entire Lehigh community, including townspeople, where previously all touchy deci- sions were made behind closed doors. Finally, it has forced Forum members and others to examine new approaches to solving old problems. The Forum has done these things because it is not the result of a transitory student interest in politics as some had suspected. Its roots grow deeper and are now too firmly embedded to reverse the process. They trace a decade of growing student involvement, both at Lehigh and else- where. Events such as the rally for coeducation, protests against prejudicial and backward pledging policies of fra- ternities, the move for an improved Liberal Arts college, all took place prior to the Forum ' s birth in April of 1970. Yet The 1970 Spring Lehigh movement (left) was the catalyst for the Forum ' s creation. University Presi- dent, W. Deming Lewis (be- low), played an important role in this creation, but has since assumed an ambiva- ient attitude toward the pol- icy body. pmrrmr r ■ • t they set the stage and the mood which made the Spring movement possible, and make a return to the old scheme unimaginable. The Immediate events which led to the creation of the Forum were truly bewildering. The atmosphere was a mix- ture of carnival and corporation, with strikes and slogan chanting and mass rallies in the UC, at the flag pole, and in Grace Hall, with a rock festival interspersed between the give-and-take bargaining sessions. It was from these bar- gaining sessions, at the departmental, college, and univer- sity level during four days of cancelled classes, that the delicate compromise called the Lehigh University Forum emerged. When it was all over there was much collective back- patting, since Lehigh had managed to avoid the violence that had racked so many other college campuses. Colum- bia, Berkely, Tufts, Harvard had all become household words, not for their academic prowess, but for their violent campus activism. That Lehigh had somehow managed to elusively escape the spectre of an invading police force seemed unique. It was even suggested that Lehigh ' s me- thod of solving problems deserved national recognition, al- though little coverage ever materialized outside the Lehigh Valley. What was important about all this self-pride was that a true sense of community had developed during the Spring of 1970. The mistrust which had prevailed between stu- dents, faculty and administration had been neutralized and replaced by a spirit of cooperation. For at least that one month the Forum stood as a symbol of what the various segments of the University, working together, could accomplish. But, the Forum was no Utopia. The fact that the body represented a compromise and not a unanimously en- dorsed solution to the University ' s governance problems has been critical in the organization ' s failure to perform as The Forum represents an uneasy compromise between students and faculty, both vying or power with the administration. had been hoped. For while the majority has always main- tained the necessity for such a body, there has never been agreement on the exact nature the Forum should take. The constitutional structure of the compromise was simple. The Forum would have 125 members to insure against power elites. There would be 60 students, 60 fac- ulty members, an five administrators on the body, thus giv- ing students an almost 50% voice in decision making. The powers of the Forum were divided into three groups: (1) Those in which it has exclusive and final jurisdiction. Among these areas are social life, athletics, extra curricular activities, academic environment, registration, and resi- dence and dining. (2) Those areas in which it can review policy and have its proposals presented to the Trustees. In the event the Presi- dent disagrees with a Forum proposal, both are submitted to the Trustees. Long range planning, community relations, overall budget, and administrative appointments at the rank of Dean or above are included in this area. (3) Those academic areas where it may only recommend policy, such as curriculum requirements and academic discipline. Despite the apparent straight-forwardness of the Con- stitution, numerous conflicts have arisen regarding its inter- pretation—conflicts which have tended to limit the Forum ' s power and jurisdiction. For example: Is the creation of a student-teaching apprentice program for credit a new aca- demic program (primarily a Forum area), or a change in curriculum requirements (a faculty preserve)? Or, is an in- crease in the projected size of the freshman ' s class an ad- missions policy (Forum jurisdiction) or a budgetary matter (administration responsibility) because it involves tuition money needed to balance the books? On these issues a coalition of students and liberal faculty members have tended to favor increased Forum power. But, a majority of the faculty and some students have usu- ally argued that these areas are outside the Forum ' s policy- setting jurisdiction. The administration has altered its stance from issue to issue. Thus, on nearly every delicate matter there is a sizable number of Forum members who challenge even the body ' s right to deal with the problem in an effective way. This has, to a large extent, slowed the legislative wheels and prevented the Forum from realizing its full potential. A manifestation of this attitude has been the administra- tion ' s failure to present certain issues to the Forum while there is still time to adequately consider alternative pro- posals, or to draft new ones if necessary. Time after time- in housing on several occasions, in the size of the freshman class, in the establishment of emergency social regulations, ohn Fields, Forum IJ vice-Chairman, makes a point at a poorly attended Forum meeting. Declining interest is one of the problems plaguing the Forum. in the All-University Complex issue-the administration has come to the Forum with a proposal and urged its speedy adoption because failure to act immediately would be haz- ardous. This has infuriated and frustrated many Forum members, since the body is being asked to submit to be- coming a rubber stamp for predetermined policy. Administrators have usually answered these charges by stating that thev believe that the Forum had been con- sulted adequately. Yet, in a peculiar sense, these adminis- trators in their justification, have underscored the basic difference in attitudes which confounds the organization. To the administration and to many faculty, the Forum is like a computer. It is programmed to provide inputs into a given situtation, but it cannot make the final decision itself. The ultimate authority to act lies elsewhere This fact was made frustratingly clear in the All-Univer- sity Complex controversy. The Forum had adopted a $67 million ten-year development campaign in May, Wi which included a creative arts center as a top priority. However, preliminary studies indicated that it would be difficult to raise money for that project. Thus instead the administration proposed a $6 million combination held house intramural facility which could handle mass cultural events and graduation ceremonies, as well as athletic events. Many students doubted the value of such a fac.l.ty and criticized its high price tag. They presented a plan which redistributed most of the money to endowment and library acquitsitions. After a five-hour heated debate, the student-sponsored plan won approval by a scant four-vote margin. Still, there was very little doubt about which path would ultimately be taken. Both proponents and opponents of the All-University Complex conceded privately that the Trustees would overrule the Forum and adopt the adminis- tration position, as they eventually did. Although four votes was hardly an overwhelming endorsement of the student proposal the trustee decision was the severest blow to the Forum ' s prestige to date-for the constitutionally-estab- lished body had failed in its first policy fight with the administration. . , Also evident in the debates over the ten-year plan and other topics has been an unwillingness of some faculty and administrators to completely accept students as being re- sponsible, experienced, and intelligent enough to make the right decisions. Several student Forum members have said that the only place they are considered equals are on small subcommittees where knowledge of student attitudes and interests is vital. In large groups there is a peer group pres- sure among some faculty members to maintain an air ot superiority. Many students have complained of being sub- The All-University Com- plex (artist conceptions shown here) was a center of dispute between stu- dents and the administra- tion. The Trustees ' deci- sion to build the complex, reversing the Forum deci- sion, was the severest blow to the Forum ' s pres- tige to date. jected to such condescending statements as I ' m afraid you students have not done your political homework, whenever there is a difference of opinion between a stu- dent and a professor. Such attitudes can have a chilling effect on the Forum, but fortunately they have not. The number of professors who act this way are in the minority; and most of the Fo- rum ' s spadework is done in subcommittees where students are considered equals. Still, failure to fully recognize stu- dent participation does, to some degree, limit Forum cooperation. Differences in ideology partially accounts for the Fo- rum ' s less than ideal performance, but the Forum has con- tributed much by way of its own inefficiency. Sub- committees have proliferated and overlap. The Forum has frequently delved into administrative rather than policy matters. Decision-making is agonizingly slow. Implementa- tion of resolutions has been even more turtle-like. There has been no effective way found to involve freshmen in the organization. Of course, none of these characteristics is pe- culiar to the Forum as a legislative body. But, the Forum was created to cut through the University ' s overlapping and secret governance structures, not to replace those structures with its own red tape and bureaucracy. The result of all this has been a declining interest in the Forum. This is evident in increasing absenteeism, especially among students. There is difficulty in finding candidates. Only 55 undergraduates ran for 40 Forum seats in 1972, about half as many as in previous years. Several faculty members have resigned immediately after being selected. There is nearly always a ho-hum attitude expressed whenever the Forum is mentioned on campus. What has happened is that people are giving up on the Forum because it is not a cure-all. The simple fact of the matter is that the Forum could not possibly accomplish in the short time of its existence what Quixotic dreamers had hoped. To allow the Forum to atrophy through disinterest would be tremendously short-sighted, though. For the Forum ' s Forum 11 officers include (left to right) Chairman George Dinsmore. Vice-Chairman Marc Jacobs, and Secre- tary-treasurer Scott Hopkins. On the far right is Forum secretary Elizabeth Patterson. contributions have already been substantial, although less publicized