A\ i
7
D ^
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2010 with funding from
Lyrasis IVIembers and Sloan Foundation
http://www.archive.org/details/epitomeyearbook177lehi
EPITOME
1953
•\,
-SW
Nv,;
Hit'
..^M
f-!WJ
EPITOME
10 5 3
published by the Senior Class
Lehigh University
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
ROBERT E. LINCK
Editor- in - Chief
RALPH N. MEERWARTH
Business Manager
Dedication
The Lehigh men in the service of their conntry, are typified by
George Anthony LaSasso, Lehigh 50. 1st Lieutenant in the United
States Marines, and holder of the Bronze Star with "V" cluster. While
at Lehigh, he devoted much of his lioundless energy to activities repre-
senting the University; while serving his country, he gave his all. It
was with deep sorrow that Lehigh University learned of the death of
George Anthony LaSasso on October 14. 1952.
With sincere gratitude and appreciation of his great sacrifice we
dedicate to George Anthony LaSasso, and the many others he exempli-
fies, the 1953 Epitome.
'53 In Review
At last we have reached that point in our
lives toward which we have ever been looking.
There is a certain magic in being at this stage
of a complete metamorphosis, in which we turn
from the years of training to the years of prac-
tice. Now recorded in experience are the events
of college life in toto — the parties and dances,
the work, and the fellowship, which added to-
gether will forever mark us as being college men.
Though we realize that commencement is really
the beginning of life and not the end. still it
marks the closing of a comparatively carefree
life that was both work and fun.
For the last time in our career at Lehigh
we watched with amusement the influx of be-
wildered freshmen in September, which never
failed to recall our seemingly remote experiences
of Freshman Week. The frosh appeared to be
as lively as ever and a few weeks found Cyanide
and Arcadia issuing stern reprimands to the non-
wearers of dinks, notwithstanding the smooth
orientation program carried on by those organi-
zations.
Chaplain Bean's resignation early in the
Fall announced the loss of a real friend, who
had helped many of us solve some perplexing
problems while struggling toward graduation.
Back again on the campus after a tour of dvity
with the U. S. Navy was another old acquaintance,
Byron C. Hayes, this time acting as associate dean
of students.
Lamberton Hall, sporting a new coat of
paint, dinner music, and new cooking equipment,
was in the news again when I. D. C. began spon-
soring feature movies there over the weekends.
Both Taylor and Price Hall showed startling im-
provement after being remodeled during the
Sunnner, but this will never erase our lasting
memory of them as they were in previous years.
Plans for the building to house the world's
largest vertical universal testing machine were
announced ]>y President Martin D. Whitaker.
The seven story building, to be located south
of Fritz lab, will also house five laboratories in
addition to the testing machine.
Our senior year, after the fashion of all sen-
ior years, was overflowing with social events. Our
first thought, of course, goes to the two House-
parties, those two "tremendous smashes" which
everyone enjoyed to the utmost, even though
Uncle Sam dampened spirits by taxing the
seniors' hard-earned money. After spending
weeks conjuring and building displays portray-
ing the Lafayette football team undergoing var-
ious misfortunes, how could we forget Lafayette
Weekend? The Beta's won with their crossword
puzzle which read "It's no puzzle. Lehigh spells
defeat for Lafayette " and the football team,
obeying the command, trampled our rivals 14-7.
Less successful were the freshmen, who used
huge quantities of kerosene to supplement their
pep rally bonfire in the face of pouring rain.
An innovation in dances held at Lehigh was
the series of Dink Hops, held in Grace Hall,
and sponsored by the frosh cabinet principally
for the dorm freshmen.
Campaigning, better known as "politick-
ing," was more evident than ever on the campus,
undoubtedly sparked by the national elections.
Both Eisenhower and Stevenson factions were
well represented, with the "Ike" forces being
victorious in the campus election. This result
resubstantiated the old maxim, "As Lehigh goes,
so goes the nation." Prospective Arcadians cam-
paigned with equal vigor, not at all hampered
by the new ruling that posters be tied, not
tacked, to our South Mountain timber.
One of Arcadia's most popular achieve-
ments was the installation of a television set in
Drown Hall. The top floor now acquires new
life whenever a McCarthy investigation or base-
ball game appears on the screen.
'~'i>
r:
M*:
v«i
IKf
V^
'>*^^r^
^*^^-%^^<^l^,^i^*
v^"^^^, .;rii^^?
Lehigh's administrative backfield called
several new plays this year. One was the cnnivila-
tive demerit system which went into action for
the first time in the Fall of 1952, whereby the
student knew exactly the depth of the hot water
he was in. Because of the introduction of a
super-system of registration, all upperclassmen
could register in one day, and the familiar "form-
filling-out" type of writer's cramp was reduced
to a minimum. "Valentine Day" was a Lehigh
function that was not changed however, for on the
fated day of the first semester, one hundred thirty-
three of the pink greetings were handed out.
Lehigh welcomed its thirtieth national fra-
ternity when Rho Eta, the local fraternity, be-
came a chapter of Delta Chi and moved into
the Palmer residence on campus.
Throughout the year we enjoyed the great
performances given by Mustard and Cheese. Be-
ginning with "Caesar and Cleopatra," the thes-
pians did a good job on all their selections, which
also included "Murder In The Cathedral," and
"The Rivals." The last mentioned play was inte-
grated into the festivities of Greek weekend,
which, along with the pledge banquet, the pro-
gram at the Maennerchor, and the Monte Carlo
dance, provided one of the outstanding week-
ends of the year.
The Student Concert-Lecture series as usual
brought a fine group of performers to Lehigh
University. Our old friend Dr. Polgar was one
of the most talked-about; for a few days after
his act it seemed that everyone had become an
amateur hypnotist, and good subjects were at
a premium.
Returning alumni would scarcely recognize
the Brown and White. Throwing caution to the
winds, the staff changed printers and came forth
with an entirely new appearance, producing a
circulation jump of undetermined thousands.
The Placement Bureau has been doing an
excellent job of finding both full time and sum-
HUM- tM)ii)l()ynient for Lehigh men. and reported
a suhstaiitial increase in the number ot companies
desiring to interview at Lehigli. The nundjer of
seniors going into industry has l)een decreased,
however, bv the uncertain situation of world
affairs, which has induced many men to join
the ROTC or AFROTC programs^ swelling them
to capacity.
These were some of the events that ''made
the headlines" during our last year at Lehigh.
We realize, however, that they constitute only
a lattice-work which is filled with the really
memorable personal experiences which occurred
at Lehigh. It is our hope that when tlie incidents
mentioned here are reviewed in the future, they
mav serve to reconstruct our college days.
»^
'V / / ! ^
/y
^*$^<i
I SSfl"
tS fK SIB
I nun
'tis"
^V'
"li.
■\iM
K^
■4^
^J.«IV
Ut
\. .V
0^*
^
■••'l^'-^l
rx.
■'^^
\
^/
^■i.'
>*.
5 V/
■r^:
^. :*
A.
T^^ni
iP
':^^
^J
^-^1
;-r'.--«<s..
Adiiiiiiistration
Board of Trustees
Corporate Members
Eugene Gifford Grace, E.E., Eng.D., LL.D., Litt.D., D.C.S.
Frank William Sterrett, A.B., B.D., D.D., LL.D.
Earle Frederick Johnson, C.E., Eng.D. . . . .
Robert Edwin McMath, A.B., LL.B
Andrew Edward Buchanan, Jr., Ch.E., Eng.D.
Alfred VanSant Bodine, M.E., Eng.D., . . . .
William Lawrence Estes, Jr., B.A., M.D., Sc.D.
Stewart Joseph Cort, El. Met., Eng.D
Theophil Herbert Mueller, A.B., B.D., M.A., LL.D.
Nevin Elwell Funk, E.E., Eng.D
Bethlehem, Pa.
Bethlehem, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Bethlehem, Pa.
Wilmington, Del.
Bridgeport, Conn.
Bethlehem, Pa.
Bethlehem, Pa.
New York, N. .Y.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Members Elected by Alumni
Clifford Franklin Lincoln, C.E.
Class of 1911
George Raleigh Brothers, B.A., C.E.
Class of 1908
Monroe Jackson Rathbone, Ch.E.
Class of 1921
Alfred Slack OsBourne, M.E. ...
Class of 1910
Leonard Mead Horton, B.S. in Bus. Adm.
Class of 1928
Edward Aloysius Curtis, B.S. in Bus.Adm., LL.B.
Class of 1926
. Philadelphia, Pa.
Term Expires 1953
Ware Neck, Va.
Term Expires 1954
. New York, N. Y.
Term Expires 1955
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Term Expires 1956
New York, N. Y.
Term Expires 1957
Newark, N. J.
Term Expires 1958
14
Martin D. Whitaker, A.B., M.A., Ph.D., LL.D., Sc.D.
President
15
I ice-President
¥.. Kenneth Smiley
Deans of Students
Wray H. Concdon
J. D. Leith
Byron C. Hayes
Registrar
James H. Wagner
Assistant to the President
Pall J. Franz, Jr.
Institute of Research
Preston Parr
Harvey A. Xemlle
17
Office of the Treasurer
Karl L. Werkheiser, Elmer W. Click, Donald W. Schmoyer,
Stanley F. Heffner, John W. Maxwell
Health Service
Carl O. Keck, Ralph E. Miller, Mary C. Ryan, Ann C. Pecuch,
James P. Mathews, Ruth M. Vogel, Cecilia F. Herbener
18
Librarian
James D. Mack
Public Relations
Placement, Counseling, and Testing Services
Frank V. Palevicz. Fred G. Armstrong. Harry T. Hah>. Everett A. Teal
Robert F. Herrick, Lucile L. Barrett, Ethel H. Risbon, Charles J. Moravec, A. F. Bodner,
Angus M. Rees
19
Alumni Association
Robert A. Harrier. George F. A. Stutz
Buildings and Grounds
Edward J. Farrell, Andrew W. Litzenbercer
Admissions Office
S. H. Missimer
J. W. McGeady
Mrs. Pauline Collins
C. A. Seidle, Director
Miss Marlene Owens
20
Economics and Sociology
First Row:
Richard M. Davis. Max D. Snider, Sherwood G. Walters, Herbert M. Diamond
Second Roif:
Frank J. Velesz. Anthony J. Bryski, John E. Jacobi
Third Roii::
Herbert W. Fraser. John J. Hughes, Robert A. Battis, Finn B. Jensen
Accounting
Roy B. Cowin, Alfred P. Koch, Russell A. Altenberger, Elmer C. Bratt. Lolis M. Lettieri,
Carl E. Allen. Raymond G. O'Neill
21
Finance
Harvey D. Hotchkiss
Frederick A. Bradford
Finn B. Jensen
Leon E. Krouse
Biology
First Row:
Marjorie M. Nemes, Hope T. M. Ritter,
Stanley J. Thomas, Bradford B. Owen
Second Row:
John P. Thomas, Basil W. Parker, Francis
J. Trembley
Geology
First Row:
James R. Randolph, Richard A. Wilkens,
Gerald D. O'Brien, John P. Trexler
Second Row:
John D. Ryan, George R. Jenkins, Bradford
Willard, Hugh R. Gault, Lawrence Whit-
comb
22
German
h\ns k. schcchard
Marion C. Lazenby,
K..!;kkt p. More
liiHv S. Tbemper
Fine Arts
Hans K. Schcchard
Francis J. Quikk
PsYchoIosv
First Row:
James L. Graham, Adelbert Ford, TTil-
UAM L. jE>-KrNS
Second Roic:
Nathan B. Gross, F. C. J. McGcrk,
Ambrose C. Karkowski
Third Roic:
Robert F. Shoaf, Donald A. Topiul-
LER, Alfred C. Feickert
23
Music
George L. Gansz, Robert A. Boudreau
Classical Languages
Earl L. Crum, Joseph A. Maurer
Education
Seated :
Frank V. Palevicz, Harold P. Thomas, Joseph G. Newlin
Standing :
Robert A. Bream, Robert B. Norris, Fred G. Armstrong, Harry T. Hahn, A. Gordon
Peterkin
24
History and GoLemment
First Row:
George "S". Kyte, John M. Haicht, Ernst B. Schilz
Second Roic:
William A. Aiken, George D. Harmon. Lloyd C. Taylor, Richard W. Taylor, Rocco
J. Tresolini, John P. Stew.\rt, Raymond G. Cowherd
English
First Roiv:
Albert E. Hartunc, Jack R. Brownfield, Minotte M. Chatfield, J. Blrke Severs, J.
Allen Bowers, Ernest X. Dilworth. Albert A. Rights
Second Row:
Robert L. Zimmerman, Joseph B. McFadden, Walton H. Hutchins, Klaus Halm, Carl
F. Strauch, Dwight L. Freshley, Frank S. Hook, Cloyd M. Criswell. Glenn J.
Christensen
Third Row:
John A. Hertz, C. Harry Domm, Ephraim B. Everitt, Louis F. Thompson, H. B.arrett
Dams. Edgar H. Riley. Ray L. Armstrong, S. Blaine Ewing. Lloyd E. Kaiser
25
Romance Languages
HeiN'ri R. Chalos
Allen J. Barthold
Georoe D. Farne
Herbert E. Isar
Rafael A. Soto
Mathematics and Astronomy
First Row:
George F. Feeman, Voris V. Latshaw, Lloyd L. Smail. George E. Raynor, Jacob Samoloff,
Ralph N. Van Arnam, Frank S. Beale
Second Roiv:
Chester B. Sensenig, Samuel Schecter, Felix Haas, Albert Wilansky, Samuel I.
Goldberg, Clarence A. Shook, Samuel Goldberg
Third Row:
Robert R. Stoll, Howard H. Wicke, Edward H. Cutler, Benjamin C. Kenny, Hubert
H. Snyder
26
Chemistry
First Row:
Albert C. Zettlemover,
\5 ARREN W. Ewi.NC, Earl
J. Serfass, Harold V. An-
derson. Edward D. Am-
STLTZ
Second Row:
WrLLL\M C. \^ALKER, RaF-
FAELE F. MuRACA, NeLSO.N
R. Easton, Richard N.
Rhoda, Frank H. He^^ley,
Frank J. Fornoff, Robert
D. BiLLINGER, VeLMER B.
Fish
Third Row:
George E. Schmalch, Rob-
ert M. Keath, Charles A.
Blood. Herman E. Col-
UER, Glenn I. Post, Rob-
ert R. Fr.\ble, Leonard P.
SUFFREDINI, StLART S.
Kl'lp, Robert J. Petfield,
C. Austin Buck. Charles
H. Herty. in. Emmett S.
Jacobs
Physics
First Row:
Eluott \r. Cheney', James M. Hyatt, Wilbur D. B
Sp.atz, Paul L. Bayxey', Frank E. Meyers
Second Row:
Raymond B. Sawyter, Cassius W. Clutis, Donald
Wheeler. Ernest F. Costello
Third Row:
Merle M. Ir^tne, Peter Havas, Jack E. Chatelain,
Raymond J. Emrich
Fourth Row:
Allen H. Meitzler, Williayi C. Schie\"e, Eluott P,
^'ALKE^BL^^c, Vincent 0. Altemose, Albert C. Wil-
liams. Robert L. Peterson
Fifth Row:
Edwin L. ^'ois.ard, Erxest G. Fontheim, Herbert L
Hoover, Jay S. Chtvtas, Stanley F. Smith
27
Chemical Engineering
Charles W. Simmopss, Leonard A. Wenzel, Louis Maus, Jr., Alan S. Foust, Madan L. Khullar
Civil Engineering and Mechanics
First Row:
William B. Clement, Merton' 0. Fuller, Howard S. Strausser, Hale Sutherland, William
J. Eney, Robert B. Kleinschmidt, George C. Driscoll, Samuel J. Errera, Edgar K.
MUHLHAUSEN
Second Row:
Albert DeNeufville, Knud-Endre Knudsen, Lynn S. Beedle, Murray B. McPherson,
Alexis N. Smislova, Gysbert J. Mostert, V. A. FoRss, E. Russell Johnston, Raymond
H. Snyder, Cyril D. Jensen
Third Row:
William J. Brown, Howard J. McCrodden, Carson F. Diefenderfer, Edward G. Russ,
Roger E. Kolm, Frederick W. Schutz, Jr., J. W. McNabb, Ferdinand P. Beer. Bruno
Thurlimann
28
Electrical Engineeritig
Howard D. Grueer, Joseph Texo, Loyal V. Bewley. John J. Karakash,
Archie R. Miller, Howard T. MacFarland
Industrial Engineering
Dale S. Beach
Arthur F. Gould
William J. Richardson
Robert E. Heiland
Frank H. Hughes
29
Mining Engineering
Robert T. Gallagher
Arthur W. Brune
Mechanical Engineering
First Row:
Joseph V. Fedor, John B. Arnaiz, Thomas E.
JACKso^', WiLLLAM G. Harrach, James V. D.
Eppes
Second Row:
Thomas S. Eichelberger, Theodore A. Terry,
David M. Parke, James B. Hartman
Third Row:
Russell E. Benner, Milton C. Stuart
Intercollegiate Athletics
and Physical Education
First Row:
Fay C. Bartlett, William Sheridan, Gerald G. Leeman, Michael T. Cooley, William
G. Whitton, David Dockham, Anthony Packer
Second Row:
E. A. Havach, William Christian, William B. Leckonby, Percy L. Sadler, Paul E. Short
30
Ait Science and Tactics
Seated :
Capt. HAnoLD Hendler, Major Philip B. TVoodroofe, Lt. Col. Ralph A. Xewma>, Capt. Julian W. Bradbury, Capt. Francis J. Hasek
Standing:
Sergeants John Bereznak, Robert W. Wilson, Willlam G. Howey, Richard J. Vlaun, Lt. Col. Charles K. Baker, Jr.. Capt. Harold
L. Naylor, Serge-\nts Daniel W. Kemmerling, Raymond A. Cr-^wford, Stanley Mick, Richard W. Th.\ircen
Military Science and Tactics
First Row:
Warrant Officer Russell V. Wall. Capt. John H. Raffebty, Major John H. Harkins, Lt. Col. Cecides V. B.\iiberis, Major W.alter
P. CuMEiE, Capt. Paul B. Walter
Second Roiv:
Sergeants Maurice L. Duran, James R. Jones. Robert Reed. Robert C. Cooley
II
*M8li»*ff*'
>
V
Seniors
Class of 1953
The Class of 1953 was like a new born babe when it ar-
rived at South Mountain in September, 1949. It was bewildered,
eager, and had much to learn. However, by the end of Fresh-
men Week the group was adjusting to the transition of being
molded into men of Lehigh.
The freshmen year had many rewards. Fifty-three strong-
armed Frosh earned the class the right to abandon their dinks
by out-tugging the yearlings of Lafayette. The belles of nearby
colleges were soon aware of our presence as we plunged into the
social whirls of college life. The endless hours of acquiring
knowledge also left its impression on us.
As sophomores we were in the childhood of our college
careers. With this growth we shouldered more responsibilities.
We searched for new fields to apply our energies and founded
them in the various sports, clubs, and activities of the Llniver-
sity. The Snowball was the highlight of our social season.
The restlessness of teens was apparent as we returned for
our junior year. With endless energy we sponsored movies, held
smokers, and organized a picnic. In addition our class for first
time in recent years staged the spring houseparty. The financial
reward compensated us well for our initiative.
Finally, we reached our collegiate maturity. As adults we
assumed the corresponding responsibilities. A Senior Cabinet
Hue?ter. Hull. Gentile. Sapp.
3i
F,,^l K.m : Hur-i.-r. Hull. (,rnii|... -a|ip: >.■',-;,' H^n : -,iMn/ill,. („.,
berg. W ingt-rt. Kt_■i^t.■r. Mratfgu;. Kautinan. Ruemmi-li- ; Tluril Kiui\
Gilf. Linck. McAdam. Reinauer, Atkinson, . Mowrer, Yates.
.:a-. I.illiu-r. -^luhr. Golden-
Cilclire-t. Ki'xln. Rogers.
and a Senior Committee were chosen to carry out many of these
responsibilities. We accepted jobs with the nation's top com-
panies fully realizing that we would succeed — the Lehigh way.
To express our gratitude we purchased a part of Lehigh s future
by adopting the Class Gift Insurance Plan.
In the social column Vaughn Monroe provided the soft
music for our Fall houseparty. Who can forget the tax issue that
resulted? There was great frolicing and fun making by all who
attended the Senior picnic. When with revelry we look back on
days at Lehigh, the splendor of graduation weekend will occupy
a foremost position. The fashionable dinner, the formal dance,
and, of course, the graduation ceremonies all had an integral
part in the beauty of the occasion.
No recapitulation of our campus days would be complete
without mentioning Mr. John Haight. During our last two years.
Mr. Haight guided our policies with sagacity and understanding.
Xo task was too great in his eyes which partly accounts for many
of the goals we achieved. A great man did a great job!!
As the Class of 1953 leaves these sacred halls of ivy. may
it be with full understanding of what we are — men of Lehigh.
Nicholas S. Gentile. Jr.. President
Charles Hull. ]' ice-President
Peter K. Huester, Treasurer
Robert H. Sapp. Secretary
John M. Haight, Jr.. Faculty Advisor
^BEL ACKERMAN
ADELMAN
ALBERS
ALBERT ALBRIGHT
ALLEN, A. H.
ALLEN, W. D
Robert Walter Abel
Anthony Albert
Roy C
Ind. Eng. Ridgewood, N. J. B.S.
— Mech. Eng. Reading.
Pa.
B.S
— Met. Eng.
B.S.-
Alpha Sigma Phi — Rushing chairman, secre-
tary; Radio Workshop, WLRN; A.LLE.,
Alpha Phi Sigma; Baptist Student Fellow-
ship— president.
Richards IV -B — secretar>'-treasurer ; A.S.M.
E. ; Freshman Counselor.
Town : Pershing Rifles — president. Scab-
bard &- Blade — vice-president; Lehigh Met-
allurgical Society.
John Howard Ackerman
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Cresskill, N. J.
Dravo B-II; Brown & White: Mustard &
Cheese; Purchase Card Committee; A.S.M. E.
Robert Copley Albright. Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Ladue. Mo.
Phi Delta Theta — social chairman, librarian
& historian, pledge captain; Scabbard &
Blade; Spring Music Festival; Basketball —
freshman; Lehigh Business Society; Air
Force Drill Team.
Ronald Murray Ansorge
B.S. — Gen. Bus. Allentown, Pa.
Town: Brown and White: Mustard and
Cheese; Alpha Lambda Omega.
Myles Henry Adelman
B.S. — Accounting
South Orange, N. J.
Pi Lambda Phi — vice president, treasurer.
Rushing chairman; Sophomore, Junior Class
Cabinet; Lambda Mu Sigma — treasurer. Alpha
Kappa Psi; Lehigh Business Society, Account-
ing Society.
Albert Harold Allen
B.A. — Eu. Hist. Middletown, N. Y.
Tempo I, Tempo II — treasurer; Brown &
White; Phi Alpha Theta; Cosmopolitan Club,
International Relations Club. Spanish Club.
Bernell Edwin Argyle
B.S. — Eng. Phy. Elmira, N. Y.
Pi Kappa Alpha — scholastic chairman; Le-
high Collegians — student leader. Band, Or-
chestra; A. I. P. — president, German Club;
Trustee Scholarship.
B.S.
Robert Edward Albers
■ Chem. Eng. East Orange. N. J.
Alpha Sigma Phi — house manager, honor
marshal, social committee; House Party
Decoration Committee; A.I.Ch.E., Student
Chemical Society — secretary, treasurer.
B.S.
William Donald Allen
- Accounting New York, N. Y.
Price Hall — secretary-treasurer; Pershini
Rifles; Fencing — varsity; Cut & Thrust, Ac
counting Society.
John Robert Armbruster
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Allentown. Pa.
Town; Town Council — vice-president; Per-
shing Rifles; A.I.Ch.E.. Student Chemical
Society, Alpha Lambda Omega.
ANDERSON
ANSORGE
ARMBRUSTER
36
ARMSTRONG
ATKINSON
ARRA
AUNGST
ATALLAll
AYERS. R. A.
Donald Armstroxg
BA. — Biology Trenton, N. J.
Delta Sigma Phi — editor-historian: R. \^ .
Hall Pre-Medical Society — treasurer.
John Peter Arnesen
B.S. — Marketing RoseOe, N. J.
Pi Kappa Alpha — corporation secretary,
alumni secretary, alumni collector, sergeant-
at-arms: WLRN — engineer: Arcadia — pres-
ident. "Big Four" — chairman: Scabbard &
Blade. Who's Who: Baseball — varsity, man-
ager; Spanish Club. Varsity "L" Club.
Edward George Atkinson William DeWitt Ayers, Jr.
— Mech. Eng. Hawthorne. N. J. B.S. — C. Eng. West AUenhurst, N. J.
3.A.
Michael Phillip Arra
- Government Mt. Kisco, N. Y.
Taylor A — secretary, treasurer; Brown &
White: Senior Class Committee. Freshman
Orientation, Arcadia — Elections Committee —
chairman; Pi Gamma Mu. Phi Alpha Theta —
president. Pershing Rifles. Who's Who:
Swimming — freshman. Interdorm Wrestling.
Football: Political Science Assembly — vice-
president, secretary: Freshman Honors.
Phi Gamma Delta — recording secretary;
Epitome: Senior Class Cabinet; Spring Music
Festival; A.S.M.E.. A.I.E.E.
Charles Dill Atmore
B.S. — Marketing Haverford. Pa.
Alpha Chi Rho — scholastic chairman;
Sophomore. Junior Class Cabinets; Alpha
Kappa Psi. Pi Gamma Mu; Alpha Phi Omega,
International Relations Club.
Stanley Eugene Aungst
B.S. — Eng. Phy. Middletown. Pa.
Drinker IV — athletic manager, president;
Tau Beta Pi, Pi Mu Epsilon, Newtonian So-
ciety; Football — freshman; Physics Society;
Wilbur Prize.
Lambda Chi Alpha — athletic chairman;
Baseball — freshman. Soccer — freshman ; A.S.
C.E.
Ralph Edward Bach, Jr.
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Maplewood, N. J.
Pi Kappa Alpha — correspondent; I.F.C. —
representative; Band. Orchestra. Collegians;
Swimming — freshman. Track — freshman, J.V.
Andrew Benjamin Bacho, Jr.
B.A. — Geology Pennington, N. J.
Theta Kappa Phi — sergeant-at-arms, dis-
ciplinary officer, building & colonization
chairman; Football — varsity; Howard Eck-
feldt Society. A.I.M.E., Spanish Club, Ger-
man Club, Blair Club. Newman Club.
Sami Isa Atallah
B.S. — Chem. Eng. The Hashemite
Kingdom of Jordan Country
Price Hall; American Chemical Society.
A.I.Ch.E., Cosmopolitan Club — president; Full
Tuition Scholarship.
Richard A. Ayers
;.S.--Eng. Phy. North Plainfield. N. J.
Pi Kappa Alpha: A.I.P. ; Camera Club.
David George Baker
B.S. — Marketing Chester, N. J.
Totvn; Brown & White; Canterbury Club,
Student Chemical Society.
AYERS, W. D.
BACH
BACHO
BAKER
37
^Tk.
BARCAN
BARSTOW
Alfred Judson Barcan
B.S. — Ind. Eng. New York. N. Y.
Tau Delta Phi; I.F.C.; A.I.I.E., Blake Phil-
osophical Society.
Irvy Thomas Barker, Jr.
B.S.— Mech. Eng. Hawthorne, N. J.
Richards IV-B — athletic manager, social
chairman; Chapel Choir; Intramural Football.
Baseball, Swimming, Wrestling; A.S.M.E.,
DeMolay Society, Shop Club, Auto Club.
George Redmond B.-vrry
B.S. — Met. Eng. Chappaqua, N. J.
Taylor B — secretary-treasurer; Christian
Council — treasurer. University Chapel Com-
mittee; Chapel Choir; Baseball — freshman.
Intramural Football, Basketball, Baseball;
Camera Club; Westminister Fellowship — sec-
retary-treasurer.
Bruce Robert Barstow
B.A. — English Philadelphia, Pa.
Kappa Alpha — secretary, social chairman,
corresponding secretary; Brown & White —
general ad manager, circulation manager.
Mustard & Cheese; Sophomore, Junior Class
Cabinet, Arcadia Associates, Freshman Orien
tation Program; Pi Delta Epsilon — president
Spring Music Festival; Lehigh Business So'
ciety.
John Frank Barteau, III
B.S. — Mech. Eng. West Haven. Conn.
Richards II-A — scholastic chairman; Phi
Beta Kappa, Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma — vice-
president. Pi Mu Epsilon, Phi Eta Sigma;
A.S.M.E. — treasurer. Automobile Club, Sailing
Club, DeMolay Club — treasurer, vice-pres-
ident; Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, Senior
Honors,
Andrew Paul Bartush
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Avoca, Pa.
Town.
Henry James B.attaglla, Jr.
B.A. — English Montclair, N. J.
Phi Sigma Kappa — social chairman, treas-
urer, vice-president, publicity chairman ;
Brown & White, WLRN; Sophomore, Junior,
.Senior Class Cabinets. Houseparty Co-Chair-
man. Snowball Dance Chairman; Newman
Club, Dance Chairman of Campus Chest.
John Sherman Beekley, Jr.
B.A. — History Wilmington, Del.
Alpha Sigma Phi — house manager, cus-
todian, corresponding secretary; Glee Club;
Canterbury Club — treasurer, president; Wil-
liams Sophomore Prize — first prize.
Eugene William Beggs, Jr.
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Glen Ridge N. J.
Phi Gamma Delta — corresponding secretary;
Epitome; Spring Music Festival; Lacrosse —
freshman, varsity; A.I.I.E.
Richard Thomas Begley
.S. — Met. Eng. Trenton. N. J.
Alpha Sigma Phi.
Gordon Grant Bell
B.S. — C. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Pi Kappa Alpha; Tennis — freshman, varsity.
Thomas Filcher Bell, III
B.S. — C. Eng. Summit, N. J.
Dravo — athletic manager; Chi Epsilon; Soc-
cer— freshman, varsity; A.S.C.E.; S.A.M.E.;
Sophomore Class Honors.
BARTEAU
BEGGS
BARTUSH
BEGLEY
BATTAGLIA
BELL. G. G.
BEEKLEY
BELL. T. F.
38
r^ r^ ^
"S^ msi.
lea™ «»^
BE.XCKER
BEST
'.IKMESDERFER
Richard Kralse Bencker
B.A. — Ind. Psy. Brookline. Mass.
Town ; Baseball — freshman ; Spanish Club.
Student Chemical Society.
John Richard Billings
.S. — Mech. Eng. BetUehem. Pa.
Town: Chapel Choir; Canterbury Club.
.S.M.E.
Edward Arthur Blount
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Huntingdon Valley. Pa.
Sigma Phi Epsilon — president, secretary -
I.F.C.; Track — varsity; American Chemical
Societv, A.I.Ch.E.
B.S.
Richard Raxney Best
- Chem. En2. Poultnev. Vt.
Delta Upsilon — corresponding secretary ;
Football — freshman; Student Chemical So-
ciety: Freshman. Sophomore Honors.
John Francis Blazik
B.S. — Marketing Philadelphia. Pa.
Taylor D — vice-president; Machine Shop
Club, Newman Club.
Charles Jacob Bodenstab
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Cambria Heights, N. Y.
Alpha Tail Omega; Pi Tau Sigma — treasur-
er; Swimming — varsity, freshman; A.S.M.E.,
German Club.
Spencer Steel Bevins
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Jamesto«-n, N. Y.
Richards II-B — social chairman, athletic
manager; Tennis. Intramural Sports; Brown
Key Society. Student Chemical Society-.
A.I.Ch.E.
Donald John Biemesderfer
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Lancaster, Pa.
Delta Sigma Phi — chaplain, alumni rela-
tions chairman; A.S.M.E.
Marvin '\^'ayne Bloch
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Town. Tempo III — secretary; Town Coun-
cil; A.I.E.E., Alpha Lambda Omega.
Willoughby Charles Blocker
B.S. — Marketing New York, N. Y.
Psi Upsilon — secretary, treasurer: Brown &
JThite; Sophomore. Junior Class Cabinets;
Band. Glee Club, Cliff Clefs, Spring Music
Festival — business staff: Hockey; Outing
Club.
Alfonso Bohorquez
B.S. — C. Eng. Maracaibo, \enezuela
Dravo All — scholastic chairman; Chi Ep-
sUon. Newtonian Society; Soccer — freshman;
Cosmopolitan Club. A.S.C.E.
William Barnard Bolton
B.A. — Geology QuakertowTi. Pa.
Lambda Chi Alpha; A.I.M.E. : Howard Eck-
feldt Society — secretary.
BILLINGS
BLOUNT
BLAZnC
BODENSTAB
1^ f^% ^^
39
BOND
BOWMAN, J. R.
BO L LINE
BRANDES
BOWMAN, D. L.
BREWER
James P. Bond
B.S. — M. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Pi Kappa Alpha; Pi Mu Epsilon; Glee
Club; Tennis — freshman; Howard Eckfeldt
Society; Society of Exploration Geophysicists;
Freshman, Sophomore Honors.
Jack R. Bowman
l.S. — Marketing Wormleysburg, Pa.
Town: Town Council; Sportsmans Club.
Harold Edgar Brown, Jr.
B.S. — Met. Eng. North Tonawanda, N. Y.
Dravo D-I ; Pershing Rifles — finance officer,
executive officer; A.S.M., Lehigh Metallur-
gical Society, Chess Club.
George Dean Bouline, Jr.
!.A. — Geologj' Binghamton, N. Y.
Tempo I.
George Stanley Brandes
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Allentown. Pa.
Town; Town Council
Omega, A.I.E.E.
Alpha Lambda
Robert Alan Brown
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Chatham, N. J.
Town; Alpha Pi Mu — president; A.LLE.,
A.S.M.E.
Peter M. Boutross
B.S. — Accounting Brooklyn, N. Y.
Toion ; WLRN — music librarian, assistant
program director; Lehigh Accounting Society;
Sophomore Honors, Dean's List.
Helmut H. Brandt
B.S. — Met. Eng. Betlilehem Pa.
Beta Theta Pi — house manager; Brown &
White; Track— freshman ; Lehigh Metallur-
gical Society — president.
Richard Willl\m Bryers
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Leonia, N. J.
Dravo B-II — sophomore representative; La-
crosse— freshman, varsity. Varsity "L" Club,
A.S.M.E.
Donald Lee Bowman
B.S. — Eng. Phy. Easton, Pa.
Town; Band, Collegians, Cliff Clefs; Physics
Society, A.LP.
Joseph Blake Brewer
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Allentown Pa.
Town; Alpha Lambda Omega.
Edward Job Bubb
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Quincy, lU.
Pi Kappa Alpha; Richards I — section pres-
ident, athletic manager; Canterbury Club —
treasurer, A.LE.E.
BROWN. H. E.
BROWN, R. A.
. BRYERS
BUBB
^k^^
40
BLGBEE
BURR
Newton Albert Kendall Bugbee
B.S. — Marketing Trenton. N. J.
Chi Psi — Alpha affairs: Basketball — fresh-
man. Tennis — varsity : Varsitv "L" Club.
John Arlan Butz
B.S. — Gen. Bus. Bethlehem, Pa.
Town: Town Council; .Alpha Lambda
Omeaa.
Bernard Wilbur Castor
B.A. — Con., Geo. Elmont. N. Y.
Richards 1 1 IB: Brown & IP' kite: Intra-
mural Sports; Camera Club, German Club.
Conservation Society, Howard Eckfeldt So-
ciety.
Rudolph Eugene Burger. Jr.
B.S.— Gen. Bus. .Malba. L. I.. ^^ Y.
Phi Sigma Kappa — vice-president, presi-
dent; LF.C. — Lafayette Display Committee:
Football — "B". T^'restling — "B"; Senior Insur-
ance Committee.
B.S.
Richard Kirby Burr
-Finance Riverton, N. J.
Delta Sigma PAi— treasurer; WLRN: Band
— student director; Alpha Phi Omega.
Stew.art Fred Campbell
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Westtield. N. J.
Delta Phi — steward, pledge advisor, public
relations; Junior Class Cabinet; Spring Music
Festival; Auto Club, A.I.LE., Physics Society.
William Albert Carlisle. Jr.
B.S. — Marketing DuBois. Pa.
Phi Gamma Delta — treasurer; Arcadia; La-
crosse— freshman. Wrestling — freshman, var-
sity; Brown Key Society, Varsity "L" Club
— secretary.
Edward Everett Chick
B.S. — Met. Eng. Claremont. .N. H.
Delta Phi — vice-president, recording secre-
tary, alumni relations chairman; Pershing
Rifles; Fencing — varsity, manager; Cut &
Thrust. Varsity "L" Club. Ski Club, S.A.M.E..
A.S.M.. Lehigh Metallurgical Society.
Donald Warren Clapp
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Verona. N. J.
Delta Upsilon — president, vice-president,
scholarship chairman, librarian; Phi Eta Sig-
ma. Newtonian Society — secretary. Pi Mu
Epsilon, Tau Beta Pi; Football — freshman.
J.V., Baseball — freshman, J.V.. Interfratemity
Sports; Student Chemical Society, A.I.Ch.E.;
Dean's List, Competitive Regional Scholar-
ship.
Lewis Phillip Bush
B.S. — M. Eng. Coopersburg. Pa.
Theta Chi: Epitome: Spring Music Festival:
Howard Eckfeldt Society — vice-president;
Cheerleader.
George William Carrington
.S. — Mech. Eng. North Miami. Fla.
Town; To^vn Council; A.S.M.E.
Emmett a. Clary, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Haddonfield. N. J.
Dravo A-I — secretary-treasurer, freshman
counselor; Brown & White, WLRN; Sopho-
more Class Cabinet; .\utomobile Club, Span-
ish Club — treasurer.
CAMPBELL
CHICK
CARLISLE
CLAPP
CARRINGTON
CT^ \RY
41
CLAUSEN
CLAUSER
CLAUSON
COLCLOUGH
Douglas Blinn Clausen
B.S. — Finance Rockville Centre, N. Y.
Delta Sigma P/ii— vice-president: WLRN;
I.F.C., Senior Insurance Committee.
George Eugene Clauser
B.S. — Met. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Town: Tau Beta Pi; Pi Mu Epsilon; Alpha
Lambda Omega; Lehigh Metallurgical So-
ciety.
Henry Elwood Clauson, Jr.
B.S. — Accounting Bridgeport, Conn.
Alpha Tau Omega — treasurer, assistant
treasurer; Glee Club, Orchestra. Spring Music
Festival, Cliff Clefs; Lehigh Accounting So-
ciety; Student Concert Lecture Series Com-
mittee.
William Eliot Coles. Jr.
B.A. — English Cranford. Pa
Sigma Phi.
John Francis Collins, Jr.
B.S. — Met. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Chi Psi — athletic manager; Basketball —
freshman varsity; Chess Club, Lehigh Met-
allurgical Society.
Lawrence Edward Collins
B.S. — Eng. Phy. Jackson Heights, N. Y.
Town; Brown & White, Debate — president;
Town Council, Arcadia, Junior Class Cabinet :
Phi Eta Sigma, Cyanide, Delta Omicron
Theta, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Alpha Theta,
Blake Society, Who's Who; Political Science
Assembly — vice-president. Inquisitors — chair-
man; Freshman, Sophomore Honors, Williams
Extempore Speaking — second place.
B.S.
Edwin Francis Compton
- Ind. Eng. Haddonfield, N. J.
Theta Xi — vice-president, social chairman;
WLRN; Newtonian Society, Alpha Pi Mu—
treasurer, Pershing Rifles; Fencing — freshman,
Interfraternity Sports; Alpha Phi Omega,
A. I. I.E.; Freshman Honors.
William Patrick Connery
B.S. — Marketing Rockville Centre, N. Y.
Theta Kappa Phi — executive secretary,
pledge manager, social chairman; Lehigh
Business Society, Newman Club; Lambda Mu
Sigma — secretary.
Joseph David Conrad, Jr.
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Springfield, Pa.
Richards lU-A — section president, social
chairman; Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society;
Pi Mu Epsilon; Chapel Choir; Intramural
Sports; A.S.M.E. ; Freshman, Sophomore
Honors.
William George Colclough, Jr.
B.S. — Chemistry Atlantic Highlands, N. J.
Kappa Alpha — athletic chairman, scholastic
chairman; Track — varsity. Cross Country —
varsity, captain; American Chemical Society
— president.
Edward Thomas Comly, II
l.S. — Fin., Gen. Bus. Morrisville, Pa
Town: Town Council;
man, varsity.
Basketball — fresh-
RoBERT Parlett Conrad, Jr.
B.A. — History Hagerstown, Md.
Tempo I; WLRN; Phi Alpha Theta; Wrest-
ling— freshman; Political Science Assembly,
Cosmopolitan Club.
COLLINS, J. F.
CONNF.RY
COLLINS, L. E.
CONRAD. J. D.
COMLY
CONRAD. R. P.
42:
^l,
41ft Aik 4ft
Theta Chi: Epitome — contracts manager:
William's Debate: Student Purchase Card
Committee: Arnold Air Society; Howard Eck-
feldt Society — treasurer; A.I.iVI.E.; Quarter
Club.
Chi Psi — secretary, steward; Pershing Ri-
fles: Glee Club, Chapel Choir: Football —
freshman, varsity; Student Chemical Society.
A.I.CkE.
COOKE CUKADl
CORNISH
COX
CR.\MTON CRISLIP
CRISP
CROCKER
James Filwcis Cooke. II
Fr.\nk Richard Cramto\
William
-M. Eng. UwcUand. Pa. B.S.
— Chem. Eng. Jenkintown.
Pa.
b.a
— Class. L
Leonard Hall — vice-president, social chair-
man; Alpha Chi Epsilon — secretary-treasurer.
Eta Sigma Phi — secretary; Canterbury Club:
Freshman, Sophomore honors.
B.A.
Richard M. Coradi
- Finance Cliffside Park. N. J.
Kappa Sigma: I.F.C. : Sportsman's Club.
Spanish Club. Christian Council — publicity
chairman. Christian Council's Messenger —
editor.
William Henry Cormsh
B.S. — C. Eng. Greensburg. Pa.
Alpha Tau Omega — social chairman;
WLRN: Newtonian Society, Chi Epsilon;
Glee Club; A.S.C.E. ; Freshman Honors.
B.S.
Richard Willis Cox
- Mech. Ens. Girard. Pa
Taylor E — vice-president; Phi Eta Sigma;
Fencing — varsity; Cut & Thrust, A.S.M.E.
Rodney Linwood Crislip
B.A. — Philosophy Akron, 0.
Sigma Chi — \-ice-president. treasurer, stew-
ard: Arcadia Associate: Phi Eta Sigma —
president. Cyanide — treasurer. Alpha Epsilon
Delta — treasurer; Track. Freshman Numerals;
R. W. Hall Pre-medical Society; Freshman.
Sophomore Honors, Dean's List.
George Thomas Crisp, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Ridgefield Park. N. J.
Theta Xi — secretary, athletic chairman;
Outina Club.
Charles M. Crocker
- C. Ena. Carbondale. Pa.
Robert Reed Cutler
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Baldwin, N. Y.
Lambda Chi Alpha; A.S.M.E. — secretary',
president. Shop Club — president.
James W". D.wts
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Philadelphia, Pa.
Taylor C — section vice-president. Richards
II-B — section president; Band; Soccer —
freshman. Rifle Team — varsity.
Richard Watkins Davis
B.A., B.S. — Arts, I. Eng. Lebanon. Pa.
Kappa Sigma — scribe, correspondent, edi-
tor: Debate — varsitv: Delta Omicron Theta —
president: Pershina Rifles: Scabbard and
Blade; A.LLE.; S.A.M.E.: Blake Philosophi-
cal Society — president: The Inquisitors; Fresh-
man Honors.
CROSBY
CUTLER
DAYIS. J. "T.
DAVIS. R. "«'.
43
«^
UAVLS. W. J.
DE LOTTO
DEA1\
DEMPSEY
DE LANCEY
DIERCKS
William John Davis
B.A. — Ind. Psychology Claries Summit, Pa.
Alpha Tau Omega — president, vice-presi-
dent; I.F.C. — president, Arcadia Freshman
Week Committee, Arcadia Publicity-Public Re-
lations Committee; Who's Who; Spring Music
Festival — sales manager, business manager;
German Club, Chess Club — vice-president.
Christian Council, Roger Williams Fellowship
— vice-president.
John Louis Dean, Jr.
B.S. — Finance Convent, N. J.
Theta Kappa Phi — alumni secretary, social
chairman. Rushing Committee chairman, au-
ditor; Brown & White — circulation manager;
Junior Class Cabinet, I.F.C. Investigating Com-
mittee; Baseball — freshman manager. Rifle
Team — varsity manager; Newman Club.
B.A.
Lewis Peter De Lotto
-Finance Clifton. N. J.
B.S.
Andres Jose De Chene
- Gen. Bus. Curacao
Netherlands
West Indies
Price Hall — president, social chairman;
I.D.C., Committee for the Improvement of
Price Hall — chairman ; Swimming — freshman,
varsity. Tennis — freshman; Cosmopolitan
Club, Spanish Club.
James Edward De Lancey
B.S. — Civ. Eng. York, Pa.
Town; Chi Epsilon; Band, Orchestra,
Spring Music Festivals; A.S.C.E.
Phi Gamma Delta — scholarship chairman;
Senior Class Cabinet, Publications Committee
Houseparty — chairman. Sophomore Dance
Committee — chairman; Arnold Air Society,
Scabbard & Blade, Ski Team; Outing Cluh.
Walter Jerome Dempsey
B.S. — Eco. Statistics Elizabeth, N. J.
Taylor B — social chairman; Spanish Club.
Machine Shop Club, Newman Club.
William Christman Dengler
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Reading, Pa.
Delta Tail Delta — ritual officer; Class In-
surance Committee; Alpha Pi Mu — secretary;
Tennis — freshman, varsity; A. I. I.E. — secretary,
vice-president, president, Brown Key Society,
Varsity "L" Club.
John C. Diercks
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Grand Rapids, Mich.
Price Hall — president, vice-president, fresh-
man counselor; Pi Tau Sigma — president. Pi
Mu Epsilon — treasurer, Tau Beta Pi, Who's
Who; A.S.M.E. — vice-chairman, German Club
— vice-president; Alpha Phi Omega — treas-
urer; Williams Debates — first prize. Freshman,
Sophomore Honors.
HoBART Brose Dietz, Jr.
B.S. — Accounting Drexel Hill, Pa.
Lambda Chi Alpha — social chairman; Mus-
tard & Cheese — business staff; Swimming —
freshman; Lehigh Accounting Society, Alpha
Phi Omega.
Frederick Randolph Dinger
.S. — Mech. Eng. Vienna, N. J.
Richards HA; A.S.M.E., Automobile Club.
Richard Arlan Doan
B.S. — Marketing Elkins Park, Pa.
Sigma Phi Epsilon — historian; Arnold Air
Society, Scabbard & Blade; Sailing Club,
Lehigh Business Society.
Donald Ellis Dorney
B.S. — Met. Eng. Allentown, Pa.
Sigma Na — reporter, alumni contact officer;
Junior Class Cabinet; Newtonian Society;
Scabbard and Blade; Pershing Rifles; Base-
ball— freshman; Metallurgical Society;
A.S.M.; S.A.M.E.; Freshman Honors.
DINGER
DORNEY
44
i)()i iii.i;i)\^
DOUSHKESS
Leon John Dorsey
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Scranlon. Pa.
Kappa Si^ma: Interfrateinity Sports;
A.S.M.E.
James Alfred Doubleday
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Fitlshurgli. Pa.
Sisma Chi.
William Norris Doushkess, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Mountain Lakes. N. J.
Phi Delta Theta — secretary, historian, ex-
ecutive council ; Broivn & White, WLRN ; Ju-
nior Class Cabinet. Houseparty Ticket Com-
mittee; Spring Music Festival — sales commit-
tee ; Football — freshman, assistant varsity man-
ager, head freshman football manager; Le-
high Business Society — secretary. Automobile
Club — secretary, treasurer.
B.S.
Daniel David Dubosky
Elec. Eng. Lansford, Pa.
Town, Drinker ll-B — section president,
scholastic chairman. ~c>|ihi'iiMiii k pnscntative,
dormitory vice-prr-hliiiL ^n, i;il . iMiiman; Tau
Beta Pi, Eta Kap|ia \ii. I'l \lii K|.Hl.>n, New-
tonian Society; Band; l.K.E. — student chair-
man, A.J.E.E.
Arturo Roberto Dunn, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Plainfield, N. J.
Delta Upsilon — social chairman; Spanish
Club, Cosmopolitan Club, Student Chemical
Society.
C. Frederick Eben
.S. — M. Eng. Laureldale, Pa.
Town; Howard Eckfeldt Society, A.LM.E.
Paul C. Ely, Jr.
B.S. — Eng. Phy. Lorain, 0.
Theta Delta Chi — social chairman. Rushing
chairman; Tennis — freshman; Radio Club,
Camera Club. A. I. P., Alpha Phi Omega.
Robert Hall Endriss
B.S. — Marketing New Haven, Conn.
Sigma Phi Epsilon — comptroller, pledge
master, athletic chairman, junior marshal;
Brown & If' kite; Spring Music Festival; Base-
liall — freshman, varsity. Intramural Sports;
Varsity "L" Club.
William Harrison Engle
!.S. — Finance
Bethlehem, Pa
Town; Town Council — treasurer, Budge
Committee — chairman, Board of Representa
tives. Executive Committee; Newtonian So
ciety; Fencing — freshman; Christian Council
Roger Williams Fellowship — president. Alpha
Lambda Omega, Alpha Phi Omega, Account
ing Society, German Club; Sophomore Hon
ors. Alumni Prize.
Edward A. Dreskin
3.S. — Gen. Bus. .'^outh Orange. N. J.
Tau Delta Phi.
David George Eldridge
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Wanonah. N. J.
Drinker III-A — president; Pershing Rifles;
A.S.M.E.
B.A. -
Robert Charles Erney
- Geology Summit. N. J.
Sigma Phi — social chairman; Intramural
Sports; Howard Eckfeldt Society; A.LM.E. :
Automobile Club — secretary.
DUBOSKY
ELY
m^km
45
ETTINGER
FARKAS
B.A.-
Edwin Henry Ettinger
-Ind. Psy. AUentovvn, Pa.
Lambda Chi Alpha — alumni correspondent;
Glee Club — section leader. Cliff Clefs; Lehigh
Outing Club.
LoREN Edward Farrer
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Stroudsburg, Pa.
Richards IIl-A — freshman whip; Radio
Club. A.S.M.E.
Paul Edward Fedeles
3.S. — Met. Eng. Monaca. Pa.
Beta Theta Pi; Football — freshman, varsity.
Baseball — varsity, captain; Varsity "L" Club.
William Charles Evans
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Ventnor City. N. J.
Alpha Tau Omega — treasurer; Brown &
White, Epitome; Football — varsity; A.I.Ch.E..
Student Chemical Society, Camera Club.
Kenneth Rawnsley Eynon
B.S. — Accounting Rutherford, N. J.
Richards II-B — scholastic chairman; Bas-
ketball, Baseball — freshman manager. Intra-
mural Sports; Accounting Society, Chess
Club.
B.A.
William Farkas
- Government Bethlehem, Pa.
Town; Town Council, Sophomore Class
Cabinet; Phi Eta Sigma, Cyanide, Pi Gamma
Mu, Who's Who. Pershing Rifles; Spanish
Club, Political Science Assembly; Campus
Chest — chairman of Town Division ; Freshman,
Sophomore Honors, Alumni Prize to Highest
Ranking Junior in College of Arts and
Science — co-winner.
Alfred J. Fasolino. Jr.
B.S. — C. Eng. RockviUe Centre. N. Y.
Theta Kappa Phi — sergeant-at-arms, scholas-
tic chairman, athletic chairman; Baseball,
•■B": A.S.C.E.. Newman Club.
Edward Dewey Faulstick
B.A. — Amer. Hist. Bethlehem. Pa.
Town; Pershing Rifles; Alpha Phi Omega.
Raymond Baker Featherman, Jr.
B.A. — Finance Bethlehem, Pa.
Chi Psi — historian, scholarship chairman :
Mustard and Cheese; Sophomore Class Cab-
inet ; Baseball — freshman, Track — varsity ;
Psychology Club.
Richard Hugh Fehrs
I.A. — Ind. Psy. Port Chester, N. Y.
Theta Xi — steward, social chairman ; I.F.C.
Edwin George Fenton
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Mansfield. O.
Theta Xi — social chairman, house manager,
president;- Mustard & Cheese; A.I.E.E.
Joseph Brinton Ferguson
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Wynnewood. Pa.
Phi Delta Theta — assistant house' manager,
house manager, social chairman; Junior Class
Cabinet; Eta Kappa Nu — treasurer, Newtonian
Society; Soccer — freshman, varsity; Radio
Club, Varsity "L" Club, A.I.E.E.; Freshman
Honors.
FARRER
FEDELES
FASOLINO
FEHRS
FAULSTICK
FENTON
FEATHERMAN
FERGU.SON
46
FETTERMAX
FLAGG
F I SI IKK
FRANK
David Samuel Fetterma\ John Robert Flagg
— Chem. Ens. Shaker Heialits. 0. B.S. — Accounting West Chester. Pa.
Pi Lambda Phi; Swimming — freshman, var-
sity: .\merican Chemical Society, A.I.Ch.E..
Hillel Society. Varsity "L" Club.
Town; Taylor B — social chairman; I.D.C. ;
Ice Hockey — manager, assistant manager;
Varsity "L"" Club, Lehigh Accounting Society
— secretar)'. Alpha Phi Omega — historian.
Bruce Austin Frankenfield
B.A. — Biology Catasauqua. Pa.
Taylor B — scholastic chairman; Alpha Ep-
silon Delta — vice-president; R. W. Hall So-
ciety; Freshman, Sophomore Scholastic Hon-
Albert Edward Fiedler
B.S. — Mech. Eng. . Paterson, N. J.
Drinker IV; Senior Committee; Camera
Club, A.S.M.E., Lehigh Christian Fellowship.
Joseph Richard Flesher
B.A. — Mech. Eng. Parkersburg, W. Va.
Sigma Chi — social chairman. Rushing
chairman.
David J. Fray. Jr.
B.S. — Accounting Clarks Green, Pa.
Town ; Lehigh Accounting Society.
Frederick Stirzel Fischer, Jr.
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Wynnewood. Pa.
Chi Psi — social chairman ; I.F.C. ; Col-
legians. Spring Music Festival; Track — fresh-
man, varsity; Automobile Club.
Robert Thom^vs Folk
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Allentown, Pa.
Town; Wilbur Scholarship Prize, Wilbur
Prize for Physics, Electrical Engineering Prize.
Harry Richard Friedland
B.S. — Accounting New York, N. Y.
Pi Lambda Phi — secretary. Rushing chair-
man; Pi Gamma Mu; Lehigh Accounting So-
ciety, Hillel Society; Sophomore Honors.
David Emil Fisher
B.S. — Marketing Philadelphia. Pa.
Pi Lambda Phi — treasurer, house manager:
Brown & White; Junior, Senior Class Cab-
inets; Alpha Kappa Psi; Track — freshman;
Camera Club, Hillel Society.
Philip Lawrence Frank
B.S. — C. Eng. Clarks Summit. Pa.
Alpha Tau Omega — scholarship chairman:
Interfraternity sports; A.S.C.E.
W. Leroy Gaines
B.A. — Geology
Norwood, Pa.
Richards II-A; Brown & White; Swim-
ming. Track; Sailing Team; Automobile
Club, Sailing Club, Howard Eckfeldt Society.
FRANKENFIELD
FRAY
FRIEDLAND
GAINES
47
GARCIA
GAVLICK
GARDNER. H. R
GENTILE
Luis A. Garcia
B.S. — C. Eng. Maracaibo. Venezuela
Dravo A-II: Cosmopolitan Club.
Leo Francis Gavlick
B.S. — C. Eng. Swoyerville. Pa.
Town; A.S.C.E., Alpha Lambda Omega.
B.S.
Joseph Edward Geusic
- Physics Lansford, Pa.
Drinker Il-B — treasurer; Physics Society-
treasurer.
Harry Robert Gardner. Jr.
B.S. — Met. Eng. Rahway. N. J.
Town ; Lehigh Metallurgical Society, A.S.M.,
Automobile Club, Professional Society for
Metallurgists.
Nicholas Stephen Gentile, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Pompton Lakes, N. J.
