Springfield College - Massasoit Yearbook (Springfield, MA) - Class of 1968 Page 1 of 208
Cover
Pages 6 - 7 Pages 10 - 11 Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9 Pages 12 - 13 Pages 16 - 17
Show Hide text for 1968 volume (OCR )
Text from Pages 1 - 208 of the 1968 volume: “
=S£---—ygs 1968 MASSASOIT SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE EDITED BY CARL ERIC LINCOLN CLAUDIA F. SAMMARTINO AMERICAN YEARBOOK COMPANY CAMBRIDGE. MARYLAND 1968 1968 MASSASOIT STAFF STEVEN A. G0LD8ERG ................................ BUSINESS MANGER J. ROCKWELL ALLEN ADVERTISING MANGER GARY A, BURKHART............................ PHOTOGRAPHY PETER S. SINNOTT ........................... PHOTOGRAPHY DANIEL L. COSTER PHOTOGRAPHY JONATHON BOZBECKIAN PHOTOGRAPHY JOHN P. MATTHEWS PHOTOGRAPHY MICHELE B. SINKEZ ........................... LAYOUT EDITOR JOHN E. NEWLIN............................... SPORTS EDITOR SUSAN KOLLER .......................................SECRETARY MRS. MARY LOMBARDI............................... ADVISOR CREDITS VICTOR O'NEILL STUDIOS OF NEW YORK CITY: SENIOR PORTRAITS HOFFMAN PHOTO LABS OF NEW YORK CITY: PHOTO PROCESSING SPECIFICATIONS: PAPER STOCK: MOHAWK SUPERFINE. EGGSHELL FINISH. 80 LB. TEXT WEIGHT TYPE FACE: NEWS GOTHIC 2 xite- C t- PREFACE I WHAT THE WORLD NEEDS MOST FROM ITS PEOPLE IS NOT THAT THEY BE EDUCATED. BUT THAT THEY RECOGNIZE THE FUNDAMENTAL DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PERSONS AND THINGS: THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN BEING RESPECTED AND BEING USED. UPHEAVAL AND REBELLION IN CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN SOCIETY IS NOT THE RESULT OF DEFIANCE—IT IS RATHER A SEMI CONSCIOUS. CONFUSED. PASSIONATE ATTEMPT TO ASSERT THE MEANING OF THIS DIFFERENCE-TO RE-EMPHA- SIZE THE ONCE VALUEO AMERICAN IDEALS OF HUMAN DIG- NITY AND WORTH. AMERICA WAS FOUNDED ON THESE PRINCIPLES AND THE PRINCIPLES HAVE BEEN PERIODICALLY DEFENDED WITH THE BLOODSHED AND LONELINESS OF MEN AND WOMEN. WHO. ACUTELY AWARE OF THE PR08LEMS OF THE WORLD AND THE POSSIBLE CONSEQUENCES. FEEL OBLIGATED TO LEAD THOSE WHO ARE CONFUSED BY THE CONFUSION OF OTHERS TO AN EXISTENCE. PHYSICAL AND SPIRITUAL. THAT MAKES LIFE WORTHWHILE. AND TODAY. IDEALISTS IN PROTEST AGAINST HATE. UN- FOUNDED PREJUDICE AND IGNORANCE ARE TRYING TO CHANGE THE MINDS AND HEARTS OF A PEOPLE TOO READY TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THINGS IN AMERICA AND NOT CAPABLE YET OF WORKING WITH PEOPLE TO FORM A MORE PERFECT SOCIETY. AS A LAND OF THE PEOPLE. AMERICA CANNOT BE A NATION ANYTHING OTHER THAN ITS PEOPLE AT ANY GIVEN MOMENT. AMERICA IS THE LAND OF MONEY. MORALS. AND EQUALITY OF OPPORTUNITY: AMERICA BELIEVES IN MATERI ALISM AS THE BEST MANIFESTATION OF HUMAN INITIATIVE AND SKILL-ASSERTION OF ONE S BEST PHYSICAL AND INTEL LECTUAL ABILITIES; AMERICA BELIEVES IN THE JUDAEO CHRISTIAN PRINCIPLES OF JUSTICE AND LAW. OF RIGHT AND WRONG. OF THE HIGH VALUE OF HUMAN EXISTENCE AND CHARITY; AMERICA BELIEVES IN EQUALITY OF OPPORTUNITY. OF FREEDOM TO ASSERT ONES INDIVIDUALITY-ONES ABILITY ACCORDING TO THE JUST LAWS OF THE SOCIETY. YOUNG AMERICANS TODAY ARE ENGAGED IN A STRUGGLE TO BRING THESE PRINCIPLES BACK INTO AMERICAN LIFE. TO REVEAL THE DEEPER MEANING OF THESE PRINCIPLES. HUMANITY NEEDS OPEN MINDED PEOPLE WILLING TO LIS- TEN TO ITS PROBLEMS WITH UNDERSTANDING HEARTS. PROBLEMS INVOLVING MINDS AND HEARTS CANNOT BE LEGISLATED AWAY. FOR LEGISLATURES ARE THINGS. AND THE ONLY RELATIONSHIPS WHICH CAN PRODUCE CONSTRUC TIVE CHANGE ARE THOSE BETWEEN PERSONS-CAPABLE OF JUDGING EACH OTHER RECIPROCALLY. SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE MAKES THE ATTEMPT TO BRING PEOPLE TOGETHER-TO STIMULATE SUCH RELATIONSHIPS. SOMEWHERE. WITHIN THE CLASS OF 1968 (INDEED WITHIN THE ENTIRE COLLEGE COMMUNITY). ARE PERSONS OF UNBEARABLE SENSITIVITY WHO STRIVE EACH DAY OF THEIR LIVES TO EXPRESS THE TORMENT THAT FOR THEM LIFE IS ONE BIG ACHE-BECAUSE THEY CANNOT IGNORE THE PLEADINGS OF THOSE IN NEED. OF THOSE WHO FEEL THE QUALITATIVE DIFFERENCES OF THE VARIOUS KINDS OF LOVE. OF THOSE WHO FEEL AND CANNOT UNDERSTAND OR EXPRESS THEMSELVES. SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE EXPERIENCE REFINES THE TYPE OF PEOPLE THE WORLD NEEDS. CLAUDIA F. SAMMARTINO CO EDITOR-IN CHIEF AMERICAN STUDIES 1969 PREFACE IN THOUGHT 1968 THE GROWTH OF AMERICA . . . SOMETHING IS HAPPENING HERE . . . CRISIS WITHIN A DECADE OF GROWTH . . . THIS IS THE EIGHTH YEAR IN THIS DECADE OF GROWTH. AMERICA IS MATURING. PAINFULLY. SLOWLY. AND NOT WITHOUT CRISIS. AMERICANS ARE FINDING A NEW IDEOLOGY. A NEW SELF IMAGE. AND A NEW RESPONSIBILITY. NEVER BEFORE IN THE HISTORY OF THESE UNITED STATES HAVE THE ISSUES BEEN SO CLEARLY SET BEFORE US. NEVER BEFORE HAVE THE ANSWERS BEEN SO INTANGIBLE. AND NEVER BEFORE HAVE SO FEW BEEN GIVEN SO GREAT A RESPONSIBILITY. WHO? THE AMERICAN PEOPLE. WHAT? AMERICA AS AN INFANT MATURES THERE ARE INVARIABLY GROW ING PAINS.” AND SO IT HAS BEEN. HERE. IN THE LAST EIGHT YEARS. DALLAS . . . NOVEMBER 22. 1963 . . THE ASSASSI- NATION OF THE THIRTY-FIFTH PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES-JOHN F. KENNEDY. DETROIT . . . JULY 1967 43 DEAD IN THE BLOODIEST AND MOST INSANE RIOT IN THE NATION'S HISTORY. MEMPHIS . . APRIL 4. 1968 THE ASSASSINATION OF THE REVEREND MARTIN LUTHER KING. JR.: A MAN. A WORD. A PRAYER AND A DREAM . . . THIRTY YEARS FROM THIS DATE-1968-HISTORIANS WILL VIEW THESE YEARS WITH CONCERN. THEY WILL RECORD THE WORDS AND EVENTS THAT WERE SPOKEN AND OCCURRED BETWEEN 1960-1970. THEY WILL PROBABLY SUBMIT THAT THESE YEARS, THE YEARS WHEN REASON WAS BASED ON DISSENT AND THE WAR IN VIETNAM WERE. IRONICALLY. THE YEARS OF AMERICA S GREATEST STRIDE TOWARD MATURITY. AMERICA WAS COMING OF AGE. SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE OURING THESE PAST FOUR YEARS WE HAVE ENJOYED OUR FREEDOM AT A DISTANCE FROM THE TURMOIL AND THE GROWING PAINS. OUR WORLD OF ROLLER COASTER RIDES AND SUNDAY AFTERNOONS IS. BUT. AFTER ALL. A TEMPORARY ESCAPE FROM OUR RESPONSIBILITY. SHOULD WE SPEAK WITH 5 UNDERSTANDING? SHOULD WE EDUCATE WITH UNDERSTAND ING? SHOULD WE LEAD AMERICA? WE SHOULD . . . THIS IS OUR LEGACY-WE THE MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1968-AND OUR STORY IS YET TO BE TOLD. WE MUST BE THE ONES THAT UNDERSTAND. THESE BOOKS AND THE HOURS THAT WE HAVE SPENT PREPARING FOR OUR PROFESSIONS ARE VIRTUALLY USELESS UNLESS-TODAY AND TOMORROW-WE CAN CONTINUE TO SEARCH FOR TRUTH; UNLESS WE CAN ERASE THE PREJUDICE AND DESPAIR THAT HAVE KEPT AMERICA FROM COMING OF AGE. AND UNLESS WE CAN UNDERSTAND . . WE ARE TOLD THAT WE ARE HERE BEING PREPARED TO SERVE AND TO UNDERSTAND. STRANGE BEDFELLOWS: TEACHERS. DOCTORS. AND COMMUNITY LEADERS-WE WILL JUSTIFY OUR PREPARATION. TODAY. AND TOMORROW WE MUST ALL BE EQUIPPED TO SERVE AND TO UNDERSTAND. THE MASSASOIT THE BEGINNING WAS . . A PORTRAIT OF SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE THAT IS NOT YET COMPLETE THE CLASS OF 1968 SOME OF THE INDIVIDUALS TODAY AND TOMORROW BUT. ALWAYS TOMORROW THE ENDING WILL BE . . . CARL E. LINCOLN CO EDITOR IN-CHIEF AMERICAN STUDIES 1968 TO HAVE BLIND FAITH IN THE SYSTEM CAN BE WORSE THAN HAVING NO FAITH AT ALL. PERHAPS ONE CANNOT BE CONVINCED THAT FAITH CAN HAVE LOGIC BEHIND IT; PER HAPS ONE CAN. TO BELIEVE AND TO KNOW WHY ONE BELIEVES IS A GREAT ACCOMPLISHMENT. FOR THEN ONE CAN GUIDE OTHERS TO HAVING A MORE MEANINGFUL BELIEF. IT IS DIFFICULT TO FIND SOMEONE WHO 8ELIEVES IN AMERICA. IN AMERICAN PEOPLE. IN AMERICAN STUDENTS. SOPHISTl CATION IS A BIG WORD. IT FITS FEW PEOPLE. MANY TRY TO BE SOPHISTICATED; FEW TRY TO BE THEMSELVES. MANY LIKE ONLY SOPHISTICATION; FEW ARE AFFECTED BY SINCERITY- OR THE LACK OF IT. MANY THINK THAT TO LEAD IS TO SET AN EXAMPLE-TO TRANSCEND THE COMMONPLACE-TO BE SOPHISTICATED. SOME THINK THAT TO LEAD IS TO BE SINCERE-COMMONPLACE. AWARE. SPIRIT. MIND. AND BODY-IS NOT A TRANSCENDING PHI- LOSOPHY. TO HAVE RATIONAL FAITH. TO UNDERSTAND THE COMMONPLACE. TO BE SINCERE-IS TO LEAD—IS TO GUIDE OTHERS TO A DEEPER FAITH. NOT ONLY IN THE SYSTEM. BUT IN THEMSELVES. HE WHO GUIDES THUS. IS WORTHY OF THE INTENTIONS OF THIS DEDICATION. THOMAS W. O'CONNOR HAS BEEN ASSOCIATED WITH SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE AS AN INSTRUCTOR IN POLITICAL SCI- ENCE SINCE 1966. EXPERIENCED IN BUSINESS AND POLITICS. MR. O'CONNOR RECEIVED HIS BACHELOR'S DEGREE FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE IN 1963 AND A MASTER S DEGREE IN HISTORY FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTI CUT IN 1965. CHAIRMAN OF THE HISTORY DEPARTMENT. MR. O'CONNOR IS INSTRUCTOR OF COURSES IN AMERICAN GOVERNMENT. FOREIGN AFFAIRS. RUSSIAN HISTORY. AND POLITICAL SCIENCE SEMINAR. THOMAS O'CONNOR HAS ESTABLISHED A SENSITIVE PER SONAL RAPPORT WITH HIS STUDENTS. THOSE WHO HAVE BEEN ASSOCIATED WITH HIM. AS A STUDENT OR AS A PER SONAL ACQUAINTANCE. ARE FORTUNATE. THEY KNOW AN IN- STRUCTOR WHO WOULD RATHER CONVERSE WITH A STUDENT FOR TWO HOURS IN THE DUGOUT THAN LECTURE BEFORE A CLASS OF TWO HUNDRED OR WITHDRAW BEHIND THE COMFORT AND SECURITY OF A CLOSED OFFICE DOOR. THEY KNOW A MAN THAT IS READILY AWARE OF THE PROBLEMS OF BEING. AT ONCE. A STUDENT AND A YOUNG ADULT. THOMAS O’CONNOR IS PERSONALLY INVOLVED WITH THE STUDENTS OF SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE. IN AN AGE OF MASS EDUCATION, COMPUTERIZED LEARNING AND PSEUDO SOPHISTICATION. HE HAS MAINTAINED THAT QUALITY WHICH YOUNG ADULTS RESPECT MOST. THOMAS W. O'CON- NOR BELIEVES IN HIS STUDENTS. FOR THIS WE PROUDLY DEDICATE THE 1968 MASSASOIT TO HIM. 6 7 WILBERT E. LOCKIIN PRESIDENT B.S.. LL.D ADMINISTRATION PAUL U. CONGDON ACADEMIC DEAN B.S.. M.A.. ED.D. REUBEN B. FROST DIRECTOR OF THE DIVISION OF HEALTH. PHYSICAL EDUCATION. AND RECREATION A.B.. M.A., PH D. HENRY J. PAAR DIRECTOR OF THE DIVISION OF ARTS AND SCIENCES B.S.. M.A.. PH.D. ROBERT E. MARKARIAN DIRECTOR OF THE DIVISION OF TEACHER EDUCATION A.B.. ED.M.. PH D. ATTALLAH A. KIDESS DIRECTOR OF INTERNATIONAL CENTER. ADVISOR TO FOREIGN STUDENTS B.A.. M.P.E.. D.P.E. CALVIN J. MARTIN ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT B.S., M ED ROBERT D. ANDREWS. B.A. ASSISTANT ADMINISTRATOR FOR Y.M.C.A. PROGRAMS B.A. RACHEL ASTLE LIBRARIAN ASSISTANT IN CHARGE OF READERS SERVICES B.S., M.L.S. DOUGLAS W. BARRUS ASSISTANT COMPTROLLER B.S. DORIS M. BORRNER LIBRARIAN B.A.. B.S. TRENOR A. BRYANT DIRECTOR OF COUNSELING CENTER B.S.. M.S. JOHN J. COSTELLO DEAN OF STUDENTS B.S.. M S.. PH.D. GIFFORD R. HART. JR. DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC RELATIONS A.B. HUBERT F. HILL DIRECTOR OF STUDENT ACTIVITIES B.S. HAROLD G. LYNCH ALUMNI SECRETARY B.S.. M.S. ROBERT R. PARSONAGE COLLEGE CHAPLAIN B.A.. B.D. THEODORE L RICH COLLEGE CHAPLAIN B.S.. M.S. ROGER M. ROPER REGISTRAR B.A.. M.S. EDWARD F. SANDOW. JR. ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTOR FOR Y.M.C.A. PROGRAMS B.S.. M.B.A. EMERY W. SEYMOUR DIRECTOR OF THE DIVISION OF GRADUATE STUDIES AND COORDINATOR OF RESEARCH A.8.. M.ED.. D.P.E. 10 FRANK W. SMALE COMPTROLLER AND ASSISTANT TREASURER B.S.. C.P.A. EDWARD S. STEIT2 DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS B.S., M.ED.. D.P.E. SCOTT H. WILLSON DIRECTOR OF DEVELOPMENT B.S. HERBERT ZENATY DIRECTOR OF THE ALUMNI FUND 8.S. JAMES E. GENASCI ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF GRADUATE STUDIES B.S.. M.A.. ED.D. THOMAS L. JOHNSON ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF DEVELOPMENT B.S.. M S. JAMES M. KEMP ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION PROGRAMS B.A.. M.A. JOHN E. MACK DIRECTOR OF FINANCIAL AID 8.S.. M.ED. JOHN L. NEWMANN ASSISTANT TO THE DIRECTOR OF HEALTH. PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND RECREATION 8.S.. M.ED. JAMES F. PLATLER ASSISTANT REGISTRAR 8.A. DOUGLAS M. SCHUMANN ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS B.S.. M.ED. ROBERT SILLEN ASSISTANT LIBRARIAN IN CHARGE OF TECHNICAL SERVICES B.S. ALAN D. WALKER ASSISTANT TO THE DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS B.S.. M.S. JOHN J. WILSON DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATE FOR FEDERAL PROGRAMS B.S. CAROL BRALEY R.N. MARY BROWN HOUSING MANAGER GREG CONTOS DIRECTOR OF FOOD SERVICES LLOYD FASSETT OIRECTOR OF THE DATA PROCESSING CENTER JON A. FOLEY DIRECTOR OF SPORTS INFORMATION FAYE W. FLYNN MANAGER OF THE COLLEGE 800KST0RE SUSAN GOULDING ASSISTANT TO THE DIRECTOR OF CONTINUING EDUCATION A.B. M. KELLY LOMBARDI PUBLICATIONS EDITOR SUSAN MACAULEY R.N. JOHN L. MOODIE. JR. ASSISTANT PLANT MANAGER JOHN J. NORMAND SUPERINTENDENT OF BUILDINGS GEORGE ROMANO PURCHASING AGENT II FACULTY ARCHIE P. ALLEN PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. M.ED. DOROTHY D. ANDERSON ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. M.S. SETH ARSENIAN DISTINGUISHED SPRINGFIELD PROFESSOR OF HUMANICS B.A.. M.A.. PH.D. MIKLOS T. ATS ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF GERMAN AND HISTORY M.A.. PH.D. DENZIL BAGSTERCOLLINS PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH A. B.. A.M. RICHARD 8ARTSCH INSTRUCTOR IN PHYSICAL EDUCATION B. S.. M.S. EDWARD R. BILIK ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S., M.S. L. WILLIAM BLIZARD ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ARTS AND EDUCATION B.S.. M.A. JOHN W. BRAINERD PROFESSOR OF BIOLOGY AND CONSERVATION A. B.. M.A.. PH.D. GEORGENE A. BRAMLAGE INSTRUCTOR IN BIOLOGY B. A.. M.S. NANCY L. BRAUND INSTRUCTOR IN HISTORY B.A.. M.A. DONALD F. BRIDGEMAN PROFESSOR OF RECREATION B.S.. M.ED.. D.P.E. CARROL P. 8RITCH INSTRUCTOR IN DRAMA AND ENGLISH A. B., A.M. STANLEY P. BROWN ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF MATHEMATICS AND EDUCATION B. S.. M.S.T.. M.A. ERROL L. BUKER ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICS B.S.. M ED. JONE BUSH INSTRUCTOR IN PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. M.S. 12 DAVID R. CARLSON INSTRUCTOR IN ENGLISH 8.A.. M.A. FRANCIS R. CARPENTER ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF HISTORY B.A.. M.A. CARLOS CARANZA INSTRUCTOR IN GEOLOGY AND NATURAL RESOURCES B.S.. M.S. JOSEPHINE CECCO ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF EDUCATION AND ENGLISH B.S.. M.A.. ED.D. HAROLD M. CHILDS PROFESSOR OF HEALTH EDUCATION B.S., M.S.. ED.D. ROBERT A. COBB INSTRUCTOR IN PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. M.S. CECELIA R. COOPER ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PSYCHOLOGY AND DIRECTOR OF THE REHABILITATION COUNSELOR TRAINING PROGRAM B.A.. M.A.. PH.D. JOHN C. COX MARK A. EHMAN PETER GURAU ASSISTANT PROFESSOR ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PSYCHOLOGY ANO RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION DIRECTOR OF THE COUNSELING CENTER A.B.. S.T.M. BA. M.A. B.S. M.ED. JANICE ELDRIDGE HAROLD C. HARLOW INSTRUCTOR IN CHEMISTRY PROFESSOR OF COMMUNITY VERNON W. COX 8.S.. M S. LEADERSHIP AND DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR AND COORDINATOR OF URBAN OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION LORA EWING STUDIES B.S.. M.ED. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH B.A.. M.S., ED.D. EVELYN M. CUSTER B.S.. M.S.. M.A JACKE C. HARRIS ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF EDUCATION PETER S. FERNALD INTERGROUP RELATIONS. B.S.. M.A, ASSISTANT PROFESSOR DIRECTOR OF COMMUNITY OF PSYCHOLOGY LEADERSHIP AND DEVELOPMENT LEON DOLEVA ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF A.B.. M.S.. PH D. A.B.. S.T.B.. S.T.M. EDUCATION AND DIRECTOR OF CLAIRE FITZPATRICK GERARD A. HARRISON AUDIO VISUAL AIDS INSTRUCTOR IN ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF B.S.. M.ED. PSYCHOLOGY RECREATION MARTIN L. DOSICK A.8.. B.S.. M ED. B.S.. M.S. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF DORIS M. FLETCHER THOMAS W. HAY SOCIOLOGY PROFESSOR OF LIBRARY ASSISTANT PROFESSOR A.B.. M.A,. PH D. SCIENCES AND LIBRARIAN OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION WAYNE S. DOSS A.B.. B.S. B.S.. M.S. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF GORDON E. GILLETTE ROBERT B. HESSELBARTH PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND ASSISTANT PROFESSOR ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF COORDINATOR OF STUDENT OF SOCIOLOGY ENGLISH TEACHING A.B.. M.ED.. D.P.E. B.A., M.S. B.S.. M.S.. D. UTT. SARA F. GOODMAN MIRIAM HIRSCH EUGENIE DOZIER INSTRUCTOR IN ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF PSYCHOLOGY COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.A.. M.ED. AND COORDINATOR OF THE B.A.. M.EO. COMMUNITY TENSIONS CENTER 13 B.A.. M.S. WILLIAM G. HORTON INSTRUCTOR IN RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY B.S., B.D. F. EDGAR HUBBARD PROFESSOR OF PHYSICS AND MATHEMATICS AND OF EDUCATION A. B.. M S. JEAN G. JACOBS. PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND DIRECTOR OF THE DEPARTMENT OF WOMEN S PHYSICAL EDUCATION B. S.. M.A.. ED.D. EDGAR N. JOHNSON ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF CHEMISTRY B.S.. M.S.. M.S. PETER B. KARPOVICH RESEARCH PROFESSOR OF PHYSIOLOGY M.D.. M.P.E. ALLEN R. KAYNOR PROFESSOR OF PSYCHOLOGY B.A.. M ED.. ED.D. CLIFFORO E KEENEY PROFESSOR OF BIOLOGY B.S.. M.ED.. PH.D. BRUCE L. LUND VISITING LECTURER IN BOTANY B.S. KARL J. LARSON ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF EDUCATION AND DIRECTOR OF CONTINUING EDUCATION B.S.. M.ED. JOHN A. LARSON ADJUNCT PROFESSOR OF PSYCHOLOGY B.S.. M.A. DAVID G. LORD INSTRUCTOR IN ANTHROPOLOGY B.A.. M.A. BRITTON C. MCCABE PROFESSOR OF BIOLOGY 8.S.. SC.M.. PH.D. JAMES B. MCGUIRE PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH B.A.. PH D. VICTOR H. MANCINI INSTRUCTOR IN PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. M.S. RICHARD D. MCCLURE ADJUNCT PROFESSOR OF COMMUNITY LEADERSHIP AND PSYCHOLOGY B.A.. 8.D.. M.A.. PH.D. MERLE K. MILLER ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF PSYCHOLOGY B.A.. M.A.. PH.D. MILDRED MURRAY ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PHYCICAL EDUCATION B.S.. M.S. PAULA NOWICK VISITING LECTURER IN ENGLISH B.A. JOHN L. NEUMANN ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF EDUCATION B.S.. M.ED. JOHN J. O'CONNOR ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF EDUCATION PHB.. B.A.. M.ED. THOMAS W. O'CONNOR INSTRUCTOR IN POLITICAL SCIENCE B.A.. M.A. W. MASON OLDS INSTRUCTOR IN RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY A. 8.. B.D. VALERIE OLMSTEAD VISITING LECTURER IN FRENCH AND ENGLISH 8.A. DOUGLAS E. PARKER. JR. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B. S.. M.S. 14 JESSE L. PARKS ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.A.. M.A.. PH.D. MANUEL PETISCO ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ROMANCE LANGUAGES B.S.. M.ED. DIANE L. POTTER ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. M S. MARSHALL RACHLEFF ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF HISTORY B.A.. M.A. ROBERT B. RESNICK ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH B.A,. M.A.. PH.D. GENE E. RICH ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF HISTORY 8.ED.. M.A., D.S.S. JEAN F. ROSS ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF BIOLOGY A.8.. M.S. WOODROW W. SAYRE ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF PHILOSOPHY A.B.. M.A.. PH.D. IRVIN R. SCHMID ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. M.ED. ANTHONY SCOLNICK INSTRUCTOR IN PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.A.. M.S. EMERY W. SEYMOUR PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION: DIRECTOR OF DIVISION OF GRADUATE STUDIES: COORDINATOR OF RESEARCH A. B.. M ED.. D.P.E. SHERROD W. SHAW ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B. S.. M.S. CLAYTON r. SHAY PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. D.P.E.. M.S. ATARA SHERMAN ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. M.ED.. PH.D. CHARLES E. SILVIA PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. M.P.E. EDWARD J. SIMS ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH B.S.. M.A.. ED.D. WAYNE E. SINNING ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. M.S.. PH.D. CHARLES SMITH ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S., M.S. HARRY M. SMITH ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF BIOLOGY B.S.. PH.D. RAYMOND E. SNOWSELL ADJUNCT PROFESSOR OF HUMANICS WALTER G. STEWART PROFESSOR OF CHEMISTRY 8 A.. M.A.. PH.D. R BRIAN STRUNK INSTRUCTOR IN PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. THOMAS M. THOMAS ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF EDUCATION B SC.. B ED.. M.ED.. M.A. MARGARET A. THORSEN PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.A.. M.S.. PH.D. ELIZABETH M. TOSCANO INSTRUCTOR IN PSYCHOLOGY 8.S.. M.ED. 15 MARTHA VAN ALLEN ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. M ED.. D.P.E. HOLMES N. VANDERBECK PROFESSOR OF RELIGION B.S.. M.S.. B.D. GILBERT T. VICKERS ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF MUSIC EDUCATION AND DIRECTOR OF MUSIC PH.B.. M.MUS. ALAN D. WALKER ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. M.S. JAMES E. WALSH INSTRUCTOR IN PHYSICAL SCIENCE B.S.. M.ED. CHARLES F. WECKWERTH PROFESSOR OF RECREATION B.S.. M.ED.. A M.. ED.D. ROBERT WEHNER ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF POLITICAL SCIENCE B.A.. M.A. FRANK A. WOLCOTT ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.S.. M.S. 16 FALL THE CLOSE FINISH OF THE RACE BETWEEN COACH CHARLES A. SILVIA AND ART LINKLETTER COMPLETED THE EXCITE- MENT OF THE DEDICATION OF THE ART LINKLETTER NATA- TORIUM. THE OLYMPIC SIZED POOL WHICH OFFICIALLY RE PLACED MCCURDY NATATORIUM (BUILT IN 1912). OCTOBER 21. 1967. FINANCED PARTIALLY BY $100.000 RAISED DURING WORK WEEK OF SPRING TERM 1965 AND A DONATION OF $150.000 BY ART LINKLETTER. THE POOL IS 55 METERS LONG. 44 FEET WIDE. WITH SIX SEVEN-FOOT LANES. HOLDING APPROXIMATELY 450.000 GALLONS OF WATER. THE POOL HAS A MAXIMUM DEPTH OF TWELVE FEET SIX INCHES AND A MINIMUM DEPTH OF FOUR FEET. SPECIAL FEATURES INCLUDE TWO OBSERVATION WINDOWS. A SPECIAL SOUND SYSTEM. TWO ONE METER BOARDS. TWO THREE-METER BOARDS. AND A MOVABLE BULKHEAD. COACH RED SILVIA BELIEVES THAT THE NATATORIUM WAS BUILT WITH SOMETHING MORE THAN A GREAT DEAL OF MONEY. CERTAINLY THE DREAM COULD NEVER HAVE BEEN REALIZED WITHOUTTHECONTRIBUTIONSOF DR. LINKLETTER. BUSINESSES AND INDUSTRIES. GOVERNMENT AID. AND WORK WEEK; BUT HARD WORK AND FAITH. THAT SPECIAL SOMETHING GENERATED BY SPRINGFIELD'S DEDICATION TO HELPING DEVELOP HUMAN POTENTIAL FOR THE GOOD OF THE INDIVIDUAL AND COMMUNITY. MADE PEOPLE RESPOND AS THEY DID TO THIS CAUSE. A LITTLE GIRL FROM HOLYOKE RESPONDED TO THE CAUSE BY FIRST GIVING A DOLLAR AND THEN FULFILLING PLEDGES BY CONTRIBUTING MONEY EARNED. ALL BECAUSE IT WAS A SPRINGFIELD BOY WHO TAUGHT ME HOW TO SWIM. AND BESIDES GIVING SWIMMING LESSONS. SPRINGFIELD 22 80YS WERE ACTIVE IN EXPRESSING THEIR OPINIONS CON CERNING NATIONAL ISSUES. A SIGN READING MAKE LOVE. NOT WAR. APPEARED WITH STEVE MAXNER EARLY ONE MORNING AS THE EDITOR OF THE UNDERGROUND NEWS PAPER. THE OM. DEMONSTRATED AGAINST THE WAR IN VIET NAM WHEN A UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS DISPLAY PROMPTING MEN TO JOIN THE MARINE CORPS OFFICER CANDIDATE SCHOOL WAS SET UP IN THE DUGOUT. SHORTLY AFTER MAXNER'S ARRIVAL. JOE SIDOTI PROTESTED MAX NER BY SITTING BESIDE HIM WITH A SIGN THAT READ THIS GUY IS A FOOL. AND HAD AN ARROW WHICH POINTED IN THE GENERAL DIRECTION OF MAXNER. THE DEMONSTRA TION ENDED WHEN MAXNER LEFT THE DUGOUT WITH HIS SIGN TAPED TO THE MARINE CORPS DISPLAY. THE SIGN WAS DESTROYED BY STUDENTS A SHORT TIME AFTER HIS DEPARTURE. AND STILL OTHER SIGNS APPEARED ON CAMPUS. BUT NOT IN PROTEST TO ANYTHING. THE FIRST WAS VIA A NOTE PAD ATTACHED TO A STRING. A SCRIBBLED HI WAS HOISTED UP BY THE GUYS ON THIRD FLOOR MASSASOIT. A CUPCAKE WAS LOWERED DOWN TO BREAK THE ICE AND A HERSHEY BAR WAS RETURNED FROM THE GIRLS FLOOR. SPRINGFIELD’S FIRST CO ED DORMITORY WAS IN OPERATION. DURING THE YEAR. THE DORM SPONSORED MANY CO-ED ACTIVITIES. IN- CLUDING BARBEQUES AND SEASONAL PARTIES. PERHAPS THE SITUATION WAS SOMETHING NEW FOR THE GUYS. BUT IT DIDN’T TAKE LONG BEFORE THEY BEGAN APPRECIATING EVEN THE COSTUME PARTIES. THE GIRLS. EVER UNITED (AS WHEN THEY DRESSEO FOR HALLOWEEN AS A GIANT CATER PILLAR). MANAGED TO OBTAIN ANOTHER FLOOR IN MAS SASOIT FOR THE FOLLOWING YEAR . . . 