Washington College - Pegasus Yearbook (Chestertown, MD)

 - Class of 1970

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Washington College - Pegasus Yearbook (Chestertown, MD) online collection, 1970 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 238 of the 1970 volume:

1970 pegasus Washington college chestertown, maryland ;fr - III ■ i .40 m . ■ ss - P 1 i-. ' .i v : - «P ji «• « t ggflV MV VtMWt((u t i m h  « i • r W. HAtfDS OFF ' fjf W W H ' f F f i i , • ro humo i HANDS | THAN I (TrO THE Pfs£An$ ■V, : $m ■ ' ; « ,, X X Hi as ifl HI? oo o r t Fo the 1970 pegasus is dedicated to The presidency of a good college, as we all know, is a wearing and exacting position, with problems so numerous and varied that no man can be expected to deal with them all. College presidents, like professors, tend to be known for their specialties. Some raise money, some build buildings, some elevate the scholarly tone, some bring peace to troubled campuses, others turn places inside out. Daniel Zachary Gibson does not fit a category. When he became President in 1950, Washington College had behind it a long history of useful service to a small constituency. On that foundation the new President built. So extraordinary has been the development of the college under his leadership that to list figures about endowment and buildings and count the noses of personnel is to slight the truth. In the course of twenty years the physical face of the college has been transformed, its plan of studies totally redesigned, its faculty strengthened, its reputation greatly enhanced. The college is richer, stronger, more alive and more awake than it has ever been before. In these two decades in the life of the college there has developed a quality, eluding definition, that comes not only from the character of the President ' s public leadership, but also from something personal in his convictions and his style. He has led the college into new paths, but he has done so as if freedom and order were complementary rather than opposed, as if good manners were a good thing, as if past experience had in it something that the present might listen to. Though his grace of language may be difficult to emulate, his example has been contagious in matters as private as a love of good music, and a love of birds. More important to us than any of the measurable accomplishments of his long administration is the fact that President Gibson leaves Washington College a humane and civilized community. Nicholas Newlin r«i f% - f-... .( ' When Dr. Gibson, at 42, assumed the post of president of Washington College in 1950, the 168-year-old school had an enrollment of only ap- proximately 400 students. Of those, there were less than 100 girls. Other than East and Middle Halls, which at that time were housing girls, there was only one other women ' s dormito- ry, Reid Hall, among the nine perma- nent buildings on the 25-acre campus. There were only 163 out-of- state students on the campus, and most of those were from the neigh- boring states of Delaware, New Jer- sey and Pennsylvania. The faculty numbered 25, less than half what it is today. Major areas of study were offered in 14 disciplines. Endowment was barely $100,000, and the val- ue of the physical plant was less than $1 million. One of President Gibson ' s first tasks was to prepare the College for a decennial revaluation of its accreditation by the Middle States Association of Colleges, involving an extensive self-study and a three-day visit and ex- amination by a group of educators representing the Association. President Gibson guided the College successfully through that evaluation and, with the challenge met, started Washington College toward a goal of acedemic excellence that has been in the forefront of its development throughout two decades. Within his first ten years he had increased the number of full-time faculty to 37, thereby creating a highly favorable faculty-student ratio of 1 to 1 1. During the Fifties he initiated a thorough evaluation of the academic program, resulting in the first major reorganization of the curriculum in this century. Excessive courses were eliminated, emphasis was placed on independent study, and the Four Course program was adopted With the College entering the second decade of President Gibson ' s ad- ministration, the largest fund-raising effort in the school ' s history was or- ganized. Called the Heritage Program and launched in 1963, its goal was to raise $10 million during the next seven years to meet the increasing costs of operating and expanding the educational program. The initial goal of the Heritage Program was met two years ahead of schedule. The Heritage Program and earlier efforts under President Gibson ' s lead- ership have moved the College ' s endowment from $300,000 to $2.5 million, including the endowment of two professorships and partial endowment of two others. The 25-acre campus of 1950 has grown to 90 acres, with six new dormitories constructed, a major enlargement of the science building, a new power plant, a maintenance building, a student union facility, a fine arts center, a new athletic complex and playing fields, and a new 160,000- volume library. I know that what is called the ivory tower concept of ed- ucation is not in favor today, either at the secondary or the higher level. But the ivory tower has been too rudely scorned. Young men should dream dreams— and young women, too. They should have an eminence to which they can withdraw and see the world in perspective. To pro- vide that eminence and an opportunity to gain perspective is as necessary to the true purpose of the liberal college as a faculty and a library. Inaugural Address, October 27, 1951 One of the fun- damental purposes of a libera! education is to produce reasonable men and women— those who can soberly study the issues of the day, small or large, and unblinded by the winds of prejudice and pas- sion arrive at a judicious position. This is an enormous task, for man is not innately reasonable. Commencement, 1965 That blend of clear- sightedness and deep feeling, indispensable to the artist, indispens- able to the one who enjoys art intelligently, is the prize secret of the art of living. Fall Convocation, 1966 I suggest simply that when college educa- tion becomes too con- cerned with the test of immediate practicality, it may lose its most precious reason for be- ing. The aim of a college should not be to produce a business man or an athlete or an industrial chemist or a young graduate who revolves in his social niche like a well- greased bearing. Indi- rectly it may do any of these things. But the fundamental purpose of a college is to think and to produce think- ing in its students. If it confined itself exclu- sively