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THE 1977 EPITOME A SENSE OF SELF ANN R. ZIMMERMAN CO-EDITOR ROBERT L. JUDSON BUSINESS MANAGER HELEN H. RICHARDSON CO-EDITOR LEHIGH UNIVERSITY BETHLEHEM, PA. VOLUME 101 TABLE of CONTENTS CHAPTER 1: WHO WE ARE Dedication 14 Administration Faculty 16 Seniors 58 CHAPTER 2: WHAT WE DO Organizations Events 166 Sports 214 CHAPTER 3: HOW WE LIVE Living Groups 260 Greeks 290 Community 376 Here — unsure who we were, we carefully concealed our confusion under a multitude of masks, so as not to reveal we were changing and lost and . . . . . . Alone in the solitude we thought we ' d find a certain stillness, but instead there was entrapment in the institution, and chaos in not knowing who we were — asking . . . . . . How do we get out? Ignoring answers and each other we learned the hard way, the process was inward — through the doubt, through to the realization of self where . . . . . . The heart beats out energy for commitment; to a team, to a lover, to a cause, to a friend. Whole selves etched against enternity, feeling the power of . . . Belonging to what we do. Spirit and emotion engulfing us — reward for practice and for progress so we ' ve begun to learn about working in . . . . . . The group, unity in motion, doused with sweat. Interwoven bodies working inexhaustibly from the heart, gracefully transforming sport to art, while . . . . . . Living together was the real test of camaraderie; there were no formulas, only acceptance for our differences and a degree in memories, like . . . . . . The hours spent converting work to wisdom and frustration into frivolity. Tired and full after four years of collecting a scrapbook of experiences we are prepared to leave . . . 10 .■. . . This fertile, mercurial mountain where we started to sow our dreams — a sense of self began to bloom in the beauty that was Lehigh ' s. 11 m 4 H TMTfllWHlifiTWlWriTir life TBI FJstt am HP m Wsmm ■■BR 1 Kffi§ ■Sloes sBEes H JB ■I KaSKtSKl ■' To be nobody but yourself in a world that is trying desperately night and day to make you everybody else; means to fight the hardest battle ever fought and to never stop fighting ' — Cummings mm o u Q ROBERT SULLIVAN If is f ie personal contact with students that makes teaching an enjoyable job. It keeps the teacher from becoming too immersed in his subject matter and makes him aware of why he is teaching in the first place - to help students improve their skills in whatever way, and to whatever degree he can. Simply stated above is Journalism Professor Robert Sullivan ' s teaching philosophy, to which he has steadfastly subscribed throughout his 15 years at Lehigh. His con- tribution to the world of academe is a keen ability to balance a strong adherence to scholastic rigor with a special sensitivity to his students ' individual needs. It is in honor of Sullivan ' s personal approach to education, which is so valuable in shaping our sense of self, that we dedicate to him the chapter Who We Are. Al- though Sullivan ' s course work is tough, and his grading even tougher, he has a pro- found understanding of his students ' different abilities, fragile egos and normal bouts with self-doubt. Part of his philosophy is the expressed belief that the most effective teaching is done outside the classroom, and Sullivan is never too busy for academic, professional and even personal guidance. He is regarded highly as both a teacher and a friend by faculty and students alike. Professor Sullivan is an exemplary model for all professions, for he is an educator of both the mind and heart because he makes the essential effort to reach out to all his students. 14 MURIEL WHITCOMB All aspects of Lehigh ' s student life have witnessed exciting improvements during the past year. And it ' s no coincidence that the same year saw an energetic, highly committed woman join the ranks of the University administration. Of course we ' re talking about Assistant Dean of Students Muriel Whitcomb, who has endeared herself to the students with her eagerness to listen and her willingness to help. Not to mention her insistence on being called Mert instead of Dean. Besides a congenial informality Mert brought to Lehigh great dedication to im- proving the quality of student life. And in recognition of all her accomplishments in one short year we dedicate to her the chapter What We Do. A look at those accomplishments is truly amazing and inspirational. Mert is re- sponsible for the enlightening student-faculty discussions which included the Pres- idential election debates and capital punishment. In addition Mert coordinated Earth Day, a rape prevention education program, compiled a lighting report and helped organize L.U.V. Olympic Day. The list goes on and according to Mert so will she, as she explains, There ' s a lot more to be done. We look forward to her future contributions and ask only one question: How do you do it all, and do it so well? EDWARD GALLAGHER Once technological advancements were accepted uncritically into our lives. But in the wake of progress, pervasive damage has been left in the form of pollution, technological warfare, and specialization. And we ' ve finally realized we can no longer be complacent. One man at Lehigh has been in the forefront of helping students realize the im- pact of technology on the quality of our lives. Associate Professor of English Edward Gallagher has managed in his two-year tenure as director of the Humanities Perspectives on Technology (HPT) program, to build the discipline into a full- fledged minor. Gallagher ' s commitment to HPT is rooted in his concern over the aspects of technology which threaten how we live. It is therefore fitting that we acknowledge that commitment by dedicating to Ed Gallagher the chapter on How We Live. After teaching a variety of courses, from Science Fiction to Technology and Human Values, Gallagher admits his own views on technology are mixed. Although he could not live without many of the technological conveniences he expresses a concern, apparent in many HPT courses, over the ills wrought by technology. He is especially worried about students who cannot think and work on their own, and about a society which is dying in terms of meaningful activity. Gaining acceptance at a University with a national reputation for engineering was not an easy feat, since many people at Lehigh view HPT as purely anti- technological. But it is Gallagher ' s convictions that have helped HPT become a per- manent fixture here. As he maintains, Technology is so big and so powerful it must be carefully scrutinized, for doubt leads to inquiry and inquiry to truth. 15 ADMINISTRATION FACULTY is i iiiiipipi I!: ' :i !ifl !i:: : lr : ;:s:|:i |!i |!fH!::l!|s ! ii¥::| :: .:S| jiiijll ' i ' j; i; ;.!: ' !=. ' ' ■;■■]]. nhfit ' i cm  ■•■•M_i.Mi.ffir r i ■' 1 ' V ..,..,, IBlIIliiPi i ljfl U tSiHirt ' !■' : : ' ' ,.- ' ■' : l. :- ' - ' .. : . :: ' .- ; tiiBB ■!■Hi ' ■■■.,!■■, . ,, |!l: liilli ■' ■■' ' ■■■ilium .,! jij-f V. 1 m, „■.]:■Ross Yates: Runs for his life. William Quay: A gentle approach to discipline. The Other Side Of Leslie Horst: A real angel! Albert Zettlemoyer: Takes care of Lehigh ' s garbage. 18 The two faces of Dave Amidon. Lehigh ' s Staff Santa McFadden and Sharon Friedman: Have you been a good little girl this year, Sharon? . . . You have? . . . NEXT! Deming Lewis: The Presidency ' s a real racket. 19 PRESIDENT Editor ' s note: All quotes were submitted by administrators and department heads at the request of the Epitome. Deming Lewis Lehigh University is made up of many things, including an able and motivated student body, a dedicated and talented faculty, a wide ranging research program, a large campus dotted with old and new buildings, more than 25,000 alumni, many friends, a substantial financial operation and a great tradition. Lehigh is also an expression of an ideal and the embodi- ment of a purpose. The ideal is that each person who has the abili ty and wish to better himself should have the guidance and instruction which he needs to do so. The purpose is to provide that guidance and instruction to a substantial number of men and women. At Lehigh we live in many ways depending upon our roles and our preferences. We live in peace but not in compla- cency. We are ready to teach, to learn, to disagree, but we are slow to fight. We also have the responsibility of living in a rapidly developing world of which we as a university are a significant and a constructive part. — Deming Lewis 20 VICE PRESIDENTS Albert C. Zettlemoyer, Vice President and Provost Eric V. Ottervik, Vice President for Planning 21 Joseph F. Libsch, Vice President for Research Richard M. Spriggs, Vice President for Administration It is provided in the essence of things that from any fruition of success, no matter what, shall come forth something to make a greater struggle necessary. — Walt Whitman Paul J. Franz, Jr; Vice President for Development 22 Elmer W. Glick, Vice President and Treasurer The measure of civiliza- tion is man ' s observance of the unenforceable. — Preston Parr Preston Parr, Vice President and Dean of Student Affairs 23 DEANS Education is the process enabling a society to first identify it- self in the context of the past, the challenges of the present, and with an eye to the future, prepare its citizens to transmit its character. The task is so enormous that excellence and per- fection are beyond reach. We must keep on trying harder, do more, and do better, knowing that we will never be able to do enough. We must work towards the ideal of helping students grow to the limit of their potential. We must do this more so in the form of a commitment to our future as a nation rather than a contest in achievement among ourselves. As far as the College is concerned, we translate the challenge into four consequences we seek for our students: learning to think clearly and practice thinking until it becomes a habit; learning to apply knowledge intelligently; becoming aware of value systems so each student can develop a set of values to serve as a reference for decisions; finally, accepting the con- cept of work as the vehicle for serving society and the will to work as a self-discipline. It is not for us to judge our measure of effectiveness or ineffec- tiveness. O ur measure of success or failure can only be mea- sured in terms of the total performance of our graduates, first as citizens and second on the basis of their contributions to society from their work stations. — John J. Karakash  t k John J. Karakash, Dean College of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Brian G. Brockway, Dean of the Business and Economics College 24 John W. Hunt, Dean of the Arts and Science College Robert D. Stout, Dean of the Graduate School We are a diverse collection of people; we come from all walks of life. While our backgrounds are varied our objectives are similar; we are here to develop our intel- lects and to acquire knowledge. Whether we are students, teachers or adminis- trators, we are all engaged in that exciting activity; learning. Just as our backgrounds are diverse, so are our modes of living. Some live in better ac- comodations than others. But we realize that life style is ofttimes a superficial way to describe how we live. As Wilde ob- served, it is not what a man has but what a man is that matters. Intellectual and academic pursuits are a serious but not a gloomy adventure. We are a fun-loving people because we enjoy work, study and play. That is what Uni- versity life at Lehigh is all about. — William L. Quay William L. Quay, Dean of Students 25 Arthur H. Mann, Associate Dean of Students Nathan W. Harris, Assistant Dean of Students Muriel Whitcomb, Assistant Dean of Students Robert F. Reeves, Assistant Dean of Students 26 ADMINISTRATION Joseph Petronio, Bursar James H. Wagner, Registrar Eugene R. Seeloff, Director of Placement Samuel H. Missimer, Director of Admission 27 Lehigh thrives on the generosity of its alumni. This is certainly true in the area of financial aid. We hope the Class of 1977 will continue in this tradition and help us make possible the Lehigh experience for future generations of students in need of financial support. — W.E. Stanford William E. Stanford, Director of Financial Aid George L. Beezer, Publications 28 Rev. Hubert L. Flesher University Chaplain To have a concern and commitment that looks beyond the self is ironically the beginning of the realization of self. — Rev. Hugh Flesher Alumni Association: (1-r) Dennis R. Diehl, Assistant Director; James W. Niemeyer, Executive Director; Harry Ramsey, Associate Director. Many people at the University wonder why we have an Affirmative Action Officer and what she does. The explanation is complex but put in terms of this year ' s theme A Sense of Self I would suggest the following: (1) Who We Are from an Affirmative Action perspective would stress the growing diversity of our student body, our faculty and our support staff in terms of more women, blacks, Americans of native, Hispanic and Asian origins. As Affirmative Ac- tion succeeds we should be able to measure its effects not only in statistics but by the felt presence of women and minorities in non- traditional fields. (2) What We Do implies the richness of educational experiences that is possible from a heterogeneous academic community — in the classroom as well as in extra-curricular activities. (3) How We Live is the essence of Affirmative Action. Improved day-to-day relations based on respect and understanding of each other ' s backgrounds must result if Affirmative Action is to be effec- tive. Bringing in professional women and minorities as speakers, honorary degree recipients, workshop participants, etc. will help supplement those faculty and alumni from groups new to the Lehign experience. Over time, the goal is a University more representative of the culturally diverse American society, one in which each indi- vidual can benefit equally from educational and employment oppor- tunities. — Dr. Lora Liss Lora Liss, Affirmative Action Officer 29 Richard Jones, Fraternity Management Assoc. Director James D. Mack, Director of Libraries INFORMATION SCIENCE Thomas Verbonitz, Director of Administrative Services (1-r) P. Marshall, K. Werner, D. Hillman, J. O ' Connor. 30 ACCOUNTING Education, in essence, is a process of learning about oneself. — Carl L. Moore i Seated (l-r): J. Young, J. Paul, K. Sinclair, R. Mills, C. Moore. Standing: J. Hobbs, R. Parry, D. Martin, B. Fries, S. Webster. AEROSPACE STUDIES What a society gets in its armed services is exactly what it asks for, no more and no less. What it asks for tends to be a reflection of what it is. When a country looks at its fighting Seated (l-r): D. Achey, F. Deatherage, T. Harmon. Standing: R. Schafer, P. Hough, V. Ziccardi, L. Hasbrouck. forces it is looking in a mirror: If the mirror is a true one, the face it sees there will be its own. — Sir John Winthrop Hackett 31 ATHLETICS Row 1 (l-r): W. Leckonby, B. Gardiner, C. McNaron, S. Schultz; Row 2: H. Bond, J. Covert, R. Klein, B. Lipkin, J. Luckhardt, C. Anderson, H. Price, S. Sanders, W. Whitehead, T. Thompson, T. Turner, J. Whitehead, G. Leeman, W. Meyer. BIOLOGY (l-r): H. Pntchard, R. Malsberger, P. Bradt, D. Bell, E. Hoagland, S. Krawiec (chairman), B. Bean, S. Barber, S. Herman, S. Kundell. They have worked with talent and commitment. — Dr. D. Lewis on the faculty Seated (l-r): L. Wenzel (chairman), M. Charles, C. Clump, W. Luyben; Standing: L. Sperling, M. El-Asser, D.D. Joye, W. Schiesser, A. Foust, L. Nyiri, F. Stein. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING 32 1 CHEMISTRY The sheer fun of unraveling Nature ' s secrets can make a life in science an everyday pleasure and a benefit for all mankind. — F.M. Fowkes (l-r): C. Kraihanzel, R. Sprague, K. Klier, H. Leidheiser, R. Rodgers, M. Hughes, J. Manson, F. Fowkes (chairman), D. Smyth, T. Young, T. Cheng, J. Sturm, S. Schaffer, K. Schray, J. Merkel. CIVIL ENGINEERING Row 1 (l-r): A. Ostapenko, L.W. Lu, R. Johnson, G. Driscoll, D. Van Horn (chairman), L. Beedle, J. Fisher, A. Richards, J. Liebig; Row 2: C. Haffner, D. Mertz, G. Dinsmore, A. Brune, C. Kostem, T. Hirst, L. Tall, H. Daniels; Row 3: C. Siegrist, B. Allan, J. McGraw, J. Wheeler, T. Owens, J. Smith, S. Tumminelle, F. Chen. 33 CLASSICS (l-r): J. Hare, E. De Angeli, J. Maurer, C.R. Phillips. The self, it seems to me, is best defined in terms of what surrounds it, just as a painted portrait gains form and color from its background. Who we are is largely determined by what we do and the people with whom we interact. Similarly, here in the groves of academe, the faculty image is defined by the context of the students around us. Clearly, they are the answer to why we ' re here ; the life of the mind is our common concern. To paraphrase Emerson, we might say that Knowledge is its own excuse for being. — Edna S. deAngeli ECONOMICS Seated (l-r): J.R. Aronson, F. Jensen, G. Garb, C. Shen, E. Schwartz; Stand- ing: J. Luizer, N. Balab- kins, R. Charles, B. Dal- Gaard, J. Hilly, R. Moran, J. Walker, J. McNamara, J. Innes, W. Pillsbury, L.R. Tripp. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Row 1 (l-r): K. Tzeng, F. Hielscher, B. Fritchman, D. Talheim; Row 2: D. Leenov, A. Susskind, H. Gnerlich, P. Ota. 34 ENGLISH Are you lost daddy I asked tenderly. Shut up he explained. — Ringgold Wilmer Larnder (1-r): E.A. James, J. DeBellis, A. Hartung, R. Arbur, F. Hook, D. Greene, D. Ayres, P. Bei- dler, J. Fergus, j. Frakes, J. Vickrey, A. Bross, R. Williams, S. Matuska, R. Harson, J. Benner. FINE ARTS I know of no other form of human activity by which one proclaims his individuality or identity more acutely personal and revealing than the creative arts. Descartes may have proclaimed his existence with cogit ergo sum , but thinking is internalized. With the arts whether you paint, sculpt, act, compose, or write poetry, you exist because you reach outward to communicate with others. Man is the only animal who creates for the love of beauty, newness and self-expression. To be most human of all the states of the human condition, is to be an artist. I paint, therefore I am. — Richard J. Redd Front (l-r): G. Bumley, L.A. Derwin, C. Wiekkiser; Back: R. Viera, C. Alvare, R. Redd. FOREIGN LANGUAGES Seated (l-r): MM. Masiuk, A.C. van der Naald, L.S. Lefkowitz. Standing: J. A. VanEerde, A.E. Hye, J. A. Mauer. 35 GEOLOGY Seated (l-r): R. Stewart, C. Sclar, J.D. Ryan, D. Simpson; Standing: A. Rugh, J. Levy, E. Evenson, J. Parks, B. Car- son, M. Swanson, R. Sassen, J. Sumner. GOVERNMENT Seated (l-r): L. Olsen, D. Barry, E. Morgan; Standing: H. Whitcomb, R. Yates, N. Wessel, F. Colon. HISTORY Who we are: We ' re those who think that history is an exciting story of how our so- ciety, our civilization, got where it is. We ' re tho se who think that each of us exists in an historical perspective, that each of us, as individuals and as members of a group or groups, has a past which af- fects our present and our future. To leam about our common past involves an excit- ing, liberating and humanizing experience through a vicarious contact with the men and women who have built the societies and cultures in which we find ourselves. We are the keepers of society ' s memory. This is a most important function, for without the remembrance of things past there would be neither present efforts nor future goals. We are historians, members of a proud craft whose roots extend back to the time before the memory of man run- neth not. — Lawrence H. Leder Seated (l-r): }. Ellis, M. Ciarlante, S. Hartley; Standing: R. Piepmeyer, L. Leder (chairman), R. Simon, W.G. Shade, J. Saeger, M. Baylor, P. Hampton. 36 INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING Row 1 (I-r): J. Adams, G. Kane (chairman), B. Wechsler; Row 2: M. Groover, E. Zimmers, L. Plebani, A. Gould; Row 3: S. Monro, L. Long, J. Nazemetz, G. Whitehouse. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS (l-r): R. Wylie, M. Hodges, C. Joynt, Z. Slouka. JOURNALISM (l-r): J.B. McFadden (chairman), S. Friedman, R.J. Sullivan. Language is a rake in the garden of knowledge, and he who cuts a tine away makes it much more certain the weeds of ignorance will grow and ultimately smother us all. — J.B. McFadden 37 MANAGEMENT AND FINANCE MATHEMATICS Seated (l-r): J. Greenleaf, S. Buell, B. Litt, C. Beidleman; Standing: J. Stevens, J. Hobbs, B. Smackey, J. Bonge, R. Horton, S. Traub. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Row 1 (l-r): B. Eisenberg, V.R.G. Rao; Row 2: T. Hailperin, E. Pitcher, B. Rayna; Row 3: C.C. Hsing, G. McCluskey, S. Gulden; Row 4: R. Basener, A. Wilansky, A.K. Snyder, P. Cohen. Row 2 (l-r): R. Benner, F. Beer, D. Rockwell, J.C. Chen; Rou 2: B. Civelek, P. Hilton, T. Terry, F. Loo, D. Updike, J. Owczarek; Row 3: R. Hartranft, R. Sarubbi, R. Lucas, F. Er- dogan, T. Jackson. METALLURGY Standing (l-r): D. Williams, D.A. Thomas, S.K. Tarby, P.E. Bretz, A.W. Pense, S.R. Butler, R.W. Kraft, DM. Smyth, J. P. Dandridge, C.J. Vantyne, A. P. Romig, T.L. Dinsmore; Seated: J.I. Goldstein, Y.T. Chou, G.P. Conard (chairman), R.W. Hertzberg. 38 MILITARY SCIENCE The nation today needs men (and women) who think in terms of service to their country and not in terms of their country ' s debt to them. — General Omar N. Bradley Row 1 (l-r): Maj. R. John, Maj. R. Walsh, Lt. Col. A. Phelan, Capt. D. Tomasik; Row 2: A. Miller, MSgt. R. Basilic, Sgt. Maj. J. Kress, J. Locascio, Maj. H. Manns. MUSIC Brown, K. Reichard, R. Cutler, J. Bidlack. PHILOSOPHY (l-r): T. Haynes, A. Laslie, R. Bonds, J.R. Lindgren, N. Melchert, J. Hare. If nothing is changed, everything will remain the same. — Lindgren ' s Second Law 39 PHYSICS Row 2 (l-r): J. McLennan, R. Folk, Y. Kim, J. Sands; Row 2: D. Wheeler, W. Spatz, G. Borse, R. Shaffer; Row 3: R. Emrich, W. VanSciver, B. Benson, E. Bergmann. PSYCHOLOGY Row 1 (l-r): M. Richter, L. Horst, R. Loeb; Row 2: H. Foster, W. Newman, E. Kay, A. Brody, L. Paul, G. Shortess. SOCIAL RELATIONS L. Freeman, R. Herrenkohl, J. Mcintosh, B. Kopytoff, R. Rosenwein, B. Frankel, R. Williamson. 40 URBAN STUDIES CENTER FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH Most Lehigh University students understand the world as it is and come here to get certified to work in it; we try to inspire you to dream of the world as it might be and send you forth to work on it. — David Amidon David Amidon HEALTH SCIENCES As biomedical scientists, our lives are devoted to the elucidation of certain pro- cesses of living systems which will im- mediately or eventually aid in our under- standing of the disease state and how it can be alleviated. Our daily probing of those mechanisms which allow viruses, bacteria, worms, snails, rats, and rabbits to function and finding common de- nominators, reaffirms in us the belief that there is unity in the diversity of Na- ture. — Thomas C. Cheng (l-r): M. Uhrin, L. Renwrantz, K. Auld, T. Yoshino, M. Chorney, T. Garrabrent, T. Cheng (direc- tor), J. Huang, N. Heindel, T. Farris, K. Howland. 41 C C r -; iST7 M1 6s W faicAetlfor an eternity, at It tooA onyer tAan tAat to- ug a l oar stuff 2 to- a c o etHsized room . (jotui e isiy Service heck e it coarea. w STATEMENT MAGINNES HALL, BLDG. 9 BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA 18015 PHONE (215)691-7000 EXT. 781 IDENTIFICATION NUMBER 989-10-1234 fi STATEMENT DATE] 9 ! 8 ! 7 6 PERIOD ENDING 09 |06 |76 NAME B. Wildered Frosh, V D 10V DATE TRANSACTION REFERENCE DESCRIPTION AMOUNT 03 [0 2 J76 15411 Textbooks 75 25 09 |02 |76 43688 Supplies 12 75 09 |02 |76 43688 Tax 75 09 |04 |76 68934 Textbooks 95 50 09 |06 |76 79211 Textbooks 44 55 09IJ06 |76 21433 Supplies 20 00 09 |06 |76 21433 Tax 1 250 20 00 WAab cou d w ioor t um s tenc s Aour isi; vi , tAeMtoti 60 b%b.of6ooA to- tA StAJZoor of Q)racKh? ettmy tA 6i l SFresAmcuv 6am $miM cam£ ire and ' tAre - mrts uzrmcm mado :£■j , ■I Female members admitted to the ranks of Lehigh ' s Marching 97 attend practice in Taylor Stadium. Standing are (from left) Barbara JTreichler, Janet Torongo, Cynthia Nagasaki, Jane Honeyman and Lori Totten. Seated are Betsy Fenik with her French horn and Debbie York with a piccolo. All are freshmen except Miss Nagasaki, who is a sophomore. Seven Women Join the Marching 97; ' Gross-Out Bus ' May Bite the Dust It appears that the addition of Adam ' s rib will not break the back of the Lehigh University Marching 97. On September 29 the band broke a 67- year-old tradition and admitted seven coeds into its ranks. However, band manager Andrew Shmerler, ' 74, affirms that It ' s the same great band that it always was and al- ways will be. The band traditionally has been known as the finest marching band in | the East. Shmerler said he can foresee only minor changes with the addition of coeds. At present, he explains, the band is a very rowdy and crass bunch of hoodlums when they are in their own company. But as more girls come into the band - well, it ' s not that the bandies feel that they would have to change, it ' s that they would find themselves very self-conscious in the presence of girls. It also appears that the coeds will affect the band ' s traditional mode of travel. Shmer- ler said that when the Marching 97 goes on the road it usually takes three buses. Band members and their dates travel on one bus, studious band members on another bus and the rowdier bandies generally ride on the gross-out bus. This year ' s coed band mem- bers travel in the date bus, but as their numbers increase, the gross-out bus will fall by the wayside, in Shmerler ' s view. Shmerler says the band went coed volun- tarily. However, the university ' s Human Re- lations Committee was about to investigate charges of discrimination that had been levied against the Marching 97. If the band had been found guilty, university financial support probably would have been with- drawn. The coeds have not hurt the band ' s per formance. Its members still practice six I hours per week and the intensive three-day summer training camp will continue. ft WeeAend £FA fa A ' loved eoeratAeng ' o hhi eAigtA; tA spirit , t t scenera , eae i u irA . O tiHoas fj tAey caere spare ram . (o. oat . ' ■■■.■' ••■' LEHIGE UUIv ' LRSI ' i ' Y Office of the Registrar December 20, 197fi tudent Body: The following steps are involved in registering for the 1977 spring semester: 1. Bursar ' s Receipts for students whose bills are paia will be available in the south lobby of the Alumni Building on January 17 and 13 from 8:15 a.m. until 4:45 p.m., and on January 19 from 3:00 a.m. until 4:45 p.m. Students whose bills are not paid must go to the Bursar ' s Office to pay their bills and receive their V«C Ink. Will plainlr- 10M«!T« LEHIGH UNIVERSITY COURSE DROP FORM TO THE FACULTY: I wish to drop the following course(s): LEHIGH UNIVERSITY REQUEST FOR PASS - FAIL GRADING m X m U I-5- 9 Ink. Writ plainly. LEHIGH UNIVERSITY REQUEST FOR WAIVER OF PREREQUISITE I respectfully request PLEASE WRITE FIRMLY STUDENT ' S NAME. LOCAL ADDRESS . LEHIGH UNIVERSITY STUDENT ' S REQUEST FOR CHANGE OF ROSTER USE BALL POINT SOC. SEC. NO. KM KEYPUNCH ONLY THIS CHANGE WILL NOT BECOME OFFICIAL UNTIL SIGNED BY REGISTRATION OFFICE CURRICULUM DIRECTOR. Ja ent S imo- ca ed on axcmmt of crmsnes . to- fA tun of £TA ($att 9 pnsi oftA W uwnder Aota- tAajFent emen Jtr jpettvup asuf rest When tAey spend adoftfuur sftase tim On, tA roaa (to- 6edor (orest ' ($06 e£ ' not (Ac ' coftiftetMo b CTAab i yetting- ' u so- mad ' CTAc tvwfficyasrw on 22 are 6ad (pAaraa: Jaoe uoar-j a and data a coed xSaaesuaar-jfass and data a coed Saoeuoas- t faS ' and dat a coed WAen energy; i tour W -X ' am om traaitiofi of eihe ina ' tim au i£ (Jemi isi; ' 26. S7n tA ' 61) students mac in tA ' 70 ' s tAetf mac tA new h ; streaAisuy. Qje tfr Aefa a rea b of tA timea uutA tAeir ipyfrwet -?sAirl contest (j asses Snotoed Out f£Fe h. fj}7 5) iS iouh coas too- aee to- attend c as e , 6ut not too- aeefr to- notice tAat snoto- i toAi£ in doetA eAenv at easts toAen ' it i Zsy. -s wr ffl U J SFJj Ki I - - i ■rbSetsezbh IS SgK; ' --.-V;. rvn iV Post Car J Co. X. ) ' . 3750— PACKER HALL. LEHIGH UNIVERSITY , - SOL ' TH BETHLEHEM, PA -f - - jf s One Hundred Ninth Commencement Exercises Sunday, Mav 29. 1977 Lehigh University aur tfears seem lA a v i i ta it . A YJ}77jfruduation uxi asv event to- r€mem er faf , ' senior® cvAo- s£€fibj ar ( jfear ftre mriny to- enter a awr d sAaJbed 6y tA cAes af ffloaMzrd 5 T tSmitA and fflenrtf tf s inyer. uu liiiB lliliHHII SSSIiii ' l-iilpilij SENIORS ■mm I ■HiiHffliiln ' i ' .::-- iHSpaailp ira llflll ' lll l- ' il l-i !-!:-:: ! 1 ?i ■i ' . ' . ■■■.■■' :■:■■' ■. V; ' ' ' ; : ' M: ' ;! :i: : : ' ' ■- : : ' ■■■■- ' ■: ' ..■■■' : ■■' ; .: :i : :. ; :- ,; :: ' ' ' :; -, : ■mini SHI llil ;; ,, ; ' ■■■::: ' ■- %MM§W$M ' ■: . .. ' . ' ' . :!:■■■' Hi I! ... , ;..,,!.; . ■., ,;,,,. ..; .. : .: . ■- : : . ■• ■.:.,.!■.■i.. ■:■■:■.:■: : . . . ■■: ■• ■• ' ..... . - ' ■.. : ' . ■. ■.,; ■... ........ i illllllHl : ; ■■' ' „::.■' }■;■: ,: i !!!![j;|| l «i . i; .; ' I! 1 ;;!!.!!.!!! ! ' !!!!.!--. ' !!!-:!! :l.. :l: ■: ! |::|;:. !:ii!|: ..:-!!. I ' , i •■, ,i!.,: if. . : .! ' : ' . ' .. , Ghassan N. Abboud — PO Box 727, Tripoli, Lebanon; Mech. Engrg.; Alpha Chi Rho — Ritual, Rush Chair- man, Pledge Master; ASME; Intramurals; S.A.C. Sec- urity Director. Gaby Gebran Abdelnour — Beirut, Lebanon; Elec. Engrg.; Soccer; IEEE; ASME; Ski Club. Robert T. Abele — 2017 Waterloo Rd., Berwyn, Pa.; Eco. Fin.; Chi Psi — Vice-Pres., Steward, Athletic Mgr.; Rugby Team; Boxing Club; Sr. Class Executive Council. Paul Adelman — 2864 Jermantown Rd., Oakton, Va. Stephen David Ades — 77 Brownell Ave., New Bedford, Ma.; Fin.; Hillel Society — Pres.; Radio Station; United Jewish Appeal Co-Chairman. Hamed Abdul-Nart Al-Arbash — Embassy of Kuwait, Connecticut Ave., Washington, D.C.; Elec. Engrg.; Sophomore Honors; Arabic Club — Pres,; Eta Kappa Nu. Abdul Rahman S. Alawad — Embassy of Kuwait, Con- necticut Ave., Washington, D.C.; Mech. Engrg. Lucien V. Alexis HI — 4860 Ray Ave., New Orleans, La.; Fin.; Psi Upsilon — Corr. Secy., Pledgemaster; Lacrosse; ROTC. Hatneed H. Alkattan — Embassy of Kuwait, Connec- ticut Ave., Washington, D.C.; Elec. Engrg. Richard B. Allen — 19 Roberts Rd., Warren, N.J.; Acctg.; Delta Upsilon; Varsity Squash Team; Bridge Club; Investment Comm. Chairman; Sr. Class Gift Fund. Mark Spencer Alsentzer — Box 56V2 Heyburn Rd., Chadds Ford, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Phi Gamma Delta — Social Chairman; Freshman Honors; Intramurals. Paul John Altenpohl ]r. — 1411 Longcreek Dr., High Point, N.C.; Acctg.; Phi Delta Theta — Chaplain; Freshman Soccer; Marketing Club. Thomas D. Anderson — 170 Townsend Ave., Pelham, N.Y.; Civil Engrg.; Phi Delta Theta; JV Football; Base- ball; Hockey; Gryphon Society; Glee Club; ASCE. Manassi T. Antonis, Jr. — 3915 Fairfax Rd., Bethlehem, Pa.; Bio.; Lehigh Scholarship (76-77); Lehigh Univer- sity Orchestra, String Quartets. Mark Richard Arendas — 671 Cheyenne Dr., Franklin Lakes, N.J.; Fin. Mgt.; Alpha Tau Omega — Ste- ward; Investment Club; Mkt. Club; Rugby Club. Jeffrey William Armstrong — 18 Robbins Rd., Pleasantville, N.Y.; Acctg.; Freshman Football; Varsity Football; Alpha Tau Omega. Ghassan N. Abboud Gary G. Abdelnour ■M Robert T. Abele Paul Adelman Stephen D. Ades Hamed A. Al Arbash Abdul-Rahman S. Al-Awad Lucien V. Alexis III Hameed Habib Al-Kattan Mark S. Alsentzer Thomas D. Anderson Richard B. Allen Paul J. Altenpohl Jr. Manassi T. Antonis Jr. Mark R. Arendas Jeffrey W. Armstrong I m 61 - N ttAA i 2 David A. Arnesen Richard K. Asbeck Renee S. Aubert Samuel J. August David H. Ashton Clarence Auyoung Frederick C. Bader 62 Sermin N. Atlig David E. Axelson William B. Baer Eric V. Baiz Peter H. Ballas John E. Ballowe Richard G. Barber Nicholas V. Bard Brian K. Bare David A. Amesen — 977 Gordon Ln., Birmingham, Mi.; Jour.; Theta Xi; Intramurals; Brown White Desk Ed. Richard K. Asbeck — 1330 Prince Charles, Westlake, Ohio; Elec. Engrg.; Sigma Phi Epsilon; National Merit Scholar; Intramurals. David H. Ashton — 193 Greyhorse Rd., Willow Grove, Pa.; Metallurgy; Chi Psi, Steward; Metallurgy Society of AST; Rugby; Class Gift Committee. Sermin N. Atlig — Istanbul, Turkey; Mrktg.; Dean ' s List; Marketing Club. Renee S. Aubert — 109 Willow St., Garden City, N.Y.; Acctg. Fin.; Phi Eta Sigma; William L. Gladstone Scholarship; Intramurals; Sr. Class Executive Comm.; LUV; Sr. Class Investment Committee. Samuel J. August — 2450 NE 135 St. North Miami, Fl.; Acctg; Beta Alpha Psi; Dean ' s List, Sophomore Hon- ors; Hillel Society; SAC, Financial Manager. Clarence Au-Young — 7 floor, 44 Robinson Rd., Hong Kong; Civil Engrg; Phi Eta Sigma; Dean ' s List; LUV; Lehigh Post Semester Opportunity Program; Boxing Club, Intramural program; Engineering Computer Society. David E. Axelson — 408 Gilhall Rd., Clairtown, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Sigma Nu. Frederick Charles Bader — 549 Netherwood Rd., Upper Darby, Pa.; Latin Govt.; Lambda Chi Alpha, Vice- Pres.; IFC; Dean ' s List; Freshman, Sophomore Honors; Phi Beta Kappa; Forum; LUV; Leviathan; Department of Government Advisory Committee. William B. Baer — 16 Ridge Tr., Short Hills, N.J. Eric von Amman Baiz — 400 Shady Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.; German Foreign Careers; Taylor Hall Pres.; Brown White Photo Editor; Area co-ordinator Sr. Class Gift campaign; Chairman RHC Facilities Comm.; Chairman UC Tower Bell Restoration Committee. Peter H. Ballas — 23 Summit Ave., N. Plainfield, N.J.; Ind. Engrg.; Sigma Chi — Pres., Rush Chairman, So- cial Chairman; IFC Rep. John Edward Ballowe -- Birchwood Lakes, RD 1 Box Mrktg.; Pi Lambda Phi. 1778 Harcor Dr., Pittsburgh, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Taylor Hall. Nicholas Van Bard — 213-18 86 Ave., Hollis Hills, N.Y.; Elec. Engrg.; Alpha Chi Rho, Chaplain; Sportswear Rep.; Phi Eta Sigma; Eta Kappa Mu; Intramural Ac- tivities. Brian Kevin Bare — 1217 Brook Meadow Dr., Towson, Md.; Elec. Engrg.; Smiley House, Vice-Pres.; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi; IEEE, Vice Chairman. 116, Digmans Ferry, Pa. Richard Gerard Barber Michael Conan Barr — 232 Washington St., Hamburg, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Beta Theta Pi, House Manager; Presidential Prize; Pi Tau Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; ASME; Freshman Football. Peter F. Barry III — Windy Ghoul, Beaver, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; McConn House, Concessions Mgr.; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma, WLTN-TV; WLRN-Radio; Brown and White. Mark Owen Bartholomew — 423 Perkiomen Ave., Lansdale, Pa.; Acctg.; Theta Chi, Secy; Dean ' s List; Varsity Golf; Weightlifting Club; Intramurals; Outing Club; Investment Club. Michael C. Barton — 1407 Carrollton Ave., Towson, Md., Fin.; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Pres.; Dean ' s List; In- vestment Club; Ski Club; Big Brother Program. Steven Peter Bartosik — Toll Gate Rd., RD 1, Zionsville, Pa.; History; Zeta Psi; Intramurals; Marching Band, Stage Band (Freshman Mgr. Staff Asst); Concert Band, Percussion Ensemble; Forum VII; APO; Varsity Band. James Lawrence Bartz, Jr. — 2 Plymouth Rd., Summit, N.J.; Fin.; Phi Delta Theta; Intramurals; Army ROTC. Robert Francis Bayer — 7849 Anita Dr., Philadelphia, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Rush Chair- man; ASME; ASHRAE; Ice Hockey Team, Capt.; Rugby Team, Intramurals. Richard Donald Bedell — 11947 South Durrette, Hous- ton, Tx.; Chem. Engrg.; Theta Xi, Steward; Theta Xi BFD Award; Intramurals. Frank P. Behlau — 1068 Antonio Dr., North Brunswick, N.J.; Tau Epsilon Phi; Pre- Architecture German; Re- negade Beach Club, Secy Treas.; Student Art Exhibits; Parnassus; WLVR-FM. Benjamin Francis Bell — 17 Nottingham Dr., Natick, Ma.; Bio.; Sophomore Honors, Dean ' s List. Andrew Ross Ben-Ami — Apt. 209, 2385 N.E. 173 St., N. Miami Beach, Fl.; Acctg.; Beardslee House; Residence Halls Council — Treas.; Forum VI VII; Hillel Society; Pre-Law Society; College Young Democrats. Richard P. Benoit, II — 10 Candlewood Dr., Madison, N.J.; Mech. Engrg.; Pi Kappa Alpha, Historian; ASME; Varsity Hockey; Varsity Golf; Intramurals; Outing Club. Stephen M. Begany — 1204 Wiley St., Bethlehem, Pa. Alan Frederick Bergold — 1429 Linden St., Allentown, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; ACS. Jonathan E. Best — 427 Sandford Ave., Westfield, NJ. Peter Michael Bieszard — 87 Berkley PI., Glen Rock, N.J.; Acctg.; Congdon House, Pres.; Sophomore Hon- ors; Beta Alpha Psi, Pres.; Cheerleaders, Capt. (Sr.); Sr. Class Gift Campaign; Residence Halls Council. Michael C. Barr Peter F. Barry III Mark O. Bartholomew Michael C. Barton Steven P. Bartosik James L. Bartz Jr. Robert Bayer Richard D. Bedell Frank P. Behlau W H Benjamin F. Bell Andrew R. Ben-Ami ■■I Richard P. Benoit Stephen M. Begany Alan F. Bergold Jonathan Best Peter M. Bieszard Hugh E. Biggin John P. Bishop Kristine A. Blew Richard J. Bloom Jeffrey C. Bodenstab Edward J. Boltz III Linda A. Bondemore Mary Ellen Boone I ' m • W 9 y - J ! ►Afci 1 el- •i ™ . A . T • - J 9 , « K ■? « ° c • ' y A V L U ™ 1 HT t h Sc r F WL r - ■Thomas H. Boone Jr. Marcus A. Borden Anthony S. Borges Mariellen Borowiak Carl M. Bosch Jeffrey S. Boyd Jeanette Bradley Josephine A. Branco Hugh Eastburn Biggin — 10 Sugarplum Rd., Levittown, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Delta Chi; IM Manager; ASCE; JV Soccer. John Purnell Bishop — 1728 Olive St., Reading, PA.; Acctg.; Kappa Sigma, Intramural Manager; IFC; Iden- tification Editor for the Epitome. Kristine A. Blew — 3868 Lincoln Parkway W., Allen- town, Pa. Richard Jeffrey Bloom — 311 Dermody St., Roselle, N.J.; Acctg.; Kappa Sigma, Asst. Rush Chairman, Intramu- ral Manager; Asst. Basketball Coach; FMA; Forum; Drinker Fiouse, Treas. Jeffrey C. Bodenstab — 20 Shady Acres Ln., Darien, Ct.; Ind. Engrg.; Pi Lambda Phi; National Merit Scholar; Tau Beta Pi; Alpha Pi; AIIE, Pres.; Sailing Team; Brown White Senior News Editor. Edward J. Boltz 111 — 21 Hilldonia Ave., Dallas, Pa. Linda Ann Bondemore — 116 Main St., Stanhope, N.J.; Jour.; Dean ' s List; Freshman Sophomore Honors; In- tramurals; Marketing Club; Epitome Sr. Editor; Brown White Sr. Reporter, News Sports Writer; Sr. Class Gift Committee. Mary Ellen Boone — 225 Delaware Ave., West Pittston, Pa.; Fin. Soc. Thomas H. Boone, Jr. — 6627 Sulky Ln., Rockville, Md.; Acctg. Fin.; Intramurals; IFC Security Comm., Chairman; FMA Chairman, Board of Directors. Marcus A. Borden — Box 449 Syracuse, N.Y.; Spanish; Phi Gamma Delta, Pledge Master, Historian; Varsity Football. Anthony Silva Borges — 64 Ashwood Ave., Summit, N.J.; Chem. Eng.; Sigma Tau Delta; ACS; Track Cross Country. Mariellen Borowiak — 2182 Catasauqua Rd., Bethlehem, Pa.; Bio. Carl Martin Bosch — 3124 Cortland Dr., Vestal, N.Y.; Elec. Engrg.; Chi Phi, Social Chairman, Vice-Pres.; Dean ' s List; Freshman, Sophomore, Junior Honors; Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu; IEEE; Intramurals; IFC Representative; Scholarship Comm.; Judiciary Comm. Pres. Jeffrey S. Boyd — 16 Euclid Ave., Westwood, N.J.; Hist.; Beta Theta Pi; Wrestling. Jeanette G. Bradley — 4 Stonegate, Upper Saddle River, N.J.; Math.; Carothers House, Vice-Pres.; Intramurals, Volley Ball; LUV, Project Coordinator; French Club. Josephine A. Branco — 210 Hartranft Ave., Norristown, Pa. Mark S. Branibar — 4 Springbrook Tr., Sparta, N.J. David Michael Bright — 102 W. Ruth Ave., Robesonia, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Kappa Alpha, Scholarship Chair- man; Dean ' s List, Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, Se- nior; Tau Beta Pi; Chi Epsilon; ASCE; Intramurals. Ellen Brower — 21 Stonegate Rd., Ossining, N.Y.; Chem. Engrg.; Varsity Field Hockey; Swimming. Charles Wilbur Brown — 7 Walnut St., Morristown, N.J.; Mktg.; Varsity Basketball. Douglas Mathias Brunner — 1247 Berwyn-Paoli Rd., Be- rwyn, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Delta Sigma Phi, Vice-Pres.; ASME; Track Field; Brass Ensemble. Donald R. Bryant — 4487 Whetstone Rd., Manlius, N.Y.; Fin Mgt.; Phi Gamma Delta; IFC Chairman; Football; US Ski Team. Susan M. Bschorr — 28 Willets Ln., Plandome, N.Y.; ESRM; RH-11; Sr. Class President, Varsity Volleyball; Tennis. Linda Suzanne Buck — 411 South 5th Ave., Highland Park, N.J.; Civil Engrg.; RH-11; ASCE; Field Hockey; Gamma Phi Beta. David C. Burdakin — 56 Lahser Rd., Birmingham, Mi. Michael Allen Bushner — 1922 S. Delaware St., Allen- town, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; Freshman Sophomore Hon- ors. Curtis Byk — 34 Farm Ln., Great Neck, N.Y.; Mktg. Beardslees, SMAGS, Treas.; Marketing Club; SAC Visiting Lecturers Comm.; College Republicans Lehigh Radio Network; Band. David John Bzik — 147 Analomink St., E. Stroudsburg, Pa.; Bio.; Pi Lambda Phi; Dean ' s List, Freshman Hon- ors. Stephen Douglas Cahill — 75 Hampton Rd., Garden City, N.Y.; Bio.; Sigma Chi, Tribune, Publ. Relations, Chapter Editor; Dean ' s List, Freshman, Sophomore Honors; Pre-Med Society; LUV; Forum VI; Sky-Life Flying Club; Skiing Club; Sailing Club. ]ohn Titus Callaghan — R 741 Main St., Peckville, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Phi Kappa Theta, Steward; ASCE. Eileen M. Canzian — 1449 White Oak Dr., Verona, Pa.; Jour.; Brown White Editor-in-Chief. Christine C. Cardello — 33 Beechwood Dr., Convent Sta., N.J.; Fin.; RH-11; Dean ' s List; Sophomore Hon- ors; Varsity Volleyball; Centennial School Swim In- structor; Women ' s Caucus; Gamma Phi Beta Sorority, Treas.; Executive Board Senior Class; Sr. Class Gift Campaign. Ellyn M. Brower Charles W. Brown Douglas M. Brunner David C. Burdakin Donald R. Bryant Michael A. Bushner Susan M. Bschorr Linda Suzanne Buck Curtis L. Byk David J. Bzik Steven D. Cahill John T. Callaghan Eileen M. Canzian Christine C. Cardello ■HM = Anthony J. Cariddi Jr. Richard J. Cariello Joseph F. Carroll Donald P. Casapulla Mitchell L. Cassel William G. Chieco Robert R. Clark Jr. Joanna Castaldi David E. Charles William S. Check Jr. Jane E. Clarke w m mJMmj . 