West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV)

 - Class of 1971

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West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) online collection, 1971 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 296 of the 1971 volume:

Monticola West Virginia University vol. LXV Published bv the students of West Vir- ginia University as a publication inde- pendent of any University financing or regulations. Morgantown, West Virginia ■ -!«rf  , '  -- i:i,v f5 z ' Tab e of Contents Administration 60 Organizations Honoraries 80 Greeks 104 Sports 160 Roya ty 198 Seniors 206 Advertisements 262 Staff James J. Roop Editor P. Clinton Winter Business Manager Dottie DeMark Organizations Rohcn S. Glock Greeks Alan S. Verstein Sports James J. Roop L. Thomas Nazzaro John W. Collins Royalty Paul L. Wilson Seniors David A. Anderson David L. Smith Hope Hill Photographers Frederick Herman Special Assistant 4 i 10 h- 7S - z.¥Sdn 12 13 14 A 15 16 17 i :: 7:m m 18 19 20 21 22 23 hALSt NKt hmm 24 25 26 • J « 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 Appalachia and the Third World Keith Dix In trying to understand the overwhelming problems facing Appalachia today I have found it useful to th ink of the region in much the same way that econo- mists see the underdeveloped nations of the world. They refer to the poorer, non-socialist nations as the Third World , and they acknowledge that Third World nations generally are getting poorer while the industriahzed nations are getting richer— foreign aid, international development loans and technical assist- ance notwithstanding. Although Appalachia shares a common history, language and political system with metropolitan America, its economic relationship to major industrial and financial centers of the country is quite similar to the exploitative economic relationship between Third World and Western industriahzed na- tions. The analogy, therefore, can be helpful both as an explanation of the rich-land-poor-people con- tradiction within the region and as an aid to Appala- chins in forming goals and strategies for the future. Basic Economic Structure Many of the Third World countries are endowed with great natural wealth, espe- cially raw materials for heavy industry, so that their economies tend to be concentrated in the production of such products as copper, tin, petroleum, rare metals, or food and fiber. This structural dependency on in- dustrial inputs, and the trading relations which evolve from it are perhaps the most important characteristics of Third World economies. United Nations ' specialists have observed that the structure of trade of under- developed countries obliges them to export mainly pri- mary products and import mainly manufactured goods. And so it is with Appalachia— at least heartland Ap- palachia, where economic activity has been concen- trated in coal production for decades. The Appala- chian Regional Commission (ARC) reports that in the 60-county area they call Central Appalachia 162 of the 312 firms employing 50 or more workers are coal mining estabUshments. In West Virginia (the only state which lies wholly within ARC ' s definition of Appa- lachia ) coal mining and coal-based chemical produc- tion ar e the two most important industries. In 1965, the production of coal, petroleum, natural gas and electrical power accounted for 18.4 percent of the total value of West Virginia ' s total economic output; pro- duction of chemicals and primary metals accounted for another 25.6 percent. (Estimates of future trends in- dicate that production of mineral fuels and electrical power will grow in importance, accounting for 20.4 percent of output in 1975). As in the Third World, most of the resources are exported to industrialized re- gions where they arc converted into finished manufac- tured goods. West Virginia exports slightly over 85 percent of its coal (much of the remainder leaves the state in the form of electrical power or industrial chemicals), 82 percent of its chemical output, and 92 percent of its primary metals. The American industrial and commercial machine feeds on raw materials from Appalachia as surely as it does on copper from Chile, tin from Bolivia and coffee from Brazil. This kind of one crop economy which has had such devastating impact on Third World countries in times of crop failure, shifts in world demand or changes in industrial technology, has also subjected Appalachia to economic disaster. No better illustration of this can be found than the effect which the mecha- nization of the coal mines had on the region. In West Virginia alone the number of mining jobs dropped from 131,700 in 1948 to 45,000 in 1968 with a resulting shock to the state ' s economy that could be compared to the national impact of the Great Depression in the 1930 ' s. Nearly 20 percent of all nonfarm jobs in the private sector were eliminated when the mines were mechanized. But that is not the only handicap inflicted on a resource-based economic region or nation. In- come and employment levels which fluctuate with pe- riodi c business cycles in developed Western nations tend to be amplified in the Third World countries, so that job levels turn down sooner, go down farther and stay down longer in those countries which are suffering already from low incomes and high unemployment. It is generally agreed that Appalachia ' s economic rela- tionship to the rest of the nation imposes on it a sim- ilar hardship- when the nation sneezes, Appalachia gets pneumonia. Absentee Ownership. Foreign ownership and control of resource supplies, processing facilities and manufac- turing plants is an increasingly important phenomenon in the Third World. It is also a hard fact of economic life in Appalachia that much of the region ' s land, tim- ber, coal, natural gas and other resources, plus its cor- porate investments, are absentee owned. The coal in- dustry is dominated by a few large firms with out-of- state ownership and, recently, has come under the con- trol of some of the same international petroleum cor- porations which exploit the subterranean wealth of the Third World. For example. Consolidation Coal Com- pany, the region ' s largest producer, is wholly owned by Continental Oil Company (which in turn is part of the Rockefeller and Mellon financial empires). Island Creek Coal Company, second in regional output, is now owned by the California-based Occidental Petroleum Corpo- ration, and Eastern Associated, third in output, is a wholly owned subsidiary of a Boston holding company called Eastern Gas and Fuel Associates. About 10 per- cent of Appalachian coal is mined in the .so-called cap- tive mines owned by US Steel, Bethlehem Steel and other national steel firms. Absentee ownership also char- acterizes regional manufacturing; the major share of West Virginia ' s biggest industry— chemicals-is owned 34 and operated by such internalional corporate giants as Union Carbide. DuPont and Monsanto. Electric power generation, rail transportation (the railroads also own much of the region ' s coal lands) and even highway con- struction are largely under the ownership of out-of-state corporations. Absentee ownership in Appalachia is not. in itself, a bad thing but we have convincing evidence that the large corporations by virtue of their wealth and claims to ownership of the region ' s resources possess what Kwame Nkrumah called power without responsi- bility . In the search for energy fuels and resources at the cheapest possible price many hardships have been inflicted on Appalachian workers down through the years, political institutions have been dominated by outside interests, near ecological disaster threatens the region and much of the natural wealth of the moun- tains has flowed to the nation ' s flnancial centers rather than being used for mountain schools, hospitals and roads. Of course, not all of the ec onomic activity con- tributing to such high social costs in the region are car- ried on by absentee corporations. Some of it we do ourselves. (I know of a man in Wise County, Virginia who could no longer support his family on the small apple orchard he owned so he leased his land to a Ki- cal coal operator. For an income he took a job oper- ating a bulldozer ... he is now hired to strip his own farm!) But all of this economic activity, which gener- ates so much of the region ' s economic momentum, is initiated with the same impersonal forces of a profit system that seeks out labor and raw materials wher- ever they are available, at the lowest cost to the corpo- ration. People of the Third World and Appalachia, therefore, have a common enemy. The Flow of Capital It has been estimated that the economic relationship between the Third World and the developed nations annually drains three times as much capital from the poorer nations than it puts back. (See Pierre Jalee ' s The Third HorUl in the World Economy.) Unfortunately we do not have good overall statistics or research studies to show whether Appa- lachia is exploited in the same magnitude but it is gen- erally assumed that ct)al companies, chemical firms, and other absentee-owned industries repatriate to their stockholders and home offices more in profits and in- terest than they put back into new regional insestment. The Appalachian Regional Commission recently pub- lished a study of financial flows in Central Appalachia (where the region ' s lowest incomes and highest unemployment exist) which strongly supports this as- sumption. Their findings relating to both outflow and inflow of capital are worth considering: first, ARC found that corporations which mined the coal and owned the factories accumulated S260 million in re- tained earnings after taxes; second, the .XRC siud re- ported that The Area exports substantial amounts of (bank) funds for in estment to other parts of the coun- try. In 1967. the estimated gross amount of capi- tal exported was SI09; the net outflow, making allowance for capital invested in the area from (Uilside, was S54.I millii n. And. third, the inflow of capital tended to perpetuate the same economic s stem. Capital in esiment b outside sources in the area goes largely into coal mining. Since the capital inxestment per worker is 1.7 times as high in mining as in other l pes of industry, this heavy investment means that although demand is created for higher le els of skill, there are fewer jobs per insesied dollar. A further relative dis- advantage of this type of investment is ih.it it pri)longs the area ' s overdependence on coal. The success i l ' the Appalachian Regional Commis- sion ' s plan to encourage economic growth in the region by spending large sums of f-ederal monies for highway construction (SO percent of the initial appropriation), airport improvement, vocational schools, health facil- ities and water pollution control is subject to question. The ARC planners claim that during the first live 35 years of the program, 1,149 new employers have lo- cated in the region and 200,335 new jobs have been created. While this sounds impressive it should be re- membered that the regional expansion came at a time of unprecedented national prosperity and may not re- flect fundamental improvements in the local economy. Furthermore, only 62 of the new Appalachian plant lo- cations and only 10,459 of the new jobs were reported in West Virginia. Of these 62 new employers, 22 were new coal mines and 1 1 were in other extractive industries such as petroleum refining, electrical power, chemicals, and wood products. According to ARC data, only 28 new manufacturing plants (with 50 or more employees) came to the state between 1965 and 1969. Ten of these plants were in the apparel and tex- tile industry which is traditionally a low-wage, non- union industry employing mostly women. Widening Income Gap. Comparing rich and poor countries, the United Nations has recorded that with regard to per capita production, the gap between the two groups of countries with market economies has grown wider, not only in absolute value . . . but also in relative value. It is an alarming fact that the gap be- tween at least heartland Appalachia incomes and the national average has also widened in the past 20 years. The West Virginia per capita income, and probably that to most of Appalachia, is lower today, relative to the rest of the nation, than it was at the end of World War II. In 1948. per capita income in West Virginia stood at 78.2 percent of the national average. It fluc- tuated during the 1950 s, reaching as high as 78.7 per- cent of the national prosperity. The gap has been grow- ing larger. In 1969, per capita income in the U.S. was $3,687 and in West Virginia it was $2,603 or 70.6 percent of the national average. An important measure of economic growth (or lack of it) in a region in an open national market economy is population change. People usually leave an area out of economic necessity; when all hope for economic growth disappears, they are forced to migrate where they think survival is possible. The 1970 census data show that pop- ulation continued to decline in heartland Appalachia between 1960 and 1970. In fact, the loss for West Vir- ginia was greater in the decade just past than it was be- tween 1950 and 1960. Hundreds of thousands of Ap- palachians have migrated to metropolitan areas to seek jobs (often unsuccessfully) but most of the migration has been to cities outside the region. Growth in Appalachia ' s metropolitan areas is estimated to be one-third the growth of all U.S. metropolitan areas and in Kentucky and West Virginia urban areas have actually lost popu- lation. For example, early census returns show that the population of Charleston, West Virginia, declined by 1 1 percent between 1960 and 1970. Conclusion: I have not been saying that Appalachia is part of the Third World. But the economic relation- ships discussed here do convince me that the mountain region with its vast natural wealth is tied to metropoh- tan America in many of the same ways that countries in Latin America, Africa, Asia, and the Middle East are tied to the advanced capitalist nations. If this is true, then it seems to me that the word imperialism is a reasonable term to use in describing both sets of relationships. Acknowledging the similarities between Appalachia and the Third World may well be the first step toward a regional consciousness of our plight and a cooperative movement for breaking the ties that have bound us to others. The French economist, Pierre Jalee, (The Pillage of the Third World) summarized the essential nature of modern imperialism at the same time that he gave hope to the people of the Third World: 36 Imperialism exploits the subierranean wealth of the countries which it dominates because its in- dustries require these materials; but. for this very reason, the fhird W orld has an ace up its sleeve; its hand is on the tap controlling an essential flow, and thus it enjovs a position of strength in one respect which must not be underestimated in a dynamic and changing world. If mv analogv holds; if urban corporate America needs Appalachian energy, fuel supplies, chemicals and other resources as much as it needs resources from the Third World, the people of the mountain region also have their hand in the tap controlling an essential flow. And to overlook that advantage in planning for future so- cial change in the region will doom such planning to the scrapheap of past and present unsuccessful reforms. f r 37 Pollution: Environmental Wool Gathering Hunter P. McCartney Man lives in a guppv tank. In fact, mankind can be considered a race of intelligent guppies that must act as the policing agent for its own guppy tank. Guppies in a home aquarium have a benevolent overseer who keeps their surroundings clean and healthy— with snails, plants, and a filter-but we hu- man guppies apparently cannot look toward such ex- ternal contributions to our ecological system. Unlike the aquarium, however, our planet ' s closed system has built-in cleaning agents— such as wind and water currents-which we are rapidly saturating and rendering ineffective as cleaners of our environment. We are fouling the glass wool in our filter system, as it were, and there appears no new supply of filter mate- rial available. But WVU ' s president, James G. Harlow— on Decem- ber 1, 1970— revealed the names of a council he ap- pointed to swing WVU more strongly into the fight to prevent destruction of the earth ' s glass wool supply. Consisting of predominantly technically educated men, this council will presumably help remedy the problems that technically educated men have been most respon- sible for bringing to the earth. On December 2, on the national level, a Hoosier with the unlikely name of Ruckelshaus was added to the Washington bureaucratic structure— as head of something called the Environmental Protection Agency— to serve as the chief watchdog guppy in our wool-short human guppy tank. Then, on December 3, in a stunning reversal of sen- timent, the U.S. Senate voted 52-41 to deny funds for further development of the supersonic transport (SST), declaring that Today the environmental issue has come of age. In other words, some members of our society have finally recognized that the term pollution can no longer be shrugged off as a catchword used to label anything thought to be undesirable— whether applied to air, water, heat, noise, and finally, the cause of it all, people— without coming to grips with the essential spe- cifics of the problem. Unquestionably, organizations— whether established on the federal, regional, or university levels— will not solve our environmental problems unless they deal with specifics. Our society needs a jury to tell us spe- cifically what is good for us and what is bad for us. not 38 Clean Air Qecals It should be easily demonstrable, moreoscr. thai ar- tificial playing surfaces on sports fields efVectively kill hundreds of acres of our best land (and I have night- mares when I think of the next marketing push of the manufacturers of this covering lawns for lazy house- holders), denying life to countless beetles, earthworms, and other former occupants of the space now dead. Robins that were formerly happy tenants of these areas are now forced into more violent competition with their fellows. The grass that once contributed its salutary etl ' ects to our atmosphere is now gone. And for what?? For a guarantee that the playing field will be in a constant state of good repair, even though we use it no more than five percent of the time. as individuals but as a race and not a race but as members of the animal kingdom and not as members of the animal kingdom only but as life processes within this oversized guppy tank of which we are only a small part. For example, such a jury must know that, when I light my pipe and smoke it for my individual pleasure. I waste oxvgen available to all life, I add to the air that all life must consume trillions of micron-sized par- ticles, and I cost the world the existence of hundreds of amoebae and paramecia. and an orchid. I ha e ben- efited neither myself nor the life pool by my action. 39 Is it not obvious that what is true in a river is also true in the earth ' s total atmosphere? Ecologists speak glibly of dissolved oxygen (which they call DO) and bi- ological oxygen demand (which they shorten to BOD) in a stream, and thev know that when BOD exceeds DO (that is, when the oxygen account is overdrawn), certain species of aquatic life cannot exist; they either leave the affected parts of the stream or die. Yet these same ecologists seem not to realize that if BOD ex- ceeds DO in a stream, then BOD can exceed DO in our atmosphere— especially if we continue, on the one hand, to destroy the manufacturers of oxygen and, on the other, to make prodigal demands on the available oxygen by useless forms of combustion. Our environmental problems can be solved only on an individual level and, to use another metaphor, we must realize that the earth and its resources constitute a huge bank account into which some living species deposit and some withdraw, into which some men de- posit and some withdraw. As intelligent guppies, we must, individually, resolve that, if we can ' t deposit, then we must keep our withdraws to a bare minimum so that we can delay that inevitable entry, ACCOUNT OVERDRAWN. 40 41 A Republican Looks at Nixon David G. Williams Since the American Presidency is critical to concerns ranging from peace in the world to efficient bureau- cratic administration, it is important to assess the ac- tions and effect of any President. But how does one evaluate a President? Partisan discussions are too sub- jective and colored by other concerns. The powers and responsibilities specifically enumerated in Article II of the Constitution are certainly too limited as categories for judgment. Likewise it is difficult to judge a Presi- dent ' s impact on substantive policy issues; the time perspective and data are limited, and people disagree widely on policy preferences. One useful way to assess a President is to posit the variety of formal and informal roles he is expected to perform. This approach will tend to put the assessment in the larger time perspective, allow some comments on substantive policy developments, and present a general expectation against which performance can be evaluated. These roles are simultaneous, not mutually exclusive, and often conflicting; even so, the President is expected to perform in all of them. In the following, various Presidential roles are presented and the performance of President Nixon is briefly— and subjectively— assessed in each role. As national symbol and head of state. President Nixon has been limited by the electoral plurality and the divisive nature of the country in the first years of his P residency. At the same time, however, he has ten- ded to exacerbate this disunity— his inaugural speech aside. Certainly, Presidential and Vice Presidential ac- tions in the 1970 mid-term elections served to further divide rather than unify the country. It is noteworthy that in the first part of his term Nixon did appear to have defused some important divisive issues and in- creased public confidence in the Presidency as national leader. As for most Presidents, these honeymot)n months did not last long and for a good part of the country by the mid-term elections Nixon was just Pres- ident and not a national symbol of identification. In the role of author and director of foreign and in- ternational affairs. President Nixon has been very ac- tive. The President began to defuse the Vietnam issue in the early part of his term but encountered vigorous dissension over the invasion into Cambodia and re- newed but limited actions in North Vietnam. Settle- ment of the Vietnam issue remains critical. While peace talks have made little advancement. Vietnam- ization of the war and withdrawal of troops have found wide public support and appear to have some success. Somewhat of a speciahst in foreign and inter- national affairs, Nixon has found limited success in the arms limitation talks and Mid-East peace propcsals. The President plays an important role as decision- maker defining and achieving national goals. President Nixon has generally maintained a low advocative pro- file being content to move in a few areas and work somewhat conservatively within present authorization and policy. Related to this is the role of initiator and promoter of programs and legislation. On this score the Nixon Administration has been quite unsuccessful in achieving important new programs. Some new depar- tures have been suggested in revenue sharing, welfare, and some other areas, but few programs have received Congressional authorization. In defining and achieving national goals, the President is a powerful leader of public opinion. Through extensive use of the national news media and active participation in the campaign, Nixon has been somewhat successful in influencing opinions on Vietnam, Cambodia, inflafion, and law and order. If the mid-term campaign is any measure, however, the President has not been overly successful in this effort. As leader of a political party. Nixon has been more active than most Presidents. He has participated exten- sively in the mid-term elections, although not too suc- cessfully. Probably a result of being a minority Presi- dent, Nixon has been very closely concerned with party matters and building a political coalition. This is particularly apparent in what some term the Southern strategy and the nominations to the Supreme Court. A major difficulty facing the Nixon Pr esidency is the somewhat unsuccessful performance as guardian main- taining the national prosperity. In the early months of the Presidency, monetary poHcies appeared to start to deal with the economic problems, but these indicators were rapidly followed bv other signals demonstrating the tenacious nature of the problem and suggesting more economic leadership and the application of pol- icies which the Administration has been reluctant to adt)pt. Inflation coexistent with high unemployment and the inability of policies to meet these problems will be a major concern in the coming Presidential elections. 42 A President is also expected lo he ihc tuJininiMniiive manager of the gigantic Federal establishment. Signal accomplishments of the Nixon Adniinistraliiin were the creation of the cabinet level Doniesiic Council- the internal counterpart of the National Security Council— and the reorganization and expansion of the Bureau of the Budget into the new Ollice of Management and Budget. At the Departmental levels the Nixon Admin- istration was also somewhat successful in improving program implementation, combining functions, and re- ducing overlap. The rapid flurry of new programs and structures characteristic of the Johnson years almost stopped and the emphasis was on administration ' of programs previously started. Even though competition and overlapping functions can spur accomplishment and innovation, in the traditional perspective of ad- ministration the Nixon Administration has done fairly well. Although the Presidency is a powerful office, a Presi- dent cannot operate simply by edict or command even within this sphere of Constitutionallv delegated au- tiioritv and responsibility. The pluralistic dispersion of power in the svstem requires that the President and other units in the system operate largely through per- suasion, bargaining and support relationships. No President including the first has had unanimous ap- proval for his actions and use of authority. In short, the President is forced to be politically responsive lo external and internal power centers. President Nixon has been political, but since this entails being respon- sive to forces within the system, this is not bad. In the first part of the term especiallv. Nixon was responsive to those forces he judged to be in the majority and most powerful. Although the President is to be spokes- man or ilw people as the sole miiionallv elcclcd official (except for the Vice President). Nixon has focused his attention on the silent majority rather than student populations for example. In short, the Presidency of Richard M. Nixon has been a mixture of accomplishments and problems in a variety of different roles. He has been strong and suc- cessful in some roles and not so in others. The more meaningful and, of course, the more important assess- ment is a political one and that will come in Novem- ber of 1972. A Liberal Criticism of the President Sophia Peterson IT As a liberal critic. 