Westminster College - Argo Yearbook (New Wilmington, PA)

 - Class of 1970

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Westminster College - Argo Yearbook (New Wilmington, PA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 272 of the 1970 volume:

2 i Westminster College is a transient community, not only in the sense that the student body is always changing, but administration policies and curriculum change also. Seniors can think back four years and recall a different Westminster. Underclassmen will think ahead and imagine a different Westminster. Argo 1970 is an effort to capture representative examples of the people and events of Westminster, 1970. It is an effort to record rather than analyze, so that the individual reader can recall 1970 according to his personal relationships with Westminster, her people and her institutions. 4 CONTENTS ACADEMICS 39 Administration 40 Departments 58 SOCIAL LIFE . 97 Leadership 98 Social Action 110 Publications and Communications 116 Music 124 Greeks 128 STUDENTS 167 Senior Class Officers 168 Seniors 169 Senior Directory 194 Underclassmen 202 SPORTS 209 ADS AND INDEX 241 5 Dedicated to the 1970 Graduating Seniors 6 7 8 7 13 Homecom QUEEN KRIS ENQUIST. 18 Sen. Thomas Mclntyre (D.-N.H.) 21 23 26 Westminster College Artist Lecture Series presents at ORR AUDITORIUM 28 33 34 36 Honor Students p Mi SUMMACUM LAUDE: Susan Akerstrom MAGNA CUM LAUDE: Beverly Antis Sarah Baker Robert Cochran Daniel Dejoy Elizabeth Ellis Janet Ellis John Galbreath Karen Keck Kaye Keister Sara Means CUM LAUDE: Margaret Babcock David Bailie Dorothy Davis Douglas Egy Jane Ewing David Foster T. Galen Girvin Keith Hornung Susan Horvath Suzanne Howe Allen Jones Samuel Knapp Thomas McGrath Marcia Miscall Margery Moore Barbara Pershing Brian Pontius Nancy Romesburg Arthur Rowbotham April Shilling Linda Timko Diane Walton T. Dana Watson John Wilson Judith Wilson Sara Wilson ADMINISTRATION 40 Board of Trustees The Hon. John L. Miller, Pres. Mr. Clyde A. Armstrong, V. Pres. The Rev. J. Y. Jackson, D.D., Sec. Mr. Charles B. Ashton Mr. Thomas M. Brown Mr. W. Fillmore Campbell Mrs. James D. Crawford Mr. James L. Davis Mr. David B. Fawcett Mr. Robert D. Ferguson Mrs. D. N. Garner Mr. Robert E. Jamison The Rev. Richard K. Kennedy Mr. Lauri G. Laurell Mr. Irving L. Mansell Mr. Thomas V. Mansell Mr. John R. McCune The Rev. Dale K. Milligan, D.D. Mr. Harvey E. Moore Mr. Glenn B. Reed Mr. Henry A. Roemer, Jr. Mr. Walter C. Shaw, Jr. Mr. A. M. Tredwell, Jr. Mr. Clyde M. Whittaker Mr. Fred A. Williams 41 March 4, 1970 I regret the decision of the members of Student Government to remove themselves from the college community. The attempts of Student Government during the past two years to re- structure their Constitution have pointed up the difficulties in defining the role of Student Gov- ernment as the representative of the student body in its relationships to the administration, the faculty and other student groups. The key issue is the feeling of Student Government that the organization in student affairs should be virtually autonomous in its relationships to the administration, the faculty and other student groups. This attitude is incompatible with the entire structure of Westminster College. Since becoming President of Westminster, I have welcomed the numerous opportunities to con- fer with student leaders, and I shall continue to do so. Dr. Thomas R. Giddens Assistant to the President May 4, 1970 Last Friday afternoon I welcomed the oppor- tunity to confer at length with the Student Lead- ers Coalition. Primarily we discussed the pro- posals which were referred by the Coalition in referendum form to the Student Body on April 27. I reiterated my support for a central repre- sentative organization of the Student Body and offered to serve on a joint task force whose assignment would be to define at the earliest possible time the powers and responsibilities of such an organization and its relationships to other groups at Westminster. In my opinion a better understanding was reached as to the strengthened role of such an organization compared to the earlier Student Government. Also I felt that a broad consensus was reached on the principle that the central student organization would be responsible for the allocation of the Student Activity Fee. As for the Student Judiciary proposal on the referen- dum, the standing Student Affairs Committee will be presenting this spring to the Student Body its proposals for an All-College Judicial Board. It is my hope that the Student Leaders Coalition will select a representative group of students to join several colleagues and myself in drafting a document which would result in a central representative organization of the Student Body. 42 Earland I. Carlson President 43 Dr. Philip A. Lewis Dean of the College Dr. Jack B. Rogers Assistant Academic Dean Mr. Graham M. Ireland Dean of Students 46 48 49 William T. Bolyard Registrar w 51 Harry W. Shoup Director of Development Lawrence Judge Director of Public Information 52 53 55 56 57 DEPARTMENTS 58 Faculty Gallery Display: top left, Oestreich; top center, Hild; top right, Bothell. H KALINOWSKI f V 4 I. Eugene Kalinowski Gallery Display Jerome Malinowski Gallery Display: right middle, Matka I Dzeciak; right bottom. Growth. 60 Sculptor Robert Gabriel creating at Westminster: Sculpture affects people emotionally. When a person walks by a piece of sculpture it should stop him so that he has to examine it — the person must re- spond with feeling. The worst thing that I could do would be to turn out a piece of work that people would just walk by without stopping. Economics and Business Ronald P. Bergey Assistant Professor OMEGA DELTA EPSILON The national honorary for business administra- tion and economics requires a 3.0 average in either business or economics and a 2.75 ail- college of its members. Dr. Robert Milam is the advisor. Dr. Robert L. Milam, Chm. Assistant Professor Dr. George W. Trivoli Assistant Professor 63 Education and Psycholog ■0 ] Joseph R. Henderson, Chm. Professor Dr. Lawrence M. Douglas Professor Dr. Clara E. Cockerille Professor Janet E. Hopkins Assistant Professor Dr. Leon D. Radaker Professor Dr. Earl Houts Associate Professor KAPPA DELTA PI The Education honorary is open to those junior women who have attained a 3.0 all college aver- age and are education majors. This education honorary aims to foster high standards of pre- paration for teaching and advance the interests of education as a profession. The Delta Mu chapter meets monthly under the advisorship ot Dr. Clara Cockerille. The activities for the year have included an initiation banquet, a tea for Dr. McGeough of Columbia University, the bi- annual Kappa Delta Pi convention in Boston, Mass., and the presentation of the Golden Ap- ple to the person in education, music, or art, having the highest all college cumulative. Robert F. Galbreath Associate Professor I • ' • ' yiiiiiifllifi ilK ' ' ' ' ' 1 1 • Dr. Samuel A. Farmerie Assistant Professor 66 PSEA Student PSEA, the hand of Pennsylvania ' s State Education Association here at Westminster, is a representative body of Westminster students who aspire to reach into the field of education. Being that the furtherance of education is the sole heart of a democracy, teacher education of any liberal arts institution is of vital impor- tance. We find the importance of education ex- tended in that we must prepare ourselves to teach nearly twice the number of children, more than twice as much information and knowledge than did our parents generation. Education; A Race With Social Change This year Student PSEA has presented programs ranging from teacher certification laws, to a group of elementary children who gave their candid views of school, to the theme of teacher strikes in Youngstown last year. Education; A Race With Social Change Associated with the National Educational Asso- ciation, Student PSEA, with its membership of more than 50, will inevitably find its own by means of its inherent necessity; standing for education within the framework of an educa- tional institution — Westminster. Education; A Race With Social Change; Barry Poglein, Pres. PS! CHI The purpose of this national psychology honor- ary is to stimulate its members to achieve out- standing scholarship, especially in the field of psychology. Each year the group gives an award to the junior psychology major with the highest all-college average. The advisor is Dr. Einar Bredland. The officers this year were Ken Will- man, Pres., Jim Owen, V-pres., Sandra Carlson, Treas., Sue Cameron, Sec. 67 68 69 This year Dean Graham Ireland announced the reinstatement of Pi Delta Epsilon, the National Honorary Journalism Fraternity, on Westmin- ster ' s campus. The honorary was originally or- ganized in 1934 and was last active in 1959. The stated purpose of the organization is to promote and encourage excellence in all fields of journa- lism. Eighteen past and pr esent members of the Argo and Holcad staffs pledged second semes- ter. SCROLL Sue Akerstrom Margaret Babcock Carolyn Charles Ann Cogley Kathy Cresswell Kathy DeLuca Cheryl Dodd Jane Donaldson Jan Ellis Mrs. Patricia George Allen Jones Karen Keck Kaye Keister Mrs. Kathleen Lammel Muff Lang Carol McCann Tom McGrath Lois Myers Gayle Schulte Carol Stone Linda Timko Scroll, the local English Honorary, taps all inter- ested students with 15 hours in English, includ- ing Freshman Composition and Humanities, and an average of 3.0 in English and 2.0 all-col- lege. This year scroll made trips to dramatic productions at neighboring colleges. Among the performances seen were Ibsen ' s Hedda Gabler at Slippery Rock State College and lonesco ' s Bald Soprano and Albee ' s Zoo Story at Geneva College. Dr. Delber L. McKee, Chm. Professor Dr. Arthur L. Jensen Professor History r. Lawson A. Pendleton Professor Dr. Harry G. Swanhart Professor This was the last year of the combined depart- ments. In September 1970 History, Political Sci- ence and Sociology will be three separate disci- plines. The year included many honors among which was Dr. Arthur Jensen ' s appointment to the Program Committee of the Pennsylvania Historical Association. Also, G. Norman Ander- son, Foreign Service Officer in the State De- partment, spoke on the Soviet Union and the Middle East. Dave Foster, a Political Science major, received the Vanderbilt Law Scholar- ship and Allen Jones received the Phi Alpha Theta Book Award. The department sent Art Leonard, Janet Morgan and David Semick to Washington for a semester. M. Robert Ewing Assistant Professor Dr. Walter Slack Associate Professor PHI ALPHA THETA Dr. Roger Wolcott Associate Professor Carol Aston Dave Bailie Barb Braden Rebecca Brown Ann Bunner William Cleis Kathy Close Marion Frey Donna Gardiner Ellen Grosvenor Janet Hershelman Marcia Hoovler Edward jablonski Sam Knapp Bill Lauer Art Leonard Steve Melius Janet Morgan Kathy Offutt Gary Parsons Phoebe Ruiz-Valera Don Shelenberger Sandra Smith Marilyn South Patricia Stranahan Charles Toad Steve Vinciguerra Robert Zulandt 73 Mrs. Susan P. Webb Instructor Dr. James K. Sewall Assistant Professor Mrs. Carolyn McFarland Instructor Dr. George B. Clemens Professor SIGMA DELTA PI Left to Right, Top to Bottom: Edward Dambach, Nancy Miele, Karia Mizer, Sharon Mathewson, Marilyn Stiver, Pam Harvey, Barb Apgar, Marion Schmidt, Marilyn South, Edie Bowman, Dr. James Sewell, Carolyn Elder, Marina Velez, Jane Halchin, Robert Culp; Not Shown: Audrey Noble. Rudolph Herrig Instructor DELTA PHI ALPHA Language The language department ' s activities this year included many speaking engagements. The Fall meeting of the American Association of Teach- ers of German from the Western Pennsylvania Chapter was held at Westminster College in October, 1969, and Dr. Jacob Erhardt was one of the main speakers. His topic was German-Amer- ican poetry in the U.S.A. Also, Dr. George Clem- ens spoke on lexicography for the combined language honoraries at Westminster College on February 19. Dr. Erhardt and Professor Her- rig attended the Modern Language Convention in Denver, Colorado, during the Christmas vaca- tion. This next year Professor Cummins will be on leave of absence to complete his PhD. studies. Walter Biberich, Chm. Associate Professor Left to Right: Sue Akerstrom, Sue Culler, Pearle Patterson, Judy Rissler, Matt Hutchinson, Kaye Keister, Jan Ellis, Marion Frey James A. Cummins Instructor ETA SIGMA PHI Left to Right: John Bartee, Kathy DeLuca, Steve Ross, Dr. J. Hilton Turner, Sue Howe, Linda Ford, Not Shown: John Presslar, Shirley Frazier, Sara Means, Ed Davis, Carol Smith, Debbie Finnie. Eta Sigma Phi, the national classics honorary was organized on Westminster ' s campus in 1954 as the Gamma Nu Chapter. Membership is based on a 3.0 grade achievement in either Latin or Greek, after one year of college study. Dr. J. Hilton Turner, Professor of Latin and Greek is the advisor. This year Eta Sigma Phi held regular business meetings and its annual Latin Contest for the surrounding high schools. They also held open meetings with such speakers as Dr. Frank Bourne of Princeton, Dr. George Clemens of Westminster, and Professor Walther of the Pittsburgh-Xenia Seminary. 75 Mathematics KAPPA MU EPSILON Students: Margaret Babcock Charles Beckett Bob Blamick Bob Cochran Mary Beth Cochrane Jean Courtwright Edward Dambach, Treas. Jane Ewing Dave Fuller Shelley Genger, Sec. Jane Hall Linda Heard Nancy Heilman Tom Hite Dave Ihrig Sue Johns Karl Kennedy Barbara King Jean Loch Donna Majewski Ron Mamajek, V-Pres. Bob McClester Roger Metzler Barb Minnerly Phil Papenhausen Barb Pershing Brian Pontius, Pres. Caria Ruth Tom Tomczyk Tom Vallar Ron Wigand Scott Wilson JoAnn Zivkovich Edward Young Faculty: Paul Brown George Conway Warren Hickman Thomas Nealeigh Miller Peck Kenneth Whipkey Dr. Thomas R. Nealeigh, Chm. Associate Professor 78 Music 79 PHI MU ALPHA MU PHI EPSILON AMERICAN GUILD OF ORGANISTS The American Guild of organists student group at Westminster is part of the Youngstown Chap- ter of the national A. CO., a group of profes- sional church organists working for the main- tenance of high standards in church music through individual examinations, recitals, and workshops. Membership in the student group is open to all studying organ. In the past, activi- ties have included recitals and workshops in Orr Auditorium by renowned organists, tours of large organs in major cities during semester break, and participation in all activities spon- sored by the Youngstown chapter. During 1969-1970, a special activity included a hoagie sale to raise funds for the semester break trip to New York City. This three-day tour of organs in New York City included those at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, St. Michaels ' Episcopal Church, St. Thomas ' Epis- copal Church, St. Pauls ' Chapel at Columbia, the Brick Presbyterian Church and Riverside Presbyterian Church. Members also performed in Orr Auditorium for the April 27 meeting of the Youngstown Chapter. Joan Bender Kitty DuVernois David Hogue, Pres. Carol Hren, Treas. jared Jacobsen Helen Kantner Leatha Kieser Donna Lamm, Sec. Peggy Riley Ed Schell Richard Strattan Ann Strome Lunda Weaver Jackie Wilson John Wilson 80 Miss Marjorie A. Walker 81 82 Religion and Philosophy PHI SIGMA TAU Phi Sigma Tau ' s main purpose is academic recognition. Membership is gained by attaining an all college of 2.7 and passing two or more philosophy courses with at least one grade of A. Throughout the year members hear in- teresting speakers on philosophical thoughts. This year the honorary invited Professor Peter Steen to lecture on the Dooyeweerdian School of Dutch Philosophy. 