4l David D. Clauser John M. Clinch David A. Clough Helane Cohen Kenneth Colbert Anthony John Cariddi, Jr. — 150 College PL, S. Orange, N.J.; Acctg Fin.; Phi Gamma Delta, House Manager, Social Chairman; Intramural Mur. Soccer; Sr. Class Gift Fund. Richard John Cariello — 718 Larchwood Ln., Villanova, Pa.; Bio.; Music; Photography; Filmmaking, Painting. Joseph Fitzgerald Carroll — 5804 Atteentee Rd., Springfield, Va.; Fin.; MVP Baseball; ECAC Award; Intramurals. Donald P. Casapulla — 60 Gould Tr., Clifton, N.J.; Bio.; Zeta Psi; Freshman Honors, Dean ' s List. Mitchell L. Cassel — 33 Ellen Ct., Hillsdale, N.J.; Bio.; LUV; Brown White. Joanna Castaldi — Seidersville Rd., RD 7, Bethlehem, Pa.; Psych.; Psi Chi; Chamber Orchestra; LUV; Psi Chi Secy; Supervisor, University Center. David E. Charles — Charles Ln., Jamison, Pa.; Eco.; Theta Xi. William S. Check, Jr. — 1832 Pinehurst Rd., Bethlehem, Pa.; Elec. Engrg. William Gregory Chieco — 160 Quaker Ridge Rd., Man- hasset, N.Y.; Acctg. Fin.; Sigma Chi, Vice-Pres., Treas.; IFC Rep.; Varsity, Marching, Concert Bands. Robert R. Clark, Jr. — 2507 Lakewood Ct., Baltimore Md. Jane Eleanor Clarke — 807 N. Kearney St., Allentown, Pa.; Govt.; Alpha Phi Sorority; French Club; SAC Pub- licity Comm.; Mustard Cheese Production: Red Ryder. David D. Clauser — 2018 Vista Dr., Bethlehem, Pa.; Govt. Soc. Rel. John Michael Clinch — 809 Hayes Ave., Helena, Mt.; Civil Engrg. Env. Sci.; Lehigh Christian Football; Geology Club; Chaplain ' s Council; Hiking, Camping, Rock Collecting, Macrame, Science Fiction Fantasy, Wargaming. David Alan Clough - — 781 Redwood Rd., Martinsville, N.J.; Govt.; Beta Theta Pi, Soc. Chairman. Helane Beth Cohen — 2823 Debra Way, Union, N.J.; Acctg.; Bishopthorpe; Freshman Sophomore Hon- ors; Accounting Internship; Brown White; LUV. Kenneth S. Colbert — 2 Manor Rd., Livingston, N.J.; Ind. Engrg.; AIIE; Intramurals. Clinton William Coldren — 6 Circle Ln., Mechanicsburg, Pa.;- Mech. Engrg.; Delta Upsilon, Pres. Treas.; ASME; Intramurals; IFC. Randall Cole — 150 Chadwick PL, Glenrock, N.J.; Bus. Margaret M. Collier — Peachcroft RcL, Bernardsville, N.J.; Soc. Rel. Bus. Minor; RHC, LUV; Forum; Aca- demic Environment; Admissions Subcomm.; Sr. Class Gift Campaign. David A. Comfort, Jr. — 8 Cedar Dr., Granby Ct.; GeoL; Lehigh University Marching Band. Charles K. Congdon — 11041 Powderhorn Dr., Potomac, Md.; Ind. Engrg.; AIIE; JV Baseball, Intramurals. Michael M. Connolly — 738 Crescent Dr., Glenolden, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Phi Kappa Theta, Secy, Pledge Mas- ter; Freshman Honors; Chi Epsilon Honorary Frat; ASCE; Intramurals. Randy T. Constantin — 6 Brentwood Dr., Verona, N.J.; Mech. Engrg.; Beardslee. Kenneth B. Cooke — 3830 S. Miller Way, Birmingham, Mi.; Psych; Sigma Chi; Varsity Baseball. Kenneth P. Costello — 681 Lake St., Newark, N.J.; Acctg.; Leavitt House, Treas.; Investment Club; RHC; Forum. - 75 Morris Rd., Harleysville, Pa.; Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; Varsity - 450 N. Fourteenth I.R. Club; Circle K St., Catasauqua, Club; Brown Mark David Cowell - Mech. Engrg.; Tau Cross-Country. James J. Coyle Pa.; Int. Rel.; White. Susan L. Cozzie — 1532 Terrace Dr., Maple Glen, Pa.; Govt. Jour.; Pre-law Soc; Modern Dance; Brown White. Brian Starkweather Cramer — 342 Minneola St., Hinsdale, II.; Elec. Engrg.; RHC Rep.; Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman Honors; IEEE; Intramurals; Sky Diving Club, Pres.; Forum; Civil Air Patrol. Michael Cranley — 322 Woodland Ave., Brielle, N.J.; Fin.; Phi Gamma Delta, Pledge Master, Manager of Concessions. Pamela Crawford — Yardley, Pa.; Math. Hist.; RH-11, Pres. Bldg. G.; Academic Chairman Carothers House; 1st place 1976 Williams Senior Essay Contest; Dean ' s List, Freshman Sophomore Honors; University Scholar in History; Phi Alpha Theta, Phi Eta Sigma, Lambda Alpha Lambda; Turkey Trot. Paul A. Crawford — 3704 Belladonna Dr., Glenshaw, Pa.; Bus.; Theta Xi. Clinton W. Coldren Randall Cole David A. Comfort Jr. 1 Charles K. Congdon A Ik Michael M. Connolly Randy T. Constantin Kenneth B. Cooke Kenneth P. Costello Mark D. Cowell James J. Coyle Susan L. Cozzie Brian S. Cramer Michael Cranley Pamela M. Crawford Paul Crawford Johannes C. Croeze Alan H. Crudo Sheryl L. Cutler James J. Cutrufello Deborah A. Dabrowski Stanley J. Darlak David R. David Barry M. Davis Ann Marie Delano Gary L. Delp Johannes Chrisostomos Croeze — Macuarima 76, Santa Cruz Aruba, Netherlands, At.; Metallurgy Material Sci.; ASME. Alan Harris Crudo — 15 Essex Ct., Margate, N.J.; Mech. Engrg.; ASME; Intramurals; Alpha Epsilon Pi, Rush Chairman; RHC, Treas., Facilities Chairman; Epitome Staff; Hillel, Vice-Pres. Bruce Peters Crystal — 18 Eton Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y.; Fin.; Beta Theta Pi, Treas.; Dean ' s List, Sophomore Honors; Lacrosse, Capt.; Varsity Freshman Football; Sr. Class Solicitor. Whitley Austin Cummings II — 618 Newtown Rd., New- town Square, Pa.; Fin.; Chi Psi, Secy., Pledge Master; Dean ' s List; Phi Eta Sigma; JV Baseball; Varsity Hoc- key. Richard Ian Cunliffe — 49 Midland Blvd., Maplewood, N.J.; Acctg.; Sigma Nu; Treas.; Intramurals; Invest- ment Club. Robert Currie, Jr. — 1381 Graymill Dr., Scotch Plains, N.J.; Fin.; Phi Gamma Delta. Sheryl Lynn Cutler — 234 Ryder Rd., Manhasset, N.Y.; Fin.; RH-11; Contributor to School Library Magazine; Contributing Artist to Lehigh TV; Mustard Cheese. James J. Cutrufello — 308 Meghan PL, Norwood, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; Theta Chi. Deborah Ann Dabrowski — 16 Laurel Rd., Brunswick, Me.; Hist.; Gamma Phi Beta Sorority, Rush Chairman Chapter Development Chairman; Varsity Swim- ming, Intramurals; Brown White Bus. Staff; Sr. Class Gift Campaign, Publication Solicitation Committee. Stanley Joseph Darlak — RD 3, Moscow, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Lambda Chi Alpha; ASME; Intramural, Track Sports; Mustard Cheese. David Richard David — 151 Parker Ave., Easton, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; Bishopthorpe; Freshman Honors; Intra- murals. Barry Mitchell Davis — 3 Saxon St., Huntington Sta., N.Y.; Fin. International Relations minor; Beta Theta Pi, Rush Chairman, Pledge Chief; Intramurals; IFC, Rush Chairman; SAC; Mustard Cheese; IFC Rep. Nils Deacon — RD 2 Box 570, Ramtown Rd., Howell, N.J.; Hist.; Wrestling, Tri-Captain. John A. DeHuff, Jr. — 398 Woodland Rd., Madison, N.J.; Psych.; Theta Chi, Intram ural Mgr. 1 year; Forum V; Student Life Comm. Ann M. Delano — 42 Willow St., Millburn, N.J.; Chem. Engrg.; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Eta Sigma; Chevron Schol- arship; AICE; Forum Admissions Comm.; Tau Beta Pi, Membership Committee. Gary LaMar Delp — 1427 School House Rd., Perkasie, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; ASME; Intramurals; Civil Air Pat- rol, Drill Team; Air Force ROTC. Lawrence A. Deren — 1011 Locust St., Hazelton, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Congdon House. David M. Deturck — 263 Endlich Ave., Mt. Penn, Pa.; Bus.; RH-11. Frank Joseph Diana — 265 Nassau Ave., No. Mas- sapequa, N.Y.; Chem. Engrg.; Phi Gamma Delta, Pres., Treas.; Dean ' s List; LUV, Math Tutor, Emergency Room Attendant; Newman Association, Pres. Gary Alan Diehl — 2739 Elm Ct, Allen town, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; RH-11; Freshman Honors; Eta Kappa Nu; IEEE; Intramural Sports; Alpha Phi Omega; Common Cause. Stephen Ray Dill — 83 Amelia Circle, Little Silver, N.J.; Pre- Arch.; Beta Theta Pi; Intramurals; Glee Club; ROTC. Marcus F. Dilliard — 1336 North New St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Arts. Nancy Diane Dimmig — 10 Kenny Circle, Broomall, Pa.; Math. Joseph E. Diorio — 303 North 9th St., Bangor, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Freshman Honors; Chi Epsilon; ASCE, Pres.; Football. Barbara Elizabeth Dippel — 117 Boulevard, Scarsdale, N.Y.; Psych. Soc. Rel.; Gamma Phi Beta, Secy.; Brown White, Polling Comm.; Sr. Class Gift Cam- paign. Randi Di Prima — 8 Overton Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y.; Ind. Engrg.; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Chaplain; Alpha Pi Mu; AIIE; Varsity Football Cheerleader. Lawrence J. Disabatino — 511 Lennox Rd., Wilmington, De.; Civil Engrg.; Chi Psi. Michael Joseph Doeberl — 38 Mary Ln., Riverside, Ct.; Acctg. Eco.; Secy. Treas. Stevens; Freshman Sophomore Honors, Dean ' s List; Intramurals; Circle K Club Treas. Peter Cummings Dolan — Apt. 4-V, 519 Bloomfield Ave., Caldwell, N.J.; Fin. Eco.; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Vice-Pres.; Investment Club; Intramurals; RHC. Robert Leander Donaghy — 99 Van Rensselaer Ave., Stamford, Ct.; Eco.; Pi Kappa Alpha, Executive Coun- cil Chairman; Weightlifting Club, Pres.; Longgliding Club. Stephen Hunter Donaldson — 2284 Meadow Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Theta Xi. Lawrie R. Drennen, Jr. — PO Box 214 W Mt. Vernon St., Oxford, Pa.; Ind. Engr.; Delta Chi; AIIE; Marching Band; Intramurals. Lawrence A. Deren David M. Deturck 76 Frank J. Diana Gary A. Diehl Stephen R. Dill Marcus F. Dilliard Nancy D. Dimmig Joseph E. Diorio Barbara E. Dippel Randi P. DiPrima Lawrence J. Disabatino Michael J. Doeberl Peter C. Dolan Robert L. Donaghy Stephen H. Donaldson Lawrie R. Drennen Jr. Yesterday, today . . . Four years ago, Lehigh University was an institution undergoing change. Now, it is in a state of equilibrium dedicated to maintaining the status quo. When the class of ' 77 entered the University, it was of a dif- ferent mentality than the class of ' 73 which it replaced. Student attention no longer was focused on the war, the ecology and students rights, but on graduate school and the job market. Students no longer were in- terested in changing the world, but in how they would fit into that world. Demonstrations became a thing of the past. For a time, streaking became the big campus activity. As the attitude of the students changed, so did that of the ad- ministration. Financial solubility replaced student activism as the issue of concern. The University also changed physically. Student enrollment grew and with it the size of the faculty and staff. Expansion of the campus included construction of a new residence hall, physics building, chemistry building and Field House. Another lifestyle established itself on campus. The University transformed from a men ' s school with a handful of women to a truly coeducational institution. The macho image and the myth of male superiority slowly disappeared. Meanwhile, less visible changes took place. A reevaluation of a liberal arts education lead to a restructuring of the curriculum and a dropping of the language requirement. Government redirection of research spending led many faculty members in the sciences to redirect their efforts from basic to applied research. Four years have passed and the University is no longer in a state of flux. Student attitudes remain relatively unchanged. The University has committed itself to a stable environment including student enrollment and the size of the faculty, staff and the campus. Coeducation has become an established part of life at Lehigh. The University has not ceased to evolve. It will always continue to adapt to the changes in society surrounding it. But society has slowed from a period of rapid transition to one of slow evolution. Good or bad, that change has been reflected in life at Lehigh. and tomorrow Maintaining and upgrading the University ' s lifestyle and academic reputation will not be an easy matter in the future. As private education drifts precariously toward the future, the University will be confronted by many challenges. One of the most serious problems facing higher education is the decreasing number of 18- year-olds who will enter college. Despite the University ' s over acceptances in recent years, the Educational Policy Committee ' s report on admissions leaves little doubt that the University will eventually be drawing from a smaller pool of qualified ap- plicants. Thechallengefacing the University will be to maintain its academic excellence despite this situation. Spiraling tuition costs will make that challenge even more difficult. The high price of a private education could make it a scarce commodity. Only those who are eligible for financial aid and those who have $30,000 to spend may be able to take ad- vantage of a Lehigh education. Perhaps one of the most ominous threats to private education however, is the government. How much longer will parents be able to support the burden of paying twice for education — once through taxes to support state schools and again to pay painfully high private school tuition costs? As the gap between the cost of a public and private education continues to grow, public schools will become more attractive and it will become harder for private schools, Lehigh included, to compete. Of course, the future is not as bleak a picture as some might paint it. Private education will survive the next decade and the University, with its emphasis on a practical education, may even flourish. But progress will require in- novation. Innovation will require a consolidated effort by the entire Lehigh community. Only then will the University live up to its full potential. UNIVERSITY CENTER. No. 2 BETHLEHEM. PA. 18015 BROWN and WHITE Telephone Zl -86«-«331 EILEEN QUIRK DENNIS SPRICK Desk Editors JILL GOLDMAN DOROTHY BULAS Layout Editor FDEDHAYNES ■UDROCKHILL Sports Editors ' Second data postage paid at mitr m. Pa. Subscription prlca; tio.oc par academic yaar. Circulation: 5. SOD Published soml-weokly, escept during vacation and holiday period , durino. the school year by students of Lehigh Univer- sity. Printed by Lehiflft Valley Offset. Inc., Belhlehem, Pa. Represented tor national ads by National Educational Advertlslna Services, 11 E. SOth Street, New York City. 77 John A. Dreyfuss Brian W. Duff Mark A. Durback Daniel P. Durbin Donald Durkin James P. Dutt 78 James J. Edelen III Mark A. Edelstein Ronald J. Edwards Alex A. Efthimides Edward F. Egan Jr. Michael H. Ehrenpreis Michael I. Eitingon John Allen Dreyfuss — 5745 SW 118th. St., Miami, Fl.; Fin.; Smiley House; Marching Band, Varsity, Band and Concert Band. Brian William Duff — 155 Merwin Cr.; Cheshire, Ct.; Bio.; William ' s Essay Contest 3rd; Freshman Honors, Dean ' s List; Intramurals; Rugby; LUV. Mark A. Durback — 401 East Juniata St., Allentown, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Alpha Tau Omega; IFC Rep.; Chi Epsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; ASCE. Daniel Paul Durbin — 3711 Southwood Dr., Easton, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Thornburg; AICE, ACS; Delta Chi. Donald Michael Durkin — 2189 Lincoln Dr., Huntington Valley, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Phi Gamma Delta; ASCE; Freshman Football; Intramurals. James Paul Dutt — RD 1 Box 27, Temple, Pa.; Fin.; Chi Psi; Varsity Football, Track, Baseball; Sr. Class Gift Campaign Solicitor. Roland Clark East — 255 Farm Rd., Haverford, Pa.; Fin.; Phi Delta Theta; Lacrosse Tri-Captain. fames Joseph Economy — 3441 Congress St., Allentown, Pa.; Marketing; Sigma Chi, Secy.; Marketing Club. James f. Edelen III — 50 Stephenville Blvd., Red Bank, N.J.; Elec. Engrg.; Taylor House. Mark A. Edelstein — 14320 Iroquois Ave., Largo, FL; Chem. Engrg.; McConn House. James Hamilton Edwards — 689 Winona Blvd., Roches- ter, N.Y.; Geol.; Town House; Sr. Class Gift Fund; Outward Bound-Minnesota. Ronald J. Edwards — 2338 Clermont St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Marketing Management, Minor: Psychology; Delta Upsilon; Marketing Club; American Marketing Assoc. Alex Anthony Efthimides — 25125 Bruce Ln., Franklin, Mi.; Marketing; ' Soccer; Spanish Club; Pres., Interna- tional Relations Club; Automobile Racing. Edward F. Egan, Jr. — 27 Old Brick Rd., New City, N.Y.; Fin.; Sigma Chi, Vice-Pres., Rush Chairman; La- crosse; LUV. Michael H. Ehrenpreis — 60 Ely Dr., Fayetteville, N.Y.; Acctg.; Sigma Alpha Mu, Steward; Lehigh Radio; In- vestment Club. Michael I. Eitingon — Apt. 1202, 245 E. 63rd St., New York City, N.Y.; Civil Engrg.; ASCE; RH-11; APO; Hillel. 79 Karl — 128 Momingside Dr. East, Bristol, Ct.; Elec. Engrg.; Phi Sigma Kappa; Freshman Honors. Carl A. Emerling — 9824 Trevett Rd., Boston, N.Y.; Bus.; Brown White Business Staff. David Allen Engler — 1084 Howertown Rd., Catasauqua, Pa.; Ind. Engr.; Lambda Chi Alpha; Dean ' s List, AIIE; Intramurals. James — RED 1, Coplay, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Morris Minor Regis :r. Rob-: i Erbrick — 128 Walnut St., Jenkintown, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Phi Kappa Theta, Social Chairman, Rush Chairman, Vice-Pres.; Pi Tau Sigma; ASME; In- tramurals. Daniel Edmund Erdman — 243 East Lexington St., Allen- town, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Freshman Honors, Dean ' s List; William W. Coleman Scholarship; AICE; Karate Club. Jan Pete I : son — 70-40 Juno St, New York, N.Y.; Acctg.; Smilev House; Sophomore Honors; Forum Rep. James A. Eshleman — 75 Brandt Blvd., Landisville, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Chi Psi. Selim Esinli — Galle 77-8 No. 59-24, ' Barranquilla, Col- ombia, Ind. Engrg.; RH-11; Dean ' s List; Alpha Pi Mu; Intramurals; Forum; Gryphon Society; Post Semester Opportunities Program, Pres. Michael Bloch Exstein — 25 Central Park West, New York, N.Y.; Govt.; Sigma Alpha Mu, Alumni Recorder Dean ' s List: Forum, Vice Chairman, Title LX Steering Committee. Scott L. Faber — Apt. E-110, 251 DeKalb Pk., King of Prussia, Pa.; Bus.; Delta Phi. Robert Gene Facente — 229 Atlantic St., Oradell, N.J.; Ind. Engrg., Phi Delta Theta; Sr. Class Gift Campaign; IFC Rep. Anthony J. Falotico — 1484 Red Maple Ln., Allentown, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Guitar, Music. ■: Dennis Farrara — 51 Butter Ln., Reading, Pa.; Acctg.; Zeta Psi, Vice-Pres.; Intramurals. June } :-;■■: Fasesky — 616 E. Frankford St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Jour. Minor, Hist.; M M; Intramurals; Alpha Phi, Vice Pres. Pres.; Epitome, Mng. Assoc. Editors; Intern at Easton Express; Brown White; Writer for Alumni Bulletin. Sha:. mel Fay — 208 Hillcrest Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Alpha Chi Rho, Steward, Social Chairman, Pledge Master; ASCE; Intramurals. H Karl J. Ellefsen Carl A. Emerling David A. Engler James M. English Robert S. Erbrick Daniel E. Erdman Jan P. Erlichson James A. Eshleman Selim Esinli Michael B. Exstein Scott L. Faber Robert G. Facente Anthony J. Falotico Mark D. Farrara June K. Fasesky Shawn Fay V % Kirk P. Fazioli Juan L. Fernandez Jr. Mindy Fener Elizabeth P. Fenik Mary Ann T. Ferrante Larry A. Fetzer Glenn R. Ferguson Jo Marjorie Fineman 82 Brian P. Finn Richard F. Finn Jr. Marie A. Fiore David Fischer William J. Fitzgibbons John T. Fitzpatrick Ronald Flaska Howard B. Foltz Kirk Patrick Fazioli — 49 Whiteview Rd., Troy, N.Y.; Ind. Engrg.; Chi Psi, Pres.; AIIE; Varsity Baseball. Mindy Carol Fener — 24 Azalia Ct., Hempstead, N.Y.; Natural Sci.; Bishopthorpe, IM Mgr.; Varsity Field Hockey, Basketball; Lacrosse; Track; Powderpuff Foot- ball, Co-capt.; Student Athletic Trainer. Elizabeth Parsons Fenik — 415 Bender Ave., Roselle Park, N.J.; French Span.; RH-11; French Club; In- tramural Softball; Serendipity, Chamber Singers; Mus- tard Cheese; Marching ' 97; Women ' s Caucus. Glenn R. Ferguson — 369 Center Ave., Westwood, N.J.; Arts.; Sigma Chi. Juan L. Fernandez, Jr. — 436 W. North St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Fin. Span.; Theta Xi, Rush Chairman; IFC V-Pres.; Carl R. Streets Scholarship; Intramurals. Mary Ann T. Ferrante — 28 Lookover Ln., Yardley, Pa.; Geol. Sci.; RH-11; Freshman Honors; Campus Leader Spring 1975; Dean ' s List; Intramurals; SAC, Secy., Pres.; SAC Publicity Comm.; Brown White; Student Relations Committee of The Alumni Association; Bicentennial Comm.; Fencing Club; Pres. Junior Class. Larry Alan Fetzer — 562 Tobias Dr., Hellertown, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Marching Band. Jo Marjorie Fineman — 1830 Rittenhouse Sq., Philadel- phia, Pa.; Jour.; Rh-11; Richards 4 Secy.; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List; Intramurals; Brown White News Editor; Epitome Section Editor. Brian P. Finn — 40 Orchard St., Medfield, Ma.; AEP.; Smiley House. Richard Francis Finn, Jr. — 64 Juniper Way, Basking Ridge, N.J.; Chem. Engrg.; Phi Sigma Kappa, Pres., Treas., Steward; Dean ' s List; Presidential Scholar; Phi Eta Sigma; AICHE; Intramurals; Sr. Class Exec. Com- mittee. Marie A. Fiore — 20 Marion St., Windsor Locks, Ct.; Elec. Engrg.; Richards House. David Anderson Fischer — Box 207 Clark Ln., Whitehouse, N.J.; Fin.; Chi Phi; Delta, Treas.; Sports Car Club; Mustard Cheese; Lehigh Treasurer ' s Council. William John Fitzgibbons — 2 The Knolls, Locust Valley, N.Y.; Psych.; Pi Lambda Phi, Vice-Pres.; Dean ' s List Sophomore Honors; Intramurals; LUV; IFC. John Timothy Fitzpatrick — Sugarcreek, 427 Longview Dr., Sugarland, Tx.; Chem. Engrg.; Delta Phi; Freshman Honors; AICHE; Intramurals, Rugby; Forum. Ronald Flaska — 69 Puggy Ln., Bethlehem, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Freshman Sophomore Honors; AICE; Tau Beta Pi. Howard Brainerd Foltz — 620 Porter St., Easton, Pa.; Acctg.; Kappa Sigma; Lehigh Ski Club, Treas.; Sr. Class Gift Investment Comm.; National Ski Patrol; Ac- counting Intern. 83 Richard W. Foltz — 240 Wenner Way, Ft. Washington, Pa.; Physics; Delta Phi, Pledge Master. Allahyar Fouladi — c o Mr. Ezra Chitayat, 500 Fifth Ave., Suite 2136, New York, N.Y.; Bus.; Stevens. Albert F. Fox, Jr. — 819 Mohican St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Met. Judith N. Fradkin — 899 Barnswallow Ln., Huntington Valley, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; RH-11; Dean ' s List, Freshman Sophomore Honors; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Eta Sigma; Society of Women Engineers; Tennis, Squash, Skiing; LUV. Frank F. Francisco III — 2727 Nottingham Rd., Bethlehem, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; Freshman Honors. John Conway Franke — 19 Glen Ridge Ln., Pittsburgh, Pa.; Govt.; Honorable Mention Student Art Show Lehigh; Internship at Allentown Art Museum; Wilder- ness Club. David Charles Frankenbach — 363 North Ave., Fan- wood, N.J.; Elec. Engrg.; Zeta Psi; Dean ' s List, Freshman Honors; IEEE. Nancy Beth Freeman — 925 Laurie Ln., Franklin Lakes, N.J.; Acctg.; RH-11; LUV; Little Sister Program; Sr. Class Gift Campaign, Investment Solicitor. Stephen L. Freilich — 1435 Sturl Ave., Hewlett, N.Y.; Acctg.; Sigma Alpha Mu; Lehigh Radio Network; Brown White. Barry L. Fritz — RD 1, Andreas, Pa.; Met. Engrg.; Alpha Tau Omega, Worthy Chaplain, House Manager; Robert T. Lentz Award; Met. Society. Elizabeth Moore Fruin — 48 Rose Ave., Eastchester, N.Y.; Fin.; RH-11; Sr. Class Gift Solicitation Invest- ment Committees; LUV, Secy.; Project Head for LUV. Richard John Furanna — 42 Maple St., Milford, Ct.; Marketing; Kappa Alpha, 2nd Vice-Pres.; Freshman Honors; Intramurals; Glee Club; Drama. Richard John Gabel — 911 Mohawk Rd., Franklin Lakes, N.J.; Marketing; Sigma Phi, Vice-Pres., Secy., House Manager; Brown White Circulation; Sigma Phi Ski Team, Capt. William Raymond Gallagher, Jr. — 114 N. Milton Ave., Baltimore, Md.; Elec. Engrg.; McConn House, Athletic Manager; Intramurals; Bridge Club; Concert Band; Computer Society; Tutor. Athena Gallas — 1380 Perkiomen Ave., Reading, Pa.; Psych.; RH-11; Freshman Honors, Dean ' s List; TV (Lehigh Network) ' Spotlight ' MC; Financial Aid Comm. Douglas Charles Garczynski — 14 Claire St., Great Neck, N.Y.; Chem.; Freshman Sophomore Honors; ACS, Vice-Pres.; JV Basketball; LUV; Epitome Brown White Photographer. 84 Judy N. Fradkin Richard J. Gabel William R. Gallagher Jr. Athena Gallas Douglas C. Garczynski Peter M. Garda Jana C. Gardill John L. Gardiner Gerard W. Gardner Marianne E. Garrabrant Patricia E. Gedney Norman J. Garris Ernest P. Geist John R. Garrison Peter Gebert Anthony H. Genevese Lawrence H. George Diane L. Geyer Richard W. Gibbons Robert T. Giglio Stephen Giglio Peter Michael Garda — 7 Horse Shoe Ln., Great Neck, N.Y.; Acctg.; Sigma Chi, Scholarship Chairman, Chap- ter Editor; Beta Alpha Psi; IM Manager; Forum: McClintic Marshall, Treas. Jana Carol Gardill — 120 Country Club Dr., Pittsburgh, Pa.; Ind. Engrg.; RH-11; AIIE; Intramural Basketball; SWE; WLTN, Asst. Program Dir.; SAC Publicity Committee. John Lion Gardiner — Deerhill Rd., Alpine, N.}.; Bio.; Soccer Mgr., Intramurals; Hiking; Leatherwork; Guitar. Gerard W. Gardner — 7 Beach St., Maplewood, N.J.; Acctg.; Football. Marianne Elizabeth Garrabrant — 901 Mountain View Cr., Westfield, N.J.; Civil Engrg.; Phi Eta Sigma; Chi Epsilon; Intramurals; Lehigh Skydiving Club; Amaranth; ASCE. Norman J. Garris — 1232 West Rye St., Allentown, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Alpha Tau Omega. John R. Garrison — 231 Orchard Way, Wayne, Pa.; Acctg. Fin.; Pi Lambda Phi, Treas.; House Manager; Sophomore Honors; FMA Warehouse Comm.; Invest- ment Club. Peter H. Gebert — 1839 Hilltop Rd., Jenkintown, Pa.; Fin.; Phi Gamma Delta, Corres. Secy.; Lacrosse 2,3; Boxing Club; Alumni Dinner Chairman, Rush Chair- man. Patricia Elizabeth Gedney — Springvale Rd., Crugers, N.Y.; French; Varsity Field Hockey, Volleyball, Softball, Swimming; Lacrosse; Gryphon Society; Sr. Class ExeC. Comm.; Co-Supervisor Women ' s Intramu- ral Program. Ernest Paul Geist — RD 1 Box 284, Macungie, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; Tau Epsilon Phi, Pres. Anthony H. Genevese — 1102 E. Tilghman St., Allen- town, Pa.; Acctg. Lawrence H. George — 105 N. Strawberry Ln., Chagrin Falls, Oh.; Acctg.; Kappa Sigma; IFC, Rep.; Dean ' s List, Freshman Sophomore Honors; P.I.C.P.A. Award; Phi Eta Sigma; Beta Alpha Psi; Intramurals; Epitome Scheduling Editor; IFC Social Committee. Diane Lisa Geyer — 157 Highland Dr., Richboro, Pa.; McClain Merit Award; Outing Club, Vice-Pres., Secy., Treas. Richard W. Gibbons — 3 Oak Ln., Nanuet, N.Y.; Civil Engrg.; Phi Delta Theta, Secy. Robert T. Giglio — 50 Emerson Ave., Croton On Hud- son, N.Y.; Mech. Engrg.; Delta Tau Delta. Stephen A. Giglio — 114 Newmarket Rd., Garden City, N.Y.; Sociology; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Social Chairman. 87 David Ross Gilbert — 18 Gould St., New Bedford, Ma.; Govt.; Townhouse; LUV, Council. Edward A. Oilman — 1 Maria Ln., Kinnellon, N.J.; Chem. Engrg.; Taylor House. Peter B. Gilmore — 6340 SW 116 St., Miami, Fl.; Mech. Engrg.; Beardslee House. Robert J. Gilner — 1044 East 9 St., Brooklyn, N.Y.; Arts. Dorothy Anne Rorabaugh Girol — 809 Wyandotte St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Fine Arts. Roger K. Glasbrenner — 20 Cranston Rd., Pittsford, N.Y.; Fin.; Phi Gamma Delta, Rush Chairman; Varsity Football. Gary William Glasgall — PO Box 4564, Panama City 5, Panama; Mech. Engrg.; Pi Lambda Phi; ASME; Intra- mural Sports. Suzanne J. Glazebrook — 181 Sheldrake Dr., Paoli, Pa.; Psych French; Exercise Class Teacher; LUV Co- Chairman, Project Head ASH. David George G lueck — 1853 London Rd., Abington, Pa.; Bio.; Delta Upsilon, Secy.; IFC Rep.; Dean ' s List; Phi Eta Kappa; Intramurals; LUV, Muhlenberg Medical Center Emergency Room; Community Nine Ambu- lance Corp Vol.; LUV Project Head; Lehigh- Hahnemann Medical Program. Deidre L. Godycki — 1060 Granada Ave., San Marino, Ca.; Bio.; Sophomore Honors; AAAS. Jane Patricia Goeller — 107 Birch Ln., Greenwich, Ct.; Psych Drama; Bishopthorpe, Selection Comm. Dorm. Secy.; Mustard Cheese. Michael A. Goldberg — 27 Lenore PL, Hauppauge, N.Y. Stuart Scott Goldstein — 207 Nimitz Rd., Paramus, N.J.; Chem. Engrg.; Pi Lambda Phi; Freshman, Sophomore, Junior Honors; Tau Beta Pi; AICHE; Intramurals. Babak Golgolab — N. Iranshahr Ave., 27 Tahbaz St. Postal D 15, Tehran, Iran; Mgt.; SMAGS. James K. Golle — 744 Linwood Ave., Ridgewood, N.J.; Psych Soc. Rel.; Pi Kappa Alpha. Glenn Nicholas Gorab — 151 Haddenfield Rd., Clifton, N.J.; Bio.; Zeta Psi, Historian, Pledge Committee; Sophomore Honors; Krauss Scholarship; Track; Intra- murals; Alpha Phi Omega Service Fraternity; Sr. Class Gift Campaign; Brown White Photography. 88 David R. Gilbert Edward A. Gillman Peter B. Gilmore Robert J. Gilner Dorothy A. Girol Roger K. Glasbrenner Gary W. Glasgall Suzanne J. Glazebrook David Glueck Deidre L. Godycki Jane Goeller Michael A. Goldberg Stuart S. Goldstein Babak Golgolab James K. Golle Glenn N. Gorab Andrea S. Gorbach Geoffrey L. Gordon Stephen T. Gower Luke A. Graber Kerry M. Grady John E. Grant Annmarie C. Gray Kenneth W. Green Jr. Robert G. Green Colyn P. Greene Kenneth W. Grieshaber John T. Groses Jr. 1. Robin A. Gross Clifton R. Gruver Michael S. Guerrieri Catherine S. Guidon Andrea Sue Gorbach — 17 Blue Ribbon Dr., Westport, Ct.; Fin. Geoffrey Lippincott Gordon — 1359 Mansel Ave., Wil- liamsport, Pa.; Fin.; Alpha Tau Omega; Sophomore Junior Honors; Marketing Club Chairman; Visiting Lecturers Comm.; Brown White Ad Manager. Stephen T. Goiver — 1511 Shelbourne Dr., Bethlehem, Pa.; Acctg.; Town Council; Phi Eta Sigma; Intramurals; Alpha Lambda Omega, Pres.; Town Council, Treas. Board Member. Luke A. Graber — 1520 Irene St. Apt. 215, Bethlehem, Pa.; Bus. Kerry M. Grady — 77 Stanhope Rd., Sparta, N.J.; Vivil Engrg.; ASCE. John Edward Grant — 18 Oregon Tr., Bethel Park, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Alpha Tau Omega; AICHE; Student In- vestment Club; IFC Rep.; Intramurals; ASA. Annmarie Christine Gray — 7 Fiske Tr., Cranford, N.J.; Psych.; RH-11; Intramurals; Brown White; LUV; Sr. Class Gift Campaign. Kenneth W. Green, Jr. — 121 Roslyn Ave., Glenside, Pa.; Bus.; Lambda Chi Alpha. Robert George Green — 115 S. 24th St., Camp Hill, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Pi Tau Sigma; ASME. Colyn P. Greene — 621 W. 169th St., New York, N.Y.; Fin.; RH-11; Soccer, Boxing MVP: Circle K; LUV; ROTC; BSU. Kenneth W. Grieshaber — 640 Green Hill Rd., Kinnelon, N.J.; Met. Engrg.; Sigma Phi Epsilon; ASM; IM Foot- ball, Soccer, Basketball, Tennis, Volleyball; Frat House Manager, Scholastic, Beer. John T. Groses, Jr. — 407 Lyndhurst Dr., Broomall, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Alpha Chi Rho, Vice-Pres.; ASCE; Freshman Football, JV Varsity Lacrosse, Intramurals. Robin A. Gross — 11 Westland Dr., Glen Cove, N.Y.; Bus.; Williams House. Clifton R. Gruver — 6104 Crossover Ln., Rockville, Md.; Mgt.; Alpha Tau Omega; Dean ' s List; Varsity Football; Varsity Squash; Gryphon; Forum; LUV. Michael Shaw Guerrieri — 303 9th St., Ocean City, Md.; Fin. Catherine S. Guidon — 840 Langhorne Ave., Bethlehem, Pa.; Arts. 91 Clayton C. Gunheim — 3654 Wyola Dr., Newtown Square, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; RH-11; ASCE; Intramurals; Band. Peter Boland Gushue — 27 Wendover Rd., Longmeadow, Ma.; Hist.; M M; Lacrosse (Mgr.); Hockey (Mgr.); WLRN. Gregory Paul Haase — 239 Old Tote Rd., Mountainside, N.J.; Mech. Engrg.; Alpha Sigma Phi; IFC Rep., Alumni Rel.; Tau Beta Pi; ASME. Cari Hamburger — 58 Lehigh Court, Rockville Centre, N.Y.; Govt. German; Varsity Volleyball; Richards House, Pres.; Pre-Law Society; Int ' l Relations Club; Studied Semester Abroad in Germany. Bradford Dean Hamm — 2021 Harvard Ave., Camp Hill, Pa.; Marketing; Alpha Sigma Phi, Social Chairman; Marketing Club. Charles F. Hammel — RD 4, Quakertown, Pa.; Bus. Debra K. Hampton — 3055 Holly St., Denver, Co.; Eco.; RH-11; Black Students Union. Jeffrey I. Handler — 6797 Entrade PL, Boca Raton, Fl.; Civil Engrg.; Tau Epsilon Phi. Nicholas Harry Hantzes — 11828 Farmland Dr., Rockville, Md.; Eco.; Alpha Tau Omega; Freshman Honors, Dean ' s List; Rugby Club Treas.; Ski Club. Randall S. Harbold — RD 4, Gettysburg, Pa.; Bus.; Beardslee House. George Marten Hare — RD 3, East Stroudsburg, Pa.; Acctg. Fin.; Bishopthorpe; NAA award Junior Year; Beta Alpha Psi; Mgr. Treas. Bishopthorpe. Deborah Karen Harlan — 110 E. Wayne Ave., Easton, Pa.; Classics; Phi Eta Sigma; Sigma Tau Delta; Dean ' s List; Chaplain ' s Council. Alan David Harris — 585 Westmoreland Ave., Kings- ton, Pa.; Bio.; Dean ' s List, Freshman Sophomore Honors; Concert Comm.; Paper Recycling. Diane Harris — 406 N. Gilmore St., Allentown, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Williams; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Varsity Basketball; Intramural Manager. William G. Harris — 43 Guinard Dr., Watchung, N.J.; Arts. David William Hartzell — 27 Apple Ln., Mountville, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; Zeta Psi, Steward. Clayton C. Gunheim Peter B. Gushue Bradford D. Hamm Charles F. Hammel 92 Debra K. Hampton Jeffrey I. Handler Nicholas H. Hantzes Randall S. Harbold George M. Hare UMmmmmssmm Deborah K. Harlan Alan D. Harris Diane Harris William G. Harris David W. Hartzell 93 Carl J. Haslett Peter Hauser Michael C. Havener Robert C. Hawk John D. Hawkins Jr. Lewis Hay III 94 Frederick M. Haynes Stephen P. Hazlett Robert J. Hedderman Jr. Dale L. Heintzelman William Heitzman Edward F. Helgans III Raymond P. Heller Patricia A. Henry Carl J. Haslett — 322 Howard Ave., Altoona, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; RH-11; Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu; WLRN- Lenigh Radio Network. Peter James Hauser — 274 Ancon Ave., Pelham, N.Y.; Fin. Jour.; Editor, KA Quill; Investment Club, Treas.; Brown White Features Editor; WLVR-FM, Director Pub. Rel.; Pub. Rel. Heart Fund. Michael Curt Havener — PO Box 74, Collegeville, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Phi Delta Theta, Rush Chairman, Jr., Vice-Pres., Sr.; Basketball, Baseball; ASCE. Robert C. Hawk — Mercer Park Apts. 4A, 475 North St., Doylestown, Pa.; Bus.; Theta Chi. John D. Hawkins, Jr. — 54 Tisdale Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y.; Arts; Alpha Sigma Phi. Lewis Hay III — 100 Ketler Dr., Grove City, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Pi Kappa Alpha. Frederick M. Haynes — 52 Wood Ave., East Longmeadow, Ma.; Geol.; Freshman, Sophomore Honors; Brown White Sports Editor; Chess Club. Stephen Phillip Hazlett — 1401 Sunbury Dr., Bellevue, Nb.; Bio.; Pi Lambda Phi; Social Chairman 76-77, Rush Chairman 75-76; Intramurals. John P. Healy, Jr. — 286 Charlton Ave., South Orange, N.J.; Mkt.; Varsity Football, Co-Capt. Gary John Heckenberger — 450 Race St., Catasauqua, Pa.; Bio.; Lambda Chi Alpha; Freshman Honors; Re- search Award; Pre-Health Prof. Soc; Intramurals. Robert J. Hedderman, Jr. — 1647 New Scotland Rd., Slingerlands, N.Y.; Bio.; Kappa Sigma, Secy. Pres.; Intramurals; IFC; LUV; Sr. Class Gift; Epitome ID Edi- tor. Dale L. Heintzelman — Route 2, New Tripoli, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; ACS; Marching ' 97; ALO. William J. Heitzman, III — 1102 Ford Rd., Cornwells Hgts., Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Alpha Tau Omega, Worthy Keeper of the Annals. Edward Francis Helgans III — 23 Donellan Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y.; Acctg.; Pi Lambda Phi, Secy.; Freshman Sophomore Honors. Raymond Philip Heller — 218 Hillside Ave., Nazareth, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; Leavitt; Alpha Sigma Phi; Marching ' 97, Student Conductor; Concert Band, Student Con- ductor; Stage Band. Patricia Ann Henry — 158 Glen Dr., Doylestown, Pa.; Acctg.; RH-11; Marketing Club; Intramural Mgr.; Var- sity Tennis, Capt.; Powder Puff Football; Investment Club; Marketing Club Membership Chairman; Squash Team; Brown White Bus. Staff; SAC, Publicity Comm.; Forum, Title IX Adv. Comm. Chairman. 95 Larry M. Henshazv — 633 Grape St., Hammonton, N.J.; Fin.; Delta Upsilon, V. Pres., Steward; ECAC — All East Football. Robin Lynn Herfort — 18 Antony Rd., White Plains, N.Y.; Psych. Soc. Re.; LUV; Forum Rep. Carol J. Herzon — 2914 Shakespeare Rd., Bethlehem, Pa.; Arts; RH-11. Richard Hessinger — 1305 Highland St., Allentown, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Alpha Tau Omega; Dean ' s List, Freshman Honors; Pi Tau Sigma; ASME; Intramurals. James Thomas Hetherington — 302 Cross St., Philadel- phia, Pa.; Jour.; Delta Upsilon, Pledge Master; Eastern Collegiate Boxing Champ 178 lbs. 1975; Brown White Senior Reporter. Warren John Himich — 701 Cranbury Rd., E. Brunswick, N.J.; Chem. Engrg.; Student Affiliate ACS, Pres.; Marketing Club; Judo Club; Karate. Robert A. Hines — 2248 Birch St., Easton, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; ASCE; Intramurals; Weightlifting Club, Treas.; Town House, UC Supervisor. Sharon Pamela Hirsch — 1452 Tanglewood Ln., Lakewood, N.J.; Am. Stu.; M-M; Gryphon; Sigma Tau Delta; Phi Alpha Theta; Gryphon Soc, Secy.; Brown White; WLVR; WLRN; Hillel Foundation. Jay Ross Hoffman — Delsea Dr., Green Creek, N.J.; Acctg.; Tau Epsilon Phi, Social Chairman; Band; Ju- nior Year Abroad; Tau Sigma Phi; Sr. Class Gift Com- mittee. William John Holdgrafer — 70 Foxcroft Rd., Manhasset, N.Y.; Elec. Engrg.; Zeta Psi; Sky Diving. Kevin C. Holl — 34 Filbert Tr., Denville, N.J.; Arts; RH-11. Mary Ruth Hollenbach — Apt. 1, 113 S. 13th St., Allen- town, Pa.; Psych. Peter Holton — 34-21 87th St., Jackson Heights, N.Y.; Hist.; Delta Chi, Social Chairman; Dean ' s List; Phi Eta Sigma; JV Football; Varsity Football. Janet E. Holva — 2006 Sixth St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Arts. Jane L. Honeyman — 22 Crown Tr.; Morrisville, Pa.; Bus.; RH-11. Frances Caroline Hopkins — 647 Liberty St., Boonton, N.J.; Mktg Fin., Minor S.R. Lawrence Henshaw Robin L. Herfort Carol J. Herzon Richard Hessinger James T. Hetherington Warren J. Himich 96 Robert A. Hines Sharon P. Hirsch Jay R. Hoffman William J. Holdgrafer Kevin C. Holl Mary Hollenback T Peter S. Holton Janet E. Holva Jane L. Honeyman Frances C. Hopkins Paul]. Hubert Andrew J. Hudock Ronald S. Hughes 98 Thomas F. Hughes Craig P. Hunt Daniel F. Hurley Bruce Hurlman Martha C. Hutton Paul S. Idell Sheryl Illnick Mary Ann Inslee ]arp Horathai — 9 Dejo Rd., Bangkok 5, Thailand; Chem. Engrg.; Beardslee House; Dean ' s List; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Eta Sigma; Forum VI VII Rep.; LUV Tutor; Council for International Service Hospitality Under- graduate Representative; SAME, Member. Fereydoun Houriani — KH Ebtehaj, Koye Day No 26, Tehran, Iran; Civil Engrg.; RH-11. Richard H. Howson — 1 Glen wood Rd., Weston, Ct.; Ind. Engrg.; AIIE; Intramural; Brother-Theta Chi. Hana Hoza — Box 42, Belcamp Md.; Mech. Engrg.; RH-11. Paul . Hubert — 215 Stephenson Ave., Middlesex, N.J.; Bio.; Beardslee. Andrew J. Hudock — 720 Hillcrest Rd., Hershey, Pa.; ESRM; Taylor House. Mark Kenall Hughes — 101 Waverly Rd., Wyncote, Pa.; Mrktg.; Sigma Nu, Rush Chairman, Social Chairman; Freshman Honors; Brown White Layout Editor. R. Scott Hughes — 431 Morwood Rd., Earlington, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Thornburg, Pres.; Freshman Honors; ASCE; Intramurals; RHC Council. Thomas Francis Hughes — 113 W. Chestnut Hill Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.; ESRM; Freshman Honors; Geology Club; Newman Club. Craig Paul Hunt — RD 1 Park Ave., Bethlehem, Pa.; Acctg. Daniel F. Hurley — 651 Paramus Rd., Paramus, N.J.; Mech. Engrg.; Nevius Award; Sophomore Honors; BA-App. Sci.; Rugby; Delta Upsilon. Bruce Hurlman — Bronxville, N.Y.; Acctg.; Chi Psi, Treas.; JV Baseball; Varsity Squash; Served on Execu- tive Council of Chi Psi National Office. Martha C. Hutton — 22 East Hartshorn Dr., Short Hills, N.J.; Arts; M-M House. Paul S. Idell — 7 Bubbling Brook Rd., Kinnelon, N.J.; Elec. Engrg.; Pi Lambda Phi. Sheryl Evanne Illnick — Brady Dr., PO Box 188; Peapack, N.J.; Fin Management; RH-11; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List; LUV; Women ' s Choir; Women ' s Caucus; Visiting Student at Univ. of Penna. in Whar- ton School of Business; Participation in International Business Management Program in Madrid, Spain. Mary Ann Inslee — 2340 Bobwhite Ln., Lancaster, Pa.; Acctg.; RH-11 Rep.; Women ' s Choir; Band; Sr. Class Gift Comm.; Student Life — Forum VII; RHC; Title IX Comm. on Affirmative Action. 99 Mori Irvine — 187 Rt. 24 RD 1, Mendham, N.J.; Psych SR; 3rd Prize Williams Speech Contest; WLRN, Train- ing Director, Program Director, Disc Jockey; Pre-Law Soc; Brown White; Lehigh Security Force; Rape Crisis Council of Allentown. Lawrence Willoughby Jacobs 111 — 226 Hillcrest Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa.; Ind. Engrg.; Chi Phi, Historian, Secy., Treas.; Freshman Honors; Alpha Pi Mu; AIIE; Golf Team; Sr. Class Gift Campaign. Robert V. Jacobs — 3477 Ranger Rd., Davidsonville, Md.; Mech. Engrg.; Pi Lambda Phi. Steven Edward Jacobs — 743 Highview Dr., Wyckoff, N.J.; Elec. Engrg.; Town House; 2nd Prize, Contem- porary Art Award. Eric Corey Jacobsen — 43 Oslo Dr., Rockaway Twnp, N.J.; Fin.; Psi Upsilon; IFC Re.; Freshman Soccer. Jeffrey Alan Jacobson — 749 N. Webster Ave., Scranton, Pa.; Acctg.; Beta Alpha Psi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Golf Squash. Jeanne M. Janecek — 13 White Birch Dr., Morris Plains, N.J.; Arts; RH-11. Perry Bernard Janoski — 1418 White Oak Rd., Allen- town, Pa.; Soc. Rel.; Teaching Asst. Fencing Club. Robert Gilpin Jefferis — Apt. 3, 232 W. Packer Ave., Bethlehem, Pa.; Geol.; Departmental Honors; German Table, German House, President. Randall Stewart Johns — 26 Hyannis Ave., Blackwood, 1 N.J.; Elec. Engrg.; Kappa Alpha, Treas. Gary E. Johnson — 5 Hawthorne Dr., Branford, Ct.; Elec. Engrg.; McConn House. D. Bruce Jones — 1476 Holcomb Rd., Huntingdon Val- ley, Pa.; Management Fin. Lambda Chi Alpha, Pres.; Varsity Lacrosse; Sr. Class Gift Campaign. Willard F. Jones 11 — 218 East Market St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Fin.; Taylor Hall; Intramurals; Investment; College Young Republicans. Bharatkumar D. Joshi — 1320 North New St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Acctg.; Lehigh Trustee Award; Data Processing Management Assoc; India Assoc, of Lehigh Valley Vice-Pres., Social Chairman. Thomas B. Judge — 640 Prospect Ave., Little Silver, N.J.; Civil Engrg.; Beta Theta Pi, Rush Chairman, So- cial Chairman; ASCE. Robert Judson — 24 Hampton Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y.; Marketing; Sigma Alpha Mu, Secy.; IFC Rep.; Epitome Bus. Mgr., Asst. Bus. Mgr.; Marketing Club. Mori E. Irvine Lawrence W. Jacobs III i X HONORARY F M ' tmm 100 Robert V. Jacobs Eric Corey Jacobsen Robert G. Jefferis Jeffrey A. Jacobson Randall S. Johns Jeanne M. Janecek Perry B. Janoski Gary E. Johnson D. Bruce Jones Willard F. Jones Bharatkumar D. Joshi Thomas B. Judge Robert L. Judson ■■Joseph G. Kaiser Maureen E. Kane Michael J. Kane John B. Kangas P ' TJ M — f fc h Kaj Ernst Karch James F. Kearney Kipling T. Keiser Brian Kardos Gary L. Kauffman Laurence D. Keller Paul J. Kelly Kevin J. Kennedy Joseph G. Kaiser — 196 Bridge Ave., Bay Head, N.J.; Met. Engrg.; Zeta Psi; Freshman Sophomore Hon- ors; R.H. McCann Award; Tau Beta Pi; Student Met. Soc. Maureen Elizabeth Kane — 80 Stratford Rd., Rockville Centre, N.Y.; Psych.; SMAGS; Deans List; Psychology Club; Weightlifting; Asst. to Director of Intramurals; Bishopthorpe, Selection Comm.; Bishopthorpe Coor- dinating Comm. Michael Joseph David Kane — Valley Rd., Glen Cove, N.Y.; Marketing; Chi Psi, Secy.; Varsity Lacrosse. John Brewster Kangas — 25 Old Mill Rd., Chappaqua, N.Y.; Elec. Engrg.; RH-11; Dean ' s List; IEEE; Vol- leyball Badminton Intramurals. Kaj Ernst Karch — 100 N. Fairview St., Nazareth, Pa.; Acctg.; Sigma Nu, Treas., Soc. Chairman; Beta Alpha Psi; Brown White Layout Editor; Sr. Class Gift Campaign; LUV. Brian Alan Kardos — 153 S. Main St., Bangor, Pa.; Mkt.; Williams; Karate Club 4 years; Mkt. Club 2 years; Champion Pocket Billiard Player, Soph. year. Ernest Alan Karpovitch — 360 Bradford Ave., War- rington, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; RH-11; M M, Pres. ' 75, ' 76; Union Carbide Award; Pi Tau Sigma, Vice-Pres,; ASME, Pres., Vice-Pres.; Intramurals; RHC; ASME. Gary L. Kauffman — RD 2, Box 83, Loudonville, Oh.; Acctg.; Theta Delta Chi, Treas.; Dean ' s List; Beta Alpha Psi; Freshman Basketball; Investment Club. James F. Kearney — 32 Alan Ln., Mine Hill, N.J.; Civil Engrg.; Zeta Psi, Secy.; Freshman Honors; Chi Epsi- lon; Tau Beta Pi; ASCE; Intramurals; Karate Club; LU G rotto; Ski Club; Skydiving Club, Treas.; Civil Engr. Undergrad. Advisory Board. Kipling Todd Keiser — 20 Woodrow Ave., Sinking Springs, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; Beardslee, Vice-Pres. Laurence D. Keller — 107 West Woodland Ave., Penndel, Pa.; Bus.; Theta Delta Chi. Paul Joseph Kelly — York Lynne Manor Apts., City Line Berwick Rd., Philadelphia, Pa.; Hist.; Zeta Psi, Historian; Intramurals. Paul Raymond Kelly — 249 W. Oakcrest Ave., North- field, N.J.; Chem. Engrg.; Beta Theta Pi. Robert Stuart Kendall — 53 Noble St., Kutztown, Pa.; Psych.; Mustard Cheese; Chaplain ' s Council, Inde- pendent Representative. Donald Paul Kennedy — 703 Cear Hill Dr., Allentown, Pa.; Fin.; Beta Theta Pi, Steward; Dean ' s List; Freshman Football; Winter Track 1,2; Spring Track 1,2. Kevin J. Kennedy — 2167 8th Ave., Sea Girth, N.J.; Mech. Engrg.; Kappa Sigma; Tennis Team, Co-Capt.; ASME, Pres.; Pi Tau Sigma, Pres. 103 Karen Vivian Kent — 79 Kensington Rd., Garden City, N.Y.; Fine Arts Pre-Arch. Paul A. Kershaw — 328 Greenwood Ave., Jenkintown, Pa.; Marketing; Alpha Tau Omega; Varsity Football. Joel C. Kershner — 1338 Birch St., Reading, Pa.; Met. Engrg.; M M; Cross-Country Track; Student Met. Soc; Campus Crusade for Christ. Burton Alan Kesselman — 574 Fairway Dr., Woodmere, N.Y.; Sigma Alpha Mu, Steward, Rush Chairman, Pledge Master, Sgt at Arms; IM Boxing Champion; Bridge Club; Pre-Law; Karate; Chess; Brown and White Credit Mgr. Chin-Chul Kim — 1 Sagan-Dong Chongro-Ku, Seoul, Korea; Civil Engrg.; Zeta Psi; Head Instructor at Lehigh Taekwon-do (Korean Art of Self Defense) Club. Justin James King — 5 Foxcroft Rd., Rockville Centre, N.Y.; Eco.; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sr. Marshall; Pre-Law Club; Intramurals; Powder-Puff Coach; IFC; RHC; Pres. Freshman Dorm. Robert A. Kirker — 3906 Schoolhouse Ln., Harrisburg, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; Lambda Chi Alpha; Swimming; Tennis; Squash; LUV. Maclean Kirkwood III — 400 Bridle Path Woods Rd., Bethlehem, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; IEEE; Freshman Wres- tling. Carol Ann M. Kiss — 1262 Ridge Ave., Whitehall, Pa.; Ch.E; Town Council, Bd. of Dir.; Secy.; AICHE; Soci- ety of Women Engineers; Varsity Field Hockey; Intra- murals; Tau Lambda Chi. Douglas J. Kistler — 257 E. South St., Allentown, Pa.; Ch.E.; Dean ' s List; Varsity Basketball; Intramural Softball. David E. Klein — 52 Hunterdon Rd., West Orange, N.J.; Arts. Jack Morgan Kloeber, Jr. — 244 Ferguson Ave., Shaver- town, Pa.; Ind. Engrg.; RH-11; RHC Rep.; Congdon House, Secy.; Alpha Pi Mu; Ping Pong Team; Glee Club Mgr.; ROTC; Orienteering Club; Rangers. Mary Margaret Klopack — 418 Thomas St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Eng.; Town Council; Tau Lambda Chi, Vice-Pres.; Sigma Tau Delta; Varsity Volleyball; Intramurals. David Michael Klucsik — 242 Buckingham Dr., Bethlehem, Pa.; Marketing; 1976 Williams Prize in Journalism; Marching Concert Bands; Brown White; Town Council; Alpha Lambda Omega. Patricia Allison Koby — 28 Beechwood Rd., Roslyn, Long Island, N.Y.; Amer. Studies. Anthony Paul Kochenash — 1794 Newport Ave., North- ampton, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Dean ' s List; ASCE; Civil Air Patrol. y m Karen V. Kent Paul A. Kershaw Joel C. Kershner Burton A. Kesselman 104 Chin-Chul Kim Justin J. King Robert A. Kirker Maclean Kirkwood III HIH k JtZ r fc ' Iv L 4 4, • Carol Ann M. Kiss Douglas J. Kistler David E. Klein Jack M. Kloeber Mary M. Klopack David M. Klucsik Patricia A. Koby Anthony P. Kochenash Mark Koenig John W. Koester Dennis J. Kohler Larry N. Kohn Gary P. Kolleogy Dean B. Konner William F. Kovacs David F. Kozel Gordon P. Kramon Gary E. Krutul : l { -■- - . ■rv ' . ' ' gf| David M. Kuzo Robert J. Lally Richard G. Lang Kerry M. Lankenau Jeffrey D. Larson Elaine M. Laustsen Wood-Ridge, N.J.; Recording Secy.; Rockville, Md. Mark Koenig — 292 Windsor Rd. Acctg. Mgt.; Phi Gamma Delta Freshman Football; Rugby Club. John W. Koester — 11119 Rosemont Dr Civil Engrg. Dennis Jeffrey Kohler — 122 Wendover Ave., Buffalo, N.Y.; ESRM; Thornburg; Sophomore Honors, Dean ' s List; Intramurals. Larry Neal Kohn — 1751 Columbia Tr., Union, N.J.; Acctg.; Surdna Foundation Award; Mustard Cheese; Forum Traffic Appeals Committee. Gary P. Kolleogy — 1834 11th St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Elec. Engrg. Dean Bruce Konner — 51 Harding Ave., North Caldwell, N.J.; Fin.; Alpha Epsilon Pi; Dean ' s List; Alpha Epsilon Pi, Founding Father, Intramural Mgr., Historian; Circle K Club — Lt. Gov. — Pa. District, Pres. Secy.; Hillel Society, Pres., Vice-Pres.; Student Life Committee. William F. Kovacs — 27 Undercliff Rd., Montclair, N.J.; Ind. Engrg., Chi Psi. David Frank Kozel — RFD 1, Ghent, N.Y.; Govt.; Var- sity Football. Gordon Paul Kramon — 41 Franklin Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y.; Marketing; Theta Chi, Secy.; Civil Air Patrol. Gary Edmund Krutul — 17 Grandview Ave., Lincoln Park, N.J.; Acctg.; Sigma Phi, Treas., Vice-Pres., Pledge Master; Freshman Sophomore Honors, De- an ' s List; Beta Alpha Psi; Freshman Football; Brown White Circulation Mgr. David M. Kuzo — 105 S. Walnut St., Kennett Square, Pa.; Met. Engrg.; Lambda Chi Alpha. Robert Joseph Lally — 787 June Dr., Paramus, N.J.; Elec. Engrg.; Sigma Nu; IEEE; Varsity Rifle Team, Capt. Richard G. Lang — 339 North 4th St., Allentown, Pa.; Acctg.; Alpha Tau Omega, Vice-Pres.; Freshman Hon- ors; Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman Football; Varsity Foot- ball. Kerry Milford Lankenau — 18 Ellers Dr., Chatham, N.J.; Mech. Engrg.; Pi Tau Sigma; ASME; Varsity Track; In- tramurals; Marketing Club; Sr. Class Gift. Jeffrey David Larson — 35 Hidden Brook Rd., River- side, Ct.; Ind. Engrg.; Pi Lambda Phi, Steward; AIIE; Intramurals. Elaine Marie Laustsen — 1107 Saddle Brook Rd., Moun- tainside, N.J.; Ch.E.; ACS Award; Chandler Prize; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Eta Sigma; AIChE; Society of Women Engineers. 