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THE ALUMNI
QUARTERLY
Volume 83, Number
Bloomsburg State College
1
January 1983
Annual Fund
record
sets
Alumni and friends
new record
Fund.
total
in 1982
When
was
of Bloomsburg State College set a
with their contributions to the Annual
campaign ended on December
the
31,
the
$115,547.
Of that
total, $81,628
was
unrestricted gifts to the
general fund, $18,362 was designated for specific purposes, and $15,557
was earmarked for scholarships.
The corresponding figures in 1981 were $68,755 in
unrestricted gifts, $4,354 in designated contributions,
and $3,785 for scholarships - a total of $76,894.
The contributions came from over 5,200 alumni and
friends of the college. A complete report on the 1982 Annual Fund, including class totals and a listing of all contributors, will be published in the
March
edition of
THE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY.
Important changes
the Annual Fund more cost-effective,
a number of changes will be made in 1983. The most
In
order
to
make
change will be the solicitation of 1982 contributors on the approximate anniversary date of thensignificant
last gift, using first-class direct
mail and a follow-up
telephone call.
For example
an alumnus sent a contribution in
Alumni Office will mail him literature
on the 1983 Annual Fund on March 1. Sometime during
the last two weeks of March, he will receive a reminder
telephone call from the Alumni Office. The alumnus
:
If
April of 1982, the
may
send his contribution after receiving the "invitation" in the mail, or he may wait until he receives the
telephone call to make his pledge. In most cases, his
contribution will likely arrive at the Alumni Office
sometime
in April,
and that month
will
remain
niversary month. In other cases, the anniversary date
could shift one way or the other.
The new system has a number of advantages:
— It links the written, mailed message with a
telephone
— It
with each reinforcing the other.
reduces the number of mailed solicitations— in
call,
most cases— from three or four to just one.
— It guarantees each alumnus/alumna a full year
membership because the membership cards will be
dated for one year from the day the contribution is
of
received.
—
It
more evenly the Associacalendar year.
will help to distribute
tion's cash-flow during the
Over 200 students help
his an-
Phonathon
Alumni Phonathon — held in October,
— was the most successful
one ever held at BSC. Nearly $25,000 in pledges was
raised by over 200 volunteer student callers. The callers
were members of 32 campus organizations.
Recording the largest dollar amount in pledges was
the men's varsity tennis team with $2,894.07. The other
top teams were Tau Kappa Epsilon Little Sisters,
$1,245.39; Women's Choral Ensemble, $1,218.63; and the
Maroon and Gold Band, $1,210.39.
The high individual caller was Martin A. Coyne, a
senior from Hazleton, who had a total of $2,052.52. Coyne
The
1982
November and December
Solicitation of others
contributors to the Annual Fund who did not
participate in 1982 will receive a direct mail solicitation
also coordinated the tennis team's participation in the
in
February and a reminder in April. Most of these
former contributors will also receive a follow-up
phonathon.
Other participating organizations,
telephone call sometime later in the year.
Those alumni who have never contributed to the Annual Fund will receive two "invitations": in February
and in August.
were the following:
Bowling Club, Varsity Cheerleaders, Women's Swimming Team, Phi Sigma Pi, Concert Choir, Kehr Union
Program Board, Student Speech and Hearing Association, Catholic Campus Ministry, Community Government Association, Men's Swimming Team, Pi Kappa
Delta, Commuters Association, Alpha Phi Omega,
Lambda Alpha Mu, Zeta Psi Fraternity, Alpha Sigma
Alpha, Inter-Sorority Council, Circle K, Alpha Sigma
Former
Designating
For the
gifts
time, alumni will have the opportunity to
divide their gift among three categories: The Deans'
first
Fund
in
order of pledge
totals,
for Excellence (to improve and enhance academic
programs); the Athletic Scholarship Fund (to keep BSC
competitive in men and women's athletic programs),
and Unrestricted (to fund the heart of the alumni pro-
Tau, Forensic Society, Women's Recreation Association
and Co-Educational Intramurals, Women's Cross Coun-
gram, including publications, special events, student
work-study and scholarships, campus projects and
Lambda, Women's Track Team, Women's Lacrosse
Team.
Other individuals who raised more than $100 in
pledges were Marie Hollis, Lebanon; Linda Hatch,
Dushore; Sue Andrews, Park Ridge, N.J.; David Moran,
Wilkes-Barre; Mary Beth Gallagher, Warminster;
alumni services).
Alumni with questions about the Annual Fund are invited to contact the Alumni Office by letter or by calling
717-3894058.
$25,000
raises
Team, Women's Basketball Team, Montour Hall,
Project Awareness, Sigma Sigma Sigma, Phi Beta
try
Beverly Miklos, Hazleton; Rick Fenton, Lansdale; Kelli
Capparell, Clarks Summit; Bill Krieg, Flemington,
N.J.; Theresa Racek, Allentown; Tammy Marquarot,
Centralia; Sharon Wool, Shillington; Estelle Scopelliti,
Shamokin; Gail Kaucher, Reading; Carolyn Hufnagle,
Bloomsburg; Kelly Klingel, Stroudsburg; Rob Lario,
Williamsport; Brenda Beverly, West Lawn; Barbara
Seyfried, Whitehall; Theresa Anthony, Kunkletown;
David Superdock, Bloomsburg; Lisa Swartzbaugh, Hershey; Kathy Fussner, Allentown; Penny Perez, Milford;
Maggie Leiden, Altoona; John Chapin, Bloomsburg;
Grimm, Leola; Sue Cunningham, Moscow;
Dwayne Heisler, Newtown; Mike Middleton, Aston;
Marge Gillespie, Bloomsburg; Gayle Weaver, Lititz;
Colleen
Patty Kirk, Willow Grove; Terry Purcell, Mahanoy CiCyndi Rice, Mount Bethel; Dianne Gurner, Muncy;
Cheri Mausteller, Milton; May Showers, AUenwood;
ty;
Tom DiMarco, Ronkonkom,
N.Y. Robin Miller,
Catasauqua; Lisa Basci, Orangeville; Christel Pauliks,
Tafton; Dianne Uscowskas, Clarks Summit; Mary Beth
;
Murphy, Castleton, N.Y.; Chris Hunt, Williamsport;
Alan Peoples, Oakland Mills, Felicia Peters, Souderton;
Patty Piedi, Harrisburg; Sue Koenig, Denville, N.J.;
Sharon Carpitella, Warrington; Debbie Fenty, Basking
Ridge, N.J.; Donna Carter, River Vale, N.J.; Mark
Brichta, Allentown; Dianne Splendido, Wilkes-Barre;
Mary Urban, Allentown; Amy Simluns. Norristown;
Deb Kirdzik, Great Meadows, N.J.; Lori Pingitore,
Reading; Karen Brockway, Stamford, Ct.; Mary Lou
Semicek, Sunbury; April Edwards. Clarks Summit;
Jeanne Radcliff, Camp Hill; Kathy Land. Ephrata;
Marlene Prince, Pleasant Mount; Grace Wallace,
Bloomsburg.
2
News from
the
Alumni Office mailbox
George B. Fought '25 died on October 26. He taught
in Pine, Madison and Greenwood Townships. He
served as principal of the Greenwood Elementary School
1910
school
until retiring in 1964.
Fannie Brown
'10
died on September
He was a member of St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Orien-
17, 1982.
Lodge 460
F & AM,
Caldwell Consistory, Irem Temple,
and was a charter member
of Millville Fire Company. He was a member of the National Retired Teachers Association and the Pennsylvania
tal
the Columbia County Shrine,
1911
Catherine E. Garvey
State Education Association.
'11 is
Surviving are his wife, the former Virginia Walker, and
a brother, Manley Fought.
deceased.
Mary
1912
(Straub) Werkheiser
'25
recently celebrated her
The Columbia County Medical Society
presented her with a plaque "in recognition of one whose
101st
life
Florence E. (Blecker) Crouse
'12
died on
December
span indicates healthful living." Mrs. Werkheiser
Market St., Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
lives at 324
11.
The life-long resident of Danville was 91 years of age. Mrs.
Crouse was an elementary school teacher in the Danville
School District for 13 years. She was an active member of
Shiloh United Church of Christ, Chapter 186 Order of
Eastern Star, and the BSC Alumni Association. Surviving
are a daughter, a son and a sister.
birthday.
1918
1929
Criddie (Edwards) Berninger '18 died on December 20
in the Bryn Mawr Hospital. Born on April 13, 1898, in
Lansford, she was the daughter of the late Rev. Daniel Ed-
wards and Zariah Thomas Edwards. She spent many
in the Harding area, later moving to St. Davids. She
was a member of the Catawissa Methodist Church. Surviving in addition to her husband are a daughter, a son,
five grandchildren, one great-grandchild, two sisters and
years
1915
Fannie E. (Leggoe) Wandel *15 died on October 2, 1982
inSayre.Pa.
Born in Hazleton, she was a daughter of the late George
and Ella (East) Leggoe and was a member of St. Paul's
United Methodist Church. She had served on the church's
administrative board.
She was a member of the Hazleton Chapter of the Order
Eastern Star, No. 248, and both the Welliver Bible
Class and the Mary Martha Circle of St. Paul's Church.
She graduated from Hazleton High School in 1913. She
was employed as a schoolteacher between 1915 and 1922.
She was a member of the YWCA-Hazleton State General
of the
Hospital Auxiliary.
Her only survivors are a
one brother.
1920
Joseph E. Grimes '20 died on December 30. He was the
son of the late Joseph and Nora Robbins Grimes. In his
earlier years he taught high school in the
He was
District.
a
member
of the
Bloomsburg
Glad Tidings Church,
Bloomsburg.
McAlley
number of cousins.
Rath Gardner McAlley '29, who resides in Sparks,
Nevada, enjoys writing poetry and sent the following
poem to my friends and memories of Bloomsburg
1923
1
'
'
Memory Leaves
A new
elementary school in the Shikellamy School
District, Sun bury, has been named in honor
of Grace S.
Beck
'23
& *40. The 78-year-old resident of Sunbury turned
over the
Published four times a year by
your
Alumni
Bloomsburg
Association at
State College,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
At your service:
Doug Hippenstiel
'68
first
spade at dirt at the groundbreaking
ceremony in June 1981 and recently visited the completed
structure. The Distinguished Service Award of the
BSC
Alumni Association was presented to Miss Beck in 1970 in
recognition of her professional accomplishments.
Miss
to work in the school district in 1923 and
was
the elementary schools supervisor for many
years. She
retired in the late 1960s. Principal of the new
school is Ted
Beck began
Andrewlevich '62. The current elementary supervisor
Barrie Wirth '62.
is
Linda
J. Long
Alumni Records Clerk
Peggy Trathen
Bookkeeper
Eric
Thumb Program)
Dwayne Heisler
Linda Kammerdiener
Lou Maslowe
Scott Righter
Stephanie Stewart
Jeff Smith
Student Staff
And in the niches of the brain
They play a sweet yet sad refrain,
As they return and bring again
Fond memories of our lives' fast pace —
The pain, the sweetness and embrace
Of yesteryears that filled a space.
Yet through them all there shines a light,
That makes the present seem more bright,
And takes from future years the fright —
It
1924
brings bright pictures without end
Mabel P. (Carl) Lyon
Eleanor (Derr) Gilbert '24 and her husband, Fred,
observed their 50th wedding anniversary on November 26.'
Mrs. Gilbert formerly taught at the W. W. Evans School
in
Bloomsburg. They have three children, seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
Strom
Writer (Green
With little moments from the past
That fleet through time and space so fast.
The golden memories of a
Director of Alumni Affairs
Elizabeth H. LeVan
Alumni Office Secretary
Memory leaves fall thick and fast.
'24 is
deceased.
quite spectacular.
Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815.
They
live at 206
died on
November
1.
She was a
50-year member of Danville Chapter 186, Order of Eastern
Star. Surviving
Kostenbauder
is
a
sister,
Mrs. Edgar
J.
(Beatrice)
of Danville.
Ruth A. (Rarig) Bruch '29 died on November 5. She was
member of Bethany Lutheran Church, Montoursville,
Pa. She had formed the Girls' Junior Choir in the church
and was also the choir director for a number of years. She
a
was a member of the WUliamsport Music Club.
Matilda (Mensch) Waples *24 and her husband,
Russell
recently completed a 6,000-mile roundtrip
across Canada
by railroad. They report that the scenery
along the route
was
'29
retired school teacher, having taught first grade at the
First Ward School in Danville for a number of years. She
was a member of Pine Street Lutheran Church and was a
A
nephew, Atty.
Robert Buehner of Danville, is chairman of the BSC Board
of Trustees. The Gilberts live at 25 Sherwood
Drive
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Mary E. Lauver
friend.
Crabapple Lane
She once taught at the Tyson School in Columbia CounUnder the Recreation Commission, she also set up
kindergarten in Muncy and Montoursville. She taught
at
the J. George Becht School in the Loyalsock
School
ty.
District until her retirement in 1973.
Surviving are her husband, a son and two sisters.
1925
(Continued on Page 4)
ACS commends BSC
—
—
i
ib
mo
chapter
Tc Hu Rh Pd Ag Cd
In
Sn Sb
Hg
The BSC chapter of the American Chemical Society
was one of only 34 chapters in the United States judged
to be commendable by the Society Committee
on-
Tl
Pb
Chemical Education
Bl
for 1981-1982.
A
recent letter of congratulations from Stanley
Kirschner, chairman of the selection committee, to
BSC
President McCormick states that the activities of 776
chapters were reviewed, and only the above number
were given special recognition
formance.
The
m
for superior per-
Society, in
chemistry
to
its attempt to help students interested
develop attitudes of professionalism, on-
grants affiliate chapters at institutions offering
degrees in chemistry or chemical engineering.
ly
President
McCormick commended
the chemistry
department for the outstanding rating: "The students
Bloomsburg State College are fortunate to have a
chemistry faculty which is able to provide a program
Mr
of
of
high standards necessary to maintain such an accreditation. It is this kind of excellence towards
which we all
improves the quality
Bloomsburg."
strive that
CHEMICAL HONORS
of education at
—
BSC President McCormick
Pamela Sanderson, president of the BSC
the American Chemical Society, on special
congratulates
chapter of
recognition given the
local chapter. Looking on are
department chairman Roy Pointer (center) and advisors
John Plude (left) and Donald Baird.
Alumni board member remains
The following article about Edltha Eat Adams, Class
was written by Mike Stewart and appeared in
the November 12 edition of The Morning Press. Mrs.
Adams is a member of the BSC Alumni Association
Board of Directors.
of 1924,
how you could possibly make a story
would say," says 77-year-old Editha
Ent Adams, her voice strong and clear on the far end of
"Oh,
I
don't see
out of anything
Travel had been the Adamses' chief entertainment.
They had criss-crossed the country. They had followed
Abraham Lincoln's ancestors' path West, had visited
Lincoln's birthplace, his workplace, had traced his Illinois steps that would lead to the presidency. They had
crossed the ocean three times, had toured England,
Scotland and the European continent.
I
the telephone.
Indeed. Such modesty from this go-getter active in
church and community. This globe-trotting former
educator who quotes Tennyson, is conversant with the
whole of English literature and has seen all but six of
Shakespeare's plays. This living testament to the extraordinary richness, variety and vibrancy found in ordinary lives.
"Well, come on over and we'll try it," she finally tells
her caller. Good enough. Soon, she is sitting, a purring
cat on her lap, recalling in that strong voice the
highlights of her own whirlwind life
the travels, the
lessons learned, her one great love.
"I guess then we come to '65," she says. "That was
—
my husband died. It was a terrible blow to me. We
had traveled everywhere together and gone together to
school every morning for so many years. Suddenly, I
was all alone and it wasn't fun."
There is a pause. Editha Adams grips the arms of her
upholstered chair. Her eyes cloud momentarily. Then,
as a car passes outside the West Street, Bloomsburg,
home that her father built in 1899, she tells how she put
her life back together after losing, at age 61, Marion T.
Adams, the man she had known since childhood, had
gone to grade school with, to college with, and had
taught school with, she in the classroom, he as a superwhen
vising principal.
First
quite active
came work.
The bereaved woman continued teaching at Central
Columbia High School, where students had come to call
her "Granny"' which she liked because "I could tell
them things as a grandparent that I couldn't as a
parent. And talk to anyone. I never pulled any punches.
If they had a question, I answered it.
"If I hadn't had the job that first year after he died, I
don't know what I would have done. And the kids were
so supportive and kind. I just couldn't have done it
without them."
Then it came time to face private life alone.
But Marion Adams had always been the driver. "And
I was the navigator. I was the one who read the maps. I
didn't know whether I could do both. I had two choices. I
could stay home and vegetate. Or I could become my
own driver and navigator."
Happily, she did. The next year she drove — alone —
to Ontario, Canada, to a Shakespeare festival. Trips to
Arizona and the Southwest followed. Then came trips to
Hawaii and Europe, by plane. Last year, she flew to
Jerusalem for a two-week tour.
But
would have been uncharacteristic of Mrs.
who believes that "each person I meet leaves
something with me, and, conversely, I leave some of me
with those I meet" and "each thing that happens to me
opens something new" — to not stay busy, busy, busy.
She grew up in Bloomsburg and attended public
schools here, then went for two years to the thenBloomsburg State Normal School. Afterward, for two
years, she taught public school in Millville.
it
Adams
—
Then, on a senatorial scholarship, she entered Temple
in Philadelphia, learning an important lesson
"How to get around in a big city. Give me a map and
I can get around in any city. I'm not afraid of them."
After a year at Temple, she transferred to Penn State,
where she got her bachelor's and master's degrees in
English and learned another lesson
"I had a professor who was always himself. He did exactly what he
wanted to do. He taught me to be myself "
University
—
—
.
After college
Almost 83 percent
1980,
May
of the 1,101
1981
BSC graduates
and August
1981
meaningful and/or professional positions, according
report by Thomas A. Da vies, director of the Career
Development and Placement Center.
to
a
Housewife," during which she interviewed "people
associated with town projects, that sort of thing."
Since 1977 she has been a member of the advisory
board of the Columbia-Montour Area Agency on Aging.
She helps teach a Sunday School class at Wesley.
And through it all, she has carried a consuming interest
as consuming, apparently, as any of her other
wide-ranging interests — in football.
She admits that she fidgets nervously through Penn
State games. "There is nothing like Penn State to me."
—
at
83%
— 264 graduates,
—
—
j
—
-
—
"no information" graduates were deleted from
the report, the percentage would rise to 84.90.
The number of graduates, the number placed and the
percentage of graduates placed in each curriculum are
If 27
as follows
192 placed,
Business A 401, 338, 85.35%;
Business Education
37, 31, 86.11%;
Communication Disorders — 29, 28, 96.55%
Dental Hygiene
1, 1, 100%;
Early Childhood Education - 44, 38, 86.36%;
Elementary Education
96, 63, 66.31%;
Health Sciences
1, 1. 100%;
Medical Technology
18, 16, 94.11%;
Nursing
55, 55, 100%;
Public School Nursing - 1, 1. 100%;
Radiologic Technology — 2, 2, 100%
Secondary Education
37. 28, 80%;
Special Education - 115, 106 93.80%.
-
Of the 1,087 graduates who were available for placement, 900 were placed — a percentage of 82.79. Fourteen
graduates were not available for employment.
more
Church choir.
For many years, she made visits to the New York
Herald Tribune newspaper's forum on current affairs,
then lectured to civic groups upon her return.
Those talks led to a show on WCNR radio for half a
year in the early 1950s, called "Editha Adams,
Arts and Sciences
73.28%;
of
have found
teaching. After-hours, for
than 30 years, she sang in the Wesley United Methodist
Graduate placement rate
December
came
-
—
.
Allentown, and was a teacher and principal's aide
McKinJey School in Allen town.
at the
(Continued from Page 2)
1944
1930
Two anthologies
Helen (Oyer) Diehl '44 reports that she retired from
in June 1982. She taught in business departments
in Pennsylvania for 10 years and in the business department of Rim of the World High School in Lake Arrowhead,
teaching
of
poems
include works by Virginia E.
retired
teacher.
Her poem,
Cruiksbank '30, a
Fragmented. " appears in "The Family Treasury of
Great Poems" and "Miracle Upon Miracle" appears in
"Our Twentieth Century's Greatest Poems."
Miss Cruikshank has been represented in five previous
anthologies and has had several published in magazines,
including the June-July issue of Keystone Gardener. She
has won a number of contests and is a member of the
Pennsylvania Poetry Society, the Stella Woodall Poetry
Society and the National Federation of State Poetry
•
California, for 19years.
She received her master's degree from Arizona State in
Tempe. She has traveled to Alaska and Europe since retiring and plans to do a lot more traveling. She has a
daughter, Barbara, and a son, Arthur, both married and
living in California. Her husband, Andrew, died in
January 1981.
Her address is P.O. Box 203, Crest Park, Calif.
She invites any alumni visiting California to stop by.
Societies.
Her address
is
92326.
220 North Second Street, Sunbury, Pa.
17801.
1949
1932
Marvin L. Meneeley
'49
died on October
25.
He was a
Camp Hill Junior High School teacher. He was a
member of St. Peter Lutheran Church. Mechanicsburg,
retired
Rev. Oliver H. R, Rrapf '32 and Mrs. Krapf were
recognized by the Wesley United Methodist Church of
and a teacher of its adult Sunday school class. He was a
of Lowther Manor Lodge 781, R&AM, Scottish
Rite. Tall Cedars of Lebanon. Harrisburg Consistory.
Pennsylvania State Education Association and the National Education Association. Surviving are his wife, a
daughter, a son, his mother, three brothers and two
member
Bloomsburg in December in a series of services honoring
retired Wesley pastors and wives. Rev. Krapf's
hobby is
painting, and Mrs. Krapf's chief hobbies are poetry
and
music. The Krapfs have traveled extensively since their
retirement. They live at 6 West 11th Street. Bloomsburg
sisters.
Pa. 17815.
1950
1937
Stoutenburgh
Theresa Ritzo Unione '37 retired at the end of June. Mrs.
Unione taught in the schools of Pennsylvania and New
Jersey for 32 years. Upon graduating from BSC,
she
taught
the public schools of Shenandoah, Pa. for six
years. After marriage she moved to Hawthorne, N.J.,
in
where she served that school system for 26 years,
which were as department chairperson.
16 of
Under her supervision she expanded the department
from six course offerings to sixteen. She initiated a workstudy program which employers in surrounding
counties
use to the fullest. Her last contribution was beginning
a
course in word processing. The business department
of
Hawthorne High School received high commendation
from the Middle States Committee in March 1982 for
its
course offerings as well as the cohesiveness of the
Mrs. Unione has two children: Dr. Alfred J.
director of nuclear research for the
staff.
Unione,
Katherine E. (Chapin) Kump '50 recent hosted the annual get-together of the faculty and graduate students
from the master's program in communications at BSC.
He and his wife Midge are the parents of three
daughters, and they reside at 45 South 16th Street,
Allentown, Pa. 18102.
Central High School students Spencer Fisher and Kenneth Dick entertained on electric guitar. Jim Lyman '81
sang several original compositions accompanying himself
on the guitar. Ping pong matches and refreshments were
1
enjoyed by the 30 guests. Dr. Walter M. Brasch, associate
professor of English at BSC. was in charge of the gettogether.
Katherine 's mailing address
Pa. 18631.
P.O. Box 108, Mifflin-
is
ville.
1951
Empel Organization
San Francisco. Calif., and Maria Concetta Carreno.
department chairman of foreign languages at
Upper
Freehold Regional High School in Allentown,
N.J. Her
husband is director of engineering for Nabisco
Brands of
East Hanover, N.J. They are the grandparents
of three
Mrs. Unione is spending her retirement
years involved
in the Eucharistic Ministry of her church
The Uniones live at 19 Orchard Place. Hawthorne
N
J
07506.
Patricia Edwards Kirk '54 reports that her family has
been closely associated with Bloomsburg over a span of 55
years. She says the family is "very proud of our
Bloomsburg heritage and hopes it will continue for many
more years."
In 1927 her aunt, Edith R. Sitler Ruoff, was graduated
from Bloomsburg Normal School. Originally from Berwick, Mrs. Ruoff
of
grandchildren.
^
Gerald A. (Jerry) Bacon '51 has taken early retirement
from his teaching position at Northeast Bradford
High
School. He resides with his wife and son at R.D.
3, Box 277,
Towanda, Pa. 18848. Jerry would be happy to hear
from
his
BSC friends.
retired
now
lives in Fort Pierce, Florida,
from teaching. She taught both
in
and
is
Pennsylvania
and Florida.
In 1954 Patricia graduated from Bloomsburg State
Teachers College, along with her husband, Kenneth G.
Kirk. She taught several years in Forty-Fort and is now
teaching first grade in the Dallas School District.
Ken
taught in the Catawissa and Dallas School Districts, on
the
business education staff at Bloomsburg State College, and
is presently on the field staff of
the Pennsylvania
1953
Depart-
ment of Education. In August they
wedding anniversary.
will
celebrate their
25th
Dr. William H. Stoutenburgh "53 is the new
superintendent of the Allentown School District,
effective July 1,
1982. He was formerly superintendent of
the Wissahickon
School District in Ambler from July
1938
George R. Casari
'38
and
1982;
Agnes (Pinamonti)
Casari 41 report that they are
both retired now and spend
their winter vacations in
Florida. They also say they are
his wife,
grandparents since their younger
daughter had a b*hy
boy on July 15, 1982. The Casaris
live
Harper Woods, Mich.
at 19722
Woodland
48225.
1982, after a long illness.
assistant
15,
1967,
superintendent
at
June
1969;
to
30,
1, 1969 to June 30,
Wissahickon from
assistant
district
superintendent at the Washingtonville
(N.Y.) Central
School District from June 1, 1965 to March
14,
cipal of Belvidere (N.J.
1967
High School from July 1, 1961, to
May 31, 1965; elementary principal in the
Springfield
Township (Delaware County) School
District from
September 1955 to January 1960. He served as a
part-time
ple University
'40
died on August
10,
from September 1968 to June
Gary Kirk,
of
will
Pennsylvania
graduate from
in the area of
business administration.
The Kirks live at 12 Windsor Drive.
race, Dallas, Pa. 18612.
Orchard View Ter-
Tem-
Education and Doctor of Education degrees at Temple
University in 1957 and 1967 respectively. He has also completed graduate work at West Chester State College,
Pennsylvania State University and New York State
University. He has been very active in professional
and
community activities and organizations.
1959
1969.
After receiving his bachelor's degree in education
(science and math) at Bloomsburg, he earned his Master
of
Florence Stephanski Mascavage '40 died on
August 10,
1982, after a long illness. Florence, one
of the most active
members of her class, attended the 40-year reunion
in 1980
with her husband John. She lived
at 1418 Turner Street
prin-
In 1986, their son. K.
Bloomsburg University
)
associate professor of educational administration
at
1940
Florence (Stefanski) Mascavage
March
In May of this year, their daughter, Gayle
Ann Kirk, will
graduate from Bloomsburg State CoUege with a
degree in
elementary education. She will be in the last graduating
class under the name of Bloomsburg State
College.
Mary Ann Thornton Delia '59 is employed
by the Bristol
Township Schools as a teacher
of English, director of
guidance services and assistant
principal. She is active in
community
affairs,
an officer in the county Indus rial/professional management
council, and serves on
the local Little League
executive board. She and her hus-
Thomas,
10.
From
1974 to 1980. Mrs. Delia
presented the
(Continued on Page 6)
Student earns diploma, degree in same
year
MiDDnvc
JOANNE MARRONE
Bv
By
-IOANJMR"
a major."
Student Feature Writer
started when he was in the seventh
grade His
math teacher encouraged him to enter the
Johns
Hopkins University Talent Search for
the Study of
Mathematically Precocious Youth. To enter the
search
he was required to participate in the
Pre-college
Brother Andrew says he came to college
early
because "My classes in public school
were too boring I
find some college courses
just as bad." He is uncertain
what he will do after graduation:
he may go on to
graduate school, or he may look for a
It all
job.
Scholastic Aptitude Test. Out of the
2,400 seventh grade
students nation-wide taking the test, his
scores placed
him in the top 90. Although his score
did not gain him
THE ADMISSION
the
Mathematics,
summer
in the
of 1978.
So at age
13,
An-
students
THE HIGH SCHOOL student wishing to go to coUege
part-time does not have to worry
about filling out an application. All he has to do is fill
out a form from the extended programs oifice at the college
and hand it in with
three recommendations from teachers
from BSC. He currently has a 3.91 average.
Eisenberg is not the only high school student
currently
courses at BSC. There are about 20 others.
is the only high school
student attending
or guidance
counselors.
But Eisenberg
Richard Osborn, a guidance counselor
at Bloomsburg
Area High School, says it depends on the
personality of
each student whether or not he is ready
as a full-time student, according to
Ken Schnure
registrar. The others attend part-time
through the
non-degree program.
to
BSC's assistant director of
admissions, says relatively few high
school students apply for early admittance as Eisenberg
did. "If 4.500 people apply for freshman status in a
given year and five
them are interested
According
in early
admittance, that's a
to Vinovrski, the gifted
programs
lot
"
the
in
schools allow more students to
accelerate into college
faster than before. "By the time
the gifted students are
in their junior year of high
school, they have met all of
their high school requirements.
They have taken courses
such as physics and calculus, and
are left with nothing
challenging to take."
One
senior at Central Columbia. Mary
Ann Horn is
taking several courses at BSC. "I
want to be a chemical
engineer. My high school does not
have the advanced
chemistry or physics courses that I wish
to take I
thought I'd go to college to get the
courses." She hopes
to attend Perm State full time
in the
fall.
One
of her
good friends at Central Columbia, Barb
Davis, decided to take college
courses "because I felt
could handle them, I started taking
college courses
my
I
in
junior year, the
fall of 1981.
My
goal
is to
my
have
freshman year completed by the time I
start college
She hopes to enter Shippensburg State College as a sophomore
majoring in
Sharon Steiner, coordinator of the gifted
program at
Central Columbia High School, believes
college courses
provide an excellent learning opportunity
for the
psychology.
to get
my
feet
wet for when
I
gifted
"They are usually advanced in maturity and
better able to cope with things than the
average student.
They do better in a freer environment; they
can't handle the classroom. They like the
opportunity to create
and college gives the gifted student a chance to
be more
constructive."
students.
Each
of the students interviewed
college better.
agreed that they
Osborn notes that only seniors are permitted
day classes at the college, because students
go
to college full time," says
Janeen Stout, a senior at
Bloomsburg Area High School. She hopes to
attend Penn
State in the fall as a marketing major
with a minor in
psychology. She thinks she will be one
credit short
of
entering college as a second semester
freshman.
One of her classmates, Don Chomiak, agrees
with Janeen. "I thought it was a good idea to
get my foot in the
door. After my sophomore year I decided
it was time to
take a college course." He is optimistic
about attending
the Naval Academy because he has
a presidential
nomination and good Scholastic Aptitude Test
scores He
thinks taking college courses may give
him an extra
boost.
ONE STUDENT who is not currently taking a college
course but intends to take one next
semester, is
Eisenberg's 15-year-old brother, Anthony.
He is attending college early "to get a headstart,
that way when I
get out of high school I will not have to
go go to college
as long." As a high school sophomore,
he already has 15
college credits. Anthony is not sure that
course he will
be taking next semester, but it will definitely
be a
general education course.
"I take what I can in general
education courses " he
says, "for I may not be attending BSC
after I graduate
from high school. I want to do something in
the
engineering field, and BSC does not offer
engineering as
like
to attend
to be
teachers
first
subject matter It is
usually the other way around for
professors. Some professors never took an education
course."
Davis says that going from high school
teachers
writing everything out to professors
lecturing continously takes a little getting used to.
Horn says, "I expected to get everything
handed out
like in high school. Here I have
to work for things. I'm
glad I took these classes."
Bidleman observes that the pressures
on high school
students taking coUege courses is great,
especiaUy for
those like the Eisenberg brothers, who
began taking college courses in seventh and eighth
grades.
"They're fuU of fear, nerves and anxiety.
Often they
are afraid to ask questions in coUege
classes that they
would normaUy ask in their high school
classes."
"I was awfuUy scared my first few
semesters here "
Andrew Eisenberg recalls. His brother admits
to being
"a little nervous" too, when he
took his first class. "It
helped that I knew some one else had
gone through it I
wasn't the first person."
DAVIS SAYS her first class was general psychology
a
mass lecture class with about 400 other students.
That
was nice to have," she says. "I got used to
coUege
teaching that way, and
I
"Most coUege students
didn't feel intimidated."
know I'm a high school
student," says Horn. -It's usually when
they ask questions Uke 'What's your major?' or
What year are you
in''' that they find out." Davis,
Chomiak and Stout
agree, and aU four say they have found
few problems
fitting into the
don't
coUege's social environment.
Andrew Eisenberg
disagrees. "I've never had much of
worse now than ever before. I'm above
my chronological peers in inteUigence, and I'm too
young to hang around with the coUege crowd."
Receiving homework assignments from
both coUege
and high school doesn't mean these students
always
have their noses in their books. Some of them
hold parttime jobs, and most are active in the athletic
and ex-
a social
life. It's
tracurricular programs of their high schools.
Stout doesn't think that taking a coUege course
has affected her social life. She claims the key is in
organizing
her time effectively, and thinks coUege has helped
her
to
do
this.
in other
levels are
still fulfilling
their educational
requirements
major classes and one gym class a year. Seniors
who opt to attend college must still take four major
courses and a gym class at the high school.
Underclassof five
men
interested in taking college classes
must do so
at
night.
Steiner says Central Columbia follows
much the
guidelines as Bloomsburg. "It's a flexible
system.
to
go
to
According to Central Columbia's Horn, "It's hard
keeping up with both sets of classes. The time
I have
physics at the college is the same time I have
calculus
at my high school. So I can only attend
my calculus
class twice a week. I get really bogged down;
I often
have to go in assistance in calculus."
Bloomsburg High School's program is not as flexible
as Central Columbia. Students cannot take
college
courses during one of their scheduled high school
classes.
According to Chomiak, this policy limits the number
of college courses available to high school
students. He
says he can only take college courses between 1:30
and
3:30 in the afternoon, because his classes last
until 1:30
and basketball practice begins at 3:30. Chomiak wishes
he could take more: "Down here I float. I don't work
at
all. I'm bored. I float through calculus,
and physics and
English literature. CoUege is a bit more challenging."
SAM BIDLEMAN,
for
secondary enrichment coordinator
Bloomsburg High School and Middle School, points
out that a college course cannot be used to substitute for
a high school requirement, even if it is equivalent in
subject matter. According to Bidleman, "One student
took chemistry at the college when he was in ninth
grade. Now he is in eleventh grade and he finds errors
that the teacher is making
damaging situation."
Bidleman also points out
in class.
This can be a
that teaching styles differ
between high school teachers and college professors.
TRANSPORTATION to coUege can be a problem for
high school students. Anthony, who
is too young to drive
must depend on his father, WiUiam, an associate
professor of EngUsh at BSC. to drive him
to his night
courses during the faU and winter semesters.
In the
summer, he
same
Sometimes a student cannot help scheduling a college
class during one of his high school classes.
The teachers
are great about letting a student miss his
class
a college class."
full-time in the fall of 1983."
"I'm taking a course
take a course
at the college.
BERNARD VINOVRSKI,
of
who have
the academic ability to attend college
early; however, they do not want to miss
out on their
senior year." He believes a student attending
high
school and going to college part-time
gets the best of
both worlds.
receive his bachelor's degree, summa
cum laude, in
computer and information science and mathematics
BSC
BSC
is
views also provide us with the opportunity to
evaluate
the personality of the applicant, to
determine if he is
socially ready."
According to Vinovrski, "There are many gifted
his college education.
That will not be the only graduation ceremony
Eisenberg will take part in, however. Two
and a half
months after his graduation from high school, he
will
in
procedure for the gifted student is
the graduating high school senior
required with all early admittance ap-
is for
plicants and their parents or guardians.
"We want the family to think about this carefully "
says Vinovrski. "After all, the students will
never be
able to repeat the senior year of high school.
The inter-
Since that time, he has regularly taken
courses at the
college, attending the college
part-time, taking one or
two courses each semester. However,
in Eisenberg's
junior year. Central Columbia High
School allowed him
to attend BSC full-time. He is now
18, and will he
graduating from high school this June.
enrolled
it
but interview
admittance into Johns Hopkins, his outstanding
achieve-
ment did not go unnoticed.
Bloomsburg State College's Alumni Association
paid
for his first college course,
Fundamentals of
drew Eisenberg began
same as
"High school teachers are trained
and then they are trained in the
tries to
arrange his schedule to coincide
with his father's.
Horn. Davis. Chomiak and Stout wiU aU
graduate
from high school this spring with a headstart
on the
average high school graduate going to coUege.
Eisenberg wiU receive his bachelor's degree
from BSC
right before his feUow high school
graduates leave for
coUege for the first time. And his brother wiU
be going
into his junior
year of high school with 18 credits under
his belt.
CoUege is not just for the high school graduate.
If a
high school student has the ability, taking
a coUege
course can be a very rewarding experience.
6
R. Peter Beta '72 was recently named procurement
director of Metropolitan Edison Company in Reading, Pa.
He is responsible for long-range planning and the overall
1967
(Continued from Page 4)
Frank A. Thornton Memorial Award ($200) to a graduate
of Our Lady of Lourdes High School, Shamokin, who
planned to attend BSC. Occasionally helping to provide
the award were Sandra Thornton Cubbins '64 and Alice
Thornton Phillips, widow of Mr. Thornton. Mr. Thornton
was Mrs. Delia's father and served on the hoard of
trustees at BSC from 1955 until the time of his death in
operation and coordination of the purchasing and contracts functions. His address is 194 Oakmont Ct., Flying
Ferne Patricia Rarick '67 and Wilson W. Shoup were
married recently. The bride is a teacher at Southern High
School, Elysburg. Her husband is a salesman for
American General Life Insurance Company. They live in
William L. SchappeU
R.R.
Roseann Mary Sabulsky
"67 died
on July
1,
Brewer '72 and Mary K. Eberly were married
Jim is employed by Pequa Valley School District
Religious Education degree from the Southwestern Bap- as a business teacher. Mary is employed by the Office
tist Theological Seminary of Fort Worth, Texas, on
Works in Lancaster as a receptionist. They live in New
December 17.
Providence, Pa. 17560.
James William Worth
N.J. 08805.
'68
received the Master of
1973
G. Wayne Laepple '69 and his wife, Kathryn (Kiner)
Laepple '71 are the parents of a daughter, Andrea Lauren,
born on November 7. She joins a sister. Katie. The Laepples live at Rt.
3.
Box
19,
Cathy (Fiske) Gerber '73 and her husband, Glenn D.
Gerber '74 report the birth of a daughter, Amanda, bom
on March 18, 1982. Cathy is a full-time mother although
she previously worked as a social worker. Glenn is
associated with the Andrews, Dickinson & Pink Stone
Real Estate Corporation in the Delaware and Chester
County area. The Gerbers live at 812 Pleasant Hill Road,
Wallingford, Pa. 19086. They would love to hear from
alumni in this area
Robbinsville, N.C. 28771.
James
T. Prosseda '69 and his wife became the parents
daughter born on September 18. The Prossedas live at
R.D.4, Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815.
of a
Sally (Dever) Sypek '69 reports that she and her family
are living in England while her husband is on an overseas
assignment. Her address is 5 the Pines, Yarm, Cleveland,
England TS159EW. She expects
around August 1983.
Stelnhart '62 recently retired from the
United States Air Force after 20 years of military service.
At his retirement ceremony he was presented a second
J.
chief of the
Resource Management Office at the Western
Space and Missile Center at Vandenberg Air Force Base
in California. During Colonel Steinhart's
tenure at
Vandenberg, he was responsible for over half a billion
dollars worth of projects supporting missile
and satellite
launches, in addition to preparing the center for
future
shuttle operations.
Colonel Steinhart graduated from BSC in 1962 and was
commissioned a second lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force on
December
21, 1962.
He was
initially
assigned to the Office
to return
to the
U.S.
^^^^h^^^^^^^^^^^^^b
ministration.
was selected
control for the AC-130
Ron Rosso '70, wrestling coach at Columbia University,
was recognized by his colleagues recently. Ron, who has
guided the wrestling team to two straight Ivy League
championships, was named the New York State Coach of
the Year by the state's College Wrestling Coaches
Association.
at Wright-Patterson Air
responsible
for
be the chief of
Force Base in Ohio, where he was
procurement, reporting and
funding,
tracking modifications to the C-130 aircraft.
F ollowing a tour of duty with the Systems
spector General at Andrews AFB,
November
Randy L. Maoray '70 and his wife are the parents of a
daughter born on December 6. The family lives at
445
West Second St., Mt. Carmel, Pa. 17851.
Command In-
Maryland, from
1973 to
November
1975, Colonel Steinhart
Robert F. Boyer
and Marlene (Karabln) Boyer '71
September 20
who received her master's degree from
'70
the parents of a son, Travis K. on
BuckneU University, has been a business
education
teacher at Catasauqua High School since
1972. Bob who
received his master's degree from
Kutztown State' College, has been teaching at the
elementary level for the
past 13 years. He is employed by Saucon
Valley School
District. Their address is R.D.
1, Box 481-D, Macungie,
Pa. 18062.
Colonel Steinhart joined the Western Space
and Missile
in June 1977 and became the first
chief of the Resource
Management Office. Colonel
Steinhart, his wife Betty, and their
son,
William L. Derr '70 and Mary Hower Derr '68
are the
parents of a son born on November 7.
The Derrs live at SS
Country Club Drive. Bloomsburg, Pa 17815
'
Ann (Simpson) Hessel
Mollie
Michael, are
November
Pa 17821
°n
^
13
and her husband,
'73
Jerry, are the parents of a daughter. Jacquelyn. born on
1
.
The Hessels live
and
'73
Norwalk Conn
in
.
Anna Mae, became
his wife,
the parents of a daughter, Abigail Catherine, born on October 7. The baby joined a sister, Elizabeth, and a brother.
Thomas. The Heights
live
835 East Third Street,
at
Nescopeck, Pa. 18635.
1974
Bradley David Eroh
'74 and Julieann Sitler were
marThey live at West Seventh Street,
Mifflinville, Pa. 18631. Julieann is employed
by Vought Insurance Agency in Berwick. Bradley is employed
by In-
September
18.
terstate Travellers Services of Buckhorn.
Pa.
Patrice Ann (McCarthy) Kuntaler '74 and her
husband,
Richard, are the parents of a son, Rory
Patrick, born on
March 30, 1982. Pat is in her ninth year as a special
education teacher at Human Resources
School in Albertson,
N.Y. The Kuntzlers live at 36 Cromer Road,
Elmont
N Y
11003.
Snoopert Quimby
1971
(212)
730*3671.
'
P
l
-
74
and
hi* wife
™e
°Ct ° ber K1
1781 ">-
^
^
^
became the parents
Uves at
™
^
ef
^
'
h
"s *™'
Rrl-n
^
'
74
^
™<
she and
of ***lr first child,
L
A
on
0171 on 0ctober
24. 1982. JoAnne is
f"
employed by X'
the i
Greater Nanticoke Area School
District
a
g S, CIallSt Her husband is director
of the Colt
umbia County
Housing Authority and is a
1973 graduate of
gC
UVC 8t 28 E
Street Wanamie,
1
Q
9
^7
i £*
Pa
0"
0
Th ° ma8
rep0rts
herb^n^ ™^
became 016 parents
Tb ?r^
1
M.
Bras8eau
Zl^Z™
Gerald S. Frey '71 is an investment counselor
with
Chase Investors Management Corporation, 1211
Avenue of
the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10036.
Telephone
'65
was recently named
superintendent of Bensalem School
District. His contract
runs until June 30, 1986. He lives
at 63 N. Traymore Ave..
Ivy land, Pa. 18974.
*
w
,
Dampman
'
^^T
, ri
B,00msbu
•7fi
reside in Santa Maria California
1965
m
nf
?
nd
Wife Ma
ie (Marshall) Frith
K ,rth
lt f 3
son ' Jared Marshall, born on
°
n
September 14 1982.
He joins a sister. JaceUe Marie, born
Center at Vandenberg
Robert
0
was
appointed as the headquarters staff officer
for Chemical
Defense Development. In this assignment he
managed all
chemical and biological detection, protection
and decontamination projects for the Air Force.
Dr.
'^^jrhustand
k^
*
?'^'
FluCkS hve at 23 Ash Street Danv
ried on
Marlene,
to
G unship Aircraft Program
J^ZT^
^
^
Patrick T. Height
became
In 1971 Colonel Steinhart
program
dent at Geisinger Medical Center. They live in Danville
pa
November
1970
of the Air
Force Auditor General. For seven years he served as an auditor and resident auditor at bases in Ohio,
South Carolina, and Labrador, Canada. In 1967 he entered
an Air Force Institute of Technology master's degree program and was graduated from Michigan State University
in August 1968 with a master's degree in
business ad-
Dr. Timothy James McCloskey '73 and Lisa Jo Vogel
were married on October 9. The bride is employed by
Bloomsburg Hospital. The bridegroom is a pediatric resi.
Darlene J. (Yocum, Zimmerman '69 and her husband.
Gary, are the parents of a daughter born on October 12.
The family lives at R.D.3. Box 232A. Catawissa. Pa. 17820.
Meritorious Service Medal for outstanding service as
the
C.
recently.
1969
Robert
Box 640A,
Bank.
James
Col.
is
Ringtown, Pa. 17967.
John W. Liggett '72 and Doreen M. Greenwood were
married on September 25, 1982. They live at 1522 Locust
St., Reading, Pa. 19604. John was recently promoted to
operations manager of the West Lawn office of Hamilton
1968
Joan (Alper) Bukavich *62 received a master of education degree from Rutgers, the State University of New
Jersey, on May 26, 1982. She lives at 547 Central Avenue,
Lt
his wife are the parents
Their address
28.
15, 1982.
June. 1983.
Bound Brook.
and
III '72
December
of a son born on
Catawissa.
1962
Reading, Pa. 19607.
Hills,
Pa 1^3?
S
-
'
-
M
™
(Continued on Page 8)
When
some
I
sat
down with Doug Hippenstiel to discuss
ways of keeping all of you informed
Although the winter season sports are in
mid-stream
teams are off to good starts. Fan support
has
been great, with the Husky Club section
sold out for all
basketball and wrestling matches.
You may also be interested in knowing
that the Col-
different
all five
about the happenings of the Athletic
Department
throughout the year, we decided that
the best idea was
for me to communicate directly
with you through this
publication. Thus, I'm going to use
this column to keep
you updated on the progress of our athletic
program.
Since I became director of
athletics in July of
have been overwhelmed by the positive
responses
received from the alumni, community
and faculty
on almost everything we've done.
You've shown that
you genuinely care about supporting a
solid athletic program. I believe that BSC athletics, in
combination with
our outstanding academic programs,
is largely responsible for the college's excellent
reputation.
Many events have already been highlighted in
my
short tenure. One that especially
pleased me was our
very successful "ox roast" during
1982,
lege is negotiating the leasing of 15
acres of land adjacent to the upper campus which
will provide us with additional fields for intramurals,
recreation and athletics
I must take time out to
congratulate three of our
students athletes who distinguished
1
we ve
Homecoming
weekend. When the event was planned,
I had no idea of
the response that was to follow.
After seeing the super
time everyone had, there is no doubt
in my mind
that
the roast will be an annual affair.
Meeting Captain Curt
English '56, Dick Lloyd '62, and many
members of the
Class of "62 was indeed an occasion
I'll long remember.
Incidentally, the ox roast was catered
by our famous
local Hotel Magee, and the music
was provided by Tom
Austin '68, head teacher at Scott Elementary
School,
Espy, and BSC wrestling team captain,
Todd Cum'
mings.
Probably the most frequently asked question
since
taking over as A.D. concerned our football
team. It is
my
strong contention that the program is
definitely improving and will soon be recording winning
records
under Coach George Landis and his staff. The
efforts of
this season's team have generated
positive responses
from our opponents in the conference. Attendance
four
home games
at the
also reflected a positive fan response.
themselves
All-American Team.
I am pleased to report,
too, that the athletic department's move from Academic Affairs to
Student Ufe has
been well-received by not only our coaches,
but also by
our student-athletes. Thanks to two
very hard-working
men, Dr. Jerry Griff is and Dr. Jack Mulka,
the transition has been a smooth one.
By ERIC PETTIS
by saying that I not only appreciate
the financial support you've provided,
but all the other
help you have given us. Many of our
student-athletes are
now attending BSC because of your encouragement
and
perhaps, persuasion. Please continue
State College. But for Rich Lichtel, those are just
past
accomplishments.
In only two seasons as the head coach at Mechanicsburg High School, he has turned what had been a
mediocre football program into a winner. The Wildcats
were 9-2 in 1981 and are currently 10-0 thus far in 1982.
(Editor's note: This article was written before the
season was over.)
Lichtel has arisen as one of the premier coaches in the
Harrisburg area. "You have to keep it in perspective,"
he says. "You can't become obsessed with football." He
family must come before football.
Camp Hill with his wife, Bev, also a BSC
graduate, and his three children: Jeff, 11; Jason, eight;
feels that his
He
resides in
and Megan,
four.
Department. He is Gregory Paul Slocum, son
head trainer, Paul, and his wife, Millie.
December
November
The reason
in
19.
for his success is
simple —
"we
don't
pressure the kids because football at this level should be
played for fun, it shouldn't become an obsession.
Lichtel 's philosophy doesn't
time
to
change when
it
comes
teach his world cultures class to the tenth grade.
keep the kids interested," he says. "Last week
"I try to
Alumni
A
is
how
successful coach
chop sticks."
to use
important to relate the course to current
events happening in the world. "We talk about
the
it is
revolutions in South America, drug traffic in the
Middle
East, nuclear issues, or anything in the news that
interests the class," he notes.
Lichtel was the best quarterback that BSC
ever had.
Besides being the all-time leadin passer, Lichtel also
g
holds 10 other records.
"I was very fortunate to have great receivers in
invited to join
Bob
nine-day London theatre trip is being offered May
by the BSC English Department as part of a course
14-22
Study Abroad, for which undergraduate or graduate credit may be earned. Plays
chosen for the trip will span the major English
theatrical establishments such as the National Theatre,
the new Barbican arts complex that is the London home
of the Royal Shakespeare Company, the West End or
Shaftesbury theatres (comparable to New York's Broadway), and the experimental theatres like the Royal
Lichtel, but the Boston
Patriots and the Detroit Lions both offered him tryouts.
Lichtel never attended the tryouts. "I wanted first
class
treatment," he admits. "I thought I was better than I
was."
He decided to play semi-pro for the Baltimore Caps.
Lichtel once again enjoyed a successful year but he
had
regrets. "If I could do it all over I would definitely
jump
at a pro offer," he notes.
In 1969 Lichtel began his coaching career as
an assistant coach at Mechanicsburg. "Those were some tough
times because coaches came and went in a hurry, and I
London
theatre trip in
The road to a head coaching job
career was at a standstill.
was the
is
long,
and Lichtel 's
time since fifth grade that I wasn't in
football," he says. The only thing he could do was
wait.
1980 was a very long year for Lichtel, but his patience
paid off. The head coach at Mechanicsburg resigned,
and the door was open for Lichtel. After 12 years of being assistant coach, he was finally going to be at the
helm
of his
first
own team.
In his initial
campaign, Lichtel led the Wildcats
Area Conference championship.
to
their first Capital
However, Lichtel doesn't consider that his biggest accomplishment. "Eight seniors from the 1981 team went
on to reputable football colleges and some of those kids
received
scholarships," Lichtel notes.
of the 1982 squad has been a pleasant surprise for Lichtel
"they're good kids and we treat
full
The success
—
them
like individuals.
He hopes
tinue to produce quality
teams
formula will conMechanicsburg.
this
for
"Winning breeds success," he says, "and if we make
the underclassmen a part of it, then it should rub off."
He doesn't expect should rub off." He doesn't expect
next year's team to be 10-0, but the fans will expect a
winning program again and for years to come.
May
court (comparable to new York's off -of f -Broad way
of course Stratford-on-Avon.
)
and,
entitled Literary
The
would have a different job with every coach," he says.
He returned to BSC in 1974 to become the quarterback
coach. Lichtel remained at BSC until Clark Boler
replaced Ron Puhl as the new head coach. "They
brought in all new coaches and didn't ask me back."
"It
Tucker (who became an NFL all-pro) and Stan Kucharski," he notes. "And Coach Russ Houk was the
best
coach Bloomsburg ever had."
The exploits of the 1968 BSC aerial show did not go unnoticed. Scouts from many pro teams were eyeing
all
three players-Lichtel, Tucker and Kucharski.
The
Dallas Cowboys showed a great interest in Lichtel
and
even indicated that they would select him in the 1968
The Cowboys never drafted
1981. And the ten victories this season are the most by
a
Mechanicsburg team since 1954. The Wildcats will have
a chance to surpass the mark when they open the
playoffs on
feels
Corner
of our
He was born on
taught the kids
He
A.D.'s
28.
draft.
Ironically, the 1982 season was expected to be a
rebuilding year for the Wildcats due to graduation
The
to recruit for your'
of being among
the Pennsylvania Conference's finest
in all 18 sports In
the spring, the coaches and I will
be joining many of you
at area chapter meetings. We look
forward to meeting
you and renewing acquaintances. One last note:
I'd like
to welcome the newest member to
the BSC Athletic
alma mater and help us reach our goal
I
Student Feature Writer
Roger Sanders
I'd like to close
Former BSC standout
He was the leading passer in the nation in his senior
year. He is the all-time leading passer at Bloomsburg
this fall
Mike Blake. Jeanne Fetch and Deb Long
earned the
highest honor accorded a college athlete
by being
selected All- Americans. Mike, our
standout tight end
was selected as a member of the Associated
Press Little
All-American Football First Team, while
Jeanne and
Deb were picked on the NCAA Division II
Field Hockey
cost of the trip will include round trip
transporta-
and from Kennedy Airport and flights between
New York and London, hotel with continental breakfast
all
that
it
its
free
museums,
has to offer
its
in addition to the theatre,
such as
music and dance events, and the
wealth of literary and historical tradition concentrated
here.
tion to
at least five theatre tickets, a trip
to Stratford-on-Avon.'
and possibly a gathering with members of
the theatrical
profession. As in previous trips, this one is open
to noncredit participants
who may be
interested in
London and
The trip will be conducted by Dr. Susan
Rusinko professor of English. Further information
about the trip is
available from her or the English
Department office by
calling 38JM427 or 389-1429.
Reservations should be made
by January
31, 1983.
December
8
(Continued from Page 6)
The Shiners
25.
Nescopeck.Pa.
at
live
Raber Ave.,
1035
Richard Neuschwander '76 recently graduated from
Syracuse University School of Law and has passed the
Pennsylvania Bar Exam.
1975
Susan Marie Stair '76 and her husband. Gary Dean Stair
'80 are the parents of a daughter born on November 6. The
Stairs live at 203
Dorothy Lukus '75 and Wayne Levan are engaged.
Dorothy is employed Columbia Day Care Program, Inc.
and Acme Markets, both of Berwick. Her fiance is
employed by Kawneer Co. in Bloomsburg.
marketing director for Ina charter travel operator
based in Boston. She reports that she received her MBA
degree from Boston University in May 1982. She lives at 45
Ashford St., Apt. 16, Allston, Mass. 02134.
Cathy E. Poffenberger
ternational
18635.
Summerhill Avenue, Berwick, Pa.
Weekends
'78 is
Inc.,
Suzanne Sutllff Jensen '78 and David E. Jensen '81 are
the parents of a daughter, Kristi Sue, born on December
21. The Jensens live at R.D. 3. Box 423, Danville, Pa. 17821.
18603.
Todd Dennis Wenrlch
and
'78
- all
the parents of triplets
his wife recently
boys.
The family
became
lives at 1405
E, Caracas Avenue, Hershey, Pa. 17033.
Connie L. Anceravage '78 and Paul M. Yurczyk are
engaged. Connie is a facilities analyst for General
Dynamics in San Diego. Her fiance is an auditor for San
Diego Federal Savings and Loan. A June 4, 1983 wedding
in Bloomsburg is planned.
Karl H. Zimmerman '75 has been promoted in the Air
Force to the rank of first lieutenant. He is unit launch control officer with the 740th Strategic Missile Squadron.
Christina (Wright) Dunning '75and her husband, David,
are the parents of a daughter, Lauren Ashley, born on
Deborah (Flank) Hinton '78 and her husband, Glenn
Hinton '79, report the birth of a son, Ryan Joseph, born on
August 8, 1982. Their address is Box 294, Brodheadsville,
November 2. She joins a sister, Brooke Marie. The Dunnings live at 7400 Southern Drive, Columbia, Missouri
65201.
Pa. 18322.
Lynne Fae (Bauman) Greenly '75 and her husband,
Neil, are the parents of a son, Matthew Ryan, born on
November 17. The family lives at R.D. 1, Cochranton, Pa.
Laura M. Pollock
16314.
'75 and Dennis Grace '77 are the parents
daughter born on November 29. Their address is R.D. 1,
Box
had served as executive director for the Mifflin-Juniata
Donald F. Sharretts O '75 and his wife are the parents of
a daughter, Kasey Anne, born on December 20. The family lives at
R.D.
1,
unit of the
1977
183A. Shickshinny, Pa. 18655.
Box 35, Danville, Pa.
17821.
Lynne M. Williams '77 and John W. Murphy were marSeptember 11. Lynne is a programmer engineer
for Vitro Laboratories. John is a computer programmer
with the same firm. The couple live at 3107 Hewitt Avenue.
Silver Spring, Md. 20906.
ried on
Mary Jean Broody '75 M.S. and John Paul Mosca were
married recently. Mary Jean is a first grade teacher in
Crestwood School District of Mountaintop. She is also a
beauty consultant for Mary Kay Cosmetics. Her husband
is general manager and executive vice president of Aaron
Products of Wilkes-Barre. They live in Kingston, Pa.
Evelyn Baxevane '77 and Matthew J. Connell '77 were
married on November 13, 1982. Evelyn, who will keep her
name, teaches in the Denton (Texas School District. Matt
is employed at North Texas State University and has been
accepted into the doctoral program in higher education
administration at North Texas State. He plans to get a
Ph.D. Their address is 1209 Cordell, Denton, Texas 76201
)
1976
Susan (KubOis) Nesbitt '76 reports that her husband,
Dick, graduated from medical school at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia in June 1982. He accepted a
residency at Geisinger Medical Center in internal
medicine. They live at 101 Laura Drive, Apt. 2, Danville,
Pa. 17821.
Chris A. Hertig '76 recently received the designation of
Certified Protection Professional through the auspices of
the American Society for Industrial Security. Chris lives
at 777 Riverview Terrace, Apt. No. 11, Rochester, Pa.
Mary Anne
(Taylor) Haussener '77 was married recentMichael Haussener. They live at 10 Pine Lane .Willow
Street, Pa. 17584. Mary Anne has been an itinerant hearing specialist with I.U. 13 in Lancaster for five years.
ly to
JEAN GARTY
pursuing a career change in the
area of public relations/consumer affairs. She would like
to hear from alumni who are involved in this type of
business. Jean can be reached at 110
Apt.
4,
Linda M. (Bellak) Boland, '76 M.Ed lives
way Road, Flying Hills, Reading, Pa. 19607.
West
Fifth Street,
Bureau
of
'76 lives at 1117
Pa.
W
Binghamton in May 1982. She is employed by the
Binghamton City School District as an elementary learning disabilities resource room teacher at MacArthur
Elementary School. She lives at 317 Old Vestal Rd.,
Vestal,
NY. 13850.
.
John Nicholas DiBlasi Jr.
were married on October 9,
and his wife, Sally, are the parents
of a son, Geoffrey Ryan, born on October 8, 1982. Randy
has been with Air Products and Chemicals for four years.
He has received several promotions and is now the prin'76
area supervisor of the materials management
operating support department. He recently returned from
a business trip to Korea and has also traveled to South
America. The family lives at 525 South Berks St., Allencipal
town, Pa. 18104.
Ray Brewster
'7$
was
killed on
December
2
when
his car collided with a tractor trailer near
Midlothian,
Texas. Brewster was working as a salesman for Summers
Electric Co. of Dallas. Surviving are his parents; his wife,
the former Uerra Long; a son, Billy Eugene; a
brother
and a
sister.
Rae Shiner '76 and her husband, Donald W. Shiner
are the parents of a son, Joel Matthew, born on
Nikki
'79,
and Cheryl Ann Serafin
They
Odene Emory Campbell
'79
and
live in
his wife
parents of a daughter born on October
W. Main St., Bloomsburg, Pa.
Hazleton
25.
became
The family
the
lives
17815.
Karen J. (Waite) Vanderpool '79 and her husband,
Richard, became the parents of a daughter, Kathryn
Renee, born on September 20. They live at R.D.4, Arbutus
Acres, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Carl Poff
'79
demons '78 had an exhibition of her
in
the coffeehouse of the
Union from Novenber 2 through November
ed her master's degree from BSC in 1979.
25.
Kehr
She receiv-
Teresa "Terri" Bobbins '78 and Vincent Scott Carter '77
were married in a Renaissance-style wedding recently.
Terri is a communications consultant with Mountain Bell
in Denver. Vince is with the operations department of Colorado National Bank in Denver. They live at Apt. 1310,
3235 S. Parker Road, Aurora, Colo. 80014.
Rob Wintersteen '78 is the branch manager of an
engineering sales company based in Florida. His address
is
BSC
former
standout
matman, has been
wrestling coach at BSC. In addition to his
coaching duties, Carl has been hired as a health and
physical education instructor. After graduation, he
earned a master's degree in physical education at the
University of North Carolina where he also served as
assistant wrestling coach for three years.
Lorie K. (Mutchler) Sands '79 and her husband, Joseph,
are the parents of a daughter born on October 6. The family lives at R.D.2,
Brookside Village, Berwick, Pa. 18603.
Alan John Lonoconus
ried on
November
and Roxanne Long were marJohn is a teacher in Southern
Catawissa. The bride is a com-
'79
20, 1982.
Columbia High School
Billy
'79
1982.
named assistant
17603.
Sharon L. (Rupert)
Kimble
Joseph Hospital Early Childhood Education Center in
Reading, Pa. She also has been hired by the Reading
School District to coach the junior varsity girls' basketball team at Northeast Junior High School. Kathleen's address is 115 South Second St., Womelsdorf Pa. 19567.
award.
paintings and ceramics
S.
Kathleen M. Eckenroth '79 reports that she has been
employed by the Berks County Intermediate Unit as a preschool teacher since January 1980 and works at the St.
Doug Post '79 reports that he has been teaching for
three years and recently received a teacher of the year
Brenda Shaffer '78 reports that she received her
master's degree in special education from SUNY in
judicator.
Randy
1979
at 10C Fair-
a bank Road, Apt.
She is employed by the
Disability Determination as a disability ad-
Lancaster,
Marsha Del Yeager '78 and James F. Schmucker '78
were married on September 18. Jim is a government account representative for the 3M Company. They live at 606
W. James Street, Lancaster, Pa. 17603.
at 620
Lansdale. Pa. 19446. (215 ) 368-4385.
1978
John Richard Angus '76 and his wife are the parents of a
daughter born on November 13. The family lives at 85
Knapp Avenue, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Denise Muhlehem
ACS for the past four years.
Pa.
'77 is
15074.
C-304,
was recently appointed public
American Cancer Society in Her-
shey, Pa. She is responsible for coordinating the statewide
public relations program for the ACS. Laura previously
Leanne Grace
of
'78
relations director for the
in
puter operator at Geisinger Medical Center in Danville.
They live at 708 Mill St., Catawissa, Pa. 17820.
3463 Flossmoor Ave., Orlando, Fla. 32807.
Michael V. Broda '78 and Holly Marie Hons are engaged. Holly is enrolled at BSC and will graduate in 1983.
Mike is employed in Harrisburg. A June wedding is
planned.
Karen Lynn (Caplon) Haines '79 and her husband.
Mark, are the parents of a daughter, Elizabeth Dawn,
born on June 25, 1982. The family lives at 1140 Greenwich
St.,
Reading, Pa. 19604.
(Continued on Page 10)
Speech therapist wins award in Florida
Heather Harper '79, a 25-year-old Martin County
(Florida) school speech therapist, was selected as the
to leave us,"
The award
is
the state, according to Joyce Holmes, director of special
in Martin County.
Heather was chosen over junior and senior college
professors and speech therapists throughout Florida.
"This is the kind of award of which this community
education
should feel proud," said School Superintendent V. James
Navitsky. "Her fellow teachers did a lot to help her."
Heather was selected by the state association on the
basis of an examination of her work and a review of letters of recommendation. She received a special plaque
during the association's annual convention in Fort
"They actually went out
DOT
when she can attend
meetings.
Dr. Mary K. Badami is an associate professor of
speech in the Department of Speech, Mass Communication and Theatre at BSC. In addition to teaching several
is
a specialist
in inter-
communication — contact between persons or
groups who came from different backgrounds.
She has directed more than 20 workshops in intercultural awareness and communication skills for National Park Service employees. Course content focused
on equal employment opportunity for managers, intercultural and interracial sensitivity and managementlevel communication.
"I find intercultural communication intrinsically interesting," she says, adding that no one had to prod her
toward this field. She spent five years in Europe and
cultural
taught English to air traffic controllers
many.
"I watched
opportunities, so we came down and
work."
The young speech therapist said this is the first school
system in which she has worked, and that she plans to
went
to
stay.
"I asked her after she
won the award
if
she was going
She believes the white students on campus have a
the phone negotiating times
different speech courses, she
some good business
in
The parent told how Harper had taken the trouble to
consult with her daughter's doctor to discover the best
therapy that she could administer to help the child.
"The progress that both our children have made can
most
definitely be attributed to the time and effort given
by Heather," wrote the parent.
Heather lives in Port St. Lucie with her husband, Abe,
a sales representative.
communication is special
ILTIS
area of specialization
teacher of the year," Cornett said. "That
makes the honor even better as far as I am concerned."
Heather's work has the support of the parents of her
students. "She doesn't consider her profession just a
job," wrote one parent. "Heather is not only concerned
with developing their speech, but also with their
welfare."
Harper
By
of their
to select the
walls.
Student Feature Writer
It is three o'clock, and there are two other people in
line waiting to see the person behind the desk. She is on
great deal to learn from their Black classmates, and
that the college has an obligation to provide a positive
atmosphere for good interracial contact.
Along with her work in intercultural communication,
she also specializes in communication and sex roles.
Badami created
a progressive course at the University
Wisconsin (Milwaukee) called "Female and Male
In addition, she received a
$1,000 AMOCO Distinguished Teaching Award for her
work with undergraduates in this field.
of
Communication Patterns."
Badami reports
that a
group
of
women
faculty
and ad-
ministrators have met and plan to continue their
dialogue about the role of
women
on the
BSC campus. A
number of students have invited faculty and staff
them in a newly-founded BSC Women's Coalition.
"There are going
to join
to be exciting opportunities to talk
interest
about women's lives and men's lives on this campus,"
she says. "I see these as a good beginning."
A
native of
New York
bachelor's degree
City, Dr. Badami received a
(magna cum laude) from Fordham
University. She earned a master's degree in speech at
Hunter College and taught speech in the New York City
high school system for two years.
In addition to teaching in Munich for the University of
Maryland, she has held part or full-time teaching positions at the University of Virginia, Northwestern
University and Governors State University in Illinois.
She spent one semester as a visiting professor of speech
communication at Memorial University in Newfoundland, Canada.
She earned her doctoral degree in intercultural communication at Northwestern University and was at the
University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee before coming to
BSC
last year.
Munich, Ger-
educated American women
American community, ignoring the
larger German community, therefore failing to have a
intelligent,
stay within the
good intercultural experience," she observes.
During her five years in Europe, she was a radio commentator on a German and American friendship program. She also served as a guest lecturer and speaker
cultural exchange between German and American
women. This created the interest in pursuing work in intercultural communications.
Dr. Badami is concerned about some current issues at
the college. "I'm working with some faculty who work
with international students on this campus. I want to encourage American students
in
my
classes to
make
60 7HAT WAS "itXR OLD ftWENP'
MfftVpl HE SURE LET HMASelP
GO to SESP. U MUST p£ GiAP
100 pifMiY GET $TV WITH HIM
FUHHY- I F€El 9»~
UN-AN>efilCAn.
con-
She hopes that after spending some time getting to
know one another and exploring opportunities for fun on
campus and in town, the international students will feel
more welcome here. She wants American students "to
learn to appreciate the exciting discoveries you make
about the many different people who live around the
world."
t
workshops for
faculty on recognizing racism and sexism. These
workshops will include simulation games to make par-
Badami plans
ticipants
aware
to present several
of cultural differences.
A second major
concern of Dr. Badami
is
interracial
Her teaching and consulting aims to "help
white people understand that there is fundamental
racism in all of American society."
sensitivity.
THE CAR IOAH 1$ R»lD«=>FF
WE HAVE NO Oi/tJTANOtH6
pEVTf.. WE HAVE swe
/HQyPr /M «V/NGS- wE
B*/T" ITS
tact with international students."
Dr.
which
cations specialists.
Walton Beach in Florida's panhandle in October.
Heather travels the county in a yellow van converted
into a traveling speech laboratory. The vehicle's interior
is brightly painted and cartoon figures decorate the
Intercultural
'no,'
Heather said she decided to work with speech and
communications problems during her sophomore year in
college. "I had worked in a nursing home, and I had
dealt with children. I was aware of speech problems.
"I didn't want to work in the large classroom setting.
I liked the small group sessions, and I started studying
in the speech area."
Fred Cornett, program specialist for speech, hearing
and language, said Harper's award is unusual in that it
was made to her by an association of speech communi-
the highest given to speech teachers in
Spending one-half day at each school, she works with
about 20 students a day.
"These students range from slight to profoundly handicapped students," said Heather. "I like working with
the small groups."
She came to Martin County in January 1981. "My
mother-in-law lived down here. Abe (her husband) and I
had visited here often and we liked the area. There were
laughed Holmes, "and she said
pleased us."
"Outstanding Speech Teacher of the Year" for 1982 by
the Florida Speech Communications Association.
IKIAIIW MIDI* MRVICIS
tfefkrkt
CA
4470*
10
Diane Brown '81 and Mark Young were married on
September 25, 1982.
Cathy Ann Casterllne '82 and James F. Kessler Jr. '80
married recently. Cathy is employed at Shamokin Motor
Lodge. Jim is a marketing engineer for Weis Markets,
(Continued from Page 8)
Susan Scalamandre
were married on June
Melanie Joy Thomas '79 and Charles James
McCollum
were married recently. They make their home
at 2 North
Locust St., Shamokin, Pa. 17872.
'81
and James Wilkie Scales Jr
They live at 663 Belmont
Inc.
6, 1982.
Ave., Mt. Pocono. Pa. 18344.
Roxanne M. Bull
Chambersburg. Pa.
1980
'81
lives at 262
17201.
termediate Unit No.
Kevin Miller '82 has accepted a position in the computet
department of the First National Bank of Berwick. His address is 509 Broad St., Nescopeck, Pa. 18635.
She
is
South Main St., Apt 4
employed by Lincoln In-
Shelley Grozier
'82 and Frank Scarpino are engaged.
employed at the Benton Area Elementary
Loreen G. (Derr) Comstock '81 and her husband. Dan. School and Nichols Department Store. Frank is majoring
became the parents of a son, Adam Harrison, born on in civil engineering at Williamsport Area Community College and is also employed by Weis Markets.
September 30. The Comstocks live at R.D.
2, Brookside
12.
Shelley
Cathleen M. Readdy '80 lives at 65 Cheltenham
Drive
Wyomissmg. Pa. 19610. Last May she became engaged to
Anthony J. Wiencek of Reading, and the wedding
is
planned for April 23, 1983. The prospective bridegroom
is
a 1978 graduate of Villanova University and is employed
Village, Berwick, Pa. 18603.
by Western Electric in Reading. Cathy is
looking for a career in the Reading area.
tober 2. They live at 639
in the
is
Diane Susan Gansel
Amy Kleckner
process of
'81
and Carl
Roma were married on
Elm Street,
are engaged. Diane
Oc-
is
'82
and Jerome John O'Brien
Jr. "82
Jerome
a substitute teacher, and
is
employed at Leeds & Northrup of North Wales, Pa., as a
computer programmer. A June 11, 1983 wedding is
Endicott, N.Y. 13760.
planned.
Cindy (Broadt) Trapane "80 and her husband.
Steven,
are the parents of a daughter born
on January 3 1983
They live at 116 South 10th Street, Sunbury.
Pa. 17801.
1982
'
KEVIN KODISH
has been appointed assistant direcTheir
tor of communications for the
Association of Penn-
Diane P. Siebert '80 works for Scribner
Book Companies. Inc., as publicity and promotion
coordinator of
children's books. Her address is 440
East 85th Street ADt
2C. New York, N.Y. 10028.
Lynn Marie Landon '80 and Robert James Cromley
are
engaged. The wedding will take place on
October 8, 1983.
Roianne Hnnsinger '80 and Robert Pletchan '80
were
married on October 9. The bride is a certified
public accountant with Ernst and Whinney
in Reading. The
bridegroom is an accountant at Western
Electric
Com-
pany, also of Reading.
sylvania
State
'82
and University
(APSCUF) in Harrisburg. He began working
position on January 3.
in his
engineer for Kawneer Corporation of
Bloombure
Jr.
'82
are engaged. Jim is employed by JMB Real Estate
Co., Boston.
'80 and his wife, Lisa,
are the parents
son Joshua, born on October
28. The family lives at
Third Street, Box 129, Benton,
Pa. 17814.
Shoes, Inc..
a dental hygienist by the Lancaster School District.
Her
is a lawyer with the Lancaster County law
firm of
Nickolaus, Hohenadel and Chesters.
husband
Elaine Susan PeUetier '82 and Michael Scott
Slusser
were married on November 6. The bride was
employed as
a nurse at Williamsport Hospital. The
bridegroom, a
Pennsylvania State University graduate, is an instrument
technician employed by Philadelphia Electric
Co., Peach
Bottom. They live in Quarryville, Pa.
5® SEER
m
,
^
GfluId ' 81 reports
I
10, 1981
.
the
nationally
19 with
a degree
in
Va.
™
'
JS^^'SfW*'
6
P
M
&h nXn
^
81 *** 0660
?*.
at
Jeff
'81
were
is
10855
Daniel Todd Wilson '81
recently received a master
of
hbrary and information
science degree from
Stote
University of New York at
Geneseo. He
Ss acSpS a
-versilyTd
w?rk °f'"to?
0
National Migrant Special
Education
rZ5
Resource,
Training and Dissemination
Center The center
and Marshall Geiger '82 are
ennUJ g her master s de ree at
8
Marywood
Scranton. Marshall
is
employed by Ernst and Whinney,
International Public Ac
countants
in Allen town,
Pa.
Manne
S
'81
ar
i2
ment
;
McCor-
£™^
^ ^
'?,e
ve
p
r
reat ^terest in the technological
g,
Scanl0n
in the educational
COrpSl Stati0ned at
" Tech"ology developcommunity has been and will
continue to be a prime goal of
my office. As
otten the case, you are on
top of the issue."
are
Bob
is
Q uan
L T! ™
-
in
BSC will undertake a feasibility study
of advanced
technology program development
with funding support
from the Pennsylvania Department
of Education as a
part of a Commonwealth effort
to encourage high
technology educational activities.
The college was adf
C 10 000 award
°y Secretary of Education
Robert? G. Scanlon in a letter to
BSC President
'
'
ST?
for feasibility
'81
in
3 "1
"
Cheryl Marie Roulln '82 and Mikel
Robin Riley were
eC t y
eryl * a r ^tered
medical
technologist at the Geisinger
Medical Center. Her husband is a phlebotomist at Geisinger.
They reside
Advanced tech
program studied
*J
Sfl!l Schoolf of
?cSocial Welfare
College
married.
Uco Va"
77042.
Susan Kichman
'82 is
11
6
School of Law, where he is a
second-year student.
f ^Tr"^ ^
Brown
Brenda Kae Clarke '82 and Robert John
Crosetto
engaged. The wedding is planned for
December
D*kinson
Debra Ann Umstead '81 and
Robert Neiderer
married on September 11. 1982.
Their address
Meadowglen, No. 1101, Houston, Texas
Berwick, Pa. 18603.
na
West
Clarice has been
at 159
***** f °r member-
B°ard
St.,
Donna Ososkie '82 and Carl Mowery are
engaged Donis employed by H.H.
Knoebel, and Carl works for
Kawneer Aluminum Co. A fall 1983 wedding is
planned.
wa* married
the Port Je
School District since
J
and
teaches fifth grade. She is
working on
degree in education.
19811
s
she
They live
Street, Port Jervis, N.Y.
12771.
£J ^
September
her master
of
Randy Peters '82 and Brenda Hook
were married on
September 18. Randy is district
executive of the
Columbia-Montour Boy Scout Council.
Brenda is
employed at Berwick Hospital. They
live at 215 West Se-
tnSfJ"
??
Michael ?
Gould
on October
Mam
issue
Brenda Kae Clarke '82 and Robert
John Crosetto '81
were married on December 11. Bob
is serving as a lieutenant m the U.S. Marine Corps. They
live in Quantico,
cond
(
future
DiLiberto graduated on December
elementary education.
1981
to
204
school
students to develop assertive behavior skills
to deal with
peer pressure.
m
Tom
Apt
Ave.,
article deals with a systematic classroom
approach
in which the educator can help
elementary/middle
and Thomas J. Mulderig
'80 were
is employed by
Edison Brothers
Burlington. Mass. They live in
Leominster
'80
Glen
The
Debra Marie Butler '80 and David Alan
Mayers were
married recently. Both are employed by
the State Fish
Commission. They live in northern Bucks County.
Pa.
recently.
324
is
Diane Carol Remington '82 and Matthew J. Creme Jr.
were married on October 16. The couple live at 546 E.
Orange Street, Lancaster, Pa. 17602. Diane is employed as
for publication in a
distributed magazine.
Harry E. English
Judith R. Vargo
address
21801.
Richard A. DlLiberto '82 has been informed by "Early
Years," a journal for teachers, that his manuscript
entitled "Assertive Behavior for Children"
has been selected
He
of a
mamed
new
had worked for the Lewistown Sentinel
and the Pennsylvania Magazine.
James Oeste
Md.
Faculties
Kevin, who was active on student
publications at BSC,
received his degree in mass communications.
He was a
recipient of the William Teitsworth
Memorial Journalism
Scholarship. Prior to accepting his current
position, he
Kristina Rutter '82 and
mailing
Salisbury.
College
Robert W. Young '80 and Wendy
Houseknecht were
married on November 27. Wendy is
employed by Kelly
Service of Reading, Mass. Bob is an
architectural sales
works the Boston area.
Kathy Lynn Koch '82 and Michael Anthony DiLarso
were married on August 14. 1982. Kathy is employed
at
First Shore Federal Savings and Loan,
Salisbury. Md
Michael is employed at Perdue, Inc. also in
Salisbury.
is
most
Dan-
Barbara Ann Koslosky '82 and
Randall E. Rhodes '82
are engaged. Barbara is enrolled
in BSC's graduate
program in education of the hearing impaired.
Randall will
attend medical school. A 1983
wedding is planned.
Saundra Gottstein '82 and
married recently. Saundra is
School District
Tammy
RD. 4, Bloomsburg, Pa.
e"T
7
is
Tammy
'Boz'
Robbins were
a teacher in the Warrior
a dairy farmer They
Run
17815.
*-**vtuukn
'82
and
Karen S. Berger are
t
engaged.
Jeff is an accountant
for Giorgio Fool
Inc
ren
Sem
° r at BSC She ta
* u
employed aTMaple
Crest Nursing Home.
P
A 1983 wedding is planned
S^M
11
State grant aids development of M.S.N,
Special funds totalling $113,055 for
developing a
graduate program leading to the Master of
Science
to
in
Nursing degree have been awarded to BSC
by the Pennsylvania Department of Education.
In announcing the award, Secretary
of Education
Robert Scanlon said the money is being
allocated from a
special fund established by his department
to encourage
development of new graduate programs in
nursing to
serve areas of the CommonweaJth where such
programs
are not now available.
"We appreciate this support for our efforts
quality
to provide
programs responsive
service area,"
"The award
to educational needs in our
President McCormick commented
fund the start-up costs we will
BSC
will
incur
before students can be enrolled in the new
program
Given our commitment to the human services
(health)
mission in general and our Bachelor of
Science in Nursing degree program in particular, we
will
make an
commitment to providing a quality M.S.N program."
The special funding is for the 1982-1983 academic
equal
year
cover salaries for one full-time position for
one year,
and two positions for one semester. Additional
funds are
budgeted for educational supplies and other
expenses involved in establishing the program.
The M.S.N, is currently offered at seven other
tions
institu-
-
the University of Pennsylvania, Villanova
University, Widener University, College
Misericordia,
Perm State University and the University of Pittsburgh
and Edinboro State College.
"OUR PROGRAM
proposal cited the growing demand
of registered nurses in our service area
for graduate
education," said Dean Howard Macauley
of the college's
School of Professional Studies. "The M.S.N,
is the
minimum required or recommended for faculty in all
nursing programs, and we documented the
shortage in
this region of nurses with advanced
academic preparation. They are needed urgently in direct
care of patients
with complex problems, in administration,
and in
research and consultation as well as in education.
"The shortage is nationwide, and in the Commonwealth projections indicate that by 1985 there
will
be a deficit of 3,610 nurses with master's
preparation
The support by the Pennsylvania Department
of Education for graduate programs in nursing
is an effort to
reduce that shortage."
Growth and expansion of health care facilities in the
early 1970s and the anticipated shortage
of nurses led
BSC to plan and develop programs in the health care
field. The Bachelor of Science
in Nursing degree program was authorized in 1974 and the first students
were
enrolled the following year. During the
past four years
235 students have received the baccalaureate
degree in
nursing at Bloomsburg.
"With a graduate nursing program, BSC will
be able
needs of registered nurses in this region
who want to work toward the M.S.N, as well as
acto satisfy the
commodate
The following article about John
Ukleya '82, written by Frank Garner, appeared In
the
September 12, 1982 issue cf the Sunday Grit.
The career of John Ukleya, 21-year-old graduate of
Montoursville Area High School and Bloomsburg
State
College,
is off to
way the job situation is."
SO UKLEYA quit his weekend work with WCNR and
went directly from a summer internship into a full-time
executive position with "New Day Dawning."
lucky, the
He
show has been sold to stations in
Petersburg, Fla.; Corpus Christi, Texas,
and in Fresno and San Francisco, Calif. Other stations
are expected to buy the show soon.
fered the position as associate producer of the show.
"He liked the way I worked," Ukleya said. "I was
vance registration is necessary.
Madrigal Singers with String Chamber Ensemble, Friday, March 25, and Saturday, March 26, 8:15 p.m.,
Carver Hall. An evening of chamber music through song
and strings under the direction of John Master and a
guest faculty
member.
Senior Recital, Sunday, March 27, 2:30 p.m., Carver
Hall. Mary Kate Wilson and Alexandra Segers, violins.
Senior Recital, Sunday, April 10, 2:30 p.m., Carver
Hall.
Kimberly Smith, mezzo-soprano. Lucille Rosholt,
accompanist.
Women's Choral Ensemble and Husky Singers,
15, 8:15 p.m., Carver Hall. An evening
day, April
Friof
is
responsible for relaying the director's
New York
City,
where the
is
syndicated out
talent coordinator also is
Ukleya has met several well-known personalities, including Joey, through his work. While at
this
WNEP
summer, he interviewed such racing drivers as A.J.
Foyt, Tom Sneva, Gordon Johncock and Mario
Andretti.
He also talked with Dean Smith, coach of the University
of North Carolina, and Chris Ford, player with
the
Boston Celtics. The interviews were videotaped for
telecasts on WNEP, and segments of some of them
have
also been used on ESPN.
Ukleya
Although Ukleya is excited about his career, he didn't
it would be when he started college.
He ma-
know what
Communications was
major, and it turned
it is a big part of his work. He meets with the
producers of the show
Simon and Dick Heatherton of
New York City to map out strategy for the show, promotes it through advertisers and the media, meets with
stations interested in buying it, and seeks new locations
his college
out that
—
—
Spring musical events
The following events are tentatively planned by the
BSC music department for the spring semester:
Children's Concert, Tuesday, March 22, 10 a.m. and 1
p.m., Haas Center for the Arts. The annual concert is
designed specifically for the children of Bloomsburg
area schools. This year's program will feature instruments of the woodwind and brass families. John
Master conducts the College-Community Orchestra. Ad-
also
THE TALENT coordinator sets up guests who appear
on the show, and they are sent to Wilkes-Barre.
"We have to arrange for transportation and things of
that nature."
Host of "New Day Dawning" is Ray Heatherton, who
used to be radio's "Merry Mailman." His son is
a producer of the show, and his daughter is the vivacious
singer-dancer Joey Heatherton.
St.
pleting his 12 weeks internship and would be looking for
a job. As a result of their conversation, Ukleya was of-
TV career
"The syndicators contact stations, and we sell the
"We have to talk it up."
said the
WHILE CM COLLEGE, Ukleya began working at
Radio Station WCNR as an announcer. This summer,
while he got his final 12 credits by working at WNEP, he
also continued working weekends at WCNR, putting in
some 90 hours a week.
It was while he was working at WNEP in the
sports
department that he met Richard Simon, who coproduces "New Day Dawning." Ukleya had seen him
around the station and had chatted with him.
"I always talked to him," Ukleya said, "and never
knew who he was. I finally found out he was the producer of the show."
He mentioned in passing that he soon would be com-
to recruit
show," Ukleya said.
Mulberry St., Montoursville, is working on "New Day
Dawning," a talk show produced by WNEP in Wilkes-
He
which need
located.
Although he just completed work for a bachelor of
communications at Bloomsburg, he is
already associate producer of a televisiom program that
is expected to be syndicated nationally.
Ukleya, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Ukleya, 1008
Barre.
institutions
wishes to the technical staff.
The show, created in Wilkes-Barre,
arts degree in
Miami and
many
for shooting.
of
a good start.
the
master's-prepared nurses in this rural, but healthconscious area," said Lucille Gambardella,
chairperson
of the nursing department. "It will permit
registered
nurses who must continue to work to return
to college on
a part-time or full-time basis to earn the degree."
Recent graduate off to good start in
Editor's Note:
program
listed
varied choral music for both women's and men's voices
under the direction of two guest faculty members.
Spring Band Concert, Sunday, May 1, 2:30 p.m., Haas
Center. The annual presentation of varied instrumental
music by the Concert Band, Clarinet Choir, and Studio
Band. Stephen Wallace conducts the Studio Band and is
joined by a guest faculty director for the Concert Band
and Clarinet Choir.
Student Recital, Monday, May 2, 8:15 p.m., Carver
The spring semester recital by advanced music
students in the areas of piano, voice, string and wind inHall.
strument performance.
Concert Choir, Thursday, May 5, 8:15 p.m., Carver
Hall. The Concert Choir in a concert of varied music
under the directicn of a guest faculty member.