83 Dr. Joseph M. Hopkins Dr. Norman R. Adams Assistant Professor Professor Dr. J. Bardarah McCandless Assistant Professor 84 MU DELTA EPSILON John Draper Doug Egy, V-Pres. John Galbreath Donna Gardiner Keith Hornung Sue Howe, 7 reas. Richard Knodel, Pres. Klara Mae Kovacs John Loudon Tom McGrath Don McKim Steve Melius Marcia Miscall, Sec. Barbara Schoenhard Dan Schomer Mary Weber Mr. J. Miller Peck, Adv. Mu Delta Epsilon is the Church occupations honorary. Criterion for membership is a 2.5 cumulative average and concerted interest in a future vocation within the church. Officers were Richard Knodel, president; Douglas Egy, vice president; Marcia Miscall, secretary; and Sue Howe, treasurer. The main activity this year was Seminary Day sponsored in the Fall, and in coordination with Phi Sigma Tau (Philosophy honorary). It involved talks concerning the Dooyeweerdian School and German Marxism and Student Repercus- sions were heard by Professor Steen and Dr. Mc- Candless respectively. 85 Sciences Mrs. Lucile B. Frey Assistant Professor Dr. Elizabeth W. Smith Associate Professor Dr. Verl D. Rhoton Assistant Professor Dr. Clarence E. Harms, Chm. Associate Professor BETA BETA BETA Craig Barrow Ann Beezley George Boling Gretchen Flath Richard Flout David Ihrig Linda Ingling Linda Leibert Richard McKee Paula Mellott Nancy Romesburg Patricia Ryan Laurel Scolere Greg Sepik Conrad Weiser jim Youdas Biology 86 87 88 89 Earl C. Lammel Assistant Professor Speech and Drama Dr. William G. Burbick, Chm. Professor ALPHA PSI OMEGA Nu Gamma Chapter of Alpha Psi Omega, the national dramatic art honorary fraternity, recog- nizes those students who make continual, out- standing contributions to the theatre program at Westminster. Membership is contingent upon the national standards point-system, requiring points earned in both the acting and techni- cal aspects of theatre. Continuing service in both areas, rated each semester, is mandatory for retaining membership in Nu Gamma, since theatre, one of the most demanding of the arts, exacts the unceasing efforts of her students. MASQUER S Each year several outstanding honorary mem- bers are extended invitations to become Mas- quers, which recognizes achievement of ex- cellence above that required for Alpha Psi Ome- ga. Masquers annually sponsors acting awards for best actor and actress in both major and supporting roles during the theatre season at Westminster. 91 Left to Right: Art Rowbotham, Pat Lowry, Greg Eckrich, Walter E. Sheid, Tim Bonner, Stephanie Boaeuf, Rich Howitt; Missing: Robert Lamont. Greg Eckrich DEBATE Forensics shining glory this year was Greg Eck- rich. For the second year in succession he re- ceived the D.A.P.C. (Debate Association of Pennsylvania colleges) Men ' s Extemporaneous award. At Westminster, forensics centers around the inter-collegiate debate team. They have travelled to the Universities of Niagra, Buffalo, Duquesne, and Pittsburgh, where they received the second place negative trophy. The outstand- ing trip was to the National Honorary Tourney at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. Outstanding debaters are honored by Delta Sig- ma Rho — Tau Kappa Alpha, the scholastic hon- orary for national debate on the collegiate level. To enter, one must have an outstanding two year record in forensics and rank in the top third of their class. THE SEASON IM -70 OCTOKK t - tS MADWOMAN CHAILLOTS KGCMKIt to -13 BLOOD WEDDING MARY STUART OEDIPUS REX BLOOD WEDDING BY G RCI DEC. ialU2J3 m rriCE ore 93 Cwens Row One: Judi Ittner, Susie Ferguson, Ginny Frazier, Kris Enquist, Denise Pfischner, Cathy Garrison, Edie Bowman, Nancy Parish, Miss Loraine Sibbett; Row Two: Barb Laughlin, Sherrie McFarland, Sue Shear, Sue Wissolik, Sue Eisenhower, Kathy Myers, Kathy Anderson, Marion Schmidt. CWENS is a national honorary for sophomore women. Its membership is chosen on the basis of their outstanding scholarship, character, leadership and service. This year, the sixteen Cwens gave tours to prospective students, held two flower sales, and with Mortarboard deliver- ed Care Packages to the women on campus just before exams. MORTARBOARD is a national honorary which recognizes outstanding senior women for their academic achievements, participation in col- lege activities, and service to school and com- munity. The group meets regularly to discuss current issues at the college and it serves, when called upon, at college functions. This year it joined with Cwens to assist during Freshman Week and to produce Care Packages during First-semester finals, as well as providing an individual tutoring service for needy students. 94 Mortarboard V. Row One; Stuart Knecht, Pres., Don Dawson, V-Pres., Thp HP Lee Adanti, Tom Demoise, Tom Nebel; Row Two: John I I ICll IVlJ Hamilton, Darryl West, Dan Perrin, John Barnes, John Geismann, Treas., Tom Davidson; Missing: Tom Richard- son. Row One: Diane Walton, Caria Ruth, Laurel Disque, Shel- ley Genger, Margie Moore, Judy Knapp; Row Two: Julie Sandeen, Joan Bender, Sue Akerstrom, Betsy RidI; Mis- sing: Marcia Engle, Sally Baker. THANES is a sophomore mens honor society which originated at Westminster College in 1961. The members, chosen in the spring of the freshman year, are selected on the basis of leadership, scholarship, and outstanding ability. The organization is dedicated to ser- vice to the college community. Some of their activities include ushering at college events, assisting freshmen during their orientation period, and giving campus tours. At the end of each year. Thanes provides a scholarship to a freshman and add to the college loan fund. 95 who ' s Who Sue Akerstrom Sarah Baker Lance Beshore John Curry Dan Dejoy Laurel Disque Elizabeth Ellis Dave Foster Greg Geletka Galen Girvin Karl Kennedy Judy Knapp Linda Leibert Tom McGrath Jim Owen Betsy RidI Art Rowbotham Julie Sandeen Marty Schreiner Lenore Shelly Sabra Smith Tom Tomczyk Dana Watson LaRoyal Wilson JoAnne Zivkovich LEADERSHIP Student Government Open letter to the Westminster College community: Due to the repeated refusal of the College to go beyond mere rhetoric to meaningful action in student affairs and the resulting inab ility of Student Government to do so, I move that the Westminster College Student Government be hereby and henceforth totally dissolved. With the above motion, passed at the formal meeting of March 3, 1970, Student Government ceased to exist. This final action was the result of years of struggle with the powers that be and many months of extensive discussion by students both within and without Student Government. To dispel the possible charges that this is merely the result of threats, bitterness, or hasty irration- ality, this letter is written to show evidence and cause. The bargaining has not been solely between the cities of Athens = Reason and Jerusalem = Faith as is often heard about our open marketplace of ideas. The struggle has usually been between these two cities and Rome = Power — this has been the most significant dialogue to have taken place in our College. When expedient to do so, the College had used Student Government as a representative of the student body for numerous housekeeping duties and rubber- stamp legitimitizing; yet when significant and controversial issues arose. Student Government had been repeatedly passed off as being not representative of student opinion and of no more authority or consequence than the clubs and interest groups on campus. The presence of a supposed student government had also served to give the appearance to the public of student involvement in governance. What has been done concerning student affairs and governance had been the result of already-made decisions or the efforts of a few interested indivi- duals who have and will effect change without the need for group or committee sanction. More than 25% of this year ' s Student Government representatives have resigned from frustration at the lack of genuine concern on the part of both students and administrators. Student factionalism and the refusal of various in- terest and power groups to align and consolidate their power within Student Govern- ment had rendered the organization even less effective. The responsibility of handling the Student Activities Fee, which Student Government had for years attempted to acquire, has recently been relegated to another committee. F4aving responsibility for the Student Activities Fee fund would have given Student Government the ability to respond to a wide variety of student needs and to present a united voice of student opinion by the consolida- tion of student power. 98 Without any dialogue with the student sector, the alleged faculty constitution was drafted; yet it gave significant control over student affairs to the faculty committee structure. Student Government had not been given the opportunity to participate in the formulation or institution of any student ju- dicial system. Across the country where student governmen ts have been allowed to be significantly responsible, there has been the crucial involvement in at least ratifying the student judicial process. When Student Government had attempted to respond to needs and wishes of students, i.e. the lack of weekend activities, it found itself continually rebuffed. One of innumerable examples is the hypocritical ban of Sunday movie entertainment on campus. With the institution of the community idea, it has been increasingly difficult for organizations to retain their power. Student Government had acknow- ledged this trend and realized that an organization which never had power could not possibly expect to be granted power from some more favored sector. Upon examination, there were few if any functions of Student Government which could not be capably and willingly assumed by various groups on campus. Student Government could in no way justify the euphemism Government. The greatest difficulty in exposing the problem has been that the practices in handling student affairs have often been so subtle and diversionary, covering or dispelling issues before they became widely known or formalized. Examples are such tactics as silence in the face of issue confrontation and cri- ticism, predetermined or pre-directed decisions handed down to committees for the sake of appearance, the relegation of issues to committee graves, and the lack of reciprocal candidness which student leaders so actively seek. Due to the continual stalling, rebuffing, and repeated refusals of the College to go beyond mere rhetoric to meaningful action. Student Government in- evitably found it necessary to dissolve itself. The Former Officers and Majority of Members of the Westminster College Student Government Lance Beshore, Former S. C. Pres. 100 Following the dissolution of Student Govern- ment, there were several preliminary meetings of concern ed students, resulting in the Vigil of the Silent Concern. It was held every Friday morning from 9 to 9:30 in the first floor hall of Old Main. Open meetings for representatives of virtually all groups on campus were also held. These representatives compiled all recommen- dations and complaints of the student body and planned a mass meeting, which was held in Wal- lace Memorial Chapel. The mass meeting broke up for lunch after two hours of useless debate. The leaders asked the students still present af- ter lunch to elect a panel to co-ordinate a Stu- dent Leaders Coalition. The SLC would be com- prised of the president and a representative from each group on campus. It composed a ref- erendum including major proposals for a new Student Government. The student body voted on the referendum on April 27. The results were presented to President Carlson in the final meeting of the SLC. Following this meeting the SLC decided to hold a general election for the student membership in a task force which would include some administration and faculty mem- bers. The task force was organized to work to- ward the formation of a new Student Govern- ment. 102 103 First Row: Jackie Burk Ann Crabb Cathy Garrison, V-Pres. Betsy Rid I, Pres. Marion Schmidt, Sec. Judy Ries, 7reas. Patricia Perris 104 Second Row: Susie Ferguson Mary Moreland Audrey Noble Jane Ahlman Susie Culler Patricia Stockton Sara Means Miss Loraine Sibbet, Adv. 105 Dorm Personnel Hillside Duane Dudik Doug Furnier Don Grimm Dave Foster, R.D. John Wright Bill Beaver Rich Hancox Bill Brown Lou Malandra Not Shown: Tom Hite, Assoc. Art Rowbotham R.D. Jeffers Jim Barron Bill Crawford, R.D. John Geismann Not Shown: Dick Ramsey Dave Clapperton f r r r m ' l m I ' l l 106 Eichenauer Dana Watson, R.D. Marc Stover, Assoc. R.D. Lance Beshore John Curry Scott Greenwood Karl Kennedy Daniel Lugar Roger Metzler Russell Graham Carter Carl Bell Craig Barrow, R.D. Ron Morris Skip Greenaway Not Shown: Dave Dobi, Assoc. R.D. John Hogue Jim Youdas 107 Minteer Marilyn Stiver, R.D. McKelvey Joyce Rockhill, R.D. Sewall Kathy Houk, R.D. ] ] 1 I 1 i 1 Shaw Lenore Shelley, Assoc.R.D. Nancy Bille Judy Rissler Wendy Wohltmann Nancy Zeevalk 108 Galbreath Kathy Knowlson Martie McParland Marcia Miscall Audrey Noble Julie Sandeen Carol Stone 109 110 The Black Student Union organized in the fall of 1969, is composed of the undergraduate, black students of Westminster College. The pur- pose of the Black Student Union is to unite the black students into a cohesive organization which can better educate their white peers on the attitudes, goals and objections of our society ' s black minority. The Black Student Union has sponsored reading productions of plays such as In White Ameri- ca, group discussions, and an Experience in Black program to achieve its goals. It has also co-sponsored a Black Emphasis Week in con- junction with Student Government. Experience in Black 111 Peace, Inc. Men have been bent, on systematically killing each other off since greed