107 Leroy Person Leahy, Jr. — 728 N. Pennsylvania Ave., Morrisville, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; Lambda Chi Alpha; Eta Kappa Nu; IEEE; Computer Soc. Pres.; LUV, Project Coordinator. Myra H. Lebowitz — 904 Quincy Ave., Scranton, Pa.; Acctg., Freshman Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. Laurence Paul Leidner — 235 Sandpiper Ave., Royal Palm Beach, Fl.; Bio.; Alpha Epsilon Pi. Mary Ann Leonardi — 7417 Van Noy Loop, Fort G Meade, Md.; Arts; M M House; Gryphon Society; Gamma Phi Beta; Pre-Law Society; Mustard Cheese; Tech. Dir. Brown and White; Epitome; LUV, Public re- lations mgr., Softball Team. Lance F. Leonhardt — 3429 Easton Ave., Bethlehem, Pa.; Bio. Dale Edna Lerf — 2346 Redwood Rd., Scotch Plains, N.J.; Acctg.; Sophomore Freshman Honors; Dean ' s List; Marketing Club; Beta Alpha Psi; Phi Eta Sigma; Sr. Class Gift Comm.; Brown White; Gamma Phi Beta. Gilbert Levine — 339 McLean PI., Hillside, N.J.; Acctg.; Alpha Sigma Phi; Chairman of Extension Comm.; In- tramurals. Blanche Levitt — 118 Heather Dr., Mt. Laurel, N.J.; Bio.; Richards; Dean ' s List Fall ' 75; LUV Council. George L. Levkoff — 110 East End Ave., New York, N.Y.; Fin. Amy P. Levy — 57 Colgate Ln., Woodbury, N.Y.; Arts. Arthur L. Levy — 111 Woodside Ave., Trenton, N.J.; Amer. Stud.; Sigma Alpha Mu, Steward; Freshman — Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List; Phi Alpha Theta; Sigma Tau Delta; Intramurals; Water Safety Instr. Bethlehem Chapter Amer. Red Cross; Pre-Law Soc; Orchestra — Freshman Sophomore Years. D. Neil Levy — 648 Winthrop Rd., Teaneck, N.J.; Fin.; Alpha Tau Omega; Intramurals; Investment Club. Peter H. Lichtenberg — 828 Channel Rd., Woodmere, N.Y.; Fin.; Sigma Alpha Mu; Marketing; Sr. Class Gift Campaign. Elliot L. Liebman — 29 Sycamore Tr., Springfield, N.J.; Elec. Engr.; Sigma Alpha Mu; Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman Honor Society; Eta Kappa Nu; Powder Puff Football Coach. Glenn Edward Lightner — 36 Spring Rd., Livingston, N.J.; Mech. Engrg.; Alpha Sigma Phi, HM; ASME. Isaac Gordon Lilienfeld — 15 E. Frambes Ave., Pleasantville, N.J.; Civil Engrg.; Alpha Chi Rho, Ste- ward; Ski Club; Karate; Computer Society; Counselor, Freshman Camp. 108 Leroy P. Leahy Jr. Myra Lebowitz Lance F. Leonhardt Dale E. Lerf Gilbert M. Levine Blanche Levitt George L. Levkoff Arthur L. Levy Peter H. Lichtenberg Amy P. Levy D. Neil Levy Elliot L. Liebman P%5 Glenn E. Lightner Isaac G. Lilienfeld 109 Peter C. Lilienfield Theresa A. Lindley k mi i 1 fife : ,.♦: ■.} Biff Jeanne D. Longenhagen Hilton J. Lowe Daniel G. Lindner Kenneth A. Lubarsky John M. Lyon Kevin T. Lipka Carl J. Lukach Douglas C. Lytle Martin A. Mack Gloria Macksoud Joan M. Magee Lloyd M. Mahler Robert D. Makos Joseph P. Mallaney Peter Cahn Lilienfield — 45 East 85, New York, N.Y.; Pre- Arch.; McConn, Pres.; RHC Rep.; Forum, Sub- Corn, on Residence, Chairman; Asst. to Curator — University Permanent Collection. Theresa A. Lindley — 1880 Robin Way, Bethlehem, Pa.; Bio.; Swimming; Chamber Singers. Daniel George Lindner — 3145 Altonah Rd., Bethlehem, Pa.; Govt Eco.; Govt. Departmental Honors; Pre-Law Society; Radio Station; Television Station; Programm- ing Staff; Director, Sports Staff; Co-Director, Sports Staff. Kevin Theodore Lipka — PO Box 281, Flemington, N.J.; Bio.; Brown White; Hillel. Jeanne Debra Longenhagen — 2870 Meadowbrook Cir. S, Allentown, Pa.; Govt. Psych.; Intramurals; Sr. Class Gift Campaign, Sol. Invest. Comm.; Hockey Statistician. H. Jay Lowe — 46 Wall St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Acctg.; Alpha Lambda Omega. Kenneth A. Lubarsky — 100 Highland Ave., Montclair, N.J.; Fin.; Delta Tau Delta; Freshman Football. Carl John Lukach — Sedgely Farms, 4807 Lancaster Pk., Wilmington, De.; Fin.; Delta Tau Delta, Pres.; Dean ' s List; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Intramurals. John M. Lyon — 1518 Lakewood Rd., Manasquan, N.J.; Chem. Engrg.; Pi Lambda Phi. Douglas Creighton Lytle — 116 S. Sproul Rd., Broomall, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; Leavitt House; Dean ' s List; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Tau Beta Pi, Eta Kappa Nu; Varsity Band, Marching 97. Martin Alan Mack — 2806 Fairview St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; ASCE; Intramurals; Marching 97 ; Jazz Band; Varsity Band; Alpha Epsilon Pi. Gloria Elizabeth Macksoud — 15 Carteret Ct., Madison, N.J.; Govt.; RH-11; Bishopthorpe Selection Comm.; Sophomore Class Honors; Dean ' s List; Pre-Law Soci- ety. Joan M. Magee — 11 Merion Rd., Cherry Hill, N.J.; Arts; Dravo House. Lloyd M. Mahler — 23 Roger Dr., Port Washington, N.Y.; Bio. Robert D. Makos — 1958 Renwick St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Bus. Joseph P. Mallaney — 17 Cross Gates; Short Hills, N.J.; Bus.; Alpha Chi Rho. ill Francis A. Mannella, Jr. — RD-3 Circle Dr., Export, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Phi Gamma Delta. Mildred Viola Mapp — 2040 Titan St., Philadelphia, Pa.; Psych.; Black Student Union; Volunteer at Kirtz Train- ing Center. Timothy A. Marchio — 9 Seville Dr., Somerville, N.J.; Fin.; Beta Theta Pi, Vice-Pres.; Freshman Honors; In- tramurals. Deane G. Marfone — 547 N. Prince Frederick St., King of Prussia, Pa.; Fin.; Ice Hockey; Sigma Alpha Mu. Charles Craig Marino — 215 East 68th St., New York, N.Y.; Civil Engrg.; SAC, Rep. at Large, Treas. James G. Marino — 1381 Tanwood Dr., Baldwin, N.Y.; Bus.; Leavitt House. Thomas O. Marrs — 1959 Crooked Oak Dr., Lancaster, Pa.; Geol.; McConn House. Gail Martens — 161 Rockaway Ave., Garden City, N.Y.; Arts; Williams House. Maria C. Martinez — 19 Spring Ave., Bergenfield, N.J.; Urban Studies; Sophomore Honors, Dean ' s List; Psi Chi. Walter J. Marx — 228 Stonewall Ln., Fairfield, Ct.; Acctg.; Tau Epsilon Phi, Scribe, Steward; Deans List; Intramural Sports. Victor Joseph Maslanka — 76 West High St., Nazareth, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Town Council Secy.; Dean ' s List; Freshman, Sophomore Honors; Phi Eta Sigma; Chi Ep- silon; Tau Beta Pi; ASCE; Alpha Lambda Omega, Treas. Kenneth Michael Matlick — 135 Murray Dr., Oceanside, N.Y.; Acctg.; Sigma Alpha Mu, Vice-Pres.; Epitome; Brown White. John L. Matt — RD 1 Turin Rd., Lee Center, N.Y.; Fin.; Football, Intramurals. John P. Matterazzo — 671 Garfield St., Hazleton, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Beardslee House; ASME. Donald Wayne Mayer — 474 Mountainview Dr., N. Plainfield, N.J.; Civil Engrg.; Zeta Psi; Zeta Psi Schol- arship; ASCE; Intramurals; Marching ' 97; Varsity Band; Sr. Rep. of Band. Paul Crawford McBeth, 111 — 391 Neulon Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.; Acctg.; Theta Chi, Treas., Social Ch- iar.; Rush Chair.; Investment Club. 112 Francis A. Mannella Jr Mildred V. Mapp Timothy A. Marchio Deane G. Marfone Charles C. Marino James G. Marino Thomas O. Marrs Gail Martens Maria C. Martinez Walter J. Marx Victor J. Maslanka Kenneth M. Matlick John L. Matt John P. Matterazzo Donald W. Mayer Paul C. McBeth y v James R. McBride Kevin W. McCarthy Donald S. McCorkel Jr. Kathleen M. McDonough wm ? Susan B. McGovern Virginia M. McGuire Joanne T. Meglio Craig A. Meier 114 Daniel J. Melkus Peter S. Menard Donald A. Messina Carol J. Meyer Lee Meyers Margaret A. Michaels Jeffrey A. Miers George Mikes James Russell McBride — 458 Barclay Rd., Rosemont, Pa.; ME; Dean ' s List; Rugby Club. Kevin Warren McCarthy — 4978 Lindermer Ave., Bethel Park, Pa.; Fin.; Kappa Sigma; Varsity Tennis; Varsity Squash, Capt.; Board of Publications, Public Relations Board; Sr. Class Gift Solicitation Chair. Donald S. McCorkel Jr. — Church Rd. RD 1, Hum- melstown, Pa.; Arts. Kathleen Mary McDonough — 420 St. Marks Ave., Westfield, N.J.; Bio.; Richards; Gryphon Society. Susan B. McGovern — 171 Lafayette Ave., Chatham, N.J.; Eng.; RH-11; Powderpuff Football, Intramurals; Gamma Phi Beta, Secy., Ritual Chairman; Special Events Hostess, Volunteer; Sr. Class Gift Campaign, Investment Solicitation. Virginia Marie McGuire — 16 Mahan Rd., Old Bethpage, N.Y.; Acctg.; RH-11; Dean ' s List, Freshman Sophomore Honors; LUV; Intramurals. Joanne Teresa Meglio — 110 Bache Ave., New York, N.Y.; ESRM; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List; Phi Eta Sigma; Gryphon Society; Sr. Class Gift Committee. Craig A. Meier — 93 Wildwood Dr., Needham, Ma.; Bus. Daniel John Melkus — 501 Constitution Ave., Heller- town, Pa.; Bio.; Town Council; Freshman Honors; De- an ' s List; Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa; Pre-Medical Soc; ACS. Peter Smith Menard — 442 Stublyn Rd., Rt. 2; Gran- ville; Oh.; Jour., Minor IR.; RH-11; Glee Club, Stage Mgr.; Brown White, News Editor, Managing Editor, Editorial Page Editor, Associate Editor. Donald A. Messina — 91 Cedar Hill Ave., Belleville, N.J.; Elec. Engrg.; Leavitt House. Carol J. Meyer — 908 Stratford Ave., Melrose Park, Pa.; Mgt. Fin.; Varsity Swimming; Powderpuff Football; Gryphon Society, Secy.; Jr. Class, Treas.; Election Rules Comm.; Marketing Club. Lee A. Meyers — 1425 Lorraine Rd., Reading, Pa.; Acctg.; Pi Lambda Phi, Pres. Meg Michaels — 27 Woodmere Blvd. South, Wood- mere, N.Y.; Fin.; Freshman Sophomore Honors; De- an ' s List; Varsity Tennis; Intramural Sports; Invest- ment Club; LUV. Jeffrey Alan Miers — 120 S. 23rd St., Allentown, Pa.; Acctg.; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Steward, Athletic Mgr.; In- tramurals; Computer Science Minor. George F. Mikes — 33 Compass Ln., Levittown, N.Y.; Fin.; Delta Chi; Soccer Team, Intramurals. 115 Charles Robert Miller — 3288 Pine Lake Rd., Orchard Lake, Mi.; Ind. Engrg.; Phi Kappa Theta, Sgt. at Arms; AIIE; Marching Band; Intramurals. Clint Mason Miller — 2713 Winston Rd.; Acctg Fin.; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List; Investment Club; Weightlifting Club. Diane Ruth Miller — 404 Lafayette Ave., Prospect Park, Pa.; Jour. Psych.; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List; Campus Crusade for Christ; LUV. Jerry A. Miller — 805 Partridge Dr., Bridgewater, N.J.; Bio. Myra Miller — 67 Stephenville Pkwy. Edison, N.J.; Mrktg.; Townhouse; Marketing Club. Robert D. Miller — 5 Vannoy Ave., Pennington, N.J.; Ind. Engrg.; Kappa Sigma. Thomas Alan Miller — 21 E. Washington St., Fleet- wood, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; RH-11; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; Intramurals; Glee Club. William H. Mirth, III — 1445 West Macada Rd., Bethlehem, Pa.; EP. Gary Molitor — 187 Broad St., Leetsdale, Pa.; Met. M.S.; Kappa Alpha, Pres., Corres. Secy.; Freshman Honors; ASM: Navigators. ]ames Irving Moll — 61 Chestnut St., Macungie, Pa.; Civil Engrg. Donald H. Monteverde — 21 Ridge Rd., Harrington Park, N.J.; Geol.; Phi Sigma Kappa, House Manager ' 75; JV Soccer; Geology Club; Rugby Club. Clifford W. Moodie — 125 Crest Dr., Summit, N.J.; Fin Acctg.; Delta Phi, House Mgr., Guest Chairman. Paul B. Morris — 4 Demartini PL, Waldwick, N.J.; Bio.; Phi Sigma Kappa. John Burton Mountsier — 157 Morningside Rd., Verona, N.J.; Metallurgy; Kappa Sigma, Treas.; Metullurgy So- ciety; Freshman Soccer. Robin Elizabeth Muench — 11 Casino Rd., Marblehead, Ma.; Civil Engrg.; ASCE; Varsity Lacrosse; Alpha Phi Sorority. Gary Frederick Muller — 2 Anne PL, Pleasantville, N.Y.; Pre-Arch.; RH-11. 116 Jerome A. Miller Myra Miller Gary Molitor Donald H. Monteverde Robert D. Miller Thomas A. Miller William M. Mirth III James I. Moll Clifford W. Moodie fg Paul B. Morris John B. Mountsier Robin E. Muench Gary Muller Kathryn J. Mumma Thomas P. Nederostek David A. Nickel Thomas E. Norton Bryan J. Murphy Jr. William B. Murphy Daniel V. Nardone Susan M. Nemchik Joseph S. Nemetz Donald W. Newhart George E. Nowack Jr. William L. Numbers Leon G. Nusselt Jr. Lee B. Oliphant — 1 Robert S. Oliwa Laurence O ' Mahoney Kathryn Jane Mumma — 73 Oak Dr., Doylestown, Pa.; Acctg.; RH-11; National Merit Scholarship; Beta Alpha Psi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Intramurals. Bryan James Murphy, Jr. — 103 Main St., Hellertown, Pa.; Math.; Freshman Honors Sophomore; Dean ' s List; H. Barrett Davis Award for Acting Directing; Mustard Cheese. William Bryon Murphy — Orinoco Mining Co., Puerto Ordaz, Venezuela; Acctg.; Kappa Sigma; Intramurals; Mustard Cheese; Forum, Administration Commit- tee, Epitome, Scheduling Editor; IFC, Pledge Comm.; Gryphon Society. Daniel Vincent Nardone — 2095 Clarendon St., Camp Hill, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; RH-11; Ingersoll-Rand Schol- arship; Dean ' s List; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma; ASME. Thomas P. Nederostek — 5565 Hillside Ave., Whitehall, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Town Council, Board Member; IM Sports; Alpha Lambda Omega, V-Pres.; SAC, Ind. Rep. Susan Marie Nemchik — 862 North Kearney St., Allen- town, Pa.; Ind. Engrg.; AIIE; SWE. Joseph S. Nemetz — 240 Camphill Rd., Ft. Washington, Pa.; Acctg Fin.; Delta Phi, Housemanager; Baseball. Donald W. Newhart — PO Box 462, Treichlers, Pa.; Arts; Taylor House. David A. Nickel — RD 1, Newville, Pa.; Fin.; Delta Up- silon, Secy., Treas., Steward; Freshman Honors Sophomore; Freshman Football. Thomas E. Norton — 3 Neer Dr., Park Ridge, N.J.; Elec. Engrg.; Theta Delta Chi. George Edward Nowack, Jr. — 922 Donald Dr., Em- maus, Pa.; Govt.; Zeta Psi, Treas.; Dean ' s List; Freshman Honors; Participant in the Washington Se- mester Prog.; Intramurals, JV Tennis Team; Pre-Law Society; Govt. Student-Faculty Comm., Education Pol- icy Comm.; Brown White. William L. Numbers — 518 South Ott St., Allentown, Pa.; Management; Theta Xi, Secy.; Intramurals; Pres. of Lehigh County Chapter of Penna. Assoc, of Re- tarded Citizens. Leon G. Nusselt, Jr. — 5171 Lombardi Dr., Pittsburgh, Pa.; Metallurgy; Lambda Chi Alpha; Student Metal- lurgy Society. Lee Bradford Oliphant — 125 Hawthorn Rd., Braintree, Ma.; Acctg.; Delta Phi, Treas.; Varsity Soccer. Robert Stephen Oliwa — 320 Stiles St., Elizabeth, N.J.; Acctg.; Ice Hockey, Co-Captain. Laurence O ' Mahoney — 28 Oakland PL, Summit, N.J.; Geol.; Delta Phi, House Improvements Chair.; Freshman Honors; Phi Eta Sigma. 119 John A. Orsini — 2221 Grove St., Allentown, Pa.; ESRM; Geology Club. Timothy Charles Oten — 425 County Farm Rd., Wheaton, II.; Mech. Engrg.; ASME; Freshman Foot- ball; Pi Tau Sigma. George Edward Ott, ]r. — 55 Mercer St., Hamilton Sq., N.J.; Chem. Engrg.; Psi Upsilon, Pres., Social Chair- man, IFC Rep. Richard M. Packer — 730 12th Ave., Bethlehem, Pa.; Bus.; Delta Tau Delta. Michael Stephen Pahuta — Route 4, Raritan Ave., Flemington, N.J.; Mgt Mkt.; Marketing Club; Varsity Baseball; Hockey Club; Intramural Sports. Georgia Louise Panich — 656 McKee Ave., Monessen, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; RH-11. Gene Everad Parris — Government Rd., Charlestown, Nevis, BW; Chem.; Freshman Honors; RH-11; Varsity Soccer; OEA. Bayne Patterson — 1805 West Union Blvd., Bethlehem, Pa.; Soc. Rel Span.; RH-11; Sophomore Junior Hon- ors, Dean ' s List; Psi Chi Honorary Society; Mustard Cheese; Alpha Phi Sorority; Plays. Michael R. Pavia, ]r. — 33 Arnold Ln., Rowayton, Ct.; Chem.; Sigma Nu. Walter Pawlowski — 777 Ocean Ave., New London, Ct.; Acctg. Dennis E. Pearce — RD Box 62, Mars, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Leavitt House. John Kelley Pearson — Old South Rd. Rt. 1, Litchfield, Ct.; Metallurgy; Sigma Nu, Le Commander; Met. Soc. Joseph James Pennick, Jr. — 3 Longwood Dr., Andover, Pa.; Jour.; Taylor Hall; Freshman Football; Varsity Ice Hockey; Brown White; WLRN; Epitome Sports Edi- tor; Mustard Cheese; Lehigh Hockey Program Edi- tor. Kenneth Michael Pepe — 65 Florida Ave., Island Park, N.Y.; Management Marketing; Smiley House. Jose A. Perna — 602 Smiley Ave., Bethlehem, Pa.; Acctg.; Delta Upsilon; Dean ' s List; Phi Eta Sigma; Omicron Delta Kappa; Varsity Soccer, Captain. Loin ' s . Perrelli — 728 Quaker Rd., Chappaqua, N.Y.; Civil Engrg.; Kappa Sigma, Social Chairman; ASCE; Track, Skiing; Ski Club, Vice-Pres.; Mustard Cheese; Pre-Law Society. John A. Orsini Timothy C. Oten George E. Ott Jr. Richard M. Packer 120 Michael G. Pahuta r w : v ■■■' ■■■--■■' Georgia L. Panich Gene E. Parris C. Bayne Patterson Michael R. Pavia Jr. Walter J. Pawlowski Dennis E. Pearce John K. Pearson Joseph J. Pennick Jr. Kenneth M. Pepe Jose A. Perna Louis J. Perrelli Kenneth A. Peterson William L. Phipps Gregory Fabian Pierog Marcellus M. Pin Daniel C. Pinchas Brenda C. Piskin Richard S. Plewes Donald M. Plum Edmound H. Poggi III Gary S. Pogoda • Michael P. Polachek Richard E. Poole Jr. Judith A. Potashkin Guy R. Powell if All Robert R. Powell Gregg Pressman Kenneth A. Peterson — 138 Woodland Ave., Summit, NJ; Bio. William L. Phipps — Box 228, East Hampton, LI., NY; Arts. Gregory Fabian Pierog — RD 1, Emmaus, Pa.; Mgt.; Varsity Football. Marcellus M. Pin — Whiton Rd., Box 143D, RD 2, Neshanic Station, N.J.; Ind. Engrg.; Sigma Chi. Daniel Cooper Pinchas — 240 E. 79th St., New York, N.Y.; Hist.; RH-11; Table Tennis Club; IR Club; Hillel; LUV. Brenda Caryl Piskin — 741 Ave. C, Bayonne, N.J.; Ind. Engrg.; Tau Beta Pi; Alpha Pi Mu; Phi Eta Sigma; AIIE; Varsity Volleyball; IE Council. Richard Stanley Plewes — 1216 Yverdon Dr., Camp Hill, Pa.; Mgt.; Dean ' s List. Donald M. Plum — 60 Braemar Dr., Cheshire, Ct.; Geol.; ATO, Worthy Sentinel; Intramurals, Rugby; Band. Edmund H. Poggi 111 — 563 Westmorland Ave., Kings- ton, Pa.; Ind. Engrg. Gary Steven Pogoda — 223 N. Douglass Ave., Margate, N.J.; Elec. Engrg. Michael P. Polachek — 1502 Paper Mill Rd., Wyndmoor, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Chi Phi, Pres.; IFC, Rep.; Volunteers. Richard Edward Poole, Jr. — Rt. 2, Boonsboro, Md.; Mech. Engrg.; Treas. Lehigh Theta Chapter of Pi Tau Sigma; Intramural Mgr.; Trustee Grant; Intramurals; ASME. Judith Ann Potashkin — 51 Clark St., Cranford, N.J.; Bio.; Dean ' s List; Freshman Sophomore, Junior Honors; LUV, Miller Memorial Blood Center. Guy R. Powell — RD 3, Box 402 A, Somerset, N.J.; Elec. Engr. Robert W. Powell — 8 Walker Ave., Gaithersburg, Md.; Elec. Engrg.; McConn House. Gregg S. Pressman — 1000 Leopard Rd., Rydal, Pa.; Bio.; RH-11; Dean ' s List; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Hillel Club; Classical Piano, Ensembles, String Orchestra. 123 Richard Noltie Price — 77 Oakridge Rd., Verona, N.J.; Fin.; Kappa Sigma, Pledgemaster; Varsity Basketball, Freshman Sophomore; Marketing Club; IFC Social Comm.; Intramurals. Bryan Robert Proven — 909 Cumberland Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Theta Xi, Treas.; Freshman Dean ' s List; Phi Eta Sigma; ASME; Frater- nity Intramurals; Volleyball Club. Robert Angus Pulford — 23 Grandview Tr., Wethersfield, Ct.; Acctg. Fin.; Delta Sigma Phi, Pres., Sr. year, Rush Chairman, Jr. year; Beta Alpha Psi. Mac E. Purvis, Jr. — RD 3 Box 127, Valencia, Pa.; Bio.; Leavitt House. Charles B. Pyle, III — 521 County Line Rd., Radnor, Pa.; Chem,; ACS. James P. Quinn — 446 Cumberland Ave., Teaneck, N.J.; Elec. Engrg.; Pi Kappa Alpha, Steward; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List; Eta Kappa Nu; IEEE. John J. Quinn — 509 Marks Rd., Oreland, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Alpha Sigma Phi. Maureen Patricia Quirk — Box 760 Robin Rd., Furlong, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; RH-11; Pres. RHC; Eta Kappa Nu, Prize; Tau Beta Pi, Prize; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Eta Sigma; IEEE; SWE; Computer Soc; Forum; Ed. Pol.; LUV; Brown White; Omicron Delta Kappa; Lambda Alpha Lambda. Janet Mary Raibaldi — 575 Margueritta Ct., Green- wood, Ind.; Acctg.; Dean ' s List; Freshman Honor So- ciety; Marketing Club; Gamma Phi Beta; Sr. Class Treas. Barry D. Raiser — 104 Wilton Woods Ln., Media, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Beta Theta Pi. Martha Elena Raring — 4205 Williamsburg, Harrisburg, Pa.; Bio. C. Dallas Reach, Jr. — PO Box 2117, 4305 Cutlass Ln., Naples, Fl.; Civil Engrg.; ASCE. Francis James Reck — 135 South Pearl St., Shamokin, Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; Phi Kappa Theta, Pres., Vice-Pres., House Mgr., Steward; IEEE; Intramurals. Alan Guy Redden — 561 Great Plain Ave., Needham, Ma.; Hist.; Delta Phi, Vice-Pres.; Glee Club. Michael L. Redmond — 5997 Jeanine Dr., Sacramento, Ca.; Civil Engrg.; Theta Chi, Judicial Comm. Chair., Rush Chair.; ASCE; Skydiving Club; Orienteering Club. William John Reeues — 524 S. 60th St., Harrisburg, Pa.; Ind. Engrg.; Coleman Grant Recipient. Richard N. Price Bryan R. Proven Robert A. Pulford Mac E. Purvis Jr. Charles B. Pyle III James P. Quinn 124 John J. Quinn Maureen P. Quirk Janet M. Raibaldi Martha C. Rarim Francis J. Reck Michael L. Redmond Barry D. Raiser C. Dallas Reach Alan G. Redden William J. Reeves 125 Waldon E. Regi Harold J. Reiss Lynn A. Reisteter Helen H. Richardson mmIh  , L i fl i : I 1 1 John C. Ridge Joseph R. Rinn 126 Diane K. Rissinger James A. Ritter Kerry L. Rissmiller Richard A. Rivlin William G. Rixey John S. Rizzo Raymond J. Robb David M. Roberts Mark C. Roberts Christopher S. Robertson Weldon E. Regi — PO Box 519, Wrightstown, N.J.; Elec. Engrg.; Alpha Sigma Phi. Harold J. Reiss — 31-A Pardun Rd., North Brunswick, N.J.; Bus.; Sigma Alpha Mu. Lynn Ann Reisteter — 1868 Abington Rd., Bethlehem, Pa.; Govt.; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Eng. Honorary Society. Helen Hope Richardson — 172 Wharton Ln., Bethlehem, Pa.; Jour.; Richards; Omicron Delta Kappa, Treas.; Varsity Field Hockey, Basketball Softball, Powder- puff Football, Co-Capt.; Epitome, Co-Editor; Brown White, Desk Editor; Student Equal Opportunity Ath- letic Subcommittee. John Charles Ridge — 2620 Winston Rd., Bethlehem, Pa.; Geol.; Delta Chi; Varsity Tennis; Sr. Class Gift Fund. Joseph F. Rinn — 820 Elizabeth St., Ridgefield, N.J.; Acctg.; Alpha Tau Omega, Treas., Pledge Trainer; In- tramurals. Diane K. Rissinger — 259 Cassatt Rd., Berwyn, Pa.; Span. Fine Arts; Carothers; Mandeville Purchase Award; Lucille Bunin Askin Award; Lambda Alpha Lambda; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Parnassus. Kerry L. Rissmiller — 751 Floret Ave., Reading, Pa.; Fin.; SMAGS. James A. Ritter — RD 7, Allentown, Pa.; Acctg.; Alpha Tau Omega, Worthy Scribe; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List; Varsity Swimming; Investment Club. Richard A. Rivlin — 11 Jay Ct., North Woodmere, N.Y.; Fin.; Sigma Alpha Mu, Pres., Rush Chairman, IFC Rep. Intramurals; Brown White Bus. Mgr., Credit Mgr., Nat ' l Ads Mgr., Make-up Ed.; Chess Club; Bridge Club; Investment Club; Marketing Club. William George Rixey — Box 393, 798 Ave. E, Riverside, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Smiley, Secy.; AIChE Scholarship Award; Tau Beta Pi; AIChE; ACS; IM Wrestling, Foot- ball. John Rizzo — 201 Ohio Ave., Shenandoah, Pa.; Civil Engr.; Lambda Chi Alpha, High Rho- Alumni Corres.; John Howell Powell Scholarship; William F. Coleman Scholarship; ASCE; Intramural Sports; OUV; Asst. Frat. Social Chairman. Raymond John Robb — 905 Park St., McKeesport, Pa.; Acctg.; Sigma Nu, Athletic Mgr.; Freshman Honors; Phi Eta Sigma. David M. Roberts — 21 Canal Run West, Washington Crossin, Pa.; Bus.; Delta Sigma Phi. Mark Connelly Roberts — 305 Gun Rd., Baltimore, Md.; Elec. Engrg.; Glee Club, Asst. Mgr., Former Head Li- brarian. C. Scott Robertson — Acctg. Eco.; Gryphon Society, Sr. Rep. 127 Stephen G. Roda — 630 N. School Ln., Lancaster, Pa.; Fundamental Sci.; Phi Sigma Kappa, Rush Chairman, Intramural Mgr.; LUV. David Allen Roe — 120 Sandy Knoll Dr., Doylestown, Pa.; Eco.; Sigma Nu, Recorder. Michael G. Rohal — 1834 Tenth St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Civil Engrg. Amy Elizabeth Roland — 20 Washington Pk., Map- lewood, N.J.; Hist. Psych. Fine Arts Hist.; Lehigh University Research Grant; Dean ' s List; History Honor Society; Intramurals; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Golden Hearts Secy.; Parnassus. William B. Romig — 643 Bergey Rd., Telford, Pa.; Bus.; Theta Chi. Michael S. Rosen — Rye Hill Farm, Old Chatham, N.Y.; Bus. James D. Rosener — 366 Nayatt Rd., Barrington, RL; Bus.; Pi Lambda Phi. Guy Wayne Roush — 16 Page Ct., Cumberland, Md.; Mech. Engrg.; RH-11, Vice Pres. — Congdon; ASME; Intramurals, Football, Badminton, Softball; Computer Club. Arthur E. Ruggles — - Route 3 Box 397, Boonsboro, Md.; Mech. Engrg.; RH-11; Pi Tau Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma; ASME; Glee Club. Janet Marie Ryan — 185 Park St., Montclair, N.J.; Psych. Mgt.; Stoughton; Marketing Club; V. Pres., Gryphon Soc; SAC Concert Comm., DOS, Lafayette Weekend Com. Andrew T. Ryder — 253 Berwind Rd., Radnor, Pa.; Bus.; Bishopthorpe. Susan Frances Sachs — 317 Intervale East, Stamford, Ct.; Fin. Psych.; MVP Basketball Team; Recipient of A. Zettlemoyer Award; Varsity Field Hockey, Volleyball, Basketball, Softball; Powderpuff Football; Epitome; LUV; Gryphon Society. James Brian Saddel — 1132 Cleveland Rd., Center Sq., Pa.; Elec. Engrg.; Eta Kappa Nu; Lehigh Christian Fel- lowship; SMAGS. Judy J. Salines — 2526 Greenleaf St., Allentown, Pa.; Acctg.; RH-11. L. John Sanlorenzo — 25 Darby Dr., Huntington Sta., N.Y.; Fin.; Kappa Sigma, Vice-Pres.; President ' s Award; Rugby Club, Intramurals; AFROTC, Arnold Air Society; Class Gift; IFC Scholarship Fact Finding Chairman. Lloyd B. Sarakin — 552 Green PL, Woodmere, N.Y.; Arts; Intramurals; Squash Club; Pre-Law Soc; Karate Club. I Stephen G. Roda David A. Roe Michael G. Rohal Amy E. Roland William B. Romig Michael Rosen 128 James D. Rosener Guy W. Roush Arthur E. Ruggles II Janet M. Ryan Andrew T. Ryder Susan F. Sachs James B. Saddel Judith J. Salines Lloyd B. Sarakin Leonard S. Sarkissian Michelle M. Sattler Daniel Saunders Patti J. Saunders Edward R. Sause John Savchak Helen J. Schaefer Jiil Schaffer i • 4 • • If s2 jj • k • If m I i f H  H r Margaret A. Schantz John A. Schatz Nancy E. Schauer Susan C. Schautz Steven W. Scheibe Carl J. Scheitrum Richard L. Schild Mark J. Schimpf Leonard Sarkis Sarkissian — c o C A T Co., PC Box 1036, Beirut, Lebanon; Mech. Engrg.; RH-11; ASME; Tennis; Skiing; Scuba; Swimming; Vice-Pres. Arabic Club of Lehigh University. Michele M. Sattler — Box 366 RD 4, Easton, Pa.; Chem. Daniel R. Saunders — 174 Grandview Ave., Morrisville, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Phi Sigma Kappa, Inductor; Football. Patti J. Saunders — RD 3, Bethlehem, Pa.; Eng.; RH-11, Pres. Bldg. B; Carothers Social Chairman; Williams Sophomore Junior Essay Prizes, Williams Schol- arship; Dean ' s List; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Departmental Honors; Lambda Alpha Lambda; Phi Eta Sigma; Sigma Tau Delta; Intramurals; LUV, Tutor. Edward R. Sause — 292 Hance Rd., Fair Haven, N.J.; Acctg.; Delta Tau Delta, Asst. Treas.; Dean ' s List; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Beta Alpha Psi; Var- sity Baseball. John A. Savchak — 314 Maple Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa.; Acctg.; Chi Phi; Photo; Karate Clubs. Helen J. Schaefer — 1819 Levering PL, Bethlehem, Pa.; Ind. Engrg.; AIIE; Ballet; Drama. Jill Schaffer — 2607 Swanson St., Easton, Pa.; Psych.; Dean ' s List; Alfred T. Stanley Scholarship; Psi Chi; Lambda Alpha Lambda; LUV; Mustard Cheese; Gryphon Society; Mental Health Mental Retardation Student Intern, Social Welfare Program — LVAIC. Margaret Ann Schantz — 232 E. Union Blvd., Bethlehem, Pa.; Govt.; Town House Member; Intra- murals; Tau Lambda Chi, Athletic Mgr. John Anthony Schatz — 135 Park Ave., Carle Place, N.Y.; Met. Engrg.; Alpha Chi Rho, House Mgr.; Freshman Sophomore Honors; ASM; APMI; Skiing; Scuba Diving; Photography. Nancy Elizabeth Schauer — 215 Stafford Ave., Scranton, Pa.; Eng. Lit.; RH-11; Dean ' s List; Sigma Tau Delta; Amaranth; LUV. Susan Carol Schautz — 78 Forsythia Dr., North, Levit- town, Pa.; Jour. Psych.; RH-11, Richards 4 Social Chairman; Intramurals; Brown White. Steven William Scheibe — 554 W. Washington Ave., Hartford, Wi.; Acctg.; Gryphon Society, Pres.; Soph- omore Honors; Dean ' s List; Beta Alpha Psi; Soccer; Roundtable. Carl Joseph Scheitrum — 263 Brown St., Tamaqua, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Frat. Marshall; Aca- demic Scholarship (Lehigh); ASME; Intramurals. Richard Lewis Schild — 11 Maurice Lane, Huntington, N.Y.; Chem. Engrg.; Smiley House; Freshman Honors; Deans List; AIChE; Intramurals; Outing Club, Pres.; Judo Club; Publications: Copolymerization with Sur- face Active Jonic Cononomus Also to be presented at 51st National Colloid Symposium. NSF Undergraduate Research Participant. Mark Joseph Schimpf — 62 Walnut St., Little Falls, N.J.; Chem.; Phi Gamma Delta; Social Chairman, I.M. Mgr., House Mgr.; AChS; LUV; Geiger Society. 131 Paul B. Schlimme — Sussex Building Apt. 10, 2434 Mountain Lane, Allentown, Pa.; Acctg. Finance; Delta Alpha Psi; Deans List Junior Senior Years; Student Investment Club, Pres. Cynthia A. Schmidt — 121 Convent Ave., Nazareth, Pa. Kathy A. Schmidt — 1404 Rosser Ave., Elmont, N.Y.; Acctg.; Sophomore Honors, Dean ' s List. Kenneth Tarcisius Schmidt — 1502 Hope St., Stamford, Ct.; Finance; Delta Tau Delta; Pledge Master; Freshman Varsity Football. Linda M. Schnall — 41-27 Matule Drive, Fair Lawn, N.J.; Acctg.; Palmer Pres.; Residence Halls Council 197; LUV, Vice Pres.; Freshman Honors, Acctg. Intern- ship. Edythe Carol Schrier — 20 Fulton Rd., Somerset, N.J.; Chem. Engrg.; RH-11, Sect. Pres. ' 75, ' 76; SWE; AIChE; Intramurals. Kirk Paul Schubert — 208 Lincoln Ave., Sayville, N.Y.; Ger. I.R.; Mod. For. Lang. Scholarship; LUV; I.R. Club. George E. Schulze ]r. — 3 Gabriel Dr., Peekskill, N.Y.; Civ. Engrg.; Lambda Chi Alpha; ASCE; Social Comm., Asst. Rush Chairman, White Rose Comm.; Intramu- rals. Peter K. Schutz — 310 Kent Rd., Broomall, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Beardslee House, Social Chairman; Pi Tau Sigma; Intramurals; ASME. Susan Schwartz — 839 Caldwell Ave., North Wood- mere, N.Y.; Psych. Soc. Rel.; RH-11; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List; Lambda Alpha Lambda; Phi Eta Sigma; Psi Chi, Vice-Pres.; LUV, Sr. Class Gift Comm.; Big Sister. Robert H. Scott III — RD 1, Sweet Valley, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; Alpha Epsilon Pi, Master, Lt. Master; ASCE; Marching Band, Rank Leader; Campus Security. Robert M. Sederholm — 1025 Cornell Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa.; Bus.; Tau Epsilon Phi. David P. Sell — 713 North 20th St., Allentown, Pa.; Ind. Engrg.; Stevens, Gryphon, Sr. Rep.; Freshman Honors; Alpha Pi Mu; AIIE; Tennis, Intramurals; Mar- keting, Skiing, Sailing. Joseph B. Sergi, Jr. — Old Cuthbert Rd., Cherry Hill, N.J.; Elec. Engrg.; RH-11; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Eta Kappa Nu; IEEE. Cyril Gregory Serrao — 711 Maple St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Acctg. For. Careers; Phi Gamma Delta, Co-Chair. Scholarship Comm.; Pre-Law Soc; IM Frats. Susan A. Seruga — 2715 East Blvd., Bethlehem, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; RH-11. 132 Paul B. Schlimme Cynthia A. Schmidt Kathy A. Schmidt Kenneth T. Schmidt Linda M. Schnall Peter K. Schutz l Robert H. Scott III Eduth C. Schrier Susan I. Schwartz Kirk P. Schubert George E. Schulze Jr. Robert M. Sederholm r III TO IT r David P. Sell Joseph B. Sergi Jr. Cyril G. Serrao Susan A. Seruga David Shanaberger Hildy Shandell Ian A. Shapolsky Carl Shawber Gary J. Shelby John I. Silverberg Mark C. Shiner Douglas G. Shurts Sheri Siegelbaum David B. Simmons Jr. Mitchel W. Simpler Thomas B. Sinclair Otis A. Sinnott Maryann P. Skibo David C. Slagle Nora R. Slatkin David Shanaberger — 1107 Centre St., Coplay, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; ASME. Hildy Shandell — 810 Foster St., Philadelphia, Pa.; Govt.; Dean ' s List; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Recipient Richard King Mellon Scholarship; Forum V, VI, VII, Secy.; AC Environ. Comm., Treas., Vice-Chr.; LUV, Secy.; Epitome; Ed. Pol. Comm.; Women ' s Caucus, Radio Station, Newscaster; LUV Newsletter. Ian Adam Shapolsky — 152 E. 65th St., New York, N.Y.; Fin. Eco., Intn ' tl Rel. Minor; Karate; Skiing; Intn ' tl Rel. Club, Vice-Pres.; Pre-Law Soc; Karate Club; Invest- ment Club; Sr. Class Gift Investment Comm. Carl Van Vechten Shawber — 57 Edgewood Rd., Man- sfield, Oh.; Met. Engrg.; First Place Metallurgraphic Contest; Circle K; Sailing Club; Student Met. Society. Gary John Shelby — 1162 Howertown Rd., Catasauqua, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Lambda Chi Alpha, AIChE; Intra- murals; LUV; Frisbee. Douglas G. Shurts — 346 Timber Dr., Berkeley Heights, N.J.; Fin.; Delta Tau Delta, Treas.; Ice Hockey Club 4 yrs.; IFC; Grad. Comm. Member 2 yrs.; Member Delta Tau Delta National Frat. Sheri Siegelbaum — 571 Knollwood Rd., Ridgewood, N.J.; Govt.; RH11; Williams Essay Contest Fresh. Div., First Prize; Freshman Honors; Dean ' s List; Varsity Tennis; Women ' s Caucus; LUV; Ed. Pol. Comm., Stu- dent Rep.; Govt. Dept. Student-Faculty Comm. Mark Charles Shiner — 74 Francis Meyers Rd., New Bri- tain, Pa.; Hist.; Smiley 302, Social Chairman; Tour Guide — Admissions; Solicitor, Sr. Class Gift. John 1. Silverberg — 3403 Congress St., Allentown, Pa.; Mgt.; Delta Upsilon; Freshman Camp Counselor; Brown White. David B. Simmons, Jr. — RD 1, Sussex, N.J. Mitchel Wayne Simpler — 511 West State St., Kennett Sq., Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Chi Psi, Executive Council; ASME. Thomas B. Sinclair — 925 Rolandvue Rd., Ruston, Md.; Ind. Engrg. Otis Allston Sinnot, N.Y.; Fin.; Delta French Club. Maryann Patricia Bethlehem, Pa.; Acctg. LUV; Parnassus. David C. Slagle — 9000 Brandywine Rd. Oh.; Bio.; SMAGS. Nora Ruth Slatkin — 193 William Rd., Massapequa, N.Y.; Intn ' l. Rel.; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List; Visiting Committee on IR Foreign Lan- guages; ' 76 Fulbright Scholarship Nominee; Intn ' l Rel. Club. Jr. - Chi; - 21 Willow Rd., Bronxville, Varsity Track, Intramurals; Skibo — 1315 Kaywin Ave., Alpha Phi; Mustard Cheese; Northfield, 135 Angela Elane Smith — 5032 N. Capitol St. NW, Washington, DC; Psych. Bus. minor; RH-11; Cheer- leader; LUV. Mark E. Smith — 80 Summit Ave., Phillipsburg, N.J.; Acctg.; Beta Theta Pi, House Mgr., IM Bgr.; Baseball 3 yrs.; Sr. Class Exec. Council Member. Scott R. Smith — 143 Rathton Rd., York, Pa.; Fin.; Sigma Chi. Terence T. Smith — 219 East Sedgwick St., Philadel- phia, Pa.; Acctg.; Freshman Honors; Dean ' s List; SAC Freshman Rep.; Mustard Cheese; Brown White. Theodore Fell Smith, 111 — 415 Lake Ave., Bay Head, N.J.; Fin.; Kappa Sigma, Guard; Track; Rugby, Pres., Capt., Treas.; FMA, Board Member; IFC, Social Chairman, Council of Social Chairmen, Chairman. John Robert Snyder — Box 244, RD 1, Schnecksville, Pa.; Acctg.; McConn House; Student Investment Club. Lewis S. Somers IV — 516 E. Gravers Ln., Philadelphia, Pa.; Chem. Engrg.; Lambda Chi Alpha. James Tracy Sommeriverck — 1500 Dundee Ct., Bel Air, Md.; Chem. Engrg.; AIChE; Freshman Soccer; Delta Upsilon; Rugby. Daniel 1. Sparago — 420 King St., Staten Island, N.Y.; Hist.; ATO, Rush Chairman; Wrestling, Intramurals; SAC. Mark W. Stahller — 3 Overlook Rd., Clarks Green, Pa.; Acctg.; Steward, 2 Years; Varsity Swimming, Intramu- rals; Brown White Photographer; Serendipity, Bus. Mgr. John H. Stamateris — 84 Cathedral Ave., Florham Park, N.J.; Fin.; Phi Kappa Theta, Pres., Scholastic Chmn., Alumni Secy., Rec. Secy.; Dean ' s List; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Beta Gamma Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma; Rhodes Scholar Candidate. Jeffrey Evan Stamm — 60 Lynn Dr., Englewood Cliffs, N.J.; Eng.; Williams Prize Creative Writing. David Lindsay Standig — 181 Frederick St., Paramus, N.J.; Acctg.; RH-11; Beta Alpha Psi; Intramural Foot- ball, Soccer; Bridge Club, Pres.-Sr., V.P., Jr.; Lehigh Valley Grotto; Sr. Master Am. Contract Bridge; League — National Speleological Soc; Skiing; Coin Collecting; Spelunking; Student Investment Fund. Sandra A. Stanich — 1022 Elm Ave., Ridgefield, N.J.; Acctg.; Dean ' s List; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Beta Gamma Sigma; Beta Alpha Psi; Intramurals. Larry Dale Stauffer — 1120 Primrose Ave., Camp Hill, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Delta Chi; ASME; Marching Band. Mark Stacey Stauffer — RD 4, Hummelstown, Pa.; Fin. Wrestling. 136 Angela E. Smith Mark E. Smith Scott R. Smith SfcSESWi Theodore F. Smith III John R. Snyder Lewis S. Somers IV James T. Sommerwerck Daniel I. Sparago Mark W. Stahller John H. Stamateris Jeffrey E. Stamm David L. Standig Sandra A. Stanich Larry D. Stauffer Mark S. Stauffer Cheryl L. Staviski Daria Stavisky Scott W. Stebbins € % jr + Dale J. Stein Stephen Stephansen IV Kurt W. Stoffel Michael Stollbrink Robert S. Strait David J. Stradal Scott H. Strickland Ilene T. Strober Joseph E. Stroin Jr. David B. Succop Mary Ellen Sudano Donna M. Suess Jill Sugarman Cheryl Lynn Staviski — 293 High Crest Dr., West Mil- ford, N.J.; Ind. Engrg.; Richards, Intramural Mgr., So- cial Chairman; Powderpuff Football, Intramurals; SAC, Secy; Head LUSH. Daria Stavisky — 25 Columbia St., Wharton, N.J.; RH-11; Eng. Lit.; Richards IV, Treas., Sophomore Honors; Intramurals; Alpha Gamma Delta, Rush Chair., Epitome; Marketing Club; Bridge Club; Wom- en ' s Caucus Panel Member; Sr. Class Gift Campaign. Scoff William Stebbins — 30 Adams St., Clark, N.J.; Chem. Engrg.; Chi Phi, House Mgr. ' 75; Student Blot- ter. Dale J. Stein — 1102 Center St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Geol. Stephan Stephansen, IV — 111 Hunting Ridge Rd., Greenwich, Ct.; Elec. Engrg.; IEEE, Vice-Pres.; Stu- dent Systems Dev. Org.; Pre-Law Society. Kurt William Stoffel — 24 Stag PL, Lincroft, N.J.; Civil Engrg.; Pi Lambda Phi; Chi Epsilon; ASCE; Intramu- rals. Michael Stollbrink — 43-14 Crest Ln., Wescosville, Pa.; Civil Engrg. Robert Scott Strait — 631 Susan Dr., North Hun- tingdon, Pa.; Chi Psi; Civil Engrg.; Chi Epsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta; ASCE; SAME; Rugby Club. David J. Stradal — 20 Oakshade Ave., Darien, Ct.; Bus.; Williams House. Scott Hall Strickland — 801 East St., Middletown, Ct.; Ind. Engrg.; Chi Phi, Vice-Pres., Hist., Steward; Freshman Sophomore Honors;, Dean ' s List; Alpha Pi Mu; AIIE; Freshman Baseball; Band; WLVR-FM, Music Dir., Progr. Dir. Ilene T. Strober — 108 Birch Ln., Manhasset, N.Y.; Eco.; RH-11; RHC Rep.; Mktg. Club; Intramural Mgr.; LUV; Hoopla; Sr. Class Gift Campaign. Joseph E. Stroin, Jr. — 333 Stevens Ave., Morgan, N.J.; Mech. Engrg.; Thornburg. David B. Succop — 1244 Meridian Rd., Renfrew, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Chi Psi, Rush Chair., ASME; Sr. Class Gift Campaign, Chairman. Mary Ellen Sudano — 430 Pelham Manor Rd., Pelham, N.Y.; Marketing, RH-11; Richards IV, Pres. Soph. Yr.; Marketing Club; Intramurals; Alpha Gamma Delta, Pres., Secy., Soc. Chrmn., Bridge Club; Sr. Class Gift Cam. Donna Marie Suess — 515 Dewberry Ave., Bethlehem, Pa.; Drama Psych.; RH-11, Intramurals Mgr.; Vol- leyball Mgr.; Women ' s Basketball Mgr.; Sr. Class Gift Comm.; Intramurals; Hostess Co-ordinator of Spec. Event; LeCompane dance troupe. Jill Sugarman — 119 Konner Ave., Pine Brook, N.J.; Bus. 139 Dorothy Richmond Sultzer — 470 Acacia Dr., Sarasota, Fla.; Acctg.; Housemother; Varsity Field Hockey, Swimming, and Lacrosse, So., Jr.; Powderpuff Foot- ball; Sr. Class Gift; Intramural Office Employee. William Henry Swartwout, III — 141 Lebrun Ave., Amityville, N.Y.; Mech. Engrg.; RH-11, Social Chrmn.; Varsity Track; Sailing Club; Ski Club. Charles M. Tack — Main St., Weston, Pa.; Ind. Engrg.; M M House. Stephen W. Tagariello — 189 Roscommon PL, McMur- ray, Pa.; Hist Classics, HPT, Minor, Govt., Int. Rel.; Alpha Epsilon Pi, Pres., Freshman Living Section; Teaching Asst., International Law; Phi Alpha Theta, Pres.; Intramurals; RHC, Pres.; Forum, Bus. Mgr.; Lehigh Radio Network, Univ. Parking Comm.; Univ. Admissions Policy Comm.; Marching Band, Concert Band, Varsity Band, Jazz Band; Univ. Visiting Lectures Comm.; Univ. Busing Study Comm.; Univ. Traffic Appeals Comm.; RH Policy Comm.; Student Advis. Comm. to Dining Services; Res. Halls Soc. Comm.; Treas. International Relations Club; Res. Halls Facilities Comm.; Res. Halls Concessions Comm.; Forum: Stud. Life, Res Dining, Cultural Affrs — Admin. Committees; Staff Radio Announcer, WLRN. Guy Francis Talarico — 263 Grant Ave., Nutley, N.J.; Chem. Engrg.; Delta Tau Delta, Rush Chairman, Sergeant at Arms; Varsity Wrestling. Howard]. Talmud — 1618 Hereford Rd., Hewlett, N.Y.; Fin.; Sigma Alpha Mu. Stephen L. Tancin — 1020 Carbon St., Freeland, Pa.; Bio.; Tau Epsilon Phi, Vice-Chancellor. Georgina Ann Tarantini — 1128 Division St., Scranton, Pa.; Acctg.; RH-11; Gamma Phi Beta Sorority Secre- tary, Senior Class Residence Halls Concessions Mgr.; Haskins Sells Award, Phi Beta Kappa, Beta Alpha Psi, Beta Gamma Sigma. Douglas Hampar Tashjian — 954 Wildwood Rd., Oradell, N.J.; Urban Studies; Phi Delta Theta, IM Mgr., Alumni Secretary; LUV, Head Start, Tutoring, Senior Class Gift Campaign — Investment Comm., Circle K Club. Rosert Jose Teichmann — 34 E Ramona Ave., Colorado Springs, CO.; Chem.; J.V. Soccer, Chess, Sailing, Travel, Motorcycle riding, writing. Richard E. Teske — 21 Patricia Ave., Fishkill, N.Y.; Mech, Engrg.; Treasurer, Beardslee; ASME, SAME; In- tramurals. John H. Thatcher II — 1267 Gill Hall Rd., Clairton, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; RH-11. Richard Ruben Thevenet — 431 Wildwood Rd., North- vale, N.J.; Chem. Engrg.; Zeta Psi; Freshman Honors; AIChE; Rugby, Boxing, Judo, Weightlifting, Boxing Club. Joseph Edward Thomas — 108 S. Knight Ave., Margate, N.J.; Delta Tau Delta; Govt.; Dean ' s List; Football. Sally Ann Thomas — 187 Main St., Conyngham, Pa.; RH-11; ESRM. Steven M. Thomas — RD 5, Bethlehem, Pa.; Civil; Phi Kappa Theta; Intramurals. 