1 should first define briefly what 1 mean by liberalism. First, as a liberal 1 believe not only in the desirabilitv. but in the necessitv of social progress (social justice, a decent minimum standard of living for all, and the equal opportunity for every hu- man freely to develop to his fullest potential.) Sec- ondly. I believe that through collective action human beings have the capabilities of reason and heart to create a better society. Finally. I believe that because the problems which face Americans are national in scope (for example, poverty and racial dissension), the federal government, particularlv through the President, has a special responsibilitv to generate and support so- lutions and to assist citizens in their individual and group efforts of creating a better country for all. As of this writing (December. 1970). four major lib- eral criticisms of President Nixon emerge. In the field of domestic issues I would cite: (1) his failure to unite our nation, (2) his failure lo lead in areas of crucial need: and (3) his questionable ordering of priorities. In the area of foreign policv. President Nixon has notably disappointed hopes he would bring a speedv end to the Vietnam War. When the President made his inaugural address, he promised to unite the country not only has he failed to do this, but he has intensified divisions. The best evidence of President Nixon ' s failure to unite the na- tion is found in the recent Congressional campaign. Frvvin D. Canham. editor of The Christian Science Monitor wrote the day before the November election: . . . America is slipping dangerouslv toward misunder- standing and hostility comparable to last century ' s Civil War itself. The President, while not the sole rea- son for this tragic national division, has contributed to it. With the President ' s support. Vice-President Agnevv spoke approvingly of the Republican campaign of constructive polariz.iilion . He disparaged impudent snobs. radiclibs. and so-called intellectuals -a rhetoric hardly designed to promote unity. President Nixon set the tone for the Republicans ' campaign which, according to the i ' all Street Journal, [failed] to discuss education, housing, health and other social problems . . . concentrating almost exclusively instead on the social issue of campus violence, crime, pornog- raphy and the like. A President who sanctioned one of the most bitter political campaigns in recent history must now face the condemnation of man obser ers who decry the polarization of the American people. What evidence of the failure of presidential lead- ership emerges? Two commissions, both named by 43 President Nixon, have called attention it) his failure to provide leadership on two crucial issues: campus un- rest and civil rights. The Commission on Campus Un- rest under former Pennsylvania Governor William W. Scranton issued a report September 26 stating: But the most important aspect of the overall effort to pre- vent further disorder— indeed, the most important of all the commission ' s recommendations— rests with the President. The Report called upon the President to exercise his reconciling moral leadership as the lirst step to prevent violence and create understanding. The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights under Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, head of Notre Dame, issued a 1,000 page report in November outlining the failure of the federal government to implement the laws passed by Congress and calling upon the President to ex- ercise courageous moral leadership. Further evidence of President Nixon ' s failure to provide leadership in the area of civil rights comes from his own executive branch: (1) civil rights lawyers in the Justice Depart- ment accused the Nixon Admmistration of delaymg school desegregation in the South to pacify southern members of Congress; (2) on February 17, 1970, Leon E. Panetta, chief civil rights officer for the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, resigned charging pressure from the White House to slow down enforce- ment of civil rights laws; and. (3) on June 10. 1970, the U.S. Commissioner of Education, Dr. James E. Allen, Jr., was asked to resign his office by presidential direc- tive. The reason, according to Dr. Allen, was his insist- ence on vigorous enforcement of school desegregation. In the area of economic policy. President Nixon has similarly exercised weak and ineffectual leadership. At a time when unemployment is 5.6 per cent, the highest in seven years, and prices continue to rise in an eco- nomic slowdown which has seen the anomalous situ- ation of simultaneous inflation and recession. President Nixon has resisted the recommendations of an increas- ing number of economists to apply wage and price controls and has generally been very reluctant to use any of the powers of his office to control prices (other than moral exhortation.) For example, he could have eased import restrictions on oil imports when Ameri- can oil companies announced a price increase. In an interview with The New York Times just prior to his election, Mr. Nixon explained his basic philosophy that there should be far less Federal involvement in the economy. The third criticism of President Nixon ' s actions on the domestic scene concerns his priorities. In mid- 1970, the President vetoed a series of bills as inflationary, among them were the 1971 appropriations bills for the Office of Education and for the Department of Hous- ing and Urban Development, and the Hill-Burton hos- pital construction bill (in the last instance President Nixon ' s veto was eventually overridden by the Con- gress.) We must judge whether President Nixon ' s social irresponsibility in vetoing support in areas of such cru- cial social need as education, urban renewal and hos- pital construction is not far more serious than the charge of fiscal irresponsibility which he directed at the Congress. At the same time. President Nixon supported such bills as the proposed $290 million request for the su- personic transport which has akeady cost the United States $700 million over the past two years. Another projected supported by the President was the Safeguard Anti-Ballistic Missile (which will cost over $300 million during fiscal 1971.) Not only has the Safeguard system been attacked as ineffectual against nuclear attack, but also as an obstacle to arms control agreements with the Soviet Union. President Nixon ' s most-publicized legislative contri- bution, his welfare reform bill, has also suffered from his sense of priorities. Although the President called this bill the most important piece of domestic legisla- tion proposed by this Administration, he has sup- ported it, according to Washington observer John Os- borne, with nothing like the vigor he applied in his fights for the ABM, for his rejected Supreme Court nominations, and against amendments that would have restricted his freedom to end or prolong the Viet- nam War as he chooses. The failure of presidential policy regarding the Viet- nam War has been a tragedy for the United States as well as for the Vietnamese. The President ' s policy of gradual withdrawal of American troops and Vietnam- ization is a program for prolonging the war while minimizing the most dramatic reminder to Americans that we are fighting a war: American casualties. A con- siderable proportion of the Senate doubts the wisdom of presidential policy as witnessed by the fact that 39 Senators voted in favor of the recent McGovern-Hat- field proposal to order President Nixon to pull U.S. troops out of Vietnam by the end of 1971. While there was not enough support to pass the resolution (55 Sen- ators opposed it), it was a significant indication of lack of Senate confidence in the President. In President Nixon ' s October peace plan proposal, he suggested a standstill cease fire over all of Indochina which would have necessitated an incredible surrender by the Viet- cong and their allies. Given the present military bal- 44 ance in South Vietnam (in which large contingents of American and South ictnanicsc soldiers control the population centers), a stand-still cease tire would result in the loss to the Vietcong of political control of South Vietnam n which ihev have struggled since the Sec- ond World War. Only continued guerilla warfare can enable them to contest American and South Vietnam- ese control and a standstill cease fire would eliminate such tactics. What appears to be a reasonable proposal by President Ni.xon is to them a total surrender and the rejection by the North Vietnamese of such a pro- posal was not surprising. Such a proposal plus our con- tinued support of the fhieu-Kv government substan- tiates Senator J. W. I ulbnght ' s announcement over nationwide television August 31, 1970 that the L ' .S. re- fuses to make key concessions. The tragedy of Vietnam is a dual one: after 50,000 American dead, over 278,000 wounded and over SI 00 billion spent, we have not only failed to accomplish any goal commensurate with that sacrifice and de- stroyed much of Vietnam, but we have also torn our own country apart and deprived it of the necessary material and human resources to solve our very press- ing social and economic problems. In sum, this liberal ' s hopes for social progress and courageous leadership remain frustrated by President Nixon ' s adminisiratit)n. The Tragedy of Richard M. Nixon James B. Whisker It seemed obvious to nearly everyone in the after- math of the 1968 election to whom Richard M. Nixon was beholden for his mandate . Labor unions, blacks, other minorities, the industrial Bast-all had remained in the folds of the Democratic party and ignored both Mr. Nixon and Mr. Wallace. On the other hand, parts of the South, the Midwest, Far West, WASPS and the middle class had stayed Republican. Everyone knew Mr. Nixon had Senator Strom Thurmond to thank for his southern strategy win. It seemed to this observer that Mr. Nixon knew he had two roads he could follow: one led into the hearts of his people. The other was to follow President Johnson ' s lead-but not nece.ssarily his tactics or indi- vidual strategem-in becoming the President of All Americans. This latter is indeed always a risky course because the practitioner unless very skillful alienates all of the American people. 1 do not think Mr. Nixon cared or would have privatelv predicted a win for either of his first two U.S. Supreme Court nominees. Result: seemingly a large debt paid to the South. 1 also think Mr. Nixon has been, and remains today, unconvinced by any of the arguments on any side of the desegregation-in- tegration, neighborhood school-busing programs. As a result, militant black and white groups are both un- happv and middle class America i.s wistfully watching. Mr. Nixon has seen the failure of certain liberal pro- grams which began with the New Deal, and, in patch- work form, are still with us today. Welfare programs are creating a perpetual condition for an ever-increas- ing number and percentage of Americans. Clearly, something must be done to surplant traditional doling out of monev as unearned increment as a birthright ; but Mr. Nixon is rather unsure what he wants to take the place of this complex system. This is indeed a very difiicult position for anyone to be in, as it would seem likely thai a program such as a guaranteed annual wage or income subsidy would last indefinitely as did the stop-gap welfare program which lasted over 35 years. Mr. Nixon ' s original ideal solution, full employ- ment in a period of deflation, has eluded him as it has eluded other Presidents in this centur . The most pressing problem for Johnson and for Ni.xon has. of course, been the war in Vietnam. As a political scientist, 1 should have liked to have seen what Senator Eugene McCarthy would have done dif- ferently. Mr. Nixon. I believe, has been most sincere in his negotiations with the communists. Short of either extreme pullout or invasion of the North 1 think he has tried all the things he might have been expected to try. Negotiation with communist countries has histori- cally been a long, tiresome process in which success is measured in inches not in miles. Luck has not been on Mr. Nixon ' s side. The raids into Cambodia were at best a mixed bag. The ill-fated raid on P.O.W. camps in North Vietnam was successful in everything but its object. Finally, Mr. Nixon, with a divided country fighting behind him among themselves, has had to try to negotiate out of weakness not out of strength. 1 feel 45 that student and peace demonstrations have done no good and much harm, at least in this matter. Perhaps because of the division all around him in the country Mr. Nixon had hoped would fall under his spell of Bring Us Together , the President has re- quired absolute loyalty by those around him. This has caused good men to leave the cabinet, men who, in spite of various initial criticism, took their jobs se- riously. They have in many cases been replaced by yes men , whose qualifications are at best dubious. Mr. Nixon declared war on inflation, a problem viewed by many as a domestic crisis greater than war to borrow F.D.R. ' s term. The results of this homefront battle have been higher unemployment rates, .swelling welfare roles and cries of price and wage guidelines if not legal limits. The recent U.A.W. settlement with G.M., in my opinion, marked the last battle in this war. It is lost. Like Vietnam, we must now find a way to proclaim victory by 1972, and march into eternity with bugles blaring and rums roll- ing as ' we had won. Debate over the perennial guns or butter alterna- tives have weakened the United States militarily, since most of the defense allocations are going into Vietnam. The U.S.S.R. is steadily pulling ahead of us in offen- sive and defensive material. The in-fighting in the Ad- ministration over SST, TFX, and ABM have brought America ' s defense leadership into a second place standing. Additionally, the Nixon administration apparently has no ideas of its own in regard to the space program, an area in which we clearly had sev- eral years lead at the beginning of the Nixon administration. In the major areas of the former Great Society, Nixon has been unwilling to either withdraw or to maintain the previous levels of supports. OEO and other local and neighborhood projects are at a stand- still, but are not permanently closed down. Alternative Black Capitalism for the ghetto areas is in grave finan- cial trouble. The evils of urban renewal continue as our domestic rat hole in which monev is poured without success in solving the ghetto ' s most pressing problems. Colleges and universities throughout the country ar e in grave financial trouble after becoming dependent upon federal aid and then seeing it dissipate. My conclusions are simple and yet complex. Nixon is neither liberal nor conservative, and hence is unwill- ing to take the steps which either camp would recom- mend. His policies, hard-pressed anyway, are in real trouble with a generally hostile Democratic congress. Nixon sees many of the failures of New Deal-ism, whether in the form of Great Society or other, yet does not have the courage to abandon these same programs and begin new ones. He hears that Americans are go- ing to bed hungry, that boys are being killed daily in Vietnam, and that students are protesting nearly eve- rything. He knows the answers do not lie in rhetoric, but, like any of us, he is not positive where the answers do lie. Result: inactivity and lack of leadership. His advi- sors and Commissions have failed him or given him bad advice. He knows elections are won by full lunch pails so most likely pragmatism will win out over principle. This, 1 think, is the tragedy of Richard M. Nixon, President of the United States. R.O.T.C Instruction Academically Inferior Paul L. Wilson Army Reserve Officers ' Training Corps and Air Force Reserve Officers ' Training Corps courses at West Virginia University are taught by Professors of Mili- tary Science and Aerospace Studies, respectively, as- sisted by six assistant professors in the Army depart- ment and four assistant professors in the Air Force detachment. Neither of the full professors hold degrees above a masters, and none of the assistant professors in Army ROTC hold credentials higher than bachelors degrees. The assistant professors in AFROTC are one better; all four hold masters degrees. In other depart- ments and divisions of the University, no one is cred- ited with a full professorship with less than a doctor ' s degree; many (85%) of the assistant professors in the various departments hold Ph.D. ' s as well. In light of these facts, it is no surprise to discover that wide- spread resentment is found among the more academic faculty concerning the presence of these equally ranked, but academically inferior, ROTC instructors. This lack of academically qualified professors di- rectly contributes to the educational inadequacy of ROTC courses, which caused several of our best uni- versities (notably Harvard, Yale, Dartmouth, and Stanford) to drop all academic credit for military-ori- ented courses. J. P. Trinkaus of Branford College has stated, low-level trade-school courses have no place at Yale. Other faculty members have voiced similar opinions, including Arthur Galson, Chairman of Yale ' s 46 faculty committee; we don ' t think ROTC merits aca- demic stand ing. Perhaps the most damning evidence concerning academic credit ci mes from the report made by the Special Committee on ROTC for the Sec- retary of Defense: The Committee considers some of the strictly military textual materials in use during 1968-69 for all three ROTC programs (Naval, Army, and Air Force) to be insutliciently challenging to jus- tify academic credit. Why, then, is the end of credit for ROTC courses considered catastrophic? The faculty of Harvard University, one of the t)ldest and most respected institutions of higher learning in America, voted 207-125 to abolish ROTC credit and to end appointments for officers as professors and as- sistant profes.sors of military .science. Almost immedi- ately, the faculty was attacked by Major General Jo- seph Ambrose, a product of ROTC and a graduate of Harvard, in a letter to the president of the university. His letter stated in part, every university facuhy is in- creasingly composed of members without any military service and without any significant experience in the world at large, that these individuals (the faculties) cannot reasonably be expected to dictate major policy decisions requiring maturity, experience, and responsibility. Obviously, only men with prior military service are equipped to judge the necessary policy changes on loda s campuses. The faculty of Harvard had every right to dictate the policy of discontinuing ROTC credit. As educators, they judged the academic merits of a college course (ROTC) and found these merits did not measure up to the standards maintained by the university. The decision required no mihtary back- ground: it was an academic decision, and therefore was made by the group in charge of academia. Proponents of the ROTC program argue that mili- tary science courses are as relevant and deserving of academic credit as, for instance, physical education. If this is the case, credit for P.E. and similar courses should be abolished, as well. According to a ROTC pamphlet entitled, Your Son and the Army ROTC , another point in favor of ROTC is that the program will give ... an elemen- tary understanding of the psychological, physiological, and sociological factors which affect human behavior. Elementary psychology, physiology, and sociology courses, taught by qualified instructors in these specific fields are offered at all colleges and universities where ROTC is given. Why are these courses not taught to the ROTC cadet to give him an elementary under- standing . . . ? CiviHan instructors can also teach most of the so-called military courses (military history, map reading, etc.) with more detail and specific knowledge than the average military science professor. ROTC should not be completely abolished, however, for this violates the freedom of those who wish to par- ticipate in the program. Therefore, I will offer a pan- acea to those who feel ROTC is a necessity, even a privilege. My proposition is simply this: any physically and mentally qualified student in West Virginia University, if interested in the ROTC program, whether acting out of patriotism or fear of the draft, will be allowed to en- ter it. However, no uniforms will be issued, and no military training will be permitted on the property of the University, since military poHcy contradicts the philosophy upon which institutions of higher learning are based. The ROTC student will take only regular university classes; no military instructors will be lo- cated on campus. His training in leadership, military history, sociology, and certain aspects of geology and geography which the Army feels is important, will be given in regular introductory university courses (com- monly called core courses). In this manner, the pros- pective cadet will learn all the facts necessary to qual- ify him as a sociological, and psychological leader of men. while getting credit for university core. Military training would take place at three summer camps following the freshman, sophomore, and junior years. Pay would be at the rate of $60 a week. These camps would last ten weeks of the summer, and during this time cadets would learn all necessary techniques ROTC is famous for: shined brass, leadership poten- tial, and esprit de corps. The prt)gram would be complclcl M luntar on both the part of the Department of the Army and the individual. No contracts promising a specified length of service would be required. Payment for summer camp would be considered much the same as payment for a summer job; if the cadet wished to drop the pro- gram in his junior year, for instance, he could do so with no jeopardy to his record or draft status. In addition to other advantages, students attending schools not now oH ' ering ROTC could participate in the new program. This system would effectively remove ROTC courses (and. thuslv. credit) and military instructors from the campus, enabling all students (including summer ROTC cadets) to pursue their degrees unimpaired by military training. 47 Your Stake in R.O.T.C Col. William D. Ward Whether you know it or not, you have a stake in the Reserve Officers Training Corps program on this campus; and it is a stake that means big returns for you. This is true whether you are a student, faculty member, or administrator; whether you are now, have been or ever will be in ROTC— or not. Bear with me and I ' ll show you why this is so. My own views and experiences concerning ROTC would be necessarily hmited. and might be construed as prejudiced. I shall therefore rely extensively on the analyses of various aspects of ROTC, in its relations to our Armed For ces and the national interest, which have been published by a variety of persons; including educators and public figures as well as military men. Perhaps the first question which needs to be an- swered is not whether ROTC is necessary but whether any military establishment is necessary at all. There has been much expression recently of the desire for peace. This is a desire to which I can subscribe in the ideal. But this is a far-from-ideal world, as noted by Professor Gray L. Dorsey, of the Washington Univer- sity School of Law. In an article on The Nuremberg Decisions and Military Service Professor Dorsey made the following points: 1 think it would be great if we lived in a world in which there were no need for force. I think it is foolish to act as if we did live in such a world. So long as there are persons who will oppress the weak, there must be official force, and we must seek to organize it so that it is effective and re- sponsible to the prevailing opinion in the society. It simply is gross foolishne.ss to say that any country does not need effective, organized Armed Forces responsible to the general will of the people. Keep in mind for later reference those phrases about responsiveness to the people and the society. Almost a quarter century ago. in the immediate post-World War II turbulence. General of the Armv Omar Bradley said Because we disapprove of the use of force in the .settlement of international disputes, we cannot renounce that force while other nations cling to theirs. Our pleas for peace are measured not by the sincerity with which they are spoken but by the strength we can array to enforce them. In a talk to the National Presss Club last year, 23 years later. Gen- eral Bradley might have been continumg the same thought when he said: Why is there such widespread resentment iner our meeting the challenges of today? Has freedom become any less precious? One answer to that question was provided almost concurrently by the Reverend Robert J. Schiamanda of Gannon College who wrote There is something much worse than the taking of life— it is the taking of liberty, honor, integrity and self respect. I would rather see Gannon College burned to the ground in a fight of men for self determination than to see a peaceful campus where everything that we teach and stand for has been given up out of cowardice. The same philos- ophy applies in international relations. Accepting or assuming the need tor militar pre- paredness and hence the need for officers, a question remains: Why should the colleges be involved? Dr. Leon Linderoth is chairman of the Arts and Letters Division of Lake Superior State College. He puts his answer wryly in the title of an essay from which I shall quote later: Don ' t Turn the Military Over to ' The Rascals ' . This is another version of the old quip War is too important to be left to the generals. Indeed, for all the benefits which we may derive from the creation of all-volunteer Armed Forces, one of the recognized dangers which must be avoided is the isolation of those forces from the nation they are supposed to serve. Colonel Donald F. Bletz. U.S. Army, and Cap- tain Robert J. Hanks, U.S. Navy, are career officers currently studying as visiting fellows at the Harvard Center for International Affairs. In an article in the Washington Post they point to the danger in the all- volunteer Armed Forces: That we will develop what we have never before seen in America: a large stand- ing defense force composed entirelv of career military men who are isolated, even alienated from the people they have sworn to defend. It is possible that this kind of force would lose touch with and svmpath for the aspirations of the American people. Dr. Linderoth looks to the ROTC graduate to act as a needed check on the rascals . Here is his assessment: The ROTC graduate brings to the Army the hu- manistic iew that will act as a balance to the ' military mind , as it is called. The Colonel Blimps (and they do exist though in far smaller number than the SDS would ha e us believe) can be controlled only from within. The intelligent, liberally educated lieutenant of ioda is the in- telligent, liberally educated colonel of 12 or 14 years from now providing the college has done the job It claims it can do. I ' hose who fear the 48 rise of an American Foreign Legion, loyal only to its own otticers. must sec that the fastest way of bringing such an organization about is to aban- don the ROTC. Just as we should not cling blindly to the illusory ideal that peace can be achieved simply by wishing for it, so we should not grasp ec|ually blindly for the al- ternative panacea of the all-volunteer force. The con- cept is at best only a partial answer to out total de- fense needs. The all-volunteer forces will necessarily be limited in size and will have to be reinforced in times of major emergencv. Admiral Thomas H. Moorer, U.S. Navy, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, recently said about this: In the future we will be required to rely more heavilv upon our reserve components and hence, we must intensify our efforts to mold the active Army, the Army National Guard, and the Army Re- serve into a single team. The ROTC graduate has his- torically been the leaven which has served to foster the