For additional information on these events, call the
Department of Music at 389-1284 between 8 a.m. and
4:30 p.m. Address written inquiries, ticket and reservation requests to Dr. Stephen C. Wallace, Chairperson,
Department of Music, Haas Center for the Arts,
Bloomsburg State College, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
jored in sociology his first year before switching to communications. He also became interested in theater and
acted in six plays with the Bloomsburg Players, including the leads in "The Male Animal;" "The Great
Magician," and "Checkpoint Charlie."
He has moved to Wilkes-Barre to devote
his
new
career.
full
time to
12
School reorganized
Elderhostel '83
The reorganization of the Department of Business Administration in the School of Business at BSC into
four
Come to Bloomsburg State College this summer for an
enjoyable, stimulating and inexpensive vacation by
enrolling in Elderhostel. For the third summer the col-
separate departments was approved at the December
meeting of the board of trustees.
lege will sponsor three separate
weeks of Elderhostel
and August 14 to 20.
a national program with some six hun-
The growth of the Business Administration Department, since its inception in 1974 as part of the School
of
June 26
Business, materially increased the responsibilities
of a
The change to the four departments
of accounting, computer and information
systems,
finance and business law, and marketing/management
dred colleges, universities, independent schools, folk
schools and other educational institutions in the United
Elderhostel
single chairperson.
was recommended by Dr. Emory Rarig, dean
school, and Dr. Larry Jones, vice president
academic affairs.
to July
is
7 to 13,
States and other countries that offer special low-cost,
short-term residential academic programs for adults 60
years of age and older.
of the
for
Elderhostelers live on the campus for a week, from
Sunday afternoon to Saturday morning in a dormitory,
eat their meals at the college cafeteria, take three
courses of an academic nature (no tests), and par-
Elected chairpersons, effective January
1. were
Associate Professor Robert Yori, accounting;
Associate
Professor Harold Frey, computer and information
systems; Professor Bernard Dill, finance and
business
law; and Professor Melvyn Woodward,
ticipate in evening activities.
The courses are specially designed for Elderhostelers,
with two in the morning and the third following lunch.
marketing/man-
agement.
The
total cost for a
courses,
Alumni wins
August
2,
is
week, including lodging, meals and
$180 per person.
June 26
trip
to
July
2
JEWISH-PALESTINIAN CONFLICT AND
AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY.
This course will exArab reacMiddle East as a confrontation area, Palestinian Liberation Organization, the Lebanon crisis,
and
United States intersts in the conflict.
Lynn VanderDoes
'82 was the winner
of a trip for two
Orlando, Florida, which was awarded
during a drawing on Homecoming in October. The trip
was provided
by the Wainwright Travel Service of Bethlehem.
Pa.
Lynn is teaching first grade in Hopatcong. N.J.,
amine
to
and
hopes to coach high school track in the
spring. She
would like to work on a master's degree in
physical
tennis.
As an undergraduate at Bloomsburg. she was
a
member and secretary of Sigma Sigma Sigma, a
resiin
member
Columbia Hall, representative and
of the Women's Recreation
Association and a
participant in the 50-year dance marathon
for two years
She also threw the javelin and discus on the
women's
varsity track and field team.
Vacancy
Salary schedule is dependent on
qualifications and experience (MFA, one year of experience
preferred, or the
equivalent). Half-year salaries start
at $7,567 for instructors and at $9,140 for assistant
professors
e Cl0Sing
for recei P l 01 applications is
April
,J? o
1983. Send resume, three letters
of reference, undergraduate and graduate school
transcripts, a sleeve of
^
1'
slides of recent creative work,
and a self-addressed
stamped envelope to Dr. Percival
R. Roberts
Chairperson, Search and Screen
Committee Department of Art, Bloomsburg State College,
Bloomsburg,
m
'
3. 17815.
Upcoming
named
events
g Coramunity Arts Council will sponsor
music events during the spring
semester
Mummenschanz, Tuesday. February
8
llJ^lwS
Gary Karr, string bass, with
I Solisti Aquflani
chamber ensemble, Sunday,
February 27
Dayton Ballet Company,
Wednesday. March 16
graduated
in
May.
1982. College officials
November
BSC^^T^
SSf, %^™»y.
a former
mTyyelrs
in
Society
m
Community Government
English; the
Human
Relations Planning ComAssociation- Commonwealth Assoication of Students College
Arts Council; and the College Judicial
Board. He is a program
assistant in the Center for
Academic Development and
is a former member of the
Husky varsity
football
team
33 a co™"nity leader
for
This
course will examine the recent literature
of both Jewish
and Christian authors who have dealt
with the complex
and perplexing questions surrounding the
Christian
reaction to the Holocaust. Christian
response at the time
and in more recent years
U Pr ° Vlde
f<>CUS f ° r
difficuJt but stimulating
top ic
of the Holocaust (1939-1945)
^
G.B.S. IN
ARMS.
This course will study George Bernard Shaw's top impish plays about the
military
"Arms
Man" and "The Devil's Disciple." focusing on
the plays as brilliant theater and
intriguing propaganda
and the
NUCLEAR ENERGY.
Retirements approved
The retirements of Donald Bashore,
psychology Barbara Ulworth, economics; Edson
Drake, history; Marie
PameU, nursing; and Robert Richey,
speech mass
communications and theatre, were
approved by the
board of trustees. Bashore. Dilworth
and Richey are
associate professors, while Pamell
is an assistant professor and Drake is a full professor.
Bashore, who will retire in August
will complete
M years in the field of education, 23 of1983,
which were
at
This course
is
an introduction
to the nature of radioactivity,
the nuclear fission process
as a source of energy, and the
design and operation of
conventional light-water nuclear/electric
systems.
August
14 to 20
JEWISH-PALESTINIAN CONFLICT AND
AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY.
amine
This course will ex-
the forces that gave rise to Zionism.
ttons. the Middle East as a
confrontation
Arab reacarea, Palestine
Liberation Organization, the Lebanon
crisis, and United
States interests in the conflict.
BIBLE LITERATURE: FOLK AND FANCY.
This is a
in readings in English from
Ruth, Songs, Job and
Ecclesiastes to compare distinctive
course
Miss Dilworth's retirement was
effective at the end of
the fall semester. She has
been employed at BSC since
August 1966, completing 16.5 years
at the college and
21.5 years in education.
classroom teaching.
^
Was
a
August
1976 and
^
eA by
nursi*6 department in
will retire at the
end
" ye3rS ™
who came
to
BSC
of this
semester
° f educat,on 80(1
31 years in the
which were at Bloomsburg.
May
field of education, 20 of
DEMAND
economic underpinnings of this administration's
economic policies The
major tenets of both demand side and
supply side
economics will be explored from
a historical and policy
perspective.
"
F^f^l™?
Elderhostel,
Elderhostel Program, contact
100 Boylston Street, Suite
200, Boston
Massachusetts 02116 or call 617-126^056.
Write to the
above address to receive a summer
1983
For
Elderhostel
specific information regarding
Elderhostel at
a
ntaC
Ge0ree A Turner
SorH^T
H
^
Coordinator, History
Department, or call
C<
"
^
T^
N0MICS: SUPPLY SIDE OR
c,5!^
SIDE?
This course will deal with the
'
;
Oil Company to the college
Recipients of the $100 scholarships
for the current colear
8
geM
Jr " WernemUle; James
rl n7h
60 " SheUey PiCrSOn Montrose
Donna
Polak, Wilkes-Barre; and
Theresa Racek,
SSfj-'i^S
qualities of popular
and learned Biblical writings
catalog.
in 1963, will retire in
Five BSC seniors, majoring in
business administraUon/accounting, are benefitting from
a $1,250 grant
of the
7 to 13
CHRISTIAN RESPONSE TO THE HOLOCAUST.
joumalism and economics and a minor in
history.
He is a member in Sigma Tau Delta, National
Honor
He mil complete
Bloomsburg on
August
Porter, who attended Central High
School in
Philadelphia, has a double major at BSC
in English/-
from the Shell
member
-
appointment
by Governor Thornburgh had been approved
by the
Richey.
dies
This course is an introduction
nature of radioactivity, the nuclear fission
process
as a source of energy
and the design and operation of
conventional light-water nuclear/electric
systems.
to the
Senate.
mittee;
in
NUCLEAR ENERGY.
received
10 that Porter's
Seniors share grant
Former teacher
This is a
readings in English from Ruth, Songs. Job and
Ecclesiastes to compare distinctive qualities of
popular
and learned Biblical writings.
student representative to the college's
He replaces Thomas Gordon who
notification on
nursing
patron information, times
and loca-
BIBLE LITERATURE: FOLK AND FANCY.
course
of Trustees.
Professor Drake also retired
at the end of the fall
semester after 32.5 years in education,
including 18.5 at
BSC He served as dean of the School of
Arts and
Sciences from 1970 to 1978, when
he asked to return to
the following
Ijtin, at 389-4409. for
named
;
in art
The Department of Art at BSC anticipates
a temporary, one-semester teaching position
for the fall 1983
semester in the area of design, computer
graphics,
video art and photography. Course
responsibilities include two sections of basic design
and one course in
computer graphics, video art or photography,
depending
upon the candidate's qualifications.
*
been
Board
and
dent assistant
Student trustee
Aaron Porter, a BSC junior from Philadelphia,
has
education or recreation and work with a
large company
interests include swimming, racquetball.
skiing
Her
the forces that gave rise to Zionism,
tions, the
5
'
;
Alleritown
Kawneer
gives
Elderhostel
717-389-1156
$1,500
Representatives of Kawneer
Company, Inc. of
Bloomsburg presented the company's
annual gift to BSC
recenUy This year's gift of
$1,500 is an increase o
$2^
80,
^
P8St yCarS the
!"
*
aZark^'fo
earmarked
for campus*k
beautification and making
campus recreation
'
facilities available to
the public
13
Gardner recognized for swimming feats
By TINA
KLAMUT
was
Student Feature Writer
She was a three-time national swimming
champion
college. She went undefeated in
dual-meet
competition
during her four years of college swimming.
She has
been out of college for almost nine years,
but her name
still remains on the record board
for the breaststroke
events at East Stroudsburg State College.
Mary Gardner, head coach
of the
ming and diving team, was honored
BSC women's swimfor her ac-
complishments as a student-athlete at ESSC
with induction into the
ESSC
Athletic Hall of
Fame
last
faU
came
as a surprise to her "because I thought
I was too
young." Young or not, Gardner's accomplishments
Gardner chose to remain with the swimming
program.
Gardner is in her ninth year as head coach
of the
swimming and diving teams. She has produced
16 swimmers and one diver who have earned a total of 95
AllAmerican certificates. Her current win-loss record
AAU
age-group national records in different
age
brackets until she was 16. She also swam
on several
Her 1982 team placed second in the AIAW Division
IH
national championships by winning all five
relay title
races
something no other college has ever done in the
history of AIAW swimming.
Department
is
of Health,
an assisPhysical
Education and Athletics, and has been
appointed director of aquatics this year. She is
also the director of
equal opportunity in sports, monitoring
the equality in
the sports programs at BSC.
"I really enjoy being on the
administrative end of the
athletic program," says Gardner.
"It has been a
challenging change for me."
Besides being a successful swimming
coach.
Gardner
-
is the mother of two children
Katie, two. and Tim
eight months. She currently resides
in Berwick with her
husband, Dean.
Although Gardner's formal competitive swimming
career is over, she still plans to swim
in the master's
program (for those over 25) when she has more
time
For now, her induction into the ESSC HaU of
Fame is
the finale of a very rewarding and
successful swimming
Gardner.
at
ESSC make her worthy of the honor.
A NATIVE of Hatboro, Gardner began her swimming
career at the age of eight. Swimming competitively,
she
held
In addition to her coaching
position, she
tant professor in the
stands at 54-22.
"My coaching career has been very satisfying and
rewarding, and the reason is the student-athletes
I have
been fortunate enough to have had," says
was a very rewarding finale for a memorable
swimming career," says Gardner. The induction
"It
ESSC
in college.
Shortly after graduation, she became
head coach of
both women's swimming and diving
teams at BSC, as
well as the women's field hockey
team, with all three in
their infancy. When the programs
began to develop, the
department found it necessary for two different
coaches
in
at
-
career.
American swimming teams.
She graduated from Rome (N
Y.) Free Academy in
1970, earned a B.S. degree in education
at ESSC in 1974
and an M.Ed, degree at ESSC in 1977.
During her swimming career at ESSC,
Gardner was
an AJAW national champion in the 50-yard
breaststroke
and 100-yard breaststroke in 1971 and in the
50-yard
breaststroke again in 1972. She was also a
four-time
EAJAW regional champion in the breaststroke events.
She remained undefeated in dual-meet competition
during her four years of swimming, and her times
of
32 0 in tn e 50-yard breaststroke and 1:10.69
in the 100yard breaststroke are still records.
Gardner was a three-time winner of the outstanding
female swimmer award and was named Senior
Female
Athlete of the Year in 1974 at ESSC.
In addition to her achievements in
ner was also a letter winner
in field
swimming, Gardhockey while she
Blake named
to AP team
Bloomsburg
honor of
all to
State's
his long
football field by being
Mike Blake has added the highest
list of
accomplishments on the
named
to the Associated Press
Little All- America (College Division) first
team.
The 6-2, 220-pound performer from Allendale, N.J.,
was an AP Honorable Mention selection a year ago and
has been a Pennsylvania Conference Eastern Division
first
ly
team
selection the past
two seasons. He was the on-
Pennsylvania collegiate player selected to the first
of the very few chosen in the Eastern part
team and one
of the country. In addition,
he was the only unanimous
this year and was chosen
to the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) first
selection on the
PC East team
team also.
The senior co-captain helped BSC start a new era this
season under first year head coach George Landis. The
Huskies are attempting to rebuild a program that has
seen only four winning campaigns since 1960. In 1982,
MASTER COACH
—
BSC swimming and diving coach
McLaughlin (left) was recently named a "Master
Coach" by the College Swimming Coaches Association of
America. He was unable to attend the World Swimming
Clinic in Dallas, Texas, at which the presentation was to
be made, so BSC Athletic Director Roger Sanders (right)
Eli
presented the award
McLaughlin.
year as head coach of the men's
swimming team at BSC, had to meet five major criteria In
order to qualify for the award: (1) membership in the
McLaughlin,
to
in his 21st
CSCA
for at least 10 years; (2) participation in various
(3) at least a master's degree in his
coaching institutes;
academic field; (4) a 50% or better team winning record
dual meets for a period of 10 years (BSC accomplished
this feat from the 1965-66 season through 1974-75 and had
an overall mark during that time of 89-39-2); and (5)
in
coaching at least one national champion (Dave Gibas,
1971,
NCAA 50-yard freestyle title).
McLaughlin's 20-year record now stands at
after the 1981-1982 squad recorded a 6-5 season.
Landis' squad snapped a 15-game losing streak by
recording a 7-7 tie with Mansfield State in the season's
fourth game and then got its first win late in the year by
New telephone system installed
downing Kutztown State 20-7 and closed at 1-7-1.
THE TEAM showed vast improvement and Blake was
a major reason as the tightend hauled in 29 passes for
a new phone system that brings a new dimenphone users in the adrninistration offices. Called
a Dimension PBX, the system is the latest in voice communications service.
"Growth at the college and the accompanying increase in the volume of calls made it necessary for us to
convert to the new Dimension system," said Paul Con-
397 yards for a 13.7 yards per catch average and five
touchdowns. He was the team's leading scorer. In 1981
he caught an amazing 55 aerials for 731 yards as the
Huskies threw the ball 115 more times than this past
season.
The standout ended his career with 106 receptions for
1,381 yards. "I feel Mike is very deserving of the award
after the type of season he had for us," Coach Landis
commented, "even though we didn't throw the ball as
much as he had been accustomed to. He improved
greatly as a blocker and was a fine leader for a team
that had only three other seniors. His improvement over
what I saw on films from a year ago was fantastic, and
any award he receives he has certainly earned! He will
be sorely missed next year."
Mike, a mass communications major, is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert E. Blake, Allendale, New Jersey.
BSC has
sion to
ard, director of aclministrative services.
"The new service makes many time-saving features
available, which will increase the overall efficiency of
our operation," he noted.
"One feature permits phone users to transfer calls
without operator involvement," he explained. "Another
allows faculty and staff members to consult with
another party while holding the calling person on the
line, or to include the caller in on the conversation, thus
establishing a three-way conference.
"The computerized phone system
wilj permit us to
multi-button telephones with a single line
instrument without losing the ability for our personnel to
replace
many
answer someone
else's call at their desk,"
132-112-2
Conard add-
ed.
The college administrator noted
that the system can
forward calls to another telephone.
"If a caller within the phone system encounters a busy
signal from another telephone connected to the system,
the Dimension will keep trying," Conard explained. "As
soon as both lines are free, the parties will be connected," he added.
The Dimension, installed by Bell of Pennsylvania, includes 560 telephones equipped with Touch-Tone (push-
be
programmed
to
button) service.
Donald McAuvic, Bell marketing representative, said
the system utilizes solid state telephone switching and
represents the latest state-of-the-art concept in communications technology.
A new main
telephone listing for adininistrative of-
has been established as 389-1000. The number for
student information, 389-0111, remains the same.
fices
Alumni
Psst!
r
Now
-
the lime to purchase
is
that Bloomsburg
State College
memento before the name
institution
of your
changed
is
to
Bloomsburg University
of Pennsylvania.
The following items have the Bloomsburg State College imprint
at the College Store in limited quantities:
and are available
Pewter Mugs
Shot Glasses
Glass Beer
-
-
Insulated
1.49
Desk Chairs
Pillows
3.25
-
Ceramic Coffee Mugs
Miniature Ceramic
Demitasse Cup
&
Ceramic Football
Lotus Bowl
-
Saucer
-
Carver Hall Trivet
-
-
-
Small Pennants
-
Decals
7.69
8.95
Ice
Ball
Scrapers
-
Children's T-Shirts
Stickers
Point Pens
-
3.25
Stationery
Shorts
6.99
Jackets
1.39
-
1.79
-
Stop to see the large selection or
—
— 6.95
and 1.79
-
4.99 and 5.95
5.50-10.50
23.50-38.50
call
-
the College Store at 717-784-0167.
Regular Store Hours
—
—
5.50
2.95
Adult's T-Shirts
-
a.m.
7:30 p.m.
8 a.m.
4:30 p.m.
9:30 a.m.
lp.m.
— .95
5.95-14.95
Sweatshirts - 11.95-15.95
$5.50-6.95
Sweatshirts - 8.95-14.95
8
.29
.49-2.59
-
.59
-
-
1.49
-
Baseball Caps
Ceramic Ash Tray
5.95
5.95-9.50
-
& Bumper
Key Chains
-
.79
-
Gold and Silver Charms
7.99
-
2.95
Disposal Lighters
3.95
Glass Ash Tray
11.95
Stuffed Animals
7.50
-
-
Large Pennants
Stuffed Footballs
4.50
-
4.69
Vase with Handle
Bud Vase - 6.99
Trivet
4.25-12.99
Mugs
-
Plates with seal
-
99.95
-
6.50
-
Blankets
2.75
-
45.00
-
69.95
-
Captain Chairs
2.59
-
Glasses
Mugs
3.95 and 4.50
-
3.95
-
Water Glasses
Ball
Director Chairs
Mugs
Wine Glasses
High
$31.50 and 39.99
Monday and Wednesday
Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
Saturday
Look back at the
Wide World of Sports
Kent Hagedont
p a Murphy
t
Kent Hagedom
THE ALUMNI
QUARTERLY
Volume
83,
Number
2
New Human Services Center begun
O
The new
Human
College was
Services Center at Bloomsburg
Bloomsbunj State
for President James H. McCormick
steps from excavation tn
4 . mi »-m
-m._
to nnnrniof.™
completion nf
of the u.
building.
The
culmination will be professors teaching in the facility
and students learning and taking their knowledge out
into society to improve the quality of life in
named
groundbreaking ceremonies on March 31 at the
on the lower campus.
at
.
site
In naming the $6.4 million classroom
structure "The
James H. McCormick Center for Human Services "
Pennsylvania and the world through their work."
Walter Baran, Secretary of General Services for the
Commonwealth, represented Governor Thornburgh. He
read the Governor's greeting which stated in part,
"Today launches an important effort of the Bloomsburg
Robert W. Buehner Jr., chairman of the
board of
trustees, said "There is no higher honor
the college
community can bestow upon an individual than
to name
a building in lasting honor of that
individual. It is done
on rare occasions, unique circumstances
after due and
State College community to meet the special needs
of
students and citizens. I know that your new Human
considerable deliberation.
"Dr. McCormick is a man of the highest
integrity and
uncommon decency; a man who has deep respect and
abiding concern for the educational and
intellectual
processes; a man with a deep affection and
genuine love
for the tens of thousands of students
whose lives he has
touched and a man of personal modesty and
quiet
wisdom who has always been deeply commited to,
served, and championed the cause of public
higher
education.
Services Center represents a decade of commitment
by
Bloomsburg State College, and I'm pleased that this
dream has become a reality for your fine institution of
higher learning."
Baran added, "This structure will provide continuing
educational advancement and enhancement for
Bloomsburg and the state
;
of Pennsylvania." He also
expressed the best wishes of State Secretary of
Education Robert Wilburn who was unable to attend.
State Treasurer R. Budd Dwyer, a former state
"During his ten years at Bloomsburg, he has
transformed and guided Bloomsburg State College
legislator, pointed out that
Bloomsburg because not
to a
position as a recognized leader in public
higher
education in the Commonwealth. He has
made the
pursuit of excellence a goal for all facets
of the college
community which has been achieved through
ship in
many
a healthy sign for
many groundbrea kings
educational facilities are taking place today on
campuses around the state or nation. "It will also
provide needed employment and an influx of money
his leader-
work
of
community
in the
endeavor.
"Although many individual efforts have
made this
possible through planning, we still have
a number of
$5,000 scholarship established
m m
»
s^i .
"Ac aa member
i»
K<>
t
n*
"As
of the Class
of 1942, and In consideration of the excellent educational
background that
r-
.
Bloomsburg State College provided
for
me,
I
should like
to express my gratitude by establishing
a scholarship
fund, in perpetuity, in the amount of
$5,000, the income
therefrom to be used to provide assistance to
qualified,
deserving students."
With these words of appreciation, Mildred
R. Levitt
and her husband, Mike, established the "Mildred
Eaton
Alumni Scholarship Award" earlier this year.
had indicated their intention to create the
scholarship fund when they were in Bloomsburg last
June to attend Mrs. Levitt's 40th-year class reunion.
Levitt
Levitts
Mickey, as she
is
known by her
Major nursing department facilities will be located on
and will include a nursing techniques lab.
the third floor
simulated nursing station, carrell study area, physical
assessment lab. pathophysiology lab, specimen display
area, psychological and client observation lab, health
and home care lab, student nursing organization room
and a nursing seminar area. Also directly adjacent to
these areas will be the campus health center.
photographic darkroom, and audio recording and
duplication studio, three preview rooms and the director's office; an autotutorial and computer
laboratory
with 20 computer, 20 audio-visual, and 15 educational
media stations in addition to a 24-station computer
and a computer consultant's
and television and radio studios, control rooms,
viewing storage area, director's office, and WBSC office
in addition to a reception area, conference room, and
instruction laboratory
editing booths.
Second floor facilities will include several psychology
laboratories, an animal room, a learning laboratory,
and a testing suite; a sociology-psychology laboratory;
and advanced statistics labs; the curriculum
materials center with a stack and carrell areas, and
offices, conference and storage rooms, four seminar
rooms, and four typing rooms; two specialized
statistics
classrooms for elementary education and a specialized
methods classroom for secondary education.
There will be faculty offices, offices for department
chairpersons, conference rooms, and reception,
secretarial, and storage areas for several departments
on each of the floors.
Facts and figures
Building dimensions— 3 story, 130 feet by 240 feet.
Building area— 81.000 square feet.
friends, took graduate
New York University. Adelphi University and
University. Two years ago, she retired after
Exterior facing— Brick.
Hofstra
twenty-two years of teaching at Malverne High. Long
Construction cost— $4,657,800.
Scheduled completion date— June
where the Levitts make their home. She had also
taught at Montgomery Township and West Pottsgrove
high schools in Pennsylvania and at the Adelphi School
Heating— Coal And Trombe solar wall.
Building use— Multipurpose specialized
Island,
New York.
New Yorker and a graduate of the City College of New York and Brooklyn Law School. He is
a member of the bar in New York State, and recently
Business
Mike
is
Levitts have a son, Gary,
ing in Lima, Ohio.
He
is
who
is
married and
liv-
a graduate of Hofstra Universi-
and has earned a master's degree in education administration at Dayton University in Ohio.
ty
The scholarship
students
laboratories,
offices.
in
terests.
The
classrooms end
18, 1984.
a native
retired after 32 years as an accountant and attorney,
associated with the Bloomingdale family's private in-
will
be given annually to one or more
who are majoring
in business, in financial
need, and in their sophomore or junior year.
Mildred R. Levitt 42
mathematics, sociology and social welfare, elementary
education, secondary education and educational studies
and services.
studies at
of
Michael Levitt
faculty offices. Departments located in the new facility
include nursing, communication studies, psychology,
;
_
The
The Human Services Center, when complete, will be
the college's largest instructional building and will
house laboratories, classrooms, conference rooms and
office;
administration, at the college. Other remarks were
made by Julius Kroschewsky. BSC president of
APSCUF; Paul Stockier, president of the Community
Government Association; and Larry Jones, vice
president for academic affairs.
us.
and faculty
academic departments.
areas, an audio-visual media production area, a
Introductions of attending dignitaries were made by
John L. Walker, executive director of institutional
advancement, and Robert J. Parrish. vice president for
especially glad that so many of you who
helped to make
this building a reality can be here
to share today with
offices to serve eight
in
alumni and students as well as other members
of the college
largest instructional building and will house
laboratories, classrooms, conference rooms,
The ground floor will have the instructional and
specialized facilities that include: the Learning
Resources Center, with distribution, storage and work
Representative Ted Stuban. 109th District, expressed
thanks to his colleagues from both the rural and urban
districts for support in helping to pass the bill
providing
funds for the center. He also acknowledged the hard
and his love of students, has
made, and will continue to make, a significant
difference in their lives at this college, which
is soon to
become a university."
McCormick, who came to Bloomsburg in
1973, did not
know the building would be named for him.
In his
welcoming remarks, he said "The project
has been a
cooperative effort for many years,
and we are
to,
.
for
the area," he said.
areas.
"His commitment
is
it
too
_
The Human Services Center will be a three-storied,
bricked-face facility of 81.000 square feet scheduled to
be completed in June. 1984. It will be the college's
Mickey and Mike indicated that they hope the scholarship will encourage similar gifts from other alumni.
Don't forget: This is reunion year for classes with
years ending in a "3" or an "8."
Meeting in conjunction with Alumni Weekend, June
10-12, will be the classes of 1913, 1918, 1923, 1928, 1933,
1943 and 1948. The classes of 1942, 1944 and 1945 will be
joining the Class of 1943 in a special "War Years Reunion."
Holding their reunions on Homecoming, October 22,
be the classes of 1938, 1953, 1958, 1963. 19S8, 1973 and
1978. Details on the reunions have been sent or will be
forthcoming from the respective classes. For more inwill
formation, contact the Alumni Office.
News from
the
and a former teacher of its Grace Stoner Sunday
Gass, and a member of the Hummelstown
Christ
1911
Alumni Office mailbox
School
Historical Society.
another sister, Mrs. Mary H. Steck of
a grandson, and several nieces and
Also surviving
Margaret
Johnson '11 died on March 1, 1983,
at the Carroll County Nursing Home. Her last address was
Wolfeboro. N.H. 03894.
J. (Fraseri
Chambers
is
Hill;
nephews.
1914
1912
Bessie (Kimble)
Theresa R. (Dalley) Bachinger '12 observed her 90th
birthday on February 5, 1983. After graduating from BSC,
she taught at Edwardsville Grammar School for several
Young
'14
died on April
14, 1982.
1915
years.
She was married to Frank Bachinger in 1916 and they
settled in Bloomsburg. They had 11 children. She now has
26 grandchildren and six great grandchildren.
After her children were grown, she worked as a
housekeeper for Catholic priests in Bloomsburg for over
15 years.
She attends Catholic mass and enjoys special events,
going to outings and participating in crafts, bingo, singalongs and discussion groups.
Charles Rittenhouse Wiant '12 died on February 21 at
home at Pleasant Valley R.D. 1, Sweet Valley, Pa.
He taught school at Loyalville and Mossville and had
been employed with the Lehigh Valley Railroad, Sayre.
his
In
was accepted as an apprentice
he
1915,
fish
culturalist at Tupelo. Miss., retiring in 1949 as superinten-
dent of the U.S. Fish Hatchery at Marion, Ala., the largest
fish hatchery in the world.
Following his retirement, he and his wife, Jessie,
returned
to his
its
family
home
museum
maintained a
at
Sweet Valley, where they
until the couple's
ill
health forced
closing in 1979.
He was a member of the Rotary Club, an honorary
member of Masonic Lodge. Tupelo. Miss.; a veteran of
World War I, and served as adjutant and commander of
American Legion Post in Marion, Ala.
He was a member of Pleasant Valley United Methodist
Church, and in later years was a member of the Faith
United Methodist Church, Fairmount Springs.
Surviving are his wife, Jessie, to whom he was married
for 65 years; a son, W. Lloyd, Meridian, Miss.;
a
the
daughter. Mrs. Herbert (Doris) Harvey, Sweet Valley;
grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren.
five
;
Wiant
is
featured
in
a
new book, WIANT-BOGART
CROSS COUNTRY ODYSSEY,
Harvey, his daughter. Information
who attended BSC for three years.
In her foreword, the author notes: "If you plot their
longest
way
possible, but with
died on August
9,
1982, in
1
M.
1924
Q1
^ A
W. Earl Tubbs
Hospital.
March
Greensburg, Pa. He was
'16
died on
Edgar and Annie Wheeler Tubbs.
Before his retirement, he was a
West Penn Power Company for
member
the
of
First
United
17 in
Westmoreland
the son of the late
division engineer for
He was
38 years.
Church
Methodist
a
of
Greensburg, the senior citizens' group of the church, and
a
life
member of the Greensburg Sportsmen's
Association. He was a veteran of World War I.
He is survived by his wife. Anna Cole Tubbs, three
daughters and eight grandchildren.
that they zig-zagged their
looks as
if
they took the
good reason. Jessie Wiant
remarked, We went where the roads were.' When they
had a choice of roads they tried to choose the best one
The author adds: "I hope you will find it both
always
gives
Remembering
a
my
different
view
grandparents,
I
than foresight.
think they may have
prayed their way across the continent.
Copies of the book are available for $4.75 by mail
by
writing to Mrs. Harvey at Rt. 1, Box 208, Sweet Valley,
Pa.
18656. Copies are (4 at the Wiant Museum in Sweet Valley.
Berwick Lions hosted the event which was a well-kept
secret until master of ceremonies Robert Fawcett rose to
announce the dinner was a roast for the veteran newsman.
Coming from New York were Schuyler's son Eddie, AP
sportswriter, his wife Sadie and daughter Vicki, and
brother Robert Schuyler and wife Natalie of Geveland,
teacher.
"roasters."
She
survived by her husband, B. Monroe Frey; a
daughter, Mrs. Allen (Marjorie) Roth, of Catasauqua;
and a sister, Mrs. Grace McGhee of Milton.
is
Ohio.
Hilarious recollections and
some
not-so-gentle gibes
Featured were Berwick Enterprise editor Ted
Fenstermacher, Judge Jay W. Myers, Millard Ludwig '48,
Frank Colder '31, Arthur Wark '38, Dr. Donald Rabb '46.
Boyd Buckingham '43, Lester Jones, Ed Schuyler Jr. and
Bob Schuyler.
The "roasters" recalled Schuyler's support
1917
sports during his
Nellie (Papciak) Turkiewicz '17 has moved
from
Miami, Florida, to a nursing home at 106 Greenhill Road,
Greenbelt, Maryland 20770. Phone (301 ) 441-9071.
many years
popular "young men's" Bible Class
Methodist Church, his efforts on behalf
and
his activities as a
of
local
as sports editor, his most
;it
the
of the
United
lown park
BSC alumnus.
Rep. Ted Stuban presented a citation to him from the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives listing his many
Mayor Dan Bauman gave Schuyler a
key to Bloomsburg and the Lions awarded him a special
plaque noting his distinguished service to the area over
civic contributions.
1919
Mary
many years.
C. (Blecher)
Barklow
'19
died on January 25. She
in the Danville School
District for two years and in the Passaic-Garfield,
N.J.,
District for 12 years. She was a life-long member
of St.
James United Church of Christ, Ridgeville, and the BSC
was an elementary school teacher
Alumni Association. She was the
last surviving
member of
her immediate family.
1923
'23
High School, and served as principal there
He was a developer and early instructor
Technical School, a position he held until his
tor at Milton
from 1947
SUN
at
to 1964.
retirement in 1973.
He was
a
member
of the First Evangelical
Lutheran
Club of Milton; Cedar Lodge
F & AM, Mount Carmel; Williamsport Consistory; Irem
Temple; Sunbury Shrine and Milton Royal Arch Chapter
Church
"I do my roasting at home."
Ed's address is 236 W. Ridge Ave., Bloomsburg, Pa.
later,
M. Kostenbauder
died on January 17.
He served as the founder and first vocational shop direcMiles
Boyd Buckingham presented the guest of honor a plaque
from his alma mater as a "distinguished alumnus," along
with a letter from BSC President James McCormick.
In a special tribute, Ed Schuyler Jr. spoke of his father
as the "best newspaperman and the best man" he has
ever known.
A telegram from Danny Litwhiler '38, coach and former
professional baseball player, was read.
The last roaster to speak was Florence Schuyler, who
gave her husband an affectionate tribute. She confided
.
climbing Green Horn Mountain that he would never have
done it again, if given the chance. I think that looking back
he regards them as a pretty naive bunch. But hindsight
Commons.
about such things as the guest of honor's exceptional
ability as a ticket salesman were delivered by ten
,
informative and interesting. It should at least help us
appreciate today's traveling facilities. Charles Wiant
repeatedly remarked as he recalled experiences like
Ed Schuyler '24 was honored at a "roast" in
Bloomsburg on March 20.
"It was kind of you people to come. In 20 years, when I
get old, I'll look back on this with pleasant recollections,"
Ed, former editor of The Morning Press, told a large
group of old friends at his testimonial dinner at Scranton
Nina M. (Zehner) Frey '16 died on January 28, 1982.
Born August 28, 1897, Mrs. Frey was the daughter of the
late William and Lillian Fox Zehner. A member of the
Trinity Reformed Church, she was a retired school
the narrative,
in
and Model T Ford,
was provided by the diaries kept by Mrs. Harvey's
grandparents, William and Elnora (Nora ) Wiant, and by
her father, with details and additional information from
the memories of her father and her mother, Jessie Wiant,
map. you will find
way across the continent. It
'15
written by Doris Wiant
subtitled Traveling by Partin-Palmer
route on a
Ruth (Gun ton) Farrell
York, Pennsylvania.
of Mifflinburg; Lions
17815.
Helen E. Barrow '24 was elected to the board of the
Pennsylvania Citizens for Better Libraries during the
organization's recent annual meeting. She will serve a
one-year term.
Miss Barrow has been a member of the board of
directors for the John R. Kauffman Jr. Public Library for
many years. Her address is 117 N. Sixth St., Sunbury, Pa.
17801.
298.
Surviving are his wife, a step-son, two step-grandsons,
three sisters and two brothers.
1913
Anna E.
Keller had
She died at the home of her
in West Hanover Township.
17036.
Vail,
(Cassell) Keller '13 died in March 1983. Mrs.
lived at R.D. 2, Box 1, Hummelstown, Pa.
sister,
Mrs. Hester R.
The widow of Irvin F. Keller, she was a teacher in South
Hanover Twp. and Hummelstown for a number of years.
She was a member of Hummelstown United Church of
Elizabeth (Robinson) Roland '23 died on April 1.
She was a retired teacher from Jersey Shore and
Harrisburg School Districts. She was the widow of Alfred
W. Roland.
She was a
Street
member
of the Hill Civic
Club; the Market
Baptist Church, where she was clerk; and
American Baptist Women's Society, where she was an
officer.
1925
Michael P. Walaconis
BSC he was known
'25 is deceased. While attending
as "Pokey," and was very popular
with the other students. He was active in athletics, Glee
Club and dancing. He was something of a traveler. His
hometown was Ringtown, and he was a graduate
of
Ringtown High School.
(Continued on Page 4)
BSC
offers
'red carpet'
conferences
By Dale Walmer '83
Student Feature Writer
From late May until mid-August, BSC campus
facilities are used to host summer conferences.
John
Abell. assisstant
dean
of
extended programs, has been
summer conference program since 1978.
enrollment at BSC is lowest in the summer and
director of the
Student
residence halls,
campus
recreational facilities, the Kehr
Union Building, and Scranton Commons which are used
sparingly in the summer are opened up to summer conference groups.
The summer conference program is run in accordance with college policy that states: "All campus
facilities at
Bloomsburg State College serve the educaAcademic or service
tional mission of the institution.
units of the college may sponsor conferences, seminars,
workshops, and clinics, on the college campus which
serve the educational or public service missions of
Bloomsburg State College."
All
summer
conferences fall within one of two
college-sponsored groups or of f -campus
organizations. Conference rates are established annually, with college-sponsored groups charged a lower
rate.
College-sponsored groups have included Husky sports
categories
:
camps, professional
of
societies, the
Women, and
Women's Track and
University
tional
American Association
Na-
the Division III A.I.A.W.
Proceeds from non-athletic, college-sponsored and offin the Conference Account of
the College Trust Fund. These funds are used to
replenish conference supplies, improve campus
facilities, and purchase equipment used in hosting con-
campus groups are placed
ference groups.
Off-campus groups holding conferences at BSC last
the Central Pennsylvania United
Methodist Church, the Central Susquehanna Valley
Chess Tournament, Pennsylvania Arabian Horse
Association, and YMCA Aerobics Training Workshops,
to the Pennsylvania Hairdressers and Cosmetologists
summer ranged from
Conference groups vary in size from 50-1,500, and include all age groups. Last summer there were 3,400 conferees who visited BSC, with nearly 4,500 expected in
1983.
BSC cannot compete with the luxuries that
hotels offer to conventioneers, the college does
provide basic lodging and food services, meeting and exAlthough
major
as well as cultural and recreational op-
portunities at inflation-fighting prices. The BSC campus
is within walking distance of the Bloomsburg
business
movie theatres, the municipal park and
swimming pool, restaurants, and the Bloomsburg
Theatre Ensemble. There are also state parks,
historical sites, golf courses, and amusement parks
within easy driving distance of campus.
"At BSC, we offer conference groups red-carpet serdistrict, local
vice at reduced rates," Abell said.
The summer conference management program is a
combined effort of students, faculty and staff, to meet
the needs of conference groups. Many students are
employed as desk receptionists; residence hall
managers; campus shuttle bus drivers, or food service
Edward Nardi and Richard Haupt,
of the
Residence Life staff, assist Abell in coordinating many
aspects of conference management.
"John Abell and his staff have been superb," said Ted
Christiansen, program coordinator of the Pennsylvania
Arabian Horse Association.
"We have held our summer
BSC for the past six years and have not
had any problems or confrontations with the college.
Both students and staff have bent over backwards to
meet our needs."
conference at
Rev. Fisher, coordinator for the Central Pennsylvania
United Methodists, said, "College campuses suit our
needs quite well. The facilities at BSC are modern and
more than adequate. The acoustics and seating capacity
of Haas Auditorium are perfect for our group which is
approximately 1,500. They (BSC) even ran vans on campus to minimize some problems our older people experienced
in
R.D.
1,
won
the
New
Year's Baby Contest at Bloomsburg
Hospital.
Winter sports make
getting around."
BSC proud
When you read
this column, the winter sports season
be history. Once again, we can be proud of the accomplishments of our teams. Competition in the tournaments of the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference
has resulted in second-place finishes for Women's Swimwill
The
ming, Men's Basketball and Wrestling. Competition in
NCAA tournaments began in the middle of March with
our Men's Basketball Team hosting and winning the
Eastern Regional Championship Tournament; with
eleven
women swimmers
A.
qualifing for and traveling to
n Championships in Long Beach, Califorand with three wrestlers competing in the Division
I Tournament in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
What's promising about our successful winter teams is
that they are young and will return next season with
even higher hopes for conference titles. For example,
Coach Eli McLaughlin's young swim team had only one
senior, Captain Phil Spaminato, and finished with a 7-5
dual meet season. With only a few seniors graduating,
Coach Sue Hibbs returns freshman sensation Jean
the Division
Association.
workers.
"75 and his wife, Dee,
had twin reasons to celebrate on New Year's Day: Eric,
left, and Justin, right. The Raskis, who
live at Millville
Field meet.
Profits from Husky sports camps are placed in the
Athletic-Grants-in-Aid Account of the College Trust
Fund to finance scholarships for athletes in those particular sports.
hibit facilities,
NEW YEAR TWINS - Paige Raski
nia
;
D.'s
Millen to help get our women's basketball program on
the winning track. Jean has already broken numerous
school records and is on her way to establishing herself
as one of BSC's finest in women's basketball. Charlie
Chronister,
who was
selected Coach of the Year in the
Pennsylvania State Basketball Conference following his
21-9 record, loses just one senior
point guard Terry
Conrad. The lady swimmers of Coach Mary Gardner
compiled a 9-1 dual meet log and will return all
members of her squad. Todd Qimmings and Joe Wade
are the only seniors lost to graduation on our young
grappling squad.
—
One
of the highlights of this past season was the retiring of four basketball jerseys in honor of Art Luptowski
'73,
'82.
John Willis '74, Jerry Radocha '77, and Jon Bardsley
These former stars, who received Ail-American
many of our basketball records. The
banners displayed in tribute to them in the Nelson
Fieldhouse will serve as a constant reminder of the
thrills they provided us with.
As interested alumni, you may wish to recommend
former athletes whose jerseys ought to be considered for
retirement and/or for possible inclusion into the Husky
Club's Hall of Fame. You may do this by writing a letter
of recommendation to me. We will examine the individual's accomplishments and will retain the person's
recognition, hold
name
on our overall
list
of all-time greats.
I
Corner
Roger Sanders
Sunday, May 1, 1983, at 6:30 p.m. in the Scranton Commons. The Husky Gub will announce their selection for
Coach of the Year as well as any inductees into the
Fame. We also plan to use this event as
our kickoff program for our annual fund-raising campaign for athletic scholarships. If you are interested in
Sports Hall of
attending the banquet, please call Jack Mulka
(717-389-4199) to
make
reservations.
you have any ideas for our sports program, such as
a "Knot Hole Gang" Club, please share it with me. And
if you want to ask specific questions about any aspect of
our overall program or a particular team, please plan to
attend an alumni chapter meeting in your area. We try
to schedule a representative from athletics to attend all
chapter meetings. Moreover, we are looking for fundraising ideas for our athletic scholarship fund. If you
have one, as crazy as it might be, jot it down and send it
If
me.
The important message that I want to leave with you
is to let you know that we care very much about our
alumni who follow our sports program and wish to be involved. Your interest and support help us to be
motivated as we strive for excellence. Let us know your
thoughts or ways that we can be of service to you.
Perhaps we can help you by having one of our coaches
to
This year's Day of Champions Banquet, which honors
our senior athletes as well as our conference champion-
speak to your students or
ship teams and individual state champs,
WE CARE!
is
slated for
to
your club or organization.
Eleanor C. (Sheriden) Kearns "31 died on February 27,
1982. She came from Nanticoke. While a student at
BSC
she was active in volleyball, basketball, baseball, "B"
Club, Fire Official and Library Club. Her last address was
Suite 1266, United Penn
Bank
1936
Matilda M. (Kirticklis) Kasales '36 died on February 15,
Mrs. Kasales was born in Tamaqua, Pa. on June 18,
1912, a daughter of the late Anthony and Eva Bendinski
Kirticklis. She was a member of Ss. Peter and Paul's
Building, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
18701.
1983.
Church and the Women's Club, both
1932
Rev. Oliver H.R. Krapf "32, a former member of the
Alumni Association Board of Directors, died April 14. The
retired Methodist minister was well-known in the
Bloomsburgarea.
He was born in Hopewill Junction, N. Y., and was the son
of the late Rev. Elvin C. and Annie Wieane Krapf. Most of
his life was spent in Lehighton and Bloomsburg. He was a
graduate of Lehighton High School and Drew Seminary in
Madison, N.J. He started as pastor
N.J. followed by the
in 1933 in
Johnsburg,
Muncy
Valley charge, Conyngham
charge, the Calvery of Berwick, the Selinsgrove charge,
(Continued from Page 2)
the Llyswen Church of Altoona, the First Church of
Hohdaysburg, Emporium, and the Trinity of Clearfield.
Retiring in 1972, he served as a minister of visitation at the
Wesley United Methodist Church in Bloomsburg.
He was a member of the Bloomsburg Rotary, the Torch
Gub, the Historical Society, the Golden Age Club, and the
1928
Pauline E. (Bell) Walker "28 died in September
1981,
While attending BSC she was a member of the
Tau Phi Ep^
siJon Sorority and an associate member
of the Dramatic
Club. Known as "Penny." she excelled
in basketball,
hockey and tennis. She showed a real fondness
for bright
was happy-go-lucky and alwavs ready for a good
time.
Kathryn Zurlinden '28 died on April 6. 1981. Known
as
was an all-round athlete while attending
BSC. She took an active part in basketball, volleyball, tennis and hockey. She was a member of the Girls"
Glee Club
and Mu Phi Sorority.
Conference of the United Methodist Chruch.
He is survived by his wife the former Vera Kadel; one
son, Rev. Byron K. Krapf, of Shippensburg;
two
daughters. Mrs. Paul (Sylvia) Shearer of Greensburg.
Mrs. Robin (Joy) Clark of Lexington. Ohio; one brother,
Charles E. Krapf, of Livonia. Michigan; and five
1929
grandchildren.
"Kitty." she
Her
address was 103 Colonial Drive,
Island, Ga. 31522.
last
St.
Simons
1931
Tamaqua. Her hus-
grandchildren.
1937
John R. "Jack" Gering '37 died on January 17. He had
undergone by-pass surgery in November.
He was a World War II veteran, was employed as a real
estate broker and was a member of the Good Shepherd
Lutheran Church of Berwick. A certified life underwriter,
he received certification in 1948. He was also a certified
appraiser.
Surviving are his wife, two sons and three granddaughters.
American Association of Retired Persons. He was active
in the United Way and worked for the Red Cross
and was
on the Home Health Services board. He was a member of
the Masonic Blue Lodge, Lafayette, Selingsgrove, the
Caldwell Consistory of Bloomsburg and the Jaffa Shrine
in Altoona. He was a member of the Central Pennsylvania
colors,
Thelma A. (Hartzel) Bums '29 is deceased. She
graduated from Coal Township High School and her
hometown was Excelsior. Pa. While a student at BSC her
hobby was collecting antiques, particularly umbrellas.
of
band, John, died in 1979.
Surviving are a son, Commander Joseph A., Woodbridge, Va., who is serving with the Navy, and three
1934
Ronald Franklin Keeler
'34
died on April 3 after a short
illness.
He was a teacher, librarian, minister and free-lance
writer and had lived in Grand Junction, Colorado, for the
past five years. He was the author of 16 books, numerous
articles and short stories.
He was born Jan. 29, 1913, and spent his childhood in
He was a graduate of Bloomsburg High School.
He later earned a bachelor of arts degree from Minnesota
Benton.
Nicia M. Chiavacci '31 died on December
22,
"Nish," as she was known, came from Hughestown.
BSC she was
at
active
in
athletics,
1982.
While
Girls' Chorus
Y.W.C.A., and Lantern Club.
Catherine R. Ingram
Miss Ingram came
'31
died on December 14, 1982.
from Nanticoke. Known as Kay when
she was a student at BSC, she was active
in volleyball
basketball, baseball and Y.W.C.A. Her last
address was
205-2D Main Blvd., Boynton Beach, Fla. 33435.
Bible College and a master's degree from the University
He was on the faculty at Minnesota Bible College
Minneapolis for 25 years. During that time he also spent
years as minister of the Nevis Church of Christ.
He moved
Adolf M. Zalonis
in
16
where he was an English
teacher and librarian at Strathmore High School for 15
years. He was a teacher and librarian at Intermountain
to California in 1963
Bible College in
Published four times a year
by
your
Alumni
Bloomsburg
Association at
State Colle2ge.
Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
At your service:
Doug Hippenstiel
Grand Junction at the time of his death.
avid book collector and tennis player. He was
Long
Alumni Records Clerk
Peggy Trathen
Bookkeeper
Eric
J.
Strom
Writer (Green
Thumb Program)
Dwayne Heisler
Linda Kammerdiener
Lou Maslowe
Scott Righter
Stephanie Stewart
Jeff Smith
Student Staff
March
21 in the
Bloomsburg
Born in Edwardsville, Luzerne County, Dec. 13, 1912, he
resided in Bloomsburg 36 years. He was a son of Martin
and Antonia Skunda Zalonis.
He was employed as guidance counselor at the Central
Columbia School District, retiring in 1978 after serving 23
Writers Group and recently received the Distinguished
Alumnus Award from Minnesota Bible College.
Surviving are his wife, Donna, of Grand Junction; two
a member of St. Columba Catholic Church, a
War II Army veteran, and retired in 1972 as a captain in the Army Reserve. He was a member
of American
Legion Post 273, Bloomsburg, and charter member of
the
sons, Guy, Swanger, Calif.; and Robert, Cliffton,
Colo.;
years.
He was
World
Bloomsburg Tennis Club.
two daughters, Rachel York, Downey, Calif., and Malana
Johansen, Los Angeles, Calif.; a sister, Lucy
Ennis,
He received his master's degree in education from
BuckneU University in 1948. Awarded a guidance cer-
Norwood; and nine grandchildren.
tification in 1953,
1935
Alumni Office Secretary
Linda
died on
He taught mathematics, English and history and
had a 31-year teaching career.
member of the Clifton Christian Church where he served
as an elder. He was a member of the Western Rockies
'68
Director of Alumni Affairs
Elizabeth H. LeVan
'38
Hospital.
a
He was an
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1938
of Minnesota.
he received his fellowship
in
guidance
from Syracuse University in 1961.
His wife, the former Freda Steinruck, to
whom he was
married for 42 years, died June 13, 1982.
Surviving are two daughters, Sharon
A. Zalonis,
Bloomsburg; and Mrs. Edward (Elaine)
Wuenschel
Melno Park, Calif.; four sons, Martin R., Erie;
'
Albert A. Hayes '35 of Colton, California,
died at Harrisburg Hospital on December 26, 1982.
Born in Altoona on Nov. 18, 1913, he was a
son of the late
Rev. Merrill Ake and Edna Mae
McClintock.
Following
their deaths, he was adopted
by Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Hayes, of Cornfield Farms, Berwick. He
was married to
the former Letha Culp Luta for
30 years.
He was an airplane mechanic, retiring from
Norton Air
Force Base, San Bernadino, Calif, in
September 1981. He
served in the Air Force as a sergeant in
World War II in
the Pacific Theater.
Surviving, in addition to his wife,
are one daughter
Mrs. Harry (Joy) Bowers, Etters;
sisters, Mrs. John'
(Florence) Wall, Tucson, Ariz.;
Mrs. Richard (Mary
Alice) Fye Pennsylvania Furnace;
and Katheryn
Sunbury; brother, Thomas Hayes. Berwick
R.D.
three grandchildren.
Baum
3-
and
Robert N
Berwick; Mark W., Scottdale; and Michael
G., Plainfield
N.J.; and five grandchildren; six
sisters, Monica Hankey
Amelia Yudichak, Stella Cook, Ruth Siley.
and Lucy Areares.
all
of
Wilkes-Barre;
and Florence Kornacki,
Michigan.
Dorothy E. (Sidler) Kreinheder '38
died on April 3
Born in Danville. Pa., she was the
daughter of the late
William and Minnie Roberts
Sidler. She taught at the
DeLong School in Washingtonville in 1941-42.
She lived and
worked in Middletown. Camden, N.J.,
and Washington,
D C., before moving to Las Vegas 10 years
ago. Survivors
mc ude hree brothers, William, Frank,
and Edward
Sidler, all of Danville.
Her last address was 204
Greenbriar Townhouse. Las
Vegas, Nevada 89121.
(Continued on Page 6)
Hundreds of
alumni gather
in chapters
Several hundred alumni and their guests have
attended chapter meetings thus far in 1983 in
various
locations in Pennsylvania and other states.
The get-togethers have been held in Dallas
Houston, Texas;
Wyoming
and
Valley (Dallas); Schuylkill
County (Pottsville); Lower Luzerne County
(Hazleton);
Boca Raton, Orlando and St. Petersburg, Florida;
Lycoming County (Williamsport); Johnstown, Pittsburgh, Indiana and Clearfield; Philadelphia;
and
Lackawanna-Wayne-Susquehanna counties (Scranton).
Additional meetings have been planned for the
following locations and reports will be included
in the
next issue of THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY:
APRIL
21
-
Snyder, Union and Northumberland
counties, Chadwick's,
APRIL 23 APRIL 23 APRIL 26 —
Northumberland R.D. 3.
York, luncheon at Lincoln Woods Inn.
Lancaster, dinner at Olde Greenfield Inn.
Baltimore, Md., dinner at Peerce's
Plantation.
APRIL
27
—
Berks County, dinner
at
Reading Motor
Inn.
MAY 5 —
Lehigh-Northampton counties, dinner at El
Cetro Holiday Inn, Bethlehem.
MAY 7 — Lebanon County, dinner at Quality Inn,
Lebanon.
MAY
—
Wilmington, Delaware, meeting at
Little's office, 2132 North Market Street.
MAY 17 — Bucks, Chester, Delaware, Montgomery
and Philadelphia counties, dinner at the Casa Maria
Mexican Restaurant, King of Prussia.
MAY 19 - Harrisburg, dinner at the Holiday Inn,
Second and Chestnut Streets.
12
Tom
Attorney
MAY
24
— New
Jersey, dinner at
The Willows
in
Dunellen.
JUNE 11 - Philadelphia, luncheon at the Lakeside
Inn in Spring City.
JULY
9
—
Philadelphia, picnic at the cottage of
Hacks Point, Maryland.
Orville Palsgrove in
Details about the various meetings have been mailed
or will be mailed to alumni in the specific areas covered
by the chapter meetings. For additional information,
contact the Alumni Office.
San Diego
BSC's dean of student development,
Dr. John S. Mulka "66 and his wife, Kathy '68, along with
Roger B. Sanders, director of athletics and head
wrestling coach, and his wife, Nancy, co-hosted an
alumni chapter meeting and reunion at the Hanalei
Hotel in San Diego. Ten of the 32 alumni known to be
living in the San Diego area attended the get-together.
The evening's festivities began with a social hour
during which the alums became acquainted, and
information about BSC's transition to university status
was shared. Following a superb meal in the hotel's
Polynesian restaurant, the group returned to the
Mulkas' room for more reminiscing. Questions about
On January
10,
favorite profs, Berrigan's hoagies,
new
curricular
programs, athletics and future plans were asked.
Dr. Karleen Hoffman '30 turned out to be the central
figure in the group. First to arrive
leave, Dr.
and among ths last to
Hoffman entertained the younger alumni with
stories about the rules
and regulations that governed a
on the campus during her vintage.
After completing her distinguished teaching career,
Dr. Hoffman chose San Diego and its nearly perfect
climate as her retirement home. And it was during her
retirement that she earned her doctor's degree from La
student's
life
Jolla University in 1980.
Traveling the greatest distance to attend the alumni
gathering was Frank Lorah '74, who resides in North
Hollywood. Prior to serving in his present capacity as
Associated Students business manager at California
State University, Northridge, Frank was employed at
his alma mater in a similar position.
Graduates of our highly-touted program in special
education-Kim Jamison Ibarra '77, Joseph R. Nigro
'79, Cecelia Greenaway Davis '68, and Cherie E. Vaughn
'68— all spoke proudly of their undergraduate preparation and singled out their successes to such faculty
as Dr. Andrew Karpinski, Dr. Mary Barrall Hill and Dr.
William Jones.
SAN DIEGO GET-TOGETHER
-
Alumni
in
Southern
California had a good time when they got together at San
D J an uary - Sh0WD ta P hoto are (kneeling, from
T
I??V.
I
Frank Lorah
1
left)
Sandie Schuyler
74,
'77,
Jack Mulka
'66,
Joe Nigro
'79,
Linda Redding 79, Sheree A.
Pegg 79 and Connie Ancernvage 78, graduates
of our
School of Business, journeyed to Southern California
to
find promising careers in their respective fields. Like
their counterparts in special education, all gave Apluses to the educational preparation they received at
Connie Anceravage "78, Lynda Redding 79, (standing
from left) Sandee Schuyler '77, Kathy Mulka '68 Cei
Davis '68, Karleen Hoffman '30, Cherie Vaughn '68
Sheree Pegg 79, Roger Sanders, Kim Jamison Ibarra 77
Thomas Philip Grow '47, Lovell Lindenmuth Kahley
JoAnn Mays Zogby '63, Mary Catherine Brill '82,
and James R. Babcock '52.
'82,
'56,
Hazleton
Alumni of lower Luzerne County met on March
10 at
Carmen's Restaurant in Hazleton.
A wide range of years was represented by the alumni
BSC.
The alums said good night to each other by
in attendance: Irene Boughner Mock '13,
G. Bertelle
reconvening in the hotel's pub and sipping Bailey's Irish
Laubach Lamont '14, Dan Bavolack 18, Arthur Francis
Cream. In short, a good time was had by everyone.
McLaughlin '28, Marian Hoegg Carter '29, Judith
The Mulkas and Sanders were in San Diego to attend
Charles Brutosky 74, Rosemarie Garramone '80
and
the Annual Convention of the National Collegiate
Arthur Francis McLaughlin '28.
Athletic Association
(NCAA).
Dallas, Texas
A small group of alumni met on Friday evening,
February 25, at the home of Matt Connell "77 and Evelyn
Baxevane '77 in Dallas. Also attending were Brenda
Cunningham Estradaberg '61 and her husband, Carmela
Tarole Gotthardt '50, and John and Karin Scott Furniss
78 and '80.
Houston, Texas
A large group of young, enthusiastic alumni showed
up for the informal get-together at the home of Rick and
Theresa Maniscalco in Houston on February 26.
Crowding into Rick and Theresa's new home for
reminiscing and refreshments were the following:
Jack Touey '80, Jean Lawless '81, Greg Malloch '81,
Terri Sotak '81, Stephen Squires, Angie Taormina '80.
Ed Ehret '81. Robert Speziletti '81, Darryl Kuhl, Karen
Ostanek '82, Keith Walz '81, Jim Brecker '80, Linda
Wright '81, Dave Shand '81, Novellou Smith '80, Charlie
DiDonato 79, Jessica Spangler '81, Cindy DiDonato 79,
Debbie and Bob Neiderer '81, Craig Hill '82, Joyce
Kienzle '81, Cathy Squires 79, Doug Taylor '82, Karen
Webb '81, Sharon Salvo '81, Pam Pirano, Joe Ozmina
'82, J. D. Downey '80, Randy Johnson, Sam Rubbico '82.
Wyoming Valley
This year's meeting of Wyoming Valley alumni
was
held on March 3 at the new Magee Publick
House in
Dallas.
Among
the alumni in attendance
were Alda Hunter
Linda Baker Wasley 70, Sue Osborn Keller
'57, Ruth Kester Novy '45, Kathryn
Keener Dildine '43,
Suzanne Elyse Cromack 77, Joan VanDurick Jordan '67,
Richard
'46,
Mabel Albertson Linskill '28, Coralie Hughes Thompson
'57, Karen T. Chawaga '82,
Marion E. Young '29, Jay T.
Jones 77, Richard F. Laux '52, Mary Agnes Phillips
Kratz 77, Joe A. Ellsworth '42, Tom M. Cesarini '68,
Freda Snyder Hughey '18, and Jane L. Cornell 74.
Representing the college were Dr. John S. Mulka '66,
dean of student development; Kathy Matzko Mulka
68,
alumni chapters coordinator; and Doug Hippenstiel '68,
director of alumni affairs.
Pottsville
Attending this year's meeting of Schuylkill County
alumni at the Dusselfink Restaurant near Pottsville
were the following alumni:
David Wayne Bowen '68, Esther Whalen Farrell '35,
Marlene Ruth Watson 78, Mary Margaret Yasenchak
Representing the college were John Trathen '68,
director of student activities and treasurer of the
Alumni Association; Lou Maranzana, assistant football
coach; and Doug Hippenstiel, director of alumni
affairs.
Boca Raton, Florida
the east coast of Florida gathered for a
Patrick's Day at the Boca Del Mar
BSC alumni on
luncheon on St.
Country Club. F. A. "Red" Garrity '28 once again
helped greatly by making the local arrangements.
Alumni
attendance were Jeanette Campbell '37,
Elmer McKechnie '35, Gladys Kleckner
Isabel Hester '29, Stuart Marvin 78, Diane Pletcher
Marvin 79, Don Watts '37, Arthur Knerr '34. Laurie
Johnson Gaylord 79, and James H. Williams '28. A
number of spouses and/or friends also attended.
in
Charlotte and
'25,
Doug
Hippenstiel, director of alumni affairs,
represented the college.
Orlando, Florida
The White Marlin Restaurant at Longwood, near
Orlando, was the location for the annual chapter
meeting of BSC alumni living in the northern centeral
section of Florida, including St. Augustine
on
March
and Daytona,
19.
Attending the get-together were Jean Plowright '34
'36, John H. Yeager '36, Lawrence
Evangelista '34,
and
Philip
Traupane
'39,
Patricia
Szymanek Mica
'67,
Robert E. Miller '52, Robert L. Naugle '65, Mary Ann
Levine 72, Philip Martin Levine 72. Donald R. Kleckner
'64,
Martha Schiefer
Martha Skerda Carpenter 70,
and Richard L. Marella 78.
Hippenstiel, director of alumni affairs,
Albina Zadra Davis
Doug
'12.
'31
represented the college.
St.
Petersburg, Florida
Alumni on Florida's west coast met for a luncheon at
the Bradford Coach House Restaurant in St. Petersburg
on Saturday,
Alumni
March
19.
attendance were Thelma Brandon Bittner
'28, Roy C. Smay '69, Alberta M. Green '29,
Erma G.
Shearer '29, Clarence L. Hunsicker '32, Keith L. Weiser
'56, Jennis T. Ogden '39, Irene Kornell Davis '28,
Ida
Wallace Acore '29, Mabel Gordon Goodyear '36, Lena
Rachel Oman '24, Marion Wallace States '43, Marjone
K. Perotti '28, Frances Demnicki Johnson '69, and Cyril
in
A. Lindquist, retired faculty
member
(1975).
(Continued on Page 7)
Elementary School, and served as head teacher at that
He later served as head teacher at
1945
school for nine years.
the Carl G.
(Continued from Page 4)
years.
Martha
M. Audree (Reed) Robins '38 died on October 26, 1982.
Mrs. Robins came from Mansfield, Pa. She was active in
the Sewing Club, Geography Club, Dramatic Gub and
1939
who survives.
TtrzaJh Eleanor (Coppes) Pes to '39 and Minor Amos
Leighow were married on January 8 in Bethany United
Methodist Church in Milton, Pa. The bride is a retired
teacher of the Milton Area School District. Her husband is
president of Leighow Oil Co., Inc. The newlyweds plan a
wedding trip to Vienna, Austria, at a later date.
A retired school teacher, Mrs. Kantrowitz was
graduated from Lewisburg High School in 1941. She taught
for two years in Fort Washington School District, Ambler,
and returned to the Lewisburg area to teach in the Forest
Hill School, Mifflinburg School District, and then in the
Lewisburg School District, teaching in the Linntown
Elementary School and Kelly Township Elementary
School. She retired 13 years ago.
Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs.
Karen Sadowski, Clarks Summit, and Carol Kantrowitz,
State College; one grandson; a sister, Mrs. Mary
Chappell, Washington, D.C., and a brother, Charles W
Duck, Westwood, N.J.
1942
Ida jane (Snipe) Madl '42 died on December 29, 1982. Dr.
Madl was very active in college affairs when a student.
Her activities included: Maroon and Gold Band, Maroon
and Gold Orchestra, College Council, Language Club,
Upsilon, Day Women's Association, Kappa
Women's Chorus, Representative to InterfraterCouncil, Co-Chairman of Freshman Customs,
-g
Delta Pi,
*\ a *j
Izf^WM
m^^^^m
OBITER Staff. She lived at 1100 Arizona Avenue, Ft.
Lauderdale, Fla. 33312, and attended alumni chapter
meetings in Boca Raton.
Renn
School,
Mr. Diltz was a member of Bethany United Methodist
Church, HughesvUle, its administrative board, and a
member and former teacher of the progressive Sunday
School class. He was an Army veteran of World War II,
the recipient of the Purple Heart for wounds received in
Luxemburg, and was a charter member of the Local
Chapter of Purple Heart recipients, and a member of the
Disabled American Veterans.
Mr. Diltz was a member and past master of Muncy
Lodge No. 299 F&AM, Williamsport Consistory, Irem
Temple Shrine, Wilkes-Barre, and the Williamsport and
Sunbury Shrine Clubs, and a member of Warrior Run
Chapter No. 246, and Baldwin II Command. He and his
wife, the former Ruth E. Peterman observed their 26th
wedding anniversary on September 8; also surviving is a
half sister,
Maude McHenry,
Westfield Center, Ohio.
1951
i^m^m
Gamma Theta
Lairdsville for five
sixth grade teacher at the
and was a member of the East Lycoming, Pennsylvania and National Education Associations, and the
Alpha Omicron fraternity.
died on April 5 in
'45
Evangelical Community Hospital, Lewisburg. She had
been in failing health the past six months and was
hospitalized on numerous occasions.
Mrs. Kantrowitz was born Oct. 29, 1923, in East Buffalo
Township, Union County, the daughter of the late D. Oscar
and Blanche Brunner Duck.
She was married May 18, 1946, to Seymour Kantrowitz,
Gamma Theta Upsilon while a student at BSC.
nity
(Duck) Kantrowitz
J.
Renn Elementary School at
He was currently a
i
George D. Donachy '51 is retiring at the end of the
school year as an elementary principal in the Shikellamy
School District.
His retirement has been approved by the school board.
Donachy has taught and administered educational
programs in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and West
Virginia, and has spent 25 years in the educational field in
the Sunbury-Northumberland area.
1943
He graduated from Northumberland High School and
earned his master's degree at Bucknell.
He has coached various sports, principally football and
Dr. Lee R. Beaumont '43, professor of business emeritus
at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, was recently
cited
by the International Information/Word Processing
Association for his outstanding contribution to the field of
information processing
Dr. Beaumont was presented a
certificate
Donachy began his career as principal of the Joseph
Priestley School in Point Township. He was in the Army
Air Corps during World War II, then took a position as
achievement by the Philadelphia chapter of IWP, naming
coach and teacher
basketball.
of
ham as a member of the IWP Honor Society.
He is co-author of a number of textbooks in the field of
business education, and is self-employed as a
business
He returned
education consultant in the Philadelphia area.
Dr. Beaumont's address is 933 Putnam Boulevard
Wallingford, Pa. 19086.
Marion (Wallace) States
'43 lives at 760 50th
Avenue
Robert Bunge
'47
Robert L. Bunge
retire effective as of
N.,
Petersburg, Fla. 33703. She maintains homes in
Jasper, Fla., and Franklin, N.C., as well as
St.
Bunge
to the
St.
Petersburg. She says her door is always open to BSC
alumni. She spent 28 days in China in 1981 during her
'47,
associate registrar at BSC, will
August
19, 1983.
joined the faculty in
dean
of instruction
September
1964 as assistant
and several years
later
was ap-
pointed registrar.
Over the years at BSC, Bunge served as a member of
the Representative Assembly, College Calendar Committee,
College-wide
Promotion Committee, and the
Academic Review Board. Before coming to Bloomsburg,
he was a guidance counselor at Milton Senior high school
travels around the world.
Marion reports she visited with
(Betty (Singley) Trexler '43 some time ago. Betty's
address is Star Route, Coeur D'Alene, Idaho 83814.
for four years,
was associated with
seven years, and taught science
U.S.
Radium
in the
in the
Trevorton School District.
Northumberland in 1948 as elementary
supervisor and coach and in 1957 accepted a position as
superintendent of schools in Mount Laurel, N.J. He later
was an assistant professor and director of elementary
student teaching at Wesleyan College, W. Va.
He was director pf education at the Selinsgrove Center
to
for a year, then
administrator.
returned
to
New
Jersey
an
as
became an elementary supervisor in the
Shikellamy district and has served as principal at the
Oaklyn, Beck, Rohrbach and Maclay schools.
In 1969, he
Donachy has three children and two step-children. He is
to the former Myrna Dry of Shamokin
Donachy was instrumental in forming the
Northumberland Little League in 1947 and at one time
married
Corp. for
directed
Catawissa High
address
is
Northumberland's recreation
R.D. 2, Sunbury. Pa. 17801
program.
His
School for four years.
12
Bunge and his wife, Dorothy, a registered nurse, live
W. Park Street, Carroll Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
at
Thurston S. Fulmer '53 is planning to retire at the end of
the school year as an administrator with the
Shikellamy
School District.
1948
John F. Guy '48 died on October 24, 1982. Death was
due
an aneurysm of the aorta. He had retired from teaching
in Newark, Del. in June 1982. His widow,
June (Hontz)
Guy '49 survives. Her address is 301 Country Club Drive,
Fairfield, Newark, Delaware 19711.
to
(Classes of 1942,
'43, '44,
and
4
'45)
February, notices were mailed to all graduates
of
these four classes announcing plans
for a joint reunion. If
you have not returned the form attached
to the notice
please do so in order to assist the
committee in finalizing
plans. If you did not receive a notice,
please contact
In
•
Elwood M. Wagner
1
A4A
7^7
'43
( 814-237-3612)
also wish to extend invitations to
former members of
Uiese classes to attend the
reunion. If any graduates of
these classes are in contact
with former classmates
please provide names and
addresses
Wagner.
to
Elwood
M.'
Fulmer, a native of Berwick, earned a master's degree
Bucknell
University,
Lewisburg, and his
administrator's certificate at The Pennsylvania
State
University.
He began teaching at the Joseph Priestley School in
Point Township. In 1953-54, he was an elementary
teacher
in the Pine Street School in Selinsgrove.
He returned
Northumberland as teacher and principal
Robert O. Diltz
unit of the
March
'49
Muncy
died on
March
15 in the intensive care
Valley Hospital.
14 after suffering
He was admitted on
an apparent heart attack at his
In 1952, he received his master's degree
We
at
in
to
the Charles
Steele School.
home. Born in Benton, July 15, 1925, he was the
son of the
late Otto and Lena Klinger Diltz. Mr.
Diltz was a graduate
of Benton High School. He received
his teaching certification from the former Kutztown State
Teacher's College.
572 Brittany Drive
State College, Pa. 16801
1953
University,
New York
City.
In
from Columbia
1949-50 he taught high
school in the Mifflinburg school district; 1953-55,
the fifth
grade in Palerm, Alaska; 1956-65 he taught
7th and 8th
grades at the Carson Long Military Institute
at New
Bloomfield. He also served as building
officer for the
junior high boys.
In 1965 he
came
to the
HughesvUle and taught
East Lycoming school district at
fifth grade at the former Wolf
From 1967 to 1970 he was principal of the Dr. C. W. Rice
Middle School, Northumberland.
In 1971,
Fulmer was elected assistant superintendent
He and his wife, Flora, are the parents of two
The Fulmers
live at
R.D.
2,
children
Box 490A. Northumberland
Pa. 17857.
1956
Dr. Larry Roy Fiber '56 has co-authored
a college textbook entitled "Applied Business Law."
Published by
Reston Publishing Company, the book is
copyrighted 1983
He is a professor of business education
at Shippensburg
State College.
(Continued on Page 8)
New
interdisciplinary
BSC
journal starts at
Carver, an interdisciplinary journal, has been
established at Bloomsburg State College, and
the
inaugural issue will be published later this spring.
About
four thousand alumni will be sent complimentary
scholarship and other interests of the faculty, alumni,
and others connected with Bloomsburg State College.
The inaugural issue opens with a memoir by the late
H. Keffer Hartline. a 1920 alumnus and Nobel Prize
Laureate. Another alumnus, Jerome T. Ailman of
the
class of 1871, is represented by an item from the
college
archives that describes a New Mexico stagecoach
journey he took in 1880. Also featured is a two-part
article by Cecil C. Seronsy, first chairman of
the BSC
Department of English, who died in 1981; this
copies.
Supported by funds from the Alumni Association and
the Office of the Vice President for
Academic Affairs,
Carver
will
publish articles, fiction, poetry, and art by
community, including faculty,
alumni, and distinguished guests.
The journal had its origin in informal discussions
members
of the college
among faculty which led to President McCormick's
appointment of an editorial board last spring. The
fourteen-member board includes faculty from eleven
departments and Douglas C. Hippenstiel of the Alumni
Association. The editor is Gerald H. Strauss of
the
Department of English.
Other board members are: Donald Baird, chemistry;
Barbara E. Behr, business administration; Richard
Brook, philosophy; Steven L. Cohen, psychology;
James
B. Creasy, business administration; Judith
P. Downing,
biology; John A.
Enman, geography and
earth science;
Paul G. Hartung, mathematics; Kenneth P. Hunt,
special education;
James
T. Lorelli,
earth science; Percival R. Roberts,
geography and
III, art; and George
A. Turner, history.
A primary purpose of Can or is to provide an
means of strengthening the ties between
manuscript was provided by his widow, former
psychology professor Louise B. Seronsy.
Art by three members of the BSC Department of Art
— Karl Beamer, Barbara J. Strohman, and Kenneth T.
Wilson — also is featured; and there is both fiction and
poetry by a participant in the 1982 Elderhostel program
at the college. Kath Walker, an Australian
Aboriginal
who was resident on campus in 1978, has contributed an article describing the present conditions of
her people.
poet
There also is an article that presents the rationale for
the relevance of animal research in psychology by
Alex
Poplawsky of the Department of Psychology; a piece on
naming of America by William M. Baillie of the
Department of English; and a study of the Principia
Mathematica by Patrick D. Wotus of the Department of
the
Mathematics.
additional
alumni and the campus. Another aim
is
to
showcase
Alumni are
invited to
submit manuscripts and article
ideas for the next issue of
Carter
to the editor.
New honorary degree program
Bloomsburg State College has established a new
honorary degree program to recognize outstanding
achievements and contributions.
An honorary degree is an academic award which
reflects the college's mission in the areas of
intellectual
and the arts, or public service. The
pursuit, culture
policy states that such degrees should be awarded
only
to those men and women whose lives
and works
exemplify the concepts of excellence, service and
integrity.
Those who are awarded honorary degrees vill have
made noteworthy contributions to Bloomsburg State
College, to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, or to
society in general. They will have made achievements
or been scholars in the arts and humanities,
science and
-Alumni clubs
(Continued from Page
5)
A
small group of Lycoming County alumni met on
24 at the Hillside Restaurant near Montoursville.
Attending were Debra Kay Lowe '78, Lee Ann Stump
March
Thomas C. Blass '72, Mary F. Fawcett Fry '57,
Wayne Richard Palmer '78, Alice Pennington Blair '29,
Andrew B. Lawson '23, Letha Hummel Kinley '39 and
Patricia L. Damaska '82.
Among the guests were Mrs. Fry's son, Steve, who
'77,
be a student at Bloomsburg next fall.
Representing the college were John L. Walker,
executive director for institutional advancement;
will
Kenneth Schnure '69, registrar; and Doug Hippenstiel
'68, director of alumni affairs.
Western Pennsylvania
Dr. James H. McCormick, president of the College,
and John L. Walker, executive director for institutional
advancement, met with alumni in four western
Pennsylvania locations on April 7 through April 9.
JOHNSTOWN - Attending a luncheon meeting in
Johnstown on Friday, April 8, were Carol Gesalman '68,
Darla S. Studt '74 and George A. Mathews '27 and '29.
John Walker happened to have a 1927 Obiter along
with him, and it turned out that George Mathews had
been editor of the Obiter that year.
-
These are the honorary degrees BSC
will grant:
Doctor of Law (L.L.D.), Doctor of Science (Sc.D.
>,
Doctor of Letters (Litt.D.), Doctor of Pedagogy (Pd.D),
Doctor of Commercial Science (D.C.Sc), Doctor of Fine
Arts (D.F.A.
and Doctor of Humane Letters (L.H.D.)
Except in extraordinary cases, honorary
degrees will
not be awarded to active members of
the Board of
.)
Trustees, administrators or faculty of the
college. At
least one year must elapse following
association with
the college before former trustees,
acirriinistrators or
faculty may be considered for an honorary
doctorate.
No more than three honorary degrees will be
awarded
during one academic year.
Elizabeth H. LeVan,
known by her
hug from Tony the Baker
on her last day on the job in the Alumni
Office. Betty
retired this month after 19 years of service
at Bloomsburg
State College, most of it as secretary of
the Alumni
Association. Betty kept the Alumni Office
operating
smoothly in the years before a full-time director of alumni
affairs
technology, the social sciences, education, the
health
profession, commerce, trade or industry.
-
friends as Betty, gets a good-bye
WAS
was hired
Alumni
the
in 1974.
Office,
During those early years, Betty
and much of the success of the
Alumni Association today is based on the
dedicated
groundwork which Betty completed. Betty's friends,
family, co-workers and members of the Alumni
Board of
Directors attended a retirement dinner in her honor
at
Hotel Magee on Saturday, March 26. Betty is
looking
forward to spending more time with her husband, Ray,
and her family, and doing all those things she has been
too
busy
to do. All of us
wish Betty a happy and healthy
retirement.
'Goodbye, Betty*
gather.
Williamsport
PITTSBURGH
BAKER'S HUG
Meeting for dinner that evening in
Monroeville, near Pittsburgh, were David D. Steiner '67,
Melanie Gill Smith '79, Richard L. and Eileen Gulnac
Hartman '68, and Irving T. Gottlieb '43. Also attending
were three spouses.
—
INDIANA
A luncheon was held in Indiana, Pa., the
next day with the following alumni in attendance: Dr. C.
Hess '32, Lucy Rood Stitt '27, Robert P. Martin '47,
Beth Thomas '82, Tom Mulhern '77, Kathy Anderson
C.
Mulhern
and Carl Reed '81.
The final stop on the western swing
was at Clearfield on Saturday evening. Attending the
dinner meeting were Margaret M. Hendrickson Krouse
'32, William Charles Williams Jr. '80,
Dennis N. Reedy
'66, Karen Taylor Kochkodin '73 and Jeanne
Peoples
Marsh '78.
Lackawanna
Alumni from Lackawanna, Wayne and Susquehanna
'78
CLEARFIELD —
met on Thursday, April 14, at Nichols Village
Motor Inn. Among those in attendance was Pauline
McLean Gibson '22, who was accompanied by three of
her ten children and a daughter-in-law. All six
daughters attended Marywood College and are teachers,
while all four sons are employed in law enforcement.
Other alumni in attendance were G. Thomas Hughes
'76, Margaret Thomas Beidleman '29, Frederick
Garvey
'70, Linda Grow Miller '64, Brenda N. Williams '68,
Louise LaSorsa Krafjack '55, Maurice Victor Bochicchio
'73, Patricia Bederman Miller "75, John
T. Foster '66,
Jean Zenke Foster '66, Lillian Nelson Yerkes '21 (sister
of Dr. E. H. Nelson, former faculty member and past
president of the BSC Alumni Association), Angeline
Evans Beavers '21, Jay E. Long '59, Anna Nancy
Zorskas '28 & '49, Atilla Schoen Lewis '28, Laura
Anderson Davis '25, William Richard Tierney '73, Jack
F. Gerrity '66 and Betsy Young Gerrity '68.
counties
—
LAST-MINUTE POINTERS
On her last day as
secretary in the Alumni Office, Betty LeVan tries to
summarize 19 years of experience with her successor, Peg
Trathen. The latter has worked part-time for the Alumni
Association for over three years, chiefly as bookkeeper.
will continue to serve as bookkeeper, along with her
She
new duties. Peg is married to John Trathen
'68,
director of
student activities and the Kehr Union at BSC and
treasurer of the Alumni Association. The Trathens and
their
two sons
live in Catawissa.
Roalie F. Davis '66 died on March 27 at the Geisinger
Medical Center in Danville.
(Continued from Page 6)
Born
Queens, N.Y., she was a daughter of the late
Julia Rosenberg Friedman and she lived in
the Berwick area for 30 years. She was a member
of
Temple Israel Synagogue, Wilkes-Barre, and Ohev
Shalom Synagogue of Berwick. She was past president of
Ohev Shalom Sisterhood, and was presently president of
the Columbia County Chapter of Hadassah.
in
Herman and
1959
Doane W. Hunter "59 has been appointed as the regional
advocate for the U.S. Small Business Administration in
the eight Southeastern States which includes Alabama,
Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North and South
Carolina, Florida and Tennessee. As regional advocate,
Duane will maintain contact with local businesses,
regional business groups,
SBA
A
teacher in the Berwick school system, she taught for
years at the Salem Elementary School and the Ferris
Heights building. She was on the board of directors of
CSIU, Lewisburg. She received her master's degree from
14
District Offices, as well as
BSC and also attended Brooklyn College.
and local governments to determine their needs.
announcing the appointment, Regional SBA Administrator Miller Widemire said, "Duane Hunter's
exstate
Surviving are her husband, Philip; sons, Roger,
Philadelphia, and David, Norristown; one grandchild;'
and a brother, Joseph Friedman, Long Island, N. Y.
In
perience will be valuable to his post as regional
advocate
in a very important part of the country,
and in one of our
agency's most active and effective regions for
small
business. He will be a strong advocate for
small business,
listening to their
problems and working with them
strengthen the region 's small firms
to
. '
He was awarded a M.B.A. degree from Atlanta UniverMr. Hunter, who is married to the former
Anne Dolan of Allentown, has been a resident of Stone
sity in 1980.
Mountain, Georgia, for the past seven years. The
Hunters
have three sons.
His address is
Georgia 30088.
1931
Biffle
Drive,
Stone
of
a
member
of
m^m^mh
BSC
the
4
A
A/n
jf\}
/
^mmmmm
Carl G. Hack
'67 is
deceased.
Carol Slusser Fraind
He came from Berwick.
"67
had an art exhibit called
"Spunk and Spirit" in the Kehr Union from
April 10
23. It showed a wide range of
subjects but
stressed portraits of older people who
embody old-
in 1969.
through April
Frances Helen Grey '63 died on February
address was Box 307, Bemus Point, N. Y.
fashioned qualities that she admires. Carol's
address
R D. 4, Berwick, Pa. 18603.
dentist in Alexandria, Va., and a
former
college. He was a 1921 graduate
of
is
19,
1983
Her
14712.
The Rev. Wanda K. Snyder '63 died on
February 3 She
was assistant pastor of St. John's Lutheran
Church
Phoenixville, Pa. Before her ordination
in 1982 she worked
as a speech and language therapist.
She earned her M Ed
degree at BSC in 1970. Her husband,
Leonard D. Snyder
'62, M.Ed. '67, is a social
science teacher in West
the
member
'61,
last
in 1977
Randolph-Macon. The award
outstanding
Oxenrider
1963
by Mrs. Samuel Nelson Gray, the
named for her late husband. Samuel Nelson
trustee
J.
The Millersburg High School graduate earned his B.S.
degree in 1961. Four years later he received a master of
arts degree in mathematics at Penn State.
Mountain
Conrad L. Stanitski '60, professor of chemistry
and
department chairman at Randolph-Macon College,
received the Samuel Nelson Gray Distinguished
Professor
Award at the college's annual honors convocation on
April
award is
Gray was a
Clinton
mathematics department for the past 17 years, was
awarded his doctor of arts degree in mathematics from
Idaho State University in December. His thesis was
entitled "Dyad and Kronecker Products of Matrices."
Oxenrider came to BSC in September 1965 as an
instructor. The following year he was promoted
to
assistant professor and was promoted to associate
professor
1960
Established
Clinton Oxenrider '61
presented annually to an
administration or
His address
Chester
is
of the college's
317 Highland Ave., Downingtown, Pa.
19335.
faculty.
Professor Stanitski joined the faculty
at Randolphin 1976. He received his bachelor's
degree in
science education from BSC, a
master's degree in
chemical education from the University of
Northern Iowa
and a doctorate in inorganic chemistry
from the
University of Connecticut.
Macon
He is the co-author of
numerous articles. He
three textbooks and the author of
is a member of the
American
Chemical Society, Phi Lambda Upsilon, Sigma
Xi and Phi
Sigma
Pi.
1964
David P. Cecco
Janet E. (Bonstedt) Greenleaf '64
was recently elected
president of the Holy Trinity
Lutheran School Board in
Bethlehem Pa. Janet is very active
in church and community affairs. She is married
p™
to James Greenleaf,
man
at UWgh
lT/r.°n
l address is 3191
children. Her
Z
a
Universit y- They have two
Center
St.,
Bethlehem. Pa.
Stanitski formerly held teaching
positions at Kennesaw
CoUege. Georgia State University
and Edinboro State
College.
Rupert
65
was recent 'y h°nored as
„ re
Ung C ° ach for 1983
the Connecticut
K
C hCS Association Glenn is the
coach of the
2?t
u
u o
Waterford
High School Wrestling Team.
A former state
chairman for the Connecticut
United States Wrestling
'
Joseph L. Rishkofski '61, who is
superintendent of the
Area 301)001 Dlstrict has
*
selected for
Who s Who m the East" based on his
background and
service m his chosen field. He was
previously selected for
mc usion in "Who's Who in Educational
Administration"
jn^l981. Joe may be reached
at Box 923, Berwick,
™ ™
-
Pa.
David P. Cecco '67 of Burlington,
N.J., has been appointed general agent in Burlington
by the Northwestern
Mutual Life Insurance Co., Milwaukee
C
has beenthe distrlct a gent in
Burlington since
t
1978. Northwestern
is the nation's ninth
largest life insurance firm, with assets of
over $13 billion and 115
^ °m
general agencies covering
1965
1961
hI^
^
fr
^?
e
Natl ° nal FreCStyle Wrestlin
S
Te^lce im
^Glenn
lives at 80
Rope Ferry Road, Waterford, Conn.
1966
Marc L. Bartlebaugh '66 has a new address:
Rosemont Avenue, Lower Allen Township, Camp
Hill
17011.
Home phone 763-9998. School phone 69M530.
3913
Youshock '73 and her husband
Joseph M. Youshock Jr. '66, are the
parents of a daughter
born on January 14. The Youshocks
live at 819 E Second
Street, Berwick, Pa. 18603.
Jan A. Prosseda '66 was recently named
male "Runner
Year" at the Harrisburg Area Road Runners
Club's
Annual Banquet. Jan completed a
of the
successful 1982 season
winning the 35-39 age group in
the Harrisburg
Marathon on his 39th birthday. He ran
68 races last year
and was undefeated in his age group in
the spring and fall
seasons. He set age group records
in nearly every race
along with several course
standards. He has the
distinction of being the only runner
to win the "Harrisbure
5
Grand Slam."
50 states.
He is the son of Mrs.
Pearl Cecco of Shamokin.