140 Dorothy R. Sultzer William H. Swarthouse III Charles M. Tack Stephen W. Tagariello Guy F. Talarico Howard J. Talmud Stephen L. Tancin Georgina A. Tarantini .J ¥ 11117 Zfrfi . -A- Douglas H. Tashjian Richard E. Teske Richard R. Thevenet Robert J. Teichmann John H. Thatcher II Joseph E. Thomas Sally A. Thomas Steven M. Thomas 141 i  ft. -fl w ■«- ' r At i2l§JS5i§S Kurt R. Thompson W. Wade Thompson Stellan B. Thoren Arthur A. Thum Donna G. Tice Lesley A. Toporek Lorali E. Totten Timothy C. Travers 142 Frank J. Tresco Timothy J. Tripp Robert J. Trombetta Laura D. Turner  W 1 L - M i , ,ks .. Thomas S. Tutwiler Edwin S. Ullman James F. Underhill Catharine A. Ursic Kurt R. Thompson — 2000 Richmond Rd., Easton, Pa.; B.S.; Town Council, Pres.; ASCE; Alpha Lambda Omega. William Wade Thompson — 1711 Carlisle St., Bethlehem, Pa.; Eco.; Sophomore Class Honors, De- an ' s List, Beta Gamma Sigma, Omicron Delta Epsilon. Stellan Bertil Thoren — 1437V2 Lorain Ave., Bethlehem, Pa.; Mech.; Tau Beta Pi; Cross-Country, Capt; Track; J. Daniel Nolan Award; Home: Vasteras, Sweden. Arthur A. Thum — 182 Cropwell Dr., Maple Shade, N.J.; Bus.; Delta Sigma Phi. Donna Gayle Tice — 364 Chestnut Ridge Rd., Woodcliff Lake, N.J.; Acctg.; Class Honors, Dean ' s List; Intramu- rals; Marketing Club, Trea.; Gamma Phi Beta, Vice- Pres.; Brown White. Lesley Anne Toporek — 131 Yew Rd., Cheltenham, Pa.; Bio.; M M; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. Lorali E. Totten — 19 N. Branch River, Somerville, N.J.; Civil Engrg.; Richards House. Timothy C. Travers — 7516 Highland Dr., Baldwinsville, N.Y.; Bus.; Pi Lambda Phi. Frank J. Tresco — 19 Vermillion Dr., Levittown, Pa.; Bus.; RH-11. Timothy Jon Tripp — 33 Sprague Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y.; Acctg.; Delta Phi, Steward, Treas.; IFC, Treas.; Vice- Chrmn. FMA; Varsity Lacrosse. Robert J. Trombetta — 1909 M. Hoover Ave., Allen- town, Pa.; Civil Engrg.; SMAGS. Laura D. Turner — 17 Oakmont Ave., East Brunswick, N.J.; Acctg.; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List; IM Sports; Investment Club; LUV; Filmamkers ' Guild; Sr. Class Gift Campaign. Thomas S. Tutwiler — 126 Oakwood Rd., Watchung, N.J.; Mech. Engrg. Edwin Smith Ullman - — 224 Moredon Rd., Huntingdon Valley, Pa.; Fin.; Phi Gamma Delta; Lacrosse, Ice Hoc- key; Geiger Society, Social Chairman. James F. Underhill — 21 Ganung Dr., Ossining, N.Y.; Bus.; Tau Epsilon Phi. Catherine A. Ursic — 16 Alta Vista Dr., Princeton, N.J.; Arts.; RH-11. 143 Richard H. Van Hoesen — 6 Interlaken Rd., Greenwich, Ct.; Ind. Engrg.; Theta Xi, Pres.; AIIE; Varsity Squash. John Robert Vargo — 12 Anna PL, South Plainfield, N.J.; Mgt.; Delta Upsilon, Social Charmn.; Football, Track, Boxing; Bullet Club. Thomas James Vasko — 522 Whitehall St., Allentown, Pa.; Mech. Engrg.; Taylor; Freshman Sophomore Honors; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma; ASME; Intramurals; Circle K Club, Secy. Richard Michael Venanzi — 10 Diane Dr., Trenton, N.J.; Gov ' t; Sigma Phi, Pres., Rush Charmn., Social Charmn.; Brown White; Band; IFC Rep. Marc Okey Voorhees — 50 Perry St., Lambertville, N.J.; Ind. Engrg.; Beardslee; Dean ' s List, Freshman Soph. Honors; Alpha Pi Mu, Tau Beta Pi; Weightlifting Club. Elise M. Wagenseil — Beach Rd., Huntington Bay, N.Y.; Mngt.; Intramurals, S.A.M.E., Orienteering. Marc Douglas Wager — Elmont, N.Y.; Nat. Sci. — Span. Leavitt; Presidential Prize, Dean ' s List; Phi Eta Sigma; Band, LUV, Music at Lehigh Comm. Monica L. Walker — 2 Hillside Rd., Newton, Pa. Jeffrey Joseph Walters — 201 Oak Hill Dr., Upper Myack, N.Y.; Civil Eng.; A.S.C.E.; Intramurals, Ski Club; 1975 Singles Bowling Champion. E. Gregory Waltzer — 201 Rice S Mill Rd., Wyncote, Pa. Paul J. Wascher — 376 Elm Ave., Haworth, N.J. Frank Eugene Washburn, Jr. — 55 Gordon Dr., Easton, Pa.; Acctg. Linda Maria Washington — 1600 Albany Ave., Apt. B, Richmond, Va.; Acctg.; Cheerleader, Mustard Cheese, BSU, La Compane. Andrew M. Watsula — 2143 Drury Lane, Bethlehem, Pa. Clayton Paul Weaver — 46 Oak Rd. Trappe, Col- legeville, Pa.; Acctg.; National Merit Scholarship, Soph. Honors; J.V. and Varsity Basketball; Intramu- rals. Edwin Harrison Weaver — 2036 Forest St., Easton, Pa.; Civil Engr.; Marching Band, Varsity Band. Richard H. Van Hoesen John R. Vargo 144 Thomas J. Vasko Richard M. Venanzi Marc O. Voorhees Elise M. Wagenseil J Marc D. Wager AAA Monica L. Walker Jeffrey J. Walters E. Gregory Waltzer Paul J. Wascher Frank E. Washburn ■% ■I I I 1 „ I «S!mjwu«. ' -Mi,i Jackie Feldhan President class iqie « V vp m Linda M. Washington Andrew M. Watsula Clayton P. Weaver Edwin H. Weaver . Lawrence Weinstein Sydney S. Weinstein Thomas E. Weintraub Jr. Kenneth S. Weisman Ellen J. Weiss Rose M. Welliver Robert M. Wepfer Ann Louise Werley 146 Robert S. Wertman Michele A. Westcott Michael L. Wheaton Stuart D. Wheeler Edmund P. Whitby Bradford E. White Dale A. White Douglas L. Wilson — 920 Melrose Ave., Melrose, - 97 Forsythia Dr. N., Levit- Soph. Honors; Alpha Phi Brooklyn, N.Y.; Lawrence Weinstein — 2017 South Ocean Dr., Hallan- dale, Fla.; Psych.; Soph. Honors; Psi Chi. Sydney S. Weinstein — 219 Glen Arbor Rd., Haver- town, Pa. Thomas E. Weintraub Jr. N.J.; Finance. Kenneth Scott Weisman town, Pa.; Mgt. Fin.; Omega; Intramurals. Ellen Jane Weiss — 1084 East 29th St. Arts; Freshman Honors. Rose Marie Welliver — Conyngham, Pa.; Civil Engr.; A.S.C.E.; Powder Puff Football, Co-Capt.; Swimming and Softball Team; Gamma Phi Beta; Visiting Lecturers Comm.; Student Election Rules Comm., Gryphon So- ciety. Robert M. Wepfer — 118 Crescent Hills Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa.; Mech. Engr.; Wood Prize, Air Force Scholarship, Pi Tau Sigma, ASME; Intramurals; Arnold Air Society. Ann Louise Werley — 118 N. Fourth St., Hamburg, Pa.; Acctg.; Soph. Honors; Omicron Delta Kappa; Mktg. Club; Intramurals; Brown White; Gamma Phi Beta, Pres.; Board of Publications; Senior Class Gift Cam- paign. Robert S. Wertman — 2913 Meadowbrook Circle, Allen- town, Pa.; Bio. Michele A. Westcott — 434 River View Rd., Rexford, N.Y.; Bio.; Phi Eta Sigma; Chamber Music, Concert Band. Michael Lewis Wheaton — 549 West Meadow Ave., Rahway, N.J.; Acctg.; Psi Upsilon, Steward, House Mngr. Stuard D. Wheeler — 4 Delsey Rd., Kendall Park, N.J. Edmund P. Whitby 111 — RR 2, Box 172, Highlands, N.C.; Chem Engr. Bradford E. White — Pine Croft, 153 Bellevue Ave., Rut- land, Vt.; Eco.; Alpha Chi Rho, Pres.; Intramurals; L.U.S.T.; Expansion Officer, Chaplain. Dale A. White — 244 Brunswick Ave., Spotswood, N.J. Douglas Lee Wilson — 1 Buckley Hill Rd., Morristown, N.J.; Fin.; Beta Theta Pi, Pres.; Varsity Baseball, J.V. Soccer. 147 Keith Michael Wilson — 2111 Florence Ave., Bethlehem, Pa.; Govt.; Delta Tau Delta; Baseball, Pre-Law Society. Keith William Wilson — 60 Avalon Dr., Colonia, N.J.; Fin.; Zeta Psi, Intramural Mngr.; Intramurals, Senior Class Gift Campaign. Thomas James Wilson — 102 Scarlett Court — Tara, Newark, Del.; Elec. Eng.; Soccer, SSDO, WLRN, WLTN. David Andrew Winecoff — Rd. 3, Box 209, Everett, Pa.; Acctg. Fin.; Zeta Psi, Rush Chairman, Asst. Treas.; In- vestment Club, Boxing Club, Outing Club, Lehigh Wheelmen, Intramurals. Karin C. Wint — 10 Park Blvd., Allentown, Pa.; Eng. Hoivard Keith Winter — 23 Flint Rd., East Rockaway, N.Y.; Elec. Eng.; Alpha Sigma Phi; Eta Kappa Nu, Pres.; Tau Beta Pi; I.E.E.E.; Intramurals. David R. Winters — Kent Rd., Wappingers Falls, N.Y.; ESRM; Varsity Football Baseball, Beta Theta Pi; In- tramurals. Susan E. Wirth — Rd. 1, Breinigsville, Pa. Diane N. Wolf — 29 Lexington Dr., Metuchen, N.J. Steven Matthew Wolfe — Box 130B, Rd. 1, Womelsdorf, Pa.; Fin.; Dean ' s List. Steven Jon Wolff — 400 Puritan Rd., Swampscott, Ma.; Acctg.; Computer Society, Marketing Club, Intramu- rals. Robert Woodbury — Scotch Plains, N.J.; Chem. Eng.; Smiley House; Tau Beta Pi; Intramurals; A.I.C.E. Gary Francis Woodend — 141 Apache Trail, Medford Lakes, N.J.; Eco.; Zeta Psi, Pres. Gallus F. Wukitsch III — 438 Windsor St., Whitehall, Pa.; Elec. Eng.; Alpha Chi Rho, House Mngr., Exec. Officer; I.E.E.E.; Intramurals, Computer Society. Scott L. Wymore — 3 Gregory Court, Barrington, R.I. Michael Jerome Yaszemski — 119 Warren St., Harrison, N.J.; Chem. Eng.; Delta Upsilon, Vice Pres., House Mngr., Scholarship Chrmn., Sr. Rep.; Class of 1904 Scholarship Award; Tau Beta Pi, Phi Eta Sigma; Foot- ball, Nat. Football Found. Scholarship Award; Alt., NCAA Post-Grad. Scholarship. 148 David A. Winecoff Karin C. Wint Howard K. Winter Diane N. Wolf Steven M. Wolfe Steven J. Wolff Robert T. Woodbury David R. Winters Susan E. Wirth It was a picture postcard day. The kind when the school actually looks like it does in the brochures. It was as if someone had handpainted each turning leaf with orange and red acrylic, and bedecked the old buildings in rose-gold ivy. The college students, clad in earth-colored turtlenecks, were bustling off to classes or the library, stopping briefly to chat with friends. This scene, set on the side of steep South Mountain, fulfilled all our fantasies of what college should be — or at least look like. The Lehigh University Admissions Office ordered the day for us, the impressionable and nervous applicants. We made it through the interviews unscathed, and a year later returned to Bethlehem ready to fit into the picture and begin our college experiences. It didn ' t take long for our idyllic visions of college to fade. During the first four weeks it rained incessantly and our clothes mildewed. The handbook hadn ' t warned about that. Or about midterms and finals that can cause tensions like that of the Six Day War, or roommate skirmishes that are often more violent. It didn ' t give us a clue about what a gut was or how to read three books at the same time. And it didn ' t breathe a word about the confusion every college student feels at one time or another. Looking back now, it wasn ' t so bad. We seem to remember more sunny days than rainy ones, even if it was the other way around. Gary F. Woodend Gallus F. Wukitsch Scott L. Wymore Michael J. Yaszemski feu i i f K : f i ; %. K viJH f. V -? H -jSkm£- fcss Jh 1 i Donald E. Yetter Jr. Deborah A. York Michael J. Yost Stephen L. Young Paul V. Zaimes Richard P. Zajac Eugene F. Zawislak Jr. Ann R. Zimmerman Paul H. Zinc Dale A. Zuck Christopher W. Zwart Donald E. Yetter Jr. — 2080 Four Mile Dr., Montourse- ville, Pa. Deborah A. York — 20 Glen Oaks Ave., Summit, N.J.; S.R.; Publicity Mngr. — Marching Concert Band. Michael ]ohn Yost — 219 Grant St., Allentown, Pa.; Acctg. Fin.; Freshman Soph. Honors; Beta Alpha Psi. Stephen L. Young — 313 Holland St., Shillington, Pa.; Elec. Eng.; Alpha Tau Omega; Dean ' s List; I.E.E.E.; Wrestling, Intramurals, Golf, Skiing. Thomas J. Young — 918 Penn St., Williamsport, Pa. Paul Vlasios Zaimes — 8 Pine Dr., North Massapequa, N.Y.; ESRM Geo.; Delta Phi; Powder Puff Football Coach. Richard Peter Zajac — 120 Poplar St., Carteret, N.J.; Chem. Engr.; RH-11, Intramural Dir.; Basketball; In- tramurals; Chem. Engr. Club. Eugene F. Zawislak Jr. — 121 Spring Lane, Hatboro, Pa.; Elec. Engr.; Pi Kappa Alpha, Pres., Treas., Soc. Chrm., I.E.E.E.; Intramurals; Forum. Ann Ricki Zimmerman — 1546 Hewlett Heath Rd., Hew- lett, N.Y.; Journ.; Williams Scholarship; Sigma Tau De- lta, Phi Beta Kappa; Epitome, Co-Editor; LUV, chair- man; Serendipity, Asst. Editor; Brown White, Fea- ture Editor. Paul H. Zinc — 1849 Longview Dr., Lancaster, Pa. Dale A. Zuck — 6028 Cannon Hill Rd., Fort Washington, Pa. Christopher W. Zwart — 71 Hillcrest Rd., New Canaan, Conn. 151 The Woodwind Quintet The Carlton Crew 152 Kappa Sig Car Wash The 464 Club 153 m ■H ■■■■■H«L M ■H if ' s. ■M Kf. .ws ' WHAT WE DO W|W ■m as SE SS ■HI qew m vsh«kl si XftSaBn XgfmUGciiif I % ■HP OH H ■■Ha HI em 13 ra ■I ■■BsSS Mii ■HI g$S@ n n ?r §9£ ' H ■H5 ' ' It is not enough to be busy . . . the question is: what are we busy about? A J. l l V.UU We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing; others judge us by what we have done — Longfellow ftljf Ifljigt) 1. (Samt! The Rules • Anyone vritli a fligh School diploma, and or Alumni relatives my play. • Eacli player ckooses a .Marker in the color of his or her choice (only one Mack Marker per 100 players). • Back player spins flee die to determine starting order. • tacV player spins wound in Orientation Circle for 5 days. Those left standing may iotttinne the gime. • Each player receives a Tuition Funds drd. If it reals leas than 450?, te she may pick an Indentured Servant Card, orappiy for a Mike Friek Can hble ho n through, the resiling aei or Pr. Levi ' s. • flayers landing on mwr YZ-Z V ' fUaitfc nttf ' ptfk appftTprjate Card. • Players vrh opi br V Card must cEoose Greek Caid eirery 3 d turn- • Five Tree A Cards e usl one free turn . • first player to teaA Graduation wins . If the count hits the circle exactly, -the player is Magna Cum Laude. Other players wst say Ooh. ' and An • flayer augnt cheating loses turn- lUjer nd caught usually wms. ALARM FAlW TO GO OFF AIL I SEMESTER lose 5 turns. J v ggt  Bi V - take three extra turn . Y0U7£ GOT A NAGGIH COUGH. softer bst turn and leg amputation! HEALTH CENTER TO NUKSE WSr MS YOM nu-fteiATep cmmtss wait two tarns Ar % • J%fr. STRIKES. ' Hfti doto raiscbol or KiVMPUSKOFS ' TICKET YOUR CM AGAIN, j lose turn and lairing privilt Is - t W Si 1 TAlfl YOU ' RE SIGNED Uf FOE- TIYE GUT COURSES Utefyee ' K ADYltt more .tead3 • ova Wmqtke F IUi. ! — — — _ OTD unetnpli office! fail riz, lose tun. Bttmjw I MITE NAMES 1 YOUAST ffi ' jnwrar wmaw lose tarn and ■anaii feiractjoa. T APPZfFOft 5C LARSH1P. CHANGE MJU0B3! go back i so spaces GOTENUFlJ CREPITS? I v W-oriy yourself pi aaikfeef j HealiJi Cfenfer Coal. tarn iin ie- uhty. ft WHfffA OT OIEH BUIUUG MID-TERMS lose 2 tarns: M or $u 1 tnfl TAKE IfM JOB MO. 332; follow c mpusdogsr with dustpan and brash. $1.37 per bovr v INDENTURED SERVANT i r ft ft ft THE BENCHSITTERS or Warming the Bench Isn ' t So Hot Sports fans among the class of ' 77 will remember the familiar athletic names that took up space in the Brown and White twice a week: Don McCorkel, the 190-pounder who finished third in Nationals; Larry Henshaw, the big tight end with hands of glue; the all-time basketball scorer, Charlie Brown, who finished with 1,311 points. Women ' s sport was enhanced by fine athletes such as Lori Collmann, who not only spoke softly but carried two big sticks, hockey and lacrosse, with quickness some men would envy, and Sue Sachs, the gentle giant who helped build Lehigh ' s basketball team. Yes, Lehigh had its share of stars. But who will remember the majority of players who never shone as bright?The crowd never looks into the shadows of the star-studded playing fields to notice perhaps the most interested group of spectators of them all — the bench-warmers, the women and men who got splinters instead of applause, aggravation instead of acclaim. Their patience and tenacity were as outstanding attributes as those propelling the stars to the headlines. Kenny Schmidt was one of those gifted high school athletes who dreamed of carrying the ball in front of thousands of fans. He got off to a great start here, too. For the undefeated 1973 freshman team, Kenny adveraged more than 100 yards a game. He showed promise, but in the next spring session Kenny hurt his back. As he recalls it, Coach Dunlap didn ' t even know I was hurt until the next day. It pissed me off that he wasn ' t watching me. And they had to carry me off the field. The 1974 season arrived, and Kenny moved up to second team, with the coaches ' assurance that he would see time during the season. By August, 1975, he felt as though he were on his way out. One reason was the growing number of good young players. The second reason was his financial aid. Between my freshman and sophomore years they gave me a cost of livng increase (to $3,150 a year). But after my sophomore year, getting hurt so much, they lowered me to $3,100 again. I know it was the coaches who did it. They have a lot of pull in there (the Financial Aid office). There was no way I deserved a cut — my younger brother entered college that year. Kenny returned for his last summer camp in 1976 as an inexperienced senior. He was glad that John Whitehead replaced Dunlap because he thought he had a fresh start, but that was not to be. He was doomed to the bench, even though he was healthy the entire season. Because of his scholarship, he could not quit the team, no matter what his status was. How does he feel about the football program? Pretty indifferent, Kenny says. I thought it was kind of stupid not to give me a chance when I was healthy. One athlete who stayed healthy, performed well, but still didn ' t get much notice is Mindy Fener, who led one helluva busy li fe at Lehigh. Mindy earned 15 letters in high school in Hempstead, N.Y., then began her Lehigh career on the field hockey team. She went on to powder puff football, winning the game ball one year, and took up two new sports: lacrosse and rugby. In all, Mindy earned four letters, captained the Powderpuff team, and learned two new sports. But wasn ' t this supposed to be about benchwarmers? Mindy did sit the bench her last three years in hockey. She didn ' t mind, though. The freshmen who replaced her were just better than me, she said. The main thing is to have fun in sports; I ' m not there to be competitive. If I didn ' t have fun, then I would dump the game, Mindy said. She stayed on the hockey team because it was not her main sport, because she wanted to play one sport all four years, and because she could burn off her energy in j.v. games. 158 ¥ ¥ ¥ r iV iV Mary Beth Krafty didn ' t come to Lehigh with any dreams of athletic glory; the University didn ' t disappoint her. After six varsity letters at Bethlehem ' s Liberty High, and captaining the Softball team her senior year, you ' d expect her to step right into a starting role. Right? Wrong. Krafty warmed the bench in basketball, appearing only in games whose outcome was certain. A knee injury in a game long lost last year has caused problems of one sort or another ever since. Krafty didn ' t mind sitting in basketball. She said Living at home, I got into sports to meet people. Playing was secondary. Softball was another story. I really thought I should be playing. I didn ' t like being used only when someone else didn ' t show up, she said, Krafty didn ' t feel protesting would do any good. I ' m not one to raise a stink, she said. I wouldn ' t know how to raise one properly. Krafty said she has stayed in sports to see how far I can take myself. She added that There ' s something about being on a team, a special relationship with people that you won ' t find walking around on the streets. As these three athletes demonstrate, the dream of the 90-yard touchdown run, or scoring the winning goal, or sinking two clutch free throws to beat Lafayette, can ' t come true for everyone. Schmidt, Fener and Krafty also prove that not only the stars are super. 159 THE NEWS OF FOUR YEARS IN REVIEW In August 1973, more than a thousand would-be members of the Class of 1977 trouped to Lehigh during one of the worst heatwaves ever to hit campus and joined the not-so-real world of college life. The next four years were to be critical ones of growth and change - not just for us as students, but for the world. Those years saw the resignation of a U.S. president, the end of the Vietnam War, and the first landing on Mars. But for many students, the routine of tests, papers and pub nights was only seldom interrupted by news from the outside. Headlines poked through like intermittent dashes, if at all . . . Patty Hearst . . . Squeaky Fromme . . . Jimmy Carter . . . For those of you who missed it, here ' s what happened to the world during those years - as well as a few campus happenings you might recall. FALL 1973 SEPTEMBER . . . Just before we came to Lehigh, Presi- dent Richard Nixon had faced the press for the first time in five months. He acknowledged the Watergate affair had hampered his ability to govern, but said he had never con- sidered resigning . . . Some Lehigh freshmen were trying to get adjusted to their rooms in study lounges and dorm libraries. The housing squeeze resulted when 35 more freshmen than expected had accepted University admis- sion offers . . . Residents for the first time were living in SMAGS . . . Sophomore Mitch Fishkin, 19, died during a fraternity prank. Northampton County Dist. Atty. Charles Spaziani ruled that Fishkin jumped from a car in which he was being taken to Saucon Valley by three Delta Phi fra- ternity brothers ... As the University Human Relations Commission was preparing to investigate admission prac- tices of the Lehigh Marching 97, women unexpectedly marched with the band for the first time during the freshman parents ' weekend football game. Seven band members doffed their caps to reveal they were women at the conclusion of a medley of tunes from South Pacific, including There Ain ' t Nothing Like a Dame . . . OC- TOBER ... As the Watergate hearings continued, John Dean pleaded guilty to conspiracy to obstruct justice in plotting to cover up the Watergate break-in . . . Three Lehigh students were arrested and charged with posses- sion of marijuana after Bethlehem police and state drug agents raided a room in M M . . . The announcement that Fine Arts professor Leon Hicks had received a termi- nal contract created an uproar from black students ... In what came to be known as the Saturday Night Mas- sacre. Atty. Gen. Elliott Richardson resigned and his duputy, William Ruckelshaus, and Watergate Special Pro- secutor Archibald Cox were fired when Cox rejected an administration compromise on the disputed Watergate tapes . . . After two years of study, the University Board of Trustees voted against establishment of a law school at Lehigh . . . NOVEMBER . . . Nine Arab oil-producing nations put up an embargo on shipments of oil to the United States . . . The White House disclosed there was an 18Vi minute gap in a subpoenaed tape of a June 1973 conversation between Nixon and H.R. Haldeman ... As the energy crisis worsened. President Nixon asked service station owners not to sell gas on Sundays and said he would seek approval of a national 55 m.p.h. speed limit . . . Lehigh and Delaware tied for the Lambert Cup after Lehigh beat Lafayette 45-13. The Engineers lost to West- ern Kentucky in NCAA Division 11 playoffs . . . DE- CEMBER . . . Samuel Dash, chief council to the Senate Watergate Committee, told a Grace Hall audience that public confidence in the country ' s executive leadership was at its lowest level in history . . . LAN Ron BLANK not her side of Rich.Nixon SPRING 1974 JANUARY . . . Allard K. Lowenstein. No. 7 on the White House Top 20 Enemies List, told a Lehigh audi- ence, If people knew what the facts were, what his (Ni- xon ' s) administration does and stands for, they wouldn ' t tolerate it . . . After mediation efforts by Sec. of State Henry Kissinger, Egypt and Israel reached an agreement to separate their military forces along the Suez Canal . . . FEBRUARY . . . Patricia Hearst was kidnaped from her Berkeley apartment by three members of the Symbionese Liberation Army . . . The Soviet Union stripped Nobel Prize winning author Alexander Solzhenitsyn, of his citi- zenship and deported him to West Germany . . . In a his- toric indictment, seven former White House and presi- dential campaign aides were charged in March with con- spiracy in the Watergate cover-up. President Nixon was cited as an unindicted co-conspirator . . . Tom Sculley won the 134-pound national wrestling championship, Lehigh ' s first national winner since 1967 . . . With spring in the air, about 400 Lehigh students joined the national streaking craze, observed by an estimated 4,500 spectators . . . APRIL . . . The University faculty voted to elimi- nate the arts language requirement after months of debate ... In May, the Maryland Court of Appeals ordered that former Vice President Spiro Agnew be disbarred . . . JULY . . . The Judiciary Committee released eight trans- cripts which in many cases differed from the official White House version. In nearly all cases, the White House ver- sion showed Nixon in a better light . . . The Supreme Court ordered Nixon to give up forthwith tapes and documents sought by Watergate Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski . . . After six months of investigation, the 160 JERRYS PARDON-MOBILE VIC£ TRY! state lu e y . OF s-Piotwiit = f THE SPECIAL EFFECTS ARE STAGGERINC WW REALISTIC IT SHAKES YOU UP! ' JUST AN EXTRA S3OO.0OO.OOO WILL DO IT UH. THROUGH THIS FISCAL YEAR UH MAYBE 7.500.000 UNLMPLOTfD r , MIllNWlljS UMHBIMM [WIOIIUIIS IM UIIMIIS H V-™.,: if V 1 omj_ Hbi, lufiuunii UHtiESj— H Hut fmu x % iwuims i mini ■ V-i 1 Wm ' GUYS, EASY ON THE AMMO BATTALIONSUfSy SOLO THE LAST OF OUR STOCKPILE TO THE ER ROUGE ACROSS THE RIVER Judiciary Committee recommended three articles of im- peachment to the House . . . AUGUST . . . President Nixon released three transcripts of June 23, 1972, conver- sations with H.R. Haldeman. Nixon admitted the trans- cri pts showed that just six days after the Watergate break-inn he had originated plans to have the FBI halt its probe of the matter. Four days later, he became the first president in U.S. history to resign. Gerald Ford was sworn in as the nation ' s 38th president. FALL 1974 SEPTEMBER . . . After being in office less than a month. President Ford announced he was granting an uncondi- tional pardon to former President Nixon for all federal crimes he committed or may have committed while serving as president. The announcement was met with widespread criticism . . . Eighty-eight students returned to campus to find that their promised apartments in RH-11 were not finished. The students were put up in residence hall study rooms and libraries . . . Bishopthorpe was opened as an alternative residence option for Lehigh stu- dents . . . Plus-minus grading was being used for the first time, and the course drop period was shortened from 12 to 7 weeks . . . The family of Mitch Fishkin filed a $21- million lawsuit against the University, administrators and Delta Phi fraternity . . . OCTOBER . . . Students learned that tuition, which had gone up $200 for 1974-75, would increase even more the next year even though the Univer- sity had run a $463,000 surplus. Tuition would go up by $250, with an additional $100 increase in room and board • . . Rep. Morris Udall became the first of a slew of con- tenders for the Democratic presidential nomination ... A baby was delivered in Richards House . . . Palestine Lib- eration Organization leader Yasir Arafat addressed the United Nations General Assembly and called for one democratic state where Christian, Jew and Moslem live in Justice, equality and fraternity in the Middle East. After nine days of debate, the PLO was granted permanent ob- server status in the U.N. . . . Eight former national guardsmen were acquitted of charges arising from the 1970 Kent State University slayings of four students . . . DE- CEMBER . . . Theta Chi alumni recommended asking three homosexual members of the fraternity to move out of the house. Fraternity brothers were split 18-18 on a vote to decide whether to endorse the alumni recommen- dation. The gay brothers later moved out voluntarily . . . Wilbur Mills resigned as chairman of the powerful House Ways and Means Committee because of the controversy surrounding his relationship with strip tease dancer Fanne Fox. Mills later publicly attributed erratic behavior to al- coholism . . . Little-known Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter announced his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination . . . Nelson Rockefeller was sworn in as the 41st vice president of the United States, giving the nation an unelected president and vice president . . . SPRING 1975 JANUARY . . . John Mitchell, H.R. Haldeman, John Ehrlichman and Robert Mardian were found guilty of all charges in connection with the June 1972 break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters. Unindicted co-conspirator Richard Nixon had not been required to testify during the 64-day trial because of his health . . . FEBRUARY . . . The University canceled classes for a day because of a heavy snowfall ... In Boston, Dr. Ken- neth C. Edelin was found guilty of a manslaughter in the death of a male fetus . . . Varsity basketball coach Tom Pugliese announced he would quit at the end of the sea- son. The team finished the season with a 1-23 record . . . MARCH . . . Lehigh wrestlers swept Easterns. Later in the month, Mike Frick and Mike Lieberman were champs at the NCAA competition . . . APRIL ... It was an- nounced unemployment had reached 8.7 per cent, the highest rate since 1941. The University Placement Office reported that seniors were receiving 10 per cent fewer job offers than usual . . . The faculty approved a compromise nine-week course drop period . . . Uncle Manny ' s tavern opened and quickly became a Lehigh institution . . . South Vietnamese President Duong Van Minh announced an unconditional surrender to the communists, ending the long and bloody Vietnam War. The surrender came only hours after the emergency helicopter evacuation of all Americans living in Saigon and thousands of South Viet- namese who feared for their lives . . . MAY . . . Years behind national trends as usual, Lehigh students filled Grace Hall to see the original Broadway production of Hair . . . Cambodian forces captured the S.S. Mayaguez and its 39-member crew. After diplomatic ef- forts to free the ship failed. President Ford ordered in air. sea and ground forces . . . JUNE . . . Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi declared a state of emergency and arrested 676 persons, including leaders of all opposition parties. Press censorship also was imposed . . . JULY ... In a symbolic gesture of detente, U.S. and Soviet spacecraft linked in space and astronauts from both coun- tries shook hands . . . The FBI in August entered the search for missing former Teamsters president James Hoffa, who ' d been missing for three days . . . 161 FALL 1975 SEPTEMBER . . . The FBI captured Patty Hearst in San Francisco, ending a 19-month search. Three months after her abduction by the Symbionese Liberation Army, she had announced she ' d joined the SLA to fight for the freedom of the oppressed people. She was charged with armed robbery . . . The University had its first woman police officer . . . Lehigh imposed a $5 fine for skateboarding . . . There was serious concern for Presi- dent Ford ' s safety after separate assassination attempts by Lynette Alice Squeaky Fromme, 26, and Sara Jane Moore, 45. Ford said he would not capitulate to would-be attackers by canceling personal appearances . . . Some Lehigh students were taking Saturday quizzes . . . Lehigh beat Penn in football for the first time since 1889, winning, 34-23 . . . RH-11 students complained about maintenance problems . . . OCTOBER . . . Foreigners fled Beirut as fighting in Lebanon spread and the death toll mounted . . . Leaders of the Senior Class Gift Campaign accepted and then rejected Erect a Fu- ture as the campaign slogan. It was to be used with a picture of the phallic Spiral Dork tombstone in North Bethlehem . . . The Nobel Committee awarded the 1975 Peace Prize to Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov ... A front-page headline in The New York Daily News read Ford to City: Drop Dead after the President a day ear- lier had said he would veto any legislation giving the city federal loan guarantees to avoid default . . . NOVEMBER . . . Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, 77, one of the most adamant defenders of the liberal view of the Constitution, retired, citing failing health . . . Brian Hill took over as coach of the University varsity basketball team . . . Portugal pulled out of Angola, leaving the former colony in a state of civil war . . . The U.N. Gen- eral Assembly adopted an Arab-backed resolution defining Zionism as racism . . . The Lehigh field hockey team was undefeated in regular play. The team lost in the Mid- Atlantic Women ' s Intercollegiate Tournament . . . Generalissimo Francisco Franco, 82, died after ruling Spain with an iron hand 36 years . . . The Arts faculty passed a resolution urging the University to abandon its 20 per cent quota on women . . . The Engineer football squad won the Lambert Cup and was invited to play in the NCAA playoffs, in which Lehigh lost to New Hampshire . . . President Ford agreed to give federal aid to New York City to help meet its seasonal cash flow needs and avert default . . . The administration-faculty team beat the students, 20-14, in the first Donkey basketball game . . . DECEMBER . . . More than 100 Bethlehem resi- dents signed a petition calling on the University to allevi- ate pollution from its power house on Packer Avenue . . . Lehigh recognized Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Phi, and Gamma Phi Beta as its first sororities . . . South Boston High School was placed under federal control after two weeks of testimony in which black students said they had been harassed and beaten by white students and ignored by the administration and faculty ... A bomb hidden in a baggage claim area of New York City ' s La Guardia Air- port exploded, killing 11 and injuring 70 persons . . . SPRING 1976 JANUARY . . . Saturday Night Live and Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman were becoming part of the evening schedule for many students . . . Coach Fred Dun- lap, who had led the Engineer football team to two Lam- bert Cup awards in three years, announced he would leave Lehigh to coach at Colgate, his alma mater. His post later was filled by John Whitehead . . . The Supreme Court upheld public financing of presidential campaigns, but overruled parts of the post-Watergate Federal Election Campaign Act, including spending limits for candidates . . . Fifteen Lehigh students and English Professor Peter Beidler began renovating a house on Vernon Street as part of the course, The Art of Self-Reliance in a Technologi- cal Society. The course received coverage from Time magazine and CBS and ABC television . . . Chinese Prime Minister Chou En-lai died at 78 . . . The University Board of Trustees approved another $250 tuition hike de- spite the $568,000 surplus run the previous year. A $100 hike in room and board fees also was approved ... It was reported a Midnight Marauder had been entering unlocked rooms in M M House and harassing women there . . . FEBRUARY . . . CBS news correspondent Daniel Schorr was relieved of his duties for an indefinite period after admitting he had leaked a copy of a House committee report on the CIA to The Village Voice . . . Godfrey Daniels opened on Positively Fourth Street, offering an alternative to bars and the Hill . . . More than 22,000 persons died in an earthquake in Guatemala . . . The National Center for Disease Control warned state health departments to be alert for a virus later to be called swine flu . . . Flo Kennedy, lawyer, author and co- founder of NOW, told a Whitaker Lab audience, We ' re all niggerized . . . Patty Hearst was convicted of armed robbery . . . MARCH . . . Egypt ended its Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation with the Soviet Union. Presi- dent Ford a few days later said he would proceed with sales of military transport planes to Egypt, despite protest from American Jewish leaders ... It was reported that political pressure exerted by top Bethlehem officials had prevented the University from leasing 36 row houses on Birkel Avenue. The houses would have virtually solved Lehigh ' s housing shortage . . . The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that states could prosecute and imprison persons for committing homosexual acts, even if they were performed in private between consenting adults . . . Two days later the Court unanimously ruled that the mechanical re- spirator keeping Karen Anne Quinlan, 22, alive since April 1975 could be disconnected . . . Wrestling cocaptain Mike Frick ended his Lehigh career by being named an NCAA champ the second year in a row . . . The University Blaustein Lecture series featured former Sec. of Defense James Schleshinger, former Under Sec. of State George Ball, and renowned political scientist Hans Morgenthau . . . More than 150 students attended a Forum residence kcfSBD subcommittee meeting to protest sweeping changes in res- idence halls policies, including the inclusion of SMAGS in the lottery . . . APRIL ... It was reported the adminis- tration had burned more than 40,000 of the March issue of Lehigh Horizons because of a front-page article entitled, Sexual Revolution: Mostly Just Talk? The article cited a survey of students in a psychology class in which only one of four undergraduates said they had never engaged in sexual relations . . . Fifty West Point cadets were expel- led for cheating . . . MAY . . . Rep. Wayne Hays admit- ted he had had a personal relationship with congres- sional aide Elizabeth Ray, but he denied her charges she was hired to be his mistress . . . Political parties became legal in Spain for the first time since 1939 . . . The worst racial violence in South Africa ' s history broke out in June near Johannesburg . . . The Supreme Court in July up- held the death penalty . . . America celebrated its 200th birthday . . . Israeli forces raided Entebbe Airoport in Uganda and freed 103 hostages who had been aboard an Air France plane seized by pro-Palestine guerrillas six days earlier . . . Viking I landed on Mars . . . The Olympics took place in Montreal under the shadow of political pro- test. Most African teams and representatives of Taiwan boycotted the games . . . Drama division chairman John Pearson died at 39 . . . In a down-to-the-wire finish, the Republican National Convention in August nominated Gerald Ford and Sen. Robert Dole ... A mysterious ail- ment later to be known as Legionnaire ' s Disease killed 28 persons who had stayed in Philadelphia ' s Bellvue Strat- ford Hotel. FALL 1976 SEPTEMBER . . . Chinese Communist Party Chairman Mao Tse-tung, 82, died in Peking and left the western world wondering what would happen in the country he had led since 1949 . . . Lehigh freshm an Robert Wargo died while jogging with the tennis team . . . More than 90 arters Minimi ]5 v _ musH S tSu million persons watched the first of a serious of debates between presidential contenders Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford . . . The Episcopal Church approved the ordination of women as priests . . . The reported assault of a woman student on an unlit road behind Dravo gave way to a series of criticisms of campus lighting . . . Rolf Adenstadt, as- sociate professor of mathematics, drowned while canoeing on the Lehigh River ... A campus police office was set up in the U.C., after repeated demands by students . . . OCTOBER . . . Agriculture Sec. Earl Butz resigned after apologizing for the gross indiscretion of making a racist remark . . . Barbara Walters was receiving both praise and criticism as the first woman anchorperson on televi- sion news . . . Like a ghost of the ' 60s, Timothy Leary, dressed in white from his tie to his sneakers, told a Lehigh audience of evolutionary problems ... A straw poll of Lehigh students showed 53 per cent favored Gerald Ford. Only 33 per cent supported Jimmy Carter . . . NOVEM- BER . . . Jimmy Carter was elected president, ushering in a period of blue jeans, sweaters, and fireside chats . . . The unthinkable happened as Lafayette beat Lehigh for the first time in five years. The traditional weekend was without a talent show, which was canceled because of obscene skits the year before . . . The right-to-die issue raised in the Quinlan case took on a new air as con- victed murderer Gary Gilmore challenged Utah to carry out its death sentence. He eventually was shot by a firing squad . . . DECEMBER . . . The administration an- nounced a $275 tuition hike and a $125 increase in room and board fees, despite the $154,000 surplus run the previ- ous year . . . SPRING 1977 JANUARY . . . Centennial I students returned from vaca- tion to find that many personal items had been stolen. The thefts were believed to have taken place while rooms were left open to repair broken water pipes, which had ruptured when the temperature was lowered in the dorm to con- serve energy . . . Jimmy Carter marked his inauguration by taking a stroll down Pennsylvania Avenue with Rosalynn and Amy. One of his first acts as president was to pardon Vietnam draft deserters . . . Arson was sus- pected in two fires in Dravo. The issue touched off con- cern for dorm safety as many fire alarms were found to be defective . . . One of the most bitter winters in history had student apartment-dwellers digging deeper and deeper into their pockets to pay heating bills FEBRUARY . . . Freddie Prinze, 22, star of Chico and the Man, shot and killed himself . . . Increasingly gruesome reports from Ugandan refugees left the world appalled at self-appointed President for Life Idi Amin ' s reign of terror . . . The television version of Alex Haley ' s Roots and the resul- tant press attention had people wondering about their own family trees . . . MARCH . . . After 21 months of dic- tatorial rule, Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was de- feated . . . The Food and Drug Administration banned saccharin as suspected of causing cancer ... A siege of three Washington buildings by Hanafi Muslims left a radio reporter dead; 134 hostages were taken but later released . . . The Lehigh basketball squad finished with a 6-4 record in league play but lost to Hofstra in the first round of the ECC playoffs . . . Lehigh wrestlers swept Easterns for the third year in a row but had no national cham- pions . . . and the semester went on but our copy deadline didn ' t. 163 THE ART OF LEARNING Attending college was once regarded as a rite de pas- sage confined to the intellectually elite, hungry to savor the coveted fruits of knowledge. Today, however, the thought of trundling off to the university seems to almost everyone a natural event in the educational cycle. To some, four years of college becomes an elaborate exercise in avoiding the pursuit of knowledge. To others higher education is a vo-tech training program, where their sheepskin qualifies them to mindlessly perpetuate the status quo. And somewhere in the morass of myopia are the students who are in some way in touch with a vague intuition that they are here to learn — to be enlightened and begin pondering a world fraught with social ills and promising possiblities. But even for those inquisitive minds who embrace each day with a fresh sense of won- der and who are willing to experiment, to take risks, and simply to think, they discover all too quickly the art of learning is an elusive one. Has it ever occurred to you that you read more words than you have time to digest? With the press of coinci- dent deadlines for five courses and the irresistible lure of the day ' s line of bullshit, most readers can plan to retain only the gist of a chapter. Nuance is often overlooked in the hustle to get through a book on time. It takes special effort by anyone scanning other than didatcic texts to sit for a minute and ponder why someone would have bothered to write and publish such pages (besides for royalties, of course). Course work may be regarded as an unending series of chores by students, with simultaneous deadlines necessitating the emphasis to be placed on simply get- ting the work done. Quality is too often sacrificed for quantity. Too often, professors merely require homework or quizzes to insure that the student has slogged through the prescribed muck on the syllabus. Why the student did the work seems to be secondary. Thinking is an ex- tracurricular activity at the university, an activity for the elusive, quiet spare hour which never seems to come, for it is constantly being usurped by never-ending scholas- tic responsiblities. When was the last time you broke the pattern with a meaningful conversation, laced with a profound thought or two. And beyond w hat it takes to get a C, B, A , pat on the head, how much time have you spent thinking about the words you read? Learning should not be considered an inevitable result of four years of college — we would be wise to think exactly the opposite, that unless on our guard we will become programmed rather than educated beings. It takes the energy to open our senses to the subtleties in our environment (the phenomena we read in texts and are unable to recognize in life). It takes the ability to care about getting more than simply the right answer to a test question. Sometimes being wrong is the surest route to learning. But in any event the art in learning is a direct result of committing ourselves to understanding; to question and start formulating answers for ourselves. 