to that purpose it would be worth the world ' s support. Convocation, 1954 The college gradu- ate may be tempted to pay slight attention to those not so fortunate in their educational or social opportunities. We tend to seek our own kind, to underval- ue those whom we find uncongenial in some trait or other, often overlooking a quality or talent which is rare and useful. An unpleas- ing social manner, an unprepossessing ap- pearance, a lowly social status, a skin pig- ment unlike ours, may conceal a personality of singular importance. Every man has his unique worth, if we are but intelligent enough to preceive it. Commencement, 1967 The battle against superstition, fear, and prejudice is unrelent- ing—or rather, it must be unrelenting. This his- tory of mankind offers little ground for glib optimism. But if the bet- ter qualities of man ever triumph, liberal education in its broad- est sense must lead the way. Fall Convocation, 1967 No man is perfect. No woman is perfect. No institution is per- fect. While we strive to deal with them and to reshape them, perhaps as we would wish them to be, let us be careful not to undervalue the contribution they can make to our welfare. Commencement, 1951 Whether or not you make the most of your opportunities, academic and social, here or elsewhere, depends on your sym- pathetic identification with problems and people outside your- self—the effort to un- derstand. To under- stand not in order to condemn or to judge or classify— to under- stand in order to know. Fall Convocation, 1964 The most important things in your life and in the life of our nation and our world are not necessarily those which catch the headlines. They are not the whirlwind, the earthquake, the fire, but rather the still small voice. The still small voice is the obscure farmer on his acres in Iowa, the merchant in his store in New England, the housewife on the school board in Texas, the salesman on his route in Virginia, the doctor on his rounds in California — and, yes, the recruit polishing his rifle in Georgia and the sailor chipping paint in Norfolk Navy Yard. The still small voice is you day after tomorrow or year after next learning to find your place in that new world which today is for you commencing. For your world is not the 190,000,000 people in the United States or the several billions who inhabit the globe. Your world is your parents, your family, your friends, your neighbors, the people you work with, the man or woman you chat with on the street corner while waiting for your bus. That is the only world you ever really know or that knows you. Commencement 1970 daniel zachary gibson president Washington college 1951-1970 3 vi ' m g i ■ m € fi v« . seniors FR J v K Vx 5w NU ■■■-.. CD a. Q. o D c o D c D c O CO it- CD O c D w v mamm D c l_ O _Q _c O) j) c D E u O 5 james beavan peter betts z D _Q O CO D O) O _Q T3 c O -Q kathleen biddle §M mm mark brumbaugh u D s_ O mary boddie barry cocoziello michael callahan ginny colfelt m $$ g ■ 1 ' . a ■l m ft£ linda cooke H i Q. O u 13 o c o O u ft o C o c D c O T5 x p donald dolce Christopher ely c c Q- c D O c c O T3 mary francis John franco sarah flowers chip gorgone ( u _Q hen hartley fM tfMte- karen hauck thomas heald d Lf lu£uJ 7)WMUvp V t Mr f U g£- p c - - barbara harbaugh samuel hopper m n-mmi Mm t rob holland priscilla hopkins ray keen alison howel Q. D u c D 1 ■■ ' ■ ' _Q _Q O PI - X _D _ C D a p C- p R,t D E c o 1_ D E _ : c D sjryr; • V ± X+ f ■« l : f jC 1 w : :. Catherine mcavoy D u E o D John miller fe - ft V °t ■•■■ ■:■ ' :■ , % V 1 V fc : ' V ■: - D _Q s_ O _Q U) c ' c c O E april marshall _Q - _c Q. i_ D E _Q O _Q E o T3 c ff ft .: ' . ' x Vr ll 1 B S ■ ' 9 . i--V: Ii I i paul naylor c c D T3 «t«s? M £0 m A mm Si o _Q O _Q O _Q _ O) o c D _c a D rosemary roswell V - ,.i ■M 1 ■ UKi david pagliughi j|a|§PT donald rogers thomas polvinale karen sammis eileen rice cyndy renoff o ' (D u m a irni s h re ws b u r y c O to Q. E o CD c O priscilla valliant y s ?k A david thompson £3 John tucker D O c u CD c CO c D CO fl r I IS clinton weimeister m peter wettlaufer John and jean walker linda wills penelope wasem photographs not available lucille daly david isherwood pete Johnson bob koepke ethel pettit mary Schumann steve thorn pson Catherine watson harold woodcock u 0) o o O CD 8 : faculty martin cleartiel : f instructor in sociology ' ' ■ •■r asm n am DIXON Til Kill TATTEKtil THIROWta ltl IUMV robert bailey librarian waiter redding lecturer in art nanty tatum professor of english susan mc lean assistant professor of f rench edgar gwynn frank creegan professor of biology associate professor of chemistry chairman, department of biology norman James professor of english director, interdepartmental program in humanities o E D O i_ L. D Q. N O c E O (£1 D CO CO Q_ O d u; C o CO a. co CD O) O i_ O L- CD o D) CO CO CD patricia home pratt bethers assistant professor of sociology assistant professor of physics richard brown penny fall professor of mathematics assistant professor of physical chairman, department of mathematics education CD .E 2 32 °- §- u O • o H O) Q_ i— _, -Q c D 1— -t— D ? _Q co — co O O CO CO _0 u 3 E 8 ° Q- c o o £ u -2 o O CO CO CD 05 c o o Jr Q- c O charles halstead associate professor of history Ik robert neill assistant professor of english o Of QJ en _o o u c r Q) CO o i_ i_ D Cl _ Cl c i_ D D co O) CO o LO L_ D . D cn cn CO o o o JZ u u _ O o CD CO CO i_ vh O O o cn i_ .,_ o o CO c E CO 0) E M— o 1— o Cl Cl CD D c D E i_ ' 5 _c u ' CD u c (D D u c (D u CO u D oo u o • — u O .■Jz a. o Q. o c Q. o CD c CD O D c E D u l_ to O co D o CO _c -t— O u _ c o O — ' JZ D o u D T3 £ D D o Q) u o o CO CO (1) i_ Q. bennett lamond edward athey assistant professor of english professor of physical education chairman, department of physical education peter tapke professor of philosophy chairman, department of philosophy and religion dwight kirkpatrick judy kirkpatrick professor of psychology assistant professor of english chairman, department of psychology and education photographs not available: william knowles professor of economics chairman, department of economics katherine yaw professor of biology ermon foster associate professor of education registrar of the college theodore slabey associate professor director of computing jon wakelyn associate professor of history director, interdepartmental program in american studies gene defelice assistant professor of political science robert janson-la palme assistant professor of history of art william Johnston assistant professor of music kevin mc donnell assistant professor of philosophy edward messinger assistant professor of french erika salloch assistant professor of german timothy maloney assistant professor of drama chairman, department of