Lorraine M. Savidge '67
recently completed requirements for certification in
elementary school
guidance at Millersville State CoUege
and has received
e
n
ertification from
State Department
°
Sf
EdSca tion°
The certification
^
qualifies Lorraine to provide
guidance
services to elementary and
middle school students.
Lorraine attended Nyack College,
New York, working
£ere in the area of Christian
education. She received her
deg ee and maSter of education
BSC and did post graduate work
BSC,
in
tdlrT
Tom
/
reading psychology
Pa
Patricia A. (Poponiak)
by
all
Cecco was born in Danville, Pa.,
and is a 1963 graduate
of Lourdes High School in
Shamokin, Pa. He graduated
from BSC with a B.S. degree in
elementary education He
also attended Trenton State.
He joined Northwestern in
as an agency supervisor in
Burlington
Cecco and his wife, Ann, have three
daughters and live
at 7 Peachtree Lane m Burlington.
N.J. 08016.
-
5
'67
She has worked with volunteers,
receiving state
recognition as coordinator of reading
tutorial services and
right
read
to
director.
She
received
honorary life
Parents and
member of the National Education
Association and Pennsylvania
State Education Associa-
membership in the Pennsylvania Congress
Teachers and
Lorraine
°n
is
is
a
ha
member
of the International
Educat,on
?°^
Christian Foundation
N»?rZ '£
Narramore
She is currently employed in
Shamokin Area School District
H€ r
178 7 2
3ddreSS
*
of
a life
551A NOrth
the reading
^
Reading
Association and
Street
'
department
at
Sham °fcn.
(Continued on Page 28)
is
Teacher education pursues change
A decade ago,
aeo. the
thp public
nnhii/- was asking,
"Why can't
Johnny read?"
That concern has more recently shifted
toward the
source of the problem: how Johnny
is being taught.
AJthough teachers and teacher educators
are usually
departments fall. "One thing that has
always bothered
is how changes are usually
made: a lot of rushing
and sc.ssors-and-paste work, then
little or no follow up
Instead he is working with others
in the school and in
me
the field of education to engineer
a systematized
perceived as being on the defensive
against criticism,
taking initiative, acting as their own
critics, and seeking out effective
changes. The teacher
education program at BSC is one of
these few having
launched an in-depth study to change
approach to change.
The exercise in planned change
some are now
.
"Too often change
need
members
is
the top
down
T5?
work
outcome."
Seven academic units at the college are participating:
secondary education, special education, early
childhood/elementary education, business education,
educational studies and services, communication
disorders, and the reading clinic.
Seeds of the planned change were planted in 1977,
when Macauley was acting dean of professional studies
for a year. "We were preparing for a visit from
one of
with college
Five school districts are currently participating
with
in a statewide partnership program.
The
BSC
Bloomsburg, Danville, Line Mountain, Shamokin, and
Midd-West school districts are working with faculty
and
administrators from BSC's School of Professional
Studies to meet state requirements for long-range
our professional accrediting organizations, the National
Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education
planning.
Under
the state-funded College Partnership Program
Improvement, college faculty members serve
as outside consultants to local districts, bringing
for School
in
workshops for teachers, assessing the districts' role
in
the community, evaluating the use of buildings,
and
examining curriculum changes.
The partnership program was born out of concern
among State Board of Education members over the
(NCATE)."
Noting the flurry of activity to prepare reports and
presentations for the visit, Macauley realized
afterwards that there was little follow through or
monitoring of changes after the NCATE committee's
visit
too,
and recommendations, i looked at other schools,
and realized that no group seemed to have in place
a systematic
quality of education in the mid-1960s. The state
board
developed a mandate that school districts must submit
change."
long-range plans for evolving to meet changing
student
and community needs. But public schools often found it
difficult to develop adequate plans on their
own. In 1979,
the state board opened the partnership program
as a
dean
In 1979,
way
to evaluate
programs and
institute
Macauley was appointed permanently as the
and one of the first actions
of professional studies,
self-
education
Ray Babineau, Ed.D., a member of the
education faculty, who was subsequently
put on special
this
of
Administrations make decisions with
little or no input
from other levels; yet the others
are expected to carry
out the change," Macauley says.
"In this situation
gi e a V0Ice t0 3,1 the
g
p arties wh ° ™ii
l
be J5
affected by lu
the change.
Everyone can feel he or she
has a personal stake in the decisions and in their
School
He
called in
t0 aSSlSt
to
made from
he took was to search out a
mechanism for
evaluation and possible changes in
teacher
chtngT
"We wanted
bringing together
what elements
be changed, how they can
be changed most effectively,
which changes should take
priority, and what results
can be expected from the
changes.
of teacher education
quality of the teachers they produce.
Change is seldom easy, notes Howard
K. Macauley
Jr., Ph.D., dean of the
School of Professional Studies
under which most of the college's teacher
education
way
is
faculty, students, outside
educators, and
other academic disciplines to talk
about
and improve the
districts
"
change.
'
implementin
g the
Panned
do more than just a superficial
job on
Babineau says. "There's a lot happening
to
the field of education, and
changes that would keep our
in
we wanted to outline
programs abreast of new
the future." Babineau and
developments now and in
Macauley soon realized they weren't
simply preparing
for the next accrediting
committee visit, but were
talking about a game plan
for the remainder of the
1980s
and into the next decade.
In April 1982, the Pennsylvania
Department of
Education sent a team of educators
to the college to
review the change process. The
team met with the
working groups and. in their final
report, extended their
apprec.ation "for the rich, professional
experience
provided by the Bloomsburg
experimental review "
The task force is now working on thejinal
recommendation document, which is
due in early 1983
To some extent we can't wait." Macauley
admits
"Many of the faculty members are eager to
there are changes
with now."
The
first
begin, and
in
the field
we need
to get started
change, being instituted immediately
with
the concurrence of the faculty
and department heads
is
to
introduce microcomputers into the
teacher education
program. Macauley notes that many
school districts are
already purchasing equipment or
the time it takes to
add computer training to the curriculum.
"Teachers
often know less about computers
than their students
want
We
to change that as quickly as
possible." he says
Macauley's office is festooned with flip
charts and
schedule graphs that chart the
progress of the planned
change. His coffee table is stacked
high
with copies of
the position papers and faculty
responses. "We're
juggling about 18 balls right now,"
he says with a
slightly tired smile. Babineau
adds. "But we're moving
forward."
of bringing in outside help.
The Midd-West school
in the program since its
has been participating
year, 1980-81. School
superintendent Dr. Barry Smith says, "I was a new
superintendent at the start and had never been through
district
first
long-range planning. The partnership gave us realistic
help." Through the partnership, the Midd-West/Blooms-
burg team has evolved a five-year plan of regular
curriculum review and change.
"Before the partnership, we selected textbooks and
developed our courses from them," Dr. Smith says.
"Now we
set goals about
what we want to teach, then
meet our objectives. We can
see things in an organized fashion now."
The partnership program has been underway for two
years in the Shamokin Area School District. During the
current phase, the district is working on its self-image:
how faculty members regard themselves, their students,
and the district; and how students view themselves and
find appropriate books to
their faculty.
workshop
One
of the
undertakings has been a
taught to Shamokin
in assertive discipline
teachers by a Bloomsburg faculty member.
"learning is a continuous process," says Dr.
Macauley, dean
teachers,
of the
Bloomsburg program.
Howard
For
shouldn't stop with the degree." Dr.
Macauley views the workshops as one of the most
valuable tools in the partnership program.
it
At Line Mountain, the partnership program is in its
year. The district is already using the college's
first
computer system
naires on
how
to speed analysis of 1,000 questionthe school district serves the community.
A building study
is in the planning stages, and new
superintendent Dr. David Landis is optimistic about the
coming phases: "With guidance from the Bloomsburg
faculty,
we hope
to identify
an effective plan of action
meet the real needs of our students and our
community."
The partnership program benefits more than the
school district. Dr. Macauley notes that the exchange
has been like a refresher course for Bloomsburg
fatuity: "The partnership gets us out into the public
schools again. It sharpens our skills, renews our
relationships with our colleagues, and lets us re-
study program. Each
way through college by working 10 to 20 hours a week in
the Alumni Office. Seated, from left, are
Stephanie
Stewart, a freshman from Bloomsburg; Linda
Kammer-
experience the classroom.
diener,
that will
It's
worthwhile on
all
sides."
AT YOUR SERVICE - The many programs and
of the
projects
Alumni Office would not be possible without the help
of these fine students
who are
part of the college's workof them is helping to pay his or her
a junior from Manchester;
Debra
Blyler,
a
freshman from Bloomsburg. Standing, from left, are Lou
Maslowe, a junior from Doylestown; Jeff Smith, a senior
from Dushore; John Haney, a sophomore from
Fleetwood; Kerry Boll, a sophomore from Schnecksville;
and Scott Righter, a junior from Philadelphia. Dwayne
Heisler, a freshman from Newtown, was not present
for
the photograph.
10
McCormick leads
President
It's been 10 years since James H. McCormick became
president of Bloomsburg State College. In a recent inter-
"Then-Commissioner
Ziegler said he wanted
view with Jim Sachetti, Class of 1973, McCormick
discussed the past decade and shared his thoughts on
the future of BSC. Sachetti, who graduated from BSC
three months before McCormick arrived, has been
managing editor of The Morning Press
since December of 1978.
It
was June
of 1973,
in
the country."
self reluctantly putting his
dream
of being
a college
Months had gone by without a word since he had interviewed for the presidency of Bloomsburg State College.
So he mentally prepared himself for a disappointment,
and decided to proceed with plans for a summer sabbatical from Shippensburg, where at 34 he was already
serving in a major role as vice president for administration.
lege, gathering
20 college campuses.
Of course, he had no way of knowing it as he set out,
was to have a profound effect on Jim McCormick ... and Bloomsburg.
"I was doing a project with the American Association
of State Colleges and Universities, looking at personnel
but the trip
practices,"
visit
McCormick
were similar
The schools he was to
state-owned colleges in Penn-
recalls.
to the 14
sylvania.
national perspective,
I
knew
that the future of public
higher education was going to be different."
In retrospect, the word "different" barely
began to
suggest what was about to take place. In 1973, about
70
percent of BSC's students were studying to be teachers.
Students in all other programs accounted for only
30
percent.
Today
it's the teacher candidates who account
for only
30 percent, while 70 percent are students in other
professional studies, business and the liberal arts,
many working toward degrees that didn't even exist here
lO years
ago.
bee
lore like a revolution.
A
quiet one, to be
sure, but a revolution nonetheless.
And Jim McCormick, as
chance to lead
things turned out, did get his
it.
Most inconveniently, he was in Eugene. Ore., when
had given up waiting for finally came
that call he
through.
the basket case of the state
college system, barely beginning to recover from the
of Robert Nossen's short reign and the stormy
battles that led to his resignation.
McCormick
steadfastly declines to discuss publicly his
predecessor or the many controversies that kept BSC
appearing regularly in newspaper headlines across the
state from 1970 to 1972.
"I've tried to avoid that discussion," he says.
started where we were."
But he does admit that when he got the job, "Some
for his part, says he did not share their
"When
I interviewed here, even though there
were a
concerns, a lot of problems, I felt there were a lot
people here
faculty, students, trustees and the few
contacts I had with alumni
who really cared about
Bloomsburg State College and wanted to get things mov-
lot of
—
—
ing forward
and get any difficulties behind us.
So as he drove back to Pennsylvania, McCormick says
he couldn't wait to get to BSC.
Now, here it is, 10 years later. To mark the decade,
McCormick has agreed to share his thoughts. And as he
sits at a long table in the austere
quiet of the Alumni
in
Carver Hall, he recalls that the job
president in the early '70s had about
security."
it
of college
a "notorious in-
So he never "put a time frame" on how long he
might
be here, he says. "When I had the opportunity
to come,
I just tried to think about the
things that we ought to try
to do."
He
put those thoughts into his speech for the simple
swearing-in ceremony that served as his
inaugural on
Thursday, Aug.
20, 1973.
was anyone in the audience that day with the
speaker's sense of what lay ahead, he or
she might have
If
there
in retrospect
needs... Teacher education
new services to meet
remains a major func-
we must continue to aggressively explore, develop and expand other
curricular
tion of the state colleges, but
possibilities."
The message
many
too
of the cross-country trip
teachers.
had been
clear-
And McCormick says he heard
the
thing time and again as he dove into his first
year '
meeting with the college staff, with business leaders
same
and with more than 20 state legislators.
"We still needed to be recognized as a primary source
of excellent teachers for the schools of Pennsylvania "
he explains. "We just needed fewer of them. So we
knew
in our planning effort that we had to develop new
programs, and develop them quickly."
He
gives credit for getting this enormous job
done to
came up with ideas and held up well
under the stress of a major internal upheaval.
the faculty which
is
one of those leaders who always says *
in a two-hour interview, he
repeatei
ly refuses to
of
doubts.
Room
viewed
"we," not "I," and
friends in higher education couldn't believe that I
was going to get mixed up in it. They couldn't believe
that I was going to get involved."
of
new
McCormick
"We
my
McCormick,
"The thing I sensed, as I moved across the country
and saw the serious retrenchment that was going on at a
number of schools, was that it was because they hadn't
changed quickly enough from teacher education," McCormick says. "It was a tremendous trip, and from that
It's
BSC was
trauma
Loading up the family car, he and his wife Maryan
their young sons, David, 7, and Douglas, 3, hit the
road on a cross-country tour that would take them to
-
foretold the future.
"I am committed to the idea that the state colleges
must serve the Commonwealth as multi-purpose institu
tions," McCormick said. "Economic and social
changes
his family for the long drive east,
something of a shock.
and
some
up
when news of his appointment hit the press.
To some of the people who had gotten to know him
during his eight-year rise from associate professor to
vice president at Shippensburg, the announcement was
In those days,
-
require of educational institutions
The meeting in Harrisburg took place in late July or
early August, and McCormick learned he was expected
to be on the job in a matter of weeks.
So he was back in California at Sacramento State Col-
and Jim McCormick found him-
picked up on one passage which
to
Gov. Shapp, and that I
governor was going to appoint," McCormick recalls.
"So I got my family to San Franciscc and I flew across
Bloomsburg
president back on the shelf.
Higher Education Jerry
come back and meet with
was probably the person the
for
me
take in a period when many institutions
o
higher learning began to fade and decline.
For example, he speaks again and again about
the
portant contribution made by a college-wide
planning
commission which laid the groundwork for successful
programs such as nursing and computer science. It is
these and other new courses that have kept
inquiries
from high school students streaming into the
admissions
office at
a robust rate of
1
4 ?
applications for every posi-
tion,
t
McCormick says he
from the start that -the goal
setting should not be a new president coming
in and
making pronouncements about what we were going
to
be and where we were going."
"I believe in the power of people and the
collegia] approach," he explains. "My major commitment
was to
involve the people of this college and the
larger community in helping me set the goals."
Ever since his arrival, McCormick says, "I've been
trying to create an atmosphere where deans
and vice
presidents and professors and chairmen hopefully
feel
their ideas can come forth and be
considered."
And he says he believes he's done it. "I thing there's
lots of
felt
bottom-up activity going on here," he says. By
all
McCormick also sees to it there is plenty of
from-the-top-down activity, too. He likes to
bounce
memos with his ideas off subordinates and groups such
as the planning commission.
accounts,
my job is to raise new ideas with peo-j
think I'm part of the flailing around, the lookexcitement," he says.
"I think part of
pie, so
I
ing, the
it comes to making a
decision - on whethe
new program, for example - he says he nev
But when
to start a
i
loses sight of his role.
"I realize I'm the guy sitting at the
and
I
By
have
his
does not
to
own
head of the table
decisions," he said.
account, the guy at the end of the table
make
make snap judgments,
When faced
"I try to let
nor is he a worrier.
with a particularly knotty problem, he say
it ripen to the point where
you see what
you've got to do."
Is he a tough boss?
McCormick ponders
believe
replies,
the question for a
moment.
"I
do have high expectations for people." he
"and I hope I also have high expectations
I
for
myself as well."
Always the realist. McCormick says with a smile he
aware that, at any given moment, there is always son
one or some group on campus unhappy
about a decisi
he has made.
When criticized, he say he can take it. "I don't min
being challenged," he says.
"We're all searching for
truth."
McCormick admits that he gets so caught up "in the;
excitement of what I'm doing" that he
sometimes lets]
himself get overly tired. "But I've
never been to the
point
where
'To hell with
just
I
it,'
want
to
" he says.
throw up
my
hands and sayj
1
For relaxation, McCormick says
he enjoys attending
athletic and cultural events
at the college, and tries to]
19t2
ANNUAL FUND
1)
CONTRIBUTORS
BLOOMSBURG BENEFACTORS
THE
MAROON
(Perpetual Scholarships $5000)
Columbia Insurance Companies
G
Richord
Jack McDowell
CLASS
No.
No.
Solicited
Participated
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
6
16.6
9
6
$
66.6
10
22
23
32
27
30
40
49
60
53
59
46
69
325.00
20.0
40.00
4
18.2
180.00
65.00
4
17.4
8
25.0
210.00
7
25.9
65.00
4
13.3
75.00
12
30.0
1.340.00
15
30.6
230.00
10
140
160
100
Hubler
ft
302.00
Dr.
300.00
Liberty Chevrolet-Codilloc
68.3
934 71
Tom
& Mrs. Lowrence Harasym
519.71
31.6
989 71
59
59
44
42.1
1.584.71
David
32.6
1.036.92
Mr.
27.5
1.064.21
Dr.
54
54 0
1.056.71
Alvin G. Lipfert 39
Stella J. Hill '68
Wilhelmino Hayes
Michael
50.0
1,405.21
34.4
857.50
THE
($100
J.
M
Bright
48
14
29.2
342.50
1938
41.1
902.50
Irene Kornell Dovis '28
1939
78
80
43.6
628.92
Fredo Steele
1940
40.0
91
1.064.71
Lucille Jury
1941
37.4
81
25
34
32
34
36
50
40
26
1,244.13
Jasper
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
171
197
260
259
272
328
349
390
409
412
,965.50
1,811.00
52.0
547 21
Fritz
Edith Strickler
Kathryn Jones Fritz '30
Letha Hummel Kinley 39
Richord F. Laux '52
George
28
44
54
40
44
37
34
32
39
53
48
53
35.9
510.00
Robert C. Figlock 72
Francine J. Bolger 79
William H. Bailey
31.4
1.053.84
28.6
912.63
Stephen E. Phillips 80
Helen Hess Terhune 10
Georgia
35.4
928.81
1.388.13
26.1
Dotzel, Jr. '49
816.92
524.42
Ruth
457.71
Dr. Richard O.
30.2
673.48
William Paule '65
R.
31.0
906.63
Douglas
H.
24.4
755.34
20.4
947.83
23.6
1,421.05
62
62
69
22.8
945.74
91
Hope Handy 43 (MG)
Wolfe
'60
McClintock 73
Francis A. Lorah 74 +
Douglas C. Hippenstiel '68
F.
Class of 1951
Millard C. Ludwig '48
1.062.34
19.8
2.203 92
23.3
Glennis H. Rickert 14
Edna Speary Rickert 15
1.352.40
Mary
19.1
1.656.98
1.828.27
1.973,86
2,823.16
2.330.56
718
613
158
22.0
2.147.73
127
20.7
1,782.39
229
156
22.0
3.151.36
16.3
2,005.45
198
18.3
3,339.02
201
19.8
2.477.73
191
21.0
3.770.51
230
204
27.0
3,003.91
21.4
3,423.29
240
226
20.0
4,234.73
22.1
3,124.53
172
14.3
2,250 66
Betterly Maiers '33
102.50
862,63
%
donors
Class of 1922
(68,3)
Largest total
($6,430.13)
Class of 1942
'67
Liberty Chevrolet-Codilloc
Sunshine Laundry
Ronald M. Russo 70
Gertrude Gross Fleischer 07
Jane M. Elmes 72
James
Holland
E.
78 (MG)
Columbia Graphics.
Inc.
Vera Hemingway Housenick 05
Margaret L. Burns 67
Dr.
J.
Fagnani.
Jr.
Margaret Evans Lewis
74
Lawton.
S,
H. Evert
Mrs. A.
ft
Dr.
JoAnne
Betty Ruth Keller Luchak 68
Larry K. Voss 78
Dr
ft
Martho
Preston
James
F.
Snyder
'24
'58
Y. Jones '22
Kathryn M. Abbett '23-33
Gehrig
'37
Anno Jean Laubach Gehrig '37
Nancy Kiplinger Steelman 74
Editha 6nt Adams '24
Augustus Tibbs '58
Philadelphia Chopter + (MG)
Inc.
Leonard A.Winski
The Dixie Shops. Inc.
Dr.
Mrs.
K.
Panikkar
Growney
Richord U Delp
S
Fred H. Henrie
L. Lawton
Kay M. Herman Locke 66 (MG)
Corolyn L Corr 74 (MG)
Bruce R. Russell 75 (MG)
Donna Hagge Russell 78 (MG)
Geraldine Bitting Oberle 42
John H. Trathen 68
Dr.
Emory W Rang.
E. Barrow '24
Richord T Sibly 30-34
Helen
Walter
Wilbur Hibbard 31
S.
Rygiel
F, Fenstemaker 12
Margaret Bittner Parke '23
Alice Pennington Blair '29
Erma Gold Shearer 29
Dr.
Saro Dockey Edwards
amount
Randolph May
Nelson Gibble
Ridgway's Restaurant
Howard
Class of 1979
(240)
Dr. Michael Herbert
Hervey B. Smith 22
Robert A. Muscosky 69
Earl A.
8
Arnold 17
P. L
Dr.
68
F.
Thomos J. Stiner 76 (MG)
Anno Orner Gurtendort 39
Victor A. Miller '60
Albert
'44
Louise Scherer Rolland '24
Leonard
R
Wearne
76 (MG)
Hilda Albertson Heller 23
'40
18.9
25.5
III
A Bean 78 (MG)
Doris O. Bailey
28.6
22.6
Largest
G. Thomos Hughes
Jeffrey
27.1
61
of contributors
Albert H. Hitchings 52
Richord S Benyo '68
Ezra W. Horns 32
Gladys Jones Harris
Jack L. Mertz '42
21.6
number
Dorothy Englehart Zimmermon 39
335.00
21.5
Largest
Hoffman 32
Gregory Brinser 78 (MG)
Harvey A Andruss, Jr.
Roy O Zimmerman '39
30
574.84
34.6
'48
ft
Rosolyn Verona Pennington 56
'22
Wise 25
229.71
109
1982
M
Adams
->-
Mrs. William Brewster +
ft
Thelmo Brandon Bittner 28
Gladys Bakey Furlong 34
Jack Reese '52
Fice
26.0
147
144
Master's Degree Recipients
Mr
Buckingham '43
Buckingham '43
Friends of Boyd Buckingham
F
41.3
42.1
508
650
666
1023
1207
Boyd
Joanna
13
105
958
1080
1013
911
851
955
1200
Klotchok 76 (MG)
Helen Hutton Morris 28-37 +
Josephine Duy Hutchison 15
19
78
1041
J.
Francis B. Golinski 52
Judith M. Knapp 71
Suzanne E Cromack 77
Edwin M. Barton 07
16
142
119
118
129
1
6.430.13
'64
Joy Dreisbach Linn '59
Lipfert '39
61
49.4
Sandra Smith Kleppinger
William A. Turley 66
Carol Lambert Turley 71.
Mrs. Fred Campbell +
Mrs James H. McCormick
ft
ft
SOCIETY
$299)
78
1937
51.1
-
Jones 43
922.21
113
127
LONG PORCH
570.42
27.0
928 42
1951
Mr
24.1
45.0
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
Mulka 66
Kotherine Matzko Mulko 68
ft Mrs
Donold A Worts 37
S.
28
34
Steven
72
74
Fisher 69
J
John
60
42.2
50
38
50
46
78
140
189
Dr
E.~Willioms+ 15
31
81
'42
Albert
Figlock
Francis A. Loroh
23.9
69
98
Seaman Thomas
Robert C
135
1942
1943
1944
1945
W
Louise
Gerald D Fritz '41 (MG)
John D. Christion
30.4
44.4
Bakeless 15-16
THE FOUNDERS' CLUB ($143)
Martho A. Fisher '25
1934
1935
1936
151
Little
S. Evert
Douglas K Dillon
John
Thomas '47
Tom E. Williams 15
Drew K. Hosteller 76 (MG)
60
52
57
1933
Harry
($500-$»99)
Mark A Raynes 80
818.13
Thomas '42 (MG)
Seaman Thomas 47 (MG)
Kotherine
Pennsylvania Dutch Chopter +
Mogee Foundation
354.71
1.020.00
'41
W
John
Louise
174.71
33.6
Edwards '41
Eda Bessie Beilhortz Edwards
Fronds J. Stonitski 52 (MG)
79
Dennen 61
Anonymous
THE BSC TRADITION KEEPERS
22.6
35.3
+
Dawson
E.
Dr. C. Stuart
Richard S
32.2
1
+
Fleck 65 (MG)
J.
Thomas
Carl A. Poff
19
18.00
120
Family +
E.
225.05
28
47
47
181
George
16.7
1
140
133
116
126
190
Jr. '63
12
21
41
William H. Gorson.
+
'49
Grimes
E.
Francis D. Sell '35
(MG)
G. M. Hock Construction Co.
100.00
2
Robert
($1000 or more)
Robert P Miller, Friends & Fomily +
Amount
5
Class of 1932
1932
Donori
'40
Inc.
Kotharine Bierman Edwards 15
Alfred J. Cyganowski 53 (MG)
THE CARVER TOWER ASSOCIATES
Total
%
C Industries.
ft
CIRCLE
$499)
Cloyton H. Hinkel
Mildred Eaton Levitt 42
James LaBar
CLASS PARTICIPATION SUMMARY
GOLD
ft
($300
Jr.
51
Anne Fowler Hibbard 32
Elvira
James Stanulonis
Harriet
L.
'35
Kocher 39
Joseph A. Giedgowd 77 (MG)
Kotherine L Ruck 42 +
Michael J Matzko
Mr. ft Mrs. Donald A Watts 37
12
LONG PORCH SOCIETY
THE
Cynthio
L.
Louis 0. Muelhof
Catherine O'Neill Deitrich
Dr Ellen M. Clemens 62
John C Poploskie '67 (MG)
Walter H. Jorecki 33
70
Dr.
Sheroton Oonville Inn
Robert R
Dorette & Froncis
Morgaret Oavis Yenchor
Welk
Josephine Holubo Drueding 30
Elwood R Hording, Jr. '68
Dr. Donold T McNelis 57
Millord C. Ludwig
R
Robert
A
Jomes
J.
James
Morion 49
Holllster
I
Gensemer '60
Gensemer
Elizabeth Derr
'61
Buckhorn Ploio Motel
Mildred G. Goodwin 2°
John E Lovelle '41
Fronk
M
AT&T Long
Robert
Lines Personnel +
(MG)
Pursel
B.
Yeoger (MG)
F
Clark
R.
Inc.
71
III
Chorles C
Nancy
C &
J
Housenick
Housenick
L.
'60
Contractors
For Emily Nikel Gledhill
by Philadelphia Chopter.
O
12
Campbell 70 by Mr.
Fischer
'29-40
Mrs Wilbur G. Fischer
For Helen Gregory Lippert
Walter
by
C. Lippert.
For Morie Cromis
Goboro, Jr. '50.
17 by Horry
J.
For Henry Biermon (1882), Ethel
Bierman Somerville 09 ond Louise
Sober Biermon by Katharine Bier-
mon Edwords
For
Clonce
Kotherine
For
George
Ralph
L.
Gellinger
E
J.
H.
by
Hubler
31
by
Hubler 8 Family, Mr &
Dooling Dr 8 Mrs C
Edwords
A.
Ruck
Ruck 42
Elizobeth
Mrs. W.
Stuart
15.
41
Beem.
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph
Mr
8
Millicent
J.
Mrs.
Finton.
Moron.
For Terry Hutlon and Emily Hutton
28 by Helen Hutton Morris 28-37
For Sylvio Cromis by Modeline
C
For Fannie Leggoe
Tom
E.
Wondel
15 by
Willioms 15
For Jone Renoldo by Lon
L.
Hor«oth 81, Julio Piccenllo.
Suzanne E.
Cromack 77
M
Hausknecht
Hausknecht
B.
&
Mr 8 Mrs. Robert P Miller 8 Fomily
8 Friends. AT&T Long Lines District
Office 8 Supervisors & Technicians.
Employees of Jomes G Biddle Co.,
Boyd Jr. Richord E. Foir
banks. Lyndo Kommon
Poulo J.
Mogoro. Rowlond H. Myers, Jr., Mr
J
Andrew
McGroth «
Theodore
T.
Zodrogo.
Daniel
8
Morkowski. Jone
73.
Mrs.
M
Kenneth
Ann
Wiest.
J.
Barnes, Robert
Ringel. William
W
Bloss,
Jomes
Mike Rotelle 81
79, Ken Krick 79,
Reitz,
Don Conlolone
81,
Bernadette
Sigol,
J.
Mr
Henson, Bob
Grace P
Mr. 8 Mrs
Ortlieb.
Family.
Tolorico.
Dr
Robert Warren. Brian Mohlstedt
Scott Young 79 Greg Falotek
Greg
Talese
John
J
Trothen 68
Doris
R.
Rarig, Jr
E
Rorig
J.
Rod ice
O
8
80-82,
Rick Moniscolco
Christy
Doug
Demansky
Bielefeld
81
Gum
Potricio B. Torsello
Jomes
Mr. & Mrs. Robert P, Miller Family &
Friends + (MG)
Shumon
Robert
Golden Arrow Motel & Restaurant
Barbara
Behr
E.
Dr.
James
Creosy 57
B.
J.
Chorles
W
Donold
Loudermilch
+
Buckhorn Plozo Motel
Dr. Gerald
Powers
W
Himes
Clyde H. Kouffmon +
Doyle G Dodson
Richord B Houpt
I
Mr. 8 Mrs Chorles P. Pursel
Robert F Yeoger (MG)
Mr & Mrs Roger Sonders
Robert C Young. Inc.
Jone M. Ringel +
Douglas C. Hippenstiel 68
Dr Michoel Herbert
Charles A. Creosy
Hutchison Insuronce Agency
Jonice C. Keil 74
John D Klingermon
Louboch Auto Parts. Inc.
Longs Supply Co., Inc.
Donold D Robb 46
Dr. Kolyon K Ghosh
Dr.
.
John A. Scerbo
Sneidman's Jewelry Store
AT&T Long Lines District Office,
Dr.
George
Lynda
J.
of
Jr.
Mrs
+
Mr. 8 Mrs. Theodore
J
Sigol
+
Bernodette Tolorico +
Mr & Mrs Kenneth Zodrogo +
Foirbonks +
P
M Honlz, Jr (MG)
Jomes A Antipos
C & J Contractors
Cotowese Cooch Lines Inc
Liso Coyne
Robert
Nespoli
Richord C. Savage +
Bloomsburg Bonk-Columbio Trust
Mrs. Christine Alichn.e
Albert J Bush
Robert
H.
Nelson Gibble
Sunshine Loundry
Julie
79 M.Ed.
Ello R. Miller +
Mr. & Mrs. Howard Sweigort +
Mr. & Mrs. George Rolond
+
L.
Abell
Chorlotte
A
Dougherty +
Elizobeth U. Rollman
+
Mr & Mrs Robert Ames +
Dorothy H. Sheoffer +
Columbio Grophics, Inc.
Dr & Mrs. Lawrence Horasym
P. L.
Lowton, Inc
Mr & Mrs. Chorles McGoffic +
Ridgwoy s Restourant
Jock McDowell
Jomes LoBar
M
Joseph
Mrs.
Liberty Chevrolet-Codilloc
Housknecht +
K. Pursel
Gilmore Family +
Mrs Hurley O. Potterson +
George E. Hubler. Jr. & Fomily +
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J. Moron +
Jomes Henson + (MG)
Cloyton H. Hinkel '40 +
Allen F. Murphy
'80.
Longenberger (36)
Mock
Moorehead
Ino Surplus
1914
Memoriols
to
General Idwol
Co.
John D Christian
Deone
Charles
B.
Fenton
Hoppel
J
Minom
Forscht Core
Loviso Sheord
Gossman
Leah Bogort Lowton
Glennis H. Rickert (16)
1915
Memonol
to
Kotherine
Little
Fonnie leggoe Wondel
Bokeless (16)
Soro A. Broce
Joseph Cherrie
Esther Dreibelbis
Kotherine Biermon Edwards +
Josephine Duy Hutchison +
Normo Hoog McCreody
Elizobeth
Tom
E
Brig
Gen
Hunsinger
W
Bloss +
(MG)
Dr. & Mrs. Robert W Meldrum
Robert W. Buehner. Jr.
Horry
Evert
S.
Dr. Barrett
Bob
Reitz
W, Benson
+ (MG)
Dr. Robert
Worren + (MG)
Howard McKinnon
Clonce A Vorgo
Mr. & Mrs
Fronk D. Englund
G
M. Hock Construction Co
Mr. & Mrs
J Dooling +
W
CHAPTER GIFTS
Philadelphia Chapter +
Pennsylvania Dutch Chapter +
BEQUESTS BY WILL
Mory Frymire Kirk Scholorsh.p
Mary D. Comerford 13
*
Williams +
1916
Allen
G
Benson
Helen Wingert Doy
Hormon Dew
Irene
Carolyn
E.
Elder
Dorothy
M
Fritz
Shoemaker Henne
Ethel
Helen
V McHugh
Florence Seorfoss
Munro
Voletto Kohny Robinson
Elsie
Hogenbuch Robison
William D. Taylor
Williom
A
Wesley
E
Hilda
Thomos
Tubbs
Wosnock Welliver
Wiegand *
Elizobeth
Jock Metzer Ford, Inc
Elton
H,
Edwords
Bornes +
Lucy B
Donold
Poulo J. Mogaro + (MG)
Rowland H. Myers, Jr + (MG)
Mr. & Mrs Andrew T. Ortlieb
+
Grace P. McGroth & Family + (MG)
Kuster
E
S Jomes Robbins
Fannie Leggoe Wondel
L.
E.
Rolph
Welsh Miller
Edno Speory Rickert
Williom C
Jomes G. Biddle Co +
Boyd.
Glrton
L.
Lee C Hopple
Mr & Mrs
Horoce Willioms
Mrs. Noncy L. Housenick
W
Kammon +
Richord
Robert
Morion Mack Kinnermon
Dr Jerrold Griffis
Dr.
Supervisors & Technicians + (MG)
Employees
Anno Tronsue Dickinson
s
Richord
1
Irene Boughner
78
Julio Piccerillo
Columbio Insurance Componies
Dr. Craig
Florence Blocker Crouse
Ruth Kline Everett
Anne French Connell 77
Yori '57
P.
Col C B. F. Brill
Beulah Anderson Bronson
Susie H
World Travel
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard
Comerchero
Fred Nicol
to Emily Nikel Gledhill
1913
66
Hollister
E
1912
Memorial
Alfaretta Stork Wilner
Dr Leonard A. Winski
Brian A. Johnson
Burel
Eudoro Wolton Womeldorf
Howard F. Fenstemaker
Mary Zerbe Leister*
Anno Reice Trivelpiece
The Mogee Foundotion
Mr & Mrs. Ralph A. Beem +
Millicent Finton +
Your Fomily Restaurant
E.
Annette Osborne Frontz
Ruth Reynolds Hosbrouke
Edno Lewis Robinson
L.
Froncis J. Welk
George P Boss
Walter A. Hoffmon
Jomes R. Louffer
Andrew M. Schmid
Boiley
Lewis
1911
Henne
Dorette Welk
Jr
Anno Kleintob Edwords
Sora F
Sheraton Danville Inn
Robert G. Shive
'49
Brill
Richard U. Delp
Lawton
Rolph L Good +
Michoel J. Motzko
Dr. & Mrs. Harold J. Bailey
Ruth Ann Bond
Thomas F, Langan
Gene M. Leiby
51
1910
Gregg
Julio
Jr.
I
8
by
M
C.
H
Robert
Chorles McGoffic Jeanne M.
White. Mr. 8 Mrs. Richard White
& Mrs.
Scrimgeour
Bierman
Somerville
Helen Hess Terhune
Preston
'53
to Ethel
Non B DeFelice
Fred H
12
Chorles W. Chronister
37 by Penn
Mrs
Loudati
For Williom Forney by Cloyton
Hinkel '40
Bloss
K.
Dutch Chapter,
For William Teitsworfh by Froncis
A. Loroh 74, Richard C. Sovoge
For Timothy
Miller by Mr
George
S.
1909
Memorial
Joe A. DeFelice
Dr & Mrs
)
Chester
Mrs. Lucy
+
Williom H, Bailey
John
For
17 by
John
+
Nicholas Corsillo
James E. Cole
Thomos A. Dovies,
Boyd F Buckinghom
Joonna Fice Buckinghom
Modeline C. Loudoti +
W. Storb. Verno E
Jones 36, L. P Gilmore Fomily. Mr
& Mrs. John Yeoger '35-36, Mr &
Mrs Donold A. Wotts 37.
4 Mrs. FredCompbell
Mr. & Mrs
Cloro DeRose
&
Dorothy H. Sheoffer. Rolph L. Good,
Roy W Brondou
Dr. George J.
Duy
Brennon
Louis D Muehlhof
Horvey A. Andruss.
P
Clyde H. Kauffman, Howard
Neldo Sweigort Ello R. Miller.
Mr
15
S
'37
Florence Corby Sippol
Richord White
JoAnne S. Growney
Thomos L. Ohl '57
Sharon Sholley Kribbs 66
Marilyn Muehlhof
Sell '35.
Storb,
For Wilbur G.
Inc
Ames, Elizobeth u Rollman,
Charlotte
A.
Dougherty.
George & Vero Rolond, Froncis D.
14
M
Dr
John A. Scerbo
For Lomor
Hutchison.
E.
College Store
Eleanor
by
Edwards
by Josephine Duy Hutchison
& Mrs William Brewster
For Karen
(MG)
Dr. Froncis
(MG,
19
Mrs Hurley O. Patterson.
For Dr John J Gress 35 by Mrs.
John J. Gress.
For Generol Idwol H
Chorles
1907
Edwin M Barton
Gertrude Gross Fleischer
Helen Mosteller Hile
Dr.
Willord A. Christian 39
MBA
Longs Supply Co..
sylvonio
Patterson
Fenstemaker
F
Emory
Mrs. Mary
(
Hurley
'63
Mr. & Mrs. Donold A. Wotts
Walter S. Rygiel
Howard
1905
Vero Hemingway Housenick
John W. Storb +
Mr. & Mrs
Mary Borroll Hill 67
Mary Lou Fenstemaker John 45
Walter C Lippert +
MEMORIAL GIFTS +
For
Given 77
Dr.
Dr.
McGroth & Fomily + (MG)
Robert J. Fleck 65 (MG)
Robert R. Sompsell 69 (MG)
Sandro Swetlond Williams 66 (MG)
Williom J. Ewell 76 (MG)
Richord C. Knause 53 (MG)
Robert Honrz '65 (MG)
Corol McCrocken Honrz 65 (MG)
Hopple
lee G. Borthold
Jr
Hutchison Insurance Agency
John D. Klingermon
Grace
Dr. Jerrold Griffis
Lee C
Meldrum
& C Industries
Mr. & Mrs Donald A. Watts +
Charles A. Creosy
Dr.
Renninger 41
Cotherine Oplinger Renninger 41
Dr.
W
Sneidmon s Jewelry Store
The College Store
Mr. & Mrs. Roger Sanders
Robert C Young,
'67
G
Tontsits
Mr. & Mrs Chorles
Y.
Nelson A. Sworts
75 (MG)
76 (MG)
Stonley Tontsits
Suson
Edword
Fisk '60
E.
Conwell
Elwood M. Wogner 43
Koy Jones Wogner 43
Betty Zehner Dietrich '45
Dr Barrett W Benson
John F Hendler '38
Jeanne M. While + (MG)
Mr. & Mrs Howard McKinnon
Morie E Foust '37
78
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard
Comerchero
Dr. Iro
Pofricio A.
Henry Bierman
to Dr.
(1882)
Roy
Brandau +
Dr George J. Storb
Mr. 8 Mrs. Fred Campbell +
S. Duy Hutchison +
Kenneth D Schnure '69
Eleonor P Shomis
G & C Industries
Mrs. Wilbur G Fischer +
Chorlotte M. Hess 52
Dr David A. Superdock 54
'30
Col
40
Linn. Sr.
E.
lloyd 62
Robert W. Buehner.
louffer
E.
Richard R
Memorial
W
Pouline Aumiller Stork
Bridge 68
Dr & Mrs Robert
Wogner LeGronde 36
Ruth
'42
Charles C. Harmony 47
Stonley G. Rokowsky
DONORS BY CLASS
Dr, 8
Dr
Merrill A. Deitrich '42
Morilyn Muehlof
Jomes
BSd FAMILY & FRIENDS
Mrs Jomes H. McCormick
Jeonne M. White +
Nancy Green Gilgonnon '57
Douglas K Dillon
Mrs. Hurley Patterson +
The Dixie Shops, Inc
Mrs John J. Gress +
S. H. Evert
Mr. & Mrs Williom Brewster +
Dr & Mrs. A K Ponikkor
Friends of Boyd Buckinghom
Kenneth Hoffman
Catawese Cooch lines, Inc.
Columbio Insuronce Componies
Weorne 44
Motzko 77
Jessie Props!
1917
Memorial
Helen Gregory lippert
Memoriol to Morie Cromis
Georgio F Arnold
Gertrude lord Blanche
to
Groce M Dovis
Agnes Maust Dieffenbacher
Nora Berlew Dymond
Non
R.
Jenkins
Cloro O'Donnell LeMin
Helen McCarthy O Toole
Mildred M. Rice
Nellie Popciak Turkiewicz
1918
Cnddie Edwards Berninger
Vido E Edwards
Hannah low Groner
Dorothy Horrison LoBor
Cora K Cotner Mottern
Edno Davenport Ohl
Moine
E.
Richardson
Continued from page 12
Violet
VanDemplos Dando
Dawson
William
Edith Hill
Leonora Walker Simons
Morion Phillips Stiteler
Edward
H. Yost
Memorial to Hurley O. Patterson
Morion Brenner Bredbenner
Crook
Rhoda L, Crouse
Mabel G Decker
Eva Ferguson Ellis
Ann
E.
Griffith
Mary A. Hess
Linda
Pfahler
1920
Ruth Johnson Garney
Warren
Henderschott
Gertrude R. Martin
E.
('40)
Fredo Steele
Esther Welliver
lillie
Horter
Coreene
Brittoin Giere
Helen Deitrick Harmon
J
Marie King Horns
Edna S. Horter
E. Dechant
50)
Rose Connor Garrahom
Beuloh Deming Gibson
T.
Cecelia
M
Gladys
E
M
Minnie
Hohn
('39)
Morie Werkheiser Hemmig
Christina Goble Jacks
Margoret J Jones
Helen Gensemer Kennedy
Stosio Roiewski Kowalski
Long
E.
Lydio Pollock
Mohoney
1927
Morgoret Keller Riehl
Morion Marshall Beisel
Naomi Bender ('53)
Ethel Price Richards
Merceo Kreigh Benner
Rachoel Long Sauers
Anita Rodda Scott
Nelle Doley Shockloss
Kothleen Somers Bonner
Bowman
L.
Chicollo
H. Evangeline Lanning Deibert
Ruth Smith Dickstein
Molly Brace Duffy
Matilda Mensch Waples
Laura Kohler Wendel
S.
Dymond Whitlock
Edno Willioms Willioms
Edgar B Sutton
1925
Katherine Rinker Allen
Geneva
Schott
Baughman
Burgess ('40)
Katherine Wilson Byers
Lillian
1923
Helen Harmon Bowes
Grace H. Brandon
Jean Young Brown
Kathryn Brennan Burke
Rhoda Wesley Burlingame
Louise Davies Colwell
Chorlotte Fetter Coulsfon
C. Ellen
Andes Howard
Ruth Bennoge LaRue
Beatrice Girton Leorn
Sterling
Grace A. Lord 50)
Helen Chudzinski Lukus
Strauser
Martha Davies Wotkins
Mildred Sechok Weiss
Glodys Dildine Whitmire
Dorothy Foote Pihlblod
(
(
63)
Wilhelmino Spangenberg Lesoius
Morion Smith Little
Catherine D Reilly
Irmo Kopp Rich
31)
Mary
Anna Zorskas
K. Gallagher
Edno Berkheiser Gottey
Victoria Smith Giger ('44)
Marion Furman Grubb
(
Ruth
Crumb Howells
Quinn Jakobsen
Isoacs Johnson
Glodys Bundy Krick
Esther Chapin louboch
41)
('49)
Memorial
to Wilbur
Ido Hensley
Fischer
Acore
W. Brandon
Pouline Nelson Brockmon
Esther Wruble Burnat
Thelma Hartzel Burns *
Elva Griffith Dovis
Regis Neely Morris
R. Lucille
Jule Prisbek
1931
('59)
Audrey Moore Cohen
Eleanor Zydonowicz Cooke
Ralph W. Davies
Emily
Maroney Fairman
Mildred
Fortner
Alberto Willioms Green
Lolo Keeler Pulling ('60)
Irene E
Guest
Dr.
Mary Hoys Harry
Myrtle Hoegg Hayes
Schalles Rosser
Geroldine Hess Ruch
Roy
J
Horing
Esther Yeager Castor
Dorothy Jones Chose
Nicio M Chiovacci
Rosino Frank Chornack
('54)
L
m
Isabel Chelosky Hester
Creveling
Albyna Zadra Dovis
James
B.
C.
Florence
G Goodwin
Ruth M. Rockwell
M. Elizabeth Von Busk.rk Booth
Jone Fohringer Brewington
Cora Wagner Burd
LoRue
*
Elizabeth A. Reilly
to Elizobeth H. Hubler
Catharine Stockhouse Acker ('52)
Lewis
Mortz DeVoe
Bertine Prosser
Hope
('39)
Pearl Schell Carls
Jock B
Vezo
Memorials
Cloire
Cormon
Violet V.
Phyllis Fowler Wilson
Margoret Davis Yenchar
Evelyn Olver Avery
Antoinette
(
40)
Sora Smith Walter
Sora Ermish Adorns 42)
Rachel Gefhing Anthony
Groce Thompson Morlow
George A. Mathews ('29)
Sadie Zapp Moyernick
Mildred Adorns McCloughan ('29)
Mildred Crothomel McCullough
Mory Dietz Miller
('50)
Virginia M. Tedesco
G
Esther Horter Bittner
Lloyd
Schell
(
Edith
L
E.
Cotherine Vollrofh Symons
1929
Mary
Eva
32)
Anno Skladony Mergo
Anne H. Morgis
Wotkins
Zeisloft
(
(
Rhea Davis Strausser
Mory Sands Vaughn
E.
('33)
Gertrude Schraeder Johnson
A. Elizabeth Myrick Jones
Minnie Rowe Keefer
Thursobert Schuyler
Richord T. Sibly 34)
Clara Zydanowicz Petedreund
Cotherine Skvorla Polacky
Helen V Coshmareck
Gertrude Hildebrond Crayton
Laura A. Dovis
Mortha A. Fisher
Hummer
Annie
Viola M. Stadler
('58)
Dorothy Hilemon
Chorles A. John
Vivion Jermyn Frey
Philbin
Wise
36)
('48)
(
Hilda
Poyne
Elizobeth Gilbert Vincent
(
Finnerty
39)
Anno Isenberg Gossler
Harold H Hidlay
Raymond T Hodges
Robinson
M. Louise Baker Stevens
Lois A.
(
Groce Reichard Gardner
Dorothy M Gorrey 32)
J.
B.
50)
Schnurefoose
A.
James H Willioms
R.
(
Cruikshonk
Jasper M. Fritz
Kathryn Jones Fritz
(
Clara Vanderslice Thomos
Mildred Gollogher Vercusky
Mary
+
Snyder ('37) '
Ethel Roberts Stafford
Mildred Phillips Stauffer
Thelmo Prosser Cooper
Catherine M Dean
Pauline Lloyd Isaacs
Bertho Randall Troino
Lehman
Brown
Nolo Kline Brown
Anna
37)
N. Rosalie Boyer Smiley
62)
(
Ethel Fowler
F.
Soroh
Lois Mitchell
Blank
Dietterich
(
Helen Hutton Morris ('37)
Morjorie Klein Perrotti
Doris Fritz Hassert
W. Seely
McLaughlin
Oce Williams Austin
Morgoret
Leslie
F.
E.
Josephine Holuba Drueding
Eleanor M. Dwyer
Miriam Edwards
Kathryn House Everift
('30)
Mory Kershow Powell
Zelma H. Ramage
Leona Moiley Pierce
Doro Wilson Risley
Mildred Ridgley Schollenberger
Helen Zydonowicz Schwoll
Linskill
Elizabeth Davies Miller
Helen Pursel Walborn
Bessie Singer Shaffer
Evadne M. Ruggles
Hervey B Smith
Helen Hess Strouch
Lucile Jury
Arthur
Bukowski
Cavanough
Helen Morgan Daubert
Groce Reinbold Davis
Jessie Cook Dovis
Dorothy Welker DeWire
Gladys Hirsch Lyon
Sutliff
Mory Fruit Forr
Hannah M. Fetterman
M
Virginia
Schoen Lewis
Morgoret L. Lewis ('37)
Lydio Taylor Martin
Wilmo
Cloire T
Winifred A. Lawless
Mobel Albertson
E.
Stacio Audelevicz
('29)
Laird ('29)
Margoret Coburn Stracko
Frances
1930
Florence E Boker
30)
Atillo
Helen Hess Evans
Morgoret Smith Morris
A
Agnes Burns Wilson
Elizabeth Roup Yeich
Lovma Crowell Young
Marian E Young
Janetto York Colemon
Ruth Allen Smith
Leoro V. Souder ( 50)
M. Roselda Schultz Sherwood
Joseph P. Siesko ('39)
Ramoge ('48)
Adelle Cryder Raymond
George B Rhown. Jr
Mary
Rowlands
M
(
H Elizabeth Williams
Or
Helen A. Kramer
Roeder
Mobel Ridall Noble
Anna Nordstrom Pearson
Roberts
Louise Scherer Rolland
Mortha Y Jones
Morgaret Murroy Luke
Antoinette Coolbough Moson
Genevieve Bohr Morrow
Mory Lawrence Poetzell
50)
(
Eleanor Derr Gilbert
Hoffman
40)
Anders Washeleski
Dowe Welker
Lillion
('36)
Florence Fest Johnstone
Mildred Bohn Kneller
Anna Gogoloch Vaughn
Conway
Kathryn
Gertrude
Jones
(
M
(
Virgin. o
Heintzelmon (51)
K.
Korleen
Helen Odell Thompson
Foe Womelsdorf Tubick
Ruth Tempest McLaughlin
Maude Stover Meyer
Moon Dice
Rachoel Kressler Erdman
T.
Bertha
Brace
Ruth Terry
Beckenbaugh
Cameron
Saro Spongier Walters
Dole
(
Mary Sweeney Ruddy
Emily Edwards Rupert
Morse Aldrich
Edith E
Max
Bery
William
John
Helen Jones Londis
Morgaret Evons Lewis
Ruth Beaver Lindenmuth
Beotrice Cornell
Lois Pfahler
Thelmo M. Noylor
John J. Opiory
Frances Hohn Blose
Adams
Anno Jones Todd
Phillips
Francis A. Garrity
Morgon
Gilbert
Carl D. Blose
*
Irene Kornell Davis
Doyle W. Ivey
Smith
F.
62)
(
Mary
Mory
Charlotte Parsons Armstrong
Grace Baylor Auten
Helen E. Barrow
Grace Wogner Beers
1922
Doris Johnson Stewart
Margaret Betty Thomas
Frances Conner Mensinger
Antonio Ashton Metzker
1924
Editho Ent Adorns
Nelson Yerkes
Bertha 8illmeyer Zong
Geroldine Diehl Cross
Lebo Stauffer
Helen Ash Stearns
Elsie
Mory Moher McElhenny
Doris
Beotrice Williams Eichner
Thelmo Bommer Stockhouse
Annie Bronson Seely
Lola Kocher Seword
Christine B
Warren L. Fisher
Agnes Moe Eyerly George
Edith Blossom Hoffman
Fronk Klem
Ruth M. Koch
Mildred Downing Major
Morgoret Deitrick Martin
Elenoro Shannon McDougoll
Josephine Allison Moyer
Helene Lowe Schlegel
Mory Gillospy Sholer
Sara Morgon Sutcliffe
26)
Jeanette Hostie Buckingham
Anna Benninger Bush
Caroline Spotts Criswell
Morgoret Oswald Gordon 30)
Martha Yavorsky Honderohon
Grace Edwards Hortman
Rhodo M, Young
Edna Sterner Durling
Mane Howeth Simmons
Eleanor Hughes Singer
Alice Robuck Smith
('29)
Hozel Epler Furmon
Mory Zimmerman Garrison
('39)
Mildred Ridall Phillips
Ruth Shannon Rhinard
Mary A. Ross
Thelmo Brandon Bittner
Louneta Loroh ('44)
Morgoret M Mothews
Grace Gotshall Pannebaker
Morgaret Ferree Stearns
1921
Isaac
Margoret Gorvey McDonald
Lucile Cook Mensinger
Lottie M. Miller
Alice Pennington Blair
Esther Lloyd Bound
Edith P. Davis
Grossman Konel
Word Karoso
Linskill ['43)
Erma Gold Shearer
Walter M. Siesko
Bornum
Boynum
Mortha M. Lingertot
Motildo Kostenbouder Tiley
S. Frances Adorns Toor
Angeline Evans Beavers
Miller I. Buck
Adeline Burgess ('25-38)
Jean C Conner ('51)
Teresa Nelson Dougherty
Pullen
Frances
Ruth Gardner McAlley
Mayme
33)
(
Evelyn Thompson Reid
Flick Richords ( 31)
Hildo Becker Scherer
Meyer
Muzetto Llewellyn Morgan
Lillian
R
Abbett
(
Bessie
Alice
M
Estella M Hyssong
Morgaret Benfield Keller
Mary Mottavi Lang
Elizabeth Louboch Schechterly
J. Seletski
to Emily Hutton
Mory
Christine
Eliiabeth Petty
F
Morgaret
32)
(
Edith Johnson
Cotherine Strine Harmon
M. Elizabeth Hortman Hosier
Dr Margaret Bittner Parke
Kothryn Naylis Pelak
Jone Park Ashburner
Anno Dovis Barrow
Fern Trough Eshlemon
John L. Fidler
Almo
S.
Morgoret Campbell Eoger
D Lucille Koufmon Foulkrod
Evo Burlingame Fry
Mildred Housch Goringer
Helen Kehler Grodwell
Helen Koralus Mosier
Kathryn Griffith Nicholls
Helen Richie Padgett
Catharine Fagley Wilkinson
Kothryn
('34)
Carpenter
Irene Rhinard Creveling
Mor|orie I. Davey
Dodson Maynard
Leona Williams Moore
Hammond Wheeler
Lucia
Young
1921
Memorio!
1926
Morion
Lois
Dr. Henry D. Rentschler,
Jr.
K Margoret Heiss Vosline
Eldora Robbins
Stroh
•
Morkley
Iro C.
H. Sterner
E.
Almo Seybert Wilson
(
M
Dorothy Bennetto Tubridy
Helen Howells Wagner
Mildred Fohr.nger Wintersteen
Suson Drum Turner
Helen Hower MocNought
Elmo L. Mopr 40)
Ruth Kahler Purnell
Peifer
Bessie Beaver Werkeiser
Alice Albee Lutz
Pnscilla Young McDonald
Grace Kishbach Miller
Elsie
Elizabeth
Mary
Lillian Fisher Long
Helen Walton Moinworing
Marr Stout
Isabel O Donnell Sweeney
Helen Andrews Thomos
Veronico Namotka Thompson
Stecker
R
James
Dr.
Geroldine Hall Krouser
E Learn
Winifred Edwards Libby
Kreidler
S.
Glodys
Jeffrey
Beotrice Berlew Jopling
Henrielto Garinger Keller
Grace Willioms Keller
Anno Ozelko Kohler
Miles M Kostenbauder
Elizabeth
Anno Geary 'Sidler
Jorrett
Mone Cobo
Sora Shumon Fox
Mory Hancock Goinsway
Mildred
E.
J.
M
Elizabeth
Hilda Albertson Heller
Amy M.
Irene Benovitz Spitz
Mary Price Stewart
Mildred Morgan Powell
Genevieve Wilson Reid
Ruth Dyer Rudy
Hompton
Morgoret M Honks
Edith
Leonora Austin Heydon
Groce Kivler Hoover
Edythe Hortmon Slanski
Jason S Potterson
Helen Arthur Gulley
1919
Morion McHugh Shadduck
Maryon Horl Miller
Mobel Lindenmuth Nicholas
Rev Raymond Edwards
Mory Shipman Edwards
E. Thelmo Jeremioh
Geise
Zolo Smith Swanson
Katherine Kase Yeager
Moher
F
Sims Meeker
Julio
Florence Breisch Drake
Dovis
Derr
M
(
36)
Dunn
Nooma Edmunds
(
41)
Eble 61)
Fronk V Fous
Florence Fawcett Fowler
Frank J Golder
(
Morgie Harrison Gregory
Continued on page
14
Anna Breyo Rinko
Bernice Bronson Gennorio
Charlotte Osborne Boyne
Ruth Welliver Seely
Elizabeth
Helen Chopmon Berkheisei
Cormer
Laura Kelley Bollinger
Margaret Sondbrook Bristol
John P Shellenberger
Ellen Veole Smith
Mory Beierschmitt Spongier
1933
Continued from page
Kenneth E. Howk ('39)
Rev Thomos lomont Henry
Anno Fowler Hibbord
Winifred Keen Howell ('59)
13
Chorlotte
Mack Kepner
Anno Rembis Chance
Thomos S Coursen
Horold M. Danowsky
Morion DeFroin Danowsky
Elizabeth
Bowmon
Cotherine R Ingrom
Bessie A. Jenkins
Thomos
Kirker
J.
Mortha Berrimon Frye
Julia
Kokoro Yaroshesfski
Felicio Czornecki Zawotski
Dorothy Sidler Kreinheder
Vonce S. Lauboch
Helen Goretski Lewis
Irene Hirsch Heister
McGeehon
L.
McNeolis
James
Soro D Morgan
Florence Byerly Hoover
Gertrude Strein Howells
Minnie
8.
Olschefsky
Albert
Marjory Roochford Sorber
(
63)
Alice Roush Stover
Raymond W.
G
('45)
Krum
Morgoref Ziegler Kunkle
Anne Homiok Labosky
Williord
Witheridge
Clarence R Wolever
Mory Gorhom Wolever
Dorothy Jones Wolfe 38)
Lowson
Dorothy Gilmore Lovell
Mary Betterly Moiers
Anne McGinley Moloney
Dorothy Foust Wright
Calvin
Esther Hutchengs Yale
Sarah Williams Mitten
Helen Stryjak Zebrowski
Irene
A. Mildred Robb Zybort
Matilda Olosh
Keith
Lois
(
W
(
401
Menges
Nous Munson
Moe
E.
Berger
(
Bertho Astleford Probert
(
Marion C. Pyle
Kenneth A Roberts
34)
Mildred Bixler Sharp
35)
Alvina Picorello Borget
Elizobeth Brooks Brood
(
261
A Brown
Robert
('52)
Louise Gori Cocchione
Robert
Herbert
Irving Ruckel
Elda Henrie Taylor
Howord Tomlinson
Sharp
T
Soro Masteller Tomlinson
Morion Murphy Uhl
Work
J.
Bokum
Bomboy
Chowones
Isoioh D.
John
Helen Frey Morkley
Wlllard A. Christian.
W
John
Utz
Walter Wosheleski
Alice Gilmore Yeager
Ruth Schield Weniger
Morqueen V White
Howard T Willioms
Bonta
Lucille Gilchrist Kindig
+
James Stonulonis
P.
Helen Shonk Yoder
Jr.
1942
Albert A. Clouser
M
Morgoret L Deppen
Dr Jomes V DeRose
Elwood H Beaver
Victor
Howord
Minoni
Utf
Fronk
Letho
Hummel
Horriet
G
Violo Disbrow Corr
Kinley
Merrill A. Deitrich
Elizabeth Hooglond
Lipfert
Aleta
Wilhelmino Hayes
Lipfert (X-38)
Mortley
William R
Dr Alex
1936
Robert D Abbott
Deilnch
McKechme
J
Robert H
Brochyus
Dons Guild Chomberlin
Kocher
I
Belz
W
Edword B Corr
Hopkins
Annabel Boiley Jones
Alvin
W
Frances Hull Burrows
Anno Orner Guttendorf
Robert P
Cloire Sirocco Bolles
John
Ferrari
J.
Stiles
A
Joseph
Ellsworth
Jr
Stuort
Parker
Hortmon
L
Borboro Straub Hortmon
Elizabeth Jenkins Porsons
Condoce
Robert J Reimord
Wilhelmino Peel Scheffler
Myrtle E Heydenreich
Dole
Hoover
Hem
Dietrich
W
Troupane
Hester Slusser Crop
Edna Creveling Whipple
Kathryn John Evons
Philip E
Mory
Jomes
Kothryn Brobst Hortmon
Virgmio Burke Troupone
Fronk M. VonDevender, Jr.
Paul
Wolter Woytovich
Mildred Eaton Levitt
Evelyn Freehofee Young
Jeon Shumon Zehner
Edno Zehner Long
Davis
E.
D DeHoven
Almedo L Derby
H. Willioms
Verno
Grace Worrell
Morris
Emily
Wogner
Ernest U. Lou
Thelmo Derr Detz
Lorno Gillow Doyle
Mordon
Blanche
Evert
Morgoref Howk Belohlovek
Dorothy Wolfe Bower (61)
Grace McCormock Fanning
Frank
Gerosky
Harris
Fronk
J.
W
Ezra
Jean Eyer Bredbenner
Maryruth Rishe Buckolew
Walter S. Chesney
Jessie Loird
Dr
('50)
Monroe Forester
Ellen
Haywood
Ello
Chester C Hess
Wilbur
J.
Hibbord
Mildred Dimmick Hinebough
HoHmon
Clapp HoHmon
Edith Strickler
Eleanor
Kathryn Benner Houser
Dr.
Clorence
L
(
39)
Hunsicker
Helen M. Keller
Marie Hunsinger Kirker
Rev. Oliver H. Kropf
Margoret Hendrickson Krouse
Fronk
Poul
J.
I.
Theron
Perch
Reichort
R.
Rhinard
(
49)
Hazel Smoll Rumble
Emily Zydonowicz Sage
V Poulme Showers
H.
Edmond Smith
Mary Broy Smith
Lois DeMott StouHer
Wagner Swortz
Thomos
Romona Oshinsky Thomos
Almo White Todd 50)
Mory A. Vollrath ('51)
Irene Dromo Walton
Dorothy Jones Word
Gladys Boyer Wilmer ('35)
Congetto Contmi Zelinsky
Evoline Rieben Bozitsko
Jomes D Pope
Foy Gehrig Clark
Dominic
Peter
R.
Bokey,
Jr.
G
Violet Reilly
Morgoret O
Glodys Ritter Cromon
Morion McWilliams Cohen
Ben
Mory DeWold Elder
Lowrence C. Evongehsto
Ruth Henson Fox
Glodys Bakey Furlong
James A. Gennaria
Ruth Radcliffe Dickerman
Catherine
Marie
Clayton H. Hinkel +
William
Hannoh Unger Houck
Albert W. Houser
Doro Toylor Smith
Kothryn Yale
Graham
(
38)
(
42)
Krumanocker Hensley
Curwood
50)
Hancock
Glodys Jones Horns
Moe Weikel
Lapinski
Dorothy Hess Linn
Dr Horry T. Nelson
Mory Meors Northrop
A
A
George R. Tomalis
Mr. & Mrs Donold A. Wotts +
Ethel Bond Woolston
Alfred S Wosheleski
Williom
Fern Yost Whitebreod
Lorraine Lichlenwolner Wiggs
Gertrude Wilson Withey
Beuloh Lowrence Mosser
Mercedes Deone McDermott
S
Menapoce
(32)
Florence Snook Borrett
Fredo Fester
George
Bowman
Wertmon Moltz
Dorothy Edgar Cronover
Helen Weaver Ditty
Mildred Quick Muller
Morion
Groce Swortwood Patterson
Jeon Phillips Plowright ('36)
Eleanor Sharodin Faust
Aeno M. Fetlermon
Pierce M. Reed
Andrew
Dorothy M.
John
Phillips Richords
I.
Leonard E. Stout
Dorothy Derr Tilson
Fred
Carl
F
T.
Visintainer
Welliver
Jeon Smith White
Cotherine Durkin
Cosari
R
Helen Pesonsky Cassano
Irene Giger Millroy
Kothryn
1938
Elmore
L.
Fetterolf
E. Fiorini
Thomos
Thomos
Louise Seamon Thomos (MG)
Ruth Jomes
Dr.
Groce
J
Williom
Raklevicz Pendleton
Anno Edwords Lindenmuth
Dorothy Moss Lipnik
Soroh Schnure Mock ('58)
Noro BayliH Morkunos
Zeiss
Stuort Straub
F
Mono
Jomes G Pugh
Agnes A. Redo
Jane Dorrow Roberts
Glodys Brennan Rohrbaugh
Roy G. Schrope
E
Smith
Osmon Trewello
Jeon Kuster Von Blohn
Mory Jone Shorpless Wagner
Fredo Shumon Louboch
Morjorie McAllo Lee
Reisler
E.
Marion Londis Morgon
Vivion Frey Poyne
Luther
Mary
Sheiman
Bernice Blaine Stout
Linn, Sr
Florence Stefonski Moscovoge
Morgoret Wolfe Klock
Thelmo L Knouss
Peck
Ruck +
Jean Lontz Smith
Morion Long Smith
llleck
Robert
L
Sylvia Feingold
Hicks
Dorothy Berninger Hippensteel
Victono Muskaloon Hower
Hunter
Kotherine
E
Bell
Podwiko
Dorothy Selecky Poltrock
H.
Govm
Lorraine Snyder Jones
Chorles L. Kelchner
Alvin S
(
Phylis
M. Glenda Conner Glossmire
Robert R. Goodman
Earl T.
Kiethline
Florence Hortline Kindt
Foust
E.
A Gehrig
Anno Jean Louboch Gehrig
Dorothy Hower German
Adeline Loyoou Hess
Mory Fagley Humphrey
Ronold F Keeler
Bernice
Thomos DeHoven
Beatrice
Eorl
Lamar Bloss
to
'
Pino, Sr
R
Soro M. Berger
Blanche Kostenbouder Millingion
('35)
Mildred A. Bonin
1940
Chorles
CLASS OF 1937
Coyne
Horo Coyne
Richard
Pearl Boer Wise
Wertmon
Jock
Alice Kealy
Dr. Doniel E.
(
Warren
Pauline Franklin Long
Grace Foote Conner
Myrtle
H.
P.
Jr.
Wagner Diehl
Kathryn Wolp Elmer
Elizabeth
Anna Chevilski Lorko
Mary Gumon McGuire
Lois Heppe McKinney
Dorothy Hartmon Moore
Hope Richards Pensyl
Frank
Betty Horter
Imboden
L
Klinger
Hoinel A. Love
Mertz
L
Helen Klingermon Michoel
Robert B Miner
Geroldine Bitting Oberle
Glodys Rinord Ruesch
Memoriols
Robenolt Coldren
Minnie Howeth Lean
Ethel Keller Long
Michael
1937
Morjorie
Lewis
P.
John H. Yeager +
Chudzinski
Anna Northrup Greene
Robert A. Howk
R.
Chorles
Ray
Dorothy Englehort Zimmermon
A
Ermo Wollgong Lotshow
O Zimmerman
Mericle
Cnspell Cobleigh
Lillion
Wogner Hilemon
Ruth
J.
W
Mervin
Lowrence
L.
Wogner LeGronde
Ruth
1934
Irmo lowton Eyer
S
Shumon Keppley
Soro
Zeisloft
Jones +
J.
Dobb
Ehrhort
H Burnis Fellmon
Carolyn Cole Fritz
George A McCutcheon
+
Schneider
E.
George
Sterling
Edno Wagner Stevens
Rosebud Golder Ungemach
Renninger
R.
Florobelle Schrecongost Schneider
Rowland
J
Melzgar
O Horo
Cotherine Oplinger Renninger
Sam Krouss
Willis
Clork
Quigley
T
Kathorine Leedom
Moe
Lois Fullmer
1939
Mildred Ford Wesner
Mory A Stohl (37)
Raymond Stryjok
Louise Brislin Thomos
Edno Lomoreaux Tobias
Pauline Reng Turek
Elizabeth Miller
Velmo Mordon Kerstetter
Elvira
Musgrave Porter
J.
Morjorie Beaver Morrison
Ellen Rhinard O'Connell
Arthur K
Genevieve Bowmon McKelvey
Unoro B. Mendenholl
Thelmo Bredbenner Menges
Catharine A. Mensch
Noomi M Myers
William
Reed
Elizabeth Row Reed
Donold A. Ruckle
Lavelle
E
Lehmon
Word Lichtel
Leo
L
Anne Quigley Green
Gerold C. Horter
Helen Culp Keiner
Froncis D. Sell
Allen W. Porr
Cloire
Irene Diehl Konrod
John
Anno Rech Medycki
Cyril F Menges
Mory
Dovis
F,
Williom G. Kerchusky
Kriegh
S
Llewellyn C. Richords
I.
1932
CLASS OF 1932
John C Adomson
Woodrow W. Aten
Ruth Haggy Boker
33)
Butler
J
Thomos
Kreiss
Froncis Litzenberger
(
Florence Morchelti Gedanic
Kafka
J.
Beck
T
John
Dr Walter H Jorecki
Moe Mantz
Gress
Helen Hortmon Cimbola
('33)
Melbo Beck Hyde
Mory Furmon James
Hirlemon Quick
Mary E Roiewski
Rebo Willioms Schmidt
Ruth E Sonner
J.
Woodrow G. Brewington
Alice Barroll Hunsinger
Doris Sechnst Paulson
Lois
Hummel
Ethel M.
John
Hornet Styer Boop
Evelyn Smith Hooven
Orvol C. Polsgrove (MG)
John
*
Edith Boyer Miller
Anno K Ollendick
to Dr.
Lauretta Foust Baker
Hinckley. Sr.
I
1935
Memorial
Chorles F Hensley
('50)
Jomes
Willord
Dorothy N. Heller
Morgoref
Ficco Stashinski
Rev. Chorles P
Beotnce Beole Letlermon
Helen Rosser
Agatha
Heckenluber
T.
John F. Hendler
Chorles H. Henrie
Jonet Reisenweover Stahr
Morjorie Jones Harrington
Martin
Robert
63)
Gerold D. Fritz (MG)
Lois Gruver Gassert
Leon H. Greenly
Isobelle Olah Horvath
Helen Dixon Korns
Hovol
Soroh Lentz Vonce
Grace
linskill
(
E
Ruth Fowler Droke
Catherine Alberfson Fuller
Florence Blylhe Kitchen
Bernard
+•
Eshmont
J.
Richard H. Foote
Knopp Hording
Irene
R
Peter
Homer
E.
Edwards +
Edo Bessie Beilhartz Edwards
Elizobeth McGoldrick Troy
Kerr
Kathryn Fowler Kindig
Mory
Shelhomer
P.
Dr. C. Stuart
Gilligon
J.
Zimmerman
1941
Charlotte Gearhart Bakey
Claraline Schlee Baylor
Ruth Shay Biery
Micholene Zuchoski Bowen
Elizabeth Howk Brown
Agnes Pinomonti Casari
Mary Driscoll Chaapel
Edward V. Dobb
'
Horriet
P.
Wanich
1943
Joyce Knorr Adamic
Rev Corl S. Berninger
Mortha Zehner Brown
Mory Trump Bruner
Boyd F. Buckingham
Joanna Fico Buckingham
Mory Evans Courfright
Mar|orle
Woyne
E
Coombs Deets
Deoner
Leo A. Donn
Reba Henrie Fellmon
Virginio
Lowheod
Irving T
Gottlieb
D.
Fletcher
Mae Grow
Ruth Hope Handy (MG)
Mobel Troy Heffelflnger
Kathryn A. Hess
Dovid M Jones
Ruth Rhodes Klowilter
Joyce Lohr Kleckner
Continued on page 15
Continued from page
Richard
1948
14
Jorman
E
A Ledyard
Bowman l ingle
Richord
R
Arnold Goringer
W
15
1943
Joseph W. Kozlowski
Morion Wilson Balliet
June Novak Bones
Richard B. Keyser
Doris
Michael Kolle&ar
Carol Shupp Heard
Wlnton H Louboch
Lois Godleski Lynn
Elizabeth Baldy Boyer
Lucy Baker Loubscher
Gecge
Nancy Sworlz Lychos
Williom M McAloose
Borbaro Shermon McCalla
Henry
Geroldine Funk McLaughlin
Rose Oomaleskie Pogirski
Morlene Gobster Klein
E.
Miller
O
Harold
E
June Hooglond Norris
Sora Eastman Orlt
Elroy
George W. Piorote (MG)
Gloria Moiniero
Bernard M. Pofnak
James
Virginia M.
Shamboch
Jean Sidler Snyder
Loro M. Snyder
Frank M. Taylor
Nora Singley Trexler
Frederick
DeBell.
J
Jr.
Dill
Thomos
Jonet
McAndrew
J.
Elizabeth Reece McMillan
Mensinger
Clair E.
Fisher
Mortim
Robert E
M
Dormer
J.
L.
Lauck
L
Frank T. Luposhunski
Marjorie Fonzo Mariotti
Dalberg
F.
Betty
Chorles
Clemens
Crawford
Price
E.
J.
Sheehon (MG)
Stonitsk. (MG)
Froncis
F
Messo
Chorles
E.
Miller
John V. Stevens
Andre M. Vanyo
James A Whibley
Henry
Anthony J. Valente, Jr.
Col Elwood M. Wagner
Stanley C. Krzywicki
Catherine Jones Wagner
Sara K Wagner
Millard C. Ludwig
June Oplinger Wandrus
Dorothy Johnson Wasco
Martha H. Wright
Philip R, Yeany. Sr
George
Thomas W. Lewis
Dr.
John
Dr.
M
Menarick
Orner
Pleviak
Luther H. Roth
E.
S.
Samuel
J
Jr.
Ohlmon Albono
Elaine
John T Bogdon
F
Skowronski
E. Rush
Rose Kraiser Schieber
William
R.
Stratlon
Donald
Willis Swales, Jr.
Alfred
G Dent
Helen Oyer Diehl
Robert
Wayne Von
Barbara Gulik Dovis
Dr. Palmer E Dyer
Sara Oockey Edwards
Mildred Palumbo Washville
1944
M
Louise Madl Allison
Frederick
Marie Baker Gallagher
Effie
Patterson
Gore
Mory
Schromm
F.
Charlotte Reichort Sharpless
Leonard R Weorne
Helen Smith Whitebread
Marjorie Sharretts Grant
M
Edna Snyder Heckmon
1949
Stetten, Sr
M. Louise Lohr Wentzel
John W. Willioms
Bernard
1951
CLASS OF
Cyganowski (MG)
Dr. Richard
W
Dr Joseph P
Zelinski
J.
Butler
J.
J.
1951
Evans
Feifer
Wondo Farnsworth Langdon
Edwin M. Allegar
Betty Jane Anello
Carol Gass Bell
Edward G. Boker
Adda Myers Barrett
Williom F Benson
Muriel
Wagner Brush
James
R.
Jean Ackermon Moyer
Ehzobelh Smith Reynolds
Florence Mills Rzemien
Mario
Mory Alorcon Donnelly
Chorles L. Edwards
Richord C. Knause (MG)
Shirley
Reisenweaver Krommes
L.
Thomos M. Donan
George N Dotzel.
F. Emmitt
Helen Tietjen Emmitt
Carleton H. Ermish
Robert
Mary
Laura 8rundoge Evans
Joan Grozel Gamble
Milton
Mory Dorsey Genke
Nancy Rhoods O'Brien
Claude W. Renninger
Jonet Shank McLoughlin
Harold
J
Louise
Adams Missmer
Miller
Porr Seybert
Anne Sobol
Taylor
Samuel J. Trapani
Helen Cromis Worrington
Helen Martin Wotts
Berlanda
L.
G. Alberta Funk Crowford
Williom R. Deebel
Ruth
Jr
Elder
P.
Dr
Creveling
Russell C. Davis
Harold
Melvo Kocher Wintersteen
Noble Fosshouer
Richard E. Grimes
Mildred Fisher Kowolsky
John Kuntzo
Anita Behler Wrislor
Nellie K. Lock
Genevieve Scheetz Hosier
George R. Hughes
Florence Foust Yeany
Mary Tyson Lauck
Richord
Leonard
Jessie Props!
Wearne
Eloise
John M. Greenly
Hummel
S
Edward
Donald
LaBarr
R.
R.
Dr. David N.
Newbury
Zehner Dietrich
Betty
Jeanne Keller Epley
Frances
J.
Foust
Mortino Guida
Joseph J Gullo
Lucille
Mory Wogner Hoffmon
Morion Zong Huber
McGeehan McElwee
Betty
Gretchen Trobock McLoin
John G. McNelis
Morvin L. Meneeley '
Daniel P
Robert
Hozel E
Millard
T
Enomo Mosgo
Elsie Floil Kull
Wilmer F Nester
Lois Dalesman Nester
Anthony J. Paulmeno
Lawrence V Pekolo
Celestine Longo Pekala
N Eudoro Berlew Lyhne
Arlene N. Superko
John
Marilyn Soiler Jackson
Mory Lou Fenstemoker John
Dr Mory Flaherty Kohrherr
1946
Jacqueline Shaffer Creasy
Isabel
Gehmon
Wanda
Dovis
Kehler Edelman
Nellie A.
Kramer
Dr
Francis
Radice
J.
H. Reichard
Robert G. Reitz
Nancy
Fisk Riley
Vivion Corey Reynor
Maxine Shirey Robbins
Nancy Powell Swales
Hervey R. Thomas
Dr Richard F. Woechler
Edward T Wassel
Barbara Horman
Adams
Laureen Rees Watts
Carolyn Hower Williams
Dorothy Kocher Pugh
Or Donald D Robb
Mortho Teel
Dora Brown
Silk
Michael
Jonet Shullz
Ungerman
Ann Papania Bergstresser
Albert
L.
Brown
Earl H. Bloke. Jr.
Robert
P.
Burns
Arlene Pope Bonner
Martha G. Bonin
Kenneth E. Borst
Jean Enamo Cerulo
Leon Coval
Roy Croop,
Ida Wilkinson
Zerby
1947
Joseph
J
Barchock
Dale
Bennett
T.
Violo M. Blue
George
Blyler
E.
Morie Yozviak Borton
Russell C. Brachman
Jr.
Janice Jones Costner
Patricio Kistler Diseroad
George Chebro
Gloria Mazzitti Ermish
Martho Hergert Clemens
Robert H. Conrad
Bertha Kravitskl Daniels
Dr
David C Evans
Harry M. Fenstermacher
Florence Logar Davis
Eugene J. Corrigan
Joseph Curillo. Jr.
Priscillo
Kotherine Chopin Fisher
Leonard
Evelyn Hirt Brosious
L
Wonda
Borth Carver
Nancy McHenry Devore
Alberta Nounos Gillespie
Charles C.
Williom
E.
Harmony
Horvath
Helen Wright Kula
Dr
Robert P Martin
Laura Davis Puhr
Helen Fehl Roberts
Lado
J.
Savelli
George W Smith
John W. Thomas
Robert W. Warrington
Vincent
F,
Washville
Max G Cooley
Harold
A Garrison
Helen Hoffman Gerringer
Joseph J Giedo
Harry J. Gobora. Jr. +
Carmela Torole Gotthardt
Joseph J. Grande
Leon E. Grant
E.
Ruppel
John
Joseph
Eugene R Schultheis
Milford E. Shelhamer
Daniel H. Thomos
Zahoro
J
Joseph A. Albano
Dr. Chorles R. Andrews
Dr.
Abbott Fenstermacher
Frank
J.
E.
B.
Andrews
Balent
Jr.
Shaffer. Jr
E.
Furgele
L.
Yergey
L.
Anonymous
Dolores Doyle Brennan
19S7
James G.Dovenport
John E Dennen
Miriam Miller Argall
Sheldon N. Erwine
John
Arlene Moyer Foreman
Harriet Link
Richard
Williom
R.
Forschner
Mory Williams Griffiths
Anno Bittner Harshborger
Potricio Boyle Hollingsworth
Williams
E.
Williom
Schroder Walker
Donold G. Paralis
Sherwood
McGovern
Evelyn Witmon Mooney
Phyllis
Montz
Edgor F Berry,
1952
F. Bell
W
Harrison Morson
Eleanor
George Thear
1950
J.
Karol
Harriet Williams
Ashner Rabuck
Emory W. Rarig, Jr.
George E. Reck
Carolyn Vernoy Reitz
Ralph W. Wire
Ammermon
George
Lyon
Dr.
Moyer
Persing
J.
Jack
Jr.
T.
Shirley
Stanley Semic
Tidey.
Kwiatkoski
LaCoe
June Reese Lynn
Elvin C.
Doris Paternoster Wandishin
1954
Palmer
Corl H. Robbins
J.
Chorles V
Keith Weiser
Donald M. Wise
Donald Wool
J
Hinderliter
Betty Smith Linn
Eileen Falvey
Barboro Berry Kissinger
Ronald G. Krafjock
Ann Gengenbach Auerweck
Carl
Williom R Miller
Violet
Norma
Jr.
Tilmont
J.
McGrew
Barbara Brace Miller
Huntsman
Irene Sones
Patricia O'Brien Price
Mike Masanovich
Robert Mozo
Mildred Dzuris
Michael Homick
Rosalyn Verono Pennington
James
Morion
H. Jack Healy
John S Scrimgeour
Thereso Charney Spiess
Cotherme
E
George
Noncy Oberdorf Harris
Lake L. Hortmon
Elizabeth Boer Schukis
John
O'Neill Deitrich
English
Barbara Bennett Nichols
Dr Thomas J. OToole
Charles H/ Taylor,
Kline
R.
Hortmon Eyer
Robert
Norman
E.
Potricio
Marjorie Felton Mackert
William J. Mielke
James Kleman
Lipski
Copt. Curtis
Linn
Poul Lopata
F
Zimmermon
195*
C Diann Jones Bouersfeld
Shirley Andre Corey
Cormel Craparo Cosper
Mory Hoffecker Coughlon
McClintock
Morrison
E.
Marjorie Downing Cosgrove
1945
Ruth Gillmon Williams
Joy S Wirth
C. Robert
Mary Condon Gehringer
Edword M. Goodhart
Thomos A. Goodwin
Leonora MocGill Goodwin
Marjorie Ayre Herbert
Arlene Gordner Hrenenko
Jimmie D. Johnson
Gerold A. Bacon
Wolter
Francis R. Bodine
Wiik
Helene Clark Flecknoe
Joanne Hester Gentry
Angelo M. Albono
Walter A. McCloskey
Shemanski
J
L.
Mildred Pliscott Furgele
Mory Fox Albano
Bonull
Glenn
Mory Kallenbach Fowler
Pauline Garey John
J.
Sylvia Krapf Shearer
Joseph
Barbara Reitmeyer
Edward
Remley
S.
Poul H. Rhodes
Glorio Harris Zerbe
Daniel Boychuck
Kothleen Mitchell Boychuck
Charles M. Brennan
Reginald
Hope Clork Rebuck
J.
1953
Poul P. Plevyok
Mogill.
Miller
E.
James K Roberts, Jr
Thomas E. Sanders
Clyde C. Adorns
Arabel Hilbush Adams
James A. Reedy. Jr
Dorothy DeMott Reichort
William G. Romig
F
William
Pocholec
F
John T. Panzelio
Donald Porry
Louise LaSorso Krafjock
Janet Ference Kwiatkoski
Virginia R. Price
J.
Edward
Jr.
Heisler
Carolyn Yost Karos
Mary
Schukis
E
Froncis
Waller Merena
Harry G. John.
Lewis A. Kohn
Mary Trefsger
Thomos
Eleonor
Haines
Gergen
E.
Jack Reese
Jack A. Gillung
E
Philip
Sarae Uhrich Homick
William J Jacobs
Franklin E. Jones
Rose Korbo Kennedy
Joan Havord Kilroy
Kenneth G. Kirk
Edwards Kirk
Joseph D. Kissinger
Jerome S. Kopec
Helen Rutkoski Korth
Feme Soberick Krothe
Patricio
Horry
P.
Burggraf
Bushey
1.
E.
Dr Jomes
Camp
Cronmer
B.
Creasy
G
Dodson
William E. Dupkanick
Doyle
Jacqueline
Mary
U.
Desmond
Epler
Miller Ertel
Grant Ewell
Ann Geary
Fisher
Margaret Duck Follmer
Rodney Follmer
John J. Ford
John Forgach
Dr. Nancy Green Gilgannon
Donald R Hare
Anabelle Leffelaor Hargreoves
VanAuken Hawk
Louise Schullery Linscott
Enolo
Marie Parrish Morgan
Judith Ulmer Higgins
Robert C. Oney (MG)
Joan Kelshaw Palermo
Ruth Fry Schumaker
Jeononne Evans Scrimgeour
Dr. David A. Superdock
Morlene Kostenbauder Holly
Harry Hughes
Joseph J. Jones
Janice
L.
1955
Home
Margaret Yohn Keller
Evelyn M. Kilpatrick
Taylor
Galiley (MG)
William D. Kautz
Autotore
Jay
A Krothe
Alice Fegley Linn
Francis B. Galinski
Virginia
William G. Gillespie
Oren A. Baker
Catherine Christian Long
Lola Deibert Gloss
Albert T
Martin
F.
Mackert
Charlotte Motuleski Hess
Marcella Cedor Belles
Robert
J
Maremck
William
Michael
Irene Zielinski McCarthy
J
Hill
R.
Bernot
Janice Yozvtok Borton
Albert Hitchings
Dovid W. Jenkins
Belinsky
III
Nanette Hoy Crossmon
W Konyuck
Jeanne Krzywicki
Robert E Cumens
George W. Derk
Robert
Betty
Jeanne Kelder Gunn
Hazel Chopped Guyler
Dqnald L. Hoar
Colvin
Charles K. Jacobs
Richard
Loubscher
E
F
Laux
Hoffmon Dunkelberger
Patricia Phillips Feifer
Isoioh L McCloskey
Nancy Hyde McNabb
Dr. Donald T McNelis
Margaret Croft Moore
John P. Moss
Con tin
"«
S
William. R. Norton.
Sonja Bendinsky Norton
Dolores Wonot Palladino
Charles R. Perry
Sylvfo Morcheski Gross
Morion Schoffroth Harrer
E. Hendershot. Jr.
Marian L. Huttenstine
Milton M. Wiest
Rose Pavlick Radzinski
James
Robert G. Roiney
Gerald
Rodman
Thomos
Lorry
Joseph F Kleczyntki
Noncy Wurster Knorr
Edwin C Kuser
'»
I
»
>
»
«
Continued from page
Donno Wilcox Murphy
Thomos L Ohl
i!
i
15
Kenneth O. Paisley
Reimensnyder
J.
Dominick
I.