Phi Gamma Delta; WLRN; Class Presi-
dent— sophomore. Class Vice-President —
junior. Class President — senior; Who's Who;
Spring Music Festival — assistant stage man-
ager. Campus Chest — secretary. Spring House
Party — chairman; Sophomore Honors.
Jack Albert Giglio
B.S. — Marketing Bethlehem. Pa.
Town ; Mustard and Cheese ; Radio Work-
shop; Rifle Team — varsity captain; AFROTC
Rifle Team; Alpha Lambda Omega; Alpha
Phi Omega; Spanish Club — vice-president.
Richard Ayres Gardner
B.S. — Finance East Orange, N. J.
Sigma Nu; Football — varsity.
William Henry Gentzlinger
B.S. — Mech. Eng. New York, N. Y.
Theta Kappa Phi — vice-president, steward,
financial secretary, auditor; Eta Sigma Phi;
Sailing Club, A.S.M.E.
Frederick Haywood Gilchrest
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Scarsdale, N. Y.
Chi Psi — president, scholarship chairman;
Epitome — sales staff; Junior, Senior Class
Cabinets, Houseparty Dance Committee,
LF.C; Newtonian Society; Lacrosse — fresh-
man; Newman Club, Student Chemical So-
ciety, A.I.Ch.E.
Alexander Donald Garwood
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Riverton, N. J.
Town; A.S.M.E., Sailing Club — rear com-
modore.
James Georgas
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Freeport, N. Y.
Alpha Tan Omega — steward; Junior, Senior
Class Cabinets, Campus Chest, Senior Class
Picnic — chairman; A.I.I.E., S.A.M.E.
James Wallace Gill
B.S. — Chemistry Philadelphia, Pa.
Dravo B-I — section president; LD.C. ; Stu-
dent Chemical Society; German Club; Fresh-
man Counselor.
GEUSIC
GIGLIO
GILCHREST
GILL. J. W.
48
CINGRICH
GOELZ
Robert B. Gill
B.S. — Marketing South Orange, N. J.
Chi Phi — vice-president, president, house
manager; Epitome — business manager; Junior,
Senior Class Cabinet; Pi Delta Epsilon — vice-
president. Alpha Kappa Psi; Lacrosse — var-
sity; Junior. Senior Class Dance — treasurer.
Robert Heebner Gill
. Pa.
B.S. — Gen. Bus. Lansdowne
Delta Tan Delta: Intramural Football. Bas-
ketball; .Spring Music Festival — head car-
penter, stage manager, choreography; Ma-
chine Shop Club.
B.S.
Kenneth G. Gilson. Jr.
■Ind. Eng. Glen Ridge, N.J.
Kappa Alpha — vice-president, chorister;
Pershing Rifles — treasurer; Interfraternity
wrestling; Sailing Club, Roger Williams Fel-
lowship— president, A. I. I.E.
Carl Cramer Gingrich, Jr.
- Elec. Eng
H
arnsDuri
:, Pa.
Town; WLRN — remote engineer; Arnold
-\ir Society; Band. Chapel Choir — president.
University Chorale; A.I.E.E. ; Sophomore
Honors.
B.A.
Mark Jackson Given
Ind. Eng. Glen Ridge, N. J.
Arthur Paul Goldenberg
Beta Theta Pi — president, treasurer; Sopho-
more, Junior Class Cabinets. Arcadia Asso-
ciate, I.F.C. ; Omicron Delta Kappa. Cyanide
— vice-president, Pershing Rifles, Scabbard &
Blade — president. Who's Who; Spring Music
Festival; Track — freshman, varsity. Wrestling
— freshman, J.V. ; Brown Key Society, Var-
sity "L" Club; Campus Chest — treasurer;
Freshman Honors.
Donald James Click
l.S. — Elec. Eng. Reading
Town; A.I.E.E.. I.R.E. — secretary.
James Bloomfield Goddard, Jr.
3.S. — Mech. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Town; A.S.M.E., Alpha Lambda Omega.
Ernest Otto Goelz
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Philadelphia, Pa.
Taylor C — secretary, treasurer; Soccer —
varsity; A.I.I.E.; A.S.M.E.; Varsity "L" Club;
German Society; Pershing Rifles; S.A.M.E.
Ind. Eng
Philadelphia, Pa.
Dravo C-II — secretary-treasurer; WLRN,
Epitome; Junior, Senior Class Cabinet —
Commencement Committee chairman, Arcadia
Associate — freshman committee, Arcadia —
chairman of publicity, records, elections, reg-
istration; Phi Eta Sigma — treasurer, Omi-
cron Delta Kappa — treasurer, Newtonian So-
ciety, Pi Tau Sigma, Tau Beta Pi — pledge
trainer. Who's Who; Swimming — freshman,
varsity, assistant manager, head manager,
Freshman Baseball manager; Varsity *'L"
Club, A.I.I. E., Automobile Club; Pi Tau
Sigma Prize, Class Honors, Deans List.
John Charles Goldsmith
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Philadelphia Pa.
Richards II-A — athletic manager, social
chairman; A.S.M.E. — publicity committee.
James Goe Gottling
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Baltimore, Md.
Phi Sigma Kappa — secretary; Phi Eta Sig-
ma, Pi Mu Epsilon; Fencing — varsity; A.I.
E.E.. A.S.M.E., Cut & Thrust — executive com-
mittee; Eta Kappa Nu prize. Sophomore Class
Honors.
A. Stuard Graham, Jr.
B.S. — Gen. Bus. Abington, Pa.
Sigma Nu — pledgemaster, summer house-
manager; WLRN — musical director; Lacrosse
—varsity, "B"; A.I.I.E., Varsity "L" Club.
GOLDENBERG
GOLDSMITH
GOTTLING
GRAHAM
49
'^ ram .iM.
GRAHN
John Amiel Grahn, III
B.S. — Economics Tenafly, N. J.
Taylor D — athletic manager, social chair-
man; Chapel Choir; Soccer — freshman.
Roland Eric Grunert
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Beechhurst. N. V.
Price Hall, Tempo II — secretary-treasurer.
Drinker III — president (summer) ; Intramural
Sports; Physics Society; A.S.M.E.; S.A.M.E. ;
Cosmopolitan Club — secretary; Machine Shop
Club; Brown Astronomical Society.
Stephen John Hajdinyak
B.S. — C. Eng. Bethlehem. Pa.
Town, Phi Sigma Kappa; Town Council;
A.S.C.E.
Bruce Thomas Grant
l.A. — Finance
Town.
Drexel Hill, Pa.
Samuel F. Grauer
B.S. — Gen. Bu
Jenkintown, Pa.
Theta Delta Chi — Rushing chairman, junior
member executive committee; Brown & White.
WLRN; I.F.C.; Baseball— freshman, varsity.
"B" squad baseball, Interfraternity Football ;
Spanish Club.
Robert Boyd Guilda
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Teaneck, N. J.
Sigma Chi — secretary. Rushing chairman;
Soccer — freshman, varsity; Varsity "L" Club,
Interfaith Council, St. Vincent's Guild.
Arnold Michael Gussoff
B.S. — Marketing New York. N. Y.
Pi Lambda Phi — athletic manager; Brown
& White: Hillel Society.
Emil George Hamburg
B.S. — Met. Eng. Yonkers, N. Y.
Delta Sigma Phi; Track — J.V., Cross Coun-
try— J.V.; Student Metallurgical Society.
Charles Leroy Hamilton
B.A. — Geology Passaic, N. J.
Richards Ill-A; Howard Eckfeldt Society;
Sophomore' Honors, Williams Sophomore Eng-
lish Prize — third prize.
Harold Conrad Griesing
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Ebervale, Pa.
Sigma Phi Epsilon, Dravo C-I — athletic
chairman; Brown and White; Newtonian So-
ciety; Pi Tau Sigma; Pershing Rifles; Intra-
mural Sports; A.S.M.E.
Walter Ernest Haigh. Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Ardmore. Pa.
Chi Psi — president, secretary; Brown &
White — business staff; I.F.C.; Soccer — var-
sity; Brown Key Society, Varsity "L" Club.
James Thomas Hancock
B.S. — Gen. Bus. Bath. N. Y.
Delta Tau Delta — secretary; Junior Cabinet;
Music Festival; Football — freshman, varsity;
Varsity "L" Club; Sailing Club; Alpha Kappa
Psi — treasurer.
50
lIANDWr.KK
HANNAY
HANSEL
Russell Frank Handwerk. Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Bethlehem. Pa.
Lambda Chi Alpha: Glee Club: Golf Team
— varsity, captain.
Frederick Hahn Harding
.S. — C. Eng. Pen Argyl. Pa.
Taylor D: Band. Orchestra.
Robert K. Hartenstine
B.S. — Finance Pottstown, Pa.
Chi Phi — secretary; Swimming Team —
freshman, varsity, co-captain; Varsity "L"
Club.
B.A.
Jerald Edwin Hanks
- Journalism Bethlehem. Pa.
Town; Brown and White — reporter, news
editor, assistant sports editor, summer man-
aging editor, sports columnist; Town Coun-
cil; Phi Delta Epsilon; Cyanide; Intramural
Sports Freshman. Sophomore Honors: Dean's
List.
Robert Warren Hardy
B.S. — Chemist r>- Bethesda. Md.
Taylor D; Mustard & Cheese; Rifle Team —
varsity; Student Chemical Society; West-
minister Fellowship.
Robert Timothy Headley
B.S. — Finance Rochester. N. Y.
Sigma Nu; Junior, Senior Class Committee;
Outing Club.
Gerald White Hannay. Jr.
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Maplewood. N. J.
Chi Psi: Arcadia Associates; Spring Music
Festival; Lacrosse — freshman; A.I.LE.
Howard Burton Harman
B.S. — C. Eng. Owings Mills. Md.
Taylor C; Sophomore Cabinet; Wrestling
— freshman, varsity. Lacrosse — freshman :
A.S.C.E., Christian Council.
Kenneth Andrew Heller
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Haledon, N. J.
Taylor A: WLRN — engineer; Eta Kappa
Nu. Pi Mu Epsilon; Chapel Choir — librarian,
treasurer. University Chorale; I.R.E., A.LE.E.
— treasurer.
B.S.
Gr.'Vnt Hansel, Jr.
■Met. Eng. W. Winfield. N. Y.
Delta Upsilon — Rushing chairman, scholar-
ship chairman, editor; Junior Class Cabinet.
Houseparty Dance Committee; Band. Chapel
Choir. Glee Club. FootbaU — varsity, fresh-
man; Baseball — freshman; A.S.M.: William
W. Coleman Scholarship.
Richard Calvin Harmon
B.S. — Min. Eng. Livingston, N. J.
Kappa Sigma — house manager; Rifle Team
— varsity. Air Force ROTC team; Howard
Eckfeldt Society, A.LM.E., Society of Ex-
ploration.
Alexander David Henderson
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Laurelton, N. Y.
Delta Sigma Phi — secretary, athletic chair-
man: Track — freshman, varsity. Cross Coun-
try— freshman, varsity, co-captain; Interfra-
ternity Sports; A.S.M.E.; Varsity "L" Club.
HARDING
HARTENSTINE
HARDY
HEADLEY
HARMAN
HELLER
HARMON
HENDERSON
51
iii;i;i!Ei\ER
HETRICK
HERGEiMI W
HIGGINS, J. F.
HIGGINS, T. E.
Arthur Herbener
B.S. — Met. Eng. White Haven. Pa.
Town; Town Council; A.S.M., A.I.M.E.,
Lehigh Metallurgical Society.
William Kenneth Hergenhan
Russell Robert Hetrick
— Inter. Rela.
B.S. — Accountino;
Leonia, N. J.
Pi Kappa Alpha — house manager, alumni
secretary, historian ; Pi Gamma Mu, Scabbard
& Blade — secretary; Fencing — varsity, Rifle
Team — varsity. Lacrosse — freshman ; Lehigh
Accounting Society, Alpha Phi Omega, Var-
sity "L" Club; Freshman, Sophomore, Junior
Honors, Irving Samuels Prize, Williams Soph-
omore English Prize — second.
Richard Gregory Hess
B.A., B.S. — Chem.-Chem. Eng. Madison, N.J.
Phi Gamma Delta — Rushing chairman,
Dravo D — secretary-treasurer; Class Cabinet.
Class Dance Committee — chairman; Spring
Music Festival; Lacrosse — varsity, freshman.
Wrestling — freshman; Campus Chest Commit-
tee, Christian Council, Sportsman's Club,
A.LCh.E., American Chemical Society, Var-
sity "L" Club.
T. Kennady Heston, Jr.
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Ringoes. N. J.
Chi Psi — treasurer; Mustard & Cheese;
Pershing Rifles; Spring Music Festival; Foot-
ball— freshman; A.S.M.E.
Bethlehen
Town : Town Council — section representa-
tive; German Club, Cosmopolitan Club.
John Francis Higgins
B.S. — Finance Willow Grove, Pa.
Richards III-B; Brown & White, Lehigh
Business Society, Outing Club.
Thomas Eddy Higgins
B.S. — Marketing Havertown, Pa.
Psi Upsilon — librarian, corresponding sec-
retary, social chairman; Brown & White;
Spring Music Festival; Outing Club.
Walter John Hijeck
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Suffield, Conn.
Town; A.S.M.E.
James Calvin Hitchcock
B.S. — Ind. Eng. White Plains. N. Y.
Theta Delta Chi — house manager, execu-
tive committee president; LF.C. ; Band.
Norman Jay Hittinger
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Sigma Chi; LF.C; Chapel Choir; A.LCh.E.,
Student Chemical Society.
Robert Siemon Hodder
B.S. —Met. Eng. Pittsburgh, Pa.
Theta Delta Chi — corresponding secretary,
scholarship chairman, pledge captain; LF.C.
— freshman Handbook Committee, editor;
Baseball — freshman, varsity; A.S.M., Lehigh
Metallurgical Society.
Elliott Hudson Hollenback, Jr.
B.A. — Ind. Psy. Johnstown, Pa.
Alpha Tau Omega — vice-president. Rushing
chairman; Epitome — sales staff; Arcadia, Sen-
ior Class Committee; Chapel Choir; varsity
Football manager; Howard Eckfeldt Society.
HITCHCOCK
hittinger
HODDER
HOLLENBACK
k
52
IIOKM
James Davis Holman
B.S.- — Chem. Eng. Lakewoorf. N. J.
Dravo B-I ; A.I.Ch.E., Canterburj' Club.
Justin Gordon Holt
B.A. — Journalism Swarthmore. Pa.
Town ,■ Brown & White — reporter, assistant
desk editor. \'i LRN — audio technician.
B.S.
William Casper Horn
■ C. Eng. Williamsport. Pa.
Phi Delta Theta — chaplain, historian-librar-
ian: Chi Epsilon: Football — varsity. Track —
varsity; Varsity "L" Club, A.S.C.E.
Peter Letchworth Hoyt
B.S. — Gen. Bus. New Hope. Pa.
Sigma Phi; Epitome — sales manager; Jun-
ior Council; Band, Chapel Choir; freshman
Football manager, assistant varsity Football
manager; Political Science Assembly — busi-
ness manager; Lehigh Business Society.
Peter Kenneth Huester
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Scranton, Pa.
Chi Phi — treasurer, assistant treasurer; Sen-
ior Class treasurer; Cyanide. Scabbard &
Blade, .-Vrnold Air .Society. Omicron Delta
Kappa, Who's Who, Pershing Rifles; Track —
freshman numerals; A.I.Ch.E. — secretary.
Alpha Phi Omega — secretary', president; Cam-
pus Chest, Conference on Religion; Freshman.
Sophomore Honors. Chi Phi Sparks medal
for scholarship.
B.S.
Charles Hull
■ Eco. Stat. Orang
N. J.
Sigma Nu: Senior Class vice-president;
Cyanide; Who's Who; Spring Music Fes-
tival; Football — varsity; Varsity '"L" Club;
Sophomore Honors.
William Schmidt Hunter
B.S. — -Mech. Eng. Bellwood. Pa.
Town: Pershing Rifles; Band; Alpha
Lambda Omega, A.S.M.E. — publicity chair-
man. Christian Council — social chairman,
secretary. University Chapel Committee, Luth-
eran Students Association.
Roger Angelo Inglese
B.S. — Mech. Eng. AUentown, Pa.
Town; A.S.M.E.. Alpha Lambda Omega —
president.
Lester Belding Inglis, Jr.
B.S. — C. Eng. Levittown. N. Y.
Sigma Phi Epsilon — guard; Chapel Choir;
A.S.C.E.
Frank Joseph Jandrasi
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Coplay. Pa.
Town; Town Council; A.S.M.E., Alpha
Lambda Omega.
Harvey Morton Jasper
B.A. — Finance Brooklyn. N. Y.
Town; Brown & White; Town Council;
Spanish Club, Outing Club.
Charles Edward Jenkins
!.S. — Economics Pleasantville, N. Y.
Sigma Phi; Football — freshman.
HUESTER
INGLIS
HULL
JANDRASI
HUNTER
JASPER
INGLESE
JENKINS. C. E.
53
JENKINS, H. A.
JENKINS. W. J.
JENNES
JOHN
Harry Alexander Jenkins
B.S. — Accounting Bethlehem, Pa.
Pi Kappa Alpha — treasurer, house man-
ager; Junior Council, Senior Committee: Le-
high Accounting Society.
Samuel Sutton Johnson, Jr.
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Hamilton Square, N. J.
Taylor A — president, Taylor — president.
Tempo II — president; I.D.C. — president, sec-
retary; Who's Who; A.I.I. E.; Freshman
Counselor, Counselor-At-Large, Freshman
Orientation Program, Taylor Hall Improve-
ment Committee.
Hugh Charles Jones
B.A., B.S. — Arts Elec. Eng. Pittsburgh, Pa.
Drinker IV — secretary-treasurer, scholastic
chairman ; varsity Football manager.
Warren John Jenkins
B.S. — Min. Eng. Staten Island, N. Y.
Sigma Chi — steward; Epitome — senior class
editor. WLRN — advertising salesman; A.I.
M.E., Howard Eckfeldt Society.
William Paul Johnson
B.A. — Mathematics Brooklyn. N. Y.
Lambda Chi Alpha — treasurer, assistant
treasurer, Taylor D — section scholastic chair-
man; WLRN; Sophomore Class Cabinet;
Newtonian Society. Scabbard & Blade; Hockey
— varsity manager; Alpha Phi Omega; Fresh-
man Honors. Regional Scholarship.
Thomas Henry Jones, Jr.
B.S. — Min. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Theta Delta Chi — recording secretary; How-
ard Eckfeldt Society.
Frank Charles Jennes
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Scranton, Pa.
Town: Town Council; A.I.E.E., Newman
Club.
Arnold Kamr.\th Jones
B.S. — Accounting Hawthorne. N. J.
Drinker 1 1 -A; Junior Class Cabinet; Alpha
Kappa Psi; Accounting Society.
Howard Leslie Kamp
.S. — Finance New York, N. Y.
Tail Delta Phi.
George John
B.S. — Met. Eng. Boyertown, Pa.
Town; Metallurgical Society.
Cecil Roe Jones, Jr.
B.S. — Min. Eng. Ben .\von. Pa.
Delta Phi — social chairman, recording, cor-
responding secretary; Newtonian Society;
Glee Club. Cliff Clefs; S.A.M.E.; A.I.M.E.;
Howard Eckfeldt Society.
B.S.-
Ralph Henry Kamper
- Finance AUentown, Pa.
Town; Pershing Rifles; Alpha Lambda
Omega — recording secretary.
JOHNSON, S. S.
JONES, H. C.
54
JOHNSON, W. P.
JONES, T. H.
JONES, A. K.
KAMP
JONES, C. R.
KAMPER
dm^MM^
KA LFl \I AN KAUFMANN
KEARNEY
KEISER
KELEMEN KELLY, H. M.
KELLY. W. J.
KENLY
iROLD Lincoln Kauffman
Daniel John Kelemen
John Garver Kerch, Jr.
ilech. Eng. Lancaster. Pa. gg, _
- Chem. Eng. Emmaus.
Pa.
B.S.
— Gen. Bus. Akron, Ohio
B.S. — M
Delta Sigma Phi.
Mark S. Kauffmann
B.S. — Marketing New York, N. Y.
Pi Lambda Phi — president; Senior Class
Cabinet; Cyanide — president; Omicron Delta
Kappa; Pi Gamma Mu; Pershing Rifles;
Scabbard & Blade; Who's Who; Arnold Air
Society — operations officer; Hillel Society —
president; Interfaith Council — president;
Campus Chest — chairman ; Community Serv-
ice Projects — co-chairman; Freshman, Sopho-
more Honors.
Edward Rutledge Kearney
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Washington. D. C.
Alpha Tau Omega — treasurer, pledge-trainer,
scholarship chairman, sentinel; Junior Class
Cabinet; Tau Beta Pi Tutoring Committee —
chairman; Tau Beta Pi — president; Phi Eta
Sigma; Omicron Delta Kappa; Cyanide; New-
man Club — president, secretary; Inter-Faith
Council — president; A.S.M.E. ; Campus Chest;
Newtonian Society; John R. Wagner Award;
Pi Tau Sigma Freshman M.E. Award; Presi-
dent's Award — R.O.T.C. ; Freshman, Sopho-
more Honors.
Samuel Henricks Keiser, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Pottstown, Pa.
Kappa Alpha — president, rushing chair-
man; I.F.C. — representative; Senior Class
Cabinet; Band; Tennis — varsity.
Town; Town Council; Student Chemical
Society; A.l.Ch.E.
Harlan Miner Kelly
B.A. — Indus. Psy. Gloucester City, N. J.
Dravo C-1 ; Brown & White; Glee Club;
Chapel Choir; Chess Club.
William James Kelly
B.S. — C. Eng. Indiana. Pa.
Alpha Sigma Phi — president; Band. Glee
Club, Cliff Clefs, Spring Music Festival.
Robert Gordon Kenly, Jr.
B.A. — Geology Hartsdale, N. Y.
Delta Tau Delta; Mustard & Cheese; Mu-
sic Festival; Soccer — freshman; Spanish
Club; Howard Eckfeldt Society.
Sigma Phi Epsilon — secretary, pledgemas-
ter.
Robert Warren Kievit
B.S. — Gen. Bus. Ad. Clifton, N. J.
Taylor E — secretary-treasurer; Pershing
Rifles; Fencing — varsity captain; Cut and
Thrust — president; Freshman, Sophomore
Honors.
James Burnett Kingham
B.S. — Marketing Verona, N. J.
Phi Gamma Delta: Brown & White;
Epitome; Junior Class Cabinet; Music Fes-
tival; Soccer- freshman, varsity — captain; Var-
sity "L" Club; Brown Key Society.
John Rice Kingham
B.S. — Marketing Verona, N. J.
Phi Gamma Delta — assistant treasurer;
Brown & White; Epitome; Junior Class Cabi-
net; Lehigh Business Society; Spring Music
Festival; Soccer — varsity; Baseball — fresh-
man; International Relations; Varsity "L"
Club — treasurer.
KIEVIT
KINGHAM. J. B.
KINGHA-AI, J. R.
55
I
klTM)S
KOWALSKI
K\()\
KREBS
k(ii;iii,i':i;
KREHEL
William Kitsos
B.S. — Marketing Kingston, N. Y.
Town; Who's Who; Football — varsity cap-
tain 1952; Varsity "L" Club.
Albert Jacob Kowalski
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Pittston. Pa.
Town: A.S.M.E.; A.I.I.E.
Phillip B. Kreitz
;.A. — Biologv Bethlehem. Pa.
Town; Town Council Representative; Foot-
ball— freshman manager; R. W. Hall Society.
Charles Edward Klabunde
B.A. — Physics Lewiston, N. Y.
Drinker II-B; Pi Mu Epsilon; A.I.P.;
Freshman, Sophomore Honors.
Robert Seiple Knox
B.S. — Eng. Phy. Newton, N. J.
Drinker II-B — president, secretary-treasurer ;
WLRN; I.D.C. Competition Committee; Con-
cessions Committee; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu
Epsilon — president; Tau Beta Pi; Band; Or-
chestra; A.I.P. ; Radio Club; Freshman,
Sophomore Honors.
Robert Forrest Koehler
B.S. — Accounting Bethlehem, Pa.
Kappa Sigma — social chairman; I.F.C. Rep-
resentative; I.F.C. Freshman Rules Commit-
tee; Accounting Society.
Richard Joseph Kradjel
B.A. — Government Bethlehem, Pa.
Town — Town council — president, student
director of town intramural sports, chairman
I.D.C. Joint Square Dance; Town Crier —
editor, sports editor; Junior, Senior Class
Cabinets; Campus Chest; Freshman Orienta-
tion Committees; Phi Alpha Theta; Eta
Sigma Phi — treasurer; Newman Club; In-
quisitors.
Carl David Krebs
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Rutherford, N. J.
Theta Chi — secretary, historian; I.F.C. -rep-
resentative; Chapel Choir; Cross Country —
freshman, varsity manager; Track — freshman
manager; A.I.E.E.; Radio Club; Flying Club;
DeMolay Club — secretary.
Michael Francis Krehel
B.S. — Indus. Eng. Kingston, Pa.
Theta Kappa Phi — president, vice-president,
steward; I.F.C; Arcadia Associate; A.I.I.E.;
Newman Club.
Floyd Krengel
B.A. — Biology Elkins Park, Pa.
Tau Delta Phi — alumni secretary, house
manager: WLRN; R. W. Hall Society.
Paul Krenitsky
B.A.. B.S. — Elec. Eng. Olyphant, Pa.
Town; Phi Eta Sigma; Arnold Air Society;
A.I.E.E. ; I.R.E. Business Society; Newtonian
Society; Wilbur Prize — mathematics.
B.S.
James Phillip Kressler
- Economics Titusville, N. J.
Sigma Phi — president; Freshman Orienta-
tion Committee; University Chapel Commit-
tee; Alpha Kappa Psi; Pi Gamma Mu; Who's
Who; Political Science Assembly; Christian
Council — president.
KREITZ
'■*,r^^
KRENGEL
KRENITSKY
56
^ih
^i"**^!
/
C 1
v
x
^
4^
l.\(.Kl.\.\li. II. \.
LACKLAMi. I . W.
Ermest Alexander Kurmes
B.A. — Consenation Belvidere. N.
Tempo I — Scholarship chairman; Swim-
niing-"B", Varsity; Conservation Society — sec-
retary-treasurer; Howard Eckfeldt Society.
Anthony Paul Latour
B.S. — Mech. Eng. New York, N. Y.
Alpha Chi Rho — executive committee, ac-
tivities committee chairman; Epitome: Brown
& White: Junior. Senior Class Cabinet;
Camera Club; Cosmopolitan Club; A.S.M.E.
Francis M. Leake
B.S. — Accounting East Williston. N.Y.
Theta Chi — president, housemanager;
LF.C; Lehigh Accounting Society — president.
David Albert Lackland
B.S. — Marketing Plainfield. N. J.
Delta Phi — president, treasurer; Faculty
Evaluation Committee; Lost and Found Com-
mittee: Houseparty Decorations Committee —
chairman: LF.C; Scabbard & Blade: Orches-
tra; Spring Music Festival — ass't. head car-
penter, stage manager; Track — freshman, var-
sity-; Fencins — freshman.
Frederick William Lackland
B.S. — Marketing Plainfield, iN. J.
Delta Phi; Brown & White: Junior Class
Cabinet; Pershing Rifles; 1952-1953 Spring
Music Festival; Wrestling — varsity; Track —
freshman.
William Charles Ladew
B.S. — Eng. Phy. Teaneck. N. J.
Town; Town Council; Pi Mu Epsilon;
Delta Omicron Theta; A. LP. — treasurer:
Sophomore Honors.
William Albert Latshaw, Jr.
B.A. — Journalism Wyomissing. Pa.
Psi Upsilon ; Taylor Hall B — freshman dis-
ciplinarian, secretary-treasurer. president;
Brown & White — assistant news editor, news
editor, managing editor: Sophomore. Junior.
Senior Class Cabinets; LF.C. — publicity com-
mittee; Who"s Who; Cyanide: Omicron Delta
Kappa — vice president; Spanish Club; Cosmo-
politan Club; Director of Publicity & Educa-
tion 1952-53 Campus Chest; Taylor Hall Im-
provement Committee — secretary; Distin-
guished Military Student.
Julius Lauber, III
B.S. — C. Eng. Franklin Lakes, N. J.
Alpha Chi Rho — athletic manager; Base-
ball— freshman, "B"; A.S.C.E.
Harold Raymond Lauterbach
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Union, N. J.
Town ; A.LE.E. — corresponding secretary.
Carl Vincent Leary
B.S. — Finance Garden City, N. \.
Tempo I — president; I.D.C.
James Baird Lebo
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Maplewood, i\. J.
Chi Phi — steward; Chapel Choir; Lacrosse
— manager freshman, varsity; A.S.M.E.; Le-
high Outing Club; Cheer Leader; Ticket
Chairman House Party Dance Committee.
Richard David Lebson
B.A. — U. S. History Maywood. N. J.
Tau Delta Phi — athletic manager, assistant
quester: Phi Alpha Theta: Hillel Society;
Spanish Club.
LATOUR
LEAKE
LATSHAW
LAUBER
LEBO
LAUTERBACH
LEBSON
57
LE DENE
LEES
LEHR
B.S.
Donald Leonard LeDene
-Chem. Eng. Richmond Hill, N. Y.
Delta Chi — sergeant-at-arms; Price Hall —
social chairman; Pershing Rifles; Alpha Phi
Omega; A.I.Ch.E. ; Student Chemical Society.
Harry Lee
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Riverhead, N. Y.
Theta Xi; WLRN; Town Council, Student
Chemical Society; A.I.Ch.E.
William Arthur Lees, Jr.
B.S. — Accounting Scranton. Pa.
Town; Town Council; Lehigh Accounting
Society; Alpha Phi Omega.
Lawrence Leroy Lehr, Jr.
B.S. — Chemistry Bethlehem, Pa.
Town; Town Council — secretary, district &
section representative; Student Chemical So-
ciety.
Thomas Frank Leibinger
B.S. ^ Met. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Town: Town Council; Metallurgical So-
ciety; A.S.^L
David Evan Leith
B.A. — Biology
Bethlehem. Pa.
Town — secretary, president; Williams Prize
Debates; Sophomore Cabinet; Arcadia Con-
cessions Committee; Campus Chest Commit-
tee; Pershing Rifles; Alpha Epsilon Delta —
historian, president; 1952 Spring Music Fes-
tival— carpentry crew; Baseball — manager
varsity; Fencing Squad; R. W. Hall Pre-
medical Society — secretary, vice-president ;
Student Chemical Society; Freshman. Sopho-
more Honors; Dean's List.
B.S.
William Dudley Leng
Mech. Eng. New Rochelle, N. Y.
Delta Sigma Phi — treasurer, rushing chair-
man, sgt-at-arms, parents club representative;
Brown & White: WLRN; Tennis — manager;
A.S.M.E.
Robert Edward Lentz
B.S. — Marketing Northampton. Pa.
Richards IV -A — treasurer, social chairman;
Lehigh Business Society.
Edward John Leonard
l.S. — Elec. Eng. Bethlehen
Town: Town Council; A.I.E.E.
William Henry Lerch
B.S. — Accounting Allentown, Pa.
Taylor D — social chairman; Brown &
White; Scabbard & Blade; Pershing Rifles;
Spring Music Festival; Lehigh Business So-
ciety— vice president; Lehigh Accounting So-
ciety; Lehigh Auto Club — president.
James Irwin Leslie, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Summit, N. J.
Dravo B-1 — secretary-treasurer, president;
I.D.C. ; Soccer — freshman; Canterbury Club;
House Party Ticket Committee.
Allen Edwin Levan
B.A. — Chemistry Catawissa, Pa.
Dravo C-II — sophomore representative;
intramural athletic manager; 1950 Spring Mu-
sic Festival — carpenter; Baseball-freshman;
Student Chemical Society.
58
Jules Beenet Levine
B.A. — P6ycholog>-
Sigma Alpha Mu — athletic chairman, rush-
ing chairman; WLRN; Intramural Debate:
Blake Society; R. W. Hall Pre-Medical So-
ciety.
LEVINE
LEWIN
LEWITT
JTTMAN
LITTNER
LOEFFLER
EVINE
Neil Alan
LiTTMANN
Brooklyn.
N.Y.
B.A.
- English
New York. N. Y. B.S.
Sigma Alpha Mu — athletic chairman, rush-
ing committee; Brown & White: Pi Gamma
Mu; Phi Alpha Theta; Baseball-freshman;
Chess Club; Freshman Honors.
LINCK
LORE
Burton Lowitz
Accounting Newark. N. J.
Sigma Alpha Mu — recorder; WLRN — an-
nouncer, disc jockey; Pi Gamma Mu; Ac-
counting Society.
David Lewis Lewin
B.S. — Marketing White Plains, N. Y.
Sigma Alpha Mu — house manager, athletic
manager, rushing chairman, social chairman;
Junior Cabinet; I.F.C. ; Hillel Society.
Julian Louis Lewitt
B.S. — Finance Newark. N. J.
Sigma Alpha Mu — house manager, scholar-
ship chairman; WLRN — music director;
LF.C; Hillel Society.
Robert Ernest Linck
B.S. — C. Eng. Villanova. Pa.
Delta Tau Delta — corresponding secretary;
Epitome — editor-in-chief; Brown & White —
make-up editor; Mustard & Cheese: Radio
Workshop; Senior Class Cabinet; Omicron
Delta Kappa; Tau Beta Pi: Chi Epsilon —
associate editor The Transit: Pi Delta Epsi-
lon; Arnold Air Society — treasurer; Who"s
Who; Spring Music Festival — photography di-
rector; A.S.C.E. ; Camera Club; Sophomore
Honors.
Robert Harry Littner
B.A. — Biology Bethlehem, Pa.
Alpha Chi Rho — president, chaplain, ex-
ecutive committee; Brown & White: Sopho-
more. Junior. Senior Class Cabinets; I.F.C;
Town Council; Chapel Committee of Chris-
tian Council; Pershing Rifles; Spring Music
Festival; R. W. Hall Pre-Medical Society-
president, treasurer; Student Chemical So-
ciety.
George Conrad Loeffler
B.A. — Physics South Orange, N. J.
Richards I — sophomore representative,
counselor, scholastic chairman; Phi Eta
Sigma — vice-president: Physics Society; E. W.
Brown Astronomical Society — secretary-treas-
urer, president; Freshman, Sophomore Class
Honors; Dean's List.
Charles Truitt Lore, Jr.
B.S. — C. Eng. Trenton. N. J.
Town: E. \^'. Brown Astronomical Societv:
A.S.C.E.
Raymond Woodruff Ludlow, Jr.
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Essex FeUs, N. J.
Drinker III-A; Student Elections Commit-
tee: A.I.Ch.E.; Camera Club; Student Chem-
ical Society; Alpha Phi Omega — vice presi-
dent.
Lawrence Henry Lund, Jr.
B.S. — M. Eng. Pittsburgh, Pa.
Chi Phi — historian, pledge master; WLRN;
Pershing Rifles; Golf — varsity; Howard Eck-
feldt Society; A.I.M.E.; S.A.M.E.; Engineer
Award.
Kenneth Gordon Lundie
B.S. — Marketing Ocean Grove, N. J.
Taylor E — social chairman; Delta Omicron
Theta: WLRN— disc jockey; Pershing Rifles
— pledge oiEcer; Scabbard & Blade; Arnold
Air Society — adjutant-recorder; Canterbury
Club.
LUDLOW
LUNDIE
59
L^ I'UItU
MacCONNELL
L\^^
MacFARLAN
MacBEAN
MacMURTRIE
Bedford Hoyt Lydon, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Cranford. N. J.
Psi Upsilon — secretary, athletic manager:
Brown & White; Houseparty Dance Commit-
tee, Graduation Dance Committee; Hockey —
varsity; Varsity "L" Club, Foreign Policy
Association, Outing Club.
W. Martin Lyford
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Camden, N. J.
Town.
Alexander LaRue Lynn
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Watsontown, Pa.
Delta Chi — historian, president; Alpha Phi
Omega; A.I.E.E. — secretary.
B.A.-
DoNALD Dean MacBean
- Int. Rela. Allentown, Pa.
Town; Brown & White; Town Council;
Alpha Lambda Omega; International Rela-
tions Club; Foreign Policy Association.
Thomas Brown MacCabe, Jr.
B.A. — History Philadelphia, Pa.
Kappa Alpha — rushing chairman; WLRN;
Mustard & Cheese; Arcadia — vice-president;
Junior, Senior Class Cabinets; Campus Chest
Committee — chairman ; Alumni Contact Com-
mittee— chairman ; Parking Committee — chair-
man ; Freshman Orientation Committee —
chairman; Flag Day Committee — chairman.
Edgar Wade MacConnell
B.S. — Finance Scranton, Pa.
Delta Tau Delta — assistant treasurer, treas-
urer, finance chairman; WLRN; Junior Class
Cabinet; Band; Orchestra; Collegians; Spring
Music Festival; Lehigh Business Society.
Stephen Dunn MacFarlan, III
B.A. — Finance Bala Cynwyd, Pa.
Phi Gamma Delta — house manager;
Epitome; Sophomore, Junior Class Cabinets;
Senior Committee; Chapel Choir; Lacrosse —
freshman, sophomore ; Wrestling — manager
freshman, sophomore; German Club — secre-
tary, treasurer; Outing Club; A.I.I.E.
Edward Dayton MacMurtrie
B.A. — Chemistry Montgomery, N. Y.
Taylor D — secretary-treasurer; American
Chemical Society; Canterbury Club.
Robert Frank Magyarics
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Town; Eta Kappa Nu — recording secretary;
I.R.E. — treasurer; A.I.E.E.
Edward Joseph Mahoney
B.S. — Finance North Bellmore, N. Y.
Beta Theta Pi — athletic manager; Wrestling
— freshman, varsity.
William John Maloney
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Honesdale. Pa.
Town; Town Council; Tau Beta Pi; Eta
Kappa Nu — vice-president; A.I.E.E.; Newman
Club — secretary; Freshman, Sophomore, Jun-
ior Honors.
B.A.
Joel Barry Mann
-Biology Margate City, N. J.
Sigma Alpha Mu — pledgemaster, recorder,
prior; Brown & White; Alpha Epsilon Delta
— hostorian ; Wrestling Manager — freshman,
J.V.; R. W. Hall Pre-medical Society; Stu-
dent Chemical Society; Hillel Society.
MAGYARICS
^'
60
rfm
>1
i
? \'
\t.
:t-
MANZA
MARKS
\^-
1
MARCHAK
MARTIN. E. G.
#
•^5*
MARGERISON
MARTIN, F. A.
Robert Howland Many
B.A. — Histon- East Orange, N. J.
Delta Upsilon.
Allan Black Margolis
B.S. — Finance Philadelphia. Pa.
Sigma Alpha Mu — house manager; Brown
& White: I.F.C. ; Business Society; Hillel
Society.
Joseph Antonio Martinez
.S. — Marketing .\shland, Pa.
Town .- Flying Club.
B.S.-
Donald Eugene Manza
- Chem. Eng. Denville, N. J.
Drinker I IB: Student Chemical Society;
A.I.Ch.E.
William Gulp Marks, Jr.
B.S. — Accounting Westmont. N. J.
Sigma Nu: Lacrosse — freshman: Account-
ing Society — treasurer, organizer.
Ellis Willl4m Mast
!.S. — .Accounting Hellertown, Pa.
Town.
Thomas Joseph Marchak
B.S. — Marketing Bethlehem. Pa.
Town.
Richard Bennett Margerison
B.S. — Chemistry Philadelphia, Pa.
Delta Tau Delta — steward; Spring Music
Festival; Student Chemical Society; A.I.Ch.E.
— treasurer.
Edward George Martin
B.S. — Gen. Bus. Yonkers. N. Y.
Sigma Nu — secretary, athletic chairman;
Brown & White; Junior, Senior Class Cab-
inets; Newman Club — secretary; Interfaith
Council.
Francis Anthony Martin
Bethlehem, Pa.
B.S.-
Maung Maung
Mech. Eng. Pegu,
3.S. — Chemistry
Town.
Taxlor D: Camera Club; Cosmopolitan
Club- A.I.E.E.; A.S.M.E.
Thomas Howard May
B.S. — C. Eng. Maple Shade, N. J.
Taylor C: Brown & White: Mustard &
Cheese; Pi Mu Epsilon; Scabbard & Blade;
Chi Epsilon; Newtonian Society; Alpha Phi
Omega; Sailing Club — secretary; A.S.C.E. ;
Lutheran Students' Association.
MARTINEZ
MAST
MAUNG
MAY
61
^Mi^
^r-"w
McADAM
McCartney
V Ml
David Stewart McAdam
B.S. — Marketing Arlington, N. J.
Drinker III-B — president, secretary-treas-
urer; Mustard & Cheese; Junior, Senior Class
Cabinets; Arcadia Associates; I.D.C. — treas-
urer; Alpha Kappa Psi — vice-president; Per-
shing Rifles.
B.S.
T. John McAlonan
Ind. Eng. Glenside. Pa.
Theta Delta Chi — steward, athletic chair-
man ; Soccer — varsity ; Swimming — varsitv :
A.I.I.E.; Varsity "L" Club.
John Elwood McCartney
B.S. — Accounting
Bronxville, N. \.
Theta Delta Chi — athletic manager, maga-
zine editor, librarian; WLRN; Junior Coun-
cil; Accounting Society.
Walter Blair McCausland
B.S. — Marketing Bethlehem. Pa.
Frank Emory McConnell
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Larchmont, N. Y.
Delta Tau Delta — activities chairman, guide:
Sailing Team; A.S.M.E. ; Sailing Club — pub-
licity chairman, commodore.
Alexander Olcott McCord
B.S. — Finance Stillwater, N. J.
Kappa Sigma — house manager; Wrestling —
freshman, "B".
Edward Russell McFarlan
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Westfield. N. J.
Chi Psi — rushing chairman, alpha affairs;
Epitome: Junior Class Cabinet; Arcadia As-
sociate; Spring Music Festival; Ski Team —
varsity; Outing Club — president, vice-presi-
dent; A.S.M.E.; House Party Dance Com-
mittee.
Wayne R. McKee
- Met. Eng. Canonsburg, Pa.
James Robert McKnight
B.S. — Mining Eng. Freemansburg, Pa.
Town: Pershing Rifles; Howard Eckfeldt
Society; A.I.M.E.; S.A.M.E.
Robert Wyckoff McMullen
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Basking Ridge, N. J.
Taylor C; A.S.M.E.
Donald Stephen Medrick
B.S. — Chem. Eng.
Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Drinker IV ; Track — freshman, varsity; New-
man Club; A.l.Ch.E. ; Student Chemical So-
ciety.
Edwin Gustav Meeh, Jr.
B.S. — Chem. Eng. South Orange N. J.
Drinker IV — treasurer, freshman councilor;
Drinker II-A — treasurer; Sophomore, Junior
Class Cabinets; Tau Beta Pi — corresponding
secretary; Phi Eta Sigma; A.l.Ch.E. — pres-
ident; Lehigh Student Chemical Society;
Alpha Phi Omega — historian, recording secre-
Town ;
Rifles.
Town Council-
-reporter; Pershing
Toivn; Lehigh Metallurgical S
treasurer.
ocietv — tary ;
List.
Fresh
man, S
ophomore Hone
McCONNELL
McCORD
McFARLAN
McKEE
Mcknight
McMULLEN
MEDRICK
MEEH
62
'tc.
t
METZ, C. J.
]rv Meislin
i5..S. — Gen. Bii>. Allentown, Pa.
Sigma Alpha \hi.
John Frederick Metz
B.S. ~M. Eng. Upper Darby, Pa.
Chi Phi — vice-president, secretary, rushing
chairman, house committee chairman; WLRN;
Pershing Rifles; Lacrosse Assistant Manager
— varsity; Howard Eckfeldt Society; S.A.
M.E.; A.I.M.E.
Richard Otto Michal
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Maspeth, L. I., N. Y.
Town; Town Council; Baseball — freshman.
varsity; Ice Hockey — varsity; A.I.E.E. ; In
stitute of Radio Engineers — vice-chairman.
B.S.
Robert George Melega
- Chem. Eng. Perth .Amhoy, N. J.
Theta Chi — librarian; Epitome; Sailing
Club; Student Chemical Society; A.I.Ch.E.
Harold Erwin Meyer
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Havertown. Pa.
Delta Upsilon — steward, marshal, chairman
literary committee; A.S.M.E. ; Intramural
Sports.
William Thomas Middleton, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Bethlehem, Pa.
Town; Band; Spanish Club.
Peter Mesko
;.S. — Mech. Eng. Bethlelu-i
Town: A.S.M.E.
B.S.
Charles Joseph Metz
- Chem. Eng. Morrisville. Pa.
Drinker III-B — secretary-treasurer, scholar-
ship chairman: .Arcadia Associate; Alpha Phi
Omega; Student Chemical Society; A.I.Ch.E.;
Chess Club.
Herbert Milton Meyer
B.S. — Chemistry Ridgewood, N. J.
Alpha Sigma Phi — social chairman, chair-
man of undergraduate national convention
committee; l.F.C. — secretary; Glee Club;
Cliff Clefs; Chapel Choir; Football— ^varsity.
"B'"; Skiing — varsity; Ski Club; Outing Club;
Student Chemical Society.
Robert Kenneth Meyer
B.A. — English Sharon Hill, Pa.
Taylor A — scholastic chairman; Delta Omi-
cron Theta — treasurer. Brown & White, Mus-
tard & Cheese; Phi Eta Sigma, Pershing
Rifles; Cross Country — freshman; Physics
Club, Christian Council — vice-president; \^il-
liams Prize.
Clarence John Miller, Jr.
B.S. — Chemistry Abington, Pa.
Richards III-B — president, treasurer; New
tonian Society; Chess Club; American Chem
ical Society.
Richard Allan Mitchell
.S. — Marketing Audubon, N. J.
Richards I IB — president; Flying Club.
MEYER. H. E.
MIDDLETON
MEYER, H. M.
MILLER
MEYER, R. K.
MITCHELL, R. A.
63
MITCHELL, R. G.
MOLL
MOLLlOi;
MOORE, R. W.
MOLKENTHIN
MOORE, S. A.
Robert George Mitchell
B.S. — Marketing Glen Ridge, N. J.
Delta Upsilon — literary chairman, scholai-
ship chairman; Epitome: Junior Class Cab-
inet; Spring Music Festival; Soccer — fresh-
man, sophomore; Auto Club.
Thomas H. Mohr
B.S. — C. Eng. & Eco. Bethlehem, Pa.
Sigma Chi — corresponding secretary; 1952
Epitome — managing editor; Brown & White
— asst. editorial director; Arcadia — secretary;
University Discipline Committee; Student Ac-
tivities Committee; Board of Publications;
Alumni Contact Committee; Junior Class
Cabinet; Omicron Delta Kappa — president;
Cyanide; Phi Eta Sigma — vice-president; Pi
Delta Epsilon — vice-president; Pershing
Rifles; Scabbard and Blade — treasurer; Arn-
old Air Society — president; Phi Beta Kappa;
Tau Beta Pi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Chi Ep-
silon; 1952 Who's Who; Glee Club; Cliff
Clefs; Freshman, Sophomore Honors; Wil-
liams Junior Prize in English Composition
— third prize.
Edward Joseph C. Molitor
B.A. — Government Richmond Hill, N. Y.
Taylor A — athletic manager; Phi Alpha
Theta; Track — varsity; Wrestling — freshman,
varsity; Cross Country — Freshman, varsity.
Richard E. Molkenthin
B.S. — Marketing Glen Ridge, N. J.
Delta Upsilon — recording secretary, rushing
chairman; Track-varsity; Lacrosse-varsity.
Edward Jacob Moll. Jr.
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Lansdale, Pa.
Taylor B — secretary -treasurer, athletic chair-
man; Pershing Rifles; Student Chemical So-
ciety; A.I.Ch.E. ; Newtonian Society. Intra-
mural Sports.
Bruce Clinton Mooney
B.S. — Met. Eng. Palmerton, Pa.
Phi Delta Theta — vice-president, rushing
chairman, alumni secretary, scholastic chair-
man, chorister; I.F.C.; Student Metallurgy
Society.
Robert Wilson Moore
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Maplewood, N. J.
Sigma Chi — magister; Drinker I — secretary-
treasurer; 1952 Epitome — Associate Managing
Editor; 1953 Epitome — Managing Editor; Ar-
cadia; Cyanide — secretary; Pi Mu Epsilon;
Newtonian Society — president; Omicron Delta
Kappa; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; Who's
Who; Band; Glee Club; Cliff Cleffs;
A.S.M.E.; Alpha Phi Omega — vice-president.
Stanley A. Moore
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Prospect Park. Pa.
Richards III-A — president, athletic man-
ager; Phi Eta Sigma; Alpha Pi Mu; New-
tonian Society; Intramural Sports.
Robert Wismer Morgan
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Wyomissing, Pa.
Phi Delta Theta — secretary, pledge master;
Football — varsity; A.I.I.E.; Varsity "L" Club
— president.
Joseph N. Morgenstern
B.A. — English West Englewood, N. J.
Pi Lambda P/ii— president ; WLRN; SCL
Committee member; I. E.G. — publicity chair-
man; Phi Eta Sigma; Cyanide; Omicron
Delta Kappa; Who's Who; 1952 Spring Music
Festival — coordinating director; Freshman,
Sophomore Honors; Wilbur Essay Contest —
first prize; Williams Essay Contest — first prize.
B.S.
John Smith Morris
- Ind. Ens. Villanova, Pa.
Chi Psi — athletic manager, alpha affairs
chairman; Spring Music Festival; Auto Club.
Charles Henry Morrison
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Hagerstown, Md.
Town: A.I.E.E.
MORGENSTERN
MORRISON, C. H.
m%wm
.l\
0
^, ^-^
1
mm
64
\i(ii;i;isoN, J. T.
MOSSHART
MOWRER
B.S.
John Thomas Morrison
Maiketin"; Auluir
Phi Gamma Delta: Broun & W hite — sports
reporter; WLRN — sports announcer; Junior
Class Treasurer; Senior Class Cabinet; Per-
shing Rifles; Alpha Kappa Psi; Baseball —
freshman, J.V.. varsity; Wrestling — freshman,
J.V., varsity; Canterbury Club; Brown Key
Society — president; R. A. Lewis Freshman
Wrestling Cup.
Howard Morton Morse
B.S. — Marketing Clifton, N. J.
Pi Lambda Phi — social chairman; WLRN —
news announcer; Junior, Senior Class Cab-
inets, Arcadia Associate, Spring House Party
— Reception Committee chairman; .Spring
Music Festival; Lehigh Business Society. Hillel
Society, Interfaith Council.
Donald J. Mosshart. Jr.
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Ardmore. Pa.
Theta Kappa Phi — vice-president; .'spring
Music Festival; Shop Club; A.S.M.E.
Clifton Elmer Mowrer. Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Bethlehem. Pa.
Kappa Sigma: Brown & White; Freshman.
Sophomore, Junior, Senior Class Cabinets;
LF.C. — representative; Lehigh Business So-
ciety.
Henry Ernest Moyer
.S. — C. Eng. Milford, Pa.
Town: Town Council; Chi Epsilon — treas-
rer; .\lpha Lambda Omega; A..S.C.E.
Joseph William Mover
B.S. — C. Eng. Quakertown, Pa.
Sigma Nu — vice-president; Junior Class
Cabinet; Senior Class Committee; LF.C. —
athletic chairman: Spring Music Festival;
Football — freshman, varsity; Basketball — var-
sity; Baseball — varsitv; Varsitv "L" Club;
A.S.C.E.
B.S.
Richard A. Mover
Eng. Phy. Limekih
Pa.
Drinker IIA — treasurer; Brown & White:
Pi Mu Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi; Scabbard &
Blade; Phi Eta Sigma; Chemistry Society;
Phvsics .Society.
Donald Alexander Movant
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Medford, N. J.
Richards III-A — athletic manager; New-
tonian Society; Wrestling — freshman. J.V.;
Student Chemical Society; A.l.Ch.E.
Donald M. Movle
B.S. — .Marketing Yonkers, N. Y.
Chi Psi — house manager; Brown & White;
Football — freshman ; Basketball — freshman ;
varsity; Sportsman's Club.
George Michael Muha
B.S. — Chemistry Metuchen, N. J.
Theta Kappa Phi — financial secretary, treas-
urer, scholastic chairman ; American Chemi-
cal Society; Student Chemical Society; Alpha
Phi Omega.
Henry Edwin Mulder
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Long Island City, N. Y.
Sigma Phi Epsilon — president; 1951 Spring
Music Festival; A.I.E.E.; LR.E.
William Walden Mumford, Jr.
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Atlantic Highlands, N. J.
Phi Delta Theta — secretary, steward, war-
den, chorister, athletic manager; Junior Class
Cabinet; Pi Tau Sigma; Glee Club; Football
— freshman, varsity; Baseball — freshman, var-
sity; A.S.M.E.; Intramural Sports.
MOYER. H. E.
MOYLE
MOYER. J. W.
MUHA
MOYER, R. A.
MULDER
MOYANT
MUMFORD
65
ii>^
1 ^
MURPHY
NAPOLIELLO
E. C^
NAPOLITANO
NEVINS
Austin Douglas Murphy
B.S. — Econ. Stat. Merion Station, Pa.
Town; Town Council; Mustard & Cheese —
secretary, club technician ; Town Crier — edi-
tor; Spring Music Festival; Chapel Choir —
secretary; A.S.C.E.; Flying Club — secretary-
treasurer.
Ferdinand Joseph Napoliello, Jr.
B.S. — C. Eng. W. Caldwell. N. J.
Dravo A — secretary-treasurer, athletic man-
ager; A.S.C.E.
B.S.
Harry Ralph Nicholls
-M. Eng. Pitman, N. J.
Town; Town Council; Howard Eckfeldt So-
ciety; Society of Exploration Geophysicists.
Paul Niederer
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Carlstadt. N. J.
Richards III-A ; Pi Tau Sigma — secretary ;
Pershing Rifles; Alpha Phi Omega; A.S.M.E.;
Sailing Club.
Harry Charles Edwin Nuss
.S. — Elec. Eng. Allentown, Pa.
Town; A.I.E.E.; I.R.E.
Byron Ober, Jr.
B.S. — Gen. Bus. Newton, N. J.
Sigma Phi — treasurer; Dravo D-H — pres-
ident; WLRN — ad. mgr.; Cyanide; Alpha
Kappa Psi; Pi Delta Epsilon; Sophomore
Honors.
Joseph Phillip Napolitano, Jr.
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Paterson. N. J.
Sigma Phi Epsilon — vice-president, rushing
chairman ; LF.C. — representative ; A.I.I.E. ;
Intramural Sports.
Robert Arthur Niem.ann
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Bethlehem. Pa.
Town; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma;
A.S.M.E.
B.A.
Peter Neal O'Connor
Biology' Arlington. Mass.
Alpha Chi Rho — assistant chapter editor;
Drinker -III-A— president; R. W. Hall Pre-
medical Society — treasurer; Spanish Club.
B.A.
David Martin Nevins
- Biology New York City, N. Y.
Tau Delta Phi — editor, historian; Alpha
Epsilon Delta; Newtonian Society; Tennis-
freshman; R. W. Hall Pre-medical Society;
Freshman Honors.
VOLKMAR NiEMITZ
B.A. — Science New York, N. Y'.
Taylor D — secretary-treasurer, president ;
I.D.C. — Intramural, Houseparty, Movie Com-
mittees; Chapel Choir; A.S.M.E.; Class Gift
Committee.
Frederick George Oelgeschlager
B.A. — Philosophy Newark, N. J.
Taylor A — social chairman; Sophomore,
Junior Class Cabinets; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi
Gamma Mu; Newtonian Society; Orchestra;
Blake Society ; A.I.Ch.E. ; Westminster Fellow-
ship; Christian Council — chairman of Confer-
ence on Religion 1953; German Club.
NICHOLLS
NIEDERER
OBER
NIEMANN
O'CONNOH
NIEMETZ
OELGESCHLAGER
^
OGORZALEK
OPLINGER
OMHOLT
ORGILL
John Martin Ogorzalek
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Reading. Pa.
Taylor C: Newtonian Society: Lehigh Chem-
ical Society; A.I.Ch.E.
Harry J. Olson
B..\. — Geolog)- St. Louis. Mo.
Sigma Phi: Howard Eckfeldt Society —
treasurer.
..\.
Donald W. Opllnger
- Physics Rochester, N. Y.