drama director, fine arts center M l Y U i f 1 I r m r moratorium day • r .. c E o u E o JL ■ .. w)m$ 1 ' • 1 ■ I .: Q. a a 0) • D O G C a -, « ,41 spring weekend Foi the Spring ests r of 1970 only, e ach instructor at ashington College is requested tc make avail lable to hi s St idents substantially the foil g options: 1. A final E ade based on the work through 2 May 1970; 2. A final g ade based on the work thr ugh 2 ;:ay 1970 plus one final paper cr examination; 3. A final Ei ade based on the work of he full ss mester. Students shall chc ose individually form the optioi s ai ailable to them. If ar structor feels that he dc es not have SUfj ' ieient orraation to en- able hin to offer optic ns 3 and to his student in a oar icular section, then eac h student in that .. eotior may reques t the .registrar to record his grade at P or F . cambodia qP5 2i« ' OOEiai: W2 1 2  ' a 1 5 On ■ macbeth carl gamba lady macbeth susan belcher banquo eric ruark macduff michael demick duncan c.a. hutton lenox david merritt ross mark lobell seyton george schiffer donalbain dave ripley porter dave bress si ward dan a ross 1 Scottish doctor charlie hemming ¥■■ U % ■j english doctor peter boggs ■ T •• • ' V ■ I old man torn narbeth •■ ' ' .... t HI i sergeant John miller AV- ' • :1 ' ' g 3m murderer 1 ed deasy ts£ ' _ j§ - :f tj AM murderer 2 John raskin 1 ' v SbKw soldier 1 steve bartalsky i ' 1 P soldier 2 alex easier 1 % ... 1 malcolm jim dissette HI wr?t PI ■ ■ .. tf angus dave thorn pson ■il PB ' v eH k ' 1 nurse gina oliva a r ■ £ - ..A ' ii Fir f H -e-f - : director set design arlecchino pantalone leandro flaminia francheschina cintia coviello timothy maloney paul mazer michael demick jon spear dana ross elyn dye carole baldwin eugenia thorton eric ruark mark lobell .:.-■ : ' : k: ' - ' ■ «- ■ ' --■ SsZ m « AUv j ■f $ The Minority Speaks Live from Margaret Sanger Hall, straight from Room 4-B, comes the voice of perhaps the last in- habitant of the American geographic and social region known as the Chastity Belt. To give you a more explicit conception of my position, I am the final hole on the constricting belt, the one never penetrated by the piercing buckle. Also, I am American. I am the Puritan good- wives whose thimble fingers ached to supply Hester Prynne with a life-time supply of cherry- red A ' s. I am the Southern gentlewoman whose virtuous limbs paid for the nuge gilt mirrors in the fancy houses of antebellum Atlanta. I am the drab, hopefully miniskirted secretaries who secretly take the cleaning lady ' s True Confessions and just as secretly dream of being raped. More specifically, I am the only remaining virgin on 4th floor, Margaret Sanger. Oh, I do a bang-up job of hiding my condition. The most experienced observer would find in my room no deviations from the girl ' s dorm norm. Posters of a finger-pointing Pope, worn copies of Portnoy ' s Complaint and the Kama Sutra and the I wait huddled in wrinkled dusty skin as father sun crawls over my parched horizon: his slow advance mocking, his hair bleached bones; I see his eyes, brazen, tarnished, alone. I killed myselves. The flitting third part known touched on too few to live. My sun, my god I crawl, I mock — I am the blame and laud! latest issue of Avant Garde are living together in liberated confusion. Nothing is missing in my room and nothing is missing in my anatomy. (Truth compels me to admit that the last was a slight perversion of fact for literary effect. My ton- sils have been removed. But if a girl is eighteen before she loses her adenoids, how long will she take to lose her virginity?) Why do I continue to walk the straight and nar- row? For one thing, I want to be God ' s hand- maiden in the birth of the next Messiah, and a prerequisite for that assignment is a lack of assig- nations. Secondly, as a child, I was terrified by a maiden aunt ' s bedtime tales of the unnatural prac- tices of virile men. Thirdly, I am hoping that as virginity becomes a scarcer commodity, it will be worth more in the marketplace. But mostly, I ' m waiting for a quixotic knight with a passionate manner and a locksmith ' s skill to spirit me away from the virgin land of my birth. Because I am American, I am hopeful. I have been to the movies. I know. Someday my prince will come. Mary Ruth Yoe A Bludy Hart a hart of blud and a piyol of gras. a piyol of gras and blud fulling, if you are a hart becarfole you may get a erol stuck in you. Anglea Clearfield Conservatism Lights. Large company of (preferably) nude or (if you ' re uptight) body-stocking or leotard-clad actors and actresses in a ' chorus line. ' Each per- son will step forward, shout his line at the top of his lungs in the manner of a Weatherman trying to provoke the Chicago police, and then step back into line, after which someone else steps out. 1st speaker: 2nd speaker: 3rd speaker: 4th speaker: 5th speaker: 6th speaker: 7th speaker: 8th speaker: 9th speaker: 10th speaker: 11th speaker: 12th speaker: 13th speaker: 14th speaker: 15th speaker: 16th speaker: 17th speaker: 18th speaker: 19th speaker: 20th speaker: Drat! Phooey! Confound it! Gee whiz! Dad gum! Rats! Shucks! Gosh! Nuts! Blast! Glom! Bork! Golly! Leapin ' lizards! Arraugh! Do not pass go; do not collect 200 dollars! Ain ' t the beer cold! Thunderation! Heck! Darn! Lights out. Pause. Sound of typewriter over auditorium speakers. Then voice, while typing continues: On the basis of what I saw last night, I can only conclude that Mr. Hemming will never be anything more than a very minor figure in the avant-garde theatre. Charles Hemming Janet ' s Song No. 2 Angelica, come fill the cup we shall go down to the carnival grounds i promise that you won ' t forget those circus dancers . . . we ' ll dance until dawn then yawn as we cross o ' er the river rest ' neath the trees, flowers swollen with bees . . . Angelica, haven ' t you heard about the pyres liquorstore fires that are burning tonight in cities across our country . . . Andromeda ' s drawing away but we ' re acting so gay as we stumble down hallways rest in our room, softly swollen is your womb . . . As i was telling you, doctor, please please understand, i ' m a very sick man i need time to rest to think about Angelica . . . my words have run true just for you, doctor, i ' ll tell you this, you can never forget those circus dancers . . . Angelica, now is the time to throw away keys rest beneath trees . . . David Beaudouin Something I Can ' t Go Back To On star children, your eyes are too old for that which contains them and your ripe mouths curve in a half-moon alas down. With a background of grey and bloody sky you stand defiant in your youth and pain not yet knowing how to shield yourselves against the onslaught. One foot forward, the Elders ' wall prevents