Repice
Morilyn Ritter Roielle
Borboro lent* Schulfz
Edword M. Setor
Kenneth R. Smith
Dr. Donold R Stubbs
Barbara Tuckwood Thomas
John Woyurko
Robert P Yon
Jay R
Eugene
P.
Jonet
Fry
Jeon
L.
Kathleen Nebus Speranzo
Harold
E.
Robert
R.
Gaughan
Gower
Robert A Hollingsheod
Jone Smith James
L
Jones
Blonche Rozelle Jones
Mary Mojikos Klemkosky
Potnoo
Parolis
Leonard
B.
Knepper
Kruk. Jr
Lobyock
Joy Dreisboch Linn (MG)
John R. Longo
E.
Ruth Helgemo Maioriello
John
K.
Masters
Thomos
Thomos
M
Vincent. Jr
L.
Henninger Wogner
Phyllis
Joon Kotch Wolko
Jomes H Willioms
Morlene Stoude Willioms
Dr.
W. Horris
Mory Pomes Hess
Lois Myers Hicks
Jomes
Stinson
S
C.
Wojaechowski
Dr. Richord O.
Dr. Robert
Mary
John
Edword
Funk
L.
II
Gilbert McCormick.
Jr.
Filomeno Grocomo McGlode
Kenneth M. Miller.
Lois M. Miller
Jr.
Borboro Campbell Burggraf
Morgoret Coole Byrne
Kane Cicero
M Clemens
Worthy J. Cumberlond
Poliscok
Joy Eoton Wissinger
Fleck
Gloria Gilbert Boyer
Morris
Philip E. Underkoffler
Fisher
J.
Machmer
Wolfe
Ronold G. Wolfe
1961
Patricio Dunnigon Adomsky
Anthony A. Alostick
Rondoll P
E.
Beckman
Jeon Schell Bonto
Bernice
Joyce
Bretschneider
Dascola
Ellis
L
Dorothy Strodlmon Dayton
Albert W. Dazley
Richard S. Dennen
George
Donoto
Winifred W. Donkochik
Gory W. Erwine
Brendo Cunmnghom Estrodo Berg
J.
Borry F. Foust
Sonio Timo Foderoro
Paul J. Freireich
Somuel W. Gonis
Dr
Ray
Gensemer
George
Iro B.
L.
Jeffrey E. Girton
R
J.
Patricio
Wodsworth Kimball
Roy
Frank
Anno Pelak
Borboro Foy
L
Poust
Phillips
Joanne Shoffer Pileski
Bari E. Poormon
John
Rankin. Jr
J
Sandra Reber Richter
Doniel L Ritzmon
Smith Rochfort
Jill
Frederick
Robert
Soxton
E.
W
Chorles
Scarantino
Schiller
F.
Petzok
J.
Donold
O Brien
J
Oman
C.
Virginio A. Palmer
Keller
Jomes E. McMonus
Lmdo Schmidt Moss
Thomos V Nowrocki
Mancuso
Moyon
Millord, Jr
L
Williom
Kelchner
William
W
Kenneth P Miller
Kenneth Robert Miller
Nancy Rodgers Miller
Richord V Miller, Jr
Donold A Mitchell
John W Knorr
Tereso Biogiotti Lewis
Borboro Flonogon lizzul
James J. Maier
Dennis J Motzoni
Shirley Nickles Bartlett
Borboro Kindig Berlin
Dionne Bosolo Berlin
Corol Ranee Bongort
Paul C. Boyer
Leiss
Jr.
J.
Marcholonis
Carole DeFroncisco Millord
Jocobs
J
Morvm
Anderson
Myrno Bossett Anderson
Mory Beck Austin
Clyde G. Boker
Krothe
R.
Wisdo
1962
Myles
Dr.
Teddy Oakey
Williom
Otto H. Donor
Borboro Curry Eskilson
A
A
J
Corl
Woyne A Hoch
Willioms
P.
Robert A Moyefskie
John W. McCorkill
Hoines
D.
F.
Richord
Virginia Steinhort
Joon Stockhouse Wolfe
Nick
Lowrence M. Troutman
D Clork
Delores Regan Dixon
Don
Mahoney
John
Mory
Korrin Fordyce
Jr
Corol A. Haswell
W
Michoel
Hilemon
Hilemon
Bernice Kocher
Louise
Larry
L.
William
Eleanor D Bobber
Rush L. Canouse
Thomos
Ronald
Richord A. Slaber
Judith Witmyer Stevens
Berg
William H. Gorson,
Evelyn H. Gimber
Doro Forney Jorrett
Emil G Kasorda
Somuel E. Keiser
Roy E. Shiftier,
Vernon F. Sinn
Bornhart
Elliott
Wolter
Hess
Irene Schnoors
W
Dovid
Schromm
Betty
Abe
Dr
Lindo Mousteller Price
Ruth Shelhomer Price
Borry O. Smith
Rev Edword E. Prowont
Dennis W. Reiter
Betsy Whitenight Strunk
Ellen
Ronold
Dovidheiser
L
O Donnell
Morgoret
Elizabeth B. Puckey
Bangs
L
Elizabeth Pingor Dudinyak
Jessie B
A
Demeter
V.cki Wotts Egli
Lorraine Yeager Roberts
1959
Shoffer
Kroltchak
Nancy George Krotzer
Keith L Kramer
Michael M. Kush
Louise Nye Lark
Jomes K MocNeol
Corol Schlagel MocNeol
Derkits
F
Joon Welliver
Robert
Paul T
Wood
G Richard Wynn
Krum
Williom Stevenson
Eileen
Nicholas Pituch (MG)
B.
Shirley Klock DeFacis
Robert
Lydio Gobbi Gourvitz
Helen M Grim
Somuel W. Haupt, Jr.
William
Normon N Wismer
Beotrice Hess Roberts
Koppenheffer
Joan Leidy Kroftchok
Constance Rojewski Curran
Cloire Dilley Dale
Sudock
Dole B. Sullivan
Robert H. Wolters
W
Morgoret Wilkinson Wightmon
I.
O
Dr
Victor A. Miller
Joanne Atkinson Woldron
Daniel West
Mory Heotley West
Thomos
Williom
David R Gerber
Helen R. Moder
John H. McCarthy
Sarah Sands Swisher
Augustus Tibbs
Annorita D. Koch
Potncio Biehl Cronford
Borboro Peeling Criswell
Hoch
Morgoret A. Hosey
Robert C. Houck
Judith Thomos Isenberg
Muriel Trow
Will Steltz
Morgoret Stiles Christino
Ronold W. Cranford
Edword S Stokes
John N Straw
Gensemer
King
E.
Donald R Kleckner (MG)
Sondro Smith Kleppinger
Pagnotti
Annette Ritter Rohrbach
Dorothy McNeil Schweizer
Dr.
David C. Laubach
W
David
Francis
Elaine
Richord
Christina
J.
Noncy Engel Evons
Sondro M. Evans
Morlene O Hollo Froney
Mory Dorm Gnoll
Thereso Yost Hortmon
P Joseph Jennings
John T. Kovich
Helen Salfi Kruk
Doniel Kwosnoski
Morilyn Rinehimer Lehew
Michoel Lesko
Dorothy Born Lesko
Thomos
L. Little
Lloyd
Livingston
E
Corol Lewis Livingston
Joon Hinkel
Richord
R.
Mochomer
Joseph A. Moier Jr
Eugene R Molinowski
Kenneth Mertz
Melvin A. Montonye
Kathleen Sinkler Montonye
Worren W Moser
James J. Nogle
Robert E Neory
Dr.
Borboro Kolet Nied
Corimor Shultz Patrician
Lynn
Poul
J.
John H. Somsel
Noncy Hondshow Silverman
Dr
Michael E Sinco
Chorles R. Sipos
Priscillo
J.
Richord R. Roke
Gory G. Rupert
Noncy McFerron Rupert
Moses L Scott
Dr. John E. Sills, Jr
Don
Springer
E
Mory Rogowsky Springer
Poul R
Styer
Nelson A. Sworts (MG)
Delores Keen Tironi
Richord D Walters
Bonnie Jones Wicks
Louro Brown Willord
Joonne Sipe Wimmer
Bernodine Ardiere Windsor
Joonn Moys Zogby
Livziey
Lloyd
Corl Lynn
Robert M.
Price
J
Smith
Robert
J.
Sleinhort
Robert
J.
Strunk
Wolter H. Veranda
Borboro Jomes Viielli
Mory McHose Wolloce
Neol J Weaser
1964
Harold C Andrews
Anne Golder Boker
Gory A Bornabo
Corolyn Miller Bortz
John H Bousch. Jr
Diane A Bensinger
Bonnie Zehner Block
George A
Blosick
Ronald C Boston
Joseph P Cosorello
John M Chyko
Harold
J
Cole.
Froncs
J
Curran
Richord
G
Jr.
Davolo
Donno Brown Dovis
Jomce Clemens DeFinnis
James E Diehl
Dovid W. Dinsmore
Judy Reitz Dunkelberger
J. Eddlnger
Ernest
Shuba
R.
Somuel A
Storti
David
L
Stuempfle
Arthur Tinner
L
Lorenzo R Tironi
Dr
Donold T Watk.ns
Dovid B. Weover
Orvo Wynings Webb
George A Weigond
Donno Shoffer Weigond
1965
Fronk
G
Robert
E
Angelo
Joseph M. Apichello
Robert P Auker
Borfield
III
Edword Beck
Fronces Walker Berry
Dole R. Bittenbender
Shirley Krogle Bittenbender
Robert
M
Roy
Bower
E
A
Dovid
Blue
Jr
Dovis
Noncy Troutman DeJesus
Geroldme Miller DeMilio
Fronk C
Dowrnan
James
Eisenhardt,
F
Rocco A. Forte
W
James
Goss,
Dr. Robert A.
Roy
Gross
E
Jr
Green
II
Potncio Eoler Gross
Donno Bogord Gulluni
Elaine Schraeder Hockenberg
Corol McCrocken Honlz
(MG)
W. Jay Hurst
Thomos
J.
Kaczmarek
H. Rick Kessler, Jr.
Worren R Eldr.dge
Koren Shields Kitchen
Joseph R. Koons
Alex M Kozlowsk.
N Foust
Raymond A Fino
Jeon Houck Fino
John
A
Foderaro
Jr.
Borboro Nicholls Foust
Robert J. Fleck (MG)
Robert
Richord
Sr.
Hughes
D Jomes
B. Kennedy
Robert
Barbara Schaefer Shutovich
Fronces Scott Snyder
Irmo W. Springman
Fisk
R.
Patricio Lello
Genevieve
E.
J.
Haefner
Helgemo,
J. Michael Helveston
Virginia C. Hesel
Ann M Hocker
Choplick
T.
Richord
William
Richord
Avo Hilner Shippy
Normon J Shutovich
Robert H
Rose Coulter Stnne (MG|
Dr. Stephen L. Stuorl
Clarence
Swode
Austin
Shirley
Sue Bogle Lindner
Spentzos
E.
M. Joyce Laure Sheridan
Dale
Snyder
Thomos
Virginio Hordy Cocco
Wolloce I. Knepper
Rev Byron K Kropf
Shultz
Archibald
Soro Moster Charles
Paul H. Kellogg
Janice Souder Shultz
T.
Jeonette Ide D Agostine
Housenick
Joonne DeBrovo Jones (MG)
Scott
Williom
Chester
Gary I Reddig
Jomce L. Reed
Blair
Wright
J.
James S. Case
Mory Brock Cheney
Petz
L.
Jonet Bohstedt Greenleof
Howard G. Griggs
Ruth H. Benscoter
Ronold H. Beury
Borboro Uram Paskewitz
Wilbur G. Person
Corl
Nanette Evons Wenrich
1963
Makoro
Mourer
Froelich
J
Gloria Zubris Froelich
Millhouse
J.
J
George
i
Darlene Scheldt Derkits
Gory M. Dietz
Kotherine Poloni DiSimoni
C/oire H.
William C. Sheridan
Gerald
Robert
Wotts
Yeonish
Chorles C.
Rindgen
Annette Willioms Roush
John A Soloto
Dorothy Stoudt Schweitzer
Mane
Thomo
F.
Elizabeth Derr
Helen Rhown
J.
Russell
Sw.shei
F
Esther McMichoel Franklin
Poulette B. Furmon
Patricio A.
Constontine
Williom
Fronk
O'Brien
F
L
Joseph P McGroorty
Albert P
Nancy Ridoll Peters
Edna Keefer Powell
James
Williom
Kenneth A Swott
Vero Reorick Derk
Fred U Dyer
John L. Eberhort
Dr. Luther C. Notter
Dr.
P.
Jomes W.
Lewis
E.
Eugene
Wendel
Wendel
6.
Ellen Snyder
Elizabeth Slock Applegate
Poul A. Luzenski
Sondro Mourey Stinson
Donold D Stroub
Morcia S Bailey
M. Donold Miller
Sarah Ridgwoy Morrison
Soondro McBride Myers
H. Kitchen
Rose Fatzinger Kuser
Fronces Goglione Little
Gory F Anderson
Dr Boyd E Arnold
Raymond C. Horgreaves
George T Hermon
John P Hermon Jr
Corol Ely Hermon
Rev. James E Johnson
Bernard
Schultz
L
I960
Margaret Brinser Donmoyer
Franklin M. Duncon
James M. Gustove
Joon Yohn Horclerode
L.
Montz
Croig R
Donold R Coffmon
Morjorie Myers Corroo
Gerald R Donmoyer
Lynda
W. Schloyer
Lorraine Toylor
Williom Calderwood
E.
Rev. Roy
Normon
Helen Pedergnono Boron
Joseph J Barros
Fredo J. Bills
Bernard
Ralston
R
Schell
E.
Rjchord
Raymond
Carl A. Unger
1951
W
,-,
Bernice Dietz Snyder
Paul H Spohr
Dolores Slonton Senn
Roy
.
Lillian
W. Kreisher
Charles
P.
Liverton. Jr.
Continued
Gretchen Gum Jomiolk«w«tf
Gareth T, Kase
Thomas V. Keeney
John W. Kerlish
Continued from page 16
Deon A long
Donald C. Love
Ronald J Lobas
Susan Sworls lunger
Mohoney
Richard
Richard
R. Monley
Showers McCorkill
Edword K. McCormiek
H. Lewis
Morjorie Harper Lilley
Mory Llewellyn
Megargel
J.
Down
Ensley Michoel
Glenn
R.
Timothy C. Moyer
William Paule
B Jean Davey Roe
Paul L. Rhine
Kistler Sitler
W
Cecelia Mistol Toth
Williom A. Turley
Virginio Wright Tinner
A
'
Manlynne Kolnik Welsh
Wendell
Charles W. Werner
Richard T. Williams
Wholen
I
Donald L. Whitebreod
Roger H Willioms
Sandra Swetlond Williams (MG)
Janet Hoke Winkler
Ido Cooper Wynings
Bonnie Seorch Yeisley
Steible Zochorda
1966
Mortho Zubris Borchik
Marc L Bortlebough
Noncy Jones Bartoo
Jomes
Young
Karen Doty Young
Biscombe
J
Susannoh Wilson Brody
Victor R Campbell
Susan Hommerquist Carlson
Dozimoe Poul Carmo
Borboro Urbos Connor
Dovid F. Conner
Rose M Chik.
Kenneth G Cromwell. Jr.
Alice Koch Cromwell
Dorothy Brighton Denes
Linda Klock Dent
James
L.
Derr
T.
Lois Moyer Dooley
Mary A. Dowd
Barbara Robison
J
Donald
Dowmon
Dubil
Dugan
Mory Woodruff Dumbauld
Wayne A Eddowes
B.
Carole Justice Evons
David H Evons
Joseph
P.
Fozzan
Gory C. Fenstermocher
Rosemary A. Fogorty
John
T.
Foster
Jeon Zenke Foster
Irene Frantz
Jerry D. Fritz
Richard H. Fulmer
Ann Wyott Fulmer
Monlyn Button GrasJey
Dale
W
Greenly
Gum
George A Hanno
E.
Burel
Jay D
Carlo Overhiser Auten
Bryan J. Bolovoge
Samuel R. Bashore
Morion Siegel Bashore
Suzonne Reiff Berg
Glen H. Book
Edword
Harter
Richard C. Heller
Sharon Kuchinskas Herr
J.
Boulton
Patricio Born
Corlonn Nelson Broglie
Margaret L. Burns
Suson Shepherd Caldwell
Corlson
J
Patricio A.
Conwell
Cronford
B.
Barry L. Denes
Mory A Devore
Brendo Horleman Dorshimer
Spencer L. Empet
Larry H Endy
Michoel P Fitzpatrick
Alexandra Griesemer
Joseph D. Fleming
Jomes J. Fritz
Frederick
W. Dute.
Jr.
Edwards
Jonelle Simcox Edwards
M
Evans
III
Phillip D. Folk
Thomos S Fowles
Allen W. Handwerk (MG)
Robert D Harvey
Dr.
Hicks
Mory
Borrall Hill
Nila Sorensen Hill
Schuyler,
Jr.
Laird D. Shively
Gordon
Alon W. Shoop
Diane Mei Ling
Ann MocPherson Leorn
Kam
Robert
Dovid D. Steiner
Gront D. Stevens
Melody Cruys Lovelidge
Dr. Rosemory B. Lubinski
Patricio P. Stickler
Betty Ruth Keller Luchok
Regis C. Stirling
Thomos
F.
Vincent
J.
Gary
L
John
J.
Rochelle Groziano Worhurst
Robert F White
Mory
Heitz
Corol Michael Zoblocky
Terry
L
Christine Todd Alcoroz
Mary Jo Alter
Morilyn Miller Ambrose
Frederick
Bausch
Benyo
T.
Dawn
Corol
Mary Moloney Mounlz
Kotherme Matzko Mulka
John A, Murray
Linda Morgan Noidna
Robert
Noncy Horris Ostrelich
Robert R Bridge
Comille Washington Brown
Dennis
Byrne
Sandra Ingram Pascal
Borboro Tate Pench
Donno Redwinski Byrne
Gale Branch Burns
Paul
Jomes
L.
Poechmann
Terry M. Carver
Robert
L.
Reed
Thomos M. Cesarini
George E Chellew
Ronald
L.
Roberts
W
Connie Geiser Clewell
Patricia
Way Cobb
Richord P. Conner
Richard A. Philipkoski
Clyde C. Rogers'
Diana Cray Cornwell
Sandra Roberts Croll
Arocelio
Flo
Olin
Davis
L
Gerald O Devlin
Susonn Strine Doletski
Condace Nahodil Donachy
Terry
S.
Eddinger
Edward
B. Kern
Sandra Burkharl Kern
R.
David C. Huseman
Joseph C. Huttemonn
Robert
F.
Klemkosky
Kline
Stephen G. Korol
Judith Yarnall Kovol
III
Russell C Rudy
M. Louann Rhoades Rudy
Dono Houck Samuels
E.
Schlegel
Noncy Bricker Shaffer
Gordon
Sivell. Jr.
Joyce Johnson
Sivell
Marian Horris Eisenhower
Elizabeth Porosky Skoski
Charlotte
Ruth A. Slonoker
Shoron Bergeron Spollone
Barbaro Brown Spoulding
Jock
R.
Green Empet
Evans
Pomelo M. Evons
S.
Toy lor
Hummel Thomos
Lindo
J.
Trothen
Thomas R Fiorey
Lorraine Zack Tucker
Renee Heupcke Vergari
Joseph W. Walton
Neil
T.
Fleischer
Carl T
Kathleen Hoftke Gacod
G Richard Garman
John
John Genoa,
Jr.
Thomos
Potricio Derr
George
Kislyn
Worhurst
Watto.
S.
Daniel
R.
Jr
Jr.
Weaver
R.
Eward
Fisher, Jr.
J
L.
Foltz
Gobb
Shoron Lunger Guinn
Shirley
McHenry Guy
John C Hamblin
William J. Harris,
Wayne
F
Jr.
Heim
Betty
McCutchen Heintzelmon
Suzanne Bower Heller
Dole C. Henne
M
Edward R, Hess
Douglas M. Hill
Antoinette Mafulis Hoehle
William
Dole
L.
Thomos
E.
Hoffner
Houck
P.
Houston
Sylvia Boblick
Houston
Beverly A. Jones
Noncy Chomoni Kfcplon
Jone Thomas Keifer (MG)
C. Donnell Kelly
Gloria Molnor King
I.
Ray Kline
Fronk
R.
Kocher
Mory Kwosnoski Krebs
Jesse
R.
Kresge
Eloine
Jerman Kurtz
Kothleen Horsf Kuzmiak
Gail Bower Landers
B. Woyne Louboch
Joon Molnor Laubach
Morsho Montgomery Lepley
Janet Tazik Mojikos
Linda Watts Mollin
Gerald M. Mascavoge
Kathleen A. May
Charlotte Tourney McBride
Shaw McClofferty
Moyer McClure
Cheryl K. McHenry
Margaret W. McKee
Kothy J. McGuire
John A McKay
Goil
Douglos R McRoberts
Jomes A. Metzler
Margie Van Billiard
Welsh
Gorman Whitenight
Miller
Betsy Ross Montileone
Eloine F
Roddy A. Fisher
Poul D. Fowler
Evans
Virginia
Siegmann
R,
Evons. Jr
E.
Eugene M. McClaHerly
Shuey
L.
Dennis
H.
Shotwell
L.
Gory
John
Ronold
Piatt
E.
Joon Buonassisi Fefterman
William H. Hoffman
Niccol
I.
Dione Boone North
Kothleen Jarrard Osberg
Michoel
Potncio Zelner Kaczmorek
Althea Kleppinger Keiler
Montgomery
Moody
Wells Moreou
Willord B
Gloria Jonasik Gurick
Lyons
Schulten Moffett
Jr.
Sondra Loucks Gorfunkel
Dovid C Gay
Williom A. Gionnetta
Larry L Grant
Sondro Sanford Gribbin
Majikos
Judith H. Michaels
Dietterick,
L
William
Philip
II
Linda Horner Mills
Geroldine Long White
Irwin F. Zoblocky
Clothier
Cobb
Kondace Caputo
Helen Mullineaux -Marcott
E McSurdy
Eileen A Zehner Meiser
Karen Sollidoy Mellinger
Voneida
Waples (MG)
G
J.
Stephen F Foltz
James
Thomas
Kaczmorczyk
Linn
Linda Van Saders Stirling
Charles R Swank
Beverly Hoonzl Folk
Frederick M, Fertig
B.
A
Paul
Corl
Albert
Koren Undek Lesch
So
(MG)
Dovid A. Feather
Robert M. Fink
Learn
E.
Noncy Trowbridge Stackhouse
Robert F Holly
Linda B. Johns
Lola M. Hunsinger
Morjorie Francis James
Fitzpotrick
John C
Susan R
Keith C
Cermanski
P.
Potricio Secrest
Sharon Sullivan Laczo
Williom R. Large
Caryl Custer Large
Sandra Clancy Larson
Katharine Amacher Lauer
Anita Dobson Shaffer
F. Costrilli
John
Doyle
Modelyn Woll Kush
Jr.
Thomas
Shoron Enslin Dodson
Howard C Ebersole
Susan L Engstrom
Kieski
Stevonn Fecher Krueger
Austin A. Kurtz
Somsel
M Savidge
Harry M. Soxton,
E. Schmidt
III
Donno Fenstermocher Knouse
John W. Bilder
Borboro Kiner Bornman
Dovid W. Bowen
Ruth D. Correll
Charles
Corol Harter Klinger
Richard S
John C Corr
David P. Cecco
Corol
Constance Eaton King
O
Berry
J
Rebecco Pickel Davis
Gail Bruch Deans
Judy Bryant Roberts
1968
Bower
Kelchner
James B. Rolley
Mory Reckord Rolley
James J. Rosini
Thomos A. Solerno
Soro Thomos Urisko
A Anderson
Gerold
Wilbur
Derricott
Gerard p. Dick
Nqncy Andrews Didriksen
Thomas H Diehl
Connie McMichoel Donahue
Anthony H. Dooley
Alex
1967
Koshlok
F.
E.
H.
Joseph M. Youshock. Jr.
Suson Miller Zimmerman
Cloreen Oberlin Beamer
Gladys D. Bingamen
G
Luzi Kerr
Kay
Borboro Bensinger Welch
Ronold
Berkheimer
L
Sworlz Chellew
Donald J. Cloyton
Suson Fritz Cloyton
Karas
Willord
Bennett
T.
Patricio
Shimko Houck
Brendo Wolfe Kaiser
Noncy Fisher Karom
Poslock
Zeisloft
Zoronski
Charles F Bowman
Janice T. Bowman
Loretfa Hauser Horwith
J.
G
Jomes M. Bonocci
Richard W. 8ower
Douglas C. Hippenstiel
Nancy
Lorraine
Lee
Girord M. Histed
Williom T. Honfz
Jomes A. Hoosty
E.
Robert
Jeon Booth Starner
B
Ruth
J. Hill
Albert
Jr.
Mory Sipe Spering
N Straub
Robert M. Stroup
Stello
Remley
Alano Motter Remley
Carol Rhodes Rhinard
Russell
R Colorusso Scorontino
Susan Godsholl Schiller
Charles W. Sorber
Henry I Spering
Carol
Drew
Dr
Bowman
Gene
Hartmon
Dorothy M. Hauber
Goyle Yeoger Hess
Louis
Judy
Zongardi
1969
Eileen Gulnoc
(MG)
J
Nancy Thomos Agurkis
Koren Dowse Arner
Corl M Beogle
Eva Chitty Beogle
Hartman
I.
M
Zalonit
John
Fronk
Potricio
C. Poploskie
Lorry
Mary
Richard M. Stackhouse
Jeon Sobol Stonkiewicz
Borboro
John
Ouigg
L
Richord
E
N
Robert
Kofhleen Doon Grugan
Glenn E. Holterman
Elwood R. Harding. Jr.
Louise Eyster Pileri
Prosseda
S.
Sondro Houser Wilburn.
B Wolverton
Roymond
A Grugan
Lorry
James F Pegg
G. King Perry
Hoplomozian Pogharion
Dr Gory
Snyder
Thomas J Toth
Corol Wertmon Watters
Mulka
S
David L Reimold
Susan Burnett Roskos
Wesley J. Rothermel.
Shively
Borboro Twitmire Smith
Williom
A
Jon
Ido Gingrich Smith
Robert
John
*
Sharon Hodgett Griggs
Gene C Gruber
Brendo Rice Nestlerode
Nickolo Hoosty Oram
R. Miller, Jr
Patricia
Siller
I
Roberto
McMonimen
1
Thelmo D Goodman
Mary Hutchison Grody
Donno M Greco
Myro Schlesinger Griffith
Patricia Szymonek Mico
Mory Beck Miller
John D. Montgomery
Terrence L Morgan
Corol Koons Munson
Carol Ripo Oliver
H. Sherrott
Undo Ransom
Noncy
P.
David
Ronold
Edword
Gory
Dr.
Jr.
Rita P. Seybert
Jode
Capp Mononi
Jomes
Joseph Schein
Nancy linde Schueck
Larry
Edith
,
McGinnis
Michoel V Mellmger
Dr.
Edwin B. Messick, Jr.
Dorothy Wilkes Miller
R. Rupert, Jr.
Robert Sonds.
J
F.
Anne
Jo
Mojor
Gertrude Hoffer Mondak
Dorothy Krakowski Norbury
Joseph I Nutoilis
Glenn
Ruth
Corol GesalrWaW (Rfi/d)'
Kothryn E. Giger
(
D Landers
Morjorie Milani McCormick
Koy Herman Locke (MG)
Jeremy R Lomas
Morrison
"
1
Phyllis E. Mo|or
Melindo Armstrong Molmros
R Randolph May
Gerald P. McBride
Leda G McClure
Kunkel
Jomes
Donna Eckhart Meose
William
R.
KVatf "
Kwosnoski
Joyce Llewellyn Laskey
Kay Petersen Llverton
Corole Gerhard Lorenz
Angelica Socco Mohoney
Louise Beltz Louboch
Judith
B.
Phillip
Sharon Sholley Kribbs
Joseph P Kubert
Rugh Mohan
J
John
Richard A. Klingermon
Frederick J. Klock
Shirley Carl Lutz
Patricia
Francis
David'l':
Judith
Mueller
Dopp Murray
Robert A. Muscosky
Linda Wimmer Nicholson
Kothrine Merritt Niemiec
Donno Corson Oloh
Joseph
Albert
P. O'Neill
J
Orth
Continued
18
Continued from page 17
Christopher
Gessler
L.
Brendo Stonebock Shoemaker
Rosolio Goldstein
Koren Balser Wieder
Ronald Wilcha
Croig
Gloria Wilson
F.
Robert A. Wolf
Ann
Paulette Wiest Wolfgang
Adorn J Skelding
Gerold E Snyder
Gray
T. Greenawalt
Donald M. Grubb
Alan G Gryshuk
Deborah Choffee Gryshuk
Gribbin
J
P. Griffiths
Dolto
Heckman
Mory Koschok Pierce
Hornel Hummel Poechmonn
Thomos P Prohco
Shoron Spry Reed
Connie Cromley Reimold
Dolores Politzo Higgms
lindo
Cinde Rogers Hippensfiel
Dorothy Heller
Rupert
E
Donno Murroy
A
Carol
Charles
Shupe
Clark M. Benfield
Williom Hyde.
George
Jr.
Jones
E
Jr
Cheri Ziegler Skelding
Morcello Ziembo Koczmorcik
Roy C. Smoy
Priscillo
Zimmerman Koyes
Lelond A. Smelt* (MG)
Noncy Geiger Smith
Kramer Smolick
Boyd
Goil
Jocqueline A. Kent
Judith Henry Spence
Doniel A. Kliomovich
Kenneth C Stonion
Rev. Doyle
T
Keiser
H
S.
Stroub
Kenneth Kreider
S.
Swortz
Loretta M. Kukol
Solly
Tropone
Philip B.
James A
Monique Covolliero Loutenschlagi
Donno L. Lehmon
Trick
Catherine H
Vonderslice
Marsha Corpenter Vogt
Morgoret L. Woltemyer
Donno Reitz Watson
Rondel K Wesfley
Richord A. Wilburn
Frances
Vorgo Londis
Georgonne Lone
Joseph K. Louginiger
J
Hondy Wright
Yonchek
Evelyn Kovalchick Lewis
Bernice Obzut Linn
Jennifer Troutmon
Lomos
Peter W. Longo
Connie M. Lowe
J. Suson Cassel Ludwig
Hummel Mack
Ellen
Judith Adonizio
Nancy
Grifosi MocNeill
Fronk
Suson
McVey Marker
C. Yortz
Virginio
Susan
Davenport Yoder
Yodock
Sitler
Esther W. Zobitz
1970
James B Martin
Joonna Hertweck McClure
Morie Stufscovoge McDonold
Kothleen Wintersteen McWill.oms
Mielke
Ralph C Moerschbocher III
Memorial To Koren E. Campbell
Connie Beinlich Albertson
lldro J.
Ruth N. Andrione
Fronk C Boker
Russello
Suzanne Seymour Moron
Horold D Borretts
Dale E Beaver
Mildred Moyer
Corol
Borboro Dogle Beaver
Thomos C. Bedisky
Richard Beierschmitr
Michoel
E.
Judith
G
Richord
Jr.
Bieber
L.
Bingomon
Dennis W. Bishop
Daniel A. Bobeck
Patrice
Murray Bognet
Dennis D Bohr
Ann H. Brondt
James R. Bubb
Colleri (MG)
Ashworth Callen (MG)
Borboro K. Campbell
Potricio
Corol Stephany Campbell
Mortho Skerdo Corpenter
Eugene E Cioffi III
E.
Cioffi
Clewell
Donald A Corbin
Jone Reed Corbin
Bernard J. Curron
Joseph I Dorlington
Brent C. Davis
Monlyn Polmer Dovis
Donold
R
Doniel R
Deitterick
Difeo
Carol Adorns Dorword
Elaine M. Eiswerth
Mory McGinnis Evons
George F Fousnought
Eileen McCoffery Fousnought
Kothryn Ellmoker Feist
Roger J Fettermon
Evelyn Livezey Fettermon
F.
Fissel
Sheryll Ebeler Fredrick
Friedmon
C.
Linda LoFover Perry
Gerard
J.
Frymoyer
Pierotti
Sandro HoHow Piesvoux
Debbie Engelmon Porter
Morgoret Boyer Porsell
Mary M. Rachko
Stonley G. Rokowsky
Reitz
I
Leslie A.
John N.
Coolbough
Jonet Nossol Nash
Ronold
Pauline Groybill Buchonon
Thomos
Munch
J.
Rohrboch
Lindo Lyle
Rossmon
Constance D. Ruppen
Ronold M. Russo
Helen McAndrews Solomone
Potricio Robbins Sounders
Noncy Niemenski Seksinsky
Anthony F Selvoski. Jr.
Marvin
T.
Serhon
Jock W. Shorbough
Elizabeth
Hodek Shorbough
Robert
Shelly
S.
Lorroine
M
Roberto R
Robert
E
Shemo
Sikulo
Simons
Suson H. Skiptunos
Henry A Snyder
Morgo
Snyder
Judith Urso Snyder
Kothleen McFadden Stimmel
Stewort O Stroble
Poul
F
Szymonski
Tearpock
Betty Weiss Underwood
R.
Doniel
J.
Jomes F. Volania
Pomelo D VanEpps
Mary Wolton Veet
Joseph Vezendy.
Mono
W
Roymond
Jr
Pellegnno Vezendy
Jomes M. Wornogiris
Lindo Boker Wosley
Michoel
Stubbe
Beverly
S.
Lindo K. Alberts
Morgoret Blusius Doty
Dwight P. Edris (MG)
Keith M. Edwards
Catherine Brennon Angerson
Kerry S. Ayers (MG)
Williom
John
J.
Donno
W
Fonner
Gantz III
George
Dovid Gerbench
Jomes W Gilhooley
J
C.
Vincent l Gorski
Borboro A. Hoos
John J. Hoile Jr
Lesley
Hones
J. Barry Hortmon
Noncy Fetterolf Hickey
Doro K. Hillegos
J.
M
Philip
Irey
III
Maxine Bushey Jones
Susan Burke Keepnews
Charles
Daniel
J.
John J. Lowrence. Jr.
Theodore R Lowson, Jr.
Howard P Lewis
Lucindo
Linker
J.
W
Gerold
Jonet
R.
James
F
Lorson
Mortin
McCool
Alice E. McCrocken
Dovid J McDermott
Donndo Wesley McHenry
Claire
McNelis
E.
Timothy
Williom
T.
J,
McToggart
Megorgell
Thomos M. Miller
S Morgon
Gerold
G
Frederick
Morris
Borboro Hershey Myer
Corol Confer Myers
Koren Lauboch Odium
Charles F. Petry, Jr.
Alan
J. Phillips
Donno
Elaine
Little Pierolti
D Pierson
Michael A. Pillogolli
Darlene Bortz Pittner
Jomes R
Woyne
Plotukis
E Roke
James P Re.chart
Edwin W. Rhinord
Robert W Ropp
Sondra Jefferson Rupp
Doris Remsen Sochetti
Janice Tomkinson Schneck
Klink
L.
Phyllis
Hoos Klouser
Robert
E.
Dale
Knorr
Kostick
J.
Borry
P.
Krieger
John D. Lotshow
Connie leiby Lauboch
Judith J Lawrence
Suson Moeri Lee
Christine Yonish levin
M
Philip
levine
MoryAnn Poulos Levine
John W. Liggett (MG)
JoAnn H Long
Potrick Lyons
Charles
N Mockes
Brian
Ma|Or
I
James P Malkomes
Rose Lucorelli Molkomes
Vicki Edwards Morsh
III
C Bootmon
Noncy Fruehon Bohr
Patricia Cooney Booth
Mory Barry Boudmon
Pryslok Bower
Mogee Louchmen
Klinetob
Goil Stonk Kolendo
Shirley
Ann
Helen Beckley LoBont
Kline
L
B.
Dovid C Koehler
Michoel H Kolb
Robert I Kolendo
C. Bloss
Bonnie Bodger Koch
G Kolody
Corol
Ronald
Blosi
N Bower
Krommes
Jones
Kindt
B.
William
Rodney R Bicker)
Fred
S.
Jack
Michoel E Bickhort
Joan lowson Bigelow
Thomos
Johnson
P.
E.
Kenneth
Bertha Busocker Bennicoff
L
Jogo
E.
Aldono Kupstas Kortorie
Barbara Foust Keorns
Shoron Hawkins Bedisky
Corol Schmidt Belcher
Dione Holye Belusko
Jeffrey D. Kleckner
Doboroh Serowicz Kovalich
Robert
Cheryl Lobarr Boslinelli
Charlotte D Becker
Corol Kishbough
Bruce
Maurito
A. Richord Boslinelli
Wayne
Inkrote
R.
Robert A. Ireland
Steven E. Janke
Bortos
F.
Hunl
E
Leonard
Anderson
Suson Housenick Kees
Richord
Bruce
Ronold
Michael D Adorns
Jackson A. Aileo, Jr.
Jr.
Mory A Eglanski
S. Homiak
Dione Crouthomel Hosoge
Audrey E. Hower
Ulanoski
Donno Mendicmo Dobrowski
Hessling
R.
Jungmonn Hibschman
Albert
Tunis
J.
Horns
Herrold
J.
Peggy K. Holdren
Jeonette Alessi Holohan
Tompkins
1972
Depew
Christine Weiss Hoff
Connie Keller Nespoli
Borboro Porreco Nielsen
John P. Pociolti
Bell
Horry K Berkheiser.
Beth Wolfe Berney
Hummel Moerschbocher
Jr.
Mortho Seymour Denkenberger
Donold A. Dennis
Robert H. Dilks.
C. Stine, Jr.
F
BethAnne M Valentino
Anthony Vigilanti
Gregory J. Viola
Richord G. Wolck
Diana Spongier Wolck
Ralph D Weller Jr
Horry E. Woolcock
Moxine Schlesinger Yeoger
Pomelo Crowl Yeoger
Shirley K. Young
Potricio M Young
Joseph J. Wieczorek
JoAnne Kohler Wieczorek
Dione Pupkiewicz Cuirle
Williom J Dovies
Sylvia
Jr
E
Edword
Joanne
Robert
Williom H. Cluley (77)
Ernest L Confer
Richard L Coup
Klinger, Jr.
Fronk
Woyne
Roy
Fronk
Burns
William E. Chapped.
Gory A Clewell
Jr
Suson
I
Potricio Stetz
Corol Lambert Turley
Campbell
Irene Guzevich Casari
David A. Keifer (MG)
Dr.
Donold
Betty Zablocky
Morilin J
Richord N. Bradwell
Carolyn Spongier Jacobs
Shelby Treon Horer
II
Mory Guydish Steppling
Carolyn Volence Swindro
Elizabeth A. Jones
Irwin
E
A. Steppling
Gulkowsky
J.
Dovid P Guzofsky
Diane Green Hall
Maryonn Leshonski Sucheski
Bergolis
J
Florion
Janet Belfonti Stein
Roymond
L
Robert A, Guthelnz
Spollone
Susan Leabhart Spearing
Becker
J
George
Brendo Burkhort Inghom (MG)
Thomos
Jr.
Oever Sypek
Leonard T Thomos
Verdun C. Thomos
Robert
Neol
Rosaline
Sosor
P.
Robert C
Edward W. Beishline
June Bloss Berkheiser
Glenn A. Bieber
Gory S. Blasser
Edword C Boudmon Jr
Schultz
Berry Shumoker
J
Roy E Hoglund II
Koren Kroll Horwoth
Donold M. Houck
Thereso Gherardini Houck
Shotwell
I.
Louise Sitler
Dovid
1971
Kerry C. Hoffmon
Jone Skomsky Gittler
Shaffer
R.
Cynthip Sharretts Sibole
Dwight M Ackermon
Diane Carl Ardan
Vicki Hoffmon Boir
Carol Greco Borhydt
Lee G. Barthold III
Donold F Becker
Regino F Hepner
John J. Higgms Ji
Rosmi
J
Roymond
Mark Yonchek
Thomos Lloyd Henry
Michoel 0. Seksinsky
lenore Tibbett Shannon
E.
Gittler. Jr.
F.
Michoel Weinberg
Kenneth 0 Schnure
Reinhold A. Schultz
Dennis
William
John P. Gross
Barbara Lawser Hoin
Theodore A. Hortz
Suson Zimmermon Sollode
Robert R. Sompsell (MG)
Kenneth 0. Saunders
Jock
Seymour
L.
Jomce Fenton Potey
Morgoret K Poyne
Ronold
Jomes
Gory
Kothleen Mortin Weover
Joseph
Joseph
J.
Downe Schrontz Pender
Borboro Foremon Pierce
Ellen
D Weaver
Peter
Gloria Grablutz
Polkendo
Suson Schohl Polkendo
Russell
Lindo Buck Marston
Robert C
Bowen
Jr
Ann
Jeffrey
W. Brouse
Ronold S Brown
R.
M
Campbell (MG)
Richord
Derolf
J.
M
Anne
Price Dennis
Diellerick
Robert D. DiSebastian
Borboro Dodson
Joy D
Domboch
Jomes J. Doyle
Regino Foir Dunn
Jane M. Elmes
Borboro Petteng.ll Evons
M. Jocqueline Feddock
Bruce
S.
Felix R
Fehr
M
Mitchell
E
Morris
Borboro
Neuhord
J
Kathleen Roorty Nickerson
Williom H Orcutt
Robert
Parry J r
W
Thomos
Parry
J
Shelly
J. Portion
Lindo Zimniski Portion
John B Poul
Claudio Schod Poul
Theodore C Pedergnono
Noncy Pfleegor Plott
Borboro
Wynn
Robert P
Donno
M
Ploiukis
Pochokilo
Polinsky
Louise Yeany Pool
Kent
1. Prizer
Robert M. Robb
Donald
Fernandez
Mitchell
J
Jean Glavich Nebzydoski
Koy Hohn Nell
Judith A. Chappell
Maroget
John
Miller. Jr.
Miller
Pamela Griffin Morris
Suzanne U Murphy
Chombers
Lynn Croft Dovies
Karren Winkler Dovis
D
Lansing
Butterweck
Joonne Cino Checket
Pomelo Penoyer Cincotto
Christine H. Conner
Lorry
Suson
Velmo Avery Burrows
Dennis
M
Chorles
Shirley Fester Brofee
Gory
McElwee
Monlyn Hondschuh McMenomin
Louis J. Melovoge
D Michoel Brouner
Thomos E. Breit
Noncy E Brink
J
M
Doniel A. McKinney
Sherri Kindig Brondt
Richord
McClosky
Borboro Standcliffe McClosky
W
Roffensperger
Fred Ramin, Jr,
Daniel W. Rorig
E.
Richord R. Fettermon
Peggy
J.
Fiedler
Robert C. Figlock
Robert E. Fisher
Alexis
Gamble Fonner
Williom
Judith
John
E.
Fox
Gildea,
Edword
Kothy
Charney Gantz
J.
Dr. Steven D. Rovert
Connie Smith Rovert
Kothleen Eisley Reich
Jr.
L.
F.
Rillstone
Ritter
Rosolyn M. Roberts
Continued
Continued from page 18
Theresa Zoranski
Kevin Hays
1972
David J. Robinson
Kenneth B. Robinson
Brendo Bollock Ross
Linda Neyhord Runge
Gina V. Sanson©
Frank
KiHy
S.
Roberto
Ball Schildt
Schildt
Dovid
R.
Dovid
Celestine
Alfred
Wrono
O
David
Sofilko
Mann
Williom D Kelso
Kathryn A Kirk
Stout
Louise Ranck Stroup
Collins
Alan
Stump
L.
Vincent
Michoel
Korl
Tropone
Vorono
T
J.
Vitale
Cloudio Zehner
S.
Webb
Paul R. Wolverton
David C. Wright
Paul M. Yonigo
Yoder
Joseph Zokorchemny
Jr
1973
Jeon
Mary Ann D Abbott
Barbora Brumbaugh Adams
Richard C Adams
Carolyn M. Arndt
Mary Boron Bonnon
Carol Droke Benzo
Alan D Bigelow
Bluff
Antoinette Pocanowski Botke
Thomos
Bnggs
I
Marlene Klacik Morkle
Diane Yost Maturoni
Jerry
W
Robert B
Stanley
Brosh
Burnett.
Douglas
Susan Pope Byorek
Mary Jane W Cordone
Frances Holgate Corr
Beth Bonfield Chrusch
Dianne Fluhr Coleman
Mark
Constable
J.
G
Timothy
Corby
Rosemary K. Corby
Suzonne Hoggerty Cordier
Penny Wolker Cragle
Jonet Capiga Dahlquist
Dovid R Dickens
Lonny C Dietterick
Gary E Donnelly
Sherry Shirk Donnelly
Lorry
Linda
A Donovan
Hermon Drumm
Thomas
J
Dunn
Richord
J.
Eckersley
Mary Broyan
Anne
Ernst
Evons
R
McClintock
F.
Patricio Noble McClune
Jerome J. McDonald
Ronna S McMurtrie
Irene Foy McNully
Chorlene Proch Meckes
Rondoll Miller
Anthony
Milore
J
W. Minnich
Scott
Lindo
Moser
Joseph J. Myers Jr
Dovid R Navryki
Jon
E.
M
Nazor
Richard F
Neidig
Mory L. O'Neill
Alwyn R Pointer
James J. Polushock
L.
Ponuski
Anne Nuss Potterson
Povlichko
F.
Daws Pecsek
Louise
Anthony
J.
Peluso
Mecone Peluso
Eileen
Mono Soxe
Pettenger
Froncis L Plumly
David H. Pool
Daniel
I
Rovino
Judith Toborowski Reese
Gory L Rilter
Joan Peron Ronco
Mildred Scholl Rose
Gwendolyn
Eloine
J.
Francine
Kerstelter Rosenfeld
Rusetski
R.
Rutulo
James P Sachelti
George Sanderson
Maryellen Gaughan
Cynthia
L
Georhort
Cothy Fiske Gerber
J
Deon Giambrone
Maureen O'Donnell Whitehead
Richord C. Whitmire
Lindo Gottlieb Williams
Mork
Leo A. Wisneski.
Gerold L Witte
Cheryl
Sharon lomoreoux Kohrherr
Jr.
E. Korpics
Carol Connor Kunkel
Donno Kuchak Yonigo
Lindo
Patrice McCorthy Kuntzler
Yerges
Debro
Popomok Youshock
Janet M. LoShay ('77)
Robert M. Loubach
J
Patricio
Kohrherr
C.
Ruth Rhodes Zalonis
Jonet Kuppinger Zanzinger
Froncis
J
Robert
F
Ziskowski
1974
Anderson
A Andrejock
Keith D Anthony
Rebecco Scurry Apple
Corol Hunsmger Bankus
Cynthio Hunt Barroll
Wanieto Bendinsky
Corol Menig Bennett
Dovid
E.
Beyer
Dovid
S.
Beyerle
Judith A. Beyerle
Mary Engel Bigelow
Donna L. Bubb
.
Kurtz
L
Mary Beth Lech
Thomos S. Leedom
Morris H Leighow
Roymond P Leister
Rhondo Hotalon Leister
Linda Long Jeffrey
Suson Hoddad Leitzel
Carol Foustner Lesusky
Jomes
R. Lett
Joseph M. Litchko
Angela Urbschat Looby
Fronk C. Loroh +
Horry M. Lumadue
Murray
Kathleen A.
Lutz
Lyrwi
Ann K. Buchholtr
J Roymond Burnett (MG)
Mory KazofcMojor
Suson Hennessy Martin
Nancy Padgett Camellin
Carolyn L. Carr (MG)
Steven
Elizobeth F
Holden
Cortieri
A
McClellon
Sally Derr
G
McCloskey
McClure
MoUy Casey
Cynthio Pogona McCfure
Marilyn Leo McCool
Paula Deatrich Christian
Mory Weiskopf McGarve'y
Morgoret A. Cistone
David
Potncio Gottsholl Cluley
Robert I. Compton. Jr.
Salvotore A.
Raymond Consorti
Mory Angle Coploff
Jone L. Cornell
Lindo Ruoss Cureton
Robert L. Dibble. Jr.
Elizabeth
P.
Dimpter
Robert D Dodge.
Mary
Jr.
Torsello Dougherty
David V
Droppo
Karen Irwin Eberle
G
Raymond
Edwards
M McGhee
Michael
J.
Meisinger
P. Miller
Rosalind VanHouten Milore
Rondo Punda Minnich
Larry R. Moser
Ann W Moser
Dovid B Moyer
Noncy Nebhut Moyer
Dennis M. Myers
Donoto J Nieman
Pomelo Schinski Evans
Dovid C. Nyce
Rolph D O'Bonion
Joseph J. Ochotny.
Ronold
J
Dr. William P
Albert
J.
Bradley D. Eroh
Williom
Evons
Fagnani, Jr
Potricia
Fahrenboch III
Chaopel Fahrenboch
Timothy
J
R.
Kathleen
Forrel
R. Forrell
Weber
Jane A. Weber
Gory E Wilson
John R. Wolff
Ernest
Ruth
Yotes
Yerger
E.
E.
Henrietto Partridge Zobrenski
Janet C. Zogorski
Jomes
Zanzinger
J
1975
Koren W. Abernethy
Leonard C. Adams
Donna
Ambler
Kroll
Jon M. Andes
Anonymous
W
Dovid
Badger
Melodie Halkett Badger
Grace Wolewski Bekaert
Dole
Dorell Squier Orzolek
Sandro Ho'fpster Ososkie
Mary Boyd Palmer
Michele Chlebove Pennebacker
Helen Hollenboch Peters
A
Gregory
Bitler
D Blow
Paul
Corol Hendricks Boerner
Linda M. Bokus
Arlene Trush Boles
Kathleen Fndirici Bosse
Mory Cummings Bower
Jomes J Boylon
Janice Rompolo Butz
Elizabeth Chandler Campbell
Groce
Corter
E.
Andrew
J.
Chennka
Janet Fioro Cherinka
Richord T Christian
A
Christie
Eunice Zeigler Compton
Cureton
Judy Flicker Curron
Fronk Dattilo
C. Eric
Williom Deletconich
Cathy Kraus DeWald
Joseph
T. DiGiocomo. Jr.
Brendo Boyer DiGiocomo
Mary Lepley Doto
Carolyn Driedger
Christina D Dunning
Cotherine Cromer Eckersley
Lee K. English
Daniel
Jr
O'Neill
Bell
Bergman
J
Jerald
Mecca
CraigAnn Mehrmann
James
Kornes Watson
Wotts
Elizobeth R
Craig A.
Dione Dickinson
Christine Schmidt Lewis
Patrice
Ingrid
Eury (MG)
L.
Judy Collier Fosnacht
Ines T
Fernandez
Eleonoro Ehrhorn Fisher
John H.
Morilyn
J.
Flowers
Thomos
T
Foss
Flick
Moryonn Kwiatkowski Fieo
Andrea
Sharon
Richord C Pohle
Kothy Whitmire Fowler
David B Fresch
Diane DeFrancesco Fry
Susan Burkovage Pohle
Joseph
P. Fissel
Cynthia Foulke Forney
Constance Poh Goney
Koren Craholl Gehrett
Glenn D Gerber
James
Petruska
L.
R
Pollock
A Polumbo
Catherine
A Galati
Linda Golis Gardner
Joseph P Govio
Noncy
Jomes
Dorothy A. Rice
Ann Gruber Gibbons
Scheffey (MG)
R
A Schwonger
Richord
Terry
Schwenk
Secundo
R.
J.
Linda Sterner Shook
Eloine Opp Sheotler
Sides
Gory Alon Smith
David
P. Sitoski
Joonne
Vitale Sitoski
Sharon Whitteker Snyder
Helen D Strosky
Rosonne LaBrute Testo
Harris G. Theodore
Dianne Velten Thompson
Angela Falzone Grody
Debra Kern Green
Keith
Groydon A. Gulliver
Dennis M. Guyer
Koren Terry Klingermon
Ronald L. Koch
Audrey Horns Koehler
Kenneth A. Vioni
Kothy E. Woltman
Mark
Ann Shuman Gimpert
Lindo S. Gough
Griffin
Suson Kovetski White
Terrence J. White
II
Klinger
Geehan
Michoel A. Suchanick
Dorothy H. Swortz
Robert R
L
Gerhord
J|ll
Cotner Gibos
Frances M Gilroy
Wenner
Jeffrey R. White
R. Urffer
Williom G. Vorgo
Sheryl Greiner
A Sherwood
Gable
Rondoll
Dennis
Kempski
Henry M. Kipp
Kenneth J. Kitchen
Roger M. Savage
W
E.
F
Robin Ratushny
Jack
Fry
Linda Hinchcliffe
Keil
Joseph
Marcio Borlon Tuerk (MG)
Chorles H Updegroff. Jr
Ruth F Urbon
Robert D. Port
Fred
A
Jonice C
Melonie Wengrenovich
Tempesco
J.
Janet Hoffman Porzel
Robert A. Reed
Moryonn Wonyo
Kenneth
Villari
C Wogner
Richard J. Word
Mildred P Worwick
Jomes B Weber
Suson Sheoffer Weber
Charles F Wehinger
Lawrence
Koye E. Tennant
Kathleen M. Dorcey Tierno
Lorry C Toy
Chorles A. Tuerk (MG)
Beth Delong Gerlins
Dovid P. Gibos
Gregory R Folatek (MG)
Ruth McCloskey Federchak
Brendo R, Fisher
Lorry
III
Edith Romig Rabuck
Marcia Kuligowski Rado
Vito
Forish
W
Joseph
Jocques
Constance Pour Jarrord
Christine M. Jendrzejewtki
Glenn M Johansen
Lydia Lambert Johansen
Marybelh Pornell Johns
J Gregory Koshello
Genevieve H. Keating
lindo
Mary Jean Cosole
Morris
J
Molly
Jr.
Bushner
J.
McClellon
L.
Jeanne
Jeffrey A. Brodbeck
Colleen
LeGotes
Peter D. Nell
Robert W, Bluff
Donno Mullen
Kull
F.
Dennis
Joyce Kerr Beom
Sonyo Rutkowski
Stephen
Jonice Evans Mark
J
Abbott
Corl J
Kormon
Kostick
Robert H. Louver
Oren M Woodruff
Pomelo Nicholos Woodruff
A
B.
Joyce
Keith R
Irene Gulycz Wehringer
Monetlo McMicken Weller
Jeanne A DeRose Wilson
Corol
Garry
Juleanne Degenhart Kraft
Woltman
E.
Kniezewski
J.
John A. Vontine
Raphael Palucci Vontine
Morcio Wonnamocher Vermuth
M
Linda Schoeffer Kniss
Michael P Trocy
J.
Klowitter
T
Klinetob
William R Klmgermon
Deborah Dixon Timm
Linda Bennick Tinsmon
Samuel
Samuel
L
Diane
Swartz
L.
Kotch
J
Helen T. Keller
Margery Hollar Keller
Spring
Steele
L.
Polricia
Jenkins
J.
Kathleen Furman Jenkins
Kim W. Johns
Dole E. Koshner
Barbora Strohm Smith
Michael
Hulteman
Edith Seifert lompietro
Virginia Piott Ide
Michael A. Smallets
Susan Dornemon Smallets
Barry
M
Carolyn
Seebold
Elaine Lemoncelli Severs
Bart J. Slough
Robert C. Sluzis
F.
R. Hughes
Donald Hummel
H.
Paulelte Chobok Schredl
Helen
Honoberger
L
Kristi Eglody House
Carolyn Gunster Howland
Sorinelli
J.
Richard
Hammer (MG)
Donald Hedish
Dennis L. Holbrook
Karen Thomos Holbrook
Tressler
R.
Kenneth
E
Williom
J.
Richord
J
Naomi M.
J.
Gibisser
Douglos P Goerlitz
Susan M Gottlieb
Borry
Gray
L
Pomelo Westley Gray
Robert J. Grebb
Amy Scholles Gyory
A Hagerman
Borbaro
Doran
Hamonn
Gory W. Hommer (MG)
Anne Stefonik Hanna
J.
Hanno
Normon
Cheryl A.
Richards
Sempo
Darlene Nowell Signore
Michoel
F.
Grahom
Dennis A. Greenly
Jock R
Rolph
J.
Slingerlond (MG)
Smith
Nancy
Hale
Jeon
Peter A. Sopka
Patricio A.
A Horns
Daniel
Koren
Hellmuth
Edward D Spellmon
Koren Kreigh Spellman
Spadoni
T.
A
Barbara
Stasiuk
Nancy Kipl.nger Steelman (MG)
Jr
Holl
I
Anna Shostoy Sneeringer
Susan McMinn Snyder
Borbaro
Noncy M. Hoffman
Jeanne lalesto Hofmonn
Glossner
J.
R.
Michele Seliga Himelright
David A. Hoffman
M
Mory Ann Gohrig
Barbora Haug Good
Micki
William
L.
Kathleen Cheruko Glessner
Kathleen
James Slamon
C. Harlan
Regino
M
Horfmon
Houber
Denise Kriesher Houser
Noncy A Hessinger
Joseph L. Hilgar
Sharon Young Hilgor
Janice Spears Hopkins
Judith A. Stine
Borbaro
Joon Radziewicz Stoutfer
Michele Walloce
Jeonne Graver Stranzl
Lewonne
Harold C. Hoover, Jr.
Jeanette M. Imbrogno
Troutmon
Cheryl A. Innerst
Allen B
Twordzik
Christine Daggitt Inscho
Joseph
Ulrich
Dovid H. lobst
Richord
Trometter
G
Richord E. Robison
Jane Endrizz. Scheffey (MG)
Slater Gerhart
Swope
E.
S.
Szewczyk
Szulanczyk
B.
Hudock
Hummel
Hunt
Russell A Horn
Cvnthia Cragle Horn
E.
Continued
K«»y
20
Sondro Myers ThoVnds
Mary
Continued from page 19
George E. Jonsson
Juliet Wilhoms Joremko
Donno E Jones
Jeonne M. Josbeno
Deborah Roth
lindo Appel Kennedy
||
Koren S. Kornes
Oione Geise Keister
Wolter O. Keisfer
Morylou Kempt
Kathleen
Gene
Kerick
A. Wentzel
Lindo Stockmon Wentzel
Beth
Rebecco Schrum Keyser
Werkheiser
L
Knouss
Sondro Fink Knowlden
Jeffrey R.
Down
Joon Reborchok Koch
Timothy J. Kokolus
Geraldine A Konicki
Gwendelyn Reider Yerk
Carlton W. Young
Gory T Zelinske
Noncy Boysen Zelinske
Kathleen Klemick Korbich
Susan Schaeffer Krempasky
Thomas S. labor
(MG)
Zimmermon
Korl H.
Louise
1976
Patricio Bocich
Ackermon
'
Kile
Rondoll S
Kimble (MG)
Michael
Klotchok
J
Jr
Lone Hetrick Kumer
Anne
Jomie
Clifford C.
Lehman
Lewis
Don
(MG)
Peter W. Longo
Anthony A. Lovecchio
Craig
Madora
Michael G. Malanga
Cynthia Storer Malongo
Judith Billman
Kothleen M. Barrett
Lynn McCormick Motncian
Lorry A.
Mayer
Gene
McCarty
L.
Mory A. McGonn
McGee
Melissa Grotton
Charles A McKnett
Oione Blessing Meeker
Meeker
Robert
B.
Sandra
K. Millard
Richord
Minnick
L.
Cotherine
J
Aileen Wombold Modrick
Gregory W Morion
Nancy Ann Mowrer
Moron Mulvey
Linda
Motzura
McCoy
E.
Robert
Woyne
Gale Minnich Blewis
Brewster
J.
II
Morie Lundy Callahan (MG)
Gory J. Campbell
Jomes E. Campbell
Morcy J. Campbell
Koren Ickes Chiodo
Barry I Cimino
Peter
Clare
J.
Mehrer
Mengel
J.
Phillip K.
1
Buckley
McGinnis
J
Elizabeth A. Miller
Martin
Forrest B
Moryann
Dell
Crowl
Jomes
Bonnie
Stephen
Lisette
Robert
DeCorolis
J
Michele
Dubuski
Sellitto
DeSera
Ostimchuk
Oswold Jr.
Overbaugh
J.
C.
Judith Spotts Davis
J.
T.
Gregory
Doiley
L.
Graham Oxley
Sovage Oxley
Koren Sheffer Ozycz
Suson M. Pork
Jone E. Porry
Martha Harris Buckley
Joseph F. Bukofski
Coryn Fernondez Compbell
Douglas H. Cauti
Patricio Noel Chose
Michoel A Chiodo
Kim S. Christion
Deborah Weissinger Christian
Mory Motoni Cleory
Susan Snyder Myers
Kermit T. Nester
Joon Karris English
Cathy Evans Eury (MG)
Goyle Telthorster Nester
Corol Boehret Potey
Elizabeth Knecht Colleron
Debro Edwards Evons
Mariellen Pentka
Josephine Fiolkowski Evans
Koren Gehrung Evons (MG)
Terry
Mory
O Brien
T.
Charmoine Fent O'Horo
Charles V. Palmeri
William
Chester
T. Pasek
Marlene Wells Posek
Kathy DeGlos Potterson
Donna M. Peroni
Webb
Michele
Purdy
Kenneth
F.
Fronces P
Reigle
(MG)
Joseph A. Rutecki
Louis N. Soros
Ann
Dale
T. Schilling
Schmeltzle
R.
Mork
Schweiker
S
A
Robert
Schweppenheiser
Glenn W. ShoHer, Jr.
Olgo Cheddor Shaffer
Rebecca Stong Shoppell
Cherie Aderhold Sherouse
Robert A. Shoop
Daniel R. Signore
Michael
E.
III
Smith
Splone
J
L.
Sweitzer
Marcio Klinger Sweitzer
Robert P Swiotek
Ann G Swobodo
Moryonne Sable Swope
Dovid M. Sysko
Wayne
N. Szynal
Slonely
Roger
L.
I
Tontsits
Thomas
Feriod
Reid
Michele
Christine
Thomos
E.
F.
A Roman
William A. Russell
Ann Kush
Frain
J.
J
Frazier
John D. Gasper
Sue A. Geiger
Jeon M Generose
Gory W. Gill
Jomes
R.
Kit Griffiths
Brion
Gruber
Harper
P.
Denise
L.
Jonis
Elizabeth Figure Soroult
David R Espe
Stephonie Shoro Sorns
Lawrence Evans
Noncy Green Evans
Ellen Scolise
E.
Schoefer
G
Roseonn
J.
Schwonger
Frederick C. Shoppell
Harvey
House
Christopher A. Herlig
J.
Mory
J.
Drew
K.
Hockenberger.
Hoover
Jr
Hostetter (MG)
Richard T Howenstine
Koren Stank Howenstine
G. Thomos Hughes III (MG)
Lindo Horn Hughes
Robert P Hughes
William D Ide
Andrew
F.
Jinks
Melonie Kuser Johnson
Jr.
Filmeyr
L.
John P Fineron
Patricio
A
Finn
Aungst Floska
David A. Shoemaker
Sondro L. Shupp
Lindo
M
Dovid
F.
Rosemarie
Victoria A. Frace
K.
Simko
Rosonne Wolf Smith
Susan Stoddard Howk
Edwords
Everett
Robert
Robert A. Smith
K.
I.
Claire
Howord
Maureen
Terri
Michelle Roessner Schultes
Albert Gory Scicchitano
Mory Lowery Skwierz
Harris
Ellis
E brig hi
Marlojeon Twilley Foy
Schaffner
Suzanne Laverick Horrington
I.
Richord B. Durbano
Russell
Russell P. Soroult Jr
Randy
Munro Grohom
Dodd
L.
Eugene C. Dorsi
Jeon M. Dougherty
George A.
Carl
Gingrich
Russell
Dillmon
J
Mory Payne Sandor
Mory
Koren Marquette Gingrich
William M. Glavich
Elizabeth
Borbaro
Robel
Noncy Yeoger Roehrig
Joseph
DeRisi
J
Tino M. deVries
Reiner
Thomas
llona Szijorto Ide
(MG)
Rodcliff
L
Clare Cintolo Fleck
John
John V. Stevens
Brady M. Stroh
Thomos
A
Fisher
F.
Patricio Fell
Diane R. Snyder
Barbara A Sorber
Morirose Schofield Soulherton
Robert
Korl
L.
Peters
Michael A. Popiak Jr
Kathleen K Powlus
Dovid
Susan
Todd A. Foy
Moryonne Coriese Feno
Dovid M. Furman
Moria J Golabinski
Adorn A. Robito
Russell
Foil
Holly Smith Fornese
Dennis
Reponshek
Donno Hogge
Williom A.
Patricio
Susanne D Rodice
Matthew P. Raski
Noncy Sheaffer Roudenbush
Ewell (MG)
J.
Matthew J. Connell
Anne French Connell
Richord B Cooper
Suzanne E. Cromock +
Eloine D Dodurka
J.
Sondro Risner Smith
Steven M Snyder
Michael J. Sobolesky
Alecia Boyer Spoyd
Foley
Fox
Jane Dudzinski Fulton
Suzanne F. Garcia
Jean E. Gorty
Kathy L. Geiger
Mory Stopleton Spiegel
Thomas S Geiger
Joseph A. Giedgowd (MG)
Bruce H Gill Jr.
Dione Rice Gill
Goil D. Sprout
Morion Goldberg
Susan
M
Stoir
Kenneth W. Stovorski
Craig E
Steigerwalt
JoAnn F. Steponitis
Thomos J Stiner (MG)
Jeffers
Golden
Woodson Gooden
Gary L. Gordon
Betty
Daniel
Anno
E.
Grant
Gilly Grolz
Kim
Rosa Solines Stroh
Lucyann Giovannini Greggo
Dione E. Gross
Terry K Guers
Cincloir Strollo
Cotherine C Surok
Thomos
E.
Gray
E.
Klinedinsl
Marilyn K. Klock
David
Kmetz (MG)
J.
Dione Donotelli Kmetz (MG)
Cynthio Gumpert Knauer
Karen Kalbach Koch
George M. Komo Jr.
Michoel V Kowolick
Kathleen M. Kunowski
Dovid
Logner
S.
Lee
Dixie E
Randall C. Leitzel
Thomas A. lindeman
M
Jean
Lockord
Jomes
H. Longacre
Ronold
W
Loroh
Anno M. Lux
Mary Higgins
Stephen
B.
Moffelt
Mojor
Maureen A Marcus
Deborah Roncoloto Morlin
Gwen McConlogue Mortz
Mory Motty Mossic
Peggy Flynn Mattern
L. Matzko
Cynthio
Daniel K. Mouroy
Dione Leschinsky Mauroy
John A McCauley
Dovid R. McCollum
Ann M. McGorry
Christine Lorenc McLaughlin
Kimberly Ann McNolly
Glen J. McNomee
Stephen F. Mitchell
Lindo Costor Mondschein
Bernord
Volerie
Mont
L
Jr.
Monteith
J.
Dovid P Morgovnik
Jerome E Mucha
Any Westcott Myers
Gail Hick Nolf (MG)
Joon A. Norquest
Dovid J Nunzioto
(
79)
Kirk Ohlinger
Dovid
Orgler
E.
Mory Burrichter Orgler
Suson Steckline Overbey
Cynthio D. Peters
Dovid A. Pfoff
Cynthia
J.
Phillips
Koren Gebouer Piehl (MG)
Scott
L.
Pietrack
Elizabeth Price Pitcher
Bernodette Pogozelski
Thomas
J
Porambo
Charles A. Provaznik
Patrick F. Prediger
Malti
A Prima (MG)
Bettionne
Ann
Doniel R. Strobel (MG)
Donno
Daub Kosper
Dovid M. Kelly
Thomas O Kern
Stephen S. Kline
Bonser
Bettijean Bruning
E.
A Koniper
Carol
Eloine Boris Borgio
Leo
E.
Konoskie
J.
Corol
Boland
J.
Neuschwonder
Cynthio Rambocher Neumann
Robert M. O Connor
Susan Kobilis Nesbitt
David
Byron
J,
George A Boschini
Katherine Mason Boschini
Michoel J. Bower
Phillip J. Bower
Koren M. Bowman
Richord
Carl
Bocchicchio (MG)
Donna Bowen Minnick
Robert J. Mondschein (MG)
Lizobeth A, Morgan (MG)
O'Donnell
William T. O'Donnell
Crowl
John
Gary A. Bogart
Jennings
Romoine G. Johnson
Moryrose Guerrieri Johnson
Joseph P Kolkowsky
Blockus
F.
Bernard R. Miller III
Suson Madden Miller
Deborah B Clore
Deborah Nesbitt Colemon
Laurie Neibouer Costello
L.
Jomes
L.
Donald I. Johns
Nancy L. Johnson
Blewis
J
James
S.
Richard
Barbara Bates-Comer
Vonessa A. Bauer
Evelyn Baxevone
Lynn M. Bensmg
Kathleen McQuillan
Deborah
Missimer
J.
Michael
Billy R
III
Stephen
Cecil
Stanley D. Barrett
Mann
L.
Donald K. Bechtel
Diane Winters Bicjan
Williom
Anthony 0. Mangiaracina
Sandy A. Mossefti
I.
Judith Youskites Barlow
Athene Chiadis Blow
Menelius
Sigrid E
William
Jr.
Ashenfalder
Pierce Atwoter III
Eva Mekeel Mock (MG)
Ann
Baker
L.
R.
Christine Slivko Babcock
Stovroula N. Marinakos
Lundergan
Albert
E.
Duonne
Robert G. Mock (MG)
Donna Murroy Alexander
Gory L. Aurond (MG)
Peter F
Adorns
C.
Donald
Lynn Wolkins Lundy
June Gengler Lyden
Lucini
Carol
Shermon G. Lord
Charles
Ayres
Doniel F. Babcock
John C. Babcock
Dennen
Judith
Bruce M. Albertini
lesisky
Robert A. Hoffman
David A. Hopkins
L, Houser
Lee M. Houser
Joan Buchmon Houser
David B. Hughes
Michoel C. Hutnick Jr
Kim Jamison Ibarra
Kathleen W. lezzoni
Jr.
Corol Bruno Adorns
Dovid Lezinsky
Linn
Harold S. Hobensock Jr
Cathy Myers Hobensock
1977
Jr
III
Hoyden
W. Hlnkle
Brian
Zwolly
L.
L.
Sandra K. Hemmig
Koren Beasley Hiller
Anonymous
Chorles
S
Florence
Donna Socoloski Yonkovlg
Landis
J.
John W. Horvey
Cheryl A. Havilond
Ellen B. Yotes
loporte
P
Werkheiser
Whitoker
v
Nanci Haigh-Fitzgibbons
L.
O
Gail
David A. Ladonis
Joseph R lonciano
L.
Carol Batzel Hoile
Francis X
Kumet
Ruth A. Lefchak
M
(MG)
Robert S Kriebel
M
Roxaflrry Ri'HogvnbucJv
Theo Tafner
Suson C. Tontsits (MG)
Down Antrim Trout
Unger (MG)
Jerome A. Volana
James T. Waechter
Jonet Gowisnok Walsh
Barbara A. Wanchisen
Cheryl Kercsmar Woybright
Carolonne Naylor Wegmon
Mary McCudden Knouss
Patricia Romoncheck Kokolus
Thaddeus C. Kosciolek
Ruth
Jonet Moshirvsky Sf\ildrfczyk
Dovid
Brendo Laylond lehr
Roger L. Lentz
Francis
'•
Kilkenny
J.
Mehnda
Yannick
L.
G
Gregory
Cynthio
Joonne Kohon Wood
Joseph P. Woods
Pomelo Kuchok Woods
Mary-Elaine Wszolek
Undo Logo Klein
Eleanor Nowok Knorr
Elizabeth Roberts Landau
Wegmon
Gary L. Weigel
Noncy Shute Weigel
Louonne P Welker
Kennedy
O Boyle
Weber-Coto
Bradley K
Keyser
J
H Watts
L.
Susan Kessock
Woshick
Rita Lucion
Suson Yarish Weber
Dono Lerew Keough
Mark
J. Toborowski
Ronold C Tomoshefski
Gail Anderson Tress
Eileen
A Kennedy
Trieste
Andrew
Randall
Robert O Kennedy
Judith Smith
Tir|on
Compton Quinn
Potricio Seilher
Dr
Nancy
J
Quinn
Romin
Judy A. Reed
Karen Devito Reighn
Roger L. Ritchey
John W. Roehrig
Bethany Gibble Rosenberg
Janice Minnich Rynhart
Continued
Continued from page 20
Palricio
Eloino C. Salodygo
Scott
Carolyn McMaster Salerno
R
J
M
Jean
Loline
Schweitzer
I.
Scott
Paul G. Seif
Georgonne Hugick
Mary M Semon
Seit
Kaihy
Jomes
Gessner
Maureen Bottone Giordono
Janet T. Gorg
Rebecca J. Groby
Joyne
Arthur
J.
Steven
J. Hill
P. Sisson
Sitler
Stradtmon
Robert
Higgins
Steven C
Anthony
MoryAnne
Christopher
Taylor
Genevieve Cabacar Thompson
Mory-Lyn Wynne Tomosura
Jack H. Troy
Ron D Troy
Janice Briggs Turner
Linda Pulaski Unger (MG)
Drone Nork Vorgo
Christine M. Venezia
Dale C. Voorheis
Morybeth Walewski
Dione L. Wechter
Rito S. Wechter
R.chard D Welker
Beverly Morcy Wetering
Diane Schoneker Wholen
Williams
Lynn Apicello Wukitsch
John D Wylie
Paul
Hudok
Jr.
Jonkiewicz
S.
J.
Sandra
A
Eugene
R. Kelley
Robin
1978
Garry Abdo
Borry W. Adorns
Jeanne
Adams
John D Bochert
Dole R Baker
M
8olaban
Jeffrey A. Bean (MG)
John 0 Bergen
Edword R Bezdziecki
James W. Bischoff Jr
Kenneth D Blonk
Steven W. Styers
Adele
T.
Jr.
Tierney
T.
Tierney
Troxell
Jr.
Cindy Kotulko Twordzik
Anne Furmon Usuka
Daniel C. VonWyk
J.
Vorgo
Lorry K. Voss
Margaret H Koziski
Mory E. Kuprevich
Penny A. Kunsko (MG)
Ronald P Kurylo
G. Dale Wogner
Thomos
P.
Charlene Gerbino Kurylo
Brian K. Lane
Rito
Harry M. Worren
Jennifer Mountz
M. Fox
Robert
L
Williom
Frescatore
Jr
Gallen
F.
A Gathman
Elizabeth
M
Morgoret
Thomos
Judith
R.
Gehrmger
George
Gilbert
L
William A. Golden
Bernodetle M. Gondell
Debro 0 Good
Sue Corey Grosley
III
Weaver
Hodun Yurkiewicz
Joonn Schultz Zeigler
Barbara A. Zelenski
Lorry
Geraldine Scully Andregic
Morlin
Phillip
Stuart
J
Kevin
M
Marvin
Mothews
1979
George R Antochy
Laura Adolphson Antochy
Koren M. Arcuri
Morgaret A. Armstrong
Joan Matten Boiley
Guinther
Beverly Baker Gursky
Elizabeth A. Gursky
Karen Capion Haines
Glenn
Hessling
S.
Carole
Hutchison
S.
Barbara
R.
Jablonski
Thereso Michno Jacopetti
Jone Nogle Jonkiewicz
Suson Varano Jeffreys
Mark
D. Jensten
Vincent
June
J.
Deborah A. Kellerman
Diane
Kimbyrlee Sandt Bartleson
Carol A. Killheffer (MG)
Ellen M. Bonetski
Evo Bocconero Botsko
Jeffrey E Brondt
Jomes P McLaughlin Jr
Poul M McLinko
Nancy Chapmon McNomee
Gail
Paul
Irene Shubin Merklin
T
Brazil
Steven J. Bright (MG)
Gregory K Brinser (MG)
Kothryn M. Brior
Croig D
Jone Bowie Bubak
Ronnie L Bucher
Weeks Burke
Thomas J Colvorio
John M. Cannon
Anne
Covollucci
(MG)
D'lgnozio Covollucci
A Cherry
Lenore
Mono
Chlibkewycz
Lowrence
P
Cirillo Jr
Robert G. Conrad
McKlnnon Cooke
Bortlett
Beaver
Joseph R Bell
Lauren Ball Bell
Joy L. Bender
Kellerman
L.
Daniel
L.
Kline
Susanne M. Koch
Bernard S Koskulitz
L.
Eck
Cathy
E.
Laura
M
Peischl
Poffenberger
Pollock
Brilt
Dovid
Beth
E.
E.
Michael
Brooks
Buchter
C. Burrell
Reese
Joan C. Riffitts
David A Rinehimer
Nancy Bauer Rilchey
Kelly A. Roe
Ruth
Germon Ruch
Colleen
E.
Rudelitsch
James
Burrell
Jeffrey Carruthers
Lombordo
Osman
Dovid A. Cress
Patricio
M
Crone
L
Matzko
Paul
S.
Deborah
Georgio
Joseph P McDonold
Bruce
Rush
I
R. Russell
Robert P
(MG)
Ruzzo
Elyn
Molly A. Finley
Joanne M. Sokowski
Gregory T. Salerno
J.
Rysz
Potricia
Philip
J.
L.
Cuthbert
Cyganowski
Daly
Beth Norcross Daly
J. Danner
Nancy Slack Donner
Daniel
J
Vansickle
Wogner
Moore Worren
A
Wosheleski (MG)
M
Waters
Beth Dwyer West
A Whiteheod
Charles A. Wilson IV
Anne Shaloke Wilson
James A Williams
Megen L. Willioms
Yohn
Young + (MG)
Audrey VanGorder Zarkoski
Poul A Zenyuh
Victorio M. Zydzik
Sally A.
McCobe
Lonce
Volenti
Jeffrey P
Vicky Emery Wright
Mauro
Catherine Stanton Cuff
Michael T
Lorie
Timothy C. Moy
Louro Moore McAuliffe
Terry K. Rupert
Torok
Catherine M. Welch
Manco
Judith Stout
W
Beth Anselm Torok
Corey
Kothryn M. Malone
Cynthio
Coniglioro
Keith
Potricia
Daniel C. Confolone + (MG)
A
Taylor
Christine M. Wossell
Louis M. Mannangeli
Sandra Stawchansky Martin
Diane Pletcher Marvin
Peter
Sweinhort
Edword Terschak
Joel
Rito
Borboro Kehler Cimino
Veronica D. Clark
Carol Nosek Coniglioro
Sterling
Dorlene A. Stutzman
Dennis
Swank
Tracey Cooke
Angelo R. Lorenc
Ann Ryon Lowry
Evangeline A. Lunn
Edward M Madolis
J.
McCarty
Scott R.
1980
Jr
Carol Cunningham McLinko
Diane M.
Altieri
Charlene M. Mervine
Victorio
A
Altieri
Jody L. Millard
Dione Tyson Miller
Richard
J.
Andrews
Robin S Miller
Sr.
Chorles D Stothopoulos
Daniel W. Steel
Ann
T
Margoret Ehrhorn
Stephen D Fox
Nadine Sioma Snyder
Morybeth Soda
Donald N. Sproehnle.
John J. Stopert
Palmer
J.
Jr
Beth K. Snyder
R
Moryonne
Janine
Lynn A. Cathers
Cory II
Edword J Silvo
Karen J. Smoy
Marion R. Smith
Wayne
Brito
Lynn Morse Reichort
Mark Duckworth
Elisabeth A Dunnenberger
Janet Coywood Dunscomb
Sharon Petrusnek Durbano
Faith Cook Ebright
Sharrow
Shea
E.
E.
Carol
Robert C
Alyce Starke Dondera
Kim
Paglialungo
Sharon Mosso Crimian
M. Detweiler
Susan
R.
Susan J. Lilly
John B. Lockwood
Thomos
Mark A Diefenderfer
Jomes R. Domenick
Mark A. Sevec
Albert
Stomm Branch
Hollie Baskin Monwiller
Dawson
Schell
Catherine M. Seefeldt
Janet
Lorry
E.
Scharnitz
Bnan D
Debro Norman Neuschwonder
Virgimo Hoeschele Norquest
R
Alicio
M
Scott
Carmelita DeCusotis Truitt
Robert E. Umbenhauer
Levan
Morio Word Connon
Creveling
Corol Scheirer Sauerzopf
Terry P. Troy
Lawrence
Mary A. Quakenbush
Jone A. Raker (MG)
Crane
E.
Joseph A. Santanasto
Anne Yeager Sorrow
Virginia
Sally Powell Brozil
Robinson
Rogers
Cynthia Kuchorik Ruscitto
Mory Lynn Sampson
Thomos
J.
Reitz
C.
A
Borboro Neely
S.
Jr
Reitz
L.
Cheryl Shoffler Lane
Lee
Jr.
Joseph P Reese
Ann
Thereso Sweeney Bochicchio (MG)
Froncine J. Bolger (MG)
Boron
Raker
T.
L.
Doreen Yocuboski Malott
J.
Robert
Mabel D. Raski
Rhonda L Reedy
W
Doris Buro Calvario
Kevin
Preston
L.
Mory Slusseor Przewlocki (MG)
Mary Pulley
Leo I. Quinn III
M
Leslie
James
Peterson
Lauren
Krause
Lisa Kroynok
Kenneth J. Krick + (MG)
Chen Bohler Kroboth
Kothy Predmore
Robert W. Costello
Joan
Lois
Jr.
Lindo A. Kotkoskie
Cheryl Hitchens Prima (MG)
Hilarie
G
Sharon
A
Pennesi
Perrett
Befteann M. Kramer
P.
Peifer
Peiffer
J.
L.
Carole K
Debra J. Mongelli
Michoel D. Mowery
Cindy A. Mull
Kristy
Willian
Deborah Dovidson Bergen
Carl W. Berntsen (MG)
Moryann Bingaman
June Santello Bischoff
Lorroine Dzurisin Merrick
Ann M. Molchan
John F. Mondschem
Brosious
Albert E
Corl A. Merrick
Edword C Overberger
Dovid P Poyonk
Williom D. Shupp
Michael M. Baker
L.
Oblos
Gerard M. Seltzer
Kothleen Vecchi Mazurik
Therese M. McFadden
A
A Osmun
Albert H Oussoren
Heidi Custer Seitz
Hinton
E.
Helen A. Hobon
Bette L. Hoover
Sharon Unger Houseal
Cynthia Shemanski Blonk
Donna
W
Borboro
Richard M. Rudock
Carol
Monbeck
Gail A Monners
Susan Bremer Mannix
L. Manwiller
Suzanne Marburger
Jeanne Peoples Marsh
Novinskie
Edward
Rebecco K
Carol
Lyons
Nitroy
S.
Kothy
Barbara Hewitt Lorah
Earl R Lowry
J.
J
Chorles
Deboroh
William
J.
Thomos
Corl A. Poff
Deborah Arrowood Wood
Lisa M. Wood
Thomos E. Young
Limbert
E
Lindo
Jomes R. Harfan
Carl D Harraden
Gregory A. Heaps
Rebecco Heilman Heffner
A
L.
Suson
Thomos M. Polyniak (MG)
M. Wiest
Karen Reinert Wilkinson
Hendrick E. Williams Jr.
Kimberly A. Winnick
Ricky K, Loubach
Corol
Dione
Foley
Kristin
Victoria T
Walmer Walker
Paulette
Flick
J.
Diane Teel Flyte
Denise Reed Gross
Nan Y. Gross
Vercoe
Scott E.
Mussoline
J
Edword J
James F
Flanagan (MG)
Laurie Johnson Gaylord
Tuttle
Robert S Twaddell
Poul A. Twordzik
Martin
J
Williom C. Pott
Fink
I
F.
Robert
T.
Francis J
I
Tumos
Diane Berardi
Moryonne Rizzo Kirk
Gory S. Kneiss
Theodore V Konas
Sara
I.
Richard
Robert B
Kile
Emmick
L.
Koren A. Fenicle
Wllliom
Kerstetter
L
JohnXiehl
Diona Covington
Eckenroth
Jeffrey Stello
Anne Dowd
Keller
M
Samuel K Edmiston
Mory Ellen T. Ekberg
Donald H Elsenbaumer
Joni
(MG)
Mock
Moore Jr.
Moroz
Moyer (MG)
Mitchell
Myers
Neborok
Charleen M. Nicholas
Dougherty
Kothleen
A Spero
T
L.
Elizabeth Rauhouser Stein
Kenneth
Jr
Jerzok
Dovid F Jones
Eleanor J. Hassold Keeler
Robert P Kellenberger (MG)
Bruce
Yori Jr
Terry H. Zeigler
Mory
J.
Lindo Okker Lechner
Yinger
J.
Thomos
M
21
Christine Kosoloski Mussoline
Cynthio S Dongoski
Adele
Robert
Lowrence
Dubbs
Doreen K Dubinsky
Smeck
E.
Dill
Domenick
*
Mitchel
Volerie Schott
Sondro
Joseph J. Dominick
John R. Donel
Michoel
Sitler
Raymond G. Supper
Mark A. Sverchek
Jerome D. Theobold
Morion L. Thompson
Houseal
lee A. Stump
Kothleen Dawes Swank
Gail Hamlin Sylvester
Jr.
Susan J. Staof
Kathleen Weber Stoley
Roger P. Starski
Horn
J
Jr
Sinopoli
Catherine
Deborah Flank Hinton
Eloine Hontz Hockenberger
James E. Holland (MG)
James E. Hollister
Jr.
M
David
Suson Kadash Hinkle
Georgio Wohal Smeo
Anthony L, Smith
Laura Wessner Smith
Anthony Stompone III
Kenneth E. Stolorick
J
Shields
F
A
Williom C
Harlond H. Shoemaker Jr.
Ronald T Shoemaker Jr.
Hasay
F.
Edword A. Herbert
Dovid
Robert
C.
Shepperson
Lea A. Simcox
A
Carol A. Dickerson
Dale
J.
lindo
Suson Devries-Amelong
Scott
Andrew
Edmond
G
Schutl
T.
Williom
G
Lowrence
Delp
S.
Cheryl Boratto DeSimone
John J. Sexton
Brendo A ShoHer
Raymond A. Sheelen
Sharon F Gettel
John H Millhouse
Daniel
J.
Shustack
J.
George
Jr.
Richard A.
Timothy
F
Teresa
Ronald
II
Oantonio
R;
Bruce D Dehoven
Kathleen I Delissio
K.m
Schultz
R.
Shultz
S.
Jomes
,
Schmucker
F
Dovid
A. Gessner
Dill
Solmoo
Elizabeth Jones Samarin
Virginio L Schenk
Furniss
Norman
A
William
Michael Grosso
Kothy Hotchkiss Hallamore
Jon Crossmore Homme
Geraldine
Robert
-
rosso
F
W
John
Edna Bromfield Schott
Sandra Mutter Schucker
Sandra R Schuyler
Kay
Frontz,
Frontz
Thomas J. Fulton
Dena Smith Funk
Salmon
Sombor
Judge Soros
Polrick
A>
H
Joseph
A
Antellocy
_
.,
Continued
22
Continued from page
Johanna W As tier
2
J. Azor
Angela MoMeo Bachert
A
A
Kothy
Dole
Lynch
Malandra
Moloney
J
Richard P Moniscalco
W
Charles
Carol M. McClain
Amy
Boncal
Eloise H.
Boudeman
E.