than the organization ' s problems. Without the Forum to prevent the expedient solution, there would probably be undergraduate housing in Saucon Valley, re- sulting in a fragmented campus and perhaps destroying Le- high ' s small, personal, residential character. Under-at- tended Saturday classes would probably still be with us. There would be no lengthened time period for course- withdrawals, and no opportunities for undergraduate stu- dent teaching. Without the Forum the proposed renovation of Taylor gym might still be but a dream in the athletic office. There would be an inconsistent and outdated policy on the use of drugs and alcohol. News to alumni and parents might be overly censored. New procedures for preparing the budget have been im- plemented. More scholarships will be made available to the local poor. An attempt to solve the perennial parking problem is being made. This is not to say that none of these actions would have been taken without a Forum. But many of these items have come about only as the result of Forum prodding and in- itiative. And, the decisions have been made in a free at- mosphere with everyone able to participate, if they so desire. The Forum has managed these concrete accom- plishments despite all the inadequacies and imperfections which plague it. But, the real value of a body such as the Forum must always lie in its future and not in its past. It is for this reason that it is so disheartening to con- template Lehigh without a Forum or some similar organiza- tion. The Forum ' s potential is nearly unlimited. It has not approached this potential because it is still ahead of its time. Like the automobile in the early 1900 ' s, there is still a reluctance to depend on it. This need not always be the case. As the years pass, the Forum can gradually assimilate various other decision- making organs into its own structure. Its authority will be challenged less frequently as the old hardliners retire, and as the growing list of successes make its discretion indisputable. But to expect all of this to happen at once is foolhardy. To expect that in its infancy, the Forum would not have stumbled, or experimented without failure, before being able to stand on its own is unthinkable. Yet, there are still some who are ready to abandon the organization because some panacea has not become a reality overnight. What is needed now are students, faculty, and adminis- trators with the patience and the fortitude to correct, rather than to pine over, the mistakes of the past. For the present attitudes, if they persist, will only bring about a dissolution of the Forum and a reversion to the same conditions of se- crecy and mistrust which made its creation a necessity in the first place. V- ' - ■ ..s ••- i %r ' W k se : - ■•vT- ' i  8W 5 - jBli $3 jM ' V- ' jS ' ... s . ■■• i jjpii!i«tf ■ S -v . MNvT «■«■ WftP Wsw V V, i««M!fiWW . s« - ' !. 4i?4fH?!P ' B?5.=w - ■ -«j ; ' v. a£ Srs 9 I j ■■ |P..ll Mb  . v SI sa ma ■la Cbplatidly atrrid th -,noise haste, remember what j • peace there may be in silertefiWi far as possible without I surrender be on good terms with all persons. Speak your truth quietly clearly; and listen to others, even the dull j b5«K persons, they are a vexation to the spirit. Lf you compare • yourself with others, you-may become vain. biuer for al- ways there wiir.be greater lesser persons, than yourself. Enjoy your achievements as we.lt is your plans. Keep inter- ested in your career, however humbie; it is a real possession - ttopaajj in the changing fortunes of time Exe.rcise caution in your - 1 business affairs; for the world is full of trickery. But let this not blind you to:whaf virtue there is; many persons strive for high ideals; and everywhere life is full of heroism,. Be ' yourself. Especially, do not feign affection. Neither be cyni- cal about love; for in the face of all aridity dis- enchantment it is perennial as the grass. Take kindly the counsel of the years, gracefully surrendering the things o youth. Nurture strength ol o shield you in misfortune. But do not distress yourself with in; Many fears are born of fatigue lone wholesome discipline g ntle with yi are ; child of the iinivers ;ss than the tars; yoi have a right to be ! lere. Ar no doubt the universe is untul Pbe at peace with ' God, wha and whatever your labors aspirations, in i ir- cru ll Wi tusion of life keep peac ' iw R drudgery broker careful. Strive to L • V % c r 7  ■«. V i ,y . fc Y —    -• 3 n w (XV TV — c — - t? - y S vt -A v O i% em I V X ' i ' c INFORMATION (u-- 5 LS Vv tSl C ■ T,WUV N5 I f y v € M - • f k- V, « - «  V c o vV sr Os , ta ■ 2? s y 3 r -c ; m MERI £ $ TUDI05, INC, 2981 GRANT AVENUE • PHILADELPHIA, PENNA. 19114 • OR 3-5777 OFFICIAL YEARBOOK PHOTOGRAPHERS 258 Hotel Bethlehem Gracious Living in the Heart of Historic Bethlehem 1 75 modern guest rooms and suites- turn-down bed service • Two excellent restaurants: The Continental Room and The Pioneer Room [Entertainment Nightly in The Continental Room) • Completely Air Conditioned • Free Parking 437 Main Street Bethlehem, PA 18018 (215)867-3711 259 ■■•■■ -..-....■ ... COMPLIMENTS OF YOUR STUDENT LINEN SERVICE PENN linen uniform service, inc. LEHIGH VALLEY INDUSTRIAL PARK P.O. BOX 2268 • ALLENTOWN, PA. 18001 260 HAROLD STEPHENS COMPANY 16TH SUMNER AVE. ALLENTOWN, PA. MM PLUMBING CHEATING CO., INC. 7HecAa tic z£ Con iactoU Since- f928 12 4 HAMILTON STREET WAREHOUSE: 622 HANOVER AVE. Phone 432-5151 • PLUMBING HEATING ■ PROCESS PIPING SYSTEMS ALLENTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA 18102 Phone 433-5179 CARPETS and RUGS VENETIAN BLINDS WINDOW SHADES Dial 395-2061 OWEN M. BASTIAN, INC. • LINOLEUM • CERAMICS • VINYL DISTINCTIVE AND DECORATIVE FLOORS AND WALLS TREXLERTOWN, PA. 18087 Branch Store— 207 Branch St., Quakertown, Pa. 18951 - 536-7939 261 FREEMAN ' S DAIRY 737 North 13th Street Allentown, Pennsylvania B 8r M PROVISION CO. 1040 N. Graham St. Allentown, Pa. Distributors of Fine Foods to Schools- Institutions- Restaurants-Stores Meats— Poultry— Provisions Seafoods— Frozen Foods Dairy Products 215-434-9611 PRINTERS • LITHOGRAPHERS CD n DC lo- LU rn I D_ H cr m CD 0 10 z Zj mwF k A H m 2 WM CD | CD Z DC D K LEHIGH LITHO, INC. r - z H Lehigh Valley Industrial Park X LL Bethlehem, Pennsylvania Q_ O CD LU XI 1- Tl X LU m DC X CJ CD PRINTERS ■ LITHOGRAPHERS ' R sie -Who Never Had His Picture in a Yearbook 263 LEHIGH DEDICATES RATHBONE HALL ANNOUNCES $67,000,000 CAMPAIGN In April of 1972 Lehigh University officially dedicated its new $2.35-miIlion student dining facility, Rathbone Hall, named after M. ). Rathbone, president of the University ' s board of trustees and retired chairman of Standard Oil (NJ). Other major dedications during 1972 included those for the 6 residence halls of Centennial II and for the Martindale Sculpture in Maguinnes Hall of Liberal Arts. At the occasion Dr. W. Deming Lewis, president of the University, and Harold Mohler, chief executive officer of Hershey Foods Corp. and a Lehigh trustee, discussed Lehigh ' s announced 10-year, $67-million New Century Fund. Mohler will serve as national chairman of the new development effort. Principal speaker at the event was John D. Harper, chief executive officer of the Alcoa, who, in part said: Edu- cation and business are two of the nation ' s greatest strengths. We must be constantly aware that neither can prog- ress without the other, and we must be alert to find new ways to reinforce the alliance between the two. The tribute to Rathbone read: We are here to dedicate this building in honor of a man whose leadership in one of the great industries of the world has helped enhance the prestige and economy of our nation, whose valued trusteeship of his Alma Mater has helped Lehigh to increase its academic prestige throughout the nation, and whose effective leadership has also helped other educational and industrial organizations to contribute to the en- richment of our nation. Paul L. Maloney, a member of the Class of 1972, presented Mr. Rathbone with an illuminated scroll duplicating the bronze plaque in the new dining hall. MAJOR IN LEADERSHIP-ARMY ROTC PHONE AREA CODE 215 867-5019 Earl W. Ecker Construction Co., Inc. GENERAL CONTRACTORS MAILING ADDRESS: P O. BOX 2213 BETHLEHEM. PA. 180QI 1420 CHELSEA AVENUE BETHLEHEM. PA. 18018 LEE M. MACHEMER 1431 S. 4TH ST., ALLENTOWN, PA. BRICKPOINTING-WATERPROOFING-CAULKING Phone 797-4778 Comp iments of ICARUS MAINTENANCE CO. _i M. W. WOOD DINING SERVICE J. J. Morello, Inc. Roofing, Spouting, Sheet Metal Work 320 BRODHEAD AVENUE BETHLEHEM, PA. 18015 LEHIGH BOOKSTORE LEHIGH ALUMNI CLUBS Regional Vice-Presidents I (New York and New England): Burton E. Bauder ' 43, 105 Holmes Ave., Darien, Conn. 06820, 203-348-4881 II (New Jersey): Stanley M. Richman ' 55, 590 White Oak Ridge, Short Hills, N.). 07078 III (Pennsylvania and Delaware): Joseph R. Persa ' 48, 2281 Woodlark Circle, Bethlehem, Pa. 18017 IV (Central): Charles M. Frankel ' 62, 14521 W. Ridge Dr., Novelty, Ohio 44072 V (Southeastern) John K. Killmer ' 22, 2725 N.E. 16th St., Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. 33304 VI (Western) James B. 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Lane ' 67, 5 Windsor Place, Upper Montclair, N.J. 07042, 201-783-9174 P-Charles A. Nicholson ' 50, 931 Robin Rd., State College, Pa. 16801, 814-237-2392 S-George C. Kurtossy ' 60, 725 W. Hamilton Ave., State College, Pa. 16801 P-H. Merritt Hughes, Jr. ' 63, 451 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18705, 717-823-4287 S- Thomas J. Reilly ' 60, 106 York Ave., West Pittston, Pa. 18643, 717-655-1742. P-Robert A. Kaufman ' 68, 416 Richmond Dr., Millbrae, California 94030,415-697-4379 S-Robert F. Clark ' 55, 115 Poplar, Kentfield, California 94904. 415-461-9686 Compliments of: CLARENCE B. HANEY, Inc.-Masonry-Ceramic Tile 1745 Eaton Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. 18018 Mark Parseghian, Jr. ' 49, President Northern New Jersey (II) Northern New York (I) Northern Ohio (IV) Northern Indiana (IV) Northwest Pennsylvania (III) Ohio Valley (IV) Pacific Northwest (VI) Philadelphia (III) Pittsburgh, (III) Rochester (I) Rocky Mountain (VI) St. Louis (IV) Southeastern Pennsylvania (III) Southern Anthracite (III) Southern California (VI) Southern New Jersey (II) Southern New York (I) South Florida (V) Texas (VI) Twin City (VI) Upper Jersey (II) Washington, D.C. (V) Westchester Rockland County (I) Western New York (I) York (III) Youngstown (IV) P-Charles E. Paules, Jr. ' 53, 832 Stevens Ave., Westfield, N.J. 07090, 201-232-7437 S-Arthur C. Warden, Jr. ' 59, 109 Crescent Rd., Florham Park, N.J. 07932, 201-377-9523 VP-Harry Heist ' 61, 27 Witbeck St. Scotia, N.Y. 12302, 581-399-7150. S-Richard P. Schulz ' 58, 821 Harris Dr., Schenectady, N.Y. 12309, 518-377-8406. P-A.B. 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Hood, Jr. ' 50 The Cambridge Apt. 205, Alden Park, Philadelphia, Pa 19144, 215-844-8220. P-John W. Kight, III ' 63, 110 South Oak Hill Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. 