Kappa Alpha: Mustard and Cheese; Radio
Workshop; Freshman Cabinet; Cyanide; Phi
Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Newtonian So-
ciety; Wrestling — J.V.; A.I. P. — secretary-
German Club; Freshman, Sophomore, Junior
Honors; Dean's List.
John Robert O'Ravitz
S. — Met. Eng. Wilkes-Barre. Pa.
Society — secretarv" ;
Milton Howard Osborn, Jr.
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Erlton. N. J.
Theta Xi: Pershing Rifles; Track — fresh-
man; Alpha Phi Omega; A.LLE.
Norman Koch Ott, Jr.
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Allentown. Pa.
Toivn: Town Council; Pershing Rifles;
.\lpha Lambda Omega; A.LE.E.
Town ; Metallurgical
Newman Club; A.S.M.
Ray Edward Omholt
B.S. — C. Eng. Overbrook Hills. Pa.
Toun: Dravo B-Il — treasurer; Brown and
White: Chapel Choir: Alpha Phi Omeaa:
A.S.C.E.
John L.\wrence Orgill
B.S. — Met. Eng. Pottstown. Pa.
Sigma Chi; Swimming — freshman; Metal-
lurgical Society; A.S.M.
Frederick August Otter, Jr.
B.S. — Eng. Phy. West Chester. Pa.
Tempo II — counselor, proctor; Drinker I —
president, counselor: Drinker III-B — pres-
ident: LD.C; Arcadia; Sophomore Cabinet;
Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Cyanide;
Newtonian Society: Who's Who; A.I.P.
RiCH.\RD Lawrence O'Neil
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Plainfield, N. J.
Taylor "D" — vice-president ; Football — fresh-
man; Hockey Manager; Student Chemical
Society: A.LCh.E.; Sailing: Club: Newman
Club.
John Richard Ortlieb
B.S. — C. Eng. Trenton. N. J.
Alpha Sigma Phi — treasurer, scholastic
chairman, athletic manager; Newtonian So-
ciety: Chi Epsilon; A.S.C.E.; Sophomore
Honors.
Rolf W. A. Pagels
B.A. — Mech. Eng. Cynwyd. Pa.
Alpha Chi Rho — pledge trainer; I.F.C. —
representative; Pershing Rifles.
OSBORN
r:ai* ^r
OTT
OTTER
PAGELS
67
flB
u
j\
^« II "^
f^^
PATTERSON
PEACOCK. B. M.
\l LES
PEACOCK. E. D.
lam «
PAWSON
PENNELL
Peter Peabody Parsons
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Snyder, N. Y.
Taylor E — scholastic chairman; A.S.M.E. ;
Automobile Club.
Lee DeBorde Peachey
B.S. — Eng. Phy. Rochester. N. Y.
Alpha Chi Rho — treasurer; Drinker II-B —
social chairman; Newtonian Society; Band;
Orchestra; Swimming — freshman, varsity; La-
crosse— freshman; Flying Club; Sailing Club;
Camera Club; A.I.P.
Walter Edward Perdue, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Ridgewood, N. J.
Fhi Gamma Delta — historian; Football —
freshman;- Brown Key Society.
Allen Graham Patterso.n'
B.S. -- Eng. Phy. Philadelphia. Pa.
Drinker-UA — president ; l.D.C. — competition
committee; Pi Mu Epsilon — membership com-
mittee chairman; Physics Society.
Bruce M. Peacock
.S. — Mech. Eng. Bethlehem. Pa.
Beta Theta Phi.
Richard Prather Perry
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Haddon Heights, N. J.
Town; Drinker II-B — secretary-treasurer;
Football — varsity.
Charles Elmer Paules, Jr.
B.A. — Ind. Psy. Elizabeth. N. J.
Delta Vpsilon — corresponding secretary,
editor of Whitehouse; Spring Music Festival;
Swimming — freshman, varsity; A. I. I.E.; Var-
sity "L" Club.
Edward Dale Peacock
l.S. — Marketing Bala-Cyn%vyd, Pa
Dale Otto Perschka
.S. — Mech. Eng. Sharon, Pa.
Town; A.S.M.E.
B.S.
Robert Eugene Pawson
- Gen. Bus. Chatham. N.
Sigma Chi; Ice Hockey — freshman, varsity;
Football — freshman, varsity.
William Harry Pennell, Jr.
B.S.^lnd. Eng. Pittsburgh, Pa.
Sigma Phi Epsilon — athletic director; Dravo
C-I — athletic director; Spring Music Festival;
A.l.l.E.
Edward Pfenninger
;.S. — C. Eng. .A.llentown. Pa.
Town: Town Council; Chi Epsilon; A.S.C.E.
PERDUE
PERRY
PFENNINGER
68
«B«r ■ iSfe"
JT'
^f(
1^ ^W^
Charles Oliver Phillips. Jr.
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Glenside. Pa.
Town; Arnold Air Society: A.LE.E.: l.R.E.
Jay W. Picking. Jr.
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Chagrin Falls. O.
Kappa Sigma — vice-president; A.S.^LE.
Newton Irwin Pincus
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Brooklyn, N. Y.
Tau Delta Phi — pledge master, steward,
house manager: Brown and White — make up
editor, managing editor; Wrestling — fresh-
man; A.I.I.E. ; Hillel Society: Intramural
Sports.
Horace Tirley Potts. Ill
B.S. — Met. Eng. Gwynedd Valley. Pa.
Chi Psi — secretary; Pershing Rifles; .Spring
Music Festival — stage crew: Basketball — man-
ager— varsity; A.S.M.: Metallurgical Society;
Autom.obile Club — secretary, vice-president.
Gilbert Henry Priess
B.A.. B.S. — Ind. Eng. Schenectady. N. Y.
Kappa Alpha — attendant, treasurer, steward ;
.Arcadia Associate, A.I.I.E.; German Club.
Robert M. Promln
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Clifton. N. J.
Richards IV -A : Skiina Club. Canterbury
Club. A.S.M.E.
William Puckett, Jr.
Inter. Rela. Bethlehem, Pa.
William E. Pullen
.S. — Elec. Eng. Asbury Park. N. J.
Town ; A.I.E.E.
Paul Mathis Pyper
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Audubon, N. J.
Alpha Tau Omega — worthy sentinal, athletic
manager, social chairman; 1951 Epitome; A.S.
M.E.
B.S.
John David Platt
Mech. Eng. Mount Pocono. Pa.
Beta Theta Pi — assistant steward, alumni
secretary; Sophomore Class Vice-president:
Junior Class Secretary; Senior Class Cabinet:
Cyanide: Pershing Rifles; Glee Club; Wrest-
ling— freshman, varsity; .A..S.M.E.; Brown Key
Society; Varsity "L" Club.
George Williamson Prosser. Jr.
B..\. — Biology Bethlehem. Pa.
Alpha Chi Rho — chaplain; Pershing Rifles;
Scabbard & Blade; Baseball — freshman "B";
R. W. Hall Pre-medical Society.
Chandra Sekhar Ram
B.S. — Mech. Eng. New Delhi, India
Price Hall: Newtonian Societv; Phi Eta
Sigma: Pi Tau Sigma, A.S.M.E.; A.I.E.E.
Cosmopolitan Club — vice-president, treasurer
Roger Williams Fellowship — vice-president
Camera Club; French Freshman Prize; Fresh-
man. Sophomore Honors.
POTTS
PUCKETT
PRIESS
PULLEN
PROMLN
PYPER
PROSSER
RAM
69
I^HIkkjiJi^l
-N
K W
Roderick Garfield Randel
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Mountain Lakes. N. J.
Sigma Phi — vice-president, scholastic chair-
man; Newtonian Society; Glee Club; Clifi
Clefs; Ice Hockey — varsity; Student Chemical
Society; A.I.Ch.E. ; Freshman Honors.
Bruce Robert Rauhe
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Anna Maria, Fla.
Alpha Tau Omega — librarian-historian;
Music Festival; Scabbard and Blade Cup;
Intramural Sports.
Samuel Thomas Raynor
B.S. — Finance Freeport, N. Y.
Delta Chi — Chaplain, pledgemaster; Varsity
track — manager; Spanish Club; International
Relations Club.
Robert W. Reese
B.S. — Accounting AUentown. Pa.
Town; Accounting Society; Alpha Lambda
Omega.
William Edward Reeves
B..^. — Education Rahway, N. J.
Richards I — secretary-treasurer, scholastic
chairman; Phi Eta Sigma — secretary; Eta
Sigma Phi — Pylorus; German Club; Lehigh
Christian Fellowship; Freshman, Sophomore
Honors.
William David Rehner
B.S. — Finance AUentown, Pa.
Delta Upsilon — marshal, vice-president, stew-
ard; Debating Club; Sophomore Class Cab-
inet— co-chairman of Snow Ball, I.F.C. stu-
dent-faculty discussion groups committee
chairman. Campus Chest; Music Festival-stage
manager; Soccer-varsity manager.
Earl Marin Reiback
B.A. — English Brooklyn, N. Y.
Pi Lambda Phi; WLRN.
Robert Reichard
.S. — Chemistry Bethlehem, Pa.
Town; Student Chemical Society.
John Cecil Reilly
B.S. — Gen. Bus. Oceanside, N. Y.
Drinker III-B — Social Chairman.
Benjamin Franklin Reinauer
B.S. — Gen. Bus. Wortendyke, N. J.
Delta Tau Delta — social chairman cabinet,
I.F.C. representative; Senior Class Cabinet;
Music Festival; A.I.I. E.; Lehigh Business So-
ciety; I.F.C. — Greek Weekend Committee,
Freshman Handbook Committee. Chairman
Files & Archives, Freshman Committee.
Bruce W. Reinhold
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Stratford. N. J.
Delta Tau Delta — rules & activities chair-
man; Music Festival — Art Director; Football
— freshman; A.I.I.E.; Machine Shop Club —
secretary-treasurer.
Joseph F. Reuwer, Jr.
B.S. — Chemistry Harrisburg. Pa.
Dravo B-I — scholastic chairman; Phi Eta
Sigma; Student Chemical Society; American
Chemical Society — vice-president; Chandler
Chemistry Prize — Freshman, Sophomore,
Junior; Tau Beta Pi Prize; American Chemi-
cal Society Award.
REICHARD
RELWER
^^%fT
>
70
Samuel Dornon Reynolds, Jr.
B.S. — Met. Ens.
.'^waithmoie. Pa.
Theta Chi; Epitome: Track — Varsity man-
ager; ."V.S.-M.; .Student Metallurgical Society;
Quarter Club; Student Chemical Society.
Henry George Richardson, Jr.
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Rye. N. Y.
Alpha Sigma Phi — scholarship chairman,
custodian; Basketball — varsity; Tennis team
— freshman; A.I.Ch.E. ; Student Chemical So-
ciety.
Donald Elwood Rickert
B.S. — Finance Lansford, Pa.
Sigma Chi — steward, historian; Chapel
Choir; Orchestra; Band — student director;
Glee Club — student director; Combined Mu-
sic Clubs — president; Music Festival — 1953-
student manager of music.
John Buchanan Riddell
l.S. — Mech. Eng. W. Caldwell. N. J.
Delta Tau Delta — athletic chairman; Brown
': White: Spring Music Festival; A.S.M.E.
John Ritchie
l.S. — Marketing Hawthorne, N. J.
Sigma Chi: Scabbard & Blade.
Thomas Rivel, Jr.
B.S. — Accounting Philadelphia, Pa.
Drinker I IB; Tempo III — president; Sail-
ing Club; Freshman, Sophomore Honors.
Marvin Robinson
B.S. — Mecb. Eng., Elec. Eng.
Tarrytown, N. Y.
Tau Delta Phi; WLRN; Pi Tau Sigma; Eta
Kappa Nu; Music Festival; Baseball — fresh-
man, varsity; A.I.E.E. ; A.S.M.E.
David Edward Roeder
B.S. — Marketing Great Neck, N. Y.
Delta Chi — treasurer; Dormitory Section —
treasurer, secretary; Brown and White; Le-
high Business Society; Intramural Sports.
Herbert A. Roemmele
B.S. — Finance Maplewood, N. J.
Sigma Nu — president, reporter, rushing
chairman; Brown and White — ass't sports edi-
tor; Epitome — sports editor; Sophomore
Class — secretary; Junior Class — president;
I.F.C. — vice-president, judiciary committee
chairman; Senior Class Cabinet; Pershing
Rifles; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa;
Who's Who; Intramural Sports; Music Fes-
tival— Business Staff; Freshman, Sophomore
Honors; Dean's List.
Charles Pingrey Rogers, H
B.S. — Gen. Bus. Buffalo, N. Y.
Phi Gamma Delta — president; Epitome —
Sales staff; Senior Class Cabinets; Class In-
surance Committee chairman; Pershing
Rifles; Scabbard & Blade; Brown Key So-
ciety; Football — freshman. Baseball — fresh-
man, varsity; Hockey — varsity; Varsity "L"
Club — vice-president; I.F.C. weekend com-
mittee.
Edward Frederick Roos
B.S. — Ind. Engr. Union, N. J.
Drinker I — president; Alpha Pi Mu; Pi
Tau Sigma; A.I.I.E.; Shop Club; DeMolay
Club; Lutheran Student Association — pres-
ident.
John Evans Rothenberger
B.A. — English Allentown, Pa.
Phi Delta Theta — secretary, scholarship
chairman, editor; Brown & White — desk edi-
tor; Pbi Eta Sigma; Pi Gamma Mu; Alpha
Lambda Omega; Lehigh Automobile Club;
Blake Philosophical Society.
ROEMMELE
ROGERS
ROOS
ROTHENBERGER
'M
71
B.S.-
Alton Richard Rowles
- C. Eng. Shickshinnv. Pa.
Town; Drinker IV — sophomore representa-
tive; A.S.C.E.
William Crawford Roxby, Jr.
B.A. — History
Wyncote. Pa.
Dravo B-I — Freshman advisor, sophomore
representative, scholastic chairman ; secretary-
treasurer, vice-president; Junior, Senior Cab-
inets; Arcadia Associate; Campus Chest;
Class Gift Committee; I.D.C.; Scabbard and
Blade; Arnold Air Society; Golf — varsity man-
ager; R. W. Hall Pre-Medical Society; Air
Force Drill Team; Outing Club; Varsity '"L"
Club; Houseparty Committee.
Robert Allen Sailor
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Drexel HiU, Pa.
Drinker I — secretary-treasurer, freshman
counselor; Phi Eta Sigma — secretary; New-
tonian Society — president; Cross Country
Team — freshman; Student Chemical Society;
A.I.Ch.E. — vice-president ; Chandler Chemis-
try Prize.
William Andrew Sampson, Jr.
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Birmingham, Mich.
Theta Chi — athletic manager. Chaplain;
Arcadia Associates; A.LE.E.; Intramural
Sports.
Louis Sand
B.S. — Accounting Plainfield. N. J.
Pi Lambda Phi — steward, assistant social
chairman; Hillel — vice-president'; Interfaith
Council — president; Chemical Society;
WLRN.
Robert H. Sapp
Houston B. Sandford
B.S.
Garden City, N. Y.
Delta Tau Delta — president, pledge trainer,
social chairman; Brown & Jfhite — sports re-
porter; Williams Debate; WLRN; Alpha
Kappa Psi; Music Festival; Track — varsity:
Varsity '"L" Club; I.F.C.; Judicial Commit-
tee; Foreign Student Relations Committee —
chairman.
Americo Michael Santoro, Jr.
l.S. — Met. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Town: Wrestling— varsity; A.S.M.
James Peter Santos
i.S. — Ind. Eng. Woodside, N. Y.
Sigma Chi.
Ind. Eng.
Mount Holly. N. J.
Alpha Tau Omega — Alumni secretary;
Junior Cabinet; Sophomore Dance — chairman
of publicity; Junior Houseparty — chairman of
tickets; Campus Chest committee for I. F. C.
— chairman ; Music Festival ; Lacrosse — fresh-
man; A. I. I.E. ; A.S.M.E. ; Alpha Tau Omega
70th Anniversary Weekend — chairman.
Leonard Sargeant, III
B.S. — Min. Eng. Mount Holly, Va.
Chi Phi — Rushing chairman. Social chair-
man. Custodian; Epitome: Lacrosse — Fresh-
man manager, Varsitv manager; S.A.M.E.;
A.I.M.E.; Howard Eckfeldt Society.
Charles Herman Schadt
- Min. Eng. Crestwood, N. Y.
B.S.
Delta Sigma Phi — president, social chair-
man; I.F.C.; Lacrosse — freshman; Ice
Hockey — varsity; Howard Eckfeldt Society.
Thomas Edward Schaefer
B.S. — Marketing Rochester, N. Y.
Beta Theta Pi— secretary, social chairman,
pledge chief; Arcadia Associate; Glee Club;
Swimming — freshman, varsity co-captain;
Football — varsity manager.
SARGEANT
%5-
^ 3U
"•^W
72
SCHAEFFEK
SCHILBE
Howard Francis Schaeffer. Jr.
B.S. — Finance Wilmington. Dela.
Sigma Nil — sentinel; Junior and Senior
Class Cabinets; Football — freshman, varsity;
Basketball — freshman; Varsity ""L" Club.
Robert Arnold Scher
B.A. — Inter. Rela. Kew Gardens. N. Y.
Sigma Alpha Mii.
Carl George Schilbe
B.S. — C. Eng. Pottsville, Pa.
Richards ll-A — president, secretary and
treasurer; Richards House — president; Senior
Class Cabinet; I.D.C. — Discipline committee,
parking committee. Intramural athletics com-
mittee; Football — varsity; A.S.C.E.; Varsity
•L" Club.
Robert Gilbert Schilling
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Reading. Pa.
Taylor Hall: Pi Mu Epsilon; Newtonian
Society; I.R.E.; A.I.E.E.
William Albert Schlemm
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Bethlehem. Pa.
Town; A.S.M.E.; Intramural Sports.
Arthur Emerson Schmeck
B.S. — Chem. Eng.
Shamokin, Pa.
Town; Alpha Lambda Omega; Student
Chemical Society; A.I.Ch.E.; Town Council.
Donald Frank Scherer
B.S - Mech. Eng. Livingston. N. J.
Taylor-D — social chairman, vice-president ;
A.S.M.E., Machine Shop Club.
B.S.
Lloyd Robert Schissler
- Elec. Eng. Alburtis, Pa.
Town; Eta Kappa Nu; Pi Mu Epsilon;
A.I.E.E.; I.R.E.; Blake Philosophical Society;
Freshman and Sophomore Math, prizes; Sopho-
more Electrical Engineering prize.
Claude Edward Schmehl
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Reading, Pa.
Taylor B; Brown & White — photographer;
Chapel Choir; Glee Club; A.S.M.E.; Lutheran
Students.
Robert Irwin Schiff
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Brooklyn, N. Y.
Tail Delta Phi.
William Powers Schlecht
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Hackettstown, N. J.
A.S.M.E.; Dis-
Town ; Music Festival ;
nsuished Military- .Student.
Robert Theodore Schoepflin
B.S. — Marketing Brooklyn, N. Y.
Lambda Chi Alpha — president, secretary;
Soccer — freshman, varsity ; Lacrosse — fresh-
man; Brown Kev Society — vice-president:
I.F.C.
SCHOEPFLIN
73
V^^
.,«.,«^*1 ^.
•»fc
<fJ|Sj..
^ll
*l
Mill (HAl \-\
SCHWAB
Robert Louis Schuchman
B.S. — Accounting Shiremanstown. Pa.
Taylor D — president, social chairman, fresh-
man counselor, dormitory president; I.D.C. —
secretary; Who's Who; Lehigh Accounting
Society.
John Williams Seebald
B.A. — Geology AUentown. Pa.
Toivn: Alpha Lambda Omega — treasurer;
Howard Eckfeldt Society.
James Howard Shafer
l.S. — Min. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Town ; Delta Sigma Phi.
William Chisholm Schulz, Jr.
B,S. — Finance Camp Hill. Pa.
Kappa Sigma — treasurer; Golf — varsity:
Spanish Club; Varsity "L" Club; Canterbury
Club; Automobile Club,
William Ellis Seip
B.S, — C. Eng. AUentown, Pa.
Town.
Charles Baird Shakespeare
B.S, — Elec. Eng. Wynnewood. Pa.
Phi Delta Theta — reporter, vice-president,
steward, housemanager, L F, C, representa-
tive; I.F.C. — Foreign Student Committee;
Kappa Beta Phi; Lehigh Flying Club — pres-
ident.
Edward W. Schwab
B.S, — Marketing Jamaica, N. Y.
Pi Lambda Phi — steward; Brown & White
— business staff; Lambda Mu Sigma; Hillel
Society,
Roy Gates Sears
B,S. — Gen, Bus, Chicago, 111,
Theta Xi.
Richard Frank Selig, Jr.
B.S, — Marketing New Rochelle, N, Y.
Pi Lambda Phi; Alpha Kappa Psi; Hillel
Society; Ski Club,
Harley Guy Selkregg. Jr.
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Jamestown, N. Y.
Price Hall; Alpha Pi Mu — corresponding
secretary; A.LLE, ; Blake Philosophical So-
ciety; Alpha Phi Omega; Freshman and
Sophomore honors.
Henry Clinton Shankweiler
B.S. — Accounting Orefield, Pa.
Town; Alpha Lambda Omega; Lehigh Ac-
counting Society; Town Council.
Thomas Day Shannahan, Jr.
B.S. — Finance Bethlehem. Pa.
Chi Phi; Lehigh Automobile Club — pub-
licity chairman.
SEEBALD
SHAFER
SEIP
SHAKESPEARE
SELIG
SHANKWEILER
SELKREGG
SHANNAHAN
74
SHOLES
SHOOK
Joseph Lawrence Shatt
B.S. — Accounting Perkasie. Pa.
Town; Spanish Club, Foreign Policy Asso-
ciation; Camera Club; Alpha Lambda Omega;
Lehigh Accounting Society.
Richard Charles Sickler, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Media. Pa.
Phi Sigma Kappa — treasurer; Brown &
White: Class of '53 — activities committee; Le-
high Business Society — Alpha Kappa Psi;
Student Chemical Society.
Stephen Sloane Singer
B..^. — Government New York. N. Y.
Town; Phi Alpha Theta; Spanish Club;
Cosmopolitan Club; International Relations.
William Stewart Shipley. II
B.A. — Marketing York. Pa.
Chi Psi — steward; Brown & White: Col-
legians; Band; Football — freshman; La-
crosse— J.V.; Ice Hockey — varsity; Varsity
"L" Club.
Robert Sigethy
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Leonia. N. J.
Pi Kappa Alpha — steward, social chairman;
Arcadia Associate; Senior Committee; Stu-
dent-Concert Lecture Committee; Scabbard &
Blade; Lacrosse — freshman; A.I.E.E. ; Camera
Club.
Thom.4S Malcolm Skillman
.S. — Elec. Eng. East Orange, N. J.
Richards III-A; Brown & White; A.I.E.E.
Christopher Latham Sholes
B.A. — History- Mendham. N. J.
Kappa Alpha — secretary; Mustard &
Cheese.
Robert V. Silfies
Mech. Eng. AUentown. Pa.
Town; Town Council;
Lambda Omega.
A.S.M.E.; Alpha
James Brooks Skitt
.S. — Mech. Eng. Philadelphia, Pa.
Richards /F-B— president; A.S.M.E.
Daniel Anson Shook
B.A. — Class. Lan. BetWehem. Pa.
Town; Greek Play; Eta Sigma Phi — pres-
ident; Band; German Club — treasurer.
Jerry Tyson Simpson
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Harrisburg, Pa.
Drinker II-B; Newtonian Society; A.S.M.E.
Richard Slaff
B.S. — C. Eng. Passaic, N. J.
Tau Delta Phi — athletic manager, assistant
treasurer; Basketball — freshman, varsity;
A.S.C.E.; Varsity "L"" Club; Hillel Society.
SICKLER
SINGER
SIGETHY
SKILLMAN
SILFIES
SKITT
SIMPSON
SIAFF
75
>\11TH. V. \.
SMITH. R. C.
Robert Allan Slaw
B.S. — C. Eng. Bala-Cynwyd, Pa.
Sigma Phi Epsilon — Historian; Brown &
White; Lacrosse — freshman; A.S.C.E. — treas-
urer.
GURNEY POULSON SlOAN, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Wynnewood. Pa.
Delta Phi — vice-president, rushing chair-
man, secretary. Alumni secretary; I.F.C. —
representative; Pi Gamma Mu; Lacrosse —
freshman, varsity; Alpha Kappa Psi — secre-
tary; Sailing Club; Sophomore Honors; Delta
Phi Scholarship Key.
B.S.
Roger George Slutter
- C. Eng. East Stroudsburg, Pa.
Dravo C-I — president, freshman counselor,
secretary-treasurer, scholastic chairman; LD.C.
— Disciplinary Committee; Tau Beta Pi — re-
cording secretary; Chi Epsilon — secretary;
Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society; A.S.C.E.
— president, secretary; Camera Club — presi-
dent, vice-president, treasurer; Freshman.
Sophomore Honors.
Fritz Arthur Smith
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Greenwood Lake, N. Y.
Richards IV -A — president, athletic manager;
Alpha Phi Omega; Student Chemical Society.
Homer Clarence Smith
B.A. — Ind. Eng. Haddon Heights. N. J.
Pi Kappa Alpha — scholarship committee,
rushing committee, pledgemaster. president;
Brown & White — reporter; LF.C. — Rushing
Rules Committee. Community Service commit-
tee; Scabbard and Blade; Spanish Club;
A.I.I.E.; S.A.M.E.
Kenneth Norman Smith
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Walnutport, Pa.
Town — Section representative of Town
Council: Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi — vice-
president; A.I.Ch.E.; Student Chemical So-
ciety— president; Freshman, Sophomore Hon-
ors; A. A. Diefenderfer Award; A.LCh.E.
Scholarship Award.
Robert Burd Smith
B.S. — Accounting Newburgh, N. Y.
Toivn: Band; Collegians; Accounting So-
ciety.
Robert Charles Smith
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Chatham. N. J.
Drinker IV — scholastic chairman, section
chaplain. Sophomore representative; Mustard
& Cheese; Pi Tau Sigma — corresponding sec-
retary; Pi Mu Epsilon; Newtonian Society —
treasurer; Glee Club; A.S.M.E. ; Campus
Chest Solicitor; Sophomore, Freshman Hon-
Charles Dickinson Snead, Jr.
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Summit, N. J.
Theta Delta Chi — treasurer; Glee Club;
Cheerleading — captain.
Harold Bennett Snyder, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Elizabeth, N. J.
Chi Phi — house grounds chairman, alumni
chairman; Lambda Mu Sigma — president;
Swimming manager — varsity, freshman; A.S.
C.E. ; Business Society.
John Kent Snyder
i.S. — Mech. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Toivn : A.S.M.E. — assistant treasurer.
Robert Lucas Snyder
B.A. — Biology Bethlehem, Pa.
Town; Scabbard & Blade; Baseball — man-
ager, freshman and varsity; Rifle team — var-
sity; R. W. Hall Pre-Medical Society.
SXYDEPi. H. B
SNYDER. J. K.
SN^ DEK. R. L.
76
B.A.
Bruce M. Solomon
Hisl..iv New York. N. Y.
Ta\lor A: Town Council — Executive Com-
mittee; Brown & White: Sophomore Class
Cabinet: Junior Class Cabinet; Phi Alpha
Theta; Political Science Assembly — vice-pres-
ident, and secretary.
Bruce Winslow Spaulding
B.S. — Met. Eng. .Springdale, Conn.
Lambda Chi Alpha — vice-president, house-
manager; steward; Pershing Rifles; ROTC
and varsity Rifle Team; Metallurgical Society;
A.S.M.; S.A.M.E.
Thomas John Spinner, Jr.
B.A. — Inter. Rela. Valley Stream. N. Y.
Town; Richards III-B — athletic chairman;
International Relations Club; Spanish Club;
French Club; Intramural .Sports.
Robert Ott Soper
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Selinsgrove. Pa.
Dravo A-II — secretary-treasurer, freshman
counselor; Band; A.I.I.E. ; Alpha Phi Omega:
Lutheran Student Association.
Herbert Jennings Spencer
.A. — Bacteriology Briarcliff Manor. N. Y.
Town.
Ernest Edward Sponzilli
B.A. — Biology Newark, N. J.
Taylor E — Freshman Counselor; Arcadia;
Junior, Senior Cabinets; Alpha Epsilon Delta
— secretary; Newtonian society; Who's Who;
R. W. Hall Society; Sophomore, Junior Hon-
George R. Spalding
B.S. — C. Eng. Cranford. N. J.
Town.
Warren Cyrus Spatz. Jr.
B.S. — Met. Eng. Hatboro, Pa.
Lambda Chi Alpha — ritualist; Dravo D-II —
sophomore representative; A.S.M. ; Scabbard
& Blade; Pershing Rifles; Chemical Society;
Metallurgical Society ; S.A.M.E. — secretary ;
Rifle Club.
William Turner Spencer
B.A. — Physics Wayne, Pa.
Richards IV-A — president, treasurer; Mus-
tard and Cheese; l.D.C. ; Newtonian Society;
Pi Mu Epsilon — vice-president; Glee Club;
Chapel Choir; A. LP. — vice-president; Chris-
tian Council; Freshman, Sophomore Honors.
SalvatoRe Joseph Spinelli
B.A. — Spanish Bethlehem. Pa.
Toivn: Dean's List.
Richard Bergen Standiford, III
B.S. — C. Eng. Trenton, N. J.
Kappa Sigma — president, pledge trainer;
Chi Epsilon — president; Track — freshman,
J.V.; A.S.C.E.
Charles Donald Stauffer
.S. — Mech. Eng. Hamburg, Pa.
Richards II -B: A.S.M.E.
SPENCER. H. J.
SPONZILLI
SPENCER, W. T.
ST\M)IK0KI>
SPINELLI
STMiFFFR
Al^^^
77
'■*!» "*5?"-
STERN
Albert Andrew Stegun
B.S. — Ind. Eng. New York, N. Y.
Drinker; A.I.I.E.: A.S.M.E.
Charles Edward Steigerwald
B.S. — Marketing Rocky River, Ohio
Chi Phi: Lacrosse — J.V., varsity; Swimming
— J. v.; Lehigh Automobile Club — vice-presi-
dent; Newman Club — secretary.
B.S.
Robert William Stein
■ Elec. Eng. Wantaah. N. Y.
Beta Theta Pi — Athletic manager. Alumni
secretary; WLRN; Music Festival; Intramural
Sports.
Raymond Erhard Stern
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Ridgewood. N. Y.
Taylor C — president, scholastic chairman;
WLRN; A.S.M.E.; Lutheran Students Asso-
ciation.
Warren Walter Stevens
B.S. — C. Eng. MerchantviUe, N. J.
Delta Tau Delta — house manager, finance
committee, member cabinet; Mustard and
Cheese; Radio Workshop; Arcadia; Campus
Chest — co-chairman; Junior Cabinet; Scab-
bard and Blade; Who's Who; Music Festival;
Sailing Club — vice-commodore, rear commo-
dore; Flying Club; A.S.C.E.; S.A.M.E.
Ronald Douglas Stiehler
B.S. — Chem. Eng. RockviUe Center, N. Y.
Drinker UI-B — secretary-treasurer, athletic
chairman; Arcadia Associates; Phi Eta Sigma;
Newtonian Society; A.I.Ch.E.; Chemical So-
ciety.
James William Stoneback
B.S. — Gen. Bus. Quakertown, Pa.
Alpha Chi Rho; Football — freshman; Base-
ball— freshman.
Peter E. Strategos
B.S. — Met. Eng. RockviUe Center, N. Y.
Delta Sigma Phi — steward; Drinker IV —
president, vice-president; Junior, Senior Cab-
inets; Interdormitory Council; Lamberton
Hall committee; Wrestling; Metallurgical So-
ciety; A. F. Drill team.
Alfred Walter Stubner
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Emmaus, Pa.
Town — Town Council — secretary; Tau Beta
Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; A.S.M.E.;
Alpha Lambda Omega; Tau Beta Pi Pledge
essay prize; Alumni jjrize for Highest rank-
ing Junior in College of Engineering; Dean's
List.
Edward Philip Stuhr, Jr.
B.S. ~ Chem. Eng. Ho-Ho-Kus, N. J.
Drinker III-B — athletic manager, scholastic
chairman, secretary-treasurer; Junior, Senior
Cabinets; Arcadia Associates; Student Chem-
ical Engineering Society — treasurer; Student
Chemical Society; A.LCh.E.
George Robert Sublett
B.S. — Met. Eng. Huntsville, Ala.
Town; A.S.M.
Carl Wrightson Surplus
B.S. — Marketing Goudsboro, Pa.
Alpha Chi Rho; Intramural Sports.
STEVENS
sTI IINFI!
STIEHLER
STUHR
STONEBACK
SIBLETT
STRATEGOS
suRPi.rs
78
SVADEBA
TANNENBAUM
S\\ VERS
TAYLOR, D. J.
TALLON
TAYLOR, D. C.
Michael Svadeba
B.S. — Met. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Town.
Alvin Eugene Tannenbaum
B.A. — History Brooklyn, N. Y.
Sigma Alpha Mu — pledgemaster, scholastic
chairman, athletic manager; Chemistry So-
ciety; R. W. Hall Pre-Medical Society.
Pao-Hui Howard Tchou
B.S. — C. Eng. Habana, Cuba
Taylor D: A.S.C.E. ; Cosmopolitan Club;
Freshman Honors.
Donald Howard Swartz
B.S. — Mech. Eng. York, Pa.
Sigma Chi — secretary, historian, associate
editor; Epitome — Sports editor; WLRN; Pi
Tau Sigma; Omicron Delta Kappa; Tau Beta
Pi; Newtonian Society; Glee Club — business
manager; Cliff Clefs; Music Festival: Band —
announcer; A.S.M.E.; Freshman, Sophomore
Honors, Dean's List.
Richard Ross Swyers, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Scarsdale, N. Y.
Town; Epitome: Lehigh Business Society,
International Relations Club, Roger Williams
Fellowship.
Douglas Robert Tallon
B.S. — Marketing Packanack Lake, N. J.
Phi Delta Theta.
B.S.
Arthur C. Tauck, Jr.
- Marketing South Orange, N. J.
Delta Upsilon — president, vice-president,
treasurer, house-manager; Sophomore, Junior
Cabinets; Music Festival; Lacrosse — freshman,
varsity; Varsity "L" Club; Houseparty Dance
committee.
Daniel Johnson Taylor, Jr.
B.A. — Ind. Eng.-Arts Merion, Pa.
Beta Theta Pi — vice-president; rushing
chairman, sergeant-at-arms; Pershing Rifles;
Music Festival; Cheerleader; A.I.LE.; Span-
ish Club.
B.S,
Donald Charles Taylor
-C. Eng. Nutley, N. J
Sigma Phi Epsilon : Drinker IV — treasurer
Newtonian Society; Chi Epsilon — vice-pres-
ident; Scabbard and Blade; A.S.C.E.; S.A
M.E. ; Lutheran Student Association — presi
dent; Christian Council; Alpha Phi Omega
Robert Charles Temps
B.S. — Min. Eng. Glendale, N. Y.
Town; Drinker III-B — treasurer; Cheer-
leader— freshman; Howard Eckfeldt Society;
Freshman Honors.
John Irven Thompson, Jr.
B.S. — Chemistry Clementon, N. J.
Town; Brown and White — Photo staff;
Camera Club; Chemical Society; American
Chemical Society.
William Paul Thompson
B.A. — Government Roslyn Heights, N. Y.
Town; Debating Society; Phi Alpha Theta-
vice-president; International Relations Club;
Lamberton Hall Committee.
TCHOU
THOMPSON. J.
THOMPSON. W. P.
79
■fA
WdMK^^S^
THORSELL TJFFANY
roKMvCZYK
torc;ersiv\
TOWE TOWNSEND
TRENCH
TREON
lARD Siegfried Thorsell
Jerome Donald Towe
Walter
onservation Morristown, N. J. B.S. -
— Chem. Eng. Tenafly,
N.
J.
B.S. — Finance
B.A. — C
Town : Spanish Club ; Conservation Society
George Ala.\ Tiffany
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Jersey City, N. J.
Theta Chi — social chairman; Music Fes-
tival; Baseball — freshman; A.I.Ch.E.; Stu-
dent Chemical Society.
Stanley George Tokarczyk
B.S. — Min. Eng. Frackville. Pa.
Dravo A-II — section president; Howard
Eckfeldt Society.
Paul Ernest Torgerse'n
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Westfield, N. J.
Delta Phi — athletic chairman, house man-
ager, upkeep chairman; l.F.C, Sophomore,
Junior Class Cabinets; Spring Music Festival;
Tennis — freshman, varsity; A. I. I.E., Varsity
"L" Club.
Theta Chi — vice-president, marshal; Board
of Publications; Epitome — Living Groups Edi-
tor; Arcadia; Arcadia Associate; LF.C. —
pledging committee; ROTC Rifle Team —
freshman; E. W. Brown Astronomical Society;
Chemical Society; A.I.Ch.E.; Quarter Club;
S.A.M.E.
Franklin M. Townsend
-Che
Eng
Camde
N. J.
Taylor A — president, secretary-treasurer;
l.D.C, Lamberton Hall Committee; Newtonian
Society, Pi Mu Epsilon ; Political Science As-
sembly — secretary, A.LCh.E. ; Freshman
Counselor, Sophomore Honors.
William Frederick Trench
B.A. — Mathematics Long Branch, N. J.
Tavlor C — president, scholastic chairman;
Eta Kappa Nu; A.I.E.E.; Freshman, Sopho-
more Honors,- Dean's List.
Wilson Robert Treon
B.S. — C. Eng. Bethlehem, Pa.
Town.
Bloomfield, N. J.
Chi Phi — steward, Epsilon; Brown & White
— sports editor; Football — freshman, varsity;
Pi Delta Epsilon; Outing Club; Varsity "L"
Club.
Paul Tripucka
.S. — Min. Eng. Maywood, N. J.
Town; Howard Eckfeldt Society; A.LM.E.
John P. Tuthill
B.A. — Eu. Hist. Scranton, Pa.
Town: Town Council — section representa-
tive.
Alex Umanetz, Jr.
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Great Neck, N. Y.
Delta Chi — social chairman, social commit-
tee; A.l.LE.: A.S.M.E.; Outing Club.
TRILLHAASE
TRIPUCKA •
TUTHILL
80
It
UNDERHILL
VANCE
VAN HORN
VEKONY
Martin Quinn Underhill
B.S. — Marketing Greenwich, Conn.
Alpha Tan Omega; Brown & While:
Mustard and Cheese — secretary: Radio Work-
shop; Arcadia Associates; Lehigh Business
Society: Music Festival — Assistant Business
Manager.
Weston C. Vogel
B.S. — Marketing Bethlehem, Pa.
Town; Alpha Lambda Omega.
Charles Henry Wahler, Jr.
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Brooklyn, N. Y.
Tempo I — Social chairman; A.S.M.E.; .Shop
Club: DulacB.
Richard Myron Vance
B.S. — Finance Jersey City, N. J.
Tail Delta Phi — vice-president, steward, so-
cial chairman, pledgemaster, athletic chair-
man; Tau Delta Phi-magazine; Blake Society;
Hillel Society; Intramural Sports.
Ernest Arthur Volckmar
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Verona, N. J.
Richards 1 1- A — Residence Hails Counselor;
Cosmopolitan Club — president; German Club
— president; R. W. Blake Philosophical So-
ciety— secretary-treasurer ; A.LLE.
Richard A. Walbrecker
B.S. — C. Eng. Wyomissing. Pa.
Phi Delta Theta — president, steward, social
chairman, chorister; LF.C. ; Glee Club; Foot-
ball— freshman; A.S.C.E. — vice-president; Mu-
sic Festival.
b.a.
Ronald Earl Van Horn
- Journalism AUentow
Town; Brown & White — Editor-in-Chief,
news editor; Mustard and Cheese; Radio
Workshop; Alpha Lambda Omega.
Donald Kay Vollman
B.S. — Accounting Bethlehem, Pa.
Town; Spanish Club; Accounting Society.
Charles Kenneth Wallace, Jr.
B.S. — Finance
Princeton, N. J.
Beta Theta Pi — steward, executive council;
Arcadia Associate; Junior Cabinet; Brown
Key Society — secretary-treasurer.
B.S.
Robert J. Vekony
-Elec. Eng. Clifton, N. J.
Delta Chi — president, secretary, I.F.C. repre-
sentative; Eta Kappa Nu; Pi Mu Epsilon;
Who's Who; Cross-Country — varsity; Track —
varsity; A.LE.E. ; Alpha Phi Omega; St. Vin-
cent's Guild; Freshman Honors.
B.S.
Charles A. Wagenseil
- Accounting Ozone Park, N. Y.
Delta Tau Delta — vice-president, rushing
chairman, publicity chairman; WLRN; Junior
Cabinet; LF.C; Alpha Kappa Psi — president;
Music Festival.
Robert Goodwin Walters
B.A. — Inter. Rela. Reading. Pa.
Alpha Chi Rho — rushing chairman, chapter
correspondent; executive committee; Interna-
tional Relations Club; Spanish Club.
VOGEL
WAHLER
VOLCKMAR
WALBRECKER
VOLLMAN
■WALLACE
81
W A--ll,(:llAk
B.S.
Robert Warren Walton
-Chem. Eng. Shillington. Pa.
Sigma Chi — secretaiy; Band; Baseball —
freshman, varsity; Varsity "L" Club; A.I.
Ch.E. ; Chemical Society; Christian Council.
William Thomas Semmel Waltz
B.A. — Mathematics Bethlehem, Pa.
Delta Chi; Glee Club; Chapel Choir — pres-
ident; Christian Council.
B.S.-
Stanley Allen Ward
-Min. Eng. Bethlehem. Pa
Sigma Chi — president, vice-president, house
manager; Glee Club; Cliff Clefs; Howard
Eckfeldt Society — president.
John Wasilchak. Jr.
B.S. — Accounting Mahwah, N. J.
Drinker II-B; Brown & White — advertising
manager: Epitome — advertising manager;
Alpha Kappa Psi; Accounting Society; Pi
Delta Epsilon — treasurer; Newman Club.
Lin E. Webster
B.A. — Inter. Rela. Ithaca, N. Y.
Sigma Phi — president, secretary, steward;
Brown & White — feature writer; Junior
Cabinet; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Gamma Mu;
I.F.C. — representative; I.F.C. Scholarship
Committee — chairman; Dean's List; William's
Junior Prize.
John A. West
B.S. — Economics White Plains, N. Y.
Sigma Alpha Mu; Mustard & Cheese; Auto
Club; Spanish Club.
William Leslie Westerman
B.A. — Ind. Eng. Plandome Manor, N. Y.
Sigma Nu — recorder; Freshman Handbook
— editor; Brown & White — desk staff; Ar-
cadia Associates — Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonion
Society; Omicron Delta Kappa — president;
Cyanide; Who's Who; Band — student man-
ager; Collegians — manager; Glee Club;
Chapel Choir; Orchestra; Track — freshman;
German Club.
James Francis Whalen
B.A. — History Larchmont, N. Y.
Tempo I: Tempo II — president; Mustard
& Cheese; Glee Club; Chapel Choir; Music
Festival; Newman Club.
Gilbert Guernsey Whipple
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Stratford, Conn.
Dravo B-1 — athletic manager; A.S.M.E.
Orion Charles Whitaker
l.S. — Min. Eng. Long Branch, N. J.
Town; Howard Eckfeldt Society; A.I.M.E.
William Rosser Whitbeck
B.S. — Gen. Bus. Buffalo, N. Y.
Kappa Alpha — attendent; Brown & White:
Radio Workshop; Arcadia Associates; Junior
Cabinet; Senior Class committee; Music Fes-
tival; Tennis — varsity manager; Cross-coun-
try— varsity manager; Outing Club — secretary;
Ski Club; Varsity "L" Club.
Frank Paul White
.S. — Min. Eng. West Pittston, Pa.
Town; Howard Eckfeldt Society; A.I.M.E.
WEBSTER
r
westerman
f^
'i ^MBk
^em\
whalen
WHITE
82
..>*'
n
m^^
V-^T^^I
W II. I)
WITHERINGTON
w 11,1,(11 (.iii;\
WITZIG
B.A.
Theodore A. Wiener
-Inter. Rela. New York. N. Y.
Pi Lambda Phi — pledge master, rushing
chairman; Arnold Air Society.
Thomas Deloach Wilcox
B.S. — Marketing Branford. Conn.
Alpha Chi Rho — vice-president, social chair-
man, I.F.C. — representative.
Albert William Wild
B.S. — Mech. Eng. Washington, N. J.
Town— Jovn Council; A.S.M.E.
Nathan Mark Willson, II
B.S. — Ind. Eng. Jamestown, N. Y
Sigma Nu — house manager; Brown &
White — photo staff; Arcadia Concessions Com
mittee; I.F.C. — treasurer, representative; Arn
old Air Society; Camera Club; A. I. I.E. — sec
retary, vice-president; Monte Carlo — chair
man.
Clarence Brodbeck Wingert, Jr.
B.S. — Marketing Medford Lakes, N. J.
Pi Kappa Alpha — secretary, vice-president,
rushing chairman; Junior, Senior cabinets;
Senior Assessment committee; Scabbard &
Blade; Arnold Air Society — vice-president;
Spanish Club: President's Award — A.F.R.
O.T.C.
Jack Kenneth Witherington
B.S. — Met. Eng. Holland, Pa.
Chi Psi; Junior Class Cabinet; I.F.C; Ar-
cadia Associate; Football — freshman; Swim-
ming — freshman; Metallurgical Society;
Freshman Honors.
Peter Clark Wolle
3.A. — Geology
Briarcliff Manor, N. Y.
Kappa Alpha — house manager, head of
freshman, vice-president: Mustard & Cheese;
Music Festival; Howard Eckfeldt Society;
Radio Society; A.I.M.E.
Robert Edward Woodford
Ind. Eng.
Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Phi Sigma Kappa — house manager, rushing
chairman; Debating; Football — freshman;
Track — freshman; A. I. I.E.; Outing Club.
Harry James Woodhouse
•.A. — Pre-Law Gov.
Hamburg, N. Y'.
Toivn; Town Council; Eta Sigma Phi —
treasurer, Phi Alpha Theta; freshman Foot-
ball manager; Political Science Assembly;
Automobile Club, Brown Astronomical So-
ciety, International Relations Club.
Wesley Fuller Willoughby
B.A. — Journalism .411entown, Pa.
Town; Brown & White — editor-in-chief;
Radio Workshop; Who's Who.
B.S.
Richard Alan Witzig
-Marketing Maplewood, N. J.
Theta Delta Chi — executive committee,
pledge captain; WLRN; Sophomore Class
Cabinet; Basketball — freshman, varsity. La-
crosse— freshman; Spanish Club, Brown Key
Society, Varsity "L" Club.
Joseph M. Workman
B.A. — Ind. Eng. Greensburg, Pa.
Alpha Tau Omega; WLRN— sports staff;
Basketball — varsity; Arnold Air Society; Var-
sity "L" Club ; I.F.C. Community Service Com-
mittee— co-chairman.
\^OLLE
WOODFORD
WOODHOUSE
«::
^*' -***.' ' J *^^i»» I
■<SR>'^
k
83
10^ .Ktt^j -•
(/f%^
W KIGlir
YATSKO
W K"^ E
YEAGER
YONUSHKA
■^^^■
Orville Junior Wright
B.S. — Chem. Eng. Allentown, Pa.
Town; Town Council; Student Chemical
Society; A.I.Ch.E.; Alpha Lambda Omega.
William Charles Wrye
B.S. — C. Eng. Camp Hill, Pa.
Theta Xi — corresponding secretary ; A.S.C.E.
Arthur Herman Wyker, Jr.
B.S. — Finance Liverpool, N. Y.
Town.
B.S.
John Walter Yates
■ Finance Larchmoht, N. Y.
Phi Delta Theta — social chairman, Alumni
secretary, rushing chairman; LF.C. — secre-
tary; Epitome — advertising staff; Sophomore
Class Treasurer; Junior, Senior Class Cab-
inets; Arcadia Associates; Lehigh Business
Society — president, treasurer; Spanish Club;
Sailing Club — treasurer.
Frank Paul Yatsko
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Throop, Pa.
Drinker II-A — scholastic chairrnan. section
president, freshman counselor; Newman Club
— vice-president, recording secretary; A.I.E.E. ;
I.R.E.
Leroy Junior Yeager
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Catawissa, Pa.
Taylor E — sophomore representative, vice-
president, president; Pi Mu Epsilon — secre-
tary; Eta Kappa Nu — president; Phi Eta .Sig-
ma; Tau Beta Pi; Orchestra; A.I.E.E. — vice
chairman.
Joseph Vincent Yonushka
B.S. — Elec. Eng. Duryea, Pa.
Town ; A.LE.E.
James Adam Zamos
l.A. — Conservation Newton, N. J.
Pi Kappa Alpha — steward.
Albino Benjamin Zanchettin, Jr.
B.S. — C. Eng. Pen Argyl, Pa.
Town — Town Council; A.S.C.E.
Carl Herbert Zimmerman
B.A.— Eur. Hist. Paterson, N. J.
Tan Delta Phi — scribe; Brown & White —
Editorial director; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Gamma
Mu; Blake Philosophical Society — vice-pres-
ident; Freshman, Sophomore Honors.
Z\NCHETTIN
ZIMMERMAN
84
t€^
■«5^r-^
■>4
«^,^i:-^- ?^^^.
'9^
^■i V",
fcNi.
i<«'f^^ '
A
\j
CHRISTMAS— SAUCON HALL
CHEMISTRY BUILDING
m^^
-^MBM
■
^-
'-- '^'^waffij^E^
1
y
?
4-i
1
l^;«
CHARLES
RUSS
RICHARDS
HOUSE
HENRY STURGIS DRINKER HOUSE
^*ki^
m>:M
"-•i^iii
wmW-
Honoraries
First Row: Dr. Robert W. Hall, Leith. Frankenfield. Mr. Hope T. M. Ritter; Second Row: Dr.
Velmer B. Fish. Dr. Bradford B. Owen. Sponzilli. Nevins. Mann. Crislip. Dr. Stanley -J. Thomas,
Dr. Elliott W. Cheney.
Alpha Epsilnn Delta
David E. Leith, President
Bruce A. FrankenfielO, Vice-President
Rodney L. Crislip, Treasurer
Ernest E. Sponzilli, Secretary
Joel B. Mann, Historian
Hope T. M. Ritter, Faculty Advisor
Alpha Epsilon Delta, the national honorary pre-medical
society, was founded at the University of Alabama in 1926, and
the present membership numbers over ten thousand in some
sixty-one chapters. The Pennsylvania Alpha chapter at Lehigh
is the oldest of five in the commonwealth.
Foremost of the aims of this society is the encouragement
of excellence in pre-medical scholarship, others being to
recognize interest, personality, character, and the ability to co-
operate with others.
Working in close contact with the Robert W. Hall Pre-
Medical Society, Alpha Epsilon Delta makes every effort to
render service to the pre-medical student. Regular monthly meet-
ings include the presentation of papers by the members, films,
and at least once a year, a discussion of the pre-medical education
and medical school requirements. Monthly dinner meetings with
guest speakers invited from among local physicians have been
well received by the membership.
90
In the Spring of 1952, a small group of Industrial Engi-
neering students began an attempt to found a Lehigh Chapter
of Alpha Pi Mu. the relatively new national honor society for
Industrial Engineers. Their attempt met with success, and in
May the chapter was officially installed by a delegation of na-
tional officers from Georgia Tech.
Although a young organization. Alpha Pi Mu has already
gained chapters in many American colleges featuring a curricu-
lum in Industrial Engineering. It was because of this that the
Lehigh students turned in the direction that they did, feeling
that the local chapter would well be able to grow in stature along
with the parent society, which has already been recognized by the
profession as its leading honorary.
Because it is kept busy with the problems of organization
and of enlarging its enrollment, the Lehigh Chapter has not been
able to pursue any activities aimed to benefit the Llniversity. It
is hoped that in the near future such activities will result, how-
ever, and that Alpha Pi Mu will be able to benefit both the I.E.
Department and Lehigh itself. The membership is and will con-
tinue to remain small, inasmuch as it is confined to junior and
senior industrial engineers who stand above the required per-
centage of their class. This small group should prove to be an
advantage, however, for its size will result in increased unity of
purpose and cooperation towards achieving the aims and goal
of the society — to recognize and benefit students of industrial
engineering everywhere.
Alpha Pi Mu
Robert A. Brown, President
Alan W. Koppes, Vice-President
Edwin F. Compton, Treasurer
William C. Dengler
Recording Secretary
Harley G. Selkregg
Corresponding Secretary
Prof. Arthur F. Gould, Faculty Advisor
First Row: Arthur F. Cnulrl. Coniptdn. Brown: Seronfl Row: Ron*. Densripr. Selkregg, Moore.
Arnold Air Society
Thomas H. Mohr, Commanding Officer
Clarence B. Wingert, Executive Officer
Mark S. Kaufmann, Operations Officer
Kenneth G. Lundie, Adjutant-Recorder
Robert E. Linck. Finance Officer
Richard A. Doan
Public Information Officer
Captain Harold L. Naylor, USAF
Faculty Advisor
Since its origin at the University of Cincinnati in 1948 as
an honorary society for members of Advanced Air Force ROTC.
the Arnold Air Society has grown into a national organization
numbering approximately 190 chapters. This labels the society as
the largest and fastest growing of all campus organizations in the
nation. Lehigh's Cheli Squadron, organized in 1951, is proud
to be a part of the Arnold Air Society.
One purpose of the Cheli Squadron's activities is to further
the Air Force ROTC program at Lehigh University by offering
services that are not a regular part of the Cadet curriculum. An
important contribution to AFROTC life at Lehigh is the squad-
ron's inauguration of "Cheli Sez", a monthly publication edited
by Cadet George Schivley. The squadron is again sponsoring
the Air Force Drill Team under the leadership of Cadet William
Roxby. Cadet Kenneth Lundie has conducted a leadership class
in the command voice for all cadets. This year Arnold Air So-
ciety is a co-sponsor of the annual Military Ball.
Another purpose of the squadron's activities is to give its
members a better understanding of the Air Force in which they
are about to serve. A feature of each initiation ceremony is an
address by an experienced person on some aspect of Air Force
life and work. Documentary films are frequently shown at regu-
lar bi-monthly meetings. Projects planned for this spring include
inspection trips by the entire squadron to an Air Traffic Control
Center and to the LJnited States Military Academy.
First Row: Kaufmann, Capt. Harold L. Naylor, Mohr, Wingert, Lundie; Second Row: Linck,
Roxby, Huester, Workman, DeLotto, Doan; Third Row: Wiener, Willson, Cooke, Phillips.
Based on tlie objective of increasing the efficiency of tlie
civil engineering profession as an instrument of social better-
ment, Chi Epsilon was organized to recognize those character-
istics of the individual engineer necessary to the successful
pursuit of an engineering career and to aid in the development
of these characteristics in the undergraduate engineer. Engineer-
ing is constantly assuming an ever increasing responsibility call-
ing for a high order of proficiency from those who administer
and plan engineering works.
This responsibility can be adequately discharged only by
a professional group possessed of good basic technical ability and
of high moral character, capable of satisfactory social relation-
ships with a variety of types and with organizations, and with
the desire and vision to realize the extent of the social changes
brought about by the projects under its control. To contribute
to the improvement of the engineering profession. Chi Epsilon
fosters the development and exercise of the fundamentally sound
traits of scholarship, character, practicality and sociability
among its members. These traits will enable the engineer to work
towards a higher standard of service offered to humanity by the
profession.
Chi Epsilon
Richard B. Standiford, III, President
Donald C. Taylor, Vice-President
Henry E. Moyer. Treasurer
Roger G. Slutter, Secretary
Robert E. Linck. Historian
E. Russell Johnston. Faculty Advisor
First Roiv: Standiford, Bohorquez. Bell; Second Row: Taylor, E. Russell Johnston, Lynn S. Beedle,
Linck. DeLancey; Third Row: Horn, Moyer, Pfenninger, Slutter.
S Jl
'if^
First Row: Stout, Lawrence Whitcomb, Madison, Scheetz, Butler, Schweigaard-Olsen, John M.
Haight, Jr.. Barba; Second Row: Hanson, Levy, Young, Newman, Henderson, Maurer, Gross,
Cutler, Lusby. Vanderpool, Stahl.
Cyanide
Edwin F. Scheetz, Jr., President
Wallace J. Butler, Vice-President
Ronald B. Madison, Treasurer
Bert Schweigaard-Olsen, Secretary
Richard M. Davis
John M. Haight, Jr.