23 VARSITY FOOTBALL RESULTS SPRINGFIELD OPPONENT 62 COAST GUARD 0 13 AMHERST 3 20 ALBRIGHT 10 41 COLBY 7 0 NORTHEASTERN 19 0 A.I.C. 35 7 WAGNER 23 35 TUFTS WON 5. LOST 4 19 FOOTBALL THE CHIEFS IN 1967 HAD A WINNING SEASON. THEY WON A CONTEST BY THE UNBELIEVEABLE SCORE OF 62-0. THE WEEK AFTER THAT. THEY WHIPPED AMHERST COLLEGE FOR THE THIRD CONSECUTIVE YEAR. AND PROMPTLY FOLLOWED WITH TWO MORE VICTORIES. ONE OF THESE COMING IN SPITE OF THE FACT THAT ALBRIGHT. ONE OF THE TWO ADDITIONAL VICTIMS. RECOVERED THE OPENING KICKOFF FOR A TOUCHDOWN. AFTER THAT. THE COMBINED ADVERSITY OF STRONG OP- POSITION. CRIPPLING INJURY. AND AN UNSTABLE OFFENSE ALL CROPPED UP AND THE CHIEFS LOST FOUR STRAIGHT. OF THESE DEFEATS. POSSIBLY THE HARDEST TO ACCEPT WAS A 35-0 POMMELING BY A.I.C. SUDDENLY. THE TEAM WHICH HAD ALWAYS BEEN MARKED 8Y ITS GREAT DEPTH WAS OVER ITS HEAD IN INJURIES. COACH TED DUNN. NEVERONE TOMAKE EXCUSES FOR THE BREAKS OF THE GAME. WAS FORCED TO GO WITH A COMPARATIVELY LIGHTWEIGHT DEFENSIVE UNIT AND TO RELY UPON A GROUND GAME WHICH GENERALLY VMS A CRISP ONE. BUT WHICH WORE OUT TOWARD THE SECOND HALF OF THE SEASON. AND IN THE LATE STAGES OF THOSE FOUR LOSSES BUT DISMAL AS IT SOUNDS. THERE IS PRIDE TO BE TAKEN IN THE 1967 SEASON. THE TEAM DID NOT THROW IN THE SPONGE. BUT FOUGHT BACK TO NAIL TUFTS. 35-19 IN THE SEASON FINALE. AND MAKE IT THREE WINNERS IN SUCCES SION. INDEED A PROUD ACHIEVEMENT FOR THE SENIORS ON THE SQUAD WHO AS SOPHOMORES PLAYED A BIG ROLE IN THE 9-0 SEASON OF 1965. PAUL TIERNEY AND BOB TOUSIGNANT LED THE BRIGADE OF SENIOR PERFORMERS AS OFFENSIVE AND DEFENSIVE CO CAPTAINS RESPECTIVELY. THE OFFENSIVE LINE WAS HEADED UP BY SECOND TEAM LITTLE ALL-AMERICA CENTER. DICK DOBBERT. AT THE GUARDS WERE DICK WIEDL AND DON DELLO STRITTO. WHILE JOHN ECKERT AND JON FERRIS WERE IN POSSESSION OF THE STARTING TACKLE POSITIONS. AT THE END SLOTS WERE DON GREGORY. AL CAMPBELL. JAN FAULK NER. AND JEFF CRAW. AT QUARTERBACK. AL PROIETTE AND DOM GISOTTI SAW MOST OF THE ACTION WITH PHIL SIENNA AND AL CECE HAVING CRACKS AT THE POSITION LEFT VA CANT WHEN JOHN GRESKA BROKE HIS LEG IN EARLY AUTUMN PRACTICE. DOING MOST OF THE BALL CARRYING WAS POWER FUL SOPHOMORE DAVE BUDDINGTON WHO TOTED THE BALL 167 TIMES FOR 693 NET YARDS. BUDDINGTON ALSO LED THE TEAM IN SCORING WITH 36 POINTS. TED ALFLEN (236 YARDS). BOB SCHMONSEES (208 YARDS). AND PAUL TIERNEY (102 YARDS) WERE THE OTHER CONSISTENT BACK FI ELD PERFORM ERS. ADDING OFFENSIVE PUNCH WAS MIKE ROHLFS WHO SET UP SEVERAL SCORES AND TALLIED ONCE BY RETURNING PUNTS FOR 302 YARDS. THE DEFENSE HELO THE CHIEFS TOGETHER FOR MOST OF THE SEASON UNTIL. RACKED BY INJURIES. THE DEPTH BE CAME EXHAUSTED. TOUGH MEN UP FRONT WERE DICK FRIEDMAN. JOE KANE. STEVE PARKER. BOB STEINER. AND DAVE HAWKINS. THOUGH NOT BIG. BY COMPARISON. THESE FIVE WERE NEVER PUSHED AROUND BY ANYONE. AT THE LINEBACKING SLOTS WERE JIM GILLIS AND JIM KRISKOWSKI. BOTH EXTREMELY HARD TACKLERS AND FAST REACTING PLAYERS. IN THE BACKFIELD WERE TOM LE BLANC. AL CECE. CO CAPTAIN BOB TOUSIGNANT. AND ART HALL. ALL OF WHOM WERE HURT AT ONE TIME OR OTHER DURING THE SEASON. IT WAS A SEASON OF ALMOSTS. IFS. AND BUTS. 8UT THE FACT REMAINS THAT THE TEAM NEVER GAVE UP. AND THERE IS SOLACE TO BE FOUND IN 1968. WHEN CHANCES ARE. THE CHIEFS WILL PULL IT ALL TOGETHER FOR ANOTHER RUN AT THOSE TANGERINES. VARSITY FOOTBALL: FIRST ROW: FRED GRESSLER. HARRY HOVER. FRANK POLLOCK. HAROLD DROWNE. WILLIAM THAYER. WILLIAM GUZZE. ROY THOMPSON. STEVE SARNOFF. CHAS REDMOND. MIKE ROHLFS. BOB SWtt EL. AL PROIETTE. JON FERRIS. JIM FEUO. WILLIAM FEID, TOM RYAN. K KNOGHT. KOND ROW: GREG MAZUR. PETE GIGONE JOHN ECKERT JOE SIDOTI. TEO ALFLEN. DON GREGORY. JIM GILLIS. ART HALL. AL CAMPBELL. PAUL TIERNEY. 808 TOUSIGNANT. TONY MZZUTI. STEVE PARKER. DAVE BESSITTTE CHAS. SAWYER. 808 FLAHERTY. LEN WALENCIKOWSKI. BILL DAVIS. DAVE SAGE. NICK PANNES. THIRD ROW: LARRY MARTIN. COACH C08B. COACH OUNN. V. RAMSEUR. JIM KRISKOWSKI. BOB SCHMONSEES. JEFF CRAW. DOUG RUBIN. JON ROSE. DICK DOBBERT. GREG VENNELL. BOB STEINER. HANK BETCHER. JOE KANL MEL KALMAN JIM GIORDANO JOHN GRESKA. CARL TORRICE. COACH MANCINI. GARY WILCOX. JACK CHANRNEY. FOURTH ROW: PAUL BRYNTESON. DOM GISOTTI. JOHN HEGEN BART RAY ZlPKO. NICK K TALIS STEVE SPENCER. KEN RAVIZZA. JAN FAULKNER. BARNES. MORROS. DON DELLO STRITTO. BILL EARLE. LIBBY. TY SULLIVAN. DAVE HAWKINS. WALLY DAVIS. TONY AFFILITO. DAVE BUDDINGTON. KEN BLOECH. JOHN HUGHES. TOM LE BLANC. AL CECE. 25 30 THE 1967 EDITION OF SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE S VARSITY SOCCER TEAM WAS EXPECTED TO BE A PUSH OVER. YET. SURPRISED EVERYONE BY HAVING A VERY SUCCESSFUL EIGHT AND FOUR SEASON. THE SCHMIDMEN. WHO PLAY ONE OF THE TOUGHEST SCHEDULES IN NEW ENGLAND. MADE BELIEVERS OF EVERYONE AND WERE THE TALK IN NEW ENGLAND SOCCER CIRCLES AS THEY WON THEIR FIRST SIX GAMES CONVINC- INGLY. FOUR OF THEM SHUT OUTS. THE SECOND HALF OF THE SEASON WAS A DIFFERENT STORY AS THE BOOTERS. UNDER THE ABLE CAPTAINSHIP OF JIM GAYNOR. LOST A TWO TO ONE OVERTIME GAME TO IVY LEAGUE POWERHOUSE YALE. THIS WAS THE BREAKING POINT OF THE SEASON AS COACH SCHMID’S YOUNG TEAM SAW DEFEAT FOR THE FIRST TIME. THE BOOTERS REDEEMED THEMSELVES BEFORE A HUGE FALL PARENT’S WEEKEND CROWD BY SMASH ING A GAME MIT TEAM. 4-0. THEN CAME THE SECOND HEART BREAK IN THE ’’GAME OF THE YEAR AS PERENNIAL SOCCER POWER BROWN UNIVERSITY CAME TO SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE WITH AN UNDEFEATED RECORD. ALTHOUGH THE CHIEFS LOST 3-0. THEY SHOWED ANOTHER HUGE CROWD THAT THEY HAD ONE OF THE FINEST SOCCER TEAMS ON THE EAST COAST BY OUTHUSTLING AND OUTPLAYING BROWN THROUGH OUT MUCH OF THE GAME. AS THE SEASON CAME TO A CLOSE. THE BOOTERS LOST TWO AND THEN DEFEATED YANKEE CONFERENCE CHAMPION. CONNECTICUT. VARSITY SOCCER RESULTS SPRINGFIELD OPPONENT 4 BOWDOIN 0 5 DARTMOUTH 2 5 HOLY CROSS 0 2 MIDDLEBURY 0 3 COLBY 0 4 WESLEYAN 1 1 YALE 2 4 M.l.T. 0 0 BROWN 3 1 WILLIAMS 3 2 BRIDGEPORT 3 2 CONNECTICUT WON 8. LOST 4 •OVERTIME 1 I SOCCER THE CHIEFS ARE A YOUNG TEAM. THEY ARE LOSING ONLY TWO STARTERS. PLAYING AS SENIORS ON THE STARTING ELEVEN WERE DOUG BESSONE AND CAPTAIN JIM GAYNOR. DOUG IS ONE OF NEW ENGLAND'S FINEST HALF BACKS: HIS SURE FOOT AND SOCCER SENSE WILL BE MISSED. JIM. WHO PLAYED HIS HEART OUT IN EVERY GAME. WAS THE EPITOME OF DEDICATION AND ANOTHER MAJOR REASON WHY THE BOOTERS WERE SO SUCCESSFUL. BOTH THESE PLAYERS WERE HONORED FOR THEIR OUTSTANDING PLAY BY BEING SELECTED TO THE ALL NEW ENGLAND HONORABLE MENTION UNIT. THE SURPRISE PLAYER OF THE SEASON WAS CHARLIE ZIEN WHO LED THE TEAM IN GOALS SCORED WITH ELEVEN. ANOTHER SENIOR AND OFTEN A STARTER WAS CHARLIE DANNENBERG WHO HAD THREE GOALS AND PLAYED A CONSISTENT GAME. FULLBACKS JEFF MUNSELL AND PAGE COTTON. BOTH RETURNING. WERE TWO REASONS WHY THE CHIEFS HAD ONLY 15 GOALS SCORED AGAINST THEM. THEY ACCUMULATED THIRTY FIVE GOALS OF THEIR OWN. THE GOALTENDING OF ART FIDALGO AND TONY DlClCCO. ALLOWED THE OPPONENTS AN AVERAGE OF 1.25 GOALS A GAME AND GAVE THE FANS A LOT TO CHEER ABOUT AS THEY MADE MANY BRILLIANT SAVES THROUGHOUT THE SEASON. THE SPEED OF JUHAN LAURITS (FOUR GOALS) AND PAUL LE SUEUR (FIVE GOALS) SPEARHEADED THE BOOTERS OFFENSIVE ATTACK AND OFTEN GAVE THE OPPOSING DEFENDERS HEAD ACHES AS THEY DEMONSTRATED OUTSTANDING BALL CON TROL. BILLY MUSE SERVED AS QUARTERBACK FOR THE CHIEFS FROM HISCENTER POSITION. AND LED THE TEAM ALONG WITH LE SUEUR. IN ASSISTS. SOPHOMORE JIM QUIGLEY. A HALF- BACK. WAS ANOTHER BIG PLUS IN THE CHIEFS ATTACK. JIM'S OUTSTANDING PLAY EARNED HIM NUMEROUS HONORS THROUGHOUT THE SEASON WHICH CULMINATED IN HISSELEC TION AS AN ALL AMERICAN. A REAL TRIBUTE TO HIS SOCCER ABILITY. OTHER BOOTERS MAKING CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE SCHMIDMENS' SEASON WERE TOM HERGET. BEORGE DIXON. DAVE DONALDSON. WILLIE KAMANYI. ALDEN SHATTUCK. AND BOB MCCULLOUGH. COACH SCHMID. WHO RECEIVED THE HIGHEST AWARD A COACH CAN ATTAIN; THE HONOR AWARD OF THE NATIONAL COACHES ASSOCIATION—HAS A VERY FINE TEAM TO REMEM- BER IN HIS 1967 VARSITY SOCCER SQUAD. VERN COX LOOKED TO THE 1967 SEASON AS THE CULMI- NATION OF THREE GREAT YEARS OF DEVELOPMENT FOR HIS CROSS COUNTRY TEAM, AND WITH A FEW EXCEPTIONS, HIS VISION CAME CLEARLY INTO FOCUS. FOR ONE THING. THE TEAM RIPPEO OFF ITS SECOND CON- SECUTIVE UNDEFEATED YEAR. GENERALLY OVERPOWERING EVERYONE IN SIGHT. FOR ANOTHER. THE CLUB SWEPT TO A FIRST PLACE IN THE ALBANY INVITATIONAL MEET. TAKING THE FIRST FIVE PLACES. AND FOR A THIRD. COX’S HARRIERS CRUSHED EVERYONE AT THE IC4-A CHAMPIONSHIPS IN NEW YORK. THE TEAM WAS BUILT AROUND A NUCLEUS OF CONSISTENT PERFORMERS. LACKING. IF ANYTHING. ONLY THAT ONE OUT- STANDING INDIVIDUAL TO DOMINATE THE RACE FROM START TO FINISH AND TO LEAD THE TEAM TO GREATER FEATS OF ACCOMPLISHMENT. TO HAVE AN UNDEFEATED SEASON AND YET TO ASK FOR MORE IS OUT OF THE QUESTION. BUT SUCH A DEFICIENCY MAY IN PART BE EXPLANATION FOR THE TEAM S 24TH PLACE FINISH AT THE COLLEGE DIVISION NATIONALS AT WHEATON. AND A SOMEWHAT DISAPPOINTING 4TH PLACE CLOSE AT THE NEW ENGLAND CHAMPIONSHIPS. ALTHOUGH IN BOTH INSTANCES. THE COMPETITION WAS OVERPOWERING. IN THE DUAL MEETS. THAT BALANCE PAID GREAT DIVIDENDS. SPRINGFIELD SWEPT PAST RPI. TAKING THE FIRST SEVEN PLACES. ROUTED RHODE ISLAND BY HAVING SIX OF THE TOP SEVEN. PLACED THIRD THROUGH EIGHTH IN BEATING HOLY CROSS. HAD EIGHT OF THE FIRST NINE AT COLBY. SIX OF THE FIRST EIGHT AGAINST CONNECTICUT. TRIUMPHED OVER WESLEYAN WITH ALL BUT FIRST AND SECOND IN THE FIRST NINE. AND ROUNDED OUT THE UNBEATEN YEAR BY TAKING ONE THROUGH EIGHT AGAINST BOSTON COLLEGE. THE DEDICATION WENT ALL THE WAY DOWN THE SQUAD. CRAIG BENNETT. RUSS PATE. ROLAND CORMIER. KENNY KLATKA. STEVE SMITH. BILL TRAMPOSCH. GEORGE ATKINSON, AND BRUCE BARMAK PROVED HOW IMPORTANT ACONSISTENT PERFORMANCE CAN BE. AND THE PROGNOSIS IS FOR MORE OF THE SAME POWER IN THE FUTURE AT SPRINGFIELD. MOST OF THE TEAM WILL RETURN IN 1968 FOR ANOTHER CRACK AT A GREAT HABIT. THE UNDEFEATED SEASON. VARSITY CROSS COUNTRY RESULTS SPRINGFIELD OPPONENT 15 R.P.I. 50 17 RHODE ISLAND 44 25 HOLY CROSS 33 20 COLBY 43 23 CONNECTICUT 37 24 MASSACHUSETTS 37 25 WESLEYAN 36 15 BOSTON COLLEGE 50 WON 8. LOST 0 ALBANY INVITATIONAL. FINISHED FIRST. NCAA COLLEGE DIVISION CHAMPIONSHIPS. FINISHED 24th. NEW ENGLAND CHAMPIONSHIPS. FINISHED4th. IC4A COLLEGE DIVISION CHAMPIONSHIPS. FINISHED FIRST. CROSS COUNTRY THE WOMEN S FIELD HOCKEY TEAM COMPLETED THEIR FIRST UNDEFEATED SEASON THIS YEAR WITH A 5-0-2 RECORD. VICTORIES OVER CENTRAL CONNECTICUT. SOUTH- ERN CONNECTICUT. MOUNT HOLYOKE AND THE UNIVERSITY OF BRIDGEPORT ALONG WITH TWO TIE GAMES WITH THE UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS PROVIDED THE TEAM. COACHED BY DR. VAN ALLEN. WITH THEIR MAGNIFICENT REC ORD. LED BY CAPTAIN MARGARET NAYLOR. SCORING HONORS WENT TO JOANNE BENSCOTER AND PHYLLIS PLOTNICK. THE SECOND TEAM ALSO HAD AN UNDEFEATED SEASON; COMPILING AN IDENTICAL RECORD AS THAT OF THE VARSITY. HIGH SCORER WAS CANDY SCHAF. THE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL TEAM ENDED THE 1968 SEASON WITH A 5-5 RECORD. THE TEAM COACHED BY MISS JONE BUSH. POSTED VICTORIES OVER BOSTON-BOUVE. CENTRAL CONNECTICUT. MOUNT HOLYOKE AND THE UNIVERSITY OF BRIDGEPORT. THE HIGHLIGHT OF THE SEASON WAS THE GAME PLAYED AGAINST BOSTON-BOUVE AT NORTHEASTERN UNIVER- SITY. REGULATION PLAY ENDED IN A TIE. IN THE OVERTIME PERIOD THE SPRINGFIELD TEAM UNITED TO PULL OUT A VICTORY. 