Rev. Willard
W
David
Bradley
E.
Charles
Ens-Marie B Bunnell (MG)
Claudia Ashton Bush
Goyle Weisenfluh Corruthers
Daniel
Glenn A Chestnut
Deborah Forrell Chestnut
Betty
Cluley
L
William
S.
Corby
I
Craver
Mary
Merk
Mennili (MG)
S.
Melanie
R.
Patricio Fuchs Fulton
Janet Scott Furniss
A
David
Gardner
Geiger
Brion M Geigus
Phyllis Guilloume George
Gerald
J.
Cindy Cline
German
Kevin G. Gildeo
A
David
Gary
Gimbi
Golbitz
S.
Gregory V Goodridge
Robert
Graham
T.
Tomye D
Borry N.
Griffin
Grimm
Kimberly H. Groner
Ann Dougherty Hoch
Robert M. Hafner
Brenda Koppenhaver Hafner
Gregory R. Hamilton
Rickey D
Harrison
Pamela S Hortzell
Joseph F. Hepp
Leslie Richcreek Herneisey
Lois A. Hertzog
Victoria
L.
Potti
Peiffer
Pisano
E.
Karl A.
Donno
Kepner
I
Kinder
Suson M. Kingsley
Ed word Klepeisz
Robert
M
Kuhn
n
Cynthia A. Kuhns
Michelle L.Kummerer
Carole Y. LaRoche
Vincent J. LoRuffa
Jill
I.
A
Heidi
Jr
Purvis
Jr.
loylon
Kevin M. Lazarski
Dennis A Leighow
David M. Lescinskl
Elizabeth Fittrer Cole
Kathleen Greco Coll
Potncio Knight Connolley
John W. Conrad Jr.
Melonie S Conrod
Brion F. Costenbader (MG)
Kevin
Roth
Mork A. Raynes (MG)
Cathleen M. Reoddy
Chris
John E. Reenstro
Jone A. Reiner
Susan
Jr
W
Joseph
Rowley
P Belh Rubincom
Jonet Rusnok
Susan E. Rutledge
Cynthia A. Darozsdi
Dayoc
R.
Roslevich (MG)
Noncy J.
Angelo S.
Jr
Amy
Oaklond Ringhoffer
Ann Kopuschinsky
Cusatis
J.
D. Michael
Virginio Borr Riedy
Kristine
Crosley
R.
Noncy E. Defrees
Suzanne M. Degenhort
A. Richter
Lori
Coll
J.
Marie E. Cummings
Theresa M. Cunningham
Rabenold
L.
Venn Cavonough
Frank
Dinsmore
Dissman
Dotoli
H. Dougherty
Barbara A. Downes
Borboro A D Ziadosz
Patricia R
Ebert
Janet M. Schipp
Deon L. Edwards
Pamelo J Ellis
Noncy E. Erwine
Mork
Schoenagel
Scott E. Eveland
Scholl
Donno
Cheryl
Edward
Schellhammer
J
C.
Leslie
Sampsell (MG)
L.
J.
E.
A
Ray Shaddoy
Sr.
Audrey K Shryock
Kothy M. Shughart
Diane P Siebert
A
Michele
Sies
Carol A. Sitler
Eric
W
Faith
Slingerlond
Ganss Smeck
Croig R
Smith
Kathryn
L.
Robert
J
Snyder
Snyder
Gory Dean
Christine L
Ferrise
Brian D. Fry
Jr.
Ronold T Shoemaker
Constance B. Shope
Feather
Dovid W. Fraser
Cothy McGuire Fraser
Sheots
Peter Shiner
J
Stoir
Joyce Chesnutt Stothopoulos
Dennis M. Fuhrmon
Nancy A. Fumanti
Koren
Anne
J.
L.
Gollucci
Geiger
Robert C. Gennaria
Margaret A. Gerrity
John B. Gillespie
Michael A. Goc
Keith A.
Gogel (MG)
Clarice Dillon Gould
Morta Herr Griest
John C. Gross
Debra I Hallock
Tino Devlin Stello
Lisa M. Honuscik
Chesley A. Harris
Pomelo Burd Stroup
Debra Mincemoyer Harvey
Lorello F
W'lliom G. Heiss
Doniel
J.
Sutcliffe
Swank
Susan
R.
Henninger
Gregory P Talese + (MG)
Mory Wydilo Tloczynski
Matthew J. Trogeser
McGovern Herr
Debra S. Hodge
Joonne Recupero Trogeser
Carey
Janet
Lori L
Horvoth +
Huels
L.
Koren
Sinnwell
S.
Charles G. Smith
Dorothy A. Snyder
Louise A. Lisicky
Edwin W. Snyder
Jonet R Snyder
Jessica Spongier
Robert T
Loroine C. Lucas
Linda
Spezioletti
States
L.
Geraldine A. Lynch
Manuel
Theresa M. Modara
Brion C. Mahlstedt + (MG)
Anne G. Swavely
Gregory
Robert M. Thomas (MG)
Malloch
B.
M
Malocu
Mono
Liso
Weeosf
Joonne M. Westwood
Daniel J Wiesl +
Melchiore
Gerald
L.
Jeffrey
A
Webb
L.
Alison VandenBosch
J
E
Tomko
Houser Vance
Karen
May
Mayer
Mory J. McGovern
Lorie M. Medvetz
Alice
Silfies
Mildred Lauer Vosinda
Dennis C. Velas
Enger Mautz
L.
L.
Swisher
L.
Susan A. Tymusczuk
Maturani
Lauren
Sandra
Stacey
R. Stivers Jr.
Pomelo
Mastracchio
J.
L.
Radune
Miller
Dovid
A
Dovid
P.
Lindo
Mitchell
Williams
Wise
Wright
E
Mork A Yochera
Jeanette D Mitroko
Michael
Mix
Paula Sneidman Mix
Lynn A. Monsaert
Lee F Mueller
Gisele F. Nikop
Joan C O Connor
Edward B Oravitz
Jone
Jennifer
Kimberlee Jones Pavkovic
Jeffrey R. Jenkins
Scott R.
Jill
Denise Llewellyn Quinn
Denise
Roxanne M Bull
David M. Bulzoni
Daniel T Canuso
Laurie Luberecki Cicorelh
Puderboch
M. Quiggle
Thomas W. Quigley
James I Quinn
E.
Brown
Joseph A Celin
Price
Lisa
Lois
+ (MG)
Bilotta
Brokenshire
I
Diane A. Brown
Linda
A Polombo
C.
Bielefeld
David
J.
Ruth A. Shuhler
A Lotshaw
Susan M. lisiewski
John
Ross G. Brotlee
Hilary
Lotourette Landers
LaBraico
Sheri A. Lippowitsch
Gloria
Patricia Carochilo
Polenchor
J.
J.
F.
LoMonico
J.
T.
Christopher
Boyce
+ (MG)
Peggy A. Sappington
L. Sawina
Sharon Remington Schell
John L Settelen
Patricio L. Shoener
Cynthia Smith
Beam
III
Sondone
L,
Woyne
Carmen Vega Moloney
Jr.
Taryn Besen
Jeffery G. Pittenger
Bonnie
Jr.
Balonis
T.
Sharon M Opielo
Moriann Wiencek Parasido
Suson M Poscorello
Kothy
Hobyak
Jane M. Holcomb
Todd E. Hoover
Sally A. Houser
Michael D Joggard
Murray J. Johnson Jr.
Pamelo Rumberger Jones
Mark Koronovich
Susan Palangi Koronovich
Renee Miller Kauffmon
Debro Fortuno Keener
Laurel
E.
Douglas
Linda
Miller
Acor
Anderson
Peter
Brett E
M
J.
Ann Marie
A
Timothy
Sherri
Joseph G. Santangelo
Mark H. Locey
Mary F. LoMus
Morsho Rehrig long
Linda Selling Aceto
Wendy A Nyborg
Kemmerer
to
Francesco Aceto
Janet A,
Margaret Hilgor Scholl
Hirt
Zarkoski
1911
Robert
Raisso A. Prus
(MG)
J.
Michael W. Rotelle
H. Kratzer
Timothy
Young
Young
Dennis A. Artley
Beth A. Bailey
Susan Kingeter Puderboch
William K. Purse
Fischer
Robert
Bette
Jeffrey A. Foust
J
W
Robert
Moore
Jomes
Donna
Robert
Donold F. Neidig
Molcolm B. Neilon
Laurie
Linda
Yeoger
T.
Patricio G.
Memorials
Terry Mizdol Evans
Michael W. Front
Ruth
Sharon M. Robinson
Amy Kleckner Roma
Judith A. Kroh
Wilds
Deboroh Kospiah Mitchell (MG)
Lone Keating Mitchell (MG)
Judith A. Momorella
Dominic
Epler
A
RinghoHer
Jeff S.
Kromer
S.
Pamela
Katharine E Wiener
Lee E Zimmermon
Kimberly A. Zucal
Cynlhio Siegrist Poyonk
Daniel J. Duimstra
Joseph F Earley
Nanette
Robbin H. Miller
Joann Matoni Mischionti
Joseph M.
Olen L. Domey
John D. Downey
Deboroh I. Drado
Pomelo J. Duart
Theresa Duffy
Whitman
Wiegand
S
Reed (MG)
Reiflnger
L.
Kevin D. Riedy
Kathleen J. Riley
V. Kmiecinski
Kathleen M. Kondrchek
Tommy
Merced
Meachum
James G. Mortimer
Morton
I
Bethony G. Moser
Vicki L. Myers
James S. Nosh
Doran
P.
J.
George
Mcllwoine
Scott
David P. Crowford
Nancy A. Deiling (MG)
Randy L. Deitrich
Marianne P. Deska
Melisso G. Dewort
Kathleen Ryan Domenick
Lawrence F. Dooling
Nancy
Michael
Weiss
Werkheiser
Gmo
Lorraine D. Mongiello
Cynthia
L
Cathy Homish Yonniello
Earle J
Denise M. Connelly
Kevin L. Connolley
J.
Janice
Quigley
R.
Barry
Kersey
L.
McGorry
Carolyn D. Coldren
Cole
Jean D. Kiewlak
Barbara E. Klunk
Kathleen
Frank
J
Lindo
Colleen A. O'Neill Willioms
L.
L
Richard
Cassels
J
Mortin Jr
Heidi Schmaulfuhs
James F Brecker
Debbie
+ (MG)
Deboroh A Morkle
Bruce
Wagner
D Wotts
Weismon
Vicki Reeser
Mortin
Brian
Patrick C
Hutchinson
B.
Allison
Gail D.
Malott
E.
Lisa A. Bogefti
E.
Jr
L.
S. Jones
Theresa E. Jones
Frank S Kedl
Robert G. Wagner
Luxford
Donna M. Moncuso
Carolyn Nork Boone
Hulse
Cynthia Johnson Vass
Froncis T
Bloss
T.
Denise
Carol B Vincenti
R.
Hughes
Christine
Linda G. Loeser
John
Bizup
Victoria
Vonce
Jeffrey C. Long
Samuel
John C Berquist
Irvin J. Betsker
M
Dawn
Eileen R
A Bator
Kathleen A Boumon
Barbara
lori
Alice
Robert
Louis M. Vonnicolo
Michoel
Timothy C. Barrett
Cynthia L Bartynski
Mease Umbenhauer
Carol D. Lewis
Morsho A. Linn
Pamelo Kafica Lockwood
E
J Yavorchok
Yoder
1912
Jill
A. Bielitsky
Frank H. Brooks
Melindo
Cootes
J
Leslie Hollacher Crosley
C. Peirson
Delia
I
Ann Morkowski +
Joseph C Ozmino
Christy Demonsky Talese + (MG)
Michoel
T.
Thomas
J
Price
Juliette
L
Abell 79
Price
Master's Degree
Rodney T Jones 82
Trena D Kerstetter
Moureen C Alderfer 77
Thomas J Andregic '80
John W. Bornett
Calvin
Borto
E
81
78
Borto 75
Alexis' S
Morgoret
L.
A
Richard
Bouingartner
79
Brosch 71
79
Edgor W Brubaker 70
Nancy Jomes Bruboker 69
Phyllis H. Britton
Ronold C Bulford 78
Vlocia Zaharis Campbell 78
A Conway 79
Loretta
Elaine
M
Dovid
L.
Theresa
D'Alfonso 77
E.
Gilgonnon
81
Edward Y. Given 77
Gory R. Glessner 77
Donald J. Golden 77
John
J.
Charles
M
R.
III
Heller
Himes '66
Jerome C Horon '80
Borkmon Rodgers 70
W
Deboroh
Rovito 77
Socco
J
'80
Richard K. Schiebel '81
Corlton R Sheets '74
Gregory J Shively 81
Sandro K. Sholley '68
Marie B. Slanina 76
Rebecca
Stonislaw
C.
'82
Steward 72
Christine M.
Wendy
Thomas
'80
Upton 79
Sondro R Walker 75
B
Mory Beth Weber 78
71
William F Hibschmon
H. Belle
Stephen E Phillips 80
Morgoret P. Piper 80
Barbara R Rees 76
Bonnie C Riegel 68
Warren
75
Jr
Ostrowski 76
Penles 81
W
Good 74
Gorman 79
Harmony '81
Haupt
E
B.
M
Leslie
David W. Stecher 78
Beth Benjamin
Rebecca
Christine
Moleski 74
McCormick 76
Morleen Grof Montono 75
Robert
Deborah Marinello Evans 79
Fear 72
Karen M. Gotes 66
Juanita
S
Erlo
Dervrich 79
J.
Elizabeth
M
Joan Hond Dupkonick '67
Sister Suzanne M. Duzen '81
Robert
Anthony
Deotrich 79
Patricio E
77
John King '67
Alan M. Kush 75
Dovid W Lohmon 79
Rochoel L. Lohman 79
70
Richard O. Wilhour 68
Dorothy J. Wilson '82
Karen I. Wintrey '76
Jomes
J.
Zubritski
75
23
Alumni
Fund drive
Association
sets
Alumni and friends
of
record
Bloomsburg State College
set
two records in 1982 with their contributions
to the annual
phonathon and to the Annual Fund.
The phonathon-held in October, November
and
December-was
the most successful ever held
at
pledges was raised by over 200
volunteer student callers who were members
Nearly $25,000
BSC
in
of 32
pus organizations.
Contributions to the Annual
cam-
Fund
also hit a new high
When the campaign ended on December 31 the
was $115,547.
Of that total, $81,628 was unrestricted gifts
to the
general alumni fund, $18,362 was designated
for specific
purposes, and $15,557 was earmarked for
scholarships.
in 1982.
total
Total income of the Association in 1982,
including
terest on investments, was $137,725.
The contributions came from over
5,200
in-
alumni and
friends of the college. A complete report on the
1982 Annual Fund, including class totals and a listing
of all contributors, is included in this issue of THE
ALUMNI
QUARTERLY.
If you contributed to the 1982 Annual
Fund between
January 1 and December 31, 1982, your name should
be
your name was omitted or incorrectly listed, please accept our apology and contact
the
Alumni Office so we can make a correction in the next
included on the
issue of
list. If
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY.
Last year 105 alumni contributions were matched
by
employers, for a total of $6,760. Included in the Annual Fund Report section of this issue is a list of over
61
900 businesses which
employees
to
match contributions made by their
educational institutions. Please check the
list to see if your employer is on the list.
If so, ask your
personnel office for the form which must be submitted
with your contribution. If you have questions about the
matching
gift
program, please contact the Alumni Of-
fice.
Special recognition this year goes to the following
classes:
Class of 1979
Class of 1922
— largest number of contributors (240).
— largest percentage of contributors
(68.3%).
Class of 1942
— largest dollar total
($6,430).
order to make the Annual Fund more cost-effective,
a number of changes have been made this year. The
In
most significant change is the solicitation of 1982 contributors on the approximate anniversary date of their
last gift, using first-class direct mail and a follow-up
telephone call.
The new system has a number of advantages:
— It links the written, mailed message with a
telephone
call, with each reinforcing the other.
reduces the number of mailed solicitations during
the year from three or four to just one.
It
— It guarantees each alumnus/alumna a full year
membership because the membership cards will be
dated for one year from the day the contribution is
of
received.
— It will help to distribute the Association's cash-flow
more evenly during the calendar year.
Former contributors to the Annual Fund who
did not
participate in 1982 have been sent a direct mail solicitation. Follow-up telephone calls will be attempted at
some time during the rest of the year.
Three different
were used
year in conhave addresses:
one to alumni who were part of the 1982 Annual Fund,
one to alumni who have been part of prior annual funds,
and one to alumni who have never been part of an annual fund. Unfortunately, some alumni received the
wrong letter. We regret that this happened, and we are
working hard to get the "bugs" out of the new alumni
records system. Thank you for being patient.
letters
tacting over 22,000 alumni for
this
whom we
24
Before the
new name change why
not order that Bloomsburg State College
Class Ring that you have been wanting.
Your Josten's College Ring includes
these Deluxe Features at No Extra Charge:
Yellow OK Gold or White
Synthetic Birthstones or Sunburst Stones
All Birthstone Colors Available
Full Name Engraved or Fascimile Signature
1
Stone Encrusting
There are a few BSC
gift
items
in
*
stock:
Bumper Stickers • Decals
• Charms • Nylon Gym Bags
• Clothing • Ceramic Mugs
• Pewter Mugs • Pennants
Bloomsburg Univers
of Pennsylvania
During our years at Bloomsburg,
we all
heard
bits
and pieces of our
were exaggerated or distorted with
and pieces have been woven together in
college's history. Often the stories
each
telling.
Now, those
bits
•Profile
Of e Vast,
c5\
living ^Legacy*
handsome hardcover book, written
by Eda Bessie Edwards, Class of 1941,
and published by the Alumni AssociaThis
contains a collection of the most
and interesting events in the
Bloomsburg State College
from its founding in 1839 to 1979.
tion,
significant
history of
Please indicate
of copies desired.
copies at $8.50 (Alumni Office)
proceeds from the sale of the
will go to the Alumni Association, to be used for Alumni
All
book
projects.
number
copies at $9.95 (mailed)
— $_
—$
Name
.
Class Year
Address
City
.State.
Zip.
Phone Number
Please
make checks payable to BSC Alumni
Association.
Matching grants available
from these corporations
Industries
AMF
ARA
Inc.
D
ft
0)
Inc
ol
Chesapeake
N A (ALL)
NA
Maine
Co Foundation
ol
New
The Bankers
Inc
(all liM)
Bankers
(U.4)
York
Co
Lile
2
()
SP R
Co
Aetna Insurance
(2 3)
Aetna Lite 4 Casually (ALL) SP.
MO
Lutherans
lor
Products
4
Chemicals
D
ft
Inc
3
(2
2
2
D SP
Akzona
Beatrice
Foods Corp (ALL)
Bechtel Power Corp (2 3)
SPR
•AKTion Associates Inc (ALL)
(2 3)
Inc
"Albany International Corp (ALL)
SP
Alexandei
4 Aleiander (ALL)
Alexander
A
Baldwin Inc (I 2 3)
"Allegheny International Inc (I)
D
Allendale Mutual Insurance
0
4 PR)
0
Co
Aluminum Co
D
inc
Bethlehem
R D
(ALL)
Amerada Hess Corp (ALL)
American Airlines
Inc
American Bank &
trust
(ALL)
D SP
Co
Pa
ol
(ALL) A
Inc
Blue Bell Inc
SP
Boise Cascade Corp (ALL)
American Can Co (ALL) R
(I
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Cities Service Inc
Beech Aucrall Corp (1,2.3) SPR
D
Bell Federal Savings & loan
Assn (\
4)
"Allegheny ludlum Steel Corp (ALL)
R.D
D
(1.4)
Beclon Dickinson
Alco Standard Corp (ALL)
(\
R
3)
3)
(I
Dewar
CIBA-GEIGY Corp (ALL)
Becker Inc (ALL)
BecktoldCo
R D
Allied
A G
Company
Tool
Church Mulual Insurance Co
SPD
3).
R
3)
2 3) A SPR D
Chubb & Son Inc (I 4) R D
Chubb LileAmenca (12) R D
3)
"Baxter Tiavenol Laboratories
Inc
R D
(ALL)
2
(I
Chrysler Corp ft
2
The Barton-Gillel Co (ALL)
(ALL)
D
Airco Inc
2
4)
BarclaysAmerican Corp (l
Barnes & Roche Inc
(ALL)
Barnes Croup Inc (ALU
Barry Wrighl Corp (All)
R D
Inc
York Corp (I
Chicago
•C R Bard
SPO
The Aerospace Corp (ALL)
New
Trusl
Edison Company (All )
The Dexter Corp
SPR
3)
Detroit
AWG
Diamondback
"Chesebrough-Pond s Inc
0
3)
Oeposn Guaranty National Bank
telephone
Chesapeake Corp bfYL (1.2.3). R
SP
Chicago Pneumatic
Aeroiel-General Coip (AIL)
AidAssn
A Potomac
Co (ALL) R SP
D
The Bank
ft
Corp (l.UM).A
Aerofllide
4)
Cherntech Industries Inc (ALL) A
America (All)
R.D
ADexCorp (AU) R
Allis-
ol California
RD
(All).
Air
ol
Bank
D
Services Inc (ALL)
Abell
Bank
"Bank
Abbot laboratories
A S
2 PR)
(1
SPR.D
R 0
Corp (ALL)
Ball
ACF
— AJumni
— Spouse sGm
—
Employees
Status Required
Eligible
Retired
Eligible
— Outside Onectois Company
— Companies added since
ol
last
—Greater than
l
to
I
Match
Eligible
year
3)
A
ft
26
Matching grants available
SPR D UM
3)
Ralston Purina
im
Co (ALU.R.O
Semes
South
MioVJie
WW
inc
2
fJ
John Nuveen & Co Inc
Co
Middlesex Mutual Assurance
Norton S Co Inc
SP
3)
Lite
Co
Insurance
Co (ALL)
Reliance insurance Co (ML) SPR
Republic National Bank ol New York
Reliance Electric
MKfland-RossCorp t2 3 4)
0
MftUMk Banks
0
inc (ALL).
MMtan * Co
Oklahoma Gas and
Co [ML P*)
Minneapolis Stai 4 tibune Co
Milton Bradley
Co
ins
lite
2
(12
3)
Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp
R 0
Moore McCormac* Resources.
Inc
0 2)0
•PACCAR
Co
Trust
N
ol
Y
SP*D
(ALL)
Rohm & Haas Co
fl). ft
Panhandle Eastern Coip (Ail)
D
0
\K
D
(ALL)
Inc
Mutual Benefit
The Mutual
Co
Lile ins
SP
Omaha
of
SPR D
2 3)
(<
N
-
NCR
SPD
Corp (ALL)
NL Induslnes.
PepsiCo
Inc
Ik
Nabisco
SP* D
(ALL)
Naico Chenwal
Co
PET
National Bank ot Detroit
National Distillers
4 Chemical Coip
Gypsum Co
(ALL) R.
Co
0
(I
3
(ALL)
3).
SPD
Nepera Chemical Co
Pitney
3)
System Cos
Electric
Bowes
(ALL)
Inc
Pittsbuigh National
(ALL).D
(ALL) A.
New England Mutual
•Planie
Lile
insurance
Co (ALL).*
New England Petroleum Corp
Porter Painl
2.3) A
ft
Jersey Ben telephone
Co (2
D
Co
(1
Seatirsi
Orleans Public Service inc
York Bank lor Savings fl
G 0
2
(l
3)
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Rowe
D
Price
The New York Times Co (ALL) R D
The New Yorker Magazine Inc (12)
Newsweek
inc (2)
NordsonCorp
(1
fl
(I
Walerhouse
(I)
Provident Life
(AIL)
4
3)
2
ol
North American Phillips Corp (ALL)
fl.O
Utilities
Northeast
Illinois
(ALL)
SP
fl.
Co
SP
JAIL)
fl
Co
Northwestern Fmancal Corp
The Northwestern Mutual
(1.
Lite Ins
Quaker Chemical Corp
(AIL)R
(Ml)
neapolis (ALL)
ol
Min-
SPR
Quaker Slate
SPR
(ML)
(1
Oil Refining
Co
fl.
0
fl
D
A
2. 3)
(1
SP fl
2)
.
ol
ft
Inc
Inc
(ALL)
D
(ML).
D
3.1).
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Georgia
Construction
(ML)
Co
(I
2
3)
A D
u
UGI Corp (ML)
D
(Ml)
•U S
Ail
Union
D
Underwood Co UM
Camp Corp (Ml)
0
Union Commerce Bank (1.2) PR A
Union
Co (ALL)
Electric
Union Mutual
0
fl.
D
Lile
Insurance Co.
(ALL)
Union
America (ALL)
Oil
Co
ol Calilornia
(Ml)
ft.
0
( i. 2.
3)
Union
Pacific
Corp (Ml).
United Airlines Inc
Southeast Bank. N A (1.2 3)
United Bank
Co (Ml
fl.
ol
United Brands
0
(l).UM
Denver
N A
0
The Southland Corp fl
(Ail),
3).
D
ft
15.00
1
50.00
1
50.00
2
3
4
Graduate
Professional Schools Eligible
Colleges Eligible
Colleges Eligible
— Semmanes and Theological Schools
Eligible
All— All Four Types of Institutions Eligible
UM— Limned
PR
—
to Specific Institutions ot
Private Institutions only
Employees
—Alumni Status Required
SP —Spouse s Gift Eligible
R —Retired Employees Eligible
D
Outside Directors ol Company
—
— Companies added
Eligible
since last yeai
7
210.00
3
200.00
25.00
1
Ion?
50.00
50.00
i
Wheeler Corp.
25.00
i
140.00
Shell Oil Co.
2
50.00
Singer Co. Foundation
2
20 00
Nationwide Foundation
Warner & Swasey
3
225.00
1
10.00
Western Electric
Quaker Chemical Foundation
Worner Communications. Inc.
2
75 00
70.00
25.00
75.00
50.00
Weslinghouse
Bell Telephone
Coopers & Lybrond
Armstrong Cork
110.00
25.00
100.00
50.00
75.00
25.00
Woterhouse
(Anonymous)
Royal Globe Insurance Co.
Avon
IBM
AT&T Long
4
375.00
Constructors Inc
100.00
25.00
••
$
150.00
330.00
••
Lines
1.460 00
150.00
50.00
Americo
30.00
Peat, Marwick, Mitchell Foundation
100.00
General Electric
Nabisco
Hamilton Bank
100.00
PP«L
200.00
25.00
15.00
Donnelley & Sons Co.
Industries Foundation
Suburban Propane Gas Corp.
R. R.
37.50
PP&G
25.00
St.
29.42
50.00
Regis Paper Co.
30.00
Equitoble Life Assurance Society of U.S.
225.00
McDonnell Douglas Foundation
100.00
Illinois Bell
450.00
Reynolds Industries.
Crum 8
A
20.00
1
Inc.
Philip Morris
—
and
—Junior
— Community
100.00
1
EXXON
0
C2).R
70.00
2
4
R. J.
KEY
1
E.
Ingersoll-Rond
ft
Co (Ml)
United Engineers
2
1
Firestone
United Energy Resources. Inc (ALL).
Telephone Co
25 00
Hewlett-Packord Co.
Hospital Corp. oi
(2 3)
"Union Carbide Corp (1.2 3)
SP
124.26
1
Union Corbide
Eaton Corp.
William
3). fl
3
Price
(ALL)
(I
& Casualty
25.00
379.42
FMC Foundation
(Ml).SP
0
Vnei
$
10
Dun & Brodstreet
A
ol
Total matching $
Alcoa
D
ft
Petroleum (North America) Ltd
Co
_
n 1983 re: 1982)
Certainteed Corp.
The Travelers Insurance Co (Ml) SP
(Ml)
0
Southern New England
(Ml), fl. 0
Corp
(ALL)
Transamenca Corp
Trust
Southern Bell Telephone
SPD
Co
South Carolina National Bank (Ml)
UM).
The Quaker Oals Co (Ml)
Northwestern National Bank
Lile Ins
Sonal Inc (Ml).
D
Co
(1.
"Soo Une Railroad Company
Q
2. 3)
(Ml),
Burden Co fl 2
Sony Corp
0
Co
SmithKJine Foundation (ML)
R D
D
SPR.D
4
SPR.D
(ALL)
leadway Co
"Skinner Corp (2. 3).
& Gas Co
Northwest Airlines (1 2 3)
Northwestern Bell Telephone
3)
Chemical Coip (ALL)
Co
Tracor Inc
Simmons Co (1 2.3)
Simpson Timber Co (1,3, PR), fl
The Singer Co fl 4). A SPR. D
A
of
D
Public Senvice Electric
Silver
(Ml) R D
Northern tust Co. (ALL)
0
SignodeCorp (Ml)
America (Ml)
Gas Co (All)
fl
(1. 2.
D
Townsend 4 Bottom
Company (ALL) R
The Signal Cos
R
Philadelphia (ALL).
Co A
Leasing Group
River
find, matching
» r«c'd.
AT8T
Foster
(12.3)
(1).
Life
.
Corp (ML) D.
(Ml) 0
3)
D
(1)
Siemens-Allis Inc
The Prudential Insurance Co
Northeast
2
(1). fl
fl
Co
3)
Companies
1
Englond Life
Johnson & Johnson
D
Belts
The Tomnglon
SP
Provident National Bank (i 2)
Tiger
The Two
SP
A
..
partlcl-
gifts
New
A
3).
Thompson Co (ALL)
T Thorpe
Toms
& Savings Bank
Shenandoah
2 3) A
Provident Mutual Lile Insurance
4)
& Co
(I)
Tolal: 934
MATCHING GIFT PARTICIPATION
Merck Company
Bethlehem Steel
Ticor (2 3)
Total
Inc fl
"SHAKLEE Corp
Accident ins
4
(12.
.
Congressional Quarterly
JQ
fl
The Sherwin-Williams Co
Co
R D
"Transco Companies. Inc
Selon Co
Co
Price Associates Inc (I
Price Brothers
2. 3)
(1.
Inc
Security Pacitic Corp
Co
3)
Co
York Telephone
0
3.4)
Shell Oil
AD
SP
4)
SPR D
(ALL)
(2 3)
Textron Inc
J
Security Benefit Life Insurance
(12
4).
2
Towers Pernn Forsler 4 Crosby Inc
Searie
(12
0
0
Alco Standard
J Walter
SP
fl.
SPR
D
Security Van Lines Inc
Prentice-Hall Inc
2 P*)
Corp (3)
Seattle Trust
PR)
Preformed Line Products
fl,
(7
fl
(Ml)*
A
Young 4 Co (PR) A
Zapala Corp
CPC
Coip
Texasgull Inc
D
Joseph E Seagram & Sons Inc
D
(4)
Schwab & Co
Co
E
A
1 PR). SP.
fl.
Boyer & Rifter CPA's
Coterpillar Foundation
D
The Thomas
(Ml) SP R D
Foresman 4 Co
Sealnght
Preferred Risk Mutual Insurance
4)
fl.O
3)
Co (1.2.3) D
Seaboard Coastline Industries (1)
Corp (ALL) SPD
Potlatcn
•New England telephone
(t)
(12
inc
Scon Paper Co (ALL)
R .0 SP
(2 3)
Y (Ml)
D
Commerce Bank
Time Inc (Ml).
Scott
Corp (ALL). A
& Moran CPA's
N
ol
Times Publishing Co
•Playboy Enterprises Inc (ALL)
2)
(1
Paul
Inc
William
D
fl 4)
D
(12
Hope Agency
The Stanley Works
4 Co
Tennanl Sons
Texas
UM)
SPR D
SPR D
Joe Minerals Corp (ML)
SI
Cos
ft
ft
(Ml
Including matching gifts received holiday mail-waiting and
immediately after Jan. 1, 1983 re: TR. 1-3
*• Some matching gifts pending have not yet been received. •*
Thomas
The Times Minor Co (ML)
SP
Polaroid Corp
3.
D
Plamlield Cytology Laboratory Inc
England Merchants National
BankCAUJ SflflO
0
SP
(1)
Schering-Plough Corp (ALL).D
D
ft
Co
*
(ALL).
Texas Instruments Inc
Si
"Charles
UM
D
/
Aetna
SP
The Schlegel CotpJALL)
Prone/ Hi-Bred international (2 3)
^
Inc ff
2
(I
"Santa Fe International Corp
'The Pioneei Group Inc (Ml).SP.D
NatomasCo (ALL)
New England
Co (AU).*.D
The Pillsbury Co fl 2
D
fl
(MO UM.O
Inc (I)
Texas Gas Transmission Coip (ALL).
A
fl 2. 3).
Sanders Associates inc (Ml).
"Piedmont Aviation Inc (ALL).D
4)
Nationwide Mutual insurance Co
Ops
fenneco Inc (ALL)
Santa Fe Industries Inc (ALL),
R D
Weyeihaeuser Co
A
Air Products & Chemicals
Texaco Inc (1 1)
insurance Cos
ft
Phoeni> Mutual Lile Insurance (2 3
(I)
Inc
Inc
Coip
No.
(Ml) D
Inc
Tech
(ALL).SP.*.
inc
Salomon Brothers (Ml)
A
Company
Electric
Young 4 Rubicam
D
..
"fesoro Petroleum Corp (ALL) fl.O
D
(I).
Si Regis Paper
(Ml) D
Phillip Morris Inc
3).
Tandy Corporahon
SP
(1.2)
Saga Corp (Ml)
Sandcj
4)
National Sieef Corp
SPD
Texas Eastern
SAFECO
0
Electric
Western Publishing Co
Coca Colo
(ML UM). SP
Corp
STPCoip
0
D
(ML)
SP O
(12)
(I 2. 3)
Phillips Petroleum
National Medical Enterprises Inc
Inc
UM) SPD
TRW
D
SPR 0
(All)
Philadelphia National Bank (ALL)
2 3)
Co (All) R
fl,
National Life Insurance
New
Inc
Insurance
National
New
New
UM
SPS Technologies
"Philadelphia Manufacturers Mutual
National Energy Inc (PR)
New
Co
RYCOInc (ML)
SKF induslnes
R D
Phelps Dodge Corp (ALL).SP.R .O
AO
New
Rust Engineering
SCM
SP
Inc
Ptizer Inc
Can Corp (ALL) D
National
PR)
Petro-Tex Chemical Corp
fl.O
(1)
(I
Western
Whirlpool Corp (ALL),
1982
'
(
SPD
SPR D
Peoples Energy Corp (All)
NLT Corp (ALL)
NRC
2
PenruoilCo (ALL)
ft
Canada
ol
SyniaCorp (1.2
Tennani
Co
Light
YarwayCorp (2 3.1). SPR.D
Arthur Young and Co (ALL) SP
SP*.D
SybronCoip (1.2.3
SPD
4
D
Group (PR)
(MU. SPR.D
)
SWANK
C
Pennwalt Corp (1
(ALL)
Inc
Lile
feleoyne Inc (1)
UM
R
4).
D
Wesl Poinl-Pepperell (2 3)
Valley National Bank ol Arizona (I)
(ALU.R.O
Inc
Assurance Co
*
3).
SP
(ALL)
C Penney Co (ALL)
J
2 4 UM). SP
Laboratories (ALL)
Hill
Sun
Tektronix. Inc
Pennsylvania Power
(Ml)
2 3) 0
(I
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(ML).*
COMPANY
Pechmey Ugme Kuhlmann Corp
Mutual
Xerox Corp
D
patlng
* D
Pe3vey company (ALL).
Wyman Gordon
Inc
Wells Fargo Bank
Westvaco Corp (ML).
* D
(MO. D
(ALL). D
Sun Co
(ALL)
A
(1)
Welch Foods
Urban Investment and Oevelopmenl
Corp (ML)
"ROspatch Corp (2
fl
N Y (ALL)
ol
D
SPR D
(ALL)
Royal insurance (ALL)
Marwick Mitchell & Co
Peal
Wolverine World Wide. Inc
Walklns-Johnson Co
C J Webb Inc (ALL)
0
(1)
"Ross Johnston and Kersting Inc
Co (ALL)
A
(ALL)
SPR D
Lite (ALL) SPR D
Corp (ALL)
Oil
4)
3)
fl
Peabody mternalional Corporahon
Munsmgwear
Murphy
Parsons Co
Paul Revere Lile Insurance
SP
(ALL)
M
Ralph
0
fl.
Wisconsin Telephone Co (Ml)
(I)
D
(ML) SP* 0
4 Swasey Co (Ml).* 0
Weslinghouse
•Rorer Group Inc (ALL)
D
SPD
2
Parker-Hannifin Corp (I
DR
3
Mountain Stales Mineral Enterprises
ROLM
0
ft
The Wiremold Co (Ml),
Wausau Insurance Cos (ALL) R 0
fl.
Utah International Inc (Ml).
Swiss American Securities Inc (ALL)
Rockwell International Corp (ALL)
(1)
D
3)
3)
lor
(Ml) SP
Music. Inc
Co
Lite Insurance
R.O
(ML)
4 PR)
(12
SP
Winn-Oixie Stores. Inc (I 2 3)
0
(
The Martha Band Rockeleller Fund
3)
D
(Ml)
Inc
Morion-Norwich Products Inc
Motorola
Co (All)
(12
Pan American
Morrison-Knudsen Co
& Associates
(ML)
Inc (1.2)
Paalic Resources Inc
ft
ol Indiana
Inc
Webster Inc
Summit
SP*
(ML)
0
Rockelener Family
Pacific Mutual Lile Ins
4
Sione
Inc.
4 Co
P Sievens
3).
l
-
Washington Post Co (ML)
Company
2. 3)
(1.
(MO
Inc
SPD
(ML)
A
Willamette Industries Inc
ft
(ALL)
D
United Telephone
(1.
(12
2. 3)
The Wallinglord Sleel Co
Warner
2 3) R.O
Williams 4 Company (1.
he Williams Co (I). 0
Warnaco
ft.
(I
Suburban Propane Gas Corp (ML)
•Rockeleller Center Inc
PHH Group (I 2 3). R
PPG indusmes Inc (All) R D
POCorp (ALU SP
Morgan Construction Co (AIL)
Morgan Guaranty
J
(ML).SP
(All)
Inc
Diug
Sterling
ft.
Uiirj National Insurance
Heddle Mlg Co.
Steel
D
Monumental Corp 0)
R.O
Corp
Co
Stauller Chemical
(ALU SP.D
(ML).* D
Germic.de Co (1 PR) A.
The Rockeleiiei Brothers Fund.
0
ft
D
(ML).
Inc
(1.
Warner-Lambert Co
(Ml)
"Inc
John Wiley 4 Sons. Inc (All)
Wallace Murray Corp
(1. 3.
0
Tne Upjohn Co (ML)
Am (ALU.R.O
(i)
"Stale Street Boston
Rochester
Montgomery Ward 4 Co (ALL).*
Home Products
Stanley
N Y
United Virginia Bankshares Inc (ALL)
Co (ALL)
Wickes Cos
Washington National Insurance Co
(2 3)
Slate Mutual Lile Assurance Co. ol
D
ft
Richardson-Viclcs Inc
Monroe Aulo Eguipment Co A
Monsanio Company
3).
Riegel fertile Corp
Corp (ALL) fl.O
Capital
2
(I
A
fl
0
Owens-Illinois, Inc (ALL).
0
ft.
(Ohio) (ML).
The Stanley Woiks (ALL).
Richardson Gordon & Associates
2)0
A 0
(ALL).
(ML)
Inc
ol
United Telecommunications Inc
(ALL)
SPR D
Reynolds Melals Co
UM
A
Co
D
Co (ML). D
0
0
fl.
ft
A
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United Technologies Corp
(Indiana) (ALL)
Standard Products
(MO D
fl.O
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Co/p (ML)
Motesco Corp
Inc
* D
3)
ft
(12 3).D
The MITRE Corp (ALL)
Monarch
fl,
Com
Reword
3).
The Standard Oil
R J Reynolds Induslnes
Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp
0 4)*
•MITE Corp
Oil
R D
Reiham
R
(Cahlornia) Chevron
Co
Siandaid Oil
American.
Institute ol
Inc (1.2.3)
Oneida Ltd
The Minnesota Mutual
The Research
Old Stone Bank (ALL)
Ol.n Corp
USA. Inc (2
Republic Steel Corp (ALL)
2
fl
Old National Bancorporation
Manuring
U D
Co (ALO
Co
Electric
Co
Oil
Co
United Slates Trust
Co (ALL)
Standard Insurance
Standard
United Stales Tobacco
4)
Vulcan, Inc
0
Whlllaker Coip (I 2 3)
(I)
(Ml) SP
w
SP D
"United States Steel Corp (1.4).
SP*
(I)
Inc
(I 3.4).
D
4)
fl,
America
ol
Vulcan Materials Co
Gypsum Co
2.3)
(I
Co
Viclaulic
United Stales Leasing International
Inc
SP * D
Standard Brands, Inc (ALL).
(ML)
SP R
3)
SPD
(ALL)
Minnesota Mining X
A
(I).
(ALU 0
Wephone Co (AH) R 0
Ohio Bell
D
PR)
(ALL
Oahle Products inc
"Occidental Petroleum Corp
iMO
M.ehle-Goss Dexter Inc
Moog
Slanadyne
*0
0
(l)
The Slackpole Corp (ML).
A
r"Pfl).
Association
('
2)0
Mobil
The Square D Co
Squibb Coip (ALL)
Red lands Federal Savings & Loan
MxJiand Mutual
Vanan Associates
Corp.
fl.O
(ALL).
Springs Industries Inc (ALL).
SPD
2 3 PR)
(1
(ALL)
(ML)
4 Chemical
*
United Stales
0
(1.1).
4 Hutchinson Co
Sperry
Co
Insurance
Lite
SperryCorp
Raytheon Co (Ml) D
Reader's Oigesi Foundation (2 3)
United Stales Borax
(PR).
Southwestern
& Co (P*)
0 Raybm Assoc Inc (ML)
Arthur
SP* 0
Norton Co (ALU
Michigan General Corp (ML)
United Mutual Savings Bank (2 3)
United Parcel Service
fl.O
Co SP R D
Rand McNaify
Northwestern National lite Insurance
(Ml
Mtffwoan Bell telephone Co
SPR 0
west fl 3)
Instrument Corp (ALL)
D
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co (4).
Ramer Bancorporation (ML) R
"Northwestern National Bank South-
SP*
Memer
2
Paul
3)
"Southwest Forest Induslnes (ML). A
R
Northwestern National Bank ol Si
Mt Co 0 2
Metropolitan Lite
Forster Corp.
40.00
25.00
15.00
Bechtel Foundation
50.00
G.K. Technicians
20 00
Allendale Mutual Insurance Co.
10.00
—Greater than lioi Match
$6,760.00
27
)C to university status
make at least an appearance at every one. Also, he says
he's involved in supporting the athletic pursuits of his
sons, now 17 and 13.
And sometimes
in
in the
summer, you can
find
him
lost
mower on
thought aboard a grass
a small farm
raises Arabian horses.
beyond Buckhorn, where Maryan
But McCormick says there is little need for relief from
a job which he likes as much as his. "I enjoy the campus, I enjoy the students, and I feel that my work does
make a difference in students' lives."
Although he has a reputation as a meticulous planner
who holds firmly
to the belief that well-done homework
the best guarantee things will come out right, McCormick is not above giving some credit to timing and luck.
is
In fact, one theory he has to explain his success at
bringing diverse people and groups together is based on
the purely random timing of his birth.
"A few years ago, when Margaret Mead was here to
speak, she talked about the generation of people that
have been kind of in between," McCormick says. "You
know those that grew up before World War II lived in
one kind of environment, and then the kids of the '60s
—
— grew up in another.
the television, the nuclear
"I've sort of been in between, just because of my age
(44), and I've found during my years here that I've been
communicate with trustees and governors, and
be very able to remain very close to my students,
and sometimes see where they both were coming from."
McCormick says he gets a lot of his best ideas from
students, and goes out of his way to meet with them. He
says he can frequently be found having a coffee in the
able to
still
some
college union, or surprising
the
students at lunch
in
commons.
"I try to live
some
of
my
time
in their
world," he ex-
"But I'm not one of them and I don't pretend to
be. They know I'm not and I know I'm not."
He also meets with a variety of students on a more
formal basis; for example:
"Eight or ten times a year we randomly select three
or four students," he says. "We have them to lunch and
ask, 'Now how you feeling about Bloomsburg?'
plains.
"I enjoy it,"
McCormick
students feel, but
really do.
I
know how the
think they're pretty
says. "I don't
And
I
relaxed."
Another important group with whom McCormick says
he has worked very hard to establish a good relationship
is regional legislators, who each year help influence the
ultimately-critical decision
the state give
How much money
:
should
BSC?
provement funds
to build the badly-needed human services center scheduled to begin rising behind the library
McCormick
this year.
ing decade: quality.
McCormick
academic
can't help but boast, "There's not another
building being built in the state college
system."
It's happening here, he says, because "there's a feeling that if Bloomsburg's given the resources, it will do a
good job managing them."
McCormick says he got votes for the new building
because he started in 1973 "building bridges" by asking
legislators what the college could do to better serve
their constituents.
Despite this success on both sides of the Capitol aisle,
McCormick says he has never traded favors
In 10 years, the college
budget has grown from $13.7
million to $32 million. But the dollars flowing out of Harrisburg have not always kept up with development here;
that has been McCormick's single biggest frustration,
and the problem over which he has labored the hardest.
Several years into his tenure, McCormick began
fighting what he called "the million-dollar gap." The
state formula for allocating money among the state colleges did not take into account productivity, he explains,
and while BSC's enrollment had grown to make it the
third largest school in the system, the college budget
was mired in its old position — ninth.
It was about that time McCormick faced what he
remembers as the toughest period of his presidency.
In
for votes.
understood that in order to be appointed
here as a faculty member, that you have to have the appropriate credentials and go through the proper affirmative action searches," he says.
"And when it comes to student admissions, I have yet
to force the dean of admissions to take a student in ten
years. Before I would embarrass the institution on an
academic integrity issue, I would do without the vote."
But McCormick, who seems ever vigilant that his
words not offend any of his many and diverse constituencies, quickly adds, "I don't want to seem arrogant
about that. It's not to say we don't listen to legislators'
concerns, try to help them, meet with their constituents.
We think we must listen and respond, but maintain the
"I believe
it's
All this
and more
is
needed
feels is the
if
BSC
number one
is to
attain
what
com-
priority for the
he says, "when the new frontiers are
how many new buildings can you
add or how many students can you admit. The frontiers
of the '80s will be quality. How can we make that
chemistry program better, stronger, or more in tune
with the needs."
Also, planning. "We must continue to develop new
programs, in technology for example, perhaps in computers, robotics, health sciences. We must be alert to
the changing needs and to see how we can position
ourselves on the high ground to be able to respond to
those changing needs, that changing world."
Part of this ability to respond will come from faculty
and staff development, which he also views as a priority, "We won't be hiring a lot of new people," he explains, so it's important that those already on the staff
"It is a time,"
not going to be growth,
have time
to
do research and related work
in their
fields.
Two other areas McCormick has targeted for the '80s
are improvement of the students advisement process
"a problem all the years that I've been here," he says
—
— and recruitment of minority students and faculty.
All these things will be important, he explains,
because the college "market" is shrinking. With the
baby boom over, there are fewer students graduating
from high schools these days, and whereas 41 percent of
all Pennsylvania high school graduates used to go on to
some form of higher education, that figure has dropped
years of successfully balancing his
budget while setting in motion major changes in the
school's educational mission, McCormick found himself
academic and fiscal integrity."
In the coming decade, McCormick realized
signing notices to 23 professors that they would have to
be laid off.
supported higher education out of the legislature.
"I've always been proud of the fact that we have not
had a deficit budget," McCormick says. "I retrenched
'em because I had to balance my budget."
"It was very, very difficult for me to sign those letters," he says, "but as soon as I did, we went out and
fought with every bit of energy to raise the money to get
them back."
aspects of fund raising that have been traditions at
are going to have to be more aggressive, and
help ourselves with fundraising," he says. "I think
that's going to have to be a mark of the future of this
the process?
"I have not been looking for another position," McCormick replies, adding that he has turned down other of-
The battleground, of course, was Harrisburg. And it
was there that his years of what he calls doing "a lot of
university."
fers to leave
1977, after several
listening" to legislators paid
off.
He was
able to raise
enough new budget money to withdraw the letters.
A less dramatic but more significant result of BSC
lobbying in the Capitol
allocation formula
was
the gradual revision of the
which sent more money Blooms-
burg's way.
And McCormick topped that two years ago by winning
a near unanimous House vote that gave BSC capital im-
increasingly difficult to cajole
That's
why BSC
is
more money
it
will
be
for state-
moving more and more
into
private schools for years, but have not been used extensively at public schools: appeals to alumni, to corporations
and
to
major foundations.
"We
has many unmet needs.
For example, he feels the library should be enlarged. A
residence hall should be built on the upper campus to
relieve housing pressures in existing dormitories and
The
college, he explains,
still
downtown. New laboratory and instructional equipment
is needed in the sciences to train students in the
burgeoning health fields. And a number of buildings on
campus are 10-15 years old, and in need of preventive
maintenance.
into the mid-30s.
For
all
these reasons,
the planning
McCormick has
just overhauled
commission with the hope that the new
will be as successful in coping with the 80s as its
forerunner was with the '70s.
The only question that remains: How long will an administrator with a track record like his be here to guide
group
BSC
over the past 10 years.
"However," he continues, "this is not to say that, at
my age, I would rule out a change or two before retirement."
But he says that, for now, his family is happy here, he
continues to be professionally excited and challenged by
his work, and he feels he has won the support of the college community.
"I just want to be the very best president of Bloomsburg State College that I can be."
Ray T. Hock Jr. '69 and his wife are the parents of a
daughter born on April 12. The family lives at R.D. 5,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
28
(Continued from Page 8)
Lorraine (Zack) Tucker '68 lives at 173 Starboard Pt.,
Roswell, Ga. 30076. She was chosen Teacher of the Year
1981-1982 by the staif at Beaver Ridge Elementary School
in Norcross, Georgia.
John R. Bilder '68 of Fountain Springs is seeking the
Republican nomination for controller of Schuylkill
County. He earned his bachelor's and master's degrees in
political science at BSC and is working on a master's
in public
administration at the Capitol
Perm State University.
John teaches government and sociology
in
Campus
of
the North
a member of the executive
committee of the Schuylkill County Republican Party, a
member of the executive committee of the North Schuylkill Education Association, and is a member of the board
of trustees of Ashland State General Hospital.
He was a former graduate assistant in the political
science department at BSC.
Schuylkill School District,
is
Elwood "Woody" Harding,
'68
has
announced
his
manager, worked his way up to major account manager
and now is field sales manager. His address is 21 Jackson
Rd., Lake Heritage, Gettysburg, Pa. 17325.
Michael T. Butler '69 is a teacher at Watsontown
Elementary School. His address is 27 Spottswood Drive,
Milton, Pa. 17847.
Julie W". Howell '69 is a teacher in the Phoenixville Area
School District and is recognized through the state and the
nation for her efforts in creating a computer program for
that district, beginning at the junior high school level. She
was recently honored by the Pennsylvania Jaycees as the
Outstanding Young Woman Educator of 1983. Julie's
capabilities have been recognized by Commodore Computer Corp., whose machines are used in the district. The
company has selected her and the Phoenixville Junior
High School as a resource center for the nation to provide
imput for materials and instruction.
She is also very active in church affairs as well as
in
several professional associations.
intention to seek election to the office of District Attorney
for
Columbia County.
has been an assistant with
Attorney Harding
District Attorney's office since
January
3, 1977.
the
In the past
1970
six years he has been actively involved in the prosecution
of many criminal cases and has worked closely with law
enforcement agencies throughout the County. In 1982
alone, the District Attorney's office with which he is
associated
filed
287
informations involving
charges and processed 23
criminal
and misdemeanor
appeals from summary and
felony
cases, in pre-trial and post-trial hearings and before
appellate courts. As Assistant District Attorney he has
handled juvenile delinquency cases and
represent
1979,
to
appointed on April 9,
Commonwealth in support and paternity actions.
also
In addition. Attorney
solicitor to the Children
1977 to the present.
is
Barbara (Steinhart) Lerch '70 and her husband,
Richard, are the parents of a daughter, Virginia Rae, born
on January 11. The family lives at R. D. 1, Elysburg, Pa.
municipalities, including Benton Township, Fishingcreek
Township, Roaringcreek Township, Jackson Township,
South Centre Township and the Millville Area School
District.
Woody was raised in Bloomsburg where he graduated
from Bloomsburg High School in 1964. In 1968, he
graduated with highest honors from Bloomsburg State
College. While attending Bloomsburg, Woody worked
part-time at the Magee Carpet Company. After
graduation, he taught school for thre" years and received
a master's degree in education from emple University.
September of 1971, Woody enrolled in Villanova Law
School. As a result of his scholastic achievement, he was
1971
Francis B. Lingovsky '71 and Lois Marth Wanamaker
are engaged. Lois is completing graduate work at BSC,
She is employed by the Central Susquehanna Intermediate Unit at Lewisburg as a special education teacher
for blind and visually impaired students. Frank is
employed by the Hazleton Area School District as an
ECIA-Chapter 1 reading specialist and Pennsylvania
State University, Hazleton
tor.
Campus, as a reading
instruc-
An August wedding is planned.
editor
of
the
school's
legal
The Villanova Law Review. In his senior
year, the faculty honored him with the school's award for
publication,
outstanding legal writing for the article which he wrote
and published in the Villanova Law Review concerning
immunity from prosecution. Woody graduated from
Villanova Law School with honors in 1974 and was
inducted into the national legal honor society, the Order of
graduation
from
law
school,
Attorney
Harding was employed as a trust officer with United Penn
Bank. Then in 1975, Woody established his private law
practice in Bloomsburg. He is presently a partner in the
law firm of Smith, Eves, Keller, and Harding in Bloomsburg, where he resides with his wife, Dolores, and
daughter,
Amy.
Attorney Harding, who is amember of the Democratic
Party, stated that his objective in seeking the office of
District Attorney is to use his background and experience
to
effectively enforce the criminal laws in
Columbia
County.
Lynn Croft Davies '72 had an exhibit of her paintings
and weavings in the Presidents' Lounge of the Kehr Union
from January 16 through February 12. Her address is 145
Robin Lane, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Ann (Balanda) Yeager
Julie
'72
and her husband,
Steven, are the parents of a daughter, Jessica Lauren,
born on January 18, 1983. The Yeagers live at R. D. 3, Box
3120,
Berwick, Pa. 18603.
Kathleen A. (Molnar) Polastre '72 has been appointed to
serve as a consultant to the recently-formed education
committee at BSC.
Dr. Howard McCauley, dean of professional studies and
services, named Kathleen to the panel because of her
experience within the public school system, as well as her
enthusiasm and innovative teaching techniques. She is the
only committee member who is not on the faculty at the
college.
Following receipt of his degree, Don worked in
Bethlehem's home office purchasing department as an
associate buyer. He was promoted to buyer, maintenance,
repair and operating supplies group, in 1981, the position
he held until his current appointment.
He resides in Montoursville, Pa.
Alan Dakey
was
'73
recently elected president of the
vice-president of the
Wayne County YMCA. He is
Honesdale Dime Bank. Alan and
his wife, Diane, live at
Honesdale, Pa. 18431, with their
daughter, Janet. He is a member of the Central United
Methodist Church, the Honesdale Area Jaycees, and
Lodge 218, Free and Accepted Masons.
130
Shady
Joan
S.
Lane,
Corson
'73
has been certified by the American
Bloomsburg Family Counseling and Mental Health
She serves as a consultant for the Susquehanna
Valley OB-GYN Association and a counselor for St.
Matthew Lutheran Church in Bloomsburg. Her address is95 Friar Lane, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Klingerman '73 and his wife, Karen Nina (Terry)
report the addition of a second son to their family,
Bill
'74,
Brad Nelson was born on June
brother, Bryan, age
10, 1982.
He
joined an older
3.
Bill is wearing 10 years of service in the Industrial
Engineering Department of U.S. Steel in Fairless Hills,
Pa. Karen is on a child-rearing leave from her position as
a middle school English teacher for the Bensalem School
District.
The Klingermans
live at 49
Sharon Drive, Richboro, Pa.
18954.
1974
Betty Cecelia (Sorber) Austin '74 and Stephen F. Austin
are the parents of a daughter born on March 24. The
Austins live at R.D. 2, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
'74
The committee has been formed
to
review the various
education curricula provided by the college. Revisions
will
be
made
to provide
students, enabling
to
them
handle
a
more
to
practical experience for
and be
situation
upon
better understand
classroom
graduation.
Robert Wynne '69 taught biology for six years after
graduating and then tried his hand at acting in New York
City and Los Angeles. He is now an artist in Nashville,
Tennessee, where he designs record covers and posters.
He is also co-owner of the Murray Hill Music Company.
business administration in 1973.
Clinic.
1972
prepared
1969
following year he left his position to attend Bloomsburg
State College and received a bachelor of science degree in
of the
the Coif.
Following
The appointment of H. Donald Hummel '73 as
purchasing agent for the Bethlehem Wire Rope Division of
Bethlehem Steel Corporation has been announced by
James H. Wirt, division general manager.
A Williamsport native, Don attended Williamsport Area
Community College and worked for a local business
before he joined Bethlehem Steel's Williamsport plant in
1968 in the production scheduling department. The
Nurses' Association as a clinical specialist in adult
psychiatric and mental health nursing. She is on the staff
In
associate
Hummel '73
William J. Lawton '73 and Nadine M. Hunter are engaged. Bill is employed by the Shikellamy School District.
Nadine is a registered nurse and is employed by Dr. Ivor
F. Lewis of Sunbury. A summer wedding is planned.
the
also solicitor to other local
H. D.
17824.
was
Harding has served the county as
and Youth Services Agency from
He
Kocher Kressler '70 and Robert W. Keller are
is employed by the Bloomsburg Area
School District and is a fourth grade teacher at Memorial
Elementary School. Her fiance is the owner of the Suburban Fence Co. of Espy.
Shirl
engaged. Shirl
traffic convictions.
His participation has included court appearances on
behalf of the Commonwealth in the actual trial of criminal
appointed
Q7^
%J
M.S I
Victor Keeler in '69 was recently named salesman of
the year by Yale Industrial Trucks— Plant Improvements
Inc. This marks the third time Vic has received the honor.
He began working with the firm in 1979 as account
1968
degree
1
Kathleen, a graduate of Our Lady of Lourdes Regional
High School, received her master of education degree at
BSC in
1982.
She is employed as a third grade teacher at Weatherly
Area School District and is a member of the district's
Long-Range Planning Curricula Committee and serves as
president-elect of the Weatherly Education Association.
She lives at R.D. 1, Box 57F, Weatherly, Pa. 18255 with
her husband, Robert, and son, Joseph.
Trudy Mae (Pond) Snyder '74 and her husband, Allen,
are the parents of a son born on March 15. The Snyders
live at Rt.
1,
Box 575, Laramie, Wyoming 82070.
Thomas Daniel Samide
'74
and
his wife,
Barbara Jean
(Bean) '75, are the parents of a son born on March
family lives at R.D. 5, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
17.
The
Edward J. Fait '74 and his wife, Deborah, are the
parents of a son, Corey Edward, born on April 6 at
Sunbury Community Hospital. He joins a brother, Kyle
Edward. The Faits live at R.D. 1, Box 42, Mt. Pleasant
Mills, Pa. 17853.
(Continued on Page 30)
Laubach
commemorative
The following
article was written by
Brenda Martin
a writer for The Morning Press, Bloomsburg.
Benton residents are asking that a postage stamp
be
issued across the country in conjunction with
a week-
•82,
long local celebration planned for late next
year to
honor the late Frank C. Laubach.
That stamp, which would be emblazoned with
a picture of the Benton native who became an
international
when he taught millions of people around the
world to read, would only be a portion of the celebration
of the 100th anniversary of his birth. Laubach
was born
dignitary
September 2, 1884.
The borough plans
2-9, 1984,
to designate the week September
as National Literacy Week and hopes Gov.
Dick Thornburgh will also declare Literacy Week
throughout the state.
The borough hopes that the greatest "honor for a
great man" will be a postage stamp issued in his honor.
At a meeting Monday night, borough council members
signed a petition to be sent to postal officials in
Washington in hopes the stamp will be approved.
The man behind the drive to get the stamp, Kenneth
B.
McCahan, who is president of the board of directors
Frank and Effa Laubach Memorial Library of
of the
Benton, said elected officials in the state and federal
governments have also been asked to support the move-
FOREIGN VISITORS
-
Edwin Eggers
of
New
Zealand shows his family his work with computers at BSC.
ment.
"We have asked
the stamps
all of
program
the elected officials to petition
Washington
ask them to issue
"We need all the
help possible with the Postmaster General."
The post office had previously been asked to commemorate a stamp in Laubach's honor, according to
McCahan. But that request was turned down last Oca
stamp
in his
in
honor,"
McCahan
New Zealander studies at BSC
to
said.
tober.
summer in New Zealand. The birds celebrate with
a resounding chorus each dawn. But the Eggers family
is too far away to hear just now. Edwin Eggers and his
wife and sons have come half-way round the world to
Bloomsburg, while Ed studies at Bloomsburg State
College on a Rotary Foundation grant.
It's
"But now they're reconsidering issuing a stamp," he
McCahan, who said he "has a whole attache case"
full of information about Laubach, said the man was
born and raised in Benton until he graduated from
Bloomsburg State Normal School in 1901.
After that Laubach became famous when he spearheaded an international literacy movement known as
education,
"Each
study abroad."
said.
one, teach one."
The opportunity
study abroad has special meaning
to New Zealanders, as Ed explains: "We have only 3V4
million people in the country. That means we don't have
to
many
opportunities to receive the kind of specialized
training that's available here. Additional post-graduate
when we can
find
it,
usually
comes from
An educator, Ed was a teacher and school principal in
Zealand for 17 years. He left his home of Palmerston North (population 70,0001, where he is now a school
New
TV link sought
psychologist for the state's Department of Education, to
study special education at Bloomsburg.
BSC has
applied for grant funding to support a
telecommunication link that will provide educational
opportunities to adults in the Bloomsburg area. The
programming
capability will potentially provide college
working adults that will add to the
level courses for
present adult education offerings of the college.
A specific focus of the grant proposal will include
programming
for the
homebound, unemployed and the
"We have six staff psychologists, including myself,"
Eggers explains. "We're responsible for school-age
children with learning problems— what Americans term
mental handicaps, learning disabilities, or emotional
disturbances." In addition, the psychologists work with
preschoolers to recognize and intervene in develop-
mental problems as early as possible.
"I had three particular reasons for coming here,"
Eggers says. "First, I wanted to study and gain some
greater depth in some aspects of my field. Second, I
needed some time away from my day-to-day work, to
re-evaluate the emphasis of my work and to determine
the possible need for a fresh direction. Finally, I wanted
to learn about microcomputers and how they can be
.
older community. Television delivery of educational
opportunities are particularly suited to providing
educational opportunities in these environs due to
geographic terrain, uncertain weather, and energy
costs.
used
in special
education."
The educational exchange
will ultimately benefit New
Zealand. Eggers hopes to finish his study in Bloombsurg
with a master's degree in the education of exceptional
persons.
He hopes to advise the Department of Education when
he returns home about the applications of microcomputers as teaching aids.
Initial studies
have shown that microcomputers are an
excellent teaching tool for children. Those with physical
or emotional handicaps can, in some instances, make
unexpected advances because they relate better to the
one-on-one computer experience than to the classroom
and can manage their own learning.
Before leaving home, Eggers and his colleagues used
a patched-together computer system from available
materials— what New Zealanders call a "Heath
Robinson" and Americans know as a Rube Goldberg
invention. "It's unconventional, but
it
does the job,"
Eggers says.
By
the time his year of study in
Bloomsburg is done,
Eggers hopes to be well versed on the merits of
American computer hardware and which programs and
equipment are most applicable to learning situations in
New Zealand, which includes extensive home study
programs for children and adults in isolated locations.
Eggers notes that educational exchange programs
have made a substantial difference in New Zealand over
recent years. "It once took about ten years for new
developments in education to become a fact at the
chalkboard. Exchange programs have helped to reduce
that time tremendously."
Researchers busy answering questions
Their interests stretch from yesterday into tomorrow.
In one corner of the
Bloomsburg State College campus,
a biology professor studies bone remnants from the
Pleistocene Epoch. In another, a history professor
explores how robots will change the American
These are just a few of the more than 80 research
projects currently underway at the college. Several
dozen faculty
and, in
some
members
are involved
in
the research
cases, graduate and undergraduate
students are also taking part. The studies span a wealth
of
academic
Light
Education.
Some examine
fields:
psychology, sociology, education,
history, business, physics, English, art, chemistry,
mathematics, computer science, biology, and the health
sciences.
Some of the studies focus on people: How do we
absorb unspoken information? Why do consumers prefer
one advertisement over another 9
Some examine institutions: How important are the top
boarding schools to career success? Do our public
the past:
How
did industrialists shape
the Pennsylvania anthracite coal industry?
won
Who
really
campaign debates?
Do certain chemicals
influence memory? What effect does humidity have on
the 1960 presidential
Some
workforce.
Company, and
schools discourage children from the natural learning
process?
delve deep into science:
the Pennsylvania
In addition to granting the use of
Department
its facilities,
of
the
college provides support in the form of research grants
and release time. About
$4,000 is available each year
through the faculty grants program. Several faculty
members have
$20,000 is being used
also been able to use release time, in
which research is made an alternative work
assignment. Each semester a maximum of six faculty
members can abtain a small amount of release time to
pursue approved projects in field research, public
service, teaching development, and the creative arts.
Research projects culminate in reports to industry,
formal papers and presentations at professional
conferences, and journal articles. Within the past five
years, BSC faculty members have produced nearly 80
publications and presentations. Because many projects
stretch over two or more years (some run as long as ten
years), more publications and reports will be
Institutes of
forthcoming.
long-range radio signals?
And some may change
the way we live: How do
wrappings and containers interact with their
contents? Does sewage sludge, sometimes used as
fertilizer, leave potentially harmful deposits in the soil?
plastic
The majority of the BSC research projects are being
done by the faculty on their own time and primarily at
their own expense. In recent years, more than $95,000 in
support has come to the institution or to individual
faculty members from federal, industry, and private
sources. During the 1983-84 fiscal year, approximately
from sources including the National
Mental Health, Pennsylvania Power and
Mark
30
S.
Schwelker
*75
from Rider College, N.J. He
employed by Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith
is
center city Philadelphia office. He is also a
member of the Middletown Township board of supervisors
in their
Bucks County. His address
in
SCHOOL
-TO
LEFT
M
-
56
is
Shadywood Road,
Levittown, Pa. 19056.
HE ALSO
Susan Linda (Kobilis) Nesbitt '76 lives at the Highlands
101, Wall and Orange Streets, Danville, Pa. 17821.
No.
Melodee Lyn Yoder
'77
and her husband, Michael, are
The Yoders
the parents of a daughter born in February.
West Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815.
Linda (Baker) Wasley '76 and her husband, Albert, live
Church St.. Plymouth, Pa. 18651. Linda is a fifth
grade teacher in the Lake-Lehman School District. Her
husband is the owner of Al Wasley Jewelers in Plymouth.
at 33
Barbara E. (Poley) Herring '76 and her husband,
Kenneth, are the parents of a son born on April 12. The
family lives at R.D. 2, Frankford Avenue, Tamaqua, Pa.
18252.
and her husband, Rock,
are the parents of a son, Zachary Lawrence, born on
January 25, 1983. He weighed six pounds and 12 ounces.
Bonnie Joan Lethbridge '77 and Jeffrey Randolph Hull
were married on October 9, 1982. Their address is R.D. 6,
Box 314, Sussex, N.J. 07461.
David Michael McCollum '77 received the master of
education degree in elementary education from Shippensburg State College on December 18, 1982.
Karen Denise (Gallagher) Lemoncelli '77 and Ernest D.
Lemoncelli '77 have moved from Houston, Texas. Their
new address is 15 Harbor Oaks Circle, Safety Harbor, Fla.
33572. Ernest is employed by Augat, Inc., a manufacturer
of electronic interconnection components and systems. As
a factory representative he covers the Tarn pa /St.
Petersburg Area. The Lemoncellis invite all of their
friends who get down their way to be sure to stop in or call.
1978
(Seidel) Miller '76
Alecia Ann (Boyer) Spayd '76 and her husband, Mike,
are the parents of a daughter, Sarah Elizabeth, born on
November 28, 1982. The family lives at 10 Laird St., West
Lawn, Pa.
received the master of education
of a
1976
Abby Denise
'77
degree in special education from Shippensburg State College on December 18, 1982.
Michael Charles Hutnick '77 and his wife are the parents
daughter born on February 2. The Hutnicks live at 470
Riverview Ave., Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
CATS.
live at 109
Eva May Hogan
recently received a master of
arts degree in administration
19609.
Maxine Kay Davis
'78 received a master of education
educational administration from Shippensburg
State College on December 18, 1982.
degree
in
Scott Frasso '78 and Sharon Suglta were married on
May
They
28.
live at 523 N. Lafayette St.,
Allentown, Pa.
18104.
(Continued from Page 28)
Judy Ann (Johnson) Sterner '74 and her husband,
Larry, are the parents of a daughter born on March 10,
1983, in the Berwick (Pa.) Hospital. The family lives at
R.D. 1, Stillwater, Pa. 17878.
Pamela
(Schulfa ) Bair
'74
and Rickey G. Bair
'74 live at
Star Route Box 136A, Rebersburg, Pa. 16872. Rickey is the
fiscal manager for the Child Development Council of Centre County.
Pam
is
the assistant
program
director of the
Day Care Homes Program of the same organization.
Mike McDevitt '74 has been teaching at Danville High
School for eight years and has been affiliated with the
girls' basketball program for the last seven. He is now in
season as head coach. Mike
Walnut St., Shamokin, Pa. 17872.
his fifth
lives at 831
'75
and Bruce
Loch recently
formed a new partnership under the name of Loch and
DiGiacomo, Certified Public Accountants, located at 1045
C.
N. 175h Street, Allentown, Pa. 18104. Both are members of
the American and Pennsylvania Institutes of Certified
Public Accountants.
Sherman G. Lord '75 and Rose Rico were married on
7. Sherman is employed as an audiologist
for Moyer
May
and Bell Associates of Sewickly. Rose is employed by the
Hershey Chocolate Company in Hershey.
Donna Elaine Jones
and Stephen Charles Cassel
were married recently. Stephen is a graduate of Clarion
State College. Both are teachers in the East Pennsboro
'75
School District.
Carolyn
Driedger '75 reports that she has been
employed by the U.S. Geological Survey Glaciology Project Office since 1978, studying glaciers as a water
resource in the Pacific Northwest. Her address is 24 S.
"D" Street, Tacoma, Wash, 98408.
Dennis M. ODonnell '75
Hughes Aircraft Company
dress
is
is
in
23314 Lockness Ave.,
Patricia
Bederman
married
'75
Ronald
an estimator employed by
El Segundo, Calif. His ad-
Harbor City,
Calif. 90710.
writes that on June
E.
Miller,
13, 1981,
a
she
school
psychologist/counselor in
the Mountain View School
Kingsley, Pa. "After returning from our
honeymoon in Couples Resort, Jamaica, we bought a
District
in
home
Dalton. About the
in
same
time,
I
was hired as
mathematics coordinator for the Developmental
Education Department at Keystone Junior College. I
really love my job and frequently come in contact with
students who plan to transfer to a four-year institution
after KJC. I never fail to put in a good word for BSC
because I remember all the good times BSC gave me. It
was a wonderful experience— I will always cherish those
memories."
Pat earned her master's degree
education at Mary wood College in 1982.
Her address
is
in
mathematics
110 Miles Street, Dalton, Pa. 18414.
'76
received the master of
pensburg State College on December
18, 1982.
Katz Underwear Company, Honesdale, recently ap-
Edward "Ted" Thompson
as sales representative for New Jersey and Southeastern Pennsylvania,
with complete responsibility for the sale of the Katz line in
pointed
this territory.
Ted
is
'76
the great-grandson of
Edward
A.
Katz, former chairman of the board of Katz. Ted was a
district manager for the Rite Aid Drug Company prior to
his
employment with Katz. He and his wife, the former
of Huntington, West Virginia, live in
Sandra Clatworthy,
North Wales, Pa.
Mike Sharkey '78 and Patricia Dallas '78 are engaged
and plan to be married in October. Their address will be
7410 East Moreland Dr., Annadalle, Va. 22603.
Linda Craul '78 and David Turner are engaged. Linda is
employed as a sales administration manager by BristolMyers Products, New York. David, who is a graduate of
the University of Maine,
is
a district sales manager for
A May wedding
Bristol-Myers Products, Washington.
planned.
is
Richard Lee Marella
'78 and his wife, Diane, are the
daughter, Lindsay, born on August 17, 1982.
The family lives at 303 Oleander Drive, Palatka. Fla.
parents
of a
32077.
West
1975
Joseph T. DiGiacomo Jr.
John Casimir Lydzinski
science degree in Geoenvironmental Studies from Ship-
Dromgold Lichtenberger '78 received a master
education degree in special education from Shippensburg State College on December 18, 1982.
Claire
1977
of
Bernadette (Zoppetti) Sham is '77 and her husband,
Matthew, are the parents of a son, Joseph, born on March
27. The family lives at 3101 Oakview Drive No. 46, Temple,
Texas 76502.
Drive,
Kim Clark '77 and his wife, the former Holly Moore of
Bloomsburg, are enjoying their son, Grant John, who was
a year old in January. Kim is employed as a salesman for
Earl Latsha Lumber Co. in Harrisburg. The Clarks live at
303 Maple Road, Middletown, Pa. 17057.
Mary Anne (Southerton) Reichart '77 and her husband,
Randy, are the parents of a daughter born on March 21.
The Reicharts live on Rohrsburg Road, Orangeville Pa
17859.
Lee Ann Stump
'77
recently announced her candidacy
for the position of Muncy School Board Director.
She has been employed the past four years at Jones
Real Estate in Muncy.
She has been a Muncy Borough Auditor for the last three
years, been actively involved with the Muncy Area Community Project Steering Committee, and is presently a
member of both the program and audit committees for the
Muncy Area Merchants Association.
Lee Ann has been a volunteer coach for the girl's
elementary basketball program for five years, and is also
a Friend of the Court volunteer. She attends the Muncy
Baptist Church.
Lee Ann lives at 9 Schuyler Avenue, Muncy, Pa. 17756.
Timothy Jay Lawall
'77
and
his wife, the
Derr, are the parents of a son born on
Berwick (Pa.) Hospital. The family
March
former Debra
13, 1983 at
lives at R.D.
1,
the
Wap-
wallopen, Pa. 18660.
Evelyn Baxevane '77 lives at 1209 Cordell St., Denton,
Texas 76201. She is a special education teacher in the Denton Independent School District, teaching trainable mentally
is
retarded students at the local junior high school. She
to Matt Connell '77.
married
Maria
may
L. (Williams)
Anthony
'77
and James W. Anthony
be reached at Box 85, Bear Creek, Pa. 18602.
Maria reports that they are expecting a baby in May.
'77
Donna
L. (Krick)
McGlinn
Pa.
Whitfield,
'78 lives at 3205
19609.
Her
present
Wassner
position:
housewife.
Katherine Diane (Kenner) Smith '78 M. Ed. and her
husband, Lawrence, are the parents of a son, Brandon
Michael, born on September 9, 1982. Kathy is employed
by the Selinsgrove Area School District, where she has
taught first grade for seven years. The Smiths live at
R.D. 3, Box 102-A Selinsgrove, Pa. 17870.
Paul G. Janssen
became
Cheryl,
Jr. *78 reports that he
the
Elizabeth, on June
11,
parents
1982.
Paul
a
of
is
and
his wife,
daughter,
Sara
the assistant to the
township manager of Cheltenham Township. The
Janssens live at 651 Brooke Road, No. D51, Glenside
Pa. 19038.
David J. Howells '78 is employed as a sales engineer
by Mine Safety Appliances Company. His address is 3324
Pin
Oak Lane,
Mountville, Pa. 17554.
Janet (Caywood) Dunscomb '78 reports she was married to John Dunscomb on May 29, 1982. Her address is
2501 W. Sunflower, No. N-l, Santa Ana, Calif. 92704.
Elizabeth M. (Jones) Samarin '78 recently wrote to
bring us up to date on her career history.
Upon graduation, she was employed by GTE Service
Corporation as a member of their financial associate
development program consisting of three six-month
assignments in various organizations and subsidiaries of
GTE. One of her assignments was with GTE Sylvania in
Muncy, Pa. and the other two were in California. She
chose to stay in the Los Angeles area with GTE and
later became employed with Data Products Corporation
in Woodland Hills, California, where she is the accounting manager for the medium and high speed printer
divisions.
She was married in July, 1981. Her husband is
employed as vice president-finance controller with BAP
Geon Automotive Parts in Long Beach; Calif.
Her address is 1021 Sixth Street, No. 303, Santa
Monica,
Calif. 90403.
Continued on page 32
The proof is
in the professors
By Katherlne E. Fisher '50
"Let us each drink a toast as each of us recalls
Ivy-covered professors in ivy-covered halls ..."
(from "Bright College Days" by Tom Lehrer)
Times have changed since the 1950s when Tom Lehrer
penned those irreverent words. Tradition-bound pro-
simultaneously, or in whatever sequence the students
choose. Students also select appropriate sound effects
and assist in writing the narrative script. During the
fessors are a rarity at
students with their
are eager to explore
Bloomsburg State College. Most
new and
different concepts in lear-
ning.
To
cite a
"taste" of
few
is
to slight the
many, but perhaps a
campus
instructional innovations will
your appetite to visit and learn more.
whet
Teaching Intercultural Communication last semester,
Dr. Mary Kenny Badami, associate professor, Communication Studies, gave as the first week's assignment,
American Cultural Patterns, by E. C. Stewart.
Upon completion of the book, students were to write a
the book,
750-word essay answering the question, "Am I a
typical' American?" Think about that. What is a
"typical" German? Russian? Japanese? As a term project (for those brave students who returned the second
week! ), one option was to spend 15 to 20 hours with an
international student, research a five-page paper on the
foreign student's homeland, and maintain an informal
journal on the highlights and impressions from each
meeting with the student. At the conclusion of the contact hours, a comprehensive analysis was to be written
on all learnings from the project. The knowledge thus
acquired by both the international, and the American
students, could never have been found in a textbook.
The international students were often amused at what
the American students thought they "knew" about
foreign countries. Times change faster than textbooks!
At the end of the semester, Dr. Badami's students and
the contacts" celebrated their new knowledge, and
new
friendships, at an off-campus party.
//////////
Since 1975, Dr. Donald A. Vannan, professor of educa-
their
Department of Elementary and Early Childhood
Education, has been teaching some of the most laidback students on campus. Dr. Vannan developed an
adaptation of a relaxed learning/teaching method which
controlled experiments have shown to result in dramatic
tion,
achievements grade-wise, as well as retention-wise.
Originally developed in Bulgaria by Dr. Georgi
Lozanov, "suggestology", as the method is called, was
originally developed to teach foreign languages.
Adapted suggestology, as developed by Dr. Vannan, is
used with prospective elementary teachers enrolled in
the elementary science methods course. To implement
his teaching technique, Dr. Vannan changed the
classroom environment, revitalizing the traditionally
drab classroom with flowers, real and artificial, then
decorating the walls with colorful pictures and inspirational quotations.
As instructed by Dr. Vannan, students relax
themselves using deep-breathing exercises and purposeful tension/relaxation of all muscles in the body.
Variety in the intonation of lecture material is extremely important and it ranges from shouting to whispering.
Background recordings of Mozart, Haydn and Lizst are
used. Demonstrations are done for, and with, the
students. Students also teach sample lessons to their
peers.
Questioning the "ivy-covered" tradition that learning
occurs only in stiff -backed discomfort, free from any
Vannan's initial experiments yielded
The fall, spring, and summer
control classes received 6.5%, 18.5% and 9.0% of A
grades, while the "relaxed" classes earned 80%, 82.4%
and 72.0% of A grades. Suggestology has spread to
Canada, Russia, Austria, and various European coundistractions, Dr.
some amazing
tries,
results.
as well as the United States.
Dr. Vannan's article, "Adapted Suggestology and
Elementary Science at Bloomsburg State College," appeared in ERIC Resources in Education, in August 1978.
In 1979, an article titled "Adapted Suggestology and Student Achievement" was published by Dr. Vannan in the
Journal of Research in Science Teaching. Also, Dr. Vannan and his adaptation methods are discussed in the
book, SUPERLEARNING, by Ostrander & Schroeder
(1979), in which they give the results of Vannan's experiments, and terms these results "spectacular"!
//////////
In Non-Print Media (Communication 503), Dr. Walter
M. Brasch, associate professor of English and Journalism, gives his students "hands on" experience in
preparing a multi-media show. Students, some of whom
have never held a camera, are expected to photograph
pictures for slides which will be shown on three screens
techniques, Donald feels he can train "almost any willing person off the street."
show, selected students perform musical numbers on
stage while the rest of the class handles lighting, sound,
and slide projection. Dr. Brasch continually amazes
Although Donald much prefers the one-on-one ratio of
students and teachers, no student is turned away unless
the enrollment exceeds 200 per session, which it has
sometimes done. Otherwise, anyone
is
welcome, even
own capabilities. "I can't" is never
an acceptable excuse. He demonstrates to the students
how they can (and will! ). The assumption is that you
can't learn to swim until you get into the water! If there
is hesitation, Brasch shoves — which makes for frantic
students with physical handicaps such as deafness.
Using interview techniques, rather than traumatic
paddling at times.
average growth was found to be two full skill levels. Letters from scores of grateful parents, teachers, and
students verify these findings. A happy side-effect has
been that the attitude improvement has also raised
grades in other subjects because the children now have
Brasch himself is a "doer" — having authored six
books and more than 200 articles on a smorgasbord of
subjects. His books have received excellent reviews. He
says, "My undergraduate classes give me the most
joy." When not "pushing" students, he is often lending a
sympathetic ear to their problems and frustrations.
Brasch 's creative methods have practical results. After
improving the writing and editing skills of students, he
advises them on how to get articles published in
newspapers and magazines. A by-line is a "cloud-nine"
experience for budding journalists. Ivy would have to
grow pretty fast to sprout on this professor!
!
of
mathematics
is
nothing
new
— but, like the
common
cold, it has made generations of students
miserable while little has been done to find a "cure."
Other educators have worked with mathophobia in
adults. Sheila Tobias, author of
Math Anxiety, has
discussed Donald's work with him and agrees on the importance of changing attitudes as early as possible.
In the 1970s, Professor Donald organized the first
Mathophobia classes at the college. Sessions are still
held in the spring, summer and fall for students from
grades two through eight. They meet to be tutored for
one hour each day in the summer sessions, and for one
hour a week in the spring and fall sessions. B.S.C.
students majoring in elementary education do much of
the tutoring — all on a volunteer basis. Donald strives
for a one-on-one ratio of students and teachers, saying
"It has a magical effect!" The rapport established with
"their own" teacher plays a large role in the "healing"
process. Instruction is individualized and is always an
affirming experience. There are no tests, no pressures,
no frustrations, and no one is ever ridiculed for making
a mistake.
Teaching materials developed by Donald are colorful
and unorthodox. The "learning style" of each student is
respected and students select where they want to be
at a desk, squatting on the floor, or on their tummy in
the hallway! It's fun, it's noisy, and it's successful! Experiments show that each of us has a "best way" to
learn. For some it is auditory learning; for some,
visual; some learn better with background noises; some
must have absolute quiet. For students who are easily
distracted, seating them by a window can mean failure.
Donald explains, "Many children are forced into learning styles which simply will not work for them."
On June 20-24, in Kehr Union, Donald is coordinating a
learning styles workshop for K through 12 grade
teachers, as well as school administrators. A team from
the Rita Dunn Program, St. Johns University, N.Y.C.,
will discuss research which demonstrates that every
student, regardless of age, economic status, or I.Q., has
an individual learning style, and that academic achievement increases, and attitudes improve, when these differences are acknowledged and used for the benefit of
the student. Experts in reading and administration will
be present at the workshop, as well as enthusiastic
educators who have already made use of these innova-
—
tions in teaching.
Donald's regular Mathophobia courses are conducted
busy Hartline, and because of the number of students
and the style of teaching, space has been a concern.
However, the cooperation of President James McCormick and Registrar Ken Schnure has kept the program
running smoothly in the spring and fall sessions. Sumin
sessions are conducted in various school districts —
Bloomsburg, Berwick, Southern, etc, — all free of
charge. Donald, and all his teachers, donate their time.
Sometimes, students who have been helped by the program, return later to teach. Teachers need not be college educated. With his special materials and training
mer
session,
On one
a student's needs are assessed during the first
and are reevaluated at the end of the semester.
occasion when traditional testing was used, the
confidence in themselves. Parents living 20 miles away
have transported their children to the Mathophobia sessions.
Professor Donald's Mathophobia program was
selected as Bloomsburg State College's 1982 entry for
the G. Theodore Mitau Award, an award for construc-
and change which is presented annually
American Association of State Col-
tive innovation
to a
member
of the
leges and Universities. This highly competitive
//////////
Another B.S.C. innovator who embraces change has
been heralded in numerous area publications. When
Professor Richard Donald is mentioned, local residents
nod affirmatively ... "Oh yes, Mathophobia
However, get-well cards are not in order. While
Mathophobia is "catching on", it is not "catching."
Fear
testing,
was won
award
by Southwest Texas State University,
but Bloomsburg's Professor Donald has won the acclaim
of peers, educators, parents, and literally thousands of
students. Donald has the enthusiasm and zeal of an
evangelist. The "darkness" of mathophobia is far from
being conquered
but there is "one little candle" burnin 1982
—
ing brightly at
Bloomsburg State College!
Creativity is contageous! Students exposed to it, will
seek new and better ways of doing things. Only one
thing is "ivy-covered" at B.S.C. — a worn-eut old
sentence which has been discarded and trampled underfoot in the rush of progress: "We can't try anything
new, we've always done it this way."
Cooperative
EcLD. program
announced
Graduate study at BSC has been expanded to the
doctoral level through a cooperative doctor of education
degree program in elementary education offered jointly
with Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
The cooperative doctoral program was announced by
Dr. Daniel C. Pantaleo, dean of Bloomsburg's School of
Graduate Studies and Extended Programs, after
presidents of the two state-owned institutions had signed
the memorandum of understanding establishing the
relationship. The Ed.D. degree will be awarded by IUP,
which has had an approved doctoral program
for
several years.
Students admitted to the program by BSC may take
up to half of their post masters credits at Bloomsburg,
with the remaining work, as well as residency requirements, to be completed at IUP.
"This cooperative program will make it more
convenient and less expensive for graduate students in
this area to work toward a doctoral degree," Pantaleo
said. "Bloomsburg has faculty members who are well
and to serve
on examination, advisory, and dissertation committees.
We can offer a needed service in this area without
duplicating established programs."
Dr. William O'Bruba, who chairs the BSC department
of elementary and early childhood education,
qualified to offer doctoral level instruction
coordinated planning for the cooperative program and
serves as the director at Bloomsburg. He was the first
doctoral candidate to earn the Ed.D. degree at IUP.
"This program can be implemented at Bloomsburg
with
little
said.
"We
or no extra costs to the college," O'Bruba
already have the faculty members and the
necessary courses.