15215 412-781-5846 S-Stewart Early ' 66, 36 Collinwood Dr., Pittsburgh, Pa. 15215, 412-363-0915. P-William Crason, Jr. ' 60, 568-B Greenleaf Meadows, Rochester, N.Y. 14612, 716-621-3948 S-Ross H. Sherwood ' 67, 168 Creystone Lane, Rochester, N.Y. 14618 P-Alden D. Conger, Jr. ' 48, 10534 Kalamath St., Denver, Colo. 80234, 303-466-7560 S-Richard M. Ruthhart ' 45, 935 Logan St. Apt. 203, Denver, Colo. 80203, 303-244-1056 P-Maury B. Poscover ' 66, 7273 Maryland Ave., University City, Missouri 63130, 314-863-4948 S-James A. Saum ' 50, 316 E. Claymont Dr., Ballwin, Missouri 63011, 314-277-7162 P-J. Kitridge Fegley ' 64, 1701 Bern Rd, Apt. R-1, Wyomissing, Pa. 19601, 215-375-3173 S-Dale D. Krause ' 67, 45 Carroll St., Reading, Pa. 19602, 215-376-0404 P-John T. Morrison ' 53, 244 Laurel St., Minersville, Pa. 17954, 717-754-3141 S-John A. Wagner ' 54 Ridge Road, Orwigsburg, Pa. 17961, 717-366-2309 P-James B. Price ' 43, 12849 Milbank St., Studio City, California 91604, 213-766-1103 S-Donald P. Beaver ' 32, 221 Via Los Miradores, Redondo Beach, Calif. 90277, 213-375-6292 P-Richard Spangler ' 55, 118 Elkins Rd., Cherry Hill, N.J. 08034, 609-667-0253 S-William I. Evoy ' 61, Taunton Lakes, Marlton, N.J. 08053, 609-963-3525 VP-David R. Angell ' 62, RD 2, Box 229, Endicott, N.Y. 13760, 607-862-3683 S-M. Kenneth Creamer, Jr. ' 66, 404 Hazel Ave, Endicott, N.Y. 13760 607-748-2482 P-Jon E. Krupnick ' 62, 2249 Lazy Lane, Lazy Lakes, F. Lauderdale, Fla. 33305, 305-564-5940 S-Glenn A. Murray ' 44, 176 SW 7th Ave., Boca Raton, Fla. 33432, 305-564-5940 P-Fred M. Jackson, Jr. ' 56, 415 Glenchester, Houston, Texas 77024, 713-465-6820 S-Harry Andrews, Jr. ' 31, 12119 Mossycup Dr., Houston, Texas 77024, 713-468-6333 S-Samuel Blum ' 32, 2151 Grand Ave., St. Paul, Minn. 55105 P-George N. Farrand, Jr. ' 58, 70 Ripplewood Dr, Upper Saddle River, N.J. 07458, 201-327-6944 S-Donald F. Kane ' 62, 14 Sunset Terrace, Packanack Lake, Wayne , N.J. 07470, 201-696-7112 P-James B. Swenson ' 59, 4910 Brookeway Dr., Washington, DC. 20016, 301-229-1511 S-William A. Furman, Jr. ' 31, 4309 Thorn Apple St., Chevy Chase, Maryland 20015, 301-654-8039 P-Herbert S. Ward ' 48, Pheasant Rd., W RR1, Box 216A, Pound Ridge, N.Y. 10576, 914-764-5460 S-Arnold K. Jones ' 53, 22 Pheasant Rd., Whipoorwill, Armonk, N.Y. 10504, 914-273-8218 VP-Peter M. Mitchell ' 58, 300 Woodbridge Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. 14214, 716-837-6518 P-John P. Frey ' 38, 902 S. George St., York, Pa. 17403, 717-843-9454 S-Harris Rush ' 50, 70 Davidson Drive, York, Pa. 17402, 717-755-4525 VP-Bert Parket ' 61, 781 Golfview., Youngstown, Ohio 44512, 216-758-4876 S-Roger W. Saunders ' 56, 8010 Spartan Dr., Youngstown, Ohio 44512, 216-757-4390. Compliments of: Lehigh Club of Allentown, Lehigh Home Club, Lehigh club of New York, and Lehigh Club of Philadelphia SENIOR DIRECTORY Page number at end of listing indi cates page where senior picture may be found. Jon B. Abbey Civil Engineering Bradford, Pa. Pi Lambda Phi, Pres.; C. E. Forum; I. F. C; Chi Epsilon; Freshman Basketball; A. S. C. E., Treas., Pres., Dean ' s List. p. 72 James E. Abel Accounting Hellertown, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha, Soc. Chm.; I. M. Bowling, Capt. p. 22 Thomas A. Acker Economics-Finance Nazareth, Pa. Beta Theta Pi, Pres.; I. F. C. Rep.; Freshman and Varsity Football; Dean ' s List. p. 19 Kerry S. Adams Management Science Alpha Sigma Phi, Treas. p. 22 Emmaus, Pa. James J. Alexander, Jr. Accounting Hatfield, Pa. Theta Delta Chi; I. F. C. Rep.; Varsity Golf. p. 22 Richard C. Alloway Chemical Engineering Sringfield, Pa. Psi Upsilon; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 68 Robert E. Anthony Accounting Bryn Mawr, Pa. Kappa Apha, Pledge Master; Beta Gamma Sigma; Beta Alpha Psi, Treas.; Glee Club, Stage Mgr.; Freshman Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 22 Jean P. Archambault Chemical Engineering Town; A. I.Ch E. p. 68 Spyro A. Argeros Civil Engineering Town; Town Council; A. S. C. E. p. 72 Birdsboro, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Thomas D. Arner English-Social Relations Highland, Ind. Gryphon Society; S. R. Dept. Rep.; Ad Hoc Comm. on Residence; The Pricked Ear, Ed.; Williams Essay Contest, 2nd prize, p. 36 Gregory C. Arnold Geology Phi Kappa Theta, Ex. Sec, Soc. Chm. p. 55 Leonard P. Baker Electrical Engineering Baltimore, Md. Stevens House; I. E. E. E.; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 88 Terry H. Baker Mechanical Engineering Laurel, Del. Stevens House; I. F. C. Rep.; Freshman Sect., V. P.; I. M. Mgr.; Fresh- man Class Cabinet; ASME. p. 82 William H. Baker Industrial Engineering York, Pa. Phi Sigma Kappa, Sec; I. E. Undergrad Comm.; Senior Counselor- Dean ' s List. p. 79 Anthony Baran Psychology Frackville, Pa. Phi Delta Theta; Lehigh Radio, Chief Engr., Gen. Mgr.; Epitome, Photo; Eta Sigma Phi. p. 42 Walter F. Barcz, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Town; Freshman Soccer, p. 82 Reading, Pa. Reading, Pa. Keith J. Barker Metallurgy Engineering Northglenn, Colo. Town; Met. Dept. Comm.; Senior Engr. Counselor; Met. Society. Robert B. Barkhorn Finance Short Hills, N. J. Kappa Sigma, V. P.; Alpha Kappa Psi. p. 25 Roger G. Bast Management Science Chatham, N. J. Leavitt House; Residence Halls Concessions, Business Mgr.; RHC Rep.; Omicron Delta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; Beta Gamma Sigma; Marching Band; Concert Band; Christmas Vespers; I. M. Golf; Alpha Kappa Psi, Pres., Publicity Mgr., Historian; Freshman and Soph- omore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 20 Stephen F. Bayer Finance Chagrin Falls, Ohio Theta Xi, Pres.; I. F. C. Rep.; Freshman and Varsity Track and Cross Country, p. 25 Timothy C. Bayer American Studies Chagrin Falls, Ohio Chi Psi, Sec, Rushing Chm; Freshman Class and Sect. Pres.;Class Cabinet; R. H. C. Discipline Comm.; Finance And Calendar Comm., Sec, Chm.; Arcadia XXIV; University Ring Comm.; University Fo- rum; Comm. Relations, Sec; Steering Comm.; University Discipline Comm.; I. F. C. Handbook Comm.; Cyanide Society; Freshman and Varsity Track, p. 32 James R. Auman Mechanical Engineering Reading, Pa. Town; Pi Tau Sigma, Sec; Tau Beta Pi; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 82 John S. Aylsworth Accounting Abington, Pa. Sigma Chi; Beta Alpha Psi, Pres.; Varsity Football; Sophomore Hon- ors; Dean ' s List. p. 22 Lewis ). Baer Accounting Ardmore, Pa. Tay Epsilon Phi, Pledge Warden; Beta Alpha Psi; Freshman and Var- sity Soccer; Freshman Lacrosse, Co-Capt.; AIESEC, Treas.; Freshman Business School Advisor; Dean ' s List. p. 22 Stuart W. Bayne Psychology Chi Psi; Varsity Soccer, p. 42 Summit, N. j. Ben H. Becker American Studies Cranford, N. J. Gryphon Society; Ishmael; Phi Eta Sigma; Cyanide Society; Fresh- man and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 32 Richard A. Beil Mechanical Engineering Northampton, Pa. Beardslee House; Pi Tau Sigma; Sophomore Honors, p. 82 Mark A. Bendas Mathematics Perth Amboy, N. J. Gryphon Society, Treas.; T. H. C. Rep.; Human Relations Comm.; In- terfaith Council; Cyanide Society; Omicron Delta Kappa; Soph- omore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 40 Christopher P. Bennett Civil Engineering Newport, R. I. McClintic-Marshall A-3; Lehigh Sailing Team. p. 72 John R. Bereuter Mathematics— Mechanical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town; Delta Phi Alpha; A. S. M. E.; S. A. M. E.; Chess Club, Pres.; Sophomore Honors, p. 82 David E. Bickford Electrical Engineering Town; Town Council; Circle-K, V. P. p. 88 Bethlehem, Pa. James N. Biddle, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Philadelphia, Pa. Town. p. 82 Mark S. Biser Mechanical Engineering Town; Sophomore Honors, p. 82 Center Valley, Pa. Robert L. Black Mechanical Engineering Lewisburg, Pa. Beardslee House, I. M. Mgr.; Pi Tau Sigma, Treas.; Freshman Base- ball; A. S. M. E.; Senior Engr. Counselor; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 82 Peter Blum Metallurgy Engineering New Brunswick, N. ). Sigma Phi, Soc. Chm.; Brown and White; Dean ' s List. p. 62 Charles L. Board, Jr. History Town. p. 32 Wilmington, Del. Carl A. Boe, III Management McKeesport, Pa. Phi Sigma Kappa, House Mgr. , Sentinel, p. 20 Joseph S. Boka Engineering Mechanics Levittown, Pa. Stevens House; Campus Rock Groups; ). V. Baseball; Dean ' s List. p. 82 Gordon A. Brandon, Jr. Industrial Engineering Albany, N. Y. Kappa Sigma, Sec, Master of Ceremonies; Freshman Class Cabinet; Epitome, I. D. Ed., Senior Ed., Managing Ed.; Freshman Football; Freshman Lacrosse; A. I. I. E. p. 79 Andrew R. Bresler Marketing Schenectady, N. Y. McConn House; R. H. S., V. P.; Concert Chm.; Management and Fi- nance Dept. Forum Chm.; Alpha Kappa Psi; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 21 John M. Briggs Economics Philadelphia, Pa. Theta Xi Rushing Chm. p. 19 Robert A. Brodie Psychology-Fine Arts Town, p. 42 New York, NY. William N. Brodine Biology-Chemistry Rochester, N. Y. Phi Delta Theta; Gymnastics Club; Freshman and Sophomore Hon- ors; Dean ' s List. p. 52 Bruce J. Brown Accounting Pa. Delta Tau Delta, Corres. Sec, Treas.; Beta Alpha Psi; Freshman and Varsity Football; Dean ' s List. p. 22 Charles H. S. Burlington Biology Lake Worth, Fla. Smiley House, Pres. p. 50 Angus J. Cameron Social Relations Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. Congdon House; WLRN, WLVR, Prog Dir., Campus TV (Video Le- high), Prog. Dir.; Omicron Delta Kappa; Dean ' s List. p. 36 Herbert L. Campbell Economics Montclair, N.J. Beta Theta Pi; Varsity Wrestling, Co-Capt. p. 19 J. John Cardamone Applied Science— Industrial Engineering Theta Chi, House Mgr. p. 79 Utica, N.Y. Jack M. Carroll, Jr. Mathematics and Information Science Komoka, Ontario Gryphon Society; University Forum; Student Activities Council; Ish- mael; Cyanide Society; Freshman Cross Country; I.M. Wrestling; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List; Honor ROTC Ca- det, p. 40 Richard B. Carten Chemistry Boca Raton, Fla. Gryphon Society; Tau Delta Phi, Sec; Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman Bas- ketball; A.C.S.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 58 Robert L. Carter, Jr. Industrial Engineering New Egypt, N.J. Kappa Alpha; I.F.C. Scholarship Comm.; Class Gift Rep.; Freshman and Varsity Baseball; A.I. I.E. p. 79 Daniel Chaply Electrical Engineering Northampton, Pa. Town. p. 88 James M. Christian Biology Bethlehem, Pa. Theta Delta Chi, Record. Sec; Freshman and Varsity Basketball, p. 52 Michael S. Chuhinka Government Psi Upsilon, I.M. Mgr., Record. Sec. p. 30 Coplay, Pa. Gerald D. Clark Electrical Engineering Sellersville, Pa. Smiley House, Treas.; Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 88 John K. Clement Metallurgy Engineering Toledo, Ohio Delta Upsilon, Pres., Rush Chm.; Freshman Football; Varsity Hockey, p. 62 Laurence A. Clements Industrial Engineering Baldwin, N.Y. Kappa Alpha; Marching Band; Varsity Band; Concert Band; Varsity Rifle, Capt., McFee Rifle Award; A.I. I.E., Sec. p. 79 Robert H. Coad, Jr. Psychology Verona, N.J. Kappa Alpha, V.P., Pledgemaster; Alpha Phi Omega; Dean ' s List. p. 42 John A. Coco Applied Science— Civil Engineering Glenshaw, Pa. Theta Xi, V.P., Corres. Sec; Freshman Honors, p. 72 Glenn L. Colehamer Architecture Morristown, N.J. Sigma Nu. p. 39 Gene L. Collette International Relations Allentown, Pa. McConn House, Soc. Chm; Pi Sigma Alpha; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 38 John P. Collins Biology Newburgh, N.Y. Town; Varsity Track and Cross Country, p. 52 W. Stephen Comstock History Ridgefield, N.J. Sigma Phi, Pres., V.P., Convention Chm., Rushing Chm.; Dean ' s List, p. 32 William R. Conner Accounting Wayne, Pa. Sigma Nu; Epitome, Scheduling Ed., Business Mgr. p. 23 Paul C. Coppock Finance Havertown, Pa. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Treas.; Fencing Club; Ski Club; Dean ' s List. p. 25 S. James Corsa Biology— Physics Bay Shore, N.Y. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Recorder; Band, Head Librarian, p. 52 Steven B. Cox Industrial Engineering Phi Sigma Kappa, Inductor; A. I. I.E. p. 79 Camden, Maine Scott H. Cragle Mechanical Engineering Hunlock Creek, Pa. Delta Upsilon; Marching, Concert, Varsity Band, Student Con- ductor, Intercollegiate Band; Sophomore Honors, p. 82 Gregory W. Cram Industrial Engineering Mendham, N.J. Kappa Sigma, p. 79 William A. Creelman Chemistry Chatham, N.J. Beardslee House; Phi Eta Sigma; A.C.S.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 58 Michael P. Criss Biology Westfield, N.J. Psi Upsilon, V.P.; Sophomore Honors, p. 52 Walter E. Damuck, Jr. Physics West Haven, Conn. Sigma Alpha Mu, Soc. Chm; Skiing Club, Sec, V.P. p. 67 David M. Davidson, Jr. Civil Engineering Town. p. 72 York, Pa. Lewis U. Davis, Jr. Metallurgy Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. Williams House; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; Delta Omicron Theta, Treas., Pres.; Williams Extemporaneous Prize; Williams Varsity De- bate Prize; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 62 Michael B. Davis Chemical Engineering Lighthouse Point, Fla. Psi Upsilon, Corres. Sec, Parliamentarian; Freshman Honors; Dean ' s List p. 62. Steven A. Davis Civil Engineering Swoyersville, Pa. Smiley House; Freshman Sect. Pres. p. 72 Clifford K. Deakyne Chemical Engineering Levittown, Pa. Smiley House, V.P.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List p. 68 John E. Deal Civil Engineering Belvidere, N.J. McConn House; Freshman Class Cabinet; Chi Epsilon, Pres.; A.S.C.E.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Wilbur Prize; Dean ' s List. p. 72 Frank Decker Electrical Engineering Town. p. 88 Gregg B. Deehan Industrial Engineering Phi Gamma Delta, Treas.; I.F.C. Reg. p. 79 Allentown, Pa. Montclair, N.J. Harry L. Delp, Jr. International Relations Bethlehem, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha; Marnhing, Concert Band; Circle K Club; )udo Club; Air Force ROTC. p. 38 Richard H. Demoll Economics Swarthmore, Pa. Delta Tau Delta, Sec, House Mgr.; Varsity Lacrosse, Capt.; Fresh- man and Varsity Football; Dean ' s List. p. 19 George W. Dennis, III Economics Williston Park, N.Y. Town; Finance Calendar Comm.; Epitome; Phi Eta Sigma; Omi- cron Delta Epsilon; Freshman and Sophomore; Dean ' s List. p. 19 Douglas J. Devitt Electrical Engineering Erie, Pa. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Chaplin; Computer Society, Treas. p. 89 William P. Dey Natural Resources Delta Tau Delta; Dean ' s List. p. 52 Westerly, R.I. Edgar A. Deyoe, III Electrical Engineer Whitney Point, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha; Dean ' s List. p. 89 Jeffrey L. Diamond History Great Neck, N.Y. Tau Epsilon Phi. p. 32 Arthur G. Diefenbach Mechanical Engineering Garden City, N.Y. Delta Chi, Soc. Cm. p. 82 Gordon C. Diefenderfer Mechanics Emmaus, Pa. Town. p. 82 Clifford E. Dietz Chemistry Huntington, N.Y. Pi Lambda Phi, Rushing Chm. p. 59 Donato M. Diorio Government Bangor, Pa. Beta Theta Pi; Freshman and Varsity Football; Freshman and Varsity Baseball; Varsity Track, p. 30 John M. Divinchi Social Relations Natick, Mass. Delta Chi, Pres. p. 36 Richard A. Dockray Industrial Engineering Kappa Alphs, V.P.; Photo Club. p. 79 Wayne, N.J. Clifford H. Dodge Geology Lancaster, Pa. Theta Chi, Historian, House Photog.; Epitome, Photo Ed.; Freshman Track; Photo Club; Geology Club; Sophomore Honors; Dept. Hon- ors; Dean ' s List. p. 55 Francis J. Dolegiewicz Chemical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town; A.I.Ch.E. (No picture) Glenn K. Douma Chemical Engineering Leavitt House; Rugby Club. p. 68 Noel F. Dudley Physics Thea Xi, House Mgr. p. 67 Cherry Hill, N. Guilford, Conn. Kenneth J. Dull Electrical Engineering Clairton, Pa. Beardslee House; Eta Kappa Nu; Varsity Football, Mgr.; Varsity La- crosse, Mgr.; I.E.E.E., Chm.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors, p. 89 John W. Eckman, II Chemical Engineering Sigma Phi. p. 69 Lehighton, Pa. Tony M. Edwards International Relations Roslyn Heights, N.Y. Town; Student Activities Council, Sec; Arcadia Administrative Comm., Chm.; Richards House, Pres.; Cyanide Society; Pi Sigma Al- pha; I.R. Club; Dean ' s List. p. 38 W. David Eisemann Economics Chi Phi, Sec, Soc. Chm. p. 19 Lock Haven, Pa. Richard Eisenberg Economics Elmont, N.Y. Leavitt House, Concessions Mgr.; Cyanide Society; Alpha Kappa Psi, Sec; Chamber Music Dir.; Hillel Society; Schempf Award; Dean ' s List. p. 19 James M. Ellwanger Fundamental Science Short Hills, N.J. Smiley House; Sophomore Honors; Senior Engr. Counselor, p. 40 Richard C. Elterich Mechanical Engineering Ambler, Pa. Williams House, Pres., Sec-Treas.; R.H.C. Rep.; Band; A.S.M.E. p. 84 Michael D. Emmerling Geology Camp Hill, Pa. Sigma Nu, Lt. Commander, Rushing Chm.; I.F.C. Rep.; Dean ' s List. p. 55 John P. Espenschade, Jr. Industrial Engineering Swarthmore, Pa. Theta Xi, Treas.; Tau Beta Pi; Alpha Pi Mu; Freshman and Soph- omore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 79 Raymond W. Essington Electrical Engineering Tamaqua, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha, V.P.; Senior Engr. Counselor; Eta Kappa Nu, Sec; Mustard and Cheese, V.P., Light Techn.; Freshman Track; I.E.E.E.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors, p. 89 William S. Ettinger Fundamental Science Harrisburg, Pa. Smiley House, I.M. Mgr.; I.M. Exec. Council; Freshman Honors, p. 53 John G. Evans Finance Darien, Pa. Sigma Chi, Treas.; I.M. Athletics; Sophomore Honors, p. 26 James J. Falatek Industrial Engineering Sigma Phi. p. 79 Hellertown, Pa. Gregory B. Falkenbach Finance Bethlehem, Pa. Theta Delta Chi, Corres. Sec; Investment Club; Freshman and Var- sity Basketball, Co-Capt. p. 26 Terence L. Faul Government Hershey, Pa. Sigma Nu, Lt. Commander; I.F.C. Rep.; Freshman Cabinet; Epitome, Layout Ed., Introduction Ed., Editor-in-Chief; Pi Sigma Alpha, Omi- cron Delta Kappa; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List, p. 30 John M. Fields Government- Russian Studies Frackville, Pa. Gryphon Society; Congdon House, Parliamentarian; Class Cabinet; Arcadia XXIV; Governance Comm.; University Forum, Academic Affairs Comm., Vice-Chm.; Class Gift Comm.; Brown and White; Lehigh Radio, Campus News Dir., Exec. Board; Volunteers Council; I.R. Club; Leviathan, Pres.; Alpha Phi Omega; Cyanide Society, Pres.; Omicron Delta Kappa; Pi Sigma Alpha, Sec, Treas.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 30 Louis Filo, III Electrical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Alpha Lambda Omega, I.M. Mgr.; Town Council, Treas.; Freshman Cross Country; I.E.E.E. p. 90 Douglas L. Finch Foreign Careers Old Greenwich, Conn. Alpha Sigma Phi, Pres.; I.F.C. Rep.; Freshman Football; Rugby-Foot- ball Club, Capt.; AIESEC, V.P. p. 19 David A. Ford Business Psychology Haddonfield, N.J. Delta Phi, House Improve. Chm.; Class Gift Comm. p. 42 Roger H. Ford English Northumberland, Pa. McClintic-Marshall A-3, Sec.-Treas.; Library Forum; English Dept. Forum; Phi Eta Sigma, V.P.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 47 Robert B. Forman Electrical Engineering Collingswood, N.J. Phi Kappa Theta, Pres., Treas., Corres. Sec; I.F.C, Sec, Engineering Forum; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; J. P. Sloan Memorial Scholarship; ROTC Scholarship; Dean ' s List. p. 90 Keith W. Forstall Civil Engineering Town. p. 72 Pittsburgh, Pa. Leland J. Foshag Biology-Chemistry Galena, Pa. Town; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 53 David J. Foster Electrical Engineering Harrisburg, Pa. Alpha Chi Rho; Freshman Honors, (no picture) Oldrich Foucek, III American Studies Farmingdale, N.Y. Thea Chi, Historian; University Forum; History Dept. Forum; Plan- ning Priorities, Resources Comm.; Class Gift Comm., Chm; Fresh- man and Varsity Lacrosse; Freshman Football; Dean ' s List. p. 32 Glen G. Franck Management Ridgewood, N.|. Tau Epsilon Phi, Pres., Soc Chm., National Pledging Panel; I.F.C, Fack Finding Comm., Co-Chm., Class Gift Comm., Vice-Chm.; Freshman Soccer, p. 20 James C. Franke Mechanical EngineeringHudson, Mass. Theta Xi; Pi Tau Sigma, N.J. Cross Country; French Club; Freshman and Sophomore Honors, p. 84 Allen C French Electrical Engineering Town; Varsity Track, p. 91 Somerville, N. Jeffrey D. Frey Marketing Chatham, N.J. Phi Gamma Delta, Record. Sec; Varsity Hockey; Freshman and Var- sity Soccer, p. 21 Edward B. Freyfogle, Jr. Biology Decatur, III. Theta Chi; Army ROTC; German Club, Pres. p. 53 Peter I. Friedman Accounting New York, N.Y. Theta Chi, Treas.; Brown and White; Comm. for Performing Arts. p. 23 Michael I. Friess Accounting Howard Beach, N.Y. Town; Beta Gamma Sigma; Beta Alpha Psi; Freshman and Varsity Baseball; Freshman Basketball; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Alumni Junior Prize; Dean ' s List. p. 23 Scott A. Fritzinger Civil Engineering Allentown, Pa. Town; Chi Epsilon, Ed.; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 72 Brian E. Gaddis Marketing Town. p. 21 Peter E. Gadkowski Marketing Delta Upsilon; Varsity Hockey, Capt. p. 21 Parsippany, N. Chathan, N. Ronald H. Gailey Metallurgy Engineering Morrisville, Pa. Phi Kappa Theta; Freshman Cabinet; Met. Society, p. 63 Richard B. Gallagher History Huntingdon Valley, Pa. McConn House, Sec; Cyanide Society; Marching, Concert Band; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 32 Glen R. Gannssle Industrial Engineering Glen Ridge, N.J. Town; Soc. Chm. M M B-1; R.H.C Rep.; A. I. I.E. p. 79 John E. Gantzhorn Mechanical Engineering Tannersville, Pa. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sec, Contr.; Brown and White, Asst. Sports Ed.; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi, Pres.; Freshman Basketball; Wilbur Math. Award-2nd Prize; Wilbur Scholarship Prize; Freshman and Soph- omore Honors, Dean ' s List. p. 84 Robert J. Garbosky American Studies Town; Ishmael; Freshman Honors, p. 33 Scranton, Pa. Joseph S. Garufi Accounting Stratford, Conn. Delta Tau Delta, Pres., V.P.; I.F.C. Judiciary Comm. Chm.; Alpha Kappa Psi. p. 23. Lawrence Gash Accounting Margate, N.J. Pi Lambda Phi; Student Activities Council, Treas.; Alpha Kappa Psi. p. 23 Frank X. Gaughen, III International Relations Birmingham, Mich. Sigma Chi; I.F.C. Rep; Freshman and Varsity Soccer, Co-Capt. p. 38 Thomas J. Gellas Finance Livingston, N.J. Alpha Chi Rho, Soc. Chm., Pledge Master, p. 26 Krome D. George American Studies Chi Psi. p. 33 Francis G. Gerberich Chemistry Theta Xi. House Mgr. P. 59 Sewickley, Pa. Bernville, Pa. Allen R. Gerhard, Jr. Electrical Engineering Whitehall, Pa. Williams House; Delta Omicron Theta; Marching, Varsity, Grand, Band, Asst. Squad Leader; Freshman and Sophomore Honors, p. 91 R. Eric Gerhart Mechanical Engineering Souderton, Pa. Chi Phi, Steward; Brown and White, Photo; Freshman and Soph- omore Soccer; Senior Engr. Counselor, p. 84 Lawrence A. Gilbert Chemical Engineering Dallas, Pa. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sec; Tau Beta Pi, Sec; A.I.Ch.E.; Freshman and Sophomore H onors; Wilbur Scholarship Prize; Dean ' s List. p. 69 ). David Gill Accounting Chatham, N.J. Sigma Chi, V.P. Pledge Master; Beta Alpha Psi; Freshman Basketball; Freshman Baseball; Freshman and Varsity Football. Charles A. Gilmartin Accounting Carbondale, Pa. Sigma Nu. p. 23 Robert G. Gist, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Phi Kappa Theta, Rush Chm. p. 84 Pottstown, Pa. David N. Given Chemistry Ridgefield, Conn. Smiley House, A.C.S. p. 59 Stanford Glasgow Industrial Engineering Stanford, Conn. Alpha Sigma Phi, Rush Chm.; A.I. I.E.; Dean ' s List. p. 80 John C. Gleitsmann Electrical Engineering Timonium, Md. Kappa Sigma, (no picture) Jeffrey J. Gilbert Finance Summit, N.J. Phi Sigma Kappa, Treas.; Freshman and Varsity Lacrosse; Dean ' s List. p. 26 William E. Golab Accounting Mont Alto, Pa. Sigma Phi Epsilon, House Mgr.; Freshman Class Cabinet; I.F.C. Rep. p. 23 James M. Goldberg Accounting Manhasset, N.Y. Sigma Alpha Mu; Beta Alpha Psi; Freshman Tennis; Dean ' s List. p. 23 Michael S. Golden English Oreland, Pa. Alpha Sigma Phi, Sec; Freshman and Varsity Soccer, p. 47 Eugene L. Goldfeder F j ne Arts Bethlehem, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha, Asst. Soc Chm.; Exec. Comm., Steward; Circle K Club, Sec; Hillel Club; Hoopla; Marching, Varsity Band; Freshman and Varsity Wrestling, Mgr. p. 39 Robert A. Goldman Civil Engineering Springfield, N.J. Tau Delta Phi; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 72 David H. Goodman History Va. Beach, Va. Town; University Forum; Arts and Science Exec. Council; Dean ' s List. p. 33 Francis X. Goyanes, III Metallurgy Engineering Garden City, NY Theta Xi, Soc. Shm.; WLRN, Station Mgr.; Arnold Air Society; Mus- tard and Cheese; Varsity Yo-Yo, Capt. p. 63 Gary Grabel Finance Westfield, N.J. Pi Lambda Phi; University, College, Dept. Forum; Freshman Wres- tling; Investment Club p. 27 Robert E. Grant Mechanical Engineering Emery House, Pi Tau Sigma, p. 84 Springfield, N.J. Gary M. Gray Chemistry Canton, Pa. Beardslee House, I.M. Mgr.; Freshman and J.V. Wrestling, Mgr.; A.C.S.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 58 John K. Graybill Chemical Engineering Manheim, Pa. Pi Lambda Phi, I.M. Mgr.; Mustard and Cheese; A.I.Ch.E., V.P.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors, p. 69 William J. Greiner Civil Engineering E- Stroudsburg, Pa. Phi Kappa Theta; Freshman Football; Rugby Club. p. 72 David W. Greve Engineeering Physics Bricktown, N.J. Town; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 67 Stanley R. Griffiths Finance Chatham, N.J. Phi Sigma Kappa, Sec; I.F.C. Rep.; Alpha Kappa Psi. p. 27 Robert W. Grzywacz Engineering Physics Southampton, Pa. Theta Chi, Pres.; Arcadia; University Forum; Priorities, Planning, and Resources Comm., Vice Chm.; Cyanide Society; Omicron Delta Kapp. p. 67 John R. Gulash, Jr. Government Easton ' Conn ' Gryphon Society; University Forum; Gov ' t Dept. Forum; Varsity Track; Dean ' s List, (no picture) Michael A. Guzzardi Management Philadelphia, Pa. Psi Upsilon p. 20 Christopher W. Hall Electrical Engineering Pittsfield, Mass Town; Arnold Air Society, Operat. Off. p. 91 Jeffrey C. Halle p nvs j cs Portsmouth, N.H. McClintic-Marshall A-3; Marching, Varsity Band; S.P.S.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 67 William R. Haller Electrical Engineering-Physics Summit, N.J. McConn House; I.E.E.E.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 91 James H. Hamilton Economics-Finance Downington, Pa. Beta Theta Pi, Treas.; I.F.C., Treas.; F.M.A., Chm.; Alpha Kappa Psi; Freshman and Varsity Football; Freshman and Varsity Lacrosse, p. 27 Thomas W. Hammond Government Fall River, Mass. Sigma Phi, Sec; Pi Sigma Alpha; Freshman Football; Washington Se- mester; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 30 Howard I. Harmatz Finance New Milford, N.J. Beta Theta Pi, Rush Chm.; Army ROTC; Varsity Football, p. 27 Michael G. Harrison Civil Engineering Brandywine, Md. Delta Upsilon; A.S.C.E. p. 76 Robert G. Hayssen, III Arts-Civil Engineering Milwaukee, Wis. Delta Upsilon, I.M. Mgr.; Varsity Hockey, Mgr. p. 76 Blake R. Heffner Philosophy-Goverment Hellertown, Pa. Pi Lambda Phi; R.H.C., Record. Sec; University Forum; Ed Pol Oomm.; Omicron Delta Kappa; Cyanide Society; Glee Club; Pi Sigma Alpha; Williams Debate, 2nd; Sophomore Honors, p. 34 John F. Heil Psychology Springfield, Pa. Sigma Chi, Scholarship Chm., Treas., Pres.; I.F.C. Rep.; Psi Chi; Cyan- ide Society; Omicron Delta Kappa; Freshman and Varsity Cross Country and Track; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 42 Charles H. Heist, III Management-Economics E. Aurora, N.Y. Phi Sigma Kappa, President, Vice-President; I.F.C. Rugby, p. 20 Peter A. Helt Mechanical Engineering Youngwood, Pa. Beardslee, Pres.; McClintic-Marshall Section, V.P.; A.S.M.E.; Fresh- man Wrestler; Investment Club. p. 84 Thomas K. Hersh Chemical Engineering Allentown, Pa. Town; Town Council, Pres., V.P.; Alpha Lambda Omega, Pres.; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; A.I.C.E.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 69 Gerald F. Hesch Government Coplay, Pa. Phi Kappa Theta, V.P., Sec, House Manager; Leviathan; Newman Club; L.U. ' s Young Statesman, p. 30 Robert W. Hessler Electrical Engineering Stony Brook, N.Y. Delta Upsilon; Freshman Football; I.E.E.E.; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 91 Glenn B. Higbie Marketing Bethesda, Md. Pi Kappa Alpha, Treas.; Freshman Class Council Rep. p. 21 Malcolm A. Hill, II Industrial Engineering Hyattsville, Md. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Activities and Social Chairman, p. 80 Thomas D. Hipszer Accounting Lambda Chi Alpha, Sec. p. 23 Trappe, Pa. Glenn M. Hirsch Biology Lakewood, N.J. Gryphon Society; Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 53 Andrew M. Hitz Management Havertown, Pa. Sigma Chi, V.P., Scholarship Chairman, Chapter Editor; Alpha Rho, Chapter Editor; Freshman and Varsity Football; Freshman Lacrosse; Investment Club. p. 21 Stephen J. Hoerner International Relations Hershey, Pa. Delta Upsilon; Varsity Hockey, Co-Capt.; International Relations Club. p. 38 Stephen H. Hogan Mechanical Engineering Huntington, N.Y. Phi Delta Theta; I.F.C. Rep.; Freshman and Sophomore Track, p. 84 James P. Hopkinson, Jr. Chemistry Ambler, Pa. Town; Eta Sigma Phi, Sec. -Treas.; Glee Club, Publicity Mgr; Fresh- man Honors, p. 59 Ronald F. Horvath Mathematics Bethlehem, Pa. Town; Town Council; Exec. Council of College of Arts and Science; Freshman Soccer, p. 40 James R. Houck Accounting Wvomissing, Pa. Town; Epitome, Administrative Manager; Beta Alpha Psi. p. 23 William G. Howard Marketing Norwalk, Conn. Delta Tau Delta; Varsity Football, (no picture) David S. Howe Applied Science-Industrial Engineering Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Kappa Alpha; L.U. Glee Club, Cliff Clef Manager, 1st Bass section leader; Freshman Honors, p. 80 Dennis S. Howell Electrical Engineering West Reading, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha, Scholarship Chairman; Phi Eta Sigma; Eta Kappa Nu, Treas.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' List. p. 91 Gregg A. Howey Chemistry Slatington, Pa. Sigma Nu, Soc Chm.; A.C.S.; Freshman Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 59 William Hubiak Chemical Engineering Dickson City, Pa. Beardslee; A.I.C.E. p. 69 Philip C. Hunt Government Willow Grove, Pa. Theta Xi, Rushing Chairman; I.F.C. Rep.; I.F.C. Judiciary Chairman; Forum Academic Affairs Committee Chairman; Elections Com- mittee; Eta Sigma Phi; Pi Sigma Alpha; Cyanide Society; Omicron Delta Kappa; Freshman and Varsity Football; Freshman and Soph- omore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 30 James C. Huntington Geology Ft. Washington, Pa. Sigma Nu, Pledge Master, p. 55 George T. Hutchinson Industrial Engineering LaGrange, III. Alpha Tau Omega; Forum member; Varsity Wrestling, Capt. p. 80 Marshall K. Huzyak Marketing Sigma Chi; Varsity Football, p. 26 Beaver, Pa. Bruce G. Hyde Economics Jeffersonville, Vt. Phi Gamma Delta, Rushing Chairman; Brown and White, Photogra- phy Staff; Freshman Swimming; Freshman Rugby; Volunteers Coun- cil, p. 19 Raymond C. landoli Industrial Engineering Delta Tau Delta; A.I. I.E., V.P. p. 80 Paterson, N.J. Michael S. Impink Marketing Reading, Pa. Chi Psi, Pres., Exec. Committee, Pledge Master; Member of Alpha Beta Delta Bond Sale Committee; Member of University Forum; I.F.C. Rushing Committee; I.F.C. Pledging Committee; Varsity Foot- ball, p. 26 Michael C. Irwin Structures McClintic-Marshall; A.S.C.E. p. 76 Dauphin, Pa. William H. Ivey Chemical Engineering Everett, Mass. Sigma Chi, Rush Chairman; Freshman and Varsity Football, p. 76 David B. jackley Urban Studies-Industrial Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. Theta Chi; Member of University Forum; A. I. I.E.; Freshman Honors, p. 80 Roger E. Jackucewicz English New Banain, Conn. Gryphon; Freshman Section Pres; Member of Class Cabinet; Fresh- man and Varsity Track and Cross Country, p. 47 Steven A. Janes Electrical Engineering Tau Epsilon Phi, House Manager p. 91 Louis A. Jany Chemistry Town. p. 59 Caldwell, N. Northampton, Pa. Gordon I. Jetty Civil Engineering Port Byron, N.Y. McClintic-Marshall A-3, Intramural Manager; Rep. to Library Forum, p. 76 Alan R. Johnson Accounting-Business Management Worcester, Mass. Beta Theta Pi, House Manager; Freshman Wrestling; Intramural Ath- letic Manager ' s Award; Investment Club. p. 21 Alfred O. Johnson Electrical Engineering Washington, Pa. Delta Upsilon, Asst. Treas., Chapter Relations Chairman; Dean ' s List, p. 91 Richard S. Johnson Finance Dunkirk, N.Y. Phi Delta Theta, Treas.; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 27 Irvine B. Johnstone, III History Mountainside, N.J. Phi Sigma Kappa, V.P.; University Forum Rep.; Senior Class Gift Committee; Freshman and Varsity Football; Freshman and Varsity Baseball; Freshman Wrestling; Dean ' s List. p. 33 Richard P. Junker Accounting Pittsburgh, Pa. Kappa Sigma, Asst. Treas.; Alpha Kappa Psi; Rugby Club. p. 23 Michael J.W. Kaminskas Electrical Engineering Scranton, Pa. Phi Kappa Theta, Treas., Alumni Sec; Member of University Forum; Phi Eta Sigma; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi; I.E.E.E., V.P.; Senior Engi- neering Counselor; Reserve Officers Assoc; Freshman Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 91 Allan F. Kapteina Chemical Engineering Stamford, Conn. Beardslee House, Treas., Pres., Social Chairman; R.H.C. Rep.; Fresh- man Honors, p. 69 