40 ■II PENNY JOHNSON '68, KAREN O BRIEN 70 (FALL HOMECOMING QUEEN). NANCY DEL VAL '69. SHIR NEEN SMITH 71. • 6 47 IN APPRECIATION TO MR. F. EDGAR HUBBARD. PROFESSOR OF PHYSICS AND MATH AND ADVISOR TO HOSAGA, SPRING FIELDS ORGANIZATION DEDICATED TO THE STUDY OF AUTHENTIC AMERICAN INDIAN LORE. CHANTS. DANCES. AND COSTUME MAKING. FOR HAVING BEEN DEVOTED TO SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE STUDENTS---- 53 WINTER 36 3 PARTICIPATING IN A RECIPROCAL SHARING WITH THE OUT- SIDE WORLD. SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE EXPERIENCED THE OPEN ING OF THE JAMES A NAISMITH BASKETBALL HALL OF FAME AND THE INTRODUCTION OF FORMER SPRINGFIELD MAYOR CHARLES V. RYAN TO THE FACULTY DURING THE WINTER TERM. AFTER THIRTY TWO YEARS OF PLANNING. THE HALL OF FAME WAS OPENED ON FEBRUARY 18. 1968. FIRST CONCEIVED IN 1936 AFTER DR. JAMES NAISMITH. THE FOUNDER OF BASKET BALL. RETURNED FROM THE FIRST OLYMPIC COMPETITION OF THE GAME. THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF BASKETBALL COACHES. IN 1948. SERIOUSLY CONSIDERED BUILDING A MEMORIAL. FEATURESOF THE MEMORIAL INCLUDE THE HONOR COURT. A ROOMOFCEILING-TO-FLOOR STAINEDGLASS PANELS HANDPAINTED WITH PORTRAITS OF THE GREAT MEN OF BASKETBALL. DISPLAYS OF UNIFORMS AND EQUIPMENT USED BY EARLY TEAMS. THE NCAA DISPLAY OF COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY CHAMPIONS. THE NUMBER ONE DRAFT CHOICES FROM THE YEAR 1952 TO THE PRESENT. FORMER MAYOR RYAN JOINED THE FACULTY AS VISITING PROFESSOR IN URBAN LIFE. INITIATING COURSES IN INTER- GROUP RELATIONS. COMMUNITY DYNAMICS. PUBLIC ADMIN- ISTRATION AND URBAN AFFAIRS. MAYOR RYAN HOPED TO STIMULATE SOME OF THE STUDENTS TO FEEL THE EXCITE- MENT. THE CHALLENGE. AND THE NECESSITY OF AN URBAN CAREER.” AND TO HAVE THEM CARRY AWAY AN AWARENESS OF THE SERIOUSNESS OF THE URBAN SITUATION AND AN AWARENESS OF THE MANY ROLES WHICH CAN. ARE AND MUST BE PLAYED IN OUR PROBLEM LADEN CITIES.” STU DENTS ENROLLED IN THE COURSES LEARNED MUCH THROUGH DISCUSSION AMONG THEMSELVES. WITH MAYOR RYAN AND VARIOUS COMMUNITY LEADERS. WHILE SOME STUDENTS WERE INVOLVED IN TRYING TO RECOGNIZE SOLUTIONS FOR THE PROBLEMS WITHIN THE CITIES. OTHER STUDENTS WERE ACTIVE IN TRYING TO SOLVE PROBLEMS THAT EXIST BETWEEN PEOPLE. IN ORDER TO AF- FORD THE OPPORTUNITY FOR BLACK AND WHITE STUDENTS OF THE COLLEGE TO ACQUIRE. THROUGH DISCUSSION. LEC- TURES. AND FILMS. A BETTER UNDERSTANDING OF THE RACIAL SITUATION TODAY. THE AFRO AMERICAN ORGANIZA- TION OF SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE WAS FORMED ON FEBRUARY 22. 1968. A NON-MILITANT GROUP INTERESTED IN PRESENT- ING AND DEVELOPING PROGRAMS CONCERNING NEGRO HIS TORY. CULTURE. ARTS. THE AFRO-AMERICAN ORGANIZATION IS STRIVING TO INTEREST ALL STUDENTS IN THE INFLUENCING FORCES BOTH BLACK AND WHITE. WHICH CREATED AND ARE CREATING THE BLACK CULTURE IN AMERICA. CULTURE IN THE FORM OF CONTEMPORARY ART WAS EXHIBITED ON CAMPUS IN THE PRESENTATIONS OF ANDY WARHOL. PAINTER OF THE NEO-DADIST CAMBELL S SOUP CAN. MARILYN MONROE. ELIZABETH TAYLOR. AND BRILLO SOAP BOXES. APPEARING TO PRESENT AND DISCUSS HIS NEWEST CREATIONS. FILMS SHOWING PEOPLE LIVING THEIR OWN LIFE IN THEIR OWN WAY. WARHOL AND HIS FRIENDS WERE EVALUATED WITH MIXED EMOTIONS. AS COACH EO BILIK STARTED HIS SECOND YEAR AS HEAD VARSITY BASKETBALL COACH. THERE SEEMED LITTLE REASON TO BELIEVE THAT THE 1967 68 CHIEFS WOULD BE ABLE TO DO MUCH BETTER THAN THEIR 15-10 SLATE OF A YEAR AGO. A SERIOUS LACK OF HEIGHT HAD TO BE OVERCOME-AND WAS! FOR THE FIRST HALF OF THE SEASON. THERE SEEMED LITTLE HOPE FOR A PLAYOFF BERTH. THE TEAM HAD ONLY A FAIR 9-6 RECORD. THEN ALMOST OUT OF THE BLUE. THE TEAM JELLED INTO A HUSTLING. TOUGH REBOUNDING OUTFIT THAT THRIVED ON THE FAST BREAK ATTACK AND A SHOOT 'EM UPOFFENSE. AND ATE UP EIGHT OPPONENTS IN THE NEXT NINE GAMES TO FINISH THE SEASON WITH A FINE 17-7 RECORD AND A PLAYOFF TRIP TO WORCESTER IN COMMAND. THE REASONS FOR THE SUCCESS OF THIS YEAR WERE MANY. SENIOR PAUL ROMANO. WHO DEVELOPED INTO AN AGGRES SIVE OFFENSIVE AND DEFENSIVE PLAYER. TOUGH OFF BOTH BOARDS AND WILLING TO DRIVE TO THE BASKET DENNIS CLARK. A TRANSFER JUNIOR FROM MAINE WHO CONTRIBUTED 18.0 POINTS PER GAME AND WHOSE OFFENSIVE SHOT MAKING VMS FANTASTIC AT TIMES. GEORGE YELVERTON A SIX FOOT THREE INCH SOPHOMORE FROM BAYONNE. NEW JERSEY. WHO SWITCHED TO THE GUARD POSITION AND WOUND UP WITH A 15.8 SCORING AVERAGE AND A 10.0 REBOUNDING MARK. JOHN EHLERS, A SIX FOOT THREE INCH JUNIOR FROM SYOSSET. NEW YORK. AVERAGED JUST UNDER TEN REBOUNDS AND POINTS PER GAME IN SPITE OF BEING INJURED AND SICK AT VARIOUS TIMES THROUGHOUT THE SEASON. SKIP KOSZALKA. WAS THE TOP REBOUNDER ON THE SQUAD AND WHO PLAYED THE PIVOT VERY EFFECTIVELY. BOBBY HA2EN. HEADED UP THE BACKCOURT PERFORMERS WITH HIS CONSISTENT BALL- HANDLING AND TENACIOUS DEFENSE. CAPTAIN RICK JANES AND JOHNNY WELSH SAW ACTION IN THE BACKCOURT. AND JOE WILLIAMS HAD A BIG GAME AGAINST ASSUMPTION AT YEAR S END. PROBABLY THE MOST IMPORTANT WIN OF THE YEAR WAS A 71-63 OVERTIME THRILLER OVER THE HUSKIES OF NORTH EASTERN UNIVERSITY AT NORTHEASTERN. THE WIN PROVED A DECISIVE FACTOR AS THE CHIEFS WENT ON TO THE NCAA REGIONAL TOURNAMENT. BASKETBALL — VARSITY BASKETBALL RESULTS SPRINGFIELD OPPONENT 80 BOWDOIN 71 64 ST. ANSELM S 58 73 BOSTON U. 71 70 BRIDGEPORT 79 101 CLARK 88 76 ASSUMPTION 90' 73 ST. ANSELM S 79 95 TUFTS 78 100 HARTFORD 72 64 BRANDEIS 66 91 W.P.I. 84 81 HOLY CROSS 96 81 DARTMOUTH 75 108 BATES 69 78 WILLIAMS 115 101 MIDDLE8URY 69 79 CLARK 73 70 COLBY 61 71 NORTHEASTERN 63 82 AMHERST 66 117 NEW HAMPSHIRE 78 93 WESLEYAN 88 66 A.I.C. 78 99 VERMONT 85 62 BRIDGEPORT 86 75 ASSUMPTION 94“ WON 17, LOST 9 •ASSUMPTION TOURNAMENT ••NCAA TOURNAMENT 61 22SSRJI22 CAPTAIN- C0ACH EDWARD BILIK. ASSISTANT COACH DAVE JACOBS. ASSISTANT COACH LEROY CHIPMAN. SECOND ROW; SESS Ss°ce£K R0 AN0 ‘E0NARD UIUEB' ML,W K0SCALKA- UNE-0E0R0E VELVERI0,E 62 FOR THE VARSITY WRESTLERS. 1967-68 WAS A SEASON OF CHALLENGE: CHALLENGE MET AND MOUNTED. THE CHIEFS FACED A 21 MEET SLATE. INCLUDING COMPETITION AGAINST THE LIKES OF PENN STATE, NAVY. LOCKE HAVEN. LYCOMING. SYRACUSE. AND A HOST OF NEW ENGLAND POWERS. IN SPITE OF SUCH OBSTACLES. THE TEAM CAME OUT OF IT WITH A SPARKLING 14-6-10 OVERALL RECORD. ITS 18TH CON- SECUTIVE NEW ENGLAND CHAMPIONSHIP. AND SOME OUT- STANDING INDIVIDUAL EFFORTS. CO-CAPTAINS JOE PORRELL AND JIM MATIAS LED THE TEAM. 80TH INSPIRATIONALLY AND COMPETITIVELY. THROUGH A 8USY AND REWARDING SEASON OF DEDICATED EFFORT. POR- RELL FINISHED WITH A TREMENDOUS 17-1-2 RECORD. PILING UP 75 POINTS AND EARNING HIMSELF A TRIP TO THE NATIONALS AT MANKATO WHERE. 8UT FOR A SCHEDULING MIXUP. HE PROBABLY WOULD HAVE FINISHED A RESOUNDING THIRD. MATIAS WENT 15-1. RACKING UP SIX PINS TO COM- PLEMENT THE NINE OF PORRELL. TRIUMPHED AT 123 POUNDS IN THE NEW ENGLAND TOURNAMENT. THE CO CAPTAINS HAD LOTS OF HELP. HEAVYWEIGHT JOHN GLASCOCK RIPPED OFF SEVEN PINS IN DUAL MEET COMPETI- TION. A 13-5 RECORD. AND THE 191 POUND NEW ENGLAND CHAMPIONSHIP. GEORGE POPELLA CONTRIBUTED A FINE 14-5 DUAL MEET SLATE AND THE 167 POUND NEW ENGLAND CHAMPIONSHIP. CAM SINCLAIR WENT 12-5 AND TOOK A FOURTH AT THE NEW ENGLANDS. JOE SIDOTI CAME ON STRONG IN THE SECOND HALF OF THE SEASON. WINNING NINE MATCHES AND FINISHING A VITAL SECOND IN THE NEW ENGLANDS. SOPHOMORE JIM MCGONIGLE ADDED 33 POINTS IN THE DUALS AND THEN CONTRIBUTED VALUABLE POINTS TO NO. 18” BY PLACING THIRD IN THE NEW ENGLANDS. JOHN DOSS SHOOK OFF INJURIES TO WIN THE 160 POUND TITLE AFTER A 6-5 REGULAR SEASON RECORD. AND JOHN DONARUMMO. WHO SAW ACTION IN ONLY FIVE MATCHES THROUGHOUT THE YEAR. STUNNED THE EXPERTS BY WALK ING AWAY WITH THE 130 POUND NEW ENGLAND CHAMPION SHIP OVER WPI S POLIZZOTTO. RUGGED STEVE PORTO. WHO GRAPPLED IN EACH OF THE 21 SEASONAL MEETS. ADDED A FOURTH PLACE FINISH TO THE NEW ENGLAND CHAMPION- SHIP CAUSE. FOR OTHERS IT WAS A VALUABLE YEAR OF EXPERIENCE. WRESTLING VARSITY WRESTLING RESULTS SPRINGFIELD OPPONENT 41 R.P.I. 0 6 NAVY 33 10 LOCK HAVEN 28 16 WILKES 15 18 E. STROUDSBURG 21 37 C. W. POST 10 12 PENN STATE 31 37 DARTMOUTH 5 32 COLGATE 11 24 SYRACUSE 9 31 YALE 11 22 F M 9 30 M.l.T. 9 44 DARTMOUTH 3 17 CORTLAND 14 15 CORNELL 15 23 HARVARD 17 13 ARMY 27 22 BROWN 15 19 LYCOMING 11 17 WESLEYAN 20 102 NEW ENGLANDS 1st PLACE WON 14, LOST 6. TIED 1 VARSITY SWIMMING RESULTS SPRINGFIELD 40 HARVARD OPPONENT 73 63 BOWDOIN 32 65 M.l.T. 39 62 WILLIAMS 33 46 DARTMOUTH 67 71 HOLY CROSS 24 39 COLGATE 65 50 BROWN 45 52 AMHERST 43 64 TRINITY 31 56 UCONN 48 38 YALE 75 53 SO. CONNECTICUT 51 WON 9. LOST 4 NEW ENGLAND INTERCOLLEGIATE SWIMMING ASSOCIATION CHAMPION A RAGS-TO-RICHES TALE WAS COMPLETED IN THE SPACE OF ONE SEASON. SPRINGFIELD HAS TURNED OUT GOOD SWIMMING TEAMS FOR YEARS IN THE PREHISTORIC CON- FINES OF MCCURDY NATATORIUM. THIS YEAR IT ALL CHANGED. WITH BRAND NEW ART LINKLETTER NATATORIUM PROVIDING A RITZY WARPATH. THE CHIEFS WON THE NEW ENGLAND CHAMPIONSHIP AFTER COMPLETING AN UN8EATEN CONFERENCE RECORD. HOW DID IT HAPPEN? A NEARLY IDENTICAL SQUAD LAST YEAR PRODUCED A MEDIOCRE WON-LOST RECORD AND PLACED FIFTH AT THE NEW ENGLANDS. THE MODERN FA CILITIES PLAYED A MAJOR ROLE. AS COACH CHARLES E. SILVIA S METHODS ACQUIRED NEW DIMENSIONS WITH THE SPACE AND EQUIPMENT. AT AMHERST FEBRUARY 3. THE TEAM IGNITED; CLOSE RACES FINISHEO IN THE CHIEFS’ FAVOR AND THE DIVING OF BILL DONNELLY AND BOB GOLDBERG BEGAN TO CLICK. THE TREND CONTINUED AND. AMID RISING PRESSURE. SPRINGFIELD OPENED LINKLETTER NATATORIUM AND ICED UCONN AND SOUTHERN BEFORE CAPACITY CROWDS AND VIDEO TAPE T.V. THE NEW ENGLANDS IS ANOTHER STORY; BIGGER AND BETTER. COCAPTAIN DAVIS HART. WINNING THE 500 YARD FREESTYLE AND SETTING A NEW NEW ENGLAND RECORD IN THE 1650 YARD FREESTYLE. OTHER INDIVIDUAL CHAMPIONS WERE DENNIS SBREGA (200 BUTTERFLY) AND SAM FREAS (200 YARD INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY). THE FREESTYLE RELAY TEAM OF DICK GRAY. FREAS. TIM MEYER. AND STEVE OLSON WON THE MEET FOR SPRINGFIELD IN THE FINAL EVENT OF THE CHAM PIONSHIP. IN THE PROCESS THIS TEAM SET A NEW SCHOOL AND NEW ENGLAND RECORD. OTHER TOP PERFORMERS WERE DISTANCE FREESTYLERS TOM PURCELL AND JEFF ARMSTRONG; BREASTSTROKERS DOUG MOLTON AND FRANK WRIGHT; BACKSTROKERS JOHN SHEA AND JOE CONSTANTINE: AND SPRINTERS KEN SPRACKLIN AND BOB JACKSON. A GROUP OF SWIMMERS COMPETED AT THE NCAA’S AT EMORY UNIVERSITY IN ATLANTA. GEORGIA. THE 800 YARD FREESTYLE RELAY TEAM. COMPOSED OF TIM MEYER. TOM PURCELL, STEVE OLSON. AND DAVIS HART SET A NEW SCHOOL RECORD. DAVIS HART SET A NEW SCHOOL RECORD IN THE 200 YARD BUTTERFLY. AND STEVE OLSON WOUND UP A BRIL LIANT CAREER WITH A SIXTH PLACE IN THE 100 YARD BACK STROKE. THE EVENT THAT HE WON LAST YEAR. VTARSITY SWIMMING: FRONT ROW: ROBERT GOLDBERG. KENNETH SPRACKLIN, STEVEN OLSON. DOUGLAS MOULTON. DENNIS SBREGA. JOHN SHEA. TOM SAGER TIM «H5RvI9MJ?J5 ELLiJB,U: 0ENNEHY SECOND ROW: WILLIAM HARDY. JOHN SCHOTT. JOHN CHRISTIAN. MGR.. PATRICK KLEIT2. ROBERT THOMPSON. PAUL BROWN JON ROSE. EDWARD BOYNTON. ROBERT JACKSON. PHILLIP FITZGERALD. THIRD ROW: MARK ALEXANDER. DAVE ALLEN. JOE CONSTANTINE. RICK GOODWIN DAVIS HART CO- CAPTAIN. KENNETH BAlVIN CO CAPTAIN. RICHARD GRAY. DOUGLAS PARKER. MGR. FRANK WRIGHT. SAM FREAS. FOURTH ROW: JACK WELCH. COACH SMITH. JOE MCEVOY. MGR.. JAMES WATSON. MGR . JEFF ARMSTRONG. BARRY GOLDSMITH. DAVID KAYNOR. COACH CHARLES SILVA. 