It's
a cost-effective
program
that
enables us to make full use of the resources we have."
Graduate students may apply to Bloomsburg for
admission to the program and faculty members of both
institutions will screen the applications. Students
who
are admitted must complete 12 credits of post masters
study with niinimum grades of "B" before applying of
the written and oral candidacy examination.
and Thomas Charles Vought
employed at Bloomsburg
Hospital. Tom is employed by Step-By-Step, Inc. in
Bloomsburg. An April wedding is planned.
32
Ellen Marie McDonnell
are engaged. Ellen
II
Continued from page 30
Cheryl Lynn Marinchak
'78
traveled to the island of
are engaged.
toFebruaryll.1983.
Cheryl, a fourth year intern and student at the Pennsylvania College of Optometry, Philadelphia, is a
member of the Student Optometric Service to Haiti
(SOSH), a team of 20 four-year optometry students from
Linda Lee Danowsky '81 M.Ed, was married to Todd
Eugene Beaver on February 26, 1983. Linda is a teacher in
the Milton School District.
the college.
Since
its
SOSH
has provided free viimpoverished people each year
inception in 1968,
sion care to thousands of
Charles G. Smith
Haiti.
for
eye care
Ernie F. Jackson
is
of the
wholly under
SOSH team and
the
direction
their services. In 1982 over 7,000 patients
were examined
their two-week
Betsy Gathman '79 reports that effective February 1,
she was promoted to vice president of human
resources at Comprehensive Benefits Service Company,
Inc. CBSC is a third-party administrator specializing in
1979
employee
Chew Street, Allentown.
Carole Susan Hutchison '79 and Kevin Donald Hocking
are engaged. Carole attends Northampton County Area
Community
She is employed by the Easton
employed by Snyder Amusements. A
College.
YWCA. Kevin
is
wedding date has not been set.
(
Wilk) Gunther
'79
has assumed the position
of head nurse of the Critical Care Units at Good
Samaritan
Hospital in Pottsville. Victoria is a member
of the
American and Pennsylvania Nurses Associations;
Association for Practitioners of Infection
Control;
Intravenous Therapy Association; and American
Nurses
Association Council of Primary Health Care
Nurse
Practitioners.
Her
address
consulting and administration. Its
Linda J. Coleman '79 is the manager of Edison Brothers
Shoe Store, a leased department in Hess's Chambersburg
Mall, Franklin County, Pa. Linda lives at 1537 Lehigh St.,
Easton, Pa. 18042.
Tony Jankiewicz '78 and Jane (Nagle) Jankiewicz '79
have moved to 3813 Wick Place, Wexford, Pa. 15090. Tony
is women's sportswear buyer for Gimbel's in Pittsburgh.
Jane is a cost reimbursement accountant for Sewickley
Valley Hospital. She is pursuing a master's degree in
business administration at Robert Morris College, Pittsburgh.
Laurie (Johnson) Gaylord '79 lives at 7234 Carmel
Ct.,
Boca Raton, Fla. 33433. She is a teacher of the hearing impaired at the Tamarac Elementary School. She is
working
toward a master's degree in computer education
at
Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton.
Victoria T.
benefits,
headquarters are in suburban Philadelphia. Her address
is 255F Rexton Drive, West Chester, Pa. 19380,
Raymond
Fisher are
engaged. Patricia is employed by SMS Corporation as a
buyer. Her fiance is employed by Mobil Oil Corp. as a
senior financial analyst. A July wedding is planned.
1330 l2
is
601
Ridge
Avenue
Pottsville, Pa. 17901.
Mike Burkhart '79 and Carol Colburn were married on
July 9. 1982. They live at 326 Bala
Terrace West, West
Chester, Pa. 15380.
,
-f
is
f\Of\
Mark Karanovich '80 and his wife, Susan (Palangi) '80,
are the parents of a daughter, Elizabeth Eileen, born on
March 4. Elizabeth was born on her due date at 1 1 41 p.m.
She weighed seven pounds, five ounces and was 20 i 4
inches long. Mark is employed by Chase Home Mortgage
Corporation as a first mortgage originator. Susan
is
employed
Anne Arundel County as a teacher. The
in
family lives at 8858
Tamar
Dr., Apt. 301, Columbia,
Md
21045.
Kelly Galosi '82 and Peter Howatt '80 are engaged and
plan to be married on August 27 in Lebanon, Pennsylvania. Pete is head of operations for Ostego Farmers
Feed Co.
Inc. Kelly will get
in
her master's degree
in
speech
May.
18, at
the
in attending the celebration should
write to: CAS 10th Anniversary, 219 Pine
St., Harrisburg
Pa. 17101. Jeff lives at 2304 North 4th St.,
in
students and to the profession, and involvement
extracurricular activities.
Harrisburg Pa
17102.
First Lt. Brent C.
Bankus *79 was recently awarded
Army Achievement Medal. A tank commander,
Brent was also named to the captain's promotion
list.
tiie
He has served
half of a three-year tour of duty
in
Germany. He and his wife, Mary, and
John and Courtney, live in Mannheim.
West
their children,
Kevin Wixled '79 exhibited his most recent works in the
Schuylkill County Council for the Arts Galleries 3 at the
Art and Ethnic Center in Pottsville, Pa., from February 13
through March 13. "New Works" combined oils, acrylics,
watercolors and gouaches.
Susan E. Sharrow '79 teaches grades one and two
at the
Covenant Christian School in Meadville. Her address
is
336 Jefferson St., Meadville, Pa. 16335.
Deborah Kellerman
'79 lives at 924
Wheeler Ave., Scranton, Pa. 18510. She is employed as an itinerant
hearing
therapist for the Luzerne County Intermediate
Unit No
18.
Ann Marie Fiamoncini
and Bruno Andracchio are
employed as a caseworker at
'80
engaged. The future bride is
Selinsgrove Center. Her fiance is a psychologist at Selinsgrove Center. A fall wedding is planned.
Marty
Hahn '80 and Lori Kay Stadler are engaged.
employed by Keek's Drapery Mfg. Co. in
Bloomsburg. Marty works for Bloomsburg Dye Co., Inc.
Lori
C.
is
1981
Eric Fehr
manager
of
and Susan Cole are engaged. Susan is
Fashion Bug in Bloomsburg. Eric is a sales
'81
representative for D.A. Fehr, Inc. of Pittsburgh.
1984 wedding is planned.
A spring
1982
Cathy L. Crist '82 has been appointed assistant
administrative secretary at Columbia-Montour Home
Health Service, Inc. Cathy's address is R.D.
5,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Sandra K. (Rawls) Kelsey '82 and her husband, Jeffrey,
are the parents of a daughter born on April 15.
The
family's address is P.O. Box 89, Benton, Pa. 17814.
Michael
Bernsten
and Pamela Dianne
wedding is planned.
'82
1984
Steve is employed as a claims representative for All State
Insurance Co. in Whippany, N.J. Pamela is a senior at
BSC.
Scott Behrent '82
America as a
His address
is
is
employed by the Boy Scouts
district executive in Bershire County,
34 Bartlett
Avenue,
Pittsfield.
of
Mass.
Mass. 01201.
Laurie Ann Yoder '82 and David F. Farver are engaged.
Laurie is employed by Bechtel Power Corporation. Her
fiance is a service representative for Dictaphone Corporation of State College. An October 15th wedding is planned.
Vivian G. Schoeller '82 is an associate systems
analyst
with Burroughs Corp. of Radnor, Pa. Her
address is 1300
Fayette Street, 203 Morton Blvd., Conshohocken
19428.
Sherry Martucci
ried on
February
'82
and Joseph P. Gaccer
26,
1983, in St.
"82
were mar-
Elizabeth's Catholic
Church, in Whitehall, Pa. Joe is employed by The Sperry
Corporation, in Cape Canaveral. The newlyweds live in
TitusviUe, Fla.
Barbara Elaine Mettler '82 and Paul William Manning
are engaged. Barbara is a teacher at tlfe Danville Head
Start. Paul is
employed by his father as a piano technician
Manning's Pianos and Organs. No date has been set for
the wedding.
at
Terri L. Starner '82 and Mark S. Springer were married
on August 21, 1982. Terri is an associate installation
director for Shared Medical Systems in Wayne, Pa. Mark
is a medical student at Hahnemann University. The
Springers' address is Stiles Alumni Hall, Apt. 211, 325
North 15th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 19102.
Barbara Ann Koslosky '82 and Randall E. Rhodes '82
were married recently. The newly-weds live in Catawissa,
Pa. Randy will attend medical school.
Brian D. Duart
'82 is employed by Tree-Ring Research
Annex of University of Arizona, as a
computer programmer. Brian's address is 9224 East 29th
Laboratory,
Mary Beth Weeks
and James Snyder '82 were marJames is employed by AMP,
a computer analyst. Mary Beth
was formerly a credit analyst with Morgan Guaranty
Trust Company in New York City. They live in Marietta,
ried on
September
'81
18, 1982.
Street, Tucson, Arizona 85710.
Inc. of Harrisburg, Pa. as
Pa.
Bonnie MacMahon '79 and Donald
Yazurlo '81 are
engaged. An October wedding is planned.
Bonnie is
employed as a personal lines insurance analyst
with Aetna Life and Casualty in Parsippany, N.J.
Don is a computer programmer with I.B.M. in
Franklen Lakes N J
at
Pa
Anyone interested
June
A. Cable
:
to fellow
celebration, a banquet on
'81, a contemporary Christian musician,
Carver Hall on April 6. His wife, Dodi,
operates his sound system. They play at churches,
colleges, retreats, nursing homes and coffeehouses. They
have been a warm-up act for David Meece and Randy
Stonehill. The Cables live at
1519 Colgate Drive,
Bethlehem, Pa. 18107.
Steven
Embers Convention Center in Carlisle, Pa., will honor all
those who have played a part in the first 10
years of CAS.
of
The
Mark
Peckmann are engaged. A June
Michael Lewis Mixell '80 recently received the Joseph
Leyburn Kramer Award at the Dickinson School of Law.
The award is presented annually to a third-year law student who has demonstrated academic excellence,
adherence to strict ethical standards, fidelity and loyalty
Students.
employed as an auditor by Northampton County. Her
is employed by Lifetime Doors, Inc.
performed
±zf&\)
pathology
Jeffrey Albert Hunsicker '79 is serving on a
committee
planning a celebration in honor of the tenth anniversary
of
the founding of the Commonwealth
Association
206-A Buker Street, Ft.
'81 live at
fiance
1983,
Carol Killheffer '79 and Bruce Keene were married on
July 3, 1982. Carol is a business systems programmer
analyst at Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. Their address
was promoted to first lieutenant in
November 1982. Ernie and Debbie
Jean Marie Lewis '81 and Mark Charles Miskowski are
engaged. The wedding is being planned for August. Jean
mission in Haiti.
Cheryl's address is 61 Hazel Street, Delano, Pa. 18220.
Patricia Carolyn Ricci "79 and
Westminster Drive,
'81
in
(Richards) Jackson
Benning.Ga. 31905.
the
of
interns are not paid for
and treated by the SOSH team during
is
Army
the U.S.
in Haiti.
The project
members
'81 lives at 24
Dallas, Pa. 18612.
Members are volunteers who work together
each year to plan and make possible a two-week clinic
in
is
Kevin James McCloskey '81 and Valerie Linn Benrle
An August wedding is planned. Valerie is a
senior at BSC. Kevin is employed by American McGaw, a
division of American Hospital Supply Corporation.
from January 28
Haiti for voluntary patient care duties
'81
Kathleen Greco '81 and Frank Coll '81 were married on
August 7, 1982. Kathy is employed at Pixie Pre-School in
Spotswood, N.J. Frank is an instillation director at Shared
Medical Systems in New York City. They live at Percola
Avenue, Jamesburg, N.J. 08831.
Dale E. MausteUer Jr. '82 and Rochelle R. Stout are
engaged. Dale is employed by Turbotville National Bank.
Rochelle is a senior at BSC. The wedding will be
August
Kristina A. Rutter '82 and
married on April
9.
James H. Oeste
The newlyweds
live in
Jr., '82
were
Winston-Salem,
N.C.
Continued on page 34
Dr. C. Whitney Carpenter, who
retired from the
department of Languages and Cultures
in January was
awarded a master of education degree from
Teachers
College, Columbia University, on
January 26.
This is Dr. Carpenter's fifth degree
education. He holds an A.B. degree in
Cornell University, an M.A. degree
in
in
higher
German from
German from
the
University of Southern California, an
M.S. degree in
educational administration from
Bucknell University
and a Ph.D. in German from New York
University He
is also a graduate of Culver Military
Academy
James
R. Lauffer, associate professor of geography
and earth science at BSC, received his Ph.D. degree in
geology from the University of Delaware. His thesis was
"Hydrochemical Study of Shallow Ground
Water Peripheral to Rehoboth Bay, Delaware."
entitled
Lauffer came in BSC in 1966 as an assistant professor
and was promoted to associate professor in 1972. He
received his B.S. degree in geology from Allegheny
College in 1956 and his master of science degree in
geological sciences from the University of Hawaii in
1964.
Dr. Lee Hopple, professor of geography, published an
"Germanic European Origins and
Geographical History of the Southeastern Pennsylvania
article titled
Schwenkfelders" in the Winter 1982-1983 issue of
Pennsylvania Folklife. He is a student of the major
religious groups comprising the southeastern
Pennsylvania Plain Dutch population and has published
nearly a dozen papers on the European origins and
geographical history of these peoples.
Dr. Ujagar Bawa, professor of economics at BSC,
addressed a special convocation at Hanover College
(Indiana) on March 22. His topic was "Productivity and
Recession."
Professor Bawa was born in Pakistan and received his
degrees from Guru Nanak Khalsa College in Pakistan,
University of Pennsylvania, and Cornell University. He
came to BSC in 1970 and has been involved in numerous
academic and administrative activities. He was
formerly a
member
of the faculties of Wilkes College
and Howard University.
Among his distinctions while at BSC have been
serving as associate vice president for academic affairs
during 1974-75 while a search was being conducted for a
Dr. Walter M. Brasch, associate professor of
English
and journalism, is author of The Only Alternative
for
KFAD," an article about TV news operations, that
appears in the second edition of THE FOURTH
permanent appointee. He was one
ESTATE,
academic year. He is a member of the executive board
and founding life member of the Eastern Economic
Association and a founding member and director of the
Guru Nanak Foundation of America, Washington, D C.
He was awarded a meritorious certificate of
excellence in teaching and was designated as a
Commonwealth Teaching Fellow in the Pennsylvania
State College and University System for 1976-77.
a textbook written by Roy Paul Nelson, dean
of the College of Journalism, University
of Oregon, and
John Hulteng, professor of journalism, Stanford
University. The book was published
in
January by
Harper and Row.
A 50-page monograph about place-name development
and marketing is scheduled to be published in June by
the American Name Society. Dr. Brasch's book,
of three judges for
selecting candidates for graduate studies under the
Fulbright-Hayes and other foreign sponsored programs
covering the Near East and South East for the 1978-79
COLUMBIA COUNTY PLACENAMES
(June 1982) was
reviewed by the Journal of the American Name Society
as "perhaps the best" in the country and a "model for
similar studies."
Highest
percentage
of Greeks at
Bloomsburg State College has the highest percentage
"Greeks" in the state college system, according to a
report presented to the Board of Trustees recently by
Robert G. Norton, Dean of Student Life.
Although many of the private colleges and universities
of
in the state rank higher, BSC ranks first of the state
schools with 21.1 percent of its students affiliated with a
fraternal organization. Shippensburg State College
ranks second with
percent students involved.
In his report to the board, Norton noted the growth of
fraternities
members
and sororities
of all
membership
were
16.9
is
BSC. In 1977, the combined
fraternities and sororities was 842;
at
now estimated
at 1,050. In 1977 there
13 organizations; in 1983 there are 19.
Norton also reported that BSC's Greeks on an average
get higher grades than non-affiliated students. The
average sorority cumulative average is 3.14; the
average for full-time undergraduate women is 2.81. The
average fraternity cumulative average is 2.68; the fulltime undergraduate male's average is 2.64.
Historically, Norton said, Greeks have been involved
in service to the college, community and national
organizations. On campus, fraternal organizations
volunteer their time as Visitation Day guides, ushers at
cultural events, work at concerts, and work at the Red
Cross Bloodmobile visits on campus.
The Inter-Fraternity Council and Inter-Sorority
Council worked together last year to raise
approximately $600 for the Easter Seal Society and $750
for the American Heart Association.
An
individual fraternity with 25 members raised $550
for the National Muscular Dystrophy Association, and
each organization also raises money each year for their
specific national philanthropy.
Each year many alumni
of
Greek organizations return
BSC for reunions, spring formats,
members and Homecoming. In 1981,
to
registered at
Some
Homecoming, with
induction of
175
new
Greeks
195 in 1982.
organizations, Norton said, have very strong
alumni groups.
Two examples
are Delta Pi (the alumni
association manages and owns their home, the Craig
Mansion), and Sigma Iota Omega (the alumni
contribute to a scholarship fund).
The Eighth Annual BSC Band Alumni picnic will be
16, 1983, at the Bloomsburg Town
Park. For further information, contact Dr. Steve
Wallace, Department of Music, BSC, or Brenda
Hafner
held at noon on July
2114 Johnston Dr. #7. Bethlehem, Pa. 18017.
Marlene Boyd Vallin, department of communication
studies, was awarded her Doctor of Philosophy degree
at Penn State University on March 5. Her thesis was
entitled, 'A Study of Public Communication Based Upon
the Evaluation of Speeches Delivered by College
Students in a Basic Speech Course."
A number
BSC
Decker is trying to keep an up-to-date mailing list
concert choir alumni. If you haven't been
receiving information from him during the past year,
please send him your current address. Write: Concert
Choir Alumni List, Department of Music, BSC.
Bill
of all
appointments for the second
the 1982-1983 college year were approved by
of faculty
semester of
the board of trustees.
The new appointments included:
Dr. Abha Ghosh, assistant professor in the Center for
Academic Development in the capacity of tutorial
coordinator and research analyst;
Susan M. Hill, J.D., temporary instructor of finance
and business law;
The Department of Languages and Cultures is
sponsoring a three-week trip to Mexico from May 28 to
June
18.
Approximate cost
was
$12,000
raised for the area's hospice
American Cancer Society, United Fund, Heart Fund,
American Diabetes Society, Easter Seals, Mental
Health, Multiple Sclerosis and Red Cross.
John
S.
Baird
Jr.,
professor of psychology, had an
article published in the
Shu-Chen Li, temporary instructor of mathematics;
Joan B. Stone, temporary instructor of nursing;
Gideon J. Wray, temporary instructor of accounting;
Lewis V. Wray, temporary instructor of marketing/management.
Jean R. Atak, a resident of Lewisburg, was approved
on a part-time basis for the semester as temporary
journal,
The appointment
Linda M. Nicholas as an adjunct
department of philosophy and
anthropology was approved. She began her duties last
November and will continue through the end of the
semester.
member
of
in the
Approved by the board for the 1983-1984 academic
year was the appointment of Dr. Boris Raykhshetyn as
associate professor of mathematics and computer
science.
John D. Hohmann was approved as an assistant
He began his duties on December
and will continue to June 11.
wrestling coach.
11
program
administered by the Columbia-Montour Home Health
Services, Inc. Sponsored by the Kehr Union Program
Board, the marathon has raised money for the
Harriet Laine, assistant professor of biological and
faculty
For more
Sixty-one persons danced for 50 hours in the annual
dance marathon held at BSC in February. Nearly
allied health sciences;
assistant professor of psychology.
is $750.
information, contact Professor Allen Murphy.
February issue
of the
TEACHING OF PSYCHOLOGY. The
APA
publica-
and Reliability of Student
Faculty," and criticizes some recent studies
tion is titled: "Validity
Ratings of
in
student evaluation of teaching.
The Department of Communication Disorders has
been awarded a training grant of $35,261 by the
Department of Personnel Preparation of the Special
Education Programs of the U.S. Department of
Education. This grant money will be used to provide
clinical and teaching material, conferences and inservice workshops for speech pathologists, audiologists,
and educators of the hearing impaired.
The BSC Forensic Society held its first High School
Speech Tournament-Workshop on January 22. Over 125
high school competitors and coaches from more than 10
high schools were in attendance. The participating high
schools spanned an area from Scranton to Chambersburg.
Students competed
Joseph Quinn, a native of Girardville, has been named
purchasing agent at BSC, replacing Lloyd Anderson who
retired in September after 15 years of service.
Quinn, who had been an administrative officer with
the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, began his new
duties on January 10. He served nearly three years with
the Liquor Control Board before becoming a purchasing
agent.
From
March 1980, Quinn was assistant
manager of Pennsylvania Pacific, a
manufacturing firm in Warminster. He earlier
July 1978 to
plant and office
pallet
held managerial and supervisory positions with Cartex
Corp. in Morrisville, Magic Marker in Cherry Hill, N.J.,
and Cleve Pack Corp., Cranbury, N.J., while attending
Penn State University.
interpretation,
in extemporaneous speaking, prose
humorous interpretation, oratory, poetry
interpretation and dramatic interpretation.
The tournament was directed by graduate assistant
Marian Wilson, assisted by graduate assistant Fred
Deets and members of the Forensic Society. Harry A.
Strausser III is president of the society, and Professor
Harry C. Strine III serves as director of forensics.
The Forensic Team also won the first place
sweepstakes— for the third year— in the 1983 Winter
Collegiate Forensic Association's tournament in
Montreal in January.
Coordinator and director of the tabulation room was
graduate assistant Fred Deets. Accompanying the team
as judges were graduate assistants Marian Wilson and
Denise Byers.
34
OBITUARIES
1982
Dr. H. Keffer Hartline '20, who was born in Bloomsburg
of the 1967 Nobel Prize in physiology,
died of a heart attack on March 17 at Fallston General
and was a co-winner
Angela Marie Ciampi '82 recently graduated from Geisinger School of Medical Technology,
Hospital in Maryland. He was 79.
A resident of Hydes, Md., he was professor of biophysics
at Rockefeller University from 1953 until he retired in
Francis John Tomashefski '82 recently graduated from
Geisinger School of Medical Technology.
Cynthia Ann Bell '82 recently graduated from Geisinger
School of Medical Technology.
1974.
Eldoras (Leiby) Deterick '82 recently graduated from
Geisinger School of Medical Technology.
Jeffrey
Wasilewski
'82
eye."
Hartline did research
Cheryl Lynne Cleaver '82 has been named Columbia
County's American Cancer Society Nurse of Hope. She is
Medical Center.
American Cancer Society unit direcCheryl was chosen for the honor because
to local
tor Betty Scott,
'
her 'concern for her fellow man
"Her hope is to enlighten and educate those who fear
cancer," Scott said of the Nurse of Hope, "as well as give
aid and comfort through service to those already afflicted
with cancer."
Cheryl will attend the state Nurse of Hope program or
1
of
'
H. Keffer Hartline '20
April 5-7 as a representative for Columbia County.
Ann (Soback) Koast, 1316 W. Front St., Berwick, Pa.
March 9. Death was attributed to a heart attack.
died on
The College Archives
is
seeking copies of the following
publications.
Yearbooks prior
to 1916; Obiters for 1917, 1920. 1921
1923, 1924, 1925, 1927
and
1928.
College catalogs, circulars, bulletins for years prior
to
1869-1870. 1870-1871, 1871-1873. 1876-1877, 1877-1878
1879-1880, 1880-1881, 1882-1883. 1892-1893. 1895-1896
1952-1953,
and
1954-1955.
Pilots, or student
1903-1904. 1904-1905,
handbooks, for vears prior to 1900
anything between 1906 and 1928
1977-1978.
Alumni Quarterlies: Volume 76
80 i4), V. 81 il. 4) and V. 82 (1).
1
4), V. 77 il, 3
V
4)
Surviving are her husband, John, to whom she was
37 years; a sister, Helen Soback, and a brother,
Andrew Soback, both of Berwick.
New planning board formed
Dr. C. Stuart Edwards,
'41,
has been
named to
new planning
commission.
Dr. Edwards, past president of the Alumni
Association, will join 21 other voting members on the
College-Wide Committee for Planning. Also serving on
the commission will be four college managers,
11
one AFSCME staff, two RepresenAssembly members one faculty and one
student), two CGA students, and one community
(
representative.
The purpose of the commission is to develop strategic
plans for the college's future and to prepare recommendations for consideration by the Representative Assembly
will
and
for the President's approval. The commission
deal with program, enrollment, personnel, facilities
and fiscal requirement plans.
The Planning Commission will be responsible for
developing strategic and long-range plans that take
Student Life and the student body.
The commission will be a standing committee of
the
Representative Assembly, and will keep the
Assembly
informed of planning activities.
The
specific functions of the Planning
will include:
Commission
Making recommendations on all planning policies.
2. Reviewing and recommending
the college's
mission, philosophy, goals and objectives.
3. Recommending long-range
allocation distributions
among the major budget categories.
4. Requesting, reviewing and
making
recommendations related to plans submitted
by the
major budget category officers: President,
1.
APSCUF faculty,
tative
Vice
President for Academic Affairs, Vice
President for
Administration, Vice President for Student
Life and the
Executive Director for Institutional
Advancement.
5.
into
consideration the changing needs of the citizens of
Pennsylvania. The commission will also be responsible
for continuing to develop
an attractive campus, to
improve the educational and other facilities, to develop
faculty and staff, expand research, and the college
accreditation processes.
The new planning commission will work closely with
the offices of the President, Academic Affairs,
Institutional Advancement, General Administration,
the electro-physiology of the
which he
developed through the study of the optic nerve of the
horseshoe crab and other marine animals.
Dr. Floyd Ratliff, Dr, Hartline's co-leader in the University's Vision Research Laboratory, said "Hartline's basic
studies on the integrative action of the retina provided the
foundation for practically every advance in the neurophysiology of vision."
Dr. Hartline joined Rockefeller University, then called
the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, as a professor of biophysics in 1953. He had been professor and
chairman of the Jenkins Department of Biophysics of
Johns Hopkins University since 1949.
In 1972, he was named to the Detlev W. Bronk Professorship, established in the honor of the scientist who was
Rockefeller University President from 1953 to 1968.
Haldan Keffer Hartline was born in Bloomsburg, Dec.
22, 1903. He received a bachelor of science degree from
Lafayette College in 1923 and his medical degree at Johns
Hopkins in 1927.
He had been a member of the space science board that
preceded the National Aeronautics and Space Agency. He
is credited with influencing formation of NASA and
establishing
its lines
of biological research.
School.
She was head nurse at the AC&F for 17 years, chief
physical therapist at Berwick Hospital for seven years;
and nurse at BSC for 12 years. She was an active
member of the Red Cross in Civil Defense, and was a
member of Pennsylvania Nursing Association. She was
a member of St. Annunication Orthodox Ukrainian
Catholic Church, Berwick.
married
represent the Alumni Association on BSC's
in
Surviving are his wife. Elizabeth, sons Daniel, Peter
She was in ill health for two years.
Born in Newark, N.J., she was the daughter of the late and Frederick, and three grandchildren.
Hartline Science Center, a science building at BSC, is
AJex and Anna Hercha Soback. A resident of Berwick
named for Hartline and his parents, Dr. Daniel S. Hartline
area for 40 years, she was a graduate of Mifflinville
and Harriet Franklin Keffer Hartline. His parents were
High School in 1938, and the Bloomsburg Hospital nursboth teachers at the college, then the Bloomsburg
ing program in 1941. She took post graduate courses at
University of Pennsylvania and East Stroudsburg State
Literary Institute and the Bloomsburg State Normal
College.
1896-1897, 1897-1898, 1898-1899, 1899-1900, 1900-1901
1901-1902, 1902-1903, 1903-1904, 1904-1905, 1933, 1946-1947
for physiology with
retina, or the electrical characteristics of vision,
Thomas R. Levan '82 and Tina M. Klinger are engaged.
Tina is a student at the Danville Area School of Practical
Nursing in Washingtonville, Pa. She is employed parttime at McDonalds in Bloomsburg. Tom is employed at
Weis Markets in Catawissa.
a nurse at the Geisinger
Award
They were honored "for their discoveries concerning
the primary chemical and physiological processes in the
and
William Ruggiero Jr. "82 is employed by Silver's Enterprises, Inc. in Easton, Pa. He is also proprietor of "Dun
All the Lights," a mobile disc jockey service. His address
is 1434 Roseto Ave.. Roseto, Pa. 18013.
According
the 1967 Nobel
Stockholm.
Catherine
(Barry)
Wasilewski '82 live at 413 South Lime St., Lancaster, Pa.
17602. Jeff is assistant manager of Davenports, Inc. of Lemoyne, Pa.
employed as
He shared
Drs. George Wald, Harvard University, and Ragnar
Granit, of the Royal Caroline Institute of Medicine,
Reviewing and approving college-wide
accreditation studies.
6.
Monitoring the implementation of the
enrollment
program, personnel, fiscal and facilities
plans and
making recommendations for adjustments.
The Planning Commission will meet as
required
generally once a month throughout the
academic year
and on occasion during summer sessions.
Sessions may
be convened by the Director of
Institutional Planning,
the Chairperson of the Commission
or the President of
the college.
In 1965, the
Alumni Association
a Distinguished Service Award.
ceived the Nobel Prize.
at the college
Two years
gave him
later he re-
Dr. David Mullen, 57, of 147 Chinquapin Way, Athens,
Ga., professor of education at BSC from 1959-1961,
died
April 1. Death was attributed to a heart attack.
After leaving BSC, he worked for the Pennsylvania
Department of Education, Harrisburg, for two years,
followed by two years at George Peabody College
for
Teachers in Nashville, Tenn., as a college dean.
For the past 15 years, he served as professor of
education at the University of Georgia.
Surviving are his wife, Rosemary; a son, David
Jr., and
twin daughters, Lauri and Debbie, all of Athens,
Ga.
W. Horace Williams
of 40 E. Fifth St.,
Bloomsburg,
home. He was 84 years old.
Born in Bradford, England, he was a son of the late
Wilford and Annie Peacock Williams. His family
moved
to Louisville, Ky, in 1910, and to Bloomsburg in
1912.
He graduated from Bloomsburg High School in 1917
and later attended Penn State University. He was
manager of the former Leader Store in Bloomsburg
from 1926 until it closed in 1940. He owned a men's
clothing store from 1940-16 and was then employed
as
sales representative by a New York City
advertising
firm. He was later employed by Bloomsburg
State Coldied on
March
1
at his
lege as a comptroller until retiring in 1968.
He was a member of St. Matthew Lutheran Church,
Washington Lodge 265 F&AM, Caldwell Consistory,
and
Irem Temple Shrine, Wilkes-Barre. He was a
former
member and past president of Bloomsburg Rotary Club,
an Army veteran of World War I, a member
of the
American Legion Post 273, and a life member of
Elks
Lodge 436. He was a member of Phi Kappa
Psi fraternity of
Penn
State.
He was preceded
in death by his first wife, the
A. Pauline Kneis, on Dec,
21, 1957.
former
Surviving are his wife, Elizabeth Brown
Miller
Williams, a son, John W. Williams,
Haddonfield, N.J.;
and one grandson.
ALUMNI WEEKEND
June 10-12, 1983
RESERVATION FORM
MEALS
Friday,
Number
June
Cost
1983
10,
Total
Annual Alumni Banquet
Scranton
Commons
Saturday, June
ot
$9.00
$
at
$2.50
$
at
$3.50
$
at
$9.30
$
at
$9.30
$
1983
11,
Breakfast
Special Buffet in Scranton
Picnic Lunch
Commons
Carver Lawn
DORM RESERVATIONS
.
Each reservation
is $9.30 per person
per night,
including linen service.
Friday night, June 10, 1983
Saturday night, June 1 1 1983
,
NAME
CLASS YEAR
ADDRESS
1
'
This service will help the coUege in two
ways: the
Public Information Office will be able to
determine
.
PHONE NUMBER
A group of BSC alumni scattered around the state
are
Alma Mater as "correspondents. The
Alumni Office has asked them to clip any
articles about
BSC or its graduates which appear in their local
newspapers.
serving their
how
news releases are being used by the newspapers
to
reach BSC alumni and the general public,
and it will
help the Alumni Office to collect news
items like mar-
1
its
TOTAL
AMOUNT ENCLOSED
PLEASE
MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO
$
riages, deaths, promotions, retirements,
etc for
ALUMNI QUARTERLY.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION."
"BSC
THE
Our honor
SCHEDULE OF ACTIVITIES FOR ALUMNI WEEKEND,
JUNE
FRIDAY, JUNE 10
3 P.M. to 6 P.M.
4 P.M.
roll of correspondents includes:
Patricia Hollingsworth '54, Gettysburg;
George Dotzel '49, York;
10-12 1983
Timothy McTaggart 71, Columbia;
Cleo L. Hontz '27, Ephrata
Registration
in Carver Hall lobby.
Early-Bird Get-Together for Class of
1933
President's Lounge, Kehr Union
5:30 P.M.
Hour In lobbies of Scranton
Photo session for Class of 1933
Lobby of Scranton Commons
Social
6 P.M.
6:30 P.M.
Annual Banquet
Scranton
of the
Claraline Baylor
Commons
Howard Demott
Alumni Association
Commons
10
A.M.
to
Breakfast
P.M.
East Stroudsburg
Honesdale;
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Brewington '35, Berwick;
n
9
(Ztu
on
n
'
C
°"
f
hl> ye0r
*
PU
Tc
n S
be
9
r::tto n fo?:
thtre
t
'J L'
Umni ° re
Jh e PMCe
'
i$
Atilla Lewis '29, Clarks Summit;
Richard Menapace '34, Jenkintown;
Sadie Zapp Mayernick
Lewis Kohn
'
^*
*
^V*' "
1
1
"9
" ,Mp#rV,Md
°'
1
- show sons and
!•» *****
'27,
Yeadon;
Levittown
'19,
Helen Roberts
'
,Qk *
'48,
Grace Miller
invl,ed f ° StQ ov ernight on Friday and
y
Saturday in El well
$9 3 ° Per perS ° n DOr ni 9 ht which
»"e cost of linen
'
,
'49,
George A. McCutcheon '39, Dallas;
W. Leonard Carson '54, Forksville;
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip R. Yeany '43, Ambler;
Lucy Rood Stitt '29, Indiana;
Margaret Hendrickson Krouse '32, Clearfield;
(Details will be mailed to classes)
>«i£n? M
'28,
j
(Swimming, tennis, racquetball, etc.)
Reunion dinners for Classes of 1942-1945, 1948
Evening
Pottsville;
Eloise N. Fasshauer
Featuring alumni, students and faculty
Recreation
2 P.M. to 5 P.M.
'42,
Sterling Strauser
Bus tour of campus for Class of 1933
Walking tours of the campus
Annual business meeting of the Association
Carver Hall Auditorium
Picnic Lunch on Carver Hall lawn
(Scranton Commons if it rains)
Talent Showcase in Carver Hall Auditorium
Noon
2
M. Claire Balles
Refreshments will be available.
in Scranton Commons
A.M.
10 A.M.
11 A.M.
11 A.M.
Selinsgrove;
John P. Chowanes '39. Shenandoah;
Lucille M. Guida '45, Roseto;
June E. Norris '43, Bethlehem;
Joyce E. Hay '44, Easton;
Hazel F. Carter '44, Allentown;
Registration in Carver Hall Lobby
9
'35,
Sara Dersham Laubach '39, Mifflinburg;
Mrs. Edward Dobb '41, Milton;
Pauline Ditty '48, Shamokin R.D.
2;
Honoring the Closs of 1933 and Recipients of the
Distinguished Service Awards for 1983
SATURDAY, JUNE 11
9 A.M. to Noon
'41, Lititz;
Lauretta Baker '35, Lock Haven;
Beatrice Bieber '65, Muncy;
Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Hartman '42, Sunbury
R.D.
Royersford;
Reading.
'47,
Volunteers are still needed to clip articles in the
following newspapers
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Pittsburgh Press
News, Huntingdon
Centre Daily Times, State CoUege
Evening Sentinel, Carlisle
Lebanon Daily News
The Patriot, Harrisburg
Patriot-News, Harrisburg
Sun-Gazette, Willi amsport
The Grit, Williamsport
Times-Tribune, Selinsgrove
Standard-Speaker, Hazleton
Carbondale News
Times-Herald, Norristown
Phoenix, Phoenixville
Forest City News
Scranton Times
Scranton Tribune
Sunday Independent, Wilkes-Barre
The Record, Wilkes-Barre
Times-Leader, Wilkes-Barre
Citizen's Voice, Wilkes-Barre
Free Press, Quakertown
Glenside
News
Willow Grove Guide
Daily News, Philadelphia
Review, Philadelphia
Roxborough Times, Philadelphia
Local News, West Chester
1;
THE ALUMNI
QUARTERLY
Volume 83, Number 3
Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania
July 1983
McCormick
interim
chancellor
Dr. James H. McCormick, president of Bloomsburg
University since 1973, has been named to serve as interim chancellor of the new State System of Higher
Education. He will head the
Bloomsburg University,
new system, which
includes
June 30, 1984.
During the next year a search committee will look for
a permanent chancellor. Dr. McCormick has not
until
decided if he will be a candidate.
"Right now, my intention is to stay one year and then
return to Bloomsburg, " he said. He has been granted a
one-year administrative leave by the University
trustees.
Dr. McCormick said he is looking forward to the new
assignment.
"I am pleased to have the opportunity to serve in the
new system," he said. "It's a real challenge and an exciting time."
That challenge includes overseeing a budget of $400
million, 10,000
employees and
75,000 students, as well as
formulating policy for the new system.
J. Edwards Smith, chairman of the Board of Governor's search committee, said Dr. McCormick was unquestionably the best person for the job.
"Dr. McCormick is highly respected by the members
of our Commonwealth's higher education community for
his vision, his sensitivity
and his administrative abiliSmith said.
Robert Buehner, speaking for the University trustees,
said McCormick 's work over the past decade will make
ty,"
the transition a relatively easy one.
"We are in a strong position," Buehner said. "McCormick goes to Harrisburg with the support and best
wishes of the board. He has done an outstanding job serving Bloomsburg, and we are certain he will do an
outstanding job to get the
new
state
system estab-
lished."
The McCormick family will continue to live at
Buckalew Place, the president's home, during the next
year. His elder son, David,
Academy
entered the U.S. Military
at West Point on July 1. Douglas, 13, is a stu17,
dent in the Bloomsburg Area School District.
Dr. McCormick, a native of Indiana, Pa., served at
Shippensburg University as a professor and vice president for administration between 1965 and 1973.
N
£Z!^^u
G
~^
u
H.McCorm.ck
Human
building
located
^ m ^ Jm
^gn
tap
Serv.ces Center, a new classroom
between Bakeless Center for the
named acting president
for new Bloomsburg University
Dr. Larry W. Jones has been
named
acting president
Bloomsburg University until June 30, 1984. He has
served as provost and vice president for academic afof
fairs since 1981.
An
dean of the faculty from 1978-1981 and acting dean of the
School of Business and Economics from 1979-1981. He
held various administrative positions at Moorhead State
University between 1973 and 1978. In 1977-1978 he served
as assistant to the president and American Council on
Education Fellow in Academic Administration at
Oregon State University, while on sabattical from
Moorhead.
He earned his bachelor's degree
Oregon
in 1971.
junior high mathematics in Los Angeles
(1962-1963 and 1964-1965), senior high mathematics in
Eugene, Oregon (1966-1967) and junior high
mathematics in Eugene (1967-1968). From 1969 to 1971
he was a graduate teaching fellow in the Department of
Curriculum and Instruction of the College of Education
at the University of Oregon.
He subsequently was an assistant professor at
Moorhead State University (1971-1973), associate proMoorhead (1974-1976), visiting professor at
Oregon State University (1977-1978), and professor at
Eastern Montana College (1978-1981).
He is a member of a number of professional associations and has published numerous articles. He has been
active in the civic life of the communities in which he
has lived. His hobbies and interests include theatre,
reading, sailing and jogging.
fessor at
away'
gift
DR. LARRY W. JONES
message
Alumni
to
This important year of transition from Bloomsburg
State College to Bloomsburg University will offer many
challenges and new opportunities for your Alma Mater.
I am pleased to serve the University
during this important period in its history.
As acting president
It is my desire to work closely with all constituent
groups of the University
students, alumni, faculty,
support staff, trustees, and others
to continue the
significant progress of the institution accomplished by
the leadership of its fine presidents throughout the
—
—
at
He taught
his 'going
A
acting provost and vice president for academic af-
was expected to be selected by July 18.
Dr. Jones came to Bloomsburg from Eastern Montana
College, where he was academic vice president and
fairs
of
and
Com-
Jones
North Dakota
State University in 1962, a master's degree at North
Dakota in 1964, and a doctor's degree at the University
dr. james h. Mccormick
Humanities and Waller Administration Building
is June 1984
pletion date
years.
year
the
Academic and administrative decisons made
will
have long-reaching effects
Commonwealth
at large.
We
for our students
this
and
are continually striving
provide our region of this state with quality programs
and services which are made possible through your supto
port.
In this year of transition,
we hope each
of
you
will
—
support Bloomsburg University in some manner
perhaps by recommending a prospective freshman candidate, attending an alumni chapter meeting, sending us
new
idea, or attending an event.
Bloomsburg appreciates the faithful support of its
alumni and is eager to continue its relationship with
each of you. On behalf of Bloomsburg University, I look
forward to welcoming you back to your Alma Mater at
any time, but especially to Homecoming 1983 as we
begin a new era at Bloomsburg.
a
Blooms burg University
2
From
Alumni mailbox
the
Ann J. Jarrett '23 died on June 20. Born in Taylor. Pa.,
she was a daughter of the late John and Laura Evans Jarrett. She taught in Taylor Elementary School for 45 years.
She was a member of St. Luke's Episcopal Church in
Scranton and was a member of the Pennsylvania Retired
Teachers Association.
1905
Elizabeth (Mertz) Lesher '05 died on June 1 in the
Leader Nursing Home, Williamsport, where she had been
a resident for two and one half years.
Born in Point Township, Aug. 18, 1882, she was a
daughter of the late William H. and Emeline Moyer
Mertz. Her husband, Harold V., died in 1973.
She was a 1901 graduate of Northumberland High School
and was the oldest living alumnus of the school. She
taught in several of the township one-room schools, as
well as Mountain dale and Glasgow, Pa.
Mrs. Lesher was a member of Trinity Lutheran Church,
Point Township, and the Ladies Friendly Bible Class. She
served as teacher of the adult Sunday school class for
many years. She was also a member of the Point
Township Garden Club; charter member of the Northumberland Grange No. 218; and the BSC Alumni
Association.
Surviving are the following children, Charles M. of Northumberland, Miriam Hunter of Williamsport, Edith Rapchick of Olean, N.Y., and Theron S. of Charlestown, Ind. ;
15 grandchildren;
two great-grandchildren; and a
brother.
A
Boyd Mertz
of
Northumberland R.D. 2.
Delaware State represen-
son, Herbert A., a former
tative, died in 1972.
tennis player.
Dr. Margaret Bittner Parke '23, who donated $5,000 to
Alumni Association in 1980 to establish a perpetual
scholarship, died on May 30 while visiting relatives in
the
Louisiana. She resided in Brooklyn, N.Y., at the time of
her death.
The scholarship has been presented since 1981 to an
outstanding English major, which was Dr. Parke's
primary field of interest.
Born on January 6, 1901, in Mauch Chuck (Jim Thorpe),
Pa., Dr. Parke graduated from Bloomsburg in 1923, from
Pennsylvania State University in 1927 (B.A. degree), and
Teachers College of Columbia University with an M.A.
degree in 1930 and an Ed.D. degree in 1945.
1915
Shirley James Robbins '15 died on June 1 in Clemson.
South Carolina. He was born in Benton. Columbia County
Pennsylvania on January 14 1897
He was
a practicing attorney
in
Dobbs Ferry New
York, for forty years.
He was married to the late Bernice Beishline Robbins.
Surviving are his daughter, Dorothy Robbins Dedder of
Clemson, S.C.; one grandson and three great-grand-
Three brothers and four sisters also preceded her in
death.
Surviving is a sister, Harriet, with whom she lived.
While attending Bloomsburg University she was an avid
children.
While attending Bloomsburg he played the violin
and
of the orchestra. He was very studious and
took up the study of Spanish.
1910
was a member
Frank R. Adams
'10.
formerly of
St.
Johnsbury,
Vt.,
May 2 at Cottace Hospital. Woodsville, Vt. Funeral
services were held at Grace United Methodist Church,
St.
died on
Johnsbury.
1919
He was born in Rupert,
Pa. on September 20, 1891, son of
the late Samuel P. and Harriet M. Strausser
Adams.
He was a graduate of Dickinson College. Carlisle, and
attended the University of Vermont at Burlington.
Harriet K. (Golden)
Dunn
"19
died on
March
31, 1983.
He taught high school in Columbia County and
in
Culver. Indiana, before going to Vermont
where he was
superintendent of schools in the South Londonderry
Area,
Born in Hawley, Pa., she was the daughter of the late
Michael and Mary Ellen Hughes Golden.
Mrs. Dunn was a member of Queen of Peace Roman
Catholic Church in Hawley and its Altar and Rosary Society. She was a graduate of Hawley High School,
Class of
1915. She was an elementary school teacher for many
years, teaching third grade in Hawley and Scranton
Barton and
schools.
He was
a veteran of World
during WWII in 1944
His son, Graydon, was killed
I.
m Belgium.
Johnsbury. The Frank R. Adams ElemenJohnsbury, Vt. was named in his honor.
St.
tary School in
War
St.
Mr. Adams was
a
member
of
the
Grace United
Methodist Church. He was a past member
of the St
Johnsbury Rotary Club and a member of
the American
Legion Post 58 and Passumpsic Lodge No.
27, F&AM
He is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Arthur
(June)
Sydow, Mentor. Ohio; Mrs. Richard
(Frances) Stone
Hanover. N.H.; six grandchildren; a
niece.
Harriet
Adams, Bloomsburg. Pa. and a number of cousins.
;
Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Mary Margaret
Hollenbach, Rinebeck, N.Y.; one son, John M. Dunn,
Pittsburgh; six grandchildren; several nieces
and
nephews.
Mary
A. Hess "19 died recently. She had been hospital-
ized for several weeks.
Miss Hess had been a resident of Trevorton Road all her
She was a retired schoolteacher, having taught in
Pennsylvania schools for 42 years. Most of her teaching
life.
1913
Ina
Surplus ) Moorehead 13 died on June 2 She and
her
husband. Curtis G. Moorehead, who died in 1968, owned
a
grocery business in Scranton for more
than 40 years.
Before that, she was a teacher and
(
'
.
principal
at
Gouldsboro ( Pa High School.
Mrs. Moorehead was born in Gouldsboro,
a daughter of
the late Robert and Josephine Cross
Surplus. She was a
member of Simpson Methodist Church, and Annette
Chapter 10. Order of Eastern Star, both of
Scranton,
where she was a past worthy matron.
Surviving are a brother, Carl Surplus of
Bangor, Pa.
.
)
and several nieces and nephews.
MARGARET BITTNER PARKE '23
Born in Trevorton, Aug. 4, 1899, she was a daughter of
the late Harvey L. and Flora Clemens Hess.
career was in the Trevorton School District.
She was a 1917 graduate of Trevorton High School. She
was a member of Christian and Missionary Alliance
Church, Elysburg.
Miss Hess is survived by one sister, Mrs. Stella Berger
of Trevorton Road, Shamokin R.D. 1, and one
brother,
Dr
Chester C. Hess of Indiana, Pa.
While a student at BSC, she was very active
curricular affairs and
was
in extraparticularly interested in good
penmanship.
Of her time at Bloomsburg, she wrote: "I had been at
Bloomsburg for only one year and two summers, but that
was the precious time that determined the course my life
would take. It never ceases to impress on me what
the
right kind
of education can mean. The influence
of
Bloomsburg runs throughout my life."
Dr. Parke was active for over 50 years
as an educator
and author. Prior to retirement she was
a professor of
education at Brooklyn College of the
City University of
New York.
She was presented with many awards,
including the
Distinguished Service Award of the
Bloomsburg Universi-
Alumni Association in
"Who's Who of American
ty
1973.
She was recognized
Women" and
in
several other
publications.
1923
On December 24, 1937, she married Roger
I. Parke a
commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve until his death'in
1968.
1914
Leah B. (Bogart) Lawton "14 and her husband,
George
celebrated their 67th wedding anniversary
11
on May
of the First Presbyterian Church
of
Berwick and its Sanctuary Choir. They have
two living
daughters and five grandchildren. Their
address is
Both are members
Berwick, Pa. 18603.
Mildred M. (Hess) Harrington '23 died on May 8. She
in Benton on November 9, 1898, the daughter of
the late Cyrus and Elizabeth Cole Hess.
She taught school for five years in the Benton area and
five years in Irving, N.J. She was a member of the
Brandon United Methodist Church, a member of the Grass-
was born
RD
'
1'
mere Garden Club and
the
Columbia County Home-
makers.
Surviving are a daughter, two sons, nine grandchildren,
two great-grandchildren and two brothers.
In "International Who's Who
of Intellectuals" are summarized her aims and ambitions: "To
live a useful life, to
teach and guide, to search for better
answers to educational problems, to write books,
to develop school and colege curricula, and thus contribute
to the improvement of
teaching and supervision of teaching "
Memorial contributions may be sent to the
Bloomsburg
University Alumni Association to
be added to the scholarship fund which she established.
(Continued on Page 4)
Alumni Quarterly
Distinguished Service Awards
^
3Sl£££fe«*«* ~*«
the
^7
Before joining ,k.
»
the Bloomsburg
faculty
Sy
ye"s
a
in I960
Dr
He has received several awards in
recognition of his
contributions to the field of medicine.
He is a member of
Phi Kappa Phi, Alpha Omega
i,liamsport
BuckneU he also ^"ght as an
assistanTn
assistant
nf
professor
of economics
Since joining the faculty
as an instructor in 1960
he
has been promoted to
assistant professor (1%2,
The
1948 to recognize alumni
at
'
Awards
who have excelled
I
in
a nL*
S
the University
as secr etary, treasurer,
vice president and board member
of the former BSC
Facuitv
a
h
3
f
a?dp!
and
Pi Omega
Ome P Pi (national honorary °
fraternities) and a
number of state and national
business assSatSs He
was the speaker for this
year's Awards Convocation
at
w£5
,w aT*
\f ^
He and
his wife, the
many
articles to textbooks
He
and journals
The James H. Sterner Professorship"
in the Department of Medicine at the University
of Rochester
Medical Center was established by the
board of trustees
on November 14, 1979. The chair
honors
^ Slion
r
Alpha, and Cosmos.
has contributed
to
) an (1975 >to
his teaching assignments,
he has served as assistant
to
,dent (1965- 197 ° and
P
197M972 '" an
o
sum r sessions and continuing
summer
education .1972-1973
Ts\e^T
D lstingulshed Servjce
«t 3354-0
at
He
his service to
and
Eastman Kodak Company
*** former Patric,a L Hudson
uve
Monte Hermoso, Laguna Hills. California
92653
to the
-
the father of three children
by a prior marriage
(A complete listing of Dr. Sterner
's accomplishments
«
is
can be found on page 3171 of Who's
Who in America
Presenting the Distinguished Service
Award to Dr
Sterner was a contemporary. Edward
)
F. Schuyler. Class
former Mary M. Sauers
are th P
Mark Kilian. a graduate of
parents of two children:
and Moira Ann (Dee,, a student
B oomsburg. They reside at 7
York Road
at
in
Bloomsburg.
Presenting the award to
Dr. Creasy was Dr
Jr., Class of 1951, dean
of the College-of
Rang
Dr.
Emorv
SSu.
James H. Sterner
A native of Bloomsburg. Dr. Sterner
graduated from
Bloomsburg State Normal School
in 1925 and then
earned his bachelor's degree at
The Pennsylvania State
University in 1928.
He received
his
medical degree
at
Harvard Medical School in 1932. He
was house officer at
New England Deaconess Hispital in
Boston (1931-1932)
interned at Lankenau Hospital,
Philadelphia (1932-1934,
and was chief resident (1934-1936,.
next
32 years he was filiated
with Eastman
x^r*
Kodak Company, Rochester, N.Y.,
various
in
DR.
JAMES B. CREASY
57
A native of Bloomsburg. Dr. Creasy received his
bachelor's degree in business education
at Bloomsburg
He earned his Master of Science degree in
business administration at Bucknell
University in 1960
In 1974 he received a Doctor of
in 1957.
Education degree from
The Pennsylvania State University. His
dissertation was
entitled,
"A
Descriptive Analysis of the Full-Time
Teaching Faculty in Pennsylvania's Colleges
and
Universities." The study included
personal,
demographic, and professional characteristics
of 21,228
members in 118 colleges and universities. The
study was arranged around six crucial
issues facing
faculty
higher education: tenure, faculty
rank, work, age, inbreeding and
mix by academic
discrimination.
roles'
director of industrial medicine
(193M9, associate
d re Ct0r ,194 9- 1951 ».
medical director
n9^?cL i H W3S ah0
,
associated with the University
if
o
of Rochester School
of Medicine as an instructor
of industrial medicine and toxicology
(1940-1951,. associate
professor of medicine (1951-1958,,
and clinical associate
professor of medicine (1958-1968,.
He also taught
^d
?
VT
preventive medicine and community
health (1951-1968,
In 1968 he moved to Houston
to become a professor of
environmental/occupational health at the
University of
Texas School of Public Health.
Since 1976 he has been
clinical professor of occupational
medicine at the
University of California College
of Medicine at Irvine
He has served on numerous national
and international
advisory bodies concerned with
ui
of
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Published four times a year for alumni
and
friends of Bloomsburg University
by the
Alumni Association
medicolegal board for Operations
Crossroads (Bikini experiment, in 1946.
11
in 1956. his
elementary education with
major
Umversity of
™X ^
m
elemendegree
in
E
M^d
enaohSmsS
Z
K
hQman
devel °Pment education
and
UniVGrSlty 0f
im.
He
professional career as a hearing
and
speech therapist with the
Allegheny County SchooTin
Pittsburgh 1956-1%! and
,.
UiSi moved
«^?i
a
1,00
t^h
JL ^?
1
,
to the
Mm
gomery County Public Schools,
where he has been a
speech and
At your service:
Doug Hippenstiel
THOMAS J. 0 TOOLE '56
DR.
Dr. O'Toole earned his
bachelor's degree
tary education at Bloomsburg
industrial medicine toxicology, radiation protection,
cancer control, occupational and environmental
health. He was a member
toe interim medical advisory
board for the Manhattan
tt-oject of the Atomic Energy
Commission (1945-1947)
and a member of the radiological
safety section and
hearing therapist (1961-1963).
supervisor of
speech and hearing programs
(1963-1967
and
'68
1968-1969)
(1969-1973). director ofsuiUCati ° n 31,(1 SCrV1CeS
1973-1977). director
<
ofmulti-facihty programs (1977-1978).
of
and director of
special education and
related services
1981-presenU
Dr. O'Toole is a fellow
of both the Maryland
Director of Alumni Affairs
ZlS ^
Peggy Trathen
i
Alumni Office Secretary-Bookkeeper
Z
1
'
I
Linda
Long
Alumni Records Clerk
American Speech and Hearing
Association. He received
C3te ° f C
C31 com P*ence in
speech pamXgy
.
fro^'
from the national
unit and honors from
toe Maryland
J.
Jane Dildine
Assistant Alumni Office Secretary
Eric
Writer (Green
Kim McNally
T
w
r
^ ?
York and
-
cil
Katherine Mulka '68
Alumni Chapters Coordinator
3 COnsultanl
^^^on
3tl0nal
.
0
DisorteS^
S Of
*** of New
^
With Co
"
^ca^n
The educator has written
numerous
Students
U
10
in
ad-
State Directors of
He has also been active in the Counfor Exceptional Children
and is now president-elect
ia
Special
Education
Writer-Composition Editor
JohnHaney
Dwayne Heisler
Linda Kammerdiener
^e
1982
^ ***
Thumb Program)
77
Debbie Blyler
Kerry Boll
^
HC h3S
extrerae,
in
aTha serving on various committees y a
ASHA,
and panels
leadership roles. He has
served on state and national
the
*e
Strom
articles for
publication and has presented
many scholarly papers at
conferences throughout the
country
31,(1
Wife Mary are
Wenis of three
Lou Maslowe
Scott Righter
Stephanie Stewart
Jeff Smith
ma
xx^r
£?
ide at 217
^
Romng Ro3d
G
-
Presenting the award to Dr.
O'Toole was
DR. JAMES H. STERNER
'25
3
y Maiers a member of the 50-year class
former colleague of Dr. O'Toole.
(
~-
Mary
1933,
g
.
Better-
and a
4
Bloomsburg University
Continued from Page 2
(
>
'35 was honored on July
judging the Millville Independence Day
Parade for the past 30 consecutive years. Woody was
presented an engraved plaque just before the start of the
83rd Annual Parade. Woody is married to the former Jane
Fahringer '31. Their address is 2000 N. Vine St., Berwick,
Wood row (Woody) Brewing ton
1929
1924
Virginia (Dawe) Welker *29 and her husband, Asher,
recently celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary.
Mrs.
Asher retired from teaching in 1973. Mr. Welker has been
Anna (Cawthern) Bressler "24 died on AprU
29 in
Ashland State General Hospital where she had
been a patient for four weeks.
Bom in Shamokin, Sept. 27, 1903, she was a daughter of
the late George and Fannie ( Parker Cawthern.
She was a resident of Kulpmont most of her
three children and six grandchildren. They
Ridge Ave.,Sunbury, Pa. 17801.
life. Mrs
Bressler was a retired school teacher and
taught in Kulpmont and York school districts. She was married
to the
late Howard Bressler.
Mrs. Bressler was a member of First Methodist
Church
Kulpmont, and the Retired Teacher's Association
live at 229
1937
Lou Peck
ment.
Year" and was
awarded a bronze plaque mounted on teakwood. At last
count he had over 1600 hours for his two and a quarter
years of service. His wife, Claire, has worked with the
multiple handicapped for more than 16 years. She works
at the North Country Learning Center for Down's Syndrome children. The Pecks live at 2 Parish Court, Stony
degree
Brook, N.Y. 11790,
qualified in 1982 as "Volunteer of the
'31
died on
May 30.
in Forrestport,
M^S-^SSmm ^^^St^S^^
Bloomsburg
in education from Bucknell
University in 1954, and
doctorate in 1956 from Pennsylvania
State University
He
ht
and was principal of the Mount Pleasant
Township School from 1931 through 1933
and was princl P al of
Fifth Street School in Bloomsburg
from
1934-41. He had retired in 1971
iQ7i after
a «0 r a
„ career
. as an
educator in the Willingboro, Pennsbury
and Levittown
school districts, and had been
instrumental in the opening
of the Clara Barton School in
Bristol Township.
™
last
residence was in Middletown,
^^
™
^
tennis
Her
Md
1925
Mr. Pennington was a member of the
Pennsylvania
Retired Teachers Association,
the Retired Teachers
Aviation of Bucks County, the American Association
of
etlred Persons and tne National
Education Association
Gladys R. Stecker '25 died on April 30 at the
Wilmington
Medical Center. She was 77 years old.
Miss
Stecker was a
£e was a We member
of BPOE
native of Bloomsburg and, after graduating
No. 436, Bloomsburg the
from BSC, at- J?
tended Rutgers University and Glassboro
C Grant Bnttingham Lodge No. 788
State College
F&AM- Ancient AcShe taught at the Penns Grove-Cameys
cepted
Sottish Rite,
— Valley
'
of Bloomsburg
uiuu
Point elementary
J vt
Caldwell Consistory,
schools, retiring in 1964. She lived
mt°ry, and was a 32 degree Mason,
Mason.
at Penns Grove N J at
the time of her death.
Surviving are his wife, the former
Ruth O'Connor- four
sons: James, W. Harry and
Larry W., all of Dallas Tex
Maynard J. Jr.. Levittown; two
daughters: Sally Lou
t
,
O
Hazel E HoM '27 of Elysburg
R.D. 1 died on June 11
She resided her entire life in
the house in which she
was
born m RaJpho Township.
Northumberland County
,ate
WaJter
Hannahi
e
htf
tgradeattte
h
W
^
:
^
EJvsbur?n„S^
Me
-
^.etv^f^h ^h
T«2L T
rS
.
^
i
311(1
3
member
Tu^™ * * ™
Wfl<5
&
^
Irnnom f«
of
^
Helen (Dunleavy, McManus '27
died recently. Born in
Carmel Aug. 30, 1906, she was
a daughter of the late
Francis and Mary (Kelly)
Dunleavy
Mrs. McManus was a schoolteacher
until retiring in 1970
g
from Spotswood (N.J.) Elementary
School
She was educated in Mt.
Carmel schools While at"* W3S 3
<* ^e Senior
ML
lif^^^f
of
"
aform er member
of
Churchof Our
Lady, Mt. Carmel. Her husband,
Albert McManus, died
'
e
"
J*™:
was
-
Ameha (Mattem)
was
Margaret E. (Rhodes) Artley '39 reports that she completed 26 years in the classroom in 1981. She is
retired and
lives with her husband on their farm
in
Franklin
Township. The Artleys are the parents of three
daughters
Two, Dazimae (Artley) Carmo '66 and Kennee
(Artley)
Moyle 75 are Bloomsburg alumnae. The Artleys
3, Box 468, Catawissa, Pa. 17820.
live at
R.D.
Clark.
elementary teacher
in
the Line
1940
Miles G. Smith '40 died on April 15
was 65 years of age.
Mr. Smith was born March
in
21, 1918, in
Tyrone, Pa. He
Berwick, the son
of Millard
and Helen ( Mensinger (Smith
his master's degree in
education from
Bucknell University and taught 36'*
years at Clearfield
High School, where he was head of the math
department
Mr Smith was a member of Trinity United Methodist
Church, where he was a member of the
administrative
board and taught the men's Sunday
school class and the
young people's class.
He received
H e W3S
3 member of toe Clearfield Lodge
No. 314
member and past exalted ruler of BPOE Lodge
a member of the board of
directors of Demolav
r &AM,
» A ,,
r
a
No.
540,
v.ce president of the
Clearfield Republican Party a
member of the Clearfield Zoning Board,
secretary for the
board of directors of Clearfield
Hospital
n
f^ittStwSEZ
•_*«•, „
PfiliratoH at
.
"kt
"o««-iauuii.
,
attending Bloomsburg she
was interested in athleticsand
was a member of the Rural
Life Club
She was preceded
in
death by her husband
Nathan D
19 1976 Survivoi^
mdude two
^^ ^
I^'a^X^^
M
^^ento,
st^n
Wh<
'
'
;
,
fs
°°
3t h °me
°
™L^r
number J meces ^ d "ephews.
3
f
of
'
a sister
>
and an Army Air
Force veteran of World War 1 1
Mr Smith was basketbaU coach at
Clearfield High
School for 15 years and was the
first person to be honored
by the school as teacher of the
year
He was married to the former Lola
Brown, who survives
with two daughters. Judith
K. Smith, Atlanta, Ga.. and
Mrs. Dante (Jean) Filetti,
Charleston. S.C.; a granddaughter. Mara Smith Filetti;
and a sister Mrs Robert
(Jean) Pritchard. Worcester
Mass
Pa., along with
1941
1 935
in
Survivors include a son,
Joseph, Hillsborough Township. NJ.; a daughter,
Mrs. Eileen Baldwin N J
a
aster Mrs. Catherine McFadden,
Mt. Carmel- a brother
Frank Dunleavy, and two
grandchildren
S (C,a rk) Schwalm '31 died
recently. She had
,
anUary 80171 h ^gerstown.
Upper
i on July 30,
Township,
1912, she was the daughter
§
D^el and
JJp
M
'
-
S'lr
7
If£?^
National
oil
3nd Susan C Aver
*- Levittown; 15
great-grandchildren; two stepsons.
Connor, Middlesex,
tJ£?^
-
"
as She
^P
'
six
N.J.; a stepdaughter Laurel
N
u Connor, Levittown, and four stepgrandchildren.
°Township
yearS
W3S a merab€r <*
0diS Church and
^e Missionary
th
piSarTy
5,
^M
a
'a
grandchildren
1939
•
'
1927
reports that he keeps busy in his retireweek at the State
Hospital Pharmacy in Stony Brook. He
'37
volunteers about 20 hours a
he was an educator and a former
resident of Bloomsburg before
moving to Levittown 16
years ago.
Mr. Pennington graduated in 1931 from
Mrs. Bressler came from Kulpmont and
was a graduate
Mount Carmel High School. Known as
"Annie" while
bsc.
player.
He
University
Maynard J. Pennington
Born
)
in
Pa. 18603.
1931
Survivors include a sister, Miss Fannie
Cawthern
Baltimore, Md.; a brother, George
Cawthern, Baltimore'
Md., and several nieces and nephews.
Uwrlotte Irene (Zearfoss Johnson '24 died on
AprU 21.
bhe was born on June 9. 1905. She came from
Mountaintop
Pa. While attending BSC she became
an excellent
work
banking business for 50 years. The Welkers have
in the
)
of
4 for his
J*!!*"?.
^^
10 "
^J
*
The Honorable John E. Lavelle '«
was recently aDpomted to the board of trustees
^*
ot the
of tte Northeastern
He r«*"«y a on a
e Blooms burg recycling facility.
^,°
His address
J?
North
?°
^f
f
902
Authori
Ninth Street, Selinsgrove, Pa. 17870.
(^odTZritan
Moomsburg Umveraty's Dirtngulshed
Service Award
in
is
1942
-SSnS
a
r
re„rt
in
l,^
^
"
He was an Army veteran
of World War
II
^ ^te^^ ^ ^
U
lownsbip.
p
Hee was
M ^hodist Church,
a volunteer for the
(Continued on Page 6)
Alumni Quarterly
Vincent Price returning
'Alumni Memories'
Many
memories flood the mind
and soul
when walking through our
alma mater
where learning was our
goal.
The walkway
Vincent Price
lions, quiet at last
*
The fund was established at Bloomsburg
State
Teachers College in 1958 using
a $1,500 gift from Verna
S 3 U
US Twent y- five years later,
"
the colipaJ has
I
u
tege
become
Bloomsburg University, and the endow
ment fund has grown to approximately
$80 000
Mrs Jones made the original donation
on behalf of
and Dan> ah0 a raduate of
^e Class of
«
Voi It
u was whis wish
1936.
that a gift be made to the
college
and in making the donation to
start an endowed artists
and lecture fund, Mrs. Jones
Where have all our classrooms
gone'
Long Porch, I ggy s gravei
dorm9
Supplanted! Progress marches
on.
^
-
Long lawns of green seem
smaller
vanished the sunset view
of Carver Tower
because they've razed old
'
Waller.
If one could find
a hall intact,
would memories of stone
and' brick
be quite enough to call
us back?
Times spent with good,
25 years
returnine tn
returning
oc
Ri™mch..,.„ 25
to Bloomsburg.
years
Uege hist0ry as the first /"est
of the
f
PnH
Tit
Endowed
Artists and Lecture Fund.
pass.
'
after
is
r
placed on indoor pedestals,
they'
dare not roar as virgins
beckon us
Bloom
to
Edwin Markham
recalled the visit of poet
to the campus while she
and her husband were students.
The endowment, begun in
1958. had trebled then
quadrupled by the end of 1960. By
1965. it had grown to
more han $20,000; by the end of
1974, the balance was
almost $55,000^ Now, thanks to
continuing donationsvestments, and contributions
from the college Community Activities Fund, there
is almost $80,000 in
the fund to
be used to bring "famous
figures on the Educational
Artistic and Uterary Worlds"
to the Bloomsburg cam-
old friends
to
reminisce on teacher
classes, fun-time's precious
dividends.
Bloomsburg, by any name, we
share with pride
he d closely in a bond of
friendship strong
with colors of maroon and
gold securely tied
This year's schedule of events,
selected by members
Community Arts Council with Ted
Shanoski
director of Cultural Affairs, is
highlighted by the return
of actor Vincent Price for
a three-day residency with the
College-Community Orchestra Nov. 11-13.
The fall series of events begins with the
Paratore
Brothers piano duo. who will
perform in concert in Haas
Center on Sept. 22 at 8:15 p.m.
of the
80 percent
of 1982 grads
are employed
The second fall event will be the
Riverboat Ragtime
Revue at Haas on Oct. 8 at 8:15 p.m..
followed by the
Gerald O'Niel Lecture Series on the
Carver Hall stage
on Oct. 21 at 2 p.m.
The Pittsburgh Chamber Orchestra
will open the
spring semester at Haas Center
on Feb. 5 at 2 30 p
Following will be Will Stutts' one-man
theater in Carver
Hall on Feb. 22 at 8:15 p.m.
The Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble
and Pittsburgh
com P lete ^e spring schedule on March
RfTf
18 at 2:30 pjn.
Alumni can purchase a Community Patrons
Card
"season ticket" at a reduced rate of
$15 for the year
(Tickets to all these events would
cost $58 if purchased
m
Bloomsburg University graduates of the
class of 1982
did not find the job market as
tough as they had expected^Their placement rate of 80 percent
compares
favorably with marks recorded hy
four previous classes
rep ° rt f0r last year
»k
Too,
mat
891 are meaningfully
'
s
U27
^
graduates shows
or professionally employed
in a position that re-
Seven hundred sixty are employed
quires a.college degree, 102 are
in graduate school. 29
are in the service, and 207 are
seeking jobs or are
underemployed. No information was
available on 15
separately.)
VINCENT PRICE
graduates and 14 were not available
for employment
A year ago, the report gave a placement
rate of 82 8
percent of the graduates of 1981;
in 1980, the percentage
was
82.2; in 1979, 84.1,
and
"Considering the adverse economic conditions
and the
University Placement Council's not
so bright' employment outlook for college grads, we're very
pleased with
our graduate employment picture."
Tom Davies. director of career development,
commented. "We thought it
might fall below 80 percent in 1982, but
our students
worked extra hard to get positions."
A placement
rate of 100 percent was reported for
the
114 students in the communication
disorders, nursing '
dental hygiene, public school nursing,
and radiologic
technology programs. Over 90 percent
was reported for
medical technology (95.6) and special
education (91 5)
Business administration had the
highest number of
graduates placed (359), which was
total 432. Business
83.6 percent of the
Education placed 85.4, 32 out of 38
Teacher education areas, particularly
elementary
education, continue to be slow. Of the total
103 elementary education grads, 32 received
in-state teaching positions and nine out-of-state jobs,
while seven are continuing their education, and eight others
are meaningful
employed for a total percentage of 56.0. Early
Childhood
Education placed 25 of its 37 grads for 67.5
percent.
Although the secondary education area had
fewer
graduates,
it
Katherine Fisher earns
her doctorate at age 55
in 1978, 80.3.
fared considerably better at 73 percent
employment of its 26 total grads.
The Arts and Sciences curriculum was second
in
number of graduates at 269. One hundred eighty-eight
were employed for 72.1 percent. The comparatively
new
major of mass communications had the most grads in
Arts and Sciences with 47. of which 37 have been
employed (80 percent).
AllAnnnfr n ^4 «l.
The ffollowing
article was written by Pat
Parker of the
Press-Enterprise, Bloomsburg, and
appeared in the
i
4 issue of the
A
great
.
Mav
Berwick Enterprise.
many
students will graduate on the 15th
of
this month from Bloomsburg
State College - most of
teem in their early 20s. But this year is
a first, both for
BSC and for one particular graduate, who at
age 55
is
believed to be the oldest student to
receive a master's
degree in the school's history, according
to the records
of
Bernice Long of the graduate department.
The degree to be awarded is an MA in
Communication
Katherine Fisher of Mifflinville, whose
overall grade
is 3.83 and includes all
As throughout her
major - proof that age is no barrier
to ability and
to
point average
determination.
Kay is the daughter of Ethel Chapin of
Berwick, and
the late George Chapin. She got
her undergraduate
degree from BSC in 1950, and always
wanted to continue
her education, but after her
marriage, she moved to
Kankakee. 111., for several years, then
back to Pennsylvania near Valley Forge, where
she became involved
in all the activities surrounding
the rearing of three
children.
Eventually, she accepted an executive
position with
National Ministries, American Baptist
Churches there
serving as assistant-director of the
Mission Interpretation
Department.
Her work included a great deal of writing
and editing,
a field that she discovered was what she
really liked to
do, so with her children
well on the way to being grown
she apphed for and was
awarded a graduate assistantship at BSC, and returned
to this area to realize
at last
ner dream of continuing her
education
*
Kay's oldest son, Millard Fisher
Methodist minister
in
m, is now a
Lancaster. Her daughter
Shan
Kay who will be married May 21 to
Timothy Ambrogi
a Vulanova graduate, from
Berwyn. soon expects to
sign a contract as a band
vocalist; and son
Spencer a
Columbia High's "Godspell" earlier
graduate in June
With Dr. Walter M. Brash, author
of six books, as her
advisor, Kay really worked
for her degree, supporting
herself m part by tutoring a
writing lab for undergraduates and substitute teaching
in secondary schools
ui Berwick, Bloomsburg
and Central Columbia, but now
hopes to find permanent employment
in a field where
sue can continue using her
writing
guitarist for Central
this year, will
talents.
She has an article currently
appearing in the May
Sunday Digest, has a feature story in the
current Alumni Quarterly
and is completing
issue of
a multi-media
script for the Northumberland
County Juvenile Court
System. (In her spare time, she is
also teacher of the
adult Sunday School Class at
First United Methodist
Church in Berwick.
All of which proves, it's
never too late to go back to
school
to share with others what
you've learned
through living
or follow a dream that got
temporarily
sidetracked in the mainstream
of life.
-
-
6
Bloomsburg University
(Continued from Page
warehousing program
4
work release program of Lehigh County Prison and Good
Shepherd Home and Rehabilitation Center, Allentown, for
the last several years.
He and
his wife, the
former M. Virginia Arbogast,
observed their 36th wedding anniversary
last
June.
Surviving, in addition to his wife, are a son, William L.
in
the state of Pennsylvania.
a comprehensive high school in
He is currently finishing his se-
cond year at Truman High School.
Gobora has been president of the Bucks County
Business Education Educators Association and secretarytreasurer of the Bucks County Cooperative Education
Coordinators
Association.
He
is
presently
recording
Co bum, Centre County; a daughter, Cynthia F„ at secretary of St. Peter and Paul Orthodox
Catholic Church.
home; two brothers, Paul, Cressona, and Claude R., EmA native of Danville, he graduated from high sohool
maus; a sister, Arlene Christ, Montoursville, Lycoming there in 1946. He majored in
business education at
County; and a grandson.
Bloomsburg.
Warren was also a retired educator, being a graduate of
Gobora is president of the Philadelphia Chapter of
Kutztown University and Perm State University.
Bloomsburg University Alumni. His wife, the former Conof
nie Stanko, is also a native of Danville
and is a 1952
Bloomsburg graduate. She was recently elected to a
three-year term on the Alumni Association
Board of
1943
Directors.
A daughter, Kim, graduated from Bloomsburg in May
been elected to the Board of and was president of her class. The Goboras
are also the
Directors of the Life Underwriters Political Action
Com- parents of two sons, Harry in and Edward. The family
mittee of Pennsylvania. Magill holds a master's
degree lives at 19 Jonquil Lane in Levittown.
from Bucknell University. He has also completed the
Purdue University Life Insurance Marketing courses,
the
Purdue University Pension and Profit Sharing course
and
Life Insurance Agency Management Association
Schools.
His address is R.D. 1, Sugarloaf, Pa. 18249.
Andrew
F. Magill '43 has
1952
Former
1947
Harold W. Swisher
'47 is retiring at
after 36 years of teaching
the end of July 1983
and administrating at Warwick
High School. Harold's address
is
234
Owl Hill Road
Pa. 17543.
S.
was
in-
of the Detroit Pistons recently. He
built his
reputation as an assistant with the Philadelphia
76ers. Chuck says his goal is to make the
playoffs. His address is 1153 Sea Gull Lane, Cherry Hill,
N.J. 08003
NBA
JOAN & ROD KELCHNER
RODNEY KELCHNER
'56,
'56
has been appointed by Gov.
Thornburgh
James Babcock
was recently appointed an associate
Mahanoy City, Mahanoy Township
Regional Board. Jim is a principal in the
Nelson T. Davis
director
Remley,
'52,
named coach
Lititz '
1948
Reginald
basketball standout, Chuck Daly
ducted into Bloomsburg University's
Athletic Hall of
Fame on May 1. Chuck has enjoyed success coaching
basketball at Duke University, Boston College
and the
University of Pennsylvania. He was a
member of the
PRISM and TV Channel-17 broadcast team until being
Remley
live at
Route
2,
and his wife, Pattie Bowman
Box 2092, Gap, Pa. 17527. Remley
'48
'52
the
of
Agency. His address
a retired school district superintendent.
His last assignthe Pequea Valley School District.
The Remleys
have four children and five grandchildren.
Remley was
named Lion of the Year" and belongs to
BPOE 436 and
the Pennsylvania Retired
Superintendents Association
is
is
35 East Spruce St.,
Mahanoy
Pa. 17948.
Citv
J'
president since Dr. Janet Travis
left the post to become
assistant commissioner for higher education in
charge of
community college system,
A 20-year veteran of Mansfield, Kelchner has served
the state's
as
ment was
a history professor, coach, assistant dean of men,
and
dean of student affairs. For the past three years he
served
as dean of development and external relations.
1954
'
to serve as president of Mansfield
University
of Pennsylvania, effective July 1. He had
been acting
In the latter position he has been
involved in all phases
of the school's operations, including
At the 195th annual conference
of the Central Pennsylvania Conference of the
United Methodist Church
1950
W. Leonard Carson '54 was
issued
membership. Rev. Carson
~—
is
_
Harry J. Gobora, Jr. '50 has been named Teacher
Year by the senior class at Harry S. Truman High
of the
School
„
r ge
,
°\
io
^ ™ty
*
Rev
full
the
me
serving
aci
vuig
United Methodist Church.
He
degree from Lancaster
Dlv
^
conference
ZZ7e
r orks\
received
Theoloeical
Seminary in 1982. The conference
Township.
was held on the
BIoom
Gobora has been an educator for 33 years, with
sburg
University. Receiving
24 years °!
ordination as
deacon at the same conference
of serv.ce in Bristol Township.
was the Rev
clZ
in Bristol
Kimber
D
alumni relations
public relations, athletics, grants, contracts
and continuing education.
In that capacity, Kelchner feels he
won the support and
respect of all segments of the college community.
"As a faculty member, I maintained ties with
them
And the trustees are people I worked with
and feel very
comfortable with. I have a good rapport,"
he said
"Following Dr. Travis' new job announcement,
the
Alumni Association took the lead and wrote
a letter of
support for me. followed by an open
endorsement from the
Faculty Association, student organizations
and the board
of trustees.
1956
James Nicholas
'56 died on May 10.
He was 46 years old
principal of Lake-Lehman High
School. He colapsed at the monthly school board
meeting and was
transferred to Nesbitt Memorial
Hospital where
He was
pronounced dead.
Born in Plymouth, Nicholas was
the son
Leslie and Catherine Robbins
Nicholas. He
of
Lake-Lehman School District High School
he was
of the late
was principal
and taught at
Kingston High School before the
jointure and
Wyoming
Valley West after the jointure.
He was public relations
director for Wyoming Valley West
six years and directed
all the musicals for the
district. He also directed
musicals
for the Jewish Community
Center. Another six years was
spent as a radio announcer for
a local station
He received his master of arts at New
York University
and presently was studying for his
doctorate at Perm State
University.
HARRY GOBORA JR. '50
He is presently
a teacher-coordinator in the
Cooperative
Education Program. During his tenure
with the district
he has helped hundreds of young
people and adults secure
posUions in the "World of Work."
In his many contacts
with the business community,
he has acted as a leader in
forging the excellent school
district-business relationship
During his 24-year tenure in the Bristol
Township School
District he has taught 16
years at Wilson High School
served as supervisor of business
education for the district
0
re
31
four years at Demaas High
\ Delhaas
School. While at
High School he initiated the first
£l^
^
^J
^
He was listed in "Who's Who in the East"
and also was a
member of Wilkes College Chapter of Phi
Delta Kappa
He was a member of Kingston
Council, the Church of
Chrnt Uniting, Kingston, and a
member of its parish
council. He was on the board
of Child Development, president of Wyoming Valley
football conference and
president of the wrestling conference
Surviving are his wife, the former
Jessie
^
vice
Watkins; sons
r at
y omin g Valley West, and Brian'
m*?' at Child Development,
employed
both at home
Jim Nicholas was highly regarded
L
I
my behalf."
W
and the community, reflected
in the school district
euE
in very nice
written by Mary Ann Kelly,
associate editor o The Dallas
Post, and Lee L. Richards,
sports writer
had the four main constituencies acting
on
As president, Kelchner hopes to keep
the
communication open.
"You need to meet with and talk with
lines
of
students. That's
very important. Most
of them know who I am You
can't
function in a school like this if you
avoid your key groups "
After graduating from Bloomsburg
High School and
Bloomsburg University, he taught
at Millersburg Area
High School for eight years. He
received a master's
degree in history at Bucknell University
Kelchner lives in Covington, a few
miles south of
campus
with his wife, the former
Joan Laubach of
Bloomsburg. They are parents of four
children Amy 25Matthew, 24; Mindy, 22; and Ted, 20.
:
1957
Rod
C.
Folimer
'57
was recently promoted
tion of vice president of the
Citizens
Rod
to the posi-
Savings Association
when Northeast Sav-
joined the association in
1980,
ings and Loan merged with
Citizens.
He is a former member and
chairman of the Wayne Industrial Development
Authority, as well as former
treasurer of the Honesdale Area
Pool Association He is
b^LT^T™
an
£ aendovvment
Ac
Association,
member
^.
member
of the Pike
^
of the National Rifle
of the Honesdale Elks
Lodge 2228
and the Fraternal Order of
Eagles. He is marked to
the
former Connne Pentecost.
The Follmers have three
children, Kim, Mark, and
Bonnie.
His address is 5 Crestmont
Drive, Honesdale,
Pa. 18431.
(Continued on Page 8)
Alumni find
contributions
in attics
B S N S Quarter1
^
^\7Z
K
dated September,
3).
'
'V^e
1.
Number
1894, has been presented
toTe
University archives by Lois
Pfahler Jones, Class of
1922
along with a very nice
note
''Dear Friends, I've been
cleaning out boxes of
thines
which have accumulated here
at my Elyria
h0
f
yeafS 50016
a rT
g
ft
'
:
^-oVTohlvZ.
tem
T °?Ns
^
arte ^Voi.i,No.3.
•'My uncle, Dr. G. E. Pfahler,
graduated that year
^"cement and
atuX^f^!^^
0™*' which w
^d
also
J oir,ed
lists the
Dr. Sutliff and Professor
Albert were two of my
instructors
"My aunt. Mary Pfahler, and a cousin,
Elsie Pfahler
graduates. Elsie was in the
Class of 1919 or
?£>
roTmS
f publication.
J*
committee for
"I planned to send
it to you and now
read in The
Alumn. Quarterly that you are
looking for old volumes,
Hope it s as enjoyable to you as it
was to me
^° Wh ° te 3 graduate of ^ Un iverJJ!!^0^
aSS
196?1 and
now an en 8 ineer
S?r
t p ^"'
? °
tor
tj-T.E.
Products
°nly
n
'
f
fa
Mountain View, California
I have never been
able to attend any of
the Homecoming events. Several
classmates have sent
me pictures of our 40th, 50th and 60th events
"I was a teacher in several
Pennsylvania schools
before I married and moved to
Ohio. Then I did
substitute work and Good Old Testing'
in Elyria Schools
from 1956 to 1974. I still enjoy children,
but I'm no
in
•I
am
so sorry
ALL SMILES - Jennifer Horn,
when she became
16, was obviously happy
the first student admitted to
Bloom
Francis ..r^,, ...
°f
Ser's
"*
^
of 1935
longer physically able to work.
First University applicant
"Best wishes for continued school
success."
Obiters presented
Two Obiters
1926 and 1928
have been presented to
tjie University archives in
loving memory of Wilber
Gwynne Fischer, Class of 1929, by his wife.
Zelda A
Fischer, and the Manahans
Ken Sr., Lorna M.. and
Ken Jr. Mrs. Manahan is Mr. Fischer's
daughter He
died on January 1, 1982.
-
-
follows family tradition
-
Mr. Fischer taught English
in the
Bloomsburg University's
first applicant for admission
continuing a family tradition.
Early o„ July i, just after the
school opened its offices
for the first time as Bloomsburg
University of Pennsylvania, Jennifer Louise Horn,
16, showed up at the admissions office to apply for admission.
is
Nanticoke Area
School District for 40 years before
retiring in 1970 from
the Pulaski Junior High School
in Glen Lyon.
t0
Bloomsburg
He came
t0 receiv e his bachelor's
1940
He was
degree in
Her grandfather, Francis "Doc" Sell,
a Boyertown
graduated from Bloomsburg State
Teachers'
College in 1935. It had long been
Sell's dream that one
day Jennifer would follow in his
footsteps by attending
Bloomsburg. When he learned the
college would become
part of the new State System of
Higher Education on July 1, he thought it would be
nice if his granddaughter
were the first student to apply to
Bloomsburg Universirealtor,
a son of Karl
Ludwig and Mary Jane (Jennie)
Fischer of Glen Lyon. He was an active
member of the
Glen Lyon United. Methodist Church
all of his life until
moved to New Jersey in 1975.
He was a past master of Nanticoke Lodge
No
he
SNAM,
541
Nanticoke; past high priest of the
Knights
Templars. Nanticoke; member of Irem Temple
Shrine
Wilkes-Barre; member of Caldwell Consistory
(32nd
Degree), Bloomsburg; member and chaplain
Jennifer is well-acquainted with the
University having accompanied her grandfather
on numerous trips to
Bloomsburg. The Sells often come to
Bloomsburg from
of the
Golden Age Club in Deptford, N.J., member
of the
Almonesson (N.J.) United Methodist Church and
the
Almonesson Senior Citizens Club.
Two
their
older sisters. Lillian Fischer Moore and
Viola
Fischer, and a brother. T. Edison Fischer,
also attended
M
Bloomsburg.
Mrs. Fischer's address is Apt. A-ll. Knights
Bridge
Condominium. Winding Way, WestviUe, N.J. 08093.
home
welcome.
Philo handbook
A
1910
copy
of the Constitution
of the
to the
1658 State
Shamokin. It belonged to her father, the late Dr.
Victor J. Baluta, Class of 1912, who was admitted to the
society on September 14, 1912. Dr. Baluta was
a general
practice physician in Shamokin from 1927 until his
death
Street,
He was married
former Hattie Dauksha,
and they were the parents of two other children: Mrs.
William (Frances) Rumberger, Sunbury, and Mrs.
Thomas (Mary Lou) Falcinelli, Silver Spring, Md.
to the
and
to eat at
Plans are underway to observe the 100th
anniversary
of Dr. Frank Laubach's birth next
fall in his hometown
of Benton.
Known
and By-Laws
Philogogian Literary Society was presented
University archives by Albina Chaplinsky,
in 1977.
for a ride"
no doubt one of our most loyal alumni "
"He will do just anything we ask him
do for his alma mater. It's very
appropriate that his
granddaughter is the first applicant to
Sell is
to
Bloomsburg
University."