164 THE SCIENCE OF AVOIDANCE In addition to many academic disciplines at Lehigh, there is one you ' ll never find listed in the catalogue — The Science of Avoidance Mastering avoidance is the key to earning a degree with only a fraction of the effort required of other students. There are several skills of avoidance. Among the major ones are: careful course selection; recycling; setting a schedule (and promptly throwing it out the window), and an unfailing dedication — to everything but work. When choosing courses, there are some guidelines. If greeting the sun is not your thing, register for 8 o ' clock classes only under the following conditions: 1. Tempo- rary insanity; 2. The class is scheduled to meet in Taylor Stadium — your absence won ' t be as conspicuous; 3. The course is entitled Basket Weaving for Non-Majors. Things get nastier when you discover that nearly every required course seems to meet either all at once or, worse yet, on Friday fr om 1 to 4. Those with an affection for pub nights should avoid Fridays altogether, or at least schedule nothing more rigorous than SR 41. Anticipation turns to nausea when freshmen learn that gut courses are not what they seem. Professors being the conscientious souls that they are, a gut is unlikely to remain one for long once the prof, catches on. Should you hear of a course with no exams, no papers and op- tional attendance and dash to sign up, it ' s a sure bet that you (and your 3900 classmates) will be facing three hour- lies, a final, four 20-page papers and assigned seats for attendance. Also, consider the source when choosing your guts. The English major who takes Rocks for Jocks as a gut science course should find plenty of lab material between his ears. True students of avoidance test the outer limits of the grading process by taking advantage of pass fail grading. You can discover that it ' s possible to attend four classes, have a friend turn in your papers and still pass the course. Skillfully used, pass fail can also keep you from joining the Squares Club (your cum becomes smaller when squared). Recycling is an important part of saving our natural environment. It can save your academic environment. One research paper can be used again and again with only minor modifications. The Significance of ' Deep Throat ' will get you through courses in English, Psy- chology, SR, Government, Biology, Marketing and Me- chanical Engineering. To cover more academic fields, you can always collect or trade with friends. Should you be tempted to set a schedule for studying, think of the time it will take you to write it down. You could be doing something more productive, such as reading Hustler. If you really want to avoid studying, there ' s always the main reading room at Linderman. The weeknight social scene centers around there, and it ' s centrally located: halfway between Smugglers ' and Manny ' s. There ' s always a distraction worthy of your time if you ' re serious about avoidance. Think about it: which is more important to your development as a total human being, the details of Napoleon ' s domestic policy or Saran Wrapping a toilet seat? Napoleon would understand. 165 7 uKS ;i;; !r ; ;isi ; :i.;;:r.;...4.i!«! i|i!iS!: ' i.! i: t!5!! ' ' BpfflilP Ifii ■ir IsKlii? illl ' : ■.. Irs itiitaiiffl l !s@ip!3ip!Pi3lllliBiiSS;S :S : ORGANIZATIONS EVENTS J: : i.n,„ .«— illflii 1 :l- 1111 tttti I, II 111! iSliiBi iisl iHi ' ii;. 1 ilfsf liP . Jl-IV If mmm . i :..-,,, , ■mi.--. ■,■:::■,• .- p rSifk s ' tSlfm; spxf r:-- - ' , , i ll i . . iii,|iri iil.i [ I i I |i i I .;; ' ■mi ' :: ■■■■•■' ■■j ' i! = -i -viiii tiiii lirHlIilH!! ! ' !- !ib.3!, .ftq : Kii --jr.N- 1 . ' ; = ' ' . ?i ■' V- : ■,!.:■' ..;■i|i-vr: ' ii |, p j ' : ' :pE- ' . , i - llltll IfcW-W-.? .! . ' . ' .! BIRD LEAVES LEHIGH NEST For almost 19 years Mrs. Bird has been keep- ing the University alphabet soup unscrambled. If it were not for her the U.C. would be in total chaos — the S.A.C. would be meeting with V.L.C., L.U.V. and L.U.S.T. would be sharing office space, and the B W would be convening in the W.C. Besides which, Mrs. Bird is prob- ably the only person on campus who knows what all those initials mean. Unfortunately for Lehigh Mrs. Bird, who has become somewhat of an University fixture, is retiring this year. She has done the University student activities an invaluable service, and she will be greatly missed. ALPHA LAMBDA OMEGA G. Gerhat, K. Thompson, V. Mashlaka, J. Davieau, L. Stecker, T. Nederosted, R. McLennan, E. Dunton, R. Fiebrantz, S. Begany, J. Lowe, L. Duh, T. Hillegass, C. Lanbert, D. Jojsak, S. Warmkessel, D. Jenkins, J. Grencher, B. Muth. 168 ALPHA EPSILON PI FRATERNITY INTRAMURALS ... top half first year . . . overall CUM 2.90 ... 15 new Brothers ... an AEPi house . . . Good luck in the future to new Alumni Nuts, Nettles, Scottie, M-M, The Music Man, Knife, Dean of Sports, and Big Al . . . R.C.: Who really sent the pizza? . . . ha-woe is Scottie dere? . . . Participation!!! . . . What is the growling bear? ... If Lenny can ' t get it, I can! . . . Ketzel-mascot . . . Wuf, wuf . . . Rocky . . . Gourmet Delight . . . Join Circle K: Its Worth It . . . Charlie Charger . . . King and Kong . . . daily wrestling matches . . . April 24: Butts B.M. . . . Ho-Jo ' s midnight raids . . . Joseph Hendrzak Memorial Scholarship . . . Gordon gets serious . . . Moose and sheep . . . The All-Nighter ... the last of the dirty dozen ... Dr. J.T. . . . The Captain and Tennile . . . Soccer sin: D.K., B.W., D.K., J.B., J.L., J.M. vs opponents . . .616. . . St. Louis and Miami . . . Sid, the little general . . . Little Sisters . . . Chevy p ower . . . Jock awards — D.E.K., M.G., J.L. ... 4th place — 120 lbs. wrestling — A.C. . . . superpledge — S.G. . . . password — security . . . Murray the Kay . . . C.E. lovers . . . WLRN crew . . .most congenial Brother — S.T. . . . Mouse and Rho Deuteron . . . hot daaaaaag . . . mr. AEPi — L.B. . . . EEE . . . I.E. — R.F. . . . Softball — D.E.K. to D.B.K. to A.H.C. (doubleplay) . . . Sigma Eta is on the move!!!!!!!!!! Row 1 (I to r): L. Leidner, A. Crudo, M. Goldberg, P. Smith, D. Klein, Heller, S. Tagariello, R. Sayegh, M. Mack, R. Scott. utterly; Row 2 (I to r): J. Lewis, D. Konner, J. Butterly, R. Yeaton, R. 169 ALPHI PHI OMEGA Row 1 (I to r): D. Pitonak, C. Vandlik; Row 2 (1 to r): S. Bieling, C. Cable, M. Schratz, A. Fatula, K. Boczar, B. Hughes; Row 3 (I to r): R. Hansen, M. Eitingon, P. Lamb, J. Thatcher, D. Disanto, J. Wroblewski, W. DePrefontaine, M. Goldberg, M. Christie, J. Butterly, J. Butterly, S. Darlak, N. Richards, L. Leahy. ARNOLD AIR SOCIETY £ A ixW D. Atherholt, P. Carey, J. Chaippini, J. Fusco, S. Hanzlik, D. Kaminski, C. Lam- bert, J. Leknes, M. Malone, L. Pellett, M. Proft, J. Ripley, J. Sanlorenzo, A. Gag- non, R. Clark, R. Adams, G. Besenyei, B. Card, R. Daley, L. Davenport, K. Dun- leavy, B. Eck, G. Gates, T. Hartline, B. Lang, S. Nichols, M. O ' Donnell, R. Roe, R. Ronemus, M. Sasak, R. Schmid, C. Sikorsky, D. Summins. f ,- I, % 4-- rl- -) jfe, . t 170 ARMY ROTC w ! ■jftM P LTL ' LSUL « 1-14 I tit t f t t iff jrt- fc - s - Roui 3 ( fo r): J. Kloeber, M. Redmond, J. Midgley, J. Bartz, D. Miltenberger, E. Wagenseil, P. McKenney, C. Greene, L. Riniker, D. Gergel, C. Galetti, L. Deren, D. Slagle; Row 2 (I to r): S. Schooley, R. Orleman, J. Dean, C. Maltbie, S. Daniel, A. Mclnryre, T. Fisher, D. Lenyo, M. Mark, D. Lee, B. Fine, D. Pancamo, K. Levine, R.Forrest, J. Alt, W. Tetreau, D. McNealy, L. Pickens, D.Kaminski, M. Sezack, J. Wykosky, M. Buckmaster, R. Slaughter; Row 3 (I to r): G. Doan, K. Ellefsen, L. Paxton, M. McKenney, T. Masters, A. Prince, K. Fortune, J. Ney, R. Ryskamp, S.G. Geiger, J. Russo, W. Schneck, R. Muth, R. Lucas, S. Fahy, J. Kraus, D. Hickman, R. Steiger, J. Kenny, J. Reid, M. Shestok, P. Schragger, A. Bantley, J. Cowperthwait, B. Camperson, R. Sayegh, D. Emrich, Maj. Walsh, Maj. John, SGM. Kress, LtC. Phelan; Row 4 (I to r): W. Klimack, C. Kohl, J. Randl, P. Barndt, S. Courtright, P. Terenzio, C. Maltbie, D. Rarig, P. Herkenham, E. Kaufmann, R. Greenwood, G. Davieau, J. Downs, J. Schriabel, D. Jesurun; Row 5 ( fo r): A. Miller, M. North, J. Schwar, A. Balshi, M. Visintainer, F. Wentworth, J. Eggert, J. Schneider, C. Monaghan, D. Dunay, R. Parrino, F. Scattene, D. Cole, J. Mertz, L. Piolo, W. Herman, E. Heyman, J. Wykosky, T. Hoens, A. Barker, S. Filuyr, D. Stahl, Capt. Tomasik, Maj. Manns, MSG. Basilici. « 171 AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS Row 1 (I to r): B. Green, K. Owen, D. Deshler, R. Sohaney, K. Kennedy, S. Robinson; Row 2 (I to r): E. Bogucz, B. Loving, D. Nardon, D. Berger, D. Kuzo, P. Schutz, T. Oten; Row 3 to r): A. Karpovich, D. Poole, K. Lankenau, J. Edwards. BLACK STUDENT UNION Row 1 (I to r): J. Garrison, K. Jackson, C. Green, J. Williams; Row 2 (I to r): C. Smoot, V. Ste- vens, B. Wilson, K. Tate; Row 3 (I to r): M. Snowden, L. Young, R. Canabal, D. Roberts, L. Daven- port, M. Ford. 172 BRIDGE CLUB J. Johnson, R. Hageman, T. Schroeder, W. Spinner, D. Standig, B. Gorsey, B. Gallagher, D. Harle, B. Schroeder, K. Fleck, B. Jeffers, J. Jakielski, J. Iobst, L. Tillis. CHI EPSILON A. Thomson, A. Levin, C. Wenger, D. Herbener, U. Wiest, A. Hazen, J. Liebig, J. Handler, B. Raiser, D. Simmons, M Connolly, D. Yetter, K. Stoffel, J. Fisher, C. Kostem, B. Yen, L. Beedle, W. Hansell, R. Johnson, W. Murray, R. Slutter D. VanHorn, D. Stabler, M Barron R Batchelor, W. Bilenki, L. Brannaka, D. Bright, D. Brown, M. Durback, J. Eshleman, M. Garrabrant, M. Goldberg, R. Graves, D. Graver , M. Hart, D_ Heckman J. Kearney, J. Leach, V, Maslanka, J. Maurer, T. Miller, L. Norella, D. Peregrim, R. Rodack, R. Ryskamp, J. Stone, R. Strait, G. Yakowenko, D. Zuck. 173 CONCERT BAND S. Bregstein, P. Every, B. Gruver, A. Peters, D. Rankin, M. Westcott, L. LeVine, A. Ring, L. Lenthe, R. Quier, R. Allen, M. Kusmin, D. Paulus, S. Poehlein, B. Brake, A. DeLuca, M. Mazelsky, N. Miele, D. Moll, P. Scarff, C. Slegel, K. Stofanak, R. Stonfanak, U. Weist, M. Pavia, D. Rush, J. Thatcher, W. Conyers, W, Foy, A. Levin, P. Swarr, A. Bangser, G. Davis, P. Dinsmore, M. Farmer, M. Hahn, R. Heller, K. Molinaro, P. O ' Sullivan, S. Filemyr, P. Grady, A. Gunkle, B. Kautsky, M. Thompson, D. Walters, C. Berta, K. Frantz, D. Klucsik, T. McMahon, R. Cressman, T. Marrs, J. Ney, C. Ackerman, R. Adams, S. Bartosik, W. Cox, N. Sharko 174 175 m ? -4  Wrm m 5r 9- - BROWN WHITE Eileen Canzian, Fall Editor-in-Chief, Prof. Robert Sul- livan, Faculty Advisor. Ken Bandler, Spring Managing Editor; Ed Bogucz, Spring Editor-in-Chief. 176 Row 1 (1 to r): B. Glickman, L.A. Lusardi, K. Bandler, E. Bogucz; Row 2 (I to r): R. Whalen, B. Rockhill, B. Raynoha, K. Mitchell, J. Bodenstab, C. Winters, F. Haynes, M. MacDonald, A. Fleming, D. Sprick, E. Quirk, J. Goldman. 177 CIRCLE K Row 1 (I to r): K. Schaffer, K. Motschwiller, D. Konner, C. Alva; Row 2 (I to r): G. Huffman, D. Prestipino, N. Poppel, J. Lewis, P. Gordenstein, G. Gallagher. The Lehigh University Circle K Club is a cam- pus action organization sponsored by the Bethlehem Suburban Kiwanis Club. It is one of the largest collegiate service organizations serv- ing the U.S. and Canada. Circle K ' s purpose is to reach out to the campus and community and in so doing generate a spirit of harmony and con- cern for the enrichment of society. The club is dedicated to unifying people in friendship and involvement which is exemplified by this past years activities. The major activities provided a mixture of social, ser- vice fund-raising and educational projects. They included the sponsorship of the Annual Powder- puff Football game for the benefit of Multiple Sclerosis, sale of Kiwanis popcorn, assisting an Olympics for underprivileged children and the at- tendance of the 15th Annual Pa. District Conven- tion, as well as, representation at the Interna- tional Convention held in Washington, D.C. Lehigh ' s club played an active role in partici- pation of the Pa. District and had one member on the executive board, Dean Konner, immediate past Lieutenant Governor. The Circle K Club of Lehigh is a growing group of enthusiastic and dedicated students in- terested in friendship and involvement. Circle K is the middle link of the Tri-K Family which begins on the high school level with the Key Club and extends to the business level of Kiwanis. The Tri-K family work in unity to help eliminate the evils that exist. This year the Inter- national theme has been IMPACT ON LIFE. Donation to M.S. from the proceeds of the 6th Annual Powderpuff football game. D. Konner, Lt. Gov., Pa. District; K. Motschwiller, Pres.; K. Schaffer, V.P.; T. Vasko, Secretary; M. Doeberl, Treas. 178 ETA KAPPA NU H. Winter, L. Hay, G. Johnson, M. Fiore, P. Idell, B. Fritchman, G. Abdelnour, H. AI Arbash, N. Bard, B. Bare, K. Bartsch, R. Bates, W. Baumann, C. Bosch, W. Check, G. Diehl, B. Dunbar, K. Frantz, R. Gimigliano, W. Groh, C. Haslett, J. Hickey, A. Kaminsky, J. Kangas, T. Kinsella, G. Kolleogy, L. Leahy, E. Liebman, D. Lytle, C. Mack, D. McCarthy, S. McLellan, C. Messina, E. Modugno, A. Moeller, S. Petrizzo, J. Quinn, M. Quirk, J. Saddel, J. Sergi, C. Sharper, T. Walley, S. Weinstein, K. Werner, P. Whelchel, W, Wilkes, R. Yeaton, T. Yetsko, D. Zukswert. FORUM STEERING COMMITTEE T. Terry, M. Flesher, D. Amidon, J. Liebig, F. Beer, B. Rosenthal, D. Van Doren Charwat, L. Leder, E. Patterson, P. Adelman, P. Parr. M. Exstein, C. Roysdon, B. Finn, H. Shandell, L. Wenzel, C. 179 THE 1977 EPITOME Helen Richardson, Co-Editor Ann Zimmerman, Co-Editor Marc Hulsman, Photo Editor 180 Row 1 (I to r): K. Mitchell, A. Zimmerman, H. Shandell, L. Bondemore, H. Richardson, L. Goodman; Row 2: M. Hulsman, T. Bloom, R. Cariello, A. Crudo, B. Hill, P. Gordenstein; Row 3: B. Murphy, B. Hedderman, B. Judson, L. Chatzinoff; Row 4: D. Sprick (Spiritual advisor). Bob Judson, Business Manager Bob Judson, post Epitome 181 GRYPHON SOCIETY A. Inglis, G. Altomare, G. Archer, K. Benusa, K. Boczar, T. Braun, K. Cahill, J. Connolly, J. Culp, J. A ' Apolito, J. Demas, H. Donaldson, J. Ferguson, R. Folger, L. Freeman, D. Friedfeld, R. Freimuth, R. Gans, P. Garnish, N. Gurfinkel, R. Haimowitz, S. Hirsch, M. Holland, L. Johnson, G. Joyce, W. Judge, M. Kaufmann, J. Kearney, R. Kennedy, M. Koelmel, T. Kokkinos, M.A. Leonardi, J. Magee, T. Mastri, K. McDonough, R. Meehan, M. Miller, R. Nesbitt, C. Nunan, J. Ochs, L. Orysh, J. Pieczynski, J.K. Polizzano, C. Reese, C. Richardi, S. Robertson, J. Ryan, S. Scheibe, D. Sell, W. Shannon, M. Sisso n, G. Skovira, C. Tack, G. Thomas, S. Tickell, S. Turgeon, D. Visokey, D. Wardle, E. Warner, R. Welliver, P. Wilson, T. Wilson, K. Woerner. 182 HILLEL R. Kaufman, D. Konner, D. Klein, J. Larkey, B. Stein, S. Wellner. This society is a student-run organization, having a membership of more than a hundred Jewish men and women students from Lehigh University and Moravian College, sponsored by B ' nai Brith. The group has an active social calendar, as well as athletic competition and cultural programs. A convenient meeting place is the Brith Sholom Community Center which is adjacent to the campus. This organization al- lows a student to continue his Jewis identity in college. INVESTMENT CLUB P. Schlimme, P. Hauser, G. Moyer, R. Frisch, K. Tower, Prof. J. Greenleaf. 183 GLEE CLUB W. DePrefontaine, J. Johnson, D. Lee, P. Miller, R. Rentier, M. Roberts, J. Smith, L. Weiss, T. Anderson, M. Barron, D. Brown, B. Hanlette, J. Horner, S. Hutton, T. Ichihara, P. Menard, T. Miller, A. Redden, D. Seicol,J. Stone, K. Tower, J. Baxter, S. Buchanan, W. Devorick, B. Dunbar, N. Hill, M. Kearns, A. Paspalas, A. Ruggles, J. Steeley, D. Trost, S. Chen, P. Davidoff, S. Dill, M. Dybeck, S. Eberhardt, R. Furanna, A. Kaminsky, J. Kloeber, P. Landin, A. Merwin, W. Ughes, R. Cutler. 184 INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL C. Bosch, H. Domey, J. Fernandez, T. Tripp, G. Streich. 185 MUSTARD CHEESE OKLAHOMA! Marcus Dilliard, president; Katherine Hazlehurst Mary Ann Pedersen, vice presi- dent; Debra Smith Patricia Spugani, secre- tary; Russel Loughridge treasurer. 24 WAGONS FULL OF COTTON BLACK COMEDY 186 THE HOSTAGE 187 LEHIGH UNIVERSITY VOLUNTEERS A. Zimmerman, G. Bernstein, R. Guiliani, J. Alperin, S. Schwartz, J. Castaldi, L. Novik, J. Bradley, M. Grace, K. Saxe, S. Petrella, M. Howell, G. Archer, J. Dunn, C. Dirusso, D. VanDoren, S. Kovak, D. Templin, A. Decillis, M. Cahn. MARKETING CLUB Row 1 (I to r): Prof. J. Hanz, H. Latham, M. Handman, S. Eckert, L. Wels; Row 2 (I to r): L. Orysh, B. Patterson, P. Petko, K. Blew, W. Himich, E. Stieg, S. Kratovil; Row 3 (I to r): L. Zarembo, S. Kossar, D. Tice, D. Lerf, K. McCourt. 188 PI TAU SIGMA M. Barr, T. Vasko, P. Schatz, R. Hessinger, M. Cowell, R. Erbrick, A. Ruggles, R. Wepfer, R. Green, T. Othen, R. Constantin, K. Lankenau, T. Woznicki, B. Walters, D. Gallup, R. Sohaney, I. Sanders, S. Diantonio, E. Bogucz, K. Owen, D. Kuzo, J. Thatcher, P. Barry, C. Ill, J. Soltau, B. Peiper, J. Edwards, D. Deshler, W. Loving, C. Markley, D. Shuey, T. Caine, P. Schmidt, G. Skovira, D. Berger, K. Kennedy, A. Karpovitch, D. Nardone, R. Poole. PRE-LAW SOCIETY Prof. H. Whitcomb, T. Duch, Dean G.M. Ellis, N. Olack. 189 31.3 FM LEHIGH UNIVERSITY, BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA 18015 (215) 868-4121 • (215) 691-0188 J. Anderson, M. Barth, N. Becker, F. Behlau, M. Burte, R. Busch, E. Carduner, B. Cheng, J. Christy, M. Class, T. DiCilveo, D. Finkelstein, D. Garczynski, J. Garrison, R. Graves, K. Grigsby, T. Hindenlang, K. Jackson, P. Jones, C. Keener, J. Kenny, V. Legrand, M. Leopold, J. Masland, S. McDougall, J. McFadden, T. McParland, J. Mowrer, J. Plewa, C. Pondaras, J.K. Polizzano, J. Pope, D. Preusch, J. Reed, R. Rosenthal, M. Rossen, R. Schlack, G. Sellani, D. Sheeran, R. Stoloff, S. Strickland, B. Wolahan, S. Abernathy, J. Alessi, J. Alperin, D. Aprill, P. Barry, M. Berlant, E. Bogucz, G. Buragino, B. Card, D. Dziemian, J. Fald, B. Fisher, S. Freilich, R. Fountain, J. Fullwood, F. Gowanes, B. Gutstein, M. Hutton, M. Irvine, D. Kaufman, K. Kedzie, P. Klein, J. Klusaritz, W. Kunz, P. Lamb, J. Lewis, E. Liebman, J. Mancuso, G. O ' Brien, J. Ost, B. Rockhill, R. Schmid, J. Sion, C. Smoot, T. Stevens, M. Stipa, S. Tageriello, B. Tannenbaum, B. Thorton, A. Thum, E. Tober, C. Buhrendorf, A. Schechter, J. Glaze, M. Ehrenpreis, S. Maddock, S. Schmider, G. Miller, J. Goldner, M. O ' Reilly, R. Graifman, B. Hill, R. Stoloff, T. Dexter, N. Stein, C. Haslett, J. MacGahan, I. Lopatin, P. Fox, C. Keck, J. Fabre, J. Emmitt, K. Tontarski, R. Jenkins, B. Selick, J. Whiteraft, C. Distau, K. Marsh, S. Agin, P. Dickey, L. Goldstein, P. Gushue, R. Jakielski, E. Miller, J. Pennick, T. Ruhle, E. Scattene, D. Solis-Cohen, M. Torie. Jke eJLehiqh f adio r etworh 190 RESIDENCE HALLS COUNCIL E. Minnich, P. Smoler, S. Maddock, W. Wilkes, M. Winslee, I. Strober, J. Feldman, J. Goldman, C. Gorbunoff, J. Poulin, M. Levin, M. Quirk, J. Carnali, K. Motschwiller, M. Jumbo, A. Ben-Ami, L. Gant, P. Petko, P. Gordenstein, T. MaGuire, L. Reynen, S. Schmider, G. Marotta, S. Stemple, N. Shalay. Officers: Row 1 (I to r): L. Gant, P. Petko, M. Quirk; Row 2 (I to r): K. Motschwiller, G. Taran- tini, A. Ben-Ami, P. Gordenstein. 191 STUDENT ACTIVITIES COUNCIL Hh . l4 u ,r ™ . ; e  .-«   ft S _ Cindy Palenchar Tom Nederostek 192 Melanie McCoy Rich Coleman Gail Price Eric Connery Chuck Marino 193 RUGBY CLUB ' £■A f ,s © A Rou ' I ( fo r): S. Peck, R. Trevisan, D. Hooker, M. Lesswing, R. Cahill; Roiv 2 (I to r): G. Streich, M. Vallee, B. Gault, N. Boy, C. Emerling, L. Rucko, T. Smith, K. Deutch, M. Crehore, L. Dee, K. Hair, M. Lyman, R. Farenwald, F. Irish, S. Cerminaro, B. Kesselman, B. Kobin, J, Armstrong, B. Boswell. STUDENT METALLURGY SOCIETY G. Molitor, D. Jankowski, J. Quinn, A. Fox, Dr. G. Conard, Dr. S. Tarby, A. Romig, Campbell, S. Sutker, T. Castle, C. Shawber, J. Kershner, D. Moore, L. Nusselt. Dandridge, B. Somers, P. Bretz, D. 194 NEWMAN ASSOCIATION STAGE BAND 195 TAU BETA PI J. Barczynski, B. Bare, M. Barr, P. Barry, W. Baumann, D. Berger, J. Bodenstab, E. Bogucz, C. Bosch, D. Bright, D. Burdakin, T. Caine, T. Castle, S. Cigich, R. Constantin, M. Cowell, F. Daly, S. Diantonio, M. Edelstein, J. Eshleman, R. Flaska, J. Fradkin, K. Frantz, R. Gimigliano, S. Goldstein, J. Goodwin, G. Hasse, J. Handler, P. Hartranft, C. Haslett, J. Horathai, P. Idell, J. Janinek, D. Jankowski, M. Jumbo, J. Kaiser, A. Kaminsky, A. Karoly, J. Kearney, T. Kinsella, D. Kuzo, P. Landin, E. Lausten, A. Levin, M. Lorini, J. Lunny, D. Lytle, V. Maslanka, J. McCoy, J. McMinn, T. Miller, D. Moore, D. Nardone, K. Owen, B. Piskin, J. Quinn, M. Quirk, B. Raiser, C. Richardi, G. Riggin, W. Rixey, I. Sanders, J. Schatz, D. Simmons, J. Soltau, C. Tack, J. Thatcher, A. Thompson, S. Thoren, T. Vasco, M. Voorhees, T. Walley, U. Weist, K. Wint, H. Winter, G. Yakowenko, M. Yaszemski, R. Yeaton, D. Yetter. TAU LAMBDA CHI SORORITY Row 3 (I to r): J. Schnalzer, M. Schantz, L. Trinkle, C. Cence, C. Renninger, J. Schlener; Row 2 (1 to r): C. Berger, C. Kiss, H. Kertauage, J, Wagner, C. Schmidt, C. Hvizdos, N. Richards, S. Dravec, C. Palenchar. 196 WOMEN ' S CHOIR N. Butts, R. Gent, R. Grapin, B. Hjorth, R. Hinz, L. Hutchison, J. Janecek, D. Johnson, A. Kunes, J. Moore, V. Stevens, C. Tyrala, R. Vogel, D. Carroll, S. Gimson, S. Goldberg, M. Hutton, M. Inglis, A. Karoly, R. Kauffman, L. Kraushaar, S. Langenberg, D. Miller, K. Rau, D. Fennick, J. Goldman, D. Hari, M. Inslee, J. Krause, K. Latimer, L. Lenthe, E. Marshall, S. Okoniewski, S. Rzasa, L. Scnragger, K. Branting, S. Daniel, D. Harle, C. Hazlehurst, A. Helffrich, P. Lewis, R. Lanciano, E. Murphy, C. Paul, N. Reynolds, R. Sutherland. 197 EVENTS The 1976-77 speaker series offered a much more diverse group of speakers than those of recent years. Lehigh wel- comed consumer advocate Ralph Nader and radical Timothy Leary, as well as noted political figures Moshe Dayan, Victor Reisel and Dr. Lawrence Klein. J. A. Lukacs, one of eight Mellon Lecturers, spoke about a link between history and physics. To add a lighter touch to the series, Mel Blanc and his friends delighted the standing-room- only Grace Hall audience. Although the speakers offered a greater variety of topics, the series unfortunately was not up to par. For the first time in a decade, the Blaustein Lectures were not held due to a seeming oversight by those involved, who delayed to the point that speakers were no longer available. A larger number of speakers would make the lecture series more rewarding in future years. RALPH NADER The American people have to undergo a kind of procedural reorientation if they are going to be able to participate and to shape the so- ciety and to preserve their own rights. :r AM - ' - HBjf LEH- ' GH 11 111 TIMOTHY LEARY There was probably never a decade in human his- tory where so many new ideas exploded on the scene with so much energy and intelligence. No as- pect of American culture hasn ' t been somewhat changed, revised, or improved as a result of what happened in the ' 60 ' s. 198 MOSHE DAYAN We are still a long way away from peace. VICTOR REISEL The leadership of the labor unions is the single most pow- erful force in this country. The sheer power of the labor unit is so influential in our every- day life, and we can ' t even name many of the leaders of the Teamster ' s. If the under- world infiltrates the Teamsters they could decide on what day the U.S. will stand still. I have fought for the decency of American society, but to do it where it counts, fellows like me need your help. 199 DR. J. A. LUKACS In the 20th century, elements of con- vergence between our knowledge of nature as expressed in the study of modern physics and our knowledge of human nature as expressed in the study of history do exist. They lead to a phase in the evolution of human con- sciousness both in the natural sciences and the human sciences where we have to begin to think about thinking itself. 200 201 turkey trot THE ROYAL LICHTENSTEIN CIRCUS 204 DANCE MARATHON ' t A R .X.1 C THE LITTLE WIZARD Terry LaSorda There is nothing up the sleeves of senior Terry LaSorda. And if you don ' t believe him, he ' ll do his stuff with his sleeves rolled up. Terry has nothing to hide, for a sleight-of-hand artist ' s secrets are built right into his carefully developed hand mus- cles, his most important tools. For almost four years now, this elfin figure with an impish smile, has been been delighting all sectors of the Lehigh Valley with his magic. He ' s performed everywhere from children ' s wards, homes for runaways and the emotionally disturbed to fraternities, senior citizens groups, and rings of professional magicians. And anyone who has seen The Little Wizard perform knows he ' s a giant of a magician. 206 207 ' -• ' v I J ' L HE WHO GETS SLAPPED If ■■■k a I wrwl r m 1 IJ n a m 1 9 Take an early 20th-century Russian play long on mythic symbols and exposition and short on action, interpolate some clown routines that fit the play ' s circus atmosphere and also parallel events of the drama, and you have the basic premise of He Who Gets Slapped, the major Mustard and Cheese spring production. Director Jim Hill took this lengthy drama by Leonid Andreyev and employed student mem- bers of Hill ' s drama course, The Clown Wor- shop, to bring levity and some ironic comment to the environment of the seedy Cirque Briquet in Paris. Hill, who has worked with circus clowns before coming to Lehigh, also had his clowns perform during intermission. Their antics were one highlight of the show. These photographs depict the behind-the- scenes preparations of the performers, and their onstage performances. Besides practicing their routines, the clown-actors spent some time ap- plying whiteface and other makeup important to their overall presentation. Clowns and non-clowns alike sparked this production. Chief among them were Michael Del- luva as Tot, the one who gets slapped, and Cora Hook as the young performer who tragically cap- tures his fancy. Larry Kohn, David Miller, and Mark Pyles were marvelously zany as part of the clown ensemble, with Scott Lesher, as the man who stole Tot ' s wife, brought great depth of character to his role. v ■■■■■I OKLAHOMA! 210 THE HOSTAGE WHEN YA COMIN ' BACK RED RYDER CHARLIE DANIELS 211 HARRY CHAPIN 1 iSSiy ■' Mil 4  ' n ■f jl T ' r l IV 1 • JACKSON BROWNE 212 RENAISSANCE us mk y i: ;. ,i mmm mm mm 213 ■;,!flSl[Ji |: ;3 ii - ■' i-JJi ' iiitt, Hi ' ■i i ' llll fill M 59 SB ilS! ffifSfflilSteiil! ;:.i| l p kj  h ir.g i l ' 0S W ii ' yt.::- , «,4 Wi ■illla )- 1 ■' - ' lij iftalUlTvv ' !: ' '  iilotHi ■ii.S J SipSfWf ™ ■■■■:■l ' - ■•!i : il|.| ti S i ' s ' ' j t; jp.fe V 1 ■' .. ' Ijil ' iiillilli ! [ --J ;j J3 .5-li.; : : ■' ..!■! ' : ' [ .IjUllSII l. S„,.li.p|,.JT. ' | ■,[ ' ■i ; ' 1 ' |i! - i : i ' i,|u ■■■■■. i S -|lN ' Sf ' J ' ■l V jSr :-ti. ' ,:-i, ■■■■..,,.. : . ■■■! ■■■■■■assllMSP ' ' - 1 ■MmHraBi! B JfSf.ili ' ' i™ai. siaajSlifert ■..■; |jj ■' :;t : ;-;:S :W [ ::; ; |iii:ii ; ' nai ■:..■;■: ' • ' i.- ' -iiiTaiiji.ijriiiiiFM ' fivaii-i ■:! I f.italv : i ' [ftEi ! palftfi : = I IIB ' Ii 1 ; : ' ,: ' , If .:.:■: li:::,,- ....■■:■:.■: liiii lilili = vU;!.. : ..;,i:Mi l ip :f ifiiiiiValiiiif;:!. 1:1 1 raiSliS? p!II|l!lli ' ii jjiiijlpiiijiiiiljl lioliBiliiJiliiMJjliaiiiiiiiii ' iiiiililliJi!:: iJli : ;iS|r;;p;:;;iJ; B ii;: ? firiji Mi |||p|ilj iJlllllflllflifli 1 Iffliii! iilii llliffl I ' lljjjJIJJl ' ilfllllllilMllllhj!:.::!:!, ; :; ililliiliEiSiiilll: :: : : :: || liSsiiiiisiii . ■■; iT,Vli|fl l||ij m Hpfetf f ||ill 111 ' A ' ' Mil, | |f [ SilLj MS ' : FOOTBALL Whenever you lose to Lafayette, it doesn ' t matter if you were 10-0, it seems to ruin your season. - Head Coach John Whitehead. Unfortunately, even though the Engineers were 6-5, three losses at the wire to Bucknell, Virginia and Lafayette blemished what could have been a much more productive season. Inconsistent play, mental lapses and weaknesses at certain positions hampered the Engineers in close games. After opening their season with two runaway victories over Kutztown, a Division II team and Baldwin-Wallace, a Division III team, the Engineers played what may have been their best game of the year with a come-from-behind victory over Penn. They evened their record at 3-3 with consecutive losses to Yale, Bucknell and nationally-ranked Rutgers. The En- gineers lost a mud fight to Bucknell 3-0, when they elected to go for the win with eight seconds remaining. The Rut- gers loss was the hardest to swallow. Though the En- gineers definitely took the game to the Scarlet Knights, they blew their lead and eventually the game in the final quarter with mental errors. The second half of the season brought victories over Maine, Gettysburg and C.W. Post, but was marred by two heartbreaking defeats to Division I school Virginia and arch-rival Lafayette. Some outstanding individual efforts must be mentioned. Junior Dave Aprill led the Engineers with his much- improved all around play. Senior Larry Henshaw again led the receiving corps with 33 receptions, while freshman Jim McCormick led the defensive unit with 98 unassisted tack- les. Senior offensive lineman Mark Orcutt was once again named to the ECAC Division II Ail-Star team as well as the New York Times All-East team. 216 217 I Row 1 ( -r): R. Gardner, M. Borden, R. Glasbrenner, G. Pierog, L. Henshaw, M. Yaszemski, J. Matt, N. O ' Connor, M. Orcutt, M. Kelly, J. Dutt, P. Kershaw, K. Schmidt, J. Healy; Row 2 (1-r): G. Allen, M. Ford, J. Butkus, T. Cassone, M. Weaver, M. Rieker, B. Drusbosky, D. Aprill, D. Hellekjaer, N. Miron, ]. Braverman, P. Mercuri; Row 3 (1-r): P. Fenton, P. DeLuca, M. Ricketson, P. Cohen, E. Yaszemski, B. Bradley, L. Daniels, D. Mayberry, D. Mahlbacher, S. Hefele, C. Reese, E. Barth; Row 4 (l-r): C. Matics, R. Andres, ]. Dunn, J. Bernstein, A. Robinson, D. Melone, A. Vandergrift, R. Adams, T. Stein, M. Seasholtz, S. Kreider; Row 5 (l-r): J. Ringer, S. McKay, G. Clark, E. Merrill, T. Giordani, G. Skola, D. Probst, B. Swartz, B. Sulzer, D. Visokey, B. Brougher, B. Zwann; Row 6 (1-r): T. Justice, J. McCormick, M. Evanko, T. Dondero, K. Frederick, J. Pieczynski, R. Manning, D. Reichenbach, C. Kaupp, B. Penrod, G. Machikas, P. Stires, V. Rogusky, D. Raring. 218 CROSS COUNTRY ■■- ■K ■; a s ' SSF Tl From the pleasantries of the Atlantic City Boardwalk Relay victory to the narrow losses to Bucknell by five points during the regular season and by four points in the East Coast Con- ference race, the 1976 cross country squad encountered many frustrations amid the bright spots enroute to a 10-4 season and first place in the IC4-A col- lege division race. Losses to Penn, Rutgers, Army, and Bucknell pinpointed an inability to de- liver a consistently strong team per- formance, despite many talented indi- viduals. Senior co-captain Stellan Thoren, unhampered by injuries that marred his previous seasons, capped an out- standing campaign by placing third in both the ECC and IC4-A champi- onships. While sophomore James Davis and junior Charles Sumrell also performed well, freshmen Dave Rohr and Larry Ullrich surprised the team with their strong races in both championship meets. These undergraduates point to the potential for continued success for future harrier squads. Row 1 (I. to r.): C. Stoebenau (mgr.), J. Donahue, J. Cassamatis, H. Hoyt, F. Wentwoith, T. O ' Shea, L. Ullrich, J. Davis; Row 2: S. Collins, D. Norris, D. Cope, (bus driver), M. Cowell, D. Friedfeld, R. Devine, D. Rohr, S. Thoren (co-capt.); Row 3: F. Regan, S. Diamantoni, J. Peters, D. Fink; Row 4: C. Sumrell, C. Nunan, D. Sprick, B. Doherty, D. Kuzo, J. Grady, R. Schilder, A. Hubsch, M. Ranney, J. Wummer, M. Yardis (co-capt.), D. Dunne. 219 220 SOCCER ' «t ■What did many good veterans and some talented freshmen add up to for the 1976 soccer squad? Dis- appointment, as the hooters, needing a tie or win in their last game to clinch the ECC title, dropped a heartbreaking 2-1 decision to Bucknell to finish sec- ond in the league with a 3-1-1 mark and 6-5-3 over- all. Frustrations of a season that might have been 13-1 also are revealed in the statistics, as four of the team ' s five losses were by one goal. Yet Coach Tom Fleck ' s troops have much to be proud of this season. Highlighting their efforts was a 1-0 victory over then 18th-ranked Penn. Individually, senior tri-captain Larry Keller and junior Skip Di Massa led the team. Keller registered four shutouts, including one streak of one goal al- lowed in four games. Keller permitted an average of 1.42 goals per game. Di Massa provided a seasonal scoring punch of six goals and three assists. Fullbacks Rich Czekanski, John Schadt, and tri- captain Bob Weick provided outstanding defensive muscle. Although the loss of Keller, Gene Parris, Weick, and midfielders Henry Prati and tri-captain Jose Perna might hurt the team, the steady play this season of freshmen Mike Robinson, right wing, Warren Kimber, left wing, and Andy Mclntyre, fullback, will supply the potential for continued success. M Row 1 (I. to r.): P. Shook, G. Parris, B. Weick (tri-capt.), L. Keller (tri-capt.), J. Pema (tri-capt.), H. Prati, J. Schadt. Row 2: A. Mclntyre, C. Sheppard, P. Krystow, G. Crape, T. Wilson, J. Adell, C. Izuno (mgr.). Row 3: J. Harrison, (asst. coach), S. Schultz (trainer), M. Robinson ' W Kimber, S. Di Massa, R. Czekanski, P. Malik, S. Concklin, T. Kulp, T. Fleck (coach). 221 SWIMMING % % Although illness and pressures kept the swim team from competing up to its capabilities in the ECC champi- onships, the mermen proved their met- tle this season. Their 8-3 mark was the best ever under Coach Bruce Gardiner and was the best record since 1950. Pressure seemingly did not bother the Engineers during the regular sea- son. Four meets hinged on the final event, the 400 freestyle relay, and the mermen responded by capturing all four of these close contests. Another season highlight was a 58-54 loss to an overconfident Penn team that had to struggle to win against the tenacious Engineers. The mermen look in good shape for next year as only John Koester and Fred Woodruff will be graduated. Cap- tain Koester led the record-breaking team pace by capturing five individual records this season. The band of tough freshmen were led by Jeff Brooks, who came through in the Penn State meet by winning the 1,000 freestyle and by Tom Campbell, who can swim almost any event. With the addition of a transfer diver next year, the swimmers can hope to climb even higher. Row 1 (I to r): D. Langdon, T. Monica, D. Donovan, K. Nelson, J. Brooks, H. Kunze; Row 2: A. Smith, K. Silva, J. Koester (capt.), F. Woodruff, B. Alch, B. Steitz, T. Campbell; Row 3: B. Gardiner (coach), H. Schweitzer, J. Ratkevic, B. Haltenhoff, P. Klauder, P. Battaglia, P. Nunan; Row 4: K. Meyers, T. Shanahan, B. Knisley, N. Campbell, B. Roth (asst. coach). 222 HOCKEY With dreams of a Division III playoff berth rudely shattered, the hockey team awoke to capture its last three games enroute to a fine 11-5 record, its best in several seasons. The pucksters ' Chip and Dale, scor- ing leaders, co-captains and graduating seniors Bob Oliwa and Mike Dale, pro- vided a powerful scoring punch. Dale won the point race, setting a Univer- sity record of 127 total points in his four-year career, while winning the seasonal scoring race with 12 goals and 22 assists. Oliwa finished his college career with 70 goals and 54 assists, three total points shy of Dale, and finished with 31 points on the year, with his 22 goals and nine assists. It is hoped freshman Kris Talgo, who scored 13 goals and 20 assists, can pick up the slack left by the departing se- niors. Although Coach Steve Penman will be losing steady defenseman Whit Cummings, left wing Rich Benoit and defenseman Bob Bayer, the under- classmen will be there to bring con- tinued success. They include freshman goalie Mike Wise, junior center Ed O ' Mara, and wing Pete Goldstein. 1st row( . to r.): C. Rinaldi, K. Talgo, M. Dale, D. Marfone, M. Wise, E. O ' Mara, M. Langiey, B. Oliwa, J. Barnes; 2nd Row: S. Penman (coach), J. Marino (mgr.), C. Hopkins, J. Cillo, R. Benoit, P. Golds- tein, J. Pennick, D. Perlmuiter, B. Adams, P. Gushue (mgr.), P. Bechtel (asst. coach); 3rd Row: D. Radford, B. Maloney, W. Cummings, H. Marsh, J. Cookingham, B. Scott, M. Wilmerding, B. Bayer. 223 WRESTLING It was the same old song — almost. For the third straight year the Engineers took an impressive dual-meet record, 14-3, into the EIWA tournament and made a shambles of it, qualifying eight men for the nationals in Oklahoma. Al- though the Engineers came home with three placewinners, bad breaks ended all hopes of a national champion. Placewinning performances by Mark Lieberman, second, Don McCorkel, third, and Mike Brown, fifth, led the wres- tling team to a seventh-place NCAA finish with 49 points. Bob Sloand, after a disappointing third place at Easterns, was not finished with the heartbreaks when he was forced to default due to a knee injury. Earlier, Sloand had defeated the number one seed and looked like a sure shot for the title. At Easterns, again brown and white colors not only domi- nated the stands, but the victory platform as well. Lance Leonhardt, Lieberman, Brown and McCorkel won their final bouts in convincing manner after the 22nd team champi- onship in history had already been decided. Pat Sculley lost a hard-fought match in the finals for sec- ond, and Steve Bastianelli, Nils Deacon and Sloand took third place honors. McCorkel was awarded the Fletcher Trophy, given to the senior wrestler with the most career points. Highlighting the season were dual-meet victories over Cal Poly and Navy. Row 1 (I to r): L. Pleshko, B. Sloand, T. Toth-Fejel (grad. asst.), D. Hetnck, S Bastianelli L Leonhardt; Row 2: C • Talarico, G Cunnmgharn r Sculley, R. Earl, J. Allegar, N. Deacon, R. Biggs (grad asst.); Rom 3: T. Turner (head coach), C. McNaron (trainer), C. Brown, M. Stauffer, B. Amelio, M. Brown, M. Lieberman, D. McCorkel, G. Leeman (asst. coach). 224 225 227 BASKETBALL Coach Brian Hill ' s continual improvement objec- tive was realized a little faster than expected when the Engineer basketball squad came out of nowhere to qualify for a berth in the East Coast Conference cham- pionship tournament. In the tournament they pushed highly favored — and eventual winner — Hofstra right down to the final minutes before dropping an 81-72 verdict in the ECC quarterfi nals. The Engineers posted a 6-4 conference record and a 12-15 overall mark, the best record for a Lehigh cage team since 1970. Senior Charley Brown had a consistent year and paced the season scorers with 390 points. He ended his four-year varsity career with 1,311 points, the most ever for an Engineer player. Brown also hauled down 167 rebounds and was the recipient of an Eastern Col- legiate Athletic Conference weekly all-star certificate. The backcourt combination of junior Ken Clifford, who scored 331 apoints, and sophomore Bill Griffin, who led the team in assists with 85 and poured in 256 points, gave the Engineers one of the best duo of guards in the conference. Junior Ray Green topped the rebounders with 202 and was third in scoring with 307 points. Senior Paul Brandenburg followed Green and Brown in the re- bounding race with 166. Two New Jersey freshmen, Jeff Vandemark and Frank Hillman, were instrumental in the upsurge by the cagers. Brown and Brandenburg, the team ' s co- captains, were the only seniors among the squad ' s top seven performers. Engineer fans should look forward to next year as the Engineers strive to resume the momentum they took into their last game with Hofstra. 228 Row 1 (I to r): P. Kennedy (assistant coach), C. Brown (co-capt.), B. Hill (head coach), P. Brandenburg (co-capt.), B. Dunkel (j.v. coach); Row 2 (I to r): B. Griffin, K. Clifford, F. Hillman, D. Packer, M. Purcell, M. Procida, R. Zajac; Row 3 (I to r): R. Green, J. Vandemark, P. Weaver, M. Finley, B. Camperson, C. Driza. 