plagued Adam ' s cave. We, who claim to be sapient, have used the greater part of our reasoning to destroy, cripple and discourage peaceful thought wher- ever and whenever it has arisen. Christ was crucified because he loved others, because his love was contrary to the system of hatred men call government, because he recognized the power and potentialities of Peace, because he was unable to kill even unto death ... So says the youth of today, must we kill to live? Must we hate to survive? Must our hearts and lives be stained with the blood of our brothers? Can we not turn the rhetoric of our fathers into a reality for our sons? This is the project of Peace, Inc. We see and understand the challenge of Peace. We are committed to a cause which will deter and even- tually eliminate man ' s warring ways from this earth. We feel that one individual human is more important than General Electric or Gulf Oil. It is our job as Peace, Inc., to call for a re- i ordering of priorities that will place men above money, and love above hatred. The struggle to save our world is not exclusive with our organi- zation, nor is it the product of our generation. Great men have stood before us to be martyred for the cause of Peace. Their deaths have formed our foundation. Their courage has been our in- spiration. Their unwillingness to kill has become our philosophy. Tony Russo 112 Peace, Inc. members recording the results of their Vietnam awareness poll. 113 114 Editor, the Holcad, Time magazine, the Atlantic, the New York Times, and Madamoiselle have recently published articles on it. The literature is growing, and so is the number of read- ers. The militancy in Boston, in St. Louis, and on college campuses is a seconding motion to the centrality of the subject, and the explosion of the 20 ' s is being reborn in a new surge of revolutionism. Where is it, what is it, how, and why are the questions bounding from bedcham- ber to board room. It is labeled the New Feminism, but perhaps better referred to as I Am Furious (Female). We read about the death of the bra, the man who cooks and cleans, the Josephine plumbers, car mechanics, taxi drivers, and jock- eys: the invasion of the male world by his sexual counter- part who wants an equalitarianism which far outreaches that ever demanded before. In the microcosm, the beat goes on, as well as the bras. Women live under a system called the Pumpkin Perplex: an 18-year-old girl must come in at 10:30 on weeknights, an hour or two later on weekends. Twenty-one year old women must be in by midnight during the weekdays, and they have 7 a.m. permissions on weekends — which are on a trial basis. Every woman must eat in the dining halls (outside of doctor-approved excuses), and she must live in the dorms (provided she is not a commuter). She must not visit any male student who does not live in the dorms unless during a chaperoned, recognized college function, or visit any male student who lives in the dorms unless during cer- tain hours. But under no circumstances should she vi sit married or unmarried students who live in town. If she comes in later than the appointed hour, she is normally incarcerated for her lack of promptness and integrity, which is judged on a minute by minute basis. Should she be found guilty of the latter offense(s), she risks seven-to-sevens, social probation, or both. Week- end permission to visit any other place than home must be obtained from her parents, unless she is awarded blan- ket permission, under which only the housemother must approve. She graduates. She must accept a job as a secretary in a large city. She must come in at night whenever she wishes, and she must visit whomever she pleases, whenever she pleases, alone, or accompanied by someone she must choose. She must go grocery shopping on the average of once a week, or she must eat out on a regular basis. If she chooses to shop, she must find a suitable place in which to live, small enough to suit her own need, yet large enough to enter- tain family, friends at a time she must consider convenient. She must be responsible, especially for herself. But how much does she want to oe a secretary in a large city when she was trained to be a technician, an urban research analyst, a medical researcher . . .? How often does she become pregnant when she stays out later at night than midnight? How old is old enough to decide on the choice of musts? How true is a recent commercial that croons you ' ve come a long way baby, to get where you got to today? Moreover, how much does she care about all this, no matter where she must live, or to whom she must answer? What year is it? And how late is late? Well, it is one o ' clock in New Wilmington, Pa., and this student is a preg- nant pumpkin who has nine months of seven-to-sevens to fulfill, breaded veal cutlet she must swallow, a room to clean that her boyfriend has yet to see, and a job to find in the next two months that hopefully has something to stimulate a brain she is not supposed to use on a regu- lar basis, if at all. Does that sound funny? out-of-date? Call it the most joke that ever came out of the 1930 ' s when it is 1970 and most women aren ' t laughing. Is Westminster truly pathetic, apathetic, or both? What is the difference between May 28th and May 29th . . . I am only one bird in the wilderness. But I have wings. And I am going to fly. Care to join the flock? Westminster ' s Organized Women W.O.W.! 115 PUBLICATIONS AND COMMUNICATIONS Holcad First Semester EDITORIAL STAFF Sherry Dodd Nancy Koenig Bonnie Hall Mary Clare Lanphear BillSaylor Barb Braden Adam Smith Dick Flint KenWillman REPORTERS: Carol Aston, Carl Belz, Ray Bender, wood, Art Rowbotham, Liza Sipe, Patti Stranahan, Valera PRODUCTION STAFF: Sherry Aller, Jackie Burk, Dave Downton, Herb Gates, Lynda Degler, Judy Hall, Gretch Flath, Rousa Echhart, Barb Kitshen, Gloria DiCarlo, Karen Krull, Jill Moss- berger, Sandy Morgal, Mary Kay McCay, Joanne Sinisi, Cheryl Raisley, Lize Sipe, Robert Temp- ler, Ellen Winchell, Cheryl Wilson. GRAPHICS: Kathy McMahon. PHOTOGRAPHY: Keith McKenzie, Dan Lee. Editor-In-Chief News Editor Editor-At-Large Feature Editor Copy Editor M«dce-Up Editor Sports Editor Business Manager Circulation Manager Carol Charles, Dave Downton, Scott Green- Cheryl Wilson, Carl Young, Glenna Ruiz- 116 Second Semester tiolcaa The Westminster Holcad is published every Friday during the academic year, except during exami nabon periods, by under-graduate students of Westminster College, New Wilmington, Pa. 16142 William R. Lauer Editor-in-Chief Nancy Koenig News Editor John Giesmann Sports Editor David Eakin Business Manager Pamela Harvey Managing Editor Dr. C. H. Cook, Jr. Faculty Consultant William Saylor Features Editor Robert Templer Copy Editor Carl Meyer Advertising Manager Contributing Staff: Sue Aldridge, Matt Bums, Dave Downton, Pat Lowry, Betty MacLellan, Coleen McQuaide, Chip Hiistlethwaite, Carl Young, and Chris Ziesenheim. Photographers: Dan Lee, Keith McKenzie Tom Kepple, Bus. Mgr. . . . to replace the frog, here is the 1970 Argo mascot, courtesy of Abbie Hoffman (For those who prefer frogs, see page 181.) 118 Marie Macgill, Copy Ed.; Sarah Wagstaff, Prod. Mgr. Jim McWilliams, Publ. Rep. Loch Hall, Photo. Ed. 119 FALL ISSUE Chi Omega Fiction Award: Dinner Randy Campbell Scroll Poetry Award: Escape Terri Shoup Phi Mu Art Award: Photography Don Harclerod ESCAPE! From People-pocked beach, Infested with scurrying imps who spew Precious sand-castles Onto flaming faces Diving, cheeks swollen with air, to a blue-green peace I become a mermaid princess ruling my rock-palace realm. Then, forbidden to reign any longer In my slow-motion paradise, I must struggle back and gasp . . . at the air, the light, the noise — Must I now be contented with shattered sand castles? Perhaps that is why God didn ' t grant me gills. Terri Shoup 122 Karin Keck, Editor Dr. Nancy James, dv sor when I was at sixes and sevens the Nile flooded past my Grandmother ' s house, a great white pyramid, And often there among the bulrushes I found the baby Moses Betsy Wet-sy unless I happened to be floating down the Mississippi on a two by four foot bridge raft, in which case Granma ' s house conveniently doubled as a Missouri plantation or a paddle wheel showboat or a trading post as I paddled to shore in the two by four birch bark canoe Yesterday when we buried Granma from the little clapboard house, Chickens wandered in the dried-up creek bed pecking at the rocks. Sherry Dodd SPRING ISSUE Chi Omega Fiction Award: Shadows of Sunlight Linda Henry Scroll Poetry Award: . . . When I was at sixes and sevens Sherry Dodd 123 MUSIC Vesper Choir 124 Concert Choir 125 Band 126 GREEKS 128 129 130 131 SIGLYMPICS Rabbit Paddock, Chr. Eric Sutton, Co-Chr. Coaches: XQ T. Uber, M. Ivancic ZTA C. Preate 2K G. Houseman, G. Nickl ATA j. McKeever, D. Dejoy FROSH K. Mattern, J. Barnes AZ G.Geletka KA L. Gnage $M M. Stover, J. Molner 133 Phi Kappa Tau Four special events highlight- ed the year for the Phi Taus. Their second annual Christ- mas party for underprivi- leged children from New Castle was another success for both the activities and their dates and the young- sters. An outstanding pledge class climaxed the busy rush period and the pledges were quickly initiated into the spir- it of brotherhood. They and the actives worked closely together on the marathon basketball benefit for Cere- bral Palsy. The Phi Taus raised nearly one thousand dollars in this exhausting, but reward- ing effort. At the end of the year, the pitter-patter of lit- tle feet coming from 134 Waugh Ave. gave evidence of the blessed event — Brandy ' s litter of Irish Setter puppies had arrived. She de- livered the pups with the anx- ious assistance of many fa- thers and the admiration of many visitors. 134 137 138 The men of Sigma Nu started out the year with their annual Freshman Tea. They left the en- tertainment field for the football field, where they captured both A and B league, as well as the school championship. With no let up at all the Men of Sigma Nu went on to an unde- feated season in basketball by capturing the Christmas Tournament and the A league championship. With the spring came a fine pledge class and the annual Sigma Nu Volley- ball tournament. Throughout the year the Men of Sigma Nu had a representative in every Var- sity sport, as well as academic honoraries, clubs, and student organizations. 139 141 142 143 This year, the fourth year as a national chapter, has been the best for the Theta Chi ' s. They held their own in all leagues of intramural football, basketball, volleyball, and softball. The actives were very proud of their spring pledge class of fifteen men, one of the finest. As a pledge proj- ect they initiated a successful slave sale to add to the Greek Week activities. Also during Greek Week, Theta Chi golfers and swimmers won tro- phies for their mantle. This year substantial im- provements were made to the house, such as painting the walls and refinishing the floors. Finally they topped off a fine year by capturing the fraternity Scholastic Award, for the second consecutive year. 145 146 Sororities PANHELLENIC CONFERENCE is the governing body for sororities on campus. Each sorority is represented by a representative and the indi- vidual sorority ' s president. Its main purpose is to help sororities with their problems and pro- mote good inter-sorority relationships. As a group, the conference establishes the rushing rules and often works with IFC in planning Greek sponsored activities such as Greek- weekends, Alpha Epsilon Chapter of Alpha Gamma Delta had another great year participating in commu- nity and campus activities. Their community charity projects included their annual Hallow- een party for the Mercer County Crippled Children ' s Home, an Easter Seal drive for the Lawrence County association, and bake sales to collect money for the national AG charity project which is a summer camp for crippled children. The AG ' s had a good time participating in the various inter-sorority parties. Their own tun- nel party at Halloween turned out a great suc- cess again. Homecoming saw Patty Chapman as their candidate for queen and their float, the Pillsbury dough boy. Siglympics and other in- tramural sports took up a lot of the sisters ' time. We even managed to beat all the sororities in the volleyball intramurals. They just couldn ' t beat the faculty. Their greatest pride is their pledge class, once again one of the best on campus, and this year the hardest workers. They gave bake sales, sand- wich sales, and shoe shines along with their regular heavy pledge duties, and earned $180 to give a party for the actives. The fall party held with the Chi O ' S and the Christmas formal held with the Sig Kaps were a lot of fun. They had a casino party in the winter for their pledges and ended the year with a fabulous Spring formal at Troggio ' s. Alpha Gamma Delta 148 It KM £ AD- A 149 151 Omicron Gamma of Chi Omega was founded on Westminster ' s campus in January, 1925. Since that time the chapter has undertaken many an- nual service projects, such as a faculty tea, a picnic for the underprivileged children of the Settlement House, a pancake breakfast for all sorority women on campus, Thanksgiving bas- kets for two needy families, Christmas care packages to Vietnam, and an Easter egg hunt for the faculty children. This year Chi Omega ' s Homecoming float took first place and Chris Enquist, its Homecoming candidate, was crowned queen. The greatest celebration was its 75th national anniversary on April 5. 152 R Won the TITANS 153 154 155 The Delta Zeta ' s this year were variety, individ- uality, and activity. From their donations to the Cancer Society and u ' ork with underpri- vileged girls to their participation in Intramu- rals, Greek Week and the Theta Chi Slave Sale, the Delta Zeta ' s were involvement. The sisters also competed in Siglympics, attended dances at George Junior Repuolic and sponsored an In- trasorority Roundup. Three houseparties, a Hayride, Bundling party and Serwer party, and the Winter and Spring formals completed the roster of activities for the women of Delta Zeta. 158 The sisters of Kappa Delta sorority began the year with their annual kick-off dance before the first football game. Following that, Marilyn Partlow represented the KD ' s as homecoming queen candidate. Their tea for housemothers and their annual Kappa Delta dessert were great successes as was their Winter formal held at Troggio ' s in New Castle. Cathy Sterling topped off the year by winning the first place trophy in the all-college Go-Go contest. The new year began with rush, followed by pledging. Instead of the annual houseparty, the pledges decided to give a picnic for the actives, which turned out to be a great success. Along with taking the second-place trophy in basketball intramurals, the KD ' s won the Sigma Nu volleyball tournament this year. On Parent ' s Day they had a dinner which was followed by a skit and some songs. The year ended with their Spring formal at Schuster ' s in Greenville. 