67 SWIMMING THE MEN S COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM GRITTED ITS WAY THROUGH THE 1967-68 SEASON. FINISHING WITH A RESPECTABLE FIVE WIN AND THREE LOSS SLATE. A ROUSING CLIMAX TO THE YEAR CAME AT THE COLLEGE DIVISION NATIONALS. HOSTED BY SPRINGFIELD. IN WHICH THE GYM- MIES CAME UP WITH THEIR FINEST PERFORMANCE OF THE SEASON. AND FINISHED A VERY CLOSE SECOND BEHIND NATIONAL CHAMPION. SAN FERNANDO VALLEY STATE. IN SPITE OF MANY PROBLEMS WHICH INCLUDED THE A8 SENCE OF A TOP ALL AROUND MAN. SPRINGFIELD LOST ONLY ONCE TO TEAMS OTHER THAN NATIONAL POWERS TEMPLE AND PENN STATE: BOTH OF WHOM HAD OUTSTANDING SQUADS AND SEVERAL STRONG ALL-AROUND PERFORMERS. AT THE EASTERN CHAMPIONSHIPS. HELD AT ANNAPOLIS. THE CHIEFS REBOUNDED TO FINISH A STRONG THIRD AND TIE FOR THIRD PLACE IN THE LEAGUE STANDINGS: NOT BAD FOR A REBUILDING TEAM. AND A TRIBUTE TO BOTH THE GYMNASTS AND A DEDICATED COACHING STAFF IT WAS IN THE NATIONALS THAT THE TEAM FINALLY REALIZED ITS POTENTIAL: PLACING SECOND IN THE TEAM COMPETITION WITH A SEASON HIGH TEAM SCORE OF 178.05. JUST 1.35 POINTS BEHIND SAN FERNANDO VALLEY STATE COLLEGE OF CALIFORNIA. COCAPTAIN TOM PILLION TURNED ON THE HEAT AND WOUND UP THIRD IN THE NATIONALS ON THE STILL RINGS WITH A FLUID 9.05 ROUTINE. LARRY SOLOMON ALSO GARNERED A THIRD. ZIPPING OFF AN 8.95 ON THE FLOOR EXERCISE. AND PERFORMED SOLIDLY THROUGHOUT THE YEAR. THE TRAMPOLINE. A SPRINGFIELO POWER EVENT SAW TWO MEN FINISH IN THE TOP SIX. TIM ROGERS TOOK SECOND WITH A 9.05 PERFORMANCE WHILE STEVE HICKMAN WOUND UP TIED FOR FIFTH WITH AN 8.75. BOTH DOMINATED THE EVENT IN DUAL COMPETITION THROUGHOUT THE SEA- SON. POSSIBLY THE HIGHLIGHT OF THE SEASON WAS THE EXCELLENT SHOWING OF MIKE PROVENCHER. WHOSE VAULT ING HEROICS EARNED HIM A THIRD PLACE NATIONAL FINISH AND WHO MUSCLED HIS WAY ON THE PARALLEL BARS TO A 9.0 AND SECOND PLACE IN THAT DEPARTMENT AT THE BIG MEET. ALSO PLACING IN THE NATIONALS WAS TONY SUM MIT. WHOSE 8.7 WAS GOOD ENOUGH FOR SIXTH PLACE ON THE PARALLEL BARS. GYMNASTICS VARSITY GYMNASTICS RESULTS SPRINGFIELD OPPONENT 170 TEMPLE 185 160 PITTSBURGH 108 175 PENN STATE 190 174 ARMY 170 160 CORNELL 106 159 SYRACUSE 114 175 NAVY 172 171 MASSACHUSETTS 179 EASTERN CHAMPIONSHIPS. TIED FOR THIRD NATIONAL COLLEGE DIVISION CHAMPIONSHIPS. SECOND PLACE WON 5. LOST 3. RON GRANT SHOWED WELL IN THE FLOOR EXERCISE AND ON THE HIGH BAR. BEN ARDIZZONE HELPED OUT ON THE RINGS. THE PARALLEL BARS. VAULTING. AND FLOOR EXERCISE. BYRON FISH. WHO IMPROVE© STEADILY. PERFORMED FEATS ON THE SIDE HORSE. LONG HORSE AND PARALLEL BAR EVENTS. DOUG NIELSON ADDED DEPTH TO THE STRONG TRAMPOLINE UNIT. WHILE DAVE ELLIS AND RAY PELLITIER STRENGTHENED THE RING EVENT. VARSITY GYMNASTICS: ANTHONY SUMMIT. MIKE PROVENCHER. 8EN ARDIZZONE. RONALD GRANT. BYRON FISH. BOB FLETCHER. TOM PILLION. RAY PELLITIER. GERRY TAYLOR. TONY NEJEOLY. JIM BLACK. DAVE ELLIS. DOUG NIELSON. LARRY SOLOMON. ROBERT CARGILL ASSISTANT COACH. COACH FRANK WOLCOTT. 70 71 THE WOMEN S GYMNASTICS TEAM COMPLETED A MOST SUC CESSFUL SEASON. CAPTAINED BY JUDY PYLE. THE LADY GYM- MIES COMPILED A 3-2 RECORD IN DUAL MEET COMPETITION. COACHES DIANE POTTER AND MILDRED MURRAY WERE VERY PLEASED WITH THE SHOWING OF THE TEAM AT THE EASTERN GYMNASTIC CHAMPIONSHIPS AS THE TEAM DEFEATED A NUMBER OF CONTINGENTS THAT HAD PREVIOUSLY BEATEN THEM. SOPHOMORE KAREN STEWART WON THE ALL AROUND TITLE AT THIS CHAMPIONSHIP. JUNIOR JUDY GREGORY AND SENIOR JEANNE TREPANIER GAVE STRENGTH TO THE TEAM WITH THEIR CONSISTENTLY FINE ALL-AROUND PERFORMANCES. 74 VOLLEYBALL THE 1968 SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE V0LLEY8ALL TEAM EN- JOYED ONE OF THE MOST SUCCESSFUL SEASONS IN THE SCHOOLS VOLLEYBALL HISTORY. LOSING BUT ONCE IN ELEVEN MATCHES. THE CHIEFS CUMAXED A SPLENDID YEAR OF ACCOMPLISHMENT BY FINISHING SECOND TO ARMY AT THE EASTERN CHAMPIONSHIPS HELD AT WEST POINT. A TRIUMPH OVER AMHERST COLLEGE IN THE FINALS OF THE NEW ENGLAND INVITATIONAL VOLLEYBALL TOURNAMENT AT SPRINGFIELD. COUPLED WITH THAT EXCELLENT SHOWING AT WEST POINT PROVED TO BE THE HIGHLIGHTS OF THE YEAR. DEAN STICKLES. WHO CAPTAINED THE 1967-68 SQUAD. AND TALL RON RITCHIE ARE THE ONLY TWOGRADUATING MEMBERS OF A SQUAD WHICH SHOULD CHALLENGE AGAIN IN 1969 FOR THE EASTERN CHAMPIONSHIP. VARSITY VOLLEYBALL RESULTS SPRINGFIELD OPPONENT 1 HARTFORD YMCA 3 1 SCHENECTADY YMCA 7 3 HOLYOKE TURNERS 0 3 HARTFORD YMCA 1 3 WEST SPRINGFIELD YMCA 0 3 AMHERST 0 3 BROCKTON TOURNEY 3 3 AMHERST 0 3 NEW PALTZ STATE 0 3 CASTLETON STATE 0 3 NEW HAVEN YMCA 2 3 WESTOVER AFB 1 NEW ENGLAND INVITATIONAL CHAMPIONS SECOND PLACE- EASTERN INTERCOLLEGIATE TOURNAMENT WON 9. LOST 2. mm of o 81 85 86 DIANE SALVETTI '68, ANNA MORRISON 71, LYN BULLOCK '69, CHERYL TULK 70 (WINTER HOME- COMING QUEEN). 89 THIS WAS THE NEWS-TOP HEADLINES OF Student' YEAR SPRING 98 100 101 ON APRIL 4 1968 THE REVEREND MARTIN LUTHER KING WAS SHOT AND KILLED IN MEMPHIS. TENNESSEE. IMMEDI- ATELY WE RECALLED THE WORDS OF A SPEECH DELIVERED BY REVEREND KING IN WASHINGTON IN 1963. I HAVE A DREAM . HE SAID. WITH GRIEF AND IRREPRESSIBLE SORROW WE REALIZED THAT THIS MAGNANIMOUS INDIVIDUAL WOULD NEVER LIVE TO SEE THE FURTIVE FULFILLMENT OF THIS DREAM. SOME FIVE HUNDRED STUDENTS AND FACULTY MEM BERS GATHERED IN MOSES HALL TO HEAR PRESIDENT LOCKLIN EULOGIZE REVEREND KING AS A MAN THAT LIVED AND DIED FOR AN AMERICAN DREAM-THE UNITY AND BROTHERHOOD OF ALL MEN. BUCK AND WHITE. WE PRAYED AS WE WATCHED THAT GREY MULE BEARING THE REMAINS OF THE SLAIN CIVIL RIGHTS LEADER PASS IN A MOVING AND TRAGICALLY SYMBOLIC FUNERAL PROCESSION. ALMOST TWO MONTHS TO THE DAY AFTER THE MURDER OF MARTIN LUTHER KING. TRAGEDY STRUCK THIS NATION AGAIN. SENATOR ROBERT FRANCIS KENNEDY WAS SUIN BY AN ASSASSIN S BULLET WHILE ATTENDING A VICTORY RECEPTION IN LOS ANGELOS AFTER HE HAD CAPTURED A VICTORY IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE PRIMARY. ONCE AGAIN WE COULD HEAR THE CRACKLE OF GUNFIRE. ONCE AGAIN WE VIEWED. WITH GRIEF STRICKEN AWE. A NATION GOING ABOUT THE PROCESS OF MOURNING THE LOSS OF A GREAT LEADER. NOT SINCE THE ASSASSINATION OF SENATOR KENNEDY'S 8ROTHER IN 1963 HAD WE FELT SO HELPLESS. TWICE. IN TWO MONTHS. AN ASSASSIN HAD STRUCK A DASTARDLY BLOW TO THE VITALS OF THE AMERICAN POLITICAL SYSTEM. WE COULD NOT COMPREHEND THE TRAGIC IMPLICATIONS. SADDENED STUDENTS AND FACULTY MEMBERS SAT SILENTLY AMIDST THE TRAGIC HUSH THAT ASSEMBLED OVER THE 8EVERIDGE CENTER LOUNGE. AND WATCHED AS THE MIGHTY AND THE HUMBLE PAID THEIR LAST RESPECTS TO THE FALLEN SENATOR IN NEW YORK'S SAINT PATRICK S CATHEDRAL. AND THERE WAS THAT SULLEN FIGURE THAT SAT ALONE IN THE COLLEGE CHAPEL )2 AS THEY LAID SENATOR KENNEDY TO REST ON THAT DREAD- FUL SATURDAY EVENING IN ARLINGTON. WE WILL REMEMBER THESE MOMENTS BUT WE SHALL NEVER REALLY UNDERSTAND THE TRAGIC EVENTS OF TWO DAYS IN THE SPRING OF 1968. MANY EVENTS OF THIS CAMPUS WERE OBVIOUSLY OVER SHADOWED BY THE TRAGIC OCCURRENCES A PETITION. SIGNED BY SOME FIVE HUNDRED STUDENTS. REQUESTED AN EVALUATION AND APPRAISAL OF THE OFFICE OF THE DEAN OF STUDENTS. LET IT BE UNDERSTOOD THAT THE EVENTS LEADING TO THE FORMATION OF THE PETITION WERE A BIT CLOUDED. SOME PEOPLE STATED. QUITE VEHEMENTLY. THAT DEAN COSTELLO HAD OVERSTEPPED HIS BOUNDS OF RE SPONSIBILITY WHEN HE CLOSED THE COUNSELING CENTER EARLIER IN SPRING TERM THE APPEAL OF EUGENE MCCAR THY REACHED THE SPRINGFIELD CAMPUS. FOUR SPRING FIELD STUDENTS SET UP HEADQUARTERS IN THE YEARBOOK OFFICE-SOMEONE NOTED THAT THE YEARBOOK WAS A FRONT FOR THE NEW-LEFT-AND MOUNTED A CAMPAIGN THAT ULTIMATELY CAPTURED A VICTORY FOR THE RE DOUBTABLE SENATOR IN THE CHOICE '68 ELECTION THAT WAS SPONSORED NATIONWIDE BY TIME MAGAZINE INC. WE HAD JOINED THE RANKS! FINALLY. THE GAVEL OF STUDENT COUNCIL WAS PASSED ON TO PETER C. RAYMOND. A TALL. SLENDER NATIVE OF LOCKPORT. NEW YORK. IT WAS RATHER SIGNIFICANT THAT MR RAYMOND. IN THIS FIRST TERM IN OFFICE. HANDLED THE PETITION AFFAIR WITH AS MUCH POLITICAL KNOW HOW AS A SEASONED VETERAN OF THE COUNCIL WARS. IT WAS ALSO NOTA8LE THAT RAYMOND S THEME OF RESPONSI BILITY CAME AT A TIME WHEN STUDENT REBELS AT COLUM BIA LOCKED THEMSELVES IN COLLEGE BUILDINGS IN PRO- TEST OF ADMINISTRATIVE ACTIONS. MR. RAYMOND VENTURED AND HE MIGHT HAVE GAINED A LOT THROUGH RESPONSIBILITY. LUTHER KING JR. AND RC The courage of life is often a less dra- matic spectacle than the courage of a final moment; but it is no less a magnif- icent mixture of triumph and tragedy. JOHN F. KENNEDY 'BERT FRANCIS KENNEDY PHOTO CREDIT: BILL EPPRIDGE. LIFE MAGAZINE 107 VARSITY BASEBALL RESULTS SPRINGFIELD OPPONENT 1 COLGATE 0 8 YALE 0 1 HARVARD 11 3 WESLEYAN 1 1 AMHERST 10 9 HARTFORD 2 7 TUFTS 5 4 RHODE ISLAND 6 4 TRINITY 3 2 COAST GUARD 4 6 COAST GUARD 3 4 HOLY CROSS 5 3 PROVIDENCE 6 4 PROVIDENCE 3 5 CONNECTICUT 4 4 MASSACHUSETTS 11 8 COLBY 6 12 COLBY 2 5 NEW HAMPSHIRE 3 5 WILLIAMS 1 4 NORTHEASTERN 0 11 BOSTON COLLEGE 8 1 A. 1. C. 1 2 BRIDGEPORT 6 4 DARTMOUTH 7 SMALL COLLEGE REGIONAL TOURNAMENT WON 15. LOST 9. TIED 1. LAST YEAR THEY WON THE ATLANTIC COAST SMALL COL- LEGE TOURNAMENT WITH EASE. GRACE. AND CERTAINTY. THEY INTENDED TO REPEAT. IN FACT THIS YEAR THEY IN TENDED TO EXTEND THEIR POST SEASON ACTIVITIES WELL INTO THE MONTH OF JUNE. BUT THIS YEAR MATTERS WERE NOT HANDLED WITH THE SAME CERTAINTY. IT TOOK A LATE SEASON WINNING STREAK-A MINOR COUP-TO RESULT IN A SECOND STRAIGHT TOURNEY NOMINATION. MIDWAY THROUGH THE LONG SEASON-TWENTY SIX GAMES-COACH ARCHIE ALLEN AND A CONTINGENT COM PRISED MAINLY OF SOPHOMORES AND JUNIORS WERE QUES TIONING THE POSSIBILITY OF WHETHER OR NOT THEY WOULD BREAK EVEN AT THE .500 MARK. INFIELDERS WERE COMMITTING ERRORS AT A DISASTROUS AND EVER IN CREASING RATE. THE BIG HITTERS WERE NOT HITTING. THE ONLY FACTOR THAT KEPT THE REDOUBTABLE CHIEFS IN THE RUNNING WAS THE PITCHING-THANK GOODNESS THE EARLY SEASON GOING WAS A BIT DIFFICULT. AM HERST SLAMMED THE CHIEFS. 10-1. THEN HARVARD ARRO- GANTLY AND QUITE DECISIVELY HOMERED THEIR WAY TO AN 11-1 VICTORY. THE CHIEFS KEPT SOME SEMBLANCE OF ORDER AND BALANCE AS THEY MANAGED TO SPLIT TWIN BILLS WITH COAST GUARD AND PROVIDENCE. WHILE. AT THE SAME. LOSING TO RHODE ISLAND. HOLY CROSS AND THE UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS. EN ROUTE TO SOME OF THESE DEFEATS THE CHIEFS OFTEN COMMITTED MORE ER RORS THAN RUNS SCORED AFTER THE TEAM WAS CAPABLY CROWNED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS THE TREND OF PLAY ALTERED. THE CHIEFS DROPPEO COLBY IN BOTH ENDS OF A DOUBLEHEADER. THEN WENT ON TO DE FEAT NEW HAMPSHIRE. WILLIAMS. NORTHEASTERN. AND CAPPED THE STREAK WITH AN IMPRESSIVE 11-8 VICTORY OVER BOSTON COLLEGE. NOW. AFTER THE WINNING STREAK HAD BEEN COMMITTED TO THE RECORD BOOKS. IT WAS QUITE APPARENT THAT SPRINGFIELD DESERVED AN OP PORTUNITY TO DEFEND THE ATLANTIC COAST CROWN. THERE WAS LITTLE DISAGREEMENT. THE ONLY DISSENTING VOICE WAS THAT OF CROSSTOWN RIVAL AMERICAN INTER- NATIONAL COLLEGE. THE GRAND COUP HAD BEEN SUCCESS- FUL. BASEBALL SOPHOMORE ALAN PUTZ LEO THE REGULARS AT THE PLATE WITH A .318 BATTING MARK. JUHAN LAURITS LEO THE TEAM IN STOLEN BASES. INFIELD HITS. CLOSEST CALLS AT FIRST BASE. AND MADE THE FINEST CATCH OF THE SPRING. SE NIORS. BRIAN HAMMERNICK. CAPTAIN RICHARD WOTJUKIE- WICZ. JAMES WATSON. AND CHARLIE WIOMER HAD SHAKY STARTS AT THE PLATE BUT CONTRIBUTED KEY HITS DURING THE WINNING STREAK. THE PITCHING WASORIGINALLY CONSIDERED THE WEAKEST FACET OF THE SPRINGFIELD NINE. WITH ALL DUE RESPECTS TOBASEBALL PROG NOST ICAT ORS.THEPITCHING WAS RAT HER REMARKABLE. SOPHOMORE LEFTHANDER GEORGE DIXON LED THE TEAM WITH A 7-1 RECORD. SENIOR HURLER. KENNETH DEMOND. FINISHED A SUPERB CAREER 8Y POSTING A 6-3 REC- ORD WHILE LEADING THE PITCHING STAFF IN STRIKEOUTS. ALL OF THE WINNING WAS ACCOMPLISHED WITHOUT THE HEALTHY SERVICES OF WILLIAM BERRY WHO STARRED IN LAST YEAR S TOURNEY. 110 Ill VARSITY BASKETBALL: FRONT ROW; RICK JANES. CAPTAIN. COACH EDWARD BILIK. ASSISTANT COACH DAVE JACOBS. ASSISTANT COACH LEROY CHIPMAN. SECOND ROW; ALDEN SHATTUCK. MGR.. JOHN WELSH. GEORGE RUWET. JOESEPH WILLIAMS. PAUL ROMANO. LEONARD MILLER. JULIAN KOSCALKA. ALAN LANE. GEORGE YELVERTON. RANDY TAYLOR. JOHN CHLERS. DENNIS CLARK. GREG ZIOGAS. R08ERT HAZEN. 