you from taking the next blind step into the dark maze of maturity. Why Did You Come Here? Since the rhinos left And took with them the secret doctrine The seaweed rose In line at right angles To the bottom of the canyon Where the remainder huddle and watch Looking; belching Synthesizing; walking in and Listening to the rutabagas Oh please wait, for the door will lock once your steps are free to leave footprints where they please and there are many thorns to tear your unshod feet and widows ' webs to bind your brazen limbs. Oh please wait, let the unrestrained joy of your envied youth melt your eyes again, let butterflies bring full sun to your mouths until they drag you through the door. You ' ll miss it so when it ' s gone. Oh star children, please wait. Carole Denton Automatic milkmaids weave Strands of clay into holy mountains Spreading the ashes of the dead Between swaying iron hulls And the terraced garden grows Our clothes (but for the brass buttons) Confined areas; whispering of the apocalypse Weldon Monsport We Washed The Moon We washed the moon in milk and starch And hung it on the line to dry, While Mary pushed away the chairs So we could have our private sky. The room grew grey, then oil black; The sun had left us far away. Mary placed a candle at my feet, And whispered that I owned the day. Haiku On the first bright beautiful warm spring day The wasps Come out of hiding. The boneless earthworm flows down Into its own private Moist, muddy hole. The orange sky turns The woods ablaze, But it is only the sunset The moon shines Even more beautifully now, Like a satisfied bride. Venus steps off the pedestal Because she cannot Lie down on it. The old man sadly conducts The Ninth, Ordered by the stone-deaf Fiihrer. There we sat, her hand in mine, Till I grew tired and fell asleep. Dreaming of marigold and lace And of the joys that I could keep. When I awoke, though still quite dark, I saw the moon above my head. I felt for Mary, but in my hand Found not hers, but mine instead. Bill Thompson The courtly gala in the palace. But what is that I hear in the street? I am sorry Lord Hamlet. We are only casting farces today. The wealth of his being Is lost in the dark, Not shared with anyone. The little bus station Is always crowded, But no one ever stays. The one thing I share with the lion Is my lust For the antelope. She has gone and left me, My little plucker of strings, Tne fickle muse. Charles Hemming For Cambodia: Spilled Sugar Spilled sugar stuck to my feet; Bare and cold on the kitchen floor. I lifted each heel and rubbed it On the pajamas given by some holiday guest. Green jungles divided by blue rivers And three buttons shifted on by body. The flesh remained asleep, But the rumbles of a jet engine About to carry another load On another mission Demanded retaliation against My empty mouth. It was difficult to distinguish The trees from the monkeys from the soldiers As they fought to capture My plateau knees. Wooden huts burst open with flames And the smell of burning toast Mingled with the clouds of powder and gas. A long tabby tail brushed against my leg; Fearing that the flames would spread To the fur, I grabbed my animal And shoved it beneath the faucet Until I was sure there were no sparking skirmishes; The frenzied cries were silent And the soft body was still. Spilled sugar still stuck to my feet, So I put my breakfast on the floor And shook the dirty grains over my flakes. Bill Thompson Gentle Cat T ' was a gentle cat who sat Upon the motly clown. He licked his fur Three times around And nestled in the smile That cracked the paint Around the foolish lips. Few runs of laughter Spilled from that powdered face Since the tents were struck By dealers of the pocket trade. The stakes were barely set, Still tight in the earth, When the ropes were loosened And thrown about steamer trunks. This gentle cat of white and yellow Napped in the trickless hands And with his tail brushed his nose. I stretched my paws and licked my thigh, Then fell asleep in a circus eye. Bill Thompson Blake Me For all the deserts between the rains And all the lambs upon the hills, The sky ' s eye but weeps a cradle song. A leaf fringed with cotton worms Envisions a rare breed of lovers, Scorned by the evening traveler Whose hair hangs down and joins The fervor of the feet. Little Bo Peep has lost her sheep And doesn ' t know where to find them; Search the flats amid London ' s rats; They graze there in a Blakean hymn. Blake, Blake, Blake, Your eyes are open to the day Of solitude but kin to jest. And have I a lover ' s chance To seek the pearls of thy words? May it be granted, May it be deemed; Holy death for vultures On the fragile wires. Hunger has beset me And a snake is not a worm. Bill Thompson Then Alone in Eden, Alive and free, Among the finest greenery. H. Jones Baker Waiting For The Birth Of DaDa; Waiting For The Sun ... a while ago yes quite some time ago behind the sky a castle stood wherein he dwelt, lord of pottage, mess ' d and waiting for the dawn; his colour ' d heaven, she who lingered robed and waiting dreamily slumbered (looking for her loveless lover, a rigid tin thing in her dreams; stealing that which was the lord ' s thing, that which was his chiefly pleasure stole into her dreams; he that would a woman murder lust and rape was all his virtue heaving up his sword of Vengeance lay rampant on a field of crosses) aye, it was a lonely loveship and by the starship she lost the dream (her ardor was then fired in brimstone her sorrow then belied the crypt he hung by ladies grievous tear-pools tied and waiting for the dawn . . .) ' he ' the lord cried is a tin whim just a whim often is all i will make her, tire and break her; leave her waiting cold in dawn give her what her tin love couldn ' t as he fled into the dawn as he wept unto the dawn crucified he met the dawn John Raskin God Damn My Radiator God Damn my radiator That ' s knockin ' up a storm Keepin ' me from sleeping When my bed ' s so nice and warm But in the morning I ' ll write a letter To the President of this great nation Hopin ' he ' ll protect me From this God damn radiation. John Dixon A Lovely Breeze For Flags His shoe size is the same as mine And we eat our candled cake on the same day. He has a scar on his right elbow, About the same place as mine. But when there ' s a lovely breeze for flags, Only his is the one to fly. I tried kicking it once While it sailed from atop a pole, But I couldn ' t step that low. Bill Thompson Dead When We Meet Bless me when you are leaving, bless me Even when I am bad. We cannot look into each other ' s I ' s When we are dead Our opened, dead, great eyes with questions Would lighten our long night: Why were we bad to one another then, Before we died? Dave Thompson I Would Become A Flower I would become a flower if you were its bloom I would become the bloom if you were its dew I would be dew if you were the sunshine ' s warmth, That my own being could unite with you. If you, my love, were the heaven ' s realm, Then I would change to be a star as well. If you, my love, were Satan ' s fire, (To be united) I would go to hell. Dave Thompson The Wing Of Hope there are tales of physics left, great wonderings of mankind; rabies, myths, insights I may press in metaphor o cold cold moon where but from our pirate ' s pocket are you a tossed doubloon but for one moment, silence . . . and you shall hear the wing beat within your soul like a moth against lampshade. Jim Disette C CO c D rbst druf D 5c| o c O E JD o =± CD D u . CO D _c s— C c ° O CD o c O t CD o _c O -C o = — CD O _c CD _ °- D co 8.8 si CD c o E = CD CD c o Q- D CD :=l_Q CD _Q _Q E . 