University of Pittsburgh - Owl Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) - Class of 1967 Page 1 of 352
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Each of the periods of change in the 180 years of the University of Pittsburgh has raised questions about the future. Originally established as the Pittsburgh Academy in I 8 . the University was renamed thr Western University in I860. Between 1860and 1896, six divisions, including engineering, law, and dentistry, were established. Renown was not synonymous with expansion. When Dr. John Bowman assumed the chancellorship in 1921. few Pittsburghers could direct him to the school. The Cathedral of Learning is a product of his sensitivity and determination. In 1955 l)r. Edward Litchfield gave impetus to the street-car school, improving the faculty and increasing facilities along with tuition. The ten-vear realization of his dreams left the University SI9.5 million in debt. Preserving the status quo through ambiguous state-relatedness. Chancellors Stanton Crawford and David Kurtzman plunged the institution into its greatest period of uncertainty. “Life in a great university is never far removed from kinship with the great souls of the earth: Homer. David, Shakespeare . . . “The building must be more than a schoolhouse. It must be a symbol of the life that Pittsburgh has wanted to live. John Gilbert Bowman d Two years ago there was a statesman leading Pitt. He tall, graying at the temples, and was to students the essence ofcoothncss. His name was Chancellor Edward Litchfield. His unique eontribution to this University remains despite his departure. He plunged Pitt into a huge aeadcmic and physical expansion program. His dynamism, however, could not procure sufficient funds to meet the growing expenses. Well-documented articles in Science magazine said dissension between Litchfield and trustees caused his departure. The only certain facts arc that Litchfield gave Pitt a respected academic standing and now successive administrators have secured the state-related funds to insure that status. KM kaJ li m Two years ago Pitt made the big-time. Headlines flashed in local and national publications about the dissolution of Edward Litchfield’s pipe dream. Science magazines ran a meticulously researched series on the causes of the fiscal problems. The flash was short, not sweet, and the past two years have been spent in quiet austerity. Dr. David Kurtzman came from the Eels Institute in Philadelphia to apply his financial wizardry. He and a corps of diehard University administrators and state legislators created the University of Pittsburgh in the Commonwealth System of Higher Education. State-related became the by-word of the new Pitt with guaranteed state funds reducing tuition costs for students and giving the University privied access to state resources. Now the University lias made the transition from the Litchfield era to the state-related era. The question remains— What next? Throughout the fiscal crisis there were continued worries about declining academic status. Talk grew of the reincarnation of a street-ear University geared solely to concerns of, by, and for Western Pennsylvania. Good academicians would then leave the University to produce automatons to fill the region’s needs. Yet the staunchest support during the crisis came from the faculty. Although some left the University, administrators said there was not much variance from the normal turnover rate. Salaries have since been made secure and a number of departments have begun vigorous expansion of programs and faculty. While the University has the resources to keep in the rat-race of academia. there still remains the question of regionalism. I)r. Wesley Posvar, newly-appointed chancellor, has said the University’s most important function is to use its resources for the good and welfare of the region. Mis concerns plus the drop in out-of-state students have given many lingering thoughts about Trolley-Car U. Both Posvar and Dean of Student Affairs, Jack Critchfield have asserted the benefits of the regional concern. Posvar says the regional concern will only Ik one. though a primary one, focus of the school’s resources. Critch-ficld feels the priority given in-state students will not lower, but raise the quality of the student body. These men are helping the University maintain a precarious balance on the tight-rope of state-rclatcdness. The State of Pennsylvania must receive compensation for its funds by priorities to in-state students and community affairs. Faculty and students must feel they are in an academically above-average school. All wait on the sidelines to see how the challenge is met. Meeting the challenge now means meeting the community in unity. William Rea. new Chairman of the Board of Trustees, remains an active member of the civic wing of the Pittsburgh Board of Education. He and the newly-appointed trustees bring the governing board even closer to state and local concerns. Carnegie Tech President H. Guyford Stcvcr has already met several times with Dr. Kurtzman. Their new vision may be to change the concrete streets of Oakland into pulsating arteries of Knowledge. A short man with graying hair came slowly walking down Forbes Avenue one morning. He was clad in a well-tailored grey-flannel suit, a hat neatly placed on his small head, and a business man’s demeanor painted over him. As he passed a student meandering to class he gave a short friendly smile like a patriarch watching one of his children grow another inch. The man was David Kurtzman. Me was Chancellor of the University of Pittsburgh. It was that image of the benevolent parent which he conveyed during his tenure. He summed it up in his commencement address by giving thanks to the students for the knowledge they had exchanged. During his stay as Vice-Chancellor of Finance and Chancellor, Kurtzman earned the reward of a bounty hunter. Fiscal soundness had 10 I alluded Pitt, threatening its image as an academic institution. He systematically sought out the culprits and secured a financial base from which to grow. Dr. Kurtzman, a political scientist specializing in public finance, took the role of the diplomat in addition to re-aligning the school’s finances. He dealt effectively with faculty, students and community leaders in all required situations. His heir now need not worry perpetually about being on the brink of financial disaster. I)r. Wesley Posvar can use the brinksmanship of a polished diplomat to develop a vital Pitt under statc-rclatcd-ncss. He also is a political scientist with an arm-length list of military and academic honors. His primary concerns as Dean of the Social Sciences at the Air Force Academy were strategy and decision-making. In physical stature Posvar resembles more the stern, disciplinary parent with heavy curling eyebrows and grim macing face. Yet Dr. Posvar faces a different, but equal challenge to that of Dr. Kurtzman. He must now learn to walk the streets of Oakland. n o blUULNi 9 uur I ■r . a toiTlOH 13 CREDITS $47 A CREDIT ACTIVITY FEE GROSS AMOUNT •«« ONIveRSITY OF PITTSBURGH f'; stawiit iiileici for AcrtiMic chaises ituOKHT ' PUTt wuT z a 6t MR DERRICK AUSTIN 968 RIDGE ROAD AMBRIDGE PA 15003 OFFICE JAN COMPT LLER M © SCHOOL 101-A ’ TCRM WINTER 66-67 9TU0CNT NO. 268552-H OATC (HVOICCD PA. 12 16 66 OC couruxj otetjuietrvf TtTLtc 88 SEMINAR tttoc. WC9M j M f A E 0 CL G008 M E 28 DSGN 1 LAB 0 EH 0213 M E 28 MECH DSGN 1 3 EH 0204 M E 42 MECH MSRMT 3 EH 0205 M E 42 MECH MSRMT LAB 0 T 0203 A E 65 PERF STAB CONT 3 EH 0219 A E 30 ANAL DESIGN 2 EH 0219 A E 30 ANAL DESIGN LAB 0 EH 0212 A E 96 ADV TOPICS 2 EH 0213 j. : INVOlCC NO. OATC OUC 01 03 67 40122- ■;§pESS Ac LOWANCF FOR PENNSYLVANIA RESIDENCY NET AMOUNT DUE e « eois.ftCSL ., iyiTioN. ueiv. rcc., CROSS AMOUNT ,i 13 CREDITS 5.00 m Mi 491.00 120.00 $ 616.00 •-' --• 1 , 1 t r. ■ e pcr. 04 06 06 01 i 02 01 05 06 1 . i 05 ’ amount 611.00 5.00 616.00 386.00 230.00 IF NOT VALIDATED ON OR BEFORE DUE DATE REGISTRATION WILL BE CANCELLED GENERAL INFORMATION: Charges outstanding for previous terms are not reflected on this Invoice, which covers charges for only the term indicated above. This Invoice when validated by the Comptroller is your positive identification. It is subject to inspection by proper authority and will identify you during the term indicated obove for: © Q 1. Admission to the courses on the days and hours hereon. 2. Permission to use the University Library facilities. UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH ACKNOWLEDGES PAYMENT OF THIS AMOUN SA-121 12-08 OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER BY- Across each student invoice there now appears in bold lettering, “Less Pennsylvania State Residence Allowance”. That one line symbolizes Pitt's existence as a University. The state-related deduction has allowed a freshman class of nearly 2.000 to enroll for September 1967. Most of these students will be from Pennsylvania. Each one has been produced by a different interaction of heredity and environment. Each one walks, talks, eats, sleeps, and studies differently. Each one has his peculiar goals, aims, and aspirations. When each receives a window-faced envelope in August 1967 the each no longer exists. All become numbers. They arc different numbers, but all arc programmed by the computer on to an invoice. That invoice becomes the common denominator. All are comrades with the same problems and woes. All must pay the activities fee recently affixed to the drab-blue invoice. All must acquaint themselves with the drop-add procedure, time schedules, and unavailable advisors. All must learn to cope with the gum-chewing, hip-swinging employees of the Office of Student Records. All that comes from a small sheet of paper called an invoice. 13 Administration SAVINA SKEW IS, Dean of Women JACK CRITCHFIEI.I), Dean of Student Affairs V t HELEN POOI. RUSH. Assistant to the Chancellor HERBERT MeGIBBENV, Dean of Men Perhaps the most significant by-product of state-related-ncss has been the required priority given in-state students. Dr. Jack Oritchfield was Dean of Admissions and Student Aid throughout the state—related deliberation. It was he who had to ward off thoughts of declining quality of students and cautions about maintaining a diversified student body. These issues still remain, but the priorities are definitely set. Oritchfield now moves to insure that incoming students will follow a stable course at state—related Pitt. He replaced Dean Helen Pool Rush as Dean of Student Affairs. Miss Rush will become a special assistant to the Chancellor as Dean Oritchfield coordinates the intricate aspects of student life. Shifts like Rush and Critchficld’s were only minor changes in an overall administrative reorganization. The University consolidated seven vice-chancellors into a core triumverate of three; Finance. Academics, and the Professions. These shifts were the focal points for a slew of minor changes throughout the administrative hierarchy. They were the outgrowth of fiscal revamping begun two years ago. Now the bureaucrats have realigned and the new Pitt is ready to move. t5 'Hie buzz of a saw. I he hammering of a drill- the pounding of a hammer, the clash of a crane still remain though Pitt has changed. Crews work through their rote daily routines as buildings become remodelled and new structures rise. A man walks slowly along Forbes Avenue. Wrinkles run deeply across his face like ripples of a strem newly-stirred by a rushing wind. A construction worker passes by clad in metal hat with sweat stained tee-shirt clinging to his skin. An urchin-like youth propositions him to buy a Pittsburgh Press. His begging eyes beam as a dime is tossed his way. A few frolicking youths meander across the street playing hookey from afternoon classes. They toss insults at one another and passers-by and enter the Briar Bowl. A young, smartly-dressed youth steps from Gus Miller's, his eyes cast a condescending gaze on Oakland, and he proceeds with New York Times in-hand to the Cathedral. Each face passes another with seeming independence. Together they arc Oakland. A clang, a buzz, and the roll of a barreling metal monster across the tracked cobblestones once accompanied the daily routine of classes. The trollies are no more. 21 I)o you have white socks, a brown bag. and a pocketful of change? If you do. you arc a commuter. You are one of that rare breed of person who daily awakens in the heart of the city or the wilds of suburbia, hops two or three buses, and arrives haggered at 7:00 a.m. to seek higher education. You may also play ring-around-Oak-land as your used car sputters past filled spaces, street-cleaning signs, and the ever-present meter-maid. Don't lx disgruntled at your plight; you arc in the majority. With increased state aid not only are there more in-state students, but more native Pittsburghers. High school chums may no longer have to say good-bve. Instead they can venture together to meet the college challenge in Oakland. In the past the commuters have been dispersed in their concerns for student activity. They do little as a group, commuting daily and seeking out their individual interests as normal students. Despite their increased numbers, the situation will never change. 1 23 Between 3:00-6:00 p.m. daily a huge herd arises from nowhere to clog the main artery. There arc neither passports nor visas required. To pass through this human mass one must either push, shove, kick, or yell his way through or simply not enter the towers dorms. Dorm students cluster around their home base only at selected times. Besides the dinner hour seance there is the late evening deluge at the snack bar. Otherwise the male dorms are merely stop-overs in the harried life of the maturing young adult. Women follow a similar course with most of their time spent dating, meandering through the quad, or idly window-shopping the small array of Oakland stores. Ironically many dorm students spend much time avoiding living and eating in the towers. They frequent the inexpensive dining halls lining Forbes Avenue and usually weekend in the rooms of friends in Shadysidc or South Oakland. 1 J 24 25 26 —?KlHr The annual apartment-hunting ritual occurs from April to August. Students swarm throughout the honeycomb of narrow streets and alleys of Oakland. Middle-aged landladies clad in aprons and house frocks grudgingly greet exploring students. The rookie finds the experience romantic and exciting. The experienced upperclassman finds it a taxing chore. His only compensation is not having to live and eat in the Towers. The hunter's goal is a nicely-furnished room, good studying atmosphere, and reasonable rent. Instead the average student finds some little hole-in-the-wall. aged furniture, and the sounds and odors of Oakland bars and cafes. Foreign and women students meet most difficulty. Many foreigners are spurned immediately by Oakland’s real estate elite. Even when accompanied by American roommates, landlords are hesitant to rent respectable quarters. Women recently given greater off-campus privileges by the University find few accommodations designed with the woman in mind. For the well-to-do students there is always the pseudobachelor pad in Shadvsidc or in Oakland’s periphery. Regardless of the calibre of the apartment or the student the off-campus life offers the aura of intriguing independence sought by many students. 27 The common, culturally-unawarc man thinks in stereotypes. It simplifies reality for him. Everything fits into its category in a particular time and place. Anything different can only he seen as deviant, had and potentially destructive to his good life. It is to the common man, wherever he may he, that we dedicate an essay on types around campus. A puff of smoke, a sip of coke, and a bit of idle gossip all put together equal a greek. The greek does not at all resemble those grecks living in the Age of Pericles He is a cool man dressed in the latest fashion with his symbol of brotherhood displayed on a ring, jacket, tee-shirt or hanging from a bulletin board, a tuck shop wall, or a female’s neck. He has vast academic resources which have been accumulated by the blood, sweat and ingenuity of his brothers. I fespends most of his time at the house, the tuck shop or just plain bopping around. I Ic is almost a perfect man. There is only one tragic flaw. He occassionally goes to class. 32 I am tall, dark and handsome. I have bulging muscles and do my exercises daily. I have a letter, a numeral, and a stunning wardrobe of sweat pants and tee-shirts. My 124 credits are a drag and I care for nothing more than a C. Some professors will let me by because I have bulging muscles. Girls drop at me when they realize I am a jock. Bents. That's what they call us. We let our hair down most of the time. Our clothes arc different, some army surplus garb, some worn out khakis or jeans, and an assortment of earrings, sandals. Ixjots, and wrinkled shirts. We think a lot. Sometimes there seems like there is no direction, but we know we are meandering somewhere into the future. Most students consider themselves members of the mass regardless of their stereotyped role. Just as the average American citizen considers himself the common man of the middle class so the student sees himself as the mean product of all adolescents going to college. The mass usually takes the form of a band of students who are basically disconccrncd with everything except getting out of school. They rarely voice an opinion in University affairs unless it effects tuition. They will continually chastize the Pitt News for poor coverage or the Student Union Board for inadequate entertainment, but rarely offer an alternative. In essence the mass arc those people in the majority who go to school by necessity and seek personal pleasure the rest of the time. 34 Student Government elections were like one majorette passing a baton to the next. Ken Frederick, of the Association for Responsible Action, succeeded Ralph Manning. Manning had avidly backed Frederick against previous loser John Ruskav of the Pitt Progressive Party Plus. Manning and Frederick had much in common. Both were engineers with relatively high quality point averages. Both had extended their education to the full five years allowed in the engineering curriculum. Both were native Pittsburghers. Despite an amalgam of students from diverse areas. Rus-kay could not shed the old greenbagger” image he had acquired two years ago as an SG Senator. Both the PPP and ARA platforms and campaign rhetoric were similar and the loss was once again attributed to a heavy engineering bloc for ARA. The new PPP plus senatorial slate faired well with the ARA, but neither Ruskav nor his running mate Terry Hyman could buck the new image. . 36 37 There arc seven wonders in the world, but to students none can exceed in splendor the two at Pitt. The Commons Room will always symbolize the monumental architecture of the Cathedral. Its rising columns and interlocking supports seem to endlessly flow above the Commons Room. As the largest non-library studying area for students the room will be remembered for its cold, foot-worn floors, hard wood chairs, etched desk tops, and poor lighting. The Cathedral Lawn in all its sparcity is the second wonder. In the summer and fall its a study lounge or football field, in the winter a miniature Alaska, and continually a place for a calm evening together—except for the campus police. 42 43 44 k Two figures stroll hand-in-hand their hips swaying in perfect rhythm and a perfect osmosis of thought flowing between their minds. Destination seemingly means nothing for the two arc with each other. They may promenade around the Cathedral lawn, lounge in :he Student Union, or innocently talk in the Towers lobby. As they walk through a crowd they are often oblivious to all except themselves. Occasionally they stop in on the rest of the world by going to classes, a football game, or dance. Most of the time they are the world to each other and school is just a passing stage. 5 Cold, hard, calculating, mean, sarcastic, impolite. These adjectives could describe a person, hut they don’t. They personify snow which continually pervades the Pitt campus. Although it need not literally be there, snow is figuratively present all the time. Its form is concrete. Most colleges are pictured as neat little havens of higher learning lucked in the green hilled valleys of the country. In the age of modern science Pitt represents the growing urban university. Its most precious and seemingly least guarded non-human commodity is grass. When the few blades around the Cathedral are not hidden by snow they are made totally subservient to sidewalks and streets. In the summer of 1967. further encroachments were made on the Cathedral lawn to stop people from walking on the grass. Most assuredly the new paths will l e by-passed since students seek the joy of meandering through the few bits of greenery. ■46 There is not apathy per sc at Pitt. People here arc individuals with their own priorities. Some come here for an academic education. They get tapped to Phi Eta Sigma. Phi Beta Kappa, and graduate with honors. Some come here for sports. They outfit themselves in tee-shirts and sweat pants, develop their physical prowess, get lettered jackets, and pick up a bachelor's degree on the side. Others come here for social reasons. They satisfy their parents, dress in the latest college fads from ivy to hippie styles and just have fun. These people are not apathetic. They are concerned with themselves. They go where they want to go and do what they want to do with whomever they please. The only thing all have in common is being a student at Pitt. Being a student. however, does not entail for each the obligation of becoming involved in the school for the school’s benefit. For those who enjoy such activities apathy still exists in being unable to sympathize with the desires of others. For those who care little for the good and welfare of Pitt, apathy exists similarly. 48 49 SELECTIVE SERVE REGISTRATION (I THIS IS TO CERTIFY THAT IN ACC (FIRST NAME) (i □ | SELECTIVE SERVICE NO. i z RESIDENCE AT REGISTRATION N| Ambridge I SL (CITY, TOWN, OH VILLAGE) WAS DULY REGISTERED ON THE You need only mention the word draft and every male in college will display symptoms of panic. From the 1 !B Korean conflict until the escalation in Vietnam several years ago most college students did not worry alwut the draft. Now the rising world tensions over Vietnam have endangered their 2-S deferments. Grades arc being used as a criteria for induction putting another artificial catalyst into the learning process. The most fearful thing in 1967 was the constant indecision of the United States Congress on revising the draft law. WP For six months papers reported a multitude of proposals, but not until late summer did a revision come forth. Instead of alleviating worries it gave increased powers of discretion to the Chief Executive, leaving education dependent on the stress and strain of world politics. i:e system CERTIFICATE (ORDANCE WITH THE SELECTIVE (MIDDLE NAME) (NUMBER A (COUNI Pittsb 52 Even the least industrious student complains about libraries. They arc stuffy, poorly-lighted, uncomfortable, and have too strict rules for talking. To the industrious student the library is primarily poorly supplied with books in his field and is not open sufficient hours. Hillman library. opening in Fall 1967-68, is to alleviate that problem. Unfortunately when the building designs were made ten years ago it was with knowledge that Hillman would be inadequate. Spacewise there will not be sufficient room to keep pace with the plethora of literature. The lighting and interior will doubtless be more pleasant, but hours have not yet been altered and there will still be the usual prohibitions. 1. Rub your eyes. You are in Oakland. 2. Cheek your pockets for dimes and nickels. 3. Fasten your seat licit. I’rav. 4. Step on the gas. 3. Look for meter maids—inoperative signs hung on meters don't help here. 6. Proceed up the first aisle. 7. Proceed down the second aisle. 8. By-pass the third aisle. (Covering fire hydrants with trash cans is illegal.) 9. Proceed down the first aisle. 10. Proceed up the second aisle. (Having passengers lie on street to save parking spaces is forbidden.) 11. Look for 1,2. or 4 hour meters. 12. Gas. Brake. Gas. Brake. Gas. Brake. 13. Do Not swear. 14. Beware of street cleaning. 15. I lonk your horn. 16. Speedily circle parking area again. 17. Do Not swear. 18. Go back to start. awvo “Did you go to school this summer?” I don’t know. Do you mean the Spring trimester, the summer session. or the spring session?” Such is the typical conversation as the trimester system hangs in precarious balance. Since the increased state-related status of Pitt, University officials have been debating the merits of academic calendars—the semester, the trimester, or quarter system. The summer of ’67 was to be a last test for the trimester. At the end of the summer experiment, Dr. W. George Crouch secretary of the University, repeated that the trimester system is still under intensive review. A soft breeze vainly tries to break the hot, humid crust covering the evening. Sounds of cars occasionally pierce the heavy atmosphere. It is 9:00 p.m. Suddenly the clanging of fire engines disrupts the solitude. Five engines come barrelling into the Towers Dormitory garage. Students spontaneously emerge from every nook and cranny to converge on the Forbes Avenue patio. Windows open throughout the dorms and youthful calls rain down on the civic servants. Shouts are joined by a Hurry of water balloons. Firemen arc joined by police and canines as the crowd swells. The false fire alarm no longer matters as the swelling crowd begins its amoeba-like motions. Through the Towers, on to Fifth Avenue, and cascading a stream of sitting bodies on to the street. Police chase fragments of the nearly 2,000 persons massing in slapstick fashion to the Quadrangle. on to the Boulevard, around the Student Union, and back to the Towers. A harried Dean of Men Herbert McOibbcny admonishes students in the quad as panties and water balloons fall like confetti. Pittsburgh Police Superintendent James Slusser. adorned in a blazing red ban-long shirt, khaki pants, and green gym shoes, bravely thrusts across Forbes with megaphone. Alas the saviour comes. Chancellor Kurtzman gathers the crowd on the Towers patio and asks the students to consider the University’s reputation. He speaks in an understanding tone, occasionally dodging water balloons and rolls of toilet paper, and offers to have air conditioning turned on as soon as possible. After he enters the dorms for a summit with the police: chairs, toilet paper, and sundry items continue to cascade onto students. About 1:30 a.m. the movements cease. All is quiet and Pitt has had its historic summer riot. 58 1 'I I «jte6 — THE PITT NEWS— Friday. February 10. 1967 PANTY RAID! ...THE... “Fraternal Order of The Ponton ANNOUNCES ITS FIRST ANNUAL PANTY RAID DATE ... February 10 h PLACE ... Schenlcy Quad. TIME .. . Midnight ADMISSION .. . FREE! . ALL ARE WELCOME .. See You When The “Silk Flies' UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH . STUDENT ACTIVITIES CALENDAR WINTER TRIMESTER 1967 SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY 3 ORIENTATION DAY FOR NEW UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS 10 STUDENT RETURN 320 WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY UPT FRIDAY NIGHY BASKETBALL WINTER TRIMESTER BASKETBALL BEGINS Wetfmintter (A) THEATER Student Government Studio Theoter Election Petitions 1001 CL Avoiloble ot the SU Desk. ID Card Pictures for New Full Time Students 9 o.m.-9 p.m. 319 SU ID Cards Validated for Returning Students 8 30 a m. 8.45 p.m. G 35 Cl SOCIAL FILM laa. Clopp Holl 19 7 ond 9 30 p.m. SATURDAY II GOVERNMENT 10 a.m.-3 p.m. 13 13 BOOK EXCHANGE SALE 306 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Syrocute (A) WRESTLING Temple (H) FFH 2 p.m. GYMNASTICS Springfield (A) B'NAI B'RITH HIllEl DANCE SU, BR 8:30 p.m.-midnight 14 GYMNASTICS Mottochuteltt (H) TH 3 p.m Student Governmen Election Compaigr Open AED Advance in Medicine 12 noon 233 LH COFFEE HOUR with Dean Helen P. Ruth The Role of Socio life in the Univer lily SU lower lounge 3 p.m. ID CARD PICTURES FOR NEW FULL TIME STUDENTS 9 o.m.-9 p.m. 319 SU ID CARDS VALIDATED FOR RETURNING STUDENTS 8:30 .m.-8:45 p.m. G-35 Cl It PUBLIC AFFAIRS FILM Ale,and-' Ncv k)i_ SU Ballroom 7:30 p m. Student Governmen Election Petition due ot the SU Detk by 4 p.m. STUDENT GOVERNMENT BOOK EXCHANGE 306 Sale 10 o.m.-3 p.m. 17 IFC RUSH SMOKER SU Ballroom 8 p.m. BASKETBALL Lafayette (H) FFH 8:15 p.m FRESHMAN BASKET8AII Youngitown Univertity FFH „ 6:15 p.m 18 FRESHMAN BASKETBALL Well Virginio FFH 6:15 p.m BASKETBALL We t Virginio (H) FFH 8 = 15 p.m SWIMMING We t Virginia (HJ TPH 8 p.m. GRADUATE HU-MANITIES CLUB SU Supper Room 8:45 p.m. Speaker : Mr. and Mr . George Sargent IFC FORMAL RUSH COTA JAZZ SERIES Avonte Garde Jon SU lower lounge 8 p.m. Application Avail oble for the Choir manthip of Hoi coming and Parent Weekend ot the Si Detk 19 COTA CONCERT The Pitt borgh Symphony Symphonetta SU Bollroom 8:30 p m. PUBLIC AFFAIRS SERIES Mr. Quentin Keyne The Zombeii. I Pretume FILM LECTURE 12 noon SU-'BR FORUM 3 p.m. SU.'ll UPT FRIDAY NIGHT THEATER WPDU Invitotionol High School Debtae Tournament 20 UPT FRIDAY NIGHT THEATER HOOTENANY SU lower lounge 7:30 p.m IFC FORMAL RUSH LAST DAY TO ADD COURSES WRESTLING Navy (H) FFH 2 p.m. BASKETBALL Penn State (A) GYMNASTICS Syrocute (A) SWIMMING Syrocute (A) SU CONCERT Syria Motque 8 p.m. The Four Seaton . Ticket available at the SU Deik upon pr®. tentation of an ID card.___________ 21 INDOOR TRACK Kent Stole (H) FFH 1 pm BASKETBALL St. John (A) PITT STUDENT UNION SKI DAY Ticket and Information available at the SU Detk. • IFC FORMAL RUSH ENDS JANOAKT IV€ SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY 24 SPRING RECESS 27 CLASSES RESUME 28 AED Advance in Medicine 12 noon 223 IH 29 PURIIC AfFfAIRS LECTURE SERIES Mr. Jothua logon lecture 12 noon SU BR Coffee Hour 3 p.m. SU lower lounge ANNUAL UNIVERSITY CONCERT RAND SPRING CONCERT 8:15 p.m. Carnegie Mu ic Hal COTA FILM SERIES The Mutic Room 30 31 MEN'S GIEE ClUR SPRING CONCERT 8:15 p.m. SU Ballroom 1 SOCIAL DANCE SU Ballroom 9 p.m. ID cord required for odmittion SU Ballroom 7:30 p.m. 2 3 4 i 5 GRADUATE HU-MANITIES CIU8 SU Supper Room 8:45 p.m. Speaker: To be announced 6 7 SOCIAL FILM 8 lopp Hall 19 7 and 9:30 p.m. 9 10 FINAL EXAMINATIONS REGIN ii 12 13 Th 14 e Year IS FINAL EXAMINATIONS END 2nd TRIMESTER ENDS Key SU-Student Union BR—loRroom ll—lower lounge UPT— Univer ity of Pitt burgh Theoter Cl—Cothedrol of looming AED—Alpha Eptilon Doha IH—longley Hall SF—Stephen Fotter FFH—Fitigerold Field Houte TH—Trow Hall THP-Tree Hall Pool HOURS ROOK CENTER - 4000 Fifth Avenue 8:30 a m.-8:00 p.m. M-Th. 9.00 o.m.—5.-00 p.m. F-So . POST OFFICE - Forbe Avenue 8:00 o.m.—5:30 p.m. M-F 8:00 o.m.—4:00 p.m. Saturday CHECK CASHING AND CASHIER—0-35 Cl 10:00 o.m.—6:45 p.m. M-Th. 10:00 o.m.—4:45 p.m. Friday 9:00 o.m.—11:45 o.m. Saturday Heinz Chapel Services CATHOLIC Sunday Man-9:00 o.m., 12:30 p.m., 4:30 p.m. Mon., Thur., Fri., Sot. Mat —12:00 Toot. Wed. Matt—4:30 PROTESTANT Sunday—11:00 a.m. LUTHERAN Sunday—7:30 p.m. JEWISH Friday—7:00 p.m. .L 1967 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Sept. 23—UCLA H Sept. 30—lllinoit A Oct. 7-W.tt Virginia A Oct. 14—Witcontin A Oct. 21-Miami H Oct. 28—Navy A Nov. 4—Syracute H Nov. 11—Notre Dam H Nov. 18—Army H Nov. 25—P«nn State A For Comput Activities Information Coll Extontion 7191 A college comput it a very tpecial community. Within its boundoriet live thoutandt of individual from different background with varied interetlt and field of tludy. Too often, a perton become lot! in the very divertity of the Univeriity Community. To bring together people with timilor interetlt it one of the aim of the Student Union and ttudenf activilie at tho Univeriity of Pitttburgh. College day are a time for expanding your knowledge and interetlt. The Univeriity provide program for all intereit — tocial, recreational. intellectual, and cultural. The Pitt Student Union it a ploce where tfudentt, faculty, adminittration, ond alumini con entertain them-telvet, eoch other or an idea. THE STUDENT UNION BUILDING HOURS: Monday thru Thur day-8:00 A.M.-Midnight. Friday ond Soturday-8:00 A.M.-1:30 A.M. Sundoy-8:00 A.M.-11:00 P.M. STUDENT UNION Information Detk—Ext. 7191 .............................. lobby Student Union Retervotiont—Ext. 7113 Meeting Roomt Conference Room Dining Room All Progromt are Subject to Chonge Student Union Program In Red SERVICES: The Student Activilie Calendar it publithed by the Student Government Calendar Committee in cooperation with the Union Director' Office. Ralph F. Monning Pretident, Student Governmenf Howard Ainitmon, V. Pre ident, Student Government More S. Spiegol SG Coordinator of Student Orgonixation and Event John R. loch ................. Director, Student Union MARCH 1967 (Continued) APRIL 1967 Orientation For the upperclassman who braves the summer heat to study during the third trimester. Orientation means eight three-day sessions of freshmen flooding the cafeteria, asking thousands of questions about courses, housing regulations or social life, and gazing at them with the admiration that is due upperclassmen. In the eves of freshmen the three days of testing, speeches, luncheons, swimming parties, boatrides. and advisor’s appointments are exciting but frightening. Administration, faculty and students spend many hours preparing long speeches to enlighten the newcomers and freshmen glow as a multitude of University personnel report the average CEEB scores, the range of high school activities and other vital statistics of the incoming class. Meanwhile. after the stirring speeches, these novices complain of broken elevators, women's curfews, closed courses, and poor food, little realizing that this is their true orientation to everyday University life. f 62 Lantern Night The Commons Room becomes a new world when it is lighted only by the candles carried by freshman women. Led by their mentors, uppcrclass women with whom they meet once a week, the freshman encircle the Commons Room to receive light for their candles from the Shrine of Truth. They are presented by the figure of Father Pitt to Alma Mater dressed in white and flanked by Truth and Valor. 