Charles A. Seidle
Lawrence Whitcomb
Faculty Advisors
Cyanide, the junior class leadership honor society, has as
its principal purpose the organization and guidance of author-
ized freshman activities. Composed of twenty members and di-
rected by Dr. Lawrence Whitcomb, faculty advisor, plus a
faculty circle of three members, the society meets at least once
a month to iron out the difficulties and problems of the first year
men at Lehigh, as well as to plan and organize freshman activ-
ities.
One of the most successful activities which Cyanide has
organized is the freshman class cabinet. This was first organized
in the Fall of 195 L LTnder the cabinet system, a new class chooses
class representatives within six weeks after the start of the
school year. These representatives, along with Cyanide members,
comprise a cabinet through which the freshmen can air their
problems and propose activities.
Another Cyanide activity was organizing the traditional
Tug-of-War between the frosh of Lehigh and Lafayette. There
was very little work involved for the Brown and White frosh this
year. They won easily by forfeit. In addition to this. Cyanide
joined other campus organizations in staging the Lafayette pep
rally, which included freshman skits, a gigantic bon-fire, and
the traditional pajama parade across the newly renovated penny
bridge.
Cyanide was never at a loss for work during the year. For
entering students there was a Freshman Orientation Week and
an information booth maintained by the group. For prospective
students Cyanide members have seen service as guides on cam-
pus tours.
94
First Roiu: Dwight L. Freshley; Second Row: MacCormick, Gabler. Watson, Hill, Barnett, Collins,
Davis.
Delta Omicron Theta, the honorary debating society, has
enjoyed many fine seasons of debating on and off Lehigh's cam-
pus. It has competed with colleges such as Penn State, Princeton.
Army, University of Pennsylvania, University of Vermont,
Temple, and many others through its participation in dual and
packet debates and tournaments.
Lehigh's debate program began with the varsity members
and the novices engaging in intense search of information on
the national topic, "RESOLVED: that the Congress of the United
States should enact a compulsory Fair Employment Practices
Law".
The novices, men witliout previous inter-collegiate debating
experience, gained a great deal of confidence from their par-
ticipation in the Temple Novice Tournament in November. Dual
debates were very frequent, such as those between Lehigh and
Lafayette, Bucknell and Wagner College, all held in December.
Again this year Lehigh played host to the Debating Asso-
ciation of Pennsylvania Colleges Tournament. This was the sec-
ond time in as many years that Lehigh arranged the tournament,
in which over forty colleges from the entire state participated.
Spring brought the customary number of tournaments, in
addition to the numerous dual and packet debates. Lehigh at-
tended the Benjamin Franklin tournament and the Penn State
Debater's Convention, as well as the Brooklyn College Tourna-
ment and the Eastern Forensic Tournament.
Certainly there are many values in being able to speak be-
fore other people, and DOT, by its training of students in rea-
soned discourse through practice speaking and reflective think-
ing, does much to mold its members into the type of men in-
dustry and business are seeking.
Delta Dmicron Theta
Richard W. Davis, President
George Hopkins, Jr., Vice-President
Elliott B. Barnett, Treasurer
Charles E. Saylor, Secretary
H. Barrett Davis
Dvi^iGHT L. Freshley
Faculty Advisors
95
Eta Kappa Nu
Leroy J. Yeager, President
William J. Maloney, Vice-President
Joseph B. Ferguson, Treasurer
Robert F. Magyarics
Recording Secretary
Daniel D. Dubosky
Corresponding Secretary
Kenneth A. Heller
"Bridge" Correspondent
Prof. A. R. Miller. Faculty Advisor
The Eta Kappa Nu Association was founded in 1904 at the
University of Illinois by Maurice L. Carr and nine fellow stu-
dents. The Chi Chapter at Lehigh University was formed under
the national organization in 1926. The purposes of the Associa-
tion are to help its members to become better men in their field
and better citizens of their country. Also, Eta Kappa Nu seeks
to improve the standards of the profession and encourage schol-
arship among the electrical engineering students.
Initiates are selected among the electrical engineering stu-
dents for their high scholastic records and outstanding person-
alities. During the initiating period, the initiates at Lehigh wear
yellow coolie hats to identify themselves. They are also required
to complete a project which is selected as being useful to the
department.
This year the local chapter sponsored a talk on the selec-
tion of a specific field of work. This speech was intended to assist
all electrical engineers at Lehigh L^niversity in their selection
of jobs. The chapter provides each year a handbook as a prize
to the freshman in electrical engineering who attains the highest
scholastic average. A small gift, usually a subscription to an
engineering journal, is given to the Electrical Engineering De-
partment each year.
A picnic is co-sponsored annually by A.I.E.E., I.R.E., and
Eta Kappa Nu to provide social activity and relaxation for the
students and faculty members.
First Row: Vekony. Heiler. Prof. A. R. Miller, Yeager, Maloney, Ferguson, Magyarics. Second Row:
Dubosky, Yonushka, Robinson, Leonard, Bach, Gottling, Click; Third Row: Schissler, Saal, Gran-
ville. Yatsko, Gingrich, Donecker, Whyland.
During tiie current year Lamlxla Mu Sigma, tlie honorary
marketing fraternity, has undergone some very radical changes.
The second meeting of the Fall semester brought about a revision
of the constitution which expanded tlie membership and stream-
lined the operations of the group.
Although the governing rules of the organization have
changed, its objectives have not. The purpose of the fraternity
is still to make a definite contribution to tiie student body through
furthering practical knowledge of marketing practices. Lambda
Mu Sigma has done this by promoting a spirit of closer friend-
ship between the faculty and the student body and by further-
ing closer cooperation between the student and private enterprise.
Semi-annually the new members of Lambda Mu Sigma are
chosen. The men are selected from students majoring in the busi-
ness curriculum who have a high scholastic average and a defi-
nite interest in extra curricular activities. These men have demon-
strated through study and practice an intensive interest in the
field of marketing.
Progressive plans are being made which will enable the
group to become an affiliate of the American Marketing Asso-
ciation. The AMA is the foremost association of its type and
has as its members some of the most prominent men in the field
of marketing. Through this proposed affiliation Lambda Mu
Sigma would be able to establish a marketing library which
would contain the latest information on the outstanding research
and developments in the field of marketing.
Field trips and speeches by local business men are also
planned to round out the activities of Lambda Mu Sigma for
the '52-'53 school year.
Lambda Mu Siqma
Henry E. Clauson, President
Mark S. Kaufmann, Vice-President
Myles H. Adelman, Treasurer
William P. Connery. Secretary
Max D. Snider, Faculty Advisor
First Row: Adt-lnnn KiiitiiMnn Max D Snider. Clauson, Connen-; Second Row: Wingert,
Gussaff. Haiti i i I ' r 1 •]■ ~- '^and. Leslie. Sandford. Doan. Snvder.
^ '^THE CLASS OF M0|
First Row: Voris V. Latshaw, Schweigaard-Olsen; Second Row: Drum, Adler, Klinedinst, Grana-
dos, Proebstle, Nicoll, Ben, Brooks, Bauer, Mitman, Dolatta, Brady; Third Row: Budurka,
Scarkos, Hanson, Savage, Knable, Albright, Fenton, Denson, Fritz. Barstow, Speny; Fourth Row:
Scaruzzo, Schubert, Stine, Roth, Asson, Telfer, Vogel, Sinner, Baum. Seltzer, Undercuffer, Goddard.
IMewtanian Society
Bert Schweigaard-Olsen, President
J. Wilson Stout, III
Vice-President and Treasurer
James L. Cutler, Secretary
Prof. Voris V. Latshaw, Faculty Advisor
The Newtonian Society, one of the few honorary societies
on the freshman level, was founded at Lehigh in 1927 by two
members of the Mathematics Department. At the time, its mem-
bership was limited to mathematics majors who had attained a
3.5 average or better in freshnran math.
Like many clubs, the Newtonian Society became inactive
during the war years, but in the fall of 1946 the society was
reformed. At that time, the constitution was revised to include
business and engineering freshmen among those eligible for
inembership.
The purposes of the society are to promote interest in mathe-
matics among members of the freshman class, to further friend-
ship among students and faculty members, and to provide oppor-
tunity for intellectual activity outside of the classroom.
At each monthly meeting a guest speaker is invited to
speak informally on a topic of his choice. The speaker is usually
a faculty member, but occasionally a student member of the
society assumes the role. In the past year, speakers included
Dr. Hailperin who talked about "What's Wrong with the Proof?",
and Wilson Stout, who spoke on "Radioactive Growth and De-
cay."
98
A desire to bring into one body, for the general good of
the institution, all leaders in various forms of college activities
is the motive upon which Omicron Delta Kappa was founded in
1914 at Washington and Lee University. The Lehigh Xi Circle
is composed of men who have qualified for membership by their
character, leadership and service in campus life, scholarship,
fellowship and consecration to democratic ideals. Members are
elected on the five basic phases of campus life: scholarship, so-
cial and religious affairs, athletics, publications and speech, and
music and dramatic arts. This recognition of all-round leader-
ship in college life enables outstanding students and faculty
members to meet on a basis of mutual interest, understanding
and helpfulness.
At Lehigh, regular meetings are held each month at various
faculty member's homes. Such topics as participation in extra-
curricular activities and Lehigh school spirit are discussed with
the hope that the conclusions of a few will lead to the betterment
of many. One result has been a committee working in conjunc-
tion with the Student's Activities Committee to examine the
accomplishments of the various organizations on campus. An-
other accomplishment this year was the sponsoring of the All-
LTniversity Dinner in honor of Chaplain Bean, who left Lehigh
after continued devotion to the L^niversity and its men.
Dmicron Delta Kappa
William L. Westerman, President
William A. Latshaw, Vice-President
Arthur P. Goldenberg, Treasurer
John M. Haight, Jr., Secretary
Richard M. Davis, Faculty Advisor
First Row: Kaufman. James B. Hartman. Robert F. Herrick, William A. Aiken, Swartz, Latshaw,
Westerman, Goldenberg, John D. Leith, Philip B. Woodroofe. Wray H. Congdon; Second Row:
Stout, Scheetz, Morgenstern, Kearney, Gross. Richard M. Davis, John M. Haight, Jr., Linck, Mohr,
Moore, Huester, Given, Rommele, Hopkins.
Pershinq Rifles
Captain Roy C. Anderson
Company Commander
1st Lt. Harold E. Brown
Executive Officer
1st Lt. Ernest 0. Goelz
Plans and Training Officer
1st Lt. Kenneth G. Lundie
Pledge Officer
1st Lt. Paul B. Rudd, 1st Platoon Leader
1st Lt. Howard L. Weinshenker
2nd Platoon Leader
2nd Lt. John C. Wiltsie
Public Information Officer and Adjutant
2nd Lt. Herman P. Joerger
Supply Officer
2nd Lt. Allen J. Harper
Finance Officer
Charles R. Havey, 1st Sergeant
Captain Paul B. Walters
Faculty Advisor
Company F, Fifth Regiment of Pershing Rifles, honorary
national military society, has this year reached a peak in activity
and membership. LTnder the able leadership of its officers and
Captain Paul B. Walters, faculty advisor, the number of active
men in the organization has increased to one hundred fourteen.
This shows quite a growth, when compared to its fifteen men
of the original unit, started at Lehigh on April 26, 1947.
The organization was originally founded at the LIniversity
of Nebraska in 1893. Up to 1895 it was known as Varsity Rifles.
At that time its name was changed in honor of Lt. Pershing,
its first faculty advisor, whom everyone recognizes as General
Pershing of later years.
Besides its weekly Wednesday afternoon drill period and
business meeting, the Company has a Crack Drill Team that has
put itself in excellent shape with many extra hours of practice.
This team turned in an excellent performance at Bethlehem's
Armistice Day Ceremony this year. It will enter both the Regi-
mental and National Drill Meet this spring semester. During the
last few years, the team has performed its marching routine dur-
ing the intermission of Lehigh's annual Military Ball.
At all of Lehigh's home football games the Company has
served as ushers. This is the fourth year tiiat the Riflemen have
attended in this capacity.
Along with its other activities, Pershing Rifles is also a so-
cial organization. As in previous years, a Spring and Fall ban-
quet was held. Also this year the members held a dance and
some "stag" parties.
Front: Captain Paul B. Walters; First Row: Kirkpatrick. Lundie. Rudd. Anderson. Brown. Goelz,
Havey; Second Row: Frankiewich, Hendrix, LeFevre. Zannos. Arons. Taylor, Klein; Third Row:
Herbener, Werkheiser, McKnight, Coffey, Bennet, MoUer, Deutz; Fourth Roiv: Pasquali, Dietrich,
Lundquist, Horan, Kiefer, Watson, Steinmann; Fifth Row: Martin, Ford. Caster, Gelirke, Parks,
Kattel. Zelewski.
Plii Alj)lia Tlieta. tlie national lionorary liistory fraternity,
has been estal)Iisliecl on the Leliigli campus since 1940, l)ut up
to 1952-53 it was strictly of honorary status. Founded originally
to encourage the study of history, the Alpha Alpha chapter at
Lehigh has made great strides in the last year towards returning
to a highly active status on campus. Under the able leadership
of its officers the Alpha Alpha chapter has sponsored eminent
speakers at its meetings, held historical tours in the Lehigh
Valley area and encouraged friendly relations between members
of the fraternity and the faculty.
Qualifications for undergraduate membership at Lehigh in-
clude: junior or senior standing, good evidence of interest in
the study of history and government, at least a 3.5 average in
at least twelve hours of history and government, and at least a
3.0 average in all other work. Graduate students and faculty may
become members of Phi Alpha. The organization does not limit
its membership to only undergraduate students, as both gradu-
ate students and members of the faculty are invited to join.
Phi Alpha Theta
Michael P. Arra, President
William B. Thompson, Vice-President
Horace Hiest, Treasurer
Professor George D. Harmon
Faculty Advisor
George D. Harmon. Thompson. Arra, Haight. Lebson, Kyte.
Phi Beta Kappa
Officers of the Beta Chapter of Pennsyl-
vania for the year 1952-1953:
Professor Howard J. B. Ziegler,
President
Professor Frank J. Fornoff
Vice President
Dean Robert P. More, Secretary
Professor Roy B. Cowin, Treasurer
The Chapter Council is composed of the
above officers plus the following:
George W. Kyte, Professor
John D. Leith, Dean
J. Burke Severs, Professor
James H. Wagner, Registrar
Phi Beta Kappa, the oldest of all Greek letter fraternities,
was founded at William and Mary College, in Williamsburg, Va.,
in 1776. It was originally a social and literary society, but com-
paratively early in its history it developed into an honorary fra-
ternity which gives recognition to undergraduate students who
have excelled in studies designed principally to lead to a knowl-
edge, understanding and appreciation of the world in which
we live.
During the first century of its existence, the growth of the
society was slow. By 1881 there were twenty active chapters.
The individual chapters were located in the northeastern section
of the United States and were largely autonomous. In 1883 the
national organization, the United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa,
was established with the purpose of effecting a closer union be-
tween the chapters and of assuring high and uniform standards
in the chartering of new chapters and in the election of mem-
bers. Today there are 151 chapters, spread throughout the whole
country.
Membership in Phi Beta Kappa has long been recognized
as one of the outstanding scholastic honors which a student may
receive. The influence of the fraternity has done much to raise
the standards of American collegiate education.
The Beta Chapter of Pennsylvania was installed at Lehigh
in April, 1887, through the influence of several members of the
faculty who themselves belonged to the Society and felt the need
for its influence on the Lehigh campus. Membership is offered
each year to outstanding seniors who have shown unusual excel-
lence in liberal studies. The task of selecting new members falls
upon a chapter council of faculty members. Besides selecting
men from the Arts and Business Colleges and the curricula in
chemistry and physics, the council may, in any one academic
year, offer membership to not more than four seniors from the
technical curricula.
In addition to the seniors who were initiated in May, 1952,
and whose names were listed in the 1952 Epitome, the follow-
ing were initiated on June 15, 1952:
Michael R. Imbriani
Arthur I. Larky
102
hr.l K, I, khii. (linst Seltzer Baum Telfer Loiv II n II \
Rmi-iui W 1-iiit «ski. McVev Fenton. Dolcitta, Albuylit, I'lc
Greener, Principe, Sidikman. Pusthett, Schelleng, Weaver.
/|j-llc. .'Miulil. Li
Among the numerous honorary fraternities at Lehigh Uni-
versity, Phi Eta Sigma may be considered the first — the first,
that is, to be of concern to the entering student. For Phi Eta
Sigma recognizes outstanding scholarship in the freshman class.
To gain admittance, a freshman must attain a 3.50 average in
his first semester or a 3.50 cumulative average for his fresh-
man year. In either case he must rank in at least the upper 20
per cent of his class.
Phi Eta Sigma is a national organization comprised of 81
chapters, four of which are located in Pennsylvania. It has as
its goal the recognition and encouragement of scholarship among
freshmen. As a national group it publishes a pamphlet on how
to study and holds a national convention in alternate years. The
Lehigh chapter was represented at this year's convention, which
was held on the campus of Purdue LIniversity during the month
of October.
The Lehigh chapter, in order to further its aims and serve
the LTniversity, has three important activities. The members dis-
tribute to incoming freshmen copies of the pamphlet "Hints on
How to Study", carry out the clerical work in connection with
the faculty evaluation program sponsored by Arcadia, and award
a cup and a plaque each year to the dormitory section whose
freshmen have achieved the highest scholastic average. The cup
for this purpose, which remains in the University Library, was
donated by Dr. Harold V. Anderson, advisor to the organization
since its founding in 1930.
Phi Eta Sigma
Theodore B. Baum, President
Gordon H. Telfer. Vice-President
Harvey S. Long, Treasurer
Wayne J. Seltzer, Secretary
Dr. Harold V. Anderson
Faculty Advisor
103
Pi Delta Epsilnn
Bruce R. Barstow, President
Robert B. Gill, Vice-President
Dave Dunlap, Secretary
John Wasilchak. Treasurer
Charles Moravec, National Secretary
Joseph B. MacFadden
Walton H. Hutchins
FacultY Advisors
Pi Delta Epsilon, the national honorary journalism fra-
ternity, was founded at Syracuse University in 1909. Eleven
years later a chapter was organized at Lehigh, and today the
fraternity is active in colleges and universities throughout the
country.
The purpose of Pi Delta Epsilon is to provide a means of
achieving coordination and harmonious relationship among the
leaders in campus publications. These men, through membership
in Pi Delt. are able to meet and discuss problems confronting
them in their work, as well as methods for improving school
publications.
At the first meeting of Pi Delta Epsilon this year, twenty
men in Lehigh journalism were initiated into the society. Plans
for this year include the sponsoring of the Lehigh Blotter for
the third consecutive year and the formulation of a new humor
magazine.
If Pi Delt is able to overcome the financial objections to
a new humor magazine, Lehigh will hear a lot more about the
"Pi Eyed" in the future.
First Row: Gill, Barstow, Wasilchak; Second Row: Duncan, Barba, Applegate, Meerwarth.
Dolotta, Rothenberger; Third Row: Hanks, Sinner, Trillhaase, Asson, Linck, Gross, Dittman.
Pi Mu Epsilon is a non-secret organization whose purpose
is the promotion of mathematical scholarsliip among the students
in academic institutions of luiiversity grade. At Lehigh Univer-
sity, the Pennsylvania Gamma cliapter of the fraternity has
been quite active for the past year, having been reactivated in
the spring of 1952 by a group of interested members of the class
of 1953.
Election to membership is contingent first upon the attain-
ment of a good record in mathematics 13.75 in Math. 11-14,
3.50 if advanced courses have been taken I , and second upon
the indication of a genuine interest in the subject. The latter is
usually accomplished by presentation of a paper or talk on a
mathematical subject.
This year the chapter initiated the weekly mathematical
problem in the Brown and White, in conjunction with the New-
tonian Society. At the monthly meetings, which are open to the
public, speakers from other departments, universities and in-
dustry have presented talks on topics closely related to mathe-
matics. Included in the present plan is an inter-college mathe-
matics contest. In these things the Chapter hopes to have realized,
on the Lehigh University campus, the purpose of the Fraternity.
A statement about the organization would be hardly complete
without a word of gratitude extended to Professors Goldberg
and Raynor. and to Professor Robert R. Stoll. who left the de-
partment in 1952. These faculty members of the fraternity were
always at hand to help and cooperate in getting the Chapter
reorganized.
Pi Mu Epsilon
Robert S. Knox, President
William T. Spencer, Vice-President
John C. Diercks, Treasurer
Leroy J. Yeager, Secretary
Prof. Samuel Goldberg, Faculty Advisor
First Roic: Prof. Clarence A. Shook. Prof. G. E. Raynor. Spencer, Knox. \ eager. Diercks, Prof.
Samuel Goldberg; Second Row: Dubosky. Townsend, Vekony, Gottling, Conrad, Schissler, May,
Stubner. Madison. Clapp. Ladew. \^'hvland. Patterson. R. Smith: Third Row: Adler. D. Smith.
Heller. Bond. P.artra\i. Opliiiiz.r. Klaliun,!.. Hiiinrt H. ^nvder. Barba, Schilling. Mover.
First Row: Prof. Thomas E. Jackson, Roos, Niederer, Diercks, Smith, Ram; Second Ron
ing, Mumford, Stubner, Nieman.
Gries-
Pi Tau Sigma
John C. Diercks, President
John Barteau, Vice-President
Charles Bodenstab, Treasurer
Paul Niederer, Recording Secretary
Robert C. Smith
Corresponding Secretary
Prof. Thomas E. Jackson
Faculty Advisor
The Lehigh Theta Chapter of Pi Tau Sigma, the ninth
chapter to be founded since the society began in 1915, was
formally instituted in 1927.
The purpose of Pi Tau Sigma is to foster the high ideals
of the engineering profession, to stimulate interest and coor-
dinate departmental activities, to promote the mutual profes-
sional welfare of its members and to develop in students of
mechanical engineering the attributes necessary for effective
leadership in assuming the responsibilities of citizens in a de-
mocracy. Advanced students in mechanical engineering who
show real interest and marked ability in their field of study,
leadership qualities and outstanding personality are selected for
membership in Pi Tau Sigma.
Activities of the society include monthly business meet-
ings, banquets in Spring and Fall honoring the newly elected
members of the organization, and the awarding of a "Mechanical
Engineer's Handbook" to the highest ranking freshman in me-
chanical engineering.
The Pi Tau Sigma Lounge in Packard Laboratory is fur-
nished and maintained by the Lehigh Theta Chapter. This lounge
is open to all students for relaxation and study during the day
and is available to all organizations for meetings and smokers
during the evening.
Pi Tau Sigma also sponsors a Freshman Orientation Pro-
gram for new students in the mechanical and industrial engi-
neering curricula and works closely with the Student Branch of
the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in all of its ac-
tivities.
106
Tlie National Society of Scabbard aiul Blade, an honorary
military society for the Advanced ROTC. was founded na-
tionally in 1905 and came to the Lehigh campus in 1922. Its
ten regiments throughout the country are made up of a total of
104 companies. As an all-service organization. wJiicli recognizes
that harmonious relationships with all departments are essential,
the Lehigh Company "H" 3rd Regiment is composed of students
from both the Air and Army Branches of ROTC.
The main social function is the annual Military Ball,
held in Grace Hall. This year, in order to be more fully repre-
sentative of tlie military societies here at Lehigh, Arnold Air
Society and Pershing Rifles were invited to be co-sponsors of the
dance. Each Memorial Sunday the ushers and a color guard are
provided for the services held in Packer Chapel. At the bi-
monthly meetings tlie business of the society is transacted and
a speaker or an educational film is usually part of the program.
In recognition of the validness of the Preamble to its Con-
stitution. Scabbard and Blade awards a trophy to the student
who has developed the qualities of a good and efficient officer
and thus has helped to preserve them.
Scabbard and Blade
Mark J. Given, President
Roy C. Anderson, Vice-President
Thomas H. Mohr, Treasurer
Kenneth W. Hergenhan, Secretary
Major Charles K. Baker. Jr.
Faculty Advisor
I J
First Row: Mohr, Given. Major Charles K. Baker, Jr , Anderson. Hergenhan, Second Rou
Hendrix, Kaufmann, Wingert. Miller. Wiltsie. .^rneson, .Smith, Goldblatt, Bentle\. Gilchrest, Hop-
pins: Third Roic: Taylor, Doan. Horan. Davis, Huester, Schivley, Fuller, Roxbv. Rogers. Spatz,
Lerch; Fourth Row: Lackland. May, Kingsbury. Albrmht. Siirethy, Snyder, Henston stp\pns
Bailey.
.m
iitiJmr--wire«^0i
.J .
f . ^
^ '^^ %"^ -^^ -^^ * m.^
■;^ps os^p^-"' "i . £
First Row: Spatz, Lund, Sheridan, Newman; Second Row: Jones, Towe, Sargeant, Spaulding, Metz.
Bell, Davis, McKnight; Third Row: Hanson, Stevens, McGuire, Coppersmith, Armantrout, Knapp,
Abel, May, Rheinold.
Snciely of American
Military EnqinEers
Lawrence Lund, President
Thomas Sheridan, Vice-President
Phillip Newman, Treasurer
Warren Spatz, Secretary
Capt. John Rafferty, Faculty Advisor
In early February 1950, two senior civil engineering stu-
dents also enrolled in advanced ROTC started working toward
the goal of forming at Lehigh a chapter of the Society of
American Military Engineers. After a few weeks of correspond-
ence with the National Headquarters, the first organizational
meeting elected Ralph L. Kraemer, temporary president, and F.
Allan Mink, temporary secretary-treasurer, both of the Class
of 195L
Senior Regional Representative of the Society of American
Military Engineers , Colonel Luessig presented the Lehigh
Chapter with its charter on October 26, 1950.
Since its beginnings here at Lehigh, the chapter has carried
on an interesting and varied program to secure the participation
of the members toward the main objectives of the society to
promote and foster the defense of our country.
108
First Rotv: Meeh. Moyer. Kearney, Slutter, Sniitli; Second Row: Dubosky, Knox, Goldenberg,
Professor James B. Hartman. Professor Robert D. Billinger, Moore, Maloney, Clauser; Third Row:
Diercks. Stubner, Barteau, Linck, Yeager.
Tau Beta Pi was founded at Lehigh University in 1885 by
Professor E. H. Williams. Professor Williams believed that there
was a great need for an honorary society which would recognize
worthy men in the technical branches of education. He therefore
established the Pennsylvania Alpha Chapter of Ta;u Beta Pi with
the help of several students. The need for such an organization
soon became apparent in other technical colleges. As a result
the organization has grown to include 93 chapters in the leading
technical colleges of the nation.
At present the local chapter consists of 21 undergraduate
members. All men in the upper eighth of the junior class and the
upper fifth of the senior class are eligible for election. After
scholastic requirements have been fulfilled, election to member-
ship is based on integrity, breadth of interest, adaptability and
leadership.
At LeJiigh. Tau Beta Pi sponsors annually a slide rule in-
struction course for engineering freshmen. In the past few years
a tutoring system covering freshmen engineering courses has
been developed and administered by the members. Each year
Tau Beta Pi awards a prize to the highest ranking freshman
engineering student.
Tau Beta Pi
Edward R. Kearney, President
Kenneth N. Smith, Vice-President
Richard A. Moyer, Treasurer
Roger G. Slutter, Recording Secretary
Erwin G. Meeh, Corresponding Secretary
Professor D. Billinger
Professor James B. Hartman
Professor Joseph F. Libsch
Faculty Advisors
109
...^N*^^^^
Activities
Arcadia
Arcadia, the student government of Lehigh University, is
composed of fifteen men elected from the student body by the
Hare System of Proportional Representation, better known as
preferential balloting. The fifteen men carry on two major func-
tions— administrative and representative.
Arcadia is representative in that it provides a medium for
gathering and formulating student opinion. Each Arcadian is
elected by men who feel that he can best serve their interests and
needs.
The administrative functions are concerned with carrying
out the activities of standing committees. Arcadia insures the
expression of student opinion in four areas of University policy
by being represented in the following faculty committees: Disci-
pline. Student Activities, Student Club Finance and the Board
of Publications.
Arcadia is an evolving organization: each Arcadia takes
steps which will benefit the student body. It represents student
opinion on its standing committees other than those of the stu-
dent-faculty type. The Parking Committee offered a proposal
concerning the dormitory parking problem; the Campus Com-
mittee sought and received extra police protection over House-
party week-ends: the Drown Hall House Committee was con-
Gross, Arneson, Hopkins, MacCabe.
First Row: Herbert M. Diamond, Arnesen, MacCabe, Gross, Hopkins; Second Row: Dussinger.
Lewis. Adams. Sowerbutt, Moore, Stevens, Goldenberg, Sponzilli, Arra.
cerned with redecorating Drown Hall and installing a television
set in the student lounge; the National Student's Association
Committee reactivated the purchase card system; the recently
established Lamberton Hall Committee made great progress in
improving the conditions in the University's dining hall. In addi-
tion to these added benefits, this year's Arcadia successfully
completed its regular duties — faculty appraisal, campus chest,
freshman orientation, Lafayette Pep rally, and many others.
Regardless of all the loyal effort put forth by each member
of Arcadia, and regardless of the achievements the student gov-
ernment has and will attain, there are two factors without which
it cannot be successful — student interest and cooperation. Ar-
cadia meetings are open to all tlie members of the student body,
and any undergraduate who has formally declared his intentions
one week ahead of time must be heard at a meeting. Only with
the aid of genuine interest and with the display of whole-hearted
cooperation of the students can Arcadia really attain its goal,
that of being truly representative.
John P. Arnesen, President
Thomas B. MacCabe, Jr., Vice-President
Malvern J. Gross, Jr., Treasurer
George Hopkins, Jr., Secretary
Herbert M. Dl\mond, Faculty Advisor
113
Class of 1954
Following the election, plans were made for the formation
of tlie cabinet. Last year we had an executive cabinet of ten men
and an associate cabinet of fifty men. This year the executive
cabinet was increased to twenty-five men and the associate cabi-
net Avas decreased to twenty-five. The associate cabinet is on hand
to serve on various committees. Because of the good job done
last year on the Snowball, practically all the members of last
year's cabinet were reappointed.
Houseparty dance was the big item on the agenda. This was
the second year that the junior class had run the dance. Early
in the Fall the committees were established and the budget was
passed. Total cooperation was evident on the part of all com-
mittees. In addition to the dance, the juniors held their annual
class picnic in Spring.
The class sponsored a new tradition on the Lehigh cam-
Newman, Stout. Cable Gunn
114
First Row: Smith, Singley, Greenstone, Newman, Gunn, Cable, Stout, Snadecki, Feldman; Second
Row: Haase, Madison, Rodberg, Knapp, Sichert. Pearl. Lewis, Pavia, Korn, Wiltsie, Armstrong.
pus. Uniform class blazers designed by the class cabinet were
sported by a number of the men of '54. It is expected that in
years to come the majority of Lehigh men will wear the blazers.
The Juniors can boast of the athletes that represent the class
on the various varsity teams, which turned in good records
over the year. The Juniors showed leadership also in all extra-
curricular activities about the campus. Cyanide, the junior hon-
orary, worked hard to enforce the freshman regulations which
have been lax for a number of years.
Next year we will take over, following the Class of "53. Prob-
lems will arise and a great deal of work will have to be done. We
are looking forward to a good year, our last one, and we hope to
be able to add greatly to the betterment of Lehigh University.
J. Wilson Stout, President
John A. Cable, Vice-President
Thomas E. Gunn, Treasurer
Philip F. Newman, Secretary
Thomas C. Kubelius, Faculty Advisor
115
Class of 1955
Fall semester 1952, brought autumnal leaves to the campus
and — courtesy of the Class of 1955 — the "Dink Hop" to the
freshmen. The "Dink Hop" was a highly successful dance spon-
sored by the "sophs" to acquaint the "frosh" with the young
ladies from Moravian. Cedar Crest, and St. Luke's.
From Thanksgiving to December 13th. the Class Cabinet
was busy making ready for the Snowball. Good publicity and
effective ticket plugging, along with the musical attractions of
Matt Gillespie, were responsible for packing the upper floor of
Grace Hall with more than four hundred couples. Decorations
in blue and white, including the twelve foot high Snowman,
Seated: Carpenter. Faust: Standing: Smitli. Gleckner.
116
Seated: Schubert. Machette. Gleckner. Carpenter. Smith. Faust. Td\lor; iie<onil Ri}u Milln
Ring, West. Howey. James, Berry, Seeds. Egner. Cundy. Bentle\. Ben Ian. Third Rini Milthel.
Schiesser, Deutz, Hamilton, Royster, Hetterly, Tarbert, Cahn
created a festive atmosphere. The evening was highlighted by tlie
rhythm of the "Theta Deh Dixielanders" and the presentation
of a prize to the winner of tlie "What Is It?" contest. Needless
to say. the class treasury was given a substantial boost.
After a thorough discussion, the Cabinet decided that it
could function most efficiently as the governing body of the
class with a constitution; accordingly, a committee was ap-
pointed to draft one. Their draft was subsequently adopted. One
of the principal points of the Constitution was the description of
the powers and duties of each of the officers, and of the Cabinet.
As a public service project, the class acted as co-sponsor
of the 1953 Blood Drive here on campus.
Thanks to an active interest by the faculty advisors, Mr.
Taylor and Mr. Lettieri, and the leadership of the officers, the
Class of 1955 maintained its reputation as one of the most
active groups at Lehigh.
117
Joseph R. Carpenter, President
R. Byron Smith, Vice-President
James F. Gleckner, Treasurer
Kenneth J. Faust, Secretary
Louis M. Lettieri, Lloyd C. Taylor,
Faculty Advisors
Class of 1956
George Lemmon. Chairman
William Burgin, Secretary
Lawrence Whitcomb, Faculty Advisor
As freshmen continue to play an increasingly important
part in university affairs, the recognition given them also in-
creases.
The first taste of university life for the men of '56 was
afforded by the Freshman Orientation Program. This new func-
tion, under upper classman supervision, provided group discus-
sion an hour a week for the first three weeks of school to cover
all possible problems and questions that needed answering.
The Freshman Cabinet, presided over by a specially ap-
pointed executive committee of two members of Cyanide, the
junior honorary society in charge of freshman affairs, is still in
its infancy. However, it is rapidly assuming its own voice on
campus, it being the only group to which a number of freshmen
may belong to aid in fostering personal and class aspirations.
One man from each living group is elected by his fellow class-
men as their section leader, six weeks after the semester's begin-
ning. The purposes of the organization are to keep the cabinet
members abreast of current affairs and to establish and main-
tain potential school leaders.
An innovation this year was the "Dink Hop", the first such
dance ever held solely for an incoming university class as a whole.
Its success speaks well for the class' future, as well as for the
continuance of an annual freshman dance. Another project being
investigated and attempted is the possible and needed extension
of library study hours. The Cabinet has already done excellent
work in handling, in conjunction with Cyanide, some of the
Lafayette week-end projects, such as the pre-game skits and
bonfire.
First Row: Zeiter, Lawrence Whitcomb. Lemmon. Siegel, Keenhold; Second Row: Lucas, Danziger,
Kounelias. Fouchaux, Burgin, Lord, Gasswint, Luce. Heim, Harkavy. Osborn: Third Row: Muntean,
Beck, Taylor, Mercer, Million, Vandervalk, Woodruff.
First Row: Kemp, Peterman, Kuser, Stan, Pruf. J. B. MacFadden; Second Row: Gruneliaum,
Dolotta, Budurka, Greener, Sidikman, Sichert, Pratt, Mehnert, Weygandt; Third Row: Herbener,
Hake, Ryerson, Klein, Poorman, Heller, Shapiro.
The "Voice of Lehigh" found a place in the adult world of
broadcasting when it celebrated its fourth anniversary of sched-
uled programs in October, 1952. The long story of expansion
has almost come to a conclusion, with facilities almost equalling
those of any commercial station in the Lehigh Valley.
This year has seen the much desired newsroom become a
reality with the installation of two teletype news machines in the
recently completed studio "C". They serve as the source of limit-
less material that keeps the listeners well informed and provides
valuable training for the news staff. One of the biggest programs
of the year was the coverage of the presidential election, made
possible by the wire services of the New York Times and the
LTnited Press.
The equipment list has seen a few additions in 1952-*53.
The second tape recorder was purchased, several new amplifiers
built, and new office fixtures made the operation of the business
department more efficient.
Commercially the interest shown by national sponsors in
college radio predicts financial success for WLRN in the
near future. This will mean that WLRN will be even better
able to serve the Lehigh students.
Recognition for the improvement shown by WLRN came
this year in the form of a second prize won by the music show
contest sponsored by the Intercollegiate Broadcasting System.
Future improvement has been assured by the fact that Professor
McFadden this year became the station's faculty advisor.
WLRIV
119
The Brown
and White
Wesley F. Willoughby, Editor-in-chief
Malvern J. Gross, Business Manager
William A. Latshaw, Managing Editor
Carl H. Zimmerman, Editorial Director
Joseph B. McFadden,
Walton H. Hutchins,
Faculty Advisors
The Brown and White began the school year with a "teeth-
rattling shakeup" of the business staff, a new, more modern
flag, and a new column. Inside Straight. Immediate improve-
ment of the business staff was evident in a more satisfactory
accounting system, dependable and extended circulation serv-
ice, and an impressive requisition system for purchases. Straight
added spice to the editorial page; the new flag brought mixed
comments at first, but it seemed to win acceptance.
Not the least of the innovations was a renovation of our
Brown Hall quarters that included fluorescent lights, a tile floor,
new desks and typewriters.
Handicapped by a shortage of manpower, disappointing
photographic work, and fantastic printer's errors, the Brown and
White struggled on until, on December 10, 1952, the William
F. Schlechter Printing Company contracted to print the paper
for the rest of the school year. At the same time. B&W substituted
for its extra, extra bold headline type of the past few semesters
a more modest, modern, and clearer type.
Features from past semesters were retained. Mountainviews
was put on a more exalted level as a regular feature on the edi-
torial page. The Bibler and Herblock cartoons provided vivid and
humorus caricatures of student and political life respectively.
Personals and Comments and Sports Angles were continued, and
a popular Math Puzzle was instituted.
The Fall Houseparty edition cast several student dignitaries
in undignified, not to mention corrupt, political roles — all in
fun, of course. The issue after the Lafayette game displayed
proudly a shot of Tom Gunn catching the pass that won the
game for us. Another time we caught Victor Borge on all fours
leering into our camera during an SCL program.
Alfred Packer, "America's only proved maneater," and
reputed nephew of Asa, was exposed. John Carradine gave us
a revealing if inconclusive interview. Chong Oon discussed
America and his Malayan homeland for us.
The editorial and letters columns boiled with controversy.
Student dress, fraternity discriminatory clauses, MCW's dousing
of our freshmen, and the music department were some of the
120
First Row: Zimmerman, Haase, Rothenberger, Willoughby, Latshaw, Applegate, Dean, Duncan;
Second Row: Joseph B. McFadden, Preis. Dittman, Gross, Asson, Sinner, Walton H. Hutchins,
Ameling.
issues. The number and interest of tlie letters received were a
marked improvement over other semesters.
After considerable discussion. B&W decided against pick-
ing a candidate for president, and confined itself to reporting
student participation in the campaign, of which there was much.
There were problems, but the paper managed to go to press
twice a week, containing information and comment about stu-
dents, for students.
121
Epitame 1353
ROBERT E. LINCK, Editor-in-Chief
RALPH N. MEERWARTH, Business Manager
EDITORIAL STAFF
Robert W. Moore
Managing Editor
Stanley C. Levy
Associate Managing Editor
Peter M. Barba
Photo Editor
SECTION EDITORS
Wayne J. Seltzer
Opening and Administration
Warren J. Jenkins
Seniors
Bert Schweigaard-Olsen
Honoraries and Activities
Donald H. Swartz
Sports
Jerome D. Towe
Living Groups
FACULTY ADVISORS
Joseph B. McFadden
Walton H. Hutchins
First Roil : Liiick. J. B. McFadden, Moore; Second Row: Swartz, Seltzer, Goddard, Schweigaard-
OUrii. la. k-.iii. liarba.
-Moore. J. B. McFadden. Linck, Meerwarth
The production of the 1953 Epitome actually
began during the late Spring of 1952, at which time,
many interviews were arranged with representatives
of the firms who do the actual work directly associ-
ated with publishing the yearbook. At the same time,
the nucleus of the staffs, both editorial and business.
is undergoing expansion in preparation for the re-
turn to the campus in the Fall.
Schedules are proposed for all the work that is
expected of the staff, and interdependent deadlines
are arranged to urge in fairly strong terms that the
work be accomplished in time, in hopes of publica-
tion before graduation.
Concurrently, this is what must be accomplished.
All seniors must be photographed, and their Lehigh
activities recorded. Pictures must be taken of the
faculty and administration, of honorary societies and
activities, of sports teams including action shots
throughout the year, of fraternities and dormitories,
special photos of the campus, and other timely pic-
tures prepared. Written information required in-
cludes identification of all photographs, write-ups for
honoraries. activities, and sports, together with list-
ings of officers and faculty advisors for all of the fore-
going plus the names of all the students in each
living group. The whole conglomeration of informa-
tion is then edited, assembled in order, made up into
pages, and then after much checking, the book is
finally printed and bound. In short, the task seems
to be insurmountable. When it is completed, it never
seems quite so bad as had been expected.
There are indeed many worries, but the compensa-
tion that lies in the knowledge of producing something
worthwhile, something which will strike up memories
from the time it is first read to the last, is more than
can be assayed.
123
Epitame 1953
BUSINESS STAFF
Peter L. Hoyt. Sales Manager
James F. Cooke, Contract Manager
John Wasilchak, Advertising Manager
Samuel D. Reynolds. Photo Manager
We of the Business Staff of the EPITOiME have furnished
the Editorial Staff with the funds necessary to bring to you the
best yearbook possible.
We are proud of the fact that this year more copies of the
EPITOME have been sold than in any other year of the book's
existence. The achievement has been made by greater efffciency
in canvassing the living groups and better advertising.
The Business Staff also added a new section to its organi-
zation, called the Photography Staff. This newly established
group gave you the opportunity to purchase extra prints of the
organizations and the living group of which you were a member.
Simply enough, we could not have done a complete job
without your assistance; for nearly everyone contributes to the
EPITOME in one way or another. We, of the Business Staff
thank you for your cooperation, and we hope that your invest-
ment in the 1953 EPITOME will prove to be of ever increasing
value as the years go by.
First Row: Wasilchak, Cooke, Meerwarth, Hoyt, Reynolds; Second Row: Mudge, Brooks, Sellers,
Serphos, Haberle, Hollenback, Butterweck, Smith, Murdoch, Rogers.
The CDlleqians
First Row: Hower. Messner. Hillrgass. Gabler. Dunlap. I!niiii,-ki; >>,„„,/ li,ni 1 i-, li. i W , >l, r
man. McAllister. Balles, Becker. Bach. Robert A. Boudreau: Third Row: (Jiantiulh
Frederick G. Dunlap. Leader
Ralph E. Bach, Jr.. Manager
Robert Austin Boudreau,
George L. Gansz,
Faculty Advisors
Members: Ralph Bach. John K. Aman. E. Graham Bowers. James H. Jewell, Frederick Kahl-
baugh. Donald Klein, Paul E. Klinedinst. John S. Shoffstall. Donald Allardyce, John Krizan.
Robert Fouchaux, Neal Griffing. Thurman Kremser, Thomas McAllister, Robert B. Smith. Wil-
liam Wessner, William Westerman, Frederick Harding, Edwin UndercufFer, Robert Long, Paul
Ofiesh.
n ii
H^^IMi^l
I I ff /" ii
m^
Brass Chair
JT
Td^\
T'-TTT^r
vA
M- . / i
' ^ viWTWrf
«»««WLi
/
^=». -
"H-,
The BiDwn
and White
Band
Richard K. Burr, Student Director
Clinton Schmieg, Jr., Assistant Director
William Westerman, Manager
Donald Kirkpatrick, Assistant Manager
Clyde S. Harmes, III.
Publicity Director
Robert A. Boudreau, Faculty Advisor
The Lehigh University Brown and White Marching Band
opened its 1952-53 season by attending the second annual Music
Camp held at Downingtown, Pennsylvania. This camp, which
was open during the four days of Fall registration, offered an
excellent opportunity for both freshmen and upperclassmen to
combine play with practice.
Mr. William Schempf, our regular director and faculty ad-
visor, was given a leave of absence to study music at the Univer-
sity of Vienna during the 1952-53 school year. Mr. Robert A.
Boudreau was appointed to fill this vacancy.
With the opening of the Fall semester came the football
season. The marching band had the privilege of going with the
team to Buffalo, Bucknell, and Lafayette, the Buffalo trip being
an overnight stay. Pre-game and halftime routines were presented
at all the home football games. Highlighting our halftime per-
formances was the "Salute to Freedom" show, complete with
fireworks and doves, presented at the Carnegie Tech game.
Following the football season, auditions were held for the
Lehigh Concert Band. Our first performance, the Christmas Con-
cert, was very well attended. Ronald Rogers appeared as guest
soloist.
Our second concert was composed of works by Serge Proko-
fieff, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Paul Dukas, and Hector Berlioz.
Richard Franko Goldman appeared as guest conductor. The
Moravian College for Women Glee Club, the Lehigh University
Glee Club, and the Lehigh University Brass Choir also appeared
on the program.
Other activities for the band included participating in the
Spring Music Festival and making numerous concert tours to
local high schools. As a climax to another successful season, the
band, along with other Lehigh musical organizations, performed
the fourth annual "Pops" concert. Because of his magnificent
performance at the Christmas concert, Ronald Rogers again
appeared as guest soloist.
126
William k. AI,Ih,11
Donalil Allardyce
John K. Amaii
Ralph Bach
Toby Balles
Robert F. Bell
Robert B. Bemowitz
Robert A. Boguski
E. Graham Bowers
Allan J. Brodsky
Richard Biiell
Richard K. Burr
Louis Cianciulli
David A. Diener
Leonard S. Dorsett
Stan Drucker
Frederick G. Dunlap
Richard N. Fastiggi
David E. Felker
James B. Field
Clyde R. Flory
Robert Fouchaux
Harold R. Fritz
Bernard Fromm
George Fyfe
Karl A. Gabler
Thomas P. Gotas
Neal Griffing
Walter H. Grove
William A. Haase
Frederick Harding
Clyde S. Harmes
Kent W. Hemphill
John R. Hillegass
George E. Hindley
James H. Jewell
Frederick Kahlbaugh
John Kirkpatrick
Donald Klein
Paul E. Klinedinst
Robert Knox
Thurman Kremser
John Krizan
F. Jody Letout
Robert Long
William J. Lockfield
Thomas McAllister
Frederick Meckley
Walter J. Messner
Robert H. Miller
Paul Ofiesh
Clarence Reichard
John C. Reider
John Schelleng
Stephan T. Schlager
Clinton Schmeig
Ronald J. Schumacher
David G. Scrivner
William Seitz
Mortimer R. Shapiro
John S. Shoffstall
Robert B. Smith
Robert 0. Soper
Howard E. Stine
Kenneth P. Strohl
Charles J. Uhl
Edwin Undercuffer
Richard Wallis
John M. Webster
William Wessner
William Westerman
Harry G. Wood
Robert Worley
^ ^^ *S^f!kfi»
1! »i ffn
2^ f
127
Chapel Chair
Carl C. Gingrich, Jr.. President
Kenneth A. Heller, Treasurer
Austin D. Murphy. Secretary
Prof. George L. Gansz, Director
Seven years ago. througli the diligent efforts of Chaplain
Bean, the Chapel Choir was formed. Today the choir has within
its group approximately forty members.
The musical program of Packer Memorial Chapel is provided
by the Chapel Choir under the direction of Professor George
L. Gansz, the University Organist. Each Sunday the group can
be heard leading the congregation in sacred song. During the
holiday seasons, the Chapel Choir combines with the St. Luke's
Hospital Nurse's Choir to form the University Chorale. Per-
formances have included: "Stabat Mater" by Pergolesi, "The
Ballad of Judas Iscariot" by Pervis, and excerpts from the "Cru-
cifixion" by Stainer.
To add diversion and interest to the group's program. Pro-
fessor Gansz has maintained an active social calendar. This in-
cludes numerous picnics, hayrides, dances and skating parties.
The most satisfying experience of the year, however, is at Christ-
mas, when the University Chorale goes carolling at the St. Luke's
Hospital and in and around the city of Bethlehem.
First Row: George L. Gansz, Dir. ; Haney, Murphy, Burgin, T.; Austin, Ryerson, Ledder, Smith;
Second Row: Gross, Margotta, Hogan, Dietrich, McKenzie, LeVan, Chamberlin, Cahill, Ritter,
Mackes; Third Roiv MrMahon. Lester Morgan Graf Frantz, Burgin, W. Weir, Shaal. Lund-
quist Le\on Fourth Ran \^ alt/ Mien Siliaiil/ Bmuii Barry. Maguirc.
5 b <•
128
First Row: George L. Gansz. Miller. Feinberg. Strohl, Rowles. Clauson. Grandin. Cornish. John-
son. W. Burgin. Egner. Gaden, Fastiggi, Ginsburg, R. Smith, Kahlbaugh, Austin. Derrington.
Falcone. Swartz; Second Row: Scrivner, Shelly, Brown, Graf, Moskowitz, Sneden, Vail, Van
Hoesen, Leyon, G. Randel. Kirkpatrick, Whalen, Bennett, J. Smith, Lyness. Weber. Cahill. Oberly:
Third Row: .McMahon. Baker. Ledder. Weigel, Worley. Throop. H. Weir. Wilson. Beekley. Waltz.
Kehrig. HoUoway. T. Burgin. Davis. Harte. Carrasquillo. Danforth. W. Kelly: Fourth Roiv: Heiden-
reich. Emhardt, Lundquist. Nellis. Ettinger. Aman, Hatfield. Hetterly. Barthold, Banks, Seltzer,
Schantz, Priebe, Allen, Reichley. Sudholz, Wallis. Kuehner. Chapman.
Lehigh's versatile and ever-popular Glee Club again at-
tained great heights this year under the leadership of Professor
George L. Gansz.
After two months of intensive rehearsing, the Glee Club
started its season in December with the traditional Christmas
Vesper service in Packer Memorial Chapel, In reverent silence,
the overflowing congregation listened to the beautiful Christmas
Carols as they were sung by the one hundred and sixty voices of
the combined choirs of Lehigh and Moravian College for \^' om-
en. This program was broadcast over two local radio stations, and
also taped for rebroadcast by The Voice of America,
In January, the Club made its annual trek to Centenary
Junior College where they were cordially received. In the early
part of February the songsters appeared in a Sunday Recital
Series concert with the L^niversity Orchestra. Also in February,
the Club invaded the South for a joint concert with the women
of Sweet Briar ollege. To cement the cordial relationships be-
tween the two schools. Lehigh reciprocated by having the Sweet
Briar choir at Bethlehem in a combined concert early in March,
A few weeks later the warblers, in another major undertaking,
presented a program with the Cedar Crest College choir at the
AUentown school. The month of April was centered around the
sixth annual Spring Music Festival held in Grace Hall.
The Glee Club closed its season in May with concerts at high
schools and business clubs in the New Jersey and Pennsylvania
area, ending another year of successful singing at Lehigh.
Glee Club
129
t;^.-
f^r
First Row: Robert Austin Boudreau. Diener, Prof. Ferdinand Beer. Mrs. F. Beer. Mrs. P. Nead.
Stewart, Schelleng, Priebe; Second Row: Paterson. Anchin. Hindley. Booth. Balles. Drucker. Knox.
Kinard. Smith. Messner; Third Row: Williams, AUardyce. Krizan. Peachey. Kremser, Shoffstall,
Fyfe. Schumacher.
All-College Orchestra
Cliff Clefs
First Row: Swartz, G. Randel, Carrasquillo; Second Row: George L. Gansz, Donnecker, Kuehner,
Madison, Seltzer, Kirkpatrick; Third Row: Rickert, Cornish, Reichley. Priebe, Allen, Moore, Stotz.
In 1^12 a group of Leiiigli stutlenls from Allentown formed
tlie Allenlown-Lehigh Organization. It is from this organization
tliat tlie present Alplia Lambda Omega social fraternity, formally
chartered and recognized by the University, has evolved.
Membership in A L 0 is open to any man who can lay claim
to being a "Town-man." Inasmuch as the membership of the
fraternity is largely made up of residents of the immediate area
it can lay claim to truly being Lehigh's local fraternity. At present
there are 90 men in the group making us one of the larger
active organizations in the Lehigh family.
The fraternity strives for full participation in campus activ-
ities with representatives in Arcadia, Brown & White, the Band.
Mustard & Cheese and Varsity teams. A L 0 again ruled the
roost in intramural football and has teams entered in other in-
tramural sports.
Six A L 0 parties are held throughout the year along with
a smoker and initiation banquet. Our own houseparty revels.
Lafayette party, Christmas party. Spring party and farewell ])ic-
nic are times never to be forgotten.
A L 0 is in a unique position in that it extends a welcome
hand of friendship to many men who would not otherwise get
to enjoy their measure of campus life.
Under the fine direction of its officers and faculty advisors,
A L 0 and its recently organized Alumni organization will con-
tinue to uphold Lehigh's fine traditions. They are sure to be a
group you will be hearing more about in the coming years.
Alpha Lambda
Dmeqa
Roger A. Ingelese, President
Edward Dussinger, Vice-President
John Seebald, Treasurer
Victor M. Frey, Recording Secretary
Louis H. Peters, Corresponding Secretary
Samuel Missimer, Richard Storrow,
Faculty Advisors
First Row: Vadelund, Knauss, Hartman. Rentschler, Hunter, Fritzinger, Held, Burns, Conti; Sec-
ond Row: Schmeck, Capt. Harold A. Hendler. Peters, Frey, Ingelese. Dussinger, Shatt, Shank-
weiler; Third Row: Butz, Jandrasi. Evans, Zahavchuk, Berghold, Feidler, Retzler, Bergstresser,
Shavnenek, Lange; Fourth Roiv: Wright. Armbruster. Ott, Giannelli, Swider, McBean, Keleman,
Mitchell, Green, Hersh, Reichard. Goddard; Fritz, Licini, Singley; Fifth Row: Mahoney, Silfies.
McBean, .Stinner, Clauser, Prutzanni, Reese, Doyle, Snyder, Stubner, Turnaver. Kropp. Van Horn.
Seebald, Kamper.
Spring Music
Festival
Warren W. Stevens,
Coordinating Director
William J. Davis, Business Manager
David A. Lackland,
Technical Director and Stage Manager
Donald E. Rickert,
Student Manager of Music
Byron C. Hayes, Albert A. Rights,
George L. Ganz, Faculty Advisors
Continuing in the tradition of the last five years, the 1953
Lehigh Music Festival proved itself to be as different as it was
enjoyable. "Music from Earth" and "Music from Space" were
presented to the Lehigh audience, complimented by lighting,
color projection, original narrative and choreography.
The annual all-student production presented in Grace Hall
on April 17th and 18th. utilized a student-constructed set 100
feet wide and 33 feet deep, including a 97 foot projection screen.
Lighting for the '53 show required 90.000 watts, 20,000 more
than ever before. Slides and motion pictures added background
to the music, and five slide projectors constructed by the tech-
nical staff were used to view the images cast on the screen.
The Lehigh Glee Club and Concert Band formed the nu-
cleus of the musical group, presenting "Music from Earth" in
Part L Songs of many lands were included with corresponding
color projection. A section of popular music featured the talents
of the Collegians, the Cliff Clefs, and several special dance
groups.
"Music from Space", Part H of the show, was planned with
Marc Blitzstein's "Airborne Symphony" as the central idea and
also featured "Music Out of the Moon" by Harry Revel. The set,
constructed as a highlight to Part H, depicted the futuristic idea
of Space through the use of eccentric design. Raised platforms
and ramps formed a turreted mountainside along the north wall
of Grace Hall where the music groups were assembled.
First Row: Gilchrest, Kuser, Morgenstern, Albert A. Rights, Davis. Butler: Second Row: Benedict,
MacCabe. Cron, Franz, Howell. Erving, Sapp. Brandes, Weygandt; Third Row: Fred Lackland,
Dave Lackland, Daly, Blocker, Stevens. Underbill, Latsbaw.
This year, as in tlie past, tiie Bro\vn Key Society lias been
busy with its program of aiding visiting athletic teams, perform-
ing services for various University activities and serving as
general liost and guide for many functions connected with Le-
high.