unity that Admiral Moorer cites as so necessary among the active and reserve components of our Armed Forces. Thus, both in numbers and in character the ROTC graduate will be more rather than less neces- sary in an all-volunteer Armed Forces concept. It should be kept in mind tht the primary purpose of ROTC is not to produce either platoon leaders or ca- reer officers. Its main purpose, as implied in its name, is to produce reserve officers— citizen soldiers. This dual image of the ROTC graduate was expressed by Dr. David M. Potter, Professor of History at Stanford University. Speaking of the graduates at a commission- ing ceremony he said: They have been earning their commissions as officers in the armed services of their country at the same time that they were earning their university degrees. They have been receiving training for useful careers in civilian life at the same time that they were qualifying for their military commissions. They have been preparing to lead lives as men of peace if they can. but as men of war if they must. Who benefits from the ROTC program? The stu- dent, host institutions, employers, parents, taxpayers. American public, and the Army, fhe student, the in- stitution, and the parent gain from the financial assist- ance or scholarship program, from the allowances paid to students during the last two years of the program, from having available one more career option, and from the opportunity to examine in detail an appar- ently unavoidable facet of man ' s environment. (Will and Ariel Durant in their study of some 3421 years of history found only 268 without a war of one kind or another.) The taxpayer gains since the ROTC is a much more economical source of officers than either the military academies or the officer candidate pro- grams. The public and the Army benefit from having the officer corps made up of a broad cross section of the country, rather than a military elite emanating from a single class, or a single institution. As for other employers, there is a considerable body of testimony that indicates that the ROTC graduate is, by virtue of his experience as an officer and leader, preferred above counterparts lacking this education and experience. This, then, is the ROTC. You have a stake in it, whether you join it or not. Even if you do not join it your stake will continue to be the security that it fos- ters for you as an American citizen. If you do join it, you will add to that stake the many personal benefits involved: material, intellectual and psychological. But don ' t join it lightly. Heed the warning and the reas- surance voiced on this campus this academic year by Lieutenant Colonel Lucius E. Young, U.S. Army Re- tired, who spoke to Alpha Phi Omega from his own experience as a ROTC graduate who had completed a career in the Reserves: Only a dedicated American should join ROTC; someone who wants to lead. Fortunately, there is still a great deal of this type on the campus today. Assessment of Student- bmmunity Relationship lohn D. Rockefeller IV I worry about the gulf that exists between students and so many members of our society. I see students as a powerful force for positive change in our state and nation, but that power is eroding, rather than growing. We need to examine why. Remember that in the eyes of most Americans you are privileged. You enjoy an opportunity which many of them never had or could not enjoy because schools were too expensive, or too exclusive; because most Americans in their youth didn ' t have the money or the ability that was needed to get into college. They had to support their families, to work at inadequate wages when there were enough jobs, and make do with less when there weren ' t. They had to fight in our wars, too; in the Second World War which is beyond the mem- ory of college students, but well within that of every American over 30. Yet those same Americans who didn ' t get to college 49 themselves have taxed themselves to build our state universities so that this generation might have the op- portunity they didn ' t. So the anger at destruction of property and the dis- ruption of classes is at least partly understandable in this sense. It is the anger of people who sacrificed to build, and never went to a university themselves. Another reason for hostility is that student protest has become symbolic, rather than persuasive. Symbols are extremely difficuk to manipulate. Attacking sym- bols provokes people to defend them for what they mean to them, not to reject them because of what they mean to the protestors. The flag is an example. For those who see only American troops going into needless battle in Vietnam. the flag has become a symbol of hypocrisy, and they have dishonored it publicly in the heat of their anger. Yet for almost all Americans, for even those opposed to the war, the flag means much more. It means citi- zenship for those who fled to this country from tyr- anny in other lands. It means opportunity for those whose families sacrificed and suff ' ered to reach these shores. It means freedom, in the political sense and freedom in the senses Franklin Roosevelt meant— free- dom from want, from fear, of speech and expression, freedom of worship. What reason is there to demean the flag? Doing so makes no real point about what we object to in our foreign pohcy. But it does hurt and outrage most Americans. It hurts me. When Americans saw the demonstrations three years ago at the Demo- cratic Convention, they saw the flag, our flag, attacked. For the anti-war movement, that was insanity, as are other attacks on symbols which most people, particu- larly West Virginians, still value. Another factor— and this is most important— students have been ineffective because they have cut themselves off from most of the American community. Much of this is not their fault. Most students go to school far away from the communities in which they were raised, in other communities where they are out- siders, and where they cultivate a style of life in which they take no responsibility for the functioning of the larger community. They do not pay taxes there, or vote there, or join local organizations, or go to church there. They dress, eat. and entertain themselves in new ways, some of them illegal. Many universities, and the communities of students which surround them, are resented bv the local communities for these reasons. So students in many communities are outsiders, and privileged outsiders at that, and this is something stu- dents have been slow to recognize. There has been a decline of community in this coun- try. This is partly because we now take almost half of our young people and send them to places where they no longer associate very much with their parents, their family, their neighbors, with people who are older, who are working full time, who are living on their life ' s savings. And the converse of this statement is true. Most citizens, most voters, have ve ry little contact with students, either the strangers in their midst or the strangers who are their children. The result is the de- mands students have made, whether they be on campus or in the streets, have been made on people with whom they have no ties, no established relation- ships, no feeling of community. How many students, instead of massing comfortably on the campus with others of like mind and dress, like habits and age, have gone back to the communities where they grew up and worked with the people they know, and who know and respect them? These, then are some facets of the hostility which face students. If you want to end the war, if you want to work to end hunger, if you want to provide necessary health care and education and opportunity in Appalachia, the people you have to convince are your parents, and your aunts and uncles, and next door neighbors, and the guy who drives a truck or wears a miner ' s lantern, or walks a beat in your neighborhood. 50 The Future of Campus Dissent William S. Haymond Should students dissent? If so, what form should dis- sent take? How tar should it go? These questions, I think, answer themselves-and in pretty nearly the op- posite wav people suppose who are inclined to ask them-when they are put in plain terms without emotionallv-charged words like dissent in them. Should university students who are seriously dis- satisfied with the university and with American society complain and complain publicly? Do students have reason to be dissatisfied? Is perhaps one reason that university administrations seldom listen to what stu- dents actually suggest, being intent rather on dis- covering whether the suggestion represents sufficient power to pose a threat? If university government is in the habit of listening to its community in this way, does this set rather definite limits to the rational dis- course within the university which the administration in Washington constantly urges, whose periodic failure and breakdown it finds so exasperating? The question whether students have any business dissenting seems to me an odd question for a free society to ask, and so I can ' t help thinking that it is mainly the irrational re- sponse, born of anxiety and guilt, of a society which pro- fesses democracy and respect for humanity but which practices power and human manipulation to the intoler- able criticism of some of those who have seen and ex- posed its duplicity, its failure to keep faith with its own ideals. I have no doubt then whether protest on the campus is a good and necessary thing— it. along with the protest of black people and the poor, has awakened us like nothing else in the past fifteen years to grievous fail- ings in the American way: and the very quasi-hysteria in which society is presently reacting to it proves its effec- tiveness. It also tells us something about how it should and should not be used in the immediate future. The pri- mary purpose of protest after all is communication, not intimidation (the first unfortunately is scarcely possible in a pluralist , competitive society without the capacity to resort to the second): and communicating with the confused and violence-prone is not an easy matter. Pro- test should and must continue on the campus, but its forms from now on have to be much more carefully chosen. Is there any need to dwell on the yawning gap be- tween American promise and American performance— in Southeast Asia, in the ghettos and depressed areas of this country, in the communities of black people and other people of ci lor here, in the physical environ- ment, systematically polluted at substantial rates of profit h large business interests to the tune of .Amer- ica, the Beautiful and incantations of praise to free enterprise? Is it particularK difficult hi recall the sit- in ' s of black students in the South m the ' 50 ' s. the Freedom Riders, the Port Huron Statement and the founding of the Students for a Democratic Society in ' 62. and the impact thev ha e had on how we now see America, our awareness of the dilVerence between what America presently means to people around the world and what .America should mean ' ' Should we be 51 reminded that the single largest block of these students in dissent has been good or better than average stu- dents, achievers , in the arts and humanities, non- technicians, thus underscoring, the almost forgotten fact that the university is not exclusively or even primarily a place where one goes to learn how to earn a living or master some practical skill— it is not just a social service station for a technological society—but that the university is still, first and foremost, a commu- nity where a sense of human values, a notion of the good society, is fostered and gained, and not only through discussion, reading, and reflection, but also by positive action in society, by active commitment to the ideal? Finally is there any longer any serious question whether student protest in these years has been on the whole peaceable and responsible, directed at obvious evils and more times than not simply ignored or out- rightly repressed? The Washington protest march of November 1969 against the war is a good example of the first: the killings at Kent State and Jackson State in the Spring of 1970 and following them the in- dictments of students and or faculty in Kent and Jack- son rather than of the Guardsmen or the State Troop- ers who did the killing are a good example of the second. A closer look at the double violence at Kent State (for the Portage County grand jury ' s indictment of twenty-five students and faculty in connection with the campus disorders can only be characterized as violence against them) can tell us something, I believe, about the meaning of dissent on the campus today and how it should be practiced at the present time. One, of course, can ' t overlook the amazing credulity of the jury towards pohce and prosecution and its evident willing- STUDENT 52 ncss t . believe ihe worst ol t.lissenlini; sludents. if ihe aulhorilies uiiesled Ui it. In spite of the Seranton Com- mission ' s Report, in spite of the f.B.I. ' s lindini:. whieh called the killings not necessary and not in order , judged six of the guardsmen criminalK liable for shooting and described the action ol ' the students as non-riotous, in spite e en of Spiro Agnevv. who said on the [)a id Irosl show on Mas 7 that the killings were murder, but not lirsl degree , and that he couldn ' t condone them: in spite ol ' all this, the grand jury exon- erated the Ciuard o ' an crmuiial act .md instead in- dicted students and facultv lor inciting to riot and cn- sasini! in ricitoiis acii itv! And one mav reasonabK assume that the |ur ' s mindless mistrust of students and hostilit towards them fairK accuratcK retlected the attitude of the ni n-uni ersity community. If this were all. one would be forced to conclude that communication is no longer possible between the uni ersit and the large societs. and dissent as a neces- sary means of communication in these times would then be meaningless. But it doesn ' t seem to be quite all. The irrationalit ol ' the indictments may not be at- tributable so much to the blind resentment of the people of the comnuimt to students as to the un- scrupulousness of the prosecutors, who neglected to present the iur with some very pertinent evidence to the killings. The jurN was ne er shown the second re- port of the F-BI. which ga e in detail all the e idence the federal investigators had been able to gather that the Guard after the killings had fabricated the story that they had fired in the belief that they were se- rioush threatened b the adNancins: students, at whom they discharged their ritles; and that evidence in the the opinion of the investigators was considerable. Nor did the prosecution have Captain Srp and the five other (iuardsmen testify who stated poinledh to the federal agents that the (iuard was not in danger and that it was not a shooting situation when the Ciuard tired-had the jury heard Capt. Srp. it might not have been so ready to absolve the (iuard. since Srp was the ollicer of highest rank invuKed in the incident. If the performance of the Portage Count) grand jury can be taken as not untypical of the way people are re- acting nowada s to students when there is a question of law and order, there are grounds for guarded op- timism their verdict seems to be more the result of ig- norance than of unreason and hatred; had the facts been honestly presented it) them, one can hope they would have decided difl ' erently. The case then may properlv be used to deline today ' s challenge to the uni- versitv. Tor in a time of much-needed rel ' orm-in the universitv as well as in society as a whole-it falls to the universitv. its faculty and students, to provide the necessary enlightenment. Dissent on the campus must be shaped bv this consideration, this means that it must be untiring and vigorous, at the same time tai- lored to the demands of a confused and mistrustful people; reasoned presentation and analysis of the facts, not rhetoric and the antics of violence, must form its substance. This may well require more self- discipline and ingenuity than some of us in the univer- sity have shown, but it is the only way dissent today, it seems to me, can perform its necessary function. 53 V , - K Limited Dissent Manfred O. Meitzen Student dissent has been an important catch phrase lately. Of course, the American way of hfe pro- vides the right to dissent for all. To be only slightl y fa- cetious, we could say that dissent is the American way of life. Consequently, at first glance, there should be nothing curious about students dissenting. Dissent can be a very illusive concept. Basically, it means disagreement; but there are very wide ranges of disagreement. Disagreements may be strictly in- tellectual. They may be disagreements carried out in actions of group withdrawal, e.g., the dissenting church in England, or of individual withdrawal, e.g., divorce, or of national withdrawal, e.g., secessions. Dissent, or disagreements, may take the shape of physical force such as in a case of fisticuffs or in any enforced action, or in war. In any discussion about dissent, the fluidity of the concept must be kept firmly in mind. Student dissent brings to mind again a necessary fact of democratic life in our society, namely, that all dissent must necessarily be limited even in a democ- racy as it is in a totalitarian government. A democracy is distinguished in this matter by the fact that it allows the people the privilege of setting the restraints beyond which they may not dissent in that society. But it re- mains that democracies harbor many repressions of dissent at all levels. An examination of various sub- groups in a democracy makes this manifest. The right of children to dissent has been highly limited from the beginning of our history. They are forced to be in bed at eight; they must go to school; they are not allowed to possess and use firearms, etc. They may even be forced, albeit at times subtly, to change their in- 54 tellectual point oi ' view. e.g.. from hating music to lov- ing it, from haling a certain kind o{ ' people to loving them. (Perhaps in a decade we shall he hearing of an amendment for children ' s lib. ) The dissent of the criminal prisoner is even more curbed. He is given little leeway for dissent either physically or in- tellectuallv. In a lesser hut still intense way those in the armed forces of a democracy are curbed in all ranges of dissent. Those who belong to labor unions are allowed little dissent. So it is with those who must obey tratVic laws or with those who play football on a team. We all understand that dissent is repressed in many areas of life for all o ' the various subgroupji of our society. The subgroup, students, at all stages, confronts the same reality. They too must face limits to dissent. Lim- itation of dissent for students usually centers about two foci: (a) Because of the large number of other students with whom they must share learning facilities, they must limit dissent, hor example, a hundred students utterly opposed ti) the teaching methods and subject olferings i f a university may not bring it to a standstill for overhaul if lilteen thousand other students are rela- tively pleased with it even though the one hundred might have a good point. One student in a class of forty may not interrupt the class indefinitely insisting that he has a right to exhaust a question early in the course while thirty-nine others want an introduction to all the other questions of the course though there might be some some worth to an exhaustive explor- ation of the first question. One hundred students ought not block a building when two thousand students and faculty want in. The dissent of gifted students about what seems to them to be plodding pedagogy must of- ten be curbed in the face of numbers, i.e.. the eighty other students of very pedestrian mental abilities in their class, (b) Because of the experience of learned faculty in their fields and because of their experience about how one learns in their disciplines it is often necessary to stifle student dissent about the method of pedagogy in order to achieve learning. Students in their immaturity often think that they know the best method of learning when, as a matter of fact, they do not. A good educator must override their dissent. For example, a piano instructor insists on more fingering exercises and other exercises to improve technique while the beginning student, often resentfully, must lay aside concertos, upon which he would already like to embark. The wisdom and authority of the instructor must suppress the dissent of the student: and this sup- pression is a matter of benevolence on the part of the instructor though it may seem to be arbitrary repres- sion to the student. A student manifests dissent be- cause he earned a D . Ihe instructor limits his dis- 55 sent by showing the student how his mind had not been open to many angles of the subject matter. A freshmen vehemently demands calculus. The math- ematics department replies by insisting that he take al- gebra instead. The University is by nature not a democratic in- stitution. It presupposes that it has in its faculty those who are more intellectually advanced than those who come as students. The University is an outfit that seeks after truth. There is a whole hierarchy of levels of truth-seekers. The advanced truth-seeker, the faculty, must retain their role as academic leaders. They must set the norms of the academic enterprise and evaluate its worth. Those who are lower in the hierarchy must welcome the leadership of the faculty. That, indeed, is for what students have come to the University and for what they are paying. Students may advise the faculty concerning curriculum and academic standards but they should never directly regulate these matters. Only the faculty has this prerogative. If the students were to prove as capable or more capable than the faculty in matters of determining curriculum and standards, then the faculty should be dismissed as incompetent at once. Unfortunately, the universities are lapsing from in- stitutions whose main goal is the quest for truth to in- stitutions whose main goal is training. Whenever this happens, students have a fundamental right to dissent: and the university must not limit that dissent. Students must be careful that their dissent is over a basic fraudulence such as this rather than over adolescent trivialities or over destructive nihilist subversions of the university. When student dissent is justified and not Hmited by the University or the state, students must always be careful not to be destructive. Destructiveness betrays selfish dissent and barbarity. Destructiveness is self- judging. Those who have a case for dissent against the University must necessarily never be destructive in their protests; for the University is a creative enter- prise. Those who dissent in order to improve the Uni- versity cannot be destructive toward the University for they would contradict their loyalty. Destructive student dissenters cannot be real students for that would com- prise a contradiction in terms. It should be difficult for students to be sure if their dissent concerning the University is justified or not. Still developing as they are. it is almost impossible for students to look circumspectly at the whole of educa- tion. Perhaps the most vahd dissent against the Uni- versity could be articulated by alumni, ten years on in hfe and in their professions. Perhaps they should fill out the University and faculty evaluation sheets that we should take most seriously. 56 Aca-Dilema W. Alan Woodford I he dilemma facing ihc academic institutions of tiida . t r acadilemma , has made the institution,s of higher learning ulnerable to attack from inside and outside their ivy walls. The burden of guilt is multi-lat- eral, lying generally on the evils of society. It must be noted, however, that most tensions and frustrations arise from the governance of such institutions. There are many factors which have led to the cur- rent dilemma. The need for a college education has been escalated beyond all proportion. Today ' s high school student is under pressure to perform— not from love of learning, but to get himself into college. Com- petition is severe and high selectivity is often led to over-emphasis of impersonal factors, such as test scores and high school grades. Thus, we find the majority of a high .school graduating class categorized as pre-col- lege material. Consequently parents feel that a college degree is the ultimate and a mandate for success: and, their children feel that a college education is a necessary an- tecedent and an indispensable foundation. College campuses, in addition, have become a refuge from the draft and good odds on finding a husband. College graduates find themselves in limbo, hunting for a job or seeking specialized graduate education. I contend that the public must be warned and educated to accept vocational and technical training as a profit- able alternative and a necessity in providing society with better educated and skilled workers. Another fault in higher education today, or another factor contributing to aca-dilemma . is that in high places there is too little concern over poor instruction. A great part of administrative energy in colleges and universities is absorbed in physical expansion. Students are not being motivated or intellectually satisfied in the class room. The idealism of the youth is not being channeled effectively. Their newly-found knowledge is not being utilized nor is their rhetorical commitment to democracy being supplemented with a working knowledge of progressive government. Students must be guided into practical application and allowed to function in a learning experience. Rather than administrative time spent on furthering and extending the learning experience, we find admin- istrative time spent i n justifying their needs and de- sires to influential people outside the academic com- munity. The majority of those outside the academic community lack the expertise, insight, or current knowledge as to what the campus has to achieve phys- ically and mentally to progress. We also find many faculty members complacent in the roles they play both inside and outside the institution, rather than seeking more involvement in determining the broader purpo.ses of the institution and seeking more control over the conditions affecting their work. As for the principle of in loco parentis , university continuance of such a policy works against the interest in student ' s general education and prevents rea.sonable freedom for them to govern their own lives. This prin- ciple seems to be in considerable decline: hi)wever. its current application appears to be a reaction of admin- istrative over-concern with deviants. Perhaps, adminis- trators ought to relax and realize that thev simplv can- not control much of the behavior thev might like to control. They could turn their attention to what thev can do: that is. to fulfill important aducational func- tions and reforms by providing more facilities for ad- vice and discussion in crucial areas affecting higher education. I feel that if administrators would honestly attempt to reduce controls, students would be forced to realize more clearly that their decisions are their t)wn and af- fect their lives, thus instilling a greater sense of respon- sibility and greater commitment toward higher learning. In general, administrators are overly concerned with deviants . There have been and always will be deviants who will violate the slightest exertion of au- thority. But we have too many rules that are made with the deviants in mind. Not enough is thought about the suppressive efi ' ects of such rules on the broad mass of non-deviant students. Administrators are often misled into thinking that the intelligent students ' criticisms of the college are de- signed purely for irritation and destructiveness: there- fore, they overlook the many truths that may be present. Contributions can be made and must be lis- tened to. In a more benignly functioning community other students would help control those students not sincerely committed to higher learning. Suspicion and distrust, combined with the prevailing attitude of powerlessness. produce a climate where ex- pressions of rage and militancv reign. Students are growing more reluctant to accept governance and counsel from administrators because of past student- administrative relationships. Instead of seeking ways to suppress questioning students, administrators should be seeking ways to utilize their energv and idealism. . s administrators it is also their responsibilitv to de- velop student ' s responsibility and instill an awareness of the forces that shape our institutions. The universitv community remains a combination of human elements in a constantly volatile state, and the soft underbelly of our society that is being punched by every element. Instead of being allowed to tighten up and meet the problems at hand, they are forced to function on the rebound, react in an inexperienced fashion, and account publicly for their growing pains. There are no simple answers to aca-dilemma and ttxi many times the symptoms have been treated with- out open-mindedly attacking the problems. 