229 INDOOR TRACK It ' s the same old story, a fight for love and glory . . . and Lafayette stole the glory and an undefeated season from the Engineers as the annual dogfight between the teams again came down to the final relay races, with Lafayette capturing the mile relay and a 72V2-63V2 victory. Coach John Covert ' s troops ended with a 5-1 record. More important than the record, however, was the individual progress made by the since what Covert called the underpar performances in the home opener, which Bloomsburg never made because of the blizzard. Miler Stellan Thoren continued his winning ways from cross country as he qualified for the IC4As ana scored in that meet with a 4:10.7 mile. Daniel Doyle accompanied Thoren to the IC4As on the strength of his Field House record pole vault 15ft-lV2in. With a bevy of freshman scorers, the team can look to con- tinued excitement and success. % I 230 SQUASH Row 1 (1 to r): R. Allen, C. Gruver.B. Kirker, K. Noonan, D. Dietrich; Row 2: D. Schantenbach (coach), R. Moore, D. Spoont, K. McCarthy (capt.), P. Davidoff, C. Covert, S. Somers, P. Henry. RIFLE Row 1 (I to r): R. Ronemus, D. Cole, N. Berger; Row 2: J. Duffy, L. Loewer, B. Liebermann, J. Esch; Row 3: L. Brannaka, W. Smith, B. Lally (capt.), SGM J. Kress (coach), N. Richards, M. Bubel, B. Bronner. What do the undefeated rifle team and the 3-11 squash team have in common, except their sharing an Epitome page for the second consecu- tive year? Both squads will lose very few se- niors as freshmen gained valuable ex- perience this year. While the riflemen can only hope to maintain their excel- lent 25-1 combined two-year record, the squashers come off a building year with hopes of bolstering their record with a tentative New England road swing next season against excellent Ivy League teams. Squash team captain Kevin McCar- thy said the season allowed Coach Dennis Schantzenbach to insert many freshmen into the nine-singles lineup while also offering a lot of people a lot of fun. Despite the team ' s record, three players went to the Nationals in An- napolis. Although McCarthy, Bob Kirker and freshman standout Ricky Moore all lost in the first round, Moore advanced to the third round of the con- solations before being eliminated. Meanwhile, back at the range, the rifle team breezed through its regular season en route to a first-place finish in the National Rifle Association champi- onship. A squad of Captain Bob Lally, Bob Liebermann, Joe Duffy and Joe Smith triumphed over 25 teams. Lehigh teams also placed sixth and 12th. Such excellent finishes reveal a depth that will continue next year, as only Lally will graduate. Liebermann had the team ' s top average in competing in half the matches, and Lally finished second. The riflewomen, unlike their still- struggling squash counterparts, solidly contributed to team victories. Lynn Loewer and Wendy Smith ranked among the top 10 in team averages, while Nancy Richards, along with Jon Schnabel, had a good freshman season. Who knows? If both teams continue to improve, maybe each will have its own page next year. 231 Row 1 (1 to r): B. Arndt, G. Butz, B. Shannon, E. Scheidler, D. Wilson, K. Tilton, A. Ottinger; Row 2: P. Sclar (batboy), M Iorio, G. Troxel, B. Luchsinger, M. Smith, T. Spence, W. Bilenki, R. Piger; Row 3: S. Meyer (trainer), J. Parisi (statistician), C. Anderson (pitching coach), D. Reichen- bach, J. MacDonald, T. Howland, S. Kreider, J. Carroll, S. Schultz (coach). The 1977 baseball season should be known as the year that was, and the weekend that was not. Stan Schultz ' s baseball troops compiled a season record of 19-8-1, which surpasses the previous best win total of 16 accomplished by the 1973 squad. Before 1973, the best record of wins was 15, set in 1916. The great season came to a heartbreaking conclusion when the Engineers dropped two of their last four games, both to Lafayette, and eliminated themselves from the E.C.C. playoffs. Contributing to the record breaking season however, was a successful southern tour dur- ing spring vacation in which the Engineers won four of six games and a subsequent six- game winning streak in early April. Highlights of the year were the double header sweep of Delaware and a win over Temple. Senior Joe Carroll finished his brilliant ca- reer with a .584 slugging average followed by Al Ottinger who hit .459. Pitchers Mitch Smith and Mark Iorio had 12 and 11 wins respective- iy- LACROSSE The lacrosse team ' s 6-6 record is certainly not indicative of how much progress it has made in two years under the guidance of John Luckhardt. With a schedule which in- cludes five nationally-ranked teams, the Engineers aver- aged in the double figures offensively and lost four very close games. Highlighting the season were victories over nationally ranked Fairleigh-Dickinson at Madison, Wilkes and Lafayette. The Engineers looked very impressive however, in losing to Bucknell in overtime and nationally-ranked Delaware in the last minute. Freshman Scott Helgans broke the (modern) scoring record with 38 goals and 20 assists, followed by Chip Von Heill with 22 goals. Roland East, Bruce Crystal and Hel- gans were voted to the E.C.C. first team. The Engineers have 13 returning lettermen and should make a strong bid for the conference championship. Row 1 (1 to r): T. Walter, J. Lucskovich, D. Varrelman, R. East (tri-capt.), B. Crystal (tri-capt.), M. Kane (tri-capt.), E. Helgans, T. Tripp, C. Von Heill; Row 2: J. Luckhardt (head coach), W. Phillips, A. Grande, M. Rabinowitz, G. Bechtel, J. DeBottis, D. Byelick, J. Luttmann, S. Helgans, R. Klein (asst. coach); Row 3: P. BrambiUa, R. DiAntonio, R. Stoloff, R. Chambers, J. Butkus, K. Alley, W. Gardener, J. DiPietro, J. Susski (equip, mgr.). 233 GOLF Row 1 (I to r): J. Mowrer, L. Sniscak, K. Warshaw, C. Foster; Rozo 2: J. Neimeister, B. Waldvogel, R. Moore, M. Versuk (capt.), C. Matics, C. Van Tuyl, G. Leeman (coach). Why do the Engineer golf and tennis teams seem to compliment each other? Each year since 1967, as the race for the Lehigh-Lafayette All-Sports Trophy dwindles down to a precious few sporting events, the burden of clinching victory or a tie for the cov- eted award usually falls upon the duffers or the netmen. This year the golf team let outright victory in the trophy race slip away as it dropped a heartbreaking 400-402 match to Lafayette in the Engineer regular season finale. The duffers thus left it up to their partners on the tennis courts, who responded with a victory over the Leopards to tie the cup race. (See opposite page). On the links this season the team recorded a respectable 13-6 log. Post-season efforts, how- ever, found the duffers playing below potential as they finished ninth in the Eastern Intercol- legiate Championships. In the East Coast Con- ference title match the team totaled 807 points to claim fifth behind Delaware ' s 772 first-place score. Junior captain Mike Versuk shepherded his team through many close matches this season. For his outstanding efforts he received the Lehigh Trophy as most valuable team member. The many returning veterans again should as- sure a strong Engineer finish in the trophy race. 234 TENNIS A clutch team victory over Lafayette in its season finale and an ECC title for doubles duo Jack Ridge and Jeff Lang highlighted the tennis team ' s overall 11-6 record and 4-1 ECC log. The victory for senior Ridge and freshman Lang was the one break through in an overall also — ran day as the team, battling for sec- ond behind eventual winner Tem- ple, ended up a close fourth with 18 points behind West Chester, with 23 points, and Bucknell, with 19 points. Ridge and Lang showed why they rolled up an impressive 16-2 record when they defeated a stub- born West Chester team in the fi- nals. The doubles team of sopho- more Bill Siegele and freshman John Speer also fared well, reaching the finals before falling to Bucknell. A week later the netmen re- sponded to the challenge of finaliz- ing a tie in the 1976-1977 All-Sports Trophy race between Lehigh and Lafayette at six-all by routing the Pards, 8-1. Lehigh now commands an 8-0-3 lead in the trophy series. Coach Bruce Smith said he was extremely pleased with the season, one of the team ' s best in many years. With only Ridge graduating, Smith should be experiencing much pleasure in upcoming sea- sons. Row 2 (I to r): N. Hano, ]. Lang, B. Wyckoff, J. Ridge (Capt.), J. Speer, B. Long; Row 2: C. Menendez (asst. coach), E. Dianastasis, B. Kelly, F. Lusby, T. Yerdon, B. Siegele, B. Smith (head coach). 235 TRACK AND FIELD The East Coast Conference Championships: An Irwin Allen Production should have been the title of the May 6-7 conference meet in Saucon Valley. With a few exceptions, the performance of the En- gineer track team was a disaster worthy of the pro- ducer of The Towering Inferno. The tracksters, who should have finished perhaps a close second to winner Bucknell, ended up sixth with 45 points and no individual winners. The elements of this tragedy lie not totally in meet performances but in a gradual team disintegration because of injury. The sun and fun of the spring trip to Bermuda produced decimation of the sprinting crew via pulled muscles. Although the others re- covered for the last few meets of the season, valuable 400-yard relay man Jimmy Dutt, a senior, ran in only one outdoor meet and missed the ECCs. As the season progressed, the aches and pains mounted. In the distance events, Dennis Sprick pulled muscles in Bermuda and missed the entire season. Dave Rohr ran one race, then could run no more. Halfmiler co-captain Chris Nunan made it to the Penn Relays, before hurt tendons forced him to quit. In the field events, triple jumper Dave Stauffer competed with a tender foot all season. Co-captain javelin thrower John Vargo came up with a sore elbow and shot putter Phil Bosco a sore wrist. With all the injuries, which forced Coach John Covert to sent a skeletal team to the ECCs, the sub- par team performance was almost an anticlimax. Only junior hurdler Jim Kappel, with a second in the 120 highs, and sophomore Jim Davis ' 14:19 second- place effort in the three-mile brightened the En- gineer day. The 7-1 regular season, which included a sweet 95-68 romp over Lafayette, had some outstanding performances. Stellan Thoren ran a 4:06.7 mile. Freshman Andy Hubsch raced a 1:51 800-meter en route to the team ' s second-place finish in the college division of the Penn Relays 3,200-meter relay. Vargo threw the javelin 227 feet, a new school record, and Dan Doyle vaulted 15-6, also a new school record. Row 1 (l to r): C. Stoebenau (mgr.), T. O ' Shea, M. Giguere, W. Hicks, C. Tenenbaum, J. Farr, S. Glaser, W. Falk, J. Eggert, D. Doyle, J. Dutt, D. Rohr, E. Aduhene, L. Ullrich, D. Sprick; Row 2: J. Kappel, M. Ranney, F. Wenrworth, D. Balickie, S. Thoren, J. Wummer, R. Williams, C. Sumrell, A. Hubsch, D. Friedfeld, D. Roberts, J. Davis, R. Devine, D. Stauffer, J. Covert (coach); Row 3. R. Stewart, D. Nissley, B. Blumenfeld, M. Holland, R. Folger, H. Hoyt, J. Peters, C. Radler, J. Vargo, J. Vargo, (co-capt.), R. Dunne; Row 4: E. Modugno, C. Nunan (co-capt.), D. Hellekjaer, B. Swartz, J. Grelis, P. Bosco, E. Jarrell, S. Scharkss. 236 237 VICTIMS TO VICTORS IN FIVE YEARS ' We used to be ' jockettes. ' Now we ' re jocks like everyone else. Judy Manns, ' 75. After five years of coeducation, perhaps the most visible area of integration has been ath- letics. Through the efforts of many, both on and off the field, the Engineers have advanced from winless club teams four years ago to un- defeated varsity teams and recognition as east- ern powers in several sports. Women such as Judy Manns, one of the original coeds, provided a foundation for fu- ture growth. She spent 90 per cent of (her) freshman year in Steck ' s office, bitching be- cause there was nothing to do. Once the teams were started, though, not everyone took them seriously. The first time I wore my var- sity jacket on campus, Manns recalled, Everyone kept asking me ' what sport did your boyfriend letter in? ' In 1972, Helen Bond was hired to coach field hockey, swimming and tennis. Competing on a club level, the Engineers lost more than they won, but even the fact that they were compet- ing was an achievement in itself. In 1973, the three sports were elevated to varsity status. Tennis led the field at 3-3. 1. We did it! Sue Sachs ' gesture after the win over Lafayette sums up the undefeated ' 75 hockey sea- son. Joining in the celebration are (I to r) Jeanne Bonney ' 78, coach Helen Bond, Trudi Schifter ' 79, Sue Robinson ' 78, Stacy Stacom ' 79, Barb Ewing ' 76, Jane Love and Carol Hart, both ' 78. Sachs, ' 77, went on to greater fame as m.v.p. of the 1976 basketball team and three-time co-captain in bas- ketball. Bonney was co-captain of the 1975 la- crosse team. 2. Marcie Reuben ' 78 follows through on a spike in a 1975 win over Moravian. She served as co- captain of the first team. 3. A loose ball draws a crowd in the first home lacrosse match, 1975. Dispelling the first year teams aren ' t supposed to win myth, the En- fineers were 5-1. Giving chase are (I to r in plaid ilts) Lori Collmann ' 78, Ann McGregor ' 76 (3rd from left), Judy Manns ' 75 and Karen Sam ' 76. Collmann holds scoring records in three sports. At the 1976 Flagpole Day, she won m.v.p. awards in field jockey and lacrosse and received the Mary O. Hurley award as Lehigh ' s best woman athlete. In addition, she was co-captain of the 1976 and ' 77 field hockey teams and the 1976 and ' 77 lacrosse teams. Manns received the Hurley award in 1975. She co-captained the 1972, ' 73 and ' 74 field hoc- key teams and the ' 75 lacrosse team. McGregor co-captained the undefeated ' 75 field hockey team. 238 2 tie inert) lasAnsey 77 The 1974-75 academic year brought a tre- mendous change in the character of the athletic program. Three new sports, volleyball, basket- ball, and lacrosse, all coached by Barbara Lip- kin, were introduced. In addition, three Lehigh teams finished with winning records. The field hockey team was 5-3, with several freshmen pacing the scoring and defense. Lori Collmann was the Engineers ' leading scorer, while Carol Hart and Cheryl Kolp were defen- sive mainstays. Volleyball, however, provided a less than pleasant welcome for Lipkin; the squad lost all five matches. The powderpuff team annihilated Lafayette 46-0. Pam Watson and Collmann set single-game passing and scoring records which surpassed those held by Kim McQuilken and Jack Rizzo. The first women ' s basketball team experi- enced its share of growing pains. The En- gineers ' 2-5 record should have included a frustration allowance for games which slipped away in the final minutes. Inexperience and in- juries were the team ' s downfall, though freshman Sue Woytkewicz singlehandedly kept Lehigh in some contests. The swimming team still came up short of a winning season, despite record-setting efforts from freshmen Maureen Madden and Mary Jane Haesche and senior Ginny Thompson. By the spring of 1975, Barbara Lipkin must have wondered if she ' d ever have a winning team. Many of the women on her lacrosse squad had never played the sport before, but they formed a unit good enough to post a 5-1 record. Collmann and Manns paced the offense with 11 goals apiece, while freshmen Jeanne Bonney and Doc Gable played tough de- fense. The tennis team led all Lehigh athletes by going undefeated in eight matches. They were the first wo men to have a perfect season, and achieved their record on the strength of supe- rior singles play from freshman Patty Hand- werk, senior Wendy Brower and sophomore Pat The Hat Henry, as well as strong efforts in doubles from Lynn Lasser, Kathy Murphy, Ginger Wisham and Pam Watson. The field hockey team surprised everyone by beating all 10 opponents and earning a trip to Eastern regionals. The scoring statistics speak for themselves: Lehigh 42, Opponents 5. Coll- mann scored 16 goals to set a new team record, and set another mark (shared by Janet LeClair) by netting five in one game. The de- fense was no less awesome. 4. Patty Handwerk ' 78 exhibits perfect form on her forehand. She ivas m.v.p. of the undefeated 1975 squad. In two years of singles competition, her singles record was 13-3. Uncanny anticipation and delicate placements are her greatest strengths as a player. 5. Maureen Madden ' 78 at speed. Mo was m.v.p. of the 1975 and ' 76 swim teams, and estab- lished new records in butterfly and freestyle. She co-captained the ' 76 and ' 77 teams. 6. Lori Collmann ' 78 on the way to one of five touchdowns in the 1974 powderpuff game vs. Lafayette. Collmann ' s 30 points broke the old record (25) set by Lehigh and New York Giant halfback Jack Rizzo. She received the game ball for her touchdown spree. 239 1 In several games, the Engineers allowed no shots on goal. The volleyball team skyrocketed from 0-5 to 5-2 on strong efforts from freshman Irene Pavels and junior Andi Gorbach. Basketball ' s fortunes also improved, and the Engineers finished 6-4. Co-captains Sue Sachs and Sue Woytkewicz provided inside and outside scor- ing threats, while freshman Patty Garnish pro- vided strength at guard. The swim team had the dubious distinction of being the only losing women ' s team despite a good showing by Madden, Haesche and freshman Carol Zetterstrom. The spring brought another undefeated ten- nis team. The women rolled to their second straight 8-0 record with the help of freshmen Andie Altman, Mimi McLennan and Allison Steele, as well as Handwerk, Henry, Lasser and Murphy. Lacrosse finished 7-1, with another record-setting performance by Coll man. The sophomore co-captain scored 38 goals, including seven in one game. Another new sport, softball, compiled a winning record in club competition, with var- sity status for this year. There has been much more to the develop- ment of the sports program than wins, losses and points scored. The women ' s tremendous desire to succeed and grow has been the spark for many accomplishments. The spirit and camaraderie among the athletes has been one of the greatest benefits of the program. The common ground of athletics extends beyond the playing field in many instances. For many women athletes, the best place to discuss the day ' s game was usually at a table in Smugglers ' or Manny ' s. The growth of women ' s athletics has led to new questions to be answered. The women have the talent and potential to be powers in several sports. But is that the goal toward which the program shoud be oriented? It is a question of priorities which will doubtless take some time to resolve. Women at Lehigh used to be ogled as they walked to class. Now people are watching them on the field, with good reason. It ' s all part of the jock ' s world at Lehigh, a world no one could have envisioned five years ago. 1. Carol Hart ' 78 catches Bloomsburg ' s goalie flat-f looted. Hart was a tri-captain of the 1976 team. Her aggressive play at midfield was a key to the Engineers ' success in field hockey. 2. Cheryl Kolp ' 78 grabs for a rebound against Lafayette. Kolp ' s work on the boards was an asset in both the good years (76) and the bad ( ' 75). She was co-captain of the ' 76 and ' 77 lacrosse team and the ' 75 and ' 76 field hockey teams, while maintaining the highest average in the Business College. 240 FOOTBALL Top down (1 to r): C. Delia, P. Latz, M. Fener, L. Weissman, D. Moorehead, S. Hall, L. Eckert, J. Harris, K. Berry, M. McCoy, J. Crouse, D. Campbell, J. Ochs, L. Melillo, L. Collmann, S. McGovern, J. Smith, T. Rauch, P. Zaimes, S. McAuley, V. Commisa (coaches), H. Richardson (co-capt), R. Welliver (co- capt.). The powderpuff football team came out on the short end of a defensive battle with Lafayette, losing 6-0. The Engineer defense broke down only once, despite being on the field most of the afternoon. Free safety Doris Campbell and linebackers Lisa Melillo and Terri Rauch overcame injuries to turn in superb performances. The Pards ' passing game was cut off by aggressive coverage by Campbell and cornerbacks Jocelyn Ochs and co-captain Rosie Welliver. Ends Lou Ann Eckert and Melanie McCoy also played well. Offensively, the Engineers were inconsistent. One drive was ruined by a penalty which was called, while a last-second attack was stalled by one which wasn ' t. The gains came mostly on short passes from co-captain Helen Richardson to split end Lori Collmann and tight ends Andie Altman and Lauren Weissman. Halfbacks JoAnne Harris and Beeb Crouse were also offensive threats, Harris by air and Crouse by land. Although the Engineers will be losing Richardson, Welliver, safety Mindy Fener, guard Dee Sultzer and end Sue McGovern to graduation, the team can be counted on to put more points on the board in the future. 241 FIELD HOCKEY What do you get when you take the pressure of last year ' s undefeated season and add tougher opponents? Frustration. The Engineer field hockey team saw no end to it, struggling to a disappointing 4-4-2 record. Several of the women had fine sea- sons. Tri-captain Lori Collmann led the team in scoring for the third straight year. Midfielders Cheri Novak and tri- captain Carol Hart played strong de- fense, as did backs Andie Airman, and Nancy Barrett. Trudi Schifter ' s aggres- sive goaltending was one of the team ' s greatest strengths. In the Eastern Regionals, the Engineers put up a good fight before losing to Lock Haven, the 3 team in the country. Another year ' s experience should help bring back the winning attitudes and better times. mmm Row 1 (I to r): G. Skelly, M. Fener, L. Collmann (tri-capt.), C. Hart (tri-capt.), T. Schifter, E. King; Row 2: K. Lelinski, C. Novak, A. Altman, C. Kolp (tri-capt.), N. Barrett, T. Stacom, L. Konigsberg, J. LeClair, J. Kaufman; Row 3; H. Bond (coach), V. Wilkins, J. Crouse, A. Wenhold, R. Evans, M. Blust, L. Young. 242 VOLLEYBALL The Engineer volleyball team came into its own this year, posting a 9-1 record and sweeping a tournament. The team s strengths were evident in every match. A high serving percentage, consistent setting and powerful Row 1 (1 to r): L. Moore, K. Benusa, A. Gorbach (co-capt.), I. Pavels (co- capt.), S. Sachs; Row 2: B. Lipkin (coach), M. Klopack, A. Leitgeb, L. Kaufman, B. Piskin, P. Gedney, L. Jacobsen; Row 3: H. Hall, M. Allen, B. Crowe, C. Crowe, C. Maute. spiking constantly put the Engineers in the lead. Co-captains Irene Pavels and Andi Gorbach were the sparkplugs for Lehigh. Pavels ' excellent all-around play and Gorbach ' s serves and spikes were instrumental, as were the spiking of Sue Sachs and Heather Hall and the setting of Meg Allen, Kathy Benusa and Laura Moore. The Engineers ' only loss came at the hands of Mansfield State, an Eastern power. They won their division in the Philadelphia Invitational Tournament, rolling over four opponents. The squad also scored its first win over Kutztown this season. The j.v. team was also successful, with a 6-1 mark. The Engineers seem to be headed for an undefeated season in the foreseeable future. 243 BASKETBALL Row 1 (I to r): A. Lynch (head coach), C. Webster, N. Barrett, P. Garnish, K. Benusa, J. Wadsworth, M. Krafty; Row 2: L. Kaufman, K. Lelinski, C. Novak, M. Mark; Row 3: S. Woytkewicz, S. Sachs (co-capts.); Missing: A. Altman, S. Beltz, L. Konigsberg, J. Dykehouse (asst. coach). In order to succeed, a team must have talent, good coaching and intense desire. The women ' s basketball team had all three, and turned them into an 11-6 season, high- lighted by a 5th-place finish in the EAIAW Invitational. Each player chipped in with points, assists and defense. Freshman Karen Lelinski was the team ' s leading rebound- er with 197, and fought her way inside for points. Cheri Novak, another freshman, combined excellent shooting skills with physical defense. Sophomore playmaker Patty Garnish led the team in assists, with 95, and saved several games with her coolness under pressure. Sophomore Celia Webster ' s inside game and touch from the foul line made her the Engineers ' leading scorer, with 217 points and a 12.8 average. Junior co-captain Sue Woytkewicz played tough defense and loosened up opposing zones with her outside shot. Senior co-captain Sue Sachs crashed both boards, canned shots from all over, and finally reached her potential as a player. Her contributions as a player and a leader will be greatly missed. The Engineers boasted several women who made things happen when they came off the bench. Kathy Benusa, a husting guard with a team-leading 52% field goal per- centage, Andie Altman, a versatile swing forward, and Leslie Konigsberg, a power forward, along with defensive stalwarts Nancy Barrett and Sharon Beltz Ted the reserves. Mitz Krafty, Lori Kaufman, Mardi Mark and Jeannie Wadsworth also saw considerable playing time and per- formed well. Lehigh ' s strategy depended on high-percentage shots and a variety of stingy defenses. They were masterminded, driven and motivated by first-year coach Annette Lynch. The Engineers show signs of becoming an Eastern pow- erhouse in the next few years. 244 SWIMMING The women ' s swim team, sparked by several tal- ented freshmen and a new coach, recorded its best record since its beginnings five years ago. The En- gineers capped their first winning season (8-3) with a respectable performance in the Nationals. Freshmen Karen Hespell, Megan Blust and Mary Weis were the key to many victories. Hespell set sev- eral new records in freestyle and butterfly, and finished sixteenth in the Nationals in the 100-yard freestyle. Blust excelled in butterfly and breaststroke. Weis was a strong freestyle and butterflyer. The trio, along with junior co-captain Maureen Mo Madden, consistently swam well in the relay events. Sophomore co-captain Carol Zetterstrom had a good season in freestyle, especially in the distance events. Her younger sister Doris also showed potential as a distance swimmer. Sophomore Christie Davidson earned the Engineers points in backstroke. Senior Carol Meyer, competing in her first (and last) varsity season, was a consistent placewinner in breaststroke. The divers, junior Mary Jane Haesche and freshman Sue Stoup, both had excellent years. Haesche reaped the benefits of this year ' s inclusion of the three-meter event, winning it several times. First-year coach Joan Peto instilled confidence and technique in her squad. With only Meyer graduating, Peto has a strong base for more winning years. Row 1 (I to r): S. Stoup, M. Blust, N. Hittinger, K. Hespell, C. Zetterstrom (co-capt.), M. Weis, M. Madden (co-capt.), L. Clark; Row 2: M.J. Haesche, D. Zetterstrom, K. Tate, C. Davidson, A. Gaydos, C. Meyer. 245 LACROSSE Rozv 2 (1 to r): A. Schoff, D. Daych, S. Stacom, M. Fener, P. Shively; Row 2: C. Rosen, A. Gaydos, E. King, L. Konigsberg, T. Stacom; Row 3: M.J. Haesche, S. Stemple, P. Schnugg, N. Barrett, C. Novak; Row 4: L. Collmann (co-capt), C. Kolp (co-capt.), L. Moore, B. Yocum, K. Benusa; Row 5: B. Lipkin (coach), G. Greene, T. DiCilveo, C. Crowe. What should have been the lacrosse team ' s best season yet turned out to be its worst. Injuries devas- tated the Engineers, paving the way for a disap- pointing 3-5 record. The season began with two runaway wins, one over highly-touted Trenton State. Things turned sour against Lafayette when, in the space offive minutes, freshman Cheri Novak broke her leg and freshman Tara Stacom was knocked unconscious. Novak was lost for the season, and Stacom saw limited action for the remainder of the campaign, though she did have 13 goals and 6 assists. Junior co-captain Lori Collmann led the attack, saving her best efforts for pressure situations. She was leading scorer with 24 goals, giving her 78 in three years and handed out 8 assists, also a team high. Sophomore Wiz King ' s shooting skills gave her 22 scores. Defensively, junior co-captain Cheryl Kolp had her best year yet. She stood her ground well around the goal, despite an injured knee. Freshman Ann Gaydos was a welcome addition at defense wing with her strong checking. Sophomore Kathy Benusa shadowed opponents well on the opposite wing. Center Mindy Fener is the only graduating player. With a healthy attack and a more consistent defense, the Engineers should get back on track soon. 246 TENNIS ' W- It had to happen sometime. The Engineer ten- nis team ' s winning streak (20 matches over three seasons) ended this year, but the women ' s 7-2 record was still a good one. Junior Patty Handwerk had yet another fine season at first singles, dropping only one match. Sophomore co-captain Andie Airman ran her record to 17-0 over two years at second singles. Freshman Lauren Weissman showed good po- tential at third singles. Senior co-captain Pat The Hat Henry and sophomore Allison Steele compiled a 5-2 mark at first doubles. Junior Lynn Lasser and sophomore Lori Kaufman were a winning combination at second doubles. The tougher schedule faced by this year ' s team was a mixed blessing. Two new additions to the schedule, Ursinus and Bucknell, won narrow vic- tories over the Engineers, but the stiffer competi- tion was a welcome challenge. The Engineers will lose Henry, a four-year starter, to graduation, but still have a strong foundation on which to build another long win- ning streak. Top-down: M. McLennan, A. Steele, T. Bloom, H. Bond (coach); Clockwise: J. Welty, B. Stein, D. Greco, T. Schifter, L. Weissman, P. Handwerk, P. Henry (co-capt.), A. Altman (co-capt.), L. Lasser, L. Kaufman, H. Heiser, S. Chodakewitz. 247 SOFTBALL I The Engineer Softball team made its debut in winning style, combining explosive offense with heads-up defense and good pitching for a 7-2 record. There wasn ' t an easy out in Lehigh ' s lineup. Beeb Crouse hit .500 and stole 4 bases, and played consistent defense at second base. Shortstop Sue Woytkewicz led the Engineers in on base percentage and saved her best defen- sive efforts for tough plays. The middle of the order was a veritable Murderers ' Row. Karen Lelinski (.394, 2 h.r., 12 rbi) came through best in the clutch and was a defensive mainstay at first base. Sue Sachs ' awesome power at the plate (.455, 2 triples, 9 rbi) matched her acrobatics in center field. Right fielder Helen Richardson was a long ball threat every time up. She hit .538, led the team in runs batted in with 25, in triples with 5, and in total bases. She played errorless defense. The Engineers boasted a strong pitching staff, anchored by Maryann Waszkiewicz. The freshman hurler went 18 innings without giving up an earned run, threw a shutout and helped her own cause by hitting a team high .571 and knocking in 18 runs. B.K. Pisano showed great promise with a variety of pitches and a consistent bat. Toni Leitgeb, who saw action at both ends of the battery, was 2-0 as a pitcher and set a single-game record with 10 rbi. Lisa Melillo was a tower of strength at third base with her quick reflexes and accurate arm. Karen Yocum kept on improving behind the plate as the season progressed. Terri Rauch bolstered the defense in left field, and swung a mean bat (.407, 10 rbi). Graduation will take its toll on the team. Rose Welliver, one of the team ' s founders, catcher Pat Gedney, Sachs and Richardson will be tough to replace, but the Engineers have enough talent left over for many more super seasons. Row 7 (I to r): P. Gedney, M.B. Krafty, D. Seyfried, L. Melillo, T. Rauch, R. Welliver, L. Eckert; Row 2: J. Crouse, M. Waszkiewicz, B.K. Pisano, S. Woytkewicz, S. Southwick; Row 3: D. Jones (asst. coach), J. Kaufman (asst. coach), T. Leitgeb, K. Yocum, H. Richardson, K. Lelinski, S. Sachs, T. Thompson (head coach); Missing: L. Schnorbus. 248 INTRAMURALS As you already know there was nothing compulsory about the Intramural Sports and Recreation program. You could join us or leave us as you pleased, however we had something for you if you allowed yourself to try it. We were there to serve you and help you. The program offered was designed to cover a wide range of activity for your leisure time. We sincerely encouraged you whenever we had an opportunity to take advantage of both the program and the facilities. The fun and serious moments seem to stand out sharply, especially the things you liked to do best. Con- tinue to have fun doing the things you like to do best. Keep sharp and physically active as you enjoy new and exciting experiences. Take it easy — but do it! Keep physically active and mentally alert! Start now to enjoy the days ahead by spending some of your time remembering us. Hopefully we soon can look up and there you are; a ' 77 straight from heaven. — Best Wishes, Steck TROPHY POINT TOTALS UPPERCLASS Kappa Sigma 2389 Delta Phi 1379 Congdon 2179 Delta Upsilon 1375 Beardslee 2152 Kappa Alpha 1353 Pi Lambda Phi 1970 McConn 1339 Zeta Psi 1933 Sigma Alpha Mu 1337 Chi Psi 1873 Alpha Sigma Phi 1318 Alpha Lambda Omega 1793 Bishopthorpe 1313 Delta Chi 1715 Phi Delta Theta 1293 Richards 2B 1663 Williams Thornburg 1273 Beta Theta Pi 1645 Delta Sigma Phi 1266 Alpha Tau Omega 1564 Sigma Phi Epsilon 1255 Sigma Nu 1548 Sigma Chi 1174 FRESHMEN Dravo B4 M-M Bl Richards 1 Stevens M-M B3 Emery Dravo B2-3 Dravo CG 1-2 Drinker 3B Drinker 1 Dravo C3-4 Stoughton 1570 1508 1322 1321 1163 1158 1116 1024 971 965 921 918 WOMEN Alpha Gamma Delta 1062 Palmer 876 Richards 3B 832 Williams Thornburg 808 Gamma Phi Beta 716 M-M A2 673 Tau Lambda Chi 636 Stoughton 566 Carothers 543 Dravo A4-B5 533 Dravo Al-2-3 500 Richards 4 495 249 3L J3 C I,® b FOOTBALL LU 29 Kutztown 21 Baldwin-Wallace 24 Penn 6 Yale Bucknell 21 Rutgers 24 Maine 56 Gettysburg 20 Virginia 17 C.W. Post 17 Lafayette Final Record 6-5 OPP. 6 W 14 W 20 W 21 L 3 L 28 L vv 15 W 21 L 10 W 21 L SOCCER LU OPP 4 Navy Swarthmore 1 L W 2 LaSalle 3 L 2 Delaware 1 W 1 Rutgers Drexel (OT)l T 1 L 1 Penn W 1 1 Gettysburg Rider W (OT) 1 T 1 West Chester W 3 1 Lafayette Hartwick 2 W 8 L 2 1 Muhlenberg Bucknell 2 T 2 L Final Record 6-5-3 CROSS COUNTRY LU OPP 26 Delaware 33 W 15 Rider 49 W 33 Penn 24 L 20 LaSalle 39 W 15 Temple 50 W 19 St. Joseph 38 W 30 Bucknell 25 L 22 Millersville 35 W 15 West Chester 47 W 20 E. Stroudsburg 43 W 31 Army 25 L 15 NYU 50 W 43 Rutgers 19 L 17 Lafayette 46 W 1st in college division, Atlantic City Relay 3rd in Paul Short Memorial 2nd in ECC championships 1st in IC4-A championships, college division Final record 10-4 FIELD HOCKEY LU OPP 2 Bucknell 4 L 5 Albright W Millersville T Rutgers 3 L 3 Muhlenberg 1 W 2 Bloomsburg 2 T 2 Kutztown 3 L 1 Lafayette 2 L 1 Trenton St. W Final Record 4-4-2 VOLLEYBALL LU OPP 2 NCACC W 2 LaSalle W 2 LCCC W 2 Moravian 1 W 2 Albright W 2 Moravian W Mansfield 2 L 2 Kutztown W 3 Lafayette W 2 Cedar Crest 1 W Final Record 9-1 RIFLE LU 1257 Bucknell 1309 Lafayette 1309 Penn State 1297 Kutztown 1297 Seton Hall 1302 Princeton 1302 Rider 1268 Phila. Coll. of Pharmacy 1298 Kings 1277 Rutgers 1277 Stevens Tech 1300 Scran ton 1st in Tri-State League Championships 1st in NRA Sectional Championships Final Record 14-0 OPP 1136W 1015W 1231 W 1152W 901 W 1270 1285 W 1153W 1201 W 1191 W for.W 1252 WRESTLING LU OPP 30 Wilkes 12 W 3 Iowa 34 L 32 S. Illinois 10 W 28 Tennessee 12 W 17 Cal Poly 16 W 25 E. Carolina 8 W 27 N. Carolina 16 W 22 N. Carolina St. 12 W 13 Iowa St. 22 W 41 Pittsburgh 3 W 25 Navy 16 W 39 Rutgers 7 W 30 Army 10 W 17 Penn St. 18 L 33 Temple 7 W 33 Yale 9 W 33 Syracuse 9 W 1st in EIWA Tournament 7th in NCAA Tournament Final Record 14-3 BASKETBALL LU 74 Kutztown 57 Wagner 66 Army 86 Kings Point 73 Rutgers 91 Colgate 87 Elizabethtown 71 Albright 82 Amherst 74 Fairfield 83 St. Francis, Pa. 96 FDU-Madison 71 Seton Hall 58 Drexel 56 Scranton 69 Delaware 78 Bucknell 71 Rider 76 West Chester 68 Muhlenberg 80 Lafayette 85 Delaware 67 Bucknell 75 Rider 58 West Chester 71 Lafayette 72 Hofstra Final Record 12-15 OPP 58 W 61 L 73 L 92 L 97 L 86 W 78 W 91 L 61 W 104 85 31 96 63 59 73 L L W L L L L 69 W 67 W 69 W 60 W 91 L 82 W 56 W 68 W 76 L 98 L 81 L WOMEN ' S SWIMMING LU 50 Bloomsburg 51 Widener 90 Immaculata 82 Bryn Mawr 69 Penn 52 Lafayette 71 Glassboro 82 Temple 81 LaSalle 68 Bucknell Final Record 7-3 LU 69 53 58 73 79 68 103 74 62 88 69 73 59 68 57 63 53 Final WOMEN ' S BASKETBALL F M Trenton St. Rutgers Mansfield NCACC Allen town Albright Widener Lafayette Cedar Crest Moravian Kutztown LaSalle Bucknell Muhlenberg Lafayette Seton Hall Record 11-6 OPP 80 L 75 L 30 W 36 W 62 W 79 L 60 W 47 W 36 W 63 W OPP 57 W 70 L 80 L 52 W 57 W 31 W 34 W 47 W 69 L 32 W 30 W 58 W 104 L 66 W 42 W 87 L 80 L LU 3 5 7 5 6 3 10 5 2 12 9 11 5 3 13 9 ICE HOCKEY Delaware West Chester Penn St. Wagner Penn St. Little Flyers Brooklyn Cortland Cortland Iona RIT RIT Trinity Fairfield Delaware West Chester OPP 4 L 2 W 5 W 2 W 4 W 5 L 2 W 15 L 9 L 9 W 2 W 1 W 11 L 4 L 8 W 4 W Final Record 10-6 250 SQUASH LU 2 Princeton JV Navy 1 Fordham 4 SVCC 4 Hill School 1 F M 7 Mercersberg 8 Stevens Haverford F M 2 Haverford 3 Hill School Final Record 3-9 BASEBALL LU 3 Methodist 2 Methodist 11 Ga. Southern 6 Armstrong St. 13 Armstrong St. 8 U. of Virginia 4 St. Joseph (12) 9 Rochester 6 Muhlenberg 13 Drexel Penn St. 8 Temple 8 Trenton St. 6 Bucknell 3 Bucknell 6 Penn 10 Upsala 3 Rider 3 Rider 7 Delaware 6 Delaware 6 Rutgers (10) 9 Kutztown 4 West Chester 6 West Chester 1 Lafayette 6 Lafayette 4 Gettysburg Final Record 19-8-1 OPP 7 L 9 L 8 L 3 W 5 L 8 L 1 W 1 W 9 L 9 L 7 L 6 L OPP 4 L 8 L 8 W 2 9 3 4 2 5 3 6 5 5 2 2 1 2 10 w 6 1 7 4 11 3 3 7 2 WOMEN ' S LACROSSE LU O 19 Villanova 4 10 Trenton St. 3 7 Lafayette 8 6 F M 9 9 Rutgers 12 2 Kutztown 5 14 Cedar Crest 1 7 Bucknell 12 Final Record 3-5 WOMEN ' S TENNIS LU 5 Villanova 3 Lafayette 5 Centenary 4 F M 2 Ursinus 5 Moravian 4 Albright 5 Cedar Crest 2 Bucknell Fina 1 Record 7-2 MEN ' S LACROSSE LU 4 Villanova 9 Drexel 15 FDU-Madison 6 Bucknell 13 Wilkes 17 Swarthmore 10 Western Md. 10 Kutztown 13 Lafayette 11 Montclair St. 6 Penn St. 9 Delaware Fina 1 Record 6-6 OPP w 2 W W 3 W 3 L W 1 W w 3 L OPP 5 L 14 L 9 W 7 L 7 W 1 W 4 W 17 L 5 W 5 W 19 L 11 L MEN ' S TENNIS LU 5 Kutztown Colgate Scranton Muhlenberg Villanova Swarthmore Bucknell Rider F M Gettysburg Temple Rutgers Drexel Delaware Bloomsburg West Chester 8 Lafayette 4th in ECC Tournament Final Record 11-6 GOLF LU 406 Kutztown 406 404 Muhlenberg West Chester 404 426 E. Stroudsburg Penn 402 F M 402 Swarthmore 392 Rider 392 393 Temple LaSalle 393 West Chester 384 384 Rutgers Bucknell 390 Delaware 392 Penn St. 403 Princeton 395 395 Colgate Bucknell 402 5th in Lafayette ECC Tournament 12th in EIGA Tournament Final Record 3-6 OPP 1 W 9 L 1 W w 1 w 6 L 4 W 2 W 3 W 3 W 7 L 6 L W 1 W 5 L 8 L 1 W OPP 444 W 426 W 401 L 427 W 438 W 436 W 464 W 424 W 380 L 410 W 375 L 394 W 395 W 383 L 388 L 408 W 399 W 407 W 400 L TRACK LU 158 Temple 158 Kutztown 158 E. Stroudsburg 158 Bloomsburg 158 Trenton St. 101 West Chester 101 Colgate 98 Lafayette 6th in ECC Championships Final Record 7-1 OPP 208 L 39 W 57 W 100 W 42 W 66 W 36 W 65 W MEN ' S SWIMMING LU 79 West Chester 54 Penn 63 58 Temple Penn St. 62 63 E. Stroudsburg Delaware 79 71 41 Rutgers Gettysburg LaSalle 73 33 Lafayette Bucknell 5th in ECC Tournament Final Record 8-3 OPP 34 W 59 L 50 W 55 W 51 W 50 W 33 W 42 W 72 L 40 W 80 L INDOOR TRACK LU 79 E. Stroudsburg 86 Drexel 62 33 86 LaSalle 59 91 Temple 91 Villanova 45 49 63V2 Lafayette Final Record 5-1 72 V: OPP w w w w w L WOMEN ' S SOFTBALL LU OPP 8 PSU-Ogontz 10 L 20 Villanova 8 W 38 Muhlenberg 16 W 23 F M 2 W 11 NCACC W 15 Kutztown 7 W 15 Albright 8 W 7 Bucknell 9 L 23 Lafayette 7 W Final Record 7-2 251 mm mmmmmm mmgt SHE ' ' And tell me, what have you in these houses? And what is it you guard with fastened doors? Have you peace, the quiet urge that reveals your power? Have you remembrances, the glimmering arches that span the summits of the mind? Have you beauty, that leads the heart from things fashioned of wood and stone to the holy mountain? Tell me, have you these in your houses? Gibran smbhS LEARNING TO I THURSDAY 4 P.M.: Struggling through 4 o ' clock hourly; counting seconds to 9 p.m. pub night (18,000, and counting . . .) THURSDAY 8 P.M.: Select wardrobe for party; shoulder pads for getting to the bar, water (beer?) — proof shoes . . . and socks and pants and hair. Expect to come out perfumed like all the rest: Eau De Biere. THURSDAY 9 P.M.: Plot route on hill. Do not drive. As- sume (correctly) that everyone else on the road is roar- ing drunk. Remember, the shortest distance between two points often includes FIJI. THURSDAY 10 P.M.: Hot to trot — especially to the bath- room after six beers. Men: be sure to ask date ' s age. She may be from Broughal Junior High. Women: be sure to ask date ' s affiliation. He may be from FIJI. THURSDAY 11 P.M.: Swim back to bar for 17th beer. Your belch is recorded at 6.3 on the Richter scale. Comment to date on intimate atmosphere of party. Date replies, Your foot is in my navel. FRIDAY 2:30 A.M.: Set alarm for 9 a.m. class. Proceed to bathroom. FRIDAY 1:45 A.M.: Return from bathroom and reset alarm for Sunday. FRIDAY 3:59 P.M.: RALLY! Back to the hill for Happy Hours. See Lehigh administrators for the first time. Watch faculty become progressively more informal. Weak drinks wear off fast — get psyched for grain par- ties. FRIDAY 8:30 P.M.: Mix grain punch. Heavy on grain, light on mixer, heavy on punch! FRIDAY 11 P.M.: Serve grain punch. Reason for delay: grain parties do not last long. Grain goes down fast and so do even the heartiest drinkers. OUTDOOR 254 PARTY HEARTY BAND PARTIES FRIDAY MIDNIGHT: Would you go for Greekers after grain? Not if you ' re smart. Combination causes spon- taneous combustion. See you at St. Luke ' s. Recom- mended remedy: beer and bromo. SATURDAY 6 A.M.: Sunrise cocktail party. Watch the sun rise along with your blood alcohol level as your body sets. SATURDAY 7:30 A.M.: A good Samaritan returns you to your bed after finding you embracing a lamppost in Phi Delt ' s parking lot. Avoid all stairs en route home. SATURDAY 3 P.M.: Variety is the spice of life. Bring out the bong. Marvel at engineering student ' s senior project: an eight-passenger hookah. Smoking makes you thirsty and quaaludes make you horny so . . . SATURDAY 9 P.M.: Off to social suicide, which mas- querades at Lehigh in the form of band parties. Drink beers two at a time to save trips. Attempts to scratch your back get you arrested for indecent assault. The band is the warm-up group for the ARCHIES and knows only three songs: Play That Funky Music, Taking Care of Business, and Suffragette City. SATURDAY MIDNIGHT: Venture to a midnight grain party where the grain expired at 11:45 p.m. So you de- cide to forsake the mayhem of the hill for the quiet conversation at Uncle Manny ' s Saloon. SUNDAY NOON: You pass up church because you saw God in the Drinker parking lot earlier this morning. You substitute Alka Seltzer for alcohol and strain to re- member three cures for a hangover: 1) sweat it out; 2) sleep it off; 3) throw it up. Opt for number 2 and see you next Thursday. 255 HALLOWEEN 256 PIZZA PARTY HAPPY HOURS FIJI ISLAND CASINO 257 WASTED DAYS AND WASTED NIGHTS 258 259 - ' ■. 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' i ' iafeii ' iSiSriltiic :ii: YiY .I;.;.:l; ::i;iniiU: i:;:|;;: iiiiidlYiLlr iniliiilillkiiiiL,.! oYjIiYiiiiiiidniiii; fj-rili; i.l Xi: i r ' i iiSBilHl 18 Bilnitlll IplfeglJf ■-aifei ' wflHH ««i Slffi:i ! ;«!!:: «l ' ; .tSfefe ■hi ' i ■.is ' ■BEARDSLEE Row 3 (I to r): G. Plotch, A. Ben-Ami, D. Miller, W. Toback, M. Long; Row 2 (I to r): J. Feldman, B. Shollenberger, R. Villanueva, J. Preziosi, C. Au-Young, J. Goldberg, M. Branibar; Row 3 (I to r): S. Fucich, G. Waltzer, J. Murray, R. Teske, J. Horathai, N. Callivas, C. Congdon, R. Bates, K. Frantz, M. Reiber, V. Bunten, M. Voorhees, P. Gilmore; Row 4 (1 to r): P. Schutz, R. Eastman, R. Cole, D. Berger, T. Maguire, M. Doeberl, P. Hubert, D. Houston, K. Pearce. CAROTHERS Row 1 (I to r): J. Dunham, C. Izuno, K. Comly, L. Wels, S. Welner; Row 2 (1 to r): A. Romano, L. Kurz, O. Yannitsadis, K. Bryant, E. Burkart, J. Bradley, D. West, B. Lemke, E. Burkart; Rou 3 (1 to r): J. Obetz, K. Grigsby, P. Hein, L. Montovano, B. Hansbury, E. Wells, B. Perry; Row 4 (1 to r): M. Fitzgerald, J. Levitt, J. Fraivillig, L. Loewer, C. Marconis, S. Sonin, L. Hutchison. 262 PALMER 2 Row 1: L. Pickens; Row 2 (I to r): C. Schneider, D. Bartsch, K. Boczar, S. Courtright; Row 3 (I to r): D. Mariani, D. Feiertag, L. Ansilio, M. lannucci, L. Richardson, K. Eberhart. PALMER 3 Row 1 (I to r): B. Murphy, C. Powell, M. Mazelsky, R. Welliver, L. Schnorbus, D. Zetterstrom, K. Hartman, T. Rauch, J. Anderson; Row 2 (I to r): L. Hammond, M Thune, K. Wilhelm, A. Weston, S. Baglow, C. Graham; Row 3 (I to r): M. Idecker, C. Gorbunoff, L. Eisenhart, T. Deutsch, B. Pisano. 263 STEVENS Row 2 (7 to r): L. Bowman, A. Berg, J. Succop, D. Sell, C. DePhillips, M. Griffin, T. Stiles, I. Schepps, G. Gershenson, R. Reinaker, W. Grimm, C. Alfano, T. Forcey, R. Tilley; Row 2 (I to r): P. DeStefano, B. Johnson, J. Skito, D. Voulgaris, J. Cass, N. Barto, B. Herman, J. Oonk, D. Seeger, R. Stewart, D. Kraus, D. Lindsay, D. Boyuka, A. Hollingsworth, G. Rudy, W. Hessler. STOUGHTON 264 Row 2 ( to r): L. Schrier, K. Latimer, S. Bregstein, D. Symnoski, S. Daniel, P. Weisse, B. Savitsky, N. Cassidy, J. Harris, M. Kramer; Row 2 (1 to r): T. Ward, M. Koelmel, L. Rissel, D. Reed, B. Horvath, J. Ryan, M. Ehrich, S. Hall; Row 3 (I to r): D. Donovan, R. Sayegh, K. Heverly, J. Butterly, J. Wetzel, E. Shulman, D. Moorehead, J. Onnen, B. Pfleger, A. Jones, J. Slayton, K. Caldwell; Row 4 (1 to r): B. Pevner, J. Frankenburg, C. Sturm, B. Underkoffler, F. Shoemaker, D. Gross, M. Loukides. WILLIAMS Row 1 (I to r): L. Kraushaar, R. Hinz, M. Surdovel, L. Seibel, L. Eckert; Row 2 (I to r): R. Gross, S. Smith, C. Manns, C. Cable, G. Martens, W. Wilkes, D. Miller, D. Harle; Row 3 (I to r): D. Harris, J. Cahir, G. Delp, E. Schilder, B. Brake; Row 4 (I to r): J. Horner, W. Gulick, J. Hanna, D. Stauffer, B. Lilly, M. Hamelfarb; Row 5 (I to r): D. Stradal, B. Cardos, R. Ryskamp, D. Dziemian. 