The Society's membership lias been proud to carry out a
compreliensive program designed to further intercollegiate rela-
tions. Coaches, managers and members of visiting teams, whether
they be of the football squad or the fencing team soon become
acquainted with the friendly Brown Key member who is always
present to give needed assistance. Spectators and visitors to Uni-
versity athletic and social programs also find the wearer of the
Brown Key armband a welcome guide as well as a helpful host.
With an aim toward increasing common bonds with other
colleges. Brown Key, together with Varsity "L". sponsored the
new All Sports Trophy for Lafayette-Lehigh competition. Lehigh
was the first recipient of the award which was given at the an-
nual football game between the two rivals.
By fund-raising programs, such as ushering at athletic con-
tests, selling balloons, and through membership dues, the Society
has become financially firm. Brown Key hopes to some day in
the future be in a position to promote student grants for deserv-
ing athletes, but for the present the members have found it an
honor and a privilege to serve Lehigh.
Brown Key Society
John T. Morrison, President
Robert T. Schoeplin, Vice-President
Charles K. Wallace, Secretary-Treasurer
David M. Dockham. Faculty Advisor
First Row: Schoepflin. John M
Benner. Jim Kinffliam. Rnrjers. Srh
CaMr. Hai!;li. L.-'niinnii, l.inf-. 'I'nn
Wallace: Second Ron
. WitziL'. Jan>p« Mo
Ft
Tooker. Snadecki, Dengler. Given.
Third Row: Nick, Henderson,
Sailing Club
Frank E. McConnell, Commodore
Warren W. Stevens, Vice-Commodore
Kenneth Gilson, Treasurer
Thomas May, Secretary
Alexander Garwood, Rear Commodore
The Sailing Club had a highly successful season this Fall,
both in campus activities and in intercollegiate racing. A large
turnout of new and old members and a great amount of interest
shown by everyone allowed the club to send teams to all meets
to which Lehigh was invited and to hold several social events.
For the first time in the history of the club, invitations were
received to three of the major regattas of the season. The team
placed third out of nine schools in the Nevins regatta, held at
Kings Point, N. Y., seventh out of thirteen at the Timme-Ang-
sten at Chicago and fourth out of seven at the Potomac Frost-
bite Regatta in Washington, D. C. At each regatta Lehigh crossed
the finish line ahead of several major schools, such as Navy,
Notre Dame and Maryland.
The freshman team also had a good season. At the Greater
Philadelphia Area Championships, the team collected thirty-
nine out of a possible forty points, nosing out such schools as
Princeton and Penn. They then went on to second place in the
Middle Atlantic Freshman Championship held at Fort Schuyler,
N. Y.
The high interest shown by the members is reflected in the
fact that arrangements have been made to keep the club's three
Penguin class sailing dinghies at Split Rock Lodge in the Po-
conos. thus, affording better sailing and allowing home regattas
to be held.
First Row: Olson, Bacho, Arthur W. Brune, Hugh R. Gault, Robert T. Gallagher, Ward, Ziminski
Second Row: Renschler, Eben. Temps, Bolton, Jenkins, Gaines, Irving. Rudd, Tolnes; Third Row
Reed. Ziminski, Hatfield, Wehnau, Bond, Rayfield. Erney. Goddard, Brandes. Keiler. Nichols.
Hnward Eckfeldt Snciety
First Row: Stubner, Leith. Armbruster, Engle, Preston Parr; Second Row: Singley. Ladew.
deBlecourt, Moyer.
Town
Cnuncil
135
As in the past, the Mustard and Cheese Club of Lehigh
University has again this year done a great deal to promote
and foster dramatic ideals on the University campus. The past
season was, in fact, one of the fullest and most varied in the long,
colorful history of the organization.
In the Fall of 1952, things got under way rapidly with a
full-scale selling campaign for the Lehigh Film Society, an
M&C organization founded to enjoy a series of Hollywood
classics. The hard earned results of the campaign put us in the
black to the extent that we were able to purchase a sky cyclorama
for use in future productions.
Mustard!
Ralph L. Towne, President
Thomas H. Asson, Vice-President
Austin D. Murphy, Secretary
Richard W. Corney, Treasurer
David P. Finger, Club Technician
H. Barrett Davis, Director
J. Allen Bowers, Technical Director
136
& Cheese
At the same time, casting and planning were being carried
out for the December production of Shaw's "Caesar and Cleo-
patra". The show, staged witli imaginative effectiveness by Mr.
Allen Bowers, our new technical director, was received enthu-
siastically by a large audience of campus and town theatre-goers.
Without allowing any dust to settle, the group next went
into rehearsal for two plays to be given in March. Taxing his
versatility to the utmost. Professor H. B. Davis undertook the
direction of both shows concurrently. The first, "Murder in the
Cathedral", by T. S. Eliot, was successfully staged twice on
March oth, while a farcical version of Sheridan's "The Rivals"
took place March 20th and 21st.
The latter play was given in cooperation with Interfraternity
Council's Greek Weekend, a fact which proved to be of mutual
advantage to the success of both events. Now that the pattern
has been established, it's to be hoped that the same idea will
be continued in following years.
To wind up the season, a series of one-act plays are cur-
rently being planned for May. We have high hopes that these
may be used competitively with other colleges in Pennsylvania,
as well as being shown to the local public.
The year has been one of the most noteworthy in the history
of Mustard and Cheese. The organization has continued its steady
growth in popularity and achievement just as it will continue to
do in years to come.
First Row: Chaplain Gi
C.unn. Martin.
M. Bean, Kearny. Guilda; i'e
Interfaith Council
Edward R. Kearny, President
Robert B. Guilda, Secretary-Treasurer
Chaplain George M. Bean
Faculty Advisor
The purpose of the Interfaith Council of Lehigh University
is to promote understanding and harmony among the faiths. The
Council's main function this year, as it has been for the past
two years, was the presentation of the new Annual Conference
on Religion, which was scheduled on the University Calendar
for March 8-11.
The component groups of the Interfaith Council are the
Christian Council, Hillel Society and the Newman Club. These
three represent the major faiths at Lehigh and are represented
in the Council by three members from each organization.
The introduction of an Annual Conference on Religion has
helped to increase the religious awareness on the Lehigh Uni-
versity campus. This year Mustard and Cheese undertook to
present two performances of "Murder in the Cathedral", which
brought together members of all faiths to start the Conference.
This was in addition to the well planned individual programs of
the three member organizations.
Added burden fell on the Council this year, as it operated
without the guidance of Chaplain Bean, who had helped our
group immeasurably in the past two years.
138
Tlie Christian Council of Leliigli L'niversity is composed of
representatives of seven protestant religious organizations ( Al-
plia Chi Epsilon. Canterbury Club, Chapel Choir, Lutheran
Student Fellowship. Wesley Fellowship, and Westminster Fellow-
ship) and ten committee chairmen (Cell Groups, Chapel, Con-
ference on Religion. Discussions, Interfaith, Publicity. Social
Service, Student Christian Movement, and Visitations I . each of
whom directs an area of voluntary Christian activity.
This year, as in previous years, the Christian Council was
instrumental in organizing Lehigh's Third Annual Conference
on Religion which was held on March 8-1 L Opening with the
presentation of "Murder in the Cathedral", the conference con-
tinued with noon discussions, afternoon seminars, personal in-
terviews, and faculty meetings on tiie theme "'The Meaning of
Life in an Age of Crisis."
During the year, the Social Service Committee lias engaged
in a noteworthy program of supervised recreation for the boys
and girls of Wiley House, the local Children's home, and has
sent groups of volunteers to help with social service work in
Philadelphia. Pa. Cell Groups have had a healthy expansion and
several new groups are meeting regularly for prayer, discussions,
and fellowship. The Chapel Committee, instituted to further
attendance at Chapel and local church services, now includes a
representative in every fraternity and dormitory. The Student
Christian Movement Committee has actively represented Lehigh
at various conferences.
Christian Council
James P. Kressler, President
Robert K. Meyer, Vice-President
George R. Barry, Treasurer
William S. Hunter, Secretary
Chaplain George M. Bean,
Faculty Advisor
First Row: Meyer, Kressler, Chaplain George M. Bean, Barry, Oelgeschlager, Hunter; Second
Row: Searfoss, Wiltsie, Engle, Ryerson. Donecker, Harman; Third Row: Rudd, Warnecke,
Kremser. Lemmon. Amelins. Vouns. Gould.
/•"t^
/• ^ ^
>
^
^ ^"^ i'^
(^ n f!» .^
First Row: Stevens, John M. Haiglit, Johnson. Beekley. Collins. Murphey. Warneckc. Tannous:
Second Row: Mrs. Hindley, Nuttall, Meiggs, Falzone, Biggs, Nelmes. Thompson. Van Scoyoc.
Miner, Betge, Shurtleff. Robinson, Lee, Mentzer, Serfass, Smith; Third Row: Bubb, Kennedy,
Potter, Wing. Kiefer. Leonard. Lawrence, Yeaton, McCormick, Rebhan, Krieger. Charlesworth,
Arner, Hughes, Hindley, Van Winckel.
Lehigh Moravian Canterhury Cluh
First Row: Sapner. Piergrossi, Father Cigich, O.F.M., Guest Speaker. Gunn. Buttling. Mahoney,
Harris; Second Row: Yankovicb, Decunto, Boguski, Vaughn, Hynes, Lozano, Uhl; Third Row:
Walsh, Briggs, Clear, Asson, Preis, Straat, Ziminski.
IVewman Cluh
140
1 lie aim of tlie Westminster Fellowshi]). the Presbyterian
Churcli member group of Lehigh's Christian Council, is to pro-
mote Christian companionship and worship tlirougii a varied
program of spiritual, intellectual and social events. With over
fifty members, the ranks of the co-ed group are at their highest
point in history and the drive continues for new members.
Weekly Sunday evening supper meetings this year have fea-
tured panel discussions on timely topics, speakers from all walks
of church life, informal gatherings and movies, including some of
the top religious films of the day. The meetings are held in the
First Presbyterian Church: however, the Fellowship has taken
to the wide open spaces on more than one occasion for hikes,
picnics, hayrides, skating parties and for the final meeting of
the year, the annual retreat weekend in May.
A fitting climax for a year of good fellowship, the retreat
is held in a nearby camp in the Pocono's and provides a week-
end of fun, relaxation and spiritual refreshment. Visitation
Sunday is another big day in the group's busy year. On this
day, the members visit shut-ins of the church for a few minutes
of cheerful conversation. To welcome incoming freshmen from
Lehigh and Moravian Colleges for Men and Women, the group
helps to serve a banquet given by the church session in Sep-
tember.
WEstmrnsler
Fellowship
William A. Haase, President
Martha Jean Ure, Vice-President
Daniel R. Hake, Treasurer
Kenneth P. Strohl, Secretary
Mr. and Mrs. John Leming
Rev. Daniel Hiett,
Advisors
First Row: Young, Beck, Budd, Strohl, Ure, Haase, Hake, Rev. Dan Hiett, Varady, Ladew;
Second Row: Bryant. Clauss. Maginn, Byran, Donecker, Dickson, Luckfield, Weller, Oelgeschlager,
\ eager. McMahon. Nelmes. Hardy, Eddy. Frantz. Webber, Morris, Nuttall, Eichelberger. Stout:
Third Row: Lundquist. McMullan, Dietz, Bristol. Shields, de Mille, Mortland, Rayfield, Barry,
Mann. De Blecourt, Miller, Graf, Siftar, Wiegand.
"^
f^
i^^^^^l^^mSfSm
O- -^::/*^^
'Pj
inij
HiIIgI Society
Richard A. Fischer, President
Louis Sand, Vice-President
Ronald Lipschie. Treasurer
Robert Chaiken, Secretary
Rabbi William Frankel, Facultv Advisor
Through the endeavors of the Hillel Society of Lehigh Llni-
versity the Jewish student is helped in the fields of religion,
cultural activity, social life and a varied athletic program.
Following tradition, Hillel continues to have a wide scope
of activities, with the main feature of the year encompassing the
Conference on Religion. As an outgrowth of the Conference,
Hillel has found among its members a desire for speakers on
Judism and other cultural subjects. These talks have now been
coordinated into Hillel's program.
Each summer one or two outstanding Hillel members are
sent to the National Leadership Training Institute, where prob-
lems on both a national and local level are discussed.
Since the number of Jewish students at Lehigh has risen in
the past year, there have been many new and competent hands
available for work in the Hillel's organization. With proper
guidance, Hillel should continue on the upward path of better
functional activity and greater constructive human effort in its
fields of endeavor.
First Ro2v: Brody. Fischer. Rabbi William Frankel. Van Passen, Unger. Second Roiv: Scheet-
man. Klein.
Fir:>t A L K 1^ _ 11 Mederer. Flaag; Second Row: Cup-
schalk "^trohl John-un Hdsid Ring Punrman. >upcr Cd--t-l Wechsler. Smith. Davis. Lees: Third
Roil Lienhardt Le Dene Ha~~on Coher \^ orle\ Schickedanz. Bausmith. Starr. Heuchert.
Hurbner. Davis. Abbott: Fourth Row: Brodsky. Abe!. Salter. UndercufBer. Hergenhan. Zeiter.
Aspinvvall. May, Selkregg. Anderson. Gilbert.
Alpha Phi Omega, largest national service fraternity, com-
pleted in 1953 its eleventh year of service to Lehigh L niversity
and the Lehigh Valley. The fraternity was founded in 1925 at
Lafayette College by a group of former Boy Scouts who recog-
nized the desirability of carrying over into their campus life
the ideals and principles which they adopted as Scouts in their
boyhood days. There are now more than two hundred and sixty
chapters tliroughout the Lnited States.
Alpha Psi Chapter was founded at Lehigh L niversity in
1936 by a handful of former Eagle Scouts. The group continued
in existence for five years until 1941 when \^ orld T^ ar II made
it necessary to disband the organization. The chapter was reac-
tivated in 1947 and today has sixty-five active members.
The service projects of APO on the Lehigh campus are
numerous. Freshmen week activities are planned and conducted
by the chapter in conjunction with Cyanide. Lshering at Stu-
dent Concert Lectures and the Spring Musical Festival has be-
come traditional. Besides the above projects, the chapter man-
ages the following activities: Fall and Spring book sale, parking
cars at football games. Lehigh L'niversity blood bank, balloting
and vote counting of student elections, and the annual Scout
Visitation Day. On November 15th more than 1.000 scouts and
scoutmasters from councils within a fifty mile radius came to
tour the campus.
Alpha Phi Dmega
Peter K. Huester, President
George Hopkins, Jr.. Vice-President
John C. Diercks, Treasurer
Erwix G. Meeh, Recording Secretary
Paul Niederer. Corresponding Secretary
Robert Fagg. Historian
Edgar K. Mllhausen. Faculty Advisor
143
Political Science
Assembly
William P. Thompson, President
Michael P. Arra, Vice-President
Peter Hoyt, Treasurer
James Cashen, Secretary
Richard W. Taylor, Faculty Advisor
Throughout the year the Political Science Assembly con-
ducts many activities which not only provide an outlet for stu-
dents interested in governmental affairs, but are also of service
to the Lehigh campus.
Debates, radio broadcasts, and other methods of enlighten-
ing the Lehigh student body are used by this group to bring
national governmental problems and affairs to the campus. Dur-
ing the past year the Political Science Assembly conducted a
presidential poll to determine whom the Lehigh family favored
as its choice in the election. Ike won by an overwhelming ma-
jority on the Lehigh ballot. Furthermore, the Political Science
Assembly favored this choice as its own in its annual conven-
tion, which this past year was a model nomination convention.
In addition, P.S.A. members have a busy calendar of dis-
trict, regional, and executive meetings at which they meet with
leaders from other campuses to consider points of common in-
terest to determine policies and plans for the state-wide Inter-
collegiate Conference on Government of which the Political
Science Assembly is the local chapter.
Ka(ftrt\. Franz. Cashen. Thompson. Hoyt, Castnr. \\ hi
/
)
/
I
^
First Row: Jennes, Lynn, Maloney. Yeager, Heller. Lauterbach: Second Row: Bloss. Ram.
Hopkins, Fisher, WTiyland. Bressington. Armstrong. UsUn, Johnson, Maung, Althouse; Third
Row: Bausmith, Michal, Hohn, Minnich, Edson, Budurka, Clarke, Robinson, Bradley: Fourth
Row: Somers, Starr, Morrison, Pullen, Kremitskv, Zeiter, Butts, Yatsko, Schissler, Peterman.
Founded October 12, 1902 by President Emeritus Charles
F. Scott, the Lehigh Student Branch of the American Institute
of Electrical Engineers celebrated its fiftieth anniversary this
Fall. A suitable birthday party feted the occasion which was
enhanced by the presence of Dr. J. L. Beaver, who was also
present when the association was formed. The Lehigh branch, the
first of 127 branches in American colleges and universities, is
comprised of undergraduate students of electrical engineering.
The purposes of the organization are to achieve a closer
relationship between students of this curriculum and the faculty
and to present opportunities for the student to gain an intimate
knowledge of his field. In this endeavor the society brings to
the members outstanding men from industry to inform the group
of the opportunities, problems, needs and achievements of the
electrical industry.
Frequently there are slides and feature films on various
phases of the industry. During the meetings this year represen-
tatives of BeU Telephone Laboratories. AUis-Chahners, Philco
Corporation. Pennsylvania Water and Power Commission, and
General Electric spoke to the organization. In addition the pro-
gram featured a special demonstration and lecture on Safety
Measures by representatives of the Pennsylvania Power and
Light Company.
A. I. E. E.
WiLLL\M J. JVLiLONEY, President
Leroy Yeager, Vice-President
Kenneth Heller, Treasurer
Alexander Lynn — Ray Lauterbach,
Secretaries
Howard T. IVLacFarland. Faculty Advisor
145
First Row: Scott, Uengler, Willson; Second Row: Schubert. Watson, Hevia. Reller,. Brown, Berry,
Anderson, Boguski, Wood, Clark, Bellows, Reynal, Haines; Third Row: King, Juba, Curlee, Gilson,
Alter, Butterwech, Timm, Campnell, Abel, Briggs, Snyder, Lundquist, Ringgold, Goely; Fourth
Row: Pincus, Ridolphi, Kovalski, Umanetz, Maguire, Aspinwall, Coppersmith, Volclcman, Tor-
gersen, Taylor, Stegun, Cable, Bell, Barcan, Lioster,
A. 1. 1. E.
William C. Dengler, President
N. Mark Willson, Vice-President
Robert W. Degen, Treasurer
William E. Berry, Secretary
Arthur F. Gould, Faculty Advisor
Since its first meeting more than tliree and one-half years
ago the Student Chapter of the American Institute of Industrial
Engineers has advanced and grown steadily. The purposes which
the Lehigh Student Branch strives to achieve are to give the
undergraduate an opportunity to develop a closer association
with the field which he has chosen for his career, and to attain
a closer relationship with his fellow students and his faculty.
In order to accomplish these purposes there have been
many fine speeches at our meetings throughout the year. The
speeches were presented by faculty members from our Industrial
Engineering Department at Lehigh, and by men from industries
such as Armstrong Cork, General Electric, and Warren Foundry
and Pipe Corp.
The society has two publications which are enjoyed by the
members each month. Of these two informative magazines, the
A. I. I. E. Newsletter helps to unite the various chapters and
keeps the members well informed of decisions and activities of
our chapters, as well as those of the National Headquarters. The
other publication. The Journal of Industrial Engineering, con-
tains many interesting articles on industrial engineering projects,
theories and equipment of today.
Th6 Chapter's social program, consisting of smokers and
informal get-togethers, is highlighted each year by a banquet in
November and a spring picnic held in conjunction with the
A. S. M. E. at a local park.
146
The present student pliysics clul) at Lehigh traces its ex-
istence to 1948. when a group of interested physics students
undertook a reorganization of the society, using other campus
course societies for its model. The society flourished as a purely
local organization until January. 1951 when, after several months
of petitioning, associate membership was granted in the Ameri-
can Institute of Physics. The society took pride in being among
the first of college physics clubs to be allowed such a privilege.
This Fall, as the society entered into the third year of its
affiliation with A. I. P.. a broad program of future activities was
outlined: and aside from various field trips to places such as
Philco and Brookhaven Laboratories, it was planned to invite
a wide variety of speakers, with topics ranging from experimen-
tal aspects of physics to the more philosophical consideration
of science. Dr. Curtis" talk on strain waves in matter illustrates
the former, while the latter aspect ^vas represented by Dr. Grun-
baum's talk on the philosophy of natural science. Other high-
lights during the year were the combined meeting with Sigma
Xi. and a second combined meeting with Pi Mu Epsilon and
the Blake Society.
A well-rounded year was completed with the election of
ofl&cers for 1953. and the annual Spring picnic at the reservoir.
A. I. P.
Bernell Argyle, President
William Spencer, Vice-President
Joseph E. Geusic, Treasurer
DoxALD W. Oplinger, Secretary
FR.A.NK E. Meyers, Faculty Advisor
First Row: Geusic. Spencer. Argyle, Opiinger, Haines; Second Row: Loeffler, Ladew. DoUota,
Kinkaid, Telfer. Klabunde. Rodbers, Sibner. Avres, Patterson.
First Row: Dr. Richard M. Davis. McAdam. Hancock, Sloan, Wagenseil. Professor Roy B. Cowin;
Second Row: Morrison, Wasilchak. Jones, Fisher, Sanford, Dean, Carl Allen. Dr. Elmer Bratt.
Alpha Kappa Psi
Charles A. Wagenseil, President
David S. McAdam, Vice-President
James Hancock, Treasurer
GuRNEY P. Sloan, Jr., Secretary
Dr. Elmer Bratt, Faculty Advisor
Alpha Kappa Psi. the first national professional business
fraternity, was founded in 1904. and the chapter at Lehigh was
installed in 1924. Today the fraternity has over seventy-five
undergraduate chapters and twenty-six graduate chapters in ma-
jor cities from coast to coast. The membership of Alpha Kappa
Psi consists of over 28.000 professionally trained members and
approximately 700 faculty members on the staffs of colleges and
universities.
The national organization is quite active and performs
many valuable services for the members. Currently it maintains
a placement bureau to assist graduating seniors and alumni
members to make desirable business contacts. A directory with
photographs and qualifications of members is sent to over 2000
leading business firms throughout the United States. The fra-
ternity also has several scholarships plus a Student Loan Fund
which makes loans to undergraduate and graduate members for
completion of degree requirements.
Locally, the chapter's main activity is the sponsorship of
varied professional programs. During the year, the members
are given the opportunity of hearing outstanding speakers from
the business world, and are shown many informative movies
about various phases of business activity. Inspection trips are
another interesting phase of our program; Hess Brothers, Bethle-
hem Steel, Merrill, Lynch, Pierce. Fenner & Beane, and the New
York Stock Exchange are only several of the places that have
been visited. Banquets, beer parties and picnics give Alpha
Kappa Psi a well rounded yearly program.
148
Tlie Civil Engineering Society was organized in 1873 and
is tlie oldest organization of its kind on the campus. It was
reorganized in 1922 and became affiliated witii the American
Society of Civil Engineers as a student chapter. Since then, the
chapter has worked very closely with Lehigh Valley Section.
A.S.C.E.
Tiie cliapter serves the student in many ways. First, it pro-
vides opportunities for students to become better acquainted
with recent developments in the various fields of civil engineering.
Second, students are afforded opportunities to meet and talk
with professional engineers. Third, they can learn more about
the types of work which engineers of different companies do.
Fourth, it enables the students from all classes to become better
acquainted with their instructors and fellow students.
The chapter holds a meeting each month at which an out-
standing engineer gives an illustrated lecture on some engi-
neering project. Inspection trips are sponsored by the society,
and movies are obtained on many major projects. The lectures
throughout the year included a discussion of a project in each
of the following fields of civil engineering: sanitation, highways,
steel erection, reinforced concrete construction, sales, and water
supply. A Christmas Banquet was held this year at which the
seniors put on a program for the entertainment of faculty, stu-
dents, and alumni. The chapter also sponsored a picnic in the
Spring.
A. S. C. E.
Roger G. Slltter, President
Richard A. Walbrecker, Vice-President
Robert E. Morax. Treasurer
Robert M. Peterssen, Secretary
Professor Roger E. Kolm.
Faculty Advisor
First Roiv: Prof. Howard J. McCrodden. Prof. John 0. Liebig. Prof. Raymond H. Snyder. Pe
terssen. Slutter. ^^albrecker. Moran. Mostert. AIcNabb. Prof. Howard S. Strausser. Prof. Wil
liam B. Clement. Prof. Edgar K. .Muhlausen. Prof. Roger E. Kolm: Second Row: Napoliello,
Ostrander. Hultman. Standiford. L. Garcia. Newman. Gorham. Fasolino. Seip. Becker. Tavlor.
Laub: Third Row: Harman. Tyler. Mohr. Buttling. Omholt. Rowles. Mover, T. Bell. Gavlick.
M. Garcia, Stemler. Westerman. Jones: Fourth Row: ■Ressner. Slaff. Madison. Stevens. Linck.
Field. Delancey. May. Lauber. Pfenninger. Inglis, Babcock, G. Bell.
A. S. M. E.
Robert R. Cutler, President
John C. Diercks, Vice-President
John F. Barteau, Jr., Treasurer
Paul Niederer, Secretary
Thomas S. Eichelberger. Facultr Advisor
In 1911 the Lehigh Student Branch of the A.S.M.E. was
founded to broaden the student's knowledge of the practical side
of mechanical engineering and to acquaint the student with en-
gineers in active practice.
The current year was started with an active and concerted
membership drive which proved to be extremely successful. In
order to continue at our increased rate of activity and to satisfy
the objectives of the Student Branch, prominent engineers gave
illustrated lectures on topics of technical interest at each of our
monthly meetings. These lectures were selected to cover all the
various phases of mechanical engineering including machine de-
sign, air conditioning, and heat power. Also, through these meet-
ings, an opportunity was provided for the student to become
better acquainted with the members of the faculty and wdth
fellow students.
In line with our social activities, the annual Lehigh-Lafay-
ette Smoker, sponsored by the Anthracite-Lehigh Valley Section
of the A.S.M.E., was held during the Fall semester. In the Spring
the picnic was held complete with softball games, volleyball
games, and other varied activities.
As the year drew to a close, representatives were sent to
the annual Regional Student Conference at Princeton LIniversity.
The program of activities included banquets, tours, and social
events, and the highlight was the presentation, in competition,
of papers on subjects in the field of mechanical engineering by
the student delegates.
First Row: Goldsmith, Thomas S. Eichelberger, Snyder. Cutler. Diercks, Goddard, Hunter, Nie-
derer; Second Row: Stauffer, Harmes, Smith, Ackerman, Hendrix, Fiedler, Ingles. Farrer, Davis,
Skitt, Parsons, Beyer, Billetter, Barba, Jandrasi; Third Roiv: Wall, Greising, Simpson, Conrad,
Albert, Stubner, Niemitz, Billings, Shearer, Silfies, Bryers. Lebo. Schmehl, Hijeck; Fourth Row:
Stine, Grunert. Stern. Dinger, Wild, Kowalski. Niemann. Schlecht.
''r
First Row: Sailor. Albers, Meeh. K. Smith. Colclougli. Richard N. Rhoda. Reuwer. Stuhr.
Huester; Second Row: Schmeck. Bell. Walton. Moll. Wiltsie, Mouwen. F. Smith, D. Fetterman.
Pasquali; Third Row: R. Fetterman. Ogorzalek, Grunebaum. Middlekauff, Marsh. Reitz. Gill.
Lee. Thompson. Flory. L. Klein. Wright: Fourth Roiv: LeDene. J. Smith, Sander. Mack. Stiehler.
Posillico. Keleman. Carlson. Bevins. Randel. Pinkey. Shapiro. Armbruster.
The Student Chemical Society is the oldest student society
on the campus, founded November 7, 1871. Under the present
program, this society integrates the functions of the two profes-
sional societies, serves to interest especially the freshman and
sophomore classes in Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, and
operates the social program of the departmental societies.
Chemical Societies
STUDENT CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Kenneth N. Smith. President
Robert E. Albers, Vice-President
RiCH.ARD N. Rhod.4. Faculty Advisor
The Student Chapter. American Institute of Chemical En-
gineers was established at Lehigh on December 4, 1949. to
provide for the professional development of the students in
chemical engineering. The emphasis in the year's program was
on the various fields of endeavor open to graduate chemical en-
"fineers.
A.I.Ch.E.
Erwin G. Meeh. Jr., President
Robert A. Sailor, Vice-President
Peter K. Huester, Secretary
Edward P. Stuhr, Treasurer
Charles W. Simmons, Faculty Advisor
The Chapter of Student Affiliates, American Chemical So-
ciety, was chartered on February 25, 1949, in order to aid under-
graduate students in Chemistry in gaining some insight into the
professional side of their chosen careers.
STUDENT AFFILIATES, A.C.S.
William G. Colclough, President
Joseph F. Reuwer, Vice-President
George M. Muha, Secretary
Richard B. Margerison, Treasurer
Richard N. Rhoda, Faculty Advisor
151
*i,^
H
\
n'
■
Wm*- MKBtS
p^..^^^^^
■ r ^s
['I'm
'm^^^^Mz
jpiiJ
First Row: Nolle, Begley. Brandt, O'Ravitz, McKee; Second l<<ni : Sanlonl, Aljbott. Krauss,
Venseret, Schnell, Leibinger, Spatz, Reynolds, Lanphear, Gardner. Strategos. Herbener, Fetzer,
Leinback; Third Roiv: Brown, Clauser, Chick, Grant, Collins, Dorney, Potts, Sublett, Cohen,
Taylor, Weigel, Crabtree, King.
Metallurgy Snciety
Helmut H. Brandt, President
Richard T. Begley, Vice-President
Wayne R. McKee, Treasurer
John R. O'Ravitz, Secretary
Dr. Robert D. Stout, Faculty Advisor
The Metallurgy Society is an organization composed of
students majoring in the field of metallurgical engineering. The
monthly meetings of the Society serve as a source of gathering
information regarding developments in. and related to. the
metallurgical field. The meetings also give the members of vari-
ous classes an opportunity to meet and exchange views on sub-
jects of common interest.
This year the Society invited members of the arts and busi-
ness faculties to speak on subjects of a non-technical nature, in
order that the members may be better informed as to the role
that they, as engineers, play in society. Also, technical men in
various fields of endeavor were invited to talk, so that the stu-
dent could supplement his textbook education and at the same
time, get a better outlook on the opportunities in the various
aspects of industry.
Several social functions were held in addition to the regu-
lar monthly meetings. In December, the Society held its annual
Christmas banquet, while in May the faculty joined the students
for the annual picnic.
152
First Row: Bradford B. Owen, Robert W. Hall. xVrmstrong, Leith, Littner, Snyder, Hope T. M.
Ritter, Stanley J. Thomas; Second Row: Blank. Haltzman, Armstrong, Haney, Beach, Pearce.
Quigley. LeVan. Prosser, Conti. Crislip; Third Row: Mann, Sponzilli. Vartanian. Spencer.
Boruchow. Puschett, Eisenberg, O'Connor, Frankenfield, Kreitz, Nevins.
The Robert ^ . Hall Pre-Medical Society was founded in
1922 in honor of the first head of the Biology- Department.
Robert \^ . Hall. The aim of the Society is to further interest in
pre-medical and medical education and the field of biolog>' in
general.
Toward the attainment of this aim. a great variety of speak-
ers is secured from local hospitals, medical school faculties, and
the ranks of practicing physicians. Movies are shown from time
to time on subjects of interest to the group. Current informa-
tion on medical school admissions and catalogs from many insti-
tutions are made availabe to the members.
In addition to these activities, the Society takes field trips
to local hospitals and mental institutions. Joint meetings are
often held with Alpha Epsilon Delta. Moreover, the R. W. Hall
Society joins with several other similar organizations in the
Lehigh Valley for an annual pre-medical banquet.
flohErt W. Hall
Pre-Medical Society
Robert H. Littner, President
David E. Leith, Vice-President
Donald Armstrong, Treasurer
Robert L. Snyder, Secretary
Hope T. M. Ritter, Faculty Advisor
153
FiTSt Row: Magmarics. Dubosky, Click; Second Row. Peterman, Yantsko. Nuss. Phillips
Krenitsky, Perry, Heller.
Institute of Hadin Engineers
First Row: Morgan, Hess, Hull, Amesen, Miller, Ferguson, Schadt; Second Row: Kingham,
Scheetz, Bell. Clark. Williams, Miles, Keim, Hollenback, Semilof. Beggs. Witzig; Third Row:
Rogers, Maurer, Stanford, Doushkess, Hansel, Tauck. Schubert, Lemmon, Torgeson; Fourth Row:
Carlisle, Henderson. Goldenberg, Royster. Jirsa. Slaff. Comly.
Varsity "L" Cluh
Tlie Leliigli University Cosmopolitan Club has been insti-
tuted for the expressed purpose of ". . . uniting socially and
intellectually, upon grounds of mutual understanding and ap-
preciation, students and faculty of all nationalties represented
at Lehigh University: to promote friendly relations and a right
standard of order, toleration, and justice among them; and to
promote fellowship and good-will among nations, based upon
our common humanity".
Because of its diversified membership, the Cosmopolitan
Club engages in many varied activities. Dinner meetings, held
at Lamberton Hall, provide ample opportunity for informal dis-
cussions of timely topics, presented by faculty members, stu-
dents and guest speakers. These talks are often illustrated by
moving pictures.
In the field of social activities, the Cosmopolitan Club holds
many social gatherings at various fraternity houses: these parties,
which are very popular with the members of the club, are open
to all members of the Lehigh family and are enhanced by the
presence of the foreign students from the neighboring colleges
for women.
The individual members of the Cosmopolitan Club are often
asked to speak at the meetings of various civic groups and so-
cieties in Bethlehem and vicinity. The topics of these talks center
on the various aspects of life in the countries represented in
the club.
Cosmnpolitan Club
Hans de Blecourt, President
Daniel J. Collins. Vice-President
Ted a. Dolotta, Treasurer
Chong K. Oon, Secretary
Professor Rafael A. Soto,
Faculty Advisor
First Rou:: Frances Austin. Dolotta. de Blecourt. Collins. Oon. Mrs. Rafael A. Soto: Second Roiv:
Prof. Rafael A. Soto. Napoles. Atallah. Ram. Erde. Lyse. Mostert. Inouye, Dr. Charles .\. Seidle:
Third Row: Maung. Buenaventura. CoUeville, Verschuren, Haaijer, Peterman, Allen, de Cunto.
Dames Cluh
Mrs. Lee Goddard, President
Mrs. Peggy Carrington, Vice-President
Mrs. Helen Maloney, Treasurer
Mrs. Gladys Nuss, Secretary
Mrs. James V. D. Eppes, Faculty Advisor
The Dames Club of Lehigh Llniversity was organized in
February 1946 to provide social advantages for the wives of
undergraduate and graduate students. The original group con-
sisted of 187 members. The first president was ably assisted by
a faculty advisor and committee heads representing program
and entertainment, refreshments, publicity and membership.
Meetings are held the first and third Mondays of each month
with an additional director's meeting once a month. Elections
are held yearly.
This year's meeting opened with a tea to welcome new-
comers. A variety of programs followed, including a cosmetic
demonstration and a fashion show by Hess Brothers Department
Store, a political science talk, on the eve before election, by Dr.
Rosco J. Tresolini, a flower arrangement demonstration, a card
party and a talk on handicapped children by Miss Major of the
Stevens School in AUentown. The children of members were
entertained at a Christmas party and husbands and Dames
enjoyed a barn dance.
First Row Nusb, Fedeles, Goddard, Maloney, Bloch; Second Row:
Vartanian lenne^. Billings, Rowles, Fiaioli, Magyarics: Third
Roil liiliin_ii Kii]i|ii's. Rehner, Brower, Riley.
First Row Berdick, Bartush, Carrington, Eppes; Second Row: Jen-
kins, Clauser, Thompson, Gavlick, Newlin: Third Row Pullen, Coradi,
Graham, Irvine, Schott.
The Leliigli Ihiiversity Flying Cliih is conipased of a group
of students at the ITniversity whose common interest is aviation.
The main objective of tlie club is to ])rovi(le flying facilities which
are within the financial means of the students.
The club holds meetings monthly in their own room in
Drown Hall. At the meetings a program is presented usually con-
sisting of a speaker or films on aviation. TJie membership is
not restricted in any way and there is no initiation fee. The
present enrollment numbers about forty men, which includes
twenty student pilots and five licensed pilots.
The flying activities are held at the Beth-Easton Airport
on Route 22. At present the club does not own its own plane,
but has a contract with the airport operator. Rates of about
two-thirds of those obtainable elsewhere are thus assured. In-
struction is available at the airport and after seventeen hours of
instruction and eighteen hours of solo flying, a student may get
a private pilot's license. A beginner solos within the first ten
hours of instruction. An Aeronca Champion is used as the trainer
and is an excellent and easy to handle airplane for tlie beginner.
Since 1948 the club has suffered from the decline in avia-
tion enthusiasm which is of a nationwide scope. However, the
club now hopes to buy its own airplane, and if the plan ma-
terializes even lower flying rates will be available. Flying could
then be within the financial reach of most students and the en-
thusiasm in aviation would again increase.
Flying Cluh
Charles Shakespeare, President
Austin Murphy, Treasurer
Edwin Arnold, Secretary
Captain Harold L. Naylor,
Faculty Advisor
First Row: Capt. Naylor, Shakespeare, Arnold, Murpliy; Second Row: Benjamin, Neff, Joerger,
HolHen. Fiedler. Bede: Third Row: Brevity. Wiedenmeier, Smith, Mihlon, Kelton.
157
A.
T
■ -*-c3
*i»!«l***
^
IMPORTS
First Row: Leith, Mgr., Kuhlman, Butz. 'i urek. Walton. Second Row: Leidheiser, Rogers, Endriss,
Borofski, Gigon, Hodder, Fedeles. Third Row: Coach Caraway, Schepps, Mgr., Gunn, Jirsa, Meyers,
Jensen, Adler, Robinson, Snyder, Mgr.
Baseball
SUMMARY
LEHICH
OPPONENT
5
QuANTico Marines
16
5
QuANTico Marines
6
8
Hampden Sydney
12
1
Fort Lee
11
6
Richmond
8
4
Loyola
1
16
Colgate
4
2
Wagner
7
9
SWARTHMORE
6
3
Stevens
0
15
F & M
4
1
Army
2
9
Gettysburg
5
7
Delaware
4
10
Muhlenberg
0
5
Lafayette
4
4
Navy
10
0
Rutgers
2
1
Muhlenberg
5
5
Drexel
4
5
Ursinus
9
5
Lafayette
3
0
Lafayette
1
160
VARSITY LETTERMEN
ROBERT L. BOROSKI
ROBERT H. ENDRISS
PAUL E. FEDELES
RICHARD M. GIGON
THOMAS GUNN
RONALD JIRSA
EDWARD S. LEIDHEISER
HENRY F. KUHLMAN
JOSEPH W. MOYER
EUGENE A. NORTON
CHARLES P. ROGERS
ROBERT W. WALTON
FRANK J. YUREK
JOHN P. ARNESEN. Mgr.
ELIHU M. SCHEPPS, Mgr.
Wliile most Lehigh students were relaxing and enjoying
their spring vacations. Coach Eb Caraway and his 1952 crew
of diamonders headed South to open their baseball season. It
will be a while, how^ever, before the Engineers start believing
in the famous "Southern Hospitality" as they were handed five
losses during the six-game swing through Maryland and \ irginia.
Pre-season predictions of strong pitching, dependable catch-
ing, but questionable fielding and hitting became an actuality
during the season and the southern excursion was quick to bring
out these tendencies. Memories of losses to the Quantico Ma-
rines 1 2 ) , Hampden-Sydney. Fort Lee. and Richmond were
partially eclipsed by the tour's final contest which the Engineers
won largely through the four-hit pitching of Ron Jirsa. On the
trip, 29 of the opponents' total of 54 runs were unearned show-
ing how costly Lehigh's errors in the field proved at that early
date.
('.iHU'h ('.(irmiav and (.(iptain Borofski — Confab
161
Paul Fedele
Catcher
It's a three-bagger!
Caraway's squad opened its regular season by drubbing
Colgate unmercifully, 16-4. Darkness prevented the slaughter
from being worse. Jirsa not only pitched six hit ball, but also
banged out a 400-foot triple to aid his cause. Wagner dimmed
Lehigh's hopes quickly though as they dropped the Engineers
7-2, although they were outhit by the Packers.
The next three games saw some of the most amazing pitch-
ing by Engineer hurlers that has ever been chucked in Brown
and White history. Frank Yurek in popping off Swarthmore, 9-6,
whiffed 20 enemy batters for a new Lehigh mark in that de-
Dick Gigon
Short Stop
162
Bob "Dutch" "Rube" Walton
Third Base
partment. Next. Jirsa caught fire against Stevens and turned
in a three hitter, but more amazing were his 16 strikeouts in the
same game. This game saw Lehigh win 3-0 in a game unusual in
the fact that there were only a total of 6 hits and 6 walks hung
up by the teams.
Not to be out-done by his mound buddies, Ed Leidheiser
came back while pitching the Franklin and Marshall game to fan
18 opponent sluggers and to go for five himself at the plate to
rack the 15-4 win. Tom Gunn's three hits in the Army encounter
weren't enough to stop the Cadets from squeezing the winning
Ron Jirsa
Pitcher
Bill Jensen
Pitcher
Tom Gunn
Center Field
163
^^«^i-
Chuck Rogers
Catcher
STr-r-r-r-ike! Tommy Gunn takes a healthy cut.
run across in the ninth inning and spoihng Jirsa's two hit per-
formance on the mound.
In a rare display of Lehigh hitting power, the Caraway
troopers shoved aside Gettysburg, Delaware, Muhlenberg, and
Lafayette before defeating themselves in the Navy game on
five boots after holding an early lead. With two runs in the
very first inning Rutgers marched off with the next game. 2-0,
and Muhlenberg followed with a 5-1 win.
Captain Bob Boroski provided the margin of victory in the
Drexel tussle by stealing home in the final stanza. Lehigh, how-
Bob Meyers
Pitcher
164
Hank Kuhlman
First Base
.Norton hits the sack.
ever, lost to Ursinus in the rain, 9-5, and as part of commence-
ment weekend festivities the Packers split a doubleheader with
Lafayette to close the campaign. They won behind Jirsa in the
first and dropped the finale, although \ urek allowed the Leop-
ards only one safe blow.
Ron Jirsa, with a 7-1 hurling record led the team to its
11 won, 12 lost record. He struck out 85 batters and had the
lowest earned run average of any Lehigh chucker. 2.39. Dick
Gigon led his mates at the plate with a cool .337 batting average,
while Captain Boroski paced the team in the RBI department.
Eugene ''Binky" -Norton
Second Base
Bobbie Borofski
Outfield
3ob Endriss
Outfield
165
uliner, Handwerk. Lasto, Sperry, Roxby, Mgr.
Golf
VARSITY LETTERMEN
THOMAS A. CROMPTON
RUSSELL F. HANDWERK
ROBERT C. KIESLING
JOSEPH W. KRYLA
RICHARD H. SPERRY
WILLIAM C. ROXBY, JR., Me
SUMMARY
LEHIGH
opponent
5
Pennsylvania
4
6
F & M
3
5
Temple
4
tV2
Haverford
2»/!
7
Lafayette
2
8
Muhlenberg
1
5
Delaware
4
9
SWARTHMORE
0
4
Rutgers
5
8
Gettysburg
1
5
Lafayette
4
For the third straight campaign, the golf team, this time the
1952 edition, missed a perfect season by the slimmest of mar-
gins— one loss. Nevertheless, the squad, led by Captain Bob
Kiesling and coached by Bill Leckonby, turned in a record of
10 wins against the lone setback to keep its reputation of being
one of the 'Svinningest" sports on South Mountain.
The pitch-and putt men got off to a roaring start by whip-
ping their first eight opponents before the Scarlet clubbers from
Rutgers University broke the string in a tight 5-4 match. The
loss also marked the Engineers' first setback in 18 starts over
a two-year period.
Pennsylvania, Franklin and Marshall, Temple, Haverford,
Lafayette, Muhlenberg, Delaware, and Swarthmore went down
before the high-driving, accurate-putting Lehigh golfers before
the clean slate was di voted.
Following the Rutgers heartbreaker, the Packers waltzed
over Gettysburg, 8-1, and eked out their final match over rival
Lafayette, 5-4. For Coach Leckonby the year saw his all-time
Lehigh golf coaching record soar to the fantastic heights of 51
wins, only seven losses, and two ties.
166
Plaving and losing to the top lacrosse teams of the South-
land, the Engineer 1952 Lacrosse squad began one of its most
dismal seasons on record since the sport was initiated on the
South Mountain campus 67 years ago. The early Spring south-
ern excursion found the Packers bowing to the L niversity of
Baltimore in the "Lacrosse Capital of the \^ orld". 19-3. and
succumbing in similar manner to \^ ashington and Lee. and Duke
before garnering a draw with North Carolina in the last 12 sec-
onds of play, and a win over the Norfolk Naval Reserve team.
Lehigh opened its regular season at home with a loss in a
game with Stevens which featured 25 penalties. Pete Taylor
almost gave Coach "Doc" Dockham's Engineers their first regu-
lar win when he puUed the "hat trick" by scoring three goals
against Delaware, but the Hens came back in overtime to win
11-9. With nine goals scored in the first period. Rutgers romped
to an easy win. as did Washington college in a contest high-
lighted by Tom Sheridan's three counters.
After continuing their losing ways against Pennsylvania and
Swarthmore. the Engineers finally" notched a triumph by drub-
bing ^ estem Maryland. 12-5. paced by Taylors second "hat
trick" of the year. Before dropping their last game of the season
to Drexel. the South Mountain Ten assured themselves of at
least a morallv successful year by bumping oQ Lafayette. 16-8.
with Sheridan collecting five soals.
Lacrosse
V.\RSITY LETTERMEN
CHARLES A. ADA.MS
RICHARD W. BYERS
JOSEPH R. CARPENTER
HOWARD G. FIGLEROA
ANDREW S. GRAHAM. JR.
RICHARD G. HESS
THOMAS B. KOCH
AUGUST C- KUSS
JAMES N. LAND
EDWLN F. SCHEETZ
GEORGE P. SCHIVELY
THO^L\S M. SHERIDAN
ARTHUR C. TAUCK
PETER N. TA'i'LOR
GE_\LY W. WALL WORK
LEONARD SARGEANT HL
Msr.
SUM.\LARY
LEHIGH
OPPONENT
3
Ste\t:>-s
10
9
Delaware
11
0
RlTCERS
16
5
Washington
16
4
Pexnsvlvaxia
10
6
Swarthmore
17
16
Lafayette
8
12
Western Maryland
5
5
Drexel
11
First Row: McEIwain. Strauch. Carpenter. C- Adams. MoUdnthin, Seeds. Second Row: Cutler.
Tillotson. H. Adams. Hess. Land. Figueroa. LeTowt. Third Row: Coach Dockham. S*-— '• r. Bjp'.l.
Tauck. Tavlor. Wallwork. Graham. Gill. Rosenau. Sargeant, Mgr.
Tennis
VARSITY LETTERMEN
GORDON C. BELL
NEWTON A. K. BUGBEE
WILLIAM C. DENGLER
WILLIAM W. HARDWICKE
SAMUEL H. KEISER, JR.
HALL F. McKlNLEY
MURRAY H. MILLER
MARTIN S. SCHACHTER
WILLIAM R. WHITBECK.
Mar.
SUMMARY
LEHIGH
OPPONENT
9
SWARTHMOTE
0
5
Rutgers
4
8
Muhlenberg
1
9
Gettysburg
0
3
Haverford
6
5
Temple
4
9
Drexel
0
3
Lafayette
6
2
Pennsylvania
7
Although the Spring southern excursion of the 1952 Lehigh
Tennis team, which opened the informal part of the groups
schedule, didn't appear to be a success from the standpoint of
the one-win, four-loss record, it proved an invaluable success in
terms of the experience gained by tiie team members.
After dropping High Point in its opener, the Engineers then
bumped into the real "toughies" of the South. The men of Coach
Lloyd Taylor lost to North Carolina State, Duke, rated tops in the
South, Davidson, and North Carolina.
Winning all but two sets, Swarthmore handed Lehigh its
first loss of the regular campaign. The Engineers came right
back, however, to edge out Rutgers 5-4. Captain Hal McKinley
teamed with Newt Bugbee to win the deciding doubles match
for the victory.
Lehigh romped to easy wins over Muhlenberg and Gettys-
burg before Haverford's courtmen whipped them in a hard
fought contest, 6-3. For the Fords it was their twenty-eighth
straight win over a six-year period in Middle Atlantic League
play. The Packers bounced right back after the defeat to nudge
Temple, 5-4, on a decisive doubles triumph by Bill Dengler and
Murray Miller, played in a driving rain storm. The final three
games with Drexel, Lafayette and Pennsylvania found Taylor
men on the short end of the scores in each case.
First Row: Torgersen, Dengler, McKinley, Miller. Second Row: G. Bell, Reiser, Bugbee, Whitbeck.
Kneeling: Colclough. Henderson. Second Roic: Whitbeck. Mgr.. Vogel. Vekony. Schenck. Parisi.
Stout. Third Row: Jennings, Luce.
Beginning the 1952 season under the mentorship of their
new coach. Gerald Leeman. the Lehigh Cross Country team dis-
played excellent form and came through a rough schedule with
four victories, a second place, and one lone defeat.
Co-captains Dave Henderson and Bill Colclough headed a
veteran team which had distinguished itself throughout the 1951
campaign.
Outstanding among the harriers" accomplishments this sea-
son were one-sided victories chalked up at the expense of Frank-
lin and Marshall. Swarthmore. and Muhlenberg. Bob \ ekony
paced the Engineers in these meets with two first places.
The team sustained its lone defeat at the hands of a strong
Rutgers squad. They placed second in a triangular meet with
Haverford and Gettysburg. Haverford won the triangular meet,
but there was a bright spot for Lehigh in the performance of
Duane Jennings, who. because of the rule on freshman athletics
was prevented from competing on the varsity team. However.
Jennings ran with the team all season for practice, and against
Haverford took an unofficial second place in record-breaking time.
The Engineers rounded out the season in top form as they
smashed Lafayette. 21-35. Bob Vekony closed out his collegiate
career by placing first for the third time in the season, while co-
captains Henderson and Colclough placed third and sixth, re-
spectively.
Cross Country
V.\RSITY LETTERMEN
WILLLWI G. COLCLOUGH
A. DAVID HENDERSON
JOHN PARISI
J. WILSON STOUT
ROBERT J. VEKONY
RICHARD A. VOGEL
WILLIAM ■« HITBECK. Mg
SUMMARY
LEHIGH
opponent
21
F & M
35
42
Rutgers
16
15
Swarthmore
44
39
Haverford
32
Gettysburg
60
15
Muhlenberg
45
21
Lafayette
34
169
Lehigh's Track team really kicked up their lieels during
the 1952 season with remnants of broken records and victory
dust left in their wake. Coach Bill Whitton"s men amassed wins
in three dual meets, a tie in another, a nice triangular meet tri-
umph, and a fourth place spot in the Middle Atlantic Cham-
pionships.
Being one of the few Spring sports on the South Mountain
not to benefit from a southern conditioning tour before the reg-
ular season, the Engineer thin-clads went into their opening
meet, a team of questionable ability. However, when that meet
was over and the Packers had invaded and conquered the Dela-
ware tracksters by the lopsided score of 80-46, Coach Whitton
knew he had the prospects for a good season on the cinders.
In the Hen roost. Clyde Royster, century and 220-yard
dash man and the Brown and White weightmen led the charge.
Don Bell in the shot put event set a new Delaware record with
his heave. With both Bell and Royster repeating their perform-
ances in their events. Lehigh pushed aside both Muhlenberg and
Gettysburg in the triangular meet and looked to be on its way
to making track history with an undefeated year.
Rutgers had other thoughts, though, and shattered the En-
gineers' dreams with a smarting 77-49 defeat. Bouncing right
back again into top form, the Brown and Whiters gained a tie
with highly touted Haverford who hadn't lost a dual meet in
four years. Trailing by nine points going into the discus event,
Lehigh, behind Tom Stark. Bill Horn, and Bell, grabbed all
three places in the event to assure the tie. Stark broke the discus
record for the meet, hurling the discus 16 feet further than ever
before.
There was no stopping the Lehigh fleetfoots in the LIrsinus
and F & M meets, which they won easily. In the latter. Bill Col-
clough scored a double win in the half and mile events. This was
the sixth straight meet in which the Lehigh silkster scored a
double triumph.
The season ended on a sour note with a loss to Lafayette by
a close score of 66-60. In the Middle Atlantics, Whitton's speed-
sters finished in fourth place due largely to the record-breaking
performance of Bell who was the only Engineer to snag a first
spot in an event.
The season marked the second for Coach Whitton. High
point scores for the season were Royster in the 100 and 220-
yard races; Colclough in the half mile runs; Bob Hourihan
in the 440-yard event; Dave Henderson in the two-mile grind;
Ray Vartanian in the high hurdles; Paul Hulleberg in the low
hurdles; Bell in the shot put; Stark in the discus: George Lem-
mon in the high jump; Vartanian in the broad jump; and Marty
Maurer and Bob Anderson in the pole vault.
170
Fint Kuu- ■ftalker. Hciuiersun. Hambure. Foitni-v. Orr. Irelan. Lemmon. Stark. >mith Second
Row: Raynor. Mgr.. Coach Whitton, Keiler, Sandford, Bell. Hullfberg. Horn. Thompson, Vekony,
Coach Leeman.
Track
SUMMARY
LEHIGH
OPPONENT
80
Delaware
46
89
Gettysburg
37
99
MOHLENBERC
27
49
Rutgers
77
63
Haverford
63
90
Ursinus
36
82
F & M
44
60
Lafayette
66
VARSITY LETTERMEN
ROBERT E. ANDERSON
DONALD L. BELL
WILLL-VM G. COLCLOUGH
RICHARD W. CORNMAN
RALPH Z. FORTNEY
ALFRED L. GLAESER
THOMAS E. GUNN
A. DAVID HENDERSON
WILLIAM C. HORN
ROBERT HOURIHAN
R. PAUL HULLEBERG
GEORGE B. LEMMON
MARTIN W. MAURER
JOSEPH H. ORR
BRUCE L. REINHART
CLYDE R. ROYSTER
HOUSTON B. SANDFORD
FRANK E. SCHUBERT
FRED J. STARK
ROBERT D. THOMPSON
RAYMOND J. VARTANIAN
CLIFFORD D. WALKER
S. THOMAS RAYNOR. Mgr.
SAMUEL D. REYNOLDS, Mgr.
171
p
^■^4' #-»
8Ps
"-^- *
^G-^
Mj"^ 7 ^^^5.^.18 AaO*^* 8 W
First Row: Schaeffer, Muirhead, Brattlof, Walters, Stotz. Hull. Second Row: Moyer, Adams,
O'Brien, Migliaccio, Kitsos, Bolte, Semilof, Smith, Hancock. Third Row: Hansel, Schilbe, Wiley,
Horn, Koch, Gilmore, Maurer, Gunn, Trillhaase. Fourth Row: Vallotti, O'Connell, Garfinkel,
Conte, Keira, Matchette, Selgrath. Fifth Row: Hansen, Kaercher. Murray, Hammerstrom, Engle,
Gloede, Tiley, Henderson. Sixth Row: HoUenback, Mgr., Miles, Cable, R. Clark, Scavuzzo, Frey,
Trout, Keil, Barton, Shunk. Seventh Row: Coach Dockham, Coach Cooley, Head Coach Leckonby,
Coach Whitton, Dr. Havack, trainer.
Football
SUMMARY
LEHIGH
opponent
7
N.Y.U.
10
6
Delaware
7
26
Buffalo
7
15
Gettysburg
7
20
Boston U.
29
6
Bucknell
28
26
Muhlenberg
13
26
Carnegie Tech
6
14
Lafayette
7
Football at Lehigh experienced one of its lean years during
the 1952 season. If you glance at the summary on this page you
will see that the Engineers ended their season with a 5-4 record.
That is the way it will appear in the history books — but records
aren't football. Football is what the fan can remember about that
goal-line stand, or the last second pass for the winning touchdown,
— the heart-breaking one-point defeat.
This was a "retrenching" year at Lehigh and the records
are not at all surprising. Each Saturday a predominantly "green"
Big Brown team charged from its trenches and displayed real
spirit and determination despite the odds. In fact if it hadn't
been for a fumble jinx during the first part of the season, the
records may have been quite different.