63 Parents Weekend Parents Weekend is an annual event held to acquaint the parents of Pitt students with the University. Sponsored by Student Government, the weekend schedule includes a reception with the Chancellor, a panel discussion (on campus and general collegiate concerns), and a football game. Although not included in the University planned agenda, major unannounced features of the visit from home arc free meals away from the cafeteria, financial transfusions, shopping trips with the charge account, and first option on the family car for the Saturday night date. Football Weekend Fall is the season for most typically collegiate activities— bonfires, football games, rum and coke, victory parties, banner-painting parties, we-lost-anothcr-one parties. Spirit, school or otherwise, provides Pitt students with the energy to attend both the games and the weekly pep rallies. Being an urban school, the University has few facilities for such student demonstrations, so students improvise by using city streets. More attention centers on stopping long strings of street cars, than on cheering, but then this is an urban University with the spirit, school or otherwise, and facilities in the form of city streets. 66 The U.S. should be in Vietnam; the U.S. should not be in Vietnam; Students are more intellectual in college than later on; many intelligent students do not belong in college; Shapp for governor; Shafer for governor; the civil rights movement has gone far and will go farther; black people need black power. Standing room only crowds entranced by the speaker to sparse groups of students passing out leaflets heard a wide variety of opinions from lecturers in the Student Union Board Public Affairs series. Stokcly C-armichael director of SNCC advocated a greater organization of Negroes to achieve their goals through black power. Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. told a crowd which spilled into the SU lobby and marble lounge that there was still much to be done in the area of civil rights. The right, left and middle of Vietnam were summarized by Senator Wayne Morse; political scientist. Robert Scala-pino; and .Asian expert. Bernard Fall. Sen. Morse feared the escalation of the Vietnam conflict into an all Asian war and questioned the right of the U.S. “to decree there should be two governments in Vietnam.” I)r. Scalapino dismissed most of the arguments against U.S. involvement to the satisfaction of some and the anger of others. Dr. Fall, who was later killed in Vietnam, traced the crisis from the 1934 French defeat to the present “wildfire guerilla movements” and questioned if there were indeed a way out. Other issues were discussed as well. Edward Albee stressed that university theaters arc on a higher level than the Broadway stage which produces “Any Wednesday” and The Sound of Music.” 70 71 Sociologist Paul Goodman asserted that many of the brighter students do not learn by being forced to go to class but from extracurricular activities where they learn a skill such as writing and are forced to accept rcsponsiblity. The reasons for attending college of 30 to 40 per cent of the students in universities are not good enough he decided. 72 Former Prime Minister of Hungary, Fereve Nagy considered the effects of Red China, the Hungarian Revolution and Vietnam on Eastern Europe. Englishman Quentin Keynes discussed apartheid in South Africa. Politics not being slighted, candidates Raymond Shafer and Milton Shapp culled votes from students in separate speeches. 73 L'nlikc the past, this year Pitt drew a top bill of entertainers. The year began with a concert by the Back Porch Majority. This group had appeared at Pitt the previous winter and had been such a sensation that SUB invited them back for a return engagement. Homecoming was a success with Dick Gregory and the voices of Simon and Garfunkel. In January. SUB once again sponsored a free concert, this time with The Four Seasons. For Winter Weekend, the first week in February. Pitt was introduced to the soul sound of the Tempting Temptations at one of the most well-received concerts of the year. For another shift in mood. The Lcticrmcn performed for the first MDC weekend at the end of the same month. The year closed with the Serendipity Singers in concert for Engineers' Week. Derby Day Sigma Chi Derby Day was held for the first time on Pitt's campus this year, much to the dismay of many administrators and fraternity men. The day of fun and games was preceded by a hectic publicity contest which saw sorority women sustain scraped knees and bruised bank accounts to further the names of both their sorority and of Sigma Chi. Kappa Kappa Gamma gained the distinction of amassing the most points in the games and publicity while Elaina Katz was named Sigma Chi Derby Darling of 1966. 76 78 Homecoming Despite bitter cold temperatures, Pitt alumni braved the elements to attend the 1966 Homecoming game, only to see Pitt lose to their classic rival Penn State. Many shivered through the afternoon only to remember the college days of their youth, some to watch the colorful parade of mini-floats and Homecoming Queen, while others looked forward to the aftcr-thc-gamc open houses where old friends would laugh over a drink. For Pitt students the freezing cold and the unfavorable score offered reasons for emptying the flask early, or leaving early to watch Notre Dame and Michigan State on television. 79 Aside from In-ini' a cuninn for Pin graduates. Homecoming Weekend functions as a major social event for students. Kven before the Thursday night l on lire, students had an indication that this would In one of the most successful Homecomings in recent I'niversitv history. The entertainment hadn't come from the very bottom of some agency's list; instead, the Drifters played for the Friday night dance and Simon and (Jarfunkel. coupled with Dick Gregory, were contracted for the concert. Both the concert and the dance at the Penn Theater were within easy distance and were jammed by the students. Winter Weekend The “Psychedelic” (heme of this year’s Winter Weekend was best presented on Thursday night’s concert in Syria Mosque on February 2. A performance by the Temptations had the audience literally dancing in the aisles. The Carnival on Friday night had the usual Chi Omega slave girl sale and Zeta Beta Tau brother dunking. Saturday climaxed the weekend with a continuous showing of experimental films in Clapp Hall. A fast band. Cardil and the Zylums, and a slow one. Joe Westrav’s Band, entertained at the Saturday dance. An innovation in the weekend was an op art contest. The paintings of the five winners were exhibited in the Student Union. Sue Moudy and Jim Flannigan, queen and king of Winter Weekend, were crowned at the concert. 82 MDC Weekend Men’s Dormitory Council made an effort this year to give the dorm residents a weekend set aside for them much as Engineer’s Week and Greek Week are planned to unify their bodies. Following the same basic set-up as other weekends, a Fun Night was held at the field house. Thursday night. A Dinner-Dance in the Tower's Cafeteria occupied the dorm residents on Friday night, and the Lettermcn performed in Concert Saturday night. The fun night included wheelbarrow races, three legged races and passing-oranges-undcr the chin races. Distinguishing the game night from those of other weekends were Barber Shop Quartet performances from each house. MDC topped its weekend with a standing room only concert in Carnegie Music Hall. Dorm trophies were awarded banners for the Penn State basketball game and for spirit exhibited during the Weekend and especially at the game. Roaring Twenties, House of Lords, and Playboy's Penthouse placed first, second and third respectively on overall points for the weekend. IB I‘l After weeks of planning and headaches Greeks let loose to enjoy the 1967 Greek Week. Banners lined the Towers’ lobby to publicize the theme of “Color Us Greek” long before the first event in which the chariot race down Bigelow Boulevard took place despite a cold rain. Greeks proved or disproved their agility during the Fun Night proceedings in the field house. On Wednesday night, fraternity men and women dressed as gypsies, music box ballerinas, sailors, and soldiers performed in the marathon Greek Sing during which Judy Martin was crowned as Greek Week queen: In a reversed schedule the formal dance was held at Churchill Valley Country Club on Friday night and the concert featuring The We Five and Astrud Gilberto. was held Saturday night at Soldiers and Sailors Memorial. Kappa Alpha Theta and .eta Beta Tau captured trophies for the overall competition. 89 91 Engineer’s Week Although the City of the future was the theme of this year’s Engineer’s Week, the proceedings of the week were very down to earth. St. Patrick arrived with his Delta Zeta harem after the traditional march of the engineers from Engineering Hall to the Student Union. Five Legged Races were the highlight of the Gimmick kept well hidden behind Engineering Hall. 93 Additional entertainment was provided at the traditional Shamrock Ball at Churchill Valley Country Club with music by the Walt Harjier Quintet. The major innovation in Engineer's Week was a school-wide concert Saturday night by the Serendipity Singers in Soldiers and Sailors memorial. 95 96 la Commencement In his last official act as Chancellor, I)r. David Kurtz man presented 3000 candidates for degrees on May 31. Graduates and guests sat on wooden seats between the Cathedral and Heinz Chapel. Although there was no Commencement speaker, the graduates heard a message from President Johnson challenging them to continue to show “fresh and vigorous concern for the quality of American life. I)r. Kurtz man then presented his thoughts on both his and the students’ education at the University. He cautioned the graduates that they were embarking on a new phase of life that they would cither pass or fail. They could either participate in the life of the community, he said, or refuse to apply the knowledge of people and living they gained in college. If they chose the latter, they would Ik “the worst kind of dropout —a dropout of life.” He also admonished the students not to apply stereotypes to those around them as generations before them had. Standing at the back of the lawn near the Heinz Chapel steps stood a lone man in a black suit. Observing the school he would begin to head the next morning, Dr. Wesley Pos-var was just another Commencement guest. 97 Regional Campuses In the past few years, the University has expanded its regional campus at Johnstown. Today, Bradford. Grecnsburg, Johnstown, and Titusville form a quartet of regional campuses which have become a flourishing part of the University community. Construction of new facilities, growing student bodies, and more student involvement in activities are indications of the increasingly important role the regional campuses play in the University’s future. The campuses have been well integrated into their respective communities. They offer academic programs which arc similar to those offered during the first two years at the Oakland campus. Students are encouraged to transfer to Oakland after they have completed two years at the regional campus. too Greensburg Located thirty miles from the Oakland campus, the University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg offers the student a small college atmosphere with a rural setting unknown at the main campus. The campus was established primarily to serve residents of Fayette. Westmoreland. and surrounding counties. Students from other states and countries, however, give the school a cosmopolitan flavor. After four trimesters at the Greensburg campus, the student may transfer to the Oakland campus. The courses offered are the same as the freshman and sophomore courses at the main campus. Extra-curricular and social activities at Greensburg. also reflective of student life at Oakland, include dances, football weekends, a debate club, and athletics. 103 ■ 01 In September, 1966, Pitt's Johnstown outlet moved into its new eight million dollar campus. The ten-building complex, phase one of a campus construction project, provides academic facilities for over 1,000 full-time students and dormitories for 300 resident students. Student recreation and social events are centered in the Student Union and Physical Education buildings. School ties arc very strong at Johnstown. Fraternities, sororities and other organizations provide a wide range of activities. With the new facilities and a steadily increasing student body it will be possible to initiate more stimulating and rewarding programs at Johnstown. 105 - There are approximately 300 students enrolled at the University’s Titusville campus. Titusville’s present goal is the expansion improvement, and refinement of its curriculum and physical plant. Emphasis is currently placed on engineering and general liberal arts courses. Students arc encouraged to relocate at the Oakland campus after they have completed their studies at Titusville. The campus has been successfully integrated into the community, which is encouraging to those who advocate a regional campus program. The most active student organization at the campus is the Social Committee. A new dormitory provides for 150 resident students. Thus, students are given the chance to establish themselves in the surroundings of a small college before moving into the atmosphere of the big campus. 107 Great Professors Professors have often been accused of indifference to the conscience of the undergraduate students. The necessity to maintain professional status and to publish and complete research often deters professors from offering academic stimulation to these students. Today, students who have been forced to take their education in batches, have developed a collective sense of deprivation. With the widening scope of student activity, a change in professor-student relations is being demanded. Students are insisting upon education through dialogue, upon an education which will effectively assist them after graduation. The great professors are those who have provided the student with the type of academic stimulation he is insisting upon. yet still being able to remind him of his place in the scheme of things and the fact that freedom is achieved through discipline. Following arc the thoughts of this year’s Great Professors on the topic of “Changing Relationship of Students and Teachers . Perhaps this is an engineering point of view but I have not observed any change in relationships. It is the teacher’s job to create the situation, by numerous techniques at his command, that will result in the greatest learning for the student in class and out of class. It is the student’s job to learn. Until “Brave New World” or some other artificial learning method arrives I doubt if the teaching-learning process and relationship are going to change very much. Joel E. Peterson Aeronautical Engineering To my mind, there arc two things especially that make their joint adventure exciting to the student and the teacher alike. One of them is the onset of the student’s grasp of a fundamental point, often betokened by a sudden gleam in the eye. which gladdens the teacher’s heart as well. The other is the student’s posing of a genuinely penetrating question that requires the teacher to rethink his subject afresh, and reminds him that the search for truth—and not he—is the arbiter in the classroom. Adolf Griinbaum Philosophy 109 Forty-five years ago, we students took teachers, not courses; today, students take courses not teachers. I was friendly with many of my teachers for years after graduation —always to my advantage. To me. these friendships and their implications arc the greatest changes in the relation between teachers and students. no Edwin L. Peterson English I consider the diversity of collegiate student-teacher relationships both dcsircable and natural in the view of the array of personalities involved. Given the power to change these relationships, I would have each student seek from each teacher a depth of learning which goes well beyond that encyclopedic facility so useful at cocktail parties and exams. I would have each student more actively searching for those rare insights which arc intellectually exciting and fulfilling. John R. Townsend Physics 111 For Socrates living example was as important as dialogue, study the complement of civic conduct. Today’s commendable pursuit of mass education, coupled with the less estimable commercialization of life, has raised twin dangers of students concerned only with degrees and professors dedicated to the accumulation of publications. and transformed the Socratic ideal into a challenge to scholars. David Montgomery History Once I could call my students by name when I met them; now, regrettably, I cannot. However, there is now more student-faculty contact through counseling and more opportunity for student involvement in educational planning. So we have better education of the faculty by the students. It always has been one of the rewards of college teaching that “you meet the nicest young people”. I see no change in this. Allan M. Bryson Mathematics The school of liberal arts is the oldest and largest in the University. Most students, including the engineers, have been enrolled in its three divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. Due to an interested administration and an effective Liberal Arts Cabinet, students were able to take advantage of several new policies in the school this year. Under the pass-fail system, students are allowed to take six credits of work for which they receive a pass or fail mark instead of a letter grade. Credits taken in this manner still fulfill graduation requirements. A two day reading period was added to the winter session to give students ample time to prepare for finals. With the cooperation of the professors involved, the Liberal Arts Cabinet polled classes for an evaluation of the Distribution of Studies courses. Data from the questionaires will be compiled in a course guide and published in the summer. Liberal Arts 14 Engineering Engineering Hall is his home for four years; the slipstick. his bosom pal. Except for an occasional, soon-forgotten humanities course, he ventures from the Hill once a year for Engineers' Week and perhaps once again to turn an election in favor of a crony. After four years of seminars, calculus and labs, he can expect Boeing, Alcoa, Shell Oil, and Wcstinghousc to wait in line for him with a sizeable check and a draft deferment. If the engineers have acquired the stereotyped image of anti-intellectual technicians, it is the unfortunate fault of their self-imposed isolation. Those few engineers, both male and female, who have contributed to extra-curricular life at the University have proven themselves worthy members of the institution. 117 Education For the past few years the School of Education has enabled holders of a Liberal Arts Bachelor Degree to obtain a Masters Degree in Education through the M.A.T. program. A participant in the program retains the flexibility of a liberal arts program while student teaching and obtaining education credits during the three terms of the Master’s Program. For the undergraduate there are still the four terms of Liberal Arts followed by three terms in the School of Education and a term of student teaching. A double major requirement leaves the student little time for electives. It is during student teaching that graduates and undergraduates alike enter the classroom to discover the rewards and trials of the profession they have chosen. Nursing Donning her blue and white uniform, a Pitt nursing student enters the three year program of the School of Nursing after two years in liberal arts. Girls receive hospital training as soon as they enter the school, in addition to their classroom preparation. s she enters the world of the medical center, usually living in the nurses’ residence, a student nurse is exposed to a variety of learning situations. Her duties may take her to Children’s, Magee, Presbyterian, and Veterans’ Administration hospitals or to Western Psychiatric Clinic. Thus each girl gains practical experience in all phases of Nursing from geriatrics and obstetrics to psychiatry and surgery. The school also offers masters and doctoral degrees. I 120 tl r The four year dentistry course trains the student to become as skilled in using his hands as he is in using his intellectual abilities. Students in the School of Dentistry, of the five schools of the health professions. receive two years of pre-clinical instruction before actually working with patients. They learn to manipulate the tools of the profession in order to ease pain and cure disease. The long rows of chairs and instruments in the dental clinic become his laboratory for his remaining two years where he learns to work with the trust of his patient. The clinic serves members of the community who could not afford more expensive treatment as well as giving experience to the new dentist. 122 Dentistry r 12 Pharmacy At some time during their three year program in the School of Pharmacy, pharmacy students in their white jackets may be seen measuring, weighing, Tunneling, grinding, and stirring medicinal preparations or testing samples of their classmates’ blood. After two years of liberal arts training, the student enters a world of intensive study of all phases of the pharmaceutical profession to prepare him for careers ranging from hospital pharmacology to industrial pharmaceutics to managing a corner drug store. The pharmacy student learns the dedication and responsibility of a man on whose skill rests the health and well-being of hundreds of people. The professional spirit carries through to extracurricular activities such as the pharmaceutical fraternities—Kappa Psi, Phi Delta Chi, and Alpha Zcta Omega and the Pitt Capsule a magazine of pharmacy published three times a year by students in the school. 2S 128 Organizations arc many things to those that take advantage of them—fun. work, relaxation, exasperation, rewarding experiences. and much more. At the spring Student Government General Assembly, the list of organizations to be represented was surprisingly long, even to those who have been at Pitt for more than two years. Pitt's organizations vary radically in size, activity, and purpose. At least six of the organizations are governing bodies for the University’s schools. Some of the groups are sounding boards for current topics—namely Vietnam and civil rights. The Student Union board, with its many subdivisions, is responsible for most of the cultural, educational, and social programs at Pitt. A miscellany of professional, musical, forensic, and athletic organizations complete the list. With such a variety of organizations, a non-active student is usually non-ac-tivc by choice. 129 Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps trains cadets in air navigation, air base functions, global geography, and military aviation for Air Force service on land or in the air. Seniors may receive flight training while other cadets visit operational Air Force bases. Angel Flight, the women’s affiliate of the AFROTC honor society, Arnold Air Society, assists cadets at Military Ball and Parents' Night functions. 130 R.O.T.C. “Pray for rain!” was the chant of the Army R.O.T.C. cadets each Tuesday morning as they prepared for drill on the Cathedral lawn. In the event that the weather proved ill-suited for marching, the Corps learned the basics of military theory and its code of conduct; or an aspiring cadet might practice with the M-l rifle at the newly opened artillery range in Trees Hall. The two year R.O.T.C. course is designed to give men practical training in military science as well as an alternative to the one year physical fitness requirement. After his second year a cadet may elect to continue in the advanced R.O.T.C. courses for the remainder of his college career. Admission is highly competitive, based on physical examinations and past performance in the military field. This year over one hundred cadets applied for less than fifty such positions. Upon completion of this four year course a cadet is commissioned a second lieutenant. The military year is climaxed by the annual awards ceremony and the Military Ball, Pitt's only university-wide formal event which was held at the Pittsburgh Hilton. TOP LEFT, FIRST ROW A. Toch. M. Frankston. E. Rosenberg. C. Schwartzman, C. Iax k. SECOND ROW': R Lizak, M Zovko. P Mitchell, S. Kaiken, I). Mechenbicr, I). Hunter. THIRD ROW': P. Timko, K O'Toole, J. Davis. T. Crossi. C. DiPaolo, I.. Farrah, B Jones. TOP RIGHT: P Timko. D Natali. K. Shenoky, S. Edwards ABOVE. SEATED R Wilson, R Sklar. I). Natali. V. Kashbaum. R. Edelstcin STANDING: L. Cahan. V. Fatseas, G. Harp. J. Schmidt. 132 RIGHT; FIRST ROW: I . Timko, S. Edwards. I). Natali. J. Silbmtein, K. Shcnokv, A. Bush. SECOND ROW: B Black. L. Dahl. I.. Davis. C. Eight-holder. E. Zielinski. II Ungar, W. Smith This year the Associated Women Students adopted the motto “Women in Action” and began what was to be the best and most active year in its forty-seven year history at Pitt. Innovation began with the establishment of a Women's judicial Board composed of senior women. I he Board will review any infractions of the Housing rules and other problems. Freshman Council began the City Sister Program and Women's Housing Board instituted unlimited midweek permissions. AWS consolidated the four information booklets for women into one AWS Handbook which will be distributed to Freshmen women in the summer. In addition to several get-togethers for transfer and re-located students. AWS sponsored a lecture by a noted Pittsburgh gynecologist. and co-sponsored a tea honoring the Dean of Students. Lantern Night and the Traditions lest for freshmen women were conducted. It was an active and productive year. 133 Basic Student Nurses Association All students of the School of Nursing are eligible for membership in the Basic Student Nurses Association. Monthly meetings arc held and speakers arc often invited. Usually the programs concern a nursing speciality such as pediatrics or industrial nursing. As the Nursing School's governing body, BSNA sponsors social functions as well as student traditions. BSNA also holds a Pre-Nursing party to meet Liberal Arts students planning to enter the School of Nursing. TOP. FIRST ROW: V. Granke. P. Gauntlet!, K Ferraro. L. Senft, E. Miller. SECOND ROW: C. Good. J. Strait, .). Nivimki. M. Jenner, B. Black, E Anderson ABOVE. FIRST ROW. B Speck, J. Kuhl-man, B. Scu-.il. C. I .arson, P. Allen. SECOND ROW. M Negrcy, S. Edwards. M. Randour. A Dzurico, S. Hogg. RIGHT: N. Hcddingcr. A. Berkley. Mrs. C. Barnes. J. Kuhlman. 134 Cheerleaders The cheerleaders' efforts to boost a sagging school spirit resulted in a broadening of their activities this year. Hie squad attended four away and four home football games, introduced three new cheers, and invited football coach Dave Hart to speak at their Homecoming pep rally. The cheerleaders were invited to cheer for the Steel Bowl this winter. The members of the squad are selected on the basis of ability, appearance and poise, by a panel of judges from the athletic department, faculty and squad captains. Members must maintain a 2.25 Quality Point Average. STAX DING: M. Idler. C. Martinet k. R Brant h. A. Weinberg, G. Brazina. KXEEUXG: M Heller (Captain). K Troy, P Radvak.J. Stoehr. 135 Pictured above and below are the members of F.nnincerinn Cabinet Engineering Cabinet ITie Engineering Student Cabinet is the governing body for those enrolled in Pitt’s School of Engineering. The Cabinet worked closely with the Central Planning Committee of Engineers' Week to coordinate activities. An intramural sports program among the departments was sponsored this year. A bi-weekly publication, the Bulletin, is printed by the Cabinet to inform the students of the activities within the School. The ESCI IT award for travel and training abroad is presented annually by the Cabinet. Each year the outstanding senior is honored at the Engineering banquet. The special projects for 1966-67 included the design of a new seal for the School of Engineering and the presentation of a pass-fail option to the Dean. 136 I I Heinz Chapel Choir BF.I.OW, FIRS’ ROW: K Winters. A Hacker. E. Miller. P Briditium. S. Marcus. S. Adamchik, A. Bernstein. J. Mom SECOXD ROW: | Kr.iswick, B Writ . L. Ben;. K Sexton. B Dixon. F McDermott. I. Pro-van. S. Davis. THIRD ROW J. Horne. L. Bullions. A. Eva nosky, M Showers. J Johnston. T. Walsh, J. Eisenbeis. S. Roberts. FOl'RTH ROW Mr. P.iderxon. ( Cook. T. Elder. W Hallidv, M. Smokier. T Schwartx, T. .Sackson. Dr. I-ord FIFTH ROW: |). Seigh. J Kurhe. W. Yelln.G. Werner. D. Right. Twenty-eight years ago. when Hein Chapel was built, the rhoir was to be the official singing group for all services held in the Chapel. The functions and activities of the choir since that time have widened significantly. In the past the choir has sung at Convocations and the Chancellor’s Christmas Party. The choir of course sings at the Sunday morning services in the Chapel. Members also aid the Dean of Women’s office with the I-intcrn Night ceremony each fall. The tours to other campuses were again the most exciting part of the year. 137 LEFT PAGE. TOP: J. Klcm LEFI' PAGE, BOTTOM: James O. Dunbar. Jr. President. General Alumni Association ABOVE. LEFT to RIGHT. Fred S. Robie, Director of Alumni Activities. T. Ballantyne, |. Dunbar,.j. Schadt. The General Alumni Association is the graduate’s continuing link with his alma mater. Because of the Association’s belief that education docs not end with a degree, the Alumni stall' arranges for faculty speakers at meetings of some fifteen Pitt Clubs throughout the country and at those of the Association’s fourteen constituent groups. In addition. Alumni Continuing Education Day is held on the campus each winter. Pitt, the quarterly publication of the Alumni Association, keeps graduates informed about campus developments. Under the auspices of the Alumni Schools Committee, alumni throughout the country meet prospective freshman from their communities and acquaint them with Pitt. In the past year, with the cooperation of Student Government a Student .Schools Committee has been formed to assist in this program. Through the Annual Giving Fund graduates help future generations of Pitt students by financial aid to the University. 13a Hillel LEFT. FIRST ROW: I. Fox. B Ijuerick. M Kramer. Rabbi Rubinstein, F.. Ijeberman SEC-OSD ROW: A Sobol. A Goldman. II Schwartz, C. Goldberg, I Gold. THIRD ROW: R Igerscheim. J Danowski. A. Levine. B Hirsch. P Goldstein. The University’s B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation made its headquarters a warm and active place during 1966-67. (her 400 students worshiped together at High Holy Day Services. At bi-weekly brunches students participated in discussions led by such people as Dr. Alan Pollack who spoke on Soviet Jewry”, and Theodore Bikel who spoke on “The Rclavance of Judaism to Modern Day Issues. Dr. Rubenstein discussed such topics as Black Power”, LSD, Antonioni’s “Blow Up , and Paul Goodman’s Growing I p Absurd at weekly coffee hours. Sessions in Talmud and Torah were included in our weekly class schedule. The “Death of God controversy became prominent this year as we were fortunate to have Dr. Ru-bcnstcin. a leader in the new theological ferment, give his views on the subject. 