David G. Kartzman Chemistry Albany, N.Y. Stevens House; Concessions Manager; WLVR radio announcer, Asst. Program Director; Athletics-I.M.; A.C.S. p. 59 Craig R. Kauffman Mechanical Engineering Phi Kappa Theta, Steward, p. 84 Reading, Pa. Roderick T. Kaufmann, Jr. Chemistry Linden, N.J. Phi Kappa Theta, V. P. Sec; I.F.C. Rep.; A.C.S. p. 59 William J. Keating Psychology Bethlehem, Pa. Town; Mustard and Cheese, Pres. p. 43 Jay A. Keeler Electrical Engineering Town; Town Council, p. 92 Allentown, Pa. Ronald K. Kemmerer Foreign Careers-German Allentown, Pa. Town; Freshman and Varsity Baseball, p. 50 Lawrence I. Kessler Accounting Baldwin, N.Y. McConn House, Treas., V.P.; Interim Advisory Group on Dissent; Forum; Beta Gamma Sigma, V. P.; Beta Alpha Psi; Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 23 Richard D. Kimmel Environmental Science-Resources Management Weatherly, Pa. Phi Delta Theta. p. 56 David H. Kirkpatrick Mechanical Engineering Allentown, Pa. Town; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; A.S.M.E.; Dean ' s List. p. 84 Austin C. Klopp Mechanical Engineering Womelsdorf, Pa. Emery House, Athletic Manager, p. 86 Thomas R. Knoche Chemical Engineering Randallstown, Md. Gryphon Society, Pres., V.P.; Freshman Class Cabinet; Section Pres.; Forum Student Rights Committee; Forum Drug Committee; R.H.C. Rep.; Phi Eta Sigma, Sec; Tau Beta Pi; Chi Epsilon, Treas.; Omicron Delta Kappa; Freshman Football; A.S.C.E.; Freshman and Soph- omore Honors; Dean ' s List; Scott Paper Leadership Award, p. 76 Thomas P. Kokura Social Psychology Nesquehoning, Pa. Dalta Tau Delta, Asst. Treas., Scholarship Chairman; Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 36 James S. Kolodezy Physics Philadelphia, Pa McClintic-Marshall; Freshman Fencing; Society of Physics Students; Dean ' s List. p. 67. David M. Kols Economics Baltimore, Md. Sigma Alpha Mu, Pres.; S.A.C. Rep.; AIESEC, Mid-Atlantic Regional Director, p. 19 Harold J. Koplin Applied Science-Industrial Engineering Philadelphia, Pa. Emery House; Class Gift Committee; Forum Rep.; Chm. of Co-ed Life Subcommittee; A. I. I.E.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 80 Michael Kowalski Mechanical Engineering York, Pa. Theta Xi, Steward; A.S.M.E. p. 86 Joseph R. Kreiser, Jr. Chemical Engineering Lebanon, Pa. McClintic-Marshall, A-3; Member of Chemical Engineering Depart- mental Forum; Phi Eta Sigma, Tau Beta Pi; Senior Counselor; Fresh- man, Sophomore, Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 69. Michael E. Kroboth Mechanical Engineering Nazareth, Pa. Kappa Sigma, Treas.; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma, V.P.; A.S.M.E., Presi- dent; Mechanical Engineering Departmental Forum, Chairman; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List; Wilbur Prize, p. 86 Ch arles R. Kubic Civil Engineering Creensburg, Pa. Sigma Phi Epsilon, V.P.; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi, V.P.; Marching and Concert Bands, Squad Leader; American Society of Civil Engi- neers; Sophomore Honors, Dean ' s List; Alumni Junior Award, p. 76 Perry Kupietz Government Williams, p. 30 Valley Stream, N.Y. George F. Kurteson Accounting Coopersburg, Pa. Town; Alpha Kappa Psi; Sophomore Honors, p. 23 James L. Kurtz Marketing Milton, Pa. Tau Epsilon Phi, Chaplain, Vice Chancellor; Lehigh Radio Network, Production Director; Freshman Honors, p. 26 Ronald A. Lambert Industrial Engineering River Vale, N.J. Beardslee; Alpha Pi Mu, Recording Secretary; A.I. I.E.; Freshman Honors, Dean ' s List. p. 80 Robert W. Lamparter Fundamental Science-Biology Souderton, Pa. Alpha Tau Omega, Steward, Secretary; WLRN, D.J.; Tau Beta Pi; Cyanide Society; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 53 Peter G. Langseth Accounting Arlington Heights, III. Sigma Phi, Social Chm, Pledge Czar; Brown and White, Circulation, p. 23 Michael L. Lasonde Metallurgical Engineering Stratford, Conn. Sigma Phi Epsilon. p. 63 David B. Lebowitz Chemical Engineering Scranton, Pa. Tau Delta Phi, Secretary, Pledge Master; Lehigh University Volun- teers Council; Freshman and Varsity Basketball Manager, Freshman Baseball Manager; A.I.Ch.E. p. 69 Paul Hayden Legrand Finance Lynbrook, N.Y. Chi Phi, President, Treas; I.F.C. Committee, Chairman; Cyanide; Al- pha Kappa Psi; A.I.E.S.E.C. p. 27 Steven H. Leifheit Biology Theta Xi. p. 53 San Antonio, Texas Robert C. Lieberman Marketing Glen Cove, N.Y. Congdon House, Athletic Mgr.; Hillel Society, p. 26 Richard D. Livingston, Jr. Marketing-Management Science Seaford, Del. Delta Phi, Corresponding Sec; Marching and Varsity Bands; Lam- bda Mu Sigma, p. 28 David Lloyd Management Town; Dean ' s List. p. 21 Robert G. Logan Marketing Delta Upsilon, Secretary, Social Chmn. p. 28 Mountaintop, Pa. Pottstown, Pa. Peter N. Louras, Jr. Accounting Chi Psi, Steward, p. 23 Rutland, Vt. Roger A. Lowlicht Engineering Physics Manhasset, N.Y. Town; Sigma Alpha Mu, Pledge Master; Physics Dept. Forum; Engi- neering College Forum; Sailing Club, Commodore; Society of Phys- ics Students; American Association for the Advancement of Science, p. 67. Michael F. Lysak Marketing Westmont, N.J. Town; I.F.C. Rep.; Cherokee Assoc, of Keyboard Appreciation; Dean ' s List. p. 28 George C. Lytle, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Mifflinburg, Pa. Leavitt House, Pi Tau Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; A.S.M.E.; Freshman Track; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 86 Nelson K. Lytle Biology Broomall, Pa. Beardslee; Marching, Concert and Varsity Band; Dean ' s List. p. 53 Vito C. Magdelinskas Government Warwick, N.Y. Sigma Chi, President, Secretary, Rush Chairman; Arcadia, Asst. Chm.; Arts Week, I.F.C. Rep; Alumni Bulletin, Columnist; Cyanide, V.P.; ODK; Sophomore and Junior Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 30. William P. Maher Accounting Dumont, N.J. Chi Psi, Steward; Business College Forum; Beta Alpha Psi, National Accounting Honorary-V.P.; Freshman Football; Freshman Track; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List; ROTC Scholarship, p. 23 Paul Lewis Maloney Government Prchard Park, N.Y. Theta Chi, President; Arts Rep. -Lehigh Forum; Student Rep. to the Board of Trustees; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Pi Sigma Alpha; Dean ' s List. p. 30 Alan Ira Margolies Marketing Maiden, Mass. Delta Upsilon; Alpha Kappa Psi; Secretary; Freshman Intramural Mgr.; Bridge Club; Dean ' s List. p. 28 Robert H. Marmon Civil Engineering Millburn, N.J. Pi Lambda Phi, V.P.; Civil Engineering Forum; I.F.C. Rep.; Hillel So- ciety, V.P.; Intramural Manager and Intramural Executive Council; A.S.C.E., Sec; Faculty Kids Swimming Instructor, p. 76 Preston F. Marshall Electrical Engineering Walpole, Mass. Beardsley; Student Systems Development, Adm. Dir; Exec. Dir. (no picture) William N. Marshall, Jr. Biology Valencia, Pa. Williams; Phi Eta Sigma,; Delta Phi Alpha; Freshman and Soph- omore Honors, Dean ' s List. p. 53 Charles P. Matassa Electrical Engineering Baltimore, Md. McClintic-Marshall, B-3, Social Chairman, (no picture) John N. Mayo Government Lawrence, N.Y. Town. p. 30 Roderick C. McCeary, Jr. Accounting Lancaster, Pa. Chi Psi, Steward; I.F.C. Rep.; Beta Alpha Psi. p. 23 George E. McGrann American Studies McKeesport, Pa. Gryphon Society, Theta Chi; Lehigh U. Forum II. (no picture) Ralph McGrew Accounting Pittsburgh, Pa. Psi Upsilon, Pres., Pledge Master. Treas. Social Chairman, p. 23 Paul F. McHale, Jr. Government Bethlehem, Pa. Town, Pres. Freshman Town Students; Town Council; Class Cabinet; Arcadia Administrative Council; Pi Sigma Alpha; Rugby Club; Wash- ington Semester Academic Council; Freshman, Sophomore and Jun- ior Honors; Dean ' s List; Washington Semester Program, p. 30 Craig L. McKibben Accounting Westlake, Ohio Chi Psi Lodge, Pres. Treas.; I.F.C, Chairman; Beta Alpha Psi; Cyan- ide; Sophomore Honors, p. 24 Ross H. McMillian Psychology Wilmington, Del. Sigma Chi; Gryphon Society, Steward; Psi Chi Honorary Society of Psychology; Phi Psi Honorary; Freshman Football; Dean ' s List. p. 43 Jay E. Melman Biology-Chemistry N. Miami Beach, Fla. Alpha Chi Rho, House Mgr. p. 53 Joel P. Menzzopane Marketing Eatontown, N.H. Phi Kappa Theta, Athletic Mgr.; Varsity Baseball, p. 28 Marc David Mermelstein Engineering-Physics Highland Park, N.J. Town; Society of Physics Students; Frehsman, Sophomore and Jun- ior Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 67 Stewart I. Metosky Accounting Pittsburgh, Pa. Tau Delta Phi, Treasurer; I.F.C. Treasurers Council; Dean ' s List. p. 24 Orrin J. Meyers Industrial Engineering Lansdale, Pa. Theta Delta Chi, Pres., Rush Chairman; Alpha Pi Mu, Corresponding Sec; I.F.C; Freshman and Varsity Track; A. I. I.E.; Freshman Coun- selor, I.E. Undergraduate Committee; Freshman and Junior Honors; p. 80 Walter S. Milinichik, Jr. Chemistry Macungie, Pa. McClintic-Marshall, A-3, Athletic Mgr.; Intramural Exec. Board; R.H.C Rep; American Chemical Society, p. 60 Bruce D. Miller Finance Glen Cove, N.Y. Alpha Tau Omega, Treas; F.M.A., Vice Chairman; Dean ' s List. p. 27 Jeffrey L. Miller Industrial Engineering Millersburg, Pa. Phi Sigma Kappa, Pres. Sentinel, Inductor; I.E. Departmental Forum; I.F.C, Scholarship Chairman, Pledging Chairman; Alpha Pi Mu, Pres- ident; Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman Basketball; A. I. I.E.; A.P.I.C.S.; Fresh- man, Sophomore, Junior Honors; Dean ' s List; Alpha Pi Mu Prize; p. 81 Larry E. Miller Chemical Engineering Harrisburg, Pa. Beardsley House; Phi Eta Sigma; A. I. Ch.E.; Freshman Sophomore and Junior Honors; Dean ' s List; Wilbur Scholarship Prize; Chandler Prize in Chemistry, p. 69 Mark Alan Miller International Relations Harrisburg, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha, Pledge Trainer, Alumni Secretary, p. 38 Thomas Lee Miller Industrial Engineering Carlisle, Pa. Sigma Phi Epsilon, President; Rugby Club; A. I. I.E. p. 81 Donald Miselis Chemistry p. 60 Uncasville, Conn. Daniel J. Mitrano Accounting White Plains, N.Y. Alpha Chi Rho; Accounting Society; Cross Country; Sophomore and Junior Honors; p. 24 Richard Mitzner Industrial Engineering Valley Stream, N.y. Beta Theta Pi, V.P.; Varsity Wrestling, p. 81 Joseph R. Moles, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Pennsauken, N.J. Sigma Chi, Secretary; I.F.C. Rep.; Frost Wrestling; Varsity Football- Judo Club; A.S.M.E. p. 86 Electrical Engineering Dean ' s List. p. 92 Joseph Monteiro Palmerton, Pa. Franklin K. Mooney Finance Wantagh, N.Y. Residence Hall; Freshman Soccer, Varsity Soccer, p. 27 Richard A. Morgan Chemistry New Castle, Pa. Town, Section Sec; Freshman and Varsity Swimming; A.C.S., Treas, V.P.; Freshman Honors, p. 60 Todd S. Morgan Civil Engineering Amityville, N.Y. Beta Theta Pi. p. 76 Thomas A. Mueller Biology Mechanicsburg, Pa. Kappa Alpha; Freshman Soccer; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 53 Gary L. Munn Chemical Engineering Sayre, Pa. McConn, President, Athletic Mgr.; R.H.C., Freshman Cabinet; Fresh- man Wrestling; A.I.Ch.E.