112 TRACK THE 1968 SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE TRACK TEAM FEATURED ONE OF THE STRONGEST AND BEST BALANCED CONTINGENTS IN THE SCHOOL S HISTORY. THE CHIEFS SOLIDLY DEFEATED WESLEYAN. MASSACHUSETTS. HOLY CROSS. AND CONNECTI- CUT BEFORE FINISHING SECOND IN A BIG TRIANGULAR DUAL MEET TO UNDEFEATED NEW ENGLAND POWER NORTHEAST ERN. SPRINGFIELD. IN THAT SAME MEET. TRAMPLED YANKEE CONFERENCE CHAMPION NEW HAMPSHIRE. A VICTORY OVER RHODE ISLAND AND A LOSS TO POWERFUL DARTMOUTH FOLLOWED TO END THE SEASON. THE TEAM CO-CAPTAINS WERE MIKE ROHLFS AND ROD CARTOCCI. SPRINGFIELD WAS AT ITS BEST IN THE WEIGHT EVENTS. AS WITNESSED IN THE HOLY CROSS MEET. TRAILING BY TWENTY-FIVE POINTS AT THE CONCLUSION OF THE RUN NING EVENTS. THE CHIEFS EXPLODED TO OUTSCORE THEIR OPPONENTS 35 TO 1 IN THE WEIGHT AND JUMPING END OF THE MATCH AND PREVAILED BY AN ALMOST COMFORTABLE ELEVEN POINTS. RECORDS FELL IN SEVERAL CATEGORIES. JON ROSE SOARED PAST THE COVETED FOURTEEN FOOT MARK IN THE POLE VAULT. WHILE CARTOCCI LED A DUO OF JAVELIN TOSSERS TO 210 PLUS HEAVES. BOB MORRELL TRIMMED THE 440 RECORD A NOTCH. WHILE TOP ALL-AROUND POINT GETTER DON FREDERICKS EXTENDED THE TRIPLE JUMP STANDARD. MIKE ROHLFS LOWERED THE INTERMEDIATE HURDLES TIME. AND THE FIFTY FOOT MARK WAS SURPASSED BY CHARLEY THOMP- SON IN THE SHOT PUT. ADD TO THIS THE NEW MILE RELAY RECORD AND IT BECOMES EVIDENT WHY COACH VERN COX CAN TAKE SO MUCH PRIDE IN THE 1968 EDITION OF THE TRACK TEAM. THAT AFOREMENTIONED MILE RELAY TANDEM OF MIKE ROHLFS. DON FREDERICKS. DAVE R08INS0N. AND BOB MOR RELL LOWERED THE SCHOOL RECORD WHILE TRIUMPHING IN THEIR DIVISION AT THE PENN RELAYS IN PHILADELPHIA. ELEVEN SENIORS WILL BE LOST TO GRADUATION. BUT THE GREAT DEPTH OF THIS YEAR SCLUBSHOULD INSURE ANOTHER POWERFUL UNIT IN 1969. II VARSITY TRACK RESULTS SPRINGFIELD OPPONENT 110 WESLEYAN 39 83 MASSACHUSETTS 66 80 HOLY CROSS 69 99 CONNECTICUT 50 65 NEW HAMPSHIRE 35 65 NORTHEASTERN 84 86Vi RHODE ISLAND 62Vi 57 DARTMOUTH 97 WON 6. LOST 2. r-i ns AFTER FOUR YEARS OF NEAR FUTILITY ON THE COURTS. THE VARSITY TENNIS TEAM. UNDER THE ABLE DIRECTION OF NEW HEAD COACH TONY SCOLNICK. REBOUNDED IN 1968 TO POST A WINNING SEASON. THE TEAM. LED BY CAPTAIN CHUCK EAST AND NUMBER ONE LADDER PLAYER LEE DRAISIN. CAME UP WITH SOME CLUTCH LATE SEASON PERFORMANCES AND A FOUR MATCH WIN SKEIN EARLY IN THE YEAR TO POST A RESPECTABLE 6 AND 5 SLATE. THE SEASON COMMENCED WITH A SUCCESSFUL 5-2 TRIP TO PUERTO RICO. BUT OPENED IN NEW ENGLAND WITH TWO HEARTBREAKING LOSSES. BEFORE CONSECUTIVE TRIUMPHS OVER BOWDOIN. AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL. COAST GUARD AND PROVIDENCE STARTED THINGS ROLLING. A SERIES OF THREE HARD FOUGHT DEFEATS. TO POWERS WESLEYAN. TRINITY. AND MASSACHUSETTS PUT THE NETMEN UNDER THE .500 MARK AGAIN. BUT WITH THE PRESSURE ON. THE TEAM SHOWED ITS CLASS. SMASHING HARTFORD IN STRAIGHT MATCHES AND THEN ROARING FROM BEHIND TO FIRST TIE AND THEN DEFEAT CONNECTICUT IN THE FINALE. CHUCK EASTCAPTAINEDTHE UNIT. PLAYING IN THE NUMBER TWO SINGLES SLOT. AND TEAMED WITH LEE DRAISIN TO FORM THE NUMBER ONE DOUBLES COMBINATION. DRAISIN. DIMINU TIVE JUNIOR STAR. PLAYED IN THE NUMBER ONE SINGLES SLOT. PLACING SECOND IN THE FALL BRANDEIS TOURNA MENT AND GOING ALL THE WAY TO THE QUARTER-FINALS IN THE NEW ENGLAND CHAMPIONSHIPS BEFORE BOWING TO EVENTUAL TOURNEY CHAMPION JOHN LEVIN OF HARVARD. ACE TANSEY. LABELLED THE MOST IMPROVED PLAYER ON THE SQUAD. SHOWED WHY BY MOVING UP TO THE NUMBER THREE SLOT. WHILE FOOTBALL VETERAN STEVE PARKER LACED UP HIS SNEAKERS FOR THE FIRST TIME IN SCHO LASTIC COMPETITION AND WON SIX OF NINE SINGLES MATCH ES. A MOST REMARKABLE ACHIEVEMENT. BILL CHENEY. PLAYING MOST OF THE SEASON IN THE TOP FOUR. AND BOB BORONSKY. ALSO A CONSISTENT DOUBLES PLAYER. ROUNDED OUT THE STARTING SINGLES PLAYERS. WHILE STEVE DERIGGS AND LORIN STENDAHL ALSO 8R0KE INTO SINGLES ACTION ON OCCASION. IN DOUBLES. DRAISIN TEAMED WITH CAPTAIN EAST TO WIN ALL BUT TWO DUAL MEET MATCHES AND PARKER AND BORONSKY FORMED A RELIABLE NUMBER TWO DOUBLES UNIT. A FEW CHINKS IN THE ARMOR MUST BE FILLED IF 1969 IS TO BE A YEAR OF IMPROVEMENT. BUT THE RETURN OF CHENEY. DRAISIN. TANSEY. AND OTHERS. PLUS THE RISE OF SEVERAL PROMISING FRESHMAN PLAYERS MAKE SUCH IMPROVEMENT LIKELY. VARSITY TENNIS RESULTS SPRINGFIELD OPPONENT 1 R. P. 1 8 3 RHODE ISLAND 6 9 BOWDOIN 0 8 A. 1. C. 1 6 COAST GUARD 3 8 PROVIDENCE 1 2 WESLEYAN 7 2 TRINITY 7 1 MASSACHUSETTS 8 9 HARTFORD 0 5 CONNECTICUT 4 NEW ENGLAND CHAMPIONSHIPS. FINISHED 10TH. WON 6. LOST 5. VARSITY TENNIS: FRONT ROW; CHARLES EAST. CAPTAIN. TOM TURNER ASSISTANT COACH. COACH ANTHONY SCOINICK, TOM HAY FRESHMAN COACH. SECOND ROW ROBERT BORONSKI. STEVE PARKER. LEE DRAISIN. JAMES TANSEY. DENNIS POTTER. GLENN WARD. 119 120 VARSITY S: FRONT ROW: KERRY NEWELL. STEVE SARNOFF. DAVE HAWKENS. KIM SPAHN. SECOND ROW: BILL DAVIS. SKIP CLAYTON. TOM LEBLANC (TREASURER). WILLIAM HORGAN. KEN KLATKA (SECRETARY). ROBERT STEINER (VICE PRESIDENT). ROBERT TOUSIGNANT (PRESIDENT). MARK ALEXANDER. THIRD ROW: HENRY KNIGHT. CHARLES DANNENBERG. OON DELIOSTRITTO. JAMES FEIJO. FOUTH ROW: STEVE SMITH. PETER BURKHARDT. GEORGE POPELLA DOUG RUBIN. JOHN HEGEN8ART. FIFTH ROW: LARRY LACROIX. CARL TORRICE. OICK MAILLOUX. JON ROSE. DON GREGORY. VARSITY GOLF: FRONT: COACH ALAN WALKER. STANDING LEFT TO RIGHT: MARTIN TOLOMEO. JOHN OEAK. JOHN DECKER. ROBERT BROWN. CAPTAIN. DONALD SHAW. JOHN JOHNSON. BARRY WEINGERT. ROBERT SALMONSEN, STEVEN KELLY. GOLF THE CHALLENGE. NO SPRINGFIELD GOLF TEAM HAS EVER HAD A WINNING YEAR. AS THE TEAM SAW THE 1968 SEASON LET US SEE IT AS WELL: FROM THE START WE KNEW WE COULD WIN IN NEW ENGLAND. THE QUESTION WAS COULD WE PUT IT ALL TO- GETHER AND HAVE A BIG YEAR. NO OTHER GOLF TEAM HAD BEEN A WINNER. THE FIRST MATCHES ARE APPROACHED WITH CAUTIOUS OPTIMISM. WESLEYAN AND THE UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHU- SETTS BECOME THE INITIAL VICTIMS. A GREAT START! TWO TOUGH OPPONENTS OUT OF THE WAY AND DEFEATED. HARTFORD AND CLARK ARE TAKEN FOR GRANTED. 4 AND 0. ALL THE WAY? STILL PLAYING AT HOME. WE HAVE THE AD VANTAGE. WILLIAMS IS NEXT; AN ALL OUT EFFORT IS NEEDED. BOB SALMONSEN COMES THROUGH TO BEAT THEIR BEST. ROGER MARCINCUK AND STEVE KELLY WIN IN EXTRA HOLE MATCHES. BARRY WENGERT PLAYS WELL FOR THE THIRD STRAIGHT TIME AND WINS ANOTHER. FIVE MEN WIN. CON FIDENCE ABOUNDS. SIX WINS. AND NOW WE'RE ROLLING! THE FIRST AWAY MATCH AT AMHERST WILL BE TOUGH. MIDDLEBURY IS UNKNOWN TO US. THREE OF OUR FIRST FOUR MEN LOSE. CAPTAIN B08 BROWN NEEDS EXTRA HOLES. WE LOSE IT. WE GET A POINT FROM THE FIFTH SPOT. MAYBE WE CAN DO IT. JOHN DEAK WINS AT NUM8ER SIX AND WE RE EVEN! STEADY JOHN JOHNSON COMES THROUGH AND WE WIN. MIDDLEBURY IS DEFEATED. EIGHT WINS! THE TEAM IS LIVING. BREATHING AN UNDEFEATED SEASON. COME ON BOYS. COACH DIXIE WALKER THINKS WE CAN WIN ALL FOURTEEN. PROVIDENCE AND TUFTS NOW. THE TOUGHEST MATCH OF THE YEAR. WE MUST BE SHARP. HOW'S HE DOING? “COME ON. HANG IN THERE. HE'S EVEN NOW. WE LOSE ONE IN EXTRA HOLES. ANOTHER LOSS ON THE EIGHTEENTH. PROVIDENCE IS TOO STRONG. WE ARE SUB PAR. TUFTS IS 8EATEN. BUT THE BIG ONE GOT AWAY. FRUSTRATION AND MOMENTARY ANGER AT OUR PERFORMANCE BITES AT US. THERE IS ONLY ONE TRY THOUGH. NINE WINS. THE BEST EVER. THE LOSS RIDES HEAVILY UPON OUR SHOULDERS THOUGH. VARSITY GOLF RESULTS SPRINGFIELD OPPONENT 4 MASSACHUSETTS 3 6 WESLEYAN 1 5 HARTFORD 2 7 CLARK 0 6 A. 1. C. 1 5 WILLIAMS 2 4 AMHERST 3 5 MIDDLEBURY 2 6 TUFTS 1 1 PROVIDENCE 6 6 TRINITY 1 7 A. 1. C. 0 6 BABSON 1 5 DARTMOUTH 2 WON 13. LOST 1. NEW ENGLAND CHAMPIONSHIPS. FINISHED 19TH. CONNECTICUT CHAMPIONSHIPS. FINISHED 3RD. THE TOURNAMENTS ARE NOW ON TAP. GREAT EXPECTA TIONS ARE NOT TO BE REALIZED. THIRD PLACE IN THE CONNECTICUT CHAMPIONSHIPS. WE WANTED THAT ONE. LET S GET THE NEW ENGLANDS. WE RE STILL OFF FORM AND FINISH NINETEENTH. THE EARLY SEASON CONFIDENCE IS NOT VISIBLE NOW. A WIN AWAY AGAINST TRINITY AND A.I.C. BRINGS BACK THAT FEELING. NOW WE KNOW WE CAN FINISH WITH BUT ONE LOSS. BABSON FALLS. THEN DARTMOUTH. THIRTEEN WINS! CONGRATULATIONS COACH! WELL DONE BOYS! AN ATHLETE DREAMS ABOUT PERFECTION. A PERFECT GAME. A FOUR MINUTE MILE. AN UNDEFEATED SEASON. WE ARE PROUD OF OUR RECORD. WE GAVE IT ALL WE HAD. STILL IF THERE WAS JUST ONE MORE CHANCE . . . . . AND MAYBE NEXT YEAR . . . THE WOMEN S SOFTBALL TEAM HAO THEIR FIRST UN- DEFEATED SEASON. COMPILING A 9-0 RECORD. FOR THE FIRST TIME. GAMES WERE HELD AGAINST ALBANY STATE. BRIDGE WATER STATE. HUNTER AND SALEM STATE COLLEGES. AS WELL AS THE UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS. A.I.C.. AND SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT. THE HIGHLIGHTS OF THE SEASON CAME WHEN THE WOMEN DEFEATED SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT. 3-0: AND THEN. 15-1. THIS WAS THE FIRST SPRINGFIELD TEAM EVER TO HAVE DE- FEATED SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT TWICE IN A SEASON. THIS FINE TEAM HAD SIX STARTING FRESHMAN. A SOPHO- MORE AND TWO PLAYERS FROM LAST YEAR: JUNIOR DIANE ARMET. AND SENIOR CAPTAIN. GINNY CISHEK. ANOY WARHOl CULTURAL AFFAIRS 130 132 THE WHO WEEOS SPANKY AND OUR GANG I 136 NANCY SEIPLE ’68 (SENIOR WEEKEND QUEEN). DIANE SAVETTI ’68. GENE LERMAN ’68. JODI ANDREWS ’68. 137 HO SENIORS tc '.V T'W SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE 1MIUIUH' «uiumiFl!. ! ■■■• ■ L9Niit •«•twl Jono. IS To tSr MtmlwM ©I IM Clata oMSO l-adi and 0 6lloman: t am very Sappy to hi tkit opportunity to ay a f w Anal wnrit W you thtouah I ha mtdiuni of llw hi «« OU ( havr (M m mb r« o f f data lou t-r than tho u ol any 0«h r (Utt at IM« Cilli , and I ii f r. know more of you patraoiully «“S t tur Duo any of (Our prvdaceatQr . I Humber marry of you ui«K| my l -r.ua ) frt'AtU. I havv wat'.Nnl you grow rr J (levnlop 1« your Job . • ludent . e I huvr eounht to do It my owo. You have vern l my r.aprct arid my kKnliM. n«l I Hop I have .(r.rrvrd your . hvkJr.fi).. with tha Work Waob for I tv Art lanhleUer Natatoriam th iac WM ol th Co)I k during yOwr four year t, rr hay h o your •aerritr. tn t«urn wl'.li tha fatuity ao4 «hr truai.M. You wrrr paMKu- larjy hrlpfuf during «n (Una ol «h «ranattton to now Mora recently■ in a tin kt« turmoil «art «YOO vmI ik« arufXrd in town and on campti ■ from © l to roaat. you. aa «color . . ip d mauuaia IS rc pon lblo •lability that t« th u rb Of I be ©'.«lilted (nr.rr.wUly. I with earn of vow vroll Vn yo r arfaralv rIlona in tsr Uff lhal tin khaad of you. If yoo cooH.vu to ait « affccv.raly individually at yov Hava a a l a. yemf fi-r ra will KwUleuo briyS) and rocr impact upon .out felk-umcnvlU row. Thanh you for ktUn me know you. Thanh you. too, lot what you havr meant to n v fan .tty and «-. Good iovk and Co4 bleat rou. Faithfully yoof tn Mia Colle . Mb FROM A MEMBER OF THE CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTY-EIGHT THIS IS THE END. C'EST FINIS. THE CUSS OF 1968 HAS HAD IT. WE HAVE ENDED OUR STORY. THERE WILL BE NO MORE STUDYING UNTIL FIVE O'CLOCK IN THE MORNING. WE END OUR INCESSANT CONTEMPUTION OF THOUGHTS AND PHILOSOPHIES THAT ARE RATHER ESOTERIC. WE END OUR CHILDREN'S GAMES-THE WILD UNINHIBITED PARTIES. THE MOMENTS OF FRIENDSHIP SHARED. THE WALKS UPON THE SAND OF WARM BEACHES. ALL OF THIS SEEMINGLY MEANING- LESS. IS COMMITTED TO THE MEMORY. WE ARE THROUGH. WE SHALL NEVER CROSS THESE PATHS AGAIN. NOW WE ARE FREE TO ENTER THE OTHER SOCIETY WITH A CLEAR CONSCIENCE. WE REALIZE THAT WE HAVE DONE ALL THE THINGS THAT COLLEGE KIDS ARE SUPPOSED TO DO. WE KNOW THIS BECAUSE THE DIPLOMA THAT WE HOLD IN OUR HANDS TELLS ALL THOSE CONCERNED THAT WE HAVE ACCUMUUTED A CERTAIN NUMBER OF CREDITS GIVING US PROFICIENCY IN A MAJOR FIELD OF STUDY. THE OTHER SOCIETY KNOWS WE WERE COLLEGE KIDS BECAUSE WE HAVE DANCED IN THE STREETS. MADE SOME NOISE. GROWN A 8EARD AND WORN SLEAZY CLOTHES. THEY PUT UP WITH US FOR AWHILE BUT NOW WE MUST ENTER THE RANKS. IT'S ALL DOWNHILL NOW. ALL WE HAVE TO DO IS ACT IN THE MANNER DICTATED 8Y SOCIETY'S PERCEPTION OF A COLLEGE GRADUATE. UNDOUBTEDLY WE WILL BECOME MEM- BERS OF THE ROTARY CLUB. WE WILL ATTEND A MULTITUDE OF COCKTAIL PARTIES. WE WILL WEAR A COAT AND TIE. SKIRT AND HEELS. WE WILL EAT LUNCH AT ONE AND DINE AT SEVEN. IT IS NOT ESSENTIALLY IMPORTANT THAT WE WILL CON- FORM TO THE SUPERFICIALITIES OF OUR SOCIETY. WE REAL IZE THAT THEY ARE RATHER SHALLOW. BUT THERE IS SOME THING THAT SOCIETY MUST REALIZE. ALTHOUGH WE SHAVE OUR BEARDS AND CHANGE OUR CLOTHES WE CANNOT FOR GET THAT WE HAVE LEARNED QUITE A FEW LESSONS IN THE 12 PAST FOUR YEARS. ALTHOUGH WE COMMIT TO MEMORY AND LEAVE BEHIND THE SIMPLE PLEASURES OF LIFE THAT SOME PEOPLE CONSIDER MEANINGLESS. WE CANNOT FORGET THAT WE HAVE LEARNED TO LOVE AND UNDERSTAND. THE MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1968 HAVE WITNESSED TWO ASSASSINATIONS. REBELLION IN OUR CITY STREETS AND A MELANGE OF OTHER DASTARDLY ACTS THAT THREAT- EN TO DESTROY OUR SOCIETY. LET SOCIETY KNOW THAT