140 (lev The function of the Liberal Arts Cabinet is to act as a liaison between Liberal Arts students and the faculty and administration. Although the cabinet has been in existence for several years, this is the first year that it has been instrumental in making changes and presenting new ideas on behalf of the students. A pass-fail system for upperclassmen has been instituted. The two-day reading period before finals was first presented by the council. During the winter term, the Cabinet conducted an evaluation of most distribution of studies courses, which will be published next year. Liberal Arts Cabinet b°VE. SEATED: • W- „. A Pop4uvr STASO.SC: A T Men’s Council Men’s Council is primarily responsible for introducing male students to the University through the summer orientation program. Freshmen camp. Freshmen Council, and events such as the Activities Fair. This was co-sponsored with AWS to give all students an insight into the workings of campus activities. Men’s Council also sponsored Transfer Days during which students from regional campuses and other universities could become acquainted with each other and their new environment. The year will l e remembered as a period of disorder when the organization was tagged as useless and trite; a repetition of Student Government. The chief problem occurred when the Council's constitution was not ratified by the University recognitions committee before its elections and a question of the legitimacy of the organization arose. Council was given a chance to prove itself by October 1967. Outgrowths of this were plans for an upper class advisor program, a leadership conference and Fall elections for Freshmen Council. With these prospects. Men’s Council must strive to meet the challenge of this university. TOP, FIRST ROW: J. Meyers. K. Malloy. K Weiss. I) Ehren-werth, H. l-evine. M Flaunt. Nl. Diamond. A Bauer SECOND ROW: F. Tutino, I.. Baxt. J McCormick. S. Scha-piro. K. Adler ABOVE A Pop leave. B Zitclli, B Roth, I Ta ka e. E. Stack. RIGHT. FRONT ROW M Ravcnxrah. V. Willem. R Diamond. I) Cuydan. I. Jannwitch. B. Barr. R Cienek. I Cohen SECOND ROW R Vatu, M DeMarco, M Pines. G. Pettrone. Men’s Dorm Council Men's Dorm Council is a representative group of male dormitory residents who debate and vote on legislation pertaining to ail Towers' dwellers. It contributes to the comfort of the student and enhances the cultural atmosphere of the university. Furthermore. MIX' sponsors the intramural sports competition among Towers' houses and occasionally provides relief from the academic worries with TGIF dances. This year Men’s Dorm Council sponsored a weekend entirely planned for dorm residents which featured the Lettermen in concert, a game night, and a Dinner-Dance in the Towers' Cafeteria. In addition, it continued to operate the Towers' laundry and dry-cleaning service. The interested student was also given the opportunity to hear seminars with the University Chaplains and debates with Student Government candidates. Among the important legislation passed by the Council was a bill which finalized the rules for distribution of literature in the dorms and one creating new social regulations concerning female visitation in the Towers. Men’s Glee Club The University of Pittsburgh Men's Glee Club, under the direction of Mr. Philip S. Cavanaugh, is the oldest and most respected activity at the University. Composed of undergraduate and graduates from all fields of study, it presents a well-balanced. professional program of the finest music available for men’s voices. Past and present accomplishments include singing at the New York World’s Fair and such colleges as Centenary. Bowling Green and the University of Toronto. This year, the fall and winter tours took them to Southern Connecticut State College, the State University of New York at New Paltz. and Sweet Briar College. The spring tour was highlighted by a performance at the British Embassy in Washington DC. The Glee Club has sung for Parent's Weekend, Pitt Preview, pep rallies and many other University sponsored programs. TOP: H. Goldwaser. M. Bieber, P. Cavanaugh. S. Quinn ABOVE. FIRST ROW: B. Sc harder. S. Norr. I). Goiabish. J. Yccncr, S. Slone. E. Fuchs. S. Friedler. R Diamond. D. Sheets. E Zetick, R Bower. SECOXD ROW: G. Swanson. M. Bieber, K Meckler, M. Wisniewski, K Kilburc;. J- Farmerie. G. Shorin. H. (k hn. D. Herrick. M. Pcrcheskv. IIIIRI) ROW: S. Quinn. R Day. H. Goldwaser. R Cohen. I) Klcine. H. Wolfson. M Wailich, G. Cummings. K. Dobin, N. Woigt. 144 William Pitt Debate Union Each year members of the William Pitt Debate Union engage in approximately 500 intercollegiate debates across the United States. WPDU also offers an international program. Pitt debaters participate in Canadian tournaments. For the first time, two WPDU members will tour Great Britain debating at Oxford. Edinburgh, and other universities. The Union sponsors various informal debates at the University, an invitational high school tournament, and a public series program. ABOVE. FIRST ROW. B. McCarthy. I). Cornelius, R. 1 j ak, I.. .Simon. W. Archer, S. Light man, A. Belly. M. Yougn, B Uncle. SECOND ROW: G. Hopson, V. Wiliam. J. Ross. I.. Taller, B. Ixnehan, R Chocn, B. Planisck. J. l-ccch THIRD ROW: R Hurwitz. P Kemeny, M. Mamdami, M. Smith. Dr. Newman. ABOVE, HRS1ROW K Kichl. I) Swrmy. J. Rohbnd. I) Butler, M Oiampan-lionr. E. Twm SECOSD ROW: L Williams. H. Wirahip. I)r Atkinson. Dr. Wurdjrk. J Manet, Nl Weird, (I. Hrnrhak. C. Hess. R Allison. E Zablotney. THIRD ROW I Drxcntesh, E Nestler. I Oivelli. J Smith, I) alett.,(; Showier. J. Hopkins. J Mc.Millen, N. Basur Pharmacy IFC Within the School of Pharmacy, there are three fraternities. Kappa Psi. Phi Delta Chi, Alpha Beta Omega; one sorority. Lambda Sigma; and one honorary, Rho Chi. Over fifty percent of the School's students are members of one of these organizations. The coordination these five pharmaceutical societies is the responsibility of the Pharmacy IFC. The Council is composed of one delegate from each group. Even,’ November the IFC, in conjunction with its member groups, sponsors an open house at the School of Pharmacy. At that time the faculty and students greet the pre-pharmacy students and acquaint them with the school. BELOW. SEATED J. Sutcliffe, J. Jwo. J. Alvin ST AS DISC,: N. Bassar. L William . J Pctrmki I MiftUS BELOW LEFT Dr IMfl, A. Kamcshka, L. Darling, M. Degal. M McCurdy. J. Kunsman, L Williams,C Marcus, R. Floyd. 146 ABOVE LEFT. FIRST ROW: L Swantek. B Weinberger, F. Marcus. M. Segal. K Santos. A Silver-man. SECOND ROW: B. Hartman, J. Bookc. G. Doperak. C. Wilson. F. Symkowiak, I. Schwartz. THIRD ROW. J Kunsman. J Caruso, C. Smith. I). I-indy. A. Kameshka. G. Ickcs. ABOVE: J Ferrara, A. Kameshka. R Floyd, J Bush. P Rcstaneo. I)r. Colai zi. LEFT, FIRST ROW: B Weinberg. B Hartman. M. Segal. 1). Landy. M. Miller. SECOND ROW: F. Marcus, R Santos, I). Race. L. Swantek. A. Silverman. R Hietsch. T. Morris. THIRD ROW: G. Doperak. L. Marr. F. Symkowiak, J. Book, I. Darling, I Schwartz. J. Platz. LEFT, SEA TED: M. Galtageron. L. Ahlborn. B Sudak. C. Cramer. J. Jeso, V. Kancmaru. STANDING: C. Mancini. I. Corai. M McCurdy. C. Smith, J. Kunsman. P. Bender, C Wilson. J. Xicrolai. 147 M8 Student Government The purpose of the Student Government is to give authoritative direction to the student body. It achieves this by orienting new students and their parents through Freshmen Outing and Parents’ Weekend. It orders the collegians' lives by supervising publication of the Student Directory and a University Calendar of events. For relaxation it sponsors Homecoming and Winter Weekend and in recognition of academic excellence and outstanding participation in activities. the annual Tap Day. SO established a University Review Board and a President’s Council to meet with the Chancellor. Other important functions of the body were operation of the book exchange and the allocation of organizational funds. It established a committee on off-eampus housing. SG conducted an investigation of Auxilary Enterprises and its director’s connection with Your Campus Store. 149 Student Union Board Innovation was the keynote of Student Union programming this year despite the absence of an overall chairman. The Four Seasons and the Back Porch Majority drew full houses of students to two free concerts at Syria Mosque. Public Affairs speakers represented some of the most outspoken and influential figures in the world. Students who could not find room in the ballroom sat on the floor in the $U lobby and lounge to hear Martin Luther King. Stokcly Carmichael, playwright Edward AI bee, sociologist Paul Goodman and political scientist Robert Scalapino offer a wide slice of current views. Politics were represented in the figures of gubernatorial candidate. Milton Shapp, and Senator Wayne Morse. The graphic and musical arts received due tribute in the Thursday night jazz series in the lower lounge and in frequent painting and photo exhibits in the marble lounge. The COTA film series sponsored free midweek showings of foreign films such as Boris Gud-onov,” “Kanal,” and “The Magician.” On weekends there were such favorites as “Guns of Navarone,...l orn Jones,” “Topkapi,” and “The Cardinal.” SUB also engineered excursions to widely spaced Notre Dame and Europe. Despite all the activities, students still found time to “relax in the lower lounge. TOP: A. Cohen. J. Zdrale, K. Adler. M Teller. MIDDLE. P Aaron. S. Ashncr. BOTTOM J. Snangold. P Wolak ISO University Theater The University of Pittsburgh Theater has presented a wide variety of plays this year which have attracted large audiences. The “Duchess of Malfi” was their major production. The nature of the play and the theater’s creativity in presenting it provided a memorable experience for the audience. The most successful venture of the Theater was the new repertory theater located in the Cathedral of Learning. Several one act plays were presenter! on Friday evenings. “The Man with the Flower in his Mouth”, Beckett's “Krapp’s Last Tape and Sartre’s “No Exit” were included in the Theater’s program. This repertory theater is one of the few of its type existing on college campuses in this country. The center of Student Publications is the fourth floor of Schenley Hall. Between classes and at night publications are assembled which interest most of the University community. Each publication has a purpose and character of its own. This year the staffs were not as close as in the past. There was little sharing of personnel or problems. Yet the typical arguments and discussions about the administration and student government continued. The high school clinics were held, posing similar difficulties to each staff. Deadlines were met. The fourth floor was still the place to Ik. the home away from home. 154 v •' Pitt News 156 Through the summer months of 1966. the conflict over appropriations and statc-rclatcd-ness for Pitt raged in Harrisburg. During this time while every Pitt student eagerly awaited any type of legislative decision, it was the Pitt News that kept everyone abreast of the latest developments. Each new Harrisburg delay made the front page, while editorially the News demanded faster-legislative approval. Meanwhile, a top Communist spoke on campus and several students called for the abolishment of ROTC. The University was a busy place. But that was only the beginning of a year that would find the Pitt News covering stories that would have a heavy impact on the University. Plans for new dorms were announced; relations with Helen Clay Frick were severed; and a new chancellor and chairman of the Board were named. To provide the l est possible coverage, the paper was issued daily during the Student Government campaign. The Pitt News has finished recording another year. A similar task lies ahead as the paper enters its fifty-sixth year of publication. 157 The Owl is many things. To the student body that eagerly awaits its annual delivery, hurriedly glances through it, and then quickly relegates it to collecting dust on a bookshelf, the book is often little more than a collection of pictures; a catalogue of good looking and not so good looking sorority girls or the place to find the name of the officer of that honorary whose name has been forgotten. Hut to the people who give up their week nights and all too many of their weekends, the book is an attempt to capture a year at Pitt graphically; to critically analyze what differentiates this one year at the University of Pittsburgh from the 180 that have preceedcd it; to find new ways to publish a book that will force the reader to look twice, to read, to think, and to remember. This is the 1967 OWL. 159 Skyscraper Skyscraper Engineer, official undergraduate publication of the School of Engineering, made several innovations this year. With the aid of Dean Hoelscher. a program to encourage representatives from each department was initiated to contribute to the magazine. Heather Harris, Business Manager, developed the Recruiting Calendar as a service to engineering students and company representatives. Robert Anservitz provided articles about faculty members and outstanding alumni. Al Nauda and Dennis Ramsier kept readers informed of Engineering Student Cabinet’s activities. The staff also worked closely with the Central Planning Committee on Engineers' Week in publicizing the activities. The Techni-Cutic and the Slips of the Stick joke page were again two popular features. ABOVE: FROM LEF T: M Foley. 0. Baird. B Stenger, R Freedman. M Sherron. I) Scigh. J. Fleming, B. Furrey, W. I ;.yne. LOWER RIGHT: Robert Anservitz. Heather Harris. 160 Ideas and Figures Ideas and Figures is the campus literary magazine, usually. It was founded in 1959 by someone who thought it would be cool to have a campus literary magazine. Unfortunately he was wrong as most members of the university community will most willingly testify. But in spite of this, the magazine still publishes short stories, essays, poetry, photography and student art work not including the avant garde drawings and cliches in the Towers elevators. Probably the most notable achievement of the staff was the secret repainting of the office. The colors, black and lavender, met with wide acclaim from the Student Union authorities, who recommended the room l e a trial area for this year’s poverty program. The I F Military Arts parade was unavoidably cancelled when the staff discovered there weren't any military artists. Unrelated to this is the fact that the staff provided an excellent control group for the Fill .Yews feature on Campus Morality. And completely unrelated to everything, l F publishes a literary magazine, which is small, expensive, and only slightly interesting (to anyone who reads Avn Rand, Walter Lippman or Conscience of a Conservative.) and most obviously only peripheral to the true intentions of 1 F. CLOCKWISE: A. Nevsky, A. Sherman, I). White. I.. Hart. I- Weiss, F. Corrcnti. N. Grammatikos, K. Scalise. M. Bennett, R Feldman. 161 I i WPGH This year, WPGH, the student-operated radio station of the University, expanded its broadcasting to 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The station aptly broadcast the gory details of the spring riots and was the first to announce the cancellation of school due to snow. WPGH continued its reporting of national and international news through the U.P.I. wire service. Opening the doors to Dr. Kurtzman’s office, it solicited questions from the student body and broadcast the chancellor's answers. 162 GENERAL MANAGER: Robert Kaplan. PROGRAM DIRECTOR; lames A Smith. NEWS DIRECTOR: | wq h Barrett. CHIEF ENGINEER: Theodore Weiss, BUSINESS DIRECTOR: Duffy Taylor. CHIEF ANNOUNCER: Tony Palermo, STAFF. Bryant Robey. Jonathan Battle. Jamc OIp. David Ehrenwerth. Michael Srhalk Polaris ABOVE. FIRST ROW: O DiPaolo. A. Toppal. C. Harris. E. Hough. T. Crow. M Zouko. SECOND ROW:) Cusano. M. Pin. N. Boranar. M Hueco, W. Cavrak. R. Freedman The “Polaris has become the most scrutinized. hunted through, and sworn at publication at the University, for it is the handbook with the ambitious goal of presenting an “all around” picture of Pitt in an informative and interesting style to the incoming freshmen, administration, and undergraduate students. This job is one of long hours, of asking “What questions are most asked about Pitt by the suidcnts. then organiza-ing these questions into a coherent book of answers on one million and one aspects of the University scene. Included is the calendar section containing major campus activities and the pictures of all incoming freshmen. ABOVE: Nl. Ryan. M. Bueno. C. Levine. J. I-t-Pietrn. T. Orossi. C. Scanlon. LEFT, FIRST ROW. A Finger. C. Nicklas. | Farbcrow, I). Hrluck. SECOND ROW ) Schcingrow. l. Becker. E. Kasha. THIRD ROW: R Fox. M. lysine. A. Sjxranza, S. Butler. FOURTH ROW Brownstrin, M. Brc-mom. J. Borzck. N. Sherram. FIFTH ROW: E. Fcinbcrg. E. Ixvinc. M. Pepper. Office of Student Publications At Hitt, the Office of Student Publications does not direct as much as it coordinates the activities of undergraduate publications. Students arc encouraged to assume the responsibility of the organization and content of their publications. Any problems which arise that need the aid of an advisor are handled through the Director of Student Publications. Contracts with printers, plans for high school clinics and information concerning national student publications conventions originate or pass through the Director’s office. The office also makes the arrangements for the annual selection of editors and business managers. i 164 Donald A'Jayaurt DanW footer David levilm Frank Crisafi Thomas ASeisrw Hr ThcwwsOHhrtf Honoraries Through the years a number of honorary organizations have been established at Pitt to recognize students who have contributed significantly to the University through their services, leadership or scholarship in particular and varied fields. The value of honoraries is an often debated subject. Some feel that the existence of an honorary system encourages students to strive not for the ideal of service and scholarship but for the honorary membership these qualities will bring. However, the type of service which qualifies a student for an honorary is time consuming and consistent. The students leadership must be creative and effective. His scholarship must usually be above 3.00. A successful balance of these three qualities is indicative of the students ability and interest. It seems doubtful that a student who was interested only in recognition and not in the work involved would make the necessary sacrifices, would accept tHe additional responsibilities and limitations merely to pay the membership fees of an honorary to which he was tapped. 167 Gamma Circle of Omicron Delia Kappa, mens’ junior-senior leadership honorary, celebrated its fiftieth anniversary this year. Die occasion was was marked not only by a special Founder’s Day program in December, hut by coverage by the national magazine of ODK. Mr. James Reynolds. Assistant Secretary of I-abor, was the featured speaker for the anniversary. Deans W. Edward Sell (Law), Harold Hoclscher (Engineering) and James Kehl (Liberal Arts) were initiated into the University chapter with Mr. Reynolds. The affairs also brought numerous past ODK Men of the Year and other alumni back to Pittsburgh. During the year a total of nearly 30 new students, faculty and honorary members were initiated. These students joined the 25 member active membership in luncheon meetings and several evening discussion groups at Gustincs. Ralph Manning, Vice-President of the circle and President of Student Government. was selected ODK Man of the Year by a committee of alumni and faculty. President Bill Cabin and Manning turned over their offices in April to Marc Spiegel and Mike Weingarten, respectively. ABOVE: R Manning. I). Allayaud. F. Criufi, A. Patella. M Bryson. M Wineganen. W. Cabin. F. Kobic (Faculty-Scc.). K. Fischl. I) Delaney, T. Sacks. M Pcarlman. F Frank. I Meisner. J. Janis. M. Mam lani. I'. White. I.. Hershey. M Sjteigel. A. Moye, Dean II McCibbeny Omicron Delta Kappa Mortar Board FIRST ROW: S Curtis. K AcoMa-Callo, H Mown. SEC■ OSD ROW Miss Skew is. H. Unger. J Berson. F. Nichols. THIRD ROW: G. Skop, K Shcnesky. J. Wolford. M Kehns, B McLeod. J. Klicgcr. M Kricgcr. I. Brady. E. Zielinski. Mr. Davalicr. Mortar Board recognizes those women who have out-standing achievement in scholarship. leadership, and service to the University. Membership in the chapter is limited to twenty-five women who arc tapped during the winter prior to their senior year. Recommendations are received from the faculty, administration, and campus leaders. Each year Mortar Board and ODK, the men’s leadership honorary, have joint meetings. The regional convention for Mortar Board chapters was held at Pitt last fall. During the year. Mortar Board holds regular program meetings at which free discussion is encouraged. I)r. Allen Pollack spoke to the chapter about the organization of Soviet Universities. Other guest speakers have been Dr. Agnew from Graduate School of Business, and Dr. Rubenstein, contemporary theologian and Jewish chaplain at Pitt. Mortar Board members aided the Dean of Women’s Office by giving tours of the University to prospective freshmen and their parents. Druids TOP. FIRST ROW: E. Fischl. I Sacks. M. Spiegel. K. Thuvs. II. Ainisman. SECOXI) ROW: W. Cabin. M. Weinganen. I). I.cvitin. ABOVE: K Thuw. M. Spiegel. E. Fischl. Druids was established at Pitt in 1916 to rceognize and encourage leadership. scholarship, service and character among undergraduate men. Only sophomore and junior men are eligible for tapping and in addition to the 2.5 quality point average minimum, those considered for membership must have a primary leadership role (Pres, or Vicc-Prcs.) in one campus organization and a secondary role in two other activities. Druids also recognizes members of the faculty and administration who have shown a great interest in the University and its students. I)r. Edward Litchfield. Dr. David Kurtzman and Dr. Jonas Salk are a few Druid Honorary members. 171 TOP RIGHT, CLOCKWISE: J. Johnston. L. Bruce. L. Jones. R. Wol. koll ABOVE. I.EFI TO RIGHT: H. Kiwnberg, S Maricr, J. Caldwell, J Kamons, S. Gerdins, C Good. K McHugh. C. Munder. I’ Light-holder. R Birth.i. A. Kaufman, K Karpinski, M Reicher. N Sund-heimer. Gwens, a national honorary for sophomore women was founded at the University of Pittsburgh in 1922. The honor society taps freshman women who achieve a quality point average of 3.0 during their first term and who have demonstrated leadership jjotential. The purpose of Gwens is to foster scholarship among sophomore and freshman women and to promote the interests of the University. This year's ('wens continues its tutoring program for women. They assisted with freshman orientation and aided the Pittsburgh Svmj hony with some of its paperwork. 172 HOVE AND LEFT The rmbm o( Phi Eta S mj BF.-0 V LEFT: W Mama. 1) eviun, | Zckan, Chancellor .uitzman. Dean MeGibbeny, 1. Cohen. Phi Eta Sigma, the National Freshman Honor Fraternity, taps each year those full-time men students who attain a quality point average of 3.S during their first term at the University. In addition to its function of recognizing academic excellence, the honor fraternity offers a university-wide tutoring program. This service is administrated on a voluntary basis and is designated to meet the personal demands of each tutee. Phi Eta Sigma has recently l egun to award those members who have continued to achieve outstanding quality point averages. Four such presentations were made this year at Tap Day ceremonies. ABOVE: A. Scavcizzo.J. Supanovich, O. Murray. C. Barchetk. SECO.XI) ROll H. O'Dnnncll, I) Rarmirr, ( . Rocrtsch, A. Kixxhini. 1). Allayaud. | Folk, HURl) ROW: A. Muskus, B Montgomery, G. Calhoun, I) Wcvcl. I)r. MtOormick. FOURTH ROW: V.. IVI «, W. Moll. E. Fiwhl FIFTH ROW: T Blazicr. R. Pees. B Provan BELOW: FIRS ROW: C. Foensch, A. Scavuzzo. C. Murray SFCO.XD ROW A Roerhini. I) Rainier, C. Pclos. Sigma Tau Sigma Tau is a national honorary engineering fraternity which recognizes outstanding men in all fields of engineering. Qualifications for membership in Sigma Tau arc junior or senior status and a minimum 3.00 QPA. Tappees participate in a pledge program during which they make pledge books and obtain the signatures of all active members and at least three faculty sponsors. Recently, outstanding engineering professors have liecn tapped as honorary members of the fraternity. The highlight of the fall initiation banquet is the presentation of the outstanding Freshman Award to the sophomore engineering student who achieved the highest QPA in his freshman class. Sigma Tau plans to place a pyramid, the symbol of the fraternity, in the new Kenedum Engineering Building. 174 ABOVE: LEFT IX) RIGHT: I) Allayaud, I) Marcuioti; G. Zambo. R Pees. W Moll, Professor W. Coiuuro (Advisor), .) Ilandshaw. BELOW: FIRST ROW: I) Schricbcr, J. Nicholas. R Pavian. I) Thomp-son. C. Murray. Professor W. Conturo (Advisor). SECOND ROW: I) Pi Tau Sigma Pi Tau Sigma is an honorary organization for mechanical engineering students and those enrolled in the aerospace option of that department. Outstanding students are tapped twice during the school year. Unlike most honoraries, new Pi Tau Sigma members serve a pledgeship. During this Marcucri.J. Ilandshaw. R Pm THIRD ROW: G. Zambo. T Hamilton. R Maxwell. W. Moll. H Kossirin. J Keel. I) Keller. W Gonnon. I) Allayaud. E. Fitchl. | eriod they must prepare scrolls and obtain professors’ signatures which proves to be a difficult task at times. The Cider and Donuts Affair is one of the most unique events in the School of Engineering. At this time those professors who have distinguished themselves by their ability to make life as difficult as possible for engineers are presented with the Purple Prop. Purple Cam, and Purple Shaft awards. Charter members and faculty are invited to attend the annual initiation banquet. Quo Vadis The members of Quo Vadis are the student hostesses of Heinz Chapel and the 18 Nationality Rooms. When conducting tours through the rooms, the hostesses present a brief cultural and historical sketch of the country each room represents. Each December, members assist the Nationality Room Committees in decorating the rooms for Christmas according to the particular folk customs of the country. To celebrate the Fortieth Anniversary of the founding of the Committees, hostesses wore native folk costumes typical of each country. 176 A national honorary dedicated to upholding the standards and ethics of professional journalism on campus publications. Pi Delta Epsilon honors those students who have served at least 3 terms on a publication or WPGH, are at least sophomores with a 2.3 QPA, and who have made significant contributions to campus journalism. Representatives of Pi Delta serve on the executive committee of each publication and on the Publications Board. The group annually sponsors a speech by a member of the journalism profession. Pi Delta, Epsilon TOP LEFT. BACK ROW W. Kalish. H Harris, W. Stcnger. I) Srigh FROST ROW: N. Sundheimcr. C. Barr. T. Pagonis, A. Goldman, J. Kurvsman ABOVE. BACK ROW: R Zavos, B McLeod, A Goldsmith, L. Goldstein, R Anservit . FROST ROW: W. Cabin, M. Rehns. S Krawetz, B. Nicholas. I) Taylor. 177 Alpha Epsilon Delta Alpha Epsilon Delta is organized to encourage excellence in pre-medical work and to advance the interests of students in this field. AED received recognition from national headquarters for its publication of the “Hints to the Pre-med” pamphlet. This year a “Pathways to the Profession symposium on medical education was sponsored. Tours of the University of Pittsburgh Medical School are also a part of AED’s program. 'The honorary was founded at the University of Alabama in 1906. To be eligible for membership, students must have a 3.00 Quality Point Average and have completed three terms of premedical work. •!• I’ • •• 178 Pictured above arc (lie members of Alpha Epsilon Della. I i TOP. STAXD XG: J. Kuhlman. A Berkley. P. Llewelyn. N. Birdwhadlcr, J. -SKaefer. S. I Lives. B Smatsky, S. Slater. B. Scigal. J. Benjamine. SKA TED: U. Orankc. K. Clawson. ABOVE: S. Slater. |. Kuhlman. J. Shaefer. P. Llewelyn, A. Berkley. S. Hayes. Alpha Tau Delta Alpha Tau Delta is a national fraternity for women in nursing. It was established in 1921 to further higher professional educational standards for women in the profession. To be eligible for membership, the student must have a 2.5 quality point average. ATI) celebrates its Founders Day in February. This year ATD has invited several guest speakers to its meetings. Members are currently organizing an alumni chapter which would work closely with the collegiate chapter in special projects. 179 Alpha Phi Omega Alpha Phi Omega is a service oriented fraternity. APO men usher at University functions, provide refreshment and coat-check facilities at Student Union affairs, and sponsor University-wide dances for charity. APO and Chi Omega built the Homecoming Queens float this year. The greatly improved travel for sale bulletin board in the Student Union was also a project of APO. In the winter, the fraternity sponsors the annual Ugly Man on Campus contest which provides funds that support an Equadorian orphan as well as area medical institutions. At present APO is planning a Stanton Crawford Memorial Film Series for September, 1967. Pictured above left to right are the brother of Alpha Phi Omega. Kappa Kappa Psi is a national honorary fraternity of bandsmen. Thirty members were tapped twice during; the year after they had served for two trimesters in either the concert, brass. Panther, or marching bands. Pledges were chosen on the basis of outstanding musicianship and leadership and they go through a full trimester pledge program. The organization sponsors several pledge parties and each year Kappa Kappa Psi holds a dance at a downtown hotel. Awards are presented for perfect attendance at musical events. The year's president was Jay Snyder and the organization is sponsored by Robert L. Arthur, band director. Kappa Kappa Psi ABOVE. SEATED: A. Popsack. J Snyder. K Mancini. B. Seitt. K I-eichliter SECOND ROW I) Minnich. I Mazur. R Wilps, R Montgomery. R Dunkel. I) Allayaud, G. Prager. G. Michel, J. Thompson, T. I .eng. J. Whiteside. E Johnson. T. Civello, E Erlbaum THIRD ROW II Swank. R Johnston, T. Llewelyn. I Lipchick FOURTH ROW; E Fischer. J. Anderson. R Williams. R Greenspan, B Krikstone. A. Saltzman. II Long, B. McCune, G. Re ch. H. Collins. LEFT. SEATED: A Popsack. J. Snyder. R Leiehliter, B. Stitt. 182 Usually the Greek system is seen only in caricature. It is the answer to the lonely student's prayer. It is all brotherhood and sisterhood and good limes. Greeks spend their time in the Tuck Shop over cokes not Sartre. What is seldom realized and often ignored is the fact that the Greek system is not just an assemblage of unthinking unresponsibles nor its only activities the rites of spring. One who seriously assumes the responsibility of sorority or fraternity membership will find something quite different than the Era of Good Feeling. Means of improving school spirit, coping with strict quota, and initiating new programs under a sometimes unyielding administration arc problems which affect the chapters in varying degrees. Reconstructing a chapter’s decrepit reputation or constructing a new one is a challenge. Ultimately, it is the problems and responsibilities which make membership worthwhile. It is from these experiences that members mature and friendships arc formed. 183 Interfraternity Council ABOVE: A. Popcavc. R Uhl, E. Slack. J Beck. B Nudclman. BELOW: IFC Rcprescnutim-BOTTOM. SEATED I. Demase. K Frederick. E. Slack. Assoc. Dean Parker F. Enwright. STASH ISC,: J. Dockey. L. Kimer. B Martin. The Interfraternity Council is the governing body for Pitt’s fraternities. The function of I.F.C. is to regulate and supervise activities, such as rush, which involve the entire fraternity system. An intramural athletic program is maintained by I.F.C. for member fraternities. This program is directed by the physical education department. Every October the Council sponsors the I.F.C. Ball. Creek Week, held in early March, is co-sponsored with the Pan-Hellenic Council. I.F.C. is a service not only to its member groups, but also to the community. In the past, members have done volunteer work for charity organizations in the Pittsburgh area. ! I I A Delta Sigma Phi For the brothers of Delta Sigma Phi, this past year was a very active one. The Delta Sigs were engaged in almost every campus activity from the Interfraternity Council to WPGH. Members were starters in most varsity sports, and the chapter competed in the l.F.C. intramural program. This year Delta Sigs held a Valentine’s Day party for the children at the School for the Blind. At the beginning of the Winter term, the interior of the fraternity house was completely remodeled and painted. Delta Sigs have always had a busy social schedule, the events ranging from the usual Saturday night parties to a weekend at Laurel Mountain. With the two large pledge classes taken this year, the chapter looks forward to years even better than this past one. TOP: R Ross. R. Racunas. A. Krivonak. J. Vitcllo, II. Ferrer. ABOVE. FIRST ROW: J. Incifeno. K Bmh, T Keys. SECO.XI) ROW: II Deluca. G. Sirohauer. D. .Santry. J. DelPaine, J. Miller. THIRD ROW. A Sceijerwalt, J. Masco. J. Bellavich. G. Foertsch, T. Hosnack FOI RTIIROW (;. Fabio. R. Vclan. T. Hoover, J. Kruth, F. Oliver. 185 BELOW: G. Sullivan, G Baldoroje. R Cole, T. Fox. M Bui winkle. G. Nfargolf. B Hildl, R WollT. J Andmon. W. Flannery. I). Bradbury. J. l.oughren BELOW RIGHT. FIRST ROW J. Smith. M P.ijnoto. SECOXD ROW: I) Bergman. A DeCarolis. R Koshgerian. For the brothers of Delta Tau Delta the long, often tedious, hours of academie work were relieved by varied activities this year. Social events ranged from Friday jammics to the Dclt Fall Formal. Social events were a small part of the year’s schedule. Delta Tau Delta sponsored a Plus-Factor lecture Scries, hearing speakers from the business, religious, political, and military worlds. The fraternity also organized special events for members with particular interests, such as a tour of Allegheny General Hospital. Dclts served on a variety of campus organizations ranging from Inter-Fraternity Council to the Hill Education Project. Within the fraternity, the Scholarship Award Fund was used to honor three outstanding students. 186 Delta Tau Delta LEFT, FIRST ROW. G. Margolf. J. l-oug-hrcn. |. Anderson, R. Cede, 1'. Fox, VV. Zurzolo. SECOXI) ROW: X. Roceo. G. Sullivan. I) Rad bury, B. Hildt, N. Bulwinkk, VV. Flannery, G. Baldcrose. Nl. McMoniglc LF.FT, FIRST ROW: J. Uuiffiren. J. Thomp-son. R. Cole. J. Burns, I). Frisina. SEC.OXD ROW: J. Griffith. J. Jeffrey. R. Davenport. R. Gourlcy. D. Raudman, K. Vartabcdian. G. Rife. THIRD ROW: F Haubcr, L. Naamc. R Wolff, R. Verdier, R Vickcl. J. Rabold. G. Manley. VV. Brown FOURTH ROW: M. Raklewicz, J. Snyder, T. Barnes. 