Jennifer, the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John E. Horn
of Boyertown, will be a senior
at Boyertown Senior
High School. She is a member of the
tennis
Jr.
tional
Honor Society, and
is
team Nahead statistician for the
track team.
Her interest in track may also be hereditary
for her
grandfather was quite a track star while a
student at
Bloomsburg. It is believed that he was the
first
Bloomsburg student to win a state track title,
accomplishing this on May 11, 1935.
Jennifer is also a member of the
youth and government program at the YWCA, and has
participated on
Scholastic Scrimmage, a television
game show for high
school students on Channel 39. Allentown.
Because of her good academic background,
including
scholastic Aptitude Test scores and class
rank. Dr. Tom
Cooper, dean of admissions, indicated
that Jennifer will
be the first student offered admission
as a member of
the Class of 1988 at Bloomsburg University.
She plans to
major in accounting and computer science.
Laubach celebration in fall
Directors.
still
Boyertown "just
"You never know when you're going to turn
around
and find Doc standing there." said Doug
Hippenstiel
director of Alumni Affairs. Sell's trips
to Bloomsburg
nave become even more frequent since
he was elected
to the alumni board of directors
in 1981.
Quarterlies presented
Also presenting several copies of THE ALUMNI
QUARTERLY to the archives was Richard Grimes '49,
Harrisburg. Dick has served on the Alumni Board of
Additional contributions of various publications are
in
Hotel Magee.
"Doc
Hippenstiel added.
as "the Apostle to the Illiterates"
and "the
Teacher of Millions," Dr. Laubach,
Class of 1901 has
been described as a "confidant of
governments, expert
in teaching mass literacy,
and Christian mvstic
challenger of the world's complacency,
whose name is
synonymous with the word compassion."
He
in
considered the father of adult literacy
not only
the United States, but throughout
the world
is
movement now more than
in basic
in a
50 years old.
which resulted
education for an estimated 60 million
adults m
and 312 languages.
The birthday anniversary wiU coincide
with National
103 countries
Literacy Week. September 2 through September
9.
Directing the preparations for the observance
is the
board of directors of the Laubach Library in Benton.
They are searching for memorabilia such as books,
photographs, cards, newspaper and magazine
articles to
be loaned or donated to the library's permanent
collecAnyone with such articles is asked to contact Ken
tion.
McCahan
(717-925-6452) or Marjorie Hess (717-925-2314).
In further tribute to this world-educator
and man of
God, the library board is seeking the issuance of
a commemorative stamp honoring Dr. Laubach. Alumni may
support this request by writing to Mr. Paul
VanCoverden, Senior Representative Philatelic Programs.
Government Relations Department,
U.S. Postal Service,
475 L'Enfant Ave., Washington, D.C. 20260.
Bloomsburg University
8
(
Continued from Page 6
1959
Mary Anne (Majikas) Klemkosky '59 was recently
honored as 1983 Woman of the Year when the Anthracite
Charter Chapter of the American Business Women's
Association
(ABWA)
held
its
award dinner
1962
1966
Gary Rahler '62 was recently installed as president of
the Lititz Lions Club. Gary's address is 239 New Haven
Drive, Lititz, Pa. 17543.
Judith E, (Mann) Myers '66 is a teacher with the Penn
Manor School District. She is also a dance instructor at
Carol's Academy of Dance. She is active in the National
Right to Work Committee and PSMLA. Her address is
30
Kathryn K. (Kerllsh) Ellis '62 and her husband,
Truman, are the parents of a daughter, Rebekah Lynn,
born on March 7, 1983. The family lives at 2211 N.E. 115th
at the Potts-
ville Club.
Mrs. Klemkosky now becomes eligible to compete for
1983 Top Ten Business Women of ABWA and
"American Business Woman of ABWA" awards. Reci-
Washington
St., Seattle,
the
S.
1963
Edward
in taxation
Joseph A. Rado, Jr. "63, a senior sales
representative of
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., placed
more than $5.7
million in personal insurance in 1982.
He was recently
recognized by qualifying for the President's
Council. He
Three-time
Athletics
|
National
)
Intercollegiate
of
wrestler, Bill
Garson
was
'63,
1964
is
secretary of Delta Pi Epsilon.
In addition to her professional affiliations, she
is
burg. She has also taught in the Blue Mountain and North
and at the McCann School of
Business.
Schuylkill high schools,
The daughter of Mary Majikas of Girardville and the
Matthew Majikas, she is married to Ronald R.
Klemkosky. They have two sons, Gregory and Mark.
Roadrunners,
Dr. Albert C.
Hoffman
'64,
13-year faculty
member
dean
Her address
at
of the
return to
chemistry department.
Hoffman assumed the position on July 1.
Hoffman was a member of the biology
department
serving as assistant chairman from
1974-1980 He was
granted tenure in 1973 and became a
professor in 1977
I e
Cei ed
mast€r s
doctorate
^
'
degrees from
l /o
y
North
Carolina State University.
Before teaching at Millersville,
Hoffman was a
research assistant at the University
of
K,
Pittsburgh and a
nigh school biology teacher in
Milton.
His address is 60 Oak Lane,
Lancaster, Pa. 17603
late
1960
^
Judith
manager
(Wibnyen Stevens
ter '
Ci
,
Barbara T. (Twitmire) Smith '65
is a teacher
VaUey High School. Her husband,
u banon
I
-
'60 is
u No
-
'
S Box 323, Brownstown,
S
n 17508.
Pa.
is
a classroom teacher
Her
13
.
Sally Riefenstahl '60
married on June
11,
2S^^ T
Sh
Hatboro. Pa.
"^e address
and Frank Suntheimer
1983. Sally
te
nome in
mgh
were
has been a high school
Sch0° 1
-
was
^
ke their
installed recently as the
new
s
toerapist
*? y
?
C
'61
r tCh6n
and
Michael Eyet were mar3 remedial rea
^cher in
I.
^
*
!
toe Mt Carmel Area
School District. Her husband
a
Pennsylvania State University graduate,
is
a selfemployed fuel dealer.
'
?
is
ELWOOD HARDING '68
1606 Ridgedale
"e^uaie ur.,
Dr
director of financial aid
at Susquehanna University, has
been elected as one o
ten
'65,
Attorney Elwood "Woody"
Harding '68 won an impressive victory over his
opponent in the primary held on
garne nng
Democratic nomination for
nil,,/
,
C° Unty Woodv took an
ea Iv ead .Mr' °,
SC° rmg 3 resou nding victory,
?"
5.038
to ?oi ?
S
° PPOnent ms 56 Dercent of ^e party's
r^lMtfi'
!
baUoting was aho
higher than that received
by any other
?T
-
™
the
Gretehen Letterman
t
National
Danville Business and Professional
Club for a one-year term. She
is a speech
working with the Central Susquehanna
Intermediate Unit. She and her husband,
Calvin, have two
daughters, Cynthia and Michele,
and a son, Wayne The
Ryans live at R.D. 2, Danville, Pa. 17821.
Women
NEA and PBEA. Their address
Lancaster, Pa. 17601.
muus
Association of Student
raters He began his
Financial
Aid
t
Ad
twc-year term
J u£ at toe"
organization's national convention
in Anaheim, LliforPrCSident 0f the Pennsylvania
Association
ASSOClatlon
of Student Financial
Aid Administrators
^ uehanna
Su
rentivZ^^
8
'61
at Con-
£p£
Weaver. The Smiths have two
Barbara has memberships
in CVEA PSEA
SV!J
Joyce E. Ryan
of
chtfdren
Harold,
for Victor F.
Edward Mccormick
'59
1961
president
1965
estoga
Shnf
^
aS 3
c
^
member
in 1970.
of
He
is
also cur-
th * national
College
tee of the Financial
Aid Division of the Middle
States
Regional Assembly of the
College Board.
M
J U
cGovern
f
? ! fby the French has been awarded a scholarshin
funded
Government through the French
f ° r f0Ur weeks
of stud v in Avignon
m /u
ly. John has been a
French teacher for the past
12 years to
the Mt. Lebanon School
District. He is one of 35
members
of American Association
of Teachers of
French frL
'
l
r'^T*
the U.S. to receive this
££i
IT *8
of the
2
^
-
0 y C ndUCt d
hour s^n rn !
!
V?
8 Carnpaign that Evolved long
0i Pe ° p,e but a11 the
paid
e P ub,ican candidate.
William S.
?
rSeisher in
Kreisher.
nth
m
the November
General Election.
off
H
?Z
'
™*
1969
5
^oughout
10
^uage
French Language and culture
scholar^
and
civilization
in this
a
is
Jane E. (Weikert) Higinbotham '68
was recently
promoted to accounting officer in the controller's
division
at Hamilton Bank. She joined the
bank
Hoffman has been the acting dean since September
when Richard Sasin resigned the position to
1980,
a
is
NEA/PSEA, and
Pen Argyle, Pa.
Millersville State College, has been
appointed
school of science and mathematics.
in-
mittee as a worker for fundraisers.
She has been a member of the Anthracite Charter
Chapter of ABWA since its inception in 1982.
She earned her master of education degree at Blooms-
York
Pen Argyl High
School,
full-time teaching in the
volved with several community organizations, including
Eastern Star, Ladies of Elks, and Troop 124 Scout Com-
of
volunteer of the American Cancer Society.
1741 Verdan Drives., York, Pa. 17403.
Louis J. Guarino "68 and his wife, the former
Nancy
Labour, are the parents of a son born on July 6
The
Guarinos live at 702 LaSalle St.. Berwick, Pa. 18603
Carl and Carole (DeFrancisco) Millard, both '64,
are
the parents of a son, Craig Louis, born
on October 30, 1982.
Carl is a business education teacher at
secretary/organizer of the Business Ad-
A member of several education associations, she also is
active in the Schuylkill Branch of American Association of
University Women, serving as editor of its newsletter. She
She
member
as a staff accountant in 1980 and was promoted to
senior staff ac
countant in 1982. Her address is 6066
Hampton Court East
Petersburg, Pa. 17520.
MARY ANN KLEMKOSKY '59
is
^,^
QhX
^V*Q
Leaherta E. (Taylor) Mortorff "68 is a special
education
teacher with the Lincoln Intermediate Unit
No. 12.
Washington State House of Representatives and is president of PACCO, Inc. in Tennino, Wash. His mailing
address is Box 596, Tennino, Washington 98589.
and
'67 received a master of science degree
from Widener University on May 21, 1983.
12,000 agents in
inducted into the Bloomsburg University Athletic Hall
of
Fame on May 1. Bill was inducted into the NAIA Hall of
Fame in 1980. Bill was very involved in campus activities
while attending Bloomsburg. He is a member of the
instituted,
B. Kern
'
company's
Association
NAIA champion
^
1
is
ranked number 15 among the
the United States and Canada.
visory Committee.
Lancaster, Pa. 17603.
1967
awards will be announced at the national
ABWA convention in Las Vegas, Nevada, in October.
She is a teacher of business education and chairperson
her department at Pottsville Area High School. For the
past five years, she has served as coordinator for the
Cooperative Occupational Training Program, which she
St.,
98125.
pients of these
of
Pearl
M
T
S
eralEphrataHigh
Sc^iL duuress
at'e^L ^rZ
Granger Drive,
l
«s 101
17540.
Lancaster, Pa.
2
The
country.
(Continued on Page 10)
AJumni Quarterly
New 'Hall
he induction of Chnrk n„i..
of Famers'
m.
„_ ,
KJ
The
tra^TsT SStSjST
» sconng Blth 216 poinls a „ d
B """mbUre
'
™
S
*
^^WM. Ho**
J
ve scored 203 points (
°r
*
^
'
'
ZZT
^r"/o
P
1
^^^^
«£3
for
After one year as Athletic
Director, I can honestly say
have never enjoyed working
more than I have this
year. It has certainly been
a very productive year
In the January edition
of the QUARTERLY
SPORTS SHORTS
'
coaching
g
Big Five
PCnt f ° Ur years as an assis ^nt
coach for the Philadelphia
l 76ers
under Billy Cun-
fifteen acres
Wh
liSter
° guided his tearn to
M^?!
NCAA tournament appearance,
'
its
up-
all of
'
Bloomsburg
63
East Regional title. Francisco, a 6-3
junior guard from
WUkes-Barre, was named the tournament's
Most
Valuable Player as he scored 42 points,
pulled down 12
rebounds and blocked 12 shots. On the
season, he led the
Huskies in scoring with 14.7 points
per game and was second on the club in rebounding with
an average of 5 0
per game.
Noack, a 6-5 freshman from Whitehall,
was one of four
freshmen who saw plenty of action.
Along with making
E-B-All-Freshman team, he was previously
named
.T
the ECAC Division II Co-Rookie
of the Year along with
Jeff Buckson of Southern Connecticut.
At 12.2 points
CHUCK DALY '52
per
game. Noack was the Huskies' third leading
scorer He
led the team in rebounds with
5.7 per game and foul
shooting where he hit 80.2% of his
free throws
BILL G ARSON was a three-time NA1A champion,
a
three-time Pennsylvania Conference
champion, a fourtune NAIA All-American, and in 1980 was
inducted
the
NAIA
into
Hall of
Fame.
As a freshman. Garson placed fourth at
heavyweight
in the NAIA tournament in Lock
Haven, while helping
the Huskies, under head coach Russ
Houk, to the national title. A year later, Garson
captured the 191-pound
title as Bloomsburg finished
fifth.
In 1962, both Garson and the Huskies
again reigned as
national champions. Garson again wrestled
in the 191pound class that year.
Garson s career came to an end in fitting fashion in
1963, as the WiUiamsport native won the
NAIA
heavyweight crown in front of the Huskies' hometown
fans.
m
e. who were selected
SSHI
rlLP7 Department
Jr
by
the Athletic
as the outstanding senior
athletes for 1983. These four
young people have certainly
made significant contributions to our
athletic
Regional
the
The team
finished second nationally.
Along with wrestling, Garson was involved in many
campus activities in his years at Bloomsburg. He served
on several Community Government Association committees, was a student member of the Pennsylvania
State
Chronister guided the team to a 23-10
record, his third
20-win season in succession. In his 12
years as the
Bloomsburg coach, he has never had a losing
and
season
his career
record stands at 216-104.
Paul Slocum, athletic trainer at Bloomsburg Universihas resigned that post to
ty for the past 10 years,
become
at the
5.
He
the
manager
of the sports
medicine department
NPW Medical Center in Nanticoke,
is
effective July
a certified athletic trainer.
Congratulations to the men's tennis
team and the
women's
softball team for winning
Pennsylvania State
Athletic Conference championships.
It was the fifth consecutive PSAC title for Coach
Burt Reese's netmen
Hutchins0D,
s softball team advanced
to the
JSTtS".
NCAA Division U regional finals
Heart
of Connecticut. Their
and lost to Sacred
season record was 33-4
program
mPlify eXC6Uent r0le
plans
now
The Day
Friday,
for our 450 student-
Champions Banquet again was a tremenIt was nice to see so many
alumni
and supporters turn out to honor our
athletes
Russ Houk and Stu Edwards did their
usual
of
dous success.
friends,
fantastic
job of introducing our Hall of
Fame inductees, Bill Garson and Chuck Daly. By the
way, Chuck Daly was
recently hired as head basketball
coach of the
Detroit
Pistons.
Spring sports produced All-Amencans
in women's
track and field and men's tennis.
Patty
became
Davenport
the first female to
become an
NCAA n
All-
Amencan as she placed fourth in the nation in
the high
jump. Marty Coyne and Dave Superdock
teamed up to
become Ail-Americans in tennis.
Dennis Grace, a graduate of Indiana
University
Bloomington, Indiana, and former coach
at Clemson
University has been selected to
replace Dr Lou
Mingrone as the head soccer coach.
He brings a tremendous amount of knowledge,
experience, and enthusiasm
to the program.
We're in the planning stages of sponsoring
a Robert
Redman Day
at one of our home football
games this
Dr. John Hoch, Dean Emeritus,
and Dr. Charles
Brennan will be coordinating this
affair. Former players
of the late Bob Redman
will be receiving invitations to
this event.
fall.
We have scheduled a Russ Houk night
December
9,
when we wrestle
on Friday
Millersville. All of Russ'
former athletes and friends will be
invited to honor him
at this occasion. If you are
interested in information or
being involved in these two special
events, please contact me.
forget, too,
to register for the Ox Roast,
t
catered
by Hotel Magee, at Homecoming. This
event was one of
our most successful. Hopefully,
the
to attend
RUSS HOUK NIGHT
Millersville vs.
mode ls
atWetes
Don
Make
fields for in-
this very worthwhile
project
Congratulations to Gwen Cressman,
swimmer from
Philadelphia, and Barry Francisco,
basketball player
from Wilkes-Barre, for their
selection as the outstanding
underc^ss athletes and to Dave
Superdock, tennis
player from Bloomsburg, and
Diane Alfonsi, basketball
ra
f0
,,er fr °
Pottsvill
surprised everybody by finishing
second in
the Pennsylvania State Athletic
Conference and earning
a slot in the NCAA Division
East
n
new
ST/rT-fw"
,
(CGA) for ?
funding
The Huskies, who entered the season
with only one
senior, looked upon the 1982
season as a rebuilding year
Bloomsburg recorded upset victories over
nationally
ranked Cheyney and Philadelphia
Textile to win
anticipate using the
tion
the
All-Freshman squad
we
84.
^amurals. recreation, and varsity
athletics. Recognition
C Communit Government
Associay
third straight
was named the E B
Division II Coach of the Year.
Francisco was named to
magazine s Division II second team
while Noack
was selected to the publication's
Detroit
referred
with Bloomsburg Hospital
to lease
ofland on Mt. Olympus (new
name for
per campus). On July 1st
machinery began moving sod
o convert this land to nine
playing fields. During the
and Glenn Noack, were accorded
post-season honors by
Lastern Basketball magazine.
CflSoS-ffl
head COach for tne CJeveland
rZ.r *»He was bFiefly
Cavahers.
recently named coach
the
I
to the negotiations
Charlie Chronister, head
basketball coach, and two of
his Bloomsburg University
players, Barry Francisco
in the history of the
BILL GARSON
Roger Sanders
I
'
of
ner
tathy Sheridan, along
with
3 744 winn,n Percentage.
e
Over
Penn won 20 of 25 Big Five
games for an
V
'
ng
Da,y the best i"tra^ity
g
T^f
Cor-
seniors Terry Conrad
and
Todd Cummings. represented
the over 500 athletes
who
competedforthe University during
the past academic
0rd f ° r
rTn H
record
A.
D.'s
of the 18 varsity
y™£ at bTe
an, fo^s ,he
V
th °Se yCarS Daly
s s < uads
four"'
our Iyy
?crowns and three Big
l League
Five titles while
g
At Penn Da^' S tean^sr'eco^
e?a
Re P r esentative in the
president of PACc°.
t0Wn/g ° Wn
support group, presented
the award
In addition, four
current BSC student/athletes
presented a review of the
successes
^
si*
Daly then moved on to
Boston College Universitv
two ye ars
spending six
5?-? n
that
penod
,s
'
sutawnqr High School, he
spent
^
lZ
CS 35 3 State
bUrg profess or emeritus
M. Eleanor Wrav
l0
pm,
p^S~
r
^^SS^
°^
stateof°W^h
Bloomsburg
December 9
WATCH NEXT QUARTERLY FOR DETAILS
day
will
come when
we will have to use the entire Nelson
Fieldhouse Arena
for this event. Homecoming is
scheduled for October 22
The Huskies will be hosting the Wolves
of Cheyney.
At a time when the conference is becoming
more and
more competitive and we are striving for
national
recognition, it is even more important
for you, our
alumni and friends, to "GET INVOLVED."
If every
alumnus would donate between $10 and
$25 to the
General Scholarship Fund, we will have
a better base
to
build our future to even greater
heights. If you haven't
contributed this year, please do so today.
It will be
greatly appreciated.
YOUR HELP!
WE NEED
9
Bloomsburg University
10
(Continued from Page 8)
G.
Wayne Laepple
Patricia (Leiby) Rogers "71 and her husband, Scott S.
are the parents of a son, Zachary David, born on May
'69
brings us up to date with the
leap from the
classroom at Danville Junior High School to general
manager of the Graham County Railroad in Robbinsville,
N.C., last February, I am once again on the move. In May,
I
became
5.
-
120 miles
is
10 times the size of the
The family
lives at R.D. 2,
Box
19,
ried
Troy, Pa. 16947.
Reverend William H. Cluley '71 was ordained at the
twenty-second Annual Convention of the Lutheran Church
in America's Central Pennsylvania Synod.
His address is
manager of the Maryland and
Delmarva Peninsula. The new
assistant general
Delaware Railroad on the
railroad
Karen Marie Gable '74 and Richard Spinicci were marrecently. Karen is employed as the ad systems
manager with Reuben H. Donnelley in Scranton. Dick is
employed as a loan specialist with the Small Business Administration in Wilkes-Barre. They live in Kingston, Pa.
'72,
made the quantum
following note: "Having
P.O. Box 4320, R.D.
Graham
Patricia Ann (Long) Nalin '74 and her husband, Dennis,
are the parents of a son, Christopher Michael, born on
Spring Grove, Pa. 17362.
4,
May
County.
"Kitty and
Alabama
520-E
is
Ave., Salisbury,
Md.
21801
—
only 30
minutes from the beach!
(Hummel) Poechmann
Work degree in May
Harriet
received her Master
'69
at
Barry.
Delaware
Melanchton W. Mench '69 and Mary K. Quinlan were
married on June 4. They live at 634 N. Carolina Ave., S.E.,
Washington, D.C. 20003. Both are audit managers with the
U.S. General Accounting Office in Washington, D.C.
Richard F. Hartung '69 writes as follows: "To bring
I have just retired from the
Bristol
Township School District, where I was employed
in
School
asked
m
Tripoli. Libya, until all
to leave in
'72
North
Companies
the Americans were
address
Senior
Short Street, Danville, Pa. 17821.
John L. McLaughlin '72 received his law degree on June
4 from the Dickinson School of Law, Carlisle. He is
associated with the law firm of Marks & Wagner. John, his
wife, Susan, and their two sons live at 213 W. Mahoning
Danville, Pa. 17821.
St.,
of August 27 will be
P.O. Box 6735, Hawalli
Kuwait, Arabian Gulf. Of course I shall
return home each
summer. I shall be able to be reached at my
permanent
1975
is 121
Cheryl (Labarr) Bastinelli "72 and her husband,
Richard '72, recently became parents. The family lives at
8 Chip Lane, Flying Hills. Reading, Pa. 19607.
Gough Avenue. Ivyland Boro
Sherman George Lord '75 and Rose Mary Rico were
May 7. The bridegroom is director of
audiology at Moyer and BeU Associates,
Sewickley They
Pa. 18974. telephone (215)674-3444."
married on
live in Coraopolis,
1973
1970
Gary Allen Smith
Janet M. Nossal
ried on
December
'70
and was
was awarded a Master of Business
Administration degree by Shippensburg
University on
and William L. Nash HI were mar1979. They are the parents of
a
bom
on March 28 1983
Kishbaugh
Kishbaugh
on
'78
Hazleton
Educational Association. She
Joseph s Church. Wyoming.
was a member
May 28. The Kishbaughs live in Albertsville, France.
of
J. Chatkiewicz '73 and his wife are
the parents
on May 2. The family lives at R.D 2
Box 32
Catawissa, Pa. 17820.
of a son born
i
Lyn
Maturam
is
a
brother
James J LeVan '70 and Ruth Elaine
Kohn are engaged
The bnde-to-be, a nursing graduate
of Widener Universien
ye
£°, ? at Shriller s Hospital for Crippled
Children,
'
Rev
17402
Blair Russell
a teacher in the Bristol
An October wedding is planned.
Blair is
SKSZT
Monie
'70
and
his wife, Sandra, and
Lehigh Road, York, Pa.
senior pastor of the First
Presbyterian
Pa aBndn 15 a
a
**
two children
live at 2875
*"« -
™*
C
il ? »
L
,Kess,er
»
,
Village,
73
-
Rwyan
'73
and her husband, Dr
^eir address is 200 Forest Road, Sher^
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
? m
h
P aS ,e
31,(3 ***
Jm Wnbewust) '73
?' t
are the parents
of a son born on June 21.
The baby is the
couple s second son. The
family lives at 9139 Grant Ave
Manassas, Va. 22110.
J?h?
PAUL BLOW '75
'73
reports that she went to Brazil
in
1977 to teach at the Amazon Valley
Academy which is a
school for the children of
American missionaries
Presently she is teaching the Bible
to Brazilian young peo^
pie. Her address is CP. 334.
64.000 Teresina, Piaui, Brazil
thf
^
Sub
Club.
tion
?5
"Ts" ^ ^
„
and
W
WaS reCent,y named as a
qualifier for
InSUranCC 0on
''Presidenr
This honor was earned
through national
I
°'J? ?
,'
Margaret (Blusius) Doty
'71 and her husband.
Robert
are the parents of a son. Daniel
Christopher, born recentaddress
68 Avenue of Two fr^™.
*
Rumson
'74
and Robert Samuelian are
engaged
supeS at
tteLtT^r
Long Term Care Facility of
Danville State
the
U~
f,ance holds a degree in
electrical
of
Hospital
^
e^in^tag"K
Chadds Ford Electronics. A^all
wSg £
Ba^NA* M*3ry
«£?'
~
?'k
competi-
expXe
S^TiESt'™38 therap€Ut,C actlviUes
Her
recognition for outstanding
marketing
professionalism. Paul is
married to the
They ,Ive at 210 E1
Mary Ann McGann
Janet LaShay
Z'JiO!*
and her h "sband, John
Anthony Jacob
Maturams hve at R D
2. Bogart
'
1974
1971
N.J. 07760.
Maturani
the parents of a son.
^
Deborah Dinstel
toeir
'
St
wood
is
81
?
RnZ Danville,
n
Road,
Pa. 17821.
Y.
Jim
V Yost
are
Pr
at
Surviving in addition to her
mother
Thomas Tissue, Setauket, Long Island,
N.
District.
and Caroline E. (Artman)
are the parents of a son, Eric Arthur
born
'73
Anthony
Wyoming, the daughter of
Irene Linn Tissue and the late Kenneth
Tissue. She was a
graduate of Wyoming High School, Wilkes
College and
bad attended the University of
Madrid in Spain, and the
University of Scranton. She was a
teacher at the Grebey
Junior High School, Hazleton. She
was a member of Pennsylvania State Education Association,
the National
Educational Association, and secretary
of the
Philadelphia.
by
a former marriage, is in first grade.
Linda is a
teacher's aide a couple mornings a week.
Her mailing address is R.D. 2, 3ox 306-C. Howard, Pa.
May 29 in Nesbitt Memorial
life-long resident of
Township School
Linda M. (Golis) Mattern "75 reports she was
married to
Ron Mattern on October 9. 1982. Linda's daughter,
Renee
16841
Carl A.
21 inches long.
She was a
Pa.
It is
She weighed eight pounds and four ounces
Tanya A. Tissue '70 died on
Hospital in Kingston, Pa.
'73
May 7. 1983.
29,
daughter. Adrienne Marie,
their first child.
Jeanne Marie Johnston *74 received her degree as an
osteopathic physician from the Philadelphia College of
Osteopathic Medicine in June.
Kuwait as
in
of Kuwait,
US. address which
served as personnel officer for the Department of Commerce since July 1981, and was previously employed at
Bloomsburg in 1980-81 as a personnel analyst III. He is
enrolled in the MBA Program at the university. Stanley
and his wife, Barbara, have two children. They live at 6
High School.
December of 1981.
American School
Stanley E. Carr '74 has been appointed director of personnel at Bloomsburg effective May 19, 1983. Stanley has
was recently named 1983 Big Sister
Philadelphia Area Big Sister/Big
Nancy lives at 6601 Hilltop Drive
Year by the
Brother Association.
Brookhaven, Pa. 19105. She teaches office practices and
accounting in the Business Education Department
and
coaches varsity girls' lacrosse and hockey at the
Since that time, I have returned to Bristol
Township, only to decide to try my hand at teaching
overseas again. I
shall be working at the American
School of Kuwait
Hopefully, someday soon. I shall land
a job in Saudi
Arabia or Egypt.
My new
Center, Bushnell, Fla. Tina is employed in the Neonatal
Intensive Care Unit at the Geisinger Medical Center.
A
September wedding is being planned. The couple will
reside in Tampa, Fla.
Nancy E. Brink
Africa. During that time I taught at
the Oil
Dexter Ave., Evansville
David C. Heebner '74 and Tina M. Hess are engaged.
David is director of treatment at White Deer Treatment
19808.
of the
for the
past 14 years. During two of those years,
however, I
taught for one year and travelled the other
live at 109 S.
-Charles County, Md. for the past six years. She established a medical library service at this facility. Michelle
is
employed at Lancaster County Library in Lancaster, Pa.
as business services/reference librarian. Her address
is
751 E. Market St., No. 38, Marietta, Pa. 17547.
1972
people up-to-date,
The Nalins
Michelle Seliga '74 reports that she recently earned an
M.S.L.S. degree from Catholic University in Washington,
D.C. She worked at Physicians Memorial Hospital in
R. David Weller '71 and his wife, Marietta (McMicken)
'72, are the parents of a son, Craig Andrew, born
on April
12, 1983. Craig joins a brother, Brett David, age six, and a
sister, Joyce Marie, age 3^2.
The Wellers live at 2709 Burnley Road, Wilmington,
Marywood College,
Scranton. She lives at 8 Oldt Drive, Williamsport. Pa.
17701 with her husband, James '68, and two sons, Lee and
of Social
17.
Ind. 47714.
Daniel D. Zito '71 recently received a Master of
Business Administration degree from Lehigh University.
He is employed as assistant to the president of Easton
Publishing Co. He lives at 208 Oxford Drive, Easton, Pa.
18042 with his wife and two children.
are also happy to announce the arrival of
Andrea Loren Laepple, who was born on November 7 and
is doing fine. She joins Katie, who is five now.
Our address
I
'
^
'75
recently
was promoted
to
former
e
branrh
2™ «*£ ~i£S3
J0Uled Marine MidJ and
hi
September
^XESE
^^.^^^^^
an^n
""T
organization. She is working
toward a certificate from th P
(Continued on Page 12)
First issue of 'Carver'
published
Alumni asked
to contribute
y
r
f
Potion,
°
the first
of "aMEr!!:™
or
CARVER, the inter-disciplinary
? !f
journal of
B oomsburg University has
mad?its
issue
debut The inaugural issue contains
articles dealing with
mathematics, experimental
psychology. American
history, and hterary
analyse, as welfa's
S^poetry
A
limited
number
of copies are available
from the
y
AJumn ' A^^iation and the
Office of the
rl
Vice President
for Academic Affairs
Alumni are invited to submit
either a manuscript or
a
proposal for consideration.
?
SK
Articles in all fields
£
w5
considered, but they should
be written for an audknc^
o non-specialists. October
30 is the deadline for
co
plete manuscripts for the
1984 issue
Serving as editor of CARVER
is Dr. Gerald H
°f
of English faculty
since 1961 The editorial
stceT*.
board responsible for the first
£ue included Donald Baird, chemistry;
Barbara E
Behr, business administraUon;
m
^P"*™*
Richard Brook
W^W.
StCVen L Cohen
Jam'es B.
Creasy, business administraUon;
,
Judith P. Downing
Enm an> ge ° graphy
earth s «ence;
raul G. Hartung, mathematics;
K
CWhS:
-
'
•
PailGH^ ^
T^TT
James
-
JOURNAL
Kenneth P. Hunt
geography and
R R0b€rts In art; George A.
Turner, history; and Doug
Hippenstiel, alumni affairs
special education;
DEBUTS
Carver, the new interdiscipUnary journal of Bloomsburg
University, made
its debut in June. Dr. Gerald
H. Strauss (second from
left), editor, presents a copy
to Dr. Larry W. Jones, acting
T. Lorelli,
PCrCiVal
-
Dresden
of the
University. Looking on are Dr.
James H.
McCormick interim chancellor of the new
State System
Higher Education, and Doug
Hippenstiel, director of
o
alumni
affairs.
Alumni gather in chapters throughout
Eight alumni chapter meetings
have been held since the .ast issue
of
S.U.N. Chapter
a meeli" 8 of Sn der
Un »°n and Nory
UnU,i n April 21 were
Ha
°
d
th
,? ri
pw?
^l
J.
Markunas "34, Virginia E
L Hartman
CnCe ?9 Ted J Andrewlevich
557^™:
* 5'
62. L. Irene Frederick
Young '35. Laura Kelley Bollinger '33. and Frank
Garrigan '66
24
V?'
U
e
"
r
'
'
-
Representing the University were
Doug Hippenstiel
SSS&Sf
£T
a,,airs;
and
Q " - A™SSSL
rt
York
Meeting for lunch at Lincoln
Woods Inn
April 23 were Leahetta
E. Taylor
6
T ^
D
in
79.
Representing the University
were Dr. Jack S Mulka
Dean of student development;
Kathy Mulka. alumni
rd
0r; Charles Chron,ster
^ad
ball coach; and Doug
Hippenstiel. alumni office
M?Z r
r'
.
penstiel,
fices of
Mulka '69, Melissa McDonie Pugliese
79. Judith Witmyer Stevens "60, Barbara Twitmire
Smith '65, Reginald
Remley "48. and Judith Mann Mayers '66.
Rainey
Set-
office.
Pennsylvania Dutch
The annual dinner meeting of the Pennsylvania
Dutch
Chapter of Bloomsburg alumni was
held in Reading on
W
'
Kathenne Moyer Reinert '67, Dale E. Biever '58
Catherine K. Biever '58. Karen
Suzanne Karnes 75
Donald G. Franklin '65, Ronald Cranford '63,
Patricia
Biehl Cranford '63, Joseph P. Griffiths
70, Dawn Osman
TreweUa 42, Louise E. Seaman Thomas '42.
John
Thomas '47. Sharon Faith Gettel
Mahoney '67, Elaine Brumbaugh
W
78, Angelica Sacco
'67. Michael L. Mehle
and Edward B. Kern '67
Representing the University were Roger
Sanders
athletic director and head wrestling
coach; Charles
67,
Sandra Burkhart Kern
'67
'52,
12.
Robert
Ban
G
^
at-
Poorman
E.
>38
-
C.
'46
Laurie Dnscoll Reiley
79, Harry M. Saxton
Marilyn Friedman Moore '57.
Jr. '67.
and
Representing the University was
Doug Hippenstiel
alumni office.
Harris burg
^
mi rom
Harrisburg area met at
!
Downtown
on May 19. Attending were
Ai
i
tan
^
the
Hobday
Dr. Alex J
39
Chard E Grunes 49 Kerr
y Avers
79
72 Charlotte Hensel 72, Steve
Andrejack 74' Craigann
74, Thomas Lenker 75, Janet Negry
75
Tom and Marcia Sweitzer 75. Al Oussoren
79. Donna
Kinder 80, Michael Mixell '80, Stacy
MixeU '81. and Kay
}
f?^Vu'
'
^
'
-
-
Mehrmann
Schweitzer
77.
Representing the University were Dr.
Jack S Mulka
dean of student development;
Kathy Mulka, alumni
chapter coordinator; Steve
Wallace, chairman of the
music department; and Lou
Maranzana, assistant foot-
'
ball
coach.
April 27.
Those in attendance included George
Derk '55
Vera A. Derk '60. Mark J. Constable
73. Francis "Doc"
Sell 35 John G. Genelow
77, Mildred A. Kline Genelow
78, Helen Fehl Roberts 74. Jennie
Reitz Mattern '30
Nancy Jane Kratzer '64. Barbara Nicholls
Faust '65
Little '61,
at the law of-
May
'
M
Doug Hippenstiel, alumni
Wilmington on
Ce
D
Plevyak '50, Alfred J.
Dilhplane 78. Gwen S. Miller '69.
Linda Oehler Miller
70. Edward Jerry Miller "69. and Peter
J. Eshmont '41
Representing the University were Elton
Hunsinger a
University trustee and retired aciministrator;
Dr Steve
Wallace, chairman of the music
department- Tom
Davies. director of the Career
Development Center- and
Little '62 in
Kay Gaglione
34,
Baltimore
Meeting for dinner at Peerce's Plantation
near
Towson on April 26 were Keith Kull 73,
Leo J Lehman
'41, Joe J. Gieda '50. Cissie
Dickinson Gieda "43
Dale Hunsinger '65 Paul
Cyganowski '53. Kim
Tom
Gennar,a
James A Gennana
u lT
Wilham ^TT
Reiley 79. Eugene F. Sharkey
Representing
'50.
Wilmington, Delaware
Delaware held a get-together
in
'57.
Doug Hip-
office.
tending were Dottie Stec
Blocksom
the University were Dr. Jack
Mulka
dean of student development; Kathy
Mulka, alumni
chapter coordinator; and Doug
Hippenstiel, alumni of-
Frederick D. Young
alumni
Alumni
.
fice.
York on
Mortorff '68, Rev
5 ° rah Ann Fedastj an Ever
78%nd
fitnf Lynn Reedy
!
Rhonda
w
StU3rt
wasTu^T
Chronister, head basketball coach;
and
That same evening. April 23,
Lancaster area alumni
at the Olde Greenfield Village.
Alumni in attendance included Jeffrey and Catherine
Barry Wasilewski
Jim and Marsha Yeager Schmucker
78, Louis J
met
Epler
Bayliff
30
Srrow
Lancaster
-
m
Furman 51
28. Nora
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
U.S.
Alumni
living in
New Jersey
New Jersey met
for dinner at the
Willows Restaurant in DuneUen, N.J..
on May 24. Attending were Nelson A. Swarts '62,
Bernard L. Donegan '63
Jacquie Feddock 72. Delores Keen
Tironi '63, Lorenzo
Tironi 64, Louis S. Gabriel '50,
Richard E. Jarman
50, Wayne F. Heim '69, Joseph
J. Shemanski '55. James
M. Bonacci '69, L. Anthony Saraceno
74, J. Harrison
R
Morson '56. John Phillips '57. Ralph
W. Davies '29
Dorothy Pichel Schneider '51. Joyce
Morgan Houser
Edith Quinn Jakobsen '27.
Richard C. Stout '49.
S.
McMane
'61
Michael'
and Ernest R. Shuba '64
Representing the University were
Dr. James H McCormick. president; Charles Chronister.
head basketball
coach; George Landis. head
football coach; Elton Hunsinger. University trustee;
and Doug Hippenstiel. alumni
office.
82,
*
Bloomsburg University
12
(Continued from Page 10)
(Kmush) Gathman 75 and Randall Robert
Bonnie
Gathman
are proud parents for the second time. A son,
Adam Randall, was born on March 28, 1983 at Bedford
County Memorial Hospital, Bedford, Va. They have
another son, Christopher Allen, age 3. Bonnie is still
teaching third grade at Body Camp Elementary School,
and Randy has recently become a senior procedures
analyst for the Administrative Operations Dept. at Dominion Bankshares Corporation in Roanoke, Va. The family
lives at 3013 Sleepy Ridge Drive, Bedford, Va. 24523.
'78
and Diane (Hoglund) Bachinger
6. The Bachingers
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
John F. Bachinger
'76
'75
are the parents of a son born on July
live at
R.D.
4,
1976
Barbara E. Poley Herring '76 and her husband, Robert
J Herring, are not the parents of a son, as reported in the
Debra Lee (Floyd) Rilk '76 and her husband, Walter,
are the parents of a son, Corey Lee, born on June 14. Their
address is Box 133, Benton, Pa. 17814.
Denise M. Kissel '76 and Kenneth A. Fegley were
married on June 11. They make their home in Shamokin,
Pa. The bride is a business teacher in Shamokin Area
High School. Her husband is a self-employed contractor.
Deborah Jean Lurhi-Mistal 78 received her degree as
an osteopathic physician from the Philadelphia College of
Osteopathic Medicine in June.
J. David Arnold 78 received his doctorate in psychology
from the University of New Hampshire in September 1982.
He
is
a professor of psychology at St. Lawrence Univer-
sity in Canton, N.Y.
78 and William Ferry were married
employed as lecturer/coordinator of
the Medical Laboratory Technology Program at the
Patricia Dreisbach
X 977
on
^mm^^^m
James
P. Chiavacci "77 and I^igh Ann Charles were
married on April 30. James is employed as the education
supervisor at The Wood Schools. Langhorne. His wife,
a
graduate of Clarion University and Edinboro University,
is a reading specialist at a private school
for learning
disabled students and a reading consultant at a school
for
children with handicaps. They make their home
in
Newtown, Pa.
May 2.
Patricia
is
Hazleton Campus of Pennsylvania State University. Bill is
a shepherd. The newlyweds live at their farm in Scotch
Valley, R.D. 3, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Marsha Del Veager) Schmucker 78 and her husband,
Jim 78, live at 606 W. James St., Lancaster, Pa. 17603.
Jim is a 3M sales representative, and Marsha is employed
by J.C. Penney Co., Inc.
(
.
last issue of
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY. The Herrings
We regret this error and apologize for
have no children.
the inconvenience
it
caused.
Charles Porvaznik '77 and his wife are the parents of a
daughter, Erin Michelle, born on April 14. The family
lives at 895 Railroad Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Deborah Ann (Fedastian) Evert 78 is a business
teacher with the Carroll County Board of Education. She
and her husband, John, live at 16 W. Middle St., No.
3,
Hanover, Pa.
Timothy Da wait
May
'76 and Carol Avellino were
married on
Carol attends Bloomsburg where she also is
14.
employed.
Tim
employed on the computer services
They make their home at 450A
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
is
staff at the University.
Spanish Village,
Capt. David Orgler
Commendation Medal
'77
was recently awarded the Army
Md. He is married
silon
17331.
Deborah
a
is
member
of Delta Pi
Ep-
(Gamma Xi).
at Fort Detrick,
to the former Mary Burrichter '77.
signed to Fort Sam Houston, Texas.
He has been
reas-
Margo Lee Paradis '77 and Charles "Sonny" Fox were
married on February 19, 1983. Lea Ann Simcox 77,
Margo's good friend and BSC roommate, caught the wedding bouquet! Sonny works for Hughes Helicopters in
Mesa. Margo had spent five years working as a learning
disabilities teacher with the Centennial School District
in
Warminster, Pa. She also worked as a marching band instructor with the Archbishop Wood High School in Warminster for six years. She considers herself "semiretired" from teaching but may find a new position
Alfred M. Schoch, Jr. 78 and Marjorie Sue Lusch were
married on April 30. Marjorie is a substitute teacher in the
Schuylkill County school system. Al is a newsman and
sportscaster with radio station
WPAM in Pottsville.
They
live in St. Clair, Pa.
Thomas E. Dawson 78, an agent for Prudential Insurance Company, sold more than $2.9 million of insurance in 1982. He recently won the company's award
of
honor. His address is R.D. 2, Danville, Pa. 17821.
Tom is
also active in the Danville Elks.
in
Arizona in September 1983. Margo's mailing address
P.O. Box 18274, Fountain Hills, Arizona 85268.
is
Kim McNally '77, who is copy editor of PressEnterprise, Bloomsburg, recently won a
second-place
award in the Pennsylvania Women's Press Association
contest for page layout and design.
Connie L. Anceravage 78 and Paul M. Yurczyk were
married on June 4 in Bloomsburg. The bride is employed
by General Dynamics in finance and management
in San
Diego. Her husband is employed as an internal
auditor by
San Diego Federal Savings and Loan. They
live at 1333
Thomas Ave., San Diego, Calif. 92109.
John M. Cannon 78 and Maria Ward Cannon 79 live at
Medina, Ohio 44256. The Cannons
(
Maria
L. (Williams)
Anthony
'77
and her husband, Jim,
are the parents of a son, Ryan James, born
on June 12.
Their mailing address is Box 85, Bear Creek,
Pa. 18602.
MICHAEL RAINONE '76
Michael L. Rainone
'76
was recently promoted
to assis-
tant treasurer of Industrial Valley Bank,
responsible for
loan portfolio
management and commercial lending for
a
also
portion of the Center City Loan Center portfolio.
He is
handling commercial lending based out
of IVB's Food
Distribution Center Office in South Philadelphia
Mike joined IVB's consumer loan division
in 1978
and
since then has served as assistance manager
of IVB's
Conrail Operation Center and assistant manager
of the
1518 Walnut Street office. Until his recent
promotion, he
was a commercial loan assistant
at IVB's
Girard Avenue
office.
Mike is a member of the American Institute of
Banking
ATB) and a Fourth Degree Member of the Knights
of Columbus. Mike and his wife, Gail, live in Audubon,
Pa.
(
1979
Pat (Seither) Quinn 77 and her husband,
Karl, are the
of a daughter, Kristen Elizabeth,
born on
September 28, 1982. The Quinns live at 10 Cherry
Lane
wedding to George W. Murdock.
Leesburg, Va. 22075.
for the
Hershey Chocolate Company, Hershey, Pa. Her
husband,
Richard Nilsen, is assistant principal and athletic
director
of Big Spring
High School, Newville, Pa. and is working
toward his doctor of education degree at
Temple University.
The Nilsens
live at 5500
Gloucester
St.,
Mechanics-
burg, Pa. 17055.
Mayo '76 and Dr. Robert L. Albertson were
May 21. Lois is employed as a medical
on
technologist at Berwick Hospital.
Her husband is an optometrist. They live at 439 E. Third
St., Berwick, Pa.
18603, where Bob also maintains his offices.
Robert Scott Norris 76 and
Debra Joy Wagner are
engaged Debra is employed by
Easton
0
Smin^ *
(Pa.) Hospital.
3
gr3duate
SSSra toSSHS*
°f
PHnceton
*****
at the
Theological
^sbyterian
a September 24
William Campbell Reiley 79 received
the degree of
Law School from Widener University on May 21, 1983.
Timothy R. Hessert
'77 was awarded the
M.D. degree on
by Pennsylvania State University at the
Milton S
Hershey Medical Center. Dr. Hessert is doing
his residency in psychiatry at Hospitals of the
University Health
May 22
Thomas J. Hessling '77 was recently named
manager of
Murphy store in Dansville, N.Y. Tom started
his
career with Murphy as a
management-trainer at the
Melanie
Smith
79 and her husband. Jeffrey are
the parents of a daughter,
Meghan Joyce, born on May 25
Melanie is a teacher of the emotionally
disturbed. She is
employed by Intermediate Unit
No. 1. Theif mailing address is P.O. Box 403, Fayette
City,
(Gill)
Pa. 15438.
the G. C.
firm's New Martinsville, W. Va. Murphy's
Mart.
his wife, the former Janet Ice of
New
parents of two sons, Chris and
Jaclyn Nicole.
Tom and
Martinsville are the
Tommy, and
a daughter
Lois Elaine
roamed
Rhonda Lynn
Reedy 79 is a staff accountant with Dentsply Inter. Inc. She lives at 513
Piedmont Circle, York Pa
17404. She reports that she is
planning
Juris Doctor, Delaware
Center, Pittsburgh.
Janet (Stump) Nflsen '76 received a Master
of Science
degree in biology from Shippensburg University
in May
1983. She is employed as quality assurance
auditor
report they are expecting their first child in July.
John is
an assistant district manager with Carnation Co. and
works in the Cleveland-Pittsburgh market.
Sue Ann Sagan 77 and David Fredrick Roadarmel
were
married on April 9. The bride is a reading specialist
in the
Milton Area School District. The bridegroom
is employed
at Rose Pools Inc., Lewisburg.
The newlyweds live at
R.D. 1, Milton, Pa. 17847.
parents
)
1099 Southport Drive,
1978
Edmund
Ronco 78 recently was awarded a master's
degree in finance by St. Louis University. He is employed
by American Telephone & Telegraph International in
J.
Basking Ridge, N.J. He lives in Hampton, N.J., with his
former Donna Widdoss, and their two children.
wife, the
Thomas J. Renaldo 78 received his degree as an
osteopathic physician from the Philadelphia College
of
Osteopathic Medicine in June.
n£?r£
Mifmn
Mifflin
D
-,
171
Cha r,es
'
J
79
and Alan
A Streisel are engaged.
°yed as teachers
/^^? are emp,Lewistown,
Pa. Wedding
«cuuuig
r
County
School District
of the
in
plans are incomplete.
Al Lonoconus 79, Southern
Columbia track and field
coach recently finished
second in the Eastern Regional
^^^^
Lisa
Ann Kreischer 79 received her
B.S. degree in nurs0
*? m Th0mas Jeffer *>n Uniiersi
Phi.nVrV
y
While at Jefferson, she wds
inducted into Sigma Thetii
Tau, Delta Rho Chapter.
National Nursing Honor
Society
(Continued on Page 16)
Alumni Quarterly
Graduates
gather for
Alumni
Weekend
Three class reunions and the annual business meeting
Alumni Association highlighted Alumni Weekend
on June 10-12.
Activities began on Friday evening with the annual
banquet of the Alumni Association. Guests of honor were
of the
members
of the Class of 1933 (the 50-year class) and the
three recipients of the Distinguished Service Awards
(Dr. James H. Sterner, Class of 1925; Dr. Thomas J.
O'Toole, Class of 1956; and Dr. James B. Creasy, Class
of 1957).
The Alumni Board of Directors held its regular
meeting at 8:00 a.m. on Saturday, June 11, in the faculty
dining room of Scranton Commons and the Alumni
Room in Carver Hall.
Registration was held in Carver Hall lobby on Friday
afternoon and Saturday morning from 9 a.m. to noon.
An open house was held in the Presidents' Lounge of
Kehr Union from 9 to 11 a.m., affording alumni the opportunity to visit with college faculty members and administrators.
The annual business meeting was held at 11 a.m. in
Carver Hall Auditorium, at which time eight directors
were elected. Elected for three-year terms on the board
of directors were Francis D. Sell '35, Boyertown;
Elwood Wagner '43, State College; Sara Dockey Edwards '44, Berwick; Constance Stanko Gobora '52, Levittown; Ronald W. Cranford '63, Gilbertsville James E.
Holhster 78, Bloomsburg; and Karen T. Chawaga '82,
Wilkes-Barre. Elected for a two-year term was Helen E.
Barrow '24, Sunbury.
;
At the conclusion of the business meeting, the new
board met briefly to elect officers.
A picnic lunch followed at noon on the lawn of Carver
Hall. During the picnic, a newly-planted dogwood tree
on the lawn of Carver Hall was dedicated to the Class of
1933.
Following the picnic, a talent showcase was held at 2
p.m. in Carver Hall Auditorium, featuring Jim Lyman,
Class of 1981; Steve Lindenmuth, Class of 1983; Joanie
Lander, Class of 1985; Lavon Wills, Class of 1985; John
Couch, a member of the music department faculty;
Joseph and Judy Steever, Class of 1980 and 1984; John
Garcia, Class of 1986; and Anita McCoy, Class of 1985.
On Saturday evening, two reunions were held, with the
"War Years Classes" (194243-44-45) at Caldwell Con-
and the Class of 1948 at Hotel Magee.
Student coordinator for Alumni Weekend was John
Kaney, a junior from Fleetwood.
sistory
13
14
Bloomsburg University
return for Alumni Weeke:
Alumni Quarterly
15
tend
FIFTY-YEAR CLASS—Attending
Class of 1933 were (seated)
the reunion of the
Edna Creveling Whipple,
Berenice Cuthbert Elfert, Laura Kelley Bollinger,
Pauline Reng Turek, Irene Naus Munson, Charlotte
Osborne Stein Bayne, Lois Lawson, (Row 2) Violet
Gemberling Shirk, Adelaide Hausch Kline, Ann Chance,
Irene Hirsch Heister, Evelyn Heiser Reefer, Emily Landls Sopensky, Alda Giannini Strazdus, Mary Furman
James, Anna Mary Leiser
Tobias, Emily
Wagner
Bitter,
Zeisloft,
Edna Lamoreaux
Ruth Fowler Drake, June
Mensch Strausser, Frances Evans Parker, Bob Parker,
(Row 3) Thomas Coursen, Mildred Bixler Sharp, Violet
Snyder Hoffman, Matilda Olash, Harriet Styer Boop,
Mary Jenkins Zook, Louise Shipman Evans, Mary Ahearn
Reilly, Kenneth Roberts, (Row 4) Jack Lewis, Ruth
Jackson Richards, Mary Stahl, Martha Ma it Karns, Anne
McGlnley Maloney Betty Boyle Church, Kathryn Wenner
Thacher, (Row 5) Charles F. Hens ley, Florence Byerly
Hoover, H. Grace Worrell, Larue Gass Herr, Mary Betterly Malers, K. Louise Brislin Thomas, Ethel M. Hummel,
,
Mae Mantz Krelss, (Row
6) Grace R. Hartman, ElynorG.
Burke, Gertrude S. Howells, Marion DeFrain Danowsky,
Dorothy Schild Francis, Bethia Allen King, Evelyn Smith
Hooven, (Row 7) Frances A. Reynolds, Creda Houser Van
Blargan, Miles B. Potter, Josephine E. Pack Brest, John
A. Early, Frank J. Greco, (Row 8) Dorothy Criswell
Johnson, Lucy Bitetti, Claire Musgrave Porter, Allen W.
Parr, Eugene M. Keefer, Harold M. Danowsky. (Glen Ed-
wards Studio)
Bloomsburg University
16
i
Continued from Page 12)
Sharon Dona to) Arnold '79 is a marketing assistant at
Lawrence National Bank in Canton, N Y.
Dave and Sharon may be reached at 40 East Main St.,
(
the St.
Canton,
NY.
Jill Johnson '80 recently passed the certified public accountant examination. She is employed as a revenue
agent for the IRS at Reading, Pa. She is currently pursuing her master's degree at Albright College in Reading.
Wayne L. Sawlina
of
Carl Poff 79, assistant wrestling coach at Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815.
in
1965. He was a lifetime resident of Shamokin and a computer programmer by occupation.
13617.
was recently awarded his Master of Arts degree in
Physical Education from the University of North Carolina
where he formerly was assistant wrestling coach for three
years. He lives at 920 McGuire Road, Apt. 16, Bloomsburg,
'81 died on April 22 at his home.
Shamokin, November 18, 1959, Wayne was a son
Frank Sawlina and the late Thelma Spade, who died in
Born
Stephen Craig Sneidman '80 and Linda Jane Harris are
engaged. Linda is employed at Berwick Industries Inc.
Steve is employed by Weis Markets in Bloomsburg. A
June 1984 wedding is planned.
Wayne was a
He was
1977 graduate of
Shamokin Area High
a member of Christian Missionary and
Alliance Church, Shamokin.
Survivors include his father, one sister, Debra L.
Sawlina, at home, and the maternal grandmother, Mrs.
School.
Kathy M. Shughart '80 received a Juris Doctor Degree
Florence Spade, Shamokin.
from the Dickinson School of Law on June 4.
Paul C. Zlegenfuss '81 and his wife, Martha (Vlattas)
Matthew W. Simone '80 has been selected to appear in '81, are the parents of a son, Stephen Paul. Paul is a secthe Outstanding Young Men of America Publication. He ond lieutenant in the U.S. Marine Corps. Their address is
recently received a Juris Doctorate Degree upon gradua- 208 Myrtlewood Circle, Jacksonville, N.C. 28540.
tion from California Western School of Law, San Diego
make their home in Lancaster, Pa.
Betty Jane C. Bavington '81 and Martin A. Reymer
Calif.
were
His selection to this honor was based on his scholastic married on May 28. The bride is employed by Columbia
County
Children
and
civic
service.
and
He
was
Youth
Services.
Student Bar Association
The bridegroom is
Melissa (McDonie) Pugliese '79 and her husband, Joel,
representative, treasurer of Phi Alpha Delta, interna- employed at the Computer Clinic, Inc. of Bloomsburg.
live at 25A Hampton Lane, Neffsville, Pa. 17601. Both are
They
tional
law
live
at
fraternity
28
Perry
Avenue,
198041.
and president, 1982-83; coorBloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
employed at Armstrong World Industries.
dinator of the Bar Review Course of America and corresponding secretary for the graduation committee.
Angela Susan DotoU '81 and Robert
P. Jackson were
During his law school career, Simone received the married on June 5 in St.
Andrew's Episcopal Church in
following awards: Phi Alpha Delta Outstanding Member AUentown Her husband
was graduated from Higham
Award '8142 and '82-83; Student Bar Association Civic Lane High School in Nuneaton,
England; The University
Service
Viclri Lynn Myers '80 was awarded a Master
Award,
and
of
Commentary Student of the Year.
London and Illinois Institute of
of Business
Technology Both are
He
Administration degree by Shippensburg University
and
his wife, the former Dotti Koch of Hazleton, employed by Drum Owen
on
Valve Co. in Nazareth. They live
May 7, 1983.
reside at 3405 Villa Lane, San Diego, 92123, where
he is in Nazareth, Pa.
employed as an estate planner and legal counselor with
the Donald R. Clauson Co. Inc.
Jeanne Danielle Kiewlak '81 and Gary Richard
Richard John DtFrancisco '80 and Joanne
Marie
Mrs. Simone is employed in the neonatal intensive care Beveridge were
married on May 7. Both are employed at
Pitingolo were married on April 16.
Both are special
unit of Children's Hospital, San Diego, and also
serves as the Geisinger Medical Center in Danville. They live at
education teachers employed by the Central
Susquehanna
a member of its Emergency Transport Team.
1102 Susquehanna Avenue, Sunbury, Pa. 17801.
Intermediate Unit. The bride
Kathy Jo Barto '79 and Randall Marc Johnston were
married on April 23. Kathy is employed by Commonwealth National Bank, Harrisburg. Her husband is
employed by Commonwealth National Bank, York. They
1980
is
University graduate. They
make
a Pennsylvania State
their
home
in
Sunbury
th?
Jerry L. Bolig '80 was recently appointed
auditor by the
board of directors of the Snyder County
Trust Co. Jerry
has been employed in the bank's Selinsgrove
office for a
year and a half. He lives at 302 W. Sassafras
St Selinsgrove. Pa. 17870.
E
n
Bradley
i
>8
°
was ordaine
Philadelphia^ His home church
Methodist Church, Chester.
He
University School of Theology
Bi2U|
iJrfln^
Lon
Ann is employed
!
is
in
Community United
attended
the
Boston
"
6ngaged t0 David A Pacchioli.
in the marketing
department at
-
Elizabeth Anne Chandler '81 graduated on June 22 from
West Jersey Health System School of Medical
Technology. Her address is 440 S. Jackson St..
the
Woodbury
N.J. 08096.
Mary A. Smith '81 was recently promoted to first lieutenant in the U.S. Army. She entered military
service
August
24, 1981
as a second lieutenant and was assigned to
the Personnel
ned on May
Susan
an accountant at W. M. Wagner
Sales Conine. Winfield. Her husband
is a self employed
farmer. They live at R.D. 1, Elysburg,
Pa. 17824.
14.
is
Emergency Care Research Institute
Fivmmrth MeetUlg
An October wedding is planned
^
mSTJ
St.
M
"
e G,owatski *«• and
Robert Frank were
tT
Elizabeth
Ann Seton School
"*h
S^a »
in
the U.S. Air
Minersville
Fan*
Beach Air Force Base, South
Carolina. They
SuteenthAvenueSouth.SurfsideBeach.S
Her
at
MvS
live
aM2i
I.S?
Sandra K. (Davis) Packer "80 and her husband
Dean P.
Packer '81, are the parents of a daughter
born on July 1
The Packers live at 720-B, Old Westminster
Road Westminster, Md. 21157.
and Resource Management
Institute at
Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana. Lt. Smith
serving as adjutant and student detachment
commander
at the Organizational Effectiveness
Center
and School,
Training and Doctrine
is
presently
Command, Fort Ord.
Joseph Kalinoski
'81 and Debra Kerris
are engaged. The
attending Lock Haven University. Joe is
studying toward a
at the University of Pittsburgh A
bride-to-be
is
June
wedding
MBA
2,
1984
is
planned.
Mark Alan Cable '81, a Christian singer-songwriter,
gave a concert on June 18 in the social hall of
Berwick
Assembly of God, sponsored by Uplift, The
Christian
Singles Ministry.
Michael L. MixeU '80 graduated in the top
six of his class
at the Dickinson School of Law.
He is now associated with
the law firm of Stevens and Lee
in Reading. He and his
mfe, Stacey Swisher MixeU '81, live at
33-E Gulfstream
Drive, Flying Hills, Reading, Pa. 19607.
1981
ELIZABETH DOUGHERTY '80
Elizabeth
Ann Dougherty
"80
graduated magna
cum
laude from Dickinson School of Law,
Carlisle, this past
spring. She was third in her class.
She was comments editor of the
DICKINSON LAW
and won the James S. Bowman
Memorial
REVIEW
Award given
to the senior
achieving the highest
the course in Pennsylvania practice.
marks
in
Elizabeth will be employed as a law
clerk for Judge
Richard Wickersham of the Superior
Court of Penn-
Margaret Jane Lowthert '81 and Lawrence
Joseph Dool'80 were married on April
16. Larry is a management
mg
analyst with the U.S. Civil Service.
They live in Las
Cruces.N.M.
88001.
Second Lieutenant Jeff Ringhoffer '81 and his wife
Kris
(Oakland) '80, live at 4041 Olive Road, Apt.
407, Pensacola, Fla. 32514. Jeff is a former president
of the Community Government Association.
sylvania.
Mark was president
of Christian
Mary Ann (Missy) Paskey '81 and Michael Flynn
are
engaged. Missy is employed as promotion
coordinator for
the Daily Intelligencer in Doylestown,
Pa. Her fiance a
University of Delaware graduate,
is employed as'
jeweler for Custom Jewelers and
Gems, Ivyland Pa The
wedding will take place June 16, 1984.
Michael T. Huben
'81 was recently
promoted by PennBank and Trust Company of Pottsville
to manager of the Ashland
office. Mike started with Penn-
sylvania National
She was a member of Woolsack Honor
Society
ing Law school, served as a law
clerk for the
and dur-
law firms
of
McNees, Wallace and Nurick in Harrisburg
and Laputka
Bayless, Ecker and Conn in Hazleton.
At Bloomsburg, Elizabeth was a Spanish
major.
Karen
L. Schick '81
and Thomas J. Rampulla were mar-
May 7. Karen is employed as a marketing
representative by Horrigan American Co. Inc. Tom
is the
manager of Nazareth Beverage Center. They live in
Nazareth, Pa.
ried
on
sylvania National in June 1981
as an officer trainee
his wife, the former Carol
Zinda of Centralia
and
1900
Walnut Street, Ashland, Pa.
Amy
Grace Stamets '80 and Michael John Huss
were
married recently. The bride is a
secretary
Julie
at
Allied Industries.
of the Fellowship
Athletes at Bloomsburg and has dedicated
his music to
spreading the word of Christ.
He has been singing at churches, coUeges, coffeehouses
nursing homes and at youth retreats
throughout Pennsylvania and neighboring states, accompanying
himself
on guitar and harmonica to bring a
message and create a
light, enjoyable atmosphere
touching people of all ages
His address is 1519 Colgate Drive, Bethlehem,
Pa. 18017.
Grumman
Her husband is an engineer with Bechtel
Power Corporation at the Berwick
nuclear site They
make their home in Bloomsburg
Ellen Marie McDonnell
and Thomas Charles Vought
II were married on April 30.
Ellen is employed at
Bloomsburg Hospital. Tom is employed by Step-By-Step
Inc. in Bloomsburg. They live at 203
Nassau Street Danville,
Pa. 17821.
Hart Dougherty
are engaged.
'81
'81
UVe
live
He
at
17921.
and Joseph
P.
McGarry Jr
Amy is a speech pathologist employed by the
Montgomery County Intermediate Unit
in Norristown
Her fiance is a student at Delaware
Valley College and is
employed by Zenco Machine and Tool
An October wedding is planned.
Co. of Doylestown
(Continued on Page 18)
Alumni Quarterly
17
Computer program earns Sperry grant
For the second consecutive year, Sperry Corporation
Computer Systems has presented Bloomsburg Universiship
Bloomsburg's integrated central information system
Worldwide News, an education, research,
and training publication circulated widely in the
number
thering of
was designed by key personnel in University Computer
Services for the Sperry computer system installed
at the
University. The program integrates four major
systems: student information, budget and encumbrance,
management data and academic services. The management data includes personnel, revenue, student schedul-
In accepting the grant, John L. Walker,
executive
director for Institutional Advancement,
ty with an unrestricted grant in recognition
of
its
leader-
in both the academic use of
computing and the
development of computer-based administrative
systems
In announcing this year's
$7,500 contribution, Charles
J. Reylek, Sperry sales manager, Harrisburg
branch,
said, "Ths Sperry Corporation is committed
to the fur-
human
enhances
com-
puter industry.
Bloomsburg's integrated central information system
resources development through education, and the high technology of computer
corporations
like ours is central to the success of the
future of our
country. A partnership of industry and education
and promotes these ideas. Customers of our
products and services provide the basis for our
growth
and direction for future planning."
Two years ago, the Sperry Corporation featured
in
the Sperry
ing, housing, financial aid, student accounting,
definition, academic records, and enrollments.
"One
ed for sound decision making," Doyle G.
Dodson, director of Computer Services, explained.
"We have also
been able to address the need for sharply
increased
research and classroom support." The
original Sperry
1100/21 computer system has been
updated to 1160/61,
which doubles the memory capacity and
increases the
of terminals available to students,
faculty
and
administrators.
"We
commented
are pleased that Sperry has chosen to
recognize
Bloomsburg. The
course
gift is a fine example of corporate
support for higher education. Such gifts from
business industry, foundations and individual donors
will help to
provide the margin of excellence in our
programs
of our objectives in planning
our current computer system and in developing the integrated
information program was to provide quick access
to data need-
and
services."
Thousands
enjoy
at
summer
Bloomsburg
By the end
summer programs at Bloomshave brought nearly 4,000 people to
the Bloomsburg area. According to John Abell, assistant
dean of the College of Extended Programs, the 1983
of August,
burg University
will
summer
calendar includes 30 conferences with attendees ranging from school children to senior citizens.
Before the summer is over. 3,500 people will spend
a
weekend or more in the campus dormitories, while 500
more will commute to the area for special programs.
Church conferences are drawing the largest number
of participants. The United Methodist Church Conference attracted 1,500 people in June, and a Lutheran
Youth Conference in August will bring another 1,200.
Senior citizens will take college classes in three weeklong Elderhostel sessions this summer.
Some of the summer visitors will use their time for
specialized learning. This summer the campus will host
three computer workshops, a learning styles workshop
an advanced placement calculus
workshop, high school student council leadership training, and a workshop for athletic trainers.
Athletics will be another important part of the summer programs. Among the offerings are three tennis
for educators,
camp
sessions, four wrestling
camps, two basketball
camps, a Husky school
for football, and a Bloomsburg
University Junior Tennis Tournament.
Professional, educational, governmental, or business
groups interested in using the college's conference/workshop facilities should call John Abell at
717-389-1004.
Five Arts
—
GRADUATES OF 1886 This is one of several old
photographs which Murray and M. Rebecca
West
Hackenburg bought at a recent auction in Berwick
The
photo is identified on the back as
"Harrisburg girls
Class of 1886, B.S.N.S." The ladies
are identified as
-
(seated) Emma Murphy, M. Elfleda Barnes
Gottschall,
Josephine Koser, (standing) Emma M. Fisher, ?
Barnes, and Mae E. Eaton. The Hackenburgs are 1950
and 1941 graduates, and their son, Randy, is a 1969
grad.
They reside
at R.D.
3,
Box
12,
Danville, Pa. 17821.
& Science teachers honored
Outstanding faculty,
1983
Five teachers in the College of Arts and Sciences
have
been honored as outstanding faculty members for 1983.
The award recipients, announced by the Arts and
Sciences Student Council, are Peter Bohling, Ph.D.,
associate professor of economics; Charles Brennan",
Ph.D., professor of mathematics; William Carlough,
Ph.D., professor and chairman of philosophy
and anthropology; Marjorie Clay, Ph.D.. associate professor
of
philosophy and anthropology; and James Sperry,
Ph.D.,
professor of history.
Faculty are nominated and selected by the 18-member
and cannot receive the award in two consecutive
council
years. Criteria for this year's selection included concern
for individual students, quality of advising,
excellence
as a teacher, accessibility outside the classroom,
and
participation and involvement in the University beyond
classroom
DR. WILLIAM CARLOUGH
DR.
PETER BOHLING
DR. JAMES SPERRY
DR.
CHARLES BRENN AN
activities.
This year's recipients were honored by the council
at
an informal reception held April 17 at the home of Arts
and Sciences Dean G. Alfred Forsyth.
Bloomsburg .University
18
(Continued from Page 16)
Diane Susan Gansel '82 and Jerome John O'Brien, Jr.
were married on June 11. The bride was a substitute
teacher for the Berwick-Bloomsburg area. Her husband is
employed as a computer programmer with Leeds & Northrup at North Wales. They live at Harleysville, Pa.
Jeffrey P. Ehring *81 and Judith Carol Clayton are
'82
engaged. Jeff is employed by Donald K. Ehring Inc. in
Langhorne. Judith, a Shippensburg University graduate,
teaches at the Village School ho use A November wedding
is
planned.
Timothy Alan Latshaw '81 and Charlene Lynn Snyder
were married on May 21. The bride is employed in the
medical records department at Geisinger Medical Center.
Tim is a teacher at Sun Area Vo-Tech School in New
Berlin. They live at Mahoning Terrace Apartments,
Catherine Ann (Barry) Wasilewski '82 and her husband,
Jeffrey '82, live at 413 South Lime Street, Lancaster. Pa.
17602. Catherine is a registered nurse employed at the
Lancaster General Hospital. Jeff is assistant manager of
Davenports', Harrisburg, Pa.
Danville, Pa. 17821.
William
Roanne Heisner '81 and Richard Tombasco were married in June. The newly-weds live at 1742 Dawn Circle,
Whitehall, Pa. 18052. Roanne is a procurement assistant
at Pennsylvania Power and Light Co. Rich is a nuclear
analyst with the
S. Barron '82 is working as a sales represenAshland Oil and is currently residing in New
Hampshire. He was married on June 25 to Nancy
Kressler, a would-be Class of 1983 graduate who transferred from Bloomsburg to Mansfield in early 1982. She
tative for
plans to
same firm.
make
Their address
Thomas E. Leipold '81 and Carol A. Kunicki are engaged. A July 14, 1984 wedding is being planned. Carol is
an internal auditor for the Miller-Wohl Co., Seacaucus,
N.J. Tom is attending the University of Toledo College of
Mary
a career
is
54 M>
Ellen Klinger
employed as a
in
the special education field.
Amherst St., Nashua, N.H.
-
HUSBAND-WIFE DEGREES
Robert and Kimberly
McCall were one of two married couples who received
degrees at commencement exercises in May. They were
among 882 undergraduate and graduate candidates
03060.
'82 is
a registered nurse currently
nurse at Lankenau Hospital in
staff
receiving degrees.
Kimberly, daughter of Mrs. Wilma Steinour, Hanover,
Pa., was awarded a Master of Education degree in
teaching of the hearing impaired. She previously earned
a
Philadelphia.
Law.
Teresa Tafelski '82 is employed as a correctional officer
with the Federal Bureau of Prisons in Pleasanton, Califor-
Her address
nia.
1085 Murrieta Blvd., Sunset
No. 124, Livermore, Calif. 94550.
1982
Deborah Metrick '82 and Joseph F. Barlek '81 are
engaged. The bride-to-be is a medical technologist at
Polyclinic Medical Center, Harrisburg. Joe is an accountant for Deioitte Fashions
and Sells
wedding is planned for September 17.
in Allen town.
The
Lessie
Bachelor of Science degree in elementary education in
1979 and is a 1975 graduate of Delone Catholic High School.
Robert, son of Mr. and Mrs. James McCall, Jr.,
Lancaster, Pa., graduated summa cum laude with
a bachelor
of science degree in business administration
majoring in
computer/information science. He is a 1975 graduate of
Towers
Ann Bowman
'82 and Stephen Edward Diltz
were
Stephen is employed by Diltz Equipment Sales, Lime Ridge. They make their home in
Lightstreet, Pa.
married on
Lisa
Kathleen A. Mulroy '82 is a clerk with Valley Forge Information Service in King of Prussia, Pa. Her mailing address is 2415 Hillside Drive. Norristown, Pa. 19403.
is
May
Manheim Township High School.
21.
Ann Hackenburg
and Daniel Ross Mitchell were
married on May 14. Lisa is a graduate student in speech
pathology at Bloomsburg. Her husband is employed at
Faylor Middlecreek. They live at R.D. 1, Beavertown, Pa.
'82
Roxie D. Chilson '83 and Marvin Kennedy Shrawder
were married on June 11. The bride is employed as a
nurse at Geisinger Medical Center. Her husband is employed by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board in
Bloomsburg. They live at R.D. 2, Danville, Pa. 17821.
17813.
Deanna Kay Musser
were married on May
Northumberland, Pa.
'82
and Thomas Joseph Wallish
They live at 345 Twelfth St
17857. The bride is a special
education
teacher with Central Susquehanna
Intermediate Unit. Her husband is employed
at PP&L
28.
Washington ville.
Polly Jane
Thomas
'82
and Philip Dean Tharp were
married on May 14. Polly is a registered nurse at GeisMedical Center, Danville. Her husband is a
locksmith at Keister's Keys, Selinsgrove.
inger
Peggy Ann Stahl '82 and Thomas Daniel Makowski
were
married on June 4. Peggy is employed
at Geisinger
Medical Center in the Pediatrics
Department Her
husband, a Penn State graduate, plans a
career as
Brian David Santell '82 and Melanie Ann Tosloskie were
married on May 7. They live in Bear Gap, Elysburg.
in the U.S.
trol
a pilot
Air Force.
Miriarirlx»rraine Harrar "82 and Robert Joseph
Muller
are engaged. Miriam
is
employed by Perdue Farms
Md. Bob, a graduate of East Stroudsburg State
College and Pennsylvania State
University, is
Salisbury,
employed
by Sanders & Thomas Inc., engineering
consultants Horsham. A May 1984 wedding is planned.
Gail
'82 and David Heimbach '82
were marThe bride is employed in the general accounting office at Hess's. Her husband
is retail sales
manager for Stadler Distributors of PlumsteadviUe They
liveinAllentown.Pa.
Dan Snyder '82 started as a teller at the West Milton
State Bank on May 2. He will also
continue his job at the
Fence Restaurant. His address
Columbia, Pa.
is
R.D.
1,
Box
394
New
17856.
Dennis E. Beaver '82 and Linda Ann
Hoffman are
engaged. Dennis attends Gettysburg
Lutheran
Theological Seminary and plans to become
an ordained
minister. Linda attends Bloomsburg
University and also
is employed at the Amity
House Restaurant in Lewisburg
A July 1984 wedding is planned.
Richard Eric Jansson '82 and Denise Julia
Gasper are
engaged. Dick is employed by Western
Electric as a computer programmer in Piscataway,
N.J. Denise, a Perm
State graduate, is working toward
a master's degree at
Bloomsburg. She is employed as
a speech-language
pathologist by Schuylkill Intermediate
Unit 29 A June
wedding
is
%
Laurel C. Mowery '82 and Jeffrey L. Archey
were married on May 21. The bride is employed
as a registered
nurse at Geisinger Medical Center. The bridegroom,
a
Lock Haven University graduate, is a teacher
at
Bloomsburg High School.
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
They
live
at
R.D.
Jean Marie Fillman *82 and James Hockenbury,
Jr. are
engaged. The bride-to-be is employed as a
special education teacher with the Lincoln
Intermediate Unit 11 of
York, Pa. Her fiance is employed by the
physical therapy
department of Nesbitt Memorial Hospital in
Kingston
The wedding will take place August 20 in
St. Charles
Church in Sugar Notch, Pa.
Lisa
Ann Hague
9,
'82 and
1982
Jeffrey E.
Somers
'82
were mar-
m the Evangelical Congregational
Church in Plymouth Meeting, Lisa is
employed as a second grade teacher in East Stroudsburg,
and Jeff is sales
and marketing coordinator for Eagle Lake
Corporation
Gouldsboro. Their address
Stroudsburg, Pa. 18360.
is
216
Park
ding
and Carl F. Kobeski were marThey live m Factoryville, Pa. The
'82
on April 16.
bridegroom, a Pennsylvania State University graduate,
employed by United Parcel Service.
is
is
planned.
Linda Michelle Singletary '83 and Charles F. Cowher,
engaged. Linda is employed part-time at Amity
House Restaurant in Lewisburg. Her fiance is a graduate
of Delaware Valley College. He is employed
by Personalized Landscaping, Reading. An October 15 wedding
Jr. are
is
planned.
1
Cynthia Ann Bell '82 and George R. Kibbe II were
married on May 21. They live at Owings
Mills, Maryland.
ried on October
Judy Balliet '83 and Gary Heddens '81 are engaged.
Judy is employed by Nichols. Gary is an assistant
manager for Wool worths in Scranton. An October wed-
in
Avenue
Dave Superdock "83, senior co-captain of the 1983
Bloomsburg University men's tennis team, was honored
on May 11 at the NCAA Division II Tennis
Championships
Banquet by being named as the 1983 recipient of the
Arthur Ashe Award as the nation's outstanding
studenttennis player.
The banquet was held in San Marcos, Tex., site
of the
II tourney where Superdock
competed. Southwest Texas State University was the host institution.
The award, which is named after the former
Wimbledon
champion, is given annually by the Intercollegiate
Tennis
Coaches Association (ITCA) to the Division II
Division
player who
best exemplifies the same characteristics
that Ashe
himself displayed during his illustrious
career.
To be considered for the award, an athlete
must fulfill
major categories: scholastic and
extra-curricular
four
achievement, sportsmanship and character,
humanitarian concern for others and a high
level of tennis accomplishments.
After being chosen as one of the four
finalists out of 170
candidates, Superdock was then named
by the members
of the ITCA to represent the
Eastern Region in the national competition and was then
selected as the winner
over representatives from the South,
Mid-West and West
1983
While at Bloomsburg, Superdock
compiled awardwinning statistics both on and off the
court.
planned.
Mary Jane Fedder
ried
is a secretary at M-L Appliances
and Televisions,
Shamokin. Brian is a computer programmer at ConCentral Inc., Bloomsburg.
Ann Reiss
ried in April 1983.
1984
The
bride
Inc.,
Joanne Irene Zimmerman '83 and Douglas Caffey
Rogers were married on April 30. Douglas, a 1976
graduate of East Stroudsburg University, is employed by
Safety Light Corp. in Bloomsburg. They make their home
at 236 Legion Road, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Donna Mae Stewart '83 and Glenn A. Wagner
Jr were
married on May 28. Donna Mae is employed
as a hostess
at Perkins Cake & Steak at Hummels
Wharf. Her husband
is a heavy equipment engineer
for Local 542 and is employed at Sunset Rink, Shamokin
Dam. Thev live in
Hummels Wharf,
Pa.
Dave was named
to the
Who's Who
of
America Among
College Students, and during
his junior year he was
honored by the ITCA as one of the
nation's top scholarathletes for Division
Superdock
y
II.
will attend the
L ^emtf
Pennsylvania State UniversiHCrShey MedlCal "enter
l0Cated 31
Alumni Quarterly
19
NEWS BRIEFS
Bloomsburg University expects an
enrollment of beween 4,900 and 5.000 full-time undergraduate
students
for the 1983 fall semester.
Admission figures recently
announced by Dr. Tom L. Cooper, Dean
of Admissions,
snow the number is consistent with the
University's efforts to maintain steady enrollment
at the level
established six years ago.
Cooper said his office stopped accepting
applications
for the fall semester on May 6
when University student
capacity was reached. At that time.
4,593 freshmen and
785 transfer applications had been processed
for the
1,080 freshmen and 210 transfer spaces.
Cooper said
freshmen applications were 2.1% above
the level
reached last year, while transfer applications
remained
at the
same
level.
Students indicated that they chose
Bloomsburg,
Cooper said, because of its quality programs,
reasonable cost, strong faculty and good
academic
reputation, desirable location, and
accessibility to
major
highways.
"This success should be a source of pride for the
entire University community," Cooper
said. "We expect
enrollments to remain stable throughout
most of the
1980s because of the academic strengths
which have
been established over the years."
Last year, 4.879 full-time undergraduates
were
en-
rolled for the fall semester.
YEAR CLASS — Members
of the Class of 1948 held
their reunion dinner at the Hotel
Magee on Saturday, June
35-
Benefield honored
Richard A. Benefield, a prominent Bloomsburg entrepreneur and a member of the Bloomsburg University
Business Advisory Beard, was honored as Businessper-
son
of the
Year by the state chapter
da. Phi Beta
Lambda
of Phi
In attendance were (seated) Eleanor Stunnan, a
guest; Ralph E. Seltzer, Nancy Evancho Seltzer and Betty
11.
Beta Lamb-
a broad-based business service
corporation consisting of 300,000 students, of which there
is a local chapter at the University.
is
Other members of the advisory board are Dr. Harvey
A. Andruss, president emeritus of the University; E.H.
Alkire. Air Products and Chemicals, Allentown; Clayton
Daley, retired president, Wise Foods and Drake
Bakeries. Inc.; Robert Ellis, president. Quality Inn,
Lancaster; James M. Gustave '58, assistant national
manager. Jack Daniels Distillery; Harriet Kocher
'39. regional franchise representative for
Quality Inns,
Edward
J. Kreitz '50, director of
marketing, K-Mart International; Richard F. Laux
president, United
Penn Bank; Dr. James Murphy,
'52,
chief,
four-year programs, State Education Department;
George W. O'Connell "58, vice president for sales and
marketing, Brown Company (Gulf-Western Industries);
Frank Rabold, retired vice president for administration,
Bethlehem Steel Corp.; Janet Sherman, manager,
secretarial services, Geisinger Medical Center.
Robert Nearing, director emeritus of First Eastern
Bank, N.A., was recognized
retiring
for his
The average freshman
The average freshman signing up for classes at BSC
was 18 years old, from between 51 and 500 miles
away, and a "B" student in high school.
Most freshmen made Bloomsburg State their first
choice for a college, choosing it for its good academic
reputation and going there in hopes of getting a better
last fall
sales
International;
years of service upon
from the board.
Released time grants
Six Bloomsburg University professors have been
awarded released time grants for the summer. The
grants were awarded on the basis of competition. Each
mer he
complete a novel, his seventh book.
Prof. I. Sue Jackson, Department of Sociology and
Social Welfare, received a grant for public service. Ms.
Jackson, who is active in community-based organizations, earned the grant on basis of her proposals,
"Facilitating Democratic Functioning in Small Community Organizations."
will
courtesy of the Cooperative Institutional Research Prothe American Council on Education
and the University of California, Los Angeles.
The survey, the result of questions asked matri-
gram conducted by
culating freshmen in the Fall of 1982. reveals
teresting things about the Class of 1986.
some
in-
For instance:
—Most BSC freshmen come from unbroken homes
where the father works full-tune and the mother works
only part-time, if at all. Most parents had at least high
1
More than half (57 percent) think they have
a good chance to be satisfied with college.
their field.
But less than half
to get a job to
pay
(45 percent) think they will be able
and less than
have a good chance to make
for college expenses
half (44 percent) think they
at least a
Among
B
average.
the objectives
new
students considered to be
essential or very important:
—Be
d.. ttuuiuiiig
—Raise a family
...
.....u
i.^.vj
v
.j
percent)
(73 percent)
Recipients of the creative teaching grants are Dr.
Judith Downing, of the Department of Biological and
Allied Health Services; and Dr. Riley Smith, of the
English department. Dr. Downing will develop
well off financially (69 percent
—Help others in difficulty (62 percent)
microcomputer software for a course in microbiology.
Dr. Smith will develop a course in sociolinguistics.
—Be successful in their own business (42 percent)
—Have administrative responsibility (40 percent)
—Keep up with political affairs (32 percent)
Recipients of the research grants are Dr. David
Superdock, Department of Physics, who will study environmental radiation monitoring, and Dr. Susan
Rusinko, English department, who will study the works
of playwright Tom Stoppard.
(
Most women are planning careersas business executives (14 percent), elementary teachers (13 percent),
completed college.
Most BSC freshmen (82 percent) think their chances
are very good for getting their bachelor's degree and
most 71 percent) think they will be able to find a job in
award during summer 1981, and the
award in summer 1982. This sum-
Most men expect careers as business executives (23
percent), computer analysts 119 percent), and accountants 17 percent). Eleven percent of the freshmen men
The majority of students entering BSC last fall intended to major in accounting or business administration in
preparation for a career as an accountant, a business
executive or a computer programmer or analyst.
This profile of the average BSC freshman comes
one sum-
college research grant
cent).
are undecided.
school class, or three weeks salary.
Dr. Walter M. Brasch, associate professor of English
and journalism, was awarded the creative arts grant.
He is the first Bloomsburg professor to receive grants in
three separate fields. He previously received the
mer
study for women are accounting 13 percent),
nursing (10 percent) and elementary education (9 perfields of
job.
school educations, but while 20 percent of the fathers
had college degrees, only 12 percent of the mothers had
of the six professors will receive a reduction of
creative teaching
Fisher; (standing) Stanley C. Krzywicki,
Mrs.
Krzywicki, E. Ann Baldy Boyer, Dr. Lea Boyer,
Bertha
M. Stunnan, June Novak Bones, and Salvadore Bones.
L.
—Be
I
—Obtain the recognition of colleagues (54 percent)
—Develop a philosophy of life (47 percent)
—Promote
racial understanding (27 percent).
The most popular
fields of
study for
men
are account-
ing (19 percent), business administration (13 percent)
and computer science
(12 percent).
The most popular
accountants (12 percent) or musicians (10 percent). Only 7 percent of freshmen women are undecided.
Perhaps the strangest questionon the survey dealt
with activities engaged in by students during the past
year. The results:
Eighty percent drank beer, 77 percent attended a conpercent took vitamins, 70 percent stayed up all
night, 59 percent attended a religious service, 50 percent
cert, 71
wore glasses or contact lenses, 46 percent played a
musical instrument, 32 percent wrote a computer program, 20 percent took part in a demonstration, and 21
percent took a computer-assisted course. Only 8 percent
smoked cigarettes frequently, 28 percent said
they jogged frequently, 4 percent took a tranquilizing
said they
pill,
and almost
2 percent
had taken sleeping
pills.
Bloomsburg University
20
Free seminar
Promotions
The College of Professional Studies offered a free
three-day, hands-on seminar in the use of the microcomputer to 1983 graduates in education. Held the week
commencement, the seminar provided instruction
who did not have the opportunity to
gain expertise in this technological area. The seminar
was filled to capacity.
Instructors were Julie Abell, Dr. Harold Bailey, Dr.
Charles Brennan, Dr. June Trudnak, and Robert Abbott.
Go.est lecturer was Dr. Bernard Fradkin, dean of instructional services. Seminar coordinator was Dr.
Mat-
The following faculty members have been promoted
Leo G. Barrile, sociology and social welfare, from assistant to associate professor; Barbara E. Behr,
finance
and business law, associate to professor; Lucille A.
Gambardella. nursing, assistant to associate; Frederick
C. Hill, biological and allied health sciences,
associate to
professor; Brian A. Johnson, geography and
earth
after
for those students
thew Zoppetti.
Professor honored
Dr. Walter Brascb, associate professor
of English and
journalism, was honored for Best
Education Writing in
1982 in a national competition
sponsored by the Pacific
Coast Press Club, an association
of journalists in
science, associate to professor; Lawrence L.
Mack,
chemistry, associate to professor; David J.