159 PhiMu 160 Sigma Kappa 162 Homecoming was the first event of the year for the Sigma Kappa ' s who were represented by Nancy Markham and a second place float, Siglympics, fall rush and pledge class, and a Winter formal at the Shenango Inn kept the Sig Kap ' s busy. Many hours of work and fun gave them the largest sorority Spring pledge class on campus — 18 pledges. Activation, a Spring formal at Trogio ' s, a pledge picnic, a picnic with the Thiel chapter, and a senior pic- nic filled the remainder or the year for Westmin- ster ' s Sig Kap ' s. 163 164 For the Zeta ' s of Westminster College, the year 1969-1970 was one filled with service and fun. In October they presented their candidate for Homecoming Queen, Pam Grundy, and exhib- ited their float for the year. Siglympics found the Zeta ' s in second place that October. They travelled to the Mercer Childrens ' Home later in October to help celebrate Halloween. And toward the very end of the month. Delta Omega ' s were again on the road — this time to Dusquesne University, to act as a big sis- ter chapter to the new chapter at Dusquesne. The Christmas formal was held at the Voyager Inn, Youngstown, Ohio, with the theme Win- ter Wonderland. Immediately after vacation, the suite was decorated for Rush. The theme was Persian Paradise, complete with a flying carpet. The pledge class was formally welcomed with a house-party at the Theta Chi house. ing money for the Sally Chapin Memorial Fund. Mrs. Chapin, the advisor of Delta Omega chap- ter died in March. The last months of the school year were filled with myriad activities. Delta Omega went on a retreat for a weekend in April in Grove City. Then the officers again travelled to Dusquesne, this time to initiate the new chapter formally into the national organization of Zeta Tau Al- pha. The annual Ice Cream Social was again held, to the satisfaction of the campus sorori- ties. Delta Omega also voted to continue sup- porting their or phan boy from the Holy Lands. And last, but surely not least, the Spring for- mal was held late in May at the Holiday Inn, Niles, Ohio. In March, the Zeta ' s added to their regular phi- The year was truly filled with fun, sisterhood lanthropic project (Cerebral Palsy), that of rais- and service. 165 Ted Schumacher, V. Pres.; Sabra Smith, Treas.; Carolyn Coulter, Sec; James Miller, Pres. Senior Class Officers SENIORS 168 David J. Acheson Business Administration Margaret Babcock Elementary Education Carol V. Bagg Elementary Education Linda Jeanne Baird Elementary Education Sarah Baker German Edmund R. Becker Mathematics Ann E. Beezley Biology Ann L. Beighlea Elementary Education Joan C. Bender Music, English Kevin E. Bissonette Sociology Alice J. Boyd Business Education Robert C. Boyd Mathematics 169 Barbara A. Braden Elementary Education Kenneth Brown Psychology William L. Brown Accounting William R. Brown Biology Craig H. Buddington Music Education Sue N. Cameron Elementary Education David H. Cheesman Economics John A. Cifer History Thomas J. Clemens Political Science Cathy Close History A. Barry Cochran Spanish Robert N. Cochran Chemistry 170 171 172 173 Laura Jane Donaldson James A. Downs Susan Edinger Douglas Egy English Business Administration Art Education Theology Elizabeth E. Ellis Janet L. Ellis Kenneth Elwell Jane P. Ewing French Elementary Education History Mathematics 174 175 176 Susan L. Gustafson Mathematics Bonnie R. Hall English Marion A. Hamilton Sociology Sharon Hayes Elementary Education Robert W. Heckathorne Chemistry April L. Heid Elementary Education 177 Thomas Helf rich Biology Richard E. Herzog General Science Donna K. Hitner Christian Education Judith E. Hoagland Art Education James Holden, Jr. Psychology Mary J. Hooper Elementary Education Marcia J. Hoovler Elementary Education Louise M. Hoppe Art Education Keith G. Hornung Theology 178 179 180 Kaye E. Keister English Robert L. Kelley Political Science Karl Kennedy Mathematics William L. Kennedy Accounting Thomas R. Kepple Economics-Business Bryce D. King Accounting David J. King Spanish Keith R, Kitterman Business Administration Kathleen M. Knowlson Business Education 181 Doris Larson Elementary Education Linda Leibert Biology John W. Leighbody History Louis Loeffler Economics-Business I Nancy J. Loch Mathematics John B. Loudon Theology 182 184 James H. Owen Psychology William E. Pakulski Mathematics 186 Robert M. Power Economics-Business Anne L. Rhodes Business Education Gary A. Rice Economics-Business Betsy A. RidI Spanish Nancy L. Romesburg 6 o ogy 187 188 189 Deborah C. Smith Psychology Phyllis D. Snyder Elementary Education John R. Sprague Philosophy Laraine Stanley Elementary Education Arthur C. Tate Political Science James Thompson Speech-Drama Jeffry D. Weeks Economics-Business Thomas P. Weingartner Business Administration 191 Marsha J. Whiting Spanish-English Ronald C. Wignad Mathematics Carol J. Williams Sociology Harry E. Williams Mathematics Maryjane Williams German-Spanish E. Elaine Williamson Mathematics 193 Senior Directory DAVID J. ACHESON, Berwyn, Pa., Business Administration; 1968 Mock Republican Con- vention; Intramural Sports; Pni Kappa Tau, House Manager. SUSAN M. AKERSTROM, Macedonia, Ohio, French; Cwens, Pres., Junior Advisor; Mor- tarboard; Pi Delta Phi; Scroll; Delta Phi Al- pha; Pi Sigma Pi; Dean ' s List; Summa Cum Laude; Outstanding Freshman Girl Aw ard; Mortarboard Sophomore Leadership Award; Student Government, Treas., Homecoming Co-Chairman; Self-Study Steering Commit- tee, Curriculum Committee, Standing Curri- culum Committee, Student Affairs Commit- tee; Inter-relations Board; House Council; PSEA; WRA; YWCA; Vesper Choir; Freshman Resident Assistant; May Court; Who ' s Who; PanHellenic Council; Alpha Gamma Delta, Pres. FRANK AMBROSIA, New Castle, Pa., Eco- nomics; Omicron Pi Delta, V-Pres.; Omicron Delta Epsilon, Pres.; Intramural Sports; Sigma Nu. BEVERLY A. ANTIS, Meadville, Pa., Music Ed- ucation; Mu Phi Epsilon, Treas.; Kappa Delta Pi, Pi Sigma Pi; Dean ' s List; Magna Cum Laude; Vesper Choir, Concert Choir, Or- chestra. JACKLYN S. ARMOUR, Niles, Ohio, Business Education; Cwens; Student Government; Drill Team; Holcad; May Court; Alpha Gam- ma Delta. WESLEY W. AULT, New Castle, Pa., Music Education; Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia; Band; Orchestra. MARGARET A. BABCOCK, Rochester, N.Y., Liberal Arts; Pi Sigma PI; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Scroll; Kappa Delta Pi, Sec; Cum Laude PSEA; Holcad; Faith Life Discussion Group; Board Job; Library Assistant; Delta Zeta. CAROL V. BAGG, Bethseda, Md., Elementarv Education; Intramural Sports; Holcad; Self- Study; Sigma Kappa, Sec, V-Pres., Projects Chm. DAVID A. BAILIE, Flossmoor, III., History; Phi Alpha Theta, Treas., Pi Delta Phi; Cum Laude; Self-Study Instruction Committee; Circle K; Theta Chi. LINDA JEANNE BAIRD, Chillicothe, Ohio, Elementary Education; Sigma Delta Pi, V- Pres.; House Council; PSEA; YWCA; CCF, Polk State School; Library Assistant; Delta Zeta. CRAIG STEWART BARROW, New Brighton, Pa., Biology; Beta Beta Beta; Dean ' s List; Thanes, V-Pres.; Student Government; Resi- dent Assistant; Russell Hall Resident Direc- tor. EDMUND R. BECKER, Middleburgh, N.Y., Mathematics; Football; Wrestling; Track; Varsity W. ANN ELIZABETH BEEZLEY, New Wilmington, Pa., Biology; Beta Beta Beta. ANN LARENNE BEIGHLEA, Sewickley, Pa., Elementary Education; Holcad; PSEA; YWCA; Student Government; Phi Mu, Corr. Sec. JOAN C. BENDER, New Castle, Pa., Music- English; Psi Chi; Kappa Delta Pi; Mu Phi Epsi- lon, Pres.; Mu Delta Epsilon; Mortarboard; Student Government; PanHellenic Council; Self-Study Instruction Committee; AGO; PSEA; MENC; ARGO Staff; Vesper Choir; House Council; Work-Study; Dorm Counse- lor; Assistant Resident Director; Chapel Or- ganist; Zeta Tau Alpha, Pres. LANCE G. BESHORE, Winter Park, Fla., Polit- ical Science; Student Government, V-Pres., Pres.; Self-Study Steering Committee, Student Affairs Committee, Governance Committee, Student Conduct Committee; Committee to Select Personnel Deans; Sigma Nu, Rec. KEVIN E. BISSONETTE, Johnstown, Pa., Soci- ology; Extra-Curricular Work-Study Com- mittee; Sociology Club; Student Assistant in Office of Public Information. GEORGE R. BOLING, Imperial, Pa., Biology, Beta Beta Beta; Pre-Med Society, V-Pres.; RAPE; Wrestling; Phi Kappa Tau. ALICE J. BOYD, Pittsburgh, Pa., Business Edu- cation; PSEA; YWCA. ROBERT C. BOYD, North East, Pa., Mathe- matics, Football; Intramural Sports; Inter- Fraternity Council; Phi Kappa Tau, Pres. BARBARA ANN BRADEN, Pittsburgh, Pa., Elementary Education; Phi Alpha Theta; Hol- cad; Resident Assistant, Browne; House Council; PSEA; YWCA; Desksitter; Phi Mu, Treas. WILLIAM L. BROWN, fne. Pa., Accounting; House Council; Intramural Sports; Band; Board Job. WILLIAM R. BROWN, Glenshaw, Pa., Biology; Football; Track; Lab Proctor. CRAIG HOUGHTON BUDDINGTON, Craig- ville, Mass., Music Education; Phi Mu Alpha Sinfoni a; Concert Choir; Chamber Singers. N. SUE CAMERON, Pittsburgh, Pa., Elemen- tary Education; Psi Chi, Sec; Kappa Delta Pi; YWCA; WRA; PSEA; Kappa Delta. DAVID H. CHEESMAN, Westfield, Pa., Eco- nomics; Omicron Delta Epsilon. JOHN ALLEN CIFER, Sharpsviile, Pa., History; Intramural Sports; Theta Chi. THOMAS J. CLEMENS, New Wilmington, Pa., Political Science; Sociology Club; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Political Relations Club, Treas., V-Pres.; Intramural Sports; Sigma Phi Epsilon. CATHY CLOSE, Voungsfown, Ohio, History; Phi Alpha Theta; Sigma Delta Pi, Sec. -Treas.; Dean ' s List; Student Government; YWCA; PSEA; Vesper Choir; Chi Omega, V-Pres. A. BARRY COCHRAN, Harrisburg, Pa., Span- ish; Football; Varsity W; Intramural Sports; Sigma Phi Epsilon. LYNN COMFRY, Export, Pa., Spanish-Ger- man; Sigma Delta Pi; WRA; YWCA; PSEA; Kappa Delta, Treas., Scholarship Chm. CAROLYN H. COULTER, yamestown, N.Y., Elementary Education; Dean ' s List; PanHel- lenic Conference, Sec; Senior Class Sec; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Cheer- leading; Intramural Sports; PSEA; Ferguson Resident Assistant; Library Assistant; Desk- Sitting; Board Job; Sigma Kappa, Rush Chm. BRYCE HAYS CRAIG, Nutley, N.]., Philoso- phy; Thanes; 1968 Mock Republican Conven- tion; CCF, Special Service, Established Ser- vice, Co-Rec Chm.; Basketball; Intramural Sports; Phi Kappa Tau, Chaplain. WILLIAM P. CRAWFORD, Philadelphia, Pa., Sociology; Student Government; Resident Assistant; Jeffers Resident Director; Holcad; Inter-Fraternity Council, V-Pres.; Phi Kappa Tau, V-Pres. KATHLEEN A. CROSS, Butler, Pa., Elementary Education; Hockey; PSEA; Drill Team; Sigma Kappa, Social Chm. JOHN R. CURRY, Danville, Pa., Biology; Omi- cron Delta Kappa; Who ' s Who; Pre-Med So- ciety, Pres.; Student Government, Home- coming Co-Chm., Self-Study Steering Com- mittee, Counseling Committee, Long-Range Planning Committee; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Project EDEN; RAPE; Inter-Rela- tions Board; Intramural Sports; Resident Assistant; Head Waiter Russell Hall; Biology Assistant. DARRELL C. DAVIES, Wayne, Pa., History; Band; Intramural Sports; Phi Kappa Tau, Stew- ard. SUSAN REBECCA DAVIS, Salem, N.]., Ele- mentary Education; UCM; PSEA; WRA; Vol- unteer Service Group; International Interest Group; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Washburn Semester in Copenhagen; PanHel- lenic Council, V-Pres.; Zeta Tau Alpha, Corr. Sec. ELIZABETH ANN DEVLIN, Brockway, Pa., Ele- mentary Education; PSEA; YWCA; Intramural Sports; Desk-Sitting; Delta Zeta, Social Chm. LAUREL DISQUE, Greensburg, Pa., Speech; Cwens, V-Pres.; Alpha Psi Omega; Mortar- board, Treas.; Who ' s Who in American Col- leges and Universities; Who ' s Who in Ameri- ca; Student Government, Sec; Self-Study Committees; May Court; Vesper Choir; Inter- Relations Board; House Manager for Theater; Inter-Collegiate Oral Interpretation Tour- naments; Special Committee for Selection of Dean of Women; Delta Zeta, V-Pres. WILLIAM A. DOLTON, Southampton, Pa., Philosophy; Pi Delta Epsilon; ARGO, Editor; Publications Committee; Vesper Choir; 1968 Mock Republican Convention, State Chm.; Scrawl; Intramural Sports; Friends of Bryce Craig; Phi Kappa Tau. LAURA JANE DONALDSON, Washington, Pa., English; Scroll, Pres.; PSEA; CCF; Interna- tional Interest Group; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Tennis; Intramural Sports; Labo- ratory Assistant; Library Assistant; Delta Zeta, Assis. Social Chm., Rec. Sec. JAMES A. DOWNS, Philadelphia, Pa., Busi- ness Administration; Intramural Sports; Sigma Nu. HUGH DOUGLAS DUNLOP, Totowa, N.j., Biology; Cross Country; Vesper Choir. GREG W. ECKRITCH, Irwin, Pa., Political Sci- ence; Delta Sigma Rho-Tau Kappa Alpha; Stu- dent Government, Communications Commis- sioner, Constitution and By-Laws Commit- tee, Chm.; Political Relations Club, Pres.; 1968 Mock Republican Convention, State Chm.; Debate; Forensics; 1969, 1970 First Place Men ' s Extemp. in DAPC; Under-Gradu- ate Assistant Debate Coach. SUSAN EDINGER, Delmar, N.Y., Art Educa- tion; Vesper Choir; PSEA; YWCA; Desksitter. DOUGLAS EGY, fast Syracuse, N.Y., Theol- ogy; Mu Delta Epsilon, V-Pres.; Cum Laude; Religious Life Committee; Vesper Choir; Holcad; UCM, Treas., Established Service, Chm.; Sacristan; Committee of Responsibil- ity, Chm.; Theta Chi. ELIZABETH E. ELLIS, New Wilmington, Pa., French; Pi Delta Phi, Sec; Pi Sigma Pi; Cwens, Social Co-Chm.; Who ' s Who; Magna Cum i Laude; Senate; 1968 Mock Republican Con- vention, Exec. Comm.; Drill Team; YWCA; Volleyball; Basketball; Homecoming Candi- date; Chi Omega, Treas. 