187 Kappa Sigma Pitt’s chapter of Kappa Sigma began in September as a local fraternity. Delta Iota Delta, and ended in April as a colony of one of the largest national fraternities. Members have always been active in extra-curricular activities: Sky- scraper Engineer, Engineering Student Cabinet, and Student Government. Kappa Sigs participated in both intramural and varsity sports programs. The chapter was well represented in honorary organizations. and one brother was tapped to the Order of Omega. TOP, FIRST ROW: T. jurerko. S. Mordcck, J. Green. I). Zebo. J. Stipanovitch, T. Ccrchiaro, I) Dclilippo. T. Williams. J. Diede-rich SECOND ROW: W. I.y-man. G. Miller. W. Green. ABOVE. FIRST ROW. p Ahner. II. O’Donnell. S. Porac. N. Cernansky, R Jones, L. Les-niak SECOND ROW C. Leitzel. I), l-azarra. M Zovko, T Rcadal. LEFT. FIRST ROW R Kennedy. R Brunbeek. SECOND ROW: I) Arlett, J. Spinola, H. Baker. I) Koziell. R Yanal. R Peters. R DeFilippo, S. Gahn. i lambda Sigma Rho was officially recognized by the Interfraternity Council this year. The Fraternity was founded in 1961 at the University's Johnstown campus. Since that time, chapters have been established at the Oakland Campus and at Jersey City ('.ollcgc. New Jersey. Beta Chapter has always participated enthusiastically in campus activities. This year the brothers won second place in football and softball in IFC’s intramural sports program. Last winter they had the highest over-all aca- _ demic average of any fraternity on campus. JU3,mDCl3. OlgIT13. -K.I10 TOP: R Snoby, J. Dorish, R Norris. J. Mika. 1- Wonders. J. Pl.ii , M Dcsiderio. ABOVE: R Stolar, R Gillo. J. Platz. R Lcewis. I). Snoby, M Johnston. LEFT, HIRST ROW: B Long, B Fetters. B Stolar. T. Nevn, M Johnston. R Demarco. SECOND ROW R. Gillo. R. Antonazzo, R Matchick. R Lewis, M. Geha. 189 Pi Lambda Phi Although the entire year was a good one for the brothers of Pi Lambda Phi. the Greek community became aware of the group's achievements during Greek Week. It was then that Bruce Martin was named Mr. Fraternity 1966. “Blue Skies” and Red Sails In the Sunset” gained the approval of the judges a ml first place in Greek Sing, and the Pi Lams won both the trophies for softball and basketball and All Greek Sports. While certain members of the Gamma Sigma chapter contributed to the intramural program and held positions on student publications and student government, the chapter itself participated in such campus activities as Homecoming, Winter Weekend and the annual Ugly Man on Campus contest. TOP. FROST ROW M. Engels, B. Livingston. C. Greene. M. Orsher. K. Haber. SECOND ROW: M. Good nun. F. Pinkney. I). Gaili. I). Lewis, A. Hurowitz, A. Sehocnfeld. S. Fisher, K. Fox. K. lysine. ABOVE: M. Olsher. M. Goodman. J. Gale. P. Shapiro. E. Levine. L. Lipschitz, S. Aliker. M. Becker. E. Fineberg, B. Schneider. B. Slomanson. M. Corona, S. Rorhkind. I.. Golomb. K Haber. S. Bratman. I). Culler. P. Haas. l. Rosenbaum. 190 Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon has always encouraged its members to succeed in extracurricular and academic activities. The prizewinning Homecoming Float, participation in campus events, and number of members holding responsible positions in campus organizations is indicative of SAE’s involvement. Brothers have been tapped to Omi-cron Delta Kappa. Druids. Order of Omega, Sigma Tau and other honorary fraternities. A well-planned social calendar provides the necessary balance between work and relaxation for a very successful chapter. TOP, FIRST ROW: R Snyder, K Wciizel. J. Wurster, J. Wipperman, SECOXl) ROW:}. Duff. R Andolina. M. Gorrado. V. Mausl. THIRD ROW: D. Price. T. Cardomonc. L Wise, C. Matron, R. Haver Lick, T. Manko, M. Kranson. R Orpnetk FOURTH ROW: N. Simulia, A. (Sellar. D. Brown. D. Perterson, B. Gilling, J. Kristofic. LEFT, FIRST ROW I. Walkingshaw. G. Palmer, G. Edwards, M. Gargar. C. Dundon. SECOXl) ROW: D. Dobsky, K Karpinski, K Prokop. C. DeNome, L. Evans. I.. Slattern, A. Rhodies, J. Stoehr, P Bowman. P. Terik. ABOVE. FIRST ROW: B. Bernath, L. Hume. W. Cavrak. SECOXD ROW: H Stump. T. Felgar. W. Sabo. W. Bounds. B Schwartz. C. Sherman. K Quinn. THIRD ROW: A. Fleming, D. DercLa, I.. Dexter. J. Heslop.J. I-eech. 191 ABOVE. FIRST ROW: R Jacob . L. Baxt, G. Kesten-baum, I Matt, M. Diamond. M. Fel-dcn. SECOND ROW: A. Cantor. J. Blumenthal, N. Berkowitz, A. Skin-er, J. Cohen. K. Roscman, K Allen, I. l.ippner. J. Roth. S. Buxbaum, M. l-evine. D. Itkin. K Weiss. C. Weinstein, H. Jahre THIRD ROW: M. ljppen. P VanBers, M. M. Moskowitz. M. Flavin. F. Winar-sky, T. Greenwald. J. Jaroff. J. Kaplan. RIGHT: W Ka-lish, M. Auslander. L. Adelman, G. Schapiro, A. Altman. B Roth. 192 Sigma Alpha Mu For Sigma Alpha Mu, the 1966-67 year has been the best in the chapter's history at Pitt. Fall and Winter rush added forty members to the chapter. With their help Friday and Saturday night parties set the trend for the year. The annual Winter Weekend was the biggest social activity. Scholastically, the Brothers ranked first of the thirteen national fraternities on campus and were awarded academic honors by the University. Brothers have been quite active in campus activities: Chairman of Homecoming, President of Men’s Council. OWL Organizations Manager, Pitt News Staff, Secretary of I.F.C., and S.G. Senators. TOP LEFT, FIRST ROW: M Wcingancn. B Schwartz. P. Alpcrt SECOND ROW: M. Tobin. N Jlorwilz. R Klci i, B Nudlrman, H. Levine. LEFT: E RosofT, G. Sc ha pi ro. ABOVE, FIRST ROW: I) Hurwitz. I). Zlatin, M. Levin, I) Shaefitz. I. Tarr. SECOND ROW: G. Goldman, A Baum. S. Kotcen, I. Grafman, R.Javer, G. Ingber. H. Taub. 193 Sigma Chi Sigma Chi’s basic principle, that a fraternity is based on the brotherhood of men with different temperments, talents and convictions, has resulted in another successful year at Pitt. In the fall, the Sigs presented Sigma Chi Derby Day for the first time at Pitt. Derby Day was praised by all Greeks and the general University community. The Sigs placed first at Homecoming and won the Inter-fraternity football trophy. Sigma Chi was active during Winter Weekend and placed very high in Greek Week competition. Individuals in Sigma Chi also made their mark on campus activities. Ralph Manning. President of Student Government, was chosen ODK Man of the Year. Tom Meisner, newly elected Vice-President of Student Government, was tapped into ODK. TOP. FIRST ROW: K Edgecomb. C Harper SECOND ROW: S. Oderberg. R Chellcl. W. Chrisner, T Hyman. THIRD ROW P. Magee. M Poel. M Sliwoski. R Branch. C. CIonglolT. FOURTH ROW R Chikoat. L. O'Rielly. I). Choxtw. I) Wiersma. T. Meisner. FIFTH ROW W. Spaide. Nl. Bryson. I). Glum. A. Williams. C. Kolikotr. O. Anderson, R Smicrope. SIXTH ROW: A Friedberg, I.. Galvin, C. Riesen. R Chillcoai. B Young, I Scanlon. I). Moshicn, I.. Sioeke. P. Keller. SEVENTH ROW: P. Jacobson, B I-ope . I Pasternak. R Shoemaker. I. Kuhn. F. Simon. J Rocco, J. O'Brian, J. Kill. ABOVE. FIRST ROW: J. Kin. O. Anderson, R Shoemaker. R Chellcl. SECOND ROW. R Joyce. W. Ohruner. T. Hyman. M Poel. C. Harper. 1'HIRI) ROW: N. (k hen, C. Riesen. I). Williams, I). Chillcoai. 194 TOP: C. Gongloff. L. Calvin. M Sliwaski, L. O'Reilly, R Branch. P Jacobson. A. Friedburg, R Gongloff. I) Glum. ABOVE, FIRST ROW. R Iervlaino. P. Keller, R Chonios. J. O'Brien. K S ocher. SECOND ROW M DeMarco. T. Scanlon. C. Zdikoff. E. Simon. R Edgecomb, C. Harper. THIRD ROW: I) Moshier, T Pasternak, R. Gongloff, J. Kuhn, C. Ricjen.J. Rooco. I.EFT: Sweetheart, Karen Ixppo. 195 Phi Epsilon Pi Phi Epsilon Pi returned to campus this fall after attending the National convention and receiving the “Outstanding Chapter” Award. The chapter placed second in scholarship on campus. This year a program of guest speakers was instituted. Brothers arc active in varsity sports and the intramural program. The community service project during the winter term involved fifty underprivileged children. The annual dinner-dance was held during Homecoming Weekend and the chapter's Winter Weekend was held at the Holiday Inn. TOP, KNEELING: K. Pakman. J Zuckcr. FIRST ROW: S. Marks. R Golden. H. Trueger. R Serbin. SECOSl) ROW: R Fisch. P. Duchin. R Lazear, C. Snyder, W. Mescherskv. ABOVE, FIRST ROW: L. Schwartz, H. Pared. B Saunders, S. Lederman. I). Brinn, P Meyerson, L. Sherman, J. Dobrushin. SECOND ROW: P Zimring. R Isaacson, S. HamcrofT, J. Chaitin, R Lazear, R. Rubenstein, H. Levinson. J. Rosen-berg, A. Swartz. LEFT. FIRST ROW A. Levin. J LevkofT, K. Swope. S. Resnick. M. Sampson. SECOXD ROW: S. Marks. N. Chesanow, S. Talmadge. E. Sainer THIRD ROW: W. Myones, S. Soodik. S. Gunner. M. Belsky. FOURTH ROW: W. Sicgal, J. Wiener. I). Sablow-ski, A. Swartz. Phi Kappa Theta The Mu chapter of Phi Kappa Theta has gained the campus spotlight on several occasions during the year. Greek Week and Inter-Fraternity sports demanded much time from the brothers but capturing the basketball and track titles in Fraternity “B league made it worth the effort. The Phi Kap sponsored Pinochle Marathan raised $430 for Children’s Hospital and gained much publicity for the group. German beer parties, mixers, and improvements to the chapter house reflect only' a fraction of the brotherhood of Phi Kappa Theta. RIGHT. KSEEUSC T. Sitoski. P Klin. J Sink. F. Suck. STAXD-f 'G: C. Cameron, M. Mar key, K. Sanford. J. Kapalko. R Kunn, C. Dor.no, I. Kinter. I) Olson BELOW. FIRS7 ROM’: E. Kosheba, J. Berarducci. R. Tahrico. S. Buffone, I). Schreibeii. SECOND ROW: G Lies, J. Sanfield. J. Stack. J. Stepiamak. J. McMahon. BELOW. FIRST ROW: S BulTone, E. Stack, R Borolxki, F Tutino. SECOND ROW: I) Figunki. J. Kolodziejiki, S. San field, R Ivachc, K. Burke. C. Smoliniki THIRD ROW: VV. Balts, R .thlonomki. W Weber. P Viccaro, T. McCullough, D. Agostini, F. Cappellotu. FOURTH ROW: C Ihompson, T. Ijeister, P. Bianconi, C. Bosco. R Freschi. E Krugh.J. Pavia. FIFTH ROW: j. Qur.ily, I). Stack, R Ricci, R. Erdelyi, M Dillon, R Weshaler. ABOVE. FIRST ROW B Komiike. B Daniels. J. Novak. R. Sioehr. J. Klizas. J Barnes. J. McKown, B. Gratson. K Klucsor. J.DeVofc. SECOND ROW: G. Poutous. C. PrafT, I) Yahrling. I). DePaolus. I. Meier, J. Bed yk. H. Ingram. I) Booker. J. Guiel. K Wise. THIRD ROW J Lawhcad. S Mausner. T Manley, J. Kralochville, Cl. Waster, R Seward, A. Friedman. T. Hittle, J. Stiger. E Hill. I) Coleman. J I rncoski. R Campbell, J. Moedinger. R Palin. R Raber BELOW RIGHT: T. Hittle. J. Lawhcad. I) Coleman. T. Hanley. J Klizas Phi Gamma Delta Pi Sigma chapter of Phi Gamma Delta celebrated 1966-67 as its fiftieth anniversary. In February, the Fijis held their annual Norris Dinner, honoring the charter members of Pi Sigma. The Fijis also presented the Student Union with a special plaque. When that building was the Schcnlcy Motel, it served as host to several national conventions of Phi Gamma Delta. Pi Sigma began its anniversary year well, taking a pledge class of sixteen. Alumni and parents receptions at Homecoming and Parents’ Weekend were featured parts of the year. The Fijis regularly invited representatives of other fraternities to attend its chapter meals and to visit the house. 198 Zeta Beta Tau When the official chapter designation of Zeta Beta Tau at Pitt was changed to Beta Phi this year, it served to underscore the new and rapidly growing character of ZBT. Beta Phi was selected the second most improved chapter by ZBT National. The remodeling program resulted in new furniture, wood panelling, and other additons to the house. The “Dunk a Zeeb booth at the Winter Weekend Carnival was among the most successful. 'ITc chapter's entry in the L'MOC contest won second place. Socially, ZBT began the year with a dinner-dance at the Penn Sheraton, highlighted by a newly instituted sweetheart ceremony. The scope of Zeeb involvement in extra-curricular activities ranges from the Pitt Xcws, Student Government and WPGH to debate and varsity track and soccer. Zccbs have been honored by Druids, ODK, Pi Delta Epsilon and Phi Eta Sigma. ABOVE. HRS'! ROW: |) Friedman. B Friedman. K Schueler. S. Lowenthal.J. Schlesinger SECOXI) ROW: A Popkave. A. Disler, J. Meyers. F Frank. K. Adler. P. S«ollcr..J. Gruebel. J. Bocalter. I). Slavkin. THIRD ROW: 1.. Taffer. A Friede. M Fabricant.J. I leimbcr . B Goldstein. M. Pollack. I. Rosenblatt. S Mirkin. ABOVE. FIRS' ROW: J. Gerson, A. Rosengarten, J. Rosenstein, I.. Ackerman. S. WelitofT. I) Abelow. I.. Janowitch. SECOXI) ROW R Landis. I) Rosenblum, R Waller. L. Taffer, A Eh re ns. M. Simon, K Weiss, G. Vasques. BELOW. HRS ROW E Jacobs. 1. Ghoen. B. Skud. 1. Mazer, L. Gian . I. Ackerman. SECOXI) ROW: A Disler. M. Pollack. M. l.cvitov. I) Shire. R VanNaarden. R Abrams. I. Cohen. M Rosenwasser. 199 Panhellenic Panhellenic Council is composed of representatives from each nationally affiliated sorority at Pitt. The Council’s major responsibilities arc the regulation of rush and the promotion of scholarship in the sorority system. In the past year. Panhel has succeeded in liberalizing rush rules and is studying the possibility of increasing the present membership quota. During the winter term the Council sponsors Panhel Ball to honor all sorority pledges and new initiates. Greek Week is conducted by Panhellenic Council and the Inter-Fraternity Council. ['OP. SEATED: B Black, E. Zielinski. STANDING: M Mnsqudicr, R llurwitz, J. Hurdevadt, S. Edwards ABOVE. FIRST ROW: A. Cults, M Holland. J DcFcrdinando. P. Ijghtholder. I. Townsend. R Sternberg. SECOND ROW: J. Thompson, M. Jenner, M Kislinsky. B Shoer, I) Rabinowiiz, Cl. Barns, N. Gohon. 200 BELOW. FIRST ROW. J. Caldwell. L. Williams, M. Touger, B Meikrantz. SEC OX I) ROW: S. Gars-zczynski, .). Kmcick, L. Cooper. K. KcIhclTcr. 2CI Alpha Delta Pi RIGHT. TOP ROW: A l.ingcnfelier. J. Chitdak, L. Dahl.J. Grim. MIDDLE ROW: P. Hayes. E. Weagly.S. Smith. BOTTOM ROW: L. Chrisiiano.J. Pfeuircr. P Lighiholder BELOW. TOP ROW: N Davis. M. Bartlett. P Mathias. M. Dzurko. K. White. P. Lazor. C. Lajkowicz. D. Sofa, J. Allen, S. Thomson, I.. Glass. MIDDLE ROW: G. Davies. L Monger. B Angelilli.G. Piano. BOTTOM ROW: K. Hayduk. C. Michael, S. Weaglv. L. Bibik. C. Rollick. A sorority, as any other organization must experiment and change in order to keep its vitality, yet the traditions which arc the foundation of a sorority must be preserved. The sisters of Alpha Delta Pi arc aware of this need to remain vital and have initiated new programs for the chapter. ADPi has sponsored several lectures to which other sororities were invited. This program will be continued and enlarged upon. To generate more interest in Pitt athletic events, the sisters participated enthusiastically in the spirit award competition. In community service, members read for the School for the Blind and adopted a child from Appalachia. Through these projects and many social events, ADPi hopes to increase the bond of friendship among the sisters. BELOW. TOP ROW. C. Boccio. M Masquelier. L Tow rand. B Bakey, C Lightholdcr. K Maher. MIDDLE ROW. L. Kovacevic. B Spcigal. S. Liviskie, N. Soliminc, M Cicone. BOTTOM ROW: R .Schimonsky, B Onda. M. Weller 202 Nu chapter of AEP has been an active part of the University community this year. Through the mixers, a dinner-dance at the 1 jc Mont, and undying spirit during Derby Day, Homecoming and Greek Week. A E Phis grew together in a bond of friendship and understanding. To serve the Pittsburgh community, Nu chapter in association with the Hill House Day (’are (Center adopted ten four-year-old emotionally and physically handicapped children. Sisters planned bimonthly activities and visits to the Day Care ('enter. Several members received special honors this term-president of Orchesis and THYR-SA AMOS AWARD. TOP ROlV s K.iilccn. M Rrichrr. B Broken. K Feld, S. Cohn. I) Goodman. C. Swartzman, M Franktton. MIDDLE DOW A Kaufman. 1. Kamens. K While, J. Grief. V Cohen. W. Caiman. E. Katz. BOTlOSt ROW: K Kirhman. F Klein. S Spitalny. M. I-ip-pen. L. Krass. Alpha Epsilon Phi TOP ROW: S Segel. S Weinberg. H. Sukonick. J Davit, P Warsh-avtky. M Goodman. B Block MIDDLE ROW N. Cohn. B Grant. A. Topol. B Schwartz, E. Troy. A. Weinberg. II Goldttein, B Tropp BOTTOM ROW: J Berg, K Kovenlierg, C. Jarobton. C Weiner. E. RosofT. 203 Delta Delta Delta ABOVE. FIRST ROW: N. Davis, J. Kretal, S. Lang, L. Sutli. C. Mci iughlin. SECOND ROW N Lee. J. Wolford. M Randour. K Karpinski. S. Stibich. B ! oustherty B West. P. Carnall. RIGHT. FIRST ROW: K Mancini, P Timlco, P. Allen. J. Caldwell, T. Veneruso. SECOND ROW: I.. Williams. S. Duffy. M Damon. Mrs. Stewart. C. Martello. D. Natali THIRD ROW: D. Beeman, B Green. E. Crowley. J. Johnston, D. Rhodes. R Gchman. 204 - The sisters of Delta Delta Delta began the fall term with their Fiftieth Anniversary celebration. Many alumnae visited the chapter to reminisce and meet the collegiate members. The Winter Formal, held at Laurel Mountain, was the social highlight of the year. At that time, the Tri-Dclt Man of the Year was named. The last activity before finals was the annual Christmas Party. The Tri-Delts proudly display the scholarship trophy they won for the highest over-all academic average for 1966-67. In addition to this achievement. more than fifteen sisters arc members of honorary organizations. A winning spirit and more athletic ability than they realized helped Tri-Dclt win the events trophy during Sigma Chi Derby Day. The second place award was presented to the Tri-Delts and Sigma Alpha Epsilon for the miniature float which they built for Homecoming. TOP. FIRST ROW: L. Sciorelli. S Hunter. A. Tumulty. SECOXD ROW: S. Maricr. K. Miller, M Kl.itnik. I., Hoffman. B I.ash. THIRD ROW: J Bennet. M Ryan. M Mitzel. J Whaley. K Raimondo. ABOVE. FIRST ROW: B. Spec. J. Grew. C. Undis. J Slagle. C. Kehm. P. Reider. SECOND ROW. C Dundin. K McHugh. S. Edwards. R. Warantz. B Miller. P Bowman. 205 Delta Zeta Sororities have in the past been stereotyped. They are usually presented as groups of frustrated cheerleaders or supercilious snobs. VVhat is completely overlooked is the fact that a sorority is a group of young women; it is an organization through which one can mature and learn. The sisters of Delta Zeta have created, through their friendship and respect for one another, a chapter which can give its members the best that sorority can offer. The sisters are involved as individuals both in their chapter affairs and campus activities. Their very individuality is the thing which provides the most challenging and fulfilling experiences. Nothing can surpass the pleasure most DZ’s share in speaking with one another, unconcerned with crossing the t's or dotting the i’s. 206 OPPOSITE PACE. FIRST ROW: P. DeMarco, J Baer. ). Kimball, . Andrews. SECOND ROW S. Y.ilin-sk.it. J. Yankovic, J. I Bonarh. K Jacoby, I.. Kud.it. V. Segen. I. Pctro. THIRD ROW: I) Trahan. I. Zark. E. Wetsberjer, W. Jttkowiu. K Hur-witz, S. Moore. J. Campbell. L. Meist-er. C. Finney. i.EFT. A MT A 0 r. B Hamit. ‘1. Gallagher. J Shark. S. Shoben, L. Bjalobk. P. Holt man, A. Ctganik. SECOND ROW: K Uzak. B Werner. C. Berber. J. Funovitz, J Hawes. K. Sydak. S. Snyder. I). Roger . I). Arnold. ijpppqnrnsp nr?p snF7fn i3 ABOVE. F ?57 (•Oil’ F. WiJIiaim. D. Oiego. S. Scott. J. Beamcnderfrr. K Harrison, F.. Kablach. CJ. White SECOND ROW: P Wanner, J. Langsdale. E. Notel. F. Crening. I.. Ijsh. H. Clark. J■ Kmieck. B. Abbinanti. LEFT. SEATED: K Gardner, I). Diego STANDING: L. Kud.it. I. Metster, P. Wagner. D. Truhan.J. Baer. F. Williams Delta Phi Epsilon ABOVE. FIRST ROW A. Chcrn, S Marcus. K Ormoni. G. Bcrnuk, A Staff, S. Greenberg. SECOSD ROW K Sirrnbcrg, H Kloviiz. S. Topper, M Pitched. S. Bayer, I Bcrssmann THIRD ROW: E. Geller, B laeb, S. Smith. S. Row. R Block. E. Norik. B Greenfield. FOURTH ROW M Kisilinsky. N. Isen. I) Frank. J. Saltztnan, 1. Gold-man. C. Sabsowilz, A. Gold-man. N. Stcinbach. L. l.udin.in, R Edclstein. H. Schwartz. C Shoag. RIGH T M Kisilinsky, R Edlestein, A. Sharf. I) Frank. N Stcinbach. R Ormont, A. Goldman. R. Sternberg. Della Phi Epsilon Sorority reactivated the Eta chapter at the University last October with a group of twenty-five pledges. These girls immediately began to participate in campus events such as Derby Day, Homecoming and the Ugly Man on Campus Contest. The girls balance extracurricular and scholastic activities. Five members were on the Dean's List in the fall. The sisters and seven pledges are now busy thinking of new ideas for decorating their suite in Amos Hall which will be the sorority’s headquarters. 208 ■ Theta Phi Alpha Theta Phi Alpha is the embodiment of the spirit of its members. This spirit of loyalty, of achievement and of service was evident in the chapter's activities this year. At Homecoming, Theta Phi and the Pershing Rifles won third place in the float contest. Members participated in the Mentor program, Quo Vadis, Pitt News, AWS, and several honorarics. Among the chapter’s service projects this year were a Doll Party for orphans at Christmas, and a Valentine’s Day visit to Children’s Hospital. Members also contributed to the Glenmary Missioners. Theta Phi Alpha's national philanthropy. ABOVE. FIRST ROW: R Rot ash. N Owens, I). Gentilcore, M. Ruanc. I. . Dinali, A. Scavuzzo. SECOND ROW. E. Zielinski, M. Bronder, D. Taranko. LEFT. FIRST ROW: B Neman, M. l-tzor. R Cwiklik. P Geary. K Conner. SF.COM) ROW II Bednarik. T. Conomcs, P. Pctrasko, J. Shafer. T. Slow. A. Kurtz, J. Schum, L. Murry, J. DeStefano. BELOW. FIRST ROW: C. Yutz, S. Stark. J. Ciramclla, I). Ilergen-roeder, J. O’Shea, V. Ricci. K Finley. SECOND ROW. L. Corai, S. Garszczynski. C. Sal-linker, B. Black, P Rend os. Kappa Alpha Theta The sisters of Kappa Alpha Theta found the past year both rewarding and fulfilling. Excitement began with Fall rush and mounted throughout the year. Highlights of the first term included our two Homecoming Queen finalists and the co-chairman of the Homecoming Weekend activities. Studies were temporarily interruped for the house Christmas Party. Our annual theater party and midnight supper ended the term. As the winter trimester got under way, the excitement of another successful pledge class was heightened as one of our pledges was crowned Winter Weekend Queen. Panhellenic Ball, Founders Day. and our annual party for the School for the Blind added to our schedule of activities. Some of the sisters were elected to Student Government and Associated Women’s Students. We concluded the year with Greek Week and our dinner-dance at I.e Mont honoring our graduating seniors and new initiates. TOP, TOP TO BOTTOM: N. Murray, L. Farrah, N Pushkar, S. Moudy, M. Jones. I) Hedrick, K. Ob-erlander, B. Clements. C. Harris, M. Zovko, J. Davis. C. Preszykowski. Mrs. MacCrum, S. Trnavsky. L. Pluc-inski RIGHT, FIRST ROW: C. VanSickle. W Allen, I.. NVassil, C. Steele. SECOND ROW: K. Caro. S. Schindel. J. Pushkar. C. Ixonelli. S. Giancola. S. Mar-teller, I.. Cooper. THIRD ROW: K Ole wine, C. Kukan, K. Wright, A. Gourley.J. Restcr. 210 TOP LEFT: L. Yarrington, R Gox. ABOVE. FIRST ROW: L. Plate, A. Bush. I.. Yarrington. SECOS I) ROW. R. Frankel, I). Richards. I). Rino-vato, K KilhefTer. A. Baker. LEFT. FIRST ROW: L. Tyson. K. Grecto. B. Stroc. J. Stochr, T. Cloy'd, L. Perkins. SECO.XD ROW: B. Perry, K. Ayers. M Mooney, J. Nicolai, N1 Peterson. J. Schmid. 211 Kappa Kappa Gamma Kappa Kappa Gamma ideals of friendship and loyalty were reflected in many activities throughout 1966-67 school year. In the fall, we united our efforts to win the Sigma C'.hi Derby Day Trophy and watched proudly as a Kappa was crowned Homecoming Queen. Activities continued with a Valentine’s Day Party for the School for the Blind and the Kappa-Dclt faculty reception. At Greek Week and Engineer's Week, we had the joys of seeing two Kappas crowned queens. Kappas were an integral part of campus activities, from AVVS President to Student Government senators, and cheer-leadings. ABOVE RIGHT, FIRST HOW: A. Beck, N. Hollis, J. Seijelhorst. SECOND ROW: I). Sgarlet, J. Meyers, S. D’Orsic. B Gourlcy. THIRD ROW: J. •Seddon. E. Schemer, S. Caldwell, J. McQuade. S. Davis, G. Alexander. RIGHT, FIRST ROW: S. Bedner. B. Humcnuck. B. Sabo, L. Chrysler, B. Kostkas, S. I-iughlin. SECOND ROW: J. Anderson,J. Hundcvadt. C. Bairvl, C. Walker. M. Sankey, K. Shenesky, M. Anderson, V. Exsick. C. McCauley, C. Freese. BELOW, FIRST ROW: T. Gianetta, I). Kichcrer. I . O’Neil, W. McKluskey, S. Lacke. SECOND ROW: P Radvak.J. Martin. L WolfJ. Home. M. Holland. B Keller. N. Cireensfelder. L. Kern. THIRD ROW: P. Llewelyn, G. Barris. A Graham. G. Brown, P Wallace. ABOVE, FIRST ROW C. Futrrnun K New house. B Kudin. B Singer, I. Finkrlsirin. W Stark. A Oottfricd. S Stark. A Frincr. SECOND ROW M Srlknvitt. L. Rovcnfeld. I. Simon. I. Strrnblit . B Furtt, I. Davit. L. Klvon. W. Smith THIRD ROW: S. Kaiser. A. Benjamin, K Becker FOURTH ROW: M Simon. J. Brnon. B Sher. J. Sabaevitz, J. Horovitz. D. Boxer. A Lewinc. K Heidevitz, G. Freedman. S. Krawetx FIFTH ROW S. Rosen-blum. J. Silberstein, II Fink. J Prriu, E. Midas. 7 Sch.it . Nl. (iekowtki, I. I Liberman. F. Sinner LOWER LEFT. FROM LEFT: L Klvon. W. Smith. B Furtt. L Stemblitz. STANDING: L. Davit. S. Schatz. Sigma Delta Tau For the sisters of Sigma Delta Tau, 1966-67 will l e remembered as a year filled with scholastic, campus and sorority activities. A scholarship dessert was held to reward those sisters whose quality point average had improved and guest speakers were invited. Sig Dclts participated in activities which included Mortor Board, the Mentor and Senior Assistant programs. Student Union Baird and the OWL. Sorority events included a formal dinner-dance at Le Mont, mixers, participation in Derby Day, Homecoming, Greek Week and Winter Weekend. On Founder’s Day, a buffet was held in honor of our Fiftieth Anniversary as a national sorority. We also entertained at the Jewish Home for the Aged. 213 ABOVE. FIRST ROM : S. Jones. L Spicgal. B Mcikramz. SECOXD ROW J Horinka. J. DeFerdinando. L. Layton. BELOW. FIRST ROW: P DiBuono. J. Taylor. I. Mann . — SECOXD ROW E. Kriroley. F. Caceambe. V Fatsw THIRD ROW: R Formkhrlb. Chi UmC?3 S Wrighl, S. McLurkir. C. Ckwanovitch. M. Inodf. E. Anderson. M. Jenner. C. I)aw on It was a year of firsts, finalists and fun for Chi Omega. Their Homecoming floatlet “I-aunch the Lion” captured the first place trophy. A Chi O queen finalist sat on the Queen’s float which was built by Chi Omega and Alpha Phi Omega. A Chi O served as Greek Week co-chairman and other members were active on Housing Board and Dorm Council. Socially, the Chi Omega calendar included Faculty and Parents’ Teas, and a Ski Weekend. The Chi Os did volunteer work at Forbes Pavilion this year for their service project. 214 TOP. FIRST ROW: C. Lcnzi. S. Yank. S. Smith. SECOND ROW: A Speranza, J. Thompson. THIRD ROW: L. Wiizkc. P Bromstcdder. R Breen, S. Finkelstein, M. Greco, J. Brosic. S. Wood. P. N’cgrey. M. Moore, L. Crook. ABOVE, FIRST ROW: A. Wilps, A. Simmick, I,. Cia-varr.-t, 1. Cutuley, B. Thoman. SECOND ROW: E. Angie, H Crawford, N. Dclxxiis. K. Duff, C. Diskoviich. L. Ryan, S. Tavnner. M Greenberg. M. Stillcv-. LEFT: Mrs. Savlz-man. Mrs. Berkholder. Mrs. Foulk (Advisors). A sister of Phi Sigma Sigma can l c found in almost any activity at Pitt: cheerleading. Student Government, and candidates for Greek Week and Homecoming Queens. They sponsored many functions with other Greek organizations, such as a fall picnic and a scholarship dessert. Their philanthropy projects included visiting the Pittsburgh Detention Home and selling lollipops for the Heart Fund. Their parents were the special guests at a dinner-dance during Parent’s Weekend. Scholastically, Phi Sig rated second of Phi Sigma Sigma all sororities on campus. LEFT. FIRST ROW: C Heiken. G. Hammer. J Bishins. J. Marcus. C. Gardner. S. Grossman. SEC-OSD ROW: J Attie. I) Hankcc. X. Cooper. S. Frost, I Weiner THIRD ROW: J Friedman, E. Swartz, M Heller. G. l-ewis. B Siegel. CL Skop, S. Rothman. BELOW, FIRST ROW: $. Ball. , B Oldak. A. Samet. X. Kitay. SECOSD ROW: S Kolker. M Tourer. R Reinhorn. J. Diener. J. Weinick. THIRD ROW: R Mayers. S. Gerson. M Bobman. M. Rosen. X Altfeder. S. Zissu, C. Bruckner. 6 k (f t r i 217 No one doubts that the 1966-67 Panther sports scene was the most dismal in recent years. The polluted air of defeat pervaded from Pitt Stadium to the Field House to Trees Hall. When a varsity team managed to win. the usual reaction was “well, you can’t lose them all.” But an air of optimism has replaced the air of defeat. And head football coach Dave Hart has spawned a new recruiting outlook for all sports. Hart’s recruiting program has recaptured Pitt’s dominencc in talent-rich Western Pa. It has become increasingly difficult for the Big Ten. Miami. Notre Dame, the service academies, and other football powers to land prospects. Hart once said that he hoped to make the entire area off-limits to everyone except Pitt and Penn State. This past year he has even excluded Penn State from the most sought after players. When Hart sold Lloyd Weston, perhaps the most prized high school football player in America. on Pitt, it epitomized the optimism his successful recruiting has brought to the Athletic Department. The bubble could burst, however, if the 33 recruits do not mesh and win their four freshmen games. The key to the next five years could well be whether new freshman coach Darrell Lewis can organize the individual talent to beat the Ohio St., West Virginia, Penn St., and Notre Dame frosh. There arc two other new coaches who are succeeding in their recruiting efforts. Dave Adams in wrestling, and Bill Grant in swimming have promised to end the losing tradition of the past few years. Adams, who was the assistant coach at Navy, and Grant, who was a winning coach at Mt. Lebanon H.S. have been given the go-ahead” signal by Athletic director Frank Carver. Both track and gymnastics faced manpower problems last year. Now more scholarships and more extensive recruiting promise to end those difficulties for coaches Jim Banner and Warren Neigcr. Only basketball seems to have trouble in ridding itself of the vicious circle of needing the star players to win and not being able to get the star players because it’s losing. Recruiting is once again the key. Coach Bob Timmons has proven he can win when he has the ballplayers, and now he must prove he can get them. But if the overall recruiting continues on its present level, in a few years the reaction when a varsity team somehow loses will be. “well, we can't win them all. but we sure can try 221 If Football Frustration and despair haunted a football season which witnessed a once mighty tradition shudder and crumble into near oblivion. Football fans did not expect much and not much was offered. It was the worst season in Panther history. New coach Dave Hart, an emphasis on agility, and something called spirit were to make 1967 the year of the new look . The only new look came from the grandstands where increased time was spent looking at opponent’s score. Big time power Pitt was playing with less than fifty players on the squad and Hart said less than half-a-dozen had real talent. Dave Hart gropped himself during his first year as head coach. He spoke early in the season to local writers about the poor squad. In fall training he questioned how in the world certain players had ever received a scholarship. After being crunched by UCLA in the opening game. Panther football entered a nightmare-like twilight zone for the remainder of the season. After several humiliating defeats the gridders gave a surge of energy. They were not seeking victory so much as to save face. They barely lost to Duke, outplayed California, and finally beat West Virginia. 222 223 After this effort the team fell flat l efore both service academics. It may have been a patriotic gesture but seemed the inevitable outcome of a team l cing psyched-up without the material necessities. Hart’s team lacked those things valued most—speed size, depth, and talent. The gridders were playing without an offense after the fourth game of the season. They gained a scant nine yards rushing against Syracuse as the defensive unit played three-quarters of the game. Notre Dame led only 7 —0 at halftime. The Irish were favored by 39 points. I hey won 40—0. Everybody wilted in the heat of Miami and nobody recovered for Penn State. Hart brought his team to even- pre-game home pep rally. 'Hie glory was there on Friday afternoons, but the power rarely came on Saturday. Most football fanatics have given Hart a 3-year grace period to salvage Pitt football. Hart proved his ability as a recruiter in signing two good frosh squads. Now he has two years to get a more authentic new look on the varsity. 224 225 226 Freshman Football Dave Hart leaned back in his chair. Raising his arm. ho slowly drew an imaginary map in the air. it was a I map of Western Pennsylvania. This was to be his ter- ritory. For it was here that he would find the raw talent which would rebuild the football tradition. Hart, a winning personality, recruited 32 prospects his first time as head coach. Ifc knew he had to do letter the next time around, even though he thought 12 of the 1967 frosh could have started for the varsity. As it was, they spent all season routinely acting out opponent’s plays. They won only one of the four games they played as a unit. Team play was below par but several individual standouts offered some hope. 227 Soccer 228 ' f With seven starters back from the 1965 NCAA tourney squad, everyone was expecting a big year from the soccer team. But. the big year never materialized, and the hooters settled down to a losing season. The major reason for the slump was a loss of spirit suffered when it became obvious that the team wasn’t going to make it to the NCAA’s. 'Hie season started off as expected with an easy 4—0 triumph over Frostburg. Then came the games that were to show if the team was going anywhere—with perennial power West Chester and top ranked Michigan State. Although they outshot West Chester, the hooters lost a heartbrcakcr. 2—1. Then Michigan State humbled them, 6—0. But then, in their best offensive display of the season, they turned back NCAA contender Ohio University, 5—2. Next came the game that broke their back. With the help of some unabashedly home field refereeing. Slippery Rock slipped past the hooters, 3—2. Losing their cohesion, players broke up into factions with each intent on blaming the other for the team’s troubles. The factionalism carried over onto the field, as players began to play for themselves instead of for the team. The result was a 4—1 loss to Grove City, a 1 — 1 tie with Kent State, a 1—0 shutout by West Virginia, and a 2—0 whitewash bv Kuckncll— all teams with inferior talent. 