57 I ss The MONTICOLA wishes to ihank the following ainiributors who made this section of essays possible: Keith Di for PARC , a non-partisan group studying the problems of Appalaehia Hunter P. McCartne , Ph.D.. Professor of Journalism David Ci. Williams, Ph.D.. Associate Professor of Polit- ical Science Sophia Peterson. Ph. 13.. Assistant Professor of Political Science James B. Whisker. Ph.D.. Assistant Professor of Politi- cal Science Paul L. Wilson. Political Science sophomore William D. Ward. Colonel. U.S. Army. Profes.sor of Military Science John D. Rockefeller I ' . West Virginia Secretary of State William S. Havmond. Ph.D.. Professor of Philosophy Manfred O. Meitzen. Ph.D.. Chairman of Religious Studies W. Alan Woodford. President of W.V.U. Student Body. ' TO- ' ? 1 59 60 Administration Freya Swisher, editor iwrn il. $• ■- M y President James G. Harlow 62 J 63 Harry E. Heltin I ' ice President of A dminislnition and Finance Claude Kelley Vice President of Planning 04 Arch A. Moore. Jr. Governor of West Virginia Board of Regents John E. Amos President Charleston Earl T. Andrews I Ice President Berkley Springs Amos A. Bolen Secrelary Huntington Dr. F. L. Blair Parkersbiirg David B. Dolzell Moundsville Elizabeth Hardin Gilmorc Charleston Edward H. Green Huntington Albert M. Morgan Morgantown Okey L. Patterson Mount Hope Rex N. Smith Ex officio Charleston Dr. Prince Woodward Chancellor Charleston John R. Hobitzell Parkershurg 65 Jay Barton III Provost of Educalion Charles E. Andrews Provosi of Health Sciences Ray Koppelman Provosi of Research uiuJ liruJuiiic Siiuiic 66 Nelson R. Bicklev. Jr. Director of Foreign Student Coordination Neil E. Bolyard Director of Student Financial Aids Donovan H. Bond Director of Development Office 67 John D. Brisbane Director of Admissions Robert N. Brown Director of A thletics Bell) BoyJ Associate Dean of ShS Director of Resilience llii l 68 David C. K arisen Program A dvisor James F. Carruth Director of Counseling Service Virgil B. Clark Director of Physical Plant 69 John M. Gardner jE-aS Director of University Budget Office UV., «« l. ■ ' Slanlcv R. Harris Registrar l.yle I. Harod A ssociate R egisirar 70 Harr W. Ernst Director of Vniversily Relations Joseph C. Gluck Dean of Student Educational Services 71 Dr. John J. Lawless Director u Health Service M. Cornelia Ladwick Director of Placement Service Kathirene R. Jamison Counselor to Students Col. HIbcrt L. Kidd Air Force Aerospace Studies 72 W illiam H. McMillion Comptroller Rohcrl I McWtu.rlcr Associate Dtart o SES John C. Ludlum Dean nf (Iraduale School 73 Robert F. Munn Director of Libraries William H. Miernyk Director of Regional Research Institute 74 James C. Rccd Director of I ' linlnixing and Invcnlorv Ruth DeAnlonis Fdwin W Reynolds Director of Mountiiinlair Robert A. Robarbs Director of Housing W i.nc A Miilh Director of Computer Center 75 S. Thomas Serpento Director of University Hospital Ruth E. Robinson Manager of M ' . I ' . U. Bookstore Eugene L. Staples Director of i ' nircrsilv Hospital 76 Valentin Ulrich Director of Institule Bioldgical Sciences Calmon Voice Program Advisor r . . ■ I, I ■■- : iilJi.il mvvtm mm m Col. V illiaiii L) K ard Mililarv Science 77 Rev, David Pilliod Roman Caiholic Rev. Thomas Miller Presbylerian Rev. Eugene Moses Church of God Rev. Donald Spencer Presbylerian 78 Rev. David Hanes Liitlhiiin Rev. Riiberl Cushman lethi)disi h Rev. George McFarland Methodist Rc . Charles Snork Roberts Episcopalian 79 Student Administration STUDENT ADMINISTRATION CABINET-Left to right: John Wooten, Sheiry Simon, Brad Hammer, Sue Hardin, and Don Brown. STUDENT ADMINISTRATION EXECUTIVES-Left to right: Cathy Montgomery (vice-president), Alan Woodford (president), and Dave Kostelanski (treasurer). 80 STUDENT ADMINISTRATION CULTURAL COMMITTEE- Left to right: John Wooten, Sherry Simon, Sue Hardin. Brad Hammer, and Ralph Hayes. Organizations and Honoraries Dottie DeMark editor p 81 Associated Women Students ASSOCIATBD WOMKN STUDENTS-Lefl to right: Karen Goldsmith (ireasurer), Beth Ann Howard (vice president of judiciar ). Ann Wilson (vice president of activities), Nancy Mazurek (secretary), Yolan Wright (lAWS contact), and Jo Ann Spencer (president). 82 Mortar Board 1. Tari McClintock 12. Beckv Kennedy 2. Lois Fitzsimmons 13. Debbie Abolin 3. Wilma Eslep 14. Robin Core 4. Palli Lausch 15. Shclli Hinnerman 5. Janet Lovegrove 16. Debbie Burmer 6. Judi Tarowski 17. Martha Holland 7. Jane Dearstvne 18. Roberta Fox 8. Sherric Gainer 19. Julie Southerland 9, Pallv Kochek 10. Sherrs ' Umina 1 1. Judy Valentine 83 Li-Toon-Awa LI-TOON-AWA. SOPHOMORE WOMENS ' HONORARY-Left to right: Linda Gray (presi- dent), Debby Lambert (treasurer), and Isabel Perry (vice-president). Second row, left to right: Laurie Anderson, Rita Jo Roman, Randi Civitello, Ann Butler, and Jackie Bryan (secretary). Third row, left to right: Miss Jean Benson (advisor). Janet Hammack, Sherry Simon, Vicki Sto- nestreet, Cappy McCartney, Louise Gray, Donna Fulton, Joyce Wilson, and Libby Lear. Chimes CHIMES, JUNIOR WOMENS ' HONORARY-Left in iiiihi M.ir lilicn Nienier. Sheila Williams (Vice-president). Miss Betty Miller (advisor), Liz Spalding, Donna Corbin (secretary), Sarah Murphy, Patty Christopher, Karen Ksrth, Peggy Clapham, Roxanne Powers (treasurer), Margaret Mastalerz, Beverly Ammar, Ann Reppaire, Sue Hardin, Carol Dawson, Karen Kinney, Ann Coombs, Jill Dorn. Ann Wilson, Jeanette Luchok (president), and Susan Thomas. 84 Orchesis ORCHESI S PERSONNEL 9. Debbie Freeman 17. Judy Martin 1. Lois Anderson 10. Mary Beth Garvin 18. Kay Moore (secretary) 1 1. Carolyn Given 19. Linda Moyer 2. Carolyn Bachman (secretary) (president) (historian) 12. Debbie Greco 20. Patty Palumbo 3. Candy Benson 13. Beth Haines 21. Serena Saboz-fuctcr 4. Susan Cagey 14. Debbie Hardman 22. Charles Shcikovitz 5. Vickie Davis (wardrobe custodian) 23. Janet Stephenson 6. Geoff Ezell 15. Carolyn Jackson 24. Mike Stewart 7. Joan Felice 16. Wendy Kujal 25. Meredith Sturm 8. Allie Foster (wardrobe custodian) 26. Sheila Walker DANCERS -Left to right: Wendy Kujat, Janet Stephenson, Kay Moore, and Joan Felice. FlREBlRD Left to right: Patty Palumbo. Allie Foster. Kay Moore. Joan Felice, Mary B. Garvin, Susan Cagey, Carolyn Jackson. Debbie Freeman, and Janet Jo Lorina. 9x • ; 85 Helvetia HELVETIA. SOPHOMORE MENS ' HONORARY-Left to right: Fred Leif (president), Charlie Cappellari, Gary Back (vice-president); David Cohen. William Mercer. Darrell Collins, Frank Carenbaur. Darrell Quick. Gilford Dyer. Steve Britt, Terry Turner (treasurer), Charles MacAllister, Randy Robinson, and Doug Kilmer (secretary). Sphinx SPHINX. SENIOR MENS ' HONORARY-First row, left to right: Mark Miller, James Braxton, Gary Vanniere. and John Patteson. Second row. left to right: Robert Kennan. Larry Sartore. William Harmison, David Pollitt, Bradford Hammer, and Ralph Hayes. Third row. left to right: John Houghton. Michael Sherwood. Alan Woodford. Gary Tassone, and Lewis Rocchini. 86 Fi Batar Cappar FI BATAR CAPPAR, MOCK MENS ' HONORARY-First row, left to right; Scott King. Jim Morri- son, Dewey Boswell, and John Ferbe. Second row, left to right: Riley Maynard. Bill Senseney, Dan Lang, David Parks, Kent Jackfert, Mark Fufari, and Ken Codeluppi. Third row, left to right: Rocky Morabito, Woodv Boyle, Bob Clock, Randy Ringer. Dave Laughlin. Dan Najimian, Bill Hendricks. Dennis Bowen. Len McDonald, Jeff Morgan, and George Scritchfield. First row, left to right: Tom Nazzaro, Jack Shumate, A. Jay Hatfield. Lee Rice, Andy Moore. Second row. left to right: Ron Corso. Dennis Lutz, Steve Evans, Jeff Bailey, Mike Crouse, Tony Galto. Rich Rurak, and Dave Williams. Third row. left to right: Dave King. Bryan Connair. Bill Johnston. Gary Schnache. Jim Scudere. John Bengier. Pat Smith. George Zivkovich, Ben Hardesty, Bob Kutcher, Tom Flaherty, and Ray Gillette. 87 Interfraternity Council H ' f . n r i . A H l IFC OFFICERS: Vince Manzi, BUI Lyons, and Bob Kennan. Panhellenic PANHELLENIC OFFICERS: Beckie Ferracio, Sue Friebertshauser. Katie Rice, and Nancy Clavcnger. If JSl PANHELLENIC MEMBERS-Bottom to top: Gail Tenant). Sue Fnebert.shauser. Dcbbi.. Wtiit., kai.t K.vt. N n A Clavenger. Pam Harless. Karen Schoonober. Mar Kay Corum. Beckie Ferracio. Marilyn Shandler. and Therese Smith. 89 Alpha Delta Theta ALPHA DELTA THETA. MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY HONORARY-Front row. left to nght: Shirley Henderson. Freya Swisher. Jacque Vandervate. and Jenny Pellegrin. Second row, left to nght: Sharon Sabatini. Denise Crites, Annette Communtzis. Sharon Huggett. Cindy Kinney, Jenny Goodwin, Julia Kesterson. Third row. left to right: Ja- nice Malone, Katherine Hanko, Judith Morris. Linda Masarik, Diane Eaglehouse. Becky Standard. Doris Fidazzo, Gloria Morris, Vickie Losh, and Jill Jamison. LAMBDA KAPPA SIGMA. PROFESSIONAL PHARMACi:ii I ICAL FRATKRNI 1 i lOK V (). thN Lcti lo right: Carmen Donofrio. Patty Giese, Lana Cox, Janice Lucas, Anne Winne. Ann Freeman. Juliana Brown, Nancy Kelley, Michelle Monezio, Mary Kay Crowgey. Carol Meadows, Christine Stevenson, Abigail Stephenson. Patty Hayes. Bonnie Coe. Sharon Burnette. Stella Fan. Cathy Chayhen. Caro- lyn Riffee. Paiti Bailey, Debbie Bailey, Nancy Jo Bailo, Diane Mearns, and Anna Beard. Lambda Kappa Sigma 90 Alpha Epsilon Delta ALPHA EPSILON DELTA, PRE-MEDICINE HONORARY-Front row. left to right: Lenore Rexroad. Roxanne Powers, Ruby Grimm (secretary), and Margaret Simpson. Second row. left to right: Ben Alt. Mark McCormick (president). Charles Mirabli. Bra- delv Levin. Ernie Bonitatibus. and Bernie Imrich. Third row. left to right: Steve Kessel (treasurer). Steve Lewis (historian), Dave Chapmen, and Phil Luchini (vice-president). SIGMA THETA TAU, NURSING HONORARY-Seated. left to right: Gaynelle McKinney (counselor). Patricia Williams (treasurer). Rhonda Mickels (president). Clara Long, and Bonnie Thomas. Standing, left to right: Lorita Jenab (dean). Barbara Weller. Robin Core. Shirley Bell, and Patricia Diehl (secretary). Sigma Theta Tau 91 Student Education Society STUDENT NATIONAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION -Left to right; Donna Butcher (vice-president). Penny McCauley (secretary), Nancy Meredith (president), and Betty Clawges (treasurer). li)estlfirgmid.% ' VniVer ' sify ALPHA TAU ALPHA, AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION HONORARY-Seated, left to right: Dr. R. C. Butler (advisor), Stanley Hop- kins (treasurer), Rodney Wallbrown (president), Paul Cummings (secretary), and Mitchell Fincham (reporter). Back row left to right; Donald Michael, James Carr, William Aberess, Eugene Rice, Dennis Feather, Robert Knotts, Doyle Harsh, Danny Brake, Kenneth Seal, Richard Williams, Gregory Lee, and William Wilson. Alpha Tau Alpha 92 Residence Halls Association RHA APPELLATE BOARD-Seatcd, left to right: Roxanne Power. Mike Vaughan (chairman, and Denise LeClair). Standing, left to right: Mike Miller. Dave A.sh. and Darryl Collins. RESIDENCE HALL ASSOCIATION-Front row. left to right: Steve Shirley and John McMillion. Second row. left to right: Joyce Achenbrenner. Annie PatcheU, and Rosa Anna Manzo. Third row, left to right: Barbara DougIa.s (treasurer). Monica Tarantino (secretary). Mike Vaughan (vice-president). Beki Kennedy (presi- dent), and Kris Rose (communications coordinator). 93 Kappa Kappa Psi KAPPA KAPPA PSI, BAND HONORARY-Left to right: Joe Hill (secretary), Charles Washington, Robert Zigmont, William Luzadder (president), Tom Dunham, Jim Rossetti, Jerry Samazze (treasurer), Paul Sammons (vice president), Kevin WiUiams, and Ross Riddell (chancellor). 94 -■ jg- ._ 7 I I I I J I I I I ,1 Iff! .• T I I I I t . ' X  . . 4 O SiO ATO 3 0 W ♦ Band 95 Army R.O.T.C Counterguerrilla Company (Rangers) MS 11 1 Training Company— Cadet Major White, Commander. Scabbard and Blade— National Military Honor Society Pershing Rifles— National Drill Organization Counterguerilla Company— Rangers R.O.T.C. Rifle Team Mountainettes— Co-ed Drill Team Flight Instruction Program— Army Aviation 96 Second Ballalion— Cadet Lieutenant Colonel Blankenship, Commander. First Battalion-Cadet Lieutenant Colonel Schmit, Commander. 97 Mountainettes MOUNTAINETTES-Front row, left to tight: Kathy McGee and Karen Zimmerman (executive officer). Second row, left to right: Barbara Bintliff, Dana Baily, and Lorena Battistone. Third row, left to right: Linda Dechek, Karen Shinn, and Janet Hammack. Fourth row, left to right: Janelle Schierling, Gogi Morris, Cheryl Cox, and Carolyn Dann. Fifth row, left to right: Margaret Clay, Sandy Wil- liams, Chris Scott, Pam Gorman, and Kathy Kuijda. Sixth row, left to right: Antoinette Petrucci, Kathy Mayfield, Kathy Dechek, and Camille Bartman. Seventh row, left to right: Cody Cunningham (pledge trainer), Ann Alger, and Jodie Brown (treasurer). - HijidaKiiB taiH PERSHING RIFLES— Front row, left to right: Crickett Myles, Eldon Callen (first sgt), Forrest Aurentz (commander), James Ptton (executive officer), and Kathy Kuijda. Second row, left to right: Cpt. Carl W. Albright (advisor), SFC. Forrest Facemire (assistant ad- visor), Joseph Burmer, Roger Ferrell, Wilmer Boothe, Robert Burchett, Curtis Shinn, Raymond Miller, Gary Sypolt, David Moss, Robert Molinaro, Charles Hollandsworth, Jack Hawkins, John Pack, Larry Campbell, Mitchell Stevenson, Tom Jackson, Richard Corey, Richard Lemons, Brant Hathaway, Stephen Schmit, and Klans MuUinex. Pershing Rifles 98 Beta Alpha Psi BETA ALPHA PSI, ACCOUNTING HONORARY-Sealed, lefl to right: Linda Travis, Becky Kennedy, and Jane Brand. Standing, lert to right: Mike Martin, Robert Maust (faculty vice-president), John Minnich, Donald Nestor, Glenn Larew, David Sweda, David Toth, Thomas Loehr, Charles Schoen, Larry Walker, Kerry Petry, Darl Brown, and Carl Andrews. Alpha Phi Omega 99 Cheerleaders VARSITY CHEERLEADERS-Front: Shelley Reel. Kneeling, left to right: Jan Hedrick, Johanna Bryant, and Sissy Getgood. Standing, left to right: Betsy Painter and Ellen Colvin. Top: Sandy Lee. HOMI. l.t ' ONCJMIC ' S A.S.SOCIATION AND A.MhRR AN SOC Ihl ! (.)! AC.RICULTURAL ENGINEERS-Front row. left to right: Carol Dawson HEA (social vice-president), Ladonna Hoke HEA (secretary), Marilyn Casto HEA, Debbie Burmer HEA, Mary Lynn Cal- lahan HEA (president), Jayne Klebe HEA (ASAE queen, reporter), Danny L. Bainbridge ASAE (president), Ron Lutz ASAE, Greg Ko- zera ASAE (secretary). Bill Adam.son ASAE (vice-president), and Glenn Gerhart ASAE. Back row, left to right: Ruthanna Maurer HEA, Janis Henry HEA, Randy Flint ASAE, Susan Skaggs HEA (programs vice-president). Ferardo Salas ASAE, Bill Daugherty ASAE, Ed Primrose ASAE, Andy Pojak ASAE, Jim Brown ASAE, and Don McNeel ASAE. Home Economics Association and American Society of Agricultural Engineers 100 Monticola 71 Staff p. Clinton Winter, business manager. Hunter P McC ariiiev. advisor. James J. Roop. editor. 101 Robert S. Clock. Greeks. Paul L. Wilson, Seniors. Dottie DeMark, Organizations and Honoraries. 102 David L. Smith, photographer. John W. Collins. Royalty. L. Thomas Nazzuro. Rovaliv. 103 104 Greeks Robert Clock editor 105 106 107 108 109 no 1. Jim Shafer-Historian 2. Ed Hambrick— Recording Secretary 3. Bob Martini 4. Terr) ' Wolfe-Corresponding Secretar) ' 5. Jim Lighlner-President 6. Buddy Wolfe 7. Dave Ash-Treasurer 8. Steve Burge Phi Gamma Delta 111 Alpha Gamma Rho ■ V tfte Vkt- ' riikAK :y: •; % ;; 1 . Michael Jackson 2. Carter Skeetz 3. David English 4. Larry Burd 5. David Francis— President 6. Ed Bethel 7. John Kulscar 8. William Woodland 9. David Stanton 10. George Painter 1 1. Steve Perdue 12. Alvin Williams 13. Scott Speedy 14. Robert Pitts-2nd Vice-President 15. Dennis Ross 16. John Perdue 112 17. Al Grey 18. William Miller 19. Vance AKis 20. Larn Ware -1st Vice-President 21. William Wilson 22. Robert .Armour NOT PICTURED John Bell Daniel Br an William Hebt Steve Hersheld Harrv Jackson Jim Webb Drew Wharton Glenn Wharton 113 Alpha Delta PI 1. Debbie Jones 2. Beverly White 3. Kaye McClain 4. Wendy Branney 5. Bev Griffith 6. Joel Rochlus 7. Beth Weber 8. Connie Adam 9. Sue Hardin— Treasurer 10. Jenny Neihaus 11. Pam Potts 12. Mario 13. Susan Cunningham 14. Alice McClung 15. Mary Ann Sellaro 16. Mary Lynn Cocco 114 1. Diana Edens 2. Marion Nicholas 3. Mary Ellen Niemer 4. Linda Winter 5. Cheryl McWilliams 6. Diane Decker 7. Mary Polansky 8. Kathy Hume 9. Jeanne Lucas 10. Cheryl DeSaley 11. Randi Curlillo 12. Wilma Marlowe 13. Julane Curtis 14. Janice Hall 15. Annette Echarl 16. Mary Staller 17. Carm Wallace 18. Marsha Wolman NOT PICTURED Judy Evans Sheiry Umina Vicki Vesely— President Mona Shinn Deb Hall 15 Alpha Xi Delta 1. Betsy Mclntire 2. Weenie Burdette 3. Susan Milliken 4. Barbara Manilla 5. Lesa Maloney 6. Stacev Schmidt 7. Wendy Clark 8. Sue Engstrom 9. Sue Bowser 10. Pam Harless-Panhellenic Representative 1 1. Marlene Barker 12. Debbie McMillion 13. Karen Schoonover 14. Kay Moore 15. Carolyn Given-Recording Secretary 16. Karen Mullens— Corresponding Secretary 17. Paula D ' Andrea 18. Suzanne Jackson— Pledge Trainer 19. Jennifer Damous 116 NOT PICTURED Dcbby Book Barb ButtorIT Susan Cagey Nancy Cannon Lcjuc Coslanzo Colleen Cox Nancy Cox Dotlie DeMark Sherry Eade Karen Everctl Kathy Folen Emily Goodykoontz Lee Halkovich Donna Hall Mar!.ha Hall Donna Harms Linda Howell Sherry Killen Linda Kindelbcrger Carol Kulina Patli Lausch Kathy McC all-Treasurer Susan McClung Susan Moyle Barbara Puskanch Kns Sales Monica Schroeder Ellen Sharp Jenny Smith Cindy Wege 1. Marianne Bracco 2. Marion LaPresti 3. Nancy Davisson 4. Ellen Gibson-President 5. Helen Dickie 6. Whitey 7. Diane Dubovsky 8. Chris Smith 9. Sally Bowser 10. Mary Kay Droullard 11. Corleen Barker 12. Lindsey Sharp-Membership Chairman 13. Eileen Weller 14. Debbie Ciccarelli 15. Nancy Kulina 16. Sally Lester 17. Jan Cozvi 18. Lynn Ivery— Vice-President 19. Cathy Tschappat 20. Jane Roller 21. Jenny Johnson 117 ...r Alpha Phi 1. Nancy Clevenger 2. Patty Rodnok 3. Patty Hamilton 4. Priss Young 5. Arlene Kieser 6. Carol Henry 7. Patty Schulz 8. Sharon Horton 9. Ann Tender 10. Kalhy Huffman 1 1. Trish Marchio 12. Anne Michael 13. Barb Williams 14. Beth Thorne 15. Linda Molosky 16. Chris Scott 17. Dianne Johnson 18. Kathi O ' Neal 19. Jane Michael 20. Karen Waters 21. Jody Ritchie 22. Anne Anderson 23. Donna Fulton 24. Cindy Melmige NOT PICTURED Kathy Spitzer Katie Rice Debbie Weltman Jane A. Brand Olga Frontino Kate Matheson Mary Margaret Murrill Sandy Helle Joanne Loflin Patty Hayes Margaret Mastalerz 118 Nancy Smith Polly Norlon Susie McConnell Janelle Schierling Joanne Eros Sherry Simon Phyllis Maruica Kathie Dcchek 9. Mary Beck Dickson 10. Sue Grundy 11. Debbie Rose 12. Karen Goldsmith 13. Debbie Ray 14. Pam Boynlon 15. Janet Legg 16. Anita Loos 17. Vicki Tate 18. Barb Avery 19. Shelley Simon 20. Jean Hensel 21. Sue Cochran 22. Pal Wehner 23. Susan Street 24. Jane E. Brand 25. Diani Pennington 26. Kathy Brannon 27. Lorena Battistonc 28. Teddi Jo Hill 29. Missy Maust 119 Beta Theta Pi NOT PICTURED Mark Zatezalo Bob Halkovich Gary Thomas Charley Robey Dave Hill Bill Lincicome John Hughes Bob Coll Barry Fleming Larry Minardi John Joseph Gary Parsons Rick Montgomery Steve Archer Ben Benovit . Joe Buffa John Chaddock Chuck Cunningham Tom Evans Paul Freeland Joe Fuscaldo Gary Hagerty Al Hawkins Mike Holt 1. Greg Smith 25. Allen Hyle 2. Mike Deem 26. Mike Perrella 3. Mike Herron 27. Perry Miller 4. Rod Pawich 28. Joe Juhan 5. Don Sensenbaugh 29. Robbie Robinson 6. Dave Denning 30. Jim Smith 7. Sam Cipoletti 31. Mike Harris 8. Barry Fitz 32. Steve Fanok 9. Dick File 33. John R. Knox 10. Greg Church 34. Chuck Capito 11. MikeHaller 35. Sam Rozance 12. Butch Rolfe 36. Ken Steir 13. Bill Jeffrey 37. Dave Snyder 14. Bruce Hyre 38. Jack Hammond 15. Bill Moon Hendricks 39. Bob Capito 16. Sam Yerrid 40. Tony Gato 17. Frank Cordovano 41. John Secret 18. Jeff Ballard 42. Dave McCarus 19. Mike Luppinetti 43. Jim Davidson 20. Terry Thomas 44. Lou Mazza 21. DukeHaddad 45. Bob Flannery 22. Bob Frum 46. Jim Magro 23. John Mani 47. Jim Mazza 24. Tim Bandi 120 1. Ron Legan 2. Ken Lenihan 3. Greg Church 4. Barry Fitz 5. Don Hogan 6. Ray Howell A( f 7. Ed Hill 8. Gary Park i l 3 9. Tom Dickie 10. John Wilson 11. Joe Hughes 9 12. Don Sensewbaugh 13. Bob Capito 14. Tom Flaherty 15. Garv Kenamond 16. John Wurlzbacher 17. Jack Hammond 18. Ted Grodhau.s NOT PICTURED 19. Matt Wender Tom Kulick 20. Bob Bealty Mark Leidecker 21. Moon Hendricks Mike Luchmi 22. Ted Wisner Phil Luchmi 23. Butch Rolfe Sam McPherson 24. Frank Cordovano Tonv Minardi 25. Jack Pearce Kim Moore 26. Jeff Bowles Sam Nasiase 27. Terry Stevens Tom Nestor 28. Mike Harris Russ Parsons 29. Vince Manzi Dave Percynski 30. Jerry Nestor 3 1 . Tony Gaio 32. John Secret 33. Jim Das-idson 34. Lou Mazza 35. Bob Flannery 36. Jim Magro 37. John Mam 38. Bruce Hyre 39. Jim Mazza 121 1. John Bush 2. Alana Markley 3. Gay Fink 4. Madelyn Mahanes 5. Judy Swanson 6. AUce Fisher 7. Cadine Geisel 8. Karen Ferrel 9. Karen Duxbury 10. Nancy Best 11. Jane Scherer 12. Cheryl Hill 13. Beth Anderson 14. Susan Steiding 15. Mary Beth Krasevec 16. Linda Thomp.son 17. Judy Spencer 18. Gloria Stackpole Gamma Phi Beta 122 Linda Schar Candy Fichler Mary Lou Mihalich Francie Robey Donna Gibson Dick Nuuer 7. Barb Wyatt 8. Donna Schull Barb Marsh Sue Slrefl Kathy Beard Susan Holl Mom B 14. Margie Peterson 15. Ann Carver Gracey NOT PICTURED Gina Pu zuoli Madonna BIyler Donna Barton Barbara Vande Linde 123 1. Kathy Logue— 1st Vice-President 2. Carol Wolfe 3. Mary Jo Swoyer 4. Barbara Bonsall 5. Kathy Wingo 6. Vee Grant— Housemother 7. Betsy Rogers 8. Ann Kisinger 9. Debbie Greco 10. Susan Thomas— President 11. Sally Kreps 12. Susan Dudics 13. Joan Marra 14. Debbie Weith 15. Debbie Marcum 16. Claudia Bliss 17. Margie Corbitt 18. Jo Ann Audia 19. Sallie Perry Delta Gamma 124 1. Diana Brown 2. Jeanne Warman 3. Susan Lowe 4. Mary Jo Swoyer 5. Carol Wolfe 6. Patty Gainer 7. Becky Toothman 8. Donna Hutton 9. Althea Rutherford 10. Diane Slussar 1 1. Debbie Turner 12. Cindy Atkin. .on 13. Hannah 14 Marv Lee Sloan 15. Jan Cook 16. Tera Lynch 17. Libby Davis 18. Sue Barcic 19. Gogi Morris 20. Becky Watts 21. Rose Smith 22. Ann Hines-2nd Vice-President 23. Karin Kelly 24. Lynanne Butcher NOT PICTURED Meg Baughman Robvn Bowdcn Cindy Chambers Chcry Chock Mary Kay Corum Nancy Fasnacht Linda Fisher Mars Beth Garvin Bclh Gladwcll Repna Gwinn Barb Hamahan Man Beth Harshbarger Jill Hincs Margo Howard Terry Johnson Janet Juergcns Patty Marshall Sara Meadows Chns Murphy Patty Napier Karen Ragni Kathy Ralston Tern Reinking Lisa Ryder Julie Stone Dcni-sc Tomeralli Ann Vargo Kalhie Young 125 1 . Mary Magdy 2. Joyce Opsetnik 3. Mary McClintock 4. Debbie Golden 5. Claudia Baulsley 6. Alice Dugan 7. Ann Vincent 8. Sue Martin 9. Myra Stanley 10. Vicki Heale 11. Jeanne Clare 12. Nancy Crichton 13. Kathy Kujda 14. Kathy Thacker 15. Cheryl Watson 16. Pat Sweeney 17. Arabel Hatfield 18. Carolyn Denn 19. Linda Conner 20. Mary Ann Calloway 21. Debbie Scales 22. Nancy Long 23. Cris Cherry 24. Jane Roland 25. Rosanne Samus 26. Debbie Hendrickson Delta Delta Delta 126 1. Christie Wildman 2. Susie Marchlen 3. Connie Klemm 4. Connie McSwain 5. Barb Bonar 6. Jane McCullough 7. Christie McSwain 8. Judy Reilly 9. Judy Mann 10. Judy Valentine 11. Beth Ann Howard 12. Sandy Guiliani 13. Sue Stanger 14. Marilyn Shandor 15. Donna Seachman 16. Elaine Zabonnslu 17. Ann Dickey 18. Vicki Rittenhouse 19. Sandy Rupp NOT PICTURED Jenny Neely Lois Flannery Cindy Lewis Patti Christopher Su.san Marsh Roxann Powers Meredith Sturm Sharon Bunell Sara Painter Linda Bonasso Stephanie Thompson Debbie Frame Sue Fitchman Robin Ashworth Sara McEnna Louise Gray 127 1. Luther L. Lofon 2. Kent Jackfeat 3. Randy Humphreys 4. Charles Cappellari 5. Harvey Peyton 6. Don Talbott 7. Tom Hardman— Treasurer 8. Bob Kennen 9. Tim Conaway 10. Mike Metz 1 1 . Tom Clegg 12. Bill Ballard— Recording Secretary 13. John Hammond 14. Gary Cannon 15. Rudy Stanovich 16. Robert Veanon Beathold 17. Mike Chipley 18. Gene Reiff 19. Ernie Vecchio 20. Bill Smith 21. John Porec— President 22. Dudley Parks 23. Mike Bradley 24. Aldo Quagliotti 25. Aaron Phillips 26. John Beard 27. Bill Tracy 28. Howard C. Bolt 29. Greg Baiscoe 30. Robbie Smyth 31. Jim Boyd 32. Bill Smutny • St ' : f : Delta Tau Delta NOT PICTURED Skip Austin Dan Baker Tony Barone Byron Black Sam Anderson Larry Brian Chris Burskcy John ColTman Bob Cook Bill Fisher Jon Francis John Gwynne Rocky Haskins Joe Hursh Mort Johnson Steve Johnson Rick Loretta Vic Menn Dave McCandless Larry Menlzer Don Meredith Mark Miller John Moore Mike Morris Louie George Jay Hast Mike Haught Steve Heulheou Jeff Hill Don Lough 128 rs) J=l A A f J .fl J My 1. Mike Giusti 2. Sieve Boitt 3. Paul Kearney— Vice President 4. Bob Meadows 5. Dave Parks 6. Ken Bunk 7. Paul Weaver 8. John Woolen 9. Mike ChevTont 10. Chns Potts 1 1 . John Genwig— Corresponding Secretary 12. Dave Najar-House Manager 13. Bill Skewes 14. Frank Smith 15. Dave Sktdmore 16. Chuck Corspecker 17 Brad Hill 18 John Hciser [9. Randy Zook 20. Lewis Dale Gilbert 21 Dave Jagdman 22. Bill Samuelson Steve Patty Ed Prendergast Mike Riggs Jim Reger Gary Smith Mark Stanley Jay While Bill Goldsmith Dave Kessel-Beer Chairman Rav Golden Dave Powell Dave Butler Walt Golembiewski Paul Finn Mike Connor Scott Booney John Neal Chuck Payne Tom Pastlethwait Doug SkatT Rod Smith Bill Stensbury Doug Townshend Kim West Jim While Dave Williams Bob Zitelli John Witiman Mark Waldo Steve George Bob Dawson Kip .Mdcrman Bill Baker Steve Baker Marty Becker Rick Burnesky John Calandros Alex Cocco Dave Culiccrto Joe Dawson 129 Theta Chi 130 I. John McAltee NOT PICTURED 2. John Dewey Dan Chalfant 3. Bob Schenck George Cook 4. John Rulice Dave Fueg 5. Ike Rethel Dave Hirschfeld 6. Bill Carter Willis Nowell 7. Wayne Jeffers Rudy Rosnich 8. Marv Albright Dave Williams 9. Dave Howard Lee Rice 10. Vince Anido Bob Straub 11 Waldo Geisel Frank Dewey 12 Gary Charles Tom Hartley 13. Dennis Bowen 14 ' Rabbi Trenor 15. Pole 16. Dallas Hotz 17. Matt Provenzano 18. Bob Kutchen 19. Ron Conoven 20. Dan Najimian 21. Bruce Richards 131 NOT PICTURED Jean Bussard Pam Life Anna Lang Brown Beckie Ferraccio Renee Groves— Vice-President Vicki Hog ett Susan Tompkins Anne Repaire Mary Farwell Janet Hammack Pat Reilley Amelia Naccarto Janice Goodwin Mike Grande Francine Vogt 132 Kappa Delta 1. Agnese Pollice 30. Pam Roberts 2. Martha Hollen 31. Cheryl Co.x 3. Camille Bartman 32. Kathy Silvis 4. Carolyn Mazzela 33. Mrs. Mary Austin- House Mother 5. Claudia Peery 34. Janie