194 JANET L. ELLIS, Cap, Pa., Elementary Educa- tion; Pi Sigma Pi; Kappa Delta Pi; Scroll, Sec- Treas.; Delta Phi Alpna, Treas.; Magna Cum Laude; Orchestra; PSEA; Library Staff; Infir- mary Staff. J vNE P. EWING, Beaver, Pa., Mathematics; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Delta Phi Alpha; Cum Laude; YWCA; WRA; Vesper Choir; Board Job; Trouble in Tahiti, Pianist. MARGARET J. FIGULY, New Castle, Pa., French; PSEA. JANE FREEMAN FISCAL, Dorset, Ohio, Ap- plied Music-Voice; Mu Phi Epsilon; Concert Choir; My Fair Lady. RICHARD W. FLINT, Longmeadow, Mass., History; Pi Delta Epsilon; Senior Library Con- test — First; Pi Delta Epsilon Medal of Merit; Eichenauer House Council; Holcad, Editor- in-Chief, Business Manager, News Editor, Managing Editor, Senior Editor; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; International Interest Group; CCF; Self-Study Library Committee, Publication Committee, Artist-Lecture Com- mittee, Academic Life Committee, Off-Cam- pus Study Committee: Board Job; Library Assistant. THOMAS RICHARD FONTANELLA, Wam- pum, Pa., Biology; Thanes, V-Pres.; Freshman Class V-Pres.; Junior Class V-Pres.; Intramural Sports; Vesper Choir; Laboratory Assistant; Desksitter; Phi Kappa Tau, Corr. Sec. DAVE FOSTER, West Mifflin, Pa., Political Science; ODK; Pi Sigma Pi; Eta Sigma Phi; Cum Laude; V ho ' s Who; Circle K, Pres., Stu- der.t Conduct Committee; Residence Direc- tor; Inter-Fraternity Council, Pres.; Sigma Phi Epsilon. W. DAVID FOX, Charleroi, Pa., Psychology; ARGO, Business Manager; NWVFD; Consta- ble, Lawrence Co. SARA E. FRAWLEY, Titusville, Pa., Mathemat- ics; WRA; PSEA. SHIRLEY ANN FRAZER, Avon, Ohio, Latin- German; Eta Sigma Phi; Delta Phi Alpha; Band; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Summer at Univ. of Innsbruck, Austria; Zeta Tau Alpha, Treas. MARION J. FREY, Glenshaw, Pa., German; Delta Phi Alpha, Pres.; Phi Alpha Theta; PSEA; Drill Team; International Interest Group; Junior Year Abroad; Alpha Gamma Delta, Membership, Chm. DAVID A. GALLUP, Berwyn, Pa., Business Education; Intramural Sports; PSEA. R. GREGORY GELETKA, Warren, Ohio, Po- litical Science; Omicron Delta Kappa; Dean ' s List; Who ' s Who; Freshman, Sophomore, Junior Class V-Pres.; Political Relations Club, V-Pres.; Vesper Choir; Student Government, Entertainment Commissioner; Faculty Ad- mission Committee; Intramural Sports; Resi- dent Assistant; Desksitter; Washington Se- mester; Alpha Sigma Phi. SHELLEY WINN GENGER, New Wilmington, Pa., Mathematics; Cwens; Kappa Mu Epsi- lon, Sec; Mortar Board, Pres.; Volleyball; Chi Omega, Pledge Trainer. PATRICIA J. GEORGE, New Castle, Pa., En- glish; Library Staff; Secretary Religion Dept. T. GALEN GIRVIN, Atglen, Pa., Theater; Thanes; Alpha Psi Omega, Pres.; Masquers; Pi Sigma Pi; Omicron Delta Kappa; Who ' s Who; Cum Laude; 4:30 Theater, Assistant Coordinator; Religious Life Council Subcom- mittee on Worship; Vesper Choir; ARGO; Theater Productions — The Caretaker, The American Dream, The Sandbox, Mother Courage, Twelfth Night, My Fair Lady, Mary Stewart, Oedipus Rex, Directea The Wizard of Oz; Alpha Sigma Phi, HAE. OLIVER C. GORDON, Pittsburgh, Pa., His- tory; Band; Vesper Choir; Self-Study Com- mittees; Circle K, Public Relations Chm.; Biology Lab Assistant; Dorm Assistant; Audio- Visuals Assistant. RALPH W. GRANT, Somerset, Mass., Physics; Campus Conservatives, Pres.; Band; Theater; 1%8 Mock Republican Convention, State Chm.; Intramural Sports. KATHRYN DILLARD GRAY, Maplewood, N.]., Elementary Education; Mermaids, Sec- Treas.; PSEA; Sociology Club; Vesper Choir; Chi Omega, Social Chm., Civic Chm. PAUL W. GRECO, Philadelphia, Pa., Chem- istry; American Chemical Society; Inter-Fra- ternity Council; Golf; Sigma Nu. SUSAN L. GUSTAFSON, Titusville, Pa., Mathe- matics; Intramural Sports; Library Assistant; TUB Rat. BONNIE RUTH HALL, Darien, Conn., English; Pi Delta Epsilon; 1968 Mock Republican Con- vention, Youth for Humphrey, Chm.; Hol- cad, Assistant News Editor, News Editor, Edi- tor-at-Large; YWCA; WRA; Vesper Choir; Westminstrels; Desksitter; Board Job; Volley- ball; Basketball; Intramural Sports. MARION ADELIA HAMILTON, Franklin, Pa., Sociology; Kappa Delta Pi, Pres.; Delta Phi Alpha; Senate; Sociology Club, Treas.; PSEA, Membership Chm.; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Summer Univ. of Innsbruck, Austria; Zeta Tau Alpha, 1st V-Pres., Histo- rian-Rec. ROBERT W. HECKATHORNE, New Wilming- ton, Pa., Chemistry; Kappa Mu; American Chemical Society; Departmental Honors; Radio Station. APRIL LYNNE HEID, Fairview Park, Ohio, Elementary Education; WRA; Vesper Choir; PSEA; Library Assistant; Kappa Delta. RICHARD E. HERZOG, Glenwood Landing, N.Y., General Science; PSEA; Board Job; In- tramural Sports; Theta Chi, Pledge Marshal. TOM HITE, New Castle, Pa., Mathematics; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Associate Director, Hill- side; Homecoming Float Committee; Intra- mural Sports; Sigma Phi Epsilon. DONNA KATHERINE HITNER, Philadelphia, Pa., Christian Education; Student Govern- ment, Sec; V-Pres. of Ferguson; WRA, Sec; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Fresh- man Resident Assistant; Hockey; Chi Omega. JUDITH E. HOAGLAND, Blawenburg, N.J., Art Education; YWCA; Sociology Club; Drill Team; Mermaids, Decorations; Library Show- case Displays; Chi Omega, Float Chm. MARY JANE HOOPER, Munhall, Pa., Elemen- tary Education; PSEA; House Council, Judici- ary Board; WRA; Desksitter; Alpha Gamma Delta, Corr. Sec. MARCIA J. HOOVLER, Franklin, Pa., Elemen- tary Education; Phi Alpha Theta; PSEA; WRA; Sigma Kappa, Social Chm. KEITH GILBERT HORNUNG, Latrobe, Pa., Theology; Psi Chi; Mu Delta Epsilon; Sigma Tau Alpha; Cum Laude; UCM, Pres., Pub- licity Chm., Established Service, Chm. for Briar Hill; Religious Life Council; Assistant in Visual Aids Dept.; Theater Work, Mother Courage, 4:30 Theater Production; Friends of Bryce Craig. SUSAN HORVATH, Middletown, Pa., Elemen- tary Education; Kappa Delta Pi; Cum Laude; PSEA; WRA; YWCA; International Interest Group; Salvation Army Volunteer Group; Junior Year Abroad; Desksitter; Board Job; Zeta Tau Alpha. SUZANNE K. HOWE, Rochester, N.Y., Reli- gion; Eta Sigma Phi; Mu Delta Epsilon, Treas.; Cum Laude; Honors in Religion; Phi Mu. SUSAN HOWELL, Kane, Pa., Elementary Edu- cation; WRA; Hockey; PSEA; Dorm Counse- lor; Desksitter; Delta Zeta. DAVID A. IHRIG, New Kinsington, Pa., Bi- ology; Beta Beta Beta; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Animal Night. LINDA INGLING, St. Petersburg, Pa., Biology; Beta Beta Beta, Sec; WRA; PSEA, V-Pres.; RAPE, Sec; Laboratory Assistant; Interdis- ciplinary Committee for New Science Hall; Earth Day Committee; Delta Zeta, Treas. SUSAN ELAINE JOHNS, Conneautville, Pa., Mathematics; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Band; WRA; CCF; WKPS; Vesper Choir; Library Assistant; Beeghly Box Office. f UK - 937 937 faz, P62, 195 PATRICK ]. LYDON, Somerville, NJ., Business Administration; Phi Kappa Tau. ' SI NEIL E. JOHNSON, Youngstown, Ohio, Psy- chology; Intramural Sports; 1968 Mock Re- publican Convention, State Chm. KARIN KECK. New Waterford, Ohio, English; Alpha Psi Omega, Pi Sigma Pi, Scroll; Magna Cum Laude; Self-Study Committee on Honors and Academic Excellence; Scrawl, Editor; Phi Mu, Social Chm. KAYE ELIZABETH KEISTER, Monroeville, Pa., English; Alpha Psi Omega; Delta Phi Alpha; Scroll; Pi Sigma Pi; Masquers; Dean ' s List; Magna Cum Laude; Scrawl; Women ' s Choir; CCF; Theater Crews; Library Assistant; Reader for Prof.; Phi Mu, V-Pres., House Chm., Homecoming Chm. SALLY BAKER KELEWAE, Havertown, Pa., Ger- man; Cwens; Mortarboard; Pi Sigma Pi; Kap- pa Delta Pi; Who ' s Who; Delta Pi Alpha; Self- Study Curriculum Committee; PSEA; CCF; WRA; Resident Assistant; Delta Zeta. ROBERT L. KELLEY, Pittsburgh, Pa., Political Science; Student Government; Eichenauer House Council, V-Pres.; Circle K, Sec, Treas.; Self-Study Counciling Committee; PSEA; Theta Chi, Alumni Relations Chm. KARL EDGAR KENNEDY, Cheswick, Pa., Mathematics; Thanes; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Who ' s Who; Student Government; Self-Study Student Affairs Committee; Focus on Life, Co-Chm.; Resident Assistant, Eichenauer; Basketball; Intramural Sports; Phi Kappa Tau. WILLIAM L. KENNEDY, Zelienople, Pa., Ac- counting; Intramural Sports; Baseball; Phi Kappa Tau, Pledgemaster, Vendortender. THOMAS R. KEPPLE, Murrysville, Pa., Eco- nomics-Business; Pi Delta Epsilon; ARGO, Business Manager; Scrawl, Illustrator; 1968 Mock Republican Convention, Floor Cap- tain; Swimming, Captain; Varsity W; Intra- mural Sports; Theta Chi, Pledge Pres., Asst. Treas., Social Chm. BRYCE D. KING, Scottdale, Pa., Accounting; Circle K. DAVID ). KING, McKeespon, Pa., Spanish; 1%8 Mock Republican Convention; Intra- mural Sports; PSEA. KEITH R. KITTERMAN, Pittsburgh, Pa., Busi- ness Administration; Intramural Sports; Phi Kappa Tau, Pledgemaster, Sgt.-At-Arms. DANA F. KNAPP, Erie, Pa., Religion-Philoso- phy; CCF; Student Government; Intramural Sports; Resident Assistant; Desksitter; Alpha Sigma Phi. JUDITH MITCHELL KNAPP, Shaker Heights, Ohio, Art Education; Mortarboard; Kappa Delta Pi; Who ' s Who; Student Government; Self-Study Religious Life Committee; WRA, Pres.; 1968 Mock Republican Convention, State Chm.; Hockey; Volleyball; Basketball; Intramural Sports; Resident Assistant; Lab Proctor; Sigma Kappa. RICHARD E. KNODEL, Lay ayetfe, N.Y., Phil- osophy; Phi Sigma Tau, Pres.; Mu Delta Epsi- lon, Pres.; CCF; Eschatology Club; Friends of Bryce Craig; Intramural Sports. KATHLEEN M. KNOWLSON, Cranford, N.]., Business Education; Vesper Choir; PSEA; Holcad; Resident Assistant; House Council; Sec. Religion Dept. SARAH JANE KRICHBAUM, Salem, Ohio, Elementary Education; Pres. Shaw; Resident Assistant; Cheerleader; CCF; Sociology Club; Alpha Gamma Delta, Pledge Pres. ANGELA MARIE KRINOCK, Brader)ville, Pa., Psychology; May Court; WRA; YWCA; Cheerleader; Self-Study Committee; Student Government, Fres hman Week Chm.; Fresh- man Counselor; Desksitter; Lab Proctor; Homecoming Candidate; Alpha Gamma Del- ta, Activities Chm., Social Chm., 1st V-Pres. VALERIA KROSKE, Beaver Falls, Pa., Mathe- matics; Cwens, Scholarship Chm.; Basketball; Drill Team; Intramural Sports; Desksitter; Alpha Gamma Delta, Pledge Class V-Pres., Rush Chm., Guard. PHYLLIS KUHN, Munhall, Pa., Elementary Education; PSEA; YWCA; Desksitter; Board Job; Sigma Kappa, Public Relations. LINDA LEIBERT, Cleveland Heights, Ohio, Biology; Beta Beta Beta, V-Pres.; Inter-Rela- tions Board; Self-Study Housing Committee; Lab Proctor; Intramural Sports; Swim Instruc- tor; Mermaids, V-Pres.; PanHellenic Coun- cil; Delta Zeta, Social Chm., Pres. NANCY JEAN LOCH, Youngstown, N.Y., Mathematics; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Delta Phi Alpha; CCF, Polk State School, Youth Devel- opment Center; Board Job. JOHN BLAIR LOUDON, New Castle, Pa., The- ology; Mu Delta Epsilon; CCF, V-Pres., Pro- gram Chm.; Eichenauer House Council; Reli- gious Life Council; Vesper Choir; Special Service Teams; Established Service Teams; WKPS; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Intramural Sports; Student Asst. Minister. RONALD CRAIG MAMAJEK, New Castle, Pa., Chemistry; Kappa Mu Epsilon, V-Pres.; Amer- ican Chemical Society, Pres.; Intramural Sports. MARY JANE MASON, Pittsburgh, Pa., Enelish; YWCA; WRA; PSEA; Holcad; Hockey; Library Assistant. KATHLEEN E. MCGILL, Sudbury, Mass., Ele- mentary Education; Vesper Choir; Holcad, Managing Editor; WKPS; Band; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Basketball; Phi Mu, V-Pres. THOMAS EDWARD MCGRATH, New Castle, Pa., Theology; Pi Sigma Pi; Mu Delta Epsilon; Omicron Delta Kappa; Cum Laude; UCM, Pres., Special Services Teams, Chm.; Religious Life Committee; Self-Study Curriculum Com- mittee; National Presbyterian Scholar; John _C. Hanley Speech Scholarship; Intramural ' Sports. RICHARD MCKEE, New Wilmington, Pa., Biology; Peace Inc.; RAPE. KEITH MCKENZIE, Way and, Mass., History; House Council, Pres.; Circle K, Treas.; Self- Study Undergraduate Curriculum Committee, Social Action Committee, Foreign Student Committee; Student Government ; Holcad, Photographer; International Interest Group. HERBERT W. MEANS, Sheffield, Pa., Business Administration; Business Seminars. SARA ELLEM MEANS, Big Run, Pa., Elemen- tary Education; Alpha Psi Omega; Eta Sigma Phi, Sec; Kappa Delta Pi; Magna Cum Laude; Senate; House Council, Ferguson; Youth Development Center Volunteer; PSEA, Rec. Sec; Holcad; YWCA; Crews for Theater; Redlands Student; Zeta Tau Alpha. WILLIAM H. MECKLING, Pittsford, N.Y., His- tory; Baseball; Sigma Nu. STEPHEN TURNER MELIUS, Albany, N.Y., History; Phi Alpha Theta, Sec; Mu Delta Ep- silon; Student Government, Elections Com- mittee Chm.; Intercollegiate Religious Re- treats Chm.; Circle K, Religious Life; Holcad; Self-Study Committees; Board Job; Intramural Sports; Theta Chi. 196 ARTHUR F. MILLER, West Hartford, Conn., English, JAMES GREGORY MILLER, Rutherford, N.j., History; Pres. Senior Class; Intramural Sports; Student Government; Sigma Nu. JOHN NELSON MILLER, Voungstown, Ofiio, Music; Thanes, Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, Sec; Omicron Delta Kappa; Concert Choir; Or- chestra; Intramural Sports; Member Youngs- town Symphony Orcnestra; Theta Chi, Pres., Asst. Treas. BARBARA E. MINNERLY, Hammondsport, N.y., Biology; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Mortar- board; Student Government; WRA; Vesper Choir; RAPE; Uhuru; YWCA; Library Assis- tant. MARCIA MISCALL, McMurray, Pa., Christian Education; Mu Delta Epsilon, Sec; Kappa Delta Pi; Cum Laude; CCF; Peace Inc.; Resi- dent Assistant. MARGERY MOORE, Sharon, Pa., French-Ger- man; Cwens; Mortarboard; Pi Delta Phi, V- Pres.; Delta Phi Alpha; Cum Laude; Fresh- man, Sophomore; Junior Class Sec; Freshman Dorm Sec. -Treas.; Mermaids; WRA; Inter- nationa! Interest Group, Exec. Board; Self- Study Committees; Semester in France; Office Assistant; Intramural Sports; Sigma Kappa, Homecoming Queen 1967. MARY KELLEY MORELAND, New Castle, Pa., Elementary Education; Cheerleader; Mer- maids; Senate; Chi Omega. JEFFRY GEORGE MORRIS, Grove City, Pa., History; Intramural Sports; 1968 Mock Repub- lican Convention; Sigma Nu. EDWARD MOSES, New Wilmington, Pa., Elementary Education; Baseball; Intramural Sports; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Phi Kappa Tau, Social Chm., Rush Chm. MARY JO MYERS, Pittsburgh, Pa., Elementary Education; PSEA; Sociology Club; YWCA, Membership Chm.; Basketball; Volleyball; Chi Omega. JOHN A. NEGHIU, f wood City, Pa., Mathe- matics. SUE D. NEMEC, Chardon, Ohio, French-Ger- man; Delta Phi Alpha, Publicity Chm.; PSEA; WRA; Drill Team, Captain; Sociology Club; YWCA; Resident Assistant; 1968 Mock Repub- lican Convention; Chi Omega, Activities Chm., Social Chm. MARY ELLEN O ' HARA, Pittsburgh, Pa., Ele- mentary Education; PSEA; Desksitter; Alpha Gamma Delta, Rec. Sec. MILES B. OLSON, New Canaan, Conn., Math- ematics; Tennis; Intramural Sports; Phi Kappa Tau. PATRICIA L. OLSON, Youngsfown, Ohio, French-Spanish; Sigma Delta Pi; Pi Delta Phi; Senate; Student Government; YWCA; Delta Zeta. WILLIAM E. PAKULSKI, Mt. Pleasant, Pa., Mathematics; Intramural Sports; Phi Kappa Tau, Steward. GARY LYNN PARSONS, Hudson, Ohio, His- tory; Phi Alpha Theta; Swimming; WKPS; CCF, Discussion Group; Desksitter; 1968 Mock Republican Convention, State Chm.; Semester at Redlands. SHERYL PATTON, youf7gstown, Ohio, Soci- ology; YWCA; Sociology Club; CCF; George Jr. Republic; Chi Omega. BARBARA L. PERSHING, Creensburg, Pa., Mathematics; Kappa Delta Pi; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Cum Laude; Sigma Kappa, Treas., 1st V-Pres. DIANE PIERCE, Hershey, Pa., Speech; Alpha Psi Omega; Theater Productions, Wild Duck, Madwoman of Chaillot. BARBARA G. PILKEY, Upper Montclair, N.J., Elementary Education; Dean ' s List; Student Government; 1968 Mock Republican Conven- tion; Sociology Club; Desksitter; Experiment in International Living to Switzerland; Sigma Kappa, Corr. Sec. JOHN POLENICK, New Castle, Pa., Business Administration; Sigma Nu. BRIAN LEE PONTIUS, Pittsburgh, Pa., Mathe- matics; Kappa Mu Epsilon, Pres.; Cum Laude; Established Services. 