265 CONGDON Row 1 (1 to r): W. O ' Shurak, T. Obenauer, A. Inglis, C. Munson, R. Waldeck, D. Loizeaux, P. Bieszard, J. Dickol; Row 2 (I to r): J. Deren, N. Parry, J. Cox, C. Conyers, R. Aloem, J. Quilty, P. Davis, J. Goldman; Row 3 to r): J. Edwards, J. Larkey, G. Zagursky, R. Wenger, A. ElAgizy; Row 4 (I to r): R. Lund, A. Matturri, G. Wilhite, M. Bergan, D. Gardner, J. Soltav; Row 5 ( to r): N. Flouras, D. DiSanto, R. Doherty, P. Dinsmore, D. Lombardo. 266 EMERY Row 1 (I to r): J. Harper, M. Kupeski; Row 2 (I to r): A. Paspalas, J. Lombardo, J. Cooke, F. Smith, D. Margolis, B. Woolford, C. Goodman, T. Reed, E. Chumetski, S. Saunders; Row 3 (I to r): T. Orlando, J. Martino, L. Destefano, B. Beeckman, L. Pleshko, C. Kentler, D. Figueroa, R. May, D. Fries, R. Donohue, M. Morawsky, A. Smith, R. Rouleau, J. Betzwieser, C. Davis. LEAVITT Row 1 (I to r): B. Forrest, L. Wermer, G. Wirth, D. Heckman, S. Mazzeo, D. Langer, R. Rodack, F. Traendly; Row 2 (I to r): K. Costello, P. Dickey, J. Stabb, F. Snyder, B. Long, D. Herbner, C. Ackerman, P. Grady; Row 3 (I to r): E. Scheller, A. Thomson, J. Schrader, A. Bartlett, M. Purvis, U. Weist, D. Lytle, D. Messina, C. Haslett, W. Schucker, D. Pearce, T. Cowles. 267 McCONN Row 1 l to r): D. Cole, M. Edelstein, K. Jerwann, B. Ferguson, D. Miller, B. Gallagher; Row 2 (I to r): B. Powell, D. Moll, F. Daly, D. Jankowski, T. Meiss, L. Vogel, P. Lande, T. Cassel, P. Lilienfield, M. Jumbo, G. Johnson; Row 3 (1 to r): B. Gentile, T. Keeler, J. Duffy, D. Freeman, T. Heisey, B. Pyle, K. Vincent, W. Cummins, P. Morton, F. Taylor, T. Marrs, J. Michael, L. Kapner, J. Snyder, K. Huber, P. Barry, D. Yetter. Return of Nyuk-Nyuk-Nyuk . . . Roll with the Moll . . . Derelict Squad . . . Splash!! . . . Left Hand Bolt?? Patent!! . . . Overtime losses . . . Durrrr . . . Cyber alias Schnozz . . . Diver Dave . . . Sped . . . Yellow Tires . . . Pipes: Broken and Smoken ... 75 for 75 . . . Organgrinder . . . Eager-Beavers . . . Stuff her when she dies . . . Musical Roommates . . . Mikey . . . Skating, Hayride, Bowling, Surprise!!!, Nothing . . . Mail Box — Get POWelled . . . Construction Crew eats out at Leavitt . . . Closet Door — Bed Board . . . Ellen and Ellen-Not . . . E.B. passes Blocks . . . Audit still in progress ... He spelled ass wrong . . . No projector for the flicks . . . Where are the sink stoppers and shower handles? . . . Adelstein celebrates Parent ' s Weekend . . . Wild Bill pumps again! . . . Gotta get me a woman!!! . . . T. plays with his rocks . . . Someone ' s got problems making it to second base . . . Care for a Q-tip? . . . Quarfree Quakernow . . . He ' s Kevin, I ' m Blair . . . Job notices, question marks, and Success! . . . Place? What Place? I don ' t know what you ' re talking about!!! . . . Farewell to Bea!!! 268 Row 1 (1 to r): P. Mancino, J. Velimesis; Row 2 (I to r): M. Fortney, R. West, H. Coe, M. Stammherr, J. Leknes, R. Smith, T. Schroeder, B. Bare, P. Cramer, W. Doddman, A. Shukaitis, R. Whalen, M. Shiner; Row 3 (I to r): R. Schild, B. Muschlitz, W. Ruffle, L. Siegel, L.J. Dreyfuss, K. Pepe, E.T. Rixey, R. Larkin, K. Chany, T. Sion, D. Semple, E. Tarof, J. Carnali. 269 DRAVO A-l Row I (1 to r): B. Frezeman, B. Crowe, D. Greco; Row 2 (1 to r): W. Wolfgang, E. Warner, P. Mac- Kinney, J. Wadsworth, L. Rifkin; Row 3 (I to r): L. Rivet, L. Transue, L. Dembicer, J. Fisher, P. Smoler, L. Langton. DRAVO A-2 Row 1 (1 to r): M. Keating, P Somes, N. Winkler, J. Ochs. Gatson, S. Beltz, W. Weiss; Row 2 (1 to r): D. Quis, M. Weis, M. Buckmaster, A. Glynn, J. 270 DRAVO A-3 Row 1: M. Inglis; Row 2 (I to r): B. Stein, S. Kamarow, R. Kossin, D. Poles, L. Nelson; Row 3 (1 to r): M. Suib, M. Kimak, J. Kearney, M. Waszkiewicz, S. Marrs, B. Tallman, J. Chesney, C. Tyrala, S. Perley, I. Minnich. DRAVO A-4 Row 1 (I to r): K. Gulbrandsen, J. Magee; Row 2 ( to r): M. O ' Reilly, D. Diamond, L. Levine, A. Geltzeiler; Row 3 (I to r): A. Fatula, S. Lundgren, E. Marshall, J. Dezube, S. Rapp, J. Gordon, M. Schratz. 271 DRAVO B-l B-2 Row I (I to r): D. Perlmutter, G. Unger, D. Dantuono; Row 2 (I to r): D. Lee, D. Heimstaedt, R. DiAntonio, M. O ' Donnell, T. Braun; Row 3 (I to r): J. Hotung, C. Pawlowski, D. Dunne, K. Hollen, S. Helgans, D. Rarig, E. Sands, V. Rogusky, G. Besenyei, E. Avitzur, L. Keller. DRAVO B-3 Row 1 (I to r): E. Heymen, D. Stinner, J. Heidenreich, E. Suarez; Row 2 (1 to r): G. Brown, B. Daley, S. Scheibe; Row 3 (I to r): 5. Claus, A. Walch; Row 4 (1 to r): M. Boden, D. Foltz, B. Weiss, B. Campbell; Row 5 (I to r): N. Volant, G. Jacobs, G. Mulvihill. 272 DRAVO B-4 Row 1 (1 to r): D. Smith, R. Back, G. Chan; Row 2 (I to r): M. Kieszek, M. Ricketson, B. Levine; Row 3 (I to r): F. Scattene, A. Robbins, B. Seligsohn, J. Lang, B. Wiesenberg, J. Isaacson. DRAVO B-5 Row 1 (I to r): P. Abrahamsen, S. Oh, C. Richardi, R. Kanciano, C. Paul; Rozv 2 (1 to r): M. Allen, N. Butts, C. Tatko, S. Chaudhry, N. Kuzmak; Row 3 (1 to r): A. Wislar, E. Fabian, L. Kaiden, M. Cunliffe, K. Branting, A. Roberts, R. White; Row 4 (I to r): K. Yocum, S. Southwick, J. Goddess, P. Hauserman. 273 DRAVO C-G C-l S. Stem, S. Maddock, R. Schmid, M. Gough, O. Chang, M. Smith, B. Beaumont, S. Glaser. DRAVO C-2 G. Skovira, F. Kerr, C. Martin, G. Marquardt, T. Bartlett, M. Wilson, R. Kobin, C. Madsen, F. Godwin, D. Langdon, S. Geraghty. 274 DRAVO C-3 F. Griffin, P. Bushway, S. Habakus, G. Seibel, R. Seela, S. Kuncio, P. Herkenhan, T. Hart, F. Perez, C. Uribe, R. Sullivan, J. Gorman, B. Gans, B. Anderson. DRAVO C-4 M. Harding, S. Geiger, R. Hogg, V. Rizzo, R. Hicks, P. Cohen, J. Colket, D. Jesurun, R. Freeman. 275 DRAVO D-l Row 1 (1 to r): ]. Pedrotty, B. Brown, F. Regan, A. Brody, J. Doran; Row 2 (l to r): D. Visokey, M. Levin, G. Gianci, W. Falk. DRAVO D-2 Row 1 (1 to r): B. Troy, M. Spengler, G. Gates, R. Buckley, C. Huetrner; Row 2 (l to r): B. Day, P. Leparold, D. Proctor, P. Cleff; Row 3 (1 to r): M. Hamouz, M. Snowden, D. Roberts, L. Davenport. 276 DRAVO D-3 J. Goldstein, A. Swanson, M. McGrath, W. Strauss, J. Magnien, N. Miron, A. Cander, G. Mackie, D. North- acker, D. Elia, T. Kunze, A. Winters, J. Veech, D. Dalnodar, D. Hellekjaer. DRAVO D-4 R. Lippe, B. Fedynyshyn, T. Thielens, S. Lifters, C. Kreyer, J. Papach, M. Berg, F. Jones, S. Perlmutter, F. Goldberg, R. Frey, B. Rutecki, K. Alley, S. Abemethy, N. Mitchell, B. Piercy, H. Donaldson. 277 DRINKER 1 Row 3 ( to r): P. Schragger, R. Trevisan, S. Peck; Row 2 (I to r): T. Bahr, M. Hinnau, S. Marcewicz, P. Kebler, M. Bubel; Row 3 (I to r): J. Hicks, J. Koester, K. Meyer, R. Taylor, J. O ' Donnell, R. Folger, G. Poor, K. Warshaw, B. Foy, J. McCormick, J. Mulligan. DRINKER 2-A Row 1 (I to r): T. Kokkinos, S. Mackey, T. Slahta, J. Brubaker, C. Ward, T. Doan; Row 2 (I to r): H. Imaeda, F. Sine, B. Wyckoff, J. Connolly, T. Ichihara, T. Fidler, M. Lesswing, B. Nyerges, T. Gaston, S. Mitchell, D. Somero. 278 DRINKER 2-B Row 1 (1 to r): D. Delguercio, J. Hoffman, S. Agin, S. Timmerman, G. Tobenkin, C. Keck; Row 2 (1 to r): S. Gould, J. Kosch, M. Kremzner, J. Emmitt, J. Durkin, D. Kenny, W. Kunz, D. Gorenc, T. Wilmott, C. Dolan, P. Duffy. DRINKER 3- A Row 1 (1 to r): J. Wallace, J. Grelis, E. Stiefel, T. Crush; Row 2 (1 to r): C. Gardner, J. Black, K. Maydick, R. Godshalk, J. Nark; Row 3 (I to r): S. Dranginis, M. Kennedy, G. Archer, F. Spinelli, H. Beck, J. Bailey, B. Gutstein, J. Reid; Row 4 (I to r): S. Rickerich, J. Seiler, K. Dischino, P. Duff, D. Clark, L. Margerison. 279 DRINKER 3-B Row 1: B. Cheng; Row 2 (I to r): B. Grady, B. Brown, P. Stires, B. Blier, M. Mjaavedt, P. Mercuri, M. Rabinowitz; Row 3 (I to r): R. Avigdor, C. Jacoby, J. Hanlon, T. Powell, S. Cross, D. Cook, R. Meehan, D. Tatnall, W. Rush, A. Deditch. DRINKER 4 Sirring: J. Frable; Row 1 (I to r): P. Wilson, S. Turgeon, L. Tillis, S. Krawec, J. Hildebrant, H. Schoenberger, B. Wolahan; Row 2 (I to r): T. Lowe, J. Ackemann, W. Nial, R. Settle, J. P. Altier, L. Kamin, C. Kaupp; Row 3 (I to r): C. Sheppard, C. Peters, B. Zwaan, R. Greaton, K. Falk, C. Frey, S. Wainwright, G. Lewis, J. MacDonald, P. fox, D. Hartz, K. Ghezzi, S. Molkenthin, T. Kapp, P. O ' Sullivan, T. Moore, M. Sisson. 280 M MA-l - Mc CLfNl Marsh (l to r): R. Evans, L. Cutter, W. Bollman, L. Poffenberger, L. Bushar, B. McCreary, B. Hughes, L. Mihatov, D. Serignese, C. Zambotti, D. Keiser, G. Morotta, J. Strasser, A. McCoy, H. Palmer, E. Leshinsky, F. Dudman, M. Kimak, T. Caimi, P. Petko, C. Zetterstrom. M M A-2 Row 2 (I to r): L. Branch, B. Walley, K. Saxe, T. Stacom, T. Schifter, D. Passafaro, A. Gaydos, P. Lewis; Row 2 (I to r): C. Hutchinson, N. Fluhr, L. Melillo, B. Hojorth, E. Richards, L. DeMarco, M. Brown, R. Shenk, D. Sweatlock; Row 3 (I to r): C. Winters, B. Raynoha, A. Pinto, M. Cochran ' , L. Konigsberg, C. Kuemer, F. Herrick, K. Grogan, S. Dahl, M. Sasak; Row 4 (I to r): P. Roberts, M. Fener, G. Ehrlich, A. Lefko with, A. Simmons, C. Davidson, B. Karp. 281 M MA-3 Rou J ( to r): J. Smith, A. Schoff, S. Gladstone, S. Eisenberg, R. Altman; Row 2 (I to r): D. Bulas, R. Rothstein, P. Pfenninger, K. Zeitel, L. Zwirn, R. Kauffman, B. Sutherland, P. Kaercher, S. Chodakewitz, R. Hourigan; Row 3 (1 to r): S. Rubin, N. Rosenstein, S. Stemple, T. Bloom, D. Carrie, K. Yamall, I. Pavels, A. Steele, S. Beck, K. Rau, J. Welty, R. Vogel, H. Elosge, M. Hutton. M MB-l Standing (I to r): T. Mastri, T. Hoover, J. Feller, L. Mynert, R. Valk, D. Collins, B. Sukenik, J. Vandemark, R. Moore, C. Tack, G. Laatsch, J. Pope, R. Kratz, R. Clammer, D. Spoont, S. Heller, D. Fink, T. Mastroianni, N. Cates, J. Schreiber, S. Daubenspeck; Sitting (I to r): R. Stys, S. Schwabe, M. Turits, S. Hotchkiss. 282 M MB-2 Bottom Rozv (1 to r): C. Slingerland, R. Schilder, R. Alexander, A. Krishnamara, J. Grube, M. Kuser, J. Cottakis; Top Row (1 to r): P. Schlotterbeck, D. Ruppe, L. Rosenkranz, A. Cooper, L. Pierro, G. Altomare, R. Peek, H. Shames, R. Schmidt, S. Antiskay, B. Pottenger, D. Greene, J. Hawekotte, M. Brown, J. Braverman. M MB-3 Standing (I to r): S. Williams, M. Ford, R. Manning, B. Blumenfeld, G. Bernstein, R. Timpson, M. Beidleman, P. Horning, B. Schwartz, J. Kershner, S. Garfinkel, A. Seidel, S. Andres, G. Card, C. Hankins; Row 2 (I to r): M. Pardo, R. Goodwin, J. Kweder, R. Taxin, D. Pitney, J. Larson; Sitting (1 to r): K. Behrend, R. Sohaney, C. Iselborn, J. Gorcsan, A. Cander. 283 RICHARDS A-l B. Da, J. Masland, G. Behler, P. Fox, G. Banet, J. Neimeister, D. Blanset, G. O ' Brien, B. Freimuth, G. Miller, M. Stipa, T. Campbell, R. Johnston, W. Willard, J. Brooks. RICHARDS B-l G. Frankenfield, L. Ross, T. Rose, J. Baranchok, D. Cox, D. Pullis, S. Zaretsky, P. Cavanaugh, J. Zavoski, G. Yarnis, J. Schoenberg, C. Weesner, P. Bruxelles, B. Kennedy, D. Graff. 284 RICHARDS A-2 Row 2 ( to r): B. Snyder, B. Malchione, J. Snyder, G. Winchester; Row 2 (I to r): H. Tritt, P. Swarr, D. Friedfeld, J. Gerard, M. Hagler, K. Tontarski, L. Weiss; Row 3 (1 to r): C. Robinson, R. Freed, D. Krom, J. Smith, J. Hall, C. DiRusso, T. Owlett, F. Wills, E. Laquer, B. Greenbaun, R. Lunt, D. Lenyo; Roiv 4 (I to r): T. Hoens, R. Adams, M. Schreiber. RICHARDS B-2 J. Goldner, L. Olive, S. Eberhardt, C. Crowley, F. Barrant, W. Curry, D. Smith, J. LoVerde, S. Poehlein, M. Craye, M. Preperato, M. Silverman, D. Swirsky, C. Graves, A. Priest, E. Tober, T. Wilson, D. Warwick, M. Boyd. 285 RICHARDS A-3 Row 1 (I to r): D. Wolchok, A. Troyka, E. King, P. Seidenberger; Row 2 (I to r): T. Silliman, C. Rosen, D. Melega, J. Kind, E. Alperin, K. Tate, J. Anderson, C. Niemeyer, S. Langen- berg, M. Reges; Row 3 (I to r): N. Berger, K. Woerner, M. Shapiro, A. Kasher, L. Whit- worth, A. Reese, L. Lusardi; Row 4 (1 to r): B. Davis, L. Passes. RICHARDS B-3 Row 1 (l to r): A. Kunes, M. MacDonald, K. Berrv, M. Dickerman, S. Keats, J. Deane, L. Smythe; Row3(l to r): S. Kratovil, B. Mutzberg, V. O ' Neill, S. Curley, C. Herald, E. Crits, S. Schmider, C. Meder; Row 3 (I to r): D. Lusardi, t. Grasso, V. Pardo, J. Schwab, C. Filz; Row 4 (I to r): C. Staviski, L. Orysh, L. Wolfe, P. MacFarland. 286 RICHARDS 4 Row 2 ( to r): M. Westhead, J. Dukiet, S. Velthaus, A. Peters; Row 2 (I to r): R. Vernon, L. Weissman, C. Charwat, D. Silverstein, K. Hums, M. Fiore, S. Chakeres, P. Shively, C. Miller, J. Goldman, P. Spugani, M. Walp, A. Blew; Row 3 (7 to r): K. McGeary, P. Every, D. Fletcher, J. Konat, L. Reynen, E. Steig, Y. Green, N. Ziatyk, C. Palenchar, R. Grapin. BISHOPTHORPE Row 1 (I to r): J. Gana, G. Skelly, P. Timmerman, R. Herbst, C. Erickson, J. Russ; Row 2 (I to r): M. Liswith, P. An- derson, P. Wascher, D. Streit, B. Houk, T. Dexter; Row 3 (7 to r): B. Cramer, S. Mills, B. Davis, D. Welford, F. Zar- nowski, M. Salley. 287 TAYLOR 1 Row 2 (I to r): D. Fauntleroy, R. Neff, J. Poulin, B. Rhodes, C. Ruoff, A. Prince, J. Dunn, C. Thunberg; Row 2 (I to r): C. Newton, J. Zook, D. Poole, C. Alwine, J. Hall; Row 3 (I to r): T. Frawley, D. Souders, R. Morton, J. Magee, R. Brust. TAYLOR 2-E Row 1: N. Popple; Row 2 (I to r): M. Federbusch, R. Carboni, R. Marcinkowski, T. Frey, S. Koessler; Row 3 (I to r): T. Brennan, J. Bomze, B. Grove, M. Dugan, B. Wilson, C. Smoot, S. Gimigliano, D. Weiss, B. Bartle, S. Hussmann; Row 4 (I to r): T. Hussmann, C. Gutshall, J. Hughes. 288 TAYLOR 2-W Row 1 (I to r): B. Meyer, J. Daise, J. Nersesian, A. Vigneron; Row 2 (I to r): F. Burnette, B. Jones, J. Silver, B. Snyder, J. Brynes; Row 3 (I to r): P. George, B. Gentzlinger, J. Ginking, A. Alescander, G. Machinkas, R. Barbieri; Row 4 (I to r): B. Black, D. Matson. TAYLOR 3 Row 1 (I to r): J Chen, B. Jones; Row 2 (I to r): D. Butler, S. Finkel, B. Whitman; Row 3 ( to r): P. Lamb, T. Vasko, S. Dolla, T. Donahue, ' M. Oetken; Row 4 (I to r): J. Tischler, K. Peiffer, B. Babacz, A. Hudock, B. Korchak. 289 2lJ!; : !;ffif Si ' ■;.. ■;■■: : . . ' .- ' . ' ■: . 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I 111 i ■III llll illflilpMpl iflll 111 ii;ii;|;f ihll ' S- lW 1 ™ piflii.it . Piliriiiii III ill III I llllll 292 ALPHA CHI RHO A if- j G. Abboud N. Bard S. Fay J. Groses I. Lilienfeld J. Mallaney J. Shatz B. White G. Wukitsch J. Bomze P. Bosco P. Brabazon R. Brown G. Bruan J. Cahir R. Coleman C. DePhillips S. Farrow T. Faughnan D. Fauntleroy C. Garen S. Gibson R. Gimigliano W. Hall J. Harrison K. Hutter R. Inserra C. Kershner S. Kessler W. Korchak B. Krogslund M. Kusmin R. Marcinkowski S. Molkenthin D. Moore R. Morrison M. Oetting J. Oonk J. Pariseau T. Pilch D. Polett M. Rittmeyer I. Schepps W. Strauss P. Thomas R. Trakimas S. Van Keuren R. Van Winkle K. Walden W. Walker T. Woznicki 293 ¥ ., .- . ;.v i i -n- L 4? [ t Ask Robin about fowl shooting . . . But my white dress is shredding at the seams! . . . Beautiful Hawaii . . . The expertise of AGD at the fall relays ... I have a complaint — Take it to the 2nd V.P. . . . Poor Sue . . . Here ' s to Sister Leslie . . . into the shower Leslie . . . Shhh!!! We ' ll wake everyone up! . . . Hee-hee-hee . . . gossip central room 329 . . . Why a candle lighting? — we all know who it is! . . . Who has the rose bowl? . . . Where ' s Debbie? . . . We need a committee — you volunteered . . . April ' s not going to like it! . . . Debbie — HELP! ... I thought someone was flushing the toilet! . . . Bananas are my favorite — because they have appeal . . . Strawberry Daquiris and hot sunny afternoons . . . First AGD Porno Queen . . . Boogie-woogie . . . You ' ve got to be kidding! . . . Boogie Woogie Woogie ... do you have a suitcase smaller than 64 x 43? . . . I ' m an April Fool . . . little trees thrive on sugar pops 294 ALPHA GAMMA DELTA P. Hein R. Kauffman M.A. Ferrante M. Walker K. Myers R. Gross C. Davis M.A. Surdovel S. Langenberg L. Black R. Hinz A. Kunes D. James S. Smith M.E. Sudano C. Ursic N. Reynolds D. Miller L. Kraushaar D. Stavisky K. Blew C. Manns M. Zito M. Pankos S. Schmider C. Herald B. Crits J. Schwab G. Reinhart A. Blew C. Miller L. Weissman C. Hazlehurst M. Allen L. LeVine B. Murphy L. Reynen A. Pinto C. Paul 295 296 ALPHA PHI Meeting after meeting. Who will win the wine? No, Bayne, not the secret knock, pledges aren ' t sisters yet! Where is the mystery sister? And who got arrested? G-L-O-R-I-A. Pam ' s a pledge — no, she ' s a sister. No, Martha, you don ' t ram your car against a tree to park it. Rent a Phi for a Fee! . . . Slave for a Day. Melega ' s aching. Who showered with a turtle? How about Lemon Pledge(s)? Mother Superior, oops, I mean . . . Lusty girl, your pin . . . Take your man around the corner . . . Would you believe Carol Baynette, Marsha Streisand, Ms. Slimy Slike, Idle Brain Booruilji? Dues, dues, dues, and more dues. How much do I owe, Barb? Alpha Phi Helping Hearts. Ann: Well, guys, intramural marbles was yesterday — we missed that one. Program night: Rape, anyone? Maybe breast cancer? The Phi Feud. Then we have Lilies of the Mountain. And, who is Martha Foote Crow? ROLE CALL: Merlin, Sotz, Nashe, Mama Murph, Sugar Magnolia. Where ' s Julie ' s whip? A move to postpone last week ' s postponed motion to next week. Okay, who wants to have a party with . . . Raw eggs and water balloons. Who pulls all nighters every night and has eighteen labs due each week? G-L-O-R-I-A. It ' s only pretend, Violet — NOSE BLEED! Hey, Robin, what did you steal from Phi Kap this time? Jane Clarke: Let ' s play Softball in a white skirt — and don ' t forget the nylons! Martha: We have plenty of gas! We have plenty of gas! Next scene: PUSH, PAULETTE! PUSH, CHARLOTTE! Gail found an advantage in getting kidnapped: getting smashed out of her mind! What is large and metal with ice surrounding it, sits in the bathtub, and is full of beer? What ever happened to Mother Nature? Will Betsy Fenik pledge Phi? Why are you carrying those teddy bears? FEAR OF FLYING. Doylestown, anyone? Hitching from Lamberton to Thornburg. GREEKERS — KIM. Would you believe Greeker eating practice. KIM — GREEKERS. Okay, Sue, no ulcers allowed during rush! Nice devotion, Sally. Ms. Lee got SPIRIT! Then there ' s the hoe. Who ' s going to MANNIES? Who ' s got the CCOM? Who ' s got the BMOC?? And, good luck to our departing seniors, Jane, Gail, Robin, Bayne, Maryann, and Sally. So, drink, drink, to Alpha Phi . . . B. Brake K. Capobianco J. Cassidy J. Clarke M. Cuozzi S. Grysewicz G. Holt M. Lasser C. Lee J. Marcin M. Marson G. Martens R. Muench B. Murphy B. Patterson P. Ruffin M. Skibo K. Slike A. Sotzing S. Swisher K. Talhelm S. Thompson P. Whelchel D. Campbell S. Curley J. Deane L. Eisenhart C. Erikson L. Kominowski D. Melega V. O ' Neill P. Ruggeri L. Smythe P. Timmerman W. Weiss M.B. Keating N. Winkler G. Ehrlich 297 Knock, knock, Kezz! . . . Beat it, Pilgrim, ya ' smell bad! . . . You talkin ' to me? . . . Winta . . . O ' Baldie McSwine . . . The Big E . . . One ways and low lifes . . . Kenny ' s friends! . . . Billy the White Knight . . . Fines will be levied . . . Hey, Bwana! . . . Pndimus . . . Yo ' Bag . . . Husk on deCoconuts . . . The Virgin Corner . . . Hey Schmeck . . . Where ' s Glenn? . . . Y.D. . . . Merganser . . . Wa-tootse . . . Wedgee! . . . Hey Abel-san! . . Ralphie Baby ... Gil Baby . . . The smokestack . . . The Ode de BOOBOO . . . J.W. Beak . . . Cookie-Binkie . . Rocco and Bruno . . . Kiss-my-pud . . . Mr. Know-it-all . . . Hey Boys! . . . Big Rudy and Little Rudy . . . J.C Truck . . . The plants . . . The Pope . . . Play it again, Kenny . . . Master Beak ... If you don ' t like it, be steward . . . The Old Gal . . . K.B. Stober Memorial Bunk . . . Eat it! . . . Geebe the Odi Killer . . . Fred . . . Beeek . . Kess, where ' s Skilo? . . . D.B.S. . . . The Mountain Climber . . . What are the chances? . . . F em if they can ' t take a joke! . . . Not dead yet! I feel happy . . . Has never been missed! . . . The Hell it isn ' t . . . Sigs Baby • • • The Iceman . . . Collect from Westchester . . . Millersville Maulers . . . T.N.S. . . . Cass is hoggin Rose, Lil ' Rose . . . Rad flunked! . . . Peter bilt age Big 298 ALPHA SIGMA PHI B. Abel H. Andrews R. Baker L. Bell T. Caine R. Casavecchia J. Dean P. DiPiazza P. Geraghty G. Haase B. Hamm J. Hawkins W. Johnston J. Kenny S. Kessler W. Kistler R. Koubek E. Laughlin G. Levine G. Lightner H. Marsh R. Masters E. Miller J. Parisi G. Potochney J. Quinn D. Radford W. Regi D. Rhodes H. Smith J. Smith D. Solis-Cohen S. Stine K. Stober G. Wallach H. Winter J. Cooke D. Donovan S. Geraghty F. Godwin R. Heist C. Heverly R. Hicks M. Mjaatvedt J. Potochney F. Sine J. Slayton S. Wainwright 299 M. Arendas, P. Battaglia, E. Boltz, J. Buzby, D. DePaolis, T. Deutsch, C. Dippo, R. Ellsworth, J. Fitzgerald, B. Fritz, J. Futcher, N. Garris, T. Giordani, J. Grant, M. Harding, S. Hefele, W. Heitzman, C. Heller, O. Koder, J. Legath, D. Levinson, T. Kulp, J. Lobach, E. Markezin, E. McGlynn, R. Moore, K. Myers, J. Rinn, J. Ritter, D. Robinson, S. Shymon, L. Sniscak, D. Snyder, D. Sparago, T. Tate, A. Vandergrift, D. Wagner, S. Young, W. Shannon, G. Huffman, R. Rodgers, J. Burke, N. Miron, M. Dugan, S. Cross, S. Mitchell, S. Tanen, E. Bloom, B. Sulzer, D. Hellekjaer, S. Gimigliano, J. Blackburn. 300 ALPHA TAU OMEGA Pit Wars . . . Roaching . . . Roof Parties . . . Pond runs . . . Ray-Rack Time . . . Jack the Wiz Kid . . . How to dispose of fireworks in 30 seconds . . . Hade of Sheet . . . Rocky Wheez . . . Bourbon La Rue and Billy too . . . Pound Sand, Pally . . . Wahbam . . . Water Baloons . . . Fourth of July Night . . . Cliff Diving . . . Hedge Trimming . . . Futcher Missile Crisis ... A Rare Species of Snake, Pin Hade . . . Flush the Latrina . . . Billy; Evelyn and Lenny . . . Young- ster ' s Back Door . . . Grant ' s Tomb . . . Our Favorite Friend . . . Dean Domey ... La Bojo ala Socks . . . Spermer . . . Fast ' s Muffins . . . Mother Robinson . . . Phymon-666 . . . Fire Truck Egging . . . Ed ' s Slalom . . . How to Soak a Grandmother — by Tommy Gio . . . Ritter ' s Standing Eight Count . . . Fastest Bed on the Hill . . . Johnny K, alias Burr Hade . . . Stupendous Horendous . . Sparago ' s Four Foot Line . . . What about . Fungus Face . . . Hells Bells and Snack Pack 301 The flag is up; killer rule in effect . . . good stock, boys, good stock . . . Homo Primus . . . Bachman Neandrathalis . . . Beta Roots . . . I.M. football champs . . . many and various random statements . . . Mo ' s fireside chats . . . It ' s the cheapest Christmas tree we could find! . . . the M M Hotel and Resort Club . . . T.V. ties the knot . . . March 10 next in line . . . Aye, aye, aye, aye . . . Billy, Bobby, and Bossy Bunghole . . . Rich finds a bed partner . . . KINKY . . . drilling to the center of the earth . . . She ' s just a ride! . . . Nu wood, Nu kins, and Nu bombs . . . Cookie strikes silver . . . Weed ' s rent-a-car . . . Jake; tutor in residence . . . Muhammad Barry . . . You gotta like it . . . Louie and Raybo . . . What a rush . . . Parley-vous une humma humma? . . . Help me, Mick, I ' m sick! . . . Smitty ' s Bootleggers Chic . . . Keep your door locked, Kevin! . . . Dan and Dave ' s Cattle Show . . . Stiney, doctor of general knowledge . . . Burne, Weed and Schwenk, Why can ' t we use the closet? . . . Billy, C.C. dog-catcher . . . Keep the rock from Bradley . . . I ' m adaptable, If she ' s a lady I can be a gentleman! If she ' s not I can be an animal! . . . Wacisms . . . Beers on the scoreboard ... I LIKE to study . . . Bruce Crystal: Coach of the year . . . Barnsie haugs; tudgie blows . . . the spakle ' s gone out of this semi-formal! . . . Jake is fat, but he is slow . . . Judy, Judy, Judy . . . Barnsie, Willie, Schwenker, Burnt Piges, Lockwood, Jackage, Caveman, Jughead, Tony, Danny, Gorilla, Gradiations Hoops, Simply, Randy, Winnie, Wilton, L.D., Mo hazard, Wac, Boz, Brads, Eefty, Raybo, Chetly, Huntley Brinkley Atchinson, B.K., D.K., T.V., Mike and especially Turk, Weed, Barry, Poo-bear, Ex-pres, March 10 — Bruiser, Smitty, Mick and Abram . . . catch ' ya on the rebound! . . . Yours in kai. 302 BETA THETA PI B. Bachman T. Barnes M. Barr J. Bennett J. Blosser R. Bossard J. Boyd W. Bradley R. Burne A. Cerra R. Cohen B. Crystal R. Curtiss L. Daniels B. Davis S. Dill P. Floriani J. Grady T. Haynes R. Heisey M. Iorio D. Jureller P. Kelly R. Kennedy M. Klohonatz R. Landress B. Lyon J. MacDonald T. Marchio B. Mitchell L. Norella W. Peters R. Piger B. Raiser J. Schwenk M. Smith T. Stine D. Tangel K. Tilton D. Varrelman D. Wilson B. Bartle A. Deriso J. Doran P. Duff D. Graff M. Kennedy H. Kunze J. Pedrotty F. Regan S. Rickerich D. Sites M. Holland 303 M. Archibald, R. Bachert, B. Bacheson, P. Bicknell, D. Black, W. Black, J. Brandt, Z. Davis, D. Downs, J. Dussinger, B. Field, D. Fischer, H. Folsom, K. Fortune, J. Gicking, R. Gorsey, L. Jacobs, A. Kalish, J. Kraemer, M. Krey, M. Kuser, E. Lindenfelser, J. Lowman, J. Luczkovich, B. McDowell, P. Oxenbol, D. Penny, M. Pfefferle, M. Polachek, A. Prince, S. Runyan, D. Ruppe, P. Schlotterbeck, G. Schuster, H. Shanas, C. Slingerland, E. Suarez, S. Stucker, K. Todd, C. Uricchio, A. Vigneron, J. Weeks, G. Weiss, K. Welsh, C. Yung, J. Zebleckes. 304 CHI PHI Big B. has Gamma, F. Lar has Angles and Ann Marie, C.B. has K.M., Dussi has a triple, Petunia has bread and water, and Ollie wants a banana. Who ever heard of a buggernose gettin ' it, or a Wesly hauled by it. Is there really a lecture? Ox has the family over for a look at the comet. How ragged can a penny get? M.P. takes head dives, pledge masters take swan dives, but Jack just blew it, so the nurses went away. Butch and Dollar Brad go exec so Stebs goes family. But is there really a loser? Olympic jet, rock sittin, ' Saucon Beach. Who needs fines. Hill hoggin. A pile of S. should have waited, but Kathy wouldn ' t let him. Volvo National Airlines. If the pleges can handcuff Zach, why can ' t they take a Slovak? Joe complained at a lodge meeting. Bab goes steady, but can ' t seem to remember. Where are the Philly fans? Poll will run them down. Porch Party gets a guitar, so F. Lar gives a bill. I shot an arrow into the air, it fell to earth I no not where. The Centurion ' s got a fish an Ox but the rest retreated and were invaded by the Gamma Rays. Army loses Husband, Chi Phi gets a brother. Kent gives boiler tours. Lowman wants a 50 Dollar bet, and maybe Disco wants one too, but the house is broke, in so many ways. Border meeting tonight. Catch you around F. Lar, Butch, Loser, Stebs, Grief, Robert Kent, Dix Fisher, Tosi, and Michael Pete — to be continued at Manny ' s or for snacks. 305 Has anybody seen my notebook? calculator? Seagrams? etc. . . . Oh, I get it! ... I can outparty Bill any night (or day) . . . Living at Lehigh, lovin at Villanova . . . What ' s the drug involved here? . . . Did Heimy get up for lunch? dinner? . . . Mick ' s 1?! . . . Sorry Larry, Pete got the 4.0 .. . Stand up Rock! . . . Monica tames the Boo ... I fell in love with a squaw ... If I can ' t be 1, I ' m moving out! . . . Camuti: That goes for me too! . . . OZ . . . Library bouncer . . . Nice Voice! . . . The COMMANDER . . . Ivan Putski . . . Which one this weekend, Jack? . . . Our token Hebe . . . Trose . . . Duh, she caught onto my plan . . . Has-no what? ... I fell in love in Daytona . . . She was even better than Dr. Pepper! . . . Hayyyo! . . . Tennessee Gold . . . Trying to Love Two . . . The phantom returns to the lodge . . . Nice eyes, Bear . . . Nice eyes MOUNTAIN! ... 16 will get you 20, Mikey! . . . Spencer scores! . . . the Weenie turns derelict . . . Even Viv blew that lunch, Lutt! . . . Come to lately at DU, Seabear? ... I love a perky Penn stater . . . Who was whose slave, J.D.? . . . Oh, really? . . . The Trojan Lov er . . . 600 pledges, Dave? . . . Riiiiight! . . . Chuckles is a coach? . . . It ' s not my zone goes I ' m always open! . . . Hermie: Class of 19?? . . . Good morning, Gentlemen . . . Bringing your cantalopes to New Orlens, Heals? . . . What ' s in the brown bag, John? . . . Powder Pups! . . . Heh Bugs, Physics notes on Pampers?! Riiight! . . . Don ' t feed my fish!! . . . The Lodge bids a fond farewell to Esh, Kojacs, Faz, Rock, Mountain, Phantom, Seabear, Weenie, Mitch, Heals, J.D., John, Disab, and Jeremiah (again)! 306 CHI PSI R. Abele, D. Ashton, W. Cummmgs, J. Dutt, J. Eshleman, K. Fazioli, J. Healy, M. Kane, W. Kovacs, J. Pratt, M. Simpler, S. Strait, D. Succop, A. Bott, N. Camuti, V. Commisa, J. Fergu- son, C. Harris, R. Heimstaedt, S. McKay, M. Melillo, C. Mobus, W. O ' Leary, D. Probst, G. Skola, P. Stackpole, R. Thuring, B. Cowen, S. Cook, T. Conklin, J. Davis, B. Kiss, J. Luttman, T. McClain, E. Merrill, A. Robinson, M. Seasholtz, D. VanOrden, L. Williamson, C. Sonon, B. Hurlman, J. Bug- bee, J. Adams, S. Armstrong, R. Brougher, P. Bruxelles, P. Bugbee, D. Heimstaedt, G. Duff, J. Kieffer, G. Marquardt, D. Melone, D. Poole, D. Rarig, D. Reichenbach, M. Ricketson, V. Rogusky, S. Strait, J. Succop WE sxV !! 307 Sandy — Annex 3, House 2, Alumni 1; but we won ' t mention any names: Brian, Bob, Chris, Steve and Cliff . . . Will someone in the annex loan Drennen their room? . . . Journalism 122 .. . Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman . . . Hot Mix . . . Nathan Hendrix . . . Foosball . . . Uncle Cy . . . Who got Speer ' s sheets? . . . Odorisio the Terrible . . . Senior Trip 1 . . . Pete ' s Fiat — Dependability plus . . . Load . . . Dumpy in Florida . . . Mr. and Mrs. Young . . . Nice telephone bills . . . Tut — Nancy 1 and Nancy 2 . . . Delta Sig Raids . . . Nice Donut, Drennen . . . Finals — You can sleep till you wake up . . . Otis the tool . . . Bill Blitnicoff Penrod . . . The Bear is converted . . . Cold cuts three times a week . . .One — J.B. . . . HA-A-A-A-A-AS . . . Ridge — Tennis and Rocks . . . Goodnight Gene . . . 308 DELTA CHI ® vl I ' SSfcV ' ii VfcS ' li C. Markley, E. DiAnastasis, B. Penrod, G. Goelz, C. Bossi, B. Schneck, P. Holton, O. Sinnott, H. Biggin, L. Drennen, G. Mikes, ]. Baccaro, S. Gillinder, J. Ridge, T. Tutwiler, T. Young, P. Zink, L. Stauffer, R. Schloes- ser, A. Roth, R. Miller, C. Ziegler, J. Piehl, B. Knisely, G. Pritchard, D. Schutzman, M. Gass, S. Speer, M. Roddy, B. Anderson, K. Ashton, J. McDermott, J. Odorisio, B. Muratore, M. Class, B. Marrs, G. Haas, J. Gentles, T. Yurkanin, C. Park, N. Spicer, J. Saliba. 309 310 DELTA PHI M. Baker F. Bibas D. Borck J. Boyce R. Burk D. Crosby S. Crowell W. Darrow D. Deshler S. Faber J. Filreis J. Fitzpatrick R. Foltz J. Glaze A. Grande R. Hartley C. Herman J. Hunter B. Jester J. Johansen C. Johnson T. Kamens R. McCarthy D. Miller C. Moodie J. Nemetz J. Newman J. Nickolaus P. Nunan L. Oliphant L. O ' Mahoney D. O ' Malley A. Redden M. Rentschler J. Russo P. Sandvick R. Simms L. Smith T. Splescia J. Tarulli T. Tripp J. Watson P. Zaimes N. Culp J. Larkey L. Margerison J. Nark J. Neimeister C. Schehr F. Wenrworth B. Weisenberg J. Wummer 311 R. Adams, D. Balickie, J. Barczynski, C. Berta, D. Brunner, R. Connors, B. Donahue, G. Ehrich, R. Fountain, R. Gallagher, R. Johns, R. Karibian, M. Karpowich, T. Kinsella, D. Leitman, J. Lunny, T. McMahon, B. Miller, B. Neff, E. Nelson, B. Peiper, R. Pulford, J. Reid, D. Roberts, K. Schumacher, R. Stevens, W. Stout, S. Turgeon, A. Thum, W. Ughes, R. Vinton, G. Yakowenko, T. Yetsko, G. Zotian, G. Behler, A. Hollingsworth, W. Nial, P. O ' Sullivan J. Scnieffer, R. Settle, P. Smith, C. Thunberg, K. Maydick, T. Lowe. 312 DELTA SIGMA PHI Dee Zee Ooo . . . That ' s what she said . . . Leroy, Lar the Czar . . . Fubar . . . Bark . . . Mongo . . . Slow down . . . Get down . . . Boogie . . . Bull Dinkies Bert . . . Bars . . . Where ' s Korioiou . . . he ' s waiting . . . Artartartart . . . Mart run . . . Mart parties . . . FiFi numbers . . . F . . . the Phantom . . . Engaged? . . . Lights on . . . Take the special . . . Lunny ' s giggle . . . Pledge!!! . . . Trebor Snevets . . . Stubby . . . Pumpkin Head . . . Berle finally leaves . . . will he return? . . . Beanie returns! . . . the crowd goes wild . . . Denture woman . . . Cedar crest Crew . . . Kutztown run . . . Anybody find our bus? . . . Turgeon won? . . . Larry returns . . . Ugh! . . . Kennel club . . . Colt 45 . . . $300 per can . . . Logger still at large ... Fat Fran . . . Leroy ' s nose at Lafayette . . . gladiators return . . . SHOTS!!! . . . Viewmaster . . . the Office of the Mayor . . . projectiles . . . policeman ' s ball at Delta Sig . . . Fire department attends pledge party . . . Zote . . . any champagne yet? . . . Weee Oooo . . . Buffy blows her cookies . . . Where ' s the cook? . . . Where ' s the steward? . . . Where ' s the food? . . . Grog of Gamma Chi . . . No-work chairman . . . Wally-house hero . . . What a year!!! 313 Delta Tau Delta is a unique fraternity at Lehigh. The brothers here downplay the traditional fraternity brotherhood ideal for their own model, one based purely on friendship rather than seniority. We believe our system is the best because of the fine people that graduate from Lehigh as Delts. The Delts are very active in the university community and won the overall Greek Week trophy in 1977. No frater- nity at Lehigh can boast the fine combination of scholars and athletes that the Delts can. Our tradition is different, but we feel it is something special. 314 DELTA TAU DELTA C. Lukach, E. Sause, K. Lubarsky, D. Shurts, G. Talarico, B. Giglio, R. Gardner, K. Schmidt, G. Willard, J. Diorio, D. Kozel, J. Thomas, D. Packer, M. Kelly, M. Rieker, G. Clark, T. Kielty, R. Molnar, R. Smith, B. Livingston, P. Schneider, B. Jarrell, M. Weaver, C. Phillips, D. Zuck, M. Berlant, P. Douglas, B. Lynch, G. Brennan, S. Kelly, C. Squitieri, J. Orr, G. Talarico, P. Guthorn, P. Joyce, J.Nolan, G. Gross, T. Palmisano, B. Roman, S. Hudacek, B. Graver, J. McCormick, R. Andres, K. Ghezzi, L. Pierro, T. Powell, P. Mercuri, M. Giduck, T. Hensler, J. Allegar V f V ■315 316 DELTA UPSILON R. Adams P. Adelman C. Alva J. Baron B. Campbell K. Carney C. Coldren D. Corderman J. Davis J. Edell R. Edwards P. Gordon D. Gross L. Henshaw J. Hetherington R. Kelly R. Lucnsinger M. Madison L. Martin P. Mayer P. McGinnis C. Meier G. Miller J. Neely R. Newman J. Perna B. Pulver J. Rodden K. Schaffer M. Scherer J. Schulze D. Schwartz J. Silverberg G. Swenson G. Swenson M. Tisiker J. Vargo J. Vargo D. Vogler R. Winters D. Wolf E. Yaszemski M. Yaszemski D. Zuck J. Butkus E. Jarzembowski G. Machikas J. Magnien J. Manlbacher S. May berry M. McGrath T. Monica S. Naylor A. Swanson B. Swartz J. Veech J. Wetzel A. Winters C. Wolfe 317 «v, I ' 1 ■- • ■l i - ■v You mean another girl hit the dust? . . . Janet — founded upon a rock . . . How many this weekend Dips? . . . Lafayette Zetes love Gamma Phi ' s own Charlie ' s Angels . . . Gina, tennis anyone? . . . Lerf ' s choice — here today, gone tomorrow . . . Sugs, Oh I ' ll never get pinned! . . . Sue M. — Where are the parties this weekend? . . . Tice — sweet home, Alabama . . . Chris took inventory at Kappa Sig . . . Wiz, it ' s a far truck from ATO to Virginia . . . Sue G. pinned a great blind date . . . Kiwi — polka for us in your dream dress . . . Mitch, C.B. craze . . . What ' s your handle? . . . Monica — strictly platonic! . . . Mary Ann — Gamma ' s own little PHI . . . Linda — 260 doesn ' t mean M.P.H. . . . Stemps, Whould you believe Woody? . . . S.D. — you sat in what in Saucon Valley?? . . . Peggy L. — meet any nice people on buses, lately? . . . Moans has a butterfly under her turtleneck . . . Our mistletoe equipped helicopter always has fun at Easterns . . . Rosie — diamonds are a girl ' s best friend . . . D.A.D. WOW!!. . . Amers — would rather pierce them than burn them . . . D.L. pie eater — more like inhaler . . . Toastie — our top bun — fearless leader? . . . T.S. — our classy jock . . . L.K. — tell us — he ' s the best!! . . . T.D. — doesn ' t like wrestlers at all . . . L.S. — tried to find another cousin at Yale . . . V.P. — steak every night!! . . . Cindy now likes motorcycles . . . CD. likes J.C. Penney Specials, you ' re sic . . . J.H. — quit clowning around . . . B.D. — love those B.D. ' s . . . L.M. ' s home — the Mart . . . What? our little squirrel lover . . . V.W. . . . Congrats to Gamma Phi ' s first graduates! 318 GAMMA PHI BETA L. Buck C. Cardello J. Cawley S. Chodakewitz D. Dabrowski B. Davis B. Dippel T. Eck S. Gimson M. Kaufman E. King S. Kossar C. Kuerner M. Leonardi D. Lerf A. Levy S. McGovern L. Melillo K. Mitchell L. Montovano V. Pardo P. Petko J. Raibaldi M. Russel L. Southworth S. Stemple J. Sugarman G. Tarantini D. Tice S. Trost R. Welliver A. Wenhold A. Werley L. Zarembo L. Zwirn W. Bollman K. Comly S. Dahl G. Davidson T. Deutsch M. Ehrich E. Grasso Y. Green J. Harris K. Kahn L. Konigsberg M. Lewis D. Lusardi G. Marotta A. McCoy L. Rifkin L. Schnorbus D. Sey fried M. Smoler T. Stacom J. Smith V. Wilkins 319 K. Anthony, C. Botway, D. Bright, S. Carpenter, E. Connery, C. Covert, N. Fenelli, R. Furanna, M. Gorson, D. Gorzsas, C. Grant, P. Hauser, W. Hutton, R. Johns, K. Klingensmith, P. Lathrop, J. Maurer, J. McHugh, A. Merwin, G. Molitor, G. Moyer, D. Nissley, R. Parrino, R. Price, R. Rentier, D. Ritter, J. Schwanda, J. Shields, D. Shin, C. Smith, W. Staplins, V. Sytzko, K. Tower, R. Trerotola, R. Adams, J. Andrelczyk, J. Baxter, M. Giguere, J. Hildebrant, T. Ichihara, D. Krom, K. Meyer, P. Miller, B. Nyerges, J. Peters, J. Pope, L. Siegel, D. Smith, J. Smith. 320 KAPPA ALPHA The Snake is ceased . . . The youngest Italian and his magic fork . . . Mitches . . . Announcement . . . What ' s Faustie ' s first name? . . . You mean Ron ' s Italian . . . Krash would . . . if he wasn ' t engaged . . . Wel- come to Furry ' s Kinky Corner . . . The Mobile Edna . . . Alice in Guzzler- land . . . You want to speak to Eddie? Do you mind holding? . . . Speed and the Porcelain 500 .. . The Tor that ate Pittsburgh . . . Who buys clothes at Fredrick ' s of Hollywood? . . . Pappy take a dive . . . BMW stands for Bama ' s marriage wish . . . Lisa is coming . . . again . . . Nick has Mary ... or does Mary have Nick . . . Another . . . boring an- nouncement . . . Cal ' s culinary catostrophies . . . whose plants did the rabbit eat . . . The track star does not have smelly feet . . . Mommy ' s calling . . . Chris who? . . . Merwinitis . . . K.T. ' s wierd women . . . What do you get when you cross a Rudy and Elliot? I don ' t know but what ever it is Kong likes it . . . let ' s talk about the C.E. Department at dinner . . . his employer knows him only as Volleyball . . . Jeannie, was Wrench a good KAP? . . . Who says the Ping-pong table doesn ' t fit in the pit? Carp, which Cindy is yours? 321 Howard ' s back this semester — Who cares? . . . Where are your priorities . . . Tube Room All-Stars . . . The Peris- cope Sees All . . . Thanks . . . Some of our best friends are Delts . . . Demmo ' s Pizza Lunch . . . But I ' ve got all weekend to do my term project! . . . No need for spurn . . . Luzz engages in afternoon delight ... So Murph, you think you ' re a brother . . . Let ' s paint Chenzo! . . . Oh, Ev . . . Oh God I ' m gonna be ill . . . Third floor is floating again . . . Baston, Schwantz, Hollywood, Pecker, Vagrant, Lingasaur . . . Bachs sees the crack of dawn . . . Test today, Ted? . . . What ' s Billera driving this week? . . . Today ' s Cawley ' s birthday!! . . . Oiy vey, Who ' s drawing swastikas on the phone booth? . . . Horning gets off the list — But does THAT count? . . . Nulty-Cheating during UMass Weekend?! . . . Laurie II Gets Flashed . . . Who ' s got Molly today? . . . Curley by a KO . . . Miller and linoleum come clean in the tub . . . Smile and say cheese loaf ... In the Race for a Date Contest It ' s Roids for 9, Mauler for ever . . . Cohn ' s first floor dump . . . All these stats and still loosers . . . Who ' s back in the Valley?!!? 322 KAPPA SIGMA T. Smith, R. Bloom, J. Mountsier, J. Sanlorenzo, R. Hed- derman, R. Miller, K. McCarthy, K. Kennedy, R. Price, E. Vees, R. Uptegraff, J. Bishop, L. Perrelli, B. Murphy, L. George, H. Foltz, K. Kramer, S. Brown, K. Kravitz, C. Bachman, G. Gigon, D. Hetrick, R. Hennighausen, B. Car- ter, C. Donahue, R. Herman, E. Barth, M. Rayhill, L. Shep- tock, C. Whitman, D. Schoneman, R. Pulling, D. Har- grave, B. Westcott, D. Williams, F. Lusby, S. Schwartz, T. Cohn! B. Van Lopik, V. Scullen, K. Noonan, T. Winters, G. Cawley, B. Peck, T. Billera, J. Borillo, M. Miller, J. Betzwieser, D. Breisch, B. Camperson, C. Gardner, P. Horning, R. Moore, J. Papach, D. Spoont, B. Steitz, T. Thielens, J. Colket. 323 324 LAMBDA CHI ALPHA B. Arnstein, F. Bader, R. Canavan, S. Darlak, A. Delenick, B. Dunbar, D. Engle, M. Frey, K. Green, M. Handman, G. Heckenberger, G. Hillenbrand, M. Hulsman, A. Jackopin, J. Johnson, D. Jones, R. Kirker, D. Kuzo, H. Latham, L. Leahy, R. Lovetri, C. Lutz, M. Malone, R. Monetti, D. Morris, M. Nunzio, L. Nusselt, W. Potter, G. Ramsey, K. Reichenbach, J. Rizzo, K. Sailer, A. Schiefer, G. Schulze, G. Shelby, L. Somers, J. Sommer, J. Watson, J. Williams, P. Wise, J. Wroblewski, N. Barto, R. Drummey, D. Hickman, D. Krouse, D. Pitney, D. Pullis, L. Ross, J. Sokol, S. Zaretsky, J. Larson, G. Yarnis, D. Zavoski. 325 P. Altenpohl J. Ripoll W. Baer F. Reilly J. Bartz G. Simpson R. East D. Byelick R. Facente D. Valerio R. Gibbons R. Woelfel M. Havener M. Sisson D. Tashjian B. Fauth T. Walter B. Adams S. Wymore J. P. Altier T. Anderson B. Ascetta R. Braen K. Behrend G. Dipaolo P. Blust F. Ditmars D. Cox S. Erickson C. Crowley D. McCarthy D. Dunne A. Morin }. Flanagan J. Papazian G. Frankenfield G. Scott D. Hartz A. Wynn P. Ockert C. Foster S. Reid S. Gordon B. Baback C. Miles Phi 326 PHI DELTA THETA She may not be beautiful, but she sure can sing! . . . Can you guess which ones are graduat- ing? . . . Why take a chance with Radar? . . . Ran, how can you fit a 24 inch T.V. in a 12 inch room? . . . Who are Kris and Doug? . . . Altenpohl, look before you make a U-turn . . . Scotty, is it true big-busted girls have big hearts? . . . Where ' s my moronic date? . . . Roland, you explain it — it ' s too complicated for us . . . Phi, there ' s a grizzly bear outside . . . What ' s the vaseline for? . . . Norton, Arizona State Alumni . . . The chem boys . . . Bob and his jute box . . . Lock the door, Chris is back! . . . THE FOZ . . . Wow, I can ' t get into that . . . That ' s nothing . . . Roily, if you don ' t open your door, I ' ll never invite you to the shore again . . . Trenton State here we come . . . Which way to Simpson ' s House?? . . . Who turned up the heat? . . . Heerrreees Gabby . . . The Bong Show . . . bridgemon . . . What ' s a gammer? . . . . . . Scotty pins Mary Ann . . . Gregg, do they make you do Gibbons, that is $15,000 for your personality . . . A.L.J. . . . fine the steward . . . Pete ' s a piss . . . Uh-oh, another MC subway story . . . Must be a Rich Braen joke ... I know ... Is Valerio a nerd? . . . The year of the Cat . . . Reibs, are you going to really make $4,000 . . . Drew, was it your first time? . . . Art, are there any more light bulbs? . . . Mike, your television is on . . . Pay your house bills . . . Let ' s make the next hundred better . . . Good luck Seniors — BooBoo, Booby, Sparky, Radar, Giboner, Havs, Chippy, Tash, Attybird, Rolls, and Phi. Freddie goes crazy over Karen exercises in the Air Force? . . . 