230 I I Pride took over in the last two games as the team reversed itself to down previously undefeated Akron 1 —0 and arch-rival Penn State by a 2—0 count. It was too late to salvage a winning season, but there was at least some glory in knowing how good the team could he when it played as a unit. Finally there was a hint of good things for the future as the freshman soccer team compiled an undefeated season. Even though this record contained three ties, the scoring potential the freshmen showed could bring another winning season for next year's squad. Alas—another “wait for next year” sport. | ( | I Never before were distance runners so lonely. There were only five of them. Just enough to claim the distinction of being a team. But they weren’t satisfied with just that distinction, rhey had a new coach, .Jim Banner, who is seldom satisfied with anything less than perfection. They had a captain. Frank Handelman. who is seldom satisfied with anything less than total involvement. The lonely five made cross-country the year’s only fall sport with a winning record. Out of 21 teams in the Canisius Invitational Tournament. they placed second. In the IC4A climax, they finished near the top. Handelman broke the home course record by over 20 seconds. Banner said he wasn’t satisfied. The next time out Handelman cut another 12 seconds off the time for the four-and-one-half mile ordeal. Banner said that there was at least one team people could be proud of. There were also five lonely runners that could be proud. 232 Basketball It was supposed to ! • the start of a comeback for the basketball team. This would be the year when the team would use its sophomore talent to end the devastating drought of the past two seasons. Instead of improving, the cagers regressed to their worst season in history. They lost 19 games and won only six. Two of the wins were against Carnegie Tech. The other four victories were against Westminster. Hut knell. Lifayette. and the Air Force Academy. The third straight year of famine made coach Hob Timmons a center of controversy. Timmons still smiled, kept losing and complained about the loss of several key sophomores at the start of the season. Jim l-iValley took the dubious honors of leading the team in scoring and rebounding. 234 235 236 7 For the freshman basketball team the battle has ended, but the war is just beginning. Behind them is a 14—4 record, one of the most successful in history. On the road ahead is the task of trying to rescue basketball at Pitt. This fall frosh coach Tim Grgurich brought in the biggest group of freshman cagcrs in history. Limited to four scholarships, he cornered two members of state championship teams. Mike Patchcr • and Rob McFarland. Along with them came Bob Petrini of highly rated DeMatha Catholic in Washington, I).C. and Charlie Hunt at 6-foot-7. The 14 wins set a frosh record and included victories over arch-rival Duquesnc and top-ranked Wesley Junior College. Among the team's disappointments were two close losses to West Virginia and an early season trouncing by Duquesnc. 238 Wrestling Shudt 3 CUIA 3 SCMUCHtRT o RCMtT Rhone Tree ZoLiior UMIWTWN HOOVER The Eastern Wrestling Tournament (EIWA) climaxes the season for most wrestling teams in the East. This year’s EIWA was truly a climax for the matmen. It marked the close of their worst season and the final degradation of a once mighty tradition. 'Hie matmen scored minus two points in the Easterns, finishing next to last. Only three wrestlers won their first round matches, and they entered no heavyweight. In season competition the wrestlers lost ten. beating only St. Francis and Franklin and Marshall. Against Navy, Michigan, and Lehigh, they came within one match of being shut out. Rival coaches ironically looked toward Pitt for a breather in their harsh schedules when just three years ago they feared the sight of a Blue and Child uniform. Coach Dave Johnson said the decline rested primarily on the lack of scholarships and on his being hired only for part-time work. 239 Gymnastics There is one consolation for a gymnastics team which had its worst season. They performed, as usual, before little or no audience. The gymnasts lost to all seven of their Eastern l raguc opponents, only defeating Cornell and West Virginia. A common denominator of defeat was the lack of gymnasts per se. Often the gym team marched forth in full strength of five to seven performers to face the opposition’s 15 to 20. Dave Shidlemantle, defending Eastern champion on the long horse, was injured at the start of the season and never fully recovered. Jim Sacco, who was to have concentrated in only three events, ended up competing in nearly twice that many. 240 i 242 All season long the swimmers aimed for a winning record only to lose it in their last meet. Some stellar individual performers placed them eighteenth out of 20 teams in the Easterns. The mermen operated under new coach Jerry Snyder when Ben Grady resigned before the season. John I nc had 11 firsts, back-strokcr Jor LeViere had eight, and sophomore Howie Norris had a winning streak of eight in the 200-yard butterfly. Track 12 The lack of depth that was so apparent in the indoor track season carried over into the outdoor season. Coach Jim Banner sent individual | crformcrs to relay meets and scheduled only two dual meets. The tracksters clobbered Wayne State, 116 1 2—37 1 2, after Navy had outclassed the thinclads in their first meet. 131- 23. Penn State easily won the Big 4 Quadrangle Meet, but the track team captured second ahead of Syracuse and West Virginia. At least one half dozen Pitt records were broken indoors but there weren't enough individual standouts such as Tom Christie and Dave Brinn in the hurdles, Roger Holly in the half mile, and Frank Handlcman in the distance races, to win team meets. Banner is in the process of correcting the situation. Among the high school track stars he has recruited is Jerry Richey who has run the mile in 4:10 which already eclipses the Pitt record. In addition, Banner has footballers Dave Garnett and Mike Connell for the sprints. The depth problem will no longer lx so apparent. 244 245 Baseball At the beginning of the season, coach Bobby Lewis flatly predicted that his baseball team would go undefeated. I put them on the spot.” he said. “And under the conditions, I couldn't be more pleased with the way they played. I'm as proud of this team as any I've coached.” The Panthers won 13 of 16 games and had ten cancelled or postponed because of rain or wet grounds. Lewis felt that if his club had been able to play all the rained out games, it would have been invited to the NCAA playoffs. As it was. the baseball team was in contention for a bid until it lost a double-header to Penn State, 3—2 and 3—0. Dave Welty emerged as one the nation's finest pitchers during the season. The Panther lefthander had a 6—1 record and compiled an ERA of 0.32 with 89 strikeouts in 55 innings. Before Penn State scored on him. Welty had hurled 44 2 3 innings of shutout ball. Against Syracuse, Welty highlighted the season with a nohitter. He also had the third highest batting average (.333) on the team. Lewis hopes Welty will use his last year of eligibility rather than sign a major league contract. 246 248 I 1 1 : Perhaps golf coach Rex Pecry had the 1966 season in mind when he forecast “a very long season” for 1967. Hie golf team had won only three of 17 matches in '66 and the year's top two players had graduated. No one was more pleased than Pcerv. however, when the golf team refused to heed his prophesy. Sophomore Pete Keller, playing number one. proved to be a pleasant surprise and unexpected help came from transfer student Rick Golden. After their first four matches, the golfers rallied for a 6 8 record and had their hopes for an even season dashed when Kucknell and Clarion cancelled matches. They played steady golf, said Pecry, and his choice of words was correct. Bill Bryan, Dick Winter, John Dcllavcrson, and Bob Racunas shot consistently in the 70’s and low 8()'s. The golfers narrowly missed upsetting Eastern Champion Penn State. Bryan. Winter, and Golden won their matches, but the l.ions hung on to win the last three pairings and the match. 4—3. Only Winter and Karl Quinn, who played seventh, will not return next season. 249 With new home courts and a permanent place to practice, the tennis team enjoyed its first winning season since 1962. After dropping three of their first four matches, the netmen strung six consecutive victories to compile a 7—5—I record. Led by first singles player Hill Nichols, the tennis team defeated Bethany, 6—3. in the year’s big upset. Bet hay had won 18 straight matches over two seasons of play and Nichols personally snapped the 37 match skein of Bethany’s Kirk Hunter. Bill Goldstein combined with Nichols for an 8—3 mark as the number one doubles team. Goldstein, playing primarily number two in singles competition, posted a 7—5 record. Nichols’ 9—4 singles mark also included an upset win over Youngstown’s John Kcil, who had a 16 match winning streak. Erik Lieberman (8—3). Bob Salcmbicr (7—5). Tom Stromp (10—2). and Elliot Sainer (5—7) contributed to the successful season. Coach Ben Pope praised the consistency of the netmen. adding, “they had spirit from the first match on.” Pope has everyone except lacl erman back next season 251 69 BASKETBALL Carnegie Tech 58 59 Davidson 97 68 William Mary 72 57 Columbia 69 65 Duquesne 72 68 Rutgers 87 52 N. Carolina S. 80 53 Air Force 52 71 Westminster 78 60 Syracuse 70 58 Lafayette 47 44 Penn State 84 78 West Virginia 102 66 St.Johns 95 60 VP. I. 77 63 Bucknell 58 72 Cornell no 59 Ford ham 68 62 West Virginia 81 83 Westminster 72 70 Virginia 82 49 Temple 87 73 Penn State 87 69 Carnegie Tech 55 68 Miami (OHIO) 82 14 FOOTBALL UCLA 57 7 Duke 14 15 California 30 17 West Virginia 14 7 Navy 24 0 Army 28 7 Syracuse 33 0. Notre Dame 40 14 Miami 38 24 Penn State 48 BASEBALL C. Washington Georgetown Cleveland State Ashland Indiana State Grove City Syracuse Syracuse Clarion Westminster Saint Francis Penn State Penn State Saint Francis Allegheny Duquesne SWIMMING Miami (O.) Syracuse W. Virginia Buekncll Kent State Ohio U. Slippery Rock Grove City Maryland Air Force GOLF 0 Navy 7 5 West Virginia 19 1 1 2 G. Washington 5 1 2 2 Georgetown 5 3 Ohio University 25 4 Saint Vincent 3 4 1 2 West Virginia 2 5 Westminster 2 1 Indiana State 6 1 Kent State 6 6 Carnegie Tech 1 6 Duquesne 0 3 Penn State 4 4 1 2 Allegheny 1 1 2 WRESTLING St. Francis Temple Navy Army Cornell Michigan F M Ixhigh Penn State Syracuse TRACK Navy 1 2 Wayne State Penn State Syracuse W. Virginia Kent State Penn State Army Navy Slippery Rock 131 37 1 2 115 28 12 58 74 84 95 29 23 116 39 TENNIS West Virginia California Indiana State West Virginia Hiram Duquesne Allegheny Youngstown Slippery Rock Bethany Carnegie Tech Grove City Penn State CROSS COUNTRY 15 Slippery Rock 48 57 OhioU. 28 Kent State 49 15 Gannon 48 15 Grove City 40 20 West Virginia 46 44 Penn State 19 134.40 GYMNASTICS Slippery R. 137.25 139.90 Cornell 112.35 132.00 Springfield 174.45 142.75 Mass. 149.75 146.50 Syracuse 164.90 164.40 Kent S. 167.35 161.25 Army 178.75 149.80 Navy 171.55 141.75 W. Virginia 136.97 152.30 Temple 178.85 132.90 Penn S. 186.55 SOCCER Frostburg West Chester Michigan State Ohio U. Slippery Rock Grove City Kent State West Virginia Akron Bucknell Penn State TlvJ fv Pratt Whitney Aircraft U OIVISION OF UNITED AIRCRAFT CORPORATION fi February 13, 1967 Mr. Earl Fischl 3955 Forbes Avenue Allll Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Dear Mr. Fischl: As a result of your recent campus interview with Mr. Wells, we believe you have the interests and qualifications to fill a position at Pratt Whitney Aircraft. Therefore, we are pleased to offer you employment at our Connecticut Operations in East Hartford. Your starting salary will be $735 per month based on a 40-hour work week. This offer is made contingent upon your satisfactory completion of our established employment requirements which include a physical examination and personal security investigation. The offer is also made on the basis of our understanding that your representation to our interviewer concerning your background is complete and accurate. Your work will be in the Experimental Engineering Department and will concern various aspects of development and analysis of flight propulsion systems, energy conversion systems and power devices. Your assignment to an experimental group will follow a brief orientation program designed to provide an insight into the over-all engineering operation and to acquaint you with the specific responsibilities and activities of the Experimental Engineering Department. The programs within Experimental Engineering range in scope from the development of both airbreathing and non-airbreathing power systems to the development and application of highly specialized instrumentation for use in the development of our products. Airbreathing projects include full-scale development of turbojet and turbofan engines, VTOL (vertical-takeoff-and-landing), STOL (short-takeoff-and-landing) and supersonic powerplants, as well as industrial and marine gas turbines. Supporting these efforts are component development groups which carry on work on compressors, burners, turbines, bearings and seals, afterburners, fuel systems, etc. Non-airbreathing projects are directed toward the development of energy conversion systems in the fields of thermionics, thermoelectronics, and fuel cells. Project responsibilities include development of hardware and associated ground support equipment for specific applications, such as the fuel cell systems for the Apollo program. To support these efforts, groups are involved in studies of a more general nature, such as in the fields of thermodynamics, hydrodynamics, controls, advanced materials and structures. EAST HARTFORD. CONN. 06108 After the two-and one-half to four years it has taken to fulfill graduation requirements, a student may give some thought to what his education has been. To some, the years have been a means to achieve social respectability or the promise of success in a career. To others, formal education has been like crawling from a funnel, each course raising new questions and doubts. These people find that their cocksure ignorance at the beginning has changed to a thoughtful uncertainty by graduation. Now the senior looks forward to a job or continued studies, that which challenges his abilities, or insures a good salary or both. ODK Man of the Year President of Student Government Ralph Manning received the highest recognition for a senior man in the area of leadership by being named the ODK Man of the Year. Mr. Manning was a chemical engineering major with an honor grade point average. A member of Sigma Tau honorary and president of Omega Chi Kpsilon honorary, he was also a member of the Engineer’s Society and the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. He represented the chemical engineers on the Engineering and Mines Cabinet and was a member of the Allocations Committee and Chairman of the 1965 Engineers’ Week. As Vice-President of Sigma Chi fraternity, Mr. Manning participated in interfraternity sports. He served as Vice-President of ODK and of the Pennsylvania Association of College Students. 258 Mr. and Miss Pitt William Cabin and Dina Natali were selected as Mr. and Miss Pitt by a committee of prominent juniors who chose them on the basis of their contributions to the University. Miss Natali was vice-president of AWS and chairwoman of Women's Housing Board. A mentor and a senior assistant, she also served as president of McCormick Hall and as a Student Government senator. Other activities include being a member of the Student Affairs Advisory Committee and Delta Della Delta Sorority. She was also the recipient of the Italian Room Scholarship for European study. Mr. Cabin served as business manager and literary editor of the OWL and editor of the Pitt News. He was president of ODK and Pi Delta Epsilon. A member of the Liberal Arts Cabinet and the Student Allocations Committee, he also served on the Student Affairs Advisory Committee and the Student Publications Board. I 259 The 1967 Owl Hall of Fame Education at Pitt is not limited to the classroom. It is also the participation in a University community which is as diverse as the people who compose it. Each year the Owl Hall of Fame recognizes those senior men and women who have made the greatest contribution to this community. Students are chosen from every area of campus activity, from publications to athletics. Selection is made by a committee of junior class leaders who themselves represent the broadest areas of student life. While scholarship is a factor, it is not emphasized. The most important criteria is not how many organizations the senior has ! cen a member of, but how worthwhile his contributions have been. 260 261 262 S531 PREVIOUS PAGE. LEFTTORIGHT: Lois Brady, Patti Allen, Thomas Sacks, Earl Fischl.Janet Berson. THIS PAGE: Fred Frink, Margie Gelb. Howard Ainisman. Ralph Manning. Kay Shcnesky. Peggy Jo Timko. Bernie McLeod. James Janis. Linda Davis, James Doc key, NOT PRESENT: Barbara Elman. Martin Engels. M ah mood Mamdani, Bruce Martin. Tawia Pagonis 263 RICHARD ABRAMS ELSA ACOSTA GALLO STANLEY ADAMS LAWRENCE ADEI.MAN RAUL AHNER HOWARD ALMSMAN ROBERT ALCORN DONALD ALLAYAL D PATRICIA ALLEN THOMAS ALLEN ALAN ALTMAN ARLENE AI.TMYER ANTHONY AMOROSO RICHARD ANDERSON EDWARD ANGEL WILLIAM ANNABLE ROBERT ANSEKYTI'Z JAMES ANUSKIEWICZ WILLA APPEL ROBERT ARCURIO MICHAEL ARONOWSKY ALVIN ARRICK ROBERT AUERBACH MILES AUSI.ANDER JACQUELINE BAER ERVIN BAIRD KATHLEEN BAKER BARBARA BAKEY YVONNE BA LASH WILLIAM BANE THOMAS BARBER STEPHEN BARGZAK SYLVIA BARKSDALE GRACE MARIE BARRIS BARRY MELVIN VINCENT BARTOLOTTA JR. SALLI BASKIND NICK BASSAR JR DAVID BAUM THERESE BAUMGART RUTH BECHTLE CAROL BECKER FREDERICK BECKER JUDITH BECKER DAVID BELLET ANN BENJAMIN JOHANNA BENJAMIN JOHN BENNETT 265 JOHN BENSHOFF CLAUDIA BENTZ JULIAN BERARDUCC! TINA BERGERSON DEAN BERGHANE WARREN BERGIIOLZ ANN BERKELY JANET BERSON CAREN BERNSTEIN ANN BERNSTEIN MARILYN BERNARD HAL BERMAN EDMUND BIAGETTI JAMES BIGKERTON NANCY BINDSCIIADLER FRANK B1NGMAN JUDITH BIRD ROSEMARY BISKUP SUSAN BLACK DANIEL BLACKWELL ROBERT BLANC THOMAS BLAZER DAVID BOARD DONALD BOBISH RONALD BOGGS ROBERT BOOTE CAROLE B(X)TH JAMES BOTSKO JOHN BOTTEGAL WILLIAM BOYD ROBERT BQYLAN BARBARA BOZEWICZ LOWELL BRACKEN FRANCES BRADLEY LOIS BRADY JOAN BRAMAN SHELDON BRATMAN PRISCILLA BRAUN WALTER BREHM JOEL BREITSTEIN HARRY BREMER HELEN BRESEE GEORGIANNA BRETHAUER MARK BRIGGS MARSHA BROSE FRANCES BROWN GARY BROWN JAMES BROWN 266 JAMES BROWN JR STANLEY BROWN LOUISE BRUDNAK GUY BUCCI CARLOS BUENO JOHN BURK JR CAROL ANN BURKAMP KAREN BURNWORTH ARLENE BURTON-NANCY BUTLER BRUCE BUVINGER BONNIE BYRNE WILLIAM CABIN ROBERT CALDWELL GREGORY CALHOUN CAROL CANON 267 JUDY GAPLAN JOHN CARNEY WILLIAM CARTER NICHOLAS CERNANSKY SUSAN CHAPMAN JEANNE CIIEBERENCHICK AMELIA CHENG MILAN CHEPKO JANET CHISDAK DALE CHODOROW MARY JO CHOTINER WILLIAM CHRISTOF MARY JO CICONE MARY ANNE CIOITI ANTHONY C1VELLO FRANK CLARK JR KATHY CLAWSON PATRICIA CLICK GERARD CLOSSET PATRICIA CLOYD ROBERT COB AUG II ANITA COHEN ARTHUR COHEN ROBERT COHEN VERNON COLBERT EDWARD COLE PATRICIA COLLURA JAMES COMPAGNO CANDACE COJESKI KEVIN CONNOLLEY JANE CONS I'AI) CAROLYN CON TER DIANE COSHAREK MARTIN COURTNEY DENNIS COURTRIGHT LEWIS CRICHTON FRANK CRISAFI ELLEN CROWLEY ALLISON CUNNING 11 AM RICHARD CUNNINGHAM SHARON CURTIS RICHARD CUTLER 268 SHARON DANNER JOSEPH DANOWSKY LEON DARLING ELIZABETH LOUISE DAUGHERTY LINDA DAVIS MARGARET DAVIS PETER DAVIS DONALD DECESARE LAWRENCE DEMASE GARY DELUCIA MARTHA DEPRISCO GAIL DETAR NORBERT DETIG ANN DEUTSCH PATRICIA DEVROUDE DONNA DIEGO JOYCE DIENER JANET 1)1 FF.RDI NANDO 269 JOHN DIGEOROE CHARLES 1)1 PIETRO JACK DOBKASHIN JAMES DOCKEY AN THONY DOLL JAMES DOLNIK THOMAS DOWNEY THOMAS DU BEN FRANK DUDA RICHARD DUDZINSKI ROBERT DUNKEI. JUDITH DUNKEI.BERGER LOUISE DURAN GAYLE DURKIN DEANNA DURRMAN BARBARA DVORZNAK WILI-ARD DYCKES SUSAN EBER T JANET ECKER BARBARA ELMAN JOHN ENGEL GARY ERNST SHARON ESKOW RUBEN ESPINOSA ANTHONY ESPOSITO LYNN EVANS LEON FEINERMAN RACHEL FELDMAN SAMUEL FELDMAN WILLIAM FELDMAN JERRY FELENCIIAK ROBERT FENNELL JOSEPH FERN EBEN FETTERS TERRENCE FETTERS ALLAN FINGERET CRETCHEN FINNEY MICHAEL FINUCANE DAVID FIOL EARL F1SCHL WILLIAM FI TZGERALD JAMES FLANNIGAN 270 LOIS FLANSBAUM RICHARD FLOYD ROLAND FOGLE JOSEPH FOLK WILLIAM FORD DANIEL FORERO LEONARD FOX CAROLE FRANK DEANNA FRANK FRED FRANK RICHARD FRANK WILLIAM FRANK KENNETH FREDERICK WILLIAM FRIEBEN WILLIAM FRIED BARBARA FROEHLICH SUSAN FROST ROBERT FURRY LAWRENCE FUNSTEN MARTHA GALEY JOSEPH GARBARINO KATHERINE GARBINSKI CONSTANCE GAR DNER GEORGE GARDNER ALICE GARIN BARBARA CARMAN JANE GASSNER PA I R ICIA GAUNTI ETT CARROLL GEARY RICHARD GEBELEIN MICHAEL GEM A VIRGINIA GEHL MARJORIE GELB BERNARD GEMBINSKI NICK G ENERA LOVICH BARBARA GERBER GERALDINE GERSON CHARLES GERSTBERGER VINCE GIANGARLO RICHARD GIBSON ROBERT GILBERT LYNNE GILMAN ) 271 RAYMOND GII.LO SUSAN GITOMER JAY GLASSER DENNIS GLUNT JOSEPH GLL'VNA JAMES GODFREY BARBARA GOLD STANLEY GOLDBERG THEODORE GOLDBERG TIM GOLDBERG ROBERT GOLDEN JEROME GOLDMAN RICHARD GOLDMAN RONNBY GOLDNER BONNIE GONZALES LEE GOLOMB GERALDINE GOODSTONE THOMAS GOSS RICHARD GOTTLIEB MICHAEL GRAFF VIRGINIA GRANKE BEVERLY GRANT LINDA GRA ITON KENNETH GRAY KATHRYN GRECO JOHN GREECHER MARILYN GREEN MARY GREEN BRUCE GREENAWAY ARCHIE GREENWOOD MICHAEL GREVER DEENA GRIFF JUDITH GROSS BRENDA GROSSMAN JERALD GROTSTEIN JONATHAN GUYASUTA JADER HABED ( KOLE HABER LEONARD HABIG SHIRLEY HAIINE JANET HALL MARCIA IIALLECK SUZANNE HAMILTON JANICE HANAHAN ROBERT HANAWALT THOMAS HAND FRANKLIN I IANDEI.MAN JAMES HANDSHAW 272 MARINELL HANDSHAW DAVID IIANGOSKY KRISTIN MARKER WILLIAM HARPSTER EILEEN HARRIS HEATHER HARRIS LINDA HARRIS WILLIAM HATCH JOSEPH HAWKINS SHEILA HAYS SUZANNE HAYES RICHARD MEALY NANCY HEASTINGS SUSAN HEIKIN DAVID HEIN GEORGE HEINEY HARRY HEINLEIN MARSHA HELLER CHARLES HENDRICKS PETER HERMAN LAETIT1A HERR I) ANTHONY HERZINC RONALD HIETSCH NANCY HINKEL IRA HIRSCHHORN JOHN HLYWA DARRELL HOBLACK MOSES HOCHMAN KATHRYN HOFFMAN CATHERINE HOLI.ERAN ROBERT HOLLIS BERNARD HOLZMAN KERRY HOLTZWORTH WILLIAM HONS SUSAN HOPKINS DOLORES HOPPER 273 GLORIA HOKINKA RONALD HORNAK JANET HORNBY JEFFREY HOROVITZ JUDITH HOROVITZ ROBERT HOROWITZ RAYMOND HOROWITZ PHILIP HOURICAN JANET HOUT THOMAS NUETTNER RICHARD HULME MILDRED HUSTON GARY ICKES ROY IGERSHEIM JUDITH ILSON JOAN JACOBY LINDA JACKSIC EDWARD JAI-IL MARGARET JEFFREYS ROSEMARY JENDRAL JUDITH JESO PERPETUA JIMENEZ RONALD JOHNSON RONALD JOHNSTON ANITA JONES BEVERLY JONES RICHARD JONES SARAH JONES JAY JORDAN RU TH JORDON 1 ARTHUR KAMESHKA CLAIRE K A MIN' LOIS KANE ROBERT KAPLAN DAVID KARCH THOMAS KARCHER LAWRENCE JOSEPH SANDI JOSEPH DOROTHY KABAKERIS WILLIAM KALISH MARJORIE KALSOK STANLEY KALSON DEBORAH KARLOVICH IRIS KATZ NEIL KATZ MARJORIE KAUFMANN CAROLE KAWCHAK KENNETH KAZMERSKI CAROLYN KEHM MARY LOU KEHRER ALLYN KEISER MICHAEL KELLER WILLIAM KENNY LINDA KERN LARRY KIEL CAROL KIMMEL DAVID KINCHORN MARJORIE KIRK ROBERT KIRK EDWARD KIRSTEIN 275 276 HARRIETTE KLEIN LEWIS KLEIN JAMES KLIZAS GERALD KOCHINSKY FRANCIS KOLIC DONALD KONTZ HOWARD KORN JOHN KOSSEY BARBARA KOSTKAS RUTH KOSTMAN STEFAN'IE KOTT JAMES KRAL ELLIOTT KRAMER MARSHALL KRAMER BERNIE KRAUSS DORIS KRAUSS 277 SUSAN KRAWETZ SANDRA KRAYNEK WILLIAM KRIF.G MARIAN KRIEGEK BARRY KIRKSTONE LAWRENCE KRONSTAIN RAYMOND KUCERA MICHAEL KUNSMAN NANCY KUZEMKA SUSAN I .ABOVE NICOLA LACARIA JAMES l.AFFERTY PAUL LAMBERT DONALD LAMPARSKI MARVIN LANDAU ROBERT LANDEL LAWRENCE LANCERHOLC PETER LAPLACA CHRISTINE LARSON JAMES LAUGHEY JEFFREY LAW HEAD ROBERT LAWSON PATRICIA LEARY DONALD LEET JOHN LEETE STEPHEN LEIGHTMAN JOHN LENCOSKI MADELINE LEPIDI KAREN LEPPO THOMAS LESCHINE 278 HARRY LEVER ELLEN LEVIN AARON LEVINE CAROL LEVINE DAVID LEVINE ELEANOR LEVINE LOUISE LEVINE DONALD LEVIS GAIL LEWIS JON LEWIS RALPH LEWIS JANE LIBERMAN EDWARD LIEBERMAN ERIK LIEBERMAN MARTIN LIEBOWITZ CARRII.EE LIGHTHOLDER GEORGE LIGHTY CHARLES LIND DAVID LINDBERG DAVID LIPMAN RONALD LIPMAN CHING-LEOU LIU PEGGY LLEWELYN DAVID l.OBAS JOSEPH LOCKER FENTON LOHNES HARRY LONG BRUCE I.ONGPHRE DENNIS LORENZI MYRON LOUIK 279 DENNIS LOWERY JOHN LUCAS THOMAS LUNDY MYRON LURIE TERRY LUTZ PAMELA MACDOVITZ ANITA MALLINGER CAROLINE MALONEY M A HMOOD MAM DAN I RONALD MANCUSO RALPH MANNING FRED MARCUS JACK MARCUS MICHAEL MARCUS CLARK MARGOLF HOWARD MARKOWITZ ROBERT MARSHALL BRUCE MARTIN 280 CHRISTOPHER MARTIN GARY MARTIN KENNETH MARTIN PAUL MARTIN LOUISE MARVICH MARY MASQUEI.IER SIBYL MASQUEI.IER ANTHONY MASSARO MARY MASSLON JOHN MATCHIK JAMES MATERNA JOHN MATSCO ROBERT MAXWELL JOSEPH MAYHUT WILLIAM MA7.ANOWSKI MICHAEL MAZEROY STANLEY MAZZA CATHERINE McCANN MILES McCUE ROBERT MeCUNE MARTHA McCURDY ANNETTE McGANKA Robert McGinnis BERNADINE McLEOD ELIZABETH MECKE ROY MECKLER JUDITH MEHOLD BONNIE MEIKRANTZ MARK MENDLOW THOMAS MERRIMAN GERARD MICHAEL WALLACE MICOSKY LEIDA MILAZZO DAVID MILLER DENNIS MILLER 281 GILBERT MILLER HARVEY MILLER MARILYN MILLER GENE MILTON JAMES MOGUSH WALTER MOLL SARAH MONTGOMERY LEONARD MOONEY MARYANN MOONEY MARILYN MORAN IV. SANDRA MORGAN ROBERT MORSEK NURITH MOSER SARA MOSES HELEN MOWRY ROBERT MROSS THOMAS MURPHY WILLIAM MURPHY PHILLIP NASRALLAH DINA NATALI CAROL NATHANSON ALEXANDER NAUDA GARY NAUGLE JANET NEBIOLO MONICA NEFF CAROL NELKIN MARCIA NELSON MICHAEL NENNO ELISE NESTEI. ERIC NESTLER FRANK NEWELL SUSAN NEWHOUSE BARBARA NICHOLS FRANCES NICHOLS PAUL NIELSEN ROBERT NIEMEYER GUILLERMO NINO DANIEL NIPPES WILLIAM NIRO PAUL NISTIGO GAIL NIXON SIGMUND NORR 282 KENNETH NOVAK SIMON ODERBERG MARJORIE ODLE JOSEPH O’DONNELL RUSSELL OFT NICK I OK IN MICHAEL OLSHER JOAN O’SHEA JANET OSSIP LEO OSWALD RICHARD OVERMOYER DANIEL PACE TASSIA PAGONIS JOHN PALMER JOANNE PAN FACES ELAINE PAPANDREAS AGORO PAPPAS JANE PARKE BRUCE PARKER GEORGE PARKER BONNIE PARSONS FRANK PAUL CAROL PAULEY MITCHELL PEARLMAN MARTIN PECK HAM RICHARD PEES EDWARD PEPPE1. DOROTHY PERICH KATHARINE PERKINS ELDA PERZ CHARLOTTE PETERSON MARCIA PETERSON ROY PETRE PHILIP PHILLIPS MARIA PIANTANIDA LEWIS PIPER ELAINE PLITTMAN JOSEPH POHL CHARLES POLIVKA MARK POLLACK EMIL POPARAD GLENN PRAGER 283 WILLIAM PRUCHNIC KARL QUINN ILENE RABINOWIT7. BETHANN RADF.N MARGARET RAGO THOMAS RKADAI. DAVII) REED DONALD REEDER CHARLES REHLIN MARSHA REHNS ELIZABETH RKIB SUZANNE REID ROSI.YN REINHORN GARY RESCH JERALD RESNICK ALBERT REYNOLDS 2S4 BARBARA RHOADS JOHN RHOADS JAMES RICE PETER RICH JUDITH RICHARDSON VICTORIA RISKO IRENE ROBATISIN BETH ROBERTS GEOFFREY ROBERTS STEVEN ROCHKIND RICHARD RODGER NORMAN ROGOZIN JACK ROHLANI) HENRY ROLL SANDY ROPER MICHAEL ROSBOROUGH GERALD ROSEN HENRIETTE ROSEN JAMES ROSEN ARTHUR ROSENFELDER DONALD ROSENZWEIG LESLIE ROSS BARRY ROTH MARY ROTH JAMES ROTHSCHILD JOANN ROVILEA SANDRA ROZANCE ARNOLD KUBENFIELI) HOWARD RUBENFIELD ROBERT KUDGES JOHN RUDY STEPHEN RUCG MICHAEL RUN IN BARBARA SABO THOMAS SABO THOMAS SACKS DAVID SALLACH CAROL SALLINGER DENNIS SANTINI ROBERTA SARRAF THOMAS SCAN LIN JUDY SCHAFER GERALD SGHAPIRO FREDA SCHEINGROSS STUART SCHERR DAVID SCHIFFRIN ELLIOT SCHILLER RHONDA SCHIMONSKY 285 JOHANNA SCHMID LESLIE SCHNELL WILLIAM SCHROEDEL BARRY SCHRADER DAVID SCHREIBER CONSTANCE SCHWARTZ IRWIN SCHWARTZ LORA SCHWARTZ MARK SCHWARTZ SUSAN SCOTT WILLIAM SCOTT JOHN SEDLAK MARY SEDLOCK BERNICE SEIGAL DONALD SEIGH JOEL SEIGLE MYRNA SELKOVITS CAROL SERRA JOSEPH SETON CONSTANCE SETI'LEMYER HENRY SHAFFER LINDA SHAFFER LARRY SHAFFER JUDITH SHANGOLD RONALD SHAPIRO SANDY SHAPIRO LEONARD SHARON B VINSON SHEFTIC PATRICIA SHELLEY ELEANORE SHENESKY BARBARA SHERMAN C. LEON SHERMAN MABEL SHERMAN LEE SHEVRE ARTHUR SIIIREY FRANCIS SHOR JOHN SHORE PAULA SHRUT ALBERT SI EG GF.RRI SIEGEL SUSAN SILVERMAN EVELYN SINGER HOWARD SINGER ROBERT SIRKO CAROLYN SISKA MICHAEL SITAR KIPRIAN SKAVINSKI RICHARD SKOCZYLAS 766 287 GRACE SKOP SUSAN SLEVIN WILLIAM SLOMANSON BARBARA SMATSKY CATHY SMITH MICHAEL SMITH GEORGIA SMITH HARRY SMITH ROBERT SMITH STANLEY SMOKLER MARK SMUKLER EVELYN SNYDER AMY SOB EL EDWARD SOBOTA RENEE SOKOLOW LEWIS SOLOMAN JAMES BOLTERS JOHN SOMMER JOHN SOPKO ANNELLE SOPONIS JAMES SOUTHWICK PATRICIA SOW ASH FLOYD SPECHLER LINDA SPIEGEL RUTH SPIEGEL RICHARD SPINOLA MARY SPROCH MICHAEL STACHOWIAK ROBERT STAINBROOK IRENE STANA JAMES STANISLOW NANCY STEINBACK JOHN STEINIGER WILLIAM STENGER LINDA STIEN KATHRYN STERN 288 TIMOTHY STEVENS SUSAN STEWART JOHN STIPANOVICH JOYCE STOEHR ROBERT STOLAR ALAN STONE PHYLLIS STONE STEVEN STONE JUDY STOVER MARJORIE STRATTON JAMES STREJCEK THOMAS STRITTMATTER WILLARD STUVER MARY SUDAK JAMES SUSKIE JOHN SUTCLIFFE JAMES SVVANEY HARRY SWANK DANIEL SWANSON SUZANNE SWARTZ MATTHEW SYSAK BARBARA SZYMUSIAK FRANCIS TACKAGE GONCALO TAVARES MICHAEL TELLER WILLIAM TEWES RUTHE TEX EMMA THOMPSON PEGGY JO TIMKO CAROLYN TIRA ROBERT TKAG arlene Torn MARLENE TOUGER LYNNE TOWNSEND SUSAN TROI-ANO ELIZABETH TROY LINDA TYSON EDWARD TYTKE JUDITH U LB ERG LOUIS ULERY HARRIET UNGAR JOHN UNGAR STANLEY URBANEK RANDALL VALENTINE MICHAEL VAVREK TONI VENERUSO PAMELA VENET PATRICIA VI DON I 289 PETEK VITUOCI WILFRED VOGT Raymond worm ABRAHAM WACHSBERG NYAL WALKER CAROL WALTER PAUL WALTER BETTE WALTERS FRED WALTERS RONNI WARANT7. RICHARD WARREN ROY WARREN MARILYN WASCOL CHARLES WEATHER HEAD THOMAS WEBER TIMOTHY WEBER TERESA WEIL DORIS WEII.ER MICHAEL WEILL JERRY WEINBERGER JILL WEINICK DALE WEINSTEIN DAVID WEISS HARV EY WEISSMAN MARIAN WELLER LINDA WERKSMAN GARY WERNER DENNIS WEST GAIL WHITE PRISCILLA WHITNEY 290 ■ JOHN WILDS MIDCF. WILKES DIANNE WILLIAMS FRANCINE WILLIAMS LOUIS WILLIAMS LYNNE WILLIAMS RICHARD WILLIAMS RONALD WILLIAMS JOHN WILLS RALPH WILPS CAROLE WILSON FRANK WILSON CHARLES WIMER RICHARD WINTER ROGER WISE PAUL WISNIEWSKI ANDREA WOLFAND KAAREN WOLFARTH HOWARD WOLFSON ROBERT WOULITICH SAMMY YANOVICH ELAINE V I .KM ( K JOSEPH YOUNG GEORGE AIMES GERALDINE ZALAR GREGORY ZAMBO EUGENEZANONI MICHAEL Z.APF ABDULLATIF ZARRUG ROBERT ZAVOS J 291 ALVIN ZAVVATSKI ANDI ZEBI.F.R JULIAN ZEKAN RONALD ZELAZOWSKI LINDA ZELIN GAIL ZENDER KM I LIE ZIELINSKI SANDRA ZIUNSKAS PATTI ZIMMERMAN ALTA ZIMOV BASIL ZITELLI EVELYN ZOI.LER KENNETH ZORCH ALIM) ZORTEA STEPHEN ZL'FALL JANE ZYKOWSKI 292 There were the masses and the individuals. The noise and the quiet. There was solitary study and crowded cram sessions. The meaning and the nonsense. There was bad food and good company. A lonely walk up the hill on to the library. There was waiting for books and crowded elevators and corrected invoices. Experiments worked and failed. Classes were attended and cut. There were good and bad decisions, strong and weak opinions. There were the places that remained after the people had left. 299 Senior Index ABRAMS. Richard Alan Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Am Phi Epsilon Pi ACOSTA-GALLO. Elsa Ambalo. Ecuador liberal Am Mortar Board. Quax ADAMS. Stanley Dean Pitcairn. Pa. liberal Am Young Republicans. Int Students Organization ADELMAN. Ijwrence (anion. Ohio liberal Arts Siyma Alpha Mu. Scabbard and Blade. Pershing Rifles (Captain), Ski Club. Intramurals. Parent's Weekend Comm .MINER. Paul Frank Pittsburyh. Pa Liberal Am Delta lota Delta. Student American Chern. Society. Intramurals AINISMAN. Howard Pittsburyh. Pa laberal Arts Siyma Alpha Mu, Druids. Men's Council (Sec.-Treat.), Pre-lasv Society, Student Government (Vice-Pres,), Ptll News AIX'.ORN. Robert C. Penn Hills. Pa. Education Phi Eta Siyma. Ski Club. Student PSEA, Intramurals. Basketball (Myr ). Parents Weekend. Freshmen Orientation. Pitt Preview ALLAYAUD. Donald Uniontown, Pa. Enyineeriny Kappa K.ip|ta Psi. Siyma Tau (Coer. See.), Pi Tau Siyma. AlAA, Vanity Marrhiny Band. Intramurals ALLEN. Patricia I) Bartow. Floe, laberal Am Delta Delta Delta (Ret Sec.). Mortar Board, Quax, Styma Theta Tau, Mentor. Senior Assistant. Student Gov., Basic Student Nurses Assoc . AWS Scholarship Chairman. Pitt Preview ALLEN. Thomas W Bradford. Pa laberal Arts Circle K (Pres ). Intramurals. Golf Team. Alpha PM Omega ALTMAN. Alan Brooklyn. N Y. Liberal Arts Siyma Alpha Mu. IFC ALTMYER. Arlene R Pittsburyh. Pa Nursiny Siyma Thru Tau. Alpha Tau Delta AMOROSO. Anthony John Donor a. Pa. Enyineeriny ASM E (Sec.) ANDERSON. Richard E Fanwood. N.J. laberal Am Vanity Marrhiny Band ANGEL. Edward K Pittsburyh. Pa laberal Art ISO. Pitt FotoClub ANNABLE, William 1 jwrrnce Grose City, Pa. liberal Am Alpha Epsilon Delta. Beta Beta Beta. Phi Eta Siyma. Phi Beta Kappa ANL SKIEW ICZ. James M Oakmont. Pa. Enyineeriny IEEE APPEL. Willa Roosevelt. N.J. Liberal Am Pi Delta Epsilon. Special Fellowship Comm.. HEP. Ideas and Figures (Art Editor) ARCURIO. Robert Gary Johnstown. Pa liberal Arts Delta Siyma Chi (Vice Pres ) ARONOWSKY. Michael Jay New York City. N Y. Lilieral Arts Phi Epsilon Pi ARRICK. Alvin R Pittsburyh. Pa. General Studies AUERBACH. Robert Roslyn Heights. N Y. lilieral Arts Ski Club. Intramurals. Phi Beta Kappa AUSLANDER, Miles Owen North Massapequa. N Y. liberal Arts Siyma Alpha Mu (Historian). Pitt Plaven BAER. Jacqueline Ijev lamer Burnell. Pa liberal Arts Delta Zeta BAIRD. Ervin C. York. Pa Enyineeriny BAKER. Kathleen A Olean. New York Education BAKF.Y, Barbara Ann Pittsburyh. Pa. liberal Arts Alpha Delta Pi. IIEP. Mentor. Senior Assistant. Homecoming, Pitt Preview BALASH. Yvonne Johnstown. Pa. Nursiny Alpha Tau Delta BANE. William H I rv i nylon-on-Hudson liberal Arts Men's Dorm Council. Track BARBER. Thomas Campbell Beaver Falls. Pa. liberal Arts Delta I'au Delta. Young Republicans. Tennis BARCZAK. Stephen R Pittsburyh. Pa. Enyineeriny ARAB (Pres ). ASCE (See ). Intra-murals BARKSDALE. Sylvia Joyce Pittsburyh. Pa laberal .Arts Alpha Kappa Alpha BARRIS. Grace Marie Pittsburyh. Pa. liberal Arts Kappa Kappa Gamma, Canterbury Club. HEP. vouny Democrats BARRY. John Melvin Pittsburyh. Pa General Studies BARTOLOTTA. Vincent J. Mononyahela. Pa Liberal .Arts Delta Siyma Phi. Intramurals BASKIN'!). Salli Pittsburyh. Pa liberal Arts BASSAR. Nick Jr. Aliquippa. Pa. Pharmacy Rho Chi (Pres ). Kappa Psi. Pitt Capsule (Sports Editor) BAUM. David R. Freeport. N Y liberal Arts Pi Lambda Phi. Intramurals BAUMGART, Therese Anne Mount Vernon. N Y liberal Arts BEGU I LE. Ruth (Catherine Pittsburyh. Pa Nursing Basic Student Nurses Organization BECKER. Carol Ann Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts BECKER. Frederick E Washington. D.C. Enyineeriny Intramurals BECKER.Judith Garland. Pa. Pharmacy I.imbdu Kappa Siyma. Pitt Capsule BF.LLET. David F Teaneck. N.J. liberal Arts Pi lambda Phi. Druids. Pre-Law Society. 