197 CHARLES ). PRENTICE, Wexford, Pa., History; Alpha Psi Omega; International Interest Croup; Holcad; Theater Productions, The Odd Couple, Twelfth Night, Wild Duck, The Madwoman of Chaillot, Blood Wed- ding; Sigma Nu. ANNE L. RHODES, Maplewood, N.j., Business Education; Dean ' s List; Intramural Sports; Holcad, Copy Ed.; Theater Productions, Gay Nineties Review, My Fair Lady; Sigma Kappa, Rec. Sec, Merchandise Chm. BETSY A. RIDL, Pittsburgh, Pa., Spanish; Cwens; Mortarboard, Sigma Delta Pi; Kappa Delta Pi; Who ' s Who; Senate, Pres.; Inter- Relations Board; Religious Life Council; Stu- dent Conduct; PanHellenic Council; House Council; Mermaids, Pres.; Intramural Sports; YWCA, V-Pres.; Drill Team; Chi Omega, Pres., Personnel Chm., Float Co-Chm. CHARLES E. ROBERTS, Girard, Pa., Chemis- try; Basketball, Mgr.; American Chemical Society, Treas. NANCY LEE ROMESBURG, McKeesport, Pa., Biology; Beta Beta Beta; Pi Sigma Pi; Cum Laude; Pre-Med Society; YWCA; RAPE; Bi- ology Lab Assistant; Lab Proctor; WKPS; Zeta Tau Alpha, Activities Chm., Float Chm. ARTHUR JAMES ROWBOTHAM, Poland, Ohio, Political Science; Delta Phi Alpha; Omi- cron Delta Kappa, Treas.; Phi Sigma Tau, Sec- Treas.; Tau Kappa Alpha; Thanes; Who ' s Who; Cum Laude; 1968 Mock Republican Convention, Campaign Mgr., Chm. of Youth for Nixon; Debate; Band; WKPS; Holcad; Desksitter; Resident Assistant; Intramural Sports; Theta Chi, Rush Chm. STEPHEN C. ROWLAND, Mars, Pa., Mathe- matics; Intramural Sports; 1968 Mock Repub- lican Convention; Phi Kappa Tau, Rush Chm. CHARLES V. H. RUDGE, Youngstown, Ohio, Elementary Education; PSEA; Circle K. CARLA GRETCHEN RUTH, Youngstown, Ohio, Mathematics; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Mor- tarboard; YWCA, Membership Chm.; Holcad; Self-Study Off-Campus Subcommittee; Red- lands Semester; Zeta Tau Alpha, Treas., Parlia- mentarian; PanHellenic Council, Pres. WILLIAM E. SAMUELS, Farrell, Pa., Econom- ics-Business; Student Government, V-Pres.; Basketball, Co-Captain; Football; Varsity W; Black Student Union, Pres.; 1968 Mock Re- publican Convention. JULIE ANN SANDEEN, Bradford, Pa., Elemen- tary Education; Cwens, Sec, Sr. Advisor; Mor- tarboard, V-Pres.; Kappa Delta Pi, Who ' s Who; Drill Team; PSEA; CCF; WRA; Resident Assistant; May Queen, 1969-1970; Delta Zeta. MARTIN J. SAYERS, Arlington, Va., Business Administration; Alpha Psi Omega; WKPS, Station Mgr., Studio Engineer; College Public Address Systems Engineer; Will W. Orr Aud. Stage Mgr. MARTHA J. SCHREINER, Pittsburgh, Pa., Mathematics; Who ' s Who; CWENS, Selection Board; Campus Retreat Organization; Intra- mural Sports; Volleyball; Basketball; WRA, V-Pres.; UCM, Special Service, Established Service; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Delta Zeta. GAYLE CAROLYN SCHULTE, Jamestown, N.Y., Elementary Education; Kappa Delta Pi, Historian; Scroll; Orchestra; PSEA; YWCA; Phi Mu. TED ALLEN SCHUMACHER, Rittman, Ohio, Mathematics; Senior Class V-Pres.; Basket- ball, Co-Captain; Baseball; Intramural Sports; Varsity W; FCA, Pres.; UCM; Phi Kappa Tau. RUTH SELLMAN, McKeesport, Pa., Elemen- tary Education; Delta Phi Alpha; Sigma Delta Pi; WRA; PSEA; Kappa Delta. TERRENCE L. SERGI, Pittsburgh, Pa., Business Administration; Football; Baseball; Intramural Sports; Varsity W; Sigma Nu, Financial Com- mittee Chm. ALLEN E. SHEAKLEY, 8uf er, Pa., Mathematics; UCM, Special Service Teams; Circle K; WKPS; ARGO; Holcad; Computer Lab Proc- tor; Language Lab Technician. LENORE MARGARET SHELLEY, Northville, Mich., Elementary Education; CWENS, Ritual Chm., Jr. Advisor; Sec-Treas. Browne Hall; Pres. Browne Hall; Senate, Treas.; Vesper Choir; AGO; CCF, Special Service, Polk State School; May Court; Associate Resident Di- rector of Shaw; Alpha Gamma Delta, Chap- lain. APRIL SHILLING, Sharon, Pa., Elementary Education; Kappa Delta Pi; Cum Laude; Mer- maids; MENC; PSEA; Kappa Delta. LYNNE SHORT, Laurel, Del., Music Education; Mu Phi Epsilon; Senate; MENC, V-Pres.; AGO; Women ' s Choir; Concert Choir; Work- Study; Resident Assistant; Self-Study Com- mittee; Choir Director, Gay Nineties Re- view, One Acts, Old Maid and The Thief. TERRY ANNE SHOUP, New Wilmington, Pa., English; Outstanding Senior; Student Govern- ment, Chm. Social Action Committee, Elec- tions Committee; Pres. Ferguson Dormitory; Drill Team; Pep Club Organizer; PanHellenic Council; YWCA; Mermaids Narration; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Resident Assistant; Self-Study Committee on Academic Scheduling; Faculty Committee on Publica- tions; Organizer for Moratorium, Free Uni- versity, Earth Day, Action Day, Black Aware- ness Week; Chi Omega, Rush Chm. BRUCE W. SMITH, S 7ver Spring, Md., Mathe- matics; Alpha Psi Omega; House Council; Swimming; Vesper Choir; Concert Choir; Resident Assistant. DEBORAH CRANE SMITH, Freeport, Pa., Psy- chology; Cheerleader, Captain; May Dance; Gym Show; Gymnastics Club; WRA; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Self-Study Counseling Committee; Chi Omega, Activi- ties Chm. SABRA SMITH, Lakewood,.N.Y., French-Span- ish; Cwens; Pi Delta Phi; Sigma Delta Phi; Who ' s Who; Student Government, Asst. Sec, Homecoming Chm.; Treas. Soph., Jr., Sr. Class; PanHellenic Council; Self-Study Coun- seling Committee; May Court; PSEA; YWCA; WRA; International Interest Group, Exec. Comm.; Sec Spanish Dept.; Desksitter; Sigma Kappa, Pres. JOHN RUSSEL SPRAGUE, New York City, N.Y., Philosophy; Intramural Sports; CCF; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Friends of Bryce Craig. LARAINE STANLEY, Pittsburgh, Pa., Elemen- tary Education; Dean ' s List; CCF, Established Service, Special Service; PSEA; YWCA; WRA; House Council; WKPS; International Interest Group; Board Job; Desksitter. SUSAN STONE, Worcester, Mass., Sociology; Sociology Club; Kappa Delta. ARTHUR C. TATE, Pittsburgh, Pa., Political Science; Football; Baseball; Board Job; Cam- pus Mailman; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Social Chm. LINDA S. THOMPSON, Springfield, Pa., En- glish; Sigma Kappa. 198 LINDA TIMKO, Campbell, Ohio, Spanish- English; Sigma Delta Pi, V-Pres.; Scroll; Cum Laude. THOMAS STEPHEN TOMCZYK, Pittsburgh, Pa., Mathematics; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Omi cron Delta Kappa; Dean ' s List; Who ' s Who Basketball; Intramural Sports; Varsity W FCA; 1968 Mock Republican Convention, House Council, Sec; Head of Intramural Football Program; PIAA Basketball and Foot- ball Official; Sigma Nu, Lt. Commander. KATHERINE SUE UHLER, Tenafly, NJ., Ele- mentary Education; Drill Team; WRA; Reli- gious Life Council Sub-Committee; Volun- teer Work at Special Ed. School; Chi Omega, Corr. Sec. JOSEPH A. URCIOLI, Clark, N.]., Business; Intramural Sports; Phi Kappa Tau, Rec. Sec. ELIZABETH J. WALKER, Meadville, Pa., Ele- mentary Education; Basketball; House Coun- cil; PSEA; Alpha Gamma Delta, Treas. BETSY WALLACE, Mineola, N.Y., History; YWCA; Sociology Club; 1968 Mock Republi- can Convention; Chi Omega, House Mana- ger. DIANE J. WALTON, Irwin, Pa., Speech; Kappa Delta Pi; Sigma Delta Pi; Alpha Psi Omega, Sec; Mortarboard, Hist.; Masquers; Dean ' s List; Cum Laude; Narrator for May Court; CCF; Forensics; Theater Productions; Phi Mu. JOANN WARNER, Fairfield, N.]., Elementary Education; PSEA; YWCA; Vesper Choir; Desk- sitter; Infirmary Clerk; Phi Mu, Sec. ROBERT L WATSON, Coraopolis, Pa., His- tory; Inter-Fraternity Council, V-Pres.; Dor- mitory Assistant, Russell; Intramural Sports; 1968 Mock Republican Convention; Phi Kap- pa Tau, Athletic Chm., Pledge Class V-Pres. T. DANA WATSON, Erie, Pa., Economics; Omicron Delta Kappa, Pres.; Omicron Delta Epsilon; Pi Sigma Pi; Who ' s Who; Cum Laude; Freshman, Sophomore, Junior Class Pres.; Inter-Relations Board; Student Govern- ment, Pari.; Student Conduct; Self-Study Committees; Student Affairs Committee; Resident Assistant and Director; Phi Kappa Tau, Corr. Sec. MARLAINE J. WEAVER, Transfer, Pa., Music Education; Mu Phi Epsilon, Social Chm.; WRA; Band; Orchestra; AGO; MENC; Private Teacher of Flute; Phi Mu, Rush Chm., Social Chm. MARY RAE WEBER, Ellwood City, Pa., Ele- mentary Education-Christian Education; Mu Delta Epsilon; PSEA; YWCA; Women ' s Choir. JEFFRY D. WEEKS, Buffalo, N.Y., Economics- Busmess; Football; Baseball; Varsity W; Intra- mural Sports; FCA; International Interest Group; Self-Study Curriculum Committee; ARGO, Sports Ed.; Student Government; Phi Kappa Tau, Asst. Pledgemaster. THOMAS P. WEINGARTNER, New Castle, Pa Business Education; Sigma Nu. RONALD C. WIGAND, Marlton, N.J., Mathe- matics; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Golf; Intramural Sports; FCA; 1968 Mock Republican Conven- tion; Phi Kappa Tau, Pari., Treas. CAROL ]. WILLIAMS, Youngstown, Ohio, Sociology; YWCA; Sociology Club; Service Team to George Junior Republic HARRY E. WILLIAMS, New Castle, Pa., Mathe- matics; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Intramural Sports. MARYJANE WILLIAMS, McKeesport, Pa., German-Spanish; Delta Phi Alpha; PSEA- WRA; YWCA; Kappa Delta. E. ELAINE WILLIAMSON, New Castle, Pa., Mathematics; Drill Team; WRA; Kappa Delta. 199 R. KENNETH WILLMAN, Glenshaw, Pa., Math- ematics; Delta Phi Alpha; Thanes; Psi Chi, Pres.; ODK; Track; Intramural Sports; Resi- dent Assistant; Holcad, Circulation Mgr.; Intra-Fraternity Council; Alpha Sigma Phi, Pres., Rush Chm. JUDITH ANNE WILSON, Apollo, Pa., Music Education; Kappa Delta Pi; Mu Phi Epsilon, V-Pres., Corr. Sec; Student Government; MENC, Pres.; Band; Vesper Choir; Concert Choir; Artist-Lecture Film Committee, Sec; Phi Mu, V-Pres. LAROYAL WILSON, Mt. Pleasant, Pa., His- tory; Phi Alpha Theta; Outstanding College Athlete in Who ' s Who; Varsity W, Pres.; Foot- ball; Track, Captain; CCF; BLOC; Board Job; Desksitter. DENNIS A. WITTMAN, McKeesport, Pa., Busi- ness Administration; Sigma Nu, Pres. W. EVE WOLCOTT, Albion, N.Y., Elementary Education. C. EDWIN YOUNG, Rimersburg, Pa., Econom- ics; Omicron [)elta Epsilon, V-Pres.; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Intramural Sports; Theta Chi, Treas. SANDRA ZIMMERMAN, Monroeville, Pa., Sociology; Sociology Club; WRA; Kappa Del- ta, Sec. JO ANN ZiVKOVICH, Monroeville, Pa., Math- ematics; CWENS, Tours Chm.; Kappa Mu Ep- silon, Sec; Who ' s Who; Galbreath Pres., Sec- Treas.; PSEA; Senate, Sec; Student Govern- ment; WRA; YWCA; Resident Assistant; Kap- pa Delta, Pres., V-Pres. ROBERT ZULANDT, New Brunswick, N.]., Phi Alpha Theta; Self-Study Program; Wash- ington Semester; Sigma N u. Woodrow V. Aaron Susan |. Allen Emily R. Annecillo Carol A. Aston John R. Bartee Junior junior Junior Junior Sophomore UNDERCLASSMEN Robert M. Blamick Junior David K. Burr Junior Mabel Jean Blews Sophomore David S. Byrd Junior Stephanie R. Boaeuf Sophomore Mary Beth Cochrane junior Robert L. Boyer junior M, Jean Courtwright junior Carolyn A. Bragg Sophomore Kathryn Cresswell Junior 202 203 Linda S. Henry Sophomore Charlene K. Holt Sophomore Sharon L. Karonias junior Martha E. Henry Sophomore Spencer D. Howell junior Christine Kendrick Sophomore Arlen R. Herb Sophomore Jan C. Jacobsen junior Karen G. Krull junior Carl J. Hohman Sophomore Patrick M. Kalenic Sophomore Deborah F. Kuhn junior Virginia K. Lake Sophomore M. Y. Fifi Lee Sophomore Douglas W. Lehrian Sophomore Mark B. Liesinger junior Patricia E. Lowry Sophomore Daniel A. Lugar junior Nancy ]. Markham junior Sharon A. Mathewson junior Donald K. McKim junior Linda D. Miley junior Melynie Murray Junior Debbie A. Olson junior Roxanne G. Patton Sophomore Jane L. Pizer Sophomore Mary Ann Prokop junior Joan E. Reimer junior Sandy Rorlson Freshman Phoebe Ruiz-Valera junior Frederick Sassin junior David Sarver Freshman 205 Marion M. Schmidt Sophomore Michael T. Shovlin Sophomore George A. Sinclair Sophomore Sandra S. Smith Junior Catherine A. Sterling Junior Marilyn K. Stiver Junior Carol L. Stone Junior Anne E. Strome Sophomore Robert J. Templer Sophomore Cheryl E. Thompson Junior Thomas A. Vallar Junior 207 208 - mi iiiit ' ' S3i - F rst Row, D. Bierbach, R. Hancox, S. Greenaway, J. LoBello, J. Pugh, 8. Beaver, C. McNamara; Second Row, F. Black- hurst, R. McKissick, M. Acerni, D. Grimm, J. Sansone, B. Matthews; Third Row, asst. coach J. Fusco, G. McNamara, R. Neel, D. West, R. Coles, J. Downey, C. Bennis; Fourth Row, M. Matthews, C. Martin, R. Valicenti, M. Dukovich, B. Cole; Fifth Row, asst. coach G. Nicholson, asst. coach H. Davis, M. Belich, L. Young, B. Fitts, C. McCaskey, D. Milliron. FOOTBALL Co-captain, Bill Beaver WON 6 2 LOST Westminster 44 15 Slippery Rock Marietta 8 14 Westminster Susquehanna 0 3 Westminster Westminster 45 25 Carnegie-Mellon Westminster 10 7 Mt. Union Westminster 23 0 Heidelberg Westminster 14 7 Waynesburg Westminster 46 0 Geneva 210 (■in ' «• 1 yi - J r. 1 7-35 F rsf Row, A. Tate, SJ. Becker, P. Johnston, A. B. Cochran, B. Power, M. Annarella; Second Row, M. Connoly, S. Vin- ceguerra, F. Tobias, J. Thompson, J. Ebersberger, J. McCaw, J. White; Third Row, C. Gallagher, M. Smith, K. Fassio, S Mcclester, J. Veres, equip, mgr. L. Ringbloom; Fourth Row, B. Barris, B. Sweterlitsch, B. Greenham, M. Peterson, S. Larson, mgr. J. Foreman; Fifth Row, R. Price, C. Garland, R. Bubb, C. Strawbridge, Head coach Dr. H. Burry; missing L. Wilson. High-scoring wins marked the ' 69 Titan football season despite two disappointing losses. The de- fensive squad deserves much of the credit al- though the offense stole the limelight with several spectacular plays. The two losses, to Marietta and Susquehanna however, were due to the inability of the Titan offense to maintain their drives. The Susquehanna game was particularly disappointing since it was lost in the last seconds. The offense more than made up these two games however, the rest of the year. The season began with an impressive victory over Slippery Rock. Returning quarterback, Dave Bier- back, connected with sophomore Dave Milliron in the first quarter and John Ebersberger booted the extra point to start the march. Then rookie halfback Roger Price dropped a pass into the waiting arms of Laroyal Wilson for the second Co-captain, Craig McNamara 211 touchdown. Other outstanding plays included the 29-yard dash for the end-zone oy the hard running Joe Veres and the dazzling 5Q-vard