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IJ Ji- sea son ' s record 6- 7-0 was hington 3 swarthmore 1 western maryland 2 2 western maryland 8 1 upsala 10 upsala 6 randolph macon 8 10 dickinson 4 14 mount st. mary ' s 1 towson 8 10 Johns hopkins 11 5 p.m.c. 3 9 loyola 7 4 loyola roster: frank ogens jim wentzel John powers john dickson glenn dryden bob skilling steve raynor noby viamonte john steinhart steve sandebeck dary carrington ed athey (coach) dave bruce (captain) bill dunphy (manager) steve ellyson (captain) « ; ' f m ' - =tt r: ■,, roster: les cioffi rick bales eric ruark John miller John wagner John carlin jack keenan bill buchanan torn Washington pete chekemain frank iglehart chris combs (pres.) ■HHHB V «S % ■ people j i m bell al grzech dale trusheim bill pricket gill bliss torn hodgson bill ingham jim bell John raskin jim di I Ion steve rapp nancy bate ■I? ( ! t£ a «w :%- tX 1 $ ?  • • lt D left to right: jim mueller tiny holloway bohn vergari joe lounge charley collins randy white brad carney dave pagliughi chuck Johnson chris ely torn polvinale steve newhard mr. bohemian mike callahan eric goedeke jeff lees mr. beer left to right: mitch mowell steve bartalsky rick horstman mike mann randy white bill pitcher John tansey jim wentzel steve sandebeck leroy theta chi left to right: bob lehman donald dolce frank marion eric ciganek tim barrow John wayne steve ogilvy John hall mark svec barry drew larry martin left to right: dave griffiths paul shepherd ken kiler pete maryott steve golding John carlin jim hogg doug stoker dave knowles del boardman george williams jerry luhn rob holland bill leonard John foster geoff anderson fred price george henckel jack keenan bill bolinger brooks bergner rick bales bill ingham left to right: ron lokos kit erskine chris wisdom pete kier torn bortmes don garratt kappa alpha phi sigma kappa sitting: standing: jim bell torn galloway ed brennan peter wettlaufer scott woolever sam martin dale trusheim John way mark brumbaugh sam hopper putnam maclean sandy snyder joe nichols dave slama left to right.- peg jackson sue wilson marty dryden sally pearson mary crise meredith horan nancy smith ann bernsdorf lynn puritz jenny lucke gretchen schultz zeta tau alpha sitting: lynn leonhardt michael mcmullan leigh barnard laura irving diane sanchez lynn tobin pam davis standing.- phyllis dondorf linda phinney ann lickel dee marvel Judy noone kathy weber pris hopkins barbara isenberg nancy brunner mary francis becky hainsworth wendy marsha pam gates gail hasson colleen spivey helen perley michele magri dotti chris rogney lindstrom fit? standing: melinda wrightson diane morawski polly quigley denise skidmore sharon toher sitting: alison cooksey barbara hancock karen gossard $£ MB ;. v.; - ;V ' ■■:-: ' ., ■- , v r sitting: standing: ellen rohrbacker mary boddie chris hoppe carol payne sandy pelkey lou ellen murphy lynn wetzel allison langrall candy mcavoy claudia slack sally soderberg sherry daiger linda hawkes jane irby ellen dye marge vojtek ginger damon mickey finan debbie veystrk gay hunter mary hutchinson sue villemain left to right: pam locker beth kahn helen anstine lana Crawford Joanna brown I sitting: janet stidman linda dies kathy Sk gottlieb sue luster nancy norwood barbara moore standing: marilyn peterson pris valliant laura wills cheryl brunski esther nebus sue perry carol brooker karen dembinsky elaine gott gaii ackerman barbara maddex sally moniot etlp+it c h i me g cS iM-.- -., ., ■ ' , : -i ? } ' , ■ mi : f. ' J !• • ' , ACKERMAN, GAIL KATHRYN B.A. Sociology Alpha Chi Omega, Vice Pres., 4; Panhellenic Council, Vice Pres. 3, Treasurer 4; PEGASUS, typist 1 ,2 ; S.E.A. 4 ; Women ' s Chorus 2; Dormitory President 4. ANDERSON, JOHN HAROLD APRILL, GLENN HENRY B.S. Biology Society of Sciences 1; Fencing Club 2; Intra- murals: football 1,2,3; soccer 1,2; baseball 2,3; Dean ' s List 4. APRILL, KAREN LYNN B.A. Sociology Alpha Chi Omega 2,3; Chorus 2; Intramurals: volleyball 1,2,3; basketball 2,3; hockey 1,2,3; Certificate Award from Women ' s Athletic Board. BARNARD, MARGARET LEIGH B.A. Sociology Zeta Tau Alpha, Historian 3, Rush Chairman 4; Pan-Hel 4; Class Treasurer 4; W.R.A. Judiciary Board; S.E.A. 2 ; Volleyball and basketball intramurals 3,4; Basketball Birls W. C. team 3 ; M.V.P. Volleyball intramurals 4; Transferred from Pitzer College, Claremont, California. BEAVAN, JAMES BENJAMIN JR. B.A. Mathematics Newman Club 1 ,2,3; Chorus 1 ; S.E.A. 4; Wes- ley Club 4; Tutorial Program 3; Track 1 ,2,4 (Varsity); Intramurals 2,3 (softball); Cross Country 2 (varsity); Honorable Mention 3. BEAVEN, BRIAN PATTERSON B.A. History PEGASUS 1 ,• S.E.A. 4 ; Riding Club 4 ; Drama Club 1 ; Ski Club 1 ; The Frederick G. Livingood Memorial Award for Student Teaching. BIDDLE, KATHLEEN AGNEW B.A. English S.E.A. 2; Newman Club 1,2, Sec. -Treasurer 3; Tutorial Program 2, Pres. 3; Dean ' s List 2; Honorable Mention 1,3. BODDIE, MARY ELIZABETH B.A. English Alpha Omicron Pi, Secretary 4 ; Pan-Hel Treasurer 3; Dean ' s List 4; Honorable 3. BOGASH, BERTRAND E. B.A. English ELM, Reporter 1 ,2, Sports Editor 3,4; Chorus 1,2,3; Republican Club 1,2,3,4, President 3,4; Intramural Softball 1,2; Intramural Football 1,4. BRUCE, DAVID SHELTON B.A. International Studies Theta Chi, President 3; IFC 2,3,- Class President 1 ; SGA 1 ,2 ; Varsity Club; Varsity Basketball and Baseball 1,2,3,4; Soccer 4; Intramurals 1,2,3,4 ; Basketball M.V.P. 2,3; Eldridge L. Eliason Award 4; Honorable Mention 1; ODK 3,4; Who ' s Who 4. BRUMBAUGH, MARK BRODERICK BRUNNER, NANCY B.A. History Zeta Tau Alpha 1 ,2,3,4; S.E.A. 4 ; Chorus 2 ; Canterbury Club 1 ,2 ; Library Ass ' t 1 ,2,3; W.A. A. 1 ; PEGASUS 1 . CALLAHAN, MICHAEL TIMOTHY B.A. German Lambda Chi Alpha 1,2,3,4; Newman Club 1, 2,3,4; Intramural Basketball 1,2,3,4; Intramural Football, Softball, and Volleyball 2,3,4; Honorable Mention 1,4. COCOZIELLO, JOHN