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Basts Student Nursiny Association BERMAN. Hal Z Pittsburyh. Pa. liberal Arts Intramurals BERNARD. Marilyn Pittsburyh. Pa. Education Cwens. Student PSEA. Spanish Club BERNSTEIN. Ann Rye. N Y. liberal Arts HEP. Heinz Chapel Choir BERSTEIN. Cam Hewlett. N Y. liberal Arts HEP BERSON. Janet Susan Philadelphia. Pa liberal Arts Siyma Delta Tau. Cwens (Sec ). Mortar Board (Pres). Quax. Psi Chi, Junior Worthy Award. Mentor. Senior Assistant, Student Government Senator. AWS (Vice Pres ). Women's Housing Board (Pres ). Allocation Comm. BIAGE IT I. Edmund Paul Pittsburyh. Pa. General Studies BICKERTON. James Briton Bickerton-Cloyd Clairton. Pa liberal Am Theu Chi. Pershing Rifle BINDSCHADLER. Nancy Pittsburgh, Pa Nursing Alpha Tau Delta, Pitt Player (Set.) BINOMAN, Frank Wood Somerset. Pa. Education Limbda Sigma Rho. Student PSKA BIRD. Judith Father Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Am Chi Omega (Vice Prev). Delta Phi Alpha BISKl'P. Rosemary Crucible. Pa Education Newman Club. HEP. Pitt Players. Student PSEA BL CK. Susan Lynn Johnstown. Pa. Education BLACKWELL, Daniel D. Pittsburgh. Pa General Studies BLANC. Robert P. Bethel Park. Pa liberal .Arts IXelta Tau Delta. Young Democrats BLAZER. Thomas Anthony Whitaker. Pa. Engineering Sigma Tau. ALVA BOARD. David Bruce Stockertown. Pa. Engineering Phi Gamma Delta, AIAA BOBISH. Donald Tarcntum. Pa. Engineering BOGGS. Ronald James Pitcairn. Pa. liberal Art Tau Kappa. Epsilon. Young Demo, crals BOOTE. Robert McLaurin Media. Pa. Iaberal Arts I EC BOOTH. Carole Mar Greensburg. Pa. liberal Arts Alpha Epsilon Delta. Quax. Hein Chapel Choir BOTSKO. James John Ambridge. Pa Engineering Alpha Pi Mu (Scr-Treas), AIIE BOTTECALJohn David Seward. Pa. liberal Arts HEP BOYD. William John III Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts Young Democrats BOYLAN. Robert E Jr Canton. Ohio liberal Arts Men's Dorm Council. Young Demo, crats (Chrm.), Intramural . Alpha Phi Omega BOZEWICZ. Barbara Joan Pittsburgh. Pa. Liberal Am BRACKEN. Lowell Lewis ligunicr. Pa. 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Young Repub-licans, AWSJudkial Board BRF.THAUER, Georgianna Rosemary Pittsburgh. Pa. Libcrjl Arts Delta Phi Alpha BRIGGS. Mark Allen Waterford. Pa liberal Arts Men's Glee Club BROSE. Martha M Pittsburgh, Pa. liberal Arts Young IXemocrats BROWN. Frances Ruth Oil City. Pa Nursing BROWN. Gary Frances Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Art Bowling BROWN. James F. Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal Arts BROWN, James Williamjr McKees Rocks. Pa Engineering Eta Kapjxi Nu. IEEE BROWN. Stanley Willian Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts BRUDNAK. Louise Ann Johnstown. Pa. Nursing BUCCl.Guy R Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Delta Sigma Phi (Vice Pres.), IFC. Young Democrats. Pitt News. Baseball. Pitt Preview BUENO, (jrlos Hermann Trujillo Bogota. Columbia. South America Engineering Soccer BURK. John G. Jr. Jeannette. Pa liberal Arts BURKAMP, Carol Ann Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts Quo Vadis BURNWORTH. Karen I. Uniontown. Pa. liberal Arts Student American Chemical Society BURTON. Arlene Ixslie Pittsburgh. Pa. Education BUTLER. Nancy Jean Nelson. Pa. Education Pitt News. ISO BUVINGER. Brucejarvis Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts BYRNE. Bonnie Anne Timonium. Md Liberal Arts Pitt Players CABIN. William I) Pittsburgh, Pa. liberal Arts Druids. Omicron Delta Kappa (Pres.). Pi Delta Epsilon (Pres ), the 0117. (literary Editor and Bus Mgr ), nil Newt (Editor-in-ChieO. Student Allocations Comm.. Liberal Arts Cabinet (Course Evaluation Project Chrmn), Student Publications Board (Senior Rep ). Student Affairs Advisory Comm., Pitt Pol Union (Chrmn.), Honorable Mention—Pi Delta Epsilon National Newswriting and Editorial Writing Contests CALDWELL. Robert James Avalon. Pa. Liberal Arts Arnold Air Society. Photo Club. WPGH. Young Republicans. The OH' ., Basketball. Lettermen'sClub CALHOUN, Gregory Lee New Bethlehem, Pa. Engineering Pi Kappa Alpha. SAE, NSPE (Treas). ASME CANON. Carol Jamestown. N.Y. Education CAPI.AN. Judy Sherry Monroeville. Pa Education CARNEY, John Stephen Greensburg, Pa liberal Arts CARTER. William L. 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Women's Gym Team CIO I'l l. Mary Anne Yukon. Pa. liberal Arts CIVEI.LO, Anthony N. Pittsburgh. Pa. Pharmacy Kappa Kappa Psi (Vice Pres.), Kappa Psi (Treas.). Bandman Of the Year (1 65). Concert Band. Varsity-Marching Band. Intramurals. Panther Band. APhA. PPA. ACPA CLARK. Frank M Bessemer, Pa. Iaberal Arts Pi Kappa Alpha, Lutheran Campus Ministry Council, Men's l orm Council (Parliamentarian). Young Democrats. Football CLAWSON'. Kathy G. New Florence, Pa Nursing Alpha Tau Delta (Pres ), Polaru (Feature Editor). BSNA CLICK. Patricia I) Pittsburgh. Pa Education Delta Zeta (Scholarship Chairman) CI.OSSET. Gerard Paul Bogota. Columbia Engineering CLOYD. Patricia Erie. Pa Liberal Arts Cloyd-Eskow Kappa Alpha Theta (First Vice Pro). Cwens. Mentor, Senior Assistant. Pitt Vol. for Mental Health COBAUGH. Robert Vai hn (onenuuth. Pa Engineering Intramural COHKN, Anita Nlarilvn Pittsburgh, Pa laberal Arts Student Directory COHKN. Arthur Harold Pittsburgh. Pj. liberal Arts Men's Glee Club (Co-pub Chmn ), Men's Council. Student Government (Co-spirit Award Chmn.) Calendar Comm . Pre-law Society. Commuters Assoc. (Advisor). Int. Relations Club. CCUN COHEN. Ruben David Johnstown. Pa. liberal Arts lambda Signu Rho. Pitt Platers. Student Government. Yount; Democrats. hit .Veil (Asst Ed. Johnstown), Intramurals COLBERT. Vernon L. Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering IEEE. Phot.. Club. The OWL (Photo Editor). Polant (Photographer). Skyu taper Engineer (Photographer) COLE. Edward Roy University Heights. Ohio Lilier.il Arts Phi Epsilon Pi, Intramurals. Out of State Student Comm. (Co-chmn.) COLl.l'RA, Patricia Helen McKeesport. Pa. Nursing Alpha Delta Tau COM PAGNO. Jama W. Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts CONJESKI, (indace Maureen Burgettstown. Pa laberal Arts Pill Xeun CONNOLLY. Kevin Paul Port Chester. N V. liberal Arts Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Intramurals CONSTAD.Jane Jamaica. N Y liberal Arts CONTER. Carolyn lee Bradford. Pa liberal Arts COSHARKK. Dune Mae Johnstown. Pa. liberal Arts COURTNEY. Martin George Maywood. N.J. laberal Arts COURTRIGHT. Den ms Harry East Stroudsburg. Pa liberal Arts WPGH (Asst Bus Mgr). Intramurals ('.RICH TON. lewis Richard Portage. Pa liberal Arts CRISAFL Frank James Canonsburg. Pa. laberal Arts Arnold Air Society (Pledgemaster). Arnold Air Society Medal. Men's Dorm Council. Pre-law Society. Student Government. Intramurals CROWLEY. Ellen Marion Glen Ridge, N.J. laberal Arts Delta Delta Delta (Social Chmn ), The OWL. Pitt Preview CUNNINGHAM. Alison Elizabeth Berkeley Heights. N.J. liberal Arts Delta Delta IVIta, Ski Club, hit Xeun CUNNINGHAM. Richard N Johnstown. Pa. Engineering Delta Sigma Chi. Shamrock Award. IFC. Intramurals CURTIS. Sharon Kay Murrysville. Pa liberal Arts Delta Zeta (Rec See.). Alpha Epsilon Delta. Beta Beta Bela. Mortar Board. Quax. University Scholar. Mentor. Senior Assistant, Spec Fellowship. Readers for the Blind. Quo Vadis CUTLER, Richard Rockville Centre. N.Y. liberal Arts Pi lambda Phi DANNER. Sharon Bean Pittsburgh. Pa. Education DANOWSKY. Joseph S. Scranton. Pa. liberal .Arts Lambda Sigma Rho. Junior Worthy. Hillel Foundation (Pres.) DARLING. LeonJ Pittsburgh. Pa Pharmacy Alpha Zeta Omega. Pitt Capsule. Allegheny Counts Pharmacy Assoc.. American Pharmaceutical Assoc DAUGHERTY. Elizabeth louise Johnstown, Pa liberal Arts Delta Delta Delta. Dormitory Council DAVIS. Linda Ruth Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Sigma Delta Tau (Pres). HEP. Menfor. P.inhellenic Council. Student Government, Polaris. Student Directory Staff. AWS. Parents' Weekend (chairman). Commuter Association (Co-Chairman) DAVIS. Margaret Jean Pittsburgh. Pa Nursing DAVIS. Peter Benjamin Brookline. Mass liberal Am Dormitory Council. Men's Dorm Council, Student Government (Pres and V. Pres Bradford Campus), Intramural F'oothall. Baseball. Basketball. Beacon House President DECESARK. Donald E Pittsburgh. Pa lalser.il Arts Pitt News. Collegiate Council for United Nations (Sec.) DEI.UCIA. Gary louts Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering Society of Automotive Engineers (Pres.) DEM AS E. Lawrence A. Allison Park. Pa. liberal Arts Sigma Alpha Epsilon (Pres.), Young Republicans. IFC (Chief Justice), Intramural Football. Swimming DEPRISCO. Martha S. Media. Pa liberal Arts Mentor. Senior Assistant. Quo Vadis DETAR.Gail I-Titusville. Pa. Engineering DETIG. Norbrrt Thomas Pittsburgh. Pa. General Studies DEUTSCH. Ann Louise Syracuse. N.Y. Education Dormitory Council DEVROUDE, Patricia J. Trafford. Pa. liberal Arts DIEGO. Donna Marie Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts Delta Zeta (Pres ). PanhellenicCouncil DIENER,Joyce Harrisburg. Pa liberal Arts Phi .Sigma Sigma (Corres. Sec), Gwens. Thuru Amos Award. Pitt Players. Student Government DIFEKDINANDO, Janet Anne Norristown. Pa Education Chi Omega (Pres), Panhellenic Council. Greek Week Committee DIGF.OKGE. John Donald Erie. Pa Engineering Delta Tau Delta. Eta Kappa Nu. Intramural Bowling DIPIE I RC), Charles Michael Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering Sigma Tau. NSPE (Pres ). ASCE (Trcas.). ARBA (See.) DOBRASHIN. Jack Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Phi Epsilon Pi. Society For the Advancement of Management DOCKEY. James Nlichad York. Pa Engineering Delta Tau IXelta (Pres ), Order of Omega. Young Republicans IX)1.L. Anthony Riegel Allentown. Pa. liberal Arts Theta Chi (Rec. Sec.), Freshman Swimming DOLNIK. James Harry New York. N.Y. liberal Arts Men's Dorm Council. Intramural Softball. Football DOWNEY. Thomas V North Irwin. Pa laberal Arts DUBLN. Thomas M Dayton. Ohio liberal Arts Beta Beta Beta. Hillel. Men's Dorm Council DUDA.Jr.. Frank I'hocnas Carnegie. Pa Engineering Faa Kappa Nu (V. Pres.). IEEE (Pres), Pitt Christian Fellowship (Pres.) DUDZINSKI. Richard McKees Rocks. Pa. Engineering Pi Kappa Alpha. Intrafraternal Softball. Football. Basketliall. Bowling. Faiginrcringand Mines Bulletin DUNKEL, Robert Sherwood Pittsburgh. Pa laberal Arts Kappa Kappa Psi (Trcas.). Concert Band. Varsity Marching Band. Intramural Softball DUNKELBERGER. Judith Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts Student Religious laberals. Dormitory Council. HEP. Folk Dance Club. Quo Vadis. Spanish Club. Special Fellowship Committee DURAN, lavuiseJulia Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Art Chi Omega (Soc and Civic Service Chairman) DURKIN. Gayle F. Olcan. N.Y. liberal Arts DURRMAN. Deanna Harrisburg. Pa liberal Arts Kappa Alpha Theta (Kush Chairman), HEP. Mentor. Pitt Mental Health Corps DVORZNAK. Barbara Jane McKeesport. Pa liberal Arts Zeta Tau Alpha (Soc. Chairman), Quax DYCKES II. Willard I. Corey. Pa. liberal Arts Alpha Epsilon Delta. Intramural Volleyball. Bowling. Football. Basketliall. Wrestling EBERT. Susan Bryn Athyn. Pa. liberal Arts Kappa Alpha Theta (Chaplain), Student Union Board (Sec.) ECKER. Janet T Derry . Pa. liberal Arts Alpha Delta Pi. HEP. Pitt Players (Properties Head) ELMAN. Barbara J Alexandria. Va. laberal Arts Sigma Delta Tau (First Vice Pres ). Mortar Board. Quax. Psi Chi. Junior Worthy . Dormitory Council (Pres of Holland Hall). Mentor. Senior Assistant. Panhellenic Council (Rush Chairman). Housing Board. The OWL. Winter Weekend (Dance Chrmn.), Pitt Preview (Chairman). Student Union Board ENGEL. John B Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts ERNST. Gary Charles N. Braddock. Pa Engineering ASChE. K M Cabinet. HEP. Young Republicans. Intramurals ESKOW. Sharon Eskow-Gitomer Fall River. M,m. liberal An Hilld. ATI I). Women's Choral ESPINOSA. Ruben Jose Quito. Ecuador I .i Ixta I Arts ESPOSITO. Anthony New York. N Y Engineering EVANS. Lynn L. Pittsburgh. Pa. Education Women’s Choral, Young Krpublirans FEINEKMAN, lawn.) Harrisburg. Pa. Liberal Arts Beta Beta Beta. Hillel. Men's Dorm Council, Pitt Players. Intramural Football. Basket ball FELDMAN. Rachel Ann Tea neck. N.J. Education HEP. Freshman Council. Freshman Orientation, Young Democrats. Y Corps FELDMAN. Samuel F Brooklyn. N Y. Liberal Arts Hillel. Men's Dorm Council. Intramural Football. Basketball FELDMAN, William Milton Brooklyn. N Y. Liberal Arts HEP, Young Democrats. Student Union Board Public Relations Committee FELBNCHAK. Jerry Jeannette. Pa. Liberal Arts Orthodox Youth Fellowship. Slavic Club FENNELL III. Robert H Pittsburgh. Pa. Liberal Arts Young Republicans. Freshman Soccer Team. Radio Club FF.RN.Joseph J. Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal Arts Dormitory Council. Pitt Players, Intramural Softball, Foot hall, Playboys Penthouse Sport Chairman FETTERS. EbanG Mt. Holly Springs. Pa. Liberal Arts I.ambda Sigma Rho (Treas.). Circle K. Dormitory Council (V Pres ). IFC. Intramural Football. Baseball FETTERS. Terrence Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal Arts FINGERET. Allan L. Pittsburgh. Pa. Liberal Arts Psi Chi FINNEY. Cretchen M Lancaster. Pa Liberal Arts Delta Zeta, Heinz Chapel Choir (librarian) FINUCANE. Michael Barry Chambersburg. Pa. Liberjl Arts HEP FIOL. David Jon Fair I.awn. N.J. Education Intramural Football. Basketball. Softball FISCHL, Earl Ambridge. Pa. Engineering I ruids (Sec ). Omicron Delta Kapp.i (Exec Comm ). Pi Delta Epsilon (V. Pres.), Pi Tau Sigma. Sigma Tau. AIAA, Society for Professional Engineers. Junior Worthy. Photo Club. Men's Dorm Council (President's Council), Student Government (Elections Board). OWL (Editor 1967), Intramural Football, Basketball. Intercollegiate Golf. President Hawthorne House FITZGERALD. William H McKeesport. Pa Liberal Arts Delta Sigma Phi. Scabbard anti Blade. Swimming FLANIGAN, James M West Mifflin. Pa Iibcral Arts Football—Captain, Track FLANSBAU.M. LoisJ. Pittsburgh. Pa. Education Student PSEA FLOYD. Richard Allen Indiana. Pa Pharmacy Pitt Capsule, Phi Delta Chi. P P A.. ApHA. Ac. P.A. FOGLE. Roland I) Berlin. Pa Engineering FOLK. Joseph Frederick Altoona. Pa Engineering Phi Eta Sigma, Eta Kappa Nu. Sigma Tau. E M Cabinet. Men's Dorm Council, Varsity Marching Band. Young Republicans (Treas.). Dorm Counselor FORI). William E Irwin. Pa. liberal Arts Phi Eta Sigma. Psi Chi (Pres ) FORF.RO. Daniel Barranquilla. Colombia. S.A Engineering FOX. Ixonard Martin Camden, N.J. laberal Arts Ps. Chi (Sec -Treas ). Hillel (Pres ). WPGH FRANK. Carole Pittsburgh, Pa liberal Arts FRANK. Deanna Lynn University Heights. Ohio liberal Arts Della Phi Epsilon (Treas ). Mentor, OWL. Concert Band FRANK. Frederick N. Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts Zeta Beta Tau (Treas.). Druids (Treas ). Order of Omega. Pi Delta Epsilon. Druids Man of the Year. IFC Publicity Chairman. Men’s Council, Student Government. Young Democrats, OWL—literary Editor 1965, Pitt News-Editor FRANK. Richard Alan Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts Phi Eta Sigma. Ideas and Figures. Pitt News. Intramural Wrestling. Bowling. Football. Track FRANK. William O Johnstown, Pa. liberal Arts Phi Etl Sigma FREDERICK. Kenneth Charles Pittsburgh. Pa. Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon (Pres ). Druids. Omicron Delta Kappa. Order of the Omega (Pres ). Phi Eta Sigma. Sigma Tau. Emit! Award. E M Cabinet. IFC (Pres, and past V. Pres ). Student Government, Homecoming Co-Chairman FRIEBEN, Jr.. William R. Johnstown. Pa. laberal Arts FRIED. William David New York. N Y liberal Arts Woodrow Wilson Nominee. HEP. WPGH, Pershing Rifles, Ideas and Figures (Bus. Mgr.), Pitt News FROEHLICH. Barbara lax-Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts FROST. Susan Eileen Bronxville. N.Y. liberal Arts Phi Sigma Sigma, Cwern. Quax. Dormitory Council. Student Government. President of Amos Hall FUNSTEN. Lawrence I) I-cviltown. Pa. Liberal Arts NSF Grant. Newman Club. N'AACP. Young Democrats FURRY. Robert W. Johnstown. Pa Engineering Phi Theta Kappa. A.I.CH.E. Sigma Tau, Omega Chi Epsilon, N.S P.E.. Skyscraper Engineer (Editor), Intramural Football GALEY. Nlartha jean Bradford. Pa. liberal Arts Women's Athletic Association, Iima-zel C-orp GARBARINO. Joseph James Berkely Heights. N.J. liberal Arts GARBINSKI. Catherine J. Brntleyville. Pa. liberal Arts Quo Vadis GARDNER. Constance I Rydal. Pa liberal Arts Phi Sigma Sigma (Social chairman), HEP. Ski Club GARDNER, George Andrew Liwrence. N.Y. liberal Arts GARIN. Alice A. Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts GAR.MAN. Barbara Pittsburgh. Pa. Education AWS (Johnstown). Cheerleaders (captain—Johnstown). Student PSEA (Johnstown—Treas.) GASSNER. Jane Elizabeth Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal Arts Pitt Players GAUNTLETT. Patricia A Mincrsville, Pa Nursing Theta Phi Alpha (Vice-pres.), Basic Student Nurses Assn. GEARY, (’.arroll Lynn New Stanton, Pa. Education Student PSEA GEBELEIN, Richard Stephen Chattsford, Pa. liberal Arts Young Republicans (editor of Newsletter). Society for Conservative Studies (Pres ), Pitt New (Business staff.) GEHA, Michael A Johnstown, Pa. Liberal Arts Lambda Sigma Rho (Vice-pres ). Phi Eta Sigma GEHL. Virginia South Orange. N.J. Education Women's Choral GF.l.B. Marjorie New Rochelle. N.Y. Liberal Arts Dorm Council (Vice-pres. Bracken-ridge) HEP (Program Director). Mentor. Senior Assistant, WPGH (Publicity Director). Quo Vadis GEMBINSKI, Bernard T Johnstown, Pa Engineering GENERALOVICH. Nick Farrell. Pa. Pharmacy Sigma Chi. Basketball. PPA. ACPA. APhA GERBER. Barbara Mae Pittsburgh. Pa. Education GERSON. Geraldine Sharon. Pa liberal Arts Dorm Council. Hillel, Y-Corps GERSTBERGF.R. Charles R Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal Arts Delta Iota Delta. IFC Basketball. Softball. Football GIANGARLO. Vincent Albert Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts Alpha Phi Omega (Treas ). American Chemical Society (Pres ). Young Republicans. Pitt News. Basketball. Pitt Karate Club. Student Union Board GIBSON. Richard Bruce Stoystown, Pa. Engineering GILBERT. Robert Joseph Wethersfield. Connecticut Liberal Arts Delta Sigma Phi. Basketball. Football GILLMAN. Lynne Butler. Pa liberal Arts GILLO. Raymond Eugene Alverda, Pa. liberal Arts loimbda Sigma Rho. Football G1TOMER. Susan Marsha Cherry Hill. N.J. liberal Arts Mortar Board (Vice-pres ), Quax. I'hryia Amos Award, Gillespie Award, Mentoe. Pitt Players. Senior Gitomer-Herman Assistant. Quo Vadi (Vice-pres.). Homecoming ( ec’y) Pin Pro icvv (Morn ins; Chairman), Winter Weekend (Executive Board.) GI.ASSF.R. Jay David Uniotuown. Pa. I jlK-r.il Am Hillcl. Photo dub. Pre-law Society. Ski Club. Pitt News. Karate Club Cl.I'XT. Deni Alan Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Sigma Chi (Treat.) GLl'VNA. Joseph P |r Greenslioro, Pa. liberal Art Circle K. (amcert Band. Vanity Marching Band. Intramurals. Col-legiate Council for the United Nations GODFREY. James Ronald Allison Park. Pa liberal Arts Cir«lr K (Pro ), Pre-law Society (Pro.). WPGII (Sport Director). Intramural . Commuter Association GOLD, Barbara S PittslNirgh. Pa. Iilier.il Arts Action Housing Tutor. Freshman Orientation (Hostess). Military Ball Finalist-1966. PSF.A GOLDBERG. Stanley A Allentown. Pa liberal Arts GOI-DBKKG,'Fheodore (ireensburg. Pa l.ilieral Arts Limbda Sigma Rho. Onmron Delta Epsilon. Young Democrat GOLDBERG. Tim Grcentburg, Pa l.ilieral Arts Delta Sigma Rho (Vice-prcs.) GOLDEN. Robert J Pittstmrgh, Pa. Iilier.il Arts Phi Epsilon Pi (Social Chairman). Phi Fia Sigma. Society for the Advancement of Management. WPGH. Young Republicans. IFC sports GOLDMAN. Jerome Mark C Ximdcn. N.J liberal Arts Ski Club. Intramurals GOLDMAN. Richard M New Orlrans. La. Iilier.il Arts Young Democrat Goldner. Ronnv Sue Wcttbury. N Y l.ilieral Arts Quax. HEP. Mentor. Student Union Board GONZAUvS. Bonnie M Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Chi Omega (Social and Civic Chairman). Gwens. Mentor. Senior Assistant. Pitt Preview Committee GOI.OMB. I .re S. Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Pi l-ambda Pin (Hisl.). WPGH (Broadcaster), OWL (Business Stall). Polaris (Business Staff). IFG Sports GOODSTOXE. Geraldine H New York. N Y Education Alpha F wilon Phi (Panhellrnic Rep). Dorm Council. Freshman Council. Y-Corp . Pitt Players, Ski Club GOSS. Thomas A. Conrmaugh, Pa Engineering Concert Band. Varsity Marching Band GOTTLIEB. Ric hard Michael New York. N Y. liberal Arts Signia Alpha Mu (Ass't. Flxchec|uer). IF’C Sport . Pitt Preview GRAFF. Michael F Bradford. Pa. liberal Arts GRANKFL Virginia A Silver Springs. Md. Nursing Quax, Sigma Theta Tau. Basic Student Nurses Ass'n (Yicc-prev), Alpha Tau Delta (Trcas.) (•RANT. Beverly Ann Ml. Ixbanon. Pa. Faluration ORATI ON, Linda | Pittstmrgh. Pa Faluration Stutlent PSF. Young Republican GRAY, Kenneth Murray Seward. Pa. Engineering Pin Delta Psi. ASMF, Intramurals GRECO. Kathrvn Ann Mt l-ebanon. Pa. lilieral Arts Kappa Alpha Theta. HEP. Ski dub. Young Republicans OR EEC HER. JohnS. Johnstown. Pa. lilieral Arts GREEN. Marilyn Marcia Pittstmrgh. Pa. Education Mentor GREEN. Mary Elizabeth Bedford. Pa lalier.il Arts Della Delta Delta. Mentor GREENAWAY. Bruce I. Monroeville. Pa Faigineering GREENWOOD. Archie. Jr. lamg Branch. N.J. labrral Arts Omega Psi Wn. Intramurals GREYER. Michael Rhodes Pittstmrgh. Pa. liberal Arts HEP. Physical Education Club (Judo) Freshman Orientation Counselor, Student Union Board (Recreation Committee.) GRIFF. Deena P Great Neck. NA lilieral Art Gwens. HEP. ISO GROSS. Judith Ann Monongahela. Pa. Nursing Della Delta Delta (Corr Sec). Gwens. Quax. Thvrsu Amos Award. Mentor. Senior Assistant GROSSMAN. Brenda Philadelphia. Pa lilieral Art Intramurals GRO I S I EIN. Jerald A Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Intramurals GL'YASU’TA, Jonathan Ponsford Sharptburg, Pa Faluration Sigma Ghi. Druid . Omicron Delta Kappa, Scabbard and Blade. Dorm (Council. Varsity Marching Band. Lacrosse HABF.D.Jadcr Managua. Nicaragua lilieral Arts HABER. Carole G. Pittstmrgh. Pa lilieral Art Gwens, Thursa Amo Award, Wood-row Wilson Fellowship Nominee. Panforth Foundation Fellowship Nominee. Mentor. Student Union Board ((Chairman Midday Series) HABIG.Jr . Ixonard P West Chester, Pa lilieral Art Sigma Chi, Pershing Rifles (Own-minder BTLN) HAHNE. Shirley R Pittstmrgh. Pa. Lilieral Arts HALL. Janet G. Hillside. N.J. lilier.il Arts Pitt News. Polaris HALLECK. Marcia Pittstmrgh. Pa. Lilieral Arts Dormitory Council (Soc. Comm ), Young Republicans. AWS Judiciary Board (Chairman) HAM I L I ON. J Suzanne Pittstmrgh. Pa lilieral Arts Heinz Chapel Choir HANAFUN. Janice M Delta Zeta. OWL HANAWALT. Robert A Allentown, Pa liberal Art Delta Sigma Phi (See.). Young Republicans. Intramural Football. Baseball HAND. Thomas Joseph Pittstmrgh. Pa. Engineering Sigma Tau IIANDELMAN. Franklin Howard Cleveland Heights. Ohio laberal Arts C C Zoo (See ). HEP. NAACP. Varsity Track. Cross-Country (C-apt.) FIANDSH AW. James McCurdy New Cumberland. Pa Engineering Pi Tau Sigma. Track HANDS HAW. Marinell FLlame New Cumberland. Pa. Education Student PSEA HANCOSKY. David John Cleveland. Ohio Engineering Sigma Chi. IFC. Intercollegiate Track. American Society of Mechanical Faigineer . Nat‘1 Society for Professional Engineers DARKER. F Knstin Sewickley, Pa. laberal Arts I leinz Chapel Choir HARPS'TER. William Henry Bloomfield Hills. Mich laberal Arts Pi Kappa Alpha. Alpha Epsilon Della. Campus Ministry Council. Pershing Rilles HARRIS. Eileen Joan Pittsburgh, Pa. Lilieral Arts Delta Phi Alpha HARRIS. Heather Lynn Pittstmrgh. Pa laberal Arts OWL. Pitt New (Advertising Mgr.). Skyscraper Engineer (Bus. Mgr.) HARRIS, landa Ann Pittsburgh. Pa Education HEP. Ski Club HATCH. William Ellis Brixikhavrn. N.Y. Ialwr.il Arts YMCA (Pres ). AGS Student Affiliate (Pres.) HAWKINS.Joseph Theodore Pittsburgh. Pa. General Studies Freshman Soccer HAYS. Sheila P Cape (aid. Mass. Nursing HAYES, Suzanne Penny Chatham. N.J. Liberal Arts Alpha Delta Pi (Chaplain). WRA. Orthesis HEALY, Jr. .Richard James Oil City. Pa liberal Arts HEASTINGS. Nancy Mildred Pittsburgh. Pa. laberal Arts HEIKIN. Susan Anne Philadelphia. Pa Liberal Arts Pitt Players. Pitt Y-Corp . Publicity Chairman—Winter Weekend 1963. Pitt Preview 1966 (Cos-Chairman Morning Faent) HEIN. David A Pott Grove. Pa. Foigi fleering Phi Eta Sigma. Fia Kappa Nu. Men’s Glee Club. Student Government. Intercollegiate Wrestling HEINEY, George G. Ha nee Point. Md laberal Arts Delta Tau Delta, Young Kepuldic.mc HEINI.EIN. Harry Wayne Coraopolis. Pa. Engineering Pershing Rifles (Maj. Battalion Stall) HELLER. Martha G. Pittstmrgh. Pa. Faluration Phi Sigma Sigma (V. Prc ). Gwens. Pi lambda Theta (Ritual Chairman). flcad Cheerleader. Student Government. Junior Worthy HENDRICKS. Charles J Conemaugh. Pa Engineering HERMAN. R Peter New York. N.Y. liberal Art Alpha Epsilon Delta. Zeta Beta Tau Herman-Keller (Treat.). Photo Club, IFC. Ski C:iub, OWI.. Pin News (Production Editor) IIEKK. 1-ictitia J.inc Pittsburgh. Pa I jbrr.il Art HEK' .INC. I). Anthony St. Marys. Pa Engineering Intramural Softball, Football HIETSCH. Ronald New (Ustlc. Pa Pharmacy Alpha Zcta Omega IIINKKL. Nancy Elizabeth Johnstown. Pa. Nursing Sigma Theta Tau. Alpha Tau Delta. Phi Theta Kappa MIRSCIIHORN. Ira Daniel East Norwich. N Y l.ilieral Art Intramural Soft hall. Swimming HLYWA.John Jeannette. Pa. Engineering E M (-linnet, Intramural Football. Havketball. Volleyball. Am Soc. Mechanical Engineer (Treat.) IIOBLACK. Darrell West Milllin, Pa. Engineering 1-imMa Chi Alpha HOC: MM AN. Motes L'montown, Pa, Liberal Art Alpha Epsilon Delta. Phi Eta Sigma HOFFMAN. Kathry n S. Pittsburgh. Pa Education HOLI.EKAN. Catherine Anne Pittsburgh, Pa. Liberal Art HOLLIS. Robert Frank Pittsburgh. Pa liberal An Scabbard and Blade (Treat ). Pershing Rilles (Exec Officer and Treat.), Chairman Military Ball Publicity Committee HQLZMA.N. Bernard H Brooklyn. N Y laberal An Alpha Epsilon Della. Beta Beta Beta. Men' Dorm Council. Alpha Phi Omega HOI. .WORTH. Kerry Wayne Pittsburgh. Pa laberal An HONS. William Allen Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal An HOPKINS. Susan S. Pittsburgh. Pa. laberal Arts HOPPER. Dolores Jeanne Elmhurst. Pa l.ilieral Art Phi Theta Kappa HORINKA. Gloria Joyce Beaver Fall . Pa laberal An Chi Omega (Treat.), Beta Beta Beta (Sec ). Concert Band IIORNAK, Ronald Joseph Donor.i, Pa Engineering E M (-linnet. Men' Dorm Council (Sec ). Young Democrat HORNE. Janet Elaine Johnstown, Pa Education Kappa Kappa Gamma, Hein Chapel Choir, Physical Education Club HOROYITZ. Jeffery Herbert Pittsburgh. Pa laberal An Pi l.imbda Phi. WPG If, Freshman Gymnast learn. Intercollegiate Pres Journalist. Commuter Assoc . HOROVITZ. Judith M Margate NJ. laberal An Sigma Delta Tau. lpha Epsilon Delta, Beta Beta Beta. Dormitory CxHineil (Set -Treat ). Mentor HOROVi r . Rohen (a-tlie Brooklyn. N Y. Ijberal Art Alpha Psi Omega. Pitt Players (Pres.). Pitt News. Advisor to Parents' Weekend. Student Union Board (Soc. Comm.) HOURICAN. PhilipJames Pittsburgh. Pa. Engineering A ECU E . Newman Club. Intramural Football. Basknball. Softball HOUT.Janet IxHiise Johnstown. Pa liberal An Pitt Christian Fellowship, YMCA (Program Chairman). Hein Chapel Choir. HEP. Pitt Mental Health Corps (Treat.), Young Democrats. International Student HORWITZ. Raymond L. Rockawav Park. N Y laberal An Alpha Epsilon Delta. P i Chi. Men's Glee Club. Ski Club HUETINER. Thomat Lee Pittsburgh. Pa lalieral An Intramural Baskellsall IIULME. Richard I) Monroeville. Pa Engineering Druids. Omicron I Vita Kappa (Sec ). Phi Eta Sigma. Men's IXvrm Council (Treat.), Men's Residence Counselor, Student Government. Swimming (0o-(iipt.). Special Fellowship Program HUSTON. Mildred Ford City, Pa Nursing ICKES. Gary K Bedford, Pa Pharmacy Sigma Chi. Pin Capsule. PPA. ACPA.ApllA IGERSIIEIM. Roy Howard New York. N V Liberal An Millet. HEP. Pitt Preview. Public Affairs Committer IUSON. Judiths Pittsburgh. Pa Iiberal An JACOBY. Joan Frances Rye. NY Liberal An HEP. Quo Yadi (Treat.) JAKSIC. Linda I. Pittsburgh. Pa Education JAI.IL. Edward A. New Milford, N | Engineering Phi Camma Delta (Corr Sec.). Uppcrvlau Countclor, IFC. Dorm Council (Athletic Chairman). Men's Council. Intramural . ASCE. PSPE. RB JEFFREYS. Margaret Shields Bedford. Pa Education JENDRAL. Rosemary A Uniontown. Pa I jberal An JEM). Judith Ellen Allison Park. Pa Pharmacy I.imlxti Kappa Sigma (Vice Pres ). Rho Chi (Corr. See.). Darbakrr Scholarship. Pill Cafimlr (Feature Editor) JIMENEZ. Perjietu.1 s New York. N V lalieral An JOHNSON. Ronald W (awry. Pa Engmeenng K.ip|u Kappa Psi (Sec.). Sigma I'au (Vice Pres ). Eta K.ippi Nu. Concert Band. Varsity Marching Band. Intramural JOHNSTON. Ronald Craig llavennwn. Pa. Engineering IEEE. PSPE JONES. Anita I. Pittsburgh. Pa (iener.il Studies HEP. Brother-Sister Program JONES. Beverlv Jean Philipsburg. Pa Nursing JONES. Richard O Pittsburgh. Pa laberal An JONES. Sarah F Pittsburgh. Pa Education Student Covernment Cabinet. Student PSEA. Pitt Preview. Creek Week. Chi Omega (Sec.) JORDAN. Jay Louis Pittsburgh. Pa liberal An Alpha Epsilon Della. Beta Beta Beta. Psi Chi (Vice Pres ). Circle K (Pres,). Pre-law Society JORDON. Ruth Braddock. Pa Education Ski dull. Student PSEA. Young IVmocr.it JOSEPH. l-awrenceG Pittsburgh. Pa. Engineering Senatorial Scholarship. Intramural (Dept. Chairman). Engineer's Week (IVpt. Chairman) JOSEPH. Sandi Windber. Pa liberal Art KABAKERIS. Dorothy Pittsburgh, Pa. Education HEP. Pill .Vet .. KAI.ISH. William Elizabeth. NJ. lalieral An Sigma Alpha Mu (Treat.). WPGM (Bus Manager), hr 0117. (Organizations Manager), hll Stun KA1-SON. Marjorie Vnn Pittsburgh. Pa laberal Art KAI.SON. Stanley Pittsburgh. Pa laberal An KAME-SIIKA. Arthur Munhall, Pa Pharmacy Phi Delta Chi (Pres). Circle K. Pill (jtfnult (Feature Stall) KAMIN. Claire laiuise Pittsburgh. Pa Education Alpha Epsilon Phi. Nudeni PSEA (Treat ), Hospitality Committee KANE. I an (Urol PastaM'. N.J. laberal An Phi Sigma Sigma. Psi Chi. IIEP. Student Government. Young I Vomeral . liberal An ( -linnet KAPI-VN. Roben Paul New Rochelle. N.Y. laberal An WPGH (General Manager). International Relations Club (Pres). Junior Worthy KARCH. David Char let West Milllin. Pa Engineering Swimming KARCHER. Thomas Alceit Johnstown. Pa lalieral Arts KARLOVICH. Deborah Lynn Pittsburgh. Pa Education Student PSEA KATZ. Iris S Pittsburgh. Pa Education KATZ. Neil F. Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering ARBA. PSPE. ASCE. Arnold Air Society (Pres ). Intramural KAUFMANN. Marjorie (•reensburg. Pa lalieral An Mentor. Senior Assistant KAWCHAK. Carole Ann Johnstown, Pa. Education Alpha Kappa Pi (Treat.), Newman Club. Student Government. Student PSEA. AWS KAZMERSKI. Kenneth II Bethel Park. Pa. Engineering Society of Auto. Engineer (Treat.) KEHM. Carolyn Jean York. Pa Nursing I Vita I Vita I Vita (Kush Chairman), Owens BSNA(Sec.) K El IRE K Mary Imu Ganonshurg, Pa lalieral Arts Mortar Board. ldta and hfnrtt. Pre-Med Honorary REISER. Allsn Wavnc Bay Village. Ohio l.ilieral Arts Delta Sigma Phi KEI.I.EK. Michael l,ewi Keller-Lewis l-ancastcr. Pa liberal Am Nlcn' Glee Club KENNY. William C. Johnstown,, Pa Liberal Arts KERN. linda E. Pittsburgh, Pa. liberal Arts Kappa Kappa Gamma (Registrar) KIEL, lawrtntr KriardifT Manor. N.Y liberal Am Alpha Phi Omega (Vice Pres ), Men's Glee Club, Men's Dorm Council (Chairman), Intramural , Mental Health Volunteer Corps (Pres ) KIMMKL. Carol Elaine Johnstown. Pa Education KINCIIORN. David William Harwichpon, Md. Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Alpha Pi Mu KIRK. Marjorie A. Chicago. Ill liberal Am KIRK. Robert Harry Mcchanicsburg, Pa. Liberal Am Men's Glee Club (Pres). Men's Dorm Council. Intramurals. Pitt Mental Health Vol. Corps KIRSTEIN, Edward Gerard Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts Intramurals KLEIN. Harriette D. Pittsburgh. Pa Education Senior Assistant. Student PSEA. Quo Vadis KLEIN, Louis Arthur Harrisburg, Pa. liberal Arts Beta Beta Beta. Men's Glee Club. Varsity Quartet KI.IZAS, James F. Millington. N.J. Engineering Phi Gamma Delta. Young Republicans KOCHINSKI. Gerald J NVindber. Pa. Education Phi Beta Kappa. Student PSEA KOI.IC, Frances M McKeesport. Pa Nursing KOONTZ. Donald F. Stoystown. Pa Education KORN. Howard S. Brooklyn. Pa liberal Arts KOSSEY. John A Barton. Ohio laberal Am Am Institute of Physics KOSTKAS. Barbara Lynne Glasspon. Pa Liberal Ans Kappa Kappa Gamma (Public Relations Chairman). Beta Beta Beta (Vice Pres.), Slavic Club, Freshman Council, Owens KOSTMAN. Ruth Maxine Pittsburgh. Pa Education Dorm Council, Student Government. Women’s Choral. International Students, Brother-Sister Club KOTT.Stefanie Cranford, N.J. liberal Arts Sigma Delta Tau (Rush Chairman), Dormitory Council. Freshman Council Alt,. Int Students Organization. Brother-.Sister Club KRAU James Joseph Wilmerding, Pa. Engineering ASME KRAMER. Elliot Jav Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Am Hillel. Pill Sews (Circulation Mgr ). Admissions Office Guide KRAMER. Marshall Frederic Manchester. Conn, liberal Arts Hillel (Vice Pres ). HEP. Soccer KRAL'SS. Bernice I) Irvington. N.J. liberal Arts Beta Bela Beta KRAUSS. Doris Arlene Youngstown. Ohio liberal Am NAACP. Y Corps KRAWETZ. Susan E Bavside. N.Y. liberal Am Sigma Delta Tau. Pi Delta Epsilon (Sec.), Dormitory Council. Mentor. Senior Assistant. The OWL (Asso-date Editor). Wont ('65 Ed. Staff). Pitt Preview. Host Hostess Comm,. Student Union Board (Social Pub Comm) KRAYNEK. Sandra B West Newton, Pa Nursing Alpha Tau IVIta. BSNA KRIEG, William Joseph Falconer. N.Y. Liberal Am Society for Advancement of Management KRIEGF.R. Marian Emily Beach wood. Ohio Liberal Ans Sigma Delta Tau (Vice Pres ), Mortar Board. Thrysa W. Amos Award. Hillel, Dormitory Counril (Vice Pres), Mentor. Senior Assistant. WRA. Women's Choral. Women's Housing Board KRIKSTONE. Barry Jav Pittsburgh. Pa laberal Ans Kappa Kappa Psi, Psi Chi. Concen Band. Varsity Marching Band KRONSTAIN, lowrrnccjohn Conway. Pa. Engineering lEF.F. KL’CF.RA. Raymond Paul Johnstown. Pa Liberal Am Intramurals KUNSMAN. Michael E Portage. Pa Engineering IEEE KUZEMKA. Nancy Anne Donor a. Pa liberal Ans Omicron Delta Epsilon. Phi Chi Theta, East. Orthodox Youth Fellowship. Young Republicans (Exec. Comm.). Society for Adv. of Management LA BOVB, Susan Arlene Cherry Hill, N.J. Liberal Arts Dormitory Council, HEP. Young Democrats. YNICA, Freshman Council LA CARIA, Nicola Braddork. Pa. General Studies Book Onter Record Buyer LAFFERTY.James A. Gheswick. Pa. F.ngineering Society of Auto. Eng.. Intramurals LAMBERT, Paul G. Coatusvillr. Pa-liberal Arts Track LAMPARSKI. Donald G. Natrona Heights, Pa. Liberal Ans Men's l orm Council, Intramurals LANDAU. Marvin Nonh Bergen. N.J. liberal Ans Alpha Phi Omega. Pitt Review LANDEL. Roben E Riverdale. N.J. Iilier.il Ans Delta Sigma Phi. Gymnastics 1 .ANGERHOLC, Lawrence Johnstown, Pa liberal Arts Phi Eta Sigma LA PI-ACA. Peter A. Windber, Pa. Engineering I-ambda Sigma Rho. IEEE. Intra-murals LARSON, Christine Iavuise Pittsburgh. Pa Nursing Alpha Tau Delta. BSNA LAUGHREY. James Stephen Latrobe. Pa. liberal Am Ski Club. Student Government (Pres of Greensburg Campus), Young Democrats. Intramurals LAW HEAD. Jeffrey I. Cuyahoga Falls. Ohio liberal Arts Phi Gamma Delta (Pres), Beta Beta Beta, Kappa Kappa Psi, Concert Band. Varsity Marching Band LAWSON. Robert Cony. Pa. liberal Ans Phi Eta Sigma LEARY, Patricia Bradford. Pa Education Action Housing Tutoring Program I.F.ET. Donald Rodney Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal Arts Phi Eta Sigma (Historian), Coll Council for the U N. (Pres.). Commuter .Ass. (Exec. Counril). WPDU (Treas.) I.EF.TE. John B Coudersport. Pa liberal Arts Young Republicans (Pres). Pill Sews. Pitt Political Union LEIGHTMAN. Stephen D. Morrisville. Pa liberal Arts NAACP (Vice Pres ), WPDU. Put YMCA (Pres.), Int Relations Club (Vice Pres.) LENCOSKI, John B Latrobe, Pa. Engineering Phi Gamma Delta. AIME. E M Cabinet. Skyscraper Engineer I.F.PIDI. Madeline Joanne Jeannette. Pa Education HEP. Mentor. WPDU LF.PPO, Karen M. Hanover, Pa. Litieral Arts Kappa Kappa Gamma. Gwens. Mentor. Senior .