punt return TD by Chick Mathews, Chick agamscored in the fourth period on a pass from Skip Greena- way. Co-captains Bill Beaver and Craig Mc- Namara led the defense in holding the Rockets to fifteen points, as the offense spread its wings. Next weekend the Titan ' s wings were clipped as the Pioneers of Marietta handed the Titans a 14 to 8 on Memorial field. Twice in the first half, the offense marched powerfully toward the end-zone only to be stopped short of the goal. In the second quarter, Rich Hancox, defensive half-back, blocked a Marietta punt, recovering it for a two-point safety. Then, in the last quar- ter, the Titans again scored with a Bierbach- Wilson bomb. It was enough, however, even though the defense allowed Marietta only two touchdowns. Defense played another superb game against Susquehanna in which they held the Knights to less than 100 yards all game and allowed no touchdowns only to see the Titan offense consis- tently give up the football. Susquehanna ' s score came in the final 25 seconds of the last quarter when the Knight ' s one-armed place kicker booted a fifty-yard field goal to defeat the Titans 3 to 0. If anything was to break the hapless trend. Homecoming was it. Continuing Westminster ' s long tradition of homecoming victories, the Tartans of Carnegie-Mellon University became the Titan ' s twentieth consecutive victim, under Coach Burry. Defensive halfback Rich Hancox put Westminster on the scoreboard when he intercepted a CMU pass and raced 27 yards for a touchdown. In the second quarter, the Titans hit paydirt three more times. Joe Veres scored from the twelve-yard line and Bob Powers made a 40-yard touchdown run. Veres again scored to conclude the first half and the Titans led 28 to 0. In the third quarter Bill Beaver scored for the Westminster defensive team by recovering a CMU fumble in the end-zone. An interception by Mike Annarella set up a 21-yard pass from second string quarterback Skip Greenaway to halfback Roger Price. The Tartans managed to make the scoreboard the last quarter and the game ended 45 to 25. Mt. Union offered a hard fought, low-scoring battle which left the first half deadlocked at 7 to 7. The game was won in the second half when Craig McNamara booted a dramatic field goal — bouncing the ball on the cross bar be- fore it went over. The highlight of the Heidelberg game was Chick Mathews ' 77-yard punt-return touchdown. The real stars of the game, however, were the de- fensive members of the team. Bill Beaver, Art Tate, Craig McNamara, and Mike Annareiia formed the nucleaus of the tight Titan Defense, which held Heidelburg scoreless. Westminster defeated arch-enemy Waynesburg by a close score. The first Titan score was a one- yard plunge by Mark Acerni about half way through the first quarter. Waynesburg then tied the game in the second quarter. The game remained tied until the fourth quarter when, with 4:52 remaining, quarterback Dave Bierbach hit Joe Veres with a touchdown pass to give Westminster a 14 to 7 win. Waynesburg at- tempted to rally, but an interception by Fritz Tobias sealed the victory. Winning over Waynesburg put real spirit in the Titan squad and the Geneva game proved to be a real rout. Dave Bierbach and Mark Acerni both crossed the goal line in the first half but the real thrillers remained for the second half. Sprung by a block by John Pugh, Bob Power raced 40-yards for a score. Ned Becker then blocked a Geneva punt and took the pigskin in for a defensive TD. Defense starred again as Daryl West intercepted two Geneva aerials, both of which set up Titan touchdowns. Joe Veres plunged into the end-zone once again before the end of the game and the Titans went into the locker room to end the season with an impressive 46 to 0 victory. CROSS COUNTRY SENIORS Co-Captains, Bill Samuels and Ted Schumacher Bill Samuels Ted Schumacher WON 14 10 LOST Westminster 92 81 Alliance Westminster 73 67 Carnegie-Mellon Westminster 70 68 Waynesburg Youngstown 106 74 Westminster Syracuse 89 51 Westminster Central State 43 30 Westminster Westminster 63 61 Howard Cleveland State 75 66 Westminster Westminster 70 68 Washington and Jefferson Indiana State 70 51 Westminster Westminster 62 57 St. Vincent Youngstown 86 65 Westminster Pitt 74 71 Westminster Westminster 65 63 Carnegie-Mellon Westminster 60 55 Geneva Westminster 95 64 Slippery Rock Westminster 68 51 Gettysburg Westminster 100 85 St. Vincent Westminster 92 79 Waynesburg Westminster 91 83 Susquehanna Bucknell 82 66 Westminster Pitt 75 56 Westminster Westminster 90 87 Geneva California 77 60 Westminster 216 The Westminster Titan basketball team began their season with three close, but victorious ball- games, defeating Alliance, Carnegie-Mellon, and Waynesburg. Co-captain Ted Schumacher showed great improvement in rebounding. The majority of the team was built around under- classmen; returning lettermen Gary Brown, Scott Greenwood, Randy Huey, Tim Gribbin, and freshmen Tom Ritchey and Fred Rothen. The varsity team was troubled, however, with an assortment of bad shoulders, feet, hands, and ankles which contributed to two defeats from Youngstown and Syracuse. These problems were complicated by the unfortunate injury of Tom Tomczyk, who returned to action later in the season, and the tragic accident of Jim Barron, who was out the rest of the year. Second Semester basketball got off to a slow start, but the close game with Pitt seemed to create the spirit that was needed. Even though the Titans lost 71-74, Pitt coach Buzz RidI had nothing but praise for Coach Davis ' squad. The Titans then treated the fans to seven straight victories. The key figure in these victories was Gary Brown whose hot hand tipped the balance more than one night. The Titan streak was not, however, the work of Brown alone. Huey, Shoey, and Greenwood contributed more than their share and Fred Rothen showed great skill as a freshman. Despite two late season losses to Bucknell and Pitt, the Titans seemed to look in the direction of K.C. Maybe they were just looking the other way when they played California. VARSITY BASKETBALL Row One: T. Gribbin, S. Males, R. Huey, G. Brown, G. Rice, T. Tomczyk, D. Dudik; Row Two: C. Bell, T. Ritchey, F. Rothen, T. Schumacher, S. Greenwood, R. Ondako, Coach, H. Davis, Coach; Missing: B. Samuels, T. Parry, J. Barron. 217 Row One: C. Miller, B. Banner, J. Painter, G. Rice, H. Elerby, S. Males, D. Jones, V. Bell; Row Two: R. Ondako, Coach, L. Young, B. Cole, G. Schultz, J. Anderson, S. Pearson, B. Rote, H. Davis, ' Coac i. J. V. Basketball 219 Row One: T. Richardson, D. Staggard, B. Marshall, D. Douglas, J. Muirhead, J. Blewitt; Row Two: J. Hogue, B. Yingling, C. Acton, M. Wilson, T. Wilson, N. Becker, E. Nicholson, Coach. WRESTLING 220 SWIMMING WON 2 7 LOST Carnegie-Mellon 53 51 Westminster Slippery Rock 67 37 Westminster Westminster 55 49 Washington and Jefferson Indiana 57 47 Westminster Allegheny 63 41 Westminster Akron 63 40 Westminster Hiram 59 45 Westminster Clarion 65 37 Westminster Westminster 56 46 Thiel Still swimming in an intercollegiate bathtub, the Titan swimmers finished the 1969-1970 sea- son with a record of 2-7. With victories over Washington and Jefferson and Thiel, this year ' s Titans won more meets than the last four teams combined. Despite several disappointments, the teams continued to improve over the sea- son. This year ' s team included Freshman Dave Downing and Terry O ' Halleron in the freestyle events, and Scott Weaver in the breast stroke. Sophomore John Petre has developed into a fine backstroker, while Loch Hall has continued to win in the 200 and 100 freestyle. Juniors on the team include Tom Biythe, a breast stroker. Spencer Howell, in distance freestyle, and War- ren Risk in the butterfly and individual medley. Co-Captains for the team were senior Tom Kep- ple, a distance freestyler and Junior Dave Fuller who swam freestyle and individual medley. Freshman Ted Hendrickson and Sophomore Dave Clapperton were this year ' s divers, who performed well in every meet. The season ended with the Titans finishing in eighth place in the eleven-team Penn-Ohio Championship. Hall, Downing, O ' Halleron and Fuller led the team with a fourth in the free- style relay. Fuller added a 6th in the 50 free, and also 9th and 11th, while Hall scored an 8th and a 9th and John Petre placed 12th. With only co-captain Tom Kepple graduating, the team is looking forward to a winning sea- son in the future, and also, hopefully, to ade- quate facilities in the near future. 222 223 WON 4 2 LOST Westminster 74 71 Carnegie-Mellon Clarion 75 70 Westminster Westminster 102 43 Allegheny Westminster 82 62 Geneva Westminster 89 46 Waynesburg Indiana 98 46 Westminster Dist. 18 Cham p. Meet: 5th Place TRACK Row One: R. Matthews, M. Connolly, R. Brown, D. Dawson, L. Wilson, J. Sansone, D. Milliron, B. Johnston, R. Hancox, C. McNamara; Row Two: B. Greenham, D. Grimm, M. Matthews, L. Shafer, J. Hartman, J. Geisemann, J. McCaw, L. Mc- Millan, P. Roser; Row Three: E. Nicholson, Coach, C. Becker, B. Fitts, E. Sutton, L. McKean,T. Mapigan, P. Blose, J. Petre, W. Hamilton, J. Hartzell, W. Gabrys; Missing: B. Beaver. 224 225 GOLF 226 227 228 Row One: Vallar, Kispert, Veres, Super, Davis, Summers, Rose, Sheldon, Carter, Jones, Beatty; Row Two: Ondako, Coach, Ramsey, Dudik, Krout, Price, Holensworth, Huey, Bierbach, Morris, Christy, Asst. Coach; Missing: Weeks, Irvin. 229 Row One: D. Stewart, H. Dierks, J. Terry, W. Conk- lin, V. Barrett, D. Lee; Row Two: S. Ross, W. Sieck, W. Johnston, W. Clements, R. Metzler, M. Olson, Coach J. Fusco. WON 6 2 LOST Carnegie-Mellon 6 3 Westminster Westminster 8 1 St. Vincent Westminster 7 2 Waynesburg Westminster 6 3 Duquesne Westminster 9 0 Geneva Allegheny 5 4 Westminster Westminster 7 2 Youngstown Westminster 5 4 Pitt 230 TENNIS The Titan Tennis team made a fine showing this year under the very capable mentorship of Coach Joe Fusco. Steve Ross at number one position compiled the best record of 7-1 and would have had some tough compe- tition if freshman Wally Clements had been able to finish the season. The team ended the season with the N.A.I. A. Districts at Edinboro with a first in number one doubles and a near victory for Ross in number one singles. INTRAMURALS 2S2 233 The Mermaids Club consists of upperclass wo- men who are interested in water ballet. Tryouts are held in September and approximately 20 girls are invited to join the club. The club meets once a week — practicing, mak- ing their own costumes, perfecting stunts in the water and putting their routines to music. Their annual show was held in March. Following the theme Trip the Waves Fantastic the girls presented variations of dances from different countries. 234 237 TITANAIRES 238 239 240 ADS INDEX 241 X NTER ' S Compliments of Men ' s and Boys ' Wear ED and JERRY ' S SUNOCO Since 1906 New Wilmington, Pa. New Castle 652-5541 MORE THAN THE VERY BEST MIKE ISABELLA ' S RESTAURANT AND LOUNGE TROGGIO ' S Banquet Rooms Meeting Rooms 658-3755 Take out Foods 658-7455 U. 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Compliments of THE LANDMARK RESTAURANT COFFEE SHOP MCDONALD ' S is your kind of place. (T.M.) 2425 Wilmington Road New Wilmington, Pa. New Castle, Pa. THE CAMERA MART 224 East Washington Street NEW CASTLE, PA. everything photographic Compliments of THE SPORTING GOODS COMPANY INC. NEWCASTLE, PA. 658-2535 Your ideas may be as different as your fingerprints. When it comes to producing a yearbook, you want your ideas to dominate the scene. Delmar is turned on to what you want and ready to help you produce the most exciting yearbook you ' ve ever had. Turn on your imagination and contact Delmar today. DELMAR PRINTING COMPANY POST OFFICE BOX 12446 CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA 28211 A DIVISION OF REPUBLIC CORPORATION INDEX —A— Aaron, Woody — 202 Acerni, Mark — 210 Acheson, Dave — 169 Aaon, Craig — 88 Adams, Dr. Norman R. — 84 Adanti, Lee — 95 Ahlman, Jane — 105 Akerstrom, Sue — 71, 75, 95, 96, 180 Allen, Sue — 202 Alpha Gamma Delta — 148, 150 Alpha Psi Omega — 91 AlphaSigmaPhi — 130, 133 American Guild of Organists — 80 Anderson, John — 219 Anderson, Kathy — 94 Annarella, Mick — 211,212 Annecillo, Emily — 202 Apgar, Barb — 74 Argo— 118, 119 Aston, Carol — 73, 202 — B— Babcock, Marg — 71, 76, 169 Badal, James J. — 69 Bagg, Carol — 169 Bailie, Dave — 73 Baird, Linda Jeanne — 169 Baker, Sarah — 95, 96,169 Band — 126 Banner, Barry — 219 Barnes, John — 95 Barrett, Vail — 231 Barris, Brad — 211 Barron, Jim — 106 Barrow, Craig — 86, 107 Bartee,John — 75, 202 Baseball — 227-229 Basketball — 216-219 Beatty, Bob — 229 Beaver, Bill — 106, 173, 208, 210 Becker, Chris — 224 Becker, Ned — 169, 211, 220 Beckett, Charles — 76 Beezley, Ann — 86, 169 Belich,Milo — 210 Bell, Carl — 107, 217, 226 Bell, Valentino — 219 Bender, Joan — 80, 95, 109, 169 Bennis, Craig — 210 Bergey ' , Ronald P. — 62 Beshore, Lance — 96, 107, 109, 231 Beta Beta Beta — 86 Biberich, Walter — 75 Bierbach, Dave — 210, 213, 229 Bille, Nancy — 108 Bissonette, Kevin — 169 Blackburn, William- 53 Blackhurst, Fred — 210 Black Student Union — 110, 111 Blamick, Robert — 76, 202 Bleasby, Dr. George — 68 Blewitt, John — 220 Blews, Mabel Jean — 202 Blose, Pete — 224 Boaeuf, Stephanie — 92, 202 Boling, George — 86 Bolyard, William T. — 50 Bo nner, Tim — 92 Bothell, Judy — 113 Bothell, William A. — 59, 113 Bowman, Edie — 74, 94 Boyer, Robert — 202 Boyd, Alice — 169 Boyd, Robert C. — 169 Braden, Barb — 73, 108, 116, 170 Bragg, Carrie — 202 Bredland, Dr. Einar — 65 Brown, Christopher L. — 68 Brown, Gary — 217, 218 Brown, Ken — 170 Brown, Paul E. —76, 77 Brown, Rebecca — 73 Brown, William L. — 106, 170, 197 Brown, William R. — 170, 224 Bubb, Randy — 211 Buddington, Craig — 170 Bunner, Ann — 73 Burbick, Dr. William G. — 90 Burk, Jackie — 104 Burns, William W.