BARRY COLFELT, VIRGINIA ELIZABETH B.A. Political Science SGA 4; WRA 2,3,4, President 4; Chairman Judiciary Board 3; ELM 2 ; W.A.A. Vice Pres. 3, Basketball and Volleyball Intramurals 2,3; Honorary Varsity Volleyball 3; Honorable Mention 4 ; Who ' s Who 4. COOKE, LINDA ELIZABETH B.A. History Miscellany Business Manager 2,3; Honorable Mention 3,4. COPE, JOEL THEODORE B.A. Sociology DALY, LUCILLE BOGAN B.A. French Sailing Club; Transferred from the University of Texas. DAVIS, ELISE B.A. History Honorable Mention 3; Phi Alpha Theta 4 ; Transferred from St. Mary ' s College. DEIS, LINDA GAYLE B.A. Music Alpha Chi Omega, Corresponding Secretary 4 ; Wesley Club 1 ; Chorus 1 ,2,3,4; W.C. Women ' s Chorus 2; Director 4; Intramural volleyball 1,2,3,4. DENTON, DONALD LESTER B.A. History Lambda Chi Alpha; Vice President of Freshman, Sophomore and Junior Class. DOLCE, DANIEL DONALD B.A. History Drama and film critic 1,2,3,4; Honorable Mention 3. DOUKAS, JESSIE J. DREW, ROBERT BARRY ELLYSON, STEVE LUCIEN B.A. Psychology MRA Representative 1,2, Social Chairman 2; ELM, Sports 4; Psychology Club; Varsity Baseball 2,3,4; J.V. Basketball 1; Intramural Basketball 2,3,4; Intramural Football 1,2,3; Intramural Softball 3; All Elm Football 3; All Elm Basketball 2; First Place MRA Rally 3; Dean ' s List 3,4; Honorable Mention 3. ELY, THOMAS CHRISTOPHER B.A. Psy chology Lambda Chi Alpha, Treasurer 3; MRA 3,4, Secretary 4; PEGASUS Sports Editor 3; Varsity Club 3,4, Treasurer 4; Intramurals 1,2,3,4; Varsity Lacrosse 1 ,2,3,4; Varsity Soccer 4. ERWIN, CAROLYN KERNELL B.A. English WRA Judiciary Board 2; All Campus Judiciary Board 1; ELM Reporter 3; Afro-American Students Association, Communications Chair- man 2. FILIPI, FRANCIS RONALD B.A. Economics Wrestling 2,3,- Intramural Football 2,4; Intra- mural Volleyball 1; Dean ' s List 4 ; Honorable Mention 3. FRANCO, JOHN CHRISTOPHER B.A. Economics Theta Chi 1 ,2,3,4, Social Chairman .3,4; IFC 4 ; Lacrosse 1,2,3,4; Intramurals 1,2,3,4. FRANK, WILLIAN CHARLES GORGONE, FREDERICK AUGUST III B.A. Economics Phi Sigma Kappa 1,2,3,4; IFC 3, Vice President 4 ; SGA 2 ; Sky Diving Club 4 ; U.S. Judo Team of East Coast 3,4; Ski Club 1,2; Sailing Club 2,3,- Varsity Soccer and Basketball 1; Intramural Softball, Football, Basketball, and Volleyball 2,3,4; Honorable Mention 2,3,4; Scholarship from Washington College for Scholastic Ability. GREEN, DEBORAH B.A. Psychology HAINSWORTH, BECKY ANN B.A. Economics Zeta Tau Alpha 2,3,4, Treasurer 3, Vice Presi- dent 4,- Sophomore and Junior Class Secretary; WAA 1,2,3,4, President 4 ; W.C. Basketball 3; Intramural Basketball and Volleyball 1,2,3,4,- Dean ' s List 3,4; Honorable Mention 3. HALL, JOHN DAVID B.A. Psychology Theta Chi, Rush Chairman 3; IFC 4; SGA 3; Varsity Lacrosse 1,2,3,4; Varsity Basketball 2; Intramurals 1,2,3,4; Honorable Mention 3,4. HARBAUGH, BARBARA LOUISE B.A. Pyschology WRA 3; Dormitory sub-council 1; ELM 1,2,3,4; Wesley Club 1,2,3,4, Secretary 1,2,3; Band 3,- Psychology Club 2; Tutorial Program 3; Intramural Volleyball 1; Dean ' s List 2,3,4; Honorable Mention 2,3; Senior Women ' s Honor Society, Treasurer 4 ; Financial Aid Committee 4. FLOWERS, SARAH PARDEE FLYNN, DONNA GRAY FLYNN, JOSEPH CLARENCE FRANCIS, MARY HELEN B.A. Sociology Zeta Tau Alpha 2, Vice President 3, President 4; Pan-Hel 4; WRA 3; Women ' s Judicial Board 3; Student Affairs Committee; All Campus Judiciary Board 4. HARTLEY, STEPHEN JUDD B.A. Mathematics Intramural Softball 3; Dean ' s List 1,2,3,4; Proctor 4; Student Aid Committee 4 ; All Campus Judiciary 3. HAUCK, KAREN MARIE B.A. History Sailing Club; Transferred from Mitchell College. HEALD, THOMAS WRIGHT HEMMING, CHARLES ERNEST B.A. Drama Players 1,2,3,4,- Canterbury Club 1 ; Intramural Softball 1; Dean ' s List 4; Honorable Mention 2,3; Alpha Psi Omega 3 ; October 15. Moratori- um Committee. HERBST, PETER C. B.A. History SGA 4, Chairman Civic Affairs Committee,- ELM, Political Columnist 3, Editor-in-Chief 4; Demo- cratic Club 1,2; Washington Players 1,2; French Club 2; Alpha Phi Omega 3,4; Who ' s Who 4,- A Coordinator for the October 15th Vietnam Mor- atorium. HOLBROOK, CAROL VAETH HOLLAND, BROWDER ROBBINS II B.A. Sociology Kappa Alpha, President 3,4; IFC, representative 2 ; W.C. Players 1,2; Head Projectionist for Film Series 4; Varsity Soccer 2,- Dean ' s List 4 ; Honor- able Mention 2,3; ODK, Vice President 3,4. HONAN, LINDA B.A. English MISCELLANY 4; Homecoming Queen 4 ; Trans- ferred from Hood College. HOPKINS, PRISCILLA ELAINE B.A. Humanities Zeta Tau Alpha, Secretary 4 ; Miss W.C. Court 1969, W.C. Chorus 3,- Intramurals 2,3,4. HOPPE, CHRISTINA HOUSE, LOUIS BURNITE JR. B.A. Psychology Kappa Alpha Order; J.V. Basketball 1 ; Baseball 1; Soccer 2,3,- Intramurals: Basketball, Football, Softball 2,3,4,- Honorable Mention 3,4. HOWELL, ALISON JUDSON B.A. Drama Players 1,2,3,4. HUNTER, GAY CLAIRE B.A. Mathematics Alpha Omicron Pi; Class Vice President 4; Dor- mitory President 3; Judiciary Board 3; Chairman of Lower Court 3 ; ELM Business Manager 4 ; Student Affairs Committee 4,- Intramural s 2,3,4,- Honorable Mention 4 ; Senior Women ' s Honor Society, Secretary 4 ; Transferred from Towson State College. HUTCHINSON, MARY SOUTH B.A. History Alpha Omicron Pi 3,4; Sr. Representative Pan- Hel 4 ; Intramural Basketball 3,4; Intramural Volleyball 2,4; Transferred from Montgomery Jr. College. JOHNSON, PETER BRAMHAM B.A. Psychology KARPE, RICHARD DARRYL B.A. International Studies Gamma Delta Iota; MRA 4 ; Kent House Twelve,- Bridge Club, 3, Transferred from Shenandoah College. KEEN, RAYMOND WALLACE B.A. Philosophy Fencing Club 1,2,3; Sailing Club 3,4, Treasurer 3,4,- Kent House 1 2. KOEPKE, ROBERT CLAIR LANGRALL, ALISON KAY B.A. Humanities Alpha Omicron Pi ; Freshman Class Secretary,- Corus 2,3,4; Chorale 3; Honorable Mention 3. LEHMAN, ROBERT EUGENE JR. B.A. Economics Theta Chi 2,3,4, Secretary 3; ELM Sports writer 2,3,4,- Varsity Club 3,4, Secretary 4 ; Varsity: Soccer 1,2,3,4, Lacrosse 1,2,3,4; Intramurals 1 ,2,3,4,- Honorable Mention 4. LEONARD, WILLIAM OLIVER JR. B.A. English Literature Kappa Alpha Order, Vice President 2,3,4; IFC Secretary 4 ; Representative MRA 3 ; Intramurals 1 ,2,3,4; Varsity Cross Country 1 . LUHN, JEROME VICTOR B.A. Political Science Kappa Alpha 1,2,3,4; IFC Judiciary Board 4 ; SGA 2 ; Chorus 1,2; Spanish Club 1, President 2 ; Varsity Wrestling 1,2,3,4; Intramurals 1,2,3,4,- Lettered in Sports 2,3,4. LUXL, FRANK S. B.A. Mathematics Mgr. Coffee House 2,3,- Honorable Mention 1 ,3. MANNING, MARTHA ROSE B.A. Engligh WRA Judiciary Board 2,- S.E.A. 4 ; Dean ' s List 3; Honorable Mention 1,2. MANOLIS, EVELYN B.A. History ELM Associate News Editor 3,4; S.E.A. 4; Tu- torial Program 2,3; Big Sister Program 2,3; Hon- orable Mention 1 . MARION, FRANK JAMES