‘Assistant. Student Government (Sec), laberal Arts Cabinet. Sweetheart of Sigma Ghi LESCHINE. Thomas Michael Ambridgc. Pa. liberal Arts Men's Glee Club (Treas.). The OWl. (literary Staff) LEVER. Harry M Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal Arts Alpha Epsilon Delta (Treas ), Phi Eta Sigma. Hillel. Phi Beta Kappa LEVIN. Ellen louisc Falls Church. Va. Litieral Arts Freshman Council, WPGH LEVINE. Aaron Martin New York. N.Y. Liberal Arts Alpha Epsilon Delta, Beta Beta Beta. Hillel. Cirtle K (Board of Directors) LEVINE. Corel Sue Buffalo. N.Y liberal Arts HEP. Mentor. Ski Club. Pitt Preview. Y-Corps LEVINE. David Elliot Nutley . N.J liberal Arts LEVINE. Eleanor Suzanne Morrisville. Pa General Studies LEVINE. Louise Ann Las Vegas. Nev liberal Arts Alpha Epsilon Phi (Vice Pres), Dormitory Council. HEP. Freshman Council LEVIS. Donald Allen Flushing. N.V. Engineering Phi Gamma Delta. IFC, Polaris (Assoc. Editor) LEWIS. Gail Frances Pittsburgh. Pa Education Phi Sigma Sigma (Sec. Vice Pres ), Mentor. Panhcllenic Council, Senior .Assistant LEWIS. Jon Mark Jeannette. Pa Engineering Zeta Beta Tau. AllE (Vice Pres ). Pitt Preview LEWIS. Ralph Milton Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering Levvis-Meikrantz Lambda Sigma Rho (Pro ), AIAA, Intramural LIBERMAN, Jane Scarsdale. N Y. Education LIEBERMAN. Edward M Brooklyn. N Y. liberal An Hilld (Pres), ATI I) (See. Vice Pres), Men' l)orm C-ouncil. Prelaw Society, Ski Club (Treat.). Varsity Marching Band. Young Democrat (Co-Chairman). Pitt Preview LIEBERMAN. Erik Robbm Pittsburgh. Pa. laberal Arts Phi Epsilon Pi. Tennis LIEBOWITZ. Martin Edward Brooklvn. N Y liberal Am Alpha Phi Omega, Tennis EIGHTH OLDER, Gamier Jule Me Murray. Pa. liberal Art Alpha Delta Pi (Recommendation Chairman). Mentor. Senior Assistant. Women's Choral. AWS EIGHTY, George Walter Windsor. Pa liberal Arts Men's Dorm Council. Pitt New (Production Mgr.) LIND. Charles Augustus Atlantic City. N.J. liberal Arts LINDBERG. David Russel Munhall. Pa Liberal Art Swimming LI PM AN. David M Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Pi lambda Phi. Pre-Law Society. Polani. Intramurals. Orientation Host. Pitt Preview LI PM AN. Ronald Edward Indiana. Pa Liberal An Sigma Alpha Mu LIE', Ching-leou Hangchou. Chekiang. China library and Information Science LLEWELYN. Peggy Ann Easton. Pa Nursing Kappa Kappa Gamma (Vice Pres.), Alpha Tau Delta LOB AS. David M Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Art Alpha Epsilon Delta, Beta Beta Beta. Intramural LOCKER.Joseph Pittsburgh. Pa lilieral Arts Zcta Beta Tau I.OHNES, Fenton Wayne 1-eRoy Russell. Pa. liberal Arts Intramural LONG. Harry Joseph Tarentum. Pa liberal Arts Kappa Kappa Psi. Concert Band. Varsity Marching Band. Intramural I.ONGPHRE. Bruce M Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Art Pre-law Society. Young Republicans LORENZI. Dennis Nlonongahela. Pa. Engineering LOUIK. Myron David Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Am Phi Epsilon Pi, Society for Adv. of Management LOWERY, Dennis W. Bradford. Pa liberal Am Circle K (Board of Directors). Bradford Campus S.G. Pres LUCAS,John Paul Youngstown. Ohio liberal Arts Alpha Epsilon Delta (See ). Beta Beta Beta. Kappa Kappa Psi (Sec ), Concert Band. Varsity Marching Band LUNDY. Thomas Pittsburgh. Pa. Liberal Arts Phi Epsilon Pi LURIE. Myron Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal An Sigma Alpha Mu. Circle K. Intramural LUTZ. Tern Brooklvn. N Y. Education HEP. Polani (Reference Editor). Freshman Council, Y-Corps. Coordinator of Spring Festival. Winter Weekend (Carnival Chairman). Parent Weekend. Student Union Board (Social Chairman) MAGDOVITZ. Pamela Oil City. Pa liberal An MALLINGER. Anita Ellen Pittsburgh, Pa. Education Gwent. Pi lambda Theta. Atlantic Student Writing Contest, Hilld, Student PSEA MALONEY. Caroline Ann Pittsburgh. Pa lilieral Arts MAMDANI. Mahmood Kampala. Uganda liberal Arts Senior Worthee, NAACP (Vice-Pres ). WPDU (Vice-Pres ), lilieral Union (Pres.). Allocations Committee. International Students Organization (Co-Chrmn) MANCUSO. Ronald Lobe West Baby lon. N Y. liberal Arts Ski Club MANNING. Ralph F. Pittsburgh. Pa F'ngineering Sigma Chi (Vice-Pres ), Sigma Tau. Omicron Delta Kappa (Vice-Pres.), Omega Chi Epsilon (Pres.), Flngi-neer’s Society. Engineer's Week (Chrman), PACS (Vice-Pres ), Allocation Committee MARCUS. Fred Pittsburgh. Pa. Pharmacy Pi Delta Epsilon. Pitt Capsule (Editor). Alpha Seta Omega, Pharmacy IFC.RhoChi MARCUS. Jack Sherman Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Phi Eta Sigma, University Scholar. Hilld MARCUS. Michad David Pittsburgh. Pa. Ijberal Am Alpha Phi Omega (Pres.) MARGOLF. G. Clark Ddta Tau Delta (Treas). Phi Eta Sigma. Eta Kappa Nu, IEEE. Young Republicans. Freshman Orientation MARKOWITZ. How ard Jay Havrrtown. Pa liberal Am Sigma Alpha Nlu (Recorder). IFG. Pitt Preview. Intramural MARSHALL.Jr.. Robert W Coraopolis. Pa Dentistry Pi Kappa Alpha Psi Omega MARTIN. BruceJ. 1 jrchmont, N.Y. Liberal Am Pi lambda Phil. IFG (Vice-Pres.. Sec.). Student Government, Greek Week MARTIN. Christopher Stephen Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Am .Arnold Air Society. Photo Club (Pres ). Pitt Xetas (Edtr-in-Chf.) MARTIN. Gary Thomas Niagara Falls. N.Y. Engineering Delta Tau Delta. Swimming (Capt ) MARTIN. Kenneth Duane Munhall. Pa. Liberal Arts Pershing Rifles MAR TIN. Paul Raymond Mt. Ixbanon. Pa Education HEP. Student PSEA MARVICH. laiuise Annette Yukon. Pa. liberal Arts MASQUEUER. Mary Virginia McDonald. Pa Education Alpha Delia Pi. Panhellenic Council (Treasurer) MASQUEUER. Siby l Winifred McDonald. Pa liberal Am Heinz Chapd Choir. Pitt Players. Engineering Queen MASSARO. Anthony A. Pittsburgh. Pa. Engineering Intramurals MASSLOK. Mary Zink Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Am HEP. Pitt Newt MATCHlK.John Richard Johnttown, Pa. Engineering lambda Sigma Rho. AIAA. Intramural MATERNAJames-Michad Cleveland. Ohio Engineering Ddta Tau Delta. Young Republicans. Basketball MATSCO. John Theodore Donora. Pa. Engineering IAA MAYHUT. Joseph Michael Brownsville. Pa liberal Ans Theta Chi (Sec ) MAXWELL. Robert F. Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering ' Phi Eta Sigma, Sigma Tau. Pi Tau Sigma (Cor.-Sec ). AIAA (Pres ), Air Force Financial Assistance Grant. Intramural MAZANOWSKI. William Erie. Pa liberal Arts MAZEROV. Michael Martin Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Am Student Union Board MAZZA. Stanley John Jersey City. N.J. liberal Am McCANN. Catherine Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts McCUE. Mile John Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Men's Glee Club, Pitt Play ers McCUNE. Robert P Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Am Alpha Epsilon Ddta (Pres ), Beta Beta Beta. Kappa Kappa Psi. American Chemical Society. Varsity Marching Band McCURDY. Martha Jo Greenville. Pa Pharmacy Alpha Delta Pi (Treas.), lambda Kappa Sigma. Pharmacy IFC, PtU Capsule McGANKA. Annette Conemaugh. Pa liberal Arts McGINNIS. Robert James Avalon. Pa. Education Intramural McLEOD. BernadmeJ. Brooklyn. N.Y. Education Mortar Board. Pi Delta Epsilon. Pi Umbda Theta, Orchesis (Pres.), AWS MECKE. Elizabeth Sea Cliff. N.Y. liberal Am Pitt Players MECKLER. Roy S. Toronto. Ontario Liberal Am Alpha Epsilon Delta, Beta Beta Beta. Druids (Treas ), Omicron Della Kappa, Pi Delta Epsilon. Dormitory Council. HEP. Men's Glee Club (Pres ). Men's Dorm Council, Men's Council (Vice-Pres ), Student Government. THE OWL. Intramural MEHOI.D. Judith A. Pittsburgh. Pa Education MEIKRANTZ. Bonnie IdelLa Trenton. N.J. Education Chi Omega (Treas), Dormitory Council (Pres ). Mentor, Panhellenic Council. WPDU. Housing Board. ACTION Mcndlow-Parke MEND LOW. Mark Pittsburgh. Pa ljbrr.il An Young Democrats, Pin Sews MERRIMAN. Thomas J. Pittsburgh, Pa. I jltrral An Delta Tau Drlta MICHAEL.Gerard Elliott Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Am Alpha Epsilon Della. Kappa Kappa Psi. Phi Eta Sigma. Concrn Band MICOSKY, Wallace J. McKeesport, Pa Engineering MILAZZO. l-eida Marlene Johnstown, Pa. Education Student PSEA MILLER. DavidG Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering Vice-Pres, of (iiemic.il Engineering Class MILLER. Dennis j. Cocry. Pa. liberal Arts Phi Gamma Della. Intramural MILLER. Gilbert Great Neck. N.Y. Engineering Sigma Alpha Mu, Photo Club. Intra-murals. Pistol Team MILLER. Harvey Stewan l nraster. Pa. liberal An HEP. Gymnastics. Student Union Board MILLER. Marilyn Scottdale. Pa liberal Arts Pill News MILTON. Francis E. Pittsburgh, Pa Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Photo Club. East Asian Study Group. THE OWL. Pill .Vnc«. Skyicraper Engineer. Tennis MOGUSH. James Edward E. McKeesport. Pa liberal Arts Circle K MOLL. Jr . Walter J Portage. Pa. Engineering Pi Tau Sigma (Historian). AlAA (Cortes. Sec.) MONTGOMERY. Sarah B. Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Art MOONEY. I Leonard John Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering IEEE MOONEY. Maryann Pittsburgh. Pa. laberal Arts Kappa Alpha i'heta (Kush Chairman) Mentor. Ort hesis MORAN I' . Marilyn E McKeesport. Pa. Education MORGAN. Sandra CLairton. Pa. Nursing MORSEK. Robert J Munhall. Pa liberal Arts Delta Sigma Phi. Circle K. THE OWL, Intramural MOSER. NurithE Pittsburgh. Pa General Studies MOSES, Sara Jane Sharon. Pa. liberal Arts HEP. Y-Coeps MOWRY. Helen Ann Ambridge. Pa. liberal Arts Mortar Board. YWCA, Dormitory Council (Sec.-Trea .), HEP. Y-Corps, Quo Vadis. Activities Fair (Co-Chairman) MROSS, Robert James Springfield. Va. Engineering Delta Sigma Phi. Sigma Tau. Omega Chi Epsilon. F. M Cabinet, IFC. Men's Glee Club. Student Government MURPHY. Thomas P. Pittsburgh. Pa laberal Arts MURPHY, Jr.. William A. Ambridge, Pa. liberal Arts Alpha Epsilon Delta. Beta Beta Beta. Alpha Phi Omega (Pres), YMCA (Exec. Board) NASRAI.LAH. Phillip F Akron. Ohio Liberal Arts Alpha Epsilon Delta. Baseball, Soccer (Mgr.), Intramural NATALI, Dina Ann Elizabeth. Pa liberal Arts Delta Delta Delta. Dormitory Council (Pres.), Mentor. Senior Assistant. Student Government. Women's Choral, AWS. Student Affairs Advisory Commuter NATH ANSON. Carol J landen. N.J. liberal Arts Pitt Players. WPGH, Ideal and Figures NAUDA, Alexander Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering Omicron Drlta Kappa. Phi Eta Sigma (Treas.). Sigma Tau (Treat ). Eta Kappa Nu, E M Cabinet (Pres ). IEEE. Skyscraper Engineer, Intramurals NAUGLE, Gary Wayne Johnstown. Pa. liberal Arts Phi Delta Psi. Phi Eta Sigma (Sec.-Treat.). Phi Theta Kappa NEBIOLO. Janet Theresa Monroeville. Pa liberal Arts Omicron Delta Epsilon. Phi Chi Theta NEFF. Monica Elaine Vandergrift. Pa Nursing NEI.KIN. Carol Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts NAACP. WPGH. Young Democrats NELSON. Marcia E Ford Gty, Pa. Nursing BSNA NENNO. Michael L. Bradford. Pa. Liberal Arts N'ESTEL. Elise M Glenshaw. Pa. Nursing Delta eta, BSNA. Quo Vadis (See.-Treas.), Panhrllcnic Council NESTLER. Erie L. New Hope. Pa. Pharmacy Kappa Psi (Vice Regent). Amer Pharm. Assoc (Pres.) NEWELL. Frank Edward Stahlstown. Pa. Engineering NEW HOUSE. Susan J Franklin Square. N.Y. Liberal Arts Dormitory Council NICHOLAS. Barbara C. Pittsburgh. Pa. Education Pi Delta Epsilon (Treas ). Orthodox Fellowship, hit .Veins NICHOLS. Frances Baltimore. Md lalieral Arts Delta Zeta (Rush Chrmn), Mortar Board (Treas ). Quax. Pit Chi. Mentor. Senior Assistant. Ski Club. Young Democrats. Pitt Preview NIELSEN, Paul Edward Rockville Centre. N.Y liberal Arts Druids. Phi Eta Sigma, Men's Dorm Council (See.), hit News. Intramural NIEMEYER, Robert Edward Harbor Creek, Pa Liberal Arts Sigma Chi NINO. GuillermoJ. Bogota, Colombia Engineering NIPPES, Daniel Charles Homer Gty. Pa. laberal Arts Lambda Sigma Rho (Sgt. at Arms), Dormitory Council. Intramural NIRO. William L Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering AICE (Pres.). Skyscraper Engineer. Intramurals NISTICO. Paul Edward Pittsburgh, Pa. Liberal Arts Beta Beta Beta (Committee Chrmn.) NIXON. Gail Lynn Beaver Falls. Pa Nursing Alpha lau Delta NORR. Sigmund Carl Cleveland Heights. Ohio laberal Arts Men's Glee Club. Men's Dorm Council. WPGH NOVAK, Kenneth Douglas Finleyville. Pa. Engineering ODERBERG. Simon Walter Tarrytown. N.Y. liberal Arts Sigma Chi. Track. Football ODI.E. Marjorie P Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Sigma Delta Tau (Pres ), Cwens, Mortar Board. Quax. Mentor. Pan-hellenic Council. Women's Choral (Vice-Pres), Parent's Weekend. Greek Week, Homecoming O'DONNELL. Joseph P Scranton. Pa. Liberal Am OFT. Russell Richard Pittsburgh. Pa. Engineering Society of Automotive Engineer (Soc. Chrmn.) OKIN, Nicki L. Rye. N.Y. Liberal Arts HEP (Coordinator). NAACP OLSHER, Michael West Hempstead. N.Y liberal Arts Pi l.imbda Phi, IFC. Pre-law Society. Homecoming (Chrmn), liberal Arts Cabinet (Chrmn.), hit Sen’s. Intramural . Bowling (Capt.), Golf O'SHEA. Joan Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal Arts Theta Phi Alpha (Coer. Sec ). Quax OSSIP. Janet Susan Johnstown. Pa. Education Alpha Epsilon Phi OSWALD. I.eo Alex Ebrnsburg. Pa Engineering Delta Sigma Chi. Riflery OVERMOYER. Richard G. Erie. Pa liberal Arts PACE. Daniel Gannon Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Young Rebubl leans. Judo Team (Co-captain). Chess Team (Pres), American (Chemical Society PAGON'IS. Tassia Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts Cwens. Pi Delta Epsilon. HEP. The OWL. Pitt Players. Pitt News (Business Manager). Polaris PALMER. Joho Willard Randolph. N.Y. Engineering Intramural . Golf PANTAGES. Joanne Rebecca Pittsburgh. Pa. Education Chi Omega (Vice-pres.), Cwens. GOYA PAPANDREAS. Elaine Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Art Cwens. (Service Chairman). Mortar Board. Quax. Eastern Orthodox Fellowship. Thyrsa Amos Award. Mabel Gillespie Award. Psi Chi. Freshman Council. Mentor. Quo Vadis (Pres.) PAPPAS. Agoro Pittsburgh, Pa. Education Kappa Kappa Gamma (Treas.), Cwens. HEP PARKE. Jane Preston Titusville. Pa Education Campus Christian Youth. Student PSFA. Young Republican Parker-Rubenfield PARKER, Bruce William Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Art Photo Club, live OWL. Intramural Swimming PARKER. George Paul North Wales. Pa. Engineering I ntra murals PARSON. Bonnie Elizabethtown. Pa. Liberal Arts PAUL. Frank J., Jr. Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering IEEE, Chess Club PAULEY, F. Carol Wind her. Pa. Education Student PSEA (See.) PEARI..MAN, Mitchell William Omicron Delta Kappa, Scabbard and Blade (Treats.) Student Government (Treas.) WPGH (Business Manager) PECK HAM. Martin E. Gibsonia. Pa. Engineering ASCE. ARBA (Vice-pres). F. M Cabinet (Plant Director) Skyscraper Engineer. Intramurals PEES. Richard Conrad Murrysville, Pa. Engineering AIAA, Arnold Air Society, Pi Tau Sigma. Sigma Tau PEPPEL. Edward C. Pittsburgh. Pa. Education PER ICH. Dorothy Joan Monroeville. Pa. Liberal Arts Kappa Kappa Gamma PERKINS. Katherine landley Pittsburgh. Pa Education Kappa Alpha Theta (Social Chairman). Student Directory Committee. Tutor-Action Housing PER .. FJda V. Pittsburgh, Pa. liberal Arts PETERSON. Charlotte E. Johnstown. Pa liberal Arts Chi Epsilon N’u. Women’s Varsity Swimming PETERSON. Marcia Jane Pittsburgh. Pa Nursing Kappa Alpha Theta (Treas ). Ski Club. Basic Student Nurses Association PETRE. Roy August Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Phi Eta Sigma, Intramurals PHILLIPS. Philip H Beaver. Pa. Engineering Sigma Chi. Phi Eta Stgma. Sigma Tau. Omega Chi Epsilon. Student Government PIANTANIDA. Maria E Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal Arts HEP. Slavic Club (Vice-pres ) PIPER. I-rwisJames Blairsville. Pa. Iilier.il Arts Uimbda Sigma Rho (Pres ), Intramurals PI.ITTMAN. Elaine Janet Pittsburgh. Pa Education HEP (tutor). Student PSEA POHL. Joseph Paul. Jr Erie. Pa Liberal Arts Football Team POI.IVKA. Charles F Pittsburgh. Pa Fingincering Sigma Tau, IEEE. Arnold Air Society POLLACK, Mark Stephen Millburn, N.J. Liberal Arts Zeta Beta Tau. Bela Beta Beta, Phi Eta Sigma. Track Team POPORAI). F mil Dumitry Cleveland. Ohio Liberal An Alpha Epsilon Delta PRAGER. Glenn William Penn Hills. Pa Engineering Kappa Kappa Psi. Cavil Engineering Honorary, Concert Band. Varsity Marching Band, Panther Band. National Society of Professional Engineers, Ameffcan Society of Cavil Engineers. American Road Builders Assoc. PRUCHNIC. William Foster Windber. Pa. liberal Arts QUINN. Q Karl Reading. Pa. liberal Arts Sigma Alpha Epsilon (Vice-pres). IFC, Young Republicans. Golf RABINOWITZ, llene Woodbridge. N.J. Education Sigma Delta Tau. ATID. l orm Council. Pitt News RADEN. Bethann C. Glasspon. Pa liberal Arts Quax. PITT NEWS RAGO. Margaret J Bristol. Pa liberal Arts Chi Omega. Student Union Board READAL. Thomas C. Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering Delta lota Delta (Vice-Pres.). Sigma Tau. Omega Ghi Epsilon. American Institute of Chem Engineering REED. David Michael Matamoras. Pa liberal Arts Alpha F psilon Delta. Beta Beta Beta. Hillel. Ski Club. Track. Alpha Phi Omega (Vice-Pres ) REEDER. Donald Neil Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering Eta Kappa Nu REHLIN. Charles Joseph Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering Theta Chi (Pres.). A1IE (Sec.) REHNS. Marsha Lee Baltimore. Md liberal Arts Owens (Campus Fid). Mortar Board (Campus Fit). Pi Delta Flpiilon (pr«). Quax. Mentor. PUT NEWS (Associate Fit). SKYSCRAPER ENGINEER. Junior Worthy Award. Vira Heinz Scholarship, Publications Board. Quo Vadi Exec. Comm REIB. Elizabeth. Elaine Titusville. Pa. Liberal Arts Student Gov at Titusville (Sec.) REID. Suzanne Holland Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal Arts REINHORN, RoslynJ Paterson, N.J. liberal Arts Orthesis RESCH. Gary Kenneth Lower Burrell. Pa. Liberal Arts Kappa Kappa Psi. Student Affiliation Am Chem Soc. (Sec) R ESN ICK. Jerald W Jericho. N Y. liberal Arts Men’s Dorm Council REYNOLDS. Albert Richard Johnstown, Pa. Iaber.il Arts Delta Sigma ('hi. Pershing Rifle Newman Club. Student Gov.. Baseball RHOADS. Barbara Susan Pittsburgh. Pa Nursing BSNA R HOADS. John M Pittsburgh. Pa Dental Psi Omega R ICE. James P Pittslmrgh. Pa. Engineering ASCE. NSPE. ARBA. Football. Vol-ley ball RICH. Peter Gary Windber. Pa liberal Arts Newman Club. Basketball. Football RICHARDSON. Judith Celeste Kane. Pa. Education Dorm Council HFiP. Mentor RISKO. Victoria Joyce Johnstown. Pa Education Alpha Kappa Pi ROBATISIN. Irene Rose Aliquippa, Pa. Education ROBERTS. Beth Andrea Mt V ernon. N Y liberal Arts Phi Sigma Sigma. HFiP ROBERTS. Geoffrey Richard Pittsburgh. Pa. Liberal Arts Basketball ROCHKIKD. Steven H Jericho. N Y liberal Arts Pi 1-ambda Phi (Vice-Pres). IFC. Pre-l-aw Society, Softball. Parents’ Weekend Comm RODGER. Richard R West Mifflin. Pa. Liberal Arts Wrestling ROGOZIN. Norman S. South Fiuclid. Ohio Liberal Arts The OWL. Student Union Bcxird. Midday Series Comm. ROFIIAND. Jack VV Brownsville. Pa Pharmacy Kappa Kappa Psi (Treas.). Kappa Psi (Regent). Concert Band. Varsity Marching Band. Basketball. Panther Band ROLL. Henry E Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts WPGH ROPER. Sandy la Suit land, Md. liberal Arts Mentor, Senior Assistant ROSBOROUGFI. Michael Ira Donora. Pa. liberal Arts Football ROSEN, Gerald M. l-irchmont. N Y. Liberal Arts Alpha Epsilon Delta. Psi Chi. HEP. Student Gov . Senator ROSEN, llenriette F Trenton. N.J. Liberal Art Put Players. PITT NEWS ROSEN. James A. Pittsburgh. Pa. Liberal Arts Pre-ljw Society ROSENFELDER. Arthur John Pittsburgh. Pa. Engineering Varsity Marching Band. Basketball, Football. ASCE. ARBA ROSENZWEIG, Don K Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts WPGH (Assistant Gen. Manager) ROSS. Ixslie Vaughn Johnstown. Pa. liberal Arts ROTH. Bam Alan Harrisburgh. Pa. liberal Arts Sigma Alpha Mu. HFiP. Men’s Council (Pres ), Student Council. Homecoming Comm . Business Manager. Winter Weekend Bus Man., Pitt Preview. Student Advisory Comm Greek Week Comm ROTH. Mary Uuise New Brighton. Pa Nursing ROTHSCHILD. James A Great Neck. NY. Faigineering ROVILEA. JoAnn Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Delta Zeta. PITT NEWS. POLARIS ROZANCE. Sandra F-ilene Houston. Pa. Nursing BSNA RUBEN FIELD. Arnold I) Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts Alpha F psilon Delta. Phi Eta Sigma Rubenfield-Shore RUBENFIELD. Howard I-ouis Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Arts Young Democrat RUDGES, Robcn Qumih, N.Y. liberal Art Phi ITvcla Kappa RUDY. John C. RUGG, Stephen Harley Franklin Square. I. I . N.Y. liberal Arts Hillel AIESEC. Varsity Marrhing Band. Young Republiran . IDEAS and FIGURES. PUT NEWS. Am. Chem. Soc., Intercollegiate Poetry Anthology of Am. Award RUXIN, Michael I Cleveland. Ohio liberal Arts Phi Epsilon Pi. Alpha Epsilon Delta. Phi Eta Sigma. AW Milton Award. Phi Epsilon Pi National Foundation Scholarship. Student Gov. Senator. Book Exchange Chairman, Pitt Preview, Freshmen Orientation SABO, Barbara Sue Delmont. Pa. Education Kappa Kappa Gamma, HEP. Physical Education Club SABO, Thomas A Johnstown. Pa. liberal Arts Phi Delta Psi, Intramural . Intercollegiate Baseball SACKS. Thomas I-re Washington. D.C. liberal Arts Phi Epsilon Pi (sec ), Druids. Pi Delta Epsilon. IFC (Judicial Commission), liberal Arts (Cabinet (Chairman). Pitt News (Sport Ed.) SAI.I.ACH, David L. Glenshaw. Pa. liberal Arts Pi Kappa Alpha. I.uthcran Student Assoc.. Hein Chapel Committee, Men's Dorm Council. Young Republicans, Intramural . Track Team SAI.LINGER. Carol Pittsburgh, Pa. Education Theta Phi Alpha (Hist.), Pi Delta Epsilon. Quax. Pitt News (Subscription Manager) SANTINI, Dennis Paul Indiana, Pa. Engineering HEP. WPGH (Ass't Personnel Mgr., Public Relation Chairman). Skyscraper Engineer. Intramural SARRAF. Roberta Jean Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal Arts YWCA, Angel Right (Comptroller), Young Democrats. ISO SCANLIN, Thomas F. (.evittown, Pa. Liberal Art Sigma Chi (Vice-pres,). Alpha Epsilon Della. HEP SCHAFER. Judy Ann Schuylkill Haven. Pa Nursing Iheta Phi Alpha (Rec. Sec.), Alpha Tau Delta SCHAPIRO. Gerald Eugene (.archmont. N.Y. Uberal Arts Sigma Alpha Mu (Pres.). HEP. Pitt Preview Committee SCHF.INGROSS. Freda Pittsburgh. Pa. Liberal Arts Pitt News (Business Stall) SCHF.RR. Stuart Allan Pittsburgh. Pa Uberal Arts Phi Epsilon Pi, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Student Directory Committee SCHIFFRIN. David Wharry Essex Fell . N.J Liberal Art Young Republicans. Intramurals SCHILLER. Elliot Joel Roslyn. N.Y Uberal Arts Sigma Alpha Mu (Vice-pres and Treat.) Men's Council, Pitt Preview. Freshman Orientation SCHIMONSKY. Rhonda Cheryl Ambcidge. Pa Education Alpha Delta Pi (Acitivities Chairman). Mentor. Pitt Players, Senior Assistant, Student PSEA. WRA, Pitt Preview Committee SCHMID. Johanna Elizabeth Bethel Park. Pa Uberal Arts Kappa Alpha Theta (Second Vice-pres., House Manager). Dorm Council. AWS Housing Board. Mentor. Senior Assistant. Young Republicans SCHNELL. Leslie Hewlitt. N.Y Education SCHOEDEL. William John Pittsburgh. Pa. Engineering Eta Kappa Nu. Sigma Tau (Rec. Sec.) SCHRADER. Barry W Johnstown. Pa. Uberal Arts Alpha Phi Omega (Vice-pres), Men's Glee Club (Accompanist), Pitt Players SCHREIBER. David A St. Marys. Pa. Engineering Sigma Tau. Pi Tau Sigma (Sec.) ASME (Chairman), Young Republicans. Intramural SCHWARTZ, Constance Berko Rockville Center N Y. Education Cwen . Heinz Chapel Choir. HEP, Freshman Council, Freshman Council Advisor SCHWARTZ. Irw.n Pittsburgh. Pa. Pharmacy Pitt Capsule (Ed. Stall) Alpha Zeta Omega, APhA, Pennsylvania Pharmaceutical Assoc., Allegheny County Pharmaceutical Assoc. SCHWARTZ. Lora.M. Pittsburgh. Pa. Education SCHWARTZ. Mare Alan Great Neck. New York Uberal Arts Pi l-ambda Phi (Athletic Chair- man), Ski Club (Treas.) SCOTT, Susan Elizabeth Craft on. Pittsburgh. Pa Uberal Arts Delta Zeta (Scholarship Chairman). Mentor. Senior Assistant. Young Democrats. ISO Chairman. French Nationality Room Scholarship for Travel and Study Abroad—Summer. 1965 SCOTT. William C. Pittsburgh. Pa. Engineering Young Republicans. Intramurab SEDLAK. John Andrew Johnstown. Pa. Uberal Arts SF.DLOCK, Mary IzHiisc Pittsburgh. Pa. Uberal Arts Theta Phi Alpha. Quax. Polaris (Bus. Staff) SEIGAL. Bernice P Pittsburgh. Pa Nursing Alpha Delta Pi (Standards Chairman). Alph Tau Delta (Custodian of Pin ), Baric Student Nurse Assoc. (Treas ). Freshman Orientation Hostess. Freshman Outing Counselor. Pitt Preview Hostess SEIGH. Donald ) Johnstown. Pa. Engineering Phi Eta Sigma, Sigma Tau, Omega Chi Epsilon, Phi Theta Kappa. NSPE. American Institute of Chemical Engineers. Skyscraper Engineer. (Production Editor) SEICLE.Joci Kiverdale. N.Y. Uberal Arts Phi Eta Sigma. HEP. NAACP. Young Democrats. Pitt News. Student Union Board SEI-KOVITS, Myrna Aliquippa, Pa. Uberal Arts Sigma Delta Tau. OWL Business Staff, Pitt New Business Staff. SU Public Relations Committee SERRA. Carol Ann Irwin. Pa. Liberal Arts Pitt Players SETON. Joseph New York. N.Y. Liberal Arts Men's Glee Club. Men’s Dorm Council (Social Chairman. MIX) Senator). Pitt News. Ass't SU PM Series Chairman SETTLEMYER. Constance Ann Arnold, Pa. Nursing Alpha Tau Della SHAFFER, Henry R Bradford. Pa. Liberal Art Omicron Delta Epsilon. Circle K. Intramural SHAFFER. Unda Kathleen Windber, Pa Education Student PSEA SHAFFER. Larry Paul Stoy town, Pa Engineering SHANGOLD. Judith Lou Ccdarhurst. N.Y. Uberal Arts Junior Worthy. HEP Tutor. Mentor. Freshman Council. Pitt Preview, Student Union COTA Chairman SHAPIRO. Ronald Joel Harrisburg. Pa Uberal Arts Phi Epsilon Pi (Vice-pres.), IFC. Intramurab. Secondary Schools Committee SHAPRIO. Sandra Judy Richmond. Va. Uberal Art Alpha Epsilon Phi. Dorm Council Representative. Women’s Choral (Vice-pres.) SHARON. I eonard Irwin Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal Arts Phi Epsilon Pi. Intramurab SHF.FTIC. B. Vinson Jennerstown, Pa. Uberal Arts SHELLEY, Patricia A Massapequa. N.Y. Uberal Art Pitt Players (Crew Head). Women's Choral SHENESKY. F.leanore Kay Koppel. Pa. Induration Kappa Kappa Gamma (Public Relations), Owens, Mortar Board. Pi Uimbda Theta. Senior Worthy. Frederic Schaefer Award for Study in Norway—1966. Cheerleaders. Mentor. Senior Assistant. Student Government. Student PSF-A, AWS (Pres.), Pitt Preview. Homecoming Finalist—1965, Greek Week Finalist-1966 SHERMAN. Barbara Karen Uvingston. N.J. Uberal Arts Pitt Players. Ideas and Figures. Pitt News SHERMAN. C I eon Pittsburgh. Pa Uberal Arts Phi Epsilon Pi. Intramurab, Society for the Advancement of Management (Treas.) SHERMAN. Mabel I. Pittsburgh. Pa. Liberal Arts Della Zeta. Pitt Players. Ski Club SHEVKE. lee Nebile McKeesport. Pa Education Heinz Chapel Choir, Student PSEA. Pitt News SHIREY. Arthur R Ashburnham, Mass, liberal Arts Pitt New (Ass't Business Manager). Society for the Advancement of Management SHOR, Francis Robert Pittsburgh. Pa. Uberal Arts Dean's list, HEP. Men's Council, Intercollegiate Cross Country Track, F'rcshman Camp Counselor. Student Union Film Committee. Public Affairs Committee. Casta SHORE. John Michael Pittsburgh. Pa. Shorc-Sudak Pharmacy SHRUT. Paula Ruth Pittsburgh. Pa Education SI EG. Albert Robert Bridgeville. Pa. Liberal Arts Alpha Epsilon Delta, Photo Club. OWL Photographer. Pitt News Photographer SIEGEL. Gerri I-re Pittsburgh. Pa. Education Chairman of Ski Day for Winter Weekend, Student Union PM Chairman SILVERMAN. Susan Patty Johnstown. Pa. Education HEP. Mentor. Pitt News. Student Union Board SINGER. Evelyn Lee Pittsburgh. Pa. Education Sigma Delta Tau (Rush Chairman). Pitt Preview SINGER, Howard Robert Pittsburgh. Pa. Ubcral Arts NAACP, WPDU, Young Republicans (Vice-pres.) Hillel, Society for Conservative Studies SIRKO. Robert J. Brentwood, Pa. Liberal Arts Phi Eta Sigma, Intercollegiate Baseball SISKA, Carolyn I-ouisc Johnstown. Pa. Education Alpha Kappa Pi (Corr. Sec.). Student PSEA, (the following at Johnstown—AWS, IFC. Phi Theta Kappa (Sec.). Chi Lambda Tau SITAR. Michael Dennis Monongahela, Pa. Engineering SKAVINSKI. Kiprian M. Jeannette. Pa. Liberal Ans Intramurals SKOCZYLAS. Richard David Irwin. Pa. Engineering Arnold Air Society (Information Officer), IEEE SKOP. Grace Scranton. Pa. Education Phi Sigma Sigma (Tribune and Bursar). Cwens (Vice-pres.), Mortar Board. Mentor. Senior Assistant, Freshman Council SLEVIN. Susan M Pittsburgh, Pa. Liberal Arts SLOMANSON. William Reed Johnstown. Pa. Liberal Ans Pi lambda Phi (Steward), IFC (House Alcohol Chairman), Prelaw Society, Student Union Public Relations Committee. Greek Week Public Relations Committee SMATSKY, Barbara M Van Voorhis, Pa. Nursing Alpha Tau Delta SMITH, Cathy Jane Blairsville. Pa. Pharmacy- Kappa Kappa Gamma. Lambda Kappa Sigma (Pres), Dolphin Club. Pitt Capsule (Circulation Editor) SMITH. F. Michael Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal Ans WPDU (Pres) SMITH. Georgia laicille Pittsburgh, Pa. liberal Arts Kappa Kappa Gamma SMITH. Harry A., Ill Cumberland. Md. Liberal Ans Delta Sigma Phi. HEP. Intramurals SMITH. Roben B Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Ans Phi Epsilon Pi (Pledgemaster). Alpha Epsilon Delta. IFC. Intramurals. Pitt Preview, Freshman Orientation. Trimester Analysis Committee. Homecoming and Greek Week Committees SMOKLER. Stanley Barry New Rochelle. N Y Liberal Arts Sigma Alpha Mu SMUK1.ER. Mark E. Cleveland, Ohio liberal Am Hein Chapel Choir. HEP. Men's Glee Club. Men's Dorm Council Senator, Pitt Players. Intramurals SNYDER. Evelyn Kay IWta. Pa. Nursing Alpha Tau Delta SOB EL, Amy Barbara Easton, Pa. liberal Ans Alpha Epsilon Delta. Quax. Undergraduate Special Fellowship, Hillel. Young Democrats. American Chemical Assoc SOBOTA. Edward Francis Latrobe. Pa. Engineering Outstanding Senior for Metallurgical Engineering IVpt.. E M Cabinet. Dormitory Counselor. Intramurals SOKOLOW. Renee B Pittsburgh. Pa. Education HEP. Pitt Players. Co-Chairman for Parents' Weekend—1965. Student PSEA. OWL (Organizations Manager) SOLOMON. 