Without a doubt the outstanding feature of the past season
was the Engineers' defensive play. Their brilliant record pro-
claims them tops in the east for total defense. Furthermore, one
of the mainstays of the defensive backfield, Joe Moyer, set a
new punt return record by surpassing Dick Gabriel's 603 yards.
The offensive leg of the team was plagued by fumbles early
in the season, a disease not uncommon to a green backfield. How-
ever, with experience and hard-learned lessons behind them, the
offensive combination began to click in the Buffalo game under
the guidance of Jules Clark and Tom Gloede.
172
The Big Four — Coaches Dockham, Leconhy, Coolie, and Whitton
Injuries also hampered the offensive attack. Key men such
as Harry Garfinkel. Jules Clark, and Dave ^ alters were forced
to leave the field for the remainder of the season, while many
other minor injuries hindered the team activities.
Before you finish with this page take a look at the first
picture. It holds a story of the past and for the future.
Now that you have seen the whole team, here is a chance to
look at the men responsible for coaching the 1952 squad.
Head Coach Bill Leconhy and team captain Bill "the Bull"
Kitsos are also pictured here at an early fall practice session.
The following men are 1952 \ arsitv Football Lettermen:
CHARLES A. ADAMS
ROBERT A. BOLTE
JOHN A. CABLE
JULL\N J. CLARK
ROBERT J. CLARK
JOHN T. CONTI
PAUL E. FEDELES
THO^L\S C. GLOEDE
THO\LAS E. GUNN
J.A.MES T. tt.\NCOCK
GRANT HANSEL, JR.
JOHN K. HENDERSON
WmLLAM C. HORN
CH-\RLES HULL
HOWARD E. KEIM
WILLLA.M KITSOS
^L\RTIN W. MAURER
HERBERT yi. MEYER
ROBERT H. MIGLL\CCIO
ROBERT A. MILES
ROBERT W. MORGAN
JOSEPH W. MOYER
GEORGE L. O'BRIEN
HOWARD F. SCHAEFFER
CARL G. SCHILBE
HARVEY D. SEMILOF
WALTER J. TRILLHAASE
JOHN A. VALLOTTI
DAVID M. WALTERS
RONALD C. WESTFALL
"Lee and the Bull'
173
IVYU ID
LEHIGH 7
Lehigh's Engineers found their season's opener against the
Violets of NYU a tough one to win and an even tougher one to
lose. With 17 seconds remaining to play and both teams dead-
locked in a 7-7 tie, it appeared to the spectators at Triborough
Stadium that history recorded an NYU-Lehigh stalemate. How-
ever, the power of the toe was momentarily forgotten until Frank
Sauchelli place-kicked the pigskin squarely between the uprights
for three points, an NYU victor and a heartbreaking Lehigh
defeat.
The loss was a heartbreaker because the Big Brown had
three scoring chances in the first quarter when they drove deep
into Violet territory only to be stalled by two penalties and a goal-
line pass interception. Finally, in the second quarter, fullback
Bob Bolte broke away from NYU defenders and turned in a
twisting 43-yard jaunt for six points. Walt Trillhaase converted
the extra point and thus ended Lehigh's scoring on September 27.
NYU finally found the right offensive combination late in
the third quarter and tied the contest at 7-7.
Bolte, Schaeffer. O'Brien and Walters did most of the ball-
carrying for the luckless Engineers, while Julian Clark passed
effectively from the quarterback slot.
Statistics show that the total offense of both teams was very
nearly equal. Penalties played a large part in the outcome of
the game. This coupled with a relatively inexperienced offensive
combination gave the Engineers' a disadvantage which they never
quite overcame.
Bob Migliaccio
174
In tlie first liome game of the 1952 season. Leiiigli played
host to the Blue Hens from Delaware University. For the second
time in tlie 1952 season Lehigh had its lieart broken as the Hens
eked out a 7-6 victory in a game which was packed with fumbles,
blocked kicks and goal-line stands.
Delaware capitalized on a Lehigli fumble in tlie first quarter.
The Hens took over on the Leliigh 18 and three plays later regis-
tered six points. The deciding seventh point was scored on a
trick point-after-touchdown play which saw Delaware fake a kick
and pass for the extra point.
Delaware never threatened seriously again, but the Big
Brown eleven drove deep into Hen territory three times, scoring
only once on a one-yard plunge by Bob Bolte. Trillhaase's extra-
point attempt was blocked and the scoreboard read 7-6. Twice
more the offensive thrust of the Engineers led by Julian Clark,
Bob Bolte. George O'Brien. Howie Schaeffer and Davie Walters,
knifed its way inside the Hens" 20-yard line. One drive was
stopped on the ten. The third attempt ended on the Delaware
8-yard line when, in a last-second attempt to pull the game out
of the fire. Walt Trillhaase's 12-yard field goal attempt was
blocked by the Delaware line. (See picture I.
So, for the second week in the season the seemingly luck-
less Lehigh gridders conceded a heart-breaking victory to their
opponents. However, one light was becoming brighter — the offen-
sive eleven was beginning to click, while the defense was continu-
ing its stubborn ways.
DELAWARE 7
LEHIGH 6
'I he Tlie' .slriL-es aiiairi.
■^^^gaaaBJWWW'TiTiiirir
Jim Hancock
175
tim
Gloede, Moyer. Brattloj. Stotz
Bill Tiley
BUFFALO 7
LEHIGH 27
Impressive! This is a one-word description of the offensive
and defensive attack on the Buffalo Bulls by the Lehigh En-
gineers when the South Mountain gridders met the New Yorkers
in Buffalo's Civic Stadium. The bubble of fumbles and penalties
which encased the Lehigh offense during the first two season
contests, finally broke, netting the Big Brown 27 points and their
first victory of the year.
The defensive eleven, living up to its previous record, was
equally devastating as it intercepted six passes, recovered three
fumbles, and allowed the Bulls the amazing total of minus 9 yards
on the ground and 68 yards through the air.
Maurer, O'Brien, Gunn, and Westfall scored TD's for the
Engineers. Herb Meyer added two extra points. The Clark to
Gunn combination clicked through the air, while the running
of Maurer, Westfall and O'Brien smashed the Bulls on the ground.
The most exciting play of the game occurred in the first
period when Ron Westfall, behind superb blocking, took a punt-
return reverse from Joe Moyer and raced down the sidelines for
76 yards and Lehigh's second tally.
Buffalo's only score came in the last five seconds of the
game on an intercepted Clark pass which was turned into a Bull
touchdown by Bill Crowley.
The game, which is now regarded as one of the season's
breathers gave Coach Leconby an excellent chance to put some
of his reserve strength on the firing line. Tom Gloede, who was
destined to take over the first-string quarterbacking role, handled
the team nicely through much of the second half. Jack Conti and
Dave Walters also saw action and gained experience which un-
doubtedly paid off in later games — i.e., Muhlenberg and La-
fayette.
Now the team had broken the ice — next week Gettysburg
at home.
176
For lilt' fourth week in succession the Lehigh defensive
eleven allowed the opposition only one touchdown as the En-
gineers melted the Gettysburg Bullets 15-7 in a game that was
filled with brilliant defensive play.
Play during the entire first half was spent somewhere between
the thirty-yard lines of each team. The Lehigh defense bottled
up G-Burg's running and highly-rated passing attack, but the En-
gineer offense was very slow getting started. The first half ended
in a 0-0 deadlock.
In the third quarter Taylor Stadium was rocked by a smash-
ing tackle in Gettysburg's end zone. Defensive halfback, Chuck
Adams, tore througli Bullet defenses and nailed Bob Epplemen,
giving the Big Brown a two-point lead. This provided the sliock
the offense needed. Lehigh marched 55 yards for a score with
Julian Clark sneaking the last yard. The Engineers scored an-
other in the last quarter, after capitalizing on a break. Dave
Walters dove over the goal for the final tally.
O'Brien, Clark and Maurer did most of the ball carrying
for the Engineers. Tlie Bullets were allowed only 28 yards on
the ground and 102 yards in the air. Lehigh's defensive prowess
was rapidly gaining wide acclaim in the East.
GETTYSBURG 7
LEHIGH 15
Basketball or football?
O'Brien turns the end.
177
BDSTDIV U. 29
LEHIGH 2D
Boston University defeated Lehigh 29-20 at Taylor Stadium
on October 25. Behind this statement of fact is Lehigh's third
heart-breaking football defeat of the 1952 season. The old bubble
of fumbles surrounded the Engineer offense and gave the visit-
ing Terriers three touchdowns.
Again the defensive efforts of the Big Brown staved off the
opponents' scoring efforts. However, not even the stubborn de-
fenses of the respected Lehigh line could stop a team who three
times recovered Lehigh fumbles inside the LU 30-yard line:
once on the 6: once on the 17: and once just inside the 30.
As in the game against Gettysburg. Lehigh's offense was
slow to start. They were held to only 37 yards in the first two
quarters. The only first-half Engineer score was set up by Joe
Moyer, who returned an intercepted pass to the Boston 26. Three
plays later Maurer went over for the score. The half ended 22-7 —
Boston.
In the second half, the Lehigh passing attack was still in-
effective, but the running of Howie Schaeffer, Marty Maurer,
and Julian Clark netted Lehigh two more touchdowns. Don De-
Feudis, a thorn in Lehigh's side all afternoon, scored three of
Boston's four touchdowns and helped to set up the other touch-
down and field goal.
Fumbles and DeFeudis fed the bitter pill of defeat to Le-
high for the third time. But, an even more bitter pill was swallowed
when the Engineers learned that they had lost the quarterbacking
services of Julian Clark for the rest of the season. Tom Gloede
took over for Clark in the last quarter after the southpaw had
torn ligaments in his leg.
The next game was to be with Bucknell — away. Could the
revamped offense heal its wounds in time to meet the Bisons?
Up - Up and away.
Bolte in the clear.
^^^\
^.w--*^-^*^" ^ 'V^' "^
173
'The Bull' outruns the Bisons
^
mmm
Gloede is uplifted.
Lehigh carried its fumble bubble along to Lewisburg on
November 1 when they met the Bucknell Bisons in a game that
should have ended in a very close score. However, for the second
straight week, three mistakes gave the opponent possession of the
ball within the LU 1.3-yard line and set up three touchdowns.
Lehigh defensive eiTorts were again tops as they allowed
BucknelFs high-powered ground attack 172 yards, and its air
attack 15 yards. In fact. Lehigh's total offense was 31 yards more
than Bucknell"s. due largely to fine defense and some excellent
passing by Tom Gloede who tossed the skin for 113 yards.
The Engineers' only touchdown came when Ron Westfall
caught a Gloebe pass in the end zone. Lehigh threatened several
other times but was stalled short of the goal: once on the two-
yard line.
Bucknell's only sustained drive of the game occurred in
the first period when they marched 55 yards for a score. From
here on the Big Brown's defense stiffened and the remaining
three Bison TD's were "relatively unearned"'.
Marty Maurer continued to run nicely as he piled up 60
yards on the ground. Tom Gloede. who started at quarterback
for the first time in the season, handled the offensive attack com-
mendably. despite the fumble bubble which was still unbroken
at the end of the game.
\^ ith three games remaining in the season, and a two-win,
four-loss record behind them, the slowly aging Engineers were
faced with one problem: break the fumble bubble and win the
remaining games.
BUCMELL 28
LEHIGH B
179
Walters on a field day.
(^f
Another jor George and Lehigli
MUHLEIVBERG 13
LEHIGH ^6
To Lehigh fans who attended the Lehigh-Muhlenberg game
in Taylor Stadium on November 8, the early minutes of the con-
test looked like re-plays of the Boston U. and Bucknell games.
Fumbles were flying thick and fast and before the end of the
first quarter the visiting Mules took a 13-0 lead by virtue of two
fumble recoveries: one on the LLI ten and one on the 24.
Suddenly, in the second period, the fog which enshrouded
the Engineer offense lifted and the Big Brown romped to three
touchdowns before the half ended. Dave Walters, who turned in
the best individual ground gaining record for any game of the
season, ran wild as he scored two touchdowns in the second
period. The speedy sophomore broke away from Mule defenders
for 5 and 51-yard touchdown sprints. Gloede, O'Brien, and
Maurer also turned in stellar performances as the Engineers dis-
played the best offensive attack of the season with a total offense
of 349 yards. Tom Gloede passed nicely to Gunn and Vallotti
all afternoon. One Gloede to Gunn aerial netted 57 yards and
a TD.
In the last quarter Joe Moyer made a spectacular diving
pass interception which set up the fourth Lehigh score. The
Leckmen marched 63 yards on passes from Gloede to Vallotti
and running by Walters and O'Brien. O'Brien tallied on an eight-
yard smash over the goal line.
Lehigh's defensive eleven maintained its high standards
as it allowed the Mules a total of 148 yards and kept them far
removed from the Lehigh goal after the first quarter.
To say the least, things were looking up for the team — the
marriage of the offense and defense had finally taken place.
180
Neither Kilts nor mud could stop Leliighs rejuvenated of-
fense on Nov. 15. as the Engineers piled up a 26-6 decision over
plaid clad Carnegie Tech. \^ ith several inches of mud on the field
and a very heavy dew pelting the gridiron, few fans expected to
see either time shine offensively. However, the Engineers ])assed
and ran for a total of 293 yards and four touchdowns.
Lehigh's first score was set up by a recovered fumble on
the Tech 20-yard line. After six running plays by O'Brien and
SchaefTer. the latter took the pigskin over from two yards out.
Later in the first half the ever-dangerous Tom Gunn grabbed
a Gloede pass and raced 30 yards for the second Engineer TD.
Trillhaase converted the extra point and the score remained 13-0
at halftime. During the first half the Big Brown defensive squad
held the Plaid Lads to a 52-yard total offense.
Early in the last quarter Tech scored on an aerial attack which
climaxed their only sustained drive of the afternoon. Lehigh
was not finished scoring. Tom Gunn returned the kick-oflF for
52 yards to the Kilts" 24. After a fumble and a series of Tech
plays, the Engineers took over on the Tech 25 when an attempted
fourth-down punt was fumbled. A series of running plays car-
ried the ball to the one where OBrien bucked over for the tally.
Near the end of the game Jack Conti went into the Lehigh
backfield. A few plays later Conti took the ball around left end.
stopped and then threw a perfect 26-yard strike to fullback
Maurer in the end zone for the Big Brown's final tallv. Trillliaase
converted to climax a play which was destined to figure promi-
nently in the outcome of the Lehigh-Lafayette game.
Probably the most exciting play of the game was the 29-
yard punt return by Joe Moyer which was made possible bv the
hardest, cleanest block thrown in Taylor Stadium for many a
year. Charlie Hull really let go on that one and gave teammate
Moyer the chance to break Gabriel's punt return record.
Result of game: no injuries — primed for Lafayette.
CAMEGIE TECH B
LEHIGH 26
O'Brien sa\s: Touchdown — Lehigh
Galloping Gunn
181
LAFAYETTE 7
LEHIGH 14
Lehigh football seasons are never complete or successful
unless the Engineers defeat their 88-year rivals from Easton.
ETntil the last 90 seconds of the 1952 Lehigh-Lafayette classic a
completely successful season for Lehigh looked almost impossible.
The unpredictable Leopards were "up" for the big game and
held a 7-7 deadlock until the dying seconds. What happened in
those last seconds is shown in pictures on this page. A "green"
sophomore halfback, and two experienced ends teamed up to
unleash a dynamic one-two aerial punch which covered 45 yards
and won the game for the Engineers.
With a little more than three minutes remaining in the game
and an upset 7-7 tie facing them, the Lehigh offensive squad took
possession of the pigskin on their own 44-yard line. The rain,
which had begun to fall at the start of the second half, was com-
ing down much harder now. Visibility was poor and ball-handling
treacherous. Nevertheless, after a two-yard gain around end by
Joe Moyer, Gloede took to the air and hit O'Brien on the Lafay-
ette 45. At this point, Coach Leckonby sent Jack Conti into the
game. The very next play Conti began to circle left end, stopped
and tossed a 22-yard pass to Bob Clark who made a beautiful
diving catch. Gloede again tried the airlanes, but his pass was
over the head of the intended receiver in the end zone. Once
again the nod went to sophomore Conti, and again he faded to
the left. However, this time Clark and Moyer were both covered
The play that made history and beat Lafayette.
A sequel to the Gunn catch.
182
Gloede lets one go through the
so the halfback reversed his field, spotted Tom Gunn alone on
the goal line and threw him a perfect strike for the deciding game-
shattering score. Trillhaase converted his second extra point of
the game and the men from Lehigh walked away with a 14-7
triumph.
Dramatics were the exception rather than the rule in the
game, which, for the most part, was a hard-fought defensive con-
test. The Leopards were forced to take to the air in the second
half, since their ground attack was stopped for a minus one yard.
Callahan's passing, however, netted 147 yards and the only Lafay-
ette score.
O'Brien hits for yardage.
Who gets it?
183
^''^wEB^ ^m
A study of expression.
Lehigh drew first blood in the second quarter as George
O'Brien passed and ran his way right over the Leopard goal.
Walt Trillhaase converted and the Engineers took a 7-0 half-
time lead.
The Maroon gridders bounced back in the second half with
a barrage of Callahan passes, a touchdown and a near-miss field
goal which had the crowd on its feet. Play in the last half was
nip-and-tuck until the last minute — that fatal 60 seconds for
Lafayette.
After the last gun went off the 1952 season was closed. Le-
high remained first in the East for defensive play against air and
ground offense. George O'Brien remained the leading ground
gainer on the team with a total of 331 yards. The Lafayette Leop-
ards were defeated for the third straight year.
Walters holding — Trilllh
huh I
184
Bill Kitsos, Captain
Charlie Hull
185
Tom, Gloede
John Henderson
186
Back field in mutiuii.
I
OFFENSIVE AND DEFENSIVE FORWARD WALLS
First Row: Gunn. Trillhaase. Horn. Henderson. Semilof. Schilbe. Vialotti. Clark. Second Row:
Miles. Miuliaccio. Hancock. Hansen. Kitsos. Cable. Bolte. Morgan. Hull.
^ i^ ^ p ^ J^ $ e e.
187
m^
M^[ '^^^^^tflC'^^tT^f f^'^^^
At the end of any football season nearly everybody thinks
of the seniors who have played their last game for the "Dear Old
Alma Mater". On this page you can see the way all of them en-
tered the playing field at every home game of their football
career at Lehigh. Some of the men shown here were placed on
teammates' shoulders and carried off the field after their last
game — some were carrying — but they were all carried away from
the gridiron in the hearts of Lehigh fans. Hats off to fine sports-
men in a great American Sport — Football.
That familiar funnel.
They played their last in Brotvn and White.
$ f #
'"W-i^ ^ ->*. ' Ni. '"M^
8, ** - 4 w-
188
Hampered by tlie loss of tlie two top scorers plus nine
other lettemien from last year's Middle Atlantic Championship
squad, the 1952 soccer team nevertheless achieved a commend-
able record. Bill Christian began his first year as the Brown and
\^ bite's soccer coach, taking over from Billy Sheridan, who
piloted the team for the last ten years.
In contrast to last year's championship team, which began
the season by dropping an upset victory by Gettysburg, the 1952
hooters began the season in red-hot fashion, winning their first
four games in succession and thus stretching their overall 1951-
1952 victory streak to 10 games.
Ernie Goelz. veteran center forward, booted home both
goals as the Engineers opened the season with a 2-1 revenge
victory over Gettysburg. In rapid order, the team scored im-
pressive victories over Muhlenberg. Delaware, and Rutgers. These
wins were highlighted by the one-two scoring punch of the King-
ham brothers. Jim and Jack. Sterling defense was also the watch-
word in these first four contests, the opponents being limited to
one goal per game.
After a 4-1 setback by Haverford. the Engineers quickly
snapped back into the win column, shutting out a highly rated
Xa\7- team, 2-0. Goalie. George Crosley. sparked his team to vic-
tory^ by making 23 individual saves during the game. Goelz and
T^ ally Oswald shared the scoring honors which handed Navy
its second defeat by Lehigh since the Middies have been included
on the Engineers" schedule.
The next two games ended in defeat for the Brown and
T^Tiite Booters as they fell prey to the powerful offensive attacks
of Swarthmore and Stevens Institute.
The Engineer offense came to life again after they were
shut out by Stevens, 2-0. and scored a smashing 7-2 victory over
hapless L rsinus. This score was the highest racked up by a Le-
high soccer team in three seasons.
Disaster struck the booters in their final game of the season
when Lafayette pulled one out of the fire on a freak play to sink
the Engineers. 3-2. The Leopards tied up a 2-0 halftime advan-
tage in the second half, and then, when a Lehigh defensive kick
stopped dead in the mud in front of the Engineer goal, a Lafay-
ette substitute booted over the final point.
The game played with the toe.
Soccer
SUMMARY
LEHIGH
OPPONENT
2
Getttsbukc
3
Muhlenberg
2
Delaware
2
Rutgers
1
Ha\-erford
4
2
Navy
0
3
Swarthmore
6
0
Stevens
2
7
Ursinus
2
2
Lafayette
3
VARSITY LETTEKVIEN
RICHARD W. BABCOCK. Mgr.
THOMAS F. BELL
GEORGE C. CROSLEY
JOSEPH B. FERGUSON
ERNEST 0. GOELZ
WALTER E. HAIGH. JR
ROGER D. HUTCHINSON
JAMES B KINGHAM
JOHN R KINGHAM
JOHN MERRITT
T. JOHN McALONAN
WALTER E. OSWALD. JR.
GAYLE P. WILLIAMS
ROBERT E. VANDERPOOL.
Mgr.
189
First Rair: M.C..,,]. J. \lahuiu->. Kau-t. E. Mahmic^
Coach Let-man, Klein, Jack:?un. Seel. Cunily. .Santuix
Carli-le. riiiili|.~. Mnn-i-un. Sr. <,n<l A'-
Ur. Ha\aeli. trainer.
Wrestling
VARSITY LETTERMEN
WILLIAM A. CARLISLE
JOSEPH R. COMLY, III
KENNETH J. FAUST
FRANK F. LUSBY, JR., Mgr.
EDWARD J. MAHONEY
JAMES H. MAHONEY
ALEX 0. McCORD
JOHN T. MORRISON
JOHN D. PLATT
AMERIGO M. SANTORO, JR.
WERNER K. SEEL
SUMMARY
LEHIGH
opponent
18
C0R>'ELL
10
29
Rutgers
3
32
F & M
0
32
Pennsylvania
0
8
Penn State
18
27
Yale
5
6
Army
18
16
Syracuse
11
22
Navy
6
20
Princeton
EIWA— Third Place
6
190
Another great season! This is what Lehigh's 1952-53 grap-
plers have left behind them. In compiling their 8 win-2 loss
record, the Engineers displayed throughout the season, without
exception, the brand of hard, aggressive wrestling which has al-
ways made Lehigh a favorite, win, lose, or draw, on any mat.
The matmen, who showed consistent strength in the first
tliree classes and in the heavyweight division, breezed through
the first four meets with ease as they blotted Cornell, Rutgers.
F & i\L and Pennsylvania by very convincing scores. However,
the next weekend brought disaster to the Engineers' "no defeat"
hopes when the powerful Penn Staters struck Lehigh 18-8. \ale
fell easy victim to the Brown at Grace Hall, but the stubborn
Army Mule kicked up a big surprise in the following meet and
Lehigh went down to an inspired West Point squad, 18-6. The
last three meets ended with nothing but victory for the Lehigh
"That Grand Old Man and that Grand Neh
Man of Lehigh W resiling" —
Billv Sheridan and Gerry Leeman
SEASON RECORD FOR LEHIGH WRESTLERS
ff'on By
Lost By
Dra
Pin
Decision
Pin
Decision
McCord
3
4
0
2
0
J. Mahoney
Faust
4
2
3
6
0
0
1
1
0
0
Carlisle
2
1
0
4
1
E. Mahoney
Piatt
1
0
6
5
0
0
3
5
0
0
Comly
Seel
3
4
1
3
1
0
2
0
1
1
KHne
0
1
0
1
0
Phillips
Mangus
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
Morrison
1
0
0
0
0
Jackson
0
2
0
1
0
191
"Axel" applies the torque.
matmen, as Syracuse, Navy, and Princeton fell victim to the
Leemen.
On March 14 and 15. Coach Leeman entered eight men in
the EIWA bouts at Princeton. Lehigh placed third in the com-
petition, behind Penn State and Cornell. However, the biggest
surprise, so far as Lehigh fans were concerned, was the rise of
Alex McCord to take the 123-pound championship. Werner Seel
copped the heavyweight championship as was expected, although
a badly injured ankle hampered the leviathan's wrestling style.
Jimmy Mahoney, who had trouble all season keeping the
weight down to 130 pounds, did not wrestle in the Easterns be-
Alex McCord
123 Pounds
Jim Mahoney
130 Pounds
192
cause lie was overweight. Great things were expected from the
130-pounder, since his dual meet record was 7 wins and 0 losses
at that weight. His sole loss was to Pete Fikaris, West Point 137-
pounder. John Morrison, who wrestled for Mahoney. met Dick
Lemyre in the first round and was pinned by the champ. Ken
Faust took a third in the 137-pound class as he was upset by
Syracuse's Chuck DeBellis. In the 147-pound division, Wilson
Kline, who took over for the injured Bill Carlisle late in the
regular season, got to the quarter-final round where he was pinned
by Don Frey of Penn State. Ed Mahoney came out fourth in the
157-pound class by taking two of the four bouts he wrestled. Jack
Bill Carlisle
147 Pounds
Carlisle hides the ''lights".
193
Ed Mulioney
157 Pounds
Piatt was dropped in the first round in an upset decision by John
Kousi of Yale. Joe Comly, wrestling in the very strong 177-pound
class, copped a fourth place.
There are a few things that occur during the regular wres-
tling season that fans talk about and remember for a long time.
It's hard to forget the great ovation given the very popular and
muscular Werner Seel at every match, whether he wrestled or
not. — And for good reason. Seel was undefeated in dual-meet
competition. The only blemish on his record is a 1-1 draw with
Dick Beyer of Syracuse, a bout which the Lehigh Giant finished
despite an injured ankle. The fan remembers how the underdog,
Faust reivarded for nine minutes of ivork.
Jack Piatt
167 Pounds
Plait atlcmpts a reverse.
194
}oe Comly
177 Pounds
Jkmffmm
r
'\
E^S
A
III iiiiwii 'io^^^SBET^- ^~-: — — ^ ' ^^^«^^^
"
i.omlx reverses
Wilson Kline put up a terrific battle against Navy's Ed Brooks
and came out on top of a torrid 11-8 victory. And we can't
forget the "match" which followed that one — Ed Mahoney's 16-
second pin of Navy's Bob Hamilton. Consistent, flashy, spirited,
and winning wrestling on the part of Alex McCord. Jim Mahoney.
and Ken Faust, thrilled Lehigh fans all season. Piatt and Comly,
although not as consistent as the lighter boys, turned in stellar
performances and a few upsets. Piatt gave Joe Gattuso, Navy's
strongman, the toughest battle of the season, only to lose a real
heart-breaker on a contested 9-8 decision. Joe Comly put the
Syracuse meet on ice by scoring a crucial and surprising fall
^Rock-a-bye" F. & M. — Faust scores a fall.
Werner Seel
Heavjiveight
195
McCord ■■(■onii
the Easterns.
over the New Yorker's 177-pounder. Bill Carlisle, who wrestled
under terrific handicap ( his arm taped to his side ) won the re-
spect and admiration of the fans by his spirit and aggressive
attitude.
And thus, the Lehigh wrestling season draws to a close again,
leaving a bright past and anticipating an even brighter future.
With men like Ed Eichelberger. Dick Whited, Dave Gallagher,
etc., on hand to replace veterans Ed Mahoney and Jack Piatt, the
Lehigh fan can look to the future with confidence and assurance
that wrestling at Lehigh will continue to be a great, clean, excit-
ing sport — a sport steeped in the tradition of good sportsmanship
and keen competition — a sport whose name is synonymous with
the name of Sheridan. Hats off to Billy. Coach Leeman, Coach
Coolie, and all of the Leiiigh men who have made wrestling noth-
ing but great.
Leliigli's 1952-53 hockey squad's biggest opponent of tlie
year was Ole Man Rain as he wiped out all but three of six
scheduled contests. The stickmen. however, managed to get
enough cooperation from the weather to play a game with the
Baltimore Hockey Club and two with Hill School's varsity to
wind up with a 2-1 record.
Coaches Charles Simmons and Wes Sawyer, who played
on the Engineers' first ice aggregation, wished they had stayed
at home when they took their charges and invaded Baltimore
to take-on and eventually lose to the Baltimore Hockey Club.
16-2. Captain Chuck Rogeis and Bill Shipley each scored goals
for Lehigh in a game which saw a highly experienced Baltimore
squad get off to a quick lead by snowing the South Mountain
quintet with a barrage of goals.
The stickmen rebounded to drop Hill School 8-0 and 5-1.
Again Rogers and Shipley led the way with Bryan Hitchcock
sharing the burden. An additional three games were rained out
with slushy ice forcing the Big Brown blademen to hang up
their skates for the season almost before they got started.
Sophomore Hitchcock was elected captain of the 1953-54
team while Rogers who served two years as captain received the
Wiggins Trophy for the team's most valuable player. Assistant
Coach Sawyer captained Lehigh's first team back in 1937.
A good portion of the 12-man group are freshmen and if
some cold clear weather will provide the battleground, the skaters
will be in a good position to go places next year.
Team members: Charles P. Rogers. Herbert R. Ford. Wil-
liam S. Shipley. Douglas G. Grandin. Bryan Hitchcock. Robert
E. Zoellner. Charles H. Schadt. Frank W. Forbes. Peter B.
Paschall. Robert M. Hall. Roderick G. Randel, Donald F. Pierce.
James L. Naylor. Jr.. Bedford H. Lydon. Howard J. Judd. Nor-
man F. Kaelber. Thomas Hey, manager, and Carl E. Hultman.
manager.
SUMMARY
LEHIGH
OPPO.NENT
2
Baltimore Club
16
8
Hill School
0
5
Hill School
1
Hockey
First Row: Hultman, Mgr.. Shipley, Forbes, Grandin. Naylor, Pierce, Ford. Second Row: Hall,
Paschall, Rogers, Hitchcock, Kaelber.
First Rou \all. til I k ^-ki. Workman. Coach Packer, Witzig, Calm. < jiii.l.v. .s,-rvn,l Um,
Egner, Gilmore. Clear, blaff, Gleckner. Picton, Schifflin. Kirk. Royster. Haase.
Basketball
VARSITY LETTER MEN
RICHARD WITZIG, Capt.
EDWARD CAHN
JAMES GLECKNER
RICHARD SLAFF
EDWARD CLEAR
ARCHIBOLD SCHIFFLIN
HORACE POTTS, Mgr.
SUMMARY
LEHIGH
OPPONENT
74
SW-iBTHMORE
50
52
DeL.\W.4RE
69
85
BUCKNELL
56
62
F & M
61
69
Muhlenberg
76
85
Haverford
73
58
Alfred
56
53
Hofstr.\
58
81
Rutgers
66
47
Temple
63
45
L.4FAYETTE
47
66
Gettysburg
57
97
Ursinus
52
83
BuCKNELL
62
49
Gettysburg
57
86
Muhlenberg
84
68
Temple
48
77
Rutgers
74
64
West Point
68
61
Lafayette
72
198
Records and scoring marks fell by the courtside during tiie
1952-53 basketball season as the Engineers fielded the winningest
court squad since 1925 and produced the first team with a victory-
laden record in the last 15 years. The Brown and Whites wound
up the season with a twelve and eight record accumulating more
points than ever before. 1362.
Coach Anthony Packer in his tiiird season as mentor made
the collegiate sports world once again focus its eyes on South
Mountain's ball court, as his aggressive club polished off such
liighly rated teams as Temple. Muhlenberg. Rutgers, and Geft-
tyshurg.
For the first time in recent decades a Lehigh quintet gained
the confidence of a previously wrestling-conscious campus and
climaxed a well-attended season by playing before 1800 fans in
the windup tilt against rival Lafayette.
The squads drawing power came from its consistentlv strong
team play which saw- the sharp shooting cagers average 68
points per game with their highest score of 97 against L rsinus
setting a new varsity scoring mark for Grace Hall.
Dick Slaff
Ed Clear
Fast break for Lehigh — tough break for Lafayette
199
Eddie Calm
Carrying the brunt of the attack for the Packers were Dick
SlafF, a senior, whose 345 points racked up a new season
scoring record and sophomore Ed Cahn whose 299 points moved
him to within 140 points of Lehigli's all-time college career
scoring mark of 699. He, too. eclipsed the single season scoring
total by 30.
Rounding out the aggregation's achievements for the year
were games in which the Brown and White quintet posted the
highest score on a foreign court, 85 against Haverford. the highest
score on the home court, 97 against Ursinus, and the highest total
points scored in a Lehigh game, 170 with Muhlenberg. Some
of the shine was rubbed off an otherwise brilliant campaign by
losses to Lafayette, 47-45 and 72-61.
Proof of good things to come was evident as Lehigh opened
its campaign December 3, against Swarthmore on the Grace
Hall court. A tight defense and good shooting predominated from
the Engineers as they tore into the Garnet from the opening
whistle and waltzed home a 74-50 winner. Joe Workman's 17
markers paced Lehigh. Dick Slaff and Jim Gleckner backed
him up witii 14 and 13 points, respectively.
Jim Gleckner
Cahn out flies the Eagles.
200
South Mountain's hopes for a perfect season went down the
drain as Packers' crew took it on tlie chin from an up-and-
coming Delaware crew, 69-52. Matching the Blue Hens point
for point iluring the first half, the Engineers ran into streaks of
poor shooting that bogged them down in tiie second half. Slaff's
19 points started the fans buzzing.
Hopelessly outclassed Bucknell fell prey to the Brown and
\^'hite quintet in a contest which saw them set the first of many
scoring records. Slaff"s 26 tallies snowed his opponents after
the Bisons had taken a short-lived first-quarter lead and Lehigh
took home the 85-56 win.
Lehigh's next three ball games saw the fur a-flying and the
baskets a-swishing as Franklin and Marshall became the Packers
first upset triumph. Muhlenberg took some of the glory away from
that win by dropping the Engineers, but Coach Packer was pre-
sented the Haverford game as a Christmas present before the
team broke camp for the Christmas holidays.
SlafEs dead-eye from the foul line in the last 53 seconds
nudged the Diplomats after a close, hard-fought contest, 62-61.
Although Slaff again racked 18 points it was truly a team victory
with everyone giving everything he had.
Arch Schifflin
Dick Witzig
Slaff 'charms' another one.
201
Karl Kirk
The Mules up-ended the high sailing Engineers, 76-69, as
they hit from all parts of the court to give Lehigh more trouble
than they could cope with. The Haverford track meet set a new
road scoring record for Lehigh when they breezed home on the
long end of a 85-73 score.
Lehigh resumed tlie court wars after Christmas by taking
part in the Hofstra Invitational Tournament. Ed Calm's electrify-
ing jump shot in the last 15 seconds proved the margin of victory
against their first opponent. Alfred. The 58-56 triumph found
Cahn chipping in 20 points with Gleckner tieing the score in
the last 45 seconds to set up Calm's shot.
Elimination from the tourney came at the hands of host
Hofstra when four straight points in the last minute of play gave
them the 58-53 contest. Cahn for the second straight game hit
for 20.
Beginning the new year on a winning tone, Lehigh ripped
favored Rutgers 81-66 with SlafI kicking in 22 tallies. The foul-
ridden tilt also was filled with poor shooting during the first
half. Gleckner with 17 and Cahn with 16 combined with Slaff
to pace the win.
Lehigh takes the rebound
202
After liiopping a sloppily played game to Temple 63-47 and
losing a 47-45 heart-breaker to rival Lafayette, the Engineers
pulled one of the biggest surprises of the young year by humbling
a vaunted Gettysburg aggregation 66-54. In undoubtedly one
of the best ball games which Lehigh played all season, the En-
gineers, led by Captain Dick Witzig's 26 points, outplayed a
team which previously had an average of 86.4 points per game.
Fresh from mid-year exams. Lehigh got red hot against
Lfrsinus and the 97-52 slaughter chalked another scoring mark
in the record books. \^ in No. 9. against Bucknell on the second
time round, resembled the first game between the teams with the
Packers again on top 83-62. SlafI and Cahn combined for 41
points.
The next three games turned out to be decided upsets, how-
ever, before knocking off Muhlenberg and Temple within three
nights, the Engineers themselves suffered an upset loss at the
hands of Gettysburg. 57-49. As the first encounter was the best
all season, this was the worst for the Engineers.
Cahn with his amazing jump shot and Slaflf with his con-
tinual driving shots scored 33 and 22 points, respectively, to
shine in the Muhlenberg 86-84 squeaker. Lehigh ended a draught
]ini Fictoji
Bob Gilmore
Witzig hooks one up.
203
Charles Lekowski
of 13 straight losing campaigns on South Mountain Ijy copping
their eleventh win, this one against highly rated Temple 68-48,
to assure an over 500 percent season.
Lehigh, with NCAA Tournament feelers in the offing, ruined
any dreams of taking part in the tourney as they failed to get
by Army and then closed the season by losing to Lafayette for
the twenty-first straight time in 10 years.
Scoring only three points in the first quarter against the
Cadets' 15, the Engineers sank in a hole that even a late-period
scoring barrage couldn't pull them out of and Lehigh lost 68-64.
Slaff popped in 22 while Calm led the late rally with 16.
The 72-61 setback at the hands of tlie Leopards saw Lehigh
battle neck and neck until Lafayette broke the game open with
repeated fast-break scoring drives in the last three minutes of
the game.
Coach Packer will lose only Captain Witzig and high scorer
Dick Slaff, however they're pretty fancy pairs of shoes to fill.
Jim Gleckner, Ed Cahn, captain-elect for next year, Ed Clear,
Arch Schifflin, Jim Picton, Bill Farley, Bob Gilmore. Karl Kirk,
and Steve Lekowski will all be around fighting against a good
bunch of sophomores for team berths.
Right through the "uprights" .
204
LEHIGH UNIVERSITY BASKETBALL
SCORING RECORDS
Individual Varsity Career Scoring Mark
Bill Binder— 699 points— 1940-43 (2il. years)
Individual Varsity Season Scoring Mark
Dick Slaff— 345 points— 1952-53 I 20 games I
Individual Scoring record for Grace Hall
Frank Majczan — 36 points against Franklin & Marshall 1943
Lehigh's highest score at home (Grace Hall I
Lehigh 97 Ursinus 52— February 5. 1953
Lehigh's highest score aicay from home
Lehigh 85 Haverford 73— December 18. 1953
Grace Hall scoring records
February 14. 1951 February 16. 1953
Rutgers Freshmen 101 Lehigh Varsity 86
Lehigh Freshmen 82 Muhlenberg Varsity 84
183
170
Tight defense.
205
VARSITY LETTERMEN
WILLIAM D. ALLEN
FERDINAND LAMAR BETZ
EDWARD E. CHICK, Mgr.
RICHARD W. COX
COSTEL D. BENSON
TED A. DOLOTTA •
HANS C. DREHER
BOYD D. GOLDWYN
JAMES G. GOTTLING
W. KENNETH HERGENHAN
ROBERT W. KIEVIT
WILLIAM H. LAUB
SUMMARY
LEHIGH
OPPONENT
10
Brooklyn 17
17
Haverford 10
14
Princeton 13
16
Army 11
12
Rutgers 15
21
Temple 6
17
Drew 10
18
Lafayette 9
8
Pennsylvania 19
16
Stevens 11
Middle Atlantic Champions
Fencing
Lehigh's 1953 fencing team thrust its way through another
very successful season. The fencers, under the guidance of Coach
Harry Boutsikaris, attained a 7 win-3 loss record in dual meets
plus the coveted Middle Atlantic Championship for which Lehigh
is now the permanent holder of the championship cup.
Most outstanding of the thrusters' accomplishments was
the upset victory over a very strong and favored Princeton team.
Led by Hans Dreher. expert sabre man, Lehigh made a clean
sweep of the sabre matches and came from behind to top the
Tigers.
After smashing Haverford. Princeton, and Army, the Brown
and White clad gentlemen were rudely upset by a surprisingly
strong Rutgers team, 15-12. The fencers went on to take the
victory over Temple, Drew, and Lafayette, but powerful Pennsyl-
vania squelched the winning streak by a 19-8 count. In the final
match of the year, the swordsmen ran Stevens through. 16-11.
Veteran fencers Bob Kievit and Dick Cox won Middle At-
lantic Championship titles in the foil and epee events, respec-
tively. Other outstanding fencers, who have been consistent win-
ners for the Lehigh squad are: Hans Dreher, Lamar Betz, Cos
Denson, Ken Hergenhan, Bill Laub, Boyd Goldwyn. Jim Gottling
and Ted Dolotta.
Coach Boutsikaris, Chick. Mgr.. Laub. Gottling. Kievit. Densnn. Allm. Dolotta. Cox. Betz
Dreher. Hergenhan. Goldwvn. Kolesnik.
206
Leliigh's 1952-53 rifle team, wliicli pulilicity-wise takes a
"back seat" to larger sports such as wrestling and swimming,
has been quietly and efficiently compiling the best win-loss rec-
ord of any Lehigh athletic team.
The R.O.T.C. riflemen, coached by Master Sergeant George
Partlow. were the only undefeated varsity athletic organization
last year and promise a repeat performance this year. Although
the 1952-53 team lost the marksmanship of last year's co-captains.
Don Gross and Dick Cornman, through graduation, very capable
replacements have been found in the persons of Bruce Spaulding.
Jack Giglio, Tex Arnold, Ron Dornau and Bob Hardy.
The nimrods found the going tougher than usual in the
N.R.A. regionals at the University of Maryland this year where
they placed eighth with a total of 1372 against a record of 1442
for the winning Maryland team. Lehigh, however, placed first
in R.O.T.C. competition for teams sponsored by the R.O.T.C. and
not by athletic departments.
The riflers have won eleven straight meets this year and with
only the Princeton meet left in the way of a perfect season, the
Engineers have a very good chance to stretch their two-year
victory string to 24 straight wins.
VARSITY LETTERMEN
FRED A. BRANDES. Mgr.
JACK A. GIGLIO
ROBERT L. HARDY
RICHARD C. HARMON
BRUCE W. SPAULDING
Rifle Team
207
First Rotv: Nick, Williams, Houriet, Hartenstine, Schaefer, Newman, Km
Fetterman, Miller, Peachey, Anderson, Corbett, Coach Christian.
Swimming
VARSITY LETTERMEN
KENNETH A. ANDERSON
BRUCE T. BACHOFER
ARTHUR P. GOLDENBERG,
Mgr.
ERNEST A. KUR-MES
ROBERT K. HARTENSTINE
PAUL V. HOURIET, JR.
PHILIP F. NEWMAN, JR.
ROBERT W. NICK
LEE D. PEACHEY
THOMAS E. SCHAEFER
DONALD H. WILLIAMS
SUMMARY
LEHIGH
OPPONENT
25
Navy
49
55
Penn
29
69
Temple
. 19
48
Delaware
36
60
Sw.ARTHMORE
24
59
Gettysburg
29
67
F & M
16
60
Rutgers
24
36
Army
48
64
Lafayette
20
Middle 3 Champions
Middle
Atlantic Champion
s
Easterns — Second Place
208
The 1952-53 version of tlie Brown and White Tankmen
splashed its way to one of the best team records in Lehigh swim-
ming history. In a season highlighted by record-smashing per-
formances, the mermen took eight of their ten dual meets, and
climaxed the season by annexing their fourth straight Middle
Atlantic Championship and copping second place in the Easterns.
Coach Bill Christian's charges started their season in any-
thing but championship style, as they w'ere swamped by a strong
Navy team, 49-25. From that meet on, however, it was all Lehigh,
the swimmers slicing their way through lop-sided victories in
the next seven dual meets.
Penn was the first of the Big Brown's victims, as Bob Nick
began his record-breaking escapades by lowering the school and
pool record to 1:41.0 in the individual medley.
Even Manager Art Goldenberg, got into the swim in the
Temple meet, but the able administrator was touched out for
Lee Peach:
Tom Schaefer
Captain
show position in the 200-yard backstroke. Lehigh's ace. Lee
Peachey, finished fifty yards in front of the field.
The story was a bit different in the Delaware dual meet for
the Engineers were forced to take the last event, the 440-yard
freestyle relay, in order to nose out a strong Hen team, 48-36.
The defeat marked the Hens' first home loss since early in the
19.50 campaign.
Don Williams continued his stand-out performances by
taking first in the 440 and 220-yard freestyle events, as the
Engineers took eight firsts to dunk Swarthmore, 60-24. Ernie
Kurmes, first diver, pulled the "Iron Man" stunt by placing
second to Williams in the 440, after annexing a first in the low-
board diving event.
Lee Peachey stole the spotlight when he lowered the school
record in the 200-yard Ijackstroke event to 2:24.6 at the F & M
meet. Lehigh took the measure of the Diplomats by a one-sided
67-16 score.
Bob Hartenstine
210
Perhaps the brightest and most surprising of the Engineers'
string of victories was tlie 60-24 humbling of Rutgers" natators.
This marked tiie first meet Lehigh had won from Rutgers in 32
years. Ringleaders in the drowning were Don Williams and
Captain Tom Schaefer, each of whom scored two first places.
\^ illiams copped his victories in the distance freestyle events,
while Schaefer splashed to glory in the 50 and 100-yard freestyle
sprints. Lee Peachey and Bob Nick accounted for two more
Lehigh first places in the 200-yard backstroke and 150-yard
individual medley relay, respectively.
The service schools proved to be a real jinx to the Engineers
during the season. The West Point tankmen stopped Lehigh's
winning streak in a very closely contested meet, 36-48. Lee
Peachey turned in a fine performance for the Big Brown by
unofficially lowering his mark in the 220-yard backstroke to
2:23.4.
Phil Newman
Paul Houriet
211
■u
The Middle 3 Championship was added to Lehigh's athletic
achievements for the first time in the schoors history when a
weak Lafayette tank team was dunked 64-20. The mermen,
swimming their last dual meet of the season, took nine out of
ten first places, as Nick and Williams again led the way with
double victories in their specialties.
Bob Nick, an outstanding performer throughout the season,
went on a record-setting campaign and the Engineers secured
their fourth consecutive Middle Atlantic Championship by taking
seven out of ten firsts. Nick shattered the Middle Atlantic record
in the 150-yard medley relay, and set a new Lehigh 100-yard
mark of 54.1, breaking a 15-year-old record.
Successfully climaxing a great season, the Christianmen cap-
tured second place in the Eastern Intercollegiate Swim. Lehigh
gained two individual firsts and a first in the 440-yard freestyle
relay which figured heavily in their 77-point total, second only
to Pitt's 97.
Ken Anderson
Dave Fetterman
Bill Corbett
212
And now with tlie spectacular records of sports on field,
track, court, diamond, and in water closed on another season
at Lehigh, stop for a moment and reminisce . . .
Do vou remember the Freshman Funnel at home football
Do you recall the spirit demonstrated by Lehigh fans at
away games?
Does the shouting at pep rallies still ring in your ears?
Did you notice the pep and vigor of fans at home basketball
games?
This type of spirit and sportsmanship on the part of fans
can and is only developed under the right kind of inspired leader-
ship. Lehigh has had just this type of leadership in the Cheer-
leading squad. Much credit is due to the following members of
the 1952-53 Cheerleaders:
Cheerleaders
Chuck Snead, Head Cheerleader
George Childs
Bob Blum
Eddie Doroski
George Hopkins
Don Steeber
Jim Lebo
Harry Strauch
Ken Verostick
"A cheered team is a ivinning team"
Little Cannon. Little Man — Lots oj Spirit.
213
LIVING GROUPS
miERFRATERIVITY CDUIVCIL
OFFICERS
William J. Davis, President
Herbert A. Roemmele, Vice-President
N. Mark Willson, Treasurer
John W. Yates, Secretary
Faculty Advisors
Dr. William A. Aiken
Paul J. Franz, Jr.
Robert S. Taylor, Jr.,
The Intrafraternity Council was established at Lehigh Uni-
versity in 1909 for the benefit of the fraternities as an integral
group. It was long felt before that time that the fraternities
should get together to exchange ideas and policies and set cer-
tain laws regarding fraternity behavior. The forty-four years of
IFC's existence has achieved success beyond the original founders
dreams.
The voting power lies with the presidents of the various mem-
ber fraternities. A senior and junior representative also serves
to vote when the presidents do not attend meetings, and to put
forth ideas which other fraternities have used with success and
which might be used for the benefit of the whole group. Along
with the main council IFC has a system of committees which
carry out an important function. It is from these committees that a
majority of the Administrative plans are carried into action.
Committees on Community Service whose function is to
coordinate the fraternities so that they in turn may give freely
of their time and men to aid in the various welfare agencies of
the community in and around Bethlehem. YMCA, Wiley House,
and other Red Feather agencies benefit from this IFC service.
Each Christmas the members of IFC give a party for the
children of the Bethlehem Boys' Club. Presents are donated
from the different fraternities and the IFC supplies ice cream
and cake. As a result of the success of the IFC party many of
the fraternities now give their own parties on Christmas for
similar groups.
At the termination of Rushing season this year, the IFC
sponsors "Greek Weekend." A banquet for the pledges and
pledge trainers is held at the Hotel Bethlehem for the purpose
of getting the new members-to-be of the fraternities to know
each other. Presidents, treasurers, and stewards of the various
houses meet at other fraternity houses to discuss problems
arising in their particular office, and to exchange ideas. Other
college officials and outstanding leaders in the fraternity world
attend these discussions. The interchange of information and
216
tlie banquet usually occur on a Fritlay. Then, on Saturday a
dance is held at Grace Hall featuring a name band. This year
IFC had a Dixie land band, and as a special bit of entertainment,
Mustard and Cheese, Lehigh's dramatic society, put on a play
earlier in the evening.
This year the IFC once again sponsored the Lafayette display
competition. Fraternities competed for the outstanding display
on the basis of interesting ideas, ingenuity of manner, and offen-
siveness to the Leopards. Congratulations for first prize went
to Beta Theta Pi.
It was a full year for IFC, under its president. Will Davis,
who graduated this year. We also want to thank publicly at this
time Dr. Aiken, Professor Stout, and Mr. Paul Franz who have
served so ably as faculty advisors.
First Row: Keiser, Yates, Davis, Roemmele, Willson, Littner; Second Row: Fralinger, Smith.
Leake, Workman, Sandford, Tauck, Haigh, Walbrecker, Rogers, Hartenstine, Vekony; Third Row:
Eckert, Moore. Newman, Vanderpool. Mittman, Stemler. Cashen, Cross, Stout; Fourth Row: Fischer,
Barnett. Reinauer. Collins, Barcan. Fox. Kautz, Pagels, Verostick.
217
PHI MU CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1896
Trinity College
Founded Locally — 1934
Active Chapters — 19
Colors — Garnet and White
Robert H. Littner, President
Thomas D. Wilcox, Vice-President
Lee D. Peachey, Treasurer
Raymond G. Armstrong. Secretary
George E. Matarzzo. Chapter Correspondent
First Row: Latour. Matarzzo. Peachey. Littner. Wilcox, Prosser. Boyer; Second Row: Surplus,
Pagels, Atmore, Lauber, Marsh, Purdy, Walters. O'Connor, Smith; Third Row: Delier. Wolf,
Berr>', Noble, Hix. Johnson. Lubarsky, Hood, Gaden, Armstrong, Morgan.
218
ALPHA CHI RHD
bEMORS
Charles D. Atmore
Anthony P. Latour
Julius Lauber
Robert H. Littner
Peter N. O'Connor
Rolf \^'. Pa-els
Lee D. Peachey
George ^\ Prosser
Edmund J. Purdy
James ^. Stoneback
Carlton W. Surplus
Robert G. Walters
Thomas D. Wilcox
\\ illiam E. Berry
Charles J. Hix
Sophomores
Robert S. Morgan
Donald J. Smith
Juniors
Raymond G. Armstrong
John M. Boyer
James R. Johnson
Robert Lubarsky
Elliot R. Marsh
George E. Matarzzo
William P. Noble
John A. Wolf
Pledges
Richard J. Delier "55 Danial R. Hake '54
John A. DuBois '55 Archibald M. Hood '55
Alan G. Gaden '55 Richard 0. Wise '55
In Faclltate
Stanley J. Thomas Ambrose R. West
219
BETA EPSILDIV CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1845
Yale Umversity
Founded Locally — 1929
Active Chapters — 56
Colors — Cardinal and Stone
WiLLL-VM J. Kelly, President
Richard T. Begley, Vice-President
Robert W. Abel, Secretary
John S. Beekley, Jr.. Corresponding Secretary
John R. Ortlieb, Treasurer
First Row: Albers, Abel, Begley, Kelly, Ortlieb, Beekley, Richardson, Meyer; Second Row: Un-
derbill. Kirkpatrick, Lewis, Sutherland, Daly. Kuehner, Phillips, Converse, Angino, Armstrong;
Third Row: Margotta, Depew, Ash, McMahon, Krauss, Dempsey,
220
ALPHA SIGMA PHI
Robert W. Abel
Robert E. Albers
John S. Beekley Jr.
Richard T. Begley
Seniors
William J. Kelly-
Alan W . Koppes
Herbert M. Meyer
John R. Ortlieb
Henry G. Richardson Jr.
Ernest A. Angino
Fred 0. Armstrong
Alvin 0. Converse
Arthur F. Goklsby
Kenneth A. Kirkpatrick
Juniors
Robert R. Kuehner
Robert B. Lewis
Harry J. Phillips
William H. Sutherland Jr.
Jolin B. Underbill
Sophomores
Charles M. Ash Ralph W. Hamilton
Patrick J. Dempsey George Krauss Jr.
Ronald E. McMahon
Pledges
James F. Daly '54 Kenneth C. Depew '55
Robert F. Margotta '55
In Facultate
Adelbert Ford Robert F. Herrick
221
ALPHA HHD CHAPTER OF
Founded Nationally — 1865
Virginia Military Institute
Founded Locally — 1882
Active Chapters — 114
Colors — Blue and Gold
William J. Davis, President
E. Hudson Hollenback, Vice-President
Jay F. Sharbaugh, Secretary
Henry E. Clauson, Treasurer
Robert H. Sapp, Alumni Secretary
First Row: Curlee, Sharbaugh, H. Hollenback, Davis, Clauson, Sapp, Wilt; Second Row: Frank,
Georgas, MacNab, Pyper, Underbill. Workman, Kearney, Cornish, Rauhe, Kramer, Bodenstab;
Third Row: King, D. Hollenback. Hetterly, Riegel. Fox. Battaglia, Miller, Moore, Tarbert, McGill.
Schubert.
222
ALPHA TAU OMEGA
Seniors
Cliarles J. Bodenstab
Henry E. Clauson
William H. Cornish
William J. Davis
Philip L. Frank
James Georgas
E. Hudson HoUenljack. Jr.
Edward R. Kearney
John A. MacNab
Paul M. Pyper
Bruce R. Rauhe
Robert H. Sapp
Martin Q. Underbill
Joseph M. Workman
Sophomores
Hartley C. King Lionel G. Moore
Robert M. Hetterly Donald F. Riegle
Pledges
J. Daniel Hollenback '55 Charles E. Schubert '55
Francis G. McGill "55 Walter R. Tarbert, Jr. '55
Juniors
Joseph H. Battaglia
Robert K. Curlee
Donald K. Fox
Robert H. Miller
Henry M. Porter
Jay F. Sharbaugh
Duane C. Wih
In Facultate
William T. Christian Judson G. Smull
Thomas S. Eichelberger Hubert H. Snyder
Elmer W. Click William G. Whitton
223
BETA CHI CHAPTER DP
Founded Nationally — 1839
Miami University, Ohio
Founded Locally — 1891
Active Chapters — 97
Colors — Blue and Pink
Mark J. Given, President
Robert F. Benedict, Vice-President
Thomas E. Schaefer, Secretary
Philip F. Newman, Treasurer
Helmut H. Brandt, House Manager
First Row: Newman, Given, Benedict. Schaefer; Second Row: Brandt, Wallace, Stein, Taylor,
Mahoney; Third Row: Keil, Booz, Nick, Tooker, Judd, Machette; Fourth Row: Austin, Faust,
Froden. Gasser, Murray, Temple, Jackson, Lewis, Wallis, Nellis; Fifth Row: Kopp, Schneider,
Weigel. O'Brien; Sixth Row: Van Hoesen, Horning, Howey.