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 70 James S. Myers Metallurgy and Materials Science Theta Xi, Social Chairman, p. 63 Latrobe, Pa. Thomas Nagy Electrical Engineering West Mifflin, Pa. Chi Psi, V.P.; I.F.C. Rep.; Varsity Swimming, Capt.; Sophomore Hon- ors; Dean ' s List. p. 92 Philip A. Nastasee Social Psychology Hellertown, Pa. Town; Social Ch., Smiley House. Dean ' s List. p. 37 J oseph C. Nazzaro Chemical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town. p. 70 Thomas M. Newman Accounting Drexel Hill, Pa. Condgon House, V.P.; Freshman Class Social Forum Rep. p. 24 S. Scott Nicholas Civil Engineering Milford Square, Pa. Town; Freshman Cross Country and Track, Varsity Cross-Country and Track p. 77 Bruce Frederick Nolte Chemical Engineering Stony Brook, N.Y. Delta Upsilon, V.P., Steward; Freshman Council; WLRN, Sorts An- nouncer; A.I.Ch.E., Pres., Frosh Track, p. 70 William E. Osborn Chemical Engineering Old Greenwich, Conn. Congdon House, News Director, Lehigh Radio Network; Cyanide; A.I.Ch.E.; Freshman Honors; p. 70 Vincent Pagano, Jr. Industrial Engineering Morristwon, N.|. Alpha Sigma Phi; University Forum II; Alpha Pi Mu; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Eta Sigma; A.I. I.E., Sec; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 81 J. Richard Paul Industrial Engineering Renndel, Pa. Kappa Sigma, House Manager; Freshman Wrestling; Gymnastics Club. p. 81 John Arthur Pawlik Management-Science Carnegie, Pa. Leavitt House; Arcadia, Academic Affairs Committee; Arcadia Fi- nance and Calendar Committee;Alpha Kappa Psi; Dean ' s List; Vol- unteers Council, p. 21 Richard F. Pell, Jr. Electrical Engineering Pottstown, Pa. Taylor; Mustard and Cheese, Tech. Crew, Stage Mr.; Interfaith Council, Treas.; Freshman Honors, p. 92 James S. Pennington Accounting Perkasie, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha, Treas.; I.F.C; Alpha Kappa Psi. p. 24 William K. Perkins Spanish-Foreign Careers Binghamton, N.Y. Alpha Sigma Phi; Freshman Baseball; Rugby; Dean ' s List p. 50 Michael Perlow, Jr. Civil Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town Council; Chi Epsilon, V.P.; Freshman and Varsity Soccer, Co- Capt.; A.S.C.E.; Junior Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 77 William H. Pickel, Jr. Industrial Engineering Phillipsburg, N.J. Delta Chi, House Manager; Freshman Track Numerals, A.I. I.E. p. 81 Laurence Duane Pike Physics Leavitt House, Treas. p. 67 Endicott, N.Y. Robert Pirn Industrial Engineering Media, Pa. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Pres. Steward., Ritual Officer; I.F.C; Varsity Foot- ball; A.I. I.E. p. 81 Edward C. Plank Civil Engineering New Rochelle, N.Y. Beta Theta Pi, Scholarship Committee Chairman; Chi Epsilon; Fresh- man and Varsity Football; Senior Counselor to Freshmen Engineers; Freshman and Junior Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 77 John J. Plesa Industrial Engineering Manville, N.J. Alpha Chi Rho, Steward; I.F.C. Rushing Comm; Ad Hoc Committee on Physical Education and Athletics; A. I. I.E., President p. 81 Paul Joseph Ponturo Civil Engineering Hawthorne, N.Y. Tau Epsilon Phi. V. Chancellor; I.F.C. Rep. Freshman Soccer, p. 77 James E. Popham Accounting Longmeadow, Mass. Sigma Nu. p. 24 Thomas O. Potts Mathematics Harrisburg, Pa. Thornburg; Westminister Club; Phi Beta Kappa; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 41 Frank Charles Puzio Psychology Town; Dean ' s List. p. 43 Bronxville, N.Y. Gregory Alan Raffauf Mechanics West Lawn, Pa. Town; Freshman Football, p. 86 David Phillips Railsback Accounting Newton, Mass. Town; Pledge Marshall, Social Chm. Pi Lambda Phi; I.F.C. Social Chm., University Comm. on Discipline; Board of Pulications; Alpha Kappa Psi; Beta Alpha Psi; Dean ' s List; Sophomore Honors; Wash- ington Semester (No picture) David J. Ralph Accounting Alpha Chi Rho, Ritual Officer, p. 24 Columbus, Ohio Harry B. Rath, Jr. Electrical Engineering Allentown, Pa. Town Council; I.E.E.E., Computer Society, p. 92 David A. Reese Accounting Allentown, Pa. Kappa Alpha, Treas.; Beta Alpha Psi, Sec; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 24 Wayne S. Reisner Marketing West Long Branch, N.J. Alpha Chi Rho; Varsity Soccer, p. 28 Robert Bodine Reuther Chemistry Muncy, Pa. Gryphon Society p. 60 Victor Rene Risch Chemistry Westfield, N.J Town; Semester in Germany, p. 61 Philip F. Rivers, Jr. Management Science Bethlehem, Pa. Town; Beta Gamma Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 22 John R. Rizzo Marketing Weston, Mass. Phi Gamma Delta, Pres; Forum Rep for Business School; Freshman and Varsity Football; Indoor and Outdoor Track p. 28 Thomas J. Roberts Mechanical Engineering Camp Hill, Pa. Kappa Alpha, Social Chm; Marching and Concert Band. p. 86 John David Rohal Social Relations Bethlehem, Pa. Town; S.R. Club; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 37 Ed Romanow Economics Abington, Pa. Town; Freshman and Varsity Football, (no picture) Stephen G. Roseman Electrical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. McClintic-Marshall A-3; Eta Kappa Nu, Pres.; I.E.E.E. Treas. p.92 Michael Stuart Rosen Mathematics-Pre-Med. Gryphon; Pricked Ear.p. 41 Wyncote, Pa. Jay Henry Rosenfeld Marketing New Orleans, Louisiana Town; Tau Delta Phi, Asst. Treas.; Investment Committee, Class Gift; Freshman Advisor in College of Bus. and Eco.; Psych. Dpt, Freshman Tutor; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 29 Mark C. Roth Civil Engineering Emmaus, Pa. Smiley House; Chi Epsilon; Band; Senior Engineering Counselor; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 77 Paul A. Roth Engineering Physics North Wales, Pa. Beardslee House; McClintic-Marshall, president; R.H.C.; Phi Eta Sigma; Arnold Air Society, Administrative Officer; Society of Physics Students; Counselor to Engineering Freshmen; Freshman and Soph- omore Honors; Dean ' s List; President ' s Award (ROTC Award) p. 67 Gary H. Roulston Mechical Engineering Abington, Pa. Chi Phi; Pi Tau Sigma, President; Band; A.S.M.E.; Freshman Honors; Dean ' s List p. 87 Gary Steven Rowe Marketing Silver Spring, Md. Town; Marching and Varsity Band. p. 29 Edward L. Ruden Biology Tenafly, N.J. Sigma Nu, Secretary; L.U.V. Council; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 54 Donald M. Sagman Accounting Newport News, Va. Tau Epsilon Phi, Treasurer; Beta Alpha Psi. p. 24 Kenneth I. Saler Marketing Philadelphia, Pa. Sigma Alpha Mu. Treas., Social Chairman; Marching, Concert and Varsity Band; A.I.E.S.E.C. p. 29 Lawrence J. Salerno Industrial Engineering Metuchen, N.J. Chi Psi, President; Forum II; I.F.C., President; Cyanide, p. 81 Francis R. Santoro English Norristown, Pa. McConn; Subcommittee on Coed Life; Epitome,Asst. Senior Ed.; Sophomore Honors, p. 47 Philip Kent Savage Chemical Engineering Snyder, N.Y. Delta Upsilon, Treas.; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; Varsity Rifle Team, Capt.; A.I.Ch.E.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 71 Frederick E. Schea Finance Philadelphia, Pa. Town; McConn House, Social Committee; Alpha Pi Omega, Secre- tary; Lehigh Band, Asst. Mgr. p. 27 Garry Lee Scheib Management Science Spring Glen, Pa. Theta Delta Chi, Senior member exec, committee; Freshman and Varsity Football, Co-Capt.; Freshman Track, p. 22 Howard Steven Schenkel Electrical Engineering West Caldwell, N.J. Congdon; Eta Kappa Nu; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 92 William A. Schiavone Biology Eastchester, N.Y. Pi Lambda Phi, Treas.; IFC Treasurer ' s Council; Sophomore Honors, Junior Honors, p. 54 Samuel William Schiff Management Science Media, Pa. Beardsley, V.P.; L.U.V. Council, Group Leader, p 22 Kenneth A. Schiller English Theta Xi, Steward; Eta Sigma Phi. p. 47 Richard J. Schmierer Psychology Gryphon Society; Dean ' s List. p. 43 Trenton, N.J. Trenton, N. Les Alan Schneider Government Merrick, N.Y. Dravo, Gryphon, Treas.; Government Student Faculty Organization; Epiphany Movie Series; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. (No picture) Fred W. Schroeder Engineering-Physics Trenton, N.J. McClintic-Marshall, A-3, Coffeehouse, Pres.; Newman Club , Sec; I.F.C. ; Society of Physic Students; Freshman, Sophomore and Junior Honors, p. 67 Larry D. Schutts Geology and Mathematics Nazareth, Pa. Town, Phi Eta Sigma; German Honorary; Dean ' s List. p. 56 Kenneth C. Scott Industrial Engineering Rosemont, Pa. li Psi; Alpha Reporter; Student Activities Council, Pres.; Forum get Committee; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Alpha Pi Mu; Freshman and Varsity Soccer; Freshman and Varsity Lacrosse; A.I. I.E., Treas; Senior Eng. Counselling Program for Freshmen; Fresh- man Honors, p. 81 Robert Melvin Seitz Electrical Engineering Harrisburg, Pa. Beardslee House; McClintic-Marshall, B-1, Secretary-Treas.; R.H.C. Facilities Chairman, I.E.E.E., Computer Society, S.S.D.O. p. 92 Bruce Reed Shafer Chemical Engineering Fayetteville, N.Y. McClintic-Marshall, A-3, Pres., House Council, Pres.; R.H.C. A.I.Ch.E.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors, p. 71 Michael Patrick Shay English Phillipsburg, N.J. Gryphon Society; Congdon House, Pres.; R.H.C, Phi Beta Kappa; Omicron Delta Kappa; Freshman and Sophomore Honors, Dean ' s List; Williams Intramural Debate Contest, First Prize; Alumni Prize, highest ranking junior in College of Arts and Science, p. 47 Dennis L. Smith Fine Arts-Arch. Doug Sheffer James L. Sherwin English Town; Cyanide Society; Rugby Club. Westport, Conn. Gates Mills, Ohio David Shindell Chemistry New Haven, Conn. Tau Epsilon Phi, Freshman and Sophomore Honors, p. 61 John W. Sibole, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Aldan, Pa. Dalta Tau Delta, Corresponding Secretary; Air Force ROTC, Group Command Cr.; Deputy Commander, Arnold Air Society; ROTC Rangers, p. 87 Charles E. Sieger, Jr. Government Allentown, Pa. Beta Theta Pi; Freshman Class Cabinet; Varsity Baseball, p. 30 Paul William Sigmund Chemical Engineering Morristown, Pa. Emery; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi, Treas.; Marching and Varsity Band; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 71 John H. Simensen Chemical Engineering Cinnaminson, N.J. Leavitt House, Social Chairman; Ski Club, Vice President p. 71 Robert J. Sine Industrial Engineering Yardley, Pa. Kappa Sigma; Freshman and Varsity Swimming, Co-Capt.; Freshman Golf p. 81 John F. Sise Government Reamstown, Pa. Psi Upsilon, President; Glee Club; WLVR; Dean ' s List; Williams De- bate Winner, p. 30 Finance Theta Xi. p. 27 James E. Skok Mathematics Emery House, p. 41 Palmerton, Pa. M. Stephen Smith, III Economics Miami, Fla. Town; Epitome; Omicron Delta Epsilon; Student Investment Club; Freshman Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 19 Warren V. Smith, II International Relations West Simsbury, Conn. Smiley House, Social Chairman, p. 38 David A. Stalker Accounting Phi Delta Theta; Dean ' s List. p. 24 Eatontown, N.J. Charles S. Steele Psychology Huntingdon Valley, Pa. Gryphon Society, Secretary; Arcadia XXIV,; Forum I; Forum II, Sec, Treas.; Volunteers Council, Co-Chairman, Corr ' s. Sec; Cyanide, Sec Treas; Omicron Delta Kappa; Marching and Concert Band; Psi Chi; French Club; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 43 Charles P. Steiner, Jr. Chemical Engineering Reading, Pa. Residence Hall; A.I.Ch.E.