WE HAVE NOT WITNESSED THESE ACTS WITHOUT CONCERN. LET SOCIETY KNOW THAT WE HAVE NOT SURVIVED THE PAST FOUR YEARS INTELLECTUALLY. LET EVERYONE REALIZE THAT SOME OF THE MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1968 VOWED ON THE DAY OF OUR GRADUATION TO HELP CHANGE THE SEEMINGLY FATAL COURSE THAT OUR SOCIETY IS TAKING. THE MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1968 ARE WILLING TO GET DOWN TO THE GRASS ROOTS. IN THE PAST THE LEGAL AND MEDICAL PROFESSIONS HAVE BEEN CONSIDERED THE MOST ESSENTIAL AND PRESTIGIOUS OCCUPATIONS NOW. MORE THAN EVER. WE NEED THE SOCIAL WORKERS. TEACHERS AND PHYSICAL EDUCATORS-AND WE HAVE THEM IN THE CLASS OF 1968. TO HELL WITH PRESTIGE. WE HAVE THE IN TELLECTUAL AND MORAL FIBER TO HELP. IN THE SMALLEST WAYS. SET AMERICA ON A COURSE THAT WILL EVENTUALLY REALIZE THE AMERICAN DREAM. LET US NOT FORGET THAT OUR ESOTERIC THOUGHTS LED TO THE QUESTIONING OF THE STATUS QUO. LET US NOT FOR GET THAT IN FRIENDSHIP. DURING THE SMALL MOMENTS. WE HAVE COME TO REALIZE THE VALUE OF LOVE AND UNDER STANDING. FOR THIS. ALONE. WE SHALL NEVER FORGET THESE rOUR YEARS. AND FOR THIS ALONE I AM PROUD THAT I AM A MEMBER OF THE CLASS OF 1968. ALWAYS CLASS OF 1968 SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE UNITED STATES WORLD WILLIAM F. ADAMS NORTH CAN NAN. CONNECTICUT PETER WELLES AOOICOTT BETHESOA. MARYLAND ROBERT M. AUALA WORCESTER. MASSACHUSETTS LINDA ANN ANDREWS WElSSPORT, PENNSYLVANIA JEFFREY MORRISON ARMSTRONG CAPE ELIZABETH. MAINE NANCY L. BACON NEW 8RITAIN. CONNECTICUT is BRECKINRIDGE ALEXANDER NEW YORK. NEW YORK CHARLES ANDREADCS AUGUSTA. MAINE DAWN SARAH 8AKER SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS KENDALL R. BAKER SPRINGFIELD. VERMONT BRUCE ANDREW BAR8EPI STATEN ISLAND. NEW YORK JANICE LOUISE BARNES SCHENECTADY. NEW YORK RICHARD ALLEN BAUCHER ALLENTOWN. PENNSYLVANIA BAR8ARA LEE BECKWITH HAMDEN. CONNECTICUT RICHARD PETER BEDNAR2 CRAW ROBERT BENNETT HARTFORD. CONNECTICUT NEW CITY. NEW YORK 155 KATHERINE BEAL BRIDGTON. MAINE LAWRENCE PHIUP BECK ROCHESTER. NEW YORK JANE GLORIA BESEROSKY NEW BEDFORD. MASSACHUSETTS DAVID J. BESSETTE GARDNER. MASSACHUSETTS DOUGLAS DENNIS BESSONE CHERYL L BETHUNE W SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS CHATHAM NEW JERSEY EDGAR WIIUE BISSON EXETER. NEW HAMPSHIRE OWEN V. 8LAISDELL. JR. PORTlANO. MAINE CANDACE E. BLAKESLEE WILMINGTON. VERMONT CLIFFORO C. BLASJUS GLENDALE. NEW YORK KENNETH D. BLISS WILBRAHAM. MASSACHUSETTS ROBERT G. BLUM MERIDEN. CONNECTICUT DEBORAH L BOHANNAN CALGARY ALBERTA. CANADA ROBERT S. BORONSKI WARE MASSACHUSETTS 156 FRANCIS NORMAN BOSSIO SHARON l££ BOWIES BRAINTREE. MASSACHUSETTS ROCHESTER. NEW YORK SANDRA L. BOYNTON WAKEFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS RAYMOND WILUAM BRECHT ElMONT. NEW YORK SUE ALLISON BREWER BASKING RIDGE. NEW JERSEY CAROL-ANN BROWN CAMBRIA HEIGHTS. NEW YORK 157 UNDA BOYNTON STAMFORO. CONNECTICUT CHERYL BRAN GEN BERG TRENTON. NEW JERSEY ROBERT 8ROWN. JR BEVERLY. MASSACHUSETTS CAROL BRUSH BRUNSWICK. MAINE JAMES F. BURKE. JR.. LT. COL. USMC PAUL A. CADY LITCHFIELD. CONNECTICUT FARMINGTON. CONNECTICUT EOWARO PHILLIP CAFFARELLA. JR. LINDA GRACE CALKINS SAUGUS. MASSACHUSETTS MERIDEN. CONNECTICUT RICHARO CHARLES CAMPBELL SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS RODNEY FRANCIS CARTOCCI HARWINTON, CONNECTICUT SEBASTIAN CATAUDELLA WHITES60R0. NEW YORK ROBERT CHRUSZ BELMONT. MASSACHUSETTS 158 ALBERT E. CAMPBELL NEW HARTFORD. NEW YORK VIRGINIA L CISHEK DOVER. NEW JERSEY JUSTINE ALICE COBB SYRACUSE. NEW YORK KENNETH LOWELL COUINS ROY A. COLSEY BROOKLYN, NEW YORK PLEASANTVIUE. NEW YORK MAY L. CORCA CAMBRIDGE. MASSACHUSETTS PAMELA JEAN COTE FALMOUTH. MASSACHUSETTS JANET BUOIN COULTHART FRANKLIN LAKES. NEW JERSEY 1S9 MARK LAWRENCE CONNERS BETMESOA. MARYLANO FOSTER MATTHEW CRAWFORO NORTH ADAMS, LOUISE MARIE CONNOLLY OANVERS. MASSACHUSETTS PETER JOHN CREGO UTICA. NEW YORK JEAN DABOROWSKI SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS CHRISTINE DANIELS BROOKLINE. MASSACHUSETTS CHARLES R. DANNEN8ERG WEST CHESTER. PENNSYLVANIA JOHN J. DEAK HIGH LA NO PARK. NEW JERSEY JAMES T. DECARLO, JR. STAMFORO. CONNECTICUT KENNETH R. DEMONO GUILFORD. CONNECTICUT OAVIO J. DISQUE WILLIAM DOD DAVID DONALDSON SHARON DORN BENNINGTON. VERMONT KINGSTON. NEW HAMPSHIRE SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS WEBSTER. NEW YORK 160 LEROY S. DOUCHKOFF DOROTHY ANN DURNAN EDMUND R. EAST. JR- BREWSTER. NEW YORK BALDWIN. NEW YORK MANCHESTER. NEW HAMPSHIRE EMILY C. ERICKSON RAMSEY. NEW JERSEY ELIZABETH A. ERNST SILVIA M. FERRARETTO SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS EASTON, PENNSYLVANIA 161 ROBERT STANLEY EATON RICARDO L ECHEANDIA WILTON. CONNECTICUT BROOKLYN. NEW YORK JON C. FERRIS SANDRA JEAN FIELO BUCHANAN, NEW YORK BELCHERTOWN, MASSACHUSETTS BARBARA D. FISHER NORTH ANDOVER. MASSACHUSETTS KATHRYN C. FISHER KAUSPEU. MONTANA ALAN WILLIAM FLETCHER PORTLANO. MAINE NANCY J. FLETCHER LIVINGSTON. NEW JERSEY RICHARD ALLEN FOOT ESSEX JUNCTION. VERMONT RICHARD FRIEDMAN 8RIOGETON. NEW JERSEY RAYMOND 0. FOX SOUTHWKX MASSACHUSETTS 162 JOANNE E. FURTEK i. BRUCE GARDINER EASTHAMPTON. MASSACHUSETTS PORT CHESTER. NEW YORK PAUL G1ANNAKOULIS JUDITH P. GIBNEY STOUGHTON. MASSACHUSETTS SARATOGA SPRINGS. NEW YORK SAVITRI GAUTAMADASA CEYLON PETER A. GIGONE ATTLEBORO. MASSACHUSETTS 163 JAMES GAY NOR ROSLYN HARBOR. I I.. NEW YORK NICHOLAS L GIANCOLA, JR. STAMFORD. CONNECTICUT JAMES M. CILLIS WILMINGTON. MASSACHUSETTS WARREN GLECKEL POUGHKEEPSIE. NEW YORK MARY E. GOERLICM HERBERT A. GRANT ROBERT J. CRAY. JR. RICHARD H. GRAY PAMELA L. GREEN EAST CLEVELAND. OHIO CHICAGO. ILLINOIS HOUSATONIC. MASSACHUSETTS SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS WILBRAHAM. MASSACHUSETTS DONALD H. GREGORY FREDERICK M. GRESSLER ALLISON GRIMPEL BEVERLEY A. GROSS CAROL ANN GROVE ANNANOALE, VIRGINIA WHITE PLAINS. NEW YORK FREEPORT. NEW YORK RUTHERFORO. NEW JERSEY MADISON. CONNECTICUT 164 PATRICIA A. GUTHRIE BUFFALO. NEW YORK RICHARD J. GYDUS SHELTON. CONNECTICUT ARTHUR M. HALL MILTON. MASSACHUSETTS JOANNE M. HAMOLKO DAVID HANSON DUMONT. NEW JERSEY N. SCITUATE. R.l ROBERT G. HARBEN BALDWIN. NEW YORK 165 PAULA L HAMADA PERKASIE. PENNSYLVANIA 8RIAN HAMERNICK BURLINGTON. CONNECTICUT WILLIAM M. HARDY NATICK. MASSACHUSETTS ARTHUR W. HARMON ROSELLE. NEW JERSEY RICHARD 0. HART. JR. MOUNTAIN LAKES. NEW JERSEY CAROLE L. HECHT UNION. NEW JERSEY JULIAN S. HARTWELL ACTON. MASSACHUSETTS BYRON N. HAWKINS BELCHERTOWN, MASSACHUSETTS PHYLLIS C. HAY NEEDHAM. MASSACHUSETTS NANCY LEE HAYES EAST GRANBY. CONNECTICUT JOHN H. HEDBAVNY JOHN R. HERRLING FRESH MEADOWS. NEW YORK BEDFORD. MASSACHUSETTS STEPHEN E. HICKMAN PORTSMOUTH. OHIO GARY M. HIGGINS MIDDLETOWN. NEW YORK 166 GEOFFREY H. Hill MILLTOWN, NEW JERSEY THOMAS P. HIU HARVARD. MASSACHUSETTS CAROL L HINCKLEY SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS JOHN W. HUGHES III BURLINGTON. MASSACHUSETTS CORNELIA Y. INGERSOLL ORCHARD PARK. NEW YORK JILL E. INGHAM ORANGE. MASSACHUSETTS 167 PETER C. HOFFMAN JAMES F. HOTAIING IPSWICH, MASSACHUSETTS GAU.UPVILLE. NEW YORK PHILIP J. IRVING BONNIE R. IZMIRIAN NATICK. MASSACHUSETTS NEW BEDFORD. MASSACHUSETTS LINDA M. JA8L0NSKI STEPHEN A. JACKSON CAROLE JENKINS WARE. MASSACHUSETTS WRENTHAM, MASSACHUSETTS WINOOSKI. VERMONT PENNY JOHNSON CHATHAM. NEW JERSEY STEVE F. KALOGRIS OCEANSIDE. NEW YORK STANLEY A. KASLUSKY ROBERT J. KEEFE STEPHEN V. KELLY GREGORY M. KLINE BROOKLYN. NEW YORK 8RAINTREE. MASSACHUSETTS OFFUT AFB. OMAHA. NEBRASKA ELLICOTT CITY. MARYLAND HENRY E. KNIGHT MIDLAND PARK. NEW JERSEY 16 NANCY I. KOCH SUSAN L KOLLER LANSOOWNE. PENNSYLVANIA BETHESOA. MARYLAND BONNIE J. KOSTIN SYOSSET, NEW YORK PAUL J. KOVACHICK AKRON. OHIO GARY W. KRAFT NEW MILFORO. CONNECTICUT ROBERT E. KYLE JOHN T. LAFORTE WESTPORT. CONNECTICUT FLUSHING. NEW YORK DOUGLAS J. LAGGREN UNION. NEW JERSEY FRED W. LAGRANT PHIUP B. LAPALME LEE. MASSACHUSETTS GREENFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS 169 STANLEY L. LAPI DOW BURLINGTON. VERMONT DAVID S. LAUTER8ACH CHAPPAQUA. NEW YORK CHARLES J. LELAS MILFORD. CONNECTICUT CHRISTOPHER J. LIBBEY CARL E. LINCOLN SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS NEW YORK. NEW YORK LOIS A. LINOSAY PHILADELPHIA. PENN 170 GENE M. LERMAN RAYMOND C. LEVESQUE YORK, PENNSYLVANIA COLUMBIA, CONNECTICUT ) I AUGUST M. LINK GRANT F. LONGLEY. JR. GOfFSTOWN. NEW HAMPSHIRE FRANKLIN. MASSACHUSETTS ELAINE LONGO CLARK. NEW JERSEY STEVEN LUDWIG DARIEN. CONNECTICUT JANICE L. MAC GREGOR BALTIMORE, MARYLAND DAVID E. MARCUS LITTLETON. MASSACHUSETTS WALLACE P. MARSHALL. JR. SOUTHBORO. MASSACHUSETTS ANSTIS H. MARTING SCHENECTADY. NEW YORK 171 JOHN P. MATTHEWS MATTAPOISETT. MASSACHUSETTS JR Wfr WIIUAM A. MONTICK GLEN ROCK, NEW JERSEY MARSHA M. MAXWEU SUSAN L. MECONI SADOLE RIVER. NEW JERSEY AU SABLE FORKS. NEW YORK ROBERT R. MORRILL. JR. YARMOUTH, MAINE MARGARET P. NAYLOR SUMMIT. NEW JERSEY 172 NORMA MCLAUGHLIN NEUMANN VICTOR H. NEUMANN SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS NEW YORK. NEW YORK JOHN E. NEMJN III R08ERT NICKERSON WYOMISSINC. PENNSYLVANIA 8ELFAST. MAINE JOSEPH J. PANGIA CARL PAQUETTE BROOKLYN. NEW YORK SPRINGFIELO. MASSACHUSEnS MEREDITH A. NICKLES DENVILLE. NEW JERSEY RUSSELL R. PATE GLASTON8URY. CONNECTICUT 17S STEVEN T. OLSEN SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS OAVIO PALK WANTAGH.NEW YORK P JANE PATTERSON HOLDEN. MASSACHUSETTS GERALD R. PEEK WELLESLEY. MASSACHUSETTS ANTHONY D. PIZ2UTI PROVIDENCE. R.1. CYTH1A PETERSON FREDERIC 0. PHILLEY WILBRAHAM. MASSACHUSETTS WINDSOR. NEW YORK KENTON T. POOLE FREO A. POTTER III WILMINGTON. DELAWARE SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS 174 DIANE M. PHILLIPS NEEDHAM. MASSACHUSETTS THOMAS J. PILLION NEWINGTON, CONNECTICUT ALFRED R PROIETTE HAMDEN. CONNECTICUT CORNELIUS S. PUTNAM -EAST NORTHFIELO. MASSACHUSETTS JUDITH A. PYLE BOONTON. NEW JERSEY ALDENA J. RAMSOELL CHARLES REDMONO OOUGLASSVIllE. PENNSYLVANIA SOUTHBORO. MASSACHUSEnS CARL 0. ROBERTS PORT DEPOSIT. MARYLAND LAUREL ROHLFS LEVITTOWN. NEW YORK MICHAEL P. ROHLFS LEVITTOWN. NEW YORK 175 ANDREA BETH RICKER BOON TON, NEW JERSEY RONALD J. RITCHIE GREENWICH. CONNECTICUT AUOREY-ANN ROSA SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS RAYMOND L ROSA FALL RIVER. MASSACHUSETTS JAMES RUN DIE KINGSTON. NEW YORK SHARON L RUPP MILWAUKIE. OREGON ROBERT E. RUTKOWSKI STRATFORD. CONNECTICUT DIANE SALVETTI MARTIN E. SAVAGE. JR. LOIS SAWYER FAIRLAWN, NEW JERSEY FARMINGTON. CONNECTICUT JAFFREY. NEW HAMPSHIRE 176 R08ERT G. SALMON SEN AGAWAN. MASSACHUSETTS RUTH M. SAKS ROSELLE. NEW JERSEY C. TOM SAWYER THOMAS H. SAWYER E LONGMEADOW. MASSACHUSETTS NORWICH, NEW YORK CAROL SCHINK NANCY J. SEIPLE QUAKER HILL. CONNECTICUT PHILLIPSBURG. NEW JERSEY JOHN B. SHEA CARBONOAIE. ILLINOIS EMILY M. SISSON AVONOALE ESTATES. GEORGIA 8EVERLY A. SMITH GLEN ROCK. NEW JERSEY IRENE J. SOKOLOWSKI FOROS. NEW JERSEY 177 ROSEMARY t- SHELLY WALOWICK. NEW JERSEY JOESEPH S. SIOOTI MILTON. MASSACHUSETTS SANDRA J. STAFEORO OARIEN, CONNECTICUT SANDRA S. ST ALTER QUANT ICO. VIRGINIA STEPHEN STEIN GREAT NECK. NEW YORK ROBERT J. STIEHLER ROCHESTER. NEW YORK 8AR8ARA L STERN MARBLEHEAD. MASSACHUSETTS DANIEL R. STORRS COVENTRY. CONNECTICUT LAURA JANE STEVENS GT. BARRINGTON. MASSACHUSETTS BRIAN A. STRA22A HUNTINGTON. NEW YORK BURTON D. STTCLKES. JR. PLEASANT VALLEY. NEW YORK ANTHONY SUMMITT N. MASSA PE QUA NEW YORK DAVID A. STICKNEY LEXINGTON, MASSACHUSETTS WILLIAM E. TOLLNER ROCKVILLE CENTRE. NEW YORK 178 JANICE E. V1TEU SCOTTSOALE. ARIZONA R. LEE TRACY JR. OAKLAND. NEW JERSEY LEE WALENCIKOWSKI SEASIDE HEIGHTS. NEW JERSEY ROBERT F. TOUSIGNANT GARONER, MASSACHUSETTS PAUL J. TWOMEY BIOOLFORD. MAINE CHARLES E. WALKER. JR. CHEVY CHASE. MARYLAND 179 ANGELO F. VALENTINO HARRISON. NEW YORK DAVID VENO SOMERSWORTH. NEW HAMPSHIRE TIMOTHY J. WALSH GLENN C. WARD RYE. NEW YORK LUNENBURG. MASSACHUSETTS SALLY A. WILKES WALLINGfORO. CONNECTICUT RAY WIILOCK DANIEL L. WILLS STOUGHTON. MASSACHUSETTS 8EDfORO. OHIO 180 MARTIN W1ADR0 RICHARD J. WEIDl FITCHBURG. MASSACHUSETTS