224
BETA THETA PI
ll^Sg^
Seniors
Sophomores
Robert F. Benedict
Helmut H. Brandt
Paul E. Fedeles
Mark J. Given
Edward J. Mahoney
David L. Booz
Holger A. Froden
Charles B. Gasser
William H. Jackson
Howard C. Judd. Jr.
Alvin B. Lewis. Jr.
John D. Piatt
Thomas E. Schaefer
Robert W. Stein
Daniel J. Taylor
Charles K. Wallace. Jr
Juniors
Ronald R. Keil
Robert E. Murray
Philip F. Newman. Jr.
Robert W. Nick
Richard V. Temple. Jr.
Thomas W. Tooker
David W. Austin
Kenneth J. Faust
W'illiam G. Kopp HI
Harold T. Machette
William R. Nellis
George L. O'Brien. Jr.
William C. Schneider
Everitt H. Van Hoesen
Charles P. Weigel
Pledges
James L. Horning "55 George W'. Howey '55
Richard C. Wallis '55
In Facultate
Hope T. iM. Ritter, Jr. Paul E. Short
E. Kenneth Smiley
225
PSI CHAPTER OF
Founded Nationally — 1824
Princeton
Founded Locally — 1872
Active Chapters — 32
Colors — Scarlet and Blue
Robert B. Gill, President
John F. Metz, Vice-President
Robert K. Hartenstine, Secretary
Peter K. Huester, Treasurer
Ernest K. Schickedanz, Custodian
First Row: Sheridan, Schickedanz, R. K. Hartenstine, Metz, Gill, Huester, Barthold; Second Row:
Lund, Sargeant, R. C. Hartenstine, Cutler, Trillhaase, Walter, Sooy, Thomas, Stemler, Steigerwald,
Shannahan, Lebo; Third Row: Seip. Mazaika. Newman. Furiness. Clark, Waclawski. Bachofer,
Tillotson, Robertson. Ring, .Snyder.
226
CHI PHI
Robert B. Gill
Raymond C. Hartenstine
Peter K. Huester
James B. Lebo
Lawrence H. Lund, Jr.
John F. Metz
Seniors
Leonard Sargeant, III
Thomas D. Shannahan
William E. Seip
Harold B. Snyder
Cliarles E. Steigerwald
Walter J. Trillhaase
Stephen G. Woodward
Juniors
Gregory B. Barthold
James L. Cutler
Ernest K. Schickedanz
Thomas E.
Thomas M. Sheridan
Jay R. Stemler
Charles D. Thomas
Walter
Sophomores
Bruce T. Bachofer Robert B. Ring
Carlton S. Clark Donald E. Sooy
Samuel Furiness, Jr. James R. Tillotson
Samuel C. Newman Leon J. Waclawski
Pledges
Peter W. Lange '56 Robert J. Mazaika '55
Pehr E. Magneson '56 Roy R. Neureuter '56
John H. Mark '55
David Robertson '55
In Facultate
Frank H. Hughes John J. Hughes
227
ALPHA BETA DELTA EHAPTER OF
Founded Nationally — 1841
Union College
Founded Locally— 1^9^
Active Chapters — 26
Colors — Purple and Gold
Walter E. Haigh, Jr., President
DoRT Fauntleroy, Vice-President
Horace T. Potts III, Secretary
Charles A. Adams, House Manager
Stanley W. Corbett III, Treasurer
First Row: Brattlof, Bauer. Adams, Potts, Haigh, Fauntleroy, Corbett, Shipley, Boylan; Second
Row: Graff, Bodine, Thompson, Welsh, Vartanian. Egner, West, Morris, Cundey, Dietrich. Craft.
McFarlan, Gilclirest; Third Row: Carpenter, Hannay, Witherington. Ford, Collins. Chapin. Meyers,
Heston, Moyle, Bugljee, Morse, Fischer, Cramton.
228
CHI PSI
Seniors
Sophomores
Charles A. Adams
Newton A. K. Bugbee
John F. Collins
Frank R. Craniton
Raymond B. Featherman
Frederick S. Fischer
Frederick H. Gilchrest
Walter E. Haigh
Gerald W. Hannay
T. Kennady Heston
Russel E. McFarlan
John S. Morris
Donald M. Moyle
Horace T. Potts
William S. Shipley
Jack K. Witherington
Franklin R. Bauer
James A. Boylan
Herbert C. Brattlof
Joseph R. Carpenter
Richard H. Chapin
Stanley W. Corbett
Albert H. Cundey
Gilbert E. Dietrich
John E. Egner
Herbert R. Ford
Robert E. Meyers
Ronald C. Morse
Raymond J. Vartanian
Robert A. Welsh
Juniors
Thomas N. Bodine Richard S. GrafE
Dort Fauntleroy Werner K. Seel
Robert D. Thompson
Robert B. West
In Facultate
E. Robins Morgan
229
Founded Nationally — 1890
Cornell University
Founded Locally — 1952
Active Chapters — 41
Colors — Red and Buff
LEHIGH CHAPTER DP
Robert J. Vekony, President
William K. Abbott, Vice-President
Bruce G. Chiccine, Corresponding Secretary
Eugene D. Juba, Corresponding Secretary
David E. Roeder, Treasurer
First Row: Juba. Vekori). \ljl)ott. Roeder; Second Row: Fa'^tiggi. Kephart. Ra\niir, Baush,
McKenzie, LeDene. B^ookl^: Third Ron.: Moore. Chiccine. Umanetz. Waltz. Blauvelt, DeCamp.
Coppersmith.
230
DELTA CHI
bEMORS
William K. Abbott
Samuel W. Brooks
Alan R. Kephart
Donald L. LeDene
Alexander L. Lynn
S. Thomas Raynor
David E. Roeder
Alex Lmanetz Jr.
Robert J. Vekony
William T. Waltz
Juniors
Carl V. Baush
Lon Blauvelt
Bruce G. Chiccine
Donald G. Coppersmith
William H. DeCamp III
Richard N. Fastiggi
Eugene D. Juba
Robert J. McKenzie
Sophomores
H. Theodore Leidy Richard L. Moore
Pledges
John R. Alwang '55 Edmund H. Scheick '55
231
m CHAPTER OF
Founded Nationally — 1827
Union College
Founded Locally — 1884
Active Chapters — 16
Colors — Blue and White
David A. Lackland, President
Edward E. Chick, Vice-President
Joseph R. Comly, Treasurer
Sidney T. MacKenzie, Jr., Recording Secretary
Cecil R. Jones, Jr., Corresponding Secretary
First Row: MacKenzie, Chick, Lackland. Comly; Second Row: F. Lackland. Torgerson. Campbell.
Jones; Tliird Row: Stiles. Collins. Kiefer, Pettinos. Holmes.
232
DELTA PHI
Semors
Stewart F. Campbell David R. Lackland
Edward E. Chick Frederick W. Lackland
Cecil R. Jones Jr. Gurney D. Sloan Jr.
Paul E. Torgerson
Sophomores
Herman E. Kiefer
Juniors
William T. Collins Sidney T. MacKenzie Jr.
Joseph R. Comly Lewis M. Pettinos
John W. Holmes Wilbur J. Stiles
Pledges
Charles L. Davis '5.5
233
BETA THETA CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1899
College of the City of New York
Founded Locally — 1932
Active Chapters — 72
Colors — Green and White
Charles H. Schadt, President
Douglas B. Clausen, Vice-President
A. David Henderson, Secretary
Richard K. Burr, Treasurer
Richard J. Maguire, Pledee Master
First Row: Kite, Henderson, Clausen, Schadt, Burr, Strategos, Biemesderfer ; Second Row: Arm-
strong. Grant, Tiley. Maguire. Hyde. Kriebel. Leng. Hamburg; Third Roiv: Romeo, Applegate,
Flory, Andersen, Rassman, Shindler, Halley. Fowler.
234
DELTA SIGMA PHI
Seniors
Donald Armstrong
Donald J. Biemesderfer
Richard K. Burr
Douglas B. Clausen
Emil G. Hamburg
A. David Henderson
Harold L. Kaufman
Wilson J. Kite III
William D. Leng
Charles H. Schadt
James H. Shafer
Peter E. Strategos
Pledges
Kenneth A. Andersen '55 Richard I. Halley '55
Thomas W. Applegate '55 Roy F. Hyde '54
Raymond L. Brandes Jr. '54Herman P. Joerger '54
Clyde R. Flory Jr. '55 Franklin H. Rassman '54
Charles B. Fowler '55 Anthony V. Romeo '55
Richard H. Shindler '55
Richard H. Grant
John N. Kriebel
Juniors
Richard J. Maguire
William L. Tiley
In Facultate
Carl 0. Keck Robert P. More
Edwin R. Theis
235
BETA LAMBDA CHAPTEB OF
Founded Nationally — 1858
Bethany College
Founded Locally — 1889
Active Chapters — 84
Colors — Purple, White and Gold
Houston B. Sandford. President
Charles A. Wacenseil, Vice-President
Robert E. Linck, Corresponding Secretary
James T. Hancock, Recording Secretary
Edgar W. MacConnell, Treasurer
First Row: McConnell. Gill, Linck. Wagenseil. Sandford, MacConnell. Hancock. Stevens; Second
Row: Reinauer, Riddell. Dunne. Bell. Murdoch. Cook. Van Brunt, DeCruccio, Wooley, Kenly,
Reinhold. Magerison. Dengler; Third Row: Creedon, Androshuk. Keim. Stempfle, Smith. Schifflin.
Sperry. Moller, Crabtree, Ronan.
236
DELTA TAU DELTA
William C. Dengler
Robert H. Gill
James T. Hancock
Robert G. Kenly Jr.
Robert E. Linck
Frank E. McConnell
Edsar W. MacConnell
Seniors
Richard B. Margerison
B. Franklin Reinauer
Bruce W. Reinhold
John B. Riddell
Houston B. Sandford
Warren W. Stevens
Charles A. Wagenseil
Juniors
Donald L. Bell
Duncan S. Cook
John F. DeCruccio Jr.
Frank R. Dunne
Henry Franz IV
Alexander Murdoch HI
Edwin E. Van Brunt Jr.
J. Bedford Wooley Jr.
Sophomores
Fredrick A. Moller Arthur P. Schifflin
Richard H. Sperry
Pledges
William P. Boiling '55 Theodore P. Lewis '55
James B. Crabtree Jr. '55 Richard D. Runan '55
Jerome M. Creedon '55 William S. Stempfle '55
Burton W. Foster '56 Richard B. Smith "55
Howard E. Keim '55 Richard B. Thompson '56
237
LEHIGH CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1834
Williams College
Founded Locally — 1885
Active Chapters — 70
Colors — Royal Blue and Old Gold
Arthur C. Tauck, Jr., President
Paul V. Houriet, Vice-President
John D. Wilde, Jr.. Recording Secretary
Richard R. Best, Corresponding Secretary
Richard W. Babcock, Treasurer
First Row: Molkenthin, Paules, Clapp, Hansel, Tauck, Meyer, Many, Mitchell, Dunn, Best;
Second Row: Houriet, Soper, Fyfe, Jackson, Cashen, Babcock, De Mattia; Third Row: Redden,
Houghton, Wilde, Frey, Eisenfelder, Smith, Schaub; Fourth Row: Trout, Van Wagenen, Reid,
Tennant, Hanlon, Humpleby, Jakubowski.
238
DELTA UPSILDIV
Richard R. Best
Donald W. Clapp
Arturo R. Dunn. Jr.
Grant Hansel. Jr.
Robert H. Many
Seniors
Harold E. Meyer
Robert G. Mitchell
Richard E. Molkenthin
Charles E. Paules. Jr.
William D. Rehner
Sophomores
Richard W
Arthur C. Tauck. Jr.
Juniors
Babcock Paul V. Houriet
Bradford D. Soper
James A. Cashen
Charles A. Eisenfelder
Ralph D. Fray
George G. Fyfe
John V. Hanlon
Michael J. Jackson
Richard M. Mumpleby
James R. Reid
David W. Schaub
Carlton G. Smith
David R. Tennant
Clifford E. Trout
Stanley J. Jakubowski Robert G. Van Wagenen
John D. Wilde. Jr.
Pledges
Henry J. De Mattia '54 Henry W. Kaiser '56
John R. Houghton '55 George H. Redden '55
In Facultate
Wray H. Congdon
239
PEHIVSYLVMIA ALPHA CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1825
Union College
Founded Locally— 1^9^
Active Chapters — 9
Color — Scarlet
Samuel H. Keiser, Jr., President
Donald S. Walker, First Vice-President
Peter C. Wolle. Second Vice-President
Bruce R. Barstow, Secretary
Gilbert H. Priess, Treasurer
First Row: Colclough. Sholes. "Walker. Wolle, Keiser, Priess. Barstow. B.. Whitbeck, Gilson;
Second Row: Stout, Butler. Maloney. Schweigaard-Olsen. Bailey. Bott. Barba: Third Row: Mor-
ris, Peltier, Schubert. Blester, Buhner, Buggey. Hewitt. Barstow. A.. Brady. Michie. Bevan,
Broscious, Paul.
240
KAPPA ALPHA
Seniors
Bruce R. Barstow
William G. Colclough
Samuel H. Keiser, Jr.
Thomas B. MacCabe, Jr.
Donald W. Oplinger
Gilbert H. Priess
Christopher L. Sholes
Donald S. Walker
William R. Whitbeck
Peter C. Wolle
Juniors
Albert W. Bailey
Peter M. Barba
Donald H. Bott
Wallace J. Butler
B. Schweigaard-Olsen
J. Wilson Stout. Ill
Alan M. Barstow
James L. Bevan
John L. Biester
C. Eugene Brady
Sophomores
John A. Broscious
Robert M. Hewitt
James A. Morris
William K. Schubert
Pledges
Townsend M. Buggey '55 Donald G. Michie
Phillip L. Maloney '54 Robert E. Paul '55
Paul F. Pehier '55
55
In Facultate
Robert A. Harrier Charles W. Simmons
Lloyd Taylor
211
BETA IDTA CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1869
University of Virginia
Founded Locally— 1900
Active Chapters — 124
Colors — Scarlet, White, Green
Richard B. Standiford. IIL Grand Master
Jay W. Picking, Jr.. Grand Procurator
Edwin T. Hyde, Grand Master of Ceremonies
Richard W. Davis. Grand Scribe
Norman I. Stotz, Jr.. Grand Treasurer
First Row: Weeks. Petri, Stotz, Picking. Standiford. Hyde, Davis, Pierson; Second Row: Glass,
Montgomery. McCord. Schulz. Koehler. Fetzer. Mowrer, Adams. Dorsey, Coradi, Schmalzer,
Noble; Third Row: Liddie, Havey. Becker. Atkinson. Deitz. Plolir. Kirk. Lekowski. Jones,
Schneider. Apple.
242
KAPPA SIGMA
William T. Adams.
Richard M. Coradi
Richard W. Davis
Leon J. Dorsey
Richard C. Harmon
Seniors
Jr. Robert F. Koehler
Alexander 0. McCord
Clifton E. Mowrer, Jr.
Jay W. Picking, Jr.
William C. Schulz, Jr.
Ricliard B. Standiford, III
Peter Dietz
William W. Fetzer
Edwin T. Hyde
William S. Jones
JuMORS
John H. Noble. Jr.
Ernest 0. Schmalzer
Walter C. Schneider
Norman I. Stotz, Jr.
Walter C. Weeks
Sophomores
Otto H. Atkinson Charles S. Lekowski
Charles M. Glass Alexander S. Liddie. Jr.
Charles R. Havey, Jr. Henry Petri
Karl L. Kirk George W. Plohr
Pledges
Charles R. Apple '5.5 Richard Montgomery '55
Frederick W. Becker '56 Robert B. Pierson '54
William T. Seitz "55
In Facultate
Harold V. Anderson George R. Fox
Albert J. Chabai Albert A. Rights
Aurie N. Dunlap Ernst B. Schulz
243
GAMMA-PSI CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1909
Boston University
Founded Locally — 1926
Active Chapters — 142
Colors — Purple, Green, and Gold
Robert T. Schoepflin, President
Bruce W. Spaulding, Vice-President
Richard E. Kurtz. Secretary
William P. Johnson, Treasurer
HoBART B. Dietz, Social Chairman
First Row: Handwerk, Cook, Dietz, Kurtz. SchoepHin, Spaulding, Johnson, Spatz, Bolton; Second
Row: Bauer, Kryla, Strain, Risch, Hackling, Gregor)', Smith. Levan. Avers; Third Row: Oswald,
Peterson, Koch, Hunter, Schaeffer.
244
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA
Seniors
William D. Ayers
William F. Bloomfield
William B. Bolton
Robert R. Cutler
Hobart B. Dietz
Edwin H. Ettinger
Russell Handwerk
William P. Johnson
Robert T. Schoepflin
Warren C. Spatz
Bruce W. Spaulding
Juniors
Edwin F. Bauer
Norman F. Cook
Thomas W. Gregory
John Hackling
John M. Keene
William A.
Joseph H. Kryla
Richard E. Kurtz
Rodger W. Levan
Ernest H. Risch
Philip C. Smith
Strain
Sophomores
Robert H. Engle Walter E. Oswald
James S. Jephson Charles H. Peterson
Everett Shapener
Pledges
Lawrence E. Buchard \54 Ronald K. Howie '55
Robert H. Daly '55 Robert J. Hunter '55
William Hansen '55 Thomas B. Koch '55
Donald R. Willis '55
In Facultate
Merton 0. Fuller Thomas C. Kubelius
John E. Jacobi Fred V. Larkin
John S. Tremper
2i;
PENMSYLVAIVI/l ETA CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1848
Miami University, Ohio
Founded Locally — 1887
Active Chapters — 115
Colors — Azure and Argent
Richard A. Walbrecker, President
Bruce C. Mooney. Vice-President
John E. Rothenberger, Secretary
Robert E. Vanderpool. Treasurer
Robert J. Armantrout, Steivard
First Row: Horn, Morgan. Doushkess. Mumford, Mooney, Walbrecker. Rothenberger, Yates,
Tallon, Shakespeare; Second Row: Albright, Gbur. Vanderpool, Young, Walters, Setterfield,
Armantrout, Middlekauff, Jones, Malatesta, Duncan, Ferguson; Third Row: Westerfield, Cirucci,
Savage, Fenton, Osborne, Hammerstrom, Kaelber, Vallotti. Arnold. Reynal.
246
PHI DELTA THETA
Seniors
Robert C. Albright, Jr. Robert W. Morgan
\^ illiam N. Doushkess
Joseph B. Ferguson
\^ illiam C. Horn
Ahon R. Middlekauff. Jr.
Bruce C. Mooney
William W. Mumford
John E. Rothenberger
Charles B. Shakespeare
Douglas R. Tallon
Richard A. Walbrecker
John W. Yates
Juniors
Robert J. Armantrout
John A. Duncan. Jr.
Stephen Gbur
Charles R. Jones. Jr.
Frank
Richard Malatesta
Lawrence W. Setterfield
Robert E. Vanderpool
Robert A. Walters, Jr.
Young
Edwin A. Arnold
David H. Fenton
Norman F. Kaelbt
Sophomores
Lawrence S. Reynal
Robert C. Savage
r John A. Vallotti
Pledges
Anthony J. Cirucci '56 John B. Osborne '56
Melvin Hammerstrom '55 John H. Westerman '55
1
HE^
1 ^
247
BETA CHI CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1848
Washington and Jefferson
Founded Locally — 1886
Active Chapters — 81
Colors — Royal Purple and White
Charles P. Rogers, President
William A. Carlisle, Jr., Treasurer
Edward G. Atkinson, Recording Secretary
Eugene W. Beggs, Sr., Corresponding Secretary
Walter E. Perdue, Jr., Historian
First Row: Morrison, Beggs, Carlisle. Rogers, Atkinson, Perdue, Kingham. J. R. : Second Row:
Snadecki, Marsh, Strauch, Harper, Benner, Lusby, Gentine, Luce, Kingham, J. B.. Lemmon. Delotto.
Macfarlan. Mitman. Hess; Third Roiv: Klinedinst. Herr, Mangus. HoUingsworth. Dimmick. Williams.
Henderson: Fourth Row: Martin. Clark, Scavuzzo, Barton, Roy, Byren. Crosley.
248
PHI GAMMA DELTA
Seniors
Edward G. Atkinson
Eugene W. Beggs. Jr.
William A. Carlisle. Jr.
Lewis P. De Lotto
Nicholas S. Gentile
Richard G. Hess
James B. Kingham
John R. Kingham
Stephen D. Macfarlan
John T. Morrison
Walter E. Perdue
Charles P. Rogers
Juniors
Richard E. Benner. Sr. Donald C. Luce
J. Allen Harper. Jr. Frank F. Lusby
John K. Henderson William Marsh
George B. Lemmon William E. Mitman
William A. Snadecki
Sophomores
Robert H. Barton. HI Paul E. Klinedinst, Sr.
Robert F. Clark
Donald H. Dimmick
George D. Herr, Jr.
William T. Martin
John K. Musgrave
Rudoloph J. Scavuzzo
Harry C. Strauch
Pledges
John 0. Byren '55
George C. Crosley '55
Peter P. Mangus '55
Donald H.
John A. Hollingsvvorth '55
Richard M. Roy '55
Thomas W. Stone '55
Williams '55
249
m CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1873
University of Massachusetts
Founded Locally — 1901
Active Chapters — 65
Colors — Magenta and Silver
Rudolph E. Burger, Jr., President
Henry J. Battaglia, Jr., Vice-President
Charles R. Fuller, Jr.. Secretary
Richard C. Sickler. Jr.. Treasurer
George P. Schivley. Sentinel
First Row: Kirkpatrick, Esterhoy, Sickler. Burger, Battaglia. Fuller. Reinoehl, Woodford; Second
Row: Schmieg, Friedrich. Kelly, Sonio, Heisler, Talbert, Everett, Hecklinger, Gottling, McNellis,
Berdick, Kemmerer; Third Row: Selgrath, Taylor, Emerson, Klima, Klein, McKibben, Schivley,
Broohs. Bloodsworth.
>50
PHI SIGMA KAPPA
^^QH
HH
_il^lBlKil
ll^^s^H!
Seniors
Henry J. Battaglia. Jr. George P. Schivley
Rudolph E. Burger. Jr. Richard C. Sickler
Robert E. Woodford
Juniors
Edward Berdick
George Brooks, Jr.
George P. Emerson
Steven H. Friedrich
Charles R. Fuller. Jr.
James R. Gottling
William V. Heisler, Jr.
John P. Kelly
Edward
Dale N. Kemmerer
James P. Klima
Albert H. McKibben
John B. Reindehl
Clinton Schmieg, Jr.
James J. Selgrath
Odorisio H. Sozio
Wilham L. Talbert
Taylor
Sophomores
Harry Bloodsworth. HI Roger S. Hecklinger
Charles J. Esterohoy John D. Kirkpatrick
Harry M. Klein
Pledges
Daniel Everett '54 William D. Johnston '54
Berge M. Heede '55 Laurence A. McNellis '55
251
GAMMA LAMBDA CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1868
University of Virginia
Founded Locally — 1929
Active Chapters — 105
Colors — Garnet and Gold
Homer C. Smith, President
Clarence B. Wingert, Vice-President
William A. Haase, Secretary
David M. Haines, Treasurer
First Row: Schwenk. Duke. Jennings. Krips, Connolly: Second Row: Stoops, Keifer. Haase,
Smith, Wingert, Haines, Johnson; Third Row: Bubb, Jenkins, Bach, Bell. Hergenhan, Bond,
Sigethy, Argyle, Wolford, Arneson, Ayres; Fourth Row: Klein, Norton, Zoellner. Parks, Gabler,
Kautz, Raught, Mascetti, Dunlap.
252
PI KAPPA ALPHA
Bernell E. Argyle
John P. Arnesen
Richard A. Ayers
Ralph E. Bach
Gordon G. Bell
James P. Bond
Edward J. Buhb
David W. Connolly
William R. Duke
William A. Haase
David M. Haines
Seniors
W. Kenneth Hergenhan
Harry R. Jenkins
Murry V. Jennings
John A. Keiler
Robert Sigethy
Homer C. Smith
Clarence B. Wingert
Juniors
Eric T. Kautz
Eugene A. Norton
Earle Bruce Wolford
Robert E. Zoellner
Karl A. Gabler
Jack E. Krips
Sophomores
James S. Parks, Jr.
Merlin F. Schwenk
Pledges
Frederick G. Dunlap '55 Ronald B. Knust '55
Jack L. Fox '54 Frederick C. Mascetti '54
Henry R. Johnson, Jr. '55 Frank J. McGimpsey '55
Donald H. Klein '55 Errol C. Raught, Jr. '55
Charles C. Stoops '55
In Facultate
George D. Harmon Edgar K. Muhlhausen
Bradley Stoughton
253
LAMBDA CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1895
Yale University
Founded Locally — 1915
Active Chapters — 33
Colors — Purple and Gold
Joseph N. Morcenstern, President
Jay W. Greenstone, Vice-President
Harry R. Friedland. Secretary
Martin S. Edelman. Treasurer
Murray H. Miller, Marshal
First Row: Schwab. Edelman, Greenstone, Morgenstern, Miller. H. Friedland, Wiener; Second
Row: Kaufmann, Gussoff, Platzer, Leux, Davis. Fisher, Reiback. Adelman, Selig, Fetterman;
Third Row: Roth, Arons, Henston, Rosenthal, Menkes, Skaller, Weinstein, Frohlich, Thall;
Fourth Row: Fogelson, Flatow, Bross, Frankel, Sloan, Nimensky. Mitchell; Fifth Row: Stanger,
Weinburg, Tritsch, Baum. Scharfer, S. Friedland. Richman, Goldberg, Strauss.
254
PI LAMBDA PHI
Myles H. Adelmaii
David S. Fetterman
David E. Fisher
Harry R. Friedland
Arnold M. Gussoff
Mark S. Kaufmann
Ira B. Blank
Jordan P. David
Martin S. Edelman
Samuel M. Frohlich
Robert B. Goldberg
Jay W. Greenstone
Louis V. Henston
Gene M. Levitz
Stanley C. Levy
Seniors
Joseph IN. Morgenstern
Robert P. Platzer
Louis H. Sand
Edward W. Schwab
Richard F. Selig. Jr.
Theodore A. Wiener
Juniors
Robert N. Litlman
Murray H. Miller
Joseph Menkes
Alan P. Rosenthal
Martin Rubel
Martin S. Schacter
Laurence D. Skaller
Lewis H. Weinstein
Robert Zaretsky
Sophomores
Sherwin P. Arons
Theodore B. Baum
Robert A. Blum
Joel L. Bross
David E. Flatow
Gerald W. Fogelson
George D. Frankel
Saul M. Friedland
Gordon J. Goldberg
Martin J.
Allan R. Mitchell
Robert E. Nimensky
Stanley M. Richman
Stanley C. Roth
Erwin H. Sloan
Robert I. Stanger
David C. Strauss
Richard S. Thall
Bruce A. Tritsch
Weinburg
Pledges
Ronald A. Friedman '55
In Facultate
Ralph G. Steinhardt
255
ETA CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1833
Union College
Founded Locally — 1884
Active Chapters — 30
Colors — Garnet and Gold
Paul M. Beach, Jr., President
Grant G. Goodrich. 1st Vice-President
John T. McGrann, Jr., '2nd Vice-President
Alastair S. Clark. 3rd Vice-President
Rowland Erving, Jr., Secretary
First Row: Smith. Matthes, Beach. Day; Second Row: Latshaw, Blocker. Higgens. Lydon; Third
Row: Wellinger, McGram, Hamilton, Dodds, Clark, Butter, Erving, Goodrich; Fourth Row:
Field. Wight, Jenkins. Birdsall, James, Howell, Bentley, Hitchcock.
256
PSI UPSILDIV
Seniors
Paul M. Beach. Jr. Thomas E. Higgens
Willoughby C. Blocker William A. Latshaw
Alan W. Day Bedford H. Lydon. Jr.
Peter C. Matthes
Sophomores
Cecil W. Bentley Robert W. James
Robert W. Jenkins
Juniors
Robert E. Butter Grant G. Goodrich
Alastair S. Clark Everett N. Hamilton
George E. Dodds John T. McGrann, Jr.
Rowland Erving, Jr. Donald G. Smith
Pledges
Neal Birdsall '.55 George L. Howell '55
Burke R. Field '56 Walter Wellinger, Jr. '55
Bryon Hitchcock '55 Donald iM. Wight, Jr. '55
257
SIGMA KAPPA CHAPTER OF
Founded Nationally — 1909
College of the City of New York
Founded Locally — 1923
Active Chapters — 48
Colors — Purple and White
Joel B. Mann, Prior
Leonard Karp, Exchequer
Ronald Lipshie. Recorder
Robert A. Scher, Pledgemaster
Burton Lowitz, Steward
First Row: Littman. Karp, Mann, Margolis. Lewin; Second Row: Golden. Lowitz, Scher, Lewitt,
West; Third Row: Hirsch, Tlialheimer, Pilzer. Tankowitz. Sachs. Glassberg. Stein; Fourth Row:
Entin. Schreiber. Leventhal. Barnett. Drucker. Falk.
258
SIGMA ALPHA MU
Seniors
Sophomores
Joel H. Golden
Joel B. Mann
Ralph S. Abrams Richard L. Glassberg
Jules B. Levine
Allan B. Margolis
Stanley H. Drusker Irving Hirsch
David L. Levvin
Robert A. Scher
Roy H. Entin Steven R. Leventhal
Julian L. Lewitt
Alvin E. Tannenbaum
Howard Falk John M. Thalheimer
Neil A. Littman
Burton Lowitz
John A.
West
Juniors
Elliott B. Barnett
Stephen S. Pilzer
Leonard Karp
Lawrence Sachs
Pledges
Ronald Lipshie
Richard H. Schreiber
Walter I. Epstein Stanley Greenfield
Bruce P. Klein
Martin Tankowitz
Stuart F. Feit Richard J. Melehuer
Lawrence J
. Wallen
Allen A. Stein
' «• m m I \
259
ALPHA RHD CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1855
Miami University, Ohio
Founded Locally — 1887
Active Chapters — 125
Colors — Blue and Gold
Stanley A. Ward, President
Rodney L. Crislip, Vice-President
Donald H. Swartz, Secretary
Samuel J. Shamsey. Treasurer
Robert W. Walton, Corresponding Secretary
First Row: Utzig. Rickert. Grant. Crislip. Ward. Swartz, Shawsey. Walton. Finger, Doubleday;
Second Row: Wiltzie. Jenkins. Lundquist. Moore. Wiley, Miles. Hatfield. Heimlicher. Santos.
Ritchie. Pigeon. Kuhn. OrgiU. Mohr; Third Row: Whitman. Moulton, Goddard. Picton. Guilda,
Moser; Fourth Row Flesher. Von Neida. Irving. Hitlinger. MrCann. Flvnn.
260
SIGMA CHI
Rodney L. Crislip
James A. Douljleday
Robert B. Guilda
Norman J. Hittinger
Warren J. Jenkins
Thomas H. Mohr
Seniors
Robert W. Moore
John L. OrgiU
Donald E. Rickert
John Ritchie
James P. Santos
Donald H. Swartz
Robert W. Walton
Juniors
Joseph R. Flesher
Francis Flynn
Bruce L. Heimlicher
Robert E. Irving
Rodger A. Lungquist
Robert A. Miles
Samuel J. Shamsey. Jr.
Allyn R. Von Neida
William B. Whitman
John C. Wiltsie
Sophomores
William P. Goddard Lee B. Pigeon
John E. McCann Benjamin B. Wiley
Pledges
James L. Finger '55 John C. Kuhn \55
Edward R. Hatfield '55 A. Joseph Moser '55
John C. Utzig '55
In Facultate
James D. Mack Richard N. Rhoda
261
PI CHAPTER UF
^:^«B%a
Founded Nationally — 1869
Virginia Military Institute
Founded Locally — 1884
Active Chapters — 118
Colors — Black, Gold, and White
Herbert A. Roemmele, Commander
Joseph W. Mover, Lt. Commander
Edward G. Martin, Recorder
V. Mark Willson, II, House Manager
Howard F. Schaeffer, Jr., Sentinel
First Row: Graham, Marks, Martin, Moyer, Roemmele, Willson, Dorney, Headley, Schaeffer;
Second Row: Westerman, Harrison, Davis, Scheetz, Maurer, Cable, Glaeser, Gunn, Halford,
Westfall, Madison, Kappel, Wehn; Third Row: Wagner, Degan, Girke, Clear, Roth. Gilmore,
Seeds, Muirhead, Letowt.
262
SIGMA IVU
Seniors
Donald E. Dorney
Richard A. Gardner
Andrew S. Graham, Jr.
R. Timothy Headley
Charles Hall
William C. Marks
Edward G. Martin
Joseph W. Moyer
Joseph H. Paquin
Herbert A. Roemmele
Howard F. Schaeffer, Jr.
William L. Westerman
V. Mark Willson. II
Juniors
John A. Cable
John H. Davis
Alfred L. Glaester, Jr.
Thomas E. Gunn
William M. Halford
Richard W. Kappel
Ronald B. Madison
Martin W. Maurer
Edwin F. Scheetz, Jr.
Martin F. Stockman
C. Edward Harrison. Jr. George Wehn, Jr.
Ronald C. Westfall
Sophomores
Edward F. Clear
Robert W. Degen
Robert F. Gilmore
Louis R. Girke
Z. Jody Letowt
John E. Muirhead
Robert R. Roth
Robert W. Seeds
Harry W. Stotz
Corey E. Wagner
263
PEIVIVSYLVAIVIA ALPHA CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1827
Union College
Founded Locally — 1887
Active Chapters — 10
Colors — Azure and Argent
Byron Ober, Jr.. President
Jeffrey E. Weaver. Vice-President
John H. Boardman, Treasurer
Richard W. Shaffer, Secretary
First Row: Jenkins, Randel, Hoyt, Foster, Ober, Kressler, Webster, Erney. Olson, George P.
Robinson III, Coles; Second Row: Weaver, Mudge, Nichols, Rosenau, Boardman, Archibald,
Corbert; Third Row: Verostick, Dreesen, Piatt, Shaffer.
264
SIGMA PHI
Seniors
William E. Coles, Jr. James P. Kressler
Robert C. Erney Byron Ober, Jr.
Walter J. Foster Harry J. Olson
Peter L. Hoyt Roderick G. Randel
Charles E. Jenkins Lin E. Webster
Sophomores
Juniors
John C. Archibald
John H. Boardman
William J. Corbet. Jr.
Philip T. Mudge
John D. Nichols
David L. Rosenau
Jeffrey Weaver
Steven A. M. Yaytes
Ronald H. Dreesen
Thomas E. Piatt, Jr.
Richard W. Schaffer
Kenneth J. Verostick
Pledges
Richard A. Klein '55
In Facultate
William H. Schempf
265
PEIVIVSYLV/INIA EPSILOIV CHAPTER DP
Founded Nationally — 1901
University of Richmond
Founded Locally — 1907
Active Chapters — 119
Colors — Purple and Red
Edward A. Blount. President
Joseph P. Napolitano, Vice-President
Robert H. Endriss, Comptroller
John G. Kerch, Secretary
Robert A. Slaw, Historian
First Row: Shupe, Doan. Kerch. Slaw. Blount. Napolitano, Campagna, Ralph; Second Row:
Davis, Klopp, Serniak, Taylor. Knecht, Williams, Whyland, Davidson, Kline, Quittner, Furey;
Third Row: Kaffke, Pennell, Tiger, Hughes, Ackley. Mulder, Babcock, Wiegand, Bailey, Inglis,
Griesing.
J"^
^ f*J ^*3*\f A
266
SIGMA PHI EPSILDN
Seniors
Edward A. Blount
Richard A. Doan
Robert H. Endriss
Harold C. Griesing
Lester B. Insrlis
John G. Kerch
Henry E. Mulder
Joseph P. Napolitano
William H. Pennell
Robert A. Slaw
Donald C. Taylor
Juniors
Paul R. Babcock
John C. Bailey
Francis E. Campagna
Richard H. Francis
Ronald R. Hoffman
Caspar P. P. Kaffke
Frederick V. Klopp
Andrew W. Knecht
T. Graham Ralph
Walter R. Serniak
William P. Whyland
Gayle P. Williams
Sophomores
John M. Crandall John R. Hughes
Robert T. Davidson James L. Kline
Richard C. Davis Lewis R. Shupe
Paul M. Tio-er
Pledges
Edward M. Ackley '55 Carl F. Greenamoyer '55
Bartley G. Furey '54 Robert E. Quittner '55
Arthur F. Wiegand '55
Lm Facultate
Ray C. Bartlett
267
TAU CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1910
College of the City of New York
Founded Locally — 1927
Active Chapters — 28
Colors — Blue amd White
Edward Dreskin. Consul
Richard M. Vance, Vice-Consul
Martin H. Pearl. Quaestor
Leonard S. Rodberg. Scribe
Floyd Krengel, Alumni Scribe
First Row: Lebson. Zimmerman, Schifl, Robinson, Krengel, Dreskin, Vance, Kamp, Nevins,
Barcan; Second Row: Slaff. Pearl, Steinmark, Goldblatt, Semilof, Adler, Garfinkel. Weiss, F.
Marcus, Rodberg, Pincus; Third Row: Stamm, Chaiken, Elliott, Grossman, Blum, Bell. Puschett,
Kaminker, Nachman, Solomon, Barnett.
268
TAU DELTA PHI
Seniors
Alfred J. Barcan
Edward Dreskin
Howard L. Kamp
Floyd Krengel
Richard D. Lebson
David M. Nevins
Earl Adler
Jack Barnett
Robert Chaiken
Richard Elliott
Jerry Friedenheim
Harry Garfinkel
Barry Goldblatt
Newton I. Pincus
Marvin Robinson
Robert I. Schiff
Richard Slaff
Richard M. Vance
Carl H. Zimmerman
Juniors
Fred Marcus
Martin H. Pearl
Leonard S. Rodberg
Harvey D. Semilof
Morton H. Stamm
Leonard B. Steinmark
Harvey Weiss
Sophomores
Robert F. Bell Carl L. Marcus
Bernard Blum David K. Nachman
Bernard Grossman Jules B. Pushett
Kenneth Kaminker Leonard R. Solomon
Graduate Student
Jack S. Vanderryn
269
BETA SIGMA CHAPTER OF
Founded Nationally — 1856
Norwich University
Founded Locally — 1934
Active Chapters — 110
Colors — Military Red and White
Frank M. Leake, President
William R. Kinkead, Vice-President
Carl D. Krebs. Secretary
Robert M. Hanson, Treasurer
Jerome D. Towe, Marshal
First Row: Cooke. Towe, Reynolds, Krebs, Leake, Kinkead, Hanson, Melega, Bush, Tiffany:
Second Row: Marvin, Meerwarth, Harrigan, Painter, Koch, Haberle. Auchmoody, Bausmith,
Fisher, Hopkins: Third Row: Cross, Butterweck. Seltzer, Telfer, Undercuffler, Sellers, Proebstle,
Strohl.
270
THETA CHI
Seniors
Sophomores
Lewis P. Busli
James F. Cooke
Carl D. Krebs
Frank M. Leake
Robert G. Melega
Samuel D. Reynolds
\^ illiam A. Sampson
George A. Tiffany
Jerome D. Towe
Juniors
Charles H. Aims
John C. Bausmith
David A. Fisher
Henry M. Haberle. Jr.
Robert M. Hanson
Francis L. Harrigan, Jr.
George Hopkins. Jr.
William R. Kinkead
Daniel 0. Koch. Jr.
James S. Marvin, Jr.
Ralph N. Meerwarth
Lloyd R. Painter
Clifford J. Auchmoody
Robert G. Butterweck
James A. Cross
Richard A. Proebstle
Edwin M.
John K. Sellers
Wayne J. Seltzer
William A. Strohl
Gordon H. Telfer
Lndercufifler
Pledges
Thomas M. O'Brien '55 Richard R. Swyers '53
Charles B. Vanderberg "54
Ln Fa cult ate
Fred G. Armstrong
Frank J. Fornoff
Robert B. Kleinschmidt
Harold
Charles R. Seidle
Hale Sutherland
Everett A. Teal
Thomas
271
M DEUTEHDIV EHAHGE DF
Founded Nationally — 1847
Union College
Founded Locally — 1884
Active Chapters — 29
Colors — Black, White, and Blue
James C. Hitchcock, President
Thomas H. Jones, Secretary
Robert S. Hodder, Corresponding Secretary
Charles D. Snead, Treasurer
T. John McAlonan, Steward
First Row: McAlonan, Jones, Hitchcock, Snead, Hodder; Second Row: McCartney, Ely, Locke,
Graver, Witzig; Third Row: Wallace, Budd, Fischer, Cook, Knapp, Sowerbutt, P. Taylor, Sawch,
Banks. Walker. Wolf; Fourth Roiv: Derrington. R. Taylor. Henschel. Finger. Cahn. Gleckner,
Royster. Deutz. Monnett, Coyle, Steeber.
272
THETA DELTA EHI
bEMORS
Paul E. Ely
Samuel F. Giauer
James C. Hitchcock
Robert S. Hodder
Thomas H. Jones
Malcom R. Banks
David B. Baily
Douglas N. Cook
Robert B. Fisher
Ronald C. Jirsa
Fredrick A. Knapp
William S. Locke
T. John McAlonan
Jack E. McCartney
Charles D. Snead
Richard Witzi^r
Juniors
Stephen Sawch
Richard S. Sowerbutt
Peter N. Taylor
Harold Walker
John C. M. Wallace
Richard H. Wolf
Sophomores
Chester E. Budd James F. Gleckner
Edward N. Cahn Edward C. Henschlel
Douglas C. Coyle Clyde Royster
Theodore F. Deutz Donald E. Steeber
Rodger S. Taylor
Pledges
James E. Derrington '55 David P. Finger '55
Lawrence L. Monnett '55
In Facultate
Arthur F. Gould
273
ALPHA CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1922
Lehigh University
Founded Locally — 1919
Active Chapters — 21
Colors — Red, Silver, and Gold
Michael F. Krehel, President
Donald J. Mosshart. Vice-President
G. Gahr Finney. Treasurer
Ronald C. Crofton, Executive Secretary
First Row: Bacho. Gentzlinger, Crofton. Krehel. Mosshart. Finney. Fasolino. Connery: Second
Row: Dean, Muha. Ward, Yurek, Nolan. Chute. Kiley. Evans. Tuljy, Gut. Di Blasi. Eisenhauer;
Third Row: Jablonski. Bruning, Concilio, Moran. Schwehm. Daine. Ostroski. Furtaw. Frappier,
Ardrey, Schumacher.
274
THETA KAPPA PHI
~^ ' tell.'"
bEMORS
Pledges
Andrew B. Bacho, Jr.
William P. Connery
John L. Dean. Jr.
Alfred J. Fasolino
Carl 0. Bruning
John F. Chute
Ronald C. Crofton
Robert A. Daine
Joseph J. Eisenhauer
John J
William H. Gentzlinger
Michael F. Krehel
Donald J. Mosshart
George M. Muha
Juniors
G. Gahr Finney
Robert M. Frappier
Robert Moran
Joseph C. Ostroski
George Schumacher
Ward
Robert F. Ardrey '55
Richard Di Blasi '55
William B. Evans '53
Charles E. Furtaw '55
F. Richard Gut '55
Frank J.
Leo A. Jablonski '55
Robert E. Kiley '55
Robert J. Nolan '55
Paul J. Schwehm '55
John C. TuUy '55
Yurek "55
In Facultate
Frank V. Palevicz
275
j®&k..
ETA CHAPTER DF
Founded Nationally — 1864
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Founded Locally — 1904
Active Chapters — 55
Colors — Blue and White
Edwin G. Fenton. President
Edwin F. Compton. Vice-President
Robert H. Kendall. Treasurer
Francis J. Fralinger. House Manager
William C. Wrye, Corresponding Secretary
First Roio: Fralinger. Kendall. Fenton, Compton. \^ ne. J. .Smith: Second Roiv: Billetter. Crisp.
Peacock. Morris. Seaman. Edson. Sears, Taschner. Osborn: Third Row: Hendrix. lannotta.
Spangler, Kingsbury. Stine. Lyle. Lee. G. Smith. Siebener. Fehrs, Eckert.
276
THETA XI
Seniors
Edwin F. Compton
George T. Crisp
Richard H. Fehrs
Edwin G. Fenton
Harry Lee
Milton H. Osborn, Jr.
Roy G. Sears
William C. Wrye
Sophomores
John P. Eckert Gary C. Smith
William C. Lyle Richard W. Spangler
Robert J. Seaman Howard E. Stine, Jr.
Terry N. Taschner
Juniors
Dale R. Billetter Robert H. Kendall
Francis J. Fralinger Stuart S. Kingsbury
Kenneth D. Hendrix Casimir M. Lazickas
Pledges
John A. Edson '55 Courtland P. Morris '53
Stephen lannotta '55 Edward D. Peacock '53
Frank 0. Siebener '55
Carl E. Allen
In Facultate
Andrew W. Litzenberger
277
IITERDDRMITORY COUNCIL
The structure of the Interdormitory Council is much Hke
that of the federal government. The president presides over
the Council, with the help of the Executive Committee. Resolu-
tions are proposed by various members at the monthly meeting,
and if passed the entire group sees that they are enforced. Our
poKce court is made up of the members of the Discipline Com-
mittee. If, by chance, 1. D. C. should overstep its bounds the
Dean's Office would restrain them. Dean Leith, our faculty ad-
visor, has always given wise counsel, and has thus kept I. D. C.
within bounds.
Realizing that a social program exists in the dormitories
I. D. C. has set out to make dormitory life a little more pleasant.
The first step was to place the vice president in charge of all
social affairs. At the beginning of the Fall semester he, and his
committee, organized the "Dorm Date Drag."' Over one hundred
and fifty girls were imported for this affair, and everyone had
a wonderful time. Various dormitories have had parties through-
out the year, and another all-dormitory party is planned for
the Spring semester.
Another innovation this year is a movie in Lamberton Ytall.
A movie committee was set up to run shows over weekends, and
it is now our hardest-working committee. This movie has proved
to be well worthwhile, and it is now an important part of our
social program.
At the Fall Houseparty I. D. C. again co-sponsored a Square
Dance with Town Council. This, plus the Houseparty Snack,
and numerous cocktail parties made this weekend a very enjoy-
able one for dormitory men.
For the first time in the history of the Campus Chest the
dormitories were the top contributors. We can thank Chaplain
George Bean for this, since he made an inspiring appeal to
I. D. C. before returning to his native Virginia.
This was the second year that I. D. C. adopted a Polish
war orphan, Adam Smereka. It seems only fitting that we should
help a fellow student, no matter what race, color, or creed.
It has been the policy of I. D. C. to work with other organi-
zations as much as possible. If we can make the other group's
work easier then we also make our own job easier. At times
it is necessary to oppose others for what we think is right, but
when we can work with another group we have achieved unity
of purpose.
Whatever I. D. C. has accomplished this year is a result of
the faith we have in our organization, and its leaders. Without
this faith the Interdormitory Council would be just another or-
ganization on campus.
278
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Samuel S. Johnson President
Fabyan Saxe Vice-President
Robert Schlchman Secretary
David McAdam Treasurer
HOUSE PRESIDENTS
David McAdam
Robert Schuchman
Carl Schilbe
Robert Amellng
John Diercks
. Drinker
... Taylor
Richards
.... Dravo
Price
First Row: J. D. Leith. Schuchman. Ameling, Johnson. McAdam, Saxe, Diercks; Second Row:
To^vTisend. Small. Skitt. Battaglia. Moore. Patterson, Eldridge; Third Row: Stahl, Clary, Miller.
Nitsche. Houpt. Knox: Fourth Row: Hutchinson. Niemitz. Spencer. Leslie. Asson, Jones, ^^'olford.
Mitchell. \eai;er.
279
First Row: Napoliello, Gillen, Fox, Timm, Denson; Second Row: Sanfelici, Childs, Cannata,
Wellenramp, Weintrob; Third Row: King, Jerstrom, Bittner, Posillico, Cali, Clary, Hahn.
Chiusano, McKelvey, Kelly, Mason; Fourth Roiv: Cafaro, Calatabianca, Bugie, Leonard, Kattel.
Kurtz, Kolesnik, Carney, Black, Zglobicki, Wilson.
Emmett a. Clary, Jr. President
H. Warren Timm Secretary-Treasurer
Robert W. McKelvey, Jr.
Freshman Cabinet
Emmett A. Clary, Jr.
Freshman Counselor
DRAVD AI
Seniors
Emmett A. Clary
Ferdinand, J. Napoliello
Juniors
Robert Bugie
Jack L. Fox
David L. Kurtz
Edward G. Rand
H. Warren Timm
Larry W. Weintrob
Charles F. Wellenkamp
Sophomores
Costel D. Denson
Georffe M. B. Gillen
Edward B. Kattel
E. Thomas Kelly
Peter E. Kolesnik
Paul E. Sinner
Freshmen
Michael A. Bittner
Robert R. Black
Frank J. Cafaro
Joseph W. Calatabianca
Nicholas L. Cali
Joseph R. Cannata
Richard B. Carney
George L. Childs
Phillip A. Chiusano
Russel L. Cohen
Andrew A. Hahn
William H. Hoffmann
F. Kenneth Ivers
Bernard J. Jerlstrom
Robert W. King
Joseph F. Leonard
Leonard A. Lysak
George C. Mason
Robert W. McKelvey
Bruno R. Pagnani
Mario Posillico
Arthur H. Sanfelici
James J. Wilson
Joseph R. Zglobicki
280
DRAVD All
Edward H. Small, Jr. President
Robert 0. Soper Secretary-Treasurer
Robert 0. Soper Freshman Counselor
George B. Lucas, Jr. Freshman Cabinet
Seniors
Alfonso Bohorquez
Luis A. Garcia
Marco A. Garcia
Robert 0. Soper
Stanley G. Tokarczyk
Juniors
James R. Morrison. Jr.
Edward H. Small, Jr.
Bruce W. Steinhoff, Jr.
John A. Wagner
Sophomores
Ronald E. Dornau
Edward W. Furst
James P. Streeter
Ivan A. Ziegler
Freshmen
Michael D. Butterman
Robert C. Glaus
William R. Dixon
Richard L. Eckhardt
John S. Eggenberger
Raymond P. Gila
Jay W. Gorham
Glenn Hanna
Robert K. Hartig
Jesse D. Hasson
Donald T. Heywood
Kenneth B. Hill
Franklin W. Jones. Jr.
George N. Korkgy
Myron E. LaVake III
George B. Lucas, Jr.
Bruce W. Murray
Harry C. NefF, Jr.
Herman A. Rincon
Robert H. Robinson
Gerald D. Shearer
Taylor Spink, Jr.
Dennis P. Sullivan
Charles F. Wuestner, Jr
Leonard Yaeger
First Row: Dornau. Yaeger, Wagner, Ziegler, Small, Neff, Soper, Butterman, Streeter, Morrison:
Second Row: Korkg>'. Shearer. Jones, Dixon. Hasson, Furst, Robinson, Hill, Murray, LaVake,
Hanna, Spink; Third Row: Claus, Lucas, Sullivan, Eckhardt, Gorham, Wuestner, Heywood, Gila,
Tokarczyk, Hartig, Eggenberger, Steinhoff.
281
James I. Leslie, Jr. President
William C. Roxby, Jr. Secretary-Treasurer
James W. Gill Freshman Counselor
William S. Luce Freshman Cabinet
Alfred Frickant Graduate
DRAVD BI
Seniors
James W. Gill
James D. Holman
Clifford S. Lasto
James L Leslie, Jr.
Joseph F. Reuwer
William C. Roxby, Jr.
Richard C. Sturmer
Gilbert G. Whipple
Juniors
Edward A. Huettle
Robert N. Libsch
Sophomores
Leo V. Casto
James G. Cams, III
Ralph H. Held
Robert L. Neumeister
Richard E. Reichley
Harold A. Wentworth, Jr.
Freshmen
Raymond H. Arner
Richard J. Cogswell
Morton M. Crandall
Peter T. Dellera
David A. Diener
John E. Dougherty
Zoltan W. Fazekas
Henry H. George
Henry L. Gulick
Roger T. Hansen
William B. Hillegass
F. Kennith Ivers
Edgar N. Kaplan
William H. Kelley
William S. Luce
Robert J. Lund
Lenard A. Lysak
William J. McGuckin
E. Burr Meyer
Peter R. MoguU
Bruno R. Paganani
Allen M. Rathbone
Lowell J. Raynor
Charles K. Reller
Charles N. Rosenberg
E. Les Scherck
Richard L. Schmal
Allen L. Silberman
Robert F. Smythe
Herman 0. Studholz
James W. Sweitzer
F. Bruce Waechter
Joseph C. Wasson
First Row: Cams, Hillegass, Meyer, Reller. Smythe; Second Row: Wasson, Roxby. Leslie,
Reichley, George; Third Row: Dellera, Paganani, Kelley, Neumeister; Fourth Row: Libsch,
Waechter, Luce, Rathbone, Lund, Fazekas, Feickart. Rosenberg, Casto, Lysak. Silberman,
Scherck, Raynor; Fifth Roto: Ivers. Studholz, Cogswell, Wentworth, Holman, Schmal, Hansen,
(.ill. Ilil.-lllf. I)..ll;;ll.'-ll\. Culick. Diener.
282
First Row: Ackerman, Spencer. Bigelow, Wolff. Filbert. Marquardt; Second Row: Brown,
Textoris, Granville. VanSciver, Houpt, King, D., Dittman. Levinson, Sutker; Third Roiv: Groves.
Johnson. Bell. Bryers, Metzger. Swenson, Pachman. Hull. Kottcamp, Axt, Moffet. Smith; Fourth
Row: Schwerin, Babb. De Young, Throop, Graham, Balestier, Heany, Royal, Maleike, King, C.
Grover K. Houpt President
Richard W. Granville, Jr.
Secretary-Treasurer
Grover K. Houpt Freshman Counselor
DRAVD BII
Seniors
John H. Ackerman
Thomas F. Bell
Thomas A. Crompton
Richard W. Bryers
Juniors
C. Benjamin Foy
Boyd D. Goldwyn
Richard W. Granville
Arnold J. Hanson
Grover K. Houpt
Edward Miculian
George Nass
Elliot A. Spencer
Howard L. Weinshenker
Sophomores
Ernest E. Brown
Augustus M. Filbert
Louis R. Focht
John E. Johnson
Barry C. Levinson
Burton J. Sutker
Andrew T. Textoris
Freshmen
Robert B. Axt
Francis F. Babb
Robert E. Balestier
Bradford L. Bigelow
Adrian J. DeYoung
Ronald C. Dittman
Frederic Graham
Paul R. Groves
Franklin M. Heany
Milton H. Henriques
Joel G. Hull
Leonard Jacoby
Clark W. King
Donald F. King
Edward H. Kottcamp
Raymond R. Maleike
Richard C. Marquardt
William R. Metzger
James P. Moffet
Ramon R. Ojeda
Jerrold M. Pachman
Boyer H. L. Royal
Francis T. Schwerin
Edward R. Smith
William L. Swenson
Robert H. Throop
Joseph B. Van Sciver
William L. Wolff
283
(^ -^
First Roiv: Scarkos, McAbee, Vogel, Schlager, Slutter, Schladitz, Ginsburg, Yohe, Nitti; Second
Row: Bogar, Messner, Page, Chase, Smoulders, Vagell, Kelly, Ells, Kenney, Hoffman, Pinkey,
Robinson, J. McGrath, Fetterman; Third Row: Frankiewich, R. McGrath, Wood, Harrison, Nice,
Lawerence, Yeaton, Braunstein, Jesup, Aronson, D. Smith.
Roger G. Slutter President
Martin A. Ginsburg Secretary-Treasurer
Roger G. Slutter Freshman Counselor
Myron S. Harkavy Freshman Cabinet
DRAVD CI
Seniors
Harlan M. Kelly
Roger G. Slutter
Juniors
Robert F. Feldman
Monroe S. Korn
Frank E. Schubert
Jeffery G. Zucker
Sophomores
Raphael S. Aronson
Robert 0. Chase
Martin A. Ginsburg
Louis J. Nitti
Daniel A. Pinkey
Marcus E. Scarkos
Francis Smulders
Leonard I
Roland R.
Alfred L.
Frederick
Robert I.
Robert S.
Alexander
George H.
Myron S.