1-ouisG. Johnstown, Pa. Education SOLTERS. James Pittsburgh. Pa. Education Student PSEA. Young Democrats SOMMER.John V. Beaver. Pa. Engineering Intramurals SOPKO. John Frank Newell. Pa. Engineering Sigma Tau (Sec.) SOPONIS. Annclle Rose Mincrsville. Pa. I ibcral Ans Beta Beta Beta. Women's Basket-hall SOUTHWICK, James Philip Pittsburgh. Pa. Liberal Ans Phi Beta Kappa. Phi Eta Sigma. Ski Club. Pitt News SOW ASH. Patricia Ann Jamestown. Pa. Nursing Sigma Theta Tau SPECHLER. Floyd Fabien Cherry Hill. N.J. liberal Arts Alpha Epsilon Delta, Beta Beta Beta. American Chemical Society. Heinz Chapel Choir. Men's Dorm Council (Cultural Chairman), Men's Council Senator. Put News, Intramurals. Campus Jazz Band. WPCH Announcer. Veteran Officers of World War II Award Medal. Distinguished Military Student Award. ROTG Gold Rifle Award SPIEGEL. Linda C. Searxdale, N.Y. Education Chi Omega (Pledge Mother), Pitt Players (Prop Committee), Student PS |. SPIEGEL. Ruth Susan Brooklyn. N.Y. liberal Arts Ski Club. Young IVmocrats. The OWL Businas Staff. Student Union Social Committee SPINOLA. Richard Joseph Pittsburgh. Pa. Engineering IEEE. Pennsylvania Society for Professional Engineers SPR(X:iL Mary Lucy Greenburg, Pa. Nursing HEP. Women's Choral. Basic Student Nursa Assoc STACHOWIAK. Michael H Natrona. Pa. liberal Arts Pitt Players. Slavic Club (Pres.) STAINBROOK. Robert D Meadville. Pa. Dentistry Psi Omega STANA, Irene 1-ouisc Greensburg. Pa Liberal Arts STANISLAW.James McKeesport. Pa liberal Arts STEINBACH. Nancy A Lcwistown. Pa. Delta Phi Epsilon. Hillel. Mentor. The OWL (Businas Staff). Pitt News (News Stafl). Polaris. Quo Vadis STEINICER, John Lucas New York. N.Y. Engineering Omega Chi Epsilon STENGER. William Joseph Johnstown. Pa, Engineering Phi Eta Sigma. Pi IVIta Epsilon. Phi Theta Kappa. Sigma Tau. Omega Chi Epsilon. American Institute of Chemical Engineers. NSPE. Skyscraper Engineer (Assoc. Editor) STENT. Linda Diane Erie. Pa. liberal Arts IVIta Zeta STERN, Kathryn Amy Sc.trsdale. N.Y. Liberal Art HEP. Young Rqxihlirans STEVENS. Timothy Sylvester Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts Alpha Phi Alpha (Vice-pres. Treas), HEP Tutor Recruitment. IFC. NAACP. Pershing Rifles. Parents' Weekend Committee STEWART. Susan Gloria Pittsburgh. Pa. Education Physical Education Club (Vice-pres.). Intercollegiate Field Hockey. Basketball STIPANOVICH, John. Jr. Harwick, Pa. Engineering IVIta lota IVIta, Sigma Tau. Omega Chi Epsilon, Eastern Orthodox Campus Fellowship, Concert Band. Men's Glee Club. Pitt Players STOEHR, Joyce Ellen Pittsburgh. Pa. Liberal Arts Kappa Alpha Theta, Cheerleaders (Co-captain) STOLAR, Robert John Johnstown. Pa. liberal Arts l-ambda Sigma Rho (See.) STONE. AlanJ. Carbondale. Pa. liberal Arts Sigma Chi (Rush Chairman). Phi Eta Sigma, Men's Dorm Council. Pre-law Society. Young IVmocrats. Intramurals. ISO, Pitt Preview. Freshman Basketball Manager STONE. Phyllis May Pittsburgh. Pa. Education STONE, Steven Pittsburgh. Pa. Liberal Arts Phi Eta Sigma, Omicron IVIta Epsilon. Men’s Glee Club (Alumni Sec.). Pre-Law Society. Young Republicans. Pitt Chess Club. Freshman Council STOVER. Judy Ann Bradford. Pa. Education STRATTON. Marjorie Ann New Castle. Pa Liberal Arts Women's Choral STREJCEK. James S. Pittsburgh. Pa. Liberal Arts STRITTMATTER, Thomas E. Carroll town. Pa. Engineering STUVER. Willard Carl Johnstown. Pa. Liberal Arts Phi Beta Kappa. Phi Eta Sigma SUDAK. Mary Elizabeth Aliquippa. Pa. Pharmacy Lambda Kappa Sigma (See.). Stu- Sudak-Werner dciU American Pharmaceutical Association. Allegheny County Pharmaceutical Association SUSKIE.James Bam Johnstown. Pa Liberal Ant Uimbda Signu Rho. Intramurals SUTCLIFFE. John William Cleona. Pa Pharmacy Rho Chi. Vanity Marching Band, Intramurals. PPA. APhA, ACPA SWANEY, Junes W., Jr. Pittsburgh, Pa liberal Arts Arnold Air Society (Information Officer). Intramurals. Intercollegiate F'ootball (Manager) SWANK. Harry Robert Northumberland. Pa Engineering Kappa Kappa Psi. Concert Band. Varsity Marching Band. Intramurals SWANSON. Daniel Eugene Ridgway. Pa. liberal Arts SWARTZ. Suzanne I) Harrisburg. Pa. liberal Arts Kappa Alpha Theta, HEP SYSAK. Matthew Arnold Johnstown. Pa. Liberal Arts Circle K (Sec-treat.). Student Government Representative SZYMUSIAK. Barbara Altoona. Pa. Nursing Alpha Tau Delta TACK AGE, Francis Thomas Greenslnirg, Pa. liberal Arts Men’s Council (Sec-Treas.) TAVARES. Goncalo E. Bethlehem. Pa liberal Arts Basketball. Soccer TELLER. Michael Todd Forest Hills. N Y. Liberal Arts Cheerleader. Varsity Marching Band. Homecoming Comm.. Winter Weekend Chairman. Student Union Board TEWES. William F Pittsburgh. Pa. Fmgineering IEEE. PSPE TEX. Rut be N Pittsburgh. Pa. Education Hillel. Pitt Players. The OWL. Student Union Board THOMPSON. Emma (Mrs.) Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts NAACP. PITT NEWS TIMKO. Peggy Jo Cheswick. Pa. liberal Arts Delta Delta Delta. Owens. Mortar Board. Quax. Mentor. Dorm Council. Senior Assistant. Student Gov. Sen.. AWS(Second Vice-Pres) TIRA. Carols n Antoinette Leechburg. Pa. Liberal Arts Beta Beta Beta (Sec) TKAC. Roliert V. Johnstown, Pa. liberal Am TOTH. Arlene June Pittsburgh. Pa Education Pitt Players TOUGER. Marlene R N Y.. N Y liberal Arts Phi Sigma Sigma (Pres). Dorm Council. Panhellemc Council. Greek Week. Parents Weekend. Winter Weekend. Pitt Preview TOWNSEND. Lynne Ruth Murrysville. Pa liberal Am Alpha Delta Pi (Pres.). Panhellrnic Council TROIANO. Susan Pittsburgh, Pa Nursing TROY, Elizabeth Sue Mamaroneck. N Y. liberal Arts Alpha F pnilon Phi (Soc. Ch ). Cheerleaders. Ski Club. French Club, Pitt Preview TYSON. I-inda King of Prussia. Pa Education Kappa Alpha Theta. Homecoming Co-Ch,, Freshman Council, Orrhe-sis, Creek Week Comm Panhel Preview, Freshmen Outing. Girls Varsity Swim Team TYTKE. Edward W Pittsburgh. Pa. Liberal Arts Arnold Air Society, Football. Basketball ULBERG. Judith Sherry I East Meadow. N.Y. liberal Am Gwens. Pi. Sigma Alpha. Thyrsa Amos Award. Dorm Council. Mentor Pre-Law Society. Senior Assistant. Spanish (Tub ULERY. III. Louis Marshall Johnstown. Pa. liberal Arts Phi Beta Kappa. Phi Eta Sigma. Basketball UNGAR. Harriet A McKeesport. Pa. Education Sigma Delta Tau (Sec). Mortar Board (See). Pi Lambda Theta. Mentor. The OWL. Winter Weekend Comm. Parents Weekend Ticket Co-Ch . Greek Week Comm.. Homecoming Comm. AWS. I .intern Night Ch. UNCAR.John J. Wood mere. N.Y. liberal Arts Sigma Alpha Mu (Pledge-master). IFC (Homecoming Comm.). Football. Baseball. Bowling, Basketball URBANEK. Stanley W Pittsburgh. Pa. Engineering Sigma Tau (Trcas). Eta Kappa Nu (Pres ). IEEE (Cor. See.) VALENTINE. Randall L. Braddock Hills. Pa. liberal Arts Baseball VAVREK. Michael Joseph Johnstown. Pa. liberal Am Phi Eta Sigma Wrestling VENERUSO. Toni Lynn Trumbull. Conn, liberal Arts Delta Delta Delta. Dorm Council. Mentor. WPGH. Young Republicans (See). ISO. Student Union Board VENF.T. Pamela Margo Berish Johnstown. Pa. Education PSEA VIDONI. Patricia Anne Titusville. Pa. Liberal Arts Alpha Delta Pi. AWS (Treat ) VITUOCI. Peter McKees Rocks. Pa Liberal Arts VOGT, Wilfred laniis North East. Pa. Pharmacy Darbaker Scholarship. PITT CAPSULE (Photographer) VOITH. Raymond P lAttsburgh. Pa. Fmgineering Eta Kappa Nu. IEEE WACHSBERG. Abraham Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Arts Alpha Epsilon Delta (Vice Pres.) Beta Beta Beta. Psi Chi’ (Vice Pres). Circle K (Li. Governor) HEP, Ski Club, Iniramurals WALKER. Nyal S. Berlin. Pa. liberal Arts WALTER. Carol Nlararoneck. N.Y. HEP. Women’s Choral. Pitt Pro-gressive Party Students for Peace (Sec -Treas.) Student Union Board WALTER. Paul David Johnstown. Pa Liberal Am Phi Eta Sigma. Intermur.il WALTERS. BciteJ North Wales. Pa liberal Arts Pitt Players. Ski Club, Pitt News. HEP WALTERS. Fred Benton Seward. Pa. liberal Arts Intermuni Is WARANTZ. Ronni S. Fresh Meadows. N.Y. liberal Arts Delta Delta Delta (Cultural Chairman), HEP. YMCA Volunteer at School for the Blind. Social Committee McCormick Hall WARREN. Richard Henry Paterson. N.J-liberal Arts Photo Club. Men’s Glee Club (Vice Pres ). THE OWL (Photographer). Pitt News. I.E.E.F.. WARREN Jr.. Roy Walter Johnstown. Pa. liberal Am WASCOU. Marilyn Irene Ijinraster. Pa Liberal Arts Hillel. Dormitory Council. Student Union Board. Queen of Engineering Week 1%5. Sec.-Treat, of Brack-enridge Hall. Pitt Preview Committee. Best Drevssed Coed 1966 WEATHER HEAD Jr.. Donald Charles Creensburg. Pa. liberal Arts lambda Chi Alpha. Scabbard and Blade (Commanding Officer). Pershing Riflo. (Executive Officer), Army Cadet Battalion (Executive Officer) Chicago Herald Tribune Medal. Reserve Officers Association Medal. Program Chairman. 1966 Military Ball WEBER. Thomas Peter Ambridge. Pa. Engineering Phi Eta Sigma. Sigma Tau. Men’s Dorm Council. American Society of Civil Engineers (Pres) WEBER. Timothy Ixiuis Ambridge. Pa liberal Am American Society of (aval Engineers WEIL. Teresa Pittsburgh. Pa. Education Gwens (Service Chairman). T W Arms Award. Pitt Players. Ski Club. Student PSEA. Admissions Office Guide WEILER. Doris Elaine Willow Grove. Pa liberal Alts Dormitory Gouncil. Mentor. Pitt News. Polaris. Pitt Preview (Coordinator), Student Union Buard (Secretary) WEILL. Michael H Hirktville. N.Y. liberal Arts Iniramurals WEINBERGER. Jerry Joel Scranton. Pa liberal Arts Psi Ghi. Ski Club. Student Government Senator. Spanish Club, Freshman Backet hall Team (Manager) WEINTCK, Jill Lynn llew kit. N.Y. liberal Arts Phi Sigma Sigma. (Rush Chairman). HEP. Pitt YCorp. WEINSTEIN. Dale Anne West Hempstead. N.Y. Filucation Ideas and Figures WEISS. David M Pittsburgh. Pa, liberal Am Hillel WEISSMAN. Harvey M Cleveland Heights. Ohio laber.il Am WPGH (.Assistant News Filitor). Varsity Marching Band. Student Union Board. (Special Events Committee Chairman) WELLER. Marian E Radnor. Pa. Nursing BSNA WERKSMAN. Linda Pittsburgh. Pa. Fiiuration Student PSEA WERNER. Gary 1-ee Harmony. Pa Werner-Zykowski liber41 Ant ()mi ron Delia Kappa. Htii Kta Sig-nu. Alexander Silverman Award in Chemistry. Heinz Chapel Choir (President). WPGII (Assistant Business Manager). Intramural WEST. Dennis Pobert Pittsburgh. Pa. Engineering WHITE. Gail Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Am Della Zeu (1st Nice President) WHITNEY. Priscilla Ann Erie. Pa. Education T.W. Amos Award. Dormitory (imncil. Ideasand Figures WILDS. John Nl Pittsburgh. Pa General Studio Omega Psi Phi WILKES. Midge Ellen Forrest Hills. N Y. liberal Am Quo Yadis. Spanish Club (Nice Pres ), Experiment in International laving Campus Representative WILLIAMS. C Dianne Pittsburgh. Pa. Education Della Sigma 'Dicta (2nd iie Pres ) WILLIAMS. Francine I. Pittsburgh. Pa Liberal Ans Quax. Mentor WILLIAMS. I Hiis Brooklyn. N Y. Pharmacy Kappa Psi. Kho Chi. University Scholar. IFC. Intramurals WILLIAMS. Lynne Ann Glatsport. Pa. Education Delta Delta Delta (Pres ). Cwens. Mortar Board. IWmitory Council. President Brackenridge I louse. Mentor. Panhellenic Council. Senior Assistant WILLIAMS. Richard Field Beaver. Pa. laberal Arts WILLIAMS. Ronald lee Nesv Holland. Pa. liberal Ans WILLS. John David Rockaway. N.J. liberal Ans WII.PS. Ralph F Greensburg. Pa laberal Ans Kappa Kappa Psi (Vice-Prrs.) Varsity Marching Band WILSON. Carole 1-ouisc Canton. Ohio Pharmacy Delta Delta Delta (Chaplain), l-imbda Kappa Sigma, Dormitory Council (Pres), Mentor. Senior Assistant. Housing Board. Young Republicans. OWL. Pitt Capsule. Graduate Assistant Dorm Pres.. AWS WILSON. Frank E Kingston. Pa laberal Am Phi Eta Sigma (Set ) WIMER. Charles G Ambler. Pa liberal Ans HEP. Varsity Marching Band WINTER. Richard J. Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Ans Intercollegiate Golf WISE. Roger L. Pittsburgh. Pa lateral Arts Omicron Delia Epsilon. OWL. Polaris WISNIEWSKI. Paul F Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal Ans Intcrnat'l Affairs Club. Intrrnat'l Business Society. Young Democrats. Pitt News WOLFAND. Andrea Akron, Ohio Education Dormitory Council, Freshman Orientation. WPGII. OWL. Polaris. Pitt Preview. Student Union Board (Pub. Comm.) WOLFARTH. Kaaren Lynn Pittsburgh. Pa Nursing WOLFSON. Howard A New York. N Y. liberal Ans Men’s Glee Club (Treas ). Society for the Advancement of Management (V Pres). Student Union Bcurd Public Relations Committee WOt LI I ICH Rolvert Pittsburgh. Pa. General Studies Delta Sigma Pi. Baseball YANOVICH. Sammy Medellin. Colombia. S.A. Engineering YERMACK. Elaine Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Ans YOUNG.Joseph David Pittsburgh. Pa. liberal An Men’s Freshman Council. Freshman Orientation Committee ZAI.M ES. Cieorge Thomas Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Ans ZALAR. Geraldine Mary Johnstown. Pa liberal Ans ZAMBO. Gregors Alan McKcespon. Pa Engineering Theta Chi (Corrr . Sec.). Pi Tau Sigma. Intcrfratcrnal Football. Basketball. Softball. Volleyball Z ANONI. Eugene Jerome. Pa. Education ZAPF. Michael Paul Watertown. N.Y. liberal Ans ZAR RUG. Abdul latif Tripoli. Iibya Engineering Intramural . Organization of Arab Students ZAVOS. Roben Pittsburgh. Pa liberal Ans Hillel. Photo Club. HEP. Pitt News Ncwv Editor). Chess Club ZAWATSKI. Alvm C. Ritlgwav. Pa liberal Arts Intramurals ZF.KAN. Julian M liberal Ans Alpha F psilon Delta, Beta Beta Beta (Treas.). Phi Eta Sigma (Pres ) ZEIAZOWSKI. Ronald R Cheswitk. Pa liberal Ans Varsity Marching Band. Intramurals ZELIN. linda Ann Hansdale. N.Y. Education Pitt News. Homing Board ZIELINSKI. Emilie Mane Monongahela. Pa. liberal Ans I’heta Phi Alpha (Pres), Slonar Board. Quax. Mentor. Panhellenic Council (Sec.). AWS ZII.INSKAS. Sandra I. Pittsburgh. Pa laberal Ans Delta Zeta. Pitt News ZIMOV. Alta Dayton. Ohio liberal An Alpha F pstlon Phi (Vice Pres ). ISO. Dorm Cosincil. HEP ZITELLI . Basil John Monroeville. Pa. liberal Ans Alpha Epsilon Delta. Druids. Phi Eta Stgma. Men’s Council (Nice Pres ), Student Government Senator. Intramurals. Dorm Counselor ZOLI.ER. Evelyn P New York. N.Y. liberal An Pitt Plavers. Student Government. Area ('.ampus Coordinating Comm ZORTEA. Aldo Pittsburgh. Pa Engineering AROA. ASCE. Intramural . Soccer, Football ZUFA1.L. Stephen Z Stoystown. Pa liberal An Phi Fia Sigma. Intramural ZYKOWSKI. Jane L. McKeesport. Pa Education Student PSEA 315 11 ) Wo have two Mg I of them in our ISM RSfcjJ public parlors. hL y6 In onr °P{nion KjJff} (hero is no Piano Wgfigtf morp durable or pos-ggaH oessine superior musl-k-v- M cal qualities. LEWIS GEO. S. LELAND. i', I SmrruvAKT jr-Mp House, | SBC New York, Sept 15,1874 I TO WHOM IT MAT concern.—We have used the U. 8. Pianos for the past six years. i IUO names tent citizens. ontrrcM ana eslthy bank, jrwhere, who -you will bo lero at your wn or some you can soo rtier within : for 10 days tory no pay- lank In the United Bute will satisfy i PleatO write ns. and yon will receive not only onr Illustra est Bank in America. We make this I ted Circular containing full particular , hut also a written onr 6 year ’ warrant sniarantces our reply to all qne«tlons from some officer of our Company in to any Piano In the world at any price I person. Picas state where you saw this notice. Jnited States Piano Co., 810 Broadway, New York. M-WINDING UTY ONLY llreetwltb Consumers at once and ■fatten ta for future business. We will tlful and elegant Stem-Winding d Watches by registered mall—on retry watch warranted to keep accorate lover movement hunting case watch ee, one of each kind S7.60: either aln or engraved case or, if you perfer pay for packing, expreeecbergts.etc, on approval, trusting to your honor to u receive It. Anytime within to days 4 described, mouey cheerfully retum- r more watches send % | .OO for each nouot of mouey la tent with order we tin and Charm Free with every in face If wanted. Handsome costly new and beautiful designs end we will watcb usually sold by dealara-for ten ust the thing for agents and others to g and trading purposes. Positively jve prlc's—order at once as this offer EDWARDS Sc CO., Importers 4c. Manufacturer , 257 Broadway, New York EOITTHS [I i LADIES’ la IURNAL. Y ILLUSTRATED. 1TIFDLLY PRINTED. iREAT VARIETY. DOMESTIC 8TORIE8. -ADIES’ JOURNAL itest. Handsomest and Cheap-1_ f Ladles’ Paper In tho United .RTY-TWO COLUMNS devoted s, IFancy Work Department, s. Women’s Exchange. Health jc. Short Stories and Current CAREFULLY EDITED, L ILLUSTRATIONS. nrn vc n T E N 9,000,000 worn during tho past six years. This marvelous success is due— 1st.—To tho superiority of Coraline over ail other materials, as a 6tiffener for Corsets. 2d.—To tho superior quality, shape and workmanship of our Corsets, combined with their low i prices. Avoid cheap imitations made of various kinds of cord. None are genuine unless “DR. WARNER’S CORALINE is printed on insido of steel cover. FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING MERCHANTS. WARNER BROTHERS 359 Broadway, New York City. GOLD PLATED TRICK CHARM, Everybody that wants Fcx should have one. By touching a spring in the heel, it will make them Thumb Thkir Nose, and do other Antics. You can have Roshrls ok Fcx and Wagon Loads ok Merriment with this trick. Sample by mall, 15 cents; 2 for 25 cents; one dozen, $1.00. Address, F. O.WKHOSKEY, Providence, R.I. CANCERS SAFELY REMOVED WITHOUTc THE KNIFE.WITHOUT PAIN AND ■WITHOUT - CHARGE-UNLESS! , )successFuL.n_ur com FLEMING i iZW ST NEW YORK CALIFORNIA, THE LAND OF FLOWERS. Send 50 cents, express or money order, and receive by mall, postpaid. 15 large pkts. choice now seeds, growth of 1886. We will send 35 pkts. for SI. Pansies, Marigolds, Mignonette, Asters. Phlox, Smllax, Cockscomb. Dahlias, single and double; Balsams, Stocks, Hollyhocks, Candytuft, etc. All seeds are grown on our own farm. Wo challenge the world to grow flower seeds to greater perfection. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. GKO. W. SESSIONS, Seed Farmer Nurseryman, San Mateo, San J-fc js Y ithou? otT M nT poods j ow r qphe j arKct, ■H THE 11 lasaa £S6 rr CATARRH rM Knm Ideafness eta, Sent Free. WASHER Wo vm cnarantco tho LOVELL ” WASHER to do better work and do it easier and In less time than any other machino la tho world. Warranted fivo years, and if it don't wash tho clothes dean, without rubbing, wo will refund tho money. AGENTS WANTED USHw PROOF that Agents aro mating from 875 to 8150 per _ _ month. Farmers make $200 to $500 during tho winter. Lz-dies ha vo groat sucocaa selling this Washer. Retail prioeonly Wf ; So. Sample to those desiringanagcncy82. Also tho Cclo-Wf brated KEYSTONE WHINGERS at manufacturers - lovrcct price. Wo invito tho strictest investigation. Send y your address on ft postal card for further particulars. LOVELL WASHER CO., ERIE, Pa Plated WhW goldNI PLATE O' CHAI AND PATTERI Ererywhe •tamped “ other. FERRl: 341 Hr lUHEELER’S DEODO If Are light, cool, and wai model, and more dural Each shield contains our 1 which absorbs all pcreplr sweet and clean, ana entln odor. Recommended by Ie4 ionable ladies everywhere. 80c.; No. 2, “IV.; No. 3, $1. makers can make large pn once. BASSETT SHIEL i am ci Cedar Avenue, Clcvclai am glad to testify to th bell’s Arsenic Wafers.” writes: I And your wa Slcxlon a good deal. By y JAS. P. CAMPBELL, New York. ELEGANT SHAPE, HEALTH and COMFORT Perfectly Combined In MADAME FOY’S Skirt Supporting CORSET. It is one of the mo ... popular and satlsfar tory in the market., For sale by all lead-, tng dealer . Price by mall $1.30. FOY HARMON A CHADWICK, NewHav. JOSEPH C STEEL Solo Br ALL DEALERS! •COLD MEDAL PARIS Perfect. Instructs womon simple rules thoy can comp perils, difficulties and dan complete and comprehensi Pain. Diseases of Women recipes for home treatment and disease. Invaluable to Agents wanted. DR. B. D. J PITT CLASS RINGS OFFICIAL DESIGN This design has been traditional for more than 50 years and is approved by University authorities and the Student Ring Committee. L. G. BALFOUR CO. Physician's Building 121 University Place Pittsburgh 13, Pcnna. MU-2-1644 EVERYTHING IN FLOWERS 621-1300 682-1300 3719 Forbes St. Pittsburgh 13, Pa. “READ AND WATCH YOUR WORLD GROW” THE BOOK CENTER 4000 FIFTH AVENUE PITTSBURGH 13, PA. A few words to the wise . . Follow the lead of the over 2,000,000 residents of Western Pennsylvania who have wisely chosen Blue Cross and Blue Shield protection against the cost of hospital and doctor bills. Yes, be wise and give yourself the best. And Blue Cross and Blue Shield are best because they are the only professionally-sponsored protection plans—the only plans officially approved by the hospitals and doctors themselves. BLUE CROSS-Blue Cross of Western Pennsylvania BLUE SHIELD-Medical Service Assn, of Pennsylvania BLUE CROSS OF WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA ONE SMITHFIELD STREET, PITTSBURGH, PA. 15222 ISALY DAIRY COMPANY Dairy Specialists The place to shop for quality dairy products 87 stores in the Greater Pittsburgh area. Memo To Successful Men Is your life insurance program consistent with your progress? Take advantage of an examination of your program. Allan E. Sharapan 4 Gateway Center Pittsburgh, Pa. 15222 391-3830 NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Life Insurance • Group Insurance Annuities • Health Insurance Pension Plans COLE-PARMER INSTRUMENT EQUIPMENT CO. 7330 N. Clark Street Chicago, Illinois 60626 Selected Equipment Instruments and Appliances I MEDICAL EQUIPMENT for Physicians - Hospitals Medical Students - Nurses Feick Brothers Co. Pittsburgh's Leading Surgical Supply House Financed Insurance Programs are now available to University of Pittsburgh Juniors, Seniors, and Graduate Students. You can select your own program from the many plans being offered. You will not be required to make payments until your education is completed. The program is sponsored by the State Life Insurance Company doing business nationwide for more than 70 years. You can obtain more information by contacting the company representative. MICHAEL WAYKIN 4343 Murray Avenue PITTSBURGH. PA. 15217 Telephone 421-9044 or 561-6899 950 Penn Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. 15222 281-3525 281-0518 The new 80 Mesta Hot Strip Mill provides superior finish and flatness.., top quality sheets 1 says J L This new mill enables JS.L to provide sheets of uniform and close tolerance, superior finish and flatness, and in the larger size coils desired by our customers. Automotive, appliance, and other manufacturers in midwestern markets can now get top quality sheets produced by the most modern facilities available. ' ...BETTER by Design MESTA MACHINE COMPANY PITTSBURGH. PENNSYLVANIA Cleveland Worts, JONES LAUGHUN STEEL CORPORATION 80 inch Hot Strip Mill by MESTA : News Student Newspapers CAMPUS EVENTS UNIVERSITY POLICY SPORTS NEWS HUMOR WANT-ADS Contact the Pitt News business office for information Phone 621-3500 Ext. 318 en you want a fine portrait... to record forever with charm and dignity the important events of your life,come to the Photograph Studio of your Official Photographer... GIMBELS MELLON SQUARE vvxvvw vwa' vvvaavwa vw , CONGRATULATIONS — You graduated! Hope you get a job! 3802 Fifth Avenue iay’s bookstall Pittsburgh 13, Pa J 683-2644 CONGRATULATIONS Student Union Cafeteria Venetian Room Catering Services Hunt Room Tuck Shop Faculty Club Graduate School of Public Health Scaife Hall Snack Bar Men's Dorm Cafeteria and Snack Bar AMERICAN YEARBOOK COMPANY I Parent Patrons Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Adams Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Aggelakos Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F. Alexander Mr. and Mrs. Keith R. W. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth H. Ayers Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Benjamin Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Berg Mr. and Mrs. Harold Berson Mr. and Mrs. Paul Biskup Mr. and Mrs. Alex Borodaty Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Bosco Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Brickner Mr. and Mrs. George R. Bundy Mr. and Mrs. Anthony L. Cambruzzi Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cappelloni Mr. and Mrs. Morton H. Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Wm. C. Connelley Mr. and Mrs. Paul Courtright Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Cozza Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Darr Mrs. Lawrence Demase Mr. and Mrs. Robert O. Dequinze Mr. and Mrs. Ben Deutscher Mr. andd Mrs. Anthony DiBuono Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Dobbs Charles and Margaret Downey Dr. and Mrs. Raymond S. Elliott Mr. and Mrs. Abe F. Farkas Mr. and Mrs. William J. Fedoryk Mr. and Mrs. Aaron S. Feinerman Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Fitzgerald Paul and Betty Jane Franz Mr. and Mrs. Marshall E. Freedman Walter and Frances Fried Mr. and Mrs. Jerome G. Futerman Mr. and Mrs. John Garszynski Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Gebelein Mr. and Mrs. David Gelb Jay Gerrard Geller Mr. and Mrs. Peter G. Gnatuk Mr. and Mrs. O. Goodman Mr. and Mrs. Albert Greenberg Mr. and Mrs. Francisco Gutiennez Mr. and Mrs. Gardiner L. Hanley Col. and Mrs. William F. Hart, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Claudius L. Heater Dr. and Mrs. R. D. HofTman Mr. and Mrs. John C. Hoover Mr. and Mrs. Irving J. Horwitz Mr. Richard Imler Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Isen Frank and Regina Karnash Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Keller, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. H. W. Kinter Mr. and Mrs. Irv Koenig Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kohl Mr. and Mrs. Michael Komichak Samuel Kupfer Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Lawton Mr. and Mrs. J. Neil Leary R. L. Lenzi Mr. and Mrs. Massimo Lepidi Mr. and Mrs. Frank Levine Mr. and Mrs. Richard K. Lightholder Lloyd and Betty Lorenzi Mr. and Mrs. Irvan V. Marcus Mrs. Anna Matchik Mr. and Mrs. Christy J. McKenzie Mr. and Mrs. David Mcdich Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Meley Mr. Richard E. Milhem Mr. Mrs. Gerald E. Murphy Mr. Mrs. Jake Nasrallah Mr. Mrs. Kurt Nestel Mr. Mrs. Irwin W. Newman Mr. Mrs. Edwin Niemczyk Monica and Peter M. Hozinick Leo and Alda Oberzut Mr. Mrs. Charles Obctts Mr. Mrs. Abe Perlman Mr. Mrs. Dominic R. Petrini Mr. Mrs. John F. Pilgrim Mrs. Dale Piper Mrs. Joseph M. Rach Mr. Mrs. Fred Rehns Mr. Elmer H. Renk Mr. Mrs. Louis Rinovato Mr. Mrs. Cyril P. Roberts Dr. Mrs. Thomas H. Roney Mr. Mrs. Harold Rosenbaum Dr. Mrs. Maurice Rosenzweig Mr. Mrs. William E. Ross Mr. Mrs. Marino A. Rossi Mr. Mrs. Irving Sachs Mr. Mrs. Edward J. Sadowski Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Sammel Mr. and Mrs. Edward K. Saurman Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Scanlin, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Emil E. Schoedel Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Sickels Mr. and Mrs. Al. L. Siegel Mr. and Mrs. John Sitoski Robert and Luella Smith Dr. and Mrs. Philip L. Southwick Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Springel Thomas E. Stanley Mr. and Mrs. Louis V. Steele Mr. and Mrs. John Stipanovich, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Carl W. Stuver Mr. and Mrs. Albert F. Sulzer Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sundheimer Myrna and Leo Swantek Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tackage Mr. and Mrs. Goncalo Tavares Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Tomai Dr. and Mrs. James E. Townsend Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tutino Mr. and Mrs. Francis D. Wagner Mr. and Mrs. Stanley A. Walker Mr. and Mrs. Harvey M. Weissman Lt. Col. and Mrs. Robert V. Weller Mrs. Benjamin M. Werr, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Wilkes Mr. and Mrs. John A. Yajko Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Yansky Mr. and Mrs. Alvin C. Zawatski Mr. and Mrs. Alex Zelazowski Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Zielinski Advertising Index American Yearbook Company................... L. G. Balfour Co............................ Blue Cross of Western Pennsylvania.......... Cole Parmer Instrument and Equipment Co. Fcick Brothers Co........................... Gidas Flowers .............................. Gimbcl’s Photo Reflex Studios............... Isaly Dairy Company......................... Jay’s Bookstall ............................ Mesta Machine Company....................... New York Life Insurance Co.................. 'Hie Pitt News.............................. Saga Food Service........................... The Second National Bank of Titusville...... State Life Insurance Company................ University Book Center...................... 338 f 339 I 1 ra r rm os -“-ministration ng A •n:,c A tlx' Advert t - ir Foree . Delta P si Ion l elta pb1 Alpha tips.. '—ha I9hi Omega ■i Delta I ur r l 5« n A h fl «cs II - - ' t.ir Hasehaa. Ha sir St udrn f basket ball . . r lea tiers Omega . . meneement t C'ountrx- elta Delta bta Delta hi Epsilon igma l9hi Ed neat ion..... Engineering........ Engineering (Cabinet Engineer 9s Week . . Football Basketball Freshman Freshman Football General Alumni Golf............ Great Professoa s Greeks ......... Association 3 0 l35 2'4 96 232 ,72 20-4 185 208 I8G 206 122 7C, 171 1 I 16 1 36 02 222 236 226 1 38 248 1 08 1 82 1 ♦ Greek Week ........ Greensburg Campus Gymnastics ........ Heinz Chapel Choir Hillel ............ Homecoming ........ Honoraries ........ Ideas and Figures .. . Intrafraternity Council Johnstown Campus .. Kappa Alpha Theta Kappa Kappa Gamma Kappa Kappa Psi Lambda Sigma Rho Liberal Arts........ Liberal Arts Cabinet MDC Weekend .... Men's Council ..... Men’s Dorm Council Men’s Glee Club ... Mortar Board ...... Mr. and Miss Pitt . . Nursing ................... Office of Student Publications Omicron Delta Kappa ......... ODK Man of the Year......... Organizations .............. Owl ........................ Owl Hall of Fame............. Panhellenic Council Pharmacy ......... Pharmacy IFC .. . Phi Epsilon Pi Phi Eta Sigma Phi Gamma Delta.................................... 195 Phi Kappa Theta.................................... 199 Phi Sigma Sigma .................................. 216 Pi Delta Epsilon .................................. 177 Pi Lambda Phi ..................................... 190 Pi Tau Sigma ...................................... 175 Pill News.......................................... 156 Polaris ........................................... 163 Publications ..................................... 154 Quo Vadis ......................................... 177 Regional Campuses.................................. 100 Senior Index ......................................302 Senior Portraits ..................................264 Sigma Alpha Epsilon ............................... 190 Sigma Alpha Mu .................................... 192 Sigma Chi ......................................... 196 Sigma Delta Tau....................................213 Sigma Tau.......................................... 174 Skyscraper ........................................ 160 Soccer ........................................... 228 Sports Editorial ..................................220 Sports .Scores ....................................254 Student Government ................................ 148 Student Union Board ............................... 150 Swimming ......................................... 242 Tennis.............................................250 Theta Phi Alpha....................................209 Titusville Campus.................................. 106 Track ............................................ 244 University Theatre..................................152 Vrana Photography Award ........................... 165 William Pitt Debating Union ....................... 145 Winter Weekend .....................................82 WPGH............................................... 162 Wrestling ........................................ 238 Zcta Beta Tau...................................... 195 341 86 102 240 137 140 78 166 161 185 104 210 212 181 187 114 141 . 86 142 143 144 170 259 120 164 168 258 126 158 260 200 124 146 198 173 A t As the editor of the yearbook you don’t edit the book—you live it. It becomes a part of you. It becomes an expression of your thoughts, your sensitivities, your prejudices. You publish the book for yourself rather than for the students. You complain about the work, all the while hoarding as much as you can for yourself—only handing out assignments when time or exhaustion will not permit your personal attention to the myriad of details comprising the production of a yearbook. You arc impatient with staff members who must rearrange their schedules to help an irritant editor meeting deadline. But in the end you arc grateful to the people who put up with you. those who came up to the office early and stayed late, the people who made the book a reality. And so it is with me. It is to these people, those who shared in this yearbook. that I owe a great debt of gratitude: Pat, for her great organizing of the literary staff and her moral supjx rt throughout the year; Tom, who amid cries of “Stop the Bomb!” managed to gather together a photo staff that turned in the best pictures the book has ever had to work with; Bill, for taking over the business staff and for his dynamic copy in the introductory essay of the book; Bruce, who was a one-man production staff during the final deadline and without whom this book would not have been finished on time (or almost on time); Marsha, Carole, Kathy, and Carolyn—my last minute “slave labor gang”, who were there for the “last day” and many before that; Susan, for handling the institute and the banquet as well as the production; and to John, Nancy, Tom Sacks, Jay, Dave and the rest of the photography staff, Mary Carol, Jo Carol. Cerri, and to the others who have helped make this the great book I know it will be. Finally, a special thanks should go to Larry Pirnic for giving the book a new dimension of thinking and for his tireless help with production during those final days. Also I would like to thank Mr. Irving Lloyd and Mr. Allan Shane for their great job on photography as well as Mrs. Esther Kitzes for being there to help in our minor emergencies when they would come up. I have gained a great deal from the OWL, not only this year but in the previous years that 1 worked. The book has made this the best of my four years at the University of Pittsburgh and it will be a part of me forever. Oo xl luck to Pat and the 1968 staff. Thank you all again. E.F. 343 Specifications The 1967 OWL of the University of Pittsburgh has been printed by the offset lithographic process of the American Yearbook Company located in Hannibal, Missouri. The stock on which the book is printed is 80 True White Hull Coat paper. The body copy for the book is set in 10 on 12 point Baskerville with 18 point Bask crville used for the copy heads. The caption identifications for the organization section are set in 8 on 10 point Baskerville along with the senior index at the rear of the book. Division pages use 24 point Baskerville for their heads. 'Die photographs shown in this book are the work of undergraduates at the University with the exception of those few taken and supplied by Mr. Irving Lloyd, Mr. Allen Shane, The Oakland Corporation, and The United States Marine Corps. The senior portraits were taken by Gimbel’s Photo Reflex Studio. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The cover, made of a chambray material. has been manufactured by the S. K. Smith Company of Chicago, Illinois. a LD ton 0 7 1 Ml Editor Earl Eischl Associate Editor Susan Krawetz Literary Editor Patricia Wagner Photography Editor Thomas Strccvcr layout Editor John Novak Production Editor Nancy Sundhcimcr Senior Editor Carole Barr Sports Editors Thomas Sacks Jay Rosenstein Literary Staff Mary Carol Dzurko Jo Carol Hawes (Jerri Raling Kathy White Layout Staff Bruce Barr Susan Moudy Photography Staff David Grcso Bruce Parker, Carl Baird. Ronald Berlin. Al Sieg, Robert Keonig, Dave Sherman, Andy Serdy, Rich Cohen Dave Haller. Ken Pober. Chris Sanders Business Manager Assistant Business Manager Organizations Manager Advertising Manager Comptroller Staff William Cabin David Knopf William Kalish Robert VanXarden Richard Ombres William Benedict Klisabeth Zausmer Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mcckler Diane Kcntor
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