HARTFORD. CONNECTICUT RICAHRO J. WOJTUKIEWICZ LYNN D. WOIFINGER GARONER. MASSACHUSETTS 8ELVIDERE. NEW JERSEY ALAN R. WOOD JOHN I. WORTH ICY FAIL RIVER. MASSACHUSETTS WAREHOUSE POINT. CONNECTICUT RICHARD B. ZIEGLER BERNAROSVILLE. NEW JERSEY SENIORS NOT PICTURED NANCY J. ANDERSON WESTBURY. NEW YORK RICHARD W. ASSELIN CHICOPEE. MASSACHUSETTS ROBERT N. ATWOOD AUBURNDALE. MASSACHUSETTS JERE C. AUSTIN III SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS KENNETH R. BALVIN WEST ISLIP. NEW YORK RICHARD 0. BARRY JR. S. DARTMOUTH. MASSACHUSETTS ELEANOR K. BARTON LONGMEADOW. MASSACHUSETTS FORREST M. BATEMAN HAVERHILL. MASSACHUSETTS MARJORIE L. BELGRADE LONGMEADOW. MASSACHUSETTS WILLIAM E. BLISS SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS BARRETT M. BROSS SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS ROBERT S. BURFORD WEST HARTFORD. CONNECTICUT GARY A. BURTON SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS WILLIAM J. BURRETTO MIDDLETOWN. NEW YORK JEFFREY G. CANGE SHANDAKEN. NEW YORK LEE D. CARMICHAEL N. ABINGTON. MASSACHUSETTS PAUL H. CARRINGTON WATERBURY. CONNECTICUT SUSAN E. CATHCART ATTLEBORO. MASSACHUSETTS JOAN COGSWELL WESTPORT. CONNECTICUT MARY H. CONNOLLY TEANECK. NEW JERSEY ROBERT A. CORSO HARTFORD. CONNECTICUT RODRIQUE P. COUSINO 8RIST0L. VERMONT ROY T. COWING JR. CENTERVILLE. MASSACHUSETTS MAUREEN T. CZEKANSKI PAWTUCKET. RHODE ISLAND JENNIFER W. DALY CRAWFORD. INDIANA GERAINT DAVIES MONTREAL. CANADA MICHAEL R. DEHAAN AURORA. ILLINOIS JACQUELINE S. DITTRICH SIMSBURY. CONNECTICUT JOHN DONARUMMO E. NORTHPORT. NEW YORK MICHAEL DUFFELMEYER VALHALLA. NEW YORK NORMAN C. DUPONT SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS LIESELOTTE J. DUMAIS SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS ALAN V. DUNCAN NEW YORK. NEW YORK STEPHEN C. EISOLD WILBRAHAM. MASSACHUSETTS BRUCE C. ELLIOT NORTH ANDOVER. MASSACHUSETTS DONALD E. ELLIOT RIDGEWOOD. NEW JERSEY R08ERT D. FANCHER JR. COLUMBIA. SOUTH CAROLINA BONNIE FEINSTEIN AMHERST. MASSACHUSETTS NANCY L. FISCHER ST. PAUL. MINNESOTA DONALS A. FREDERICKS PEARL RIVER. NEW YORK VIVIAN FOX SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS STEPHEN A. GLASS WEST HARTFORD. MASSACHUSETTS PHYLLIS L. GOULD WADSWORTH. OHIO FRANCIS M. GRANT FRAMINGHAM. MASSACHUSETTS DANIEL B. GRIFFIN BREWSTER. NEW YORK JANICE G. HOWARD SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS HARRY P. HOWITT W. HENRIETTA. NEW YORK DAVID M. HUGHES HOPKINTON. MASSACHUSETTS ROBERT A. HYNES SMITHTOWN. LI.. NEW YORK ROBERT E. JACKSON NEWTON. MASSACHUSETTS ERNEST C. JONES CORAPOLIS. PENNSYLVAINA REBECCA KAISER ROCHESTER. NEW YORK ROBERT C. KASTEN SCARSDALE. NEW YORK ROBERT G. KING SCARSDALE. NEW YORK DORIS M. KNAPP WOODBURY HEIGHTS. NEW JERSEY RICHARD E. NIGHT WINDSOR. VERMONT EUGENE R. LEPESQUEUR WILLIAMSTOWN. MASSACHUSETTS FREDERICK A. MANDL NEWINGTON. CONNECTICUT RICHARD J. MANSON N. ADAMS. MASSACHUSETTS RONALD E. MARKIEWICZ W. BOYLSTON. MASSACHUSETTS KAAREN A. MARSH BILLINGS. MONTANA WILLIAN MCCABE SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS MICHAEL W. MELLO TEATICKET. MASSACHUSETTS 8RUCE H. MORGAN NORTH WIL8RAHAM. MASSACHUSETTS DAVID E. MORSE AMESBURY. MASSACHUSETTS THERESE M. MULLEN PALMER. MASSACHUSETTS RICHARD A. NATALE WOLLASTON. MASSACHUSETTS ROSS M. NICHOL MONTREAL. QUEBEC. CANADA RICHARD OLSEN QUINCY. MASSACHUSETTS JOHN E. PACEK WORCESTER. MASSACHUSETTS 182 WARREN H. PARKER ASHLAND. NEW HAMPSHIRE ROBERT H. SHAY WEST SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS DAVID A. TROMBLEY WEST RUTLAND. VERMONT THOMAS E. PARMELEE ORANGE. CONNECTICUT RICHARD SHIEDOW CRANSTON. RHODE ISLAND NANCY L. TUCKER WELLESLEY HILLS. MASSACHUSETTS JOHN J. PORREll WAYLAND. MASSACHUSETTS JONATHON P. SMITH SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS MARGARET A. TUTTLE MIDDLETOWN. NEW YORK JOHN G. PROUT WHITE PLAINS. NEW YORK PATRICIA C. SMITH SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS JOHN D. VIBBERTS KENSINGTON. CONNECTICUT JOSEPH A. REGAN CHESHIRE. CONNECTICUT GEOFFREY T. SNYDER SCARSDALE. NEW YORK PAUL H. WAGNER SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS LINDA J. RENSHAW CLIFTON SPRINGS. NEW YORK BRUCE D. SODERHOLM TRUMBULL. CONNECTICUT RAYMOND W. WALSH SELDEN. NEW YORK TIMOTHY A. ROGERS BETHESDA. MD. DEBORAH L. STOUT BANGOR. NEW YORK DOROTHY A. WEININGER GLENDALE. NEW YORK MARIANN B. ROPER LONGMEADOW. MASSACHUSETTS ROBERT SWADEL NORTH READING. MASSACHUSETTS JAMES S- WHYTE LONG BEACH. CALIFORNIA ALAN S. ROSS LYNNFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS BRIAN M. SZOC GARDNER. MASSACHUSETTS SHERILYN WILLIS WINDSOR. CONNECTICUT ALAN D. ROSSI BARRE. VERMONT ROBERT THAYER QUEBEC. CANADA FRANK J. WINOSKI FAIRVIEW. MASSACHUSETTS WILLIAN H. SCHENCK SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS CHARLES 8. THOMPSON JR. SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS DERICH G. WISDOM RENFORTH. NEW BRUNSWICK. CANADA GLENN R. SCHERMERHORN PHILMONT. NEW YORK WILLIAM E. THOMPSON PITTSFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS GEORGE M. WOLFORT BABYLON. NEW YORK FRANCIS X. SCHULER IV GREAT NECK. NEW YORK PAUL A. TIERNEY ARLINGTON. MASSACHUSETTS BRUCE M. WORLEY PLAINVILLE. CONNECTICUT MARTIN A. SEEFER HARTFORD. CONNECTICUT GEORGE H. TOMSON KINGSTON. NEW YORK Itf3 ENGINEERS • CONTRACTORS P.O. Box 240. Springfield. Massachusetts • Telephone 733-2151 launderette telephones River Street at Memorial Ave. West Springfield opposite the Eastern States Exposition grounds a member of TtiiltuUfop llUU o|) fauJlilCL if THE CAMPUS BARBER SHOP Italian and English cuts styled by expert craftsmen 3 Barbers No Waiting 8:00-6:30 Monday-Saturday Corner of Eastern Ave. and Alden Street in the White House CITY CLEANERS, INC City Dye Works iiiiiiiiiiiiiiin same day service dry cleaning and laundry 1072 Main Street Springfield 734-5651 734-5652 ample parking llllllllllll lllllll special college discount serving the Springfield College community . .............................................. princtfieli Newspapers Springfield, Massachusetts IIIIMIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllll complete coverage for over 100 years Sunday Republican Mo'iniuy Idtuon fveuiny Jbaily A eupi Delehanty Drug Store prescription specialists free delivery 158 Rifle Street 734-3800 Serving The Springfield College Community DELUXE BUS SER VICE new air conditioned airide busses Charter Our Busses—Anywhere—Anytime- Any Size INTERSTATE BUSSES CORPORA TION 144 Bridge Street Terminal at 137 Bridge Street Springfield 739-3826 739-2551 Congratulations to all Graduates, and the Best of Luck to You in your Future Endeavors. IMPORT PLAZA INC. 472 Boston Road Springfield. Mass. 783-2141 Porsche Datsun B.M. W. Lotus 96 Please Drive Defensively WHBT THE NEED B SPEED GET WITH THE ELECT-SET They're off — smooth, fast and clean ■ They're the ELECT-SET, the on the go people who want to be out front with the best — on the road or at home ■ They don’t just follow the signs of the times - they set the course ■ That's why they choose electricity to make their work less wearisome and the.r living more likeable ■ ... Get with the ELECT-SET, and move into tomorrow's world today ■ Even if you don’t know a cam from a crankshaft, car- wise. you can be an expert, hot-water wise, with speedy automatic electric water heating service ■ WesterxiaMass. (••• • %• «• • •••• • «••• • •••• bases It start with a hard-hit line drive. But there’s no score unless the runner touches every base as he makes his circuit. And it’s the same in the game of personal or business mance. If you're going to score, you need a bank that touches all bases .. . offers a full range of services for all your needs. An outfit like Valley Bank that’s ready to go to bat for you any time ... when the game’s great or when the pressure's on and you need a pitch hitter you can depend on us. So drop in and see us; make us a part of your team. T AND TRUST COMPANY La'0« t network ol branch bank in Greater Springfield and Hampden County Member Federal Depot!! Insurance Corporation Springfield's Newest and Finest IA V£jp O CE 78 rooms elevator television radio room phones air conditioned 24 hour switchboard 700 State Street Springfield 739-2161 I ITS THI FOOD THAT MAKCS THt HAMS MOT TUB MAMt THAT MAKtS THI FOOD ‘ ['ATCRING V'rincMJ CnUeiif Studrntit'l «w lf CLASS OF 1969 ®lfp ©aka Jlntt 700 State Street Springfield complete dinners served until midnight 733-4121 In the Center of Springfield at 10 Harrison Ave. Member of the American (fern Society Kcgistcrcd jewelers jewelers ami silversmiths since !S62 191 SCMjCAZZSK’S Flowers 1285 Main Street 437 Bay Street Springfield 733-7857 736-8366 fresh flowers for every occasion since 1895 • • • AMERICAN LINEN SUPPLY COMPANY • ••••• Authorized Linen Suppliers For Springfield College 61 Franklin Street, Springfield the only complete service for a successful yearbook... from photography to lithography A Mat range ot Graptuc A ts Service prortfea on a complete ? ticvbtc bain to Suit your own irxjnxtoat requirements • RAOIORY, iAYLII, O'lMBILL, INC. •ruaua «I Ktur jsnts Eagle Tavern in SHERATON MOTOR INN There's always great food and drink at the Eagle Tavern. Enjoy lunch or dinner there soon. Illllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllll Special rates on rooms for students and faculty FREE PARKING SPRINGFIELO RE 4-3141 ALDEN STREET DRUG FSF Drug. Inc. 884 Alden Street Springfield prescript ions complete diabetic supplies snack bar gift cent a cosmetics free pick up and fast delivery 781-0211 782-0031 Jn business for Jour Health 192 ofiin TU) o) Qctt'mg SngagcJ? 'Btu uui Smm Swkni 2 WMwrU with special price consideration by— Herb Cohen in association with his father £sanls 'iS.monA «tUxAuit O— 732-$244 1618 MAIN STREET. SPRINGFIELD. MASS, an open letter to Springfield College Students: A diamond rnjfugement ring om■ of the meet personal and important purthutws in an individual's life—is often one of the most difficult. I haec ulnay beliefed that college students icei- comc a Straight-forward presentation of the facts bp someone r uolifitd by tunning and CJ-fwrumcv, who is sincerely interested in assisting them in mak- ing an intelligent selection. I have enjoyed the opportunities of being of as- sistance to you in your important selections. Best Of luck. Herb Cotum CONVERSE-CARLISLE COMPANY and Petroleum Engineering Division Fuel — Heating — Equipment Residential and Industrial 195 Armory Street Springfield, Mass. Phone 736-6511 1‘irst in the 11 cat inn Field for Over 75 Years Dining Hall and Snack Bar Congratulations to the Graduates 194 TOBER Foreign Motors, Inc. 676 Belmont Ave. Springfield, Mass. HOCKEY CLUB enjoy «he experience of a good beef — A Steok for Two . .. jolt try it! Dinner erved 'til 12:30 o.m., mack 'til one . . . RE 6-8521. 456 Sumner Ave. at the X -Rte. 21 HOWARD S PHOTO SUPPLY 117 State Street Springfield Nikon— Pentax—Zeiss Best Prices in New England Visit tlx- NAISMITH MEMORIAL BASKETBALL HALL OF FAME Daily 10 a.m.-5 p.m. — Sunday 1-5 p.m. fast Edge Of Springfield College Campus 460 Aldcn Street Hampden Candy and Tobacco Company 1028 Main Street Springfield 781-0566 lllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllll Wholesale distributors of candv—confections tobacco—soda fountain supplies for the Springfield College Beveridge Center «OUJARDjOHIHOnj Host of the Highways Coast-to-Coast 333 Columbus Avenue Springfield, Mass. Restaurant - Cocktail Lounge Modern Swimming Pool Springfield's Favorite Restaurant 734-8211 734-7475 788-6628 196 serving delicious (german food specialties imported wines, beers, and liquors 197 My message is to urge you to touch your realism with faith in yourself and with the magic of dreams. ” Baccalaureate Address-1968 THE COLLEGE FAMILY 198 — =S£---—ygs ■
”
1965
1966
1967
1969
1970
1971
Find and Search Yearbooks Online Today!
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES
GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.