Solomon 6. Susie Trumble 35. Jerri Tate 7. Nancy Lindberg 36. Cheri Anderson 8. Beverly Amniar 37. Debby Cummings 9. Helen Theophilus 38. Margaret Clay 10. Jane Duffy 39. Connie Larew 11. Mitzi Kisner 40. Lois Anderson 12. Patti Eaglciski 41. Sharon Madeja 13. Eileen Griffith-Secretary 42. Jane Jacobs 14. Leslie Schultheis 43. Taunja Willis 15. Debbv Harmiscm 44. Melinda Spiker 16. Pam Gorman 45. Jamie Hoover 17. Martha Carter 46 Gussie Boulding 18. Lu Jones 47. Cherie Buck 19. Sheila Williams 48. Nancy Cline 20. Krankie Hale 49. Jodie Brown 21. Ann Bonar 50. Elaine Tilka 22. Susie Stenger 51. Maru Phillips 23. Sue Tavlor 52. Kay Brown 24. Sarah Burdetle 53. Pam Maurer 25. Ann Hickman 54. Bev Baker 26. Julianna Gearhart- President 55. Nancy Martin 27. Isabel Perry 56. Joan Jackson 28. Antoinette Petrucci 57. Cindy Phillips 29. Ruth Ann Wamsley 133 Kappa Kappa Gamma NOT PICTURED Stephanie Beulike Susan Brown Darby Cahill Peggy Church Cindy Downey Cathy Ezell Cindy Faulkes Nancy Freese Jody Gluclc Carla Haslam Barbara Hemphill Debbie Henderson Leigh Holsclaw Nancy Houck Linda Hoy Pam Janes Linda Kirtley Linda Lloyd Elizabeth Martin Nancy Mazurek-Second Vice-President Pam Melvin Becky Munday Linda Troeller Missy Ulrey Audrey Wilkins Lynn Wilson Alice Brown Laura Colburn Amy Leach Gingy Smith Peggy Monahan Susie Barnard Joan Corson Ellen Peters Mary Anne Mullenix 7. Barbara Hemphill 8. Karen Potesta Joyce Wilson Betsy Beatty Mimi Smith Suzanne Hatcher 13. Donna Boylann 14. Dawn Baltich 15. Linda Grey 16. Donna Kersten-First Vice-President 17. Sandy Mullenax 18. Kathy Raynak 19. Kathy Hricik 20. Pam Maphis-Presideni 21. Mary Kate Dean 22. Barbara Webb 23. Linda Smith 24. Pam Reynolds 25. Janice Proud 26. Rosalie Earle 134 1. Patty Carrier 2. Mar) ' Ann Christie 3. Anne McWhorter 4. Sandy Michael 5. Libby Lear 6. Mary Jane Copley 7. Lucy Janes 8. Candy Cowgill 9. Dana Knight 10. Luan Culp 11. Bobbi Zigler 12. Beck a Preston 13. Patty Palumbo 14. Sharon Golden 15. Cappy McCartney 16. Ann Wilson 17. Jane Moore 135 Kappa Sigma Y- ' i -,¥. . ' % R R t ' C } 136 I . Ben Parker 2 Ken Codcluppi 3. Bill Paxlon 4. Eladio Mazon 5. John Bcngier 6 Bill Deem 7. John Aslrino 8. Rick Mason 9. Bill Meckel 10. Dan Stolfi 1 1 Don Crane 12. Ned Durbin 13. Raymo 14. Bill Johnson 15. Gene Schriner 16. Randy Hoffman 17. Don Borda 18. Robert Lesben 19. Frank Stoy 20. Joerd Kaufman 21. Mule Hickman 22. Rusty Allison 23. Jim Wolf 24. Dave Mason 25. Barry Caste 26. Jim George 27. Tom Moore 28. George McCulley 29. Chip Mitchell 30. Dave Warsinsky 31. Emy Bonitatibus 32. Doc Corder 33. Larry Douglas 34. Dan Lang 35. Dill Dugas 36. Tom Bulger 37. Jon Furbee 38. Ken Surber 39. Dewayne Hannah 40. Ron Bell 41. Tom Orban 42. Alan Woodford 43. Jim Scudere 44. J. J. Muto 45. Joe Kolesar NOT PICTURED John Boyd Milch Harris Tom Sutton Rich Peck Dr. Denny Unger Bob Hcckel Frank Dynda Jack Frame Dan Page Steve Montgomery Joe Boswell Jim Schmill Jack Shannon Brian Conmar Paul P. Loadenstine Bill Trainer Jim Williams Michael Petruski Steve Balombini John Padden Jim Hunt Doug Clark Greg Zaborny Henry Rossi Dan Prado Jack Shoemaker Wilham Marshall John Green Joe Marro Vincent Oliverio Jeff Tulalo Mark Teich Adam Gluchoski Bill Waterman Greg Mooney 137 . . .;. Pi Beta Phi 1. Jackie Bryan 2. Barb Clavan 3. Karen Kinney 4. Anita Bacco 5. Becky Hamilton 6. Mary Pat Rice 7. Anne Cunningham 8. Pam Baldwin 9. Gail Tenanty 10. Debbie Garrett 11. Jeanie Schnably 12. PaLsy Powell 13. Mary Ann Angotti 14. Ann Faulkner 15. Rebecca Wilson 16. Pam Shepherd 17. Ann Wilson 18. Teri Robinson 19. Brada Spiker 20. Winnie Robinson 21. Janet Tintle 22. Bonnie McKeever NOT PICTURED Carolyn Bachnian Linda Bachnian Vicki Baldini Dottie Bradshaw Anne Coombs Li . Cnchton Jill Dorn Mary Erskine Mary Jane Flesher Betty Anne Franco Lynn Galama Susan Jar is 138 r r T ••■ ■ f - ■- K ■ , J , . -1- M ' y n J. 1. Kalhy Kritzschmar 2. Kathy Voege 3. Mrs. Evelyn Slakley 4. Margaret Foster 5. Diane Griffin 6. Carol Bellott Hartley 7. Connie Angotti 8. Marie Phipps 9. Joann Spencer 10. Janice Offutt 11. Beth Aldish 12. Peggy Haberstroh 13. Debbie Dunning 14. Jean King 15. Christy Phillippi 16. Belh Allen 17. Peggy Tennani 18. Denny Criles 19. Katy Beal 20. Paige Cornwell Jo Anne Marra Nannette Martin Vickie Moore Helga Paxton Rosemary Pais Barb Schudere Theresa Smith Beth Snyder Debbie While Ande Ward Susie Woodford Yolan Wright Kathy Knox Joan Meredith Mary Jo Porterfield Paula Spatloe Ann Davis 139 9 JSSSSSR IIB VI%f-«l « liMm ' (5 -5 iM?l =.- Umi-, ' J ' i ' r-cq ' r f_u c.r itiiiiJ . ; V ' ■ - 1 1 ' - 1% r - Pi Kappa Alpha 1. Charlie NOT PICTURED Steve Zahn Rudy Zimmerman John Bowden Tony Duryea Mark Henderson Randy Holliday Mark Hudwall Bob Kalmar Bob Kerns Mark Kreyenbuhl Bob Liskey Don Mcintosh Mark McRoberts Mike Morgan Ken Mossgrove Dean Rohrig Craig Sl Clair Tony Schmeck Joe Skinner Joel Takarsh Larry Taylor Eric Tennant Jim Thomecelli Larry Tirdil Tony Zilich Frank Marks Tom Morris John Piazza Mike Pike Dave Pollitt Jay Pontics Mike Queer Rob Sanders Ed Shaffer Dave Simonetti Dave Simpson Charlie Sisson Don Smith Tom Snebold Dave Stemple Gene Stevens Dave Tucker Gary Vanniere Keith Vicrbicky Joe Cirone Rick Wallzak Lacy Warden Tom White Donn Wright Paul Yellinek Marty Dodrill Dennis Dolfie Dave Dubois Wayne Duff Gary Forman Dick Gasperini Willard Gobert Mike Green Dave Gregory Ron Hagerman Montie Harper Jeff Hart Joe Hill Albert Izzo Bill John Tom Johnson Bill Kalzmarek Paul Kocan Randy Lease Jim Lewis Rick Link Jim Lovell Dennis Lutz John Mallow Rick Maltese Patrick Gallagher— President Robert Munn— Vice-President Michael Sunderland— Treasurer Robert Vettorel— Secretary Pete Adler Larry Albright Mark Amole Wayne Baker Robert Ball Vance Battista Robert Bauman Calvin Blakley Brian Bober John Buck Richard Carder BiffChidester Tom Chipps Mark Colabrese Bill Comisso Ron Corso Jim Crum Dave Czerniak Scott Davidson Rick Debone 140 - A Tau Kappa Epsilon 1. John Chambers 2. John McGlothlin 3. Sam Edwards 4. Teke 5. Gary Wilkinson 6. Jack Price 7. Bruce Meeker 8. Joe Jones 9. Ed Morgan 10. Dave Dunbar 11. Dan Lutz 12. John Di Francesco 13. Rick Agustine 14. Steve Alberl 15. Jon Hdavsa 16. Steve Finch 17. Jack Moucheron 18. Paul Jones 19. Mac Willingham 20. Ed Leefer 21. Phil Zsuldos 22. Riley Robbins 23. Roger Rainey 24. Lou Rossi 25. Dave Hovsard 26. Al Marline 27. Buzz Squires 28. Bruce Lazenby 29. John Bragg NOT PICTURED Bob Strauss Paul Grass Norman Bengel Allan Frink Glen McCarthy Jack Rickel John Crane Gary Adams Charlie Beam Buzzy Rausch Tom Rausch Chuck Williamson Joe Pate Del Fat 141 NOT PICTURED 1. Chuck Mendenhall 28. Dave Mattox Rich Lane Bob Wallace 2. Bob Percival 29 . Jack Falfes Pat Bond Mike Hewitt 3. Ed Bell 30. John Del Bene Dave Lahon Bob Wilkerson 4. Steve Snider 31. J. C. Solomon Bob Willis Larry Sartore 5. Dolph Mariotti 32. John Pavlik Joedy Huffman Tret Lemack 6. Steve Halfhill 33. Reg Corbett Sam Winans Mike Cox 7. Jim Hannah 34. Art Holdt Dave Seko Steve Lovell 8. Rich Snider 35. Rod Curtis John Young Dave Keith 9. Frank Simmerman 36. Greg Cable Ray Gross Ron Brown 10. Kevin Haynes 37. Don Riggenbach Mitch Nitchnowitz Abbey Claudio 1 1 . Rick Cain 38. Jack Stein Algie La Braska Jim Thomas 12. Chuck Goldstein 39. Fred Horton Scott Hindsley Jim Boswell 13. Gary Schnacke 40. Challen HiUberry Ken Osleger Mike Mellon 14. Len Massimino 41. DougBobbit Meege Fioca Nick Zatezalo 15. John Nattles 42. Chuck Moore Tom Lorder Marty Kendrick 16. Jeff Morgan 43. John Christian Mark Rector Tom Heflin 17. Not a member 44. Mike Young Joe Lauri Phil Gwinn 18. Dewey Boswell 45. Dale Longmire 19. George Speicher 46. Rich Street 20. Bill Kelly 47. Palmer Walker 21. Les Adams 48. Bill Bennedeti 22. Scott King 49. Bob Flynn 23. Frank Jeffe 50. Tim Horvath 24. Marty Shultz 51. Gary Johnson 25. Carl Lloyd 52. Art Drennen 26. Drew Mihalek 53. Steve Hill 27. Al Zambito 142 Sigma Nu 143 Sigma Phi Epsilon 1. Dave Hartley 2. Steve Curtis 3. Bill Ross 4. Cris Kroll 5. Adam Pate 6. Clint Winter 7. Craig Seerv 8. Alan Riley 9. Al Verstein 10. John Hosmer 11. Lew Humphreys 12. Paul Wilson 13. Steve Schneider 14. Tom Cobb 15. Bill Mercer 16. Greg Parsons 17. Art McCall 18. Randy Daniel 19. Jim Roop 20. Barry Sroka 21. Fred Lief 22. De Ann Gay 23. Phil Goldstein 24. John Catselis 25. Jim Beer 26. Kelly Crooks 27. Marty Blaney 28. Ed Long 29. Steve Evans 30. Bill Merchant 31. Bill Cockrell 32. Mike Hazey 33. Popeye 34. Jerry Sadesky 35. Joe Lacek 36. Bill McWatlers 37. Tom Reynolds 38. Tim Otto 39. Tom Kraft 40. Gary Tomasick 41. Bob G lock 42 Bill Powell 43. Frank Stark 44. Bill Marim 45. Tom Stockdale 46. Dick Burgess 144 NOT PICTURED Rich Adams Con Andrews Ed Ames Gary Back Jerr Ball Steve Ball Ldu Bianchi Martin Blaney John Boyle Russ Cave Jr. Frank Chianos Dave Cicci John Collins Dirk CcKik George Cosmides Ken Currv Louis Dempsey Kenneth Dudics John Duffy Mark Fabian James Gold.sworthy Jay Gordon Dominick Grandinetii Mar in Hames Dan Jones J. T. Kitchen Jim MahatTey Kerry Malson Steve Markis Charles Marshall Mark Maxwell Jack Mousadis Thomas Nazzaro Robert Pessolano Ben Polls Stan Romonski Tom Romonski Bill Sensenev Steve Smith Steve Starn Arne Sten Bruce Slofferahn Bob Thompson Tom Turner George Vick II Joe Williams Dave Duhbc Ron Mallare Bill Mc-Clusky Don Murray Sam Nazzaro Jim Ulrich Joe Weber Mike Gima 145 Sigma Chi 1. Steve Bailey 2. Dean Rebich 3. Tom Van Gilder 4. Jim Bunn 5. Dave Anderson 6. George Rupinsky 7. Junior Barnes 8. Denny Daley 9. Mark Fox 10. Dave Shamberger 11. Gary Brison 12. Ed Donaldson 13. Dan Tunacik 14. Bobby Byrne— Treasurer 15. Dave Russell 16. Gary Tassone 17. Todd Ware— President 18. Dave Gnegy 19. Jay Graham 20. Bill Shingler 21. Bo Joy— Pledge Trainer 22. Lou Rocchini 23. Scott Meikle 24. Dave Hill 25. Harry Kanlar 26. Jim Judge NOT PICTURED Steve Douglas Joe Wilson Bob Wyckoff Dan Pollack Homer Speaker Greg Kowalkin Dave Severt Bill Cnchton Nick Cook Jim Yanero Bill Richardson Pal Frasher Chuck Sullivan Tom Mumn Tim Pahl Mike Ritter Earl Mincemoyer Mike McClellan Al Carson Mike Foster Dan Liberatore Chris Green Bruce Berger Dave Lynch Scott Durig John Patteson Gary Weber Bob Fitzpatrick Bob Goodwin Chris Reger Gary Gabriel Lee Fr azier Steve Chri.ssman Joe Capo Rob O ' Brien Rick Dean Jim Duncan Tom Bernhardt 146 1 . Tom Cross 2. Tom Boutaugh 3. Bill Schimmcl 4. Dave Williams 5. Dave Kryc-Secrelary 6. Boh Orders 7. Gary Winters 8. Bill Keni 9. Duck Daley 10 Bob Beneke 11 Keilh Wade 12 Tully Birdsong 13 Chuck Zarnoch 14. Kim Reid 15. Ernie Pennington 16. Dan Larcamp 17. Bill Herndon IX. Craig Johnson 19. Gary Tutena 20. Mike Fiery 21. Jay Dudek 22. Bob Full 23. Mike Woddard 24. Harry Church 25. Jim Strider 26. Gerry Hughes 27. Tom Menighan 28. Captain Midnight 29 C. V. DeCoria-Vice-President 1. Mac Grandon 2. Mike Weller 3. Elaine Beneke 4. Bill Sttauch 5. Bill Paulson 6. Jim Shinn 7. Ed Polichnowski 147 Phi Delta Theta fiA ' R lK 1. James Burns ' Ashbaugh 2. ' General Robert Lee Reed 3. Mike Mossman ' Mosser 4. Nick Zamp ' Zampella 5. Henry Hank Hamilton-President 6. William Pars ' Parson 7. Glenn Gook Robertson 8. John ' B. J. ' Hendrickson 9. Joe Glenn 10. Tom Ski Sliwinski 11. Jeff Meyers 12. David Mr. Amazing Greenlee 13. Jim Val Valentine 14. Richard Tricky Dicky Kaldon 15. Bobby Hipster Austin 16. Larry Swett 17. Jon Wilson 18. Gary Beast Wildasin 19. Terry ' Sterzo Sterling 20. Curtis Black Stallion Kulp 21. Charles Williams 22. Allen Cage 23. Chris Powell 24. Roland Hyper Hunn 25. Kelly Kool Man Sleight 26. Jeff SpaceMan Bogden 27. Becky Smith— Sweetheart 28. George Bayer 29. Walt Slash Leonard 30. Frank Flame Carenbauer— Secretary 31. David Morgan Milne 32. Chuck ' Chikeia ' Cox 33. Mike Harpo Bish 34. John J. C. Carroll 35. Eldon Callen 36. Big Al Hook 37. John Sobo Sobolewski— Trea.surer 38. Dennis Robbie Robertson 39. Danny D. K. Dunn 40. Randv Stud Robinson— Vice-President 41. Bill Huntington 42. David Cockster While 43. Dave Kitch ' Kitchen 148 NOT PICTURED Anthony Tony Furfari Rich Donham Denny Zimolzak Hallerman James Squirrel Ficaro Larry Brent Wilshire Gary Wayne Carr Bill Harmy Harmison Phillip Magro Gary Walden David Doc Edge Addison Nick Nicholson Frank Jello Belko 149 g, M Phi Kappa Sigma 1. Walter B. Loon 2. Dave Sayre— Vice-President 3. Andy Williams 4. Bill Martin 5. Sidney Wicks 6. Don Myers 7. Mike Fullerton 8. Ten Again 9. Bus Conaway 10. Jerry Who 11. John Welch 12. Garry Shafer 13. Nick Casto 14. Tom Boyd 15. Doug Fawcett 16. Garry Storm 17. Mike Staten 18. Andy Tomasik 19. Greg Skeens 20. Bill Tower 21. Charle Green 22. Colnel Rich 23. Don Parrot 24. Frank Clark 25. Tom Pledge 26. Don Strimheck -Chapter Advisor 27. Bob Benson 150 NOT PICTURED Barrv- Zinn Roger Corder Dave Bocchini Ron Grimes Greg Taylor John Helsley Joel Newman Wayne Norlhey Tom Marshall Rick Yeager Rick Wojdavski Pat Malloy Allan Cox 1. Dave Kostclich 2. Don Smilh 3. Mike Connell 4. Jack Angle 5. Fiona Paxlon-House Mother 6. Rich Rurak 7. Sieve Vickers 8. Gern. Stanley 9. Dave King 10. Keith Tiger 1 1. Rick Jemiola 12. Tom Vorbach 13. Bill Smith 14. Dave Porter 15. Richard McCullough 16 Garry Greene 17. Don Ryail-President 18. Bob Grither 19. Darrel Collins 20. CJreg Coble 21. Rick Able 22. Warren Lemely-Treasurer 23. Jerry Haggerty 24. Barry Luce 25. Len McDonald 26. Bob Bonar 27. Wayne Soles 28. Sid Young 29. Kenna Ankrum 30. Allan Moats 31. Don Gusso 32. Ray Stnckland 33. John Chapman 34. Walter Mills 35. Randy Ringer 36. Tom Tapkowicz 37. Wayne Milligan 151 Phi Kappa Psi 1. Chris Iverson 2. Paul Clay JeffCarruth Tom Thrush Ian Murray Gil Dyer Mac Ruckman , John Thomas Steve Ellis 10. Andy Vac 1 1. John Bush 12. Gary Pyles 13. Rick Smith 14. Jeff Ford 15. Ken Boyles 16. Steve Ullam 17. Tom Mainella 18. Rick Squires 19. Mike Garrett 20. Richie Papp 21. Dan Richards 22. Jay Dailer 23. Steve Miller 24. Fred Feaster 25. Jeff Stanley 26. Butch Bidula 27. Bill Hevener 28. Bill Cather 29. Steve Walker 30. Ned Rose 31. Bob Reynolds 32. John Field 33. Steve Yost 34. Ray Spiker 35. RolfTrautwein 36. Bob Dotson 152 j KMr % 1 •: ■p |B|| li ■H Ht fi , j S I HBnA mmT . .m ■ ' ■ ' . 0 NOT PICTURED Charles Maxwell Bill Bertram Tom Turner Bill Wilmoth Bob Thompson Chillon Wise George Zivkovich John Cooper Bob Snamclin J. C. Miller Bill Lyons Dave Laugnlin Mike Tompkins Buck Goodman Bill Scnei .el Ben Hardesty Frit Renner Lyle Hamilton Rob Lewis Speg Gon .alcs Tom (irwin Larry Lewis Jack Harrison Dave Kostelansky Wall) Knapp Jim Dobbs Steve Kessel 153 Phi Sigma Kappa 1. Skip Mines 2. Charlie Loyd 3. Mike Jones 4. John Kirby 5. Dave Zahn 6. Mike Crouse 7. Randy Weyrich 8. Larry Duva 9. John Shaheen 10. John Knowles 11. Mike Moffetl 12. Ken Raltenbury 13. Ed Settle 14. Norm Nelson 15. Gene Esposito 16. J. B. Campbell 17. Hudson Glenn 18. Gene Parelli 19. Pat Smith 20. Bud Henderson 21. Bill Budnick 22. Glen Lambert NOT PICTURED Roger Clover Chuck MofVell Dave Lovejoy Bob Teague Rudy Henley Jack Clohan Fred Risovich Wally Pierce Frank Era gale Pete Garrett Bill Tucci Chuck Van Voorhis Dan Keller Mike M.iunz lom Sochacki Bill Modell Sam McCaskey Walt McCJettigan Nick Trimboli Tim Divita 154 ivf v 5 ; ft )A ( ' 1- [7)( (i ' 5 J n) I. Mark Furfari Robby Manor . JcH ' Bailey . John Dickerson . RiKky Morabilo . Dan Hastings . A. J. Hatfield Paul Mallory 9. Harry Francis 10 Dale Martin 1 1 John Stewart 12. Bob Campbell 13. Fred Siegrist 14. George Scritchficld 15. Mike Molin 16. Tom McClung 17. Larry Rhodes 18. Dave Miller 19 Jimi Konowiiz Chip Chandler Doff Daniel Mike Anderson Dennis Justice Ted Cuppett Roger Lovejoy Mickey Hamilton Donn Brown Gar, Kocher Rob Amos Don Roofner Scott K earns Rick Meadows Dave Hansen Joe Reiner Mike Justice Mark Bovie Jetr Goodson Scott Bowers 155 Chi Phi 1. Hannibul Saint Chi NOT PICTURED Charlie Willard Mac Schilhng Logan Schilling Rick Willis Bruce Morgan Bruce Miles Ed Kaminski Mike Westbrook Ralph Young Gordon Mead Glenn Ross Rich Douglas Ed Boyd Bill Smith Jim McMuUen-Treasurer Ron Pearson Tim Ringler Stan Tennant— House Manager Munch— Historian Doug Grossan Denny Riggleman— Secretary Joe Lawson Jerry Keanak Scott Rizzo Fred Bonner B]ll Chambers Bob Chandler Ron Miller Louie-President Ed Greenwald Jeff Lohr Chris Brown Jack Wilson— Vice-President Dave Neal Chuck Roberts Jon Hall 156 157 Chi Omega 1. Jill Sutherland 2. Kathy George 3. Annie Hooff 4. Sallie Wilson 5. Bendy Carr 6. Becky Gordon 7. Margie Stevens 8. Jan F liess 9. Renny Gill 10. Sandy Dailen 11. Jane Hall 12. Connie Coleman 13. Mary Watkins 14. Jo Ellen Stewart 15. Karen Burke 16. Beckie Allen 17. JanLsy Carrulh IK. Sarah Murphy 19. Rita Roman 20. Paula Khoury 21. Cathy Hall 22. Debbie Pyles 23. Patty Menillo 24. Margaret Chrgott 25. Li . Spalding 158 1. Soozi Campbell 11. Nancy McClung 2. Rose Ann Warsinsky 12. Sue Friebertshauser 3. Angle Harris 13. Gail Poling 4. Anne Palchell 14. Susie Campbell 5. Sally Friebertshauser 15. Debbie Niday 6. Pam Cowan 16. Liffy Larentz 7. Debbie Haniillon 17. Jayne Brooks 8. Jackie Noel 18. Nancy Barker 9. Carol Winters 19. Diane Burke 10. Becky Gibson NOT PICTURED Kathleen Ehrgott Susan Montgomery Beth Spen.ser Linda Mamone Belsy Hupp Cathy Montgomery Bonnie Marks Ruthie Drinkard Lois Litzsimmons Barb Cowen Sue Wassmer Kathie Kartagener Debbie Hevnian Susan Daugherty Chris Marford Paula Whealley Mollie Talbott Barb Shelosky Karen Pallock Kathy Muffly Rhonda Kelly Peggy Clapham Mary Laughlin Jean Alice James Becky Bruce Pam Currcnee JasTie Klebc Soozi Heyman Debbie Audia 159 .• «l % ' .  «!I!MP. ' .4iirD W JWN i • Bffllt . R V -v Sports James Roop and Alan Verstein editors 161 Head Coach Bobby Bowden | ' , Football WVU Frosh Opponent 20 Pitt 10 27 Virginia Tech 10 20 Penn State 48 27 Maryland 19 162 1 RKSHMEN-First row, left to right: Wes Lynch, Mike Michael, Ron Fusco, John Gibbon, Robert Cowen, John Harold, Steve Bowden. Dick Hart, Bernie Kirchncr, Kerry Marbury. Frank Latocha. and Mike Nelson. Second row, left to right: JelV Rice. Wib Newton. John Withers, Newlon Burnworth, John Harcharic. Jim Deep, James Auxier, Frank Curia, Danny Larcamp, and Bill Stewart Third row, left to right: Phil Harless, Bob Rout, Dan Evans, Greg Ferris, Walter Bragg, Tim Braun, Bob Merkli. Harry Blake, Dave Jagdmann, Irancis I etcr, and Ed Teter. Front row, left to right: Doug Charley. Dick Ward, Bernie Galiffa, Mike Sherwood, Kim West, Tom Geishauser, David Morris, Rick Weiskircher, Leon Jenkins, Mike Slater. John Billetz. Algie LaBrasca. Mike Gillespie, Wayne Porter, Robin Kaser, Chris Potts. Bob Gresham, and Bob Ruckman. Second row, left to right: Tom Williams. Pete Wood. Ed Williams, Jim Braxton. Dale Farley, Dave Benn, Terry King, Dan Hannahs, Danny Smith. Dick Roberts. Gerald Schultzc. Terry Voithofer, Bill Samuelson. B. C. Williams. Tom Zakowski. Dennis Reid. Bob Zitelli. and George Boyd. Top row, left to right: Adam Gluchoski, Fred McMillan, Clifford Harris, Charlie Fisher, Rick Martin, Danny Wilfong. Carl Andrews, John Houghton, Tim Horvath, John Flinchum, Ron Goodwin, John Hale. Frank Samsa, Art Holdt, Ken Osleger, Scott Hindsley, Nate Stephen.s, and Bob Sims. Mountaineer gridders once again established them- selves as an Eastern power in 1970. In attaining an 8-3 record. 19 WVU records were either tied or broken. Quarterback Mike Sherwood now holds or shares all possible season and career passing records. Other 1970 squad members adding their names to the books were Bob Gresham, Jim Braxton, Bill Samuelson, and Leon Jenkins. After soundly trouncing the first three opponents of the season by over 35 points each, WVU found In- diana slightly stubborn, in netting a 16 10 victory. The following weekend, hopes of an undefeated season were shattered when a surprisingly tough Duke team upset the Mounties 21-13. Bad news continued the next week when WVU blew a 35-8 halftime lead and lost to Pitt by 36-35. Except for a loss to Penn State, the Mounties fared well in the last five games, in- cluding a 28-19 upset of the Syracuse Orangemen. WVU Opponent 43 William and Mary 7 49 Richmond 10 47 Virginia Military Institute 10 16 Indiana 10 13 Duke 21 35 Pitt 36 24 Colorado State 21 8 Penn State 42 28 East Carolina 14 28 Syracuse 19 20 Maryland 10 163 164 ' ' ra 165 166 167 A lylti 168 169 170 s i ims . 171 First row, left to right: Bill Kaiser, Kasra Farzanegan, Ralph Lauer, Paul DeLuca, John Shannon, Jerry Hedrick. Shawn Griffith, Bob Colt, Sam Vieceli, and Steve Burgess. Second row, left to right: Tom Dutton, Chuck Santaniaria, Rolf Trautwein, John Buck, Paul Throne, Dave Gregory, Gary Grammer, Rudv Zimmermann, Larry Resavage, and Bill Goggin. Third row, left to right: Russ Curl, George Parme, Pat Sullivan, Tom Wojcik, Tony Yaquinto, Bart Connelly, Martin Williams, Martins Alfred, Mario Pinto, and Jerry Redolfi. Soccer wvu Opponent Davis and Elkins 2 4 St. Leo 1 3 South Florida 6 Pent! State 5 6 W.Va. Wesieyan 1 1 Cleveland State 5 2 Ohio 3 8 St. Francis 1 2 Akron 5 1 Frostburg 5 Pitt 1 172 First row, left to right: Mike Keliev. Dan Golden, Dave Hill, Harry Lowe, JelT Brown, Brad Messenger, Rick Wolfe, and Sam Ro ance Second row, left to right: George DIugolinski, Al Tvsor. Glen Gerharl, Melvin Sims, Garrett Breakiron, Dave Walker, and Mitch Fincham. Third row, left to right: Coach George NcdelT. Bob Vettorel, Steve Orlosky, Jere Engle, Roger Lamens, Dave Snyder. Ed Charles, Blair Albert, Jim Leete, Assistant Coach Don Dillaman, Wrestling wvu Opponent 15 Waynesburg 15 9 Eastern Michigan 21 22 Howard 12 25 Indiana 10 28 Duquesne 5 29 St, Vincent ' s 9 21 West Liberty 11 37 Washington and Jefferson 2 21 Ohio Northern 14 2f West Liberty 13 9 Slippery Rock 27 26 Fairmont State 14 29 Morehead State 8 14 Pitt 24 2 California 37 22 St, Francis 14 173 Front row, left to right: Ken Tubbs, Tom Turner. Mike Cox (co-captain), Dave Holovics, Logan Popoff, Assistant Coach Craig McKay. Coach Kevin Gilson. Second row, left to right: Mark Niemiec, Greg Fleming, Jim Lightner, Jeff Rausch. Jay Graham, Bill McWatters, Larry Schueckler, Clair Aumen, Glon Turner, Eric Olson (manager). Third row, left to right: Jeff Schwarz, Terry Ziff, Geoff Young, Bob Hamilton, Steve Curtis, Bill Porter, Pete Biffel, Jim Allrich, Ed Slominski, and Barry Berger. 200rRE[ OOBACkm ' wrai ?O0BR[JISTI; iiii .- H 400 riiillldil; iBf.( i KRlrTil Swimming wvu Opponent 4th Penn State Relays 54 Virginia 59 64 Bethany 49 57 Pitt 56 73 Virginia Tech 40 48 Maryland 65 56 Washington and Jefferson 47 76 Penn State 37 82 California State 30 71 Grove City 41 4th. Cincinnati Invitational 174 Front row. left to right: Mark Sellaro. Greg Yantis. Al Fischer, Bill Truxal. and James Meredith. Second row. left to right: Sp. 4 Gap. Grady. David Selvig. Charles Mapes, Russell Tredway. and Roger Ferrell. Rifle wvu Opponent 1344 Pitt 1229 1344 Indiana I3I4 1355 Kentucky 1316 1335 Navv 1373 1337 Penn State 1349 1337 Army 1412 1362 Virginia Military Institute 1333 1st. NRA Sectional 1377 Penn State 1349 175 WVU Frosh Opponent 68 Ohio Valley 66 103 Potomac State 63 76 Robert Morris 87 91 Allegheny Commun College ity 78 94 Penn State 78 65 Pitt 90 75 Ohio State 93 94 Cincinnati 107 78 Penn State 71 62 Maryland 111 60 Pitt 91 Basketball 176 KRESHMEN RECRUITS-lefl to right: Chris Sprenger, Charlie Hicliox. Bob Homstein, Mark Catlett, and Freshman Coach Chuck Winsor. wvu Opponent 113 Colgate 92 101 Furman 95 100 Kentucky 106 74 Army, home (Mteer. Classic) 71 91 Virginia, home (Mreer. Classic) 94 83 St. Joseph ' s (Quaker City) 100 82 St Francis (Quaker City) 92 57 Davidson 66 74 Ohio State 83 82 St. John ' s 100 71 Penn State 62 107 Rhode Island 90 98 N.C. State 100 105 George Washington 96 95 Pitt 91 93 Davidson 79 8S Rutgers 109 90 Syracuse 102 93 Virginia Tech 82 98 Notre Dame 107 101 Penn State 89 83 Maryland 81 71 Florida 72 66 Pitt 64 104 Virginia Tech 95 Kneeling, left to right: Dick Symons, Wil Robinson. Skip Kintz, Harold Black. Curt Price. John Wiwtcn. Mark Dawson, and Levi Phillips. Standing, left to nghl Head Coach Sonny Moran. Assistant Coach Gary McPherson, Sam Oglesby. Larry Harris. Mike Carson. Mike Carson. Mike Heitz. Gary Rcichcnbcchcr. Dave Werthman. Bob Lowe, and Assistant Coach Chuck Winsor. 177 178 In his second year of rebuilding the WVU basket- ball fortunes. Mountaineer head coach Sonny Mo- ran guided the University to a winning (13-12) sea- son. Moran claims an accomplishment of all three initial objectives. First, he wanted to show a steady improvement. The Mounties won 10 of their last 15 games. Second, he hoped for good showings against the tougher teams. Except for Rutgers and St. Jo- seph ' s, each game went down to the wire. Finally, he wanted his younger players to gain valuable playing time. He started four juniors and one soph- omore in the last games. Three players averaged double figures this season, led by Wil Robinson ' s 24.9 points. Robinson is the fifth player in University history to score over 600 points in one year and his two year total of 1,444 places him seventh in WVU career scoring. West Virginia started off the year by outscoring Colgate 113-92 before 9.378 fans, the largest num- ber to view a basketball game in West Virginia. The new Coliseum proved to favor the Mounties as an 8-4 record was compiled on home ground. 179 180 181 182 183 Front row, left to right: Howard Kirk. Rick Jones, Harry Dietzler, and Larren Elliott. Second row, left to right; John Sims, John Semes. Tom Kerr, John Murawski, | Harrv Zarin, Tom Moore, Assistant Coach Ray Octaviano, Coach Bill Bonsall, Harold Simmon (manager). Jack Jones, Doug Petlit, Barry Dangerfield, Ron Speary. David Lawton. and Jim Means. Gymnastics wvu Opponent 121.50 Frostburg 111.55 98.07 Pitt 122.85 90.85 Frostburg 82.00 90.85 Townson 98.50 96.80 Temple 139.55 105,00 Virginia Tech 93.00 1 10.45 Old Dominion 121.66 1 10.45 William and Mary 98.43 98.00 East Stroudsburg 118.00 98.00 Montclair State 119.00 113.05 Slippery Rock 127.30 113.05 Brockport 104.15 184 1 ,, ;ii luu, Icll to right: Jvihn Rae e. Ike Harris. L. B. Marsh, Jim Jacobsoii. Don SLluillchcnu li, aiiij J.ic IIoikc. Si.i...inj i... . i ii i,. (ighl. Jim Kcilk-i, himi- Szakos. Larry Myers. Mark Cunningham, and Wally Protch. Third ro w, left to right: Trainer A. C. Whitev Gwvnn. Bob Bell . Larry Bobbs. Randy Lease. Rick Wagencr. Rob Nag . Kim West. John Hale. Tom Sochacki. Larr Wilfong. and Coach Dale Ramsburg. WVU 14 2 1 Baptist Baptist High Point Opponent 1 6 4 High Point 3 5 Marietta 3 5 Marietta 6 7 West Liberty 1 15 2 Waynesburg Geneva 1 I 4 Geneva 3 7 Pitt 7 Pitt 3 3 Geo. Washington 6 Geo. Washington 5 1 Va. Tech Va. Tech 2 Ohio 8 12 Juniata 3 3 Juniata 5 Maryland 4 9 Slipperv Rock 3 4 Bulialo 6 California St. 2 California St. 4 7 Fairmont St. 5 6 Pitt 5 2 Pitt 4 Baseball 185 Track |-ront row. left lo righl: Doug Carder. Mike Scott. Mike Mosser. Don Fosselman. Bill Huntington, and Don Icr.is, Second row, left to r.ghl (.vich Bob DcTomhc Don Sauer. Fred George. Howard Stansberry. Bob Northrup. Tim Kelly. Ernie Vecchio. Coach Stan Romanosk,. Third row. left to nght: -Frank Totta. Bill Decrini:. Bob Rieves. J. W. Wright. Tom Boislure. and Dave Tucker. 186 -pf- ' f . m WVU (Outdoor) Opponent 1st. Fairmont Invitational 67 Virginia Tech 78 80.5 Slippery Rock 36.5 80.5 Fairmont 63 3rd. Big Four Meet 4th. Pitt Invitational 187 l.el ' l to right: Don Fosselman, Bill Huntington. Mike Mosser. Mike Scott. Ernie Vecchio. Howard Stansberrv. Dave Tucker, Bill Deering. Doug Carter. Don Sauer, and Tim Kelly. Cross Country wvu Opponent 18 Virginia Military Institute 39 16 West Liberty 47 16 Richmond 47 22 Ohio State 42 15 Waynesburg 45 15 W.Va. Wesleyan 45 40 Pitt 19 23 Virginia Polytech Institute 32 5th. NCAA Regional 3rd. Big Four Meet 188 Kneeling, left to right: James Booth. Fred Smith. Ron Thorne. and Lionel Farr. Standing. Icl ' t to right; John Parker. John Chapman. Bob Wooflcr. Garr Collnll Phil Luchini. Mark Neville, and Coach. Ralael de ' alle. Tennis wvu C Opponent 1 Bowling Green 8 4 Pitt 5 1 Virginia Tech 8 6 W.Va. Wesieyan 3 8 Duque.sne 1 1 Virginia Military 8 Institute 3 California 6 Penn State 8 3rd. Big Four Meet 189 Standing, left to right: David Watkins. Mark Robinson, Jack Lvnn, James Camella, Tony Bertini, Robert WyckoH ' , and Bill Lincicome. Kneeling, left to right Mylie, Barry Fleming, Robert Rombola, Mike Luchini, and Bob Gaston. Rick Golf wvu 1 Virginia Tech Opponent 6 6 Wheeling 5.5 George Washington 15.5 14.5 393 Catholic University Penn State 3.5 363 393 Indiana 377 3.5 Clarion 4.5 2.5 Indiana 4.5 5 California 1 5 Pitt 2 14 Edinboro 5 13 6 Slippery Rock California 6 6 Indiana 4 Ohio 3 190 Director of Inlramurals Rich Mull. Athletic Director Robert N. Red Brown. .MHLtnC COLNCIL-Scjicd. Icll lo right: Bill C ' onwav. Gen Comunt is. John Scmon. bd Arkwnght. Dr. Herbert Warden. Lnairnun. % mum Martin. 