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors, p. 71 Richard P. Steinmann Civil Engineering Morris Plains, N.J. Beardsley, Secretary; Civil Eng. Forum; C.E. Curriculum Comm.; C.E. Forum Constitution Comm; Chi Epsilon, Secretary; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Eta Sigma; Varsity Baseball, Mgr.; Varsity Wrestling, Asst. Mgr; A.S.C.E.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 77 Richard Preston Stern Mechanical Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. Delta Upsilon, Secretary; Pi Tau Sigma; p. 87 Gibson Stine Mechanical Engineering Wyncote, Pa. Sigma Nu; M.E. Forum; Tau Beta Pi, Secretary; Pi Tau Sigma; Fresh- man and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 87 James F. Stine Chemical Engineering Theta Chi, Marshall; A.I.Ch.E. p. 64 Allentown, Pa. Franklin, N. James Richard Stine Metallurgical Science Greenbrook, N.J. Stevens House; Varsity Swimming, Mustard and Cheese, p. 71 Walter Joseph Crowder Stiver, Jr. Marketing Oreland, Pa. Delta Upsilon, Pledge Master; Varsity Soccer, p. 29 Thomas A. Stoneback Biology Bethlehem, Pa. Kappa Alpha, President; I.F.C., Chm. of Administration Comm; FMA Board of Directors, Secretary; Glee Club, Photography; Freshman Honors, p. 54 Thomas B. Stoup Government Social Relations Camp Hill, Pa. Sigma Chi; I.F.C., Freshman Class Cabinet; Forum Rep; Comm. Rel. Committee; Freshman Football; Freshman and Varsity Lacrosse, p. 30 John P. Strehle Mechanical Engineering Meadowbrook, Pa. Marching Band; Dean ' s List. p. 87 Scott R. Strock Chemical Engineering Springtown, Pa. Beardslee; Phi Eta Sigma; Glee Club; A.I.Ch.E.; Freshman and Soph- omore Honors; Dean ' s List, Wilbur Scholarship Prize, I.S.A. Award, p. 71 Robert Price Struble Mechanical Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. Residence Hall; Pi Tau Srma; Sophomore and junior Honors, p. 87 R. Thomas Strunk English Pen Argyl, Pa. Delta Chi, Secretary; Lehigh University Drill Team, Capt.; ROTC Scholarship, p. 48 John P. Stupp, Jr. Management Science St. Louis, Mo. Kappa Sigma, President; I.F.C., V.P.; Forum; Alpha Kappa Psi, Mas- ter of Rituals; Varsity Golf, Capt. p. 22 Roy S. Succa Management Camp Hill, Pa. Sigma Chi, Social Chairman; Freshman Football; Freshman Baseball, p. 22 Charles D. Sultzer Government Sigma Chi; Swimming, p. 31 Kennett Sq. Pa. Thomas Reyer Swan English Lititz, Pa. Taylor; Brown and White, Desk, Feature Ed. p. 48 John William Swanger, Jr. Mechanical Engineering New Orleans, La. Alpha Sigma Phi, V.P.; Pi Tau Sigma; Freshman Track, Freshman and Varsity Cross Country; Sophomore and Junior Honors; National Sci- ence Foundation Summer Research Grant, p. 87 James Philip Swartz Finance Scranton, Pa. Sigma Alpha Mu, Steward; Investment Club. p. 27 R. Budd Swartz Mechanical Engineering Sigma Phi Epsilon. p. 87 Harrisburg, Pa. Philip A. Sweet, III Biology Pottsville, Pa. Delta Phi, House Manager, Recording Secretary; Sports Car Club, Recording Secretary; Varsity Rifle Team. p. 54 William Harry Tarbox, Jr. Civil Engineering Emmaus, Pa. Smiley House; Dean ' s List; Robert Parke Hutchinson Scholarship, p. 77 Olev Taremae Social Relations-Arch. Ridgewood, N.J. Thornburg; Brown and White, Reporter; Freshman basketball, mgr.; WLVR, Asst. Music director, announcer, p. 39 Neal Joseph Tarulli Natural Sciences Franklin Lake, N.J. Beta Theta Pi, Rush Chairman; Frosh Cabinet Member, Section Pres.; Freshman and Varsity Track, Capt., Indoor and Outdoor, p. 54 Robert J. Thomas, Jr. History Pittsburgh, Pa. Chi Psi, Scholarship Chairman, Alpha Activities Chm.; Freshman Class Cabinet; Brown and White, Reporter; Cyanide; Varsity Swim- ming, p. 33 Stanley A. Tomkiel Electrical Engineering Ringtown, Pa. Beardslee, Secretary; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; Freshman Football; Eta Kappa Nu, Recording Secretary; I.E.E.E.; Freshman and Soph- omore Honors; Dean ' s List; Wilbur Scholarship Prize; Philip Francis du Pont Memorial Prize in E.E. p. 93 Joel Toof Mechanical Engineering Springfield, Pa. Emery, Treasurer; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 87 Robert Jesse Tootell Government Morrisville, Pa. Sigma Chi, Rush Chairman; I.F.C., Social Chairman; Freshman Base- ball; Freshman Judo; Varsity Soccer, p. 31 Sociology Stevens, p. 37 Gary Jay Torres William Anthony Toscani Finance Sigma Phi, Treasurer, p. 27 Nutley, N.J Bronx, N.Y. Raymond A. Tripodi Chemical Engineering Clifton, N.J. Smiley House, Pres., Sec; RHC; A.I.Ch.E.; Sophomore Honors, p. 71 David C. Trumbore Chemical Engineering Allentown, Pa. Town; A.I.Ch.E.; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 71 Dave Uhle Physics-Mathematics Quakertown, Pa. Stevens; Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 67 Paul L. Urban Biology Easton, Pa. Town; Band; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 54 Richard C. Vaillant Government Nissequogue, N.Y. Sigma Alpha Mu, p. 31 Richard H. Vanderberg Industrial Engineering Flemington, N.J. Town; AI.I.E. p. 81 David Carl Van Doren Psychology Bethlehem, Pa. Gryphon Society; Band; Dean ' s List. p. 43 Hector R. Velazquez Government Fanwood, N.J. McClintic-Marshall. p. 31 John C. Voaden Economics York, Pa. Alpha Tau Omega, Rushing Chairman, President; I.F.C.; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 19 James L. Vorhaus Physics McLean, Va. Delta Sigma Phi, Secreatry; Tau Beta Pi; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Walter Whigham Jr. Award; Malcom J. Gordon, Physics Prize; Dean ' s List. p. 67 Robert Jay Wachtenheim Lawrence, N.Y. Accounting Beta Alpha Psi; Sophomore Honors, p. 24 Bernard I. Wade Industrial Engineering Bethesda, Md. Delta Tau Delta; A.I. I.E.; Boxing Club. p. 81 Douglas Wagner Chemical Engineering Bethesda, Md. Residence Hall; Freshman Rugby, p. 71 Jeffrey W. Wald Finance Morrestown, N.J. Town; Phi Sigma Kappa; Alpha Beta Psi, Lehigh Student Investment Fund, President, p. 27 Richard H. Walker, Jr. English West Chester, Pa. Mustard and Cheese Club. (No picture) Donald Richard Walling Electrical Engineering Hudson, Ohio Lambda Chi Alpha, Athletic Mgr. Executive Committee Member, p. 93 Jeffrey J. Waltemyer Natural Science Delta Chi, Steward; I.F.C. Representative p. 56 York, Pa. Robert E. Watkins, Jr. Chemical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Sigma Nu, Commander, Treasurer; I.F.C; Circle K Club, Pres.; Omi- cron Delta Kappa; Marching, Concert, and Varsity Band, Senior Representative; Freshman Honors, p. 71 Goerge Kevin Weber Urban Studies Overijse, Belgium Leavitt House; Volunteer ' s Council; Dean ' s List; Williams Prize, p. 37 John R. Weir Chemistry Morristown, N.J. Smiley House; American Chemical Society Student Affiliates, Treas.; Sophomore Honors, p. 61 Kenneth M. Weisensale Electrical Engineering Hanover, Pa. Theta Chi, House Mgr; Forum; Eta Kappa Nu; Freshman and Soph- omore Honors, p. 93 Peter Anthony Weismantle Fine Arts Rosedale, N.Y. Psi Upsilon. p. 39 Steven M. Weitz Management Science Teaneck, N.J. Town; Forum; Basketball Announcer; Dean ' s List. p. 22 William E. Wells International Relations Sturbridge, Mass. Phi Gamma Delta; Varsity Football, p. 38 John E. Welsh, III Finance Philadelphia, Pa. Phi Delta Theta, Vice Pres., Sec; Brown and White, Business Mgr.; Freshman and Varsity Lacrosse, p. 27 William Zellers Westcott Civil Engineering Reading, Pa. McConn House, p. 77 Gerald R. White Mechanical Engineering Dowingtown, Pa. Beardslee House; A.S.M.E., Senior Counselor, p. 87 Frank Joseph Wilk, Jr. Mechanics Hellertown, Pa. Pi Kappa Alpha, President, Pledge Master; Pi Tau Sigma; Freshman and Varsity Track; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. p. 87 Alexander J. Willman Mechanical Engineering Alexandria, Va. Emery, Social Chairman, Vice President, p. 87 Ronald Wilsker Sociology Arverne, N.Y. Sigma Chi; Varsity Baseball, Captain; Varsity Football, p. 37 Glenn G. Wilson Social Relations Montclair, N.J. Chi Phi; Lehigh Review, editor; L ' Esprit (Ceder Crest); p. 37 Wesley Lester Winterbottom Civil Engineering Whitestone, N.Y. Sigma Phi Epsilon; I.F.C. Representative; Cheerleader; Capt.; A.S.C.E., Treas.; Sophomore Honors, p. 77 Thomas R. Wise Accounting Elkins Park, Pa. Sigma Phi; Freshman and Varsity Track, p . 24 William Kui Wong Chemical Engineering Summit, N.J. Congdon House; Student Affairs Committee; Epitome, Senior Edi- tor, I.D. Editor, Ass ' t Layout Editor; Cyanide; Alpha Phi Omega; AT.Ch.E. p. 71 Richard Arthur Woodruff Finance East Brunswick, N.J. Sigma Phi Epsilon; Bethlehem Tutorial Program; In Touch Pro- gram; New Demensions Program p. 27 S. Clarke Woodruff Biology Bethlehem, Pa. Pi Kappa Alpha, House Manager; Rugby Club. p. 54 Godfrey Molo Yenwo Chemical Engineering West Cameroon, Africa Soccer Team. p. 71 Walter A. Zanchuk Metallurgical Engineering Upper Darby, Pa. Town; Band, Ass ' t Mgr, Manager; Met. Society, p. 64. Andrew J. Zetlan Electrical Engineering Peabody, Mass. Theta Xi, I.M. Mgr.; Freshman Class, Secretary;p. 93 284 Peter Zombori Electrical Engineering Freshman Golf; Freshman Honors, p. 93 Havertown, Pa. Theodore ). Zubulake Mathematics Albertson, N.Y. Delta Chi, Treasurer, Athletic Mgr.; Boxing Club, Pres; Freshman and Sophomore Honors, p. 41 Board of Trustees M. ). Rathbone, President Leonard M. Horton Edward A. Curtis H. Randolph Maddox Kenneth L. Issacs H. P. McFadden Ivor D. Sims Edwin H. Snyder William B. Eagleson Lester C. Hogan Donald B. Stabler Frank C. Kear |ohn D. Harper Malcolm Carrington, |r. Kirk P. Pendleton The Rt. Rev. Dean T. Stevenson Alfred G. Blake Harold S. Mohler William C. Hittinger Edwin H. Gott Ralph L. Wilson W. Frederic Colclough S. Murray Rust, Jr. Frank C. Rabold James H. Walker Leonard P. Pool Frederick Seitz Edmund F. Martin 285 The Epitome has made a depar- ture this year, it ' s larger in size with fewer, but hopefully better, pictures; it has attempted to capture some idea of life at Lehigh via the use of magazine-style articles; and it has made a start at breaking with the concept of the traditional yearbook. I hope you have found these changes refreshing and felt that this book captured the spirit of Lehigh in 1972. It was our goal that you re- member both now and twenty years from now the Lehigh that was 1972. My thanks to all of you who aided and abetted our cause, with special thanks to Sue Milhouse, without whom I would have never survived the last deadline in June, to Mike Gilroy, who broke the tedium of yearbook production, and to Shar, for her. TLF 9 BRaDBURY- KeLLeR A DIVISION Of HERFF JONES 405 IEXINGTON AVE . NEW YORK. N Y 10017 2)


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Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

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Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

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Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

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Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

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Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

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