B.A. Economics Theta Chi, Treasur er 4; Varsity Club 3,4, Vice President 4 ; Basketball 1,2, Captain 3,4; Lacross 2,4; MVP Basketball 2. MARSHALL, APRIL ANN B.A. English MARTIN, LARRY CLIFFORD B.A. History Theta Chi, Treasurer 2; IFC 2,3; MRA 1 ; Varsity Club 3,4, President 4; Varsity Basketball 1 ,2,3,4; Varsity Lacrosse 2,3,4; Intramural Volleyball 1,2,3,4; Intramural Softball 1,2,3,4; Intramural Football 2; Referee 1,2,3,4. MARYOTE, PETER SILSBY B.A. History Kappa Alpha 3,4, Parliamentarian 3,4; IFC 3,4; SGA 2,3; Newman Club 1,2,3; Spanish Club 1,2; S.E.A. 1; Intramural Basketball 3; Volley- ball 3,4; Softball 3; Honorable Mention 2,3. McAVOY, CATHERINE LOUISE B.A. English Alpha Omicron Pi; Pan-Hel Representative 1,2; Class Treasurer 2,3; Women ' s Chorus 2; Riding Club 1,4; Hockey 1; Intramural Volleyball and Basketball 1,2,3,4; Honorary Varsity Hockey Team 1 . Mcdonald, harold wood jr. B.A. English ELM; Chorus and Chorale,- Crew Club; Intramu- ral football and baseball; Transferred from the U.S. Naval Academy. McKAY, EDWARD B. B.A. Mathematics MRA 2 ; Honorable Mention 3,4; Senior Resi- dence Proctor 4 ; Dining Hall Coordinator 3. McMULLAN, MICHAEL RAE MILLER, JOHN HODGMAN MILLHOUSE, SYLVIA ANN B.A. Psychology Alpha Omicron Pi, Rush Chairman 4; Pan-Hel 4 ; Class Treasurer 1 ; WRA 1 , Treasurer 3; Dormito- ry President 1; Homecoming Court 1; Honorable Mention 3,4. MONIOT, SARA HAMILL B.A. International Studies Alpha Chi Omega 2,3,4, 2nd Vice President 3,4; Class Secretary 4; WRA Upper Court 4; ELM Photographer 2; Newman Club 2,3,4; Ski Club 2; Wrestling Widows 3,4; Volleyball and Basketball Intramurals 2,3,4; Dean ' s List 4; Hon- orable Mention 3; Transferred from Manhattan- vi He College. MOORE, BARBARA ANN B.A. Psychology Alpha Chi Omega; Riding Club 1 ; Ski Club 1 ; Big Sister Program 2,3; Hockey (varsity and in- tramural) 1,2; Honorable Mention 4; Cheerlead- ing 2,3. MUELLER, LINDA CHRISTINE B.A. Psychology Judiciary Board, Upper Court 4; Chorus 1,2,3; European Chorus Tour 3; Dean ' s List 3,4; Psychology Assistant 4. MUELLER, JAMES P. B.A. Psychology Lambda Chi Alpha; Newman Club 1 ,2,3,4; Var- sity Club,- Intramurals 1,2,3,4; Varsity, Lacrosse 2,3,4. MURPHY, ROBERT TEMPLE B.A. Mathematics Kent House 1 2 4, President 4; Painting with W. Redding. NAYLOR, PAUL HENRY B.S. Chemistry ELM 2,3; Republican Club 1 ,2,3; Bridge Club 3; Intramural Softball, Basketball, and Volleyball 1 ,2,3,4; Dean ' s List 3,4; Honorable Mention 1 ,2. NICHOLOS, JOSEPH McCOMB JR. OGILVY, STEPHEN H ENTER JR. B.A. Psychology Theta Chi; Chorus 1 ,2,3; Soccer Varsity 1 ,2,3; Tennis Varsity 3,4; Intramural Basketball 1 ,2,3,4; Honorable Mention 2,3. OSBORN, BARBARA LEIGHTON B.A. English Literature SGA 1, Parliamentarian 2, Evaluation Commit- tee Chairman 3; Residence Assistant 3,4; William James Forum Vice President 3,4; Demo- cratic Club Secretary 2; Intramural Volleyball 1; Honorable Mention 2,3; Senior Women ' s Honor Society President 4; Who ' s Who Among Stu- dents In American Colleges and Universities 4; Student Affairs Committee 3; Library Commit- tee 2. PAGLIUGHI, DAVID JAMES PETTIT, ETHEL JUNE B.A. History Alpha Chi Omega 2,3,4, Scholarship Chairman, Recording Secretary 4,- Pan-Hel 2; Pegasus 3; Dean ' s List 2,3; Honorable Mention 2. SCHIFFER, GEORGE HENRY II B.A. Drama MRA 1; Intramural Softball, All Stones 2,3,4; Honorable Mention 4. SEZNEC, JEAN-FRANCOIS B.A. International Studies Dean ' s List 2; Honorable Mention 3; Transferred from Paris. PHINNEY, LINDA SUSAN B.A. Sociology Zeta Tau Alpha 1 ,2,3, Secretary 4 ; IFC 2,3,4, President 4 ; Ski Club 1 ,2 ; WAA 3,4; Intramurals 1 ,2,3; Cheerleader 1 ,2,3, Captain 3; Miss Wash- ington College Court 3; Residence Assistant 3,4. POLVINALE, THOMAS JOSEPH B.A. Economics Lambda Chi Alpha; Varsity Basketball 1,2,3,4; Varsity Track 3,4. RENOFF, CYNTHIA HOUGHTON B.A. Psychology President of Queen Anne ' s House 4 ; WRA 4 ; Pegasus 4 ; Psychology Club 2; Big Sister Club; WAA 2,3,4; Intramural Volleyball and Basket- ball 2,3,4; Dean ' s List 4; Honorable Mention 3; Transferred from Roanoke College. SHREWSBURY, MARTHA B. B.A. English Literature S.E.A. 4; Women ' s Chorus 2; Plays: The Miser 2, Hotel Paradiso 3, Oh What A Lovely War 2. SKELOS, DEAN GEORGE B.A. History Phi Sigma Kappa Social Member,- SGA 1,2, President 4; Chorus 1,2,3; Intramural Football and Baseball 1,2,3,4; Honorable Mention 4; Who ' s Who 4. SPIVEY, COLLEEN FRANCES B.S. Biology Zeta Tau Alpha; SGA 1 ,2,3, Vice President 4; WRA Judiciary Board 2,3, Prosecurtor 3; All Campus Judiciary Board 3,4; Newman Club 3,4; S.E.A. Secretary-Treasurer 3, member 4; Dean ' s List 3; Honorable Mention 1 ,2,3,4; Senior Women ' s Honor Society 4; Who ' s Who. SNYDER, JOHN SANFORD RICE, EILEEN MARY B.A. History President, Carolina House 4; ELM Reporter 4; S.E.A. 2; Newman Club 2,3,4; Women ' s Chorus 2; Spanish Club 2; Riding Club 4; Intramurals 2, 3; Transferred from Salisbury State College. ROGERS, DONALD WAYNE B.A. History Band 4; Wesley Club 1 ,2,3, President 2; Debate Club 1,3; Phi Alpha Theta 3,4 ; Intramural Soft- ball 2,3,4; Dean ' s List 1,2,3,4; Who ' s Who 4,- Exchange Student to University of Warwick 3. ROSEWELL, ROSEMARY B.A. Sociology Newman Club 1 ,2,3,4; Riding Club 1 A; Honor- able Mention 1; Library Assistant 1,2,3,4. SANTANIELLO, PAULA MARIE SCHEIB, JEFFREY STEPHEN STAFFORD, CYNTHIS ELLEN B.A. Sociology Alpha Omicron Pi; SGA 1 ; Women ' s Chorus 2; Intramurals 1,2,4; Homecoming Court 4 ; Honorable Mention 2,3; All College Advisory Committee 4. SUTTON, EUGENE WILSON THOMPSON, DAVID LEE B.S. Biology Players 4; Crew Club 3 ; Intramurals 2,3,4; Var- sity Basketball and Baseball 1; Honorable Men- tion 2,3,4. THOMPSON, STEVEN E. THOMPSON, WILLIAM LEWIS B.A. English Miscellany 4. TOBIN, LAURA LYNNE B.A. Sociology Zeta Tau Alpha 2,3, Vice President 4; Pan-Hel 3 ; SGA Assembly Committee 3: WRA Judiciary Board 3,4; Pegasus 1 ,2,3; WAA 4; Homecoming Court 2,3,4; Washington Ball 3,4; Cheerleader 1,2. TUCKER, JOHN RICHARD B.A. Mathematics MISCELLANY; Debate Society: Varsity Club; Varsity Track 1,2,3, lettered; Varsity Cross Country, lettered; Intramural Basketball; Dean ' s List 1; Honorable Mention 2. VALLIANT, PRISCILLA LOU B.A. Psychology Alpha Chi Omega, Rush Chairman 3, President 4: Pan-Hel 3,4; WRA 2,3; WAA 3,4,- Cheer- leader 2,3,4; Intramural Volleyball and Basket- ball 2,3,4; Two year certificate for cheerlead- ing ; Homecoming court 2; Honorable Mention 3. VARON, LARRY ELIOT B.S. Chemistry SGA Senator 4; ELM Reporter 3,4; Chorus 3,4; College Players 1; Band 3; Varsity Crew 2; Hon- orable Mention 4. VERI, FRANK WALTER B.A. Economics ELM Sports Writer,- Varsity Club; Varsity Lacrosse 3,4; Varsity Wrestling 3,4, Captain 3,4; Varsity Letter 3,4; Transferred from Ursinus