1 i.uniaiMt Hooff. Thomas Cady. and Fred Wright. Standing, left lo right: .Athletic Director Red Brown, and Av-istant Athletic Director Ed Shockey. 191 Intramurals During the 1970-71 year, 40 percent of the WVU student body participated in one or more of the four categories of intramurals now offered. A major reorga- nization step which placed recreation-intramural pro- gramming under the Programming Division of Student Educational Services enabled Director Rich Mull to combine previously separate areas. Twenty-nine sports or recreational activities were in- cluded in the men ' s intramural program. Women par- ticipated in 19 sports while co-recreational sports num- bered seven. In addition, unstructured activities programs allowed students easy access to various uni- versity facilities. Supervision and assistance was also given to various competitive and non-competitive rec- reational clubs. 193 194 195 196 197 198 Royalty Thomas Nazzaro and John Collins editors ill n Tvl VSI Tin % .-??- « M ■ £SS ' ' ' :-4r A 199 Gloria Adonizio. queen Homecoming 70 200 Kalhy Wingo, freshman princess Soozi Heyman. freshman princess 201 Mountaineer Weekend Stephanie Beulike 202 Greek Weekend Susie McConnell, Helen of Troy Alpha Phi-Sigma Phi Epsilon Ken Serber. God ' s Gift lo Wi)men Kappa Sigma— Alpha Phi 203 Susie Thompson Best Dressed 204 Libbv Lear. Beta Thela Pi Jackie Noel. Delia I .u L).l;a . Fraternity Sweethearts Jane Moore. Theta Chi 205 Debbie Blackford, Pi Kappa Alpha Elaine Beneke, Sigma Chi Palli Hepler, Kappa Sigma 206 Beckv Smith. Phi Delia Thela Mary Ellen llmer. Tau Kappa Epsilon Trish Potol ichnik. Phi Kappa Sigma 207 Seniors Paul Wilson editor 209 Agriculture and Forestry 210 Dr. Robert S. Dunbar. Jr., Dean College 0 A ruullure and Forestry 211 RICHARD T. ADAMS. Jeannette, Pa., Landscape Architecture. S.S.L.A.; FORREST W. AURENTZ. Beckley. W. Va.. Forest Man- agement. Xi Sigma Pi. Pershing Rifles Commander. Scabbard and Blade Pledge Trainer; THOMAS W. BANKERT. New Castle. Del.. Agricultural Engineering. ASAE; MARCIA A. BLACKBURN. Bed- ford, Pa.. Horticulture. Student Party Co-chairman Bureau of Finance. SHERRY L. BLACKHAM. Fredonia, N.Y.. Recreation: LOIS S. BOKIS, Blacksville, W.Va.. Recreation. Professional Recreation So- ciety; JOSEPH A, BUSH, Oxford, W. Va.. Agriculture Education: TERRENCE M. CORBITT. Parkersburg. W.Va.. Animal Industry. Beta Theta PI. CHARLES W. CREASY III, Caatawissa, W.Va.. Horticulture. Al- pha Zeta; DONALD L. CROSSTON, Elkins. W.Va.. Recreation Re- source Management. Pi Kappa Alpha. Forestry Club; PAUL L. CUMMINGS. Spencer. W.Va.. Agriculture Education. Alpha Tau Alpha. Secretary-Soil Conservation Society; RICHARD E. DAVIS, JR.. Baltimore. Md.. Wood Science. Forestry Club, Forest Products Research Society. RONALD R. DILLMAN. Ringtown. Pa., Ornamental Horticulture: ROBERT H. DOBERNECK. Jeannette, Pa., Agricultural Economics. Alpha Zeta. All-Campus Party, Academic Study Forum; W. DAVIS DODGE. JR.. Wvalusing. Pa., Forest Management. Xi Sigma Pi; DAVID E. EVANS. Pittsburg, Pa.. Landscape Architecture. Student Party. Summit Hall Social Committee. DOYLE M. FINCHAM. Elkins. W.Va.. Agriculture Education. Al- pha Tau Alpha. Wrestling Team; RANDOLPH P. FLINT. Bliss NY.. Agricultural Mechanics. MFP. SAAP, A.S.A.E.; BRUCE C. FRIZZELL. Severna Park, Md., Forestry Management. Xi Sigma Pi. Society of American Foresters. National Wildlife Association. .Amer- ican Foresters Association. Forest Ranger Technician; EUGENE V. GIZA. Morann. Pa.. Forestry. Forestry Club, Karate Club EDWARD R HALL, Palestine, V.Va., Agribusiness. SCSA. Agron- omy Club; JOHN W. HAZEL, Newark. Del.. Forest Management. Xi Sigma Pi. Forestry Club; JOHN W. JETT. Aye., Marlinton. W.Va.. Agriculture. Agriculture Council; R. ALLEN KING. War- renton, Va.. Recreation .Vwc tviProfessional Recreation Society. ROBIRI J. KUTCHER. York. Pa.. Recreation and Parks. Theta C hi. I I Balar Cappar. IFC. Golf Team, vicc-presideni Professional Recreation Society; LAWRENCE A. LANG. Morgantown. W.Va.. ■ ' orcurv: DAVin L. LEASURE. Middlebournc. W.Va.. Agricultural luliuviiDii: MARVIN A. McCLUNG II. Ml. Lookout. W.Va.. Agri- culiural Education. Alpha Tau Alpha. SCSA. 1 LOYD B. MEEKER. Moundsvillc. W.Va.. Agriculture Mechanics. Ml-Campus Party. Tau Kappa Epsilon; DONALD L. MICHAEL. Cairo. W.Va.. Agricultural Education. Alpha Tau Alpha. Collegiate FFA; JOEL G. NEWMAN. Morgantown. W Va.. Pre-leterinarv. Phi Kappa Sigma. JO ANN PATTON. Vcnetia. Pa.. Recreation. ROBERT W. POLLOCK. JR.. Filchburg. Mass.. Ornamental Hani- culture: THOMAS F. PUE. Highland. Md.. Forestry. Forestry Club; EDITH R ROBERTS. Trenton. N.J.. Horiiculiure: FRANK W. SCHUI.IT;K. Bndgeville. Pa.. Horticulture. (iARY I.. SHAMBLEN. Elm Grove. W.Va.. Agriculture Education. Mpha Tau Alpha; LESTER W. SHANKLIN. Charleston. W.Va.. Horiiculiure. Phi Kappa Psi. Student Parly; EDWARD J. J. THOMPSON. Carbondale. Pa.. Horiiculiure: RODNEY M. WALL- BROWN. Spencer. W.Va.. Agricultural Education. Alpha Tau Al- pha. SCSA. M. ANDREA WARD. Kearnesville. W.Va.. PreVeterinarv. Pi Beta Phi. Goiddiggers; ROBERT A. WILCOX. 0 on Hill, Md . Recrea- lion. . i Pm Phi. Forestry Club. Agriculture College Bowl; DOUGLAS E Will I WIS. Silver Spring. Md.. Forest Management. t oreslr Club; TOM P. WINNUBST. East Port. N.Y.. Forestry. 213 Arts and Sciences 214 Dr Ji hn C. Wnglil. Dean Collci c ol Arts and Sciences m A K m g w n H w| r 9 H K H I 215 DENNIS ROBERT ABRAMS. Piltsburgh. Pa.. Hisiurv: PRASAD JAMUNA AMBASHT. Head, Department of Mathematics. S.P. Jain College, SASARAM, Magadh University (India), taihematics. Pi Mu Epsilon, Royal Asiatic Society of London; BARBARA EL- LEN AVEY, Marlinsburg, W.Va., Spanish. Alpha Phi, Student Party; DONALD J. BAKER JR.. Moorefield. W.Va.. Social SliiJies. Delta Tau Delta, Ei Batar Cappar, All-Campus Parly. r tq -T ' iMW liitM 216 217 PAUL EDWARD BARCUS JR . W.Va.. Soaul Siudies. Kappa Delia Pi. Phi Alpha Theta. Student Academic Study Forum. S.N.E.A.; MARY BETH BEVERAGE. Man. W.Va.. English. Kappa Phi.; LOU BIANCHL Harnsburg. Pa., Psvchologv. Psi Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon; JAMES ATKINSON BIBBY. Elkview. W.Va.. PoUlical Science. Beta Theta Pi. BEVERLY SUE BINGER. W.Va., Maihemaiics. Mu Phi Epsilon; VINCE MICHAEL BLANDINA. Wyoming. Pa., Social Siudies. Kappa Sigma. Fi Batar Cappar, Student Party; EMMA J. BLO- CHER, Frostburg, Md.. Sociohg i-; PAMELA S. BRADFORD. Har- risonburg. Va., PoUlical Science. Pi Sigma Alpha. DOROTHY B. BRADSHAW. N. Wildwood. N.J., Sociology. Pi Beta Phi, SAAP; JODIE W. BROWN, Bethel Park, Pa.. PoUlical Science. Kappa Delta, Mountainettes-treasurer. Student Partv; DEBORAH ANN BRUMBAUGH. Spencer, W.Va., French. Pi Beta Phi, P Delta Phi, Homecoming Committee, AWS Committee, Mor- tar Board; SHARON ANN BUNGARD. Morgantown. W.Va., Psychology. CHARLOTTE ROSE BURDETTE, Clendenin. W.Va.. English. Delta Delta Delta. All-Campus Party, Mountainettes; ELMA C. CALLISON. Meadow Bridge. W.Va., Psvchologv. Alpha Epsilon Pi; RONALD D. CALVERT, Fayetteville, W.Va., Biologv: JOSEPH DAVID CASTLE, Morgantown, W.Va. History. Phi Alpha Theta. Pi Sigma Alpha, W.Va. Veterans Club, International Students Association. DAVID ROBERT CHAPMAN, Keyser, W.Va., Pre- Medicine. Pre- Medical Honorary; DEBORAH DENICE CHRISTIAN, 360 Valley View Ave., Keyser, W,Va., Maihemaiics: WILLIAM CONWAY. Bethany, W.Va.. Political Science. Pi Sigma Alpha. IFC, Sigma Phi Epsilon, WVU Athletic Council. Student Legislature-treasurer. Sphinx. Elections Committee co-chairman. Bureau of Finance; CYNTHIA JAN COOTE, Westbury, NY., Sociology. S.A.A.P. BENJAMIN LUKE COSTELLO. Houston, Pa., Political Science. Pi Sigma Alpha, Dorm Council Summit Hall, chairman Lecture and Debates Committee; THOMAS BENJAMIN CRISS. Clarksburg, W.Va., Physics. Phi Beta Kappa. Helvetia, Order of the Cirail. Sigma Pi Sigma, Pi Mu Epsilon, Scabbard and Blade, Computer Science Club. Fencing Club, Baptist Student lellowship; SUSAN LEA CUNNINGHAM, Mannington, W.Va., English. Alpha Delta Pi. Mountainettes, PanhellenicStudeni Parly; JAMES KEVIN DALY. Mcrchanlville, N.J.. Social Siudies, SAAP, Boreman Hall Activities Council, 218 DEBRA D DAWSON. Morganlown. W.Va.. English. Delia (iamma; VALLRIt LYNN DAWSON. Bludield. W.Va.. English. Kappa Delia; PATRICIA JACQltl INK Dl.DIK. Boswell. Pa.. Po- litical Science: DF.BORAH A. DLSIhlANO. um ' i W. Chcsinul Si , Washinglon. Pa.. Sociology. lAMES E. DICK. Piedmont. W.Va.. Maihemaiics: MELANIh ANN DOBBS, Canonsburg. Pa.. Maihemalics. Studenl Parly. SAAP; CiLKNN A. DURA. Camp Hill. Pa., Pnliiical Science: CHARLES SCOTT DURIG. Vienna. W.Va.. Political Science. Sigma Chi. VALERIA KAY DURST. Frostburg. Md . Poliiical Science; JACK CALVIN DYER. Wayne. W.Va.. Political Science: CAROL SCHARPER EDWARDS. Morganu.wn. W.Va.. Physics. Sigma Pi Sigma. Compiilcr Science Club; VIRGINIA GAY ELLIS. Charles- ion. W.Va.. Mathematics. KAREN BETH ENGLANDER. Carlisle. Pa.. Sociology. Delia Tau Delia Swceihearl 9HK JIM RALPH EVANS. LaVale. Md . Pre- Medical Honorary: DAVID B. FEIR.STEIN. Munhall. Pa.. Psy- chology and Philosophy: ANGELIQUE DIANE FRIAR. Point Pleasant. W.Va.. Mathematics, Mountaineer Freedom Parlv. SISAN 1 RIEBERTSHAUSER. Wheeling. W.Va.. Sociology. Chi Omega. Panhellonic. All-Campus Parly; OLGA FRONTING. Cherry Hill. N.J.. Psychology. Alpha Phi. SAAP. Ski Club, Student Parly: JOANNE LOUISE FURFARI. Monroeville, Pa.. Mathemat- ics. Pi Mu Epsilon, University Academic Study Forum; TRUDY ANNE GALLIC. Berkeley Springs. W.Va . Political Science. JULIANNA M. GEARHART, Ellicott City, Md , Political Science. Kappa Dclla-presidenl. Student Parlv. Campus Chapel Council; MARCiARLI ELAINE GNEGY. Washington. Pa.. Chemistry. Phi Lambda Upsilon. Student Atfiliales of American Chemical Society; NANCY JO CiRANDON. St. Albans. W.Va.. Sociology. Young Re- publicans; CHARLES ALLEN GREENE JR.. Pittsburgh. Pa.. Zool- ogy. Phi Kappa Sigma, house Committee. Forum Committee. Films Committee-Chairman. 219 MM JAN CAYE GWINN. Ml. Hope. W.Va.. English. All-Campus Parly. Miiuntainlair Advisory Board. Task Force Committee; WILLIAM SCALLEY HABERLIN, Stratford, Conn., Psychology: SHARON ANN HAMRICK. Charleston. W.Va.. Political Science: MICHAEL EDWIN HANNA. Burgettstown, Pa.. Political Science. lANET LOUISE HARRIS. Chester. W.Va.. Spanish: PAUL M. HARRIS, Weirlon. W.Va., Geology. Kappa Sigma, Sigma Gamma Epsilon, Student Party; SARAH SUSAN HARVEY, Keyser, W.Va., Psychology. Psi Chi, Task Force, Spring Spree; ARABEL ELLEN HATFIELD. Oak Lawn. III.. Political Science. Delta Delta Delta. Special Events, Monticola staff , All-Campus Party. JOSIE AVANELL HEATER, Summersville, W.Va., Mathematics: STELLA HERRICK, Morgantown, W.Va., Sociology: MARTHA SUE HOLLEN, Keyser, W.Va., English. Kappa Delta, Mortar Board, Kappa Delta Pi, Student Party; SEBERT A. HOLLEN- BECK. Morgantown, W.Va., Biology. VIVIAN R. HORWITZ. Harrisburg, Pa., Sociology: JAMES M. HOSTETTER. Fayetteville. W.Va.. Biology. Delta Tau Delta; DA- VID SHERMAN HOWARD, Moundsville. W.Va.. Mathematics. Tau Kappa Epsilon— social chairman, All-Campus Party; VEDA ANN HUGHES. Pratt. W.Va., French. Pi Delta Phi. WALTER MICHAEL HUNTER. Weirlon. W.Va.. Biohgy. CLEAN; NORMAN G. JOHNSON, Fairmont. W.Va., Political Sci- ence. Pi Sigma Alpha. Kappa Alpha. Social Committee— Chairman, Homecoming Committee; TERRI T. JOHNSON, Houston. Pa.. English: ROBERT FRANCIS JOY, McKeesport. Pa.. Psychology. Sigma Chi— pledge trainer. Student Party. RICHARD CRAIG KALDON. Glenshaw. Pa.. Geology. Phi Delta Iheta, Student Party; .STEPHEN WALTER KANICK. Wheeling. W.Va., Chemistry. Phi Lambda Upsilon; THOMAS H. KEADLE. Morgantown, W.Va.. Political Science: JOANNE ELIZABETH KLABANO, Wheeling. W.Va., Spanish. Academic Study Forum 220 JO ANNE l.AUB. Dniontown. Pa.. Psychology: GEORGE LEWIS LAWSON. l-airmonl. W.Va.. Biology: WESLEY WALTON LEE. Silver Springs, Md.. Poliiical Science, Pi Sigma Alpha-vice-prcsi- dcnl, JAMES LEEBER. Bccklcy. W.Va.. English. SHIRLEY LEONI, Uniontown. Pa.. Psychology; BLAIR E LE- VINE. Wheeling. W.Va.. Sociology: SHERRY LEE LINDSAY. Shippenville. Pa., English: ANNE DONALDSON LITTLE. Char- leston. W Va.. Poliiical Science. Pi Sigma Alpha. Ynung DemtKrats. SAAP. DA stair. STEPHEN LEPKI. Woodbine. N.J. Psychology: JEANIE MARIE LUCAS. McKeesport. Pa.. Sociology. Alpha Delta Pi. NEED Coun- cil. Student Party; BARRY GENE LUCE. Belle Vernon. Pa.. Politi- cal Science. Phi kappa Sigma; WILLIAM DONALD MaeKENZIE. St.. Morgantown. W.Va.. Psychology. Psi Chi. ALDEN GAY McBEE. Morgantown. W.Va.. Pre-Medicine. Prc- Medical Honorary. ANNA MAE McCORMICK. Pittsburgh. Pa.. Chemistry. Student Affiliate-American Chemical Society; MARK WILSON McCORMICK. Greensburg. Pa.. PreMedicine. Pre-Medi- cal Honorary. Student Advisor. Arts and Sciences Committee on Promotions and Tenures; LEONARD H McDONALD. ork. Pa . English. Phi Kappa Sigma. Fi Batar Cappar. IPC. JUDY A. McKARLAND. Uniontown. Pa.. Sociology: PHILLIP MICH. 4 EL ,M.4(JRO. Morgantown. Pre- .Medicine. Phi Delta Theta. Student Party. Young Democrats; JOANN MARR.A. Bridgeport. W.Va.. Psychology. Pi Beta Phi. Glamour Stvle Show Ci mmittce; ELISABETH K. MARTIN. Morgantown. W.Va.. Oerman. Kappa Kappa Gamma. Student Partv. S.AAP. Riding Club. ISA. Foreign Students Relations Committee. JOEL DAVID MARTIN. Boblown. Pa . Biology. PAUL JOSEPH MARTIN. Boblown. Pa.. Sociology: BARBARA ANN MASON. Cameron. W.Va.. English. .Mpha Zcta. oung Republicans, W.V.U. Speech Choir; KAY J. MASON. Cameron. W.Va.. French-German. 221 TERESA J. MERAND, Clarksburg, W.Va., French. BARBARA MAY MILLER, Hauertown, Pa., Psychology. Mountaineer Freedom Party, DONALD WILLIAM NORTON, Wheeling. W.Va., Political Science: DEBORAH L. NUTZ, Adah, Pa., Library Science. JAMES ANTHONY OLIVETO, Bridgeport, W.Va., Biology. Circle K . CHARLES FRANKLIN PAYNE, Fayetteville, W.Va., Biology. Delta Tau Delta; CHERYL ANN PETERSON, Martinsburg, W.Va., Spanish; LINDA LOU PETERSON, Beverly, W.Va., Sociology. GAIL JEAN PIROG, Stony Brook, NY., Psychology: SARAH EL- LEN PURSGLOVE, Suffern, N.Y., Spanish: JUDY ANN REILLY, McMechen, W.Va.. Sociology, Delta Delta Delta, All-Campus Party; LENORA J. REXRODE, Elkms, W.Va., Chemistry. Phi Beta Kappa, Pre-Medical Honorary, Phi Lambda Upsilon. DAVID G. SAYRE, Nitro, W.Va., Psychology. Phi Kappa Sigma, IFC. PATRICIA ANN SCARRY, Miami, Fla., English. Photography Club; STEVEN JOHN SCHMIT. Martinsburg. W.Va., Sociology. Al- pha Phi Delta, Pershing Rifles, Scabbard and Blade-vice-president, YAP, Psi Chi, YWCA Big Brother Program; DAVID BEAN SEARS, Petersburg, W.Va., History. Tau Kappa Epsilon, All-Campus Party. STEPHEN D. SHOWALTER, Clarksburg, W.Va., Biology. Scab- bard and Blade; FREDERICK WILLIAM SIEGRIST. Richmond. Va.. Psychology. Phi Sigma Kappa; BETTIE SIMMONS. Franklin, V .V a.. English-Speech: JEFFREY L. SIMON. Livingston, N.J., Zo- ology. Alpha Epsilon Pi. IFC. ERNESTINE SMALLWOOD. Summersville, W.Va., Psychology. SAAP; SUSAN MARGARET SNAVELY, Pittsburgh, Pa., Speech. Zeta Phi Ela; MARGARET ELENE SPURLOCK. Huntington. W.Va., Mathematics. Pi Mu Epsilon; STEPHEN J. SQUIRES, Box 131, Wendel. Pa., Biology. Tau Kappa Epsilon, IFC. 222 MY LEE STALCZYNSKI, West Mifflin. Pa.. English. RALPH l 1 IN STALNAKER. 523 I9ih St.. Dunbar. W.Va.. Psychology; SI s N H. .STANCJER. Milltown. N.J.. Sociology. Delta Delta Delia; BEVERLY K SULLIVAN, Dunbar. W.Va.. Psychology. Un- dergraduate .Social Work Organization. RLENE KAY SUSAN. McKeesport. Pa.. German. University Singers; MARY JOHANNA SWOYER. Charleston. W.Va.. Malh- i-malics. Delta Gamma. Homecoming Coordinator; GARY JAMES lASSONE. Masontown. Pa.. Psychology. Sigma Chi. Sphinx. W.V.U. Student Contact Service. Traditions Committee-chairman. Festival of ldea.s committee; ALLEN D. TEETS. College Park. Md.. Political Science. Pi Sigma Alpha. PATRICK ANTHONY TETI. Bluefield, W.Va.. Geology. Monticola slaff: SUSAN ELAINE TRUMBLE. Bridgeport. W Va.. Psychology. Kappa Delta. Mountainettes; DENNIS LEONARD UNGER. West I awn. Pa.. Biology. Kappa Sigma. ALAN SCOTT VERSTEIN, Huntingdon Valles. Pa.. Psychology. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Mountain- eer Weekend Committee-coordinator. Spring Spree Commillee, Student Party. VK rORIA S. VESELY. Fayette City. Pa.. Spanish-German. Alpha Delia Pi-President. Sigma Delta Pi; TODD WILLIAM WARE. I riedens. Pa.. Psychology Sigma Chi -president. Student Party; SU- SAN EMMA WASSMER. Floral Park, N.Y.. Psychology. Chi Omega; SHELDON DANA WEASE. 439 Grant Ave.. Morgantown, Biology. LINDA SUSAN WEINBERG. Weirton. W.Va.. English: EDWARD THOMAS WHITE. Ramage. W.Va.. Maihemaiics. Phi Beta Kappa, Pi Mu hpsilon; STEVE ALAN WICKLAND. Weston. W.Va.. Polil- Hill Science. Delta Sigma Rho. Pi Sigma Alpha, Debate Society; ROY THOMAS WILLIA.MSON, Oaklyn, N.J., Psychology. Unive ' r- Miv Theatre. STEPHEN HAROLD WILSON. Parkersburg, W.Va.. Speech; 1 INDA JOYCE WINES. Charleston. W.Va.. Sociology; LINDA J. WOOD. Grafton. W.Va., Spanish: MARGARET ANN YOCKE, Wheeling, W.Va.. Psychology, Gamma Phi Beta. Orchesis. All- Campus Party. Young Republicans. SAAP. Oulings Club, AWS TAC. ARLEEN DIANE ZITO. Emporium, Pa., Sociology: Student Party. Business and Economics and MILLER 224 Dr. Jack T. Turner. Dean Collcf v of Busiiu ' ss (ind Ixonomics i 226 MARTIN ATKINSON III. Reedy, W.Va.. Markeiing. DENNIS K. AUtRSWALD. Collingswood, N.J., Industrial Management, Sigma Chi, wrcslling, SAM, Student Party; CHARLES F. BAILEY. lenna, W.Va., Economics. SAM; CHARLES KONRAD BLOCK. New Martinsville. Industrial Management. SAM. STEPHEN BOLARIS, Pittsburgh. Pa., Economics. Mountain. Aca- demic Study Forum. SA.M. Student Legislature; MICHAEL D. BRADLEY. Fairmont. W.Va., Marketing. Delta Tau Delta; STEP- HEN LYNN BROWN, Buckhannon. W.Va.. Industrial Manage- ment: LAWRENCE DAVID BRYAN. Huntington, W.Va., A ccounling. WILLIAM M. BUDNICK. Welch. W.Va.. Marketing. Phi Sigma Kappa. Homecoming Committee. Greek Week Committee. All Campus Party-Steering Committee: DAVID KENNETH BUR- DETTE. Elkview. W.Va.. Marketing. Sigma Chi. Student Party; JOHN WILLIAM BL ' RDISS. Muliens. W.Va.. Finance: PETER BRYAN BURKE. Middletown. R.I., Marketing HORACE WILLIAM BURMEISTER. Williamson, W.Va.. Market- ing. Student Party; GARY THOMAS CANNON. Pittsburgh. Pa.. Marketing. Delta Tau Delta; RUSSELL L. CAVE. Charles Town. W.Va.. Marketing. Sigma Phi Epsilon; JOHN FLOYD CHAPMAN, Livingston. N.J.. Marketing. Phi Kappa Sigma. Tennis. JOE ENGEL CHRIS.VIAN. Gassawav. W.Va.. Management: CHARLES RANDALL COLE. Becklev. W.Va.. Management: JOHN WESLE - COLLIER. Uniontown. Pa.. Marketing: MI- CHAEL L. COX, Nitro. W.Va.. Industrial Management. Sigma Nu, Sphinx. Social Committee-coordinator. JAMES EDGAR CRAIG. Morgantown. W Va . Marketing. SAM; SALVATORE THEODORE DACIERNO. Westmont, N.J.. Mar- keting: WARD McKINLEY DAWSON III. Morgantown. W.Va., Finance: JERRY N. DEAL. Fairmont. W.Va., Marketing 227 K()B1:RT a. DcCARI O, Morgantuwn, W Va., Murkcimi;. JOHN 1.1.1. Dcl ' Al.O. Clarkshiirg, W.Va., Mtirkcliiii;. (kt a Thcta Pi, SAM. All-Campus Farlv; KI.NNKIH JOSEPH Fl 1 I KO, Wilsonburg. W.Va., Marketing. SAM: THOMAS V. FLAHhRTY. Wheeling. W.Va.. Miiniigcmeni. Beta Ilieta Pi. Fi Balar Cappar. All-Campus Party. THOMAS BROPHY FLANAGAN. Mabic. W.Va., Accounling: ROBIRI WARD I L ' lNN. Pcnrisauken. N.J., Mcirkciing. Sigma Nil, Suidcm Parly: JAMFS F. FOLK, Morgantown. W.Va., Eco- iiKinus: ANIHONY 1) FURFARL Pillsburgh, Pa., Economics. Phi Delia I hcla. S. M. Sludcnl I ' ailv. NANCY KARFN GOLDSMILH. Sculh C harlcslon, W.Va.. Mar- keting, Alpha Phi. Bcla (jamma Sigma, AWS-treasurer, Sludenl Party, Young Republicans: MICHAEL DAVID GRIFFFrH. Clarks- burg, W.Va., Finance. SAM: KEVIN GUTHRIE. Wind Ridge, Pa.. Finance: JOHN ROBERT GWYNNE. Morgantcnvn. W.Va.. Fi- nance. Delta Tau Dcli:i. JACK HAROLD HAMMOND JR.. Charleston, W.Va., Marketing. Beta Ihela Pi, Sphinx, Student Legislature, Sohpmore Class Vice- President, All-Campus Party, football; CHARLES WILLIAM HAR- MISON, Berkeley Springs, W.Va., Marketing. Helvetia, Sphinx, Phi Delta Thela, IF C Honor Court secretary. Student Legislature. Slu- denl Party, SAA: OLIVER WAYNE HAWK, Morgantown. W.Va., Management. SAM: LARRIE DARRELL HAWkInS. New Mar- tinsville. W.Va.. Bnsinew AtJminisiralion. RONALD C. HA ' iHURSr, Biiekhannon. W.Va.. Commerce: GARY LEI-: HINKLE. Circleville. W.Va.. .Management. JOHN FREDERICK HOSMER. Pittsburgh. Pa.. Management. Sigma Phi Epsilon-yice-president; JOSEPH L. HURSH JR., Meehaniesburg, Pa., tarkeliiig. Delta T.iu Delta. SAM. Markelinc Club PAUL SCOTT ICARD. Point Pleasant, W.Va., Economics: FRANK DAVID lOZZI, Lower Burrell, Pa., .Management. SAM, WVU Rid- ing Club-president, Phi Kappa Sigma: DELBERT L. JOHNSON. Houston, Pa., Finance, track: JOSEPH HARRY JONES. Oswego. N.Y.. Marketing, lau Kappa Epsilon-rush chairman. SAM 228 JOHN ANORIiW KASIJHA. Ucchburg. Pa. MarkeiinK. Bl VHRLY C. KLADLh. Morganli.wn, W. Va.. Accouniiiif;: Bh( Kl I I I.KN KI;NN1:DY. Dunhar. W. Va.. Aaoimliiii;. Bcia Alpha Hsi. Morlar Board. SAAP. RHA prcsidcnl. secretary. Student Govcrn- mcnl ( ahincl. Student Parly: ROBERT DANItl. KENNEN. Wheeling. W.Va.. Delta Tau Delta. Sphinx. IFC-prcsidenl. vice- president. Student Ciovcrnment Cabinet. All-Campus party. (IIAKI IS REGINALD KIEER, Saxlon, Pa. I ' roJudion linf-meer- inf-: RALPH CARL KINCi. Ravenswood. WVa . Humiww Admmh- iraiwn. Sigma Chi; JOSLPH MAR UN LA( LK. ( lift.m. N J. Fi- luime. Sigma Phi Kpsilon-schiilarship chairman. Mountaineer Weekend Committee; GLENN CHARLES LARLW. Newburg. W.Va., Accounling, Beta Alpha Psi. WALIIR F LEONARD. Grcensburg. Pa,. Fiiumce. Phi Delta Ihela. Student Party; PAMELA KAY Lll L. Parkersburg. W.Va.. liusincss ICduiaiion. Kappa Delta. Li-Toon-Awa. Angel Flight. Stu- dent Part); JAMES EDWARD LIGUORI, Pearl River. NY.. Fi- nance: LARRY WAYNE LUTZ. Dunbar. W.Va.. Management. MICHAEL MF:HL McCOY. Vienna. W.Va.. Marketing. Kappa Al- pli.i. Alpha Delta Sigma. SAM president. American Marketing As- sociation; MICHAEL M. McGLOIHIN. Morgantown. W.Va.. Mar- I cling. Pi Kappa Alpha; JOSEPH MICHAEL MARTIN, Reader. W Va.. Acciitiniing. Beta Alpha Psi. SAM. WILLIAM CiENE MAR- IIN. Oak Hill. W.Va.. Management. Phi Kappa Sigma. SAM. Stu- dent Parly. Young Republicans. S ALTER K MAL RER. Red Bank. N J. Marketing. SAM. Book- store Committee; DOL(iLAS ELWOOD MICHAEL. Berkeley Springs. W.Va.. Management; WAYNE DOUCiLAS MILLER. Mar- tinsburg. W.Va. Marketing. Sigma Chi; SHERRY LEE MCJN- TAGNA, Morgantown. W.Va.. Management. SAAP. Academic Study Forum. 1 ROBERT LYNN MOORE. Morgantown. WVa. .Management: } LOUIS GF.RARD MORLl LI. Carnegie, Pa.. Marketing. Student P.irty; C HARLF.S EARL NAIL. Verona. Pa. Management. Alpha I psilon Pi. Arnold Air Society: GERALD WAYNE NESTOR, I ' .irkcrsburg, W.Va.. Management. Beta Thcia Pi vice president, lie. All-Campus Party 229 MICHAEL V. NICHNOWnZ. Edison, N.J.. Markedng. Sigma Nu; JEFFREY DANIEL ORNDORFF. Wardensville, W.Va., Finance. Monticola sialT. Uni ersitv 4-H Club. Social Commitlee: JOHN ROBERT PARR. Morganlown. W.Va.. Marketing: GARY STEP- HEN PERDUE, Ceredo. W.Va.. Management. Beta Theta Pi. All- Campus Party. KERRY KENT PETRY, Colcord. W.Va., Accounting: DANNY NEIL PITELESKI. Fairmont, W.Va., Accounting. Lambda Chi Al- pha, IFC; DAVID RONALD POLLITT, Charleston, W.Va., Ac- counting. Pi Kappa Alpha— president. Sphinx, Student Party; DEX- TER WAYNE PORTER, Morganlown, W.Va., Marketing. MICHAEL ARTHUR PORTER, Morgantown. W.Va.. Accounting. Pi Kappa Alpha. IFC. Student Party; DAVID WAYNE POWELL, Martinsburg, W.Va., Accounting. ROBERT F. PRICE, Fairchance. Pa., Accouniing; NANCY SUE PRUNTY. Fairmont. W.Va.. Mar- keting. Ski Cluh, Student Party. GEORGE LEWIS RATKOVITCH, Burgettstown, Pa.. Management. Alpha Epsilon Pi; CATHRYN G. REESE, Weston, W.Va.. Market- ing: JAMES W. REITTER. Collier, W.Va.. Management, baseball: CHRISTOPHER LEE REGER. So. Charleston. W.Va., Marketing, Sigma Chi. DONALD PHILLIP REPPY. Morgantown. W.Va.. Marketing. Lambda Chi Alpha. Student Party: KATHY ANGELA RIDE-- NOUR, lunncllon, W.Va.. Business Education: FRANCES ANNE ROBEY. I ' ark ersburg. W.Va.. Business Education. Gamma Phi Bcla membership chairman. Task Force. Student Parts; ROBERT F. ROTHERI , JR., Altoona, Pa.. Marketing. WVU Veterans club. EDNA JEANNE ROY, Terra Alta, W.Va.. Accouniing: JOHN DA- VID RUDDLE. Riverton. W.Va.. Management: MICHAEL K. SCHNEIDER. Pittsburgh. Pa.. Management. SAM; JAMES AN- THONY SELARIO. Clarksburg. W.Va . Finance. 230 WILLIAM E. SENSENEY, Charles Town. W.Va., Marketing. Sigma Phi Epsilon-prcsujcnl, Fi Balar Cappar-treasurcr. IPC; KENNETH RAY SISLER. Fnendsvilie, Md.. Accotinimf;: LANCE EDWARD SMITTLE. Padcn Cily. W.Va., Management; DAVID RANDOLPH SNELL. Mabscott. W.Va.. Markeling. Kappa Alpha Psi. 1 SHARON LYNN SPATH. Glen Burnic. Md., Accounting: BARRY MICHAEL SROKA. Reading. Pa.. Management. Sigma Phi Epsilon; I ' M RICK FRANCIS SULLIVAN, Rocky Hill. Conn.. Marketing. 1 hela Chi. soccer; JOSEPH TAGNESI, Anawall. W.Va., Marketing. PAUL VINCENT TOMMASI. Palerson. N.J.. Management. Alpha Epsilon Pi. Arnold Air Society; DAVID JAMES TOTH. Weslover. W.Va.. Accounting: SHERRY L. UMIN. . Middlelown. NY.. Sta- tistics. Alpha Delta Pi. Mortar Board. Chimes. Li-Toon-. wa. Moun- taineer Freedom Party; GARY LEE VANNIERE, Weinon. W.Va., Commerce. Pi Kappa Alpha, Sphinx. Student Parly. Chairman Pro- motions and Travel Committee. GERALD F. VAN VLIET. Little Valley. NY.. Economics. Book- More Advisor, Committee; LARR ' l ' li W.ALKER. Princeton. W.Va.. Accounting: Beta Alpha Psi; PAIGE ERNON WEBB. Pocomoke City. Md.. Marketing: JAMES RICHARD WELTON JR.. Morganiown. Finance. TXH . D WFNDFR. Oak Hill. W.Va., Finance. Beta Theta I ' l. RK HARD MICHAEL WISNOSKI, Verona, Pa.. Management. Alpha Epsilon Pi. SAM; WILLIAM ALAN WOODFORD. Elkins. W.Va.. Marketing. Kappa Sigma. Student Body I ' rcMdenl. Junior Class President. Mountain. Sphinx. Arnold Air Society, Student Partv; MYRON GREGORY N ANTIS. Springfield. Va.. Manage- ment. All-Campus Party, rifle. DARl S H ZEHRBACH. Cumberland. Md.. Management. SAM. CLYDE STEPHEN BYRD. Mullens. W.Va.. Marketing. SAM. 231 Creative Arts Center 21, ' ) Dr. Richard E. Duncan. Dean Creative Arts Center 233 Stf f yopE iill H ' . ' nmm u m IRK m a Ul K A V W ' M H M ' fl n i 1 f:0|M Al te 234 BARBARA J ANDERSON. Glcnshjw. Pa . An. SANDRA L AN- 1)1 RSON. I ' ii( bur{;h. Pa.. Music EJuiaiion. Mu Phi tpsilon. PHM.LIS A APPOLONIA. Monongahela. W.Va.. Music Education. Mu Phi Epsilon. Music Educators ' National Conference; LARRY L. BIXLER. Morgantown, W.Va.. Music Education. Student Party. Marching Band. MiCHAELEEN A. DAVIS. Morgantown. W Va.. Music Education. Tau Beta Sigma. Music Educators ' National Confer- ence. University Singers. University Wind -Symphony: MARY K. ED- GAR. Pine Grove. W.Va.. Applied Music. Mu Phi Epsilon-vice- president. LOIS K. FITZSIMMONS. New Martinsville. W Va . Music Educa- tion. Mu Phi Epsilon. Mortar Board. Chi Omega; PATRICIA A. FUOCO. Charleroi. Pa.. Drama ELLEN C. GIBSON. Lewisburg. W.Va.. Music Education. All-Campus Party. Mountainelles. Presi- dent-Alpha Xi Delta. Camerata Singers. University Singers, Secre- tary-Homecoming Committee; BEVERLY K. GILCHRIST. Park- ersburg. W.Va., Music Education, Historian— Mu Phi Epsilon. University Singers. ROBERT P HARRIS. Morgantown, W.Va., An Education. Wrestling Team; JAMES R HOWE. Penns Grove, N.J.. Music Education. Phi Mu Alpha. Trombone Ensemble. RUTH A. KISINGER. Brownsville. Pa., Music. Mu Phi Epsilon. Student Party. Delta Gamma. Music Educators ' National Conference: THEODORE J. KOVALL. JR., Isa- belle. Pa., Music Education. ANNA L. LANG. Mt. Pleasant. Pa.. .Music Ed ucation. Mu Phi Epsi- lon. Student Party. Kappa Delta; PAMELA K. MAURER. Bridgeton, N.J.. Music Education. Mu Phi Epsilon. Student Partv. Kappa Delta SHARON L. OKELLY. Dunbar. W.Va.. Dratna. National Collegiate Players; MARSHA J. SCHMITT, Springfield, Va.. Music Education. University Singers. Camerata Singers. Music Educators ' National Conference -president. DAVID L SMITH. Morgantown. W Va . An. Photo Club-prcsidcnt. Monticola photographer: JOANN R. SPENCER. Morgantown W.Va.. Drama. Mortar Board, National Collegiate Players W.S.