. Vogel
Freshmen
Bogar
Brawnstein
R. Ells
Elms
Fetterman
Frankiewich
Hamilton
Harkavy
Alvan S. Harrison
David C. Hoffman
Donald G. lozia
Harold P. Jessup
Arthur H. Kenney
Richard M. Lawerence
Peter J. Longarzo
George R. McAbee
John McGrath
Rodney L. McGrath
William R. Messner
Augustus C. Miller
John A. Nice
Chester A. Page
James R. Robinson
Carl T. Schladitz
Stephen T. Schlager
James H. Schreiber
Donald H. Smith
Theodore P. Vagell
Harry G. Wood
Paul E. Yeaton
Curtis M. Yohe
William J. Zester
284
DRAVD CII
Thomas H. Asson President
Arthur Goldenberg Secretary-Treasurer
Robert H. Ambling Freshman Counselor
Lawrence Mihlon Freshman Cabinet
Seniors
Arthur Goldenberg
Allen E. Levan
Juniors
Robert J. Adler
Robert H. Ameling
Thomas H. Asson
Malvern J. Gross. Jr.
Paul H. Miller, Jr.
Paul 0. Sichert
Raymond P. Vogel
Sophomores
Leslie D. Bellows
John F. Mahoney
Donald R. Smith
Jack R. Tolnes
Freshmen
Donald H. Adickes
Bruce F. Barger
Edward F. Coffey, Jr.
Benjamin F. Diseroad, Jr.
Robert C. Gibson
William H. Hamihon
Donald L. Harris
George T. Keller
James F. Kelly
Delmont J. Kennedy, III
John D. Longbottom
Gerald E. Malanka
Robert C. McGrory
Gilbert R. McKown
Lawrence F. Million
Charles R. Sage
Robert M. Savino
Eric H. Shade, Jr.
Richard A. Steffens
Kenneth Van Doren
William Van Winkle
Robert C. Vaughn
Donald C. Vermilya
First Row Adler. DiBlasi, Malanka, Sichert, Tolnes, Asson, Vermilya, Goldenberg Harris,
Levan; Second Row: Diseroad, Schade, Savino, Kelly, Ameling, Keller McGrory, Coffey Kennedy,
Lon-^bottoni Van Winkle. Van Doren. Adickes, Bellows. Mahoney: Third Row: Steffens, Vaughn,
"' <:p1. Smith. Hamilton. Sage. McKown.
Mihl
Bar-
285
Kenneth R. Stahl President
Herman A. Joerger Secretary-Treasurer
Leif C. Beck Freshman Cabinet
Kenneth R. Stahl Freshman Counselor
DRAVD DI
Seniors
Harold E. Brown
Frank A. Cullen
Juniors
Donald M. Allardyce
Herman A. Joerger
Kenneth R. Stahl
Francis M. Wiedemeier
Sophomores
Leonard Gargiardi
A. Stewart Johnson
John J. Lawlor
George Nagle, Jr.
William L. Phillips
Fred J. Stark
Harry W. Stotz
Freshmen
Leif C. Beck
Robert D. Bracilano
Charles C. Cullen
Russell J. Gartmann
Roy K. Higgins
Alexander F. Jarossy
Edward H. Johnson
Arthur R. Kalpin
Donald G. Long
John J. Luzenski
George H. MacLean
Christopher F. Malo
Bruce L. Marra
James L. Naylor
Demetri Odiscos
Oltmann C. Oltmer
John P. Petrykanyn
John F. Previty
John R. Ritter
Clifford Veader
Richard Wiegand
James P. Williams
First Row: Johnson, Luzenski, Gagliardi, Ritter, Stahl, Coffin, Long, Higgins. Odiseos; Second
Row: Joerger. Previty, Phillips. Malo. Wiegand. Williams. Petr>'kanyn. Veader. Kalpin. Gartmann.
Brown, Johnson. Naylor: Third Rnir: Wiedemeier, Jarossv. Stark. Marra. Beck. Otmer. lawlcn.
Allardyce. Marl.aii.' Ciilhii. ( :.. lira. ilan...
286
f. "-^
First Row H.-lm^. Gehris. Bird. Lokav. Buell. Van Winckel; Second Row: Burke, Koth, Salmi,
lannotta, Fromm, Piorkowski, Samuel, Hake, Hoffman, Grossmann; Third «ow: Stewart, Levm,
Baker, Schectman, Chesman, Deitrich, Rorer, Friedman, Zauner, Swanson, Charwat; fourth
Row: Cornell, Metz, Evans, Thun, Carter, Worley, Zalewski, Lamphear, EUmger, Yonder Heiden,
Apmann, Millett.
DRAVD D-II
Ronald F. Piorkowski President
Daniel J. Hake Secretary-Treasurer
Richard Schectman Freshman Counselor
David M. Lanphear Freshman Cabinet
Juniors
Mark S. Charwat
Fred B. Chesman
Todd Cornell
Daniel J. Hake
Jack S. Rorer
Richard Schectman
Walter Zalewski
Sophomores
William Burke
Ronald Friedman
Bert Grossmann
Steve lannotta
Richard B. Koth
Ronald Piorkowski
Victor Salmi
Bruce Samuel
Fred W. Zauner
Freshmen
John R. Apmann
Gordan L. Baker
Benjamin L. Bird
Richard A. Buell
Dale C. Carter
Robert H. Deitrich
Michael C. Ellinger
Samuel G. Evans
Bernard Q. Fromm
John P. Gehris
Fred Yonder Heiden
Truman P. Helms
Kent D. Hoffman
David M. Lamphear
Ronald J. Levin
Fred Lokay
Philip Z. Metz
William J. Millett, Jr.
David W. Stewart
Ronald L. Swanson
Ferd Thun
Walter Van Winckel
Bob W. Worley
287
First Row: Kuebler, Bergen, Schanck, Roos, Scott. Griffing, Martone; Second Row: Zahdiir.
Borichewski, Jones, Wagner, Gutman, lanieri, Dolotta, Johnson; Third Row: Snyder, Sailor,
Field, Sweatman, Valentine, Harrison, Huntsman.
Edward F. Roos President
James L. Schanck Secretary-Treasurer
Robert A. Sailor Freshman Counselor
Henry W. Taylor. Jr. Freshman Cabinet
DHINKER I
Seniors
Edward F. Roos
Robert A. Sailor
George G. Scott
Juniors
Joseph C. Borichewski
James L. Schanck
Mortimer R. Shapiro
Robert A. Sweatman
Sophomores
Ted A. Dolotta
Neal R. Griffing
Peter K. Grunebaum
Steven L. Gutman
Paul C. Harrison
Orlando L. Huntsman
Robert H. Jones
Charles R. Kuebler
Freshmen
David B. Bergen
James B. Field
Carl S. Holzinser
Primo A. lanieri
Andrew C. Johnson
Willis D. Ludwig
Lloyd J. Macklowe
Michael R. Martone
William H. Snyder. HI
Henry W. Taylor, Jr.
Richard A. Valentine
R. Craig Vulkoff
Charles F. Wagner, IV
Robert T. Zahour
288
DRIIVKER IIA
A. Graham Patterson President
Richard A. Mover Secretary-Treasurer
Frank P. Yatsko Freshman Counselor
Norman L. Gasswindt Freshman Cabinet
Seniors
Arnold K. Jones
Richard A. Moyer
A. Graham Patterson
Frank P. Yatsko
Juniors
Tohy J. Balles
Fred Canova
Sophomores
Donald A. Heath
Howard E. Kessler
Frederick J. Mower
William E. Schiesser
Robert J. Sibner
Gerald L. Wapner
Freshmen
Duncan P. Aspinwall
Rodger E. Becker
Fred J. Fisch
Norman L. Gasswint, H
Walter H. Grove
Robert M. Hall
Philip H. Hartung, Jr.
James L. Jorgenson
Eugene E. Lester, Jr.
Robert P. McCormick
Walter J. Messner
Carl A. Moyer
W. Grant Peirce
Robert A. Reever
Elio P. Ridolfi
Ronald W. Swanson
First Roiv: Fisch, Jorgenson, Yatsko, Patterson, Moyer, Kessler, Canova, Becker, Reever; Second
Row: Sibner, Moyer; Third Row: Lester, Jones, Swanson, Peirce, Balles, Mower, Ridolfi, Gass-
windt. Grove; Fourth Row: Schiesser, McCormick, Messner, Hartung, Aspinwall.
289
Robert S. Knox President
Joseph E. Geusic Secretary-Treasurer
Ronald L. Keenhold Freshman Cabinet
Frank P. Yatsko Freshman Counselor
DRIIVEER IIB
Seniors
Joseph E. Geusic
Charles E. Klabunoe
Robert S. Knox
Ralph C. Leinbach
Donald E. Manza
Thomas H. Rivel
Juniors
Robert A. Wehnau
James C. Smith
Sophomores
E. Graham Bowers
Alan I. Brooks
Robert H. Daly
Wm. K. Muldoon
Freshmen
Arthur A. Anderman
Peter M. Blynn
Sheldon Boruchow
Raymond Dobbie
E. Richard Droesch
Robert A. Falcinelli
Albert Gold
John P. Goldsborough
G. Timothy Gray
Alan C. Greenley
Ronald L. Keenhold
John E. Krizan
Douglas K. Lovell
Wayne D. Parker
Herbert D. Remsen
William L. Schneider
Bruce Van Vliet
Robert H. Zimmerman
Front Row: Dobbie, Falcinelli, Gray, Smith, Wehnau, Knox, Geusic, Droesch, Keenhold; Second
Row: Daly, Brooks, Rivel, Leinbach, Boruchow, Schneider, Van Vliet, Gold, Remsen, Manza.
Parker: Back Roiv: Blynn, Anderman, Greenley, Klabunde, Lovell, Krizan, Zimmerman. Golds-
borouiih.
290
First Row: Paquette, Kressley. Ludlow, Eldridge. Miller, Bartholomew. Shaal; Second Row:
Patterson. Duhle; Third Row: Waterbor, Brent, Thomson, Murray, Gerhart, Schantz, Gorry,
Gray, Fouchaux, Hanson; Fourth Row: Bede, Hogan, Haney, Jackson, Thompson, Lares, Benner,
Franz.
DHmKER IIIA
David G. Eldridge President
H. Craig Miller Secretary-Treasurer
James R. Galbraith Freshman Counselor
Seniors
David G. Eldridge
Raymond W. Ludlow
Jlmors
James R. Galbraith
H. Craig iMiller
Eugene F. Paquette
Sophomores
Robert J. Bartholomew
Paul E. Benner
Harold E. Hanson
Richard H. Kressley
Spencer C. Schantz
Robert A. Shaal
Freshmen
James R. Bede
Jason G. Brent
Francis T. Dahle
Robert D. Fouchaux
David L. Franz
James C. Gerhart
Matthew Gorry
Charles L. Gray
James G. Haney
James A. Hogan
Frederick M. Jackson, Jr.
Rudolpho J. Lares
Ronald J. Murray
Robert D. Patterson
Robert C. Thompson
Edward T. Thomson
Alexander T. Van Rensselaer
Melvin N. Waterbor
291
First Row: Mowt-n. Lindemann, Fry, Stiehler, McAdam, Stuhr. Metz, Alwang, Schumacher.
Reilly; Second Row: Rogers, Stafford, Naughton, Ruth, Woodruff, Kilbourn, Hanlon, Miller,
Van Horn. Eberhart; Third Row: Parry, Usiin, Principe, Rowley, Partridge, Johnson, Pennington,
Green. Holzhauer, Ribbans.
David S. McAdam President
Ronald D. Stiehler Secretary-Treasurer
Charles J. Metz Scholastic Chairman
DRINKER IIIR
Seniors
David S. McAdam
Charles J. Metz
John C. Reilly
Ronald D. Stiehler
Edward P. Stuhr
Juniors
Donald F. Green
Norman H. Holzhauer
W. Robert Kilbourn
Herman C. Mowen
Sophomores
J. Roger Alwang
Raymond Miller
William R. Lindemann
Freshmen
Robert N. Eberhart, Jr.
Richard P. Fry
Franklin Johnson
Neil Hanlon
James G. Naughton
John L. Parry
Edmund B. Partridge
Peter S. Pennington
Louis J. Principe
Robert C. Ribbans
Richard A. Rogers
Robert W. Rowley
H. Morgan Ruth
Ronald J. Schumacher
Gary F. Stafford
Louis T. Uslin
Milton A. Van Horn
Lawrence M. Woodruff
292
DRmKER IV
Stanley E. Angst President
Erwin G. Meeh, Jr.
Secretary-Treasurer, Freshman Counselor
James M. Vandervalk Freshman Cabinet
Seniors
Stanley E. Angst
John N. Crane
Albert E. Fiedler
Hugh C. Jones
Donald S. Medrick
Erwin G. Meeh, Jr.
Robert C. Smith
Albert A. Stegon
Juniors
Raymond L. Brandes, Jr.
George E. Duerr, Jr.
Bruce Mordaunt
John R. Pavia
Clarence A. Reichard, Jr.
Sophomores
Walter J. Bennett
David W. Detter
Walter E. Huff
Ira S. Rosenberg
Pliillip R. Salter
Freshmen
Arthur D. Anderson
Robert A. Boguski
Donald G. Burt
Gerald R. Diener
Louis A. Dignazio
Leonard S. Dorsett
Edward B. Eichelberger
William T. Erickson
Robert H. Gorin
George W. Griffith
Richard J. Haughwout
Wilburt M. Herbener
Leigh M. Holt
Peter C. Huckins
John F. Lutz
Thomas W. Malek
William C. Mann
James McBetii
Peter M. Mitchell
George T. Mortland, Jr.
Harlan D. Peterson
Roger K. Peterson
Vartkess Proudian
Wade A. Renn
James D. Rooney
William R. Scheffiey
Fred P. Stein
Donald D. Talley
James M. Vandervalk
First Row: Proudian, Dignazio, Eichelberger, Dotter, Smith, McBeth, Gorin, Holt; Second Row:
R. Peterson, Diener, Dorsett, Mordaunt, Meeh, Angst, Rosenberg, Jones, Reichard, Huckins,
Fiedler: Third Row: Renn, Talley, Vandervalk, H. Peterson, Anderson, Boguski, Erickson,
Griffith. Rooney, Burt, Bennett: Fourth Row: Herbener, Malek, Mitchell, Stein, Stegun, Mann,
Mortland, Medrick. Salter. Lutz. Brandes.
293
John C. Diercks President
Edward S. Gregorek Secretary-Treasurer
John C. Diercks Freshman Counselor
William E. Zeiter Freshman Cabinet
PRICE HALL
Seniors
William D. Allen
Sami Atallah
Andres J. DeChene
John C. Diercks
Roland E. Grunert
Chandra S. Ram
Harley G. Selkregg, Jr.
Juniors
Edward L. Boyd
Thomas E. Davidson
Vincent F. DeCunto
Edward Doroski
Edward S. Gregorek
Daniel S. Klein
William H. Laub
Hector V. Lozano
Charles E. Saylor
Edward Swikart
George L. Ziminsky
Sophomores
M. Barry Bochner
William P. Boiling
Vincent A. Codella
Daniel J. Collins
Steve Cupschalk
Fred J. DeChene
Robert Long
Freshmen
George M. Barthel
Arthur L. Dym
Martin J. Eisenberg
John N. Francisco, Jr.
Spencer H. Fuchs
David G. Gallagher
William W. Hickey
Carl S. Holzinger
John S. Hope
Herbert C. Kammerer
Kristen 0. Kehrig
Ronald J. Kriju
Kenneth T. McKenna
Thomas J. Miller
Eric H. Natter
Robert Niederer
Dennis C. Noble
Robert M. Sapnar
William E. Siver
Donald S. Spitzer
Alan L. Stockett
Forman 0. Vanselous
Jay Wechsler
William E. Zeiter
Richard W. Ziminski
First Row: Niederer, Cupschalk, Lozano, Sapnar, Dym, DeCunto; Second Row: Long. Vanselous,
Ziminski, Davidson, Diercks, Laub, Atallah, Doroski; Third Row: Kammerer, Wechsler, Gregorek,
Fuchs, Spitzer; Fourth Row: Collins, Hickey, Ram, Noble, Klein, Miller, Natter, Allen, Eisen-
berg, McKenna, Siver. DeChene. Stockett: Fifth Roic: Holzinger. Ziminski. Selkregg. Saylor.
Grunert. Zeiter. Bocluii-r. Swikart. Gallaher. Barthel. Boiling.
' rr
294
First Row: Starr, Ericson, Scheick, Loeffler, Wolford. Reeves, Feldherr, Davidoff, Wian; Second
Row: Liuzzi, McNelis, Alter, Walsh, Houston, Droz, Hunt. Lantzy. Kusik; Third Row: Leyon,
Marshall, Gazda, Paschall, Buck, Burgln, Cassel.
RICHARDS I
Leland Wolford President
William E. Reeves Secretary-Treasurer
George C. Loeffler Freshman Counselor
William T. Burgin Freshman Cabinet
Seniors
George C. Loeffler
William E. Reeves
Juniors
Robert Drum
Robert E. Hourihan
James H. Mahoney
Edmund Scheick
Leland Wolford
Sophomores
Julian J. Clark
John H. Ericson
Carl iM. Feldherr
Leonard C. Klein
Raphael Luizzi
Stanley C. Starr, Jr.
Freshmen
William T. Alter
Champlin F. Buck, III
William T. Burgin
Robert F. Cassel
Alfred H. Davidoff, Jr.
Gerald B. Droz
Edward J. Gazda, Jr.
Richard G. Houston
William J. Hunt
John E. Kusik
David G. Lantzy
John R. Leyon
Steven H. Marshall
John A. McNelis
John F. Niffenegger
Peter B. Paschall
Edmund J. Walsh
Lee A. Wian
295
First Row: Austin, Weber, Apgar, Concilio. Gaines, Kennedy; Second Row: Burgin. Vo]ckmar.
Berry, Schilbe, Cron, Schmidt, Banghart; Third Row: Kounelias, Burde, Goldsmith. Barteau.
Williams; Fourth Row: Solomon, Van Schaik, Eberling, Gloede, Akers, Daly, Dinger, Price.
Le Van; Fifth Row: Ringgold, Gibson, Lombard, Chapman, Haggerty, linger, Westgren, Baillie.
MacDonald.
Carl G. Schilbe President
Archie W. Berry, Jr. Secretdry-Treasurer
Stephan Kounelias
Freshman Cabinet Representative
Ernest A. Volckmar Freshman Counselor
RICHARDS IIA
Seniors
John F. Barteau, Jr.
Frederic R. Dinger
Wilbur L. Gaines
John C. Goldsmith
Kenneth C. Haggerty
Carl G. Schilbe
Emil D. Schmidt
Ernest A. Volckmar
Juniors
Archie W. Berry, Jr.
Wilmot E. Chapman
George L. Cron
Daniel F. Daly, III
Paul H. Price
Sophomores
Thomas C. Gloede
Freshmen
Edwin R. Akers
Harold K. Apgar
Charles A. Austin, HI
David S. Baillie
Marcus D. Banghart
Richard A. Burde
Thomas S. Burgin
Richard V. Concilio
William E. Ebeling
Jay R. Gibson
James A. Kennedy
Stephan Kounelias
James H. Le Van, Jr.
Daniel R. Lombard
Arthur S. MacDonald
John C. Ringgold
Paul J. Solomon
Thomas E. LTnger
Harold M. Van Schaik
Edward H. Weber, HI
Robert C. Westgren
Russell H. Williams
296
RICHARDS IIR
lilCIIARD A. MiTCllKLL
President
Thurman R. K.REMSER SecreUiry-Treasitrer
Seniors
Spencer S. Bevins
Kennetli R. Eynon
Richard A. Mitchell
C. Donald Stauffer
Juniors
Philip J. Brassington
Hans C. Dreher
David H. Evans
Karl Foster
Gordon A. Kemp
Thurman R. Kremser
James W. Nessen
Sophomores
Peter J. Hynes
Charles A. Lang
Walter J. Rovvles
William J. Wessner, Jr.
Freshmen
Robert Allen
John D. Antrim
James P. Bell
David A. Bristol
Bruce G. Bryant
W. Reid Collins
David M. Graf
Howard S. Houghland, Jr.
Michael B. Hresko
William R. Ledder
Theodore C. Mack, Jr.
Martin S. Marcus
Edward A. McMullan
Robert L. Miller
Robert A. Nichols
James A. Paterson
Eugene H. Siegel
Roger M. Zahn
David K. Zierdt
First Row: Marcus, Eynon, Ledder, Rowles; Second Roiv: Zierdt, Dreher, Mitchell, Kemp,
Wessner; Third Row: Allen, Kremser, Bevins, Collins; Fourth Row: Hynes, Graf, Miller, Zahn,
Houghland, Nichols, Antrim, Foster; Fifth Row: Hresko, Stauffer, Evans, Nessen, Brassington,
Lang, Paterson.
297
Stanley A. Moore
Chester S. LaDue
Paul Niederer
Kenneth P. Heim
President
Secretary-Treasurer
Freshman Counselor
Freshman Cabinet
RICHARDS III-A
Seniors
J. David Conrad
Loren E. Fairer
Charles L. Hamilton
Stanley A. Moore
Donald A. Moyant
Paul Niederer
Thomas M. Skillman
Juniors
Richard C. Berger
Edgar Bundt
Chester S. LaDoe
William A. Jensen
Kenneth Leggett
Louis Hauschild
Sophomores
Willard Hansen
William N. Herbener
Philip R. Holloway
Anthony J. Principe
Freshmen
Ray R. Abriola
Henry 0. Benjamin
Warren C. Benzinger
Louisa Cianciulli
Paul M. Delage
Robert A. Hammond
Kenneth P. Heim
Ralph T. Heller
Weldon G. Helmus, Jr
Eugene L. Kern
Dean C. Kriebel
Donald Leggett
Theodore H. Lethen
Russell B. Mallett
A. Barry Muller
Reed T. Rollo, Jr.
Jay M. Shelly
Robert J. Sneden
Paul D. Vernes
First Row: Shelly, Gibson, LaDue, Herbener; Second Row: Kern. Hamilton, Moore, Moyant,
Farrer, Niederer, Rollo; Third Row: Heim. Mallett, Cianciulli, Lethen. Helmus, Hauschild, Ben-
zinger, Principa. Kriebel; Fourth Row: Benjamin, Holloway, Muller, Skillman, Conrad, Ham-
monfl. Ahriola.
298
First Row: Edland. Scrivner, Blake. Burd: Second Row: Mack. Helmer. Miller. Owen. Thomasset:
Third Row: Higgens. Sidikman. Creel. Bardach, Osborn, Greener. Loughran. Kime; Fourth Row:
Serphos, Helwigr Christiansen. Straat, MorreD. B. Castor. Schnioll, Krieger. Briggs. D. Castor;
Fijth Row: Biggs, Bailey, Dobbs, Pratl, Witherington, Lummis, North.
RICHARDS IIIH
Clarence J. Miller President
James Owen, Jr. Secretary-Treasurer
David Sidikman
Freshman Counselor { Whip I
Eugene T. Osborn Freshman Cabinet
Seniors
Bernard W. Castor
John F. Higgens
Clarence J. Miller
Juniors
Dean M. Dobbs
John E. Helmer
James Owen. Jr.
Robert L. Pratt
James N. Serphos
Paul B. Thomasset
Sophomores
Robert Bardach
Dean R. Castor
Allan E. Greener
Werner C. Helwig
Richard J. Loughran
David Sidikman
Freshmen
J. Robert Bailey
Sheridan C. Biggs
William T. Blake
Walter 0. Briggs
Lamar Burd
Roy Christiansen
Lawrence D. Edland
Allan B. Kime
Fred W. Krieger
Robert H. Lummis
Homer C. Mack
Richard Morrell
Eugene T. Osborn
Walter E. Schmoll
David C. Scrivner
Kent L. Straat
Frank C. Witherington
James H. North
John P. Creel
299
First Row: Kahlbaugh. Feldman; Second Row: Maginn, Smith. Spencer. Saal. Steinkamp : Third
Row: Bower, Lentz, Lebow, Williams; Fourth Row: Scott, Collin, Davis, Gehrke, Grandin,
Schock, Lord; Fifth Row: Luckfield, Bonsall, Erde, Samules, Jewell, Barlage, Shurtleff.
William T. Spencer
President
RICHARDS IV-A
Frederick A. Saal Secretary-Treasurer
William B. Barlage Freshman Whip
Robert A. Maginn Freshman Cabinet
Seniors
Robert £■. Lentz
Fritz A. Smith
William T. Spencer
Juniors
William B. Barlage
Ronald L. Bieber
Richard M. Feldman
James H. Jewell
Frederick A. Saal
R. Peter Shurtlejff
Sophomores
Allan J. Brodsky
John H. Gehrke
Edwin M. Lebow
Freshmen
Frederick M. Bonsall
Ralph W. Bower
Kenneth S. Collin
Julian W. Erde
Douglas G. Grandin
Frederick C. Kahlbaugh
John W. Lord. Ill
William J. Luckfield
Robert A. Maginn
Copeland B. Samules
Paul F. Schock
James W. Scott
Henry W. Steinkamp
D. Lee Williams
300
RICHARDS IVH
James B. Skitt
President
Anthony Albert Freshman Counselor
Warren D. Marsh Secretary
Albert N. Gardner Treasurer
WiLLL\M H. Sayre Freshman Cabinet
Seniors
Anthony Albert
Irving T. Barker
James B. Skitt
Juniors
George S. DiFrancesco
Donald A. Schindel
Sophomores
Albert N. Gardner
Warren D. Marsh, Jr.
Joel E. Margolis
Sidney J. Silver
Robert Wisniewski
Freshmen
Lincoln C. Cummings
Donald D. Geller
Peter R. Gross
Thomas K. Henderson
William R. Jackson
Ronald Price
William H. Sayre
James G. Schnell
Preston S. Seidel
Clyde N. Stover
Anthony W. Trescott
Herman Wend
Donald L. Williams
First Row: Silver, Mar«h, '^kitt. Gaidner. Albert; Seiond Row Gross, Trescott. Stover, Jackson,
Henderson, Price. Gpllei . Third Ron Margolis. Cummint^s. Seidel. Wend. Williams. Schnell.
.Savre.
301
Frank M. Townsend President
John Parisi Secretary-Treasurer
Frank M. Townsend Freshman Counselor
Eugene R. Muntean Freshman Cabinet
TAYLOR A
Seniors
Michael P. Arra
Kenneth A. Heller
Robert K. Meyer
Edward J. Molitor
Frederick G. Oelgeschlager
Bruce Solomon
Frank M. Townsend
Juniors
John Parisi
J. Andrew Rolfsen. Jr.
Irving L. Vuono
Sophomores
Beryl C. Gardner
Clifford A. Grammich
George D. Ryerson
Richard J. Vellacott
Freshmen
Clifford C. Benesh
Joel W. Burdick
Thomas Callahan
Peter M. Danforth
Steve B. Dobossy
Charles Emhardt
William Gardella
Frank J. Genther
Kent W. Hemphill
George W. Koelsch
Herbert B. Lord
Thomas McAllister
Gilbert E. Moscowitz
Eugene W. Mulvihill
Eugene R. Muntean
John Reider
Raymond Roth
Richard E. Scheid
First Row: Oelgeschlager, Parisi, Townsend, Rolfsen, Meyer; Second Row: Reider, Muntean,
Moskowitz, McAllister, McGimpser, Grammich, Mulvihill, Callahan, Dobossy; Third Row:
Hemphill, Burdick, Scheid, Soloman, Koelsch, Arra, Gardner: Fourth Row: Genther. Ryerson.
Roth, Benesh, Knust, Molitor, Vuono, Lord, Emhardt, Danforth, Gardella.
302
'm'^^-^^<.
First Roic: Marci. Chui. Dempsey. Xitsche. Moll. Xorian. Dymek. Nieto: Second Row: Barlow.
Schmelil. Cashmere. W. Jones. Barn'. Leonard. Weir. Gaden. Griffin. Hill: Third Roiv: Calafati.
konkel. .-Vrkin. Weinberg. Feinberg. Hillegass. Lauretti. Miele. Schilling. L. Jones, Curran:
Fourth Row: Whited. Wells. DeVilo, Minster, Rudolph, Poindeater. Fishback. Miller, \alant.
TAYLDH B
Thomas F. Nitsche
Edw.\rd J. Moll
Joel T. G-\den
President
Secretary-Treasurer
Freshman Cabinet
Seniors
George R. Barry
\^ alter J. Dempsey
Bruce Frankenfield
Edward J. Moll
Robert G. Schilling
Claude E. Schmehl
Juniors
\ incent Dymch
Gustavo Hieto
James Hill
\^'alter Konkel
Stanley Lundstrom
Thomas F. Nitsche
Hayne Smith
David ^ ang
Gerald >S"ells
Sophomores
Paul E. Norlan
Roger H. Poindexter
Joseph R. Sulosky
Salter Whitefield
Freshmen
Leonard R. Arkin
Donald J. Barlow
Philip C. Calafati
John J. Cashmere
Herbert Chiu
Edward E. Curran
Leonard H. Dagit
John P. DeVido
Carl M. Feinberg
Frederick C. Fishback
Joel T. Gaden
John T. Griffin
John R. Hillegass
Lincoln Jones. HI
William E. Jones
Ronald F. Lauretti
John \^'. Leonard
Frank J. Macri
Anthony P. Miele
Marvin R. Miller
Howard E. Miniter
Frederick L. Rudolph
Jay N. Valant
Paul D. \^'einberg
Hugh Weir
Richard S. "Whited
303
First Row: Stern, Davis, Trench, Goelz, Lyness; Second Row: Rose. Pierce, Ziegler. Walker,
Waggoner, Ofiesh, May, Woodward, Quigley. -Shields; Third Row: Clay, Harmon. Piergrossi,
Timko, Carrasquillo, Johns, Snyder. Hughes, Alfaro; Fourth Row: Burdick, Pucker, Battaglia.
Donecker, McMuUen, Schaaf, Beegle, Henshaw.
James W. Davis President
Ernest 0. Goelz Secretary-Treasurer
William E. Burdick Freshman Counselor
Maurice Alfaro Freshman Cabinet
TAYLOR C
Seniors
James W. Davis
Ernest 0. Goelz
Howard B. Harmon
Thomas H. May
Robert W. McMullen
John M. Ogorzalek
Maurice J. Piergrossi
Raymond E. Stern
William F. Trench
Juniors
William E. Burdick
Robert R. Donecker
Harold J. Lyness
Leonard P. Pucker
Robert G. Rose
Sophomores
Robert W. Henshaw
Paul A. Ofiesh
Freshmen
Maurice Alfaro
David G. Battaglia
Richard G. Beegle
Robert H. Carrasquillo
Edwin Clay
Richard H. Hughes
Robert Johns
Donald Pierce
Nelson J. Quigley
Donald Schaaf
Richard Shields
Bruce E. Snyder
John C. Timko
John Waggoner
Lance Walker
Douglas Woodward
George Zeigler
304
TAYLOR D
Seniors
John F. Blazik
James E. Erdman
John A. Grahn
Frederick H. Harding
Robert W. Hardy
William H. Lerch
Edward D. MacMurtrie
Maun Maung
Volkmar Niemitz
Richard L. O'Neil
Franklin Pechal
Donald F. Scherer
Robert L. Schuchman
Howard Pao-Hui Tchov
Juniors
Thomas H. F. Buttling
Thomas H. Hey
Carl E. Hultman
Sophomores
Thomas P. Gotzis
John D. Leggett
Gregory Long
Chong-Kie Don
Freshmen
John K. Aman
William R. Brady
Robert L. Busch
Nils G. Carlson
John Castles
John N. Dennis
David H. Fainblatt
Arthur R. Geiger
Volkmar Niemitz President
Edward D. MacMurtrie
Secretary-Treasurer
Robert L. Schuchman
Freshman Counselor
Arthur R. Geiger Freshman Cabinet
Robert G. Heidenreich
Philip L. Hower
Uel D. Jennings
Richard I. Kaminester
George A. Kerrick
Roger Knudson
Harry B. Levine
Bruce Miller
William A. Muirhead
Michael R. Foley
Wayne F. Rayfield
Robert L. Rosen
Charles J. Sagi
William J. Schuchart
Ian M. Scott
Richard E. Shemenske
Thomas D. Taylor
First Row: Erdman, MacMurtrie, Grahn, Niemitz, Blazik, Hey. Giotzis, Rosen; Second Row:
Paley, Muirhead, Brady, Jennings, Miller, Geiger, Taylor, Aman, Castles, Dennis, Knudson;
Third Row: Kerrick, Scherer, Buttling, Heidenreich Hardy, Carlson, Busch, O'Neil, Shemenske,
Lerch; Fourth Row: Kaminester. Tchou. Fainblatt. .Sagi, Levine, Schuchart. Huttman, Schuch-
man. Maunc. Hower. Hardins:.
305
Leroy J. Yeager President
MARVm E. Hah\ Secretary-Treasurer
Ernest Sponzilli Freshman Counselor
Theodore W. Reinbrecht
Freshman Cabinet
TAYLOR E
Seniors
Richard W. Cox
Robert W. Kievit
Kenneth G. Lunelle
Peter P. Parsons
Ernest Sponzilli
Leroy J. Yeager
Joseph P. Zangara
Juniors
Ralph E. L. Bender,
Marvin E. Hahn
Ronald C. Mackes
Herbert B. Smith
Ralph A. Thomas
Sophomores
F. LaMar Betz
William J. Budurka
Walter R. Conklin
John C. Wilroy
Freshmen
John T. Claiborne
James W. Clarke
Morton Cohn
Peter W. Crawford
Robert S. deMille
Rowan F. Dietz
William W. Fitter
Alex T. Frantz
Theodore P. Glueck
John L. Hettrick
Manual C. Hevia
George E. Minnich
Thomas J. Pratt
Tolbert V. Prowell
Theodore W. Reinbrecht
David P. Schumacher
Donald G. Lhlenburg
David M. Walton
Robert J. Zelko
First Row: Crawford. Claiborne, Zelko, Conklin, Parsons, Yeager, Hahn, Sponzilli, Cohn, Hettrick,
Walton; Second Row: Pratt, Prowell, Budurka, Minnich, Schumacher, Frantz, deMille, .Smith,
Dietz, Uhlenburg, Betz, Glueck; Ttiird Row: Zangara, Thomas, Clarke, Fitter, Kievit, Reinhrerht.
Wilroy, Bender, Mackes, Hevia,
306
I .:.■,! Row: Turner. Lear\\ Kurmes, Wahler, Bouline, Whalen; Second Row: Brugh, Spink,
Vellacott, Peterman. Allen, Stamler.
Carl V. Leaky President
Richard A. Mehnert Secretary-Treasurer
TEMPO I
Seniors
Albert H. Allen
George Bouline
Robert P. Conrad. Jr.
Ernest A. Kurmes
Carl \. Leary
Albert Michell
Charles H. 'Mahler
James Whalen
Juniors
Eiji Inouye
James H. Peterman
Sophomores
Lynn K. Brugh
Roger D. Hutchinson
Richard A. ^lehnert
Paul P. Stamler
Walter J. Spink
Nelson T. Turner
307
First Row: Hornbostel, Danziger, Heuchert, Otter, Leitch. Waike; Second Row: Fiore; Third
Row: Schirg, Weber, Worley, Monroe, Wagner, Wilson, Coon, Figdore, CoUyer, Murphy, Siegrist.
Frederick A. Otter, Jr.
Counselor-Proctor
Harold Danziger Secretary-Treasurer
TEMPO II
Seniors
Frederick A. Otter, Jr.
Freshmen
Gerald F. Collyer
Wayne P. Coon
Harold C. Danziger
Gary S. Figdore
Benny Fiore
John F. Heuchert
Daniel H. Hornbostel
Donald G. Leitch
R. Gail Monroe
Eugene C. Murphy
Robert A. Schirg
Henry L. Siegrist, Jr.
Charles W. Wagner
Raymond H. Walke, Jr.
Donald Weber
Donald K. Wilson
Joseph C. Worley
308
LEDNARD HALL
Joseph S. Falzone, President
\^"iLLiAM H. Meiggs. Vice-President
Richard W. Corney. Secretary
■^'iLLiAM F. MiRPHEV. Treasurer
bEMORS
\^ illiam F. Crosby
Jlmors
Richard ^ . Corney
Joseph 5. Falzone
\^ illiam H. Meiggs
^ illiam F. Murphey
Adam S. Tannous
T^ illiam ^ . Trumbore
Gardiner ^ . \ an Scovoc
sophomores
Frederick J. \^ arneche
\ ernon F. Searfoss
Freshmen
John P. Miner
Guy \. Potter
George J. Rebban
Arthur K. T^ ins
First Row: Corney. Falzone. Meiggs. Murphey: Second Roic: Tannous. \an Scoyoc, Crosby
Trumbore. Rev. Dean T. Stevenson: Third Row: Potter. Wing. Miner. Rebban. Wameche, Searfoss
i^fe
309
.M.l.V TIIK Mt.MSTKIt A \ It I \TliKI'lt ET Kit OF \.\TI KK
^ f
One Man Makes a Touehdoi^n
But 2,800 Students Make an Atbletic Program
r\N THE FOOTBALL FIELD, physical fitness
^'^ may make the difference lietween victory and
defeat. In life, too, the man in top physical condi-
tion has a priceless advantage. Accordinglv. Lehigh
University recognizes that as one hack or lineman
may influence the outcome of a game, so some 2,800
students will influence the world in which thev live.
Lehigh's traditional goal of training men physi-
cally as well as intellectually requires an athletic
program which can meet the varied sports interests
and abilities of its entire student body. For the
more skilled athlete there are varsitv teams in 13
sports, freshman teams in almost all of these, and
junior varsity teams in football, wrestling, liasket-
ball, swimming, and baseliall.
The intranmral sports program involves students
from dormitorv. fraternitv, interclass, town, and
independent groups. Here 11 regularly established
sports offer a chance for the average student to find
supervised, competitive exercise. Students not par-
ticipating in any organized sports must report for
regular ])hysical education classes and those with
physical limitations are given corrective exercises.
All students must swim 75 feet before graduation.
The planning, equipping, and supervising of
these coml)ined programs comprise an obligation
which Lehigh Lniversitv gladlv accepts, confident
that the interests of our country and world will be
l)est served by a well-l)alanced graduate, equal to
the responsibilities of his society.
^cAc^ 7iM4/Le/l^€tCf^
IN BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA]
310
A *l V e r t i s e r s
BETHLEHEM STEEL COMPANY
GENERAL OFFICES: BETHLEHEM, PA.
'«^
312
INDEX
A
Accounting. Dejjartnieiit of 21
Acknowledgements 335
ACTIVITIES Section begins 112
ADMINISTRATION Section begins .... 14
Admissions Office 20
ADVERTISERS Section begins 310
A. I. E. E 145
A. I. I. E 146
A. I. P 147
Air Science and Tactics, Department of . . 31
All-College Orchestra 130
Alpha Chi Rho 218
Alpha Epsilon Delta 90
Alpha Kappa Psi 148
Alpha Lambda Omega 131
Alpha Phi Omega 143
Alpha Pi Mu 91
Alpha Sigma Phi 220
Alpha Tau Omega 222
Alumni Association Officials 20
Alumni Memorial Building 2. 12
Arcadia 112
Arnold Air Society 92
A. S. C. E 149
A. S. M. E 150
Assistant to the President 17
B
Band 126
Baseball 160
Basketball 198
Beta Theta Pi 224
Biology, Department of 22
Board of Trustees 14
Brass Choir 125
Brown and White 120
Brown Key Society 133
Buildings and Grounds 20
C
Canterbury Club 140
Chapel Choir 128
Cheerleaders 213
Chemical Engineering, Department of . . . 28
Chemical Societies 151
Chemistry Building 86
Chemistry, Department of 27
Chi Epsilon 93
Chi Phi 226
Chi Psi 228
Christian Council 139
Christmas — Saucon Hall 86
Civil Engineering and Mechanics,
Department of 28
Class of 1953 34
Class of 1954 114
Class of 1955 116
Class of 1956 118
Classical Languages, Department of ... . 24
Cliff Clefs 130
Collegians 125
Coppee Hall 11
Cosmopolitan Club 155
Cross Country 169
Cyanide 94
D
Dames Club 156
Deans of Students 16
Dedication 4
Delta Chi 230
Delta Omicron Theta 95
Delta Phi 232
Deha Sigma Phi 234
Delta Tau Delta 236
Delta Upsilon 238
Dravo A-I 280
Dravo ATI 281
Dravo BT 282
313
COMPLIMENTS OF
erthold Studio
For the Finest in Year Book
Portraits • Groups • Candids
Consult Our Specialists
842 Hamilton Street Allentown, Pa.
314
INDUSTRIAL ENGRAVING
COMPANY
PHOTO-ENGRAVERS
CHURCH AND BANK STREETS
EASTON, PENNSYLVANIA
TELEPHONE: EASTON 8209
316
'A
¥■
'^^K-
m/:
n
1
1
^
■
^
N<
"
"t
-
»■■
if
. .
i
1
'- ■
^ !*-»
k*^*
M
Ice Cream . . .
for any occasion
MILK
Drink It for Health
Phone 7-5804
To Men of Lehigh . . .
Whatever Your Final Career Selection
HAJOCA CORPORATION
Stands Ready to Serve You in
Plumbing, Heating, Industrial /^^
and Refrigeration Supplies Ihl^lj
Bethlehem. Pa., Branch 1736 E. 4th Street
32 Eastern Seaboard Branches
318
Dravo B-II 283
Dravo C-I 284
Dravo C-II 285
Dravo D-I 286
Dravo D-11 287
Dravo House 315
Drinker I 288
Drinker II-A 289
Drinker Il-B 290
Drinker Ill-A 291
Drinker III-B 292
Drinker 1\ 293
Drinker. Henry Sturgis. House 87
Drown Memorial Hall 110
E
Eckfeldt, Howard, Society 135
Economics and Sociology, Department of . . 21
Education, Department of 24
Electrical Engineering, Department of . . . 29
English, Department of 25
Epitome 1953 122-124
Eta Kappa Nu 96
F
Fencing 206
Fifty-three in Review 6
Finance, Department of 22
Fine Arts, Department of 23
Flying Club 157
Football 172
G
Geology, Department of 22
German, Department of 23
Glee Club 129
Golf 166
Grace, Eugene Gifford, Hall 327
H
Hall, Robert W.. Pre-Medical Society ... 153
Health Service Staff . 18
Hillel Society 142
History and Government. Department of . . 25
Hockey 197
HONORARIES Section begins 90
I
Industrial Engineering, Department of . . . 29
Institute of Research officials 17
Intercollegiate Athletics and
Physical Education, Department of . . 30
Interdormitory Council 278
Interfaith Council 138
Interfraternity Council 216
Institute of Radio Engineers 154
K
Kappa Alpha 240
Kappa Sigma 242
L
Lacrosse 167
Lambda Chi Alpha 244
Lambda Mu Sigma 97
Lehigh Moravian Canterbury Club .... 140
Leonard Hall 309
Librarian 19
Library, Llniversity 9, 88
LIVING GROUPS Section begins .... 216
M
Mathematics and Astronomy. Department of . 26
Mechanical Engineering, Department of . . 30
Metallurgy Society 152
Military Science and Tactics, Department of . 31
Mining Engineering, Department of ... . 30
Music, Department of 24
Mustard and Cheese 136
N
Newman Club 140
Newtonian Society 98
0
Omicron Delta Kappa 99
319
I
HtB
Headquarters for Lehigh
WE WELCOME ALL
LEHIGH MEN
BETHLEHEM,
PENNSYLVANIA
BORDA'S DAIRY
R. D. 3, Wm. Penn Highway
Easton, Pa.
Phone Enterprise 1-0664
SERVING
LEHIGH
MEN
THE FINEST IN DAIRY PRODUCTS
320
Brown-Borhek
Company
LUMBER MILLWORK
HARDWARE PAINTS
UNPAINTED FURNITURE
SHADES VENETIAN BLINDS
+
Serving Bethlehem for LS3 Years
+
Phone 7-4151
Fritch Fuel
Company
Phone 7-4646
At 14 West 4rth Street
is the
Lehigh Stationery Co.,
Inc.
Wholesale and Retail
COMMERCIAL
AND
SOCIAL STATIONERY
OFFICE EQUIPMENT AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES
PLUS— CARDS FOR EVERY CARD DAY
+
Compliments of
Bricker's Bread
Phone UN 7-4127
+
322
-r^5&ut^V
^w-.'i^
t*
:\ftr^-
>.:.c
i??s^^
L--'^
-^^i^
Good Luck
CLASS OF 1953
Lehigh
University
Supply
Bureau
GOOD DAIRY PRODUCTS
+
NORBETH DAIRY
Well Executed Service
+
Proudly Serving the Community
+
Phone 7-3251
Freddie Derrico's
BARBER SHOP
"The Student's Barber Shop"
4 Barbers to Serve You
ALL EQUIPMENT STERILIZED FOR
YOUR PROTECTION
Open Daily 8-5:30
Fourth & New Streets Phone 8-0812
HERE IT IS!!
Efficient, Quality, Laundry Service at Thrifty, Low Cost
Complete! Ready Dried
REGULAR HOURS
Monday and Friday 8 A.M. to 8 P.M.
Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday 8 A.M. to 6 P.M.
Saturday 8 A.M. to 1 P.M.
LAUNDERETTE
PIERCE A. KNAUSS, Prop.
201 East Broad Street— Phone 6-2742 Bethlehem, Pa.
538 Broadway Phone 6-2822
MENNE PRINTERY. INC.
PRINTERS — PHOTO-ENGRAVING
RAISED PRINTING
+
207 W. Fourth Street Bethlehem, Pa.
Telephone 6-2352
ELECTRIC LAUNDRY &
FORNEY CLEANERS
"Deluxe quality dry cleaning"
COMPLETE DRY-CLEANING & LAUNDRY
SERVICE FOR STUDENTS' CONVENIENCE
CALL AT OUR TWO BRANCH STORES
333 New Street 233 Broadway
107c Discount
UN. 6-1332 BETHLEHEM 145 Ohio Rd.
324
p
Packard. James \^ ard. Laboratory . . 10, 331
Packer Hall 7. 317, 329
Packer Memorial Chapel 85
Pershing Rifles 100
Phi Alpha Theta 101
Phi Beta Kappa 102
Phi Delta Theta 246
Phi Eta Sigma 103
Phi Gamma Delta 248
Phi Sigma Kappa 250
Physics Building 321
Physics, Department of 27
Pi Delta Epsilon 104
Pi Kappa Alpha 252
Pi Lambda Phi 254
Pi Mu Epsilon 105
Pi Tau Sigma 106
Placement. Counseling, and Testing
Services staff 19
Political Science Assembly 144
President 15
Price Hall 294
Psi L psilon 256
Psychology, Department of 23
Public Relations staff 19
R
Registrar 17
Richards I 295
Richards H-A 296
Richards H-B 297
Richards Ill-A 298
Richards Ill-B 299
Richards IV-A 300
Richards IV-B 301
Richards, Charles Russ. House 87
Rifle 207
Romance Languages. Department of ... . 26
S
Sailing Club 134
Scabbard and Blade 107
Senior Portraits 36
SENIORS Section begins 34
Sigma Alpha Mu 258
Sigma Chi 260
Sigma Nu 262
Sigma Phi 264
Sigma Phi Epsilon 266
Soccer 189
Society of American Military Engineers . . 108
Spring Music Festival 132
Swimming 208
T
Tau Beta Pi 73
Tau Delta Phi • .... 268
Taylor A 302
Taylor B 303
Taylor C 304
Taylor D 305
Taylor E 306
Taylor Gymnasium 158
Taylor Hall 214
Tempo 1 307
Tempo II 308
Tennis 168
Theta Chi 270
Theta Delta Chi 272
Theta Kappa Phi 274
Theta Xi 276
Town Council 135
Track 170
Treasurer, Of&ce of the 18
V
Varsity ''V CluB 154
Vice-President 16
W
Westminster Fellowship 141
Williams Hall 323
WLRN 119
Wrestling 190
325
LIPKIN FURNITURE CO.
Everything for the Fraternity House
462 Main Street
BETHLEHEM. PA.
REEVES. PARVIN & CO.
101-123 East Walnut Street
ALLENTOWN. PENNSYLVANIA
Phone HE. 4-5138
Supplying Food Supplies to
Colleges, Fraternities and Institutions
Represented by Charlie Schaff
CAMPUS BARBER SHOP
420 New Street
+
Former!) Manager of the
HOTEL BETHLEHEM BARBERSHOP
Fred Casamassa, Proprietor
FAIRVIEW DAIRY
For Best Quality
+
Phone 7-2321
SPIEGEL
DISTRIBUTING COMPANY
ALE— BALLANTINE— BEER
517 Broadway Bethlehem. Pa.
Phone 7-9031
Compliments of
Morris Black & Sons, Inc.
Builders' Supplies & Specialties
BETHLEHEM ALLENTOWN
KAUFFMAN ELECTRIC CO.
Electrical Contracting & Appliances
MOTOROLA PHILCO DUMONT
25 W. Fourth St., Bethlehem, Pa.
Phone 6-0361
BROWN AND WHITE
Fountain Service
Light Lunch
2 West Fourth Street
FRANK BANKO
Beverages
PABST BLUE RIBBON
SCHAEFER BEER
Phone 7-3983
PURE FOOD RESTAURANT
13 West Broad Street
BETHLEHEM, PA.
Air Conditioned Phone 7-4211
326
HOWARD
JOHNSON'S
THE SPOT TO TAKE YOUR DATE
Union Boulevard
Between
Bethlehem and Allentown
Compliments of
KING COAL COMPANY
126 VINEYARD STREET
BETHLEHEM COAL
AND SUPPLY CO.
C. B. SWEIGARD, Prop.
COAL— FUEL OIL— FIREWOOD
OIL BURNERS— STOKERS
PHONE 6-4535
FRANK PIFF AND SON
DISTRIBUTORS OF
VALLEY FORGE— OLD READING
PRIOR— GINGER ALE— CLUB SODA
RHEINGOLD
100 Feet from Stadii
On Van Buren Street
BETHLEHEM
GLASS AND PAINT CO.
W'HOLESALE^RETAIL
WALLPAPERS— PAINTS— GLASS
VENETIAN BLINDS
117 W. 4th Street Bethlehem. Pa.
Phone 7-3211
AUTOMOBILE DEALERS OF BETHLEHEM
328
H-<.-h-
^'^.'i
^*^
l^l^fc^
a:^
/-IT^Av /'
^%^^^^^
DRAUCH & BOWLBY
Mineral Sp. Ice
Ice Cubes — Crushed Ice
56 RIVER STREET BETHLEHEM, PA.
Our Platform IV ever Closes
SWAN GRILL
"The Boys' Favorite Eating Place"
13 East Fourth Street
BETHLEHEM, PA.
THE M. & M. MARKET
The Home of Fine Foods
Supplies, Hotels, Lunchroom and Restaurants
+
4th Street and Brodhead Avenue Phones 7-3986, 7-3987
BETHLEHEM. PA.
Compliments of
Penn Coat & Apron Supply
Co., Inc.
A Complete Rental Service
ALLENTOWN. PA. . HE 4-7319
Compliments of the
COMMUNITY DINER
Compliments of
HAROLD STEPHENS CO.
ALLENTOWN, PA.
Distributors of
LEHIGH VALLEY BRANDS
Your Pledge oj Quality on Canned Foods
HEIMBACH'S
DUTCH MAID BREAD
The Freshest Thing in Town
Phone HE 3-4265
901 Tilghman Street Allentown, Pa.
Compliments of the
ROYAL RESTAURANT
7 West Fourth Street
330
pH' r
■ 1 i
^^^M%^
H 1
iH
■ II
COMPLIMENTS OF
BORDEN'S ICE CREAM CO.
Best for Less
PURITY FOOD MARKET
Special Prices to Fraternities
25 East Fourth Street
BETHLEHEM, PA.
New Way Laundry
13 Ave. & W. Union Blvd.
BETHLEHEM, PA.
Dealing tvith Lehigh Men Since 1914
ABCO PRINTERY
PRINTING AND GREETING CARDS
127 WEST FOURTH STREET
COMPLIMENTS OF
ABROM'S DELICATESSEN
SHANKWEILER'S HOTELS
Slatington Pike, Rt. 309
P.O. Orefield, Pa.
Phone AUentown EX 9995
Junction Rts. 100 and 22
P.O. Fogelsville. Pa.
Phone AUentown EX 9992
Wilson F. Shankweiler, Prop., Orefield, Pa.
FRUIT
TRIMBLE BROS.
PRODUCE
117-119-121 West Third Street
BETHLEHEM, PA.
PONDELEK'S
FLOWERS
lohn J. Gasdaska
Men's Wear of Distinction
Fourth Street at Vine
BETHLEHEM, PA.
Catering to University Since 1924
COMPLIMENTS OF
ROSS-COMMON
SPRING WATER CO.
UN 7-5815
620 lOTH AVENUE
332
it
COMPLIIVIENTS
OF A
FRIEND
PUi'tu- 6-2652
Kaplan's Poultry Market
S. KAPLAN. Prop.
Dealer in Live and Home Dressed Poultry and Eggs
Wholesale and Retail
332 East Third Street BETHLEHEM, PA.
Pianos Rented for All Occasions
Steinway and Other Famous Makes
GOODENOUGH'S
451 Main Street
MAGNAVOX AND DUMONT
Radio and Television
Phone UN 6-4142
Next to Hotel Bethlehem
Keating's Food
Market and
Restaurant
Summit & Wyandotte Sts.
Phone UN 6-3167
^
Ritz— Bowling and Billiards
10 MODERN BILLIARD TABLES
12 BOWLING ALLEYS
For Reservations Call 8-1141
222 EAST THIRD STREET
BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA
Dnion Bank and
Trust Companq
V^iC^^Pz^l^i^^^sHS^ Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
OF BETHLEHEM
333
The Servicing of School Annuals
is just as important to us as the printing of them
%%%\%W^\%\%\\%\%%W%\%\%W\%%%\\W*^WW^iW^%*
The many unknown details which "pop" up daily are entirely too much
for any one member of the staff to shoulder, so that today many schools
in the East are relying on our experienced year book men, men who have
helped many staffs. A number of schools were able to continue their pub-
lications without lowering their standards due to the efforts of these men
in building annuals within their budgets. We not only help you to pro-
duce your book at a moderate price, but also plan it so that your book
is above the average. We appreciate the opportunity to produce this
annual and wish to acknowledge the excellent cooperation received from
the members of the staff.
GOOD PRINTING TELLS AND SELLS
A properly planned and printed catalog, folder or broadside is a highly
productive "silent salesman" for your business. It tells your story, graphically
and convincingly .... sells your merchandise or service profitably. Let us
help you put good printing to work, building your business.
• Our Services include both Letterpress and Offset
THE KUTZTOUin PUBUSHinC COmPHIIV
PRINTING SERVICE SI
TWO FORTY THREE WEST MAIN STREET KUTZTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA
334
ACMDWLEDGEMEOTS
WE THANK
the Epitome staff who spent many valuable hours to make this yearbook
possible:
the Class of 1953 and its officers for their support and cooperation:
the advertisers whose generosity has gained our respect:
and particularly.
Mrs. Charles J. MoR-WEC. who uniquely seems to have the answers to
many perplexing problems:
Assistant Professor J. B. McFadden and Mr. Walton H. Hutchins. our
faculty advisors:
Mr. Charles J. Moravec. Mr. Robert F. Herrick. and Miss Lucile L.
Barrett of the Public Relations Office:
Mr. and Mrs. Rhl el Roberts of the Berthold Studio: Mr. Arnold Cirman
and Mr. Saul Bauman of the Varden Studios;
Mr. Charles H. Esser and Mr. Jacob R. Esser of the Kutztown Publish-
ing Company:
Mr. Floyd R. Lear of the Industrial Engraving Company:
and finally, the entire Lehigh Family, who has actually provided us with
the real incentive to produce this 1953 EPITOME.
THE EDITORS.
Epitome 1953 is bound in artificial leather with lettering embossed in copper. The text is
printed in 11 pt. Bodoni Book type with Bodoni Bold Italics and Eden Bold display lines on
Satin Proof coated stock.
Senior portraits and group photography were done by the Berthold Studio. AUentown. Penn-
sylvania, and the Varden Studios, Rochester, New l:ork. Engravings were supplied by the Industrial
Engraving Company, Easton, Pa. Covers were produced by the Kingskraft, Kingsport, Tennessee.
The book was printed and serviced by the Kutztown Publishing Company. Kutztown. Pennsylvania.
33c
Printed and Serviced by the Kiitztown Publishing Company
Kutztown. Pa.
11
m
m