College. WETTLAUFER, PETER B.A. English Phi Sigma Kappa, Vice President 3; Varsity Lacrosse 2,3; Intramurals 2,3,4. WILDE, TAYLOR LEE B.A. English Theta Chi 1 ,2,3, Vice President 4; IFC Treasurer 4; Varsity Club; Varsity Lacrosse 1,2,3,4; Tri- Captain Lacrosse 4. WILLS, LINDS ALISON B.A. History Alpha Chi Omega 1,2,3,4; SEA Treasurer-Secre- tary 4 ; WAA Secretary 3; Volleyball Intramurals 1,2,3,4; Basketball Intramurals 2,3. WOODCOCK, HAROLD WILLIAM JR. B.A. English Phi Sigma Kappa 2,3,4; Varsity Club; Varsity Soccer 1,2,3; Varsity Tennis 1,3,4; Intramural 1,2,3,4; Senior Class Auctioneer. WORTECK, EDWARD JOSEPH WALKER, JEAN HAYS B.A. History ELM Associate News Editor 4; Chorus 1,2,3,4; Chorale 2,3; SEA President 4 ; Debate Club 1 , Wesley Club; W.C. Players 2 ; WAA 1 ,2; Honorable Mention 1 ,2,3,4,- Phi Alpha Theta,- Senior Women ' s Honor Society,- Library Com- mittee 3; Academic Council 3; Committee on Admissions Academic Standing 4. WALKER, JOHN VAN B.A. History SGA 3 ; MRA 2 ; ELM 3,4 ; Washington Players 2; Honorable Mention 2,3; Omicron Delta Kappa 3,4; Warwick Exchange 4. WASEM, PENELOPE BALDWIN B.S. Biology ELM Reporter; Resident Assistant 4 ; Transferred from Hartford College for Women. WATSON, CATHERINE BASS B.A. Sociology WEIMEISTER, CLINTON GEORGE grand patrons mr. and mrs. edward j. deasy mr. and mrs. j. edward bollinger mr. paul newman mr. and mrs. John irving shaw mr. and mrs. william sandkuhler, jr. mr. and mrs. thomas f. moffitt, jr. mr. and mrs. paul v. renoff mr. and mrs. bruce w. rohrbacher patrons dr. and mrs. John m. snyder mr. and mrs. william w. wilde mr. and mrs. c. rodney wentzell mr. and mrs. david g. bress dr. and mrs. charles miller horan dr. and mrs. John j. tansey mr. and mrs. reinhard I. korgen mr. and mrs. alfred santaniello mr. and mrs. carl d. anderson mr. and mrs. h. i. goslie dr. and mrs. charles w. beaven mr. and mrs. william g. urspruch mr. and mrs. r. kirby park, jr. mr. and mrs. harrison hoffman It. col. and mrs. bailey b. smith dr. and mrs. lester kiefer dr. and mrs. otto lehmann mr. and mrs. charles p. isherwood mr. and mrs. I. remsen skidmore, jr. mr. and mrs. parker cummings wiseman mr. and mrs. charles e. hogg mr. and mrs. raymond c. keen mr. and mrs. robert h. deis rev. and mrs. a. benjamin narbeth mr. John wills mr. and mrs. edward a. murray mrs. ruth r. merritt mr. and mrs. John nicholis corff mr. and mrs. nicholas manolis mr. and mrs. s. jackson wommack, i r - capt. and mrs. robert b. bergner mr. and mrs. thomas Stevenson cdr. richard harmon wilson mr. and mrs. james j. anderson mr. and mrs. arthur r. teasdale mr. and mrs. robert n. lucke, sr. mr. and mrs. louis j. pagliughi mr. arthur marnel davies dr. and mrs. james n. mc cosh, jr. mrs. alice m. tucker mr. and mrs. John c. collins mr. and mrs. John francis king donors mr. and mrs. william reynolds innis brig. gen. and mrs. howard h. cooksey mr. and mrs. Joseph e. waltz mr. and mrs. John a. shepherd mr. and mrs. frank c. luxl mr. and mrs. r. w. cooper mr. daniel w. ingersall mr. and mrs. albert grzech mr. and mrs. albert m. pichitino mr. and mrs. howard j. carew dr. and mrs. fames edmund toher mr. and mrs. george weimeister mr. and mrs. Sidney b. hutton, jr. mr. and mrs. nathan cox, sr. mr. fames a. hooper, jr. dr. and mrs. philip a hoover mr. and mrs. herbert w. jones mr. john I. mueller, jr. mr. and mrs. allan g. anderson mr. and mrs. John c. dye mr. and mrs. francis nash iglehart, jr. mr. and mrs. harry c. george mr. and mrs. michael albert alteri mr. and mrs. harry e. murphy mr. and mrs. william c. hainsworth mr. and mrs. charles t. dean col. and mrs. f letcher f. bernedorff mr. and mrs. wesley I. dickson mr. and mrs. william a mitchell, |r. mr. and mrs. john lewis cann mr. and mrs. onnie lattu mr. and mrs. james k. guthrie mr. and mrs. waiter s. frank mr. and mrs. john frederick copeland mr. and mrs. vincent I. ruwet mr. and mrs. richard c. hopkins mr. and mrs. leonard e. eisenberg mr. and mrs. j. grafton osborn mr. and mrs. andrew c. pierne mr. and mrs. norman demick mrs. florence j. chekemain mr. john b. phi I lips, jr. mr. and mrs. Joseph s. glider mr. and mrs. russell h. Crawford mr. and mrs. philip kahn, jr. mr. and mrs. duncan douglas chalmers mr. and mrs. james b. murphy mr. and mrs. arthur bernard walsh, jr. mr. and mrs. kalman nathan isaacs mr. and mrs. hilton jayne mr. and mrs. george w. nickel, jr. col. and mrs. t.v. koepke mrs. anna p. hall mr. and mrs. lynn edwin eldridge mr. and mrs. charles k. green mr. and mrs. edward j. worteck, sr. mr. and mrs. william woznuk mr. and mrs. c harl es e. ir by dr. wilson dougherty mr. and mrs. donald w. gray mr. page thompson mr. and mrs. wilson m. roach mr. and mrs. edward j. arnold ar. and mrs. waiter . mueller mrs. margaret f. maryott mr. and mrs. robert j. leonhardt mrs. mary griffen miller mr. and mrs. leon puritz mr. and mrs. wi Hard w. tin dstro m ir. and mrs. Joseph j. heimbach mr. and mrs. g. h. sc hiffer mr. and mrs. gerhard filipi ... : ' •tW ' H; tmm m rv m • 1 i t i - j • VJ s V 1 ■rtcaiaif  m+. m ! frrf, fe : 1 I the end Printed By BRADBURY, SAYLES, O ' NEILL-PARAGON College and Independent School Affiliate of Paragon Press, In wmmm •■ ■ ■■■■•■■■•■■V.M-C llii •:•:•:•:■:■ :•:•:.:-:-:-:.:.; ■ «■:•:■:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:■: :■%%« -•-•-■-■-■-■J avaOl . 88 ■:■:•:•!■;•;•!■: mmm vK-SS! Kffl«v?-CvX-X DOC ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ • • ■ i P AJt - - - ■■■•■• LOjnrii i ■■■■■■«  _M ■ ■ ■ ■ ■■■■He ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ a • ■■■■■• itiii .■.■jnyLOS ■s cv.v. ' .v.v.ww.v, Cv.v. ' .w.w.v.w. :■ ■ ■_■■_■■ ■■■■■■■•■ .■ ■ o ■■■«■■■■•■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ •_■ •«■■■■■•■•■ ■ ■ ■■a ■ ■■•■•■••• ■ ■ -■_■_■ ■_ _• • • ■ ■ ■ a a a a !.n:- -.-.:«v. •11 • • • ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ • ■ •■ • ■ ■ ■ ■ • ■ • • ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ w£ vX;X;X;X;X%vX;X-i


Suggestions in the Washington College - Pegasus Yearbook (Chestertown, MD) collection:

Washington College - Pegasus Yearbook (Chestertown, MD) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

Washington College - Pegasus Yearbook (Chestertown, MD) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Washington College - Pegasus Yearbook (Chestertown, MD) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Washington College - Pegasus Yearbook (Chestertown, MD) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Washington College - Pegasus Yearbook (Chestertown, MD) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972

Washington College - Pegasus Yearbook (Chestertown, MD) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973


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