-president. Student Cabinet. Pi Beta Phi ADRIENNE L. SU SAN. McKeesporl. Pa.. Music Education. Mu Phi Epsilon-treasurer. Tau Beta Sigma-vice-president. Svmphony Orchestra. Wind Sym phonv. L ' niversiiv Singers: SUSAN ZSIDISIN. Linden. N.J . Drama. Zeta Phi Eta. National Collegiate Players, Dean ' s Advisory Committee. 235 Engineering 236 Dr. Chester A. Arcnts. Dean College of Engineer ing 237 MAROUN H. AOUN. Beirut. Lebanon, Mechanical Engineering. ISA— president. Student Cabinet. CLIFFORD B. ARNEY. Biuefield. W.Va.. Industrial Engineering. American Institute of Industrial Engineers: JOHN C. AVERS. St. Albans. W.Va., Civil Engineering. Chi Epsilon. ASCE: RICHARD E. BLANKENSHIP. Weirton. W.Va., Aerospace Engineering. Scab- bard and Blade. Student Pady. American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. Society for the Advancement of Management; MI- CHAEL A. BLESSING. Ft. Pleasant. W.Va.. Chemical Engineering. Tau Beta Pi. Phi Lambda Upsilon. Omega Chi Epsilon. AlChE— president. JOHN D. BOSWELL, Emporium, Pa.. Indus rial Engineering. Sigma Nu, IFC; ROBERT W. BROWN, Spencer, W.Va., Industrial Engineering. American Institute of Industrial Engineers; JOSEPH F. CAPO, Traflord, Pa., Civil Engineering. ASCE, Sigma Chi: DEN- NIS E. CH.ARNEY. Princeton. W.Va.. Aerospace Engineering. ANDREW J CINDRICK. Jr.. Uniontown. Pa.. Electrical Engineer- ing. IEEE: WILLIAM D. DAUGHERTY, Peterstown, N.Va., Agri- cultural Engineering. Tau Beta Pi, Alpha Epsilon. ASAE, Academic Study Forum: JAY B. DAVIS, Charleston, W.Va., Electrical Engi- neering. IEEE: THOMAS J. DEWITT, Morgantown. W.Va.. Me- chanical Engineering. Tau Beta Pi. Pi Tau Sigma. Phi Kappa Psi. 238 THOMAS E. ESCUE. Morganlown, W.Va.. Aerospace Engineering: PATRK K R LSPOSITO, Logan, W.Va.. Indus rial Engineering: CHARLLS B HODGKIN. Wellburg, W.Va.. Chemical Engineering. AIChE; MICHAEL S. JARRELL, Chemical Engineering. Tau Beta Pi. Phi Lambda Up.silon. Omega Chi Epsilon. AlChL. ROBERT KAYUHA. Morganlown, W.Va.. Aerospace Engineering: CHARLES KONA. Allantic Cily, N.J., Civil Engineering. ASCE: NITIN N. KUMBHANL Bombay, India, Electrical Engineering. Al- pha Epsilon Pi, Alpha Phi Omega; JOHN M. LANTZ. Parkcrsburg. W.Va., Chemical Engineering. AIChE-secrelary-treasurer. WALTER P. LEPUT, Pittsburgh. Pa.. Civil Engineering. ASCE; YOUSEF NOLIRHAYAN, Teheran, Iran, Civil Engineering: LOUIS D. ROCCHINL Oakmonl, Pa., Civil Engineering. Sphinx. ASCE, Sigma Chi, Homecoming Committee, Greek Week Committee. Stu- dent Legislature; WILLIAM S. SHINGLER. Brush Valley, Pa., Aerospace Engineering. Sigma Chi. Sigma Gamma Tau, Scabbard and Blade. JAY L. SNYDER, Somerset, Pa.. Chemical Engineering AIChE; ALVIN L. SORCAN, Bridgeville, Pa., Petroleum Engineering. AIME; RAYMOND L. STEVENSON, Piedmont. W.Va.. Industrial Engineering. AIIE: ROBERT S. TAUBERT. Ripley, W.Va., Chem- ical Engineering. AIChE. JAMES D. TA LOR, Morgantown. W.Va.. Electrical Engineering. IEEE; LARRY R. TUCCI. Weirton, W.Va., Aerospace Engineering. All-Campus Party, AIAA; DAVID T. WHITE, Morgantown, W.Va.. Civil Engineering. Student Party. Phi Delta Theta; NANCY L. WIL- HOIT. Charleston, W.Va., Civil Engineering. Student Legislature, Kappa Kappa Gamma. ROGER B. WILLIAMS, Westover, W.Va., Industrial Engineering. Alpha Pi Mu, AIIE. Phi Delta Theta. Student Legislature; GARY S. WINTERS. Nutter Fort. W.Va.. Mechanical Engineering. Sigma Chi. Student Party: RICK WOJDOWSKI. McKees Rocks. Pa.. Civil Engineering. Chi Epsilon, Phi Kappa Sigma; JOSE V. ZAPATA, Caracas, Venezuela, Aerospace Engineering. AIAA, ASME, SAM, ISA. 239 Human Resources and Education 240 Dr. Delmas F. Miller, Dean College of llimuiii Resound unJ IJiimlion Z 241 GLORIA E. ADONIZIO. Pittston, Pa., Home Economics. Home- coming Queen; BARBARA J. ALLINDER. Marmet, W.Va.. Home Economics: BEVERLY T. BAKER. Milam, W.Va., Fiimilv Re- sources; SUSAN L. BARKER, Pittsburgh. Pa., Home Economics, Home Economics Club, All-Campus Party. CAMILLE L. BARTMAN. Vandergrift, Pa„ Home Economics. Stu- dent Party, Phi Epsilon Omicron, Omicron Nu, Mountainettes, Kappa Delta; MELINDA K. HERMAN, Wheelmg. W.Va., Lan- guage Aris; ELAINE W. BIBB ! ' , Elkview, W.Va.. Secondary Educa- tion. Education Honorary; LINDA A. BONASSO. Caroling. W.Va., Family Resources, Phi Epsilon Omicron, All-Campus Party, Delta Delta Delta. PEGGY L. BRADFORD. Mullens. W.Va.. Elementary Education; REBECCA BRYANT, Seabrook, Md., Family Resources. Omicron Nu, Phi Upsilon Omicron, Student Party: MARY K. BUTCHER, Hundred, W.Va., Family Resources. Phi Upsilon Omicron; DARBY K CAHILL. Clendenin, W.Va.. Secondary Education, Kappa Kappa Gamma. JOSEPH W. CAPOZZI. Hepzibah. W.Va.. Secondary Education; JUDITH A. CASTO, Wayne, W.Va.. Family Resources. Phi Upsilon Omicron. Omicron Nu. Home Economics Club. SAAP; M.ARGA- RET J. CLAY. Alderson, W.Va.. Secondary Education, Kappa Delta Pi— president. Chimes, Student Party, Mountainettes, Kappa Delta; LINDA S. COCHRAN. Berkeley Springs. W.Va.. Elementary Edu- cation. Student Party. Alpha Phi, Mounlineer Weekend Committee. Glamor Style— show committee, Greek Newsletter. LINDA K. CONNER, Charleston, W.Va.. Secondary Education, Delta Delta Delta; JOHN J. CONNORS. Philadelphia. Pa.. Second- ary Education. SAAP; MARGARET L. DANCY. Beckley. W.Va.. Secondary Education; CAROL V. DAWSON. Berkeley Springs, V ' a.. Family Resources, Phi Upsilon Omicron. Chimes. Omicron Nu. Home Economics Club. 242 DIANNA J. DEAN. Rowlcsburg. W.Va.. Family Resources. ACEI, Home Economics Club; DEBORAH A DEEM. St. Marys. W.Va., Secondary Education; VIVIAN DESIMONE, South Ornage, N.J., Family Resources. REBECCA A. DOBBS. Moundsville. W.Va., Ele- menlary Education. MSNEA. DONNA J EDDY. Fairvicw. W.Va.. Family Resources Education. 4-H Club, Home Economics Chapter, All-Campus Party; MARYJO I RMACOFF. Washington, Pa.. Secondary Education: JUDITfl I A ANS. Noncll. Pa.. Secondary Education. Alpha Delta Pi; SHA- KOS K FEATHERS. Westover. W.Va.. Secondary Education REBECCA A. FERRACCIO. Vandergrift. Pa . Elementary Educa- tion, Mountainettes. Panhellenic-president, Kappa Delia. Student Cabinet. Social Committee; SHERRILL L. FOLTIN. Central City. I ' .i.. Elementary Education: PAULETTE K. FROHNAPFEL. Moundsville. W.Va.. Elementary Education. SNEA; BARBARA K. I ULl.ER. Morganlown. W.Va.. Family Resources. Omicron Nu. Phi Upsilon Omicron. GLENNA S. GAINER. Elkins. W.Va.. Elementary Education. Mor- tar Board. SNEA. 4-H Club; JUDITH A. GIBSON. Birch River. W Va.. Secondary Education: REBECCA J. GIBSON, Kindwood. W Va.. Elementary Education. Chi Omega. Forum-festival Com- mittee; MARY C. GIRASOLE, Morgantown. W.Va.. Social H ' ork. JA. I1..S L. GOLDSWORim . Hershey. Pa.. Secondary Education. Student Party, Sigma Phi Epsilon; MARGUERITE C. GRIMES, Clarksburg. W.Va.. Family Resources: RENEE J. GROVES. West Mifflin. Pa.. Elementary Education. Student Parly. Kappa Delta. Spe- cial Events Committee; REGINA M. GWINN. Green Sulphur Springs. W.Va.. Home Economics. Phi Upsilon Omicron. Student I ' ariy. Delta Gamma. ( ATHY W. HALL. Vienna, W.Va., Elementary Education. All- I, ampus Party, Angel Flight. Chi Omega. Mountaineer Weekend (iimmittee; JANICE M HARPER, Unionlown, Pa., Mathematics Education: CARLA S. HASLAM. Vienna. Va . Elementary Educa- tion. Student Partv. Kappa Kappa Gamma. AWS; JERRY L. IIIDRIC K. Mouth of Seneca. W.Va.. Secondary Education. 243 BARBARA S. HEMPHILL. Cinnaniinson, N.J., Secondary Educa- tion, Student Party, Angel Flight— Commander. Kappa Kappa Gamma-lst Vice-president; ALEXANDRA H. HENDERSON, Bluelield. W.Va., Home Economics. Alpha Gamma Delta; PATRI- CIA R. HEPLER. Morganlown, W.Va.. Elementary Education; DEBORAH J. HERR. Millersville. Pa., Elementary Education, Dolphins. SHELLI W. HINERMAN. Cameron. W.Va.. Secondary Education. Zeta Phi Eta, Kappa Delta Pi, Mortar Board. Student Party; MARY A. HORTON, Morgantown, W.Va.. Family Resources. All-Campus Party; JOANNE HOYER. Cumberland. Md.. Family Resources. Phi Epsilon Omicron; PAMELA HUSBY. Wycof ' a. N.J.. Elementary Education. Chi Omega. LYNN E. IVERY, Big Stone Gap. Va.. Family Resources. Phi Up- silon Omicron— treasurer, All-Campus Partv. .Alpha ,Xi Delta-vice president. Homecoming Committee; ZACHARIAS A. KARAN- TONIS, Colcord, W.Va., Secondary Education: EDWARD G. KEL- LER, Charles Town, W.Va.. Secondary Education: CHARLOTTE A, KIDD, Maxwelton, W.Va., Home Economics. SALLY L. KREPS. Charleston. W.Va.. Elementary Education. Stu- dent Party, Delta Gamma; CAROL A. KULINA, S. Somer ille, N.J., Design. All-Campus Party, Young Republicans, Alpha Xi Delta; LOIS K. LAMONT, Wheeling, W.Va., Secondary Education, Kappa Delta Pi; CHARLOTTE A. LATUSEK, Morgantown, W.Va., Elementary Education. .Alpha Delta Pi. JUDl LH A. LEFLER. Mullens, W.Va., Family Resources Education. Omicron Nu, American Home Economics Association; J.AMES P, LEWIS, LaVale, Md., Secondary Education. Pi Kappa .Alpha; TAVA S. LOGUE, Morganlown, W.Va.. Family Resources. Home Economics Club, American Home Economics Association; FRANCES K. LYMAN, London, W.Va., Family Resources. Phi Up- silon Omicron. 4-H Club. AMES. KATIIY A. McCALL. Richmond, Va.. Mathematics Education. All- Campus Parly, Alpha Xi Delta; KATHLEEN A. McGEE. Murray Hill, N.J. Home Economics. Student Parts, Mounlainettes, Alpha Delta Pi; CONSTANCE N. McLAUGHLIN, Marlmton. W.Va., Elementary Education. 244 ARTHUR B. MACE. JR.. Morganlown. W.Va.. Secondary Educa- iKin: RL ' III . MACE. Morganlown. W.Va.. Family Resources: CONNIE G MARTIN. Oak Hill. W.Va.. tamily Resources. Phi Ep- silon Omicron. Omicron Nu: NANCY D. MARTIN. Williamsiown. W.Va.. Secondary Education. Alpha Delia Pi. CHRISTINE G. MATTICK. Roscllc N.J.. Family Resources. Home Economics Chapter. YWCA; CHRISTINE F MEREDITH. Mor- ganlown. W.Va.. Home Economics. Delia Gamma. Monlicola: NANCY S. MEREDITH. 342 Morganlown. W.Va.. Elementary Edu- cation. SNEA. Chi Omega; MARY L. MIHALICH. Johnstown. Pa.. language Arts. Gamma Phi Beta. MARY I;, MONTAGNA. New Canaan. Conn.. Human Resources: LINA MOWTSCHAN. Weirlon. W.Va.. Secondary Education. All- Campus Party; MARY A. MULLENIX, Parkersburg. W.Va., Family Resources. Dolphins; BRENDA S. MYERS. 3 Moundsville. W.Va.. Hume Economics Education. Home Economics Club. SHIRLEY A. NYCUM. Clear ille. Pa.. Family Resources: JANET A PARADIS. Martmsburg. W.Va.. Secondary Education: CYN- THIA L. PHILLIPS. Elkins. W.Va.. Language Arts. Zcia Phi Eta. Kappa Delta. Greek Week— Coordinator. .Won«co o— Sales Man- ager; ELLEN J. PORTERFIELD. Hedgesville. W.Va.. Home Eco- nomics. MFP. JANE B. POWELL. Barlow. W.Va.. Elementary Education. Angel Flight. Student Legislature. Military Ball Queen. Pi Beta Phi; HAR- RIET A. PROUDFOOT. Weirlon. W.Va.. Education: KAROL RA- DOCHIO. Welch. W.Va.. Family Resources: CATHY L. REED. Mevcrsdale. Pa.. Education. Kappa Delta Pi. Student Parly. JUDITH A. REED. Elementary Education: ANNA L. REPPERT. Morganlown. W.Va.. English Education. Kappa Phi; SARAH C. RICE. Hinton. W.Va.. Elementary Education. Student Parly. Pan- hellenic-Treasurer. Glamor Style Show-Coordinator. Alpha Phi; VIAR ' ( RIFFLE. Morganlown. W.Va.. Elementary Education. 245 SUSAN L. ROBERTS, Hartsdale. NY., Child Development: MARY C. ROBINSON, Rockville, Md., Familv Resources: PAMELA A. ROBINSON, Wheeling, W.Va., Family Resources: BETSY L. RO- GERS, Bridgeport. W.Va.. Familv Resources, Delia Gamma. Student Party. Student Legi-slature. Homecoming Committee. Mountaineer Weekend Committee. Greek Week Committee. KRISTINA Z. ROSE. Clarksburg. W.Va.. Spamsh EJucaium, SAAP. RHA, JUDITH A. RAY. Bethlehem. Pa., Elementarv Educa- iion. SAAP, NDEA. MARY T. RUSSELL, Star City, W.Va.. Ele- mcniarv Educaiion: DONALD B. RYALL. Johnson City. N.Y.. Edu- caiion. IPC, Phi Kappa Sigma. DAVID C. SAMPSON. Elkins. W.Va.. Language Arts: CATHY A. SANTONAS. Familv Resources. Omicron Nu. Home Economics Club: PATRICIA L. SCHULZ. Pittsburgh. Pa.. Familv Resources. Phi Upsilon Omicron, Alpha Phi, Moniicola: ELLEN L. SHAFER, Morgantown. W.Va., Familv Resources. MARILYN M. SHONDOR, Elizabeth. Pa., English Education. Stu- dent Party. Panhellenic. Delta Delta Delta; DIANNE SHUTTS, Vienna. W.Va.. Familv Resources. Omicron Nu, Phi Upsilon Omi- cron; SHELLEY J. SIMON, Morgantown, W.Va.. .Mathematics Edu- cation. Student Party. Alpha Phi, Elections Committee; SH.ARON L. SKAGGS, Glen Ferris, W.Va., Familv Resources. ANNA O. SMALLRIDGE, Morgantown. W.Va.. Dietetics. Student Parly. AWS; THERESE R. SMITH. Charleston. W.Va.. Human Re- sources. Student Party. Panhellenic. Phi Epsilon Omicron. Pi Beta Phi, Dolphins, . Vcademic Ethics Committee, Drug Council, Senior Class Vice-president; DENNIS G. SOHO, Central City. Pa.. Educa- tion: BRADA E. SPIKER. Pennsboro, W.Va., Home Economics. Student Parly, Pi Beta Phi— Pledge Trainer. Pageant Committee- Chairman. KATHY J. SPITZER, Berkeley Spring. W.Va. Elementarv Educa- tion. All-Campus Party. Alpha Phi; MAUREEN E. STRAUSS. Am- bridge. Pa.. Secondarv Education. Student Party. Alpha Delta Pi; MONICA L. TATANTINO, Clarksburg. W. ' a., Secondarv Educa- tion. RHA, Student Party; DEBRA A. THOMPSON. Bethel Park, Pa.. Elementarv Education. MI P. 246 MARY K. THOMPSON. Morganlown. WVa.. Educaimn. Kappa Delia Pi, Block and Bridle; JODY J, THORNBERRY. Newell. W.Va.. Language Am. BETH A. THORNt. Morganlown. WVa., Secondary Education. Alpha Phi; CLAIRE A. FICICH. Wcirton, W.Va., Secondary Educat ion. SAAP, CLEAN. SUSAN K TOMPKINS. Glasgow, W.Va., Elementary Education. Kappa Delia; PHYLLIS E. VAUGHAN. Charleston. W.Va.. Eng- lish Education: CHERYL K. WAUGH. Weslon. W.Va., Language Arts: LINDA J. WEBB, Charleston, W.Va., Language Arts. Kappa Phi. KAY L WEESE. Morganlown. W.Va.. Family Resources. AWS, 4-H Club; DONNA K. WEST. Independence. W.Va.. Family Resources: PAULA L. WHEATLEY. Wheeling. W.Va.. Elementary Education. SNEA. Chi Omega; BEVERLY A. WILCOX. Parkcrsburg. W.Va., lAint;mige Arts. Zeta Phi Eta-Presidenl, Sludenl Party, Elections Committee. BARBARA K. WILLIAMS, Dunbar. W.Va.. Family Resources. Al- ph. Phi; CAROLYN E. WILLISON. Mason Rd.. Cumberland, ld . Family Resources: AUDREY L. WILKINS. Morganlown, Va.. Elementary Education. Student Partv. Kappa Kappa ( ..imma; CAROL V. WILSON, Wheeling. W.Va.. Secondary EJuca- H. Zeta Phi Eta, Sludenl Parly, Elections Commillee. ROHRIH P, WILSON. Wheeling. W.Va.. Human Reunmey Student I ' . ins. I ' l Beta I ' hi. Homcconiing Steering Commit tee; SANDR.- K. WILT. Morganlown. W.Va.. Elementary Education. All-Campus I ' .irlv. Mountainetles, Delta Delia Delta; LOUISE O. WOLISTON, W heeling. W.Va., Family Resources: LINDA G. WOLLARD. Fair- mont. W.Va., Speech and Hearing. 1 1 AINE R ZABURYNSKI, Hazlct. N.J., Home Economics. Greek Lciier. Phi Upsilon Omicron. 247 Journalism 248 Dr. Guy H. Siewart. Dean School o Journalism ■ 249 THOMAS J. BOYD, Allison Park. Pa.. Journalism. Kappa Tau Al- pha. Order of the Grail. Phi Kappa Sigma: CODETTA A. CUN- NINGHAM. Evans. W.Va.. Aiheriisint;. Mountainettes; VALERIE J. CUONZO. Parsons, W.Va.. Advertising. Gamma Alpha Chi; JOHN DIFRANCESCO. Clil ' lon, N.J,. Journalism. Tau Kappa Epsilon. MARKW F. DUNBAR. Morganlown. W.Va., Journalism: ROB- ERT 1.. FITZPATRICK. Parkersburg. W.Va.. A dverii.sing. Alpha ' Delta Sigma. Sigma Chi. Student Party. Public Relations Com- mittee; CiARY A. G.ABRIEL. West Mifllm. Pa.. Journalism. Sigma Chi. Student Party; ALICE G. GALLOWAY. Charleston. W.Va.. Kiklio-T.l ' .. MFP. Young Democrats. Debate Socieis. Fencing leani. Dormalorv Proaram Duector. I ilni .Arts Cummittee, JLNNII I-R L. (iROVh. Aurora, . a.. Journalism. Thela Sigma Phi. Sigma Delta Chi. Student Party; MARlL ' i N J. HRLIBIC. Pitts- burgh. Pa.. Journalism: REBECCA L. HAl.STFAD. South Charlcs- Inn. W.Va.. Journalism. Gamma Alph.i Chi: MAR ' f A. HHNNAN, I hintington. W.Va.. Journalism. 250 MARJORIE I.. HURl.BUT. PiUshurgh. Pa.. RaJio T.V.. Zcla Phi Fla, All-Campus Parly. Delia Delia Delia press sccrclary; JOHN V ' v JARRETT. Houslon. Texas. Journalism. Sigma Delia Chi. I ' KS.SA. Daily Alhenacum. Academic Study Commillee. Alhleiic Publicily; ELLIOTT A. KELLMAN. Bayonnc. N.J.. Journalism. PRSSA. Sigma Nu, Pholography Club: GLENN H KIRK. E. River Ml.. Bluefield. W.Va.. I ' ublu Relations. LINDA L LEWIS. Wcirlon. W.Va . Journalism. Sigma Delia Chi- vicc-presidenl. Theia Sigma Phi -sccreiary-ireasurcr. Daily Athe- naeum -Associaie Editor: MARY D. MIELLO. Paramus. N.J.. Jour- nalism. SAAP. PRSSA. Daily Athenaeum: MARY M. MURRILL. Parkcrsburg. W.Va.. Journalism. Theta Sigma Phi. Alpha Phi: t RANCES NESS. Morganiown. . 3. Journalism. KOBI RT E. PASTIN. McKccs Rocks. Pa.. Journalism. PRSSA. I oDihall Team. Dail Athenaeum. Athletic Publicily: JAMES F. PATTON. Morganiown. W.Va., Public Relations. Pershing RiHes- Execulivc Officer; MICHAEL F. PISERCHIA. Colonia. N.J.. Jour- nalism: BARBARA J. REVAK. Butler. Pa.. Journalism. Theta Sigma Phi. SAAP. VWCA. JAMES J. ROOP. Fairmonl. W.Va.. Public Relations. PRSSA. Sigma Delia Chi. Kappa Tau Alpha. Sigma Phi Epsilon-guard. A wir fo a-editor. Academic Study Forum chairman. University Academic Study Forum. Elections Committee. Student Part : GER- ALD A. SADESKY. Tarentum. Pa. Broadcasting. Sigma Phi Epsilon. Student Party. Publicity Committee. A on ifo a-pholographer: LAW- RENCE A. SARTORE. Sarasota. Fla.. Public Relations. Mountain. Sphinx. IFC. Sigma Nu-commander. Greek Letter- Editor; DAVID L. SHAW. Waterloo, NY., Journalism. Young Democrats. PRSSA. CONNIE B. SPRINGER. Wheeling. W.Va.. Journalism: FRANK H. STOY. Wheeling. W.Va.. Broadcasting. Student Party. Kappa Sigma: MARY Y. TAROWSKY. Glennville. W Va.. Journalism. Mortar Board-President; MARGARET A THORNHILL. Blue- lield. W.Va.. Radio-T.l.. Student Parly. Alpha Delta Pi. M LINDA TROFLLER. Toms River. N J. AJteriising. Alpha Delia Sigma. Gamma .Mph.! Chi. Chimes. Ski Club. Lilerarv Club. , cadeniic Sludv Forum. Kappa Kappa Ciamma; J.AMLS R. WHITE. Parkersburg. W Va . Journalism: PAUL C WINTER. Lo- gan. W.Va.. Public Relations, Student Parly. Sigma Phi Epsilon. PRSSA. A o i iro a-business manager. Young Democrats: LINDA I: YOST. Berkeley Springs. W.Va.. Advertising. Gamma Alpha Chi. Theta Sigma Phi. Dail Athenaeum Business Manager. 251 Medical Center 252 Dr I rank V. tcKce. Dean School of Medicine Dr Lorita D. Jenab. Dean School of Nursing Dr. Raphael O. Bachman School of Pharmacy 253 254 ■ r ■ H 1 WoM 1 H M B ' ' ' ' ' ;! H H H K - gfi j - V y J ij jyjy y] j 1 ' ' ' 1 ■ fxa W ' ' ■ H j H f i. k S H HHw H iHH CAROLYN VIRGINIA AUSTIN, Ronccverle, W.Va.. Nursing: MARY ANN BARCZAK. Wheeling. W.Va.. Nursing. SNA, SAAP. Drug Council. All-Campus Party. Nursing Junior Class Prcsidcnl; THOMAS CHARLES BERNHARDT. Morrestown. N.J.. Pharmacy. Sigma Chi. IFC-Chairman Honor Court, Student American Phar- maceutical Assn.; CAROL FULLEN BOMAR. Fairmont. W.Va.. Medical Technology. W CNDY A. BRAND. Morgantown. W.Va.. Nursing. Sigma Thela 1 .HI. Nursing Senior Class Vice President. By-Laws Committee. Puh- u Service Committee; CYNTHIA R. BROWN. Arlhurdalc. W.Va., ursing. Kappa Phi. Student Nurses Association; JOHN E. CA- I ' l I O. Weirton. W.Va., Pharmacy. Beta Theta Pi. Kappa Psi. Ameri- can Pharmaceutical Association, All-Campus Party; ROBERT ES- TEL COPELAND, Alderson. W.Va., Pharmacy. Delta Tau Delta, Kappa Psi. All-Campus Party. BARBARA JEAN COWEN. Reynoldsburg. O.. Nursing. Chi ' iniega. vice-president Nursing SchtKil. Academic Study Forum. Stu- dent Party; JUDITH NL COBB. Clarksburg. W.Va.. Nursing: AN- NETTE COMUNTZIS. Miirgantown, W.Va.. Medical Technology. Alpha Xi Delta. Alpha Delta Theta-Vice-President; MARGARET ANN COWDEN. Hickory. Pa.. Nursing. Nursing News and Infor- mation Committee. Nursing Professional Standards Committee. 255 RUTH A. TAYLOR, Newburg, W.Va., Nursing. Presidem Nursini: Senior Class. LINDA SUE DAMRON. Williamson. W.Va.. Pharmacy. Lambda Kappa Sigma. Rho Chi. Student American Pharmaceutical .Associa- tion. SHARON CARTER DIKEMAN. Falls Church. Va.. Denial Hygiene. Junior American Dental Hvgienists Association; DIANE SUE EAGLEHOUSE, Clarksburg. W.Va.. Medical Technology. Al- pha Delta Theta; LOUIS RONALD EAGLEHOUSE, Latrobe, Pa., Medical Technology, baseball. JEANNE ELIZABETH FALCON, Greensburg. Pa.. A ' wrsm?. Stu- dent Party, Secretary Senior Nursing Class; JOHN BRENT GAMBLE, New Martinsville. W.Va.. Pharmacy. Student American Pharmaceutical Association; SALVATORE ROBERT GOODWIN, Clarksburg, W.Va., Pharmacy. Phi Lambda Upsilon, Sigma Chi, IFC, Student Party, Student American Pharmaceutical Association, Drug Abuse Committee; ELLA MARIE GRIMM, Donegal, Pa., Nursing. Sigma Theta Tau, Student Nurses Association. PATRICIA LYNN HAYES. Parkersburg. W.Va., Pharmacy. Alpha Phi, Lambda Kappa Sigma. Drug Abuse Committee, Student Party, Orchesis; SHARON PAUL HUGGETT. Alpha Delta Theta-secre- tary; DIANNE MARIE HUNT, Clarksburg. W.Va., Nursing. Sigma Theta Tau, All-Campus Party, President School of Nursing, Vice President Junior Nursing Class; LYNN RAE JOHNSON, Lorentz, W.Va., Speech Pathology. KATHLEEN ANN KEMP. Indian Head. Pa.. Pre-Physical Therapy; RAY W ARREN KEMP JR., Mullens, W.Va.. Pharmacy. Phi Kappa Psi, Ro Chi. Kappa Psi. Student American Pharmaceutical Associa- tion, Student Party; LINDA L. KINDELBERGER, 1045 Angelo Court, Atlanta, Ga., Nursing. Alpha Xi Delta; CINDA LOU KING, Clarksburg, W.Va., Speech Pathology and Audiologv. MARY ANN KIRK. Morgantown, W. a., Speech Pathology arid .Audiometry: ELIZABETH KURTH. Morganlown, W.Va., Speech Pathology and Audiology. Zeta Phi Eta. Sigma .-Xlpha Eta; BUFORD T. LIVELY. Raincllc, W.Va., Pharmacy. Rho Chi-presidcnt, Kappa Psi; KENYANN LUCAS, Cambridge Springs. Pa.. Nursing SHERRY LEE McCANN, New Castle, Pa., Dental Hygiene. Student Party, Junior Aincrican Denial Hvgienist ' s Association; LINDA ANN MASARIK. Arnold, Pa.. Medical Technology. Alpha Delta Theta; KARI.N MATTO.X, Arlington. Va., Denial Hyi;ienc. Student I ' .irtv. Junior .American Dental Hvgienists ' Association; JUDITH BOND MORRIS. Morganlown, W.Va., Medical Technology. Alpha Delta Theta. II NNIE ELIZABETH NEELY. Charleston. W.Va.. Nursinf-. Delta Delta Delta. Student Nurses Association; PAMELA SUE NIMS, Morrcstown. N.J.. Nurunf;. Angel Flight. Homecoming Committee; MAUREEN ANN RAPP, Whcelmg. W.Va . Nursing. Student Party; EVELYN PETTY RECTOR. Kingwood. W.Va.. Medical Technology. WILLIAM l.DCiAR RELD JR.. Cumberland. Md.. Pharmacy. Sigma Nu. Student American Pharmaceutical Association: TERESA NANETTE RHOADLS. Camden. W.Va.. Nursing. Student Nurses ' Association. Kappa Phi; WILLIAM CLARKE RIDGWAY. Wheel- ing. W.Va., Pharmacy. Kappa Alpha. IPC. Student American Phar- maceutical AsscKiation; LINDA JO RIEGER. Sutcrsville. Pa.. Pre- Ph ysical Therapy. CHARLENE MARIE ROUSE. Grindstone. Pa.. Medical Tech- nology: SHARON ANN SABATINI. Brownsville. Pa.. Medical Technology. Alpha Delia Theta -president; SUSAN MICHALENE SAUNDERS. Ravcnswood, W.Va.. Medical Technology: SHARON GAIL SEABERG. Dilliner, Pa., Speech Therapy. NORABELLE SHUMAN. Charles Town. W.Va.. Speech Pathology and Audiology. Sigma .Alpha Eta. Student Party. .AWS Committee. Election Committee; RALPH KARL SIGMAN. Charleston. W.Va.. Pharmacy. Alpha Phi Omega. Student American Pharmaceutic al As- sociation; JENNIFER ALLYN SMITH. Charleston. W.Va.. . ' urs- ing. Alpha Xi Delta; MARCIA SMITH. Pittsburgh. Pa.. Nursing. Fine Arts Committee. SUSAN KAY SPROl!TS. Wheeling. W.Va.. Nursing. Kappa Delta. Student Pari ; PATRICIA ANN SWIGER. Shinnston. W.Va.. Med- ical Technology: KENNETH BRUCE VENSEL. Morgantown. W.Va.. Pre-Physical Therapy. Beta Theta Pi. Wrestling. Fi Balar Cappar. Outstanding Athletes of America 168-9); REGINALD LEONARD WILLIAMS. Fairmont. W Va.. Medical Technology. Kappa Alpha Psi. track. STEPHANIE MARIE WOTRING. Morgantown. W Va . Nursing. Gamma Phi Beta. Student Party. Fine .Arts Committee. SAAP. Col- legiate Rainbow Girls: DANN ' l ALLEN YOUNG. Charleston. W.Va.. Pharmacy. Student American Pharmaceutical Association; ALICE JEAN TALERICO. Hepzibah. W.Va.. Pre-Physical Thereby. Student Party. TAC; VICKI ELLEN TATE. York. Pa.. Denial Hy- giene. Alpha Phi. Junior American Dental Hygicnisls ' Assocation. All-Campus Party. 257 Physical Education .lilJ.i.i.«i llW| 258 Dr. Peler C. YosI, Dean School of Physical Educalion m L . ' V k L-J ' m 1 . i I i • sy 4 T -M j V ff ■ - |t 1 .. s ii jib..«ir i, J y ■1 • ■ J i N ' ' ' 259 LOIS A ANDERSON. Silver Springs. Md.. Physical Education. Or- chesis. Kappa Delta; ELIZABETH BABCOCK. Frostburg, Md.. Physical Education; JAMES F. BASHAM, Morgantown, W.Va.. Physical Education: SHARON A. BENSON. Morgantown, W.Va., Physical Education. Dolphins. Kappa Delta. JAMES W. BLISS. Locust Valley. N.Y.. Physical Education: JOYCE A. BUTLER. Charleston. W.Va.. Physical Education: REG D. COR- BETT . Rocky River, Ohio. Physical Education. Student Party. Sigma Nu; SUSAN L. DAVIDSON. Collingswood. N.J.. Physical Education. RICKEY D. DEEM, Parkersburg. W.Va.. Physical Education; PAUL W. DUMONT, Point Marion, Pa., Physical Education; SHA- RON L. GIVENS, Williamstown. W.Va., Physical Education. Physi- cal Education Majors Club. Alpha Delta Pi— house president; EI- LEEN M. GRIFFITH. Riviera Beach. Md.. Physical Education. Physical Education Majors Club, Kappa Delta. ROBERT W. HOUSER. Pine Bank. Pa., Physical Education; JEN- NIFER A. JONES, Morgantown. W.Va.. Physical Education, Dol- phins—president, Women ' s Physical Education Club, Academic Study Forum-Chairman; RALPH H. LAUER. Dover. Pa.. Physical Education: ROBERT S. LOWE. Alexandria, Va., Physical Educa- tion, varsity basketball. MARLENE K. MARCHANT. Follansbee. W.Va., Physical Educa- tion. Dolphins, Women ' s Gymnastics Club, Physical Education Ma- . jors Club; JANE E. MATHYS, OakHill, W.Va., Physical Education. Physical Education Majors Club; LINDA L. MILLER. Youngwood, Pa.. Physical Education. Physical Education Ma|ors Club; MARY PURCELL. Newport News, Va., Physical Education. BUO. PAMELA M. ROSE. Si. Albans, W.Va., Physical Education. Physi- cal Education Majors Club, Varsitv Cheerleader; MELL ' ERNA K. STATLER. Williamson, Pa., Physical Education. Physical Education Majors Club; MARCIA Y. VENSEL. Morgantown. W.Va.. Physical Education. Dolphins. Alpha Xi Delta; THOMAS C. WOODSON. Grottoes. Va.. Physical Education. Z60 School of Mines Dr. Jay H. Kelle . Dean School of Mines Paul L Selby. JD, Dean School of Imh i 1 1 k 1 ) 1 School of Law 261 Parent Patrons Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Adams Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Alger Mr. and Mrs. James J. Alexander Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Allinder Mr. and Mrs. Basil Anderson Mr. Holland B. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Anglin Mr. D. C. Arney Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Aschenbrenner Mr. and Mrs. John C. Ashworth Miss Carolyn V. Austin Mr. Laurence H. Austin Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Bacco Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bailey Mr. Michael E. Basile Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Bakas Mr. Rodney Baker Mr. and Mrs. Walter Baker Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Bales Mr. Richard F. Balsley Mr. and Mrs. Brian Baric Mr. and Mrs. Frank Barone Mrs. Marian Bartman Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Basso Mr. and Mrs. Vender B. Bassaro Mrs. Art Battistone Mr. and Mrs. Phil Bayer Mr. Robert W. Beard Mr. and Mrs. David E. Beatty Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Bellott Mr. and Mrs. Homer Benedum Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Bergner, III Mr. and Mrs. Earl Beverage Mr. Manford Blessing Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Billetz Mr. and Mrs. Tully Birdsong Mr. Curtis P. Bixler Mr. and Mrs. Jack C. Blair Mr. Michael Blandina Mr. Richard E. Blankenship Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Bliss Mrs. Ray D. Bobbitt Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bohannon Mr. and Mrs. Steve Bokis Mrs. Anna Bolaris Mr. and Mrs. K. E. Bond Mr. and Mrs. Clair N. Bomberger Mr. Andrew J. Bootz Mr. John F. Boswell Mr. John M. Bowes Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Boyd Mr. and Mrs. John Boyd Mr. Robert N. Buck Mrs. Dorothy Bullock Mr. Quentin G. Bullock Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Bungard Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Burd Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Burner Mrs. Mary Burnworth Mr. Horace W. Burmeister Mr. and Mrs. James R. Bush Mr. and Mrs. James M. Butcher Mr. Randall Butcher Mr. and Mrs. Robert Butler Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bradley, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bradshaw Mr. and Mrs. William E. Breckenridge Mr. and Mrs. John J. Brooks, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James F. Brown, III Dr. R. R. Brown Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Bryant Mr. and Mrs. James Camella Mr. and Mrs. Scott Camp Mr. James E. Campbell Mr. and Mrs. John G. Cannon Mr. and Mrs. Oscar O. Carpenter Mr. and Mrs. Espie Carter Mr. and Mrs. William D. Carver Mr. and Mrs. Carrol W. Casto Mr. and Mrs. John G. Chapman Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth J. Chock Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Christman Mr. Billy K. Clarke Mr. and Mrs. D. Derling Clarke Mr. and Mrs. Russell M. Clawges Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Cole Mr. O. B. Conaway Mrs. John E. Conelly Mr. and Mrs. Harry V. Conley Mr. and Mrs. James Conrad Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Corbett Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Cowan Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Cowie Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Creasy, Jr. Mr. Benjamin M. Criss Mr. and Mrs. Russell Cristallino Mr. and Mrs. Doug Crummett Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Cummings Mr. William S. Cumings Mr. Oval D. Damron Mr. and Mrs. Burton K. Davis Mr. and Mrs. John T. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. David, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Ward M. Dawson, Jr. Mrs. August DeBiase Mr. Bernard E. DeHart Mr. and Mrs. Ernest DeLuca Mr. and Mrs. Rudolf A. DeLuca Mrs. Hazel L. Dennison Mr. and Mrs. Anthony DeStefano Mrs. June Deuell Mr. Mike Denver Mrs. Evelyn M. Dick Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Dillman Mr. Justin T. DiGirolamo Mr. C. Earl Dixon Mrs. Margaret Doberneck Mr. and Mrs. Glenn G. Durst Mr. and Mrs. Louis F. Eaglehouse Mr. and Mrs. Harold V. Eddy Mrs. Mary H. Edgar Mrs. H. O. Eichelberger Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Elewski 262 Mr. and Mrs. William G. Elkin Mr. Frank Elske Mr. and Mrs. John H. Engstrom Mr. and Mrs. George Ermacoff Mr. Vito Esposito Mr. and Mrs. David G. Evans Mr. and Mrs. John Evans Mr. and Mrs. William T. Ezelle Mr. and Mrs. William J. Fagan Mr. and Mrs. Leslie O. Fair Mr. and Mrs. James E. Ferraccio Mr. and Mrs. Russell F. Fetty Mr. and Mrs. Alexander J. Fischer Mr. and Mrs. Odest J. Fittro Mr. and Mrs. Jesse C. Ford Mr. C. J. Fot G en. and Mrs. Charles R. Fox Mr. and Mrs. Sam Freese Mr. and Mrs. John Freudenrich Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Frizzell Mr. and Mrs. Jack E. Fruth I Mr. and Mrs. Karl H. Frye Mr. and Mrs. William F. Fuller Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. Fuoco Mrs. Mary Furman Mr. and Mrs. D. Gais Mrs. Margaret B. Galamb Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gartman Mr. and Mrs. James B. Gaston Mr. A. W. Gates Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Gay Mr. and Mrs. Leslie George Mrs. William George Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Getgood Mr. and Mrs. Edward Gibson Mrs. Vernon Gibson Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Gilbert Mr. and Mrs. Adam Gluchoski Mr. Joseph P. Goldston Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Gosnell Dr. Catherine Grellet Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Grande Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Grandon Mr. and Mrs. Louie Greco Mrs. Anna Gresko Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Gross Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Griffith Mr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Griffith Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Grimes, Jr. Mr. William Grippo Mr. Frank Guide Mrs. Virginia B. Guthrie Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Hall Mr. and Mrs. John D. Hall Mr. James E. Halstead Mr. and Mrs. Ralph S. Hambrick Dr. and Mrs. George L. Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. William B. Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. James E. Hammack Dr. Walter D. Hammer Mr. Jack H. Hammond Dr. and Mrs. R. Edward Hamrick Mrs. Patsy Hamrick Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Hannah, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David C. Hardesty Mr. James H. Hardin Mr. and Mrs. Corlis W. Harris Mrs. Bonnie N. Harvey Mr. and Mrs. Edward D. Harless Mrs. Sadie Hatfield Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Hathaway Mr. and Mrs. Jack D. Hawkins Mr. and Mrs. Eugene C. Hayes Senator Oley G. Hedrick Mr. Virgil G. Hedrick Mr. Edward Heflin Mr. and Mrs. John C. Hennen Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Henry Mr. Kenneth V. Herndon Mrs. William C. Herold Mr. Richard T. Herrick Mrs. Freddie Hill Mrs. Margret Hill Mr. Ellis M. Hinchman Mr. Joseph W. Hinebaugh Mr. M. V. Hinkle Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Hiser Mr. George L. Hubbs Mr. Luster Humphreys Mr. and Mrs. Claire R. Hull Mr. and Mrs. Byron W. Hurlbut Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Hursh Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Hogan Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hollen Mr. W. P. Holsclaw Mr. George N. Holt Mr. Eugene D. Hoover Mr. L. M. Hopkins Mr. and Mrs. William T. Hornidge Mr. J. C. Horton, Jr. Mrs. Joe R. Horton Mr. Lester H. Horowitz Hostetter Trucking Inc. Dr. Marvin R. Houck Mr. Lawton Howell Mr. Lewis P. Howell Mrs. Alice Icard Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Ivery Dr. Martin Jaenke Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jackline Mr. and Mrs. Harry R. Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Jack E. Jamison Mr. and Mrs. Clifford W. Jarrett Mr. and Mrs. Carl Jenny Dr. and Mrs. p. Bruce Johnston Mr. Wilbur C. Hohnson Mr. Phillip R. Jones Mrs. William Jones Mr. and Mrs. Jacques L. Kahn Mr. and Mrs. Michael E. Kaldon Mr. and Mrs. Toney Karantonis. Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Karth Mr. John A. Kasuba Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Katusa Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Keller Mr. Robert W. Kent Mr. and Mrs. David E. Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kilmer Mr. Edwin B. Kincaid Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Kindelberger Mr. David C. King Mr. Vincent L Kirchner Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Kitchen Mrs. Virginia Kitchen Mrs. Catherine Kona Mr. and Mrs. Theo H. Kopp Mrs. Mary Kostelich Mr. Steve J. Kovach Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kranak Mr. and Mrs. John Kubas Mr. John D. Kubas Mrs. Carl R. Kuhns Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kujat Dr. and Mrs. Dominic A. Kujda Mrs. Laura Kunkle Mr. and Mrs. George Kutcher, Sr. Mr. Martin Lacek Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Laclaria Mr. and Mrs. William C. Larew Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Laub Mr. and Mrs. Coy A. Law Mr. Raymond J. Lawn Mr. and Mrs. Steve Lebnick Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Lee Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Leif Mr. Warren E. Lemiey Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Lesnett Mr. Blair Levine Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Lewis. Jr. Dr. and Mrs. David Lewis Mrs. Cathryn Light Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Lindberg Dr. and Mrs. Paul H. Lotlin Dr. C. A. Logue Mrs. Geraldine Lott Mr. O. C. Loyd Mr. Philhp W. Lutz Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Lynch Mr. W. Gay McBee Mr. and Mrs. James C. McClain Mr. and Mrs. M. C. McCall Mr. J. Truman McCauley Mr. and Mrs. Merle L. MacDaniel Mr. and Mrs. Carl McDaniel Mr. and Mrs. Ivan McDaniel Mr. and Mrs. Donald McFarland Mr. and Mrs. Floyd McGill. Jr. Mr. James A. McGinnis Mr. C. W. McGlothlin Mr. and Mrs. R. P. McGowan Mr. and Mrs. J. R. McLaughlin. Sr. Mr. Robert McLaughlin Mr. Terrv ' W. McLaughlin Mr. and Mrs. H. W. McLuckie Mr. and Mrs. Lyie T. McMillen Mr. Edward J. McQuail. Ill Mrs. Marilyn McWaters Mr. W. Paul McWhorter Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Mack Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Madden Mr. and Mrs. Louis Mainella Mr. Richard T. Maize Mr. and Mrs. Stan .Malkin Dr. John M. Mallow Advertising P. Clinton Winter business manager 263 Mr. Joseph V. Marasco Mr. and Mrs. Joe E. Marra Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Marsh Mr. Elvin B. Marsh Mr. and Mrs. Walter Marshall Mr. and Mrs. Allan E. Martin Col. Ersel E. Martin Mr. Paul R. Martin Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Matthews Mr. and Mrs. William Mattick Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Maxham Mr. and Mrs. James Means, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Meek Mr. and Mrs. Allen L. Michael Mr. and Mrs. Alvin E. Michael Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Michael Mr. and Mrs. Andrew B. Mihalek Mr. and Mrs. Harold H. Miller Mr. John L. Miller Mr. Mark L. Miller Dr. Leslie R. Miles. Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Rhod Mills Mr. Jack D. Moats Mr. Robert N. Montgomery Mr. Dana Morris Dr. David Z. Morgan Mr. and Mrs. Jack Moucheron Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Moyer Mr. and Mrs. Clifford J. MulUgan Mr. and Mrs. Norbert R. Murphy Mrs. Corene S. Mundy Mr. Robert A. Murray, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William W. Muse Mr. and Mrs. Albert Myers Mr. Jack Nardella Mr. Harold E. Neely Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nichnowitz Mr. and Mrs. John Nicholas Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Nichols Mr. and Mrs. Howard R. Nie Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Nordstrom Mr. Herbert Nottingham Mr. Gilbert J. Nycum Mr. Clyde E. O ' Baker Mr. and Mrs. J. H. O ' Kelly Mr. James OHveto, Sr. Mr. A. Stanley Ordecki Mr. and Mrs. John S. Orlosky Mrs. Barbara Orvis Mr. and Mrs. Louis L. Parisse Mr. and Mrs. James E. Pappajohn Mr. James A. Parker Mr. and Mrs. Vencil W. Parkos Mrs. Anna M. Pastin Mrs. Ralph Patton Mr. and Mrs. Cameron B. Patchell Mr. and Mrs. Sam G. Paul Mrs. Oris C. Pauley Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Pavlick Mr. C. F. Payne Mr. and Mrs. Norman L. Pennington Dr.G. H. Perdue Mr. and Mrs. Everett B. Person Mr. and Mrs. Roy Petersen Mr. and Mrs. Frank Petrucci Mr. and Mrs. Nichol Petry Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Peyton Mrs. Lois T. Philipkosky Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Piteleski Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. 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Skaggs Mr. Romans Skujins Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Skuperski Mr. and Mrs. Etley P. Smith, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Homer C. Smith Mr. and Mrs. William L. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Melvin J. Smith Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Snyder Mr. and Mrs. George E. Spease Mr. and Mrs. John D. Spencer Mr. and Mrs. Bradford Z. Spiker Mr. G. B. Stalnaker Mr. Leon Stalczynski Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Stanley Mr. and Mrs. Lawson H. Starcher Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Stemler Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Z. Stein Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Sten Mr. and Mrs. Roy M. Stephens Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Stephenson Mr. and Mrs. Everett M. Stevens, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Stevenson Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Clay M. Stout Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Stransky Mr. and Mrs. James W. Strider Mr. Donald C. Strimbeck Mr. and Mrs. Hedge Stump Mr. and Mrs. Mervin A. Stump Mr. and Mrs. Isaac W. Stutler, Jr. Mr. John Suchko Mrs. Eugene P. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Susan Mrs. Richard A. Sutler Mr. and Mrs. Pete A. Sweda Mr. Edgar L. 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Zook 265 avt ji Owens-Illinois is a company interested in the present and future of the communities in which we operate. With people who take the time to become involved in the variety of civic activities so vital to sustained prog- ress in any community. There are 70,000 Owens-Illinois people, op- erating more than 130 plants around the world. Many are active in a variety of com- munity pursuits. One of them may well serve on the same committee with you. We work extra hard to be good neighbors because we believe the success of our operations is directly related to the overall civic and cultural environment within the community. Owens-Illinois Glass Container Division Fairmont. West Virginia (D 266 Compliments of Vi ' ctzA Cflimlij ' s Larficst Bank P O Box 130 Phone 455-4500 FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOC. OF CLARKSBURG Mortgage loans — insured savings Member of F.S.L. I.e. Corner of 3r(J and Main St. Clarksburg. VV. Va. Compliments CREIGHTON MUSIC COMPANY Clarksburg, W. Va. Baldwin Pianos and Organs Fender, Gibson, Goya, and Yamaha Guitars Compliments of DANIELS Compliments and Best Wishes! When it comes to Feminine Fashion come to . THE IN THE HEART OF DOWNTOWN BECKLEY. W. VA. BECKLEY NATIONAL BANK Beckiey, W. Va. Member F.D.I.C. Congratulations Graduate from 7 BANK OF DUNBAR DUNBAR, WEST VIRGINIA 25064 Compliments of f0ll:iOli:fiini: NATIONAL BANK or LOGAN Logan. W. Va. Over 37 Years of Friendly Service Member F.D.I.C. Logan County ' s Largest and Strongest Bank 267 WELL DONE AND GOOD LUCK! STEVENS STUDIOS A Complete Photographic Service 268 Compliments ol MET SHOE SERVICE 363 High St. Morgantown COOMBS FLOWER SHOP 401 High Street Morgantown, W. Va. HAROLD WEISS, JEWELER 292-3107 304 High St. Morgantown. W. Va. (Opposite Court House) 25601 FURNITURE CO. 402 MAIN ST. • LOGAN W. VA. BOND CLOTHES JARMAN SHOES 407 Market St. . ■ . i ■% ■ . i ■« «« Phone HORNOR 84,9 HARRISON Parkersburg, W. Va. imtR v. ' ' ' C IN GEM SO ' _Ar. yv. eJjoaae jeweler MORGANTOWN FAIItMONT WEST VIRGINIA EDUCATION , , . A vital necessity for our youth and for the continual prog- ress end growth of our country. BANK OF RALEIGH Main Kanawha S(s.— Beckley, W.Va. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Established 1899 HOTEL MORGAN SPECIALIZING IN Catering of weddings Dinner dances Fraternity parties Home catering and Equipment Rental for Parties Airconditioning and TV in all rooms SERVING THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY SINCE 1927 Frank Kraus, Gen. Manager Phone 292-8401 269 ■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ 1 1 1 1 1 pVIOBAYl F. ' lt in Ur lhone Chtm.ir MOBAY CHEMICAL COMPANY NEW MARTINSVILLE, WEST VIRGINIA Mobay Chemical is a rapidly growing company and offers many chal- lenging and interesting opportunities for college graduates. We invite you to consider a career with us in Production, Research or Technical Sales. 270 LAIDLEY AND SELBY SUPPLY 417 High Street Morgantown. West Virginia Machines and Supplies for the Office Best Wishes To W. V. U. From MARSH ' S The Spot To Shop For Footwear in: Hush Puppies To Fit Everyone ' s Desires Crosby Square and Pedwin For Men Sandler of Boston and Miss America for Women 405 High Street Morgantown, W. Va. MOUNTAINEER SPORT SHOP 439 High Street Morgantown, W. Va. Specialist In Sports CONGRATULATIONS Class of 71 from . . . in Fairmont Dial 366-3600 Ten full floors . . . and Two mezzanines, Featuring everything for the family and home . . . One of West Virginia ' s Leading Department Stores for 94 years. —THE TRUCK PEOPLE— SIMPSON TRUCK SALES, INC. Sales and Service P.O. Box 1606 Clarksburg. W. Va. Rt. 50 East Phone 624-7452 MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY of WEST VIRGINIA F. Duane Hill, President B.W. Engle, Secretary Route 19 South Clarksburg, West Virginia 271 Hunting Season The search for new gas fields goes on all the time in West Virginia as geologists from Consolidated Gas Supply — Hope ' s parent company — prowl the hills for indications that gas exists in underground formations. Rock characteristics, soil, topography, drainage patterns — even vegetation — all supply valuable geological information. It ' s highly technical but exciting — hunting usually is. Geology is only one aspect of the natural gas business. There are many other interesting careers in production and distribution. And most assuredly — a career at Hope is a career with a challenge and a future. HOPE NATURAL GAS COMPANY -iu- 111 - HUNTINGTON. WEST VIRGINIA Charleston, W. Va. Clarksburg. W. Va. Huntington, W. Va. Logan, W. Va. Vansant, W. Va. Cheshire, Ohio ri !| |:9l||IIIIJiif artht6ut«r S ' New Martinsville, W. Va. New Martinsville, W. Va. Phone 455-1300 Home of the New Martinsville Regatta ALLEGHENY LAND and MINERAL CO. SCROATH BUILDING Clarksburg, West Virginia CHAMBERLAINE FLOWERS, INC. 128 South Second St. Clarksburg, W. Va. Compliments of DAVIS-WEAVER FUNERAL HOME 329 East Main St. Clarksburg. W. Va. Phone 623-0341 John H. Davis Directors: Harry I. Kennedy Willis Antill SHOP Whiteside ' s features such fine lines as . . . bobbie brooks jantzen russ togs Jonathan logan John Meyer of Norwich four corners WHITESIDES morgantown. w. va. TODAY 273 YOUR Progress is OUR Progress Partners in area progress is WVU ' s motto as well as ours. Best Wishes for your continued achievement! The First IMational Bank of MORGAfSrrOWN Morgantown, West Virginia • Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation • Member Federal Reserve System 274 SEE GUY C AT FLINN ' S GUY C. FLINN INC. your prescription opticians 243 PLEASANT MORGANTOWN, W. VA. DIAL 296-4 145 Phone 622-1651 — 622-3631 CLARKSBURG IRON STEEL CO., INC. MRS. ROBERT WEINER, President Office and Yards at Glen Ellt No. 2 New and Used Structural Steel P.O. Box 1030 Clarksburg, W. Va. Come browse through the . . West Virginia University Book Store Book Center of the Campus MOUNTAINLAIR Celebrating Our Sixtieth Anniversary mwsi The Heart of Your Home . . . Just 49 steps up Walnut from High Morgantown Blueprint Co. Xerox Copies Offset Printing Photostats Blueprints White Prints 369 Chestnut 292-4857 COMPLIMENTS OF HECK ' S WEST VIRGINIA ' S LEADING DISCOUNT STORES 275 MASSULLO ' S Cleaners and Tailors High Street Morgantown DIAMONDS WATCHES JEWELRY CHINA SILVERWARE ROBERT A. YAGLE Jewel ler 379 High Street Morgantown, W. Va. Phone 296-7713 FARMERS ' AND MERCHANTS ' BANK MORGANTOWN. WEST VIRGINIA Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 176 Compliments of HALL DRUG COMPANY Stratton Street Logan, W. Va. Seniors: See us for your life insurance HENRY HARDESTY General Insurance and Bonding 517 Fairmont Ave, Fairmont, W. Va. 363-7000 CITIZENS SAVINGS AND LOAN Undtr Su| riiaUil Stot BvdunQ OtparlAtnt CITIZENS BUILDING yORCANTOIN lEST VIRGINIA 26S04 MARK ANTHONY Restaurant and Lounge Route 50 West Grafton. W. Va. THREE GREAT LOCATIONS Visit our new store at Middlctown Mall • modern tux rentals • Country Casual • Botany 500 • H.I.S. • Farah slacks • Jarman shoes • Bostonian shoes • Clarksburg • Fairmont • Middletown Mall City National Bank of Fairmont, W. Va. Member of FDIC 977 Compliments of BELVA COAL COMPANY Congratulations to the Class of 1971 Logan, W. Va. ■ ] r 1 ■ 1 HHH 1 ■ i KANAWHA BANKING TRUST COMPANY Charleston, W. Va. The Person to Person Bank t :cMJ}9| THE BOOK EXCHANGE, INC 152 Willey St. Morgantown, W. Va. Textbooks School Supplies 278 Phillips 5 Purity • Accuracy Promptness ,■ -i BLUEVILLE • PHONE 265-0758 • GRAFTON, W. VA. BROTHERS 423 Market Street Parkersburg, W. Vo. Parkcrsburg ' s Largest store for men. young men, women, and teen gals! BANK OF NITRO Nitro, W. Va. Your bank for now and the future . Shr Brand •-, Style stores for men and young men Beckley — Charleston — Logan, W. Va. Lenard Gottlieb Pharmacy, ' 28 Congratulations to the Class of 1971 Serving central West Virginia for over 39 years Bernard Gottlieb Journalism, ' 38 Herbert Gottlieb Pharmacy, ' 41 FOUNTAIN CUT RATE ■ GRAYS CUT RATE Clarksburg — Elkins — Weston Parkersburg — Morgantown — Fairmont w. w. McDonald land company Owners and Lessors of Coal, Gas, and Timber in Logan County 279 Building for a Greater West Virginia The NATIONAL BANK of COMMERCE Visit Our New Home — Commerce Square — In Charleston BLUEVILLE BANK Bank by mail. We pay postage both ways 5% % Certificate of Deposit No minimum Balance No service charge checking Phone 265-3400 Member F.D.I.C. Kanawha cillev Bank Where Capitol crosses Lee Charleston, West Virginia 25326 Talk with us about a career in banking 280 Chorlesfon ' s Most Convenient Bonk Extends Greetings To West Virginians Everywhere LiSMED 1951 ( TENNESSEE AVENUE AND ROANE STREET CHARLESTON, WEST VIRGINIA 25302 CONGRATULATIONS GRADUATE! from the The Charleston Mallonal Bank 281 Why should anybody spend four years in college just to work in a mine? TRY OPPORTUNITIES! Right now, Consolidation Coal Company probably offers more opportunities for engineers, chemists and other recent college graduates than most corporations in the country. In the next few years, Consol will hire an estimated 5,000 new employees- many of them recent college grad- uates. Consol is one of the world ' s largest coal companies in assets and earnings and the major source of fuel for the nation ' s public utilities. To meet the ever-spiraling demand for power, Consol is rapidly expanding its mining facilities throughout the United States and Canada. That ' s where you come in. Consol is looking for ambitious young men capable of stepping off the campus into posi- tions of management responsibility. If that ' s the type of exciting, de- manding job you ' re interested in, contact our representative when he visits your campus, or write: Con- solidation Coal Company, Person- nel Division, 407 Monongahela Building, Morgantown, West Virginia 26505. Consolidation Coal Company 282 Compliments of FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF WEIRTON 3 1 4 Penco Road Weirton, W. Va. Area code 304 723-2000 Local Ownership, Local Management Member FDIC CITIZENS BANK ot lAJeirton Dedicated to Community Service Main St. at Lee Ave. P.O. Box 760 Weirton, W. Va. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Sorry, Madam, We don ' t carry Ladies Bikinis. And they say they have everything. EVERYTHING FOR MEN AND BOYS, MADAM! VISIT OUR NEW STORE ORkTngMANI STORE AT MIDDLE- TOWN MALL CLARKSBURG MIDDLETOWN MALL FAIRMONT ' )H7. PPG has something special for the kitchen: Hercuvit . It ' s a ceramic glass range-top material that permanently covers up heating elements. PPG has something going in fabric care: Solvents for drycleaners, coin-ops and rental laundries. Drycleaned cotton polyesters look better, last longer. PPG has something special for newsprint: Hi-Sil. An opaque filler that reduces ink showthrough and improves the effect of color reproduction in newspapers. PPG has a lot going in safety: Tempered safety glass for homes, auto- mobiles, aircraft. It ' s many times stronger than ordinary glass. PPG: a Concern for the Future But these aren ' t the only areas of concern at PPG, there ' s more: we sell hundreds of Chemicals, Paint and Coating products for home and industry, as well as Float, Sheet and Plate Glass, and Fiber Glass. If you desire involvement with a growth-oriented corporation working on problems and product solutions for tomorrow and the days to follow, contact us. Works 12, Glass Division Clarksburg, W.Va. Natrium Plant Industrial Chemical Division New Martinsville, W. Va. INDUSTRIES 284 Compliments of MOUNTAIN STATE LINEN SERVICE, INCORPORATED 412 Ohio Avenue Clarksburg, West Virginia A Complete Laundry and Linen Service Phone 624-6478 C. C. Lake, Mgr. REG U S AT OFF GUESTS ENJOY: • Year Round Air Conditioning • Swimming Pool • Free TV • Wall to Wall Carpet • Baby Sitten • Excellent Restaurant Banquet and Convention Facilities Children Under 12 Free Phone: 599- 1680 GROW ALONG WITH VS... IN GREATER CLARKSBURG UNION NATIONAL BANIC Helping you take better advantage of your financial opportunities. Clarksburg ' , West Virginia Compliments of LYBURN MINES, INC. ELKAY MINING CO. SNAP CREEK COAL CO. Logan, W. Va. 285 Why make the nation ' s business yours? Because you seek a career with challenge. Purpose. You want to help. And you want to get involved. You ' ll find opportunity and fulfillment in private business, built on the capitalistic system that has given us the world ' s highest living standards. American business continually searches for new and improved products, for better ways to do things, and keep costs down. Wherever there are problems to solve — in our cities, in space, under the sea — private enterprise responds with the talent and resources to bring about efficient, work- able solutions. Your work and achievement in the corporate community can be satisfying and rewarding, your contribution important. Check into opportunities in business enterprise. Vmarican Electric V System- APPALACHIAN POWER CO. Compliments of the FOURCO GLASS COMPANY MASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING 427 W. Pike St. CLARKSBURG, W. VA. 286 MONTICOLA ' 71 extends congratulations to 1971 Grads BANK OF WEIRTON Weirton, W. Va. Serving the Weirton Area Since 1912 Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Compliments PENN AUTO SALES Toyota Sales Service Belleview Blvd., Fairmont, W. Va. Compliments of FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS OF LOGAN Member— FSLIC Logan, W. Va. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Grafton 287 West Virginia yi Surface Mining and Reclamation Association Reclamation can be and is being done! 288


Suggestions in the West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) collection:

West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

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West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

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West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

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West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

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West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

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West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

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