327 M. Alsentzer B. Kopenhaver P. Cohen C. Arcodia B. Lewis M. Connor W. Bast F. Mannella D. Delguercio M. Borden S. Martin M. Dugan D. Bryant G. Mino J. Eggert A. Cariddi S. Mock J. Gorman K. Colangelo P. Rover G. Scnerer S. Grayson R. Cortright R. Haase M. Cranley M. Schimpf R. Kobin R. Currie C. Serrao S. Lifters F. Diana M. Seward R. Manning D. Durkin M. Torie S. Reck L. Folkes E. Ullman R. Schmitt P. Gebert E. Yerdon R. Sukenik R. Glasbrenner K. Alley R. Trevisan P. Huot D. Beard J. Leiser M. Koenig J. Braverman 328 PHI GAMMA DELTA 329 L. Lee, R. Wright, F. Pinello, R. Adey, S. Miller, P. Herman, J. Habig, M. Kovacevik, J. Janinek, S. Udasin, E. Lundberg, R. McCard, B. Steiger, B. Tetreau, N. Kelley, J. Battisti, A. DeLuca, J. Karper, J. Grievo, J. Cillo, R. Megasko, B. Erbrick, T. Varro, F. Reck, M. Connolly, M. Losch, S. Devine, J. Callaghan, P. Seitz, S. Thomas, G. V aides, C. Miller, J. Stevens, T. Howland, J. Stamateris, L. Fish, J. Jablonski, J. Black, T. Crush, E. Stiefel, J. Grelis, L. Bowman, C. Van Tuyl, R. Schulz, D. Stemple, C. Pawlowski, F. Roberts, S. Sands 330 PHI KAPPA THETA Son of Raisin, B15 . . . Now, now Joann, WEO, Erbie Hartman, Rico ' s Triangle . . . Founder ' s Cup, Dancing Bears, When are you guys going to put in parking meters? I won ' t charge you. . . . Nympho 9+2 . . . Unusually Lucky Stam, Grandma, Rag, Beat, Steve, Chas, Goony, Rip, Mikey, Mitch and Bag . . . Are you the President? . . . No, I ' m the King! . . . Holiday Inn Crew . . . $120 Christmas Tree . . . PKT Flu . . . Horse, Deal, J.J., Jabbo, T.V., Rico, Lou, Larry, Nomo, Sonny, Stu, A.D., Janz, Seth, Cags . . . More is always better . . . Put a towel under the door . . . Sorry I blew up . . .1 got my 5 votes . . . Fines will be levied . . . Slug, Connecting eyes, Power Blow, Door Knob . . . Guishers, Crackers, Vigilantes, DMR . . . Campus Cops, Dollar Bill, LS N, Q.V., Basketball Weekend . . . Lug, Hermie, Toronto, M M Man, Cirro, Gas, Kova, Deep Throat, Moses, Wittle Wicky, How Big, Chief, Tom, Steigs . . . A. I., Bend over, Ease up, Tremendi, Nice Wool, Tip to Tip, I ' m beautiful, You ' re so foul . . . Comments, Tankage, Tubage, Torkage, Turkage, Bloffage, Breakage . . . Yore, News, Gaping, Flaming . . . Foul Dogs, Minga, Off or Out, Fire Alarms, R.O.O.T.H. . . . For no reason at all . . . Mike ' s Greekers Mickey Mouse, Done. i . 331 332 PHI SIGMA KAPPA Senior Nerds??? . . . Hey Butt . . . I ' m all buuur . . . Hey, you slag . . . Green Dye . . . Dickfor . . . Spentenary . . . Feds and Heads . . . He beat the odds . . . All nighter for tickets . . . Camp Lehigh . . . Chodes . . . in ' Wow . . . C-Hound . . . Flip right the out . . . Lube . . . Fine Me!!! . . . It ' s my right . . . Bar Rally . . . Go for it . . . Beached Whale . . . Dude . . . Woman! — Lightweight! . . . Lounge Rally . . . Muffinman . . . Where is the Zerostat . . . Cup of coffee . . . tooslow . . . Phi Kinky Carrot . . . CCC — Let ' s be friends . . . Picnic, same place as last year? . . . Feed the Hill . . . Larry, break any squash racquets lately . . . Pay your house bills . . . Flint did it!!! . . . Who did the math . . . I ' m down on this . . . Pumpkin, Plumply, Pumpy, Squirtbag . . . The Mouth . . . Schlong . . . Phil Billips . . . Shut up Roach!!!! . . . Nature boy . . . Baclava . . . Jailbait . . . wingding . . . Aqua . . . OGO . . . Rejections . . . Joe ' s place — meet my Friends ... 8 credit tool . . . Space Cadet . . . Irving and Raindrops . . . Marathon Plaques . . . Blocks . . . The Great Divide ... I deserve it . . . Hide the Peanut Butter . . . Bondage . . . Shrapnel . . . Kill the milkman . . . Nicky, MIA . . . Beat up the stereo . . . Massive chest . . . What ' s on the box . . . 3V2 hours to Boston . . . What a mag . . . Who is the Pumpkin? . . . Bar Dancing Lesson, 12:00 by Lube and Associates . . . When we find a girl . . . And it better be Foul!! ... I guess I got drunk last night!! . . . Hey Phil, are your Friends coming up? . . . Hey Clint, nice shoes . . . Crackers!!! . . . And the dog is licking his balls . . . Start Pumping . . . Denouncements . . . Dock them!! . . . open, close, open, close . . . This is a roast isn ' t it? . . .1 think I ' ll punch her face in . . . If I don ' t eat lunch, can I break the refrigerator door . . . Lou is going to set a record tonight . . . Senior Mafia . . . And there was much rejoicing . . . M. Adams, C. Bailey, S. Bridgman, F. Burnette, J. Cassimatis, M. Craig, D. DeRoche, D. Dudenhoeffer, K. Ellefson, B. Epstein, R. Farenwald, R. Finn, B. Gault, L. Gore, D. Gome, C. Gutshall, D. Hagan, M. herbets, C. Hertz, J. Hudson, S. Krawec, J. Lang, M. Lesswing, B. Long, A. Magid, D. Matson, D. Mendenhall, D. Monteverde, J. Morris, B. Morris, J. Mueller, B. Muir, M. Oetken, B. Phillips, S. Roda, D. Saunders, B. Scott, J. Silva, D. Simon, B. Siegele, C. Soloman, K. Talso, S. Wheeler, T. Woodward 333 Pi Kappa Alpha was founded on March 1, 1868 at the University of Virginia. The fraternity grew throughout the south until 1909, when its growth pushed northward. The Lehigh chapter of PIKE was established as a local fraternity in 1922 and later obtained recognition as a national fraternity on October 26, 1929. More important than the facts and figures about Pi Kappa Alpha, are the brothers. We are banded together . . . for the establishment of friendship on a firmer and more lasting basis; for the promotion of brotherly love and kind feeling; for the mutual benefit and advancement of the interests of those with whom we sympathize and deem worthy of our regard . . . These ideas are reinforced in day to day life; whether studying, partying, or just bumming around. The experiences we encountered sometimes good, sometimes bad, brought us together; and I think each of us is the better for experiencing them together. 334 PI KAPPA ALPHA B. Anderson, M. Barth-Wehrenalp, R. Benoit, P. Brambilla, R. Brennan, C. Buhrendorf, F. Cincotta, J. Cookingham, M. Dale, R. Donaghy, R. Enterline, J. Feller, J. Fitzgerald, T. Frawley, R. Freeman, D. Fries, J. Fusco, P. Garibaldi, J. Golle, S. Guempel, M. Hembarski, T. Hindenlang, B. Kaune, C. Keener, S. Kuncio, A. Leschick, C. Madsen, N. Podaras, J. Quinn, W. Rhoades, K. Roman, M. Sevcovik, T. Simon, W. Tarallo, J. Taylor, T. Zaremba, E. Zawislak. 335 W. Andrews, J. Ballowe, J. Bodenstab, J. Buck, D. Burdakin, D. Bzik, S. Gigich, N. DeLuca, S. Diantonio, T. Dunn, C. Easton, W. Fitzgibbons, J. Garrison, G. Glasgall, S. Goldstein, T. Havekotte, S. Hazlett, E. Helgans, C. Husband, P. Idell, R. Jacobs, J. Lapres, J. Larson, J. Lyon, L. Meyers, M. Proft, M. Pyles, J. Rosener, I. Sanders, M. Siegrist, T. Smith, A. Stern, K. Stoffel, K. Tate, S. Thornton, T. Travers, T. Valk, M. Zimmerman, R. Diantonio, J. Gardener, J. Gaston, A. Greener, S. Helgans, S. Heller, D. Hicks, D. Holt, A. Kohnke, A. Mastroianni, F. Perez, S. Schwabe, M. Turits, J. Vandemark, V. Volpe, R. Wankner, L. Weitzman, R. White, W. Willard, P. Ryan 336 PI LAMBDA PHI What do you think this is — a zoo?? . . . punt . . . the grand opening of the Upper East Side . . . the new bar . . . Snowballs, anyone? . . . Tom Foolery (.7 + .3) . . . You guys want a ride down the hill? My car ' s right out back : Scoop . . . Not true — fact! . . . Where ' s Longfave? . . . Nice chin, Haze . . . Where are we binging this weekend? . . . D.H. and the Horse and Pony Show . . . K.O.L. . . . Doeshe? . . . Fish preserves his fishood . . . the S toned Tide . . . You PIMP!! . . . Salad Bowl acrobatics . . . Who ' s with Chasanova? . . . Got to . . . C. Lapper . . . L.O.S. . . . The flying Burrito Brother — out the window (Dzik ' s Flying Cir- cus) . . . Penn Game — Jake punches out the cops and rescues Cigwad . . . Dere- lict ' s Delight . . . Spend Wildly! . . . No, I am not full of shit : Millie . . . Cretin Children . . . Bogus . . . The Fig can dig your jive, Baby . . . G.O.S. . . . Edgar . . . Jimmy pisses on Dzik ' s bookshelf . . . The Stonehead . . . Another bowl . . . The Death Mobile . . . You twits! . . . Speculation . . . Schlongers . . . Those drunken hooligans. Goodby Jack La Lane . . . We ' d all like to say goodbye and to thank the house for three great years — The Seniors — J.B., Scoop, Bird, Nook, Fitz, P.S.I. , Dzik, Stu, Rock, Jake, Haze, TIT, Kurt, ED, Coach, Nuck, Lyons, J.G. and the Fish. 337 L. Alexis, L. Alexis, R. Allison, M. Anderson, J. Beitler, P. Blazewicz, G. Blythe, R. Brownell, R. Carnevale, T. Cunningham, R. Emmet, C. Fagan, R. Fisher, B. Flat, S. Frank, D. Gibbons, W. Goldstein, E. Jacobsen, W. Kim- ball, J. Korth, R. Kramer, G. Kratzer, P. LaPorta, R. Lieberman, R. Marshke, H. Marsh, W. Mathe, A. Moel- ler, G. Ott, P. Pelsinkski, E. Pettinato, E. Rouse, B. Sampson, J. Schneider, D. Summins, D. Thompson, M. Wheaton, J. Zagorski, P. Bushway, J. Fisher, R. Frey, T. Gates, S. Geiger, D. Harkins, P. Herkenham, B. Jones, M. Keller, M. O ' Donnell, R. Reinaker, P. Schragger. 338 PSI UPSILON The black prince . . . 99% O.T.R. . . . Admiral Rush . . . L.U.S.T. . . . Sweat pants to dinner? . . . Hi, I ' m Sven . . . Shifting with a broken arm . . . Brother Bearded Clam . . . I ' M so dumb I started in business . . . Fat Louie . . . Wimp . . . Charles Nelson Reilly . . . Love a fat nurse . . . Field trips and Stars 1000 with the professor . . . Brother excess verbage . . . Disco Trobe . . . The phantom house manager . . . Skylife . . . The Rev . . . 3-D beaters . . . Pride, Desire, Victory . . . I ' m good for holding places in line . . . Poleluck, Polelock, Pollack, Pollack, Polack . . . What did the fairy god- mother say? . . . Commicrats . . . Speak up . . . Big John . . . Jazz Man . . . Bear . . . Hey Ralphie Boy . . . Polish Set- ter . . . I ' ve been sleeping on the railroad . . . Heurmphf, Heurmphf . . . Your friendly neighborhood Geek . . . Mr. Natural . . . Can I borrow your car? Mine doesn ' t have any gas . . . I ' m cuckoo for cocoa butts . . . Too many brownies aren ' t good for your head . . . shut the door and hit the road. 339 340 SIGMA ALPHA MU D. Bartner M. Brenner S. Chaplin L. Chatzinoff K. Danoff B. Deutsch N. Ehrenpreis N. Exstein P. Fenaroli S. Freilich D. Fuller P. Goldstein J. Greenbaum R. Gross B. Hill G. Hirschberg R. Ingber G. Itzenson T. Jacobson R. Judson B. Kesselman S. Kreiger B. Kreitman L. Langweber G. Levkoff A. Levy P. Lichtenberg E. Liebman L. Mahler D. Marhesius K. Matlick M. Moore M. Neporent H. Pecker H. Reiss R. Rivlin M. Rosen R. Rosenfeld R. Rosenthal R. Roth L. Sarakin D. Shavel W. Spinner R. Swartz H. Talmud S. Teitelbaum L. Weinstein L. Weitzner M. Berg M. Boden F. Cafaro R. Claire B. Cozen S. Dolla S. Finkel F. Goldgerg M. Goldgerg J. Isaacson J. Klein E. Li M. Liebergall R. Lippe N. Mitchell J. Nersesian M. Schlesinger H. Strauss 341 342 SIGMA CHI P. Ballas, J. Bigach, S. Cahill, J. Cassidy. W. Chieco, W. Connors, K. Cooke, G. Crape, S. DeTommaso, J. Dittrich, A. Dondero, J. Economy, E. Egan, G. Ferguson, K. Frederick, P. Garda, E. Giordano, W. Goldman, J. Hummel, L. Inserra, G. Jackson, J. Johnson, T. Kobylenski, E. Kohl, S. Kreider, M. Langley, W. Mann, J. Maynard, W. Oliver, D. Persico, G. Pin, R. Quinn, M. Rickert, G. Riggin, A. Rockhill, D. Roskos, J. Schadt, M. Schultz, W. Shaffer, T. Shannahan, S. Smith, J. Stork, G. Tonnon, L. Voneheill, J. Ackemann, J. Bernstein, J. Downs, J. Dunn, M. Gough, D. Kraemer, D. Pieper, P. Potako, B. Whitman, W. Wiese, B. Zwaan. 343 Greatremendousbizarre . . . True stories . . . Anderson ' s Free Sportswear . . . Hey Pal Perr-I . . . You really are you know . . . Yah-Hooo, Ride ' em . . . Strwen Dust . . . Krafty Babes . . . Disco ... Put the S back in SEC . . . Puddin . . . That shiftless, filthy Morroccan . . . Bone-Head . . . Can we flush Banet? . . . The BIG-A . . . An asset to the house . . . Winners wash Jake, losers wash Jeff . . . Studley Ripley . . . Kaj got pinned . . . 20th Century Lord Byrons . . . Jake ' s Wild Week of Sin . . . Dr. Ken . . . History of Everything . . . Well, if you like thsem, we ' ll buy thsem . . . BAH-Bah-Mi-i-i-ke . . . Corvair, an American legacy . . . Cowperthwait ' s Laugh, Nick ' s Laugh . . . How many units is your father carrying? . . . Mike Johnson slept through the party again . . . UHHHHH-Shawn . . . Wake up George . . . Make it stop . . . Clean and Pleasant. 344 SIGMA NU T. Adcock J. Albrecht M. Anderson P. Appino D. Axelson W. Beck E. Blew P. Bugbee B. Carter J. Cowperthwait R. Cunliffe H. Gravenhorst M. Hughes B. Josten C. Kahle G. Kanarr K. Karch E. Katterman C. Kraft R. Lally R. Logan L. Lyng D. Mancosh C. McCauley L. Mitchell K. Molinaro W. Nezgod R. Orlemann R. Orlemann D. Paulus M. Pavia J. Pearson R. Pesto P. Prosswimmer S. Rabenko J. Ripley R. Robb D. Roe D. Rush M. Sheehan N. Snyder J. Thomas K. Werner J. Wright C. Banet P. Cleff B. Fedynyshyn M. Hagler J. Hall M. Levin A. Mozeyko J. Ost D. Proctor W. Rush R. Thornton C. Uribe F. Wills 345 346 SIGMA PHI J. Baker B. Boswell S. Cerminaro J. Chaippini G. Field R. Gabel M. Gardner N. Garruto B. Greenspan P. Hartranft D. Hewit D. Hume G. Krutul J. Lore J. Lubarsky R. Nevins J. Oswalt R. Parkman A. Pope J. Rodgers T. Slaton K. Sullivan B. Torcivia R. Venanzi J. Warnken T. Aldrich H. Bahr D. Figueroa J. Goodwin B. Grove W. Hanlon J. Harper P. Kebler C. Kentler R. May G. Minnich M. Morawsky }. Mowrer D. Northacker T. Orlando 347 R. Asbeck, M. Barton, B. Bayer, M. Brodfueher, C. Bunt, N. Campbell, T. Cox, T. Cressman, K. Deutsch, B. Dillman, B. Dittrich, T. Donofrio, P. Dolan, P. Donovan, R. Funke, S. Giglio, B. Grieshaber, B. Haltenhoff, C. Hopkins, J. King, S. Maddox, D. Madeira, L. Martin, J. Miers, J. Ney, E. O ' Mara, J. Ratkevic, B. Reed, C. Rinaldi, S. Scaramuz- zino, C. Scheitrum, H. Schweitzer, T. Spence, G. Streich, R. Tedrow, C. Ugol, J. Bailey, B. Beeckman, J. Brooks, G. Caro, C. Davis, J. Donegan, J. Hawekotte, B. Maloney, T. Miller, L. Pleshko, B. Quier, R. Rouleau, A. Smith, M. Wilmerding. 348 SIGMA PHI EPSILON It ' s Doobie time Boys and Girls: Hey Mike, when ' s the bar going to get done? . . . Carls, Dertch . . . God loves South Philly, Lucifer vs, the turtle . . . Hey Greg, how ' s the wife? . . . Chunny, Schweitz, Sal Montividego, . . . Why do you guys?, Concessions are back, Nora ' s in the kitchen with Ralph . . . Woooow baby . . . Crazy Burnt, Crazy Rat . . . Hey Ace ... I can pack a mean pipe, Let ' s take a cruise to Canada . . . J.J., J.F.D., B.B., . . . Hey Brods, Julie on 10 . . . Mr. Jones . . . H-off, D-zone ... the controller of Montclair ... the blue balls got castrated . . . K.B., F.T.M., I.Q. . . . check it out, three steak dinners without Dean Brockway . . . Ugol Bird, Ace and Ace, Mad Dog, Ney Bird . . . Hey O ' Mara, happen to have a dime for an alter boy . . . What Ace? . . . J. A.M., A, i, . . . Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds, Tedious Tedrow, Pick your F — eking feet up . . . Prof, Drow, Neek . . . You ' re cut off . . . 295 2 where you going? . . . Brodie, Benny, Funki Rudi ... No one cuts my ass off . . . What ' s the matter now Carl? . . . Medusa, DiGregorio, Barts . . . Liz, how ' s the military Ball? . . . Mrs. Murphy, Dipole . . . Liz, Dick, Bob . . . Robin, Pat . . . Rat, light both ends and you get burned . . . We ' re going to bucket your ass, Doon . . . Pete Don, Pete Dol . . . HEY DERTCH . . . Hey Harold, are you breathing? . . . Ted ' s, Reed, Dego, Rinaldo, ... the donut man is defunked, be mp like a zip and take a trip . . . When did they put urinals in the cold dorm, Carl? . . . Doon . . . Let ' s get kinky, Reed the signs in IVA . . . Miers, will you for a keg? . . . Was it really worth $5000? 349 «■1 350 TAU EPSILON PHI TEP DOES . . . Let ' s move ou Mov Out! . . . Rose Bowl and City-Vu run . . . Paraplegic B-Ball . . . ALPO and chips ... Ed and Razi go swimming . . . Leeps returns — phil to kunet . . . Lemon meringue, tea, and a lollipop, please . . . Tancin dies on Halloween . . . Ringing rocks . . . Annie kills the Dead . . . Mush makes pipes . . . Brader fixes pipes? . . . Pigs on the Wing — got your Lehigh I.D.? . . . Chipflipping — J.B. gets fifty . . . Mashed Potatoes . . . Cook much? . . . Kaledis Interruptis . . . Wally bags a deer . . . Seeds bags a lemon . . . Doug cops the MVD (Klawitter Cup). John Boy gets rookie of the year . . . Apple-core and Cherry-pit pie . . . McClepto rapes MaBell . . . Got to be! . . . Barry ' s Gourmet Cheese Shoppe . . . What do you mean Deming is not home? . . . Renatte and Joan . . . Gammon any- one? . . . East wing executive suite . . . Green eggs without ham . . . J.U. and J.B. win car rally. Chocolate syrup!! . . . Puppy dog ... the Great Marshmallow War . . . Tusday today, Wenday tomorrow ... Sir Robin . . . Captain America (Tweety Bird) wins A.B. Dumont Award . . . Beg for ice cream . . . George uses his head . . . Ernie, the bath- room light is on . . . Intergalactic tamales . . . Glickman ' s answering service . . . GET SMALL! J. Aston, A. Bangser, F. Behlau, J. Boyea, S. Brookner, D. Caplan, E. Carduner, M. Cristaldi, R. Ezrapour, S. Frock, E. Geist, B. Glickman, J. Handler, F. Hencken, J. Hoffman, M. Imbriani, C. Kaleda, M. Kearns, J. Kenny, J. Klages, R. Klimowicz, M. Levin, W. Marx, S. McDougall, S. McLellan, C. Reed, R. Sarlati, R. Sederholm, D. Shaw, S. Tancin, J. Underhill, G. Chan, H. Schoenberger, W. Selick, E. Sprogis. sis y 351 i A THETA CHI ■i 352 O. Altenburg M. Bartholomew G. Calabrese B. Charles J. Connolly Jr. C. Cucullu Jr. J. Cutrufello C. Denault R. Dietz K. Douglas L. Engel S. Filemyr J. Fisher G. Goelz R. Hawk J. Holleman R. Hotaling C. Ill III G. Kramon M. Lammers Jr. R. Lutz III P. Mcbeth III C. Oberg J. Ostberg D. Palmieri M. Redmond J. Reed W. Romig W. Sheppard P. Smith Jr. J. Spiridon D. Walters R. Williams Jr. R. Wormser J. Zangara 353 B. Arndt, T. Baroody, P. Clausen, L. Clewett, K. Clifford, S. Concklin, R. Czekanski, S. DiMassa, C. Priza, B. Fecker, A. Finley, G. Force, T. Freibus, P. Grinups, K. Haley, J. Hohman, J. Hohman, R. Jay, G. Kauffman, L. Keller, P. Krystow, D. Laskey, P. Malik, T. Norton, D. Perigrim, H. Prati, B. Senior, P. Shook, R. Speir, M. Stoute, P. Tauck, M. Versuk, B. Waldvoger, Y. West, B. Wolf, T. Bartlett, T. Campbell, F. Kerr, C. Martin, D. Nelson, M. Purcell, B. Rutecki, M. Robinson, J. Schiech, A. Walch, M. Wilson. 354 ■■THETA DELTA CHI g ' cat ■w  ■Torps got a job!! . . . Will he graduate? . . . Psyche me, Jim Beam! . . . T.J. Side-and-a-half . . . Errrrrrrnie! . . . Roy . . . The Gentle Giant . . . Keith . . . Earth to Bart . . . Rebel . . . C.D. . . . Felks . . . Dave ... — who cares Peregrim . . . Conckphonepip . . . Dr. Pills . . . Rudy, Out . . . Brad . . . BO . . . J.P. . . . Buns . . . Hennest . . . Tauck . . . Grins . . . Pots . . . Shooky . . . Yale . . . Wally . . . B.M. . . . Fat Dick . . . Freeby . . . Crusty . . . Rrrrrrob. Jay . . . Screw your brothers . . . I ' m hungry! . . . How much did we save this week?, . . . Napkins are closed . . . Casing it!!! . . . F.O.T. . . . Yeah . . . Y ' know . . . Theta Delt I.M. Basketball . . . Pledge Clewett ' s Tap-in . . . Best I ' d ever seen . . . THE TROPHY IS BACK WHERE IT BELONGS!!!!!! . . . D.U. WHO????? . . . NO teeth . . . Moling to the bar for a 4-pack . . . Big Billy Kishbaugh. 355 Drop back 10 and punt . . . Genesee in the soda machine . . . every third can will be empty . . . Buster what? . . . the big 5-0 ... I dunno, I just don ' t know . . . Okay? ... I don ' t need this aggravation . . . yassole . . . take a hike . . . Texas progressive country redneck rock ... at the booph palace . . . This is the urinal . . . this is the cold dorm. And this is a turntable . . . ya yingyang . . . boink . . . flame on . . . phone call at Lambda Chi . . . Glenn A. White, Chem. E., . . . He ' s got that 10 beer look . . . the over-the-hill gang at H and B ' s . . . He ' s a little too frisky for me. . . . Sign the meal list please . . . Mr. F. Rosenfe . . . Hurt you . . . Where is all that third stall material? . . . up- stairs . . . weak act ... I used to be a two-car family . . . Oh, why not? . . . Rico, Chico, uanito . . . the scarlot harlot . . . Motoroid . . . Can I? Can I? . . . not too shabby . . . Grow up, Bechard . . . KW . . . Howyadoin? Howyadoin? Howyadoin? . . . Goodtoseeya, Goodtoseeya, Goodtoseeya . . . Really, for sure . . . Wrong . . . It ' s a whoosh . . . Hey, I KNOW . . . pledge party: massive brain damage . . . Oh, HAVE a drink, Motor . . . what the hell . . . yeah, later. _ 356 THETA XI T. Ahem D. Arnesen ' §( J. Bechard R. Bedell W. Blasberg f c 1 T. Boone (j K. Cole P. Crawford J. Devlin S. Donaldson J. Edleman E. Engelhard J. Fernandez K. Grau R. Halama G. Herman . W. Numbers . T. Paff J. Parker ' W. Patterson B. Proven F. Rosenfeld ifik R. Schlack K. Somes K. Swartz D. Trost G. Tuttle M. Vanhoesen R. Vanhoesen H. Walter J. Welty K. White J. Wolf J. Wyble A. Bantley J. Burgio J. Cavanaugh R. Chambers D. Fox C. Frey C. Goodman J. Heidenreich M. Herman M. Hinnau R. Laudenslauer F. Scattene R. Stys 357 • _: This section of the yearbook is dedicated to the Senior Brothers of Zeta Psi Fraternity. The past four years have been exciting and fullfilling for our Seniors. They have helped build a reputation for academic achievement, intramural participation, and successful social activities. The Seniors have also provided the necessary leadership to build an active house of Brothers with diverse p er- sonalities and interests. Our rush program was very successful with a group of 18 active pledges. We are confident that our new pledge class will work hard to maintain the quality and tradition of Zeta Psi. The names of Jackbird, Molka, Frenchy, Disco, and Coach will not be forgotten. We hope that the Seniors will return to the house and visit the Lounge for another 7:30 Room Jam. Best of luck to our new alumni and remember its Great to be a Zete. 358 ZETA PSI W. Amioio, S. Bartosik, J. Breslow, D. Casapulla, T. Cassone, T. Chappell, J. Copoulos, G. Czarnecki, G. Detwiler, D. Dietrich, M. Farrara, D. Frankenbach, G. Gorab, C. Gorski, T. Harraka, D. Hartzell, W. Holdgrafer, F. Johnson, J. Kaiser, J. Kearney, P. Kelly, C. Kim, C. Kim, W. Loving, D. Mayer, W. Mercy, S. Miller, E. Noymer, M . Phillips, G. Reel, S. Rubenstein, J. Sills, T. Smith, R. Stilwel, W. Tanchak, R. Thevenet, G. Troxel, F. Vultaggio, K. Wilson, D. Winecoff, G. Woodend, G. Zenuk, W. Zucker, R. Meehan, S. Andreopoulos, W. Blier, B. Brown, B. Cheng, W. Grady, M. Harding, K. Hollen, A. Jones, K. Krischke, B. Levine, M. Lyman, J. Morrison, K. Nelson, P. Sansom, W. Smerconish, P. Stires, H. Zadoyan, C. Jacoby. 359 A SENSE OF BETHLEHEM There is no there there. To most observers, Gertrude Stein ' s description of Oakland might well apply to Bethlehem. Beyond the environs of Lehigh, how- ever, lies a city with a rich religious and cultural heritage. Bethlehem, founded Christmas Eve, 1741 by the Moravians, still retains their influence in many respects. The reverent celebration of Christmas (and its commercial potential) gives rise to the Christmas City image. The flat gravestones in the cemetaries emphasize the idea that all men are equal in the sight of God. The industrial side of the city is obvious. The skyline is dominated by the mills and offices of Bethlehem Steel, as well as by the clouds of steam belched from the smokestacks. Though the city was incorporated from two separate towns (Bethelehem and South Bethlehem), some residents would not be easily convinced that there is unity today. The contrast of North and South Sides is remarkable. One goes from Desolation Row to the re-creation of revolutionary America. Such a contrast is the most noticeable aspect of Bethlehem. Four years at Lehigh have amply shown that a sense of Bethlehem is dif- ficult to come by, if we search for a single theme, for the only common thread of the city is its diversity. 360 361 L 362 363 - - ■J? t m g00 5r- .-? - 0 . 1 K_H __|_ s •  ,- - ___ fc - - 364 365 366 C hi9H| verii .. 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 How They Live: To take something that no one else wants; to see past the ugliness to the beauty that is there and to leave it a little better, a little more beautiful, is an ambitious philosophy of life. But Peter Beidler, professor of English, does not just pay lip service to this philosophy, he lives it. He and his family live in a 200-year-old grist mill about ten miles from campus, that he and his wife Ann purchased when they were graduate students at Lehigh in 1963. For $3,000 they acquired four stone walls and a foundation. The roof had caved in completely and the floor was covered with weeds, Beidler says. The Beidlers lived in a two-room apartment near campus while they worked on making their shambles habitable. Beidler and his wife did much of the work on the house themselves. Every place you live in must somehow be made your own. So many people never take advantage of their sur- roundings, Beidler says. His own house contains some hand-made furniture and interesting antiques. The panelled walls are draped with Indian tapestries, souvenirs from a trip to Arizona several years ago. They ' ve left the mill ' s water wheel intact and a spring still floods the basement in the gristing area. A trout occasionally manages to find its way into the basement. Beidler has carried over his unique perspective on life to his teaching career at Lehigh. Shunning routine, he has created courses which reflect his own personal interests. English 198, Self-reliance in a Technical Society, created by Beidler, is an example of his different approach to teaching. The students enrolled in the course formed a corporation, purchased a house near campus, completely remodeled it and then sold it. The physical side of the course was balanced by the required reading of five books on the topic of self-reliance. Thoreau ' s Walden was the basic text. The course was a once-in-a-lifetime chance. I like to read books and to teach. The challenge of the course was to bring together the intellectual and the physical, Beidler states. 374 THE HOUSE THAT BEIDLER BUILT Although the course was a success, I don ' t know if I ' d like to do it again because it might become routine, Beidler says. The course was offered during the 1975-76 school year. Even though his area of expertise is Chaucer, Beidler also has a deep interest in the American Indian and his literature. In 1973, he was granted a National Endowment for the Humanities Postdoctoral Fellowship to study American Indian literature, history, society and culture at the University of Arizona. He has been granted a leave of absence for the 1977-78 academic year to pursue this interest Everyplace you live must somehow be made your own. even further. He and his family hope to live on a reservation this time. We would like to live in a traditional Indian home — that ' s the best way to learn about a culture, he says. Another way to learn about a culture is through its literature. Beidler has studied In- dian literature and also taught several courses on the American Indian, including a freshman seminar. Literature is a means of getting one person close to another person without actually hav- ing physical contact. It is through literature that we learn how another person lives and loves. Beidler plans to write a novel during his leave of absence. The novel probably will be about the Americ an Indian, he says. After years of teaching and evaluating other people ' s writing, now it ' s time to reach into myself. Writing the novel is something I have to do. I ' m probably in for disappointment. But I ' ve got to do it — I ' ve got to try it. Not many things are worth doing for a lifetime, he says. For Beidler, the teacher, the carpenter, the student, life is a process of dis- covery — of finding what you ' re good at. 375 : ' ■V f, ' ! : :: ' ■' 9l. . ' • -V.V ' Si-, '  ! l; J; «i !■,■,.;■r.;.;;;i: :!,T : l: ,. nBmHn iff ' : ' — iSEa HIRSilSiSiHl MHBMmH i SM !f|s|;)!!K!:i:!!!S3! SESiS i ' il;sffifi rri-i=1 - 7 £:i - ' j 4 : ■■- rif.j , : :,:; r ; __ ._. ._.__ ________ COMMUNITY : ■: ™ , ™ W,, ™ , ' , , ™ ,ll, ,,,, ™™™ r ™™ ™™ iilMl :.-.,■' ■i ' 1 ilfiimj simi ;a:wi,i ' ™i c ™jJ|:;tSR|Spj.S!iiik!i« : SiS«!fflfift:i: ' .■::K Si. ,•.:■-;..■,:■■;;: ' .■:..: ■cijr.i-w. II fiq ■;itti i Ti,- ' : 1 J ' ' i(. : s :.LJL::;ir , ' ,N:1 - , ' ' sf R ' ;i li„. . . : ■:! S :b4l: Nil!!!:;::- 1 Jn-:: H ! :h: - ' lkL,.: Hi, j!s II : HI liisllrilllSiSIS .;;.l-«;. s-:ftap.-.!j:A ' H;. ' 8:j;3:i::r!:v ..., • ,., .-.-..--..:,.„„.,, k ' ff h ' ' i .f v ■M ' aiiffia j:;; j.;j! 5 |:i;« lisfeiSl iJiU ' ivf ii raaRJeiH- •rJl .U .r- ' ji ' liiSv ' ■- ' ;: ?:!= ' j? ! ; u ■! -i ' - . ' : ' :-. i . ' . ! -: ' ' :: [ £.r!,ifis ■fii-li-; i;n!- :; iv: ir - 4 ' ■...-:■i : l| ' ;= ' :-.; .fSKE „!fV, ; J Ji j.f aiEWfei .itiwW+MS ' H ; :■' ■-:■f:; J i ; i ?: ;l v-!-i;-: ' lH-:i; : ' -i-ii:-. : i-:r -M- ' ' ■i ii !:, ---S-i: .- f- .. ' . ' T.- ' iil.lil.finS ; ■- In] : msMmm ......■;■tliHfe,, M % .yii: ' ; ' ■' - ' ■' ■' ' i 4 i i i life i 111 ' 11 ' l ' 1 ' ' ■!, Lkw B ' ss ' ' : lilf HI 8« wii,J jii iiilliisJj |ih ia:i ; : :;i i tJitiSissilsi ; si| ' v is::i:.i r , J..«: • '  W,i ,. . ,, I ,|, : i - iV ' i?, 1 ' 1 ' ■' ■■,,: r; llilS liii -tssiiiMiFi.i ' - 1 ' ■:■:■!■■HISTORIC BETHLEHEM INC. I8 TH CENTURY INDUSTRIAL liSiiititBiVlJH ' ! 1 ; ' ' ' IjW- ! AUSTIN BROTHERS 306 Brodhead Avenue Bethlehem, Pa. Electrical Contractors 867-3051 lLOORS by BASTIAN OWEN M. BASTIAN, INC. TREXLERTOWN, PA. Phone Allentown 395-2061 BEST WISHES FOR A SUCCESSFUL CAREER Compliments of MAINTENANCE CO. 378 FREEMAN ' S DAIRY 737 North 13th Street Allentown, Pennsylvania 379 Compliments of ALLEGHENY FOOD CO. Meats, Frozen Foods, Poultry Canned Goods, Portion Controlled Suppliers to Schools, Hospitals Institutions Mount Bethel, Pa. 252-6106 ■11 t — - - — -— .-. « !PS5««=g M-« y pi irnriii - — '  — J_ ;i fel Mi ... -r-  -— i fes fev v j T. , IP i m tt ' ifffl ' ' ' • jLjyUfl S5 — PENN linen uniform service, inc. LEHIGH VALLEY INDUSTRIAL PARK P.O. BOX 2268 • ALLENTOWN. PA. 18001 380 RODALE PRESS • EMMAUS, PA. EEEEHEESi 125 North 7th Street Allentown, Pennsylvania Lehigh University Dining Services 381 Architect ' s rendering of Leliigli ' s planned $3.5 million dollar Athletic and Convocation Center: The Lehigh University board of trustees has approved plans to erect a $3.5 million, 6,000-seat Athletic and Convocation Center, announced Harold S. Mohler, president of the Lehigh trustees, and chairman of the board of Hershey Foods Corp. One of the announced goals of Lehigh ' s new Century Fund, the planned arena will be constructed on a site in Saucon Valley. The Athletic and Convocation Center (ACC) will be used for commencement exercises, concerts and theatri- cal productions, alumni reunions, major lectures and conferences, spectator sports, (particularly wrestling and basketball, and other events. The facility will also be made available for major non-Lehigh programs. Plans for the ACC call for a 95,000-square foot spec- tator area that includes a regulation basketball court and a surface that can accommodate four wrestling mats. Permanent seating will be 6,000 armed-chair seats, in- cluding 2,000 rollaway seats at floor level, with 6,500 for in-the-round stage events. Capacity for basketball games will be 4,000 and the full 6,000 for one-mat wrestling meets. Also included will be a 20,000-square foot lobby and guest passageway areas, a portable stage, some special rooms, and a storage area. Lighting will accommodate color television productions, and special areas will be made available for media representatives. Parking facilities will also be constructed adjacent to the new building. Architect ' s rendering of the interior of Lehigh ' s planned $3.5 million dollar Athletic and Convocation Center set up for commencement exercises. Architect ' s rendering of the interior of Lehigh ' s planned $3.5 million dollar Athletic and Convocation Center set up for a dual zvrestlmg meet. 382 George P. Schlicher and Son 951 Chew Street Allentown, Pa. 18105 telephone number 433-6047 CONGRATULATIONS B M PROVISION CO. Allentown ' s Leading Food Purveyor serving all the leading food services, including FMA at Lehigh 1040 N. Graham St. Allentown, Pa. PHONE 434-9611 J.J. MORELLO, INC. Roofing, Spouting, Sheet Metal Work 530 W. Broad St. BETHLEHEM, PA. 18018 383 LEHIGH UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE MAGINNES HALL 9 384 GOOD LUCK FROM THE LEHIGH ALUMNI ASSOCIATION 385 urtA at VJy n} fibt 386 Earl W. Ecker Construction Co., Inc. General Contractors 1420 Chelsea Avenue Bethlehem, Pa. 18018 PHONE 215-865-2914 Mailing Address: P.O. Box 2213 Bethlehem, Pa. 18001 Thank You For Your Patronage UNCLE MANNY ' S 701 Wyandotte Avenue Telephone Number 691-9177 PROPRIETORS: Manny Anne Marie Gonsalves GOOD LUCK IN THE FUTURE 387 INDEX 388 Alpha Chi Rho pp. 292 293 Alpha Epsilon Pi p. 169 Alpha Gamma Delta pp. 294 295 Alpha Lambda Omega p. 168 Alpha Phi pp. 296 297 Alpha Phi Omega p. 170 Alpha Sigma Phi pp. 298 299 Alpha Tau Omega pp! 300 301 American Society of Mechanical Engineers p. 172 Army ROTC p. 171 Arnold Air Society p. 170 The Art of Learning p. 164 B Band pp. 174 175 Basketball pp. 228 229 Beardslee p. 262 The Bench Sitters pp. 158 159 Beta Theta Pi pp. 302 303 Bishopthorpe p. 286 Black Student Union p. 172 Bridge Club p. 173 Brown White pp. 176 177 c Carothers p. 262 Chi Epsilon p. 173 Chi Phi pp. 304 305 Chi Psi pp. 306 307 Circle K p. 178 Community pp. 378-387 Congdon p. 265 Cross Country p. 219 D Dedication pp. 14 15 Delta Chi pp. 308 309 Delta Phi pp. 310 311 Delta Sigma Phi pp. 312 313 Delta Tau Delta pp. 314 315 Delta Upsilon pp. 316 317 Dravo Al p. 268 Dravo A2, A3 p. 269 Dravo A4, B2 p. 270 Dravo B3, B4 p. 271 Dravo B5, CB p. 272 Dravo CI, C2 p. 273 Dravo C3, C4 p. 274 Dravo Dl, D2 p. 275 Dravo D3, D4 p. 276 Drinker 1, 2A p. 277 Drinker 2B, 3A p. 278 Drinker 3B, 4 p. 279 Editors ' Page p. 391 Emery p. 265 Epitome pp. 180 181 Eta Kappa Nu p. 179 F Faculty and Administration pp. 18-42 Football pp. 216-218 Forum Steering Committee p. 179 Gamma Phi Beta pp. 318 319 Glee Club p. 184 Golf p. 234 Gryphon Society p. 182 H Hillel p. 183 The House That Beidler Built pp. 373-375 I Ice Hockey p. 223 Indoor Track p. 230 Intra-Fraternity Council p. 185 Intramurals p. 249 Introduction pp. 3-11 Investment Club p. 183 K Kappa Alpha pp. 320 321 Kappa Sigma pp. 322 323 Lacrosse p. 233 Lambda Chi Alpha pp. 324 325 Learning to Party Hearty pp. 254-259 Leavitt p. 267 Lehigh Game pp. 156 157 Lehigh Scrapbook pp. 43-57 Lehigh University Volunteers p. 188 M M M Al, A2 p. 280 M M A3, Bl p. 281 M M B2, B3 p. 282 Marketing Club p. 188 Masthead p. 390 McConn p. 266 Mrs. Bird p. 168 Mustard Cheese pp. 186 187 N News in Review pp. 160-163 P Palmer p. 263 Phi Delta Theta pp. 326 327 Phi Gamma Delta pp. 328 329 Phi Kappa Theta pp. 330 331 Phi Sigma Kappa pp. 332 333 Pi Kappa Alpha pp. 334 335 Pi Lambda Phi pp. 336 337 Pi Tau Sigma p. 189 Pre Law Society p. 189 Psi Upsilon pp. 338 339 R Radio Station p. 190 Residence Halls Council p. 191 Richards 1A, IB p. 283 Richards 2A, 2B p. 284 Richards 3A, 3B p. 285 Richards 4 p. 286 Rifle p. 231 Rugby Club p. 194 The Science of Avoidance p. 165 Scoreboard pp. 250 251 Seniors pp. 60-153 A Sense of Bethlehem pp. 360-373 Sigma Alpha Mu pp. 340 341 Sigma Chi pp. 342 343 Sigma Nu pp. 344 345 Sigma Phi pp. 346 347 Sigma Phi Epsilon pp. 348 349 Smiley p. 267 Soccer pp. 220 221 Specifications p. 390 Squash p. 231 Stage Band p. 195 Stevens p. 263 Stoughton p. 264 Student Activities Council p. 192 193 Student Metallurgy Society p. 194 Student Newman Association p. 195 Swimming p. 222 T Tau Beta Pi p. 196 Tau Epsilon Phi pp. 350 351 Tau Lambda Chi p. 196 Taylor IE, 1W p. 287 Taylor 2E, 2W p. 288 Taylor 3E, 3W p. 289 Tennis p. 235 Theta Chi pp. 352 353 Theta Delta Chi pp. 354 355 Theta Xi pp. 356 357 Thornburg p. 268 Track pp. 236 237 w Williams Women ' s Women ' s Women ' s Women ' s Women ' s Women ' s Women ' s Women ' s Women ' s Women ' s Wrestling p. 264 i Basketball p. 244 Choir p. 197 Field Hockey p. 242 Football p. 241 Lacrosse p. 246 Softball p. 248 Sport Feature pp. 238-240 Swimming p. 245 Tennis p. 247 Volleyball p. 243 pp. 224-227 £ ttM ita££? Zeta Psi pp. 358 359 389 Co-Editors: Ann Zimmerman Helen Richardson Business Manager: Robert Judson Photography Editor: Marc Hulsman Assistant Photo Editor: Barry Glickman Seniors Editor: Linda Bondemore Organizations: Beatrice Mutzberg Events Living Groups: Maryann Leonardi Sports Editors: Dennis Sprick Kathy Mitchell Administration Faculty Editor: Cheryl Winters Associate Editor: June Fasesky Scheduling Editor: William Murphy Identification Editor: Robert Hedderman Community Editor: Daria Stavisky Faculty Advisor: Prof. Sharon Friedman Financial Advisor: Prof. J.B. McFadden Photographers: Ann Zimmerman, Helen Richardson, Marc Hulsman, Barry Glickman, Susan McGovern, Teri Bloom, Rick Cariello, Paul Gordon, Debbie Fennick, Bethlehem Globe-Times (Tim Gilman), Brown and White, June Fasesky, Joseph Ryan, Merin Studios, Ann ' s Class, Robert West, Doug Garczynski, Dan Templin, Mike Temlin, Kip Marsh, O ' dy Maduka, Barry Check, Bruce Dunbar, Alex Schieffer, K. Scott Danoff, Dave Arnesen, Cheri Novak. Business Staff: Ken Matlick Jeff Jacobson Harry Reiss Larry Chatzinoff Brian Hill Robin Seiber Howard Schoenberger Dave Fuller General Staff: Hildy Shandell Peter Gordenstein Eileen Canzian Sally Velthaus Joann Woolsey Robert Claire Jim Hetherington Donna Frabotta Alan Crudo Mindy Scharf Linda Goodman THE 1977 EPITOME: a cast of thousands Who Wrote What: Bench Sitters — Jim Hetherington News in Review — Eileen Canzian How They Live — Sally Velthaus and Donna Frabotta Art of Learning — Dave Arnesen Victims to Victors, Scrapbook, Science of Avoidance and Party Hearty — Helen Richardson and Ann Zimmerman Artwork: Gene Mater (game, cartoons) Diane Rissinger (cover) Simon Tickell (sports, seniors) Susan Sachs (calligraphy, ads) Ken Lubarsky (sports) SPECIFICATIONS This book and cover were printed by offset lithography by the little Southern elves of Hunter Publishing Co., Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The paper used is 80 Warren ' s Cameo Dull Enamel. The predominant typestyle is Palatino and Palatino Italic (got it, staff?). The photographs are primarily the work of University students. Some team photos are by Ryan Studios, Bethlehem. The senior portraits and some group photos are by Merin Studios, Philadelphia. The cover artwork was created by Diane Rissinger. Sixteen months ago a small thin kid with glasses asked me if I would like to be Business Manager of the Epitome. First of all, I didn ' t even know how to pronounce the name of the yearbook correctly. Second, the thought of being Business Manager of anything was absurd. For someone who had to take Accounting three times the notion that I had to be responsible for real money was inconceivable. I mean what little I did know about the yearbook, I knew it used real money. But somehow I was able to persevere through an audit from a C.P.A. firm that I was sure would catch all my mistakes. They did catch all my mistakes but fortunately they didn ' t prosecute. Many times I walked out of that office in a daze tired of going over lists of seniors that hadn ' t paid in full. But whenever the problem reached an acute stage I could always look on my wall and reread a letter from someone named Alan Kaminsky. The gist of the letter was that I was something just to the right of a tax collector for the IRS who tried to pry money from the Lehigh student body for something called The Epitome. Alan might just have been right — but I did it better than anyone else could have — Bob Judson. 390 When I began this job 14 months ago, I knew what I was getting into, but everyone is entitled to one gross error in judgment. Throughout last summer, the WATS lines in Ann ' s and my offices got a workout, and my friends in Philadelphia (and Gladwyne) saw more of me than they bargained for. Despite our confidence that half the book would be finished by Christmas, Ann and I stumbled into May with most of the book re- maining, asking ourselves where the time went. I will always think of this book as a collec- tion of layout forms and copy sheets, but it means much more to me than that. One sel- dom has the chance to produce something which will endure, and I hope the book is worthy of such attention. It was sometimes difficult to keep things in perspective while trying to juggle my studies, two sports and the book, and I was not always successful. But there were many people in my corner all the way, and 1 thank them. My friends listened to my running commentary on the book ' s development and tolerated my dirty looks (and worse) when they asked how it was progressing. My parents encouraged me and offered all their support (financial and other- wise), and I can never thank them adequately. And to one friend who said You ' re working on that damn book? Again? Still? I promise you we ' ll get re-acquainted soon. Helen Richardson ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS It seems hard to believe that fourteen months ago I did not know a layout sheet from a scratch sheet. But one thing quickly became apparent — you are taking a gamble when you deal with either of them. As yearbook editor you are convinced you are always losing, (your sanity for instance), but you inevitably come out a winner. For the most part the rewards are intangible but valu- able, nonetheless. The returns come in the form of special friendships born out of camaraderie and collective creativity, not to mention the attainment of a certain self- knowledge. You are afforded the chance to see the best and worst of your character unfold when you immerse yourself in a total commitment — especially a commitment to quality which I hope was realized in the preceding pages. You make mistakes and you make enemies. You put your creativity and tolerance to a test and you develop new levels of patience and awareness. But above all you learn to respect the energy, dedication, and talent of all those who helped produce a yearbook. I can ' t help expressing my gratitude to those people who unknowingly made significant contributions to this book. Those people are my friends and family who were always there in full support when the going got tough and the tough got weak, sick, and frustrated. Their love was constant inspiration and I thank them. Ann Ricki Zimmerman Despite all the times we thought this was a lonely job, we had a great deal of capable help. Just how great a deal and how capable will be evident in the following paragraph. We ' ll be forever grate- ful to those mentioned below. Bob Judson kept us sane and solvent; his sense of humor was a blessing when we lost ours. Jud made us appreciate the difficulty of a business manager ' s job by doing it very well. Steve Merin, our publisher ' s rep, calmed Ann ' s nerves, caught our mistakes, and saved us from financial ruin on author ' s corrections. Hunter is lucky to have him, as were we, whenever we needed him (which was often). Marc Hulsman, our photo editor, endured the likes of Frank Hook, uncooperative groups, and the two of us to do fine work. No matter how competent the photo editor, the job some- times proves too big for one man. So we thank assistant photo editor Barry Glickman, who must not sleep; he was always there when called upon. Gene Mater ' s artwork is both beautifully exe- cuted and hilarious, a rare combination which adds greatly to the quality of our book. His moral support and suggestions were a real source of strength. Sharon Friedman, our advisor, proved that there ' s no such thing as free lunch. By divorcing herself from the day-to-day operations of the book, she saved herself headaches. We compensated, though, in edit board meetings, and we thank her for her support. Marv Merin and his able crew at Merin Studios (especially those who shot the co-editors ' senior pictures three times apiece) deserve special praise for going out of their way for us so many times. It seems unfair to lump our editors and staff into one sentence, but to thank them individually for their contributions would take much more space than we have. This book would not have been possible without them, and for that they will always be special to us. Journalism Professors McFadden and Sullivan provided professional advice, signatures for checks, and plenty of leeway with our course work. Ruth Mathis acted as switchboard, typing pool, postmistress and an 8:30 A.M. wake-up service. We hope that now that it ' s over you enjoyed it as much as we did. 391 392
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