— 73 Burr, Dave — 202 Burry, Dr. Harold E. — 81, 179, 211, 226 Bush, John E. — 73, 113 Byrd, Dave — 202 — c— Cameron, Sue — 170 Campbell, Randy — 122 Carlson, Dr. Earland I. — 43 Carter, Graham — 107, 229 Charles, Carolyn — 71 Cheerleaders — 236-237 Cheesman, Dave — 170 Chenevey, Paul R. — 78 Chi Omega — 151-154 Christy, Dr. Wayne H. — 82 Cifer, John — 170 Clapperton, Dave — 106 Cleis, Bill — 73 Clemens, Dr. George B. — 74 Clemens, Tom — 170 Clements, Wally — 230 Close,Cathy — 73,170 Cochran, Barry — 170, 171, 211, 213 Cochran, Bob — 76, 170 Cochrane, Mary Beth — 76, 202 Cockerille, Dr. Clara E. — 65 Cogley, Ann — 71 Cole, Bill- 219 Colton, David L. — 53 Comfry, Lynn — 172 Concert Choir — 125 Connolly, Mark — 211,224 Conway, George W. — 76 Cook, Dr. Charles H. — 69, 117 Copeland, Robert — 172 Coulter, Carolyn — 109, 168, 172 Courtwright, Jean — 76, 202 Crabb, Ann — 104 Crawford, Bill — 106, 172 Cresswell, Kathy — 17, 71, 202 Cross Country — 214-215 Cross, Kathy — 172 Culler, Sue — 16, 75, 105 Gulp, Robert — 74 Cummins, James A. — 75 Curry,John — 96, 107, 172 CWENS — 94 . -D- Dambach, Ed — 74, 76 Davidson, Tom — 95 Davies, Darrell — 173 Davis, Ed — 75 Davis, Harold — 81, 197, 210, 217, 219 Davis, Ron — 220 Davis, Susan — 173 Dawson, Don — 95, 224 DeBacker, Doug — 203 Debate — 92 DeHoog, Herman W. — 78 Dejoy, Dan — 96 Delta Phi Alpha — 74 Delta Zeta — 155-157 DeLuca, Kathy — 71,75 Demoise, Tom — 95 Devine, Judy — 203 Devlin, Elizabeth — 173 DeWitt, Dr. H. Dewey — 87 Dierks, Henry — 230 Disque, Laurel — 95, 96, 173 Dobi, Dave — 107, 173 Dodd, Cheryl — 71, 116, 123, 203 Dolton, Bill — 70, 118, 173 Donaldson, Jane — 71, 174 Douglas, Dave — 220 Douglas, Dr. Lawrence M. — 64 Downey, John — 210 Downs, Jim — 174 Draper, John — 84 Dudik, Duane — 106, 217, 229 Dukovich, Mitch — 210 Dundics, Laszio — 203 DuVernois, Kitty — 80 260 — E— Eakin, David — 117 Ebersberger, John — 211, 226 Eckrich, Greg — 92 Edinger, Susan — 174 Egy, Doug — 174, 84 Eisenhower, Sue — 94 Elder, Carolyn — 74 Elerby, Howard — 219 Ellis, Biz — 96, 174 Ellis, C. Ross — 51 Ellis, Janet — 71,75,174 Ellis, John — 203 Elwell,Ken — 174 Engle, Marcia — 95 Enquist, Kris — 16, 94 Eta Sigma Phi — 75 Ewing, jane — 76, 174 Ewing, M. Robert — 72 — F— Fassio, Ken — 211 Farmerie, Dr. Samuel A. — 66 Ferguson, Sue — 94, 105 Finnic, Debbie — 75 Fitts, Bill — 210, 224 Flath, Gretchen —86 Flint, Dick — 54, 70,116,175 Flout, Richard — 86 Football — 210-213 Ford, Linda — 75, 203 Foreman, jim — 211 Forjan, Terry — 203 Foster, Dave — 96, 106, 175 Fox, Dave — 175 Frazer, Shirley — 75, 175 Frazier, Ginny — 94 Freeburg, Wes — 226 Frey, Lucille B. — 86 Frey, Marion — 73, 75,175 Fuller, Dave — 76 Furnier, Doug — 106 Fusco, Joseph B. — 81, 190, 210, 231 — G— Gabrys, Ed — 224 Galbreath, John — 84 Calbreath, Robert F. — 66 Gallagher, Chuck — 211 Gallup, Dave — 175 Gardiner, Donna — 73, 84, 203 Garrison, Cathy — 94, 104 Gamble, W. Paul — 68 Garland, Chuck — 211 Geletka, Greg — 96, 176 Genger, Shelley — 76, 95, 176 George, Patricia — 71, 176 Gibb, Tom — 8, 203 Giddens, Dr. Thomas R. — 42 Giesmann, John — 95, 106, 117, 208, 224 Ginaven, John H. — 88, 113 Girvin, Galen — 96 Golf — 226 Gordon, OIlie — 176 Grant, Ralph — 176 Gray, Dr. David B. — 65 Gray, Kathy — 176 Greenaway, Skip — 107, 179, 210 Greenham, Bob — 211, 224 Greenwood, Scott — 107, 217 Gregory, Dr. Thomas M. — 82 Gribbin, Tim — 217 Grimm, Don — 106, 210, 212, 224 Grosvenor, Ellen — 73 Gunkler, Jean — 203 Gustafson, Susan — 177 — H— Flalchin, Jane — 74 Hall,Bonnie — 70, 116, 177 Hall, Jane — 76 Hall, Loch — 70, 119 Hamilton, Bill — 224 Hamilton, John — 95 Hamilton, Marion — 177 Hancox, Rich — 106, 210, 224 Harclerod, Don — 122 Harms, Dr. Clarence E. — 86 Hartman, Jim — 224 Hartzell,Jim — 224 Harvey, Pam — 74, 117 Heard, Linda — 76 Heckathorne, Bob — 177 Held, April — 77 Heilman, Nancy — 76 Helfrich,Tom — 178 Henderson, Jerome D. — 120 Henderson, Dr. Joseph R. — 64 Hendry, Dr. Richard A. —87 Henry, Linda — 123, 204 Henry, Martha — 204 Herb, Arlen — 204 Herrig, Rudolph — 74 Hershelman, Janet — 73 Herzog, Richard — 178 Hickman, Warren D. — 76, 77 Hild, Robert B. — 59 Hite, Tom — 76, 106 Hitner, Donna — 178 Hoagland, Judy — 178 Hogue, David — 80 Hogue, John — 107, 208, 220 Hohman, Carl — 204 Holcad — 116-117 Holden,Jim — 178 Holensworth, John — 229 Holt, Charlene — 204 Hooper, Mary — 178 Hoover, J. Edgar — 118 Hoovler, Marcia — 73, 178 Hopkins, Janet E. — 65 Hopkins, Dr. Joseph M. — 84 Hoppe, Louise — 178 Horn, Dr. Frederick D. — 55, 69 Hornung, Keith — 84, 178 Horvath, Sue — 179 Houk, Kathy — 108 Householder, Steacy — 179 Houts, Dr. Earl — 66 Howe, Sue — 75, 84, 179 Howell, Spencer — 204 Howitt, Rich — 92 Hren, Carol — 80 Huey, Randy — 217, 218, 229 Hutchinson, Matt — 75 — I — Ihrig, Dave — 76, 86,180 Ingiing, Linda — 86, 180 Ireland, Graham M. — 46 Ittner, Judy — 94 -J- Jablonski, Ed — 73, 180 Jackson, Rev. William N. — 47 Jacobsen, Jan — 108, 204 Jacobsen, Jared — 80 James, Dr. Nancy E. — 68, 123 Jensen, Dr. Arthur L. — 72 Johns, Susan — 76, 180 Johnson, Neil — 180 Johnston, Pat — 211,213 Johnston, Bill — 224, 230 Jones, Allen — 71 Jones, Daryll — 219, 229 Jones, John — 180 Joseph, Maura — 180 Judge, Larry A. — 52 — K— Kalenic, Pat — 204 Kantner, Helen — 80 Kappa Delta — 158-159 Kappa Delta Pi — 66 Kappa Mu Epsilon — 76 Karonias, Sharon — 204 Keck, Karin — 71, 123, 180 Keister, Kaye — 71, 75, 181 Kelley, Bob — 181 Kendrick, Christine — 204 Kennedy, Karl — 76, 96, 107, 181 Kennedy, Bill — 181 Kenworthy, Carol — 15 Kepple, Tom — 70, 118, 181 Kieser, Leatha — 80 King, Barb — 76 King, Bryce — 181 King, Dave — 181 Kirkbride, C. Dorothy — 78 Kispert, Pete — 229 261 Kitterman, Keith — 181 Knapp, Judy — 95,96 Knapp, Sam — 73 Knecht, Stuart — 95 Knodel, Dick — 84, 196 Knowlson, Kathleen — 109, 181 Kocher, Mabel C. — 55 Koenig, Nancy — 70, 116 Kovacs, Klara Mae — 84 Krickbaunn, Sarah — 109 Kro5ke,Val — 182 Krout, Wayne — 229 Krull, Karen — 204 Kuhn, Debbie — 204 — L— Lake, Gina — 204 Lamm, Donna — 80 Lammel,Earl C. — 90 Lammel, Kathleen — 71 Lamont, Bob — 92 Lang, Muff — 71, 182 Lanphear, Mary Clare — 116 Larson, Doris — 182 Larson, Steve — 211 Lauer, Bill — 70, 73, 117 Laughlin, Barb — 94 Laver, John — 226 Lawry, Dr. Jon S. — 69 Lee, Dan — 116, 231 Lee, Fifi — 189, 204 Lehrian, Doug — 204 Leibert, Linda — 86, 96, 182 Leighbody, John — 182 Leonard, Art — 73 Lewis, Dr. Phillip A. — 44 Liesinger, Mark — 204 LoBello, Joe — 210 Loch, Nancy Jean — 76, 182 Long, Dr. Kenneth — 87 Loucks, Dan — 208, 226 Loudon,John — 85, 182 Lowry, Pat — 92, 205 Lugar, Dan — 107, 205 — M— Macgill,Marie — 70, 119 Madigan, Terry — 224 Majewski, Donna — 76, 183 Malandra, Lou — 106 Males, Sam — 217, 219 Mamajek, Ron — 76 Mansell, Lucille — 49 Markham, Nancy — 16, 205 Martin, Dr. Clarence J. — 78 Martin, Cliff — 210 Marshall, Bill — 220 Mason, Mary Jane — 183 Masquers — 91 Mathews, Bob — 210, 224 Mathews, Marlin — 210, 224 Mathewson, Sharon — 74, 205 McCandless, Dr. J. Bardarah — 84 McCann, Carol— 71,108 McCaskey, Charles — 210 McCaw, Joe — 211,224 McClester, Scott — 76, 211 McFarland, Carolyn — 74 McFarland, Sherrie — 94 McGill,Kathy — 183 McGrath, Tom — 71, 85, 96, 183 McKean, Larry — 224 McKee, Dr. Delber L. — 72 McKee, Richard — 86 McKenzie, Keith — 116, 197 McKim,Don — 85, 205 McKissick, Ted — 210 McMahon, Kathy — 183 McMillan, Larry — 224 McNamara, Craig — 185, 197, 210, 224 McNamara, Gene — 9, 210 McParland, Martie — 109 McWilliams, Jim — 119 Means, Sara — 75, 105, 185 Melius, Steve — 73, 85, 185 Mellott, Paula — 86, 109 Mermaids — 234-235 Metzler, Roger — 76, 107, 231 Meyer, Carl — 117 Meyer, Wendy — 109 Miele, Nancy — 74 Milam, Dr. Robert L. — 63 Miley, Linda — 205 Miller, Charlie — 219 Miller, Jim — 168 Miller, John — 185 Miller, Dr. L. Jerold — 65 Milliron, Dave — 210, 224 Minnerly, Barb — 76 MiscaII,Marcia — 85, 109 Miwa, Yoshi — 121 Mizer, Karia — 74 Moore, Margie — 95 Morgan, Jan — 73 Moreland, Mary — 105 Morris,Jeff — 185 Morris, Ron — 107, 229 Mortarboard — 94 Mu Delta Epsilon — 85 Muirhead, Jeff — 220 Mu Phi Epsilon — 80 Murphy, George L. — 88 Murray, Melynie — 205 Myers, Kathy — 94 Myers, Lois — 71 Myers, Mary Jo — 185 — N— Nealelgh, Dr. Thomas R. — 76 Nebel,Tom — 95 Neil, Harry — 210 Neghiu, John — 185 Nemec, Charlene — 109, 185 New Wilming-Ten — 127 Nicholson, B. Eugene — 81, 210, 220, 224 Noble, Audrey — 74, 105, 109 — o— Ocock, Raymond H. — 78 Oestreich, Nelson E. — 58 Offutt, Kathy — 73 O ' Hara, Mary Ellen — 185 Olson, Debbie — 205 Olson, Mike — 199, 231 Olson, Pat — 185 Omega Delta Epsilon — 63 Ondako, Raymond K. — 81, 217, 219, 229 Owen,Jim — 96, 186 — P— Pace, Donald — 50 Painter, Jim — 219 Pakulski, Bill — 186 Palmer, Doug — 186 Papenhausen, Phil — 76 Parish, Nancy — 94 Parsons, Gary — 73, 186 Partlow, Maralyn — 16 Patterson, Pearle — 75 Patton, Roxanne — 205 Patton, Sheryl — 186 Peabody, Dr. Ada I. — 78 Peacelnc — 112-114 Pearson, Steve — 219 Peck, J. Miller — 76, 77,85 Pendleton, Dr. Lawson A. — 72 Perrin, Dan — 95 Perris, Patricia — 104 Pershing,Barb — 76, 186 Peterson, Marshall — 211 Petre, John — 224 Petreila, Dave — 226 Pfischner, Denise — 94 Phi Alpha Theta — 73 Phi Kappa Tau — 134-137 Phi Mu — 160-161 Phi Mu Alpha — 80 Phi Sigma Tau — 83 Pi Delta Epsilon — 70 Pierce, Diane — 186 Pilkey, Barb — 186 Pizer, Jane — 205 Pontius, Brian — 76 Poole, Suzanne — 186 Power, Bob — 187, 211 Pressler, John — 75 Price, Roger — 211,229 Prokop, Mary Ann — 205 Pry, Dr. Harry C. — 65 PSEA — 67 Psi Chi — 67 262 Pugh, John — 198, 210 Sells, Larry F. — 68 Templar, Bob — 117, 206 Senate — 104-105 Tennis — 230-231 Sepik, Greg — 86 Terry, Jim — 230 Servoss, Mike — 189 Thanes — 95 Radaker, Dr. Leon D. — 65 Sewall, Dr. James K. — 74 Theta Chi — 143-145 Ramsey, Dick — 106, 229 Sieck, Bill — 230 Thompson, Cheryl — 206 Reid, Dr. Isaac E. — 78 Sigma Delta Pi — 74 Thompson, Jim — 190 Reimer, Joan — 205 Sigma Kappa — 162-163 Thompson, John — 211 Rhodes, Anne — 187 Sigma Nu — 138-140 Timko, Linda — 71,190 Rhoton, Dr. Verl D. — 86 Sigma Phi Epsilon — 141-142 Titanaires — 238-239 Rice,Cary — 187,217, 219 Shafer, Larry — 224 Toad, Charles — 73 Richardson, Tom — 95 Sheakley, Allen- 189 Tobias, Fritz — 211 RidI, Betsy — 95,96, 104, 187 Shear, Sue — 94 Tobin, Edwin G. — 49 Ries, Judy — 104 Sheldon, Rick — 229 Tomczyk, Tom — 76, 96, 192, 216, 217 Riley, Peggy — 80 Shelenberger, Don — 73 Track — 224-225 Ringbloom, Sr., Lyman — 208, 211 Shelley, Lenore — 96, 108, 189 Trivoli, Dr. George W. — 63 Rissler, Judy — 75, 108 Shilling, April — 189 Turner, Dr. J. Hilton — 75 Ritchey, Tom — 217 Shipman, Rob — 120 Rockhill, Joyce — 108 Short, Lynne — 109, 189 — u— Rodeheaver, Francis — 56 Shoup, Harry W. — 52 Rohr, Scott — 113 Shoup, Terry — 122, 189 Uhler, Kaye — 190 Rogers, Dr. jack B. — 45, 82 Shovlin, Mike — 206 Romesburg, Nancy — 86, 187 Sibbett, Lorraine — 47, 94, 105 V Rorison, Sandy — 205 Sinclair, George — 206 Rose, Tim — 229 Slack, Dr. Walter H. — 73 Vallar, Tom — 76, 206, 229 Roser, Paul — 224 Smith, Adam — 54, 116 Valicenti, Tony — 210 Ross, Steve — 75, 230 Smith, Carol — 75 Velez, Marina — 74 Rote, Bill — 219 Smith, Debbie — 8, 190 Veres, Joe — 9, 208, 211, 213, 229 Rothen, Fred — 217 Smith, Dr. Elizabeth W. — 86 Vesper Choir — 124 Rowbotham, Art — 92, 96, 106, 187 Smith, Kathy — 16 Vinciguerra, Steve — 73, 211 Rowland, Steve — 187 Smith, Marvin — 211 Rowley, Annette — 187 Smith, Sabra — 96 — w — Rudge, Charles — 187 Smith, Sandie — 73, 109, 206 Ruiz-Valera, Phoebe — 73, 205 Snyder, Phyllis — 190 Wagstaff, Sarah — 70, 120, 207 Russell, Gary — 226 South, Marilyn — 73, 74, 206 Walker, Betty — 190 Ruth, Caria — 76, 95 Sprague, John — 190 Walker, Marjorie A. — 81 Ryan, Patricia — 86 Staggard, Don — 220 Wallace, Betsy — 190 — s— Stanley, Laraine — 190 Wallace, Carol — 207 Sterling, Cathy — 206 Wallace, Terry-Howard — 69 Samuels, Bill — 189,216 Sternberg, G. Alan — 53 Wallover, Sue — 207 Sandeen, Julie — 95, 96, 109, 188 Stewart, Dave — 230 Walls, Dave — 207 Sands, James D. — 51 Stewart, Dr. Howard S. — 49 Walton, Diane — 95, 190 Sansone, Jon — 54, 210, 224 Stiver, Marilyn — 74, 108, 206 Warner, Joann — 190 Sarver, Dave — 205 Stockton, Patricia — 105 Warrick, Dr. Percy — 87 Sassin, Fred — 205 Stone, Carol — 71, 109, 206 Watson, Bob — 193 Satterfield, Linda — 109 Stone, John — 48 Watson, T. Dana — 96, 107 Sayers, Martin — 121, 188 Stover, Marc — 107 Watt, Skip — 226 Saylor, Bill — 116 Stranahan,Pat — 73, 109 Weale, Fay — 207 Scheid, Walter E. — 91,92 Strattan, Richard — 80 Weaver, Marlaine — 190 Schell, Ed —80 Strawbridge, Craig — 211 Weaver, Lunda — 80 Schmidt, Marion — 74, 94, 104, 206 Strome, Ann — 80, 206 Webb, Susan P. — 74 Schoenhard, Barb — 85 Student Government — 98-103 Weber, Mary — 85, 190 Schoenhard, Carol A. — 78 Summers, Lynn — 229 Weeks, Jeff — 190 Schomer, Dan — 85 Super, Rick — 229 Weingartner, Tom — 190 Schreiner, Marty — 96, 188 Sutton, Eric — 224 Weiser, Conrad — 86 Schulte,Cayle — 71,188 Swanhart, Dr. Harry G. — 72 West, Darryl — 95, 210 Schultz, Greg — 219 Sweterlitsch, Bill — 211 Westover, Dr. Leone M. — 91 Schumacher, Ted — 168, 188, 216, 217, 218 Swimming — 221-223 Whipkey, Dr. Kenneth L. — 76-77 Scolere, Laurel — 86 Whipple, Dave — 121 Scrawl — 123 — T— White, Joe — 211 Scroll — 71 Whiting, Marsha — 192 Sellman, Ruth — 189 Tate, Art — 190, 211 Who ' s Who — 96 263 Wigand,Ron — 76, 192 Williams, Carol — 192 Williams, Harry — 192 Williams, Maryjane — 192 Williamson, Elaine — 192 Wiilman, Ken — 116 Wilson, Jackie — 80 Wilson, John — 80 Wilson, Judy — 193 Wilson, LaRoyal — 96, 193, 208, 224 Wilson, Mark — 220 Wilson,Scott — 76, 199 Wilson, Tom — 220 Wissolick, Sue — 94 WKPS — 120-122 Wohltmann, Wendy — 108 Woicott, Dr. Roger — 73 Women ' s Basketball — 240 Woods, Dr. Robert M. — 88 WOW — 115 Wrestling — 220 Wright, John — 106 — Y— Yingling, Bruce — 220 Youdas,Jim — 86, 107 Young, Ed —76, 193 Young, Lester — 210, 219 — z— Zeevalk, Nancy — 108 Zehr, Dr. Floyd — 88 Zeta Tau Alpha — 164-165 Zimmerman, Sandra — 193 Zivkovich, JoAnn — 76, 96, 193 Zulandt, Robert — 73 Argo 1970 Staff EDITOR William Doiton ADVISOR Christopher L. Brown BUSINESS MANAGER Tom Kepple PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR Loch Hall Photographs Loch Hall Mike Rhodes Dark Room Loch Hall Jeff Hodes PRODUCTION MANAGER Sarah Wagstaff Layouts Donna Bodner Pat Kalenic Sue Dunham COPY EDITOR Marie Macgill Copy. Staff Lawrence McErlean Margy Hargrave Typing Mary Jane Doiton Sports Writer Jeff Weeks Contributors: Sue Heilman, Kathy Myers, Sue Kolderup, Kathy DeLuca, Greg Eckritch, Dick Knodel, Keith Hornung, Galen Girvin, Ellen Grosvenor, Bill Samuels, Sherry Dodd, Barry Poglein, Maralyn Yanda, Sue Akerstrom, Tony Ruzzo, Sydney Lauer, Tom Tomczyk, Stuart Knecht, Warren Risk, Barb Pilkey, Sharon Math- ewson, Jane Donaldson, Sue Eisenhower, Betsy RidI, Tom Kepple, Carl Praete, Bill Sieck 264


Suggestions in the Westminster College - Argo Yearbook (New Wilmington, PA) collection:

Westminster College - Argo Yearbook (New Wilmington, PA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

Westminster College - Argo Yearbook (New Wilmington, PA) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Westminster College - Argo Yearbook (New Wilmington, PA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

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Westminster College - Argo Yearbook (New Wilmington, PA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

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Westminster College - Argo Yearbook (New Wilmington, PA) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

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Westminster College - Argo Yearbook (New Wilmington, PA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

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