Minder'hout,
philosophy and anthropology, associate to
professor;
Joseph R. Pifer, geography and earth science,
assistant
to associate; George A. Turner, history,
associate to
professor.
'
California,
New
Bloomsburg University
Oregon and Washington.
Tenure granted
On recommendation by the University-Wide
Tenure
Committee, the following faculty
members have been
granted tenure: Ellen B. Barker,
psychology; Leo G
Barnle. sociology and social
welfare; Stephen S
Batory business administration;
Jean E. Berry," nursing; Walter M. Brasch,
English; Robert L. Campbell
nursuig; Michael C. Estrada,
admissions; Charles J
'
e
llZT
,
o
J
C. Kincaid
ment Program during the month
Mark S Melnychuk, biological
and
NMC V A Onuschak, nursing;
CbemiStr5 Peter B Venut
°. b^iness ad-
HCati0n;
?thh
J
24 participants
-
SC,eDCeS:
-
mii-ct
\
ministration;
Anne
K. Wilson, sociology and
social
of June.
He was one
of
chosen from higher education ad-
Trustees reorganize
Robert Buehner Jr., associate
director of legal services for Geisinger System
Services, Danville, has been
Eight students of French visited
Quebec City in
accompanied by Dr. Ariane Foureman
and
re-elected
chairman of the council
Bloomsburg University.
May
Dr Marv
Also re-elected were
of the faculty.
vice chairman;
In the report of the 1982
last issue of
Annual Fund, included
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY,
of trustees for
Bob Griffin 73 and Marge Griffin 69 were omitted
from the President s Club list and from their
respective
class listings.
Dr. Lee Beaumont 43 was omitted from
the Long
Porch Society and from the list of Class
of 1943
con-
tributors.
LaRoy Davis
67,
FeasterviJJe
and Lucy Szabo 73, Berwick,
secretary.
Own your own Husky
The Husky, the
mascot
official
of
Bloomsburg
alma
University, can now be yours, to show-off
your
mater's university status.
This handsome 18" X 24" color poster, suitable
for
framing, is printed on a special German
paper dou-
ble coated to
add
The Husky is wearing the
school colors of maroon and gold around his
neck
and stands proud in front of a deep blue sky.
The
photograph was taken by senior Kevin
Lynch
photography editor for the Obiter and
photographed
for the Alumni Association.
Now you have the opportunity to own this handsome Husky for just $2.50, plus $1.40 for postage
and handling. All proceeds will go to the
lustre.
Obiter to
help reduce escalating costs of future
yearbooks
The poster is also an excellent gift for any
,
Bloomsburg
friend of
University.
Please complete and mail
to:
HUSKY POSTER
c/o Alumni Affairs
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg University
Bloomsburg, PA 17815
Universil
of Pennsylvania
-posters at $3.90 (moiled) equal $_
Nome,
.Class Year
Address.
City
Phone Number
.State
will
.
Zip.
in the
the following
omissions were made:
"
Students visit Canada
Lou John
"Ben
ministrators in national competition.
-
"'
participating in the
Program participant
Dr. Daniel C. Pantaleo, dean of the
College of Extended Programs and Graduate Studies,
participated in the
Z
Carnegie-Mellon University Higher Education
Manage-
'
James
is
the program to encourage industry,
government, and
academic institutions to plan joint ventures
to encourage development of advanced technology
programs.
,
Hopple, business administration;
partnership
Franklin Partnership," a program for
attracting and
developing advanced technology business
and industry
in Pennsylvania. Governor Dick
Thornburgh initiated
be shipped carefully
in
heavywall mailing tubes.
Dr. Seronsy honored
Dr. Louise Seronsy, professor of psychology
at
Bloomsburg University from
1966 until her retirement in
1973, was honored by the Mental Health Association
of
Columbia and Montour Counties for her key contributions in establishing and nurturing local
mental health
services.
Khan
at meeting
Dr. Saleem Khan, associate professor of
economics,
invited to attend a meeting of the National
Advisory
Council for South Asian Affairs on April
was
29 at the
Department of State in Washington. A morning session
dealt with recent visits by the prime minister
of India
and the president of Pakistan. Afternoon sessions
featured trade relations and immigration laws.
Article published
Dr. Donald A. Camplese of the psychology
department
and Dr. William S. O'Bruba of the department of
elementary and early childhood education department
have an article entitled "Beyond Bibliotherapy" included in the second edition of Reading Horizons: Selected
Readings. The book is published by the Reading
Center
and Clinic at Western Michigan University.
Presents paper
Dr. Lynne C. Miller, department of biology and allied
health science, presented a paper at the 59th Annual
Meeting
of the
Pennsylvania Academy of Science at
Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Her paper, entitled "The
Sell-
Cure Mechanism
in Hookworm Parasitosis with Nippostrongylus Brasiliensis in Pediatric, Adult, and
Geriatric Laboratory Rats," was also the subject of a
recent faculty research grant awarded by Bloomsburg
University.
Reading Conference
Dr. AJvin Granowsky, educational writer and consultant from Dallas, Texas, was the principal speaker
at
the 19th Annual Reading Conference at Bloomsburg
University. His topic, "Ughting Up Kids' Eyes," took a
light-hearted look at the serious issues of sexism, handling of diverse ethnic groups and races, and the "keep it
pure" mentality that affect the writing
of
books used
in
our schools.
Receives scholarship
Suzanne L. Lawrence, a Bloomsburg University senior
from Boyertown, has been awarded a |1,000 scholarship
by the Pennsylvania Institute of Certified Public Accountants.
Miss Lawrence was selected by ths trustees of ths
scholarship fund from 59 candidates nominated
by colleges and universities from throughout Penn-
PICPA
sylvania.
Sociology Careers Day
Five recent sociology graduates returned to campus
this spring for the second annual Careers Day of the
Sociology /Social Welfare Department. They discussed
the current job market, their present positions and
made suggestions to current students regarding
graduating from college, moving into the labor force,
the prospects
and
possibilities for sociology
and
social
welfare majors.
The returning alumni were Dennis Abruzzi 74, vice
president of Leaseway Transportation Corp. in Birmingham, Michigan; Ann Howell '82, a candidate for a
Master's Degree in Social Work at Mary wood College;
Pam Kramer 79, controller and expediter for Bechtel
Corp. at the Bell Bend Nuclear Plant; Lynne Mustapich
'82, a hospital social worker in Clinton, Maryland; and
Annette Starrantino '80, caseworker in the Division of
Mental Retardation in Delaware.
The panelists discussed their particular professions
with reference to the type of education they had reits relationships to present positions, and provid-
ceived,
ed illuminating insights into the various kinds of jobs
that students with a B.A. in sociology or social welfare
might seek.
Article published
Nancy Dlttman, Department of Business Education and Office Administration, had an article published
in the March, 1983, issue of the Journal of Employment
Counseling. Her article is entitled "How to Hold a SucDr.
cessful Career Planning Conference for
Women."
Mock convention
The
1984 Presidential
tradition at
Nominating Convention
Bloomsburg
—
will
—
a
be held in Centennial
Gymnasium
on Friday, April 6 (7-10 p.m.), and on
Saturday, April 7 (9 a.m. to 4 p.m.).
Alumni who would
like to participate in the
vention should contact
ty
Alumni Affairs
Doug Hippenstiel
Office.
mock
in the
Career Fair
Bloomsburg graduates returned to campus for the sixth annual career fair sponsored by
the
Career Development Center on March 30. Representing
their respective employers were
Marshall Mehring '69,
personnel manager, Ralston Purina Company;
Mark
Yachera '81, sales representative, Xerox Corporation;
John James 74, copy products sales representative,
A number
con-
Universi-
of
Eastman Kodak Company; Steve
J. Bright 78, director
Ernst and Whinney; Glenn Lang 74, New
Jersey Department of Higher Education; and Catherine
G. Branscom '64, admissions administrator, The
of recruiting,
In-
stitute for
Paralegal Training.
Article published
Dr. Brian Johnson, department of geography and
earth science, had an article published in the
March-
April, 1983, issue of the Journal of Geography.
"Who Is
On Our Streets?" examines methods of tabulating,
analyzing and mapping pedestrian traffic in a
town's
central business district.
Conference held
spring Business and Office Education Conference,
sponsored by the Department of Business Education and
Office Administration, was held on campus
on April 30.
The conference was entitled "New Technology Im-
A
plications for the Office
The
Gamma
and the Curriculum."
Xi Chapter
The University
Delta Pi Epsilon, honorary
graduate fraternity for teacher education, held an initiation ceremony and business meeting after
the conference concluded.
of
Forensic team 12th
Bloomsburg University's forensics team came back
from the 33rd Pi Kappa Delta Speech and Debate Tour-
nament as the only east coast school in the top 12.
The tournament, held in Estes Park, Colorado, was
at-
tended by 730 competitors and coaches from 109 colleges
and universities representing 35 states.
Summer school
A
total of 1,572
enrollment
undergraduate and graduate students
registered for the first six-week summer session and the
first three-week session at Bloomsburg
University. This
is an increase of over 200 students
compared to a year
ago, according to Dr. Daniel Pantaleo, dean of the College of Extended Programs and Graduate Studies.
chemistry; Dr. Andrew Karpinski, communications
disorders and special education; Dr. Richard Alderfer,
communication studies; Harold Frey, computer and information systems; Dr. William O'Bruba, curriculum
and foundations; Dr. Woo Bong Lee, economics; Dr.
Louis Thompson, English; Dr. Bernard Dill, finance and
business law; Dr. Wendelin Frantz, geography and
earth science; Dr. Jerry Medlock, health, physical
education and athletics; George Turner, history; Dr.
Mary Lou John, languages and
cultures; Dr. Melvin
Woodward, marketing/management; Dr. John Kerlin,
Jr., mathematics and computer science; Dr. Stephen
Wallace, music; Dr. Nancy Onuschak, nursing; Dr.
William Carlough, philosophy and anthropology; Dr.
David Harper, physics; Dr. Robert Rosholt, political
science; Dr. J. Calvin Walker, psychology; and I. Sue
Jackson, sociology and social welfare.
Assistant chairpersons are Dr. Gerald Powers, communication disorders and special education; A. J.
McDonnell, Jr., curriculum and foundations; and
Sharon Kribbs, nursing.
Psychology meeting
Four presentations were made by Bloomsburg University faculty and students at the annual meeting of the
Eastern Psychological Association in Philadelphia. Participants were student Michelle Mathis, Dr. James H.
Da ton. Dr. Connie Schick, Dr. Michael Gay nor and Dr.
Jean R. Atak.
Also attending the meeting were Dr. John Baird, Dr.
Steven Cohen, Dr. Alex Poplawsky, adjunct professor
Peggy Forsyth, and Dr. Al Forsyth, dean of the College
of Arts and Sciences.
I
Seminar on money
The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia and
University's Center for Economic Education co-
the
May 19. Speakers discussed the
and the money supply and its
impact on the personal lives of Americans.
sponsored a seminar on
relationship of the
FRB
fill two posiand director of
development.
After an unsuccessful national search
last year to
the combined position of director of
planning and
fill
development, Dr. Raymond Babineau of the
faculty was
asked to serve as director of institutional
planning during the 1982-1983 academic year. Mrs.
Peggy Bailey an
administrative assistant in the grants office,
continued
to serve as acting director of
development.
Since the effort to combine the two functions
was not
successful, it was decided to divide the
responsibilities
once again and conduct a separate search
for each position.
The director of institutional planning will be a
halftime position during the fall, spring
and summer
terms and will be appointed after an internal
search has
been conducted. The appointment will be for
a threeyear term.
The
Department chairpersons
The following faculty members have been elected
department chairpersons: Robert Yori, accounting;
Barbara Strohman, art; Dr. James Cole, biological and
allied health sciences; John Olivio, Jr., business education and office administration; Dr. Roy Pointer,
Searches underway
conducting searches to
is
tions: director of institutional planning
be
full-time position of director of
filled
development
will
through a national search.
Reorganization
The College of Professional Studies, under the
Dean Howard K. Macauley Jr., has been
leader-
ship of
reorganized into the School of Education and the School
of Health Sciences.
is
Directing the School of Education on a half-time basis
Dr. Ray Babineau. The school includes the Depart-
ment of Curriculum and Foundations, the Department
Communication Disorders and Special Education, the
Multicultural Education Center and the Curriculum
of
Materials Center.
Directing the School of Health and Sciences on a halftime basis is Nancy Onuschak. The school includes the
Department
of
Nursing and programs
in Allied Health.
Sabbatical leaves
recommended by the UniversityWide Sabbatical Committee, for the 1984-1985 academic
year at full pay have been approved for: Dr. Stephen D.
Beck, mathematics and computer sciences, first
semester; Ronald R. Champoux, communications
Leaves
of absence,
disorders, second semester; Paul G. Hartung,
mathematics and computer science, second semester
Brian A. Johnson, geography and earth science, first
semester; Robert B. Koslosky, art, academic year (onehalf pay ); Arthur W. Lysiak, history, second semester;
Colleen J. Marks, special education, first semester;
James W. Percey, political science, second semester;
Joseph R. Pifer, geography and earth science, summers
of 1984 and 1985; William J. Sproule, health, physical
education and athletics, summers of 1984 and 1985;
Gerald H. Strauss, English, second semester; Barbara
J. Strohman, art, academic year (one-half pay); H.
Cecil Turberville, Jr., health, physical education and
athletics, academic year; J. Calvin Walker, psychology,
summers of 1984 and 1985; William S. Woznek, elementary and early childhood education, first semester.
Approved for sabbatical leave for the full academic
year at one half pay was Dr. Christopher Armstrong,
sociology and social welfare. Lucille Gambardella, nursing, was approved for sabbatical leave for the academic
year without pay.
22
Bloomsburg University
U.S. judge gives good advice
.1» T 1
T* nj
<
•>
The Honorable
Harry T.
Edwards of the United States
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, used
the
topic "Reflecting on the Past to Chart a Course
for the
.
p.
Future" in his commencement address
graduates on May 15.
First, an individual should be self-reliant and
autonomous. Every person is literally capable of making himself; he can therefore be held responsible for his
character and his fate.
Second, all men are created equal. Everyone should
therefore stand equal before the law and should have an
equal chance for economic and social advancement.
Note that the touchstone is equality of opportunity, not
Bloomsburg
to
Judge Edwards focused on two salient features of our
and derived from them a series of sug-
nation's history
gestions regarding the
respond
them.
to
ways the graduates might
the opportunities and tasks that lie ahead
of
text:
I
am
so pleased to be here today to share in
the festivities of this graduation ceremony. I commend
the graduates for their academic achievements and
my
talk today, I will try to capitalize on your mood.
ask you to reflect, not only on your own past, but
on our nation's past, in order to set in context your own
unanimous commitment to these values that has
our country great. But when you pause to think
about it, the durability of our commitment to the foregoing ideals is rather extraordinary.
To be sure, the creed has undergone some slight
and aspirations and thereby strengthen and
enrich the sense of purpose with which you approach the
tasks ahead.
modifications. But, for the most part, the significant
events in our history have derived, not from alterations
our values, but from progressive extension of the
THE FIRST THEME I ask you to consider is the
powerful and distinctive way in which ideology has
figured in our cultural and political development.
Few
nations have ever been as dependent as we have
been on
a system of ideas
not only for the structure of our
government but for our sense of cultural identity. As
Professor Samuel Huntington has recently observed,
Americans, to an extent unparalleled among modern
in
tenets of our ideology into ever
ment of woman's suffrage after the turn of the century,
the attack on racial discrimination that began
in the
mid-twentieth century, and the assault on sex
discrimination that has only just begun. But the ideal
In the late eighteenth century, the United States
literally coalesced around an ideology
a unique configuration of convictions, hopes, and fears,
drawn from
a variety of European intellectual traditions,
-
has remained virtually unchanged.
make no effort here to assess the various
theories that have been offered to explain our
historical
commitment to a firm set of ideals. Rather, I will ask
you to consider the effects of the stability of our
itself
modified to
I will
the unusual circumstances of life in the
British North
American colonies, and welded together by the
founders
fit
of our nation into a potent engine of
revolution. In the
T.
Edwards, principal speaker
creed.
For me, possibly the most important effect of the
system is the resulting atrophy of
our capacity for critical self examination. So
many of us
have for so long accepted the principles that
I have
mentioned that they have become "submerged" in our
stability of our value
its
at the
May
was appointed to the United
States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia on
February
He
exercises,
20, 1980.
a graduate of Cornell University
(1962) and the
University of Michigan Law
School (1965). He graduated
from Michigan with high distinction
and was a member of
the Michigan Law Review
and the Order of the Coif
em5er f 016 faCUlty at
°
of
is
M
w^TL^
Ed^cJZJi
1976 until 1982
age
at Harvard Un,versit
y from
where he taught a course in law
and higher
turer ui law at
E
J Udge
Mat
.
M^TS
WarclS
?,
T
uT
Harvard Law School and as
a
guished Lecturer in
Law at Duke Law School
f0r
^ ******
member
.
?
tional Policy
Studies
at Harvard, a
visory council for the School
of Industrial
Uons at Cornell University,
a
board for toe Institute of
of the ad-
and Labor Rela-
member of the advisor^
Law and Economics at the
* member of the Visiting
*"»*
XZS y * *?^ versity
SEES,y*rf
lv
Educa-
of
0110380
«
we must remedy
this
cultivate the habit of self-
for the interaction of businessmen, workers, and voters
a model founded upon the concepts of independence,
—
—
competition, and bargaining
is truly appropriate
within the family. In your future careers and private
lives, I
hope that you
will
avoid such thoughtless distor-
tions of our traditional values.
I
ALSO HOPE
that you will recognize that world conmay require further adjustments,
ditions in the future
or even abandonment, of certain ideals heretofore
viewed as inviolate. I say this because you will confront
numerous, seemingly impossible, challenges in attempting to find your place in society following graduation.
My years as a judge have caused me to understand that,
as available economic and environmental resources
in
this country continue to decline, and the number
of
claimants continues to grow, the competition for
resources becomes unbearably intense. I have found
that a great many cases that we hear in court
are extremely difficult to resolve because of these and other
equally troubling considerations. For example, complex
cases - and inconsistent solutions — continue to
arise in
connection with the use of nuclear power, preservation
environment, health care for the poor, govern-
of the
ment employment programs, food stamps and other
welfare programs, the availability of contraceptives
for
children without parental consent, busing
and affirmative action, capital punishment, religion
in the
public schools and euthanasia. Everyone agrees
that the
underlying problems need to be addressed, but
there is
rarely a consensus with respect to the solutions.
Obviously, there is a glaring need for some
"new
thinking" in certain of these areas.
A redefinition of the
problems, perhaps, or a better, clearer understanding
of
the conflicting forces that impact on
the problems. It
may be that these problems require a new analytical
method
for arriving at solutions.
There are often too
ultimately satisfied;
moreover, the best solutions frequently
may lie
somewhere other than at the point of the
precarious and
tentative equilibrium struck among
competing
many
interests,
and no one
is
interests
In
due course,
this
it
be up
will
"new thinking"
-
deal with these issues
Distin-
" Dresent, y ser™g as a member of the
1
of social
political life. To take one example, the flowering
of
the ideal of equality of political power and economic
opportunity gave rise (in part) to the steady expansion
of
manhood suffrage in the early nineteenth century, the
elimination of chattel slavery in the 1860s, the establish-
peoples, identify their nationality with their
political
creed.
Judge Harry
more spheres
and
—
ensuing decades, the components of that
ideology were
modified and realigned. But, by the early
nineteenth
century the principal features of the
creed were well
-
made
efforts
commencement
prosperi-
tually
I will
We must
intelligently to the
our principles when they prove inappropriate. I offer
you one example: I spoke earlier about the steady
growth of the principle of equality in ever more spheres
of social life. Most of us would agree that each of those
extensions has been desirable. But there are some instances in which proposed applications of the principle
may be highly questionable. As an example, I would cite
relations between parents and children. In my view, recent developments in the law have proceeded too far in
the direction of establishing a social system where
parents and their children are viewed as autonomous
and "equal"; in other words, we have been overly concerned with identifying and strengthening the "rights"
of children as "against" their parents. And we have
paid too little attention to the preservation and development of the bonds between them. The source of the problem, I think, is our inability or unwillingness to consider whether a model of human relations appropriate
and moral ad-
FEW
happy occasion, wondering what the
gave the ideology
And material
to social
OF YOU will find any of these tenets startling
or even open to serious question. To this day, most
Americans regard the foregoing ideals as common
ground. To a large extent, it is our long-standing, vir-
future will bring.
established. Six basic principles
shape and strength:
inevitable.
a tradition,
scrutiny, regain a capacity for modifying or qualifying
vances.
—
In
is
and progress naturally lead
ty
is
TO RESPOND
cultural defect.
Sixth, history is linear. If the first five principles are
years and are anticipating, with mixed emonext phase of your lives. Your families and
friends, who join you here today, likely are given to
similar thoughts
musing over the chain of events that
to this
challenges of the coming decades,
respected, progress
tions, the
have led
democratic and should confine
for the
it is
A liberalism
not challenged to reexamine and
renew itself."
IF WE ARE
its activities,
liberal tradition is
colossal liberal absolutism.'
'a
Third, the legitimacy of government derives from the
continuous consent of the governed. The state should be
man's labor are his by natural
Thus whatever goods a man does acquire in free
competition with others belong to him absolutely and the
government is bound to protect his ownership.
last four
forms
wrong with the
thus established
Fifth, the fruits of a
—
it
is
equality of condition.)
right.
is a time for reflection
for
backward and forward glances. You, the members of
the graduating class, undoubtedly are giving some
thought to the character of your experiences over the
our habitual ways of thinking and
inclined to raise one of those
content but the fact that
its liberal
that
»
political issues.
in their pursuit of the degrees to be conferred today.
A commencement
blem aptly: "What
not
sense can be developed by education or experience, but
is usually corrupted by exposure to the temptations of
power. Therefore the "common men" are fundamentally trustworthy and are the best judges of moral and
perseverance in surviving nearly two decades of
formal education. And, on behalf of the graduates, I offer "thanks" (with love) to their parents, spouses, other
family members and friends who have supported them
their
in
we
values to the surface and seriously ask: does it remain
viable and valuable in its original form; should we continue to adhere to it? Garry Wills has described this pro-
most part, to the facilitation of consensual social and
economic activities of private citizens.
Fourth, every man has a "moral sense" that enables
him intuitively to discern right and wrong. That moral
QUARTERLY.
embedded
acting. Rarely are
(
Because Judge Edwards" address was well received
by his audience, especially the faculty, the text of his
speech is shared with readers of THE ALUMNI
The
culture,
workable
to you to develop some of
come up with approaches to
that lead to better and more
to
results.
YOU WILL BE SERIOUSLY
hampered in any atyour vision is narrowly
I fear that you will find
that the
follow the "straight and narrow"
path will
tempt at "new thinking"
if
focused. Unfortunately,
temptation to
be great.
Since the seventeenth century,
Americans have been
peculiarly prone to organize
themselves into what
-
Robert Wieb as cultural "segments"
selfperpetuating, closed circles of
like-minded people
within such circles that we
social life;
have conducted most
and
it is
to
them
our senses of self-worth.
that
we commonly
(
It is
of our
look for
Continued on Page 23
Alumni Quarterly
.
.
to students graduating in
.
Continued from Page 22,
The typical forms assumed by such "segments"
have
changed in the course of our history. In the
colonial
(
period, they were
most often defined by traditional
and allegiances; examples included the
aristocracy that spanned the British
colonies, the
These problems are not without solutions. Americans
once had a very strong tradition of participation in
"voluntary associations. Writing in the 1830s. Tocqueville observed that Americans
frequently and spontaneously
af-
finities
adherents
of particular religious sects,
members
—
and the
provement
of the characters of the participants: "When
people attend to public affairs, they are necessarily
drawn from the circle of their own interests and
region, on one hand,
and race, ethnicity, or
examples included Creoles, ScotchIrish Appalachian farmers, and Boston
"Brahmins "
Since approximately the 1920s, the most
important
cultural segments in America have consisted
of occupational groups and associations.
Twentieth-century social
class, on the other
snatched at times from self -observation ... Feelings and
opinions are recruited, the heart is enlarged, and the
...
mind is developed ..."
enclaves, in other words, tend to have functional
bases;
a person's goals, friendship network, sense
ply new fields of knowledge, and partly by their
members' desire for increased income and social
af-
-
aspect of our collective and individual lives
from our
health and legal rights to our recreation and tastes
in
clothes
is ministered to by a well-defined, selfperpetuating priesthood. Membership in one of these
-
vocational sects typically is the crux of a person's identhe principal defining feature of his social and per-
tity,
am
a nurse," or "I am a lawyer" comes
more quickly to the lips than "I live in Washington,"
like Stevie Wonder," or even "I am a Catholic."
sonal
life.
"I
THE HISTORICAL SUBDIVISION
of
American
I
socie-
and the changing criteria by which
those cells have been defined, have had countless effects
on our culture and politics. Several of those effects are
particularly important.
ty into social cells,
One
effect is the constriction of our capacity for
pathetic understanding of associates, spouses and
carpool-mates.
we choose people
sym-
-
with people
who come from
of his life,
does a person
or live
in
other social worlds. Confronted with a truly novel
character, we may recoil uncomprehendingly.
to
Your own "many prolonged, repeated experiences"
are likely to bring you to a similar understanding.
Your
efforts will be more fruitful and happy
if you begin with
Ishmael's insight.
might be derived from that extraordinary
novel; the one I would have you consider today is the
idea of moderation. Melville grasped and brilliantly
depicted a principle that we, today, too often forget:
single-minded devotion to any one goal
unhealthy, but potentially destructive.
As the book dims
in
is
not only
your memory, you are
likely to
remember Ahab
only as a maniacal captain, crazed by
the loss of his leg. But there was much that was respectable, indeed heroic, in Ahab's quest. His search for
the
white whale was, at bottom, a search for insight
— for
the meaning of life. If you didn't know the outcome of
the story, you might be inclined to commend such a
yearning to penetrate to the heart of the mystery of ex-
—
wrong
what is insane - about Ahab's
purpose but its single-minded intensity.
Nothing matters to the captain except achieving the insight he believes he will gain by finding and killing the
whale. He would — and does
sacrifice everything to
istence.
What
quest
not
is
is
its
Ahab's foil is Ishmael, the narrator. He too is a seeker
after insight. But two things render Ishmael's quest
healthy and enable him to survive. First, he recognizes
and accepts the limitations of his powers of perception.
He is aware that, in looking at "things spiritual," we
are
oysters observing the sun through water."
Second, Ishmael recognizes the importance of maintainall "like
and cultivating one's ties with other people. In a
wonderfully evocative passage, he describes the feeling
—
energy policies; you
man
state
insights
—
to list,
IN CLOSING, I ask you to reflect for a moment on the
lessons to be derived from one of the classics of
American literature
Melville's Moby Dick. Countless
ing
Most of you have, thus far. been shielded from the full
force of these pressures. The invigorating variety of the
student body in which you have moved, the broad spec-
ready
squeeze case eternally."
will
that end.
hobbies and even our vocabularies and syntaxes come to
resemble those of the people with whom we have surrounded ourselves. After years of such adaptation, we
lose our capacity even to converse - on all but the most
am
realize his full potential.
—
essentially like
ourselves. Gradually, usually unconsciously, our habits,
superficial level
shape and quality
-
groups of "specialists" have coalesced, hardened, and
subdivided. The result is that, today, almost every
heart
the bed, the table, the saddle, the
fire-side, the country
now that I have perceived all this, I
and
for the frail of heart
sometimes too
frightening to consider. Beginning in about twenty
years, you will be among the leaders of our great society. You will decide our education,
environmental and
;
status,
cases
beginning with Aristotle
is the recognition that concerted political activity is enlivening and elevating.
Selffulfillment and true freedom depend upon action
only
by participating in the basic societal decisions that
fect the
Since the 1870s, specialized occupational groups
have
been proliferating in American society. Stimulated partly by the need for cadres of experts to
develop and ap-
man must eventually lower, or at least shift,
his conceit of attainable felicity; not
placing it anywhere
in the intellect or the fancy; but
in the wife, the
TOMORROW, with your degree in hand, you face the
world. The challenges that await you are too
numerous
-
of status,
peace that came over him when, while kneading
the
that comes from the head of the whale,
he and his
shipmates joined hands: "For now. since by many
prolonged, repeated experiences, I have
perceived that in
of
Tocqueville's insights are keen, but not novel. Central
to a long and important tradition in political theory
-
and conversation often are shaped by his or her work.
During the past century, these factors have been reinforced by an independent economic and cultural
development: the process of "professionalization."
May
oil
all
im-
overlapping
-
their efforts
variety of economic and social goals. As Tocqueville
shrewdly observed, the most important benefit secured
through voluntary collective action is not improvement
of the outcomes of political and social processes,
but
of often sharply defined local
political parties
or factions. In the nineteenth century,
segments were
more often defined on the basis of two
variables
combined
— to pursue a wide
23
for
will run our major businesses; you
our spaceships; you will control our local,
and federal governments; you will find the cures
cancer and heart disease; you will find ways to join
nations in peace; you will feed and house the poor;
and
you will be protectors of freedom and liberty in this
land.
You will be able to meet these challenges because you
have been trained to identify questions of importance;
to be skeptical of quick answers; to probe alternatives;
to persist in the face of difficulties; to remain
broad in
your thinking; and to act without sacrificing quality and
compassion.
There is only one more thing that I will offer, possibly
as a word of advice. When you started college,
each one
of you possessed some unique talents and
interesting
personal traits having nothing whatsoever to do
with
your educational training. Hang on to these personal
possessions. These are the things that make you special.
Hang on to your favorite sweat shirts; keep on playing
or listening to Beethoven; paint your pictures; sail
your
boats; climb your mountains. In other words, stay in
touch with
life and with the people around you other
than just those in your occupation. I believe that in the
end analysis, your relationships with your spouse,
children, close friends, and parents, will prove to
be
much more
significant than
You should
hold.
any particular job
that you
strive to be a great teacher,
businessman, nurse, or whatever, but not to the excluI do not tell you this to suggest that you
should be inattentive to your work; rather; I am merely
urging you to keep a balanced perspective on life.
I thank you for inviting me to share this wonderful
ocsion of all else.
casion with you.
Good
luck, best wishes,
and God-speed.
trum of ideas to which you have been exposed in the last
four years, and your freedom, as yet, from occupational
specialization have kept your horizons wide. But in the
coming years, you will no longer have the luxury of such
a wonderfully variegated and stimulating atmosphere.
Those
of
you who are
in specialized occupational
powerful pressures. Specialized training
itself is often valuable and liberating; it prepares and
frees you for wider participation in our society than is
often possible without it. But its cultural concommitants
are frequently stultifying. The next time you are at a
cocktail party — or college reunion
observe the
groups of business managers discussing recent
areas
will face
—
developments
in the stock market, the circles of nurses
or doctors talking about their more "interesting" pa-
teachers discussing curriculum problems, the computer programmers "talking shop";
watch how awkward they become when some random
social event prompts a realignment of the groups. It is a
fate to which all of us are condemned, to some extent,
by the occupational specialization necessitated by
tients, the school
modern
avoid
its
But if you
worst effects.
society.
make an
effort,
you can
A SECOND EFFECT of our cultural segmentation is
first. By rooting our interests and identities in narrow, relatively homogeneous groups, we
related to the
have allowed our sense
of social responsibility to
wane.
The more we make common cause with the members
one group, the less duty we
Behind too many injustices
titude: "I care
themselves."
about
feel to aid or
in
our society
my people;
of
educate others.
lies
the at-
others can fend for
-
ALUMNI ARTISTS
Participating in an exhibit of
alumni art, entitled "A Decade of Alumni Art, 1970-1980 "
were (from left) Lynn Da vies '72, Susan Grace '74,
Doniia
Shaffer
Sharon demons '79, Jack Lamed, arJody Millard "79, John Veneski '76, and Dan
78,
tist/critic;
Grant
Not present for the photograph were Eris-Marie
Robert Behr '71, Alessla Cribben 80, Don
Sproehnle "79, John Stugrin '73 and Kevin Wixted '79. The
'77.
Bunnell
exhibit
'80,
was shown in
to April 28.
the
Haas Gallery
of Art
from April
7
24
Bloomsburg University
Alumni Scholarships awarded
Alumni scholarships worth $16,800 have been
presented to 46 students who will be studying
at
Bloomsburg University this fall. Most of them were
presented during a special program at the University
on
Sunday, April 24. Three were presented at high
school
awards programs.
This year's recipients include:
David M. Kessler, Bfoomsburg. recipient of the
Oscar
H. and Sarah H. Bakeless Alumni Scholarship
($300),
given in
memory
of these
former members
of the
University faculty.
Melanie G.
G- Berger, Pine Grove, recipient of the
Walter S. Rygiel Alumni Scholarship
($300), given
honor of this retired professor and former
Maureen Chism,
Chism. Parkside,
ParksiH. recipient of the Boyd F.
Buckingham Alumni Scholarship ($300), given in honor
in
chairman
of the vice president
of
emeritus of the University.
Linda J. Teets, Hummelstown, recipient of an Alumni
Scholarship for a student in the College of Professional
the
Department of Business Education.
Paula A. Osman, Muncy, recipient of the
Mildred
Eaton Levitt Alumni Scholarship
($500), given by Mrs
Levitt, Class of 1942, and her
husband, Meyer, in ap-
Studies ($300).
Kelly L. Obert, Newfoundland, recipient of an Alumni
Scholarship for a student in the College of Professional
Studies ($300).
preciation for the education she received
at Bloomsburg.
Gail B. Hartman, Phoenixville,
recipient of the NorH.lgar Alumn. Scholarship
($250), given in memory
of this business professor
by G&C Industries Inc
Bloomsburg, to a deserving student
in the College' of
Business.
Melissa A. Harris, Monroeton, recipient of the Howard
Fenstemaker Alumni Scholarship ($300), given in
honor of this retired faculty member and former
man
Rosemarie A. Heck, Harleysville. recipient of the
John A. Hoch Alumni Scholarship ($300), given in
honor
of this retired professor and administrator.
James F Tomedi, Bloomsburg, recipient of an Alumni
.
Scholarship for a student in the College of Arts
and
Sciences ($300 ).
Jeffrey C. Eschbach, Bloomsburg, recipient
of an
Alumni Scholarship for a student in the College
of Arts
and Sciences ($300).
Gail M. Musser, Bethlehem, recipient of the
Harvey
A. Andruss Alumni Scholarship ($300),
given in honor of
the president emeritus of the University.
F.
presi-
dent of the Alumni Association.
Catherine Simpson, Bloomsburg, recipient of ths
James Bryden Alumni Scholarship ($300), given in
memory of this professor of communication disorders.
Marianne K. Wingeard, Harrisburg, recipient of
the
Laurie A. Snyder. Shoemakersville,
recipient of an
Alumni Scholarship for a student in
the College of
Business ($300).
Glenn A. Manahan, Towanda. recipient
of an Alumni
Scholarship for a student in the
College of Business
($300
Emily Reuwsaat Alumni Scholarship ($300), given in
honor of this retired professor of special education.
Cheryl A. Kutchinsky, Shenandoah, recipient of the
).
Cynthia
J. Albitz, Gilbertsville,
recipient of the
Bruce Albert Alumni Scholarship
($300) given
memory of the former president of the
Alumni
ass
R
of 1924 Alumni Scholarship ($300), given
to a student majoring in special education.
in
Associa-
Kathryn M. Thomas, Kulpmont, recipient of
the
Margaret Bittner Parke Alumni Scholarship
($400),
given by the late educator and author
to recognize an
English major for outstanding achievement.
Betsy J. Wollam, Huntington, N.Y., recipient
of the
William Teitsworth Alumni Scholarship
($300), given in
memory of this member of the Class of 1971 who
was a
former editor of the student newspaper.
Linda S. Angst, Tamaqua, recipient of the
President's
Alumni Scholarship ($300), given
in honor of the incumbent president of the University.
KESSLER
TOMEDI
HECK
ESCHBACH
VfUSSER
BERGER
Bruce P. Warnke, Barrington, N.J.,
recipient of the
Ercel D. Bidleman Alumni Scholarship
($300) funded
by a monetary gift to the University
which has been
used to create a scholarship in
his
memory
Ellen M. Troxell, Pottsville.
recipient of" the Class of
Alumni Scholarship ($300), given in honor
of the
1968
class.
£3
OSMAN
Susan M. Jurgill, Centralia, recipient
of the Kimber C
Kuster Alumni Scholarship
($300), presented in memory'
y member wh0 was ^ tne c 'ass of
I
HARTMAN
1913
SNYDER
MANAHAN
ALBITZ
TEETS
Darla S. Snyder, Bloomsburg,
recipient of an Alumni
Scholarship ($300J for a student
in any currjcu]um
Margaret A. Lessie. Laureldale,
recipient of the
AJumm Scholarsh 'P <*300).
graduate who provided this fund
J Jon es Hatbor °. rec 'P«ent of the
of the 1894
}
mZ"
c
b
'
Mary
memory
in
Timothy M.
and friends of this member
of the Class of 1981 and
former president of the Sigma
Iota Omega fraternity
Jean M. Millen, Whitehall,
recipient of a Lucy McCammon Alumni Athletic Scholarship
($475) presented
in honor of this retired
member
of the faculty
taught physical education
and coached
who
many teams
Kathy Watson, Erie, recipient
of a Lucy MCL
McCammnn
*nmon
Alumni Athletic Scholarship
($150)
eb0rah A L° Dg F,eetwo<>d
recipient of a Lucy Mcra
A
Cammon
Alumni
Athletic Scholarship
$300)
Kelly A. Knaus, Edinboro,
recipient of a Lucy McCammon Alumni Athletic Scholarship
^
-
'
.
,
i
($125)
Sman
m£Z *"
Philadel Phia. recipient of
a Lucy
Alumn. Athletic Scholarship
,$350)
P ,per '. Burlin gton, N.J., recipient
of an
ff
Nelson Alumni
Athletic Scholarship
'
McGimmon
E HN.L
E.R
memory
of this
member
^
,$250) given in
of the Class of 1911.
a former
Son"
PrCSident
^
f
° thC Alumni
P T
Mahanoy *> reci ie "t of an
P
NeUon
J.
Nelson Alumni
Athletic Scholarship
($450)
G
-
f
lbb,e
\?
£^
i^"™'
ZL^r'
EI
*
EH
fnhn
John
'
^"fctfon.
,
L.
miil°H
EH
N.J-, recipient of
W^Barre.
recipient of
an
^T™ Ath,CtiC Sc*H»larahip(f700)
recipient
m
MeFadden,
Oakland.
N.J..
of the
6
HMoS gten
J
Martin A. Coyne, Hazleton.
recipient of a Clyde S
GD3BLE
FRANCISCO
COYNE
FRY
FRITZ
an
AtWetic S^larship
(1700)
84 0,
s
Reichart Scholarships
^
Three Bloomsburg area high
school graduates are
° f Pau
Reichart
Scholars!, ps o attend Bloomsburg
h
T
Un.versity.
The scholarships are
presented annually by the
Columb.a
"3S
V
-
m^^X:^ "
Z1
r
SThoVrH
The
Insurance Com-
ReiChartl f0Under and chai
™"
of
- «* *ass of
1983 recipients are
Diann Kindig, a 1983 eraduatP
Columbia High School; Mark
graduate of Southern Columbia High
School; and JiU S
Harvey, a 1982 graduate of
Bloomsburg High
of Central
Tapped
i
Kindig,
who
School.
will receive $1,400, is the
daughter of Dale
of Lime Ridge. She expect
to major
J
and Joyce Kindig
in
special education.
Tappe will also receive $1,400. He is
the son
and Florence Tappe of Catawissa
R.D.
3.
study radiologic technology.
He
of Charles
plans to
Harvey was a 1982 recipient of a
$1,400 scholarship
and earned an additional grant of
$1,300 this year bv
maintaining better than the minimum
C-plus average
her freshman year. She is the
daughter of Charles R
and Donna L. Harvey of Bloomsburg.
At least one additional recipient
in
be selected in
1984 and the three current recipients
will be eligible for
additional grants by maintaining
at least a C-plus
average.
There were
will
HONORS
—
Receiving
special
recognition
Awards Convocation on
at
the
April 24 were two alumni, a student leader and a retired
administrator. Shown with
University President James H.
McCormick, left, are
William F. Gittler Jr.
'72 and Jane Glttler '12,
recipients ot
certificates of appreciation; Paul Stockier
"83, recipient of
the Senior Award; and Dr. William
G. Williams, recipient
of a certificate of appreciation.
36 applications for this year's
scholar-
ships.
4
Gittlers: quiet contributors'
The William F. Gittler family, retired college administrator William G. Williams and senior student
Paul
Stockier were honored at the 14th Awards
Convocation
on April
24.
Certificates of appreciation,
summa cum laude
awards, Service Key Awards and Who's Who certificates were presented to 200 students at
an awards
luncheon in the Scranton Commons. The other awards
were made at the convocation.
Haas Center
In honoring Mr.
Stockier received the senior award
for his service to
coUege during the past four years.
Sr. and Mr.
and Mrs. William Gittler Jr., President James McCormick referred to the family as two generations of quiet
his
many
activities at
Bloomsburg, Stockier
members of Gov. Thornburgh's transition
tee which provided guidance toward
moving
commit-
to universi-
ty status on July
1.
For the past year, Stockier has been vice
chairman
Region Six of the American Student Association
Other participants on the awards program
were vice
President for academic affairs Larry Jones,
vice president for student life Jerrold Griffis, dean
of student life
Robert Norton, director of student activities
John
Trathen, and awards committee chairman
Donna Polak.
During the day's activities, recognition was
for
excellence' in the academic, as well as in the extracurricular and community areas." McCormick
said.
The two certificates of appreciation were accepted by
William Gittler Jr. and his wife, Jane, both 1972
graduates. Mr. and Mrs. William Gittler Sr. were unable
to
Among
was president of the Community Government
Association, which is the highest student-elected
office.
The Huntingdon Valley native was one of three
stu-
dent
contributors to Bloomsburg University and the communities of Bloomsburg and Catawissa.
"Their generous giving has resulted in a 'margin of
director of personnel and special advisor to the president, for his work
a
According to McCormick, Gordon conscientiously
represented student concerns and views
and served as
board secretary, which "testifies to the
the
for the Arts.
McCormick praised Williams, former
Thomas Gordon received
respect of his
and Mrs. William Gittler
to attend.
trustee
trustee colleagues."
James B. Creasy '57, professor of accounting and a
Bloomsburg alumnus, delivered the convocation address
at the
Former student
trustee award.
129 students
who graduated
recipients, 10 service
given to
with honors, 31 Who's Who
key recipients and
35 other reci-
pients of special awards.
improve and expand communications among
employees.
Creasy pointed out in his address that most of today's
prominent people do not take a "large view of their
S.
leadership assignments, but simply tend the machinery
of that part of society to which they belong.
panies.
"The cure is not to work against the fragmentation of
leadership, but to create better channels of communica-
High school graduates Diann Kindig, Mark Tappe and
Jill
Harvey receive their Paul I. Reichart Alumni Scholarsnips from Paul Reichart of Columbia Insurane
Com-
tions among the leadership groups, which you must
do
as you enter today's job market."
Hubler Scholarship
The Elizabeth H. Hubler Alumni Scholarship
was
awarded to Alex Wolfgang, a senior at North
Schuylkill
Junior^Senior High School, during an
awards assembly
J
on June 7.
The $1,000 scholarship is presented annually
by Miss
Hubler's nephew, George, as a memorial
to the former
educator and supervisor in the school
district. Miss
Hubler served on the board of directors of the
Bloomsburg University Alumni Association from
1948
until her death in 1982.
This was the second scholarship
presented in memory
of Miss Hubler to a North Schuylkill
graduate who will
attend Bloomsburg University
—
HUBLER SCHOLARSHIP Alex Wolfgang, center, accepts the Elizabeth H. Hubler Alumni Scholarship from
Dorothy Snyder, Miss Hubler's niece, who represented the
family. The $1,000 was provided by Miss Hubler's nephew,
George Hubler. At left is Doug Hippenstiel, director
alumni affairs at the University.
of
.
.
%
.
Bloomsburg University
The Norman Hilgar scholarship
A
scholarship fund has been established in memory
of
L. Hilgar, a well-known and popular professor of business administration, who died on
April 28.
1974. He began his teaciung career at the Plum
Township High School where he also served as assistant
basketball coach for two years and as head coach dur-
Norman
Dr.
He was
59 and had been hospitalized since March 22.
Contributions may be sent to the Alumni Office, made
payable to Bloomsburg University Alumni Association
with a notation that it is for the Hilgar Memorial
A
ing the 1955-1956 season.
He joined the Bloomsburg University faculty in 1956
as a professor of business administration. He served as
Fund.
native of Grove City in Butler County, he was
on March
He graduated from Grove
20, 1924.
chairman
bom
of the
department from 1977
School and served in the Army Air Force as
a radio
operator and gunner for three years during
World War
practice with his other responsibilities.
His wife, Katherine E., died on June
He
received a B.A. degree in commerce at
Grove City
College in 1949, a master's degree in
commercial education at the University of Pittsburgh in
1953, and a doctor
of education degree at the University
of Pittsburgh in
DR. NORMAN HILGAR
McHale
home; one granddaughter and one
Gene Murphy, John Hobbis and Shirley Pahls as
McHale who
townspeople.
Production crew members were Hitoshi
Sato, lighting
design; Scott Baughter, technical director;
Jim Huff-
man, master electrician; Richard Weiss, stage
manager; Jim Buller, lights; Julie Pyle, props;
Wendy
Hernck and Paul Marth, set construction.
directed here 19 years ago.
Rosemary Renn Gerber and Janice Feimster
Walters
67 were freshmen when he cast them
as Kate and Bianthe
Shakespeare's comedy. In "Our
in
women each played
several
cameo
roles
Gerber is secretary of the departments
of languages
and cultures, philosophy and anthropology
at the
University, while Walters has been
an English instructor in the Center for Academic
Development and now
works with the Educational Opportunity
Center
townspeople and children were included
in the
cast. Allen Murphy played the
narrator, or Stage
3*11
Many
Manager.
>.
Others
?5
What
Bloom
Dr. J. Almus Russell, 86, retired
faculty
on June 25 at Bloomsburg
Hospital.
member, died
He had been
in
health for three weeks.
Born
Career Development
in
Mason, N.H., he was the son
of the late
ill
Jason
RusseU A raduat€ of Dartmouth
8
™.
College in \^°Z
1920, he received his
leS
"
The Career Development Center
can offer the following
services to Bloomsburg University
Alumni:
(3)
tional
master's degree from
Cornell University in 1925, and his
doctorate in 1932
During the early part of his life he
had served as a high
career counseling
<2) credential
list
openings
Alumni
(consists primarily of educa-
from
living in the
Room
12 of the
retirement
The
Ben Franklin Building
Transcripts
languages
meeting of
field of
He was
Wilson
'
the organization of the
University's department of
nursing in the mid-1970s and
served as the first^part
H
ment chairperson.
Rlnnnfcf
Bloomsburg
^M
° 35 years 16 of whicn
V
In addit.on to teaching
French
he participated
cs
tn
to
m p us
tf
in
f
r
were at
and Latin
various baroque performances
on
'
emer
status and privileges were
granted
Smithner and three other 1983
retirees: Robert L
47, Michael McHale and
Robert Richey
i^
Bunge
86
1939. He and his wife, the
former Frances Carothers
celebrated their 42nd wedding
anniversary on^ath 9
Surviving, in addition to
his wife, are a son.
Charles
a N Y a daughter Mrs
:
y
Fredencksb
^g. Va. seven
in
&£TV^
Z
lh?M
-
-
-
^^en;
1938-45
and a
sister.
Louisville, Ky.
at
in 1965.
his
nickname
of
"Uncle
Sam"
to the
°! Amenca He was a "th°r of more than
t
30C published articles
in the field of literature,
history
'
and antiques.
kh
I
He was
a
member
Resurgam Lod ge No
quest, including the first
request
^Srr«Sl7
si g
qaeStS
m
T**
*
and bear the
Consustory, and the
He was
a
of the First Presbyterian
3] f&AM, Mitchell,
Bloomsburg Royal Arch Chapter
No
member
the Columbia-Montour
Torch
Club and the Bloomsburg Rotary
Club where he served
f r
yearS He was the
tf^Sf"*
of
K°
the Bbomsburg
club to serve as district
governor o
Rotary Du* nct 737 He was a
member
of
™m™r
"
«rewed
to
the
Registrar of Bloomsburg
Universirv
Church
S.D.; Caldwell
.
.
of
SvP^TfJMenS°
iLsr
.
^Jf"
1
v eteran of
* f
death by his
first
'
aub
-
Co'lumbT
- *~
Ciety the
s
Susquehanna
and the Mod
Wo «-ld War
S
he was preceded in
wife, the former
Louise P.
ern
I.
DR.
J.
2£t
grand-
;
reat -e rand
R^DhTAHH^
"aipn
f
(Adelle) Lonng,
:
-
'
recognized as a national authority
on Samuel
who gave
m^lv
education
She was instrumen-
tal in
Washington and Jefferson College,
Washington Pa
from 1945-17; and at Bloomsburg
from 1947 until his
immediate area are also welcome
to use the career library.
Interested individuals should
contact the center at 389-4070
for more information.
center is located in
lj
?" Kcom P Ieted 29 years in the
niS";offwhich
mne
were at Bloomsburg.
1
school teacher for six years.
He was a professor of English at Dakota
Wesleyan
University in Mitchell, S.D.,
services
vacancy mailing
and cultures, were approved
at the June
the University trustees.
Dr. Russell dies at age
can do for you
(1)
The retirements of Dr. Gertrude Flynn,
professor of
nursing and Dr. Eric Smithner.
professor of
;
in the cast
were Craig Himes, Dr. GibbsRebecca Ermish, Mrs. Gibbs; Laura
Green, Emily
Webb; John Robbins, Mr. Webb; Neil
Strine Wally
Webb; Ann Coyle, Mrs. Webb; Jesse
Whitenight, Simon
Stinson; Harry Strine, Constable
Warren and Professor
Willard; Sean Strine, Joe Croweli;
J. Scott Atherton
Howie Newsome; and Mary Lou John,
Darlene Hobbis
U.
sister.
show
directs final
retired at the end of the spring
semester.
Coming back for the occasion were two
actresses who
were in "Taming of the Shrew," the
first show McHale
Town"
7, 1982.
Surviving are three daughters, Peggy Scholl, Trexlertown; Katie and Nancy Hilgar, both at home;
three
sons, Joseph L. 75, Barto; Paul A. and John E.,
both at
'Our Town," staged at the University
in April, was
the last production directed by
Michael J.
ca respectively
to 1980.
Dr. Hilgar was known as an authority in tax and accounting theory, and he combined a small active tax
City High
ALMUS RUSSELL
Mrs.
Mark October 21-23,
1983 on your
calendar and plan on joining us for
Homecoming '83 at Bloomsburg
OCTOBER
University
s
SATURDAY
m
2
3
4
9
10
II
#17
24
22
1983
w
r
5
12
13
!
6
18 19 20(2
25 26 27
31
OCT. 1983
911a.m.
Registration
Coffee
10 a.m.
& Doughnuts,
Carver Hall
Combined Parade with Bloomsburg
Town of Bloomsburg
H.S. and the
11:30 a.m.
1:30p.m.
Ox Roast (prepared by Hotel Magee)
Nelson Fieldhouse. reservations only
Football kick-off time
Redman Stadium
2nd year George Landis and Huskies,
vs. Cheyney. Half-time Spectacular
with all-New Husky Marching Band
6p.m.
7p.m.
9p.m.
•
•
Social
Dancing
Hotel Magee will cater Its fine food at the Caldwell
Consistory on Market Square
Phil Spaziani, 13. and his band "Breakthru" will
provide exciting,
•
Dinner-Dance
comes back to
Bloomsburg
Dinner
versatile,
top 40 dancing music
Trip for two to Orlando, Florida will
be awarded
Dick Benefield of Hotel Magee
AREA HOTEL
Best
120
LISTING
Western— Danville
Exit 33. 1-80
Phone: 275-4640
Rooms— Lounge— Entertainment
Superb Restaurant— Pool
Singles $27.50
Hotel
Formerly Holiday Inn
Magee
Located in Downtown Bloomsburg
Serving Fine Food
and
Warm
Hospitality
Phone: 784-3200 for Reservations
Reception at the President's Home for members of The
Bloomsburg Benefactors, The Carver Tower Associates The
President's Club, The Executive Club, The Maroon
and Gold
Society, The Long Porch Society, The Founders' Club,
The
Centennial Club.
SHERATON DANVILLE INN
1-80
4 Pa.
54. Exit 33(717) 275-5510
Indr. Tropical Crtyrd,
7
Htd Pool
Whrpl. Saunas. 2-Lounges, 2-Rstrnts.
Relaxing Rooms. Bang. Facilities
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"D
3
The ALUMNI
Volume
83,
Number
QUARTERLY
Bloomsburg University
4
of Pennsylvania
December
1983
Doctorate,
medallion
presented
University
firsts
Two significant "firsts" occurred during Winter
Commencement exercises on Dec. 18: presentation
first
University Medallion and the
first
of the
honorary
doctorate.
Recipients of the medallion were Marco and Louise
Mitrani. whose lives have been inextricably entwined In
the life of their community and the region for half a
century.
The first honorary degree, the Doctor of Pedagogy, was
conferred upon Howard Fowler Fenstemaker in
recognition of his distinguished career in the field of
education and for his contribution of service to his alma
mater and
his community.
The commencement address was delivered by
Dr.
Charlotte Hess, professor of elementary education in the
curriculum and foundations department. She joined the
BU faculty in 1972.
The Mitranis are residents of Bloomsburg. where Mr.
Mitrani Is chairman of the board of Milco Industries. Inc
Mr. Mitrani. a native of Andhanapolis, Turkey, came to
the United States in 1920; Mrs. Mitrani emigrated to this
country from Sofia, Bulgaria, in 1921.
In addition to their community service, the Mitranis
have made significant philanthropic contributions to
local, regional, national and international organizations.
For many years, the Mitranis have been patrons of the
arts. Specifically, they have supported the cultural
programs of the University, are charter members of the
Community Patrons program, and are consistent
supporters of the programs provided by the University's
music and theater departments.
During the past several years, the University has been
involved in the initial stages of an effort to improve the
acoustics in the auditorium of the Haas Center for the
Arts.
The first stage of this project is nearing completion
This work, which includes an orchestra shell and an
acoustical "eyebrow" reflector panel, has been made
possible entirely through gifts from the Mitrani Family
Foundation.
This initial presentation of the University Medallion
acknowledged the Mitranis" many contributions to their
community, their years of service, civic mindedness,
philanthropy, and their very special relationship with
Bloomsburg University.
The medallion is a cast pewter replica of the bronze
medallion worn by the president of the university during
academic convocations as a symbol of the leadership
responsibilities vested in that office. The medallion,
designed and sculpted by Richard E. Bonham of
Catawissa, is circular in form, symbolizing the bringing
together of a special group of people mutually interested
in the University's mission.
Howard Fenstemaker was born in Berwick on Oct. 19,
1893, the son of the late George C. and Adella Fowler
Fenstemaker. He was graduated from Berwick High
School in 1910 and from Bloomsburg State Normal School
in 1912.
After-teaching a year in Dallas Township, Luzerne
County, and two years in Berwick, he enrolled in the
University of Michigan. He received his bachelor of arts
degree, magna cum laude, in 1918, and was inducted into
the Michigan chapter of Phi Beta Kappa
Continued on page 5
—
AWARDS
Howard Fenstemaker (left) was awarded the first Bloomsburg University
honorary degree, and Louise and Marco Mitrani (center) were given the first University Medallion
winter commencement services Dec 18. At right is acting University president Larry Jones.
SPECIAL
Two new
A scholarship in memory of
Dr. Cecil C. Seronsy has been
established by his wife, Dr
Louise B. Seronsy. The
scholarship in English studies
will be awarded annually to a
Bloomsburg University student
enrolled in a program of study
leading to a bachelor of arts
scholarships
Pasadena,
f
degree In English/General
English Option or a bachelor of
science degree in Secondary
English.
Dr. Seronsy, an
internationally recognized
scholar in Renaissance
literature, died on Oct 11,
department
A
1981
An emeritus
professor of
Calif.
His professional society memberships included the
Modern Language Association of America, the American
Association of University Professors and the Renaissance
Society of America
One of those rare scholar-teachers whose love of
literature and ideas was shared with students, friends and
colleagues, Dr. Seronsy will be remembered by them as a
teacher who was inspiring, a scholar whose intellectual
curiosity was constant, and as a Renaissance man whose
wit and humor will remain in the memory of those who
knew him.
When he retired from Bloomsburg in 1973. a Seronsy
Renaissance Collection of rare books was established in
the Harvey A. Andruss Library.
Dr. Louise Seronsy retired from the BU psychology
CECIL C
English and former
chairperson of the English
department, he retired in 1973 after
21
SERONSY
years at
Bloomsburg
Before that he was instructor of English at Purdue
University and was a teaching fellow in general education
at Harvard University.
He was educated In the Lowellville, Ohio, schools and
later earned his B.A. at the University of Virginia and his
A. and Ph.D. from Harvard University.
His book, "Samuel Daniel," a critical and biographical
study of the Renaissance poet, critic and historian was
published in 1967. In addition, Dr. Seronsy published
many articles in the most highly respected scholarly
M
journals.
Recognition of his work took the form of a 1964 grant
from the Huntington Library and Art Gallery in
in 1973.
has been
provided by Harriet Jarrett of
Taylor, Pa., as a memorial to
her sister, Ann J Jarrett '32,
who died earlier this year
The gift has been placed in
the university's investment
portfolio, and the interest will
be used to provide an annual
gift of $5,000
perpetual scholarship
in
memory
of the alumna
Jarrett was born in
Taylor, daughter of the late
John and Laura Evans Jarrett
She taught in the Taylor
Elementary School for 45
years, and was a member of
the Pennsylvania Retired
Teachers Association.
Ann
ANN JARRETT
"32
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
1983
Alumni class notes
1912
1904
Carrie L. Mutl) Rose
'04
Howard F. Fenstemaker '12 lives
Carroll Park, Bloomsburg. PA 17815.
has died.
Greta M. Udelhofen Keenleyside
1907
Edna
P. Clive Potts
Brundage Pentecost
'07
Gertrude G. Gross Fleischer
'07
J.
died on Oct. 19.
died on Nov 6
1909
Jessie R. Fleckenstlne Herring '09 died on Sept. 10 in
Paoli, Pa.
Born in Orangeville, she was a daughter of the late
George and Elizabeth Fisher Fleckenstine. She lived in
the Orangeville area most of her life.
Her husband. Judge Clinton Herring, died in 1940.
She was a teacher in the Orangeville area, and a
member of the United Church of Christ, Orangeville.
Surviving is a daughter, Mrs. Robert L. (Elizabeth)
Wiggins, West Chester, with whom she lived for nine
years
'12
'12
at
4
Spruce
St.,
has died.
has died.
1913
Ruth E. Harman Seeley '13 died on Oct 20 She had
been in ill health for one year
Born June 25. 1892 in Fairmount Township, she was a
daughter of the late James and Mary Stevens Harman
She taught school for several years in Nescopeck. She
was a member of Bethany United Methodist Church,
Berwick, where she served as superintendent and teacher
in the primary department from 1928 through 1980.
She was a charter member of Berwick Grange, a
member of the Garden Club, and Berwick Senior Citizens
Surviving are a son. Jay E. Seeley, Springfield; two
daughters, Mrs Max (Mildred) Giger, Almedia; Mrs.
Austin (Julia) Loreman, Salisbury, Md., seven grandchildren; 11 great grandchildren; two brothers, Stanley
Harman, State College; and Lee Harman, Lewistown",
and a sister, Helen Bowes, Berwick
1910
Sara F. Lewis
her
"10
reports that she
own home and takes care
is in
good shape, runs
of her
business affairs
Miss Lewis says she would be delighted to hear from
any of her classmates — she lives at 26 East Pettebone
St., Forty Fort, PA 18704.
Edward H. Yost
'18
died at Arlington,
Va on Dec
4
Born in Bloomsburg, he was the son of the late Alfred
N. and Bess Holmes Yost. He was last employed as
superintendent of Ix and Sons Textile Mills at New
Holland. Pa., retiring in July 1977
He was formerly associated with Bloomsburg Mills. He
was a member of the First Presbyterian Church, a 50-
1911
Edna Lewis Robinson
Sara Lewis, '10)
lives at 223 Pearl St. Burlington, Vt. 05401. Mrs Robinson
has a daughter nearby and several grandsons, granddaughters and greatgrandchildren
'11,
(sister of
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Published four times a year for alumni and
friends of Bloomsburg University by the
Alumni Association.
At your service:
Doug
Hippenstiel '68
year member of Washington Lodge 265 F&AM. and
Caldwell Consistory. He was a life-member of Bloomsburg Elks, and a member of the Bloomsburg Moose
Lodge.
His wife, Margaret Girton Yost, died on Feb. 9, 1978.
Surviving are a son, Albert N. Yost, Vienna, Va., and
five grandchildren.
Harry and Emma Jane Snyder Martin
Her husband, Frederick, preceded her in death.
of the late
Mrs. Wolff taught in a one-room schoolhouse in
Barnesville and in Mahanoy City and Woodbury, N.J
schools
While attending Bloomsburg University she
displayed a real talent in music.
She was last employed by Atlas Powder Co., Reynolds
years
She was a charter and founding member of the Word of
Life Bible Church and Christian Academy, Orwigsburg
Surviving are a son, Fred W. Wolff, Allentown; a
daughter. Alice, wife of Robert Machamer, Hometown; a
granddaughter, and three great-grandchildren
Government.
We
have been advised that Edna R. Pursel D'Agostino
more than nine years ago.
Mrs. D'Agostino was a day student while attending
Bloomsburg. She pursued the Normal Course and was a
'21
died
supporter of Philo
1922
Esther Jane Saxe
'22
died
on
Aug.
3
in
Berwick
Hospital
Born
she was a daughter of the late
William Penn and Rose Ide Saxe, and lived in Berwick
for 23 years. She received her master's degree at Penn
State University. While attending Bloomsburg she was
in
Carverton,
vice-president of Philo and active in GAA and YWCA.
She was a former regent of the Moses Van Campen
Chapter DAR, stale chairman of the student loan
committee
of
DAR. and
past president of the Regents
DAR.
She was chairman
of Fowlersville Cancer Crusade,
president of Fowlersville Homemakers, and past president of the Columbia County Homemakers.
She served on the executive committee of the Columbia
Agricultural Extension Service. She was a teacher in the
Dallas area for many years She was secretary of the
retired teachers association, a life member of the TAU
Delta Kappa Gamma, international society for women in
education. She was a member of Fowlersville Methodist
Church.
for 28
Director of Alumni Affairs
Peggy Trathen
Alumni Office Secretary-Bookkeeper
Linda
J. Long
Alumni Records Clerk
Jane Dildine
Assistant Alumni Office Secretary
Eric
grandchil-
Mildred Downing Major '21 died on Sept. 8. She was
born in Dallas Township on January 30, 1903 Surviving
are her husband, Elmer L.; a son, James A.; a sister,
Inez Kresge; and three grandchildren. At Bloomsburg,
she was active in Callie Drama, YWCA and Student
Club of
Alice C. Martin Wolff '18 died on June 10 in Coaldale
Hospital
She was born April 8, 1897 in Mahanov City, a daughter
13
1921
faithful
1918
herself
Her husband, William, died in 1945.
Surviving are two sons, two daughters,
dren, and a sister, Helen Terry of Berwick
Isabel Jones '22 died on Nov. 13, 1982. Miss Jones came
from Peeley, Pa. and was a graduate of Hanover
Township High School. She joined the Leventeens early in
her junior year and was one of their best members
Luclle M. Snyder '22 died on Sept. 23. As a student at
Bloomsburg she was known as Snyder She came from
Hazleton, Pa and was active in Philo, YWCA, GAA, and
pursued the Normal Course.
1919
Strom
Writer (Green
Thumb Program)
Kim McNally77
Writer-Composition Editor
Katherine Mulka '68
Alumni Chapters Coordinator
Students
Debbie Blyler
Kerry Boll
John Haney
Dwayne Heisler
Linda Kammerdiener
Elsie Perkins Powell '19 reports that she taught at
Mansfield University from 1925 to 1943 and at Wyoming
Seminary from 1943 to 1968.
She still does some teaching but at her home. Her
address is 161 West Shawnee Ave., Plymouth, Pa.
18651.
Alice Neely Elston '19 died on Oct.
Hospital, Paris, Tex.
1
in St.
Joseph s
A
Lou Maslowe
Scott Righter
Stephanie Stewart
Jeff Smith
life-long resident of Lehman, she was the
daughter of
the late William R. and Louella Major Neely. She
was a
graduate of Lehman High School She had taught in
the
Wilkes-Barre and Lehman school districts. For
many
years she had served as tax collector for
Lehman
Township.
While attending Bloomsburg she had a wide circle
of
friends among her schoolmates and
was active in the
1923
Grace
S.
Beck
died on July 16. She was a prominent
in the Sunbury and Shikellamy
school districts.
In 1982, the Shikellamy Area School District
named the
'23
educator for 46 years
new Grace S. Beck School in her honor
Born in Irish Valley, March 26, 1904, she was the
daughter of the late David and Alverta Dunkelberger
Beck.
She was a 1921 graduate of Shamokin High School.
Miss Beck began a teaching career for the former
Sunbury School
District. Her positions included elementary principal at the Maclay School In 1934,
elementary
Continued on page 4
D ^
_
I
MM*
|
ALUMNI QUA RTERLY/December
Bloomsburg U
faculty
Rabb and Webber
retirina
T e re irem ents of Dr Donald Rabb and Dr
Margaret
u/
i,
;
K
Webber
have
been
approved bv the Bloomsburg
r
C ° UnCl1
TrUStees
Both
wil1
retire at
°
f
from 1965
During that time, he was instrumental
successful program in medical technology
and later became curriculum coordinator
for the
program.
For the past two years, he has coordinated
and chaired
meetings of program directors and education
coordinators from the university's affiliated
hospitals
with science department faculty and
administrators from
the end
of7hTs vear
Rabb, a professor of biological and allied
health
sciences, wilfbe completing 37 years
as an educator 26 of
which were at Bloomsburg. Webber, a
professor of
communication disorders and special education
will be
completing 15 years at Bloomsburg and 21
years in
education.
'
U MARGARET WEBBER came
to
Bloomsburg
m
the College of Professional Studies
Rabb has also served on numerous
Boroughs
Association and the Columbia County
United Way
The Rabbs live at Benton R.D.2. They
have three
children, two of whom are Bloomsburg
University
graduates, and six grandchildren.
,
in a
number
of reading
and education
associations
DONALD RABB came
assistant professor
associate professor
A Donald
Bloomsburg in 1957 as an
He was promoted to
to
in biology.
in 1959
graduate of Bloomsburg
and
to full
in 1946.
professor in 1963
6
payable
n8br00k Hlgh SCh ° 01, SUVer Spring
By KERRY SCOTT BOLL
warm-hearted, fatherly, and ready to listen
Dr. Robert D. Warren, history professor
and advisor
Sigma Iota Omega, has announced his retirement in
December after 20 years of service to Bloomsburg
is
to
University
"I don't mind what month
you decide to retire " said
Al Forsyth when Warren announced
his plan' to leave
"
'But we will have to argue about the
Dr
year
Forsyth, dean of the School of Arts and Sciences,
said
he tried to convince him not to retire "because we
need
Bob Warren who
When Warren came
fr0m 1962 "
important aspects of Warren's
Others seem to agree:
David
Dr.
;
Hill,
best interests of students in
Deianey, SIO brother:
"Doc Warren is SIO. He's always been there when
you
need him.
James Hughes, another SIO brother and former
founded of the Social
Warren student:
"The Doc is someone everyone can relate
how old or how young. "
Bloomsburg alumnus Eric Koetteritz:
(SIO). At that time social
fraternities were not
permitted on the
Bloomsburg State College
campus.
Through hard work and
determination, SIO became
to
no matter
recognized by the
-
community as'
Omega,
Iota
first social
family."
Warren's guidance has
helped SIO become
Bloomsburg's largest and
most financially stable
fraternity. He encouraged the fraternity
Warren plans to continue being the adviser to SIO
saying that Greek organizations tie graduates
to the
WARREN
to use some of its
scholarships in the investment
portfolio of the University
A native of Sumrall, Mississippi, Warren attended
public schools in New Orleans. He received his bachelor
of science degree from Appalachian State University,
and
his master's degree and doctorate from Georgetown
University.
Warren was a commissioned officer In the U.S. Navy
from 1944-1955. He went on to teach In Northwood (Md.)
High School from 1957-1962 and later taught in
to establish five
spokesman
from
retires
BU
Kenneth C Hoffman,
special advisor for
university relations, retired
at the end of the fall
semester.
He was appointed
Bloomsburg faculty
to the
in 1970
as director of publications
and journalism instructor
He taught journalism
classes, served as advisor
to student publications,
and
coordinated college
publications for six years
before being assigned
responsibility for both
public relations and
publications
He continued to serve as
adviser for the yearbook
and the student handbook
A native of Lime Ridge, he was educated
in Berwick
public schools and earned his
bachelor of arts degree in
journalism at the Pennsylvania State
University
rnalls
career began as a high school
"L,
reporter
ltl°u
for the
Berw.ck Enterprise and included seven
years as
sports editor of the Enterprise and
nearly 24 years as an
Associated Press photo editor in New
York City
He returned to Berwick in 1966 when he
purchased the
printing business established by the
late Harrv
HOFFMAN
J
'
Campbell
He
is
a
member
of
APSCUF.
E
the faculty association
and the American Newspaper Guild.
At Bloomsburg
University, he has been a member of
the Representative
SCrVed 00 SeVera committees and task
He
'
'
forces
is
also a
member
of the College
Public Relations Association
and University
Retired
Shakespeare
University, and this link encourages alumni
to
to
Bloomsburg.
In addition to continuing his
fraternity,
Warren has agreed
Husky Club, an
director of the
work with
to
the
professor dies
Janet Stamm. a retired professor of
English who
specialized in the study of Shakespeare and
Elizabethan
literature, died Dec. 8 at her Sherwood
Village
was
"He's been the pillar on which the number one
fraternity is built. Acquaintances with
people with the
heart like Doc has are few in a lifetime."
Because of his good relationship with the brothers
Warren has been able to establish the largest Greek
alumni association
330 SIO alumni brothers support the
fraternity with advice and social
contributions.
"We have shared our successes," Doc says. "SIO is mv
fraternity.
money
Veteran campus
life.
comptroller of Community Activities
Warren keeps the
news
Tom
to
Improvement Organization
Bloomsburg's
Md -
,
mind.
Bloomsburg in 1964, he
new job and
college
Office
1
19
^' Warren completed his doctorate in United
c. ?
Mates
diplomatic history by writing his doctoral
dissertation: "Hawaiian Pioneer:
The Life of Samuel
Northup Castle. " Since then, he served on
numerous
campus committees and was the chairman of
the history
'
department
Students have looked upon Warren not
only as an
adviser but as a friend. Forsyth believes
growth and
development of the students have been the most
relate well with their
started a
officially
'
?964
-
more faculty like
students."
to
as history prof
retires
Student Feature Writer
Sigma
may be sent to the Alumni
"BU Alumni Association/Rabb.
Contributions
as chairman of the biology department
Warren
He
Biology Research Fund has been
to enhance
undergraduate and graduate research in the
department
Dr James E. Cole, department chairperson, expects
a
substantial portion of the research fund to be
used for
supplies and equipment to carry on research
associated
with the new Honor's Program initiated
this academic
year, as well as for research associated with
the graduate
6
programs.
A
he earned his master of
Force during World War II. He taught in the Allentown
and Benton school districts before joining the Bloomsburg
Rabb served
D Rabb
established by the Department of Biological
and Allied
Health Sciences. The fund will be earmarked
science degree in education at Bucknell University
in 1949
and his doctorate in education at Penn State in 1959.
A native of Benton, Rabb spent three years in the Air
faculty
university-wide
committees, including homecoming, academic
affairs
budget and finance, planning commission,
search and
screen and alumni day.
In the community, he has been
active with the
American Red Cross. American Heart Association
Benton Borough Council, Columbia-Montour
1968
as an assistant professor, was promoted
to associate
professor in 1970 and to full professor in
1972
The Philadelphia native earned her bachelor of science
degree in elementary education at State University
College in Oneonta. N Y. She received her
master of
psychology degree in reading and her doctorate in
psychology at Temple University.
She taught in Fords, N.J Binghamton, N Y and
at
Temple before coming to Bloomsburg. She holds
memberships
to 1973
in initiating a
1983
come back
SIO
serve as executive
athletic booster
organization which raises funds from alumni and
friends
He will also attend a number of alumni
chapter meetings.
of the University.
.4 scholarship fund has been established
in honor of Dr
Warren's retirement. Colleagues, friends and former
students are invited to contribute to this fund by
sending
checks payable to BU Alumni Association/Warren
home She
70.
Born
Bucks County, she was the daughter of the late
Rev. Frederick K. and Mary M. Stamm.
She graduated
from high school in Brooklyn, and received her
bachelor's
degree from Mount Holyoke College in Massachusetts
and her master's degree and doctorate from the
in
University of Pennsylvania
in
Philadelphia.
She taught at Bloomsburg
from 1965 to 1977, serving as
an associate professor in
English and later a full
professor.
She began her career at
Susquehanna University in
1947 where she taught
English and French.
Later, she taught at
Bradford Junior College
Haverhill, Mass. Cedar
in
;
Crest College, Allentown,
where she was also dean of
women; Monmouth
College,
Monmouth, N.J., and
Muhlenberg College,
Allentown.
ota^h
STAMM
ALUMNI QUARTER LY/Oecember
4
1983
She gathered together her three sisters — Betty Broadl
Grant of Fayetteville and Rose
Marie (Train of Williamsport — and the quartet, along
with father Fred, enjoyed a time of reminiscence and
singing of Christmas songs with Mrs. Werkheiser, who
Continued from page 2
supervisor in the Sunbury district from 1947 to 1961, and
director of elementary education and curriculum coordi-
of Lewisburg. Marjorie
nator of the district In 1961.
She was named elementary principal
of the Sunburv
in 1963 In 1964 she was cited in Who's Who
American Education for her work in education.
Her last position was a elementary principal for the
was
School District
in
Lois' third-grade teacher.
Mrs. Werkheiser lives at 324 Market
PA
Shikellamy School District
Miss Beck was a 50-year member of St. John's United
Methodist Church. Sunbury; a member of the Order of
the Eastern Star, Sunbury; Business and Professional
Women of Sunbury; Mary Derr Rockefeller Auxiliary to
the Sunbury Community Hospital; Pennsylvania State
Education Association; National Education Association;
American Association of University Women; and Delta
Kappa Gamma Sorority; a former president of John R.
Kauffman Jr Public Library; and a former member of
the Community White House Conference on the Aging
Her only survivors are cousins.
Clinton Weisenflub '23 died on July 18
Rendham, Pa
and was
a
Bloomsburg,
17815
1926
Gilbert "Sonny" Morgan '26 was killed in an automobile
accident on June 20. Mr. Morgan came from Old Forge,
Pa. and was a graduate of Old Forge High School.
His home address was 310 McClure Ave., Old Forge, PA
18518
was
a life
Kappa
of the Delta
Gamma
Sorority.
1927
He was known
as
Flu" at Bloomsburg and was a
rare ability He was active in athletics,
standing 7-feet 4-inches in his stocking feet.
1929
of
Alice Marjorie Meiss '27 died at home of a heart attack
*
on Nov. 25
She was born Dec 24, 1901, in the home she lived in,
and was a daughter of the late Henrv
and Florence
Kirkendall Meiss She was a graduate of Berwick High
School Miss Meiss taught in the public schools of Bangor,
Pa., and Berwick until her retirement in 1967 She was a
member of the Wesley United Methodist Church, Nescopeck. the Berwick Garden Club, and the American
Association of Retired Persons.
Surviving are a sister. Lorraine Meiss. at home, and a
brother. Guy Meiss, Alexandria, Va
W
1924
A tribute to a classmate by Ed Schuyler:
"Carl D. Blose "24, a talented and "respected educator,
has traveled the course of four score years plus one.
"Carl was a student up on Normal Hill long before
there were thoughts that some time in the future our
Alma Mater would gain university status.
" He was low-key in his days at
the school, during his
successful career as an educator, and in retirement But
he always did the job at hand and did it well.
"We were reminded of this talent each five vears when
he and his wife and classmate, Frances Hahn" Blose tvho
survives him. took an active role in our reunions.
"The best way to describe Blosev is that he went
through life not asking 'See what I did''' but rather 'What
can I do to help 9 and then doing a thorough job
regardless of the status of the assignment
"His death occurred on Aug. 17. 1983, following surgerv
at Good Samaritan Hospital, Lebanon ."
Frances Blose lives at Cornwall Manor Gateway 2-H,
Cornwall. Pa. Also surviving are a son, the Rev William
Blose, Shamokin, Pa., five grandchildren, and a
sister
'
Dora Blose, Elysburg, Pa
Mary E. Dietz Miller '27 died on July 24 at the
Geisinger Medical Center in Danville
Born in Valley Township. Dec 19, 1904, she was a
daughter of the late Henry and Mary Churm Dietz
A Danville resident her entire life, she was an
elementary teacher in Danville's Second Ward until she
retired in 1969. While attending Bloomsburg she was
known as Liz and was very diligent in her studies to
prepare herself for a career in teaching.
A member of the Pine Street Lutheran Church. Mrs
Miller was a member of the national, state and county
teacher associations, the American Association of Retired
Persons, American Legion Post 40 Auxiliary, and the
Geisinger Medical Center Auxiliary and volunteer services
Surviving is her husband, Edmund L.. with whom she
celebrated a 4lst wedding anniversary in Dec. 1982 She
was the
member
last
of her
immediate family.
24
Mary Louise "Becky" Becker '29 died of cancer on May
in Mercy Hospital, Scranton. She was a graduate of
Scranton Central High
While attending Bloomsburg, she was an honor student
and a member of the Mu Phi Sigma Sorority She also
was active in basketball and hockey
Mary Louise Howeth Simmons '29 died on Aug
address of record was 211 St Matthews
last
Westminster,
She worked
for 34 years
She was
a
Md
Court,
21157
Rosewood State Hospital
at
Her
23
in
Owings
Hills
graduate of Forest Park High School
of
Baltimore, Md
While attending Bloomsburg University, she was active
in basketball, baseball, hockey, YWCA and Glee Club
She loved music and played the piano.
Mrs Simmons was
Lutheran
Church
in
a
member
of St
Hampstead
Mark's Evangelical
and the LCW and
Gainer's Class of the church, Ionic Chapter ^73, OES of
Reisterstown, GFWC Woman's Club of Hampstead. Auxiliary to Hampstead Volunteer Fire Department, American
Association of Retired Persons, Manchester and Hampstead senior citizens clubs, Friends of the Village-Carroll
Lutheran Village, Maryland Classified Employees Association Inc., and American Association of Mental Deficiency.
Born in Baltimore, she was the daughter of the late
Arthur and Lulu Boyer Howeth
She is survived by her husband. Wilbur J Simmons
Wllma Dietterich Bowman
1925
'27 and her husband, Wilanniversary of their wedding on
lard, celebrated the 50th
July
6.
Mrs
Melba Davis '25 died at Nanticoke Hospital on April 19.
Miss Davis was a native of Buttonwood, Wilkes-Barre
Pa
During her 45 years of teaching in the Hanover
Township Schools, Miss Davis taught music, elementary
grades and was for one year acting principal of Hanover
Green Elementary School. While attending Bloomsburg
she was active in basketball and tennis. She
also served
as a fire captain in a very efficient manner.
She was a member of the Douglas Presbyterian Church
in Lee Park where for many years she
was director of the
Chancellor Choir.
Miss Davis is survived by her sister. Verna Norton
one
niece and two nephews.
Bowman was
a teacher in the Berwick Area
Her husband was an automobile dealer in
Berwick The Bowmans have two children and four
grandchildren They live at 829 East Second Street
Berwick,
PA
18603
Kathryn "Kitty" Gemmell Westpfahl '27 died on Sept
Mrs Westpfahl came from Scranton, Pa. and was a
graduate of Scranton Technical High School
While attending Bloomsburg, she was president of the
YWCA, member of the Phi Lambda Club, and treasurer
of Mu Phi Sigma sorority She was also a
member of the
Art Club and the Sewing Club
7
Mrs Westpfahl was not only active in her own school
was a member of the National Student Council of the
but
been notified that Dora Baker "25 has
died
while a student at Bloomsburg she was
known as "D B "
The 1925 Obiter states that she was serious, considerate
and industrious.
1925
Althea "Tela" Farley Betz '27 has died Mrs Betz
came
from Mmersville, Pa., and was a graduate of Township
y
High School
While attending Bloomsburg and was very fond
ofdancing She also had a fine repertoire of jokes and
was
known to be very amusing.
Mary Isaacs Johnson
illness
Vivian Harris Hollenbach '25 has died
Tay,or Pa and was a graduate of
Taylor High School
1930
School District
YWCA.
We have
tSELSK A° m
member
While atlending Bloomsburg, she was secretary of (he
class and a member of the Phi Gamma Tau
she was very athletic and excelled in tennis,
Sororitj
winning with her partner, the junior tennis tournament
She also played basketball, hockey and baseball She was
a member of the Glee Club.
She was a member of the National Education Association, the National Retired Teachers Association, a life
member of Pennsylvania State Retired Teachers Association, and a member of the Cumberland County Retired
Teachers She also belonged to the Fort McClure Chapter
of the DAR, Bloomsburg.
Surviving are two sons, Stephen H. Ohl, Camp Hill;
Donald W Ohl, Chicago, a daughter, Donna E Munkasey, Reston, Va.; a brother, Harold Ward, Hanover; and
five grandsons
junior
He came from
graduate" of Old Forge High
School
musician
St.,
of St. Matthew Lutheran Church, Bloomsburg.
Mrs. Ohl was a retried schoolteacher in Mechanicsburg,
where she was a reading specialist. She also taught in the
Harrisburg, Allentown and Columbia County areas she
member
Johnson
She
WUifred "Winnie" F. FoUmer Creasy '30
died in
Flemington. N.J on Aug. 27
She was born in Orangeville, a daughter of the
late Dr
and Harriet Brady Follmer Her earlier
days
spent
were
Bloomsburg,
She received her master's degree at
the University of
Pennsylvania She taught school for many
years and was
employed as a social worker in New York
and Pennsylf
WaS
ember 0f the Remington United
Mp lhnHi«fph
M
Methodist
Churchi.-in New
Jersey
Survivors include her husband,
William; one son. Dr.
Ci; eas R'dgewater, N.J one daughter.
Evelyn
y.
XiJS
22
ZTa*',*™
and two grandchildren
,
Vera Ba »
'27
died on Oct 7 after a lingering
bv her husband, David O
390 West Flores, Green Vallev
survived
is
in
later residing in Langhorn and
Flemington, N.J.
While attending Bloomsburg, she was
active in mixed
chorus, geography club, YWCA,
current events club
literary club, social control
committee and girl's athlet-
Her home was
1931
Arizona 85614.
'
,
student Lois Sharretts sang for her.
That student, Lois Sharretts Mattera
of Staten Island
* Y came to Bloomsburg for a special visit after being
contacted through her father. Fred
Sharretts of Blooms
C
D "? ta(*y" Stackhouse
Acker '31 died on July
99 at the t
22
Rochester (NYi General Hospital
where she
had been a patient for 10 days
e Wa
r
n
J0rda
Townshi
"
Lycoming
T^!
Mary Straub Werkheiser '25. a retired Bloomsburg
er
h0 is now 102 recently told her
companion
u
w
Marion Meixell
of a dream she had in which a
former
1928
C. Elizabeth
Aug
16
"Bibs" Ward Ohl '28 died at her home on
She was the widow of Donald P. Ohl.
A member
and the
of the Trinity
Women
of Trinity.
Evangelical Lutheran Church
Camp Hill, she was a former
Mavy 29K ,QOQ°
M
a nd
au
M
hStht
Life Club
]
!l
tZZl^™^
County,
P-
°'
"*
<*"*
"
Bloomsbur e- she was active In volley
11 B,00msbur
S Pla -V ers a nd Rural
Continued on page 6
P
ALU M» N
University
QUARTERWfJece^^
;
honored for
Green Thumb
Older workers program
rec?nMy
SbUre U " iVerSUy won a
di '<*™t
^S^fom&'&B
or society's
„ri
r
y ei °
o iniiM ,
group o ( peop,'e w„„
„»
Kind of award
« hie ™»™' for which
ward was
rePn»«ntative
Z?£Z2££X£ SnV
S6rVeS 3S the host ^"cy
thelaS flSS S2S
mb P/° gram in lhe slale
Thwf
nere are
ar P 32
W people
nSnl? employed
as office assistants
i
ES'
'
keynote
5 h ann ' versa --y ceremonies,
he sa.d
,',
ESSEft MB™"*"'
'** «-
S Z
^
"Bloomsburg has successfully bridged
the g
ean
P
a d
d 35 eV denCed by S wi
Sness to hi
"
fo r v
/ PCS f
US ty
em P lovm ent " he said.
Since
K
°K
8, B,00msburg nas
served as »» model agency
mr ntht K
Lock Haven
West Chester University, and
Columbia County
organizations such as the Red
Cross, Bloomsburg and
Berwick school districts. SunCom,
Berwick Hospital
P
My
,
Corporation, and Volunteer
Recycling
e
ga in ed nati0nal rec °gnition
through
r,Il „ Thumb on a television
Green
documentary shown on
I
recognition of the film s value.
.
etit
n included more than 4 000
'°.
Grants from
30
30 different countries, of which only
10 percent won
awards. A segment for the
documentarV was filmed on
a ring n PBS resuUed
5n "ationw.de
°
ImSSt
'
'
publicity for the university
^
nuhSnt
C service
K^Si^S
write for
more
1
"
radio and
ann °uncements were aired
'
0r
academic
a,,a
^
information.
SS"
SSU
'
-
taught French and
1926 when he joined the
faculty of BSTC.
He took graduate courses
at the University of
to
He was awarded
l
and
in 1947
a
he married
faculty
member
On April 6 and 7, 1,500 students from colleges
throughout Pennsylvania and surrounding
states
gather in Centennial Gym for Bloomsburg's
fifth
will
National
Presidential Nominating Convention.
The purpose of the convention is to give students
the
chance to express their views on current Issues
through
the adoption of a platform, and to
nominate the persons
they think are best qualified to run on
the democratic
ticket for president and vice president
The 1984 Presidential Nominating Convention
will be a
Democratic convention modeled after the actual
Democratic National Convention that is held every
four
years In New York City.
™i board of
SmdEL
of
Bloomsburg.
During his 37 years as
' S adViSOr to tne AIu
a
extended
in
1945.
5,OUd " on s
Award
Mr. Fenstemaker's participation
in college activities
beyond the classroom. In addit
on to h work on
countless committees, he
was director of both the band
and orchestra and he served
as organist for
commencements for 15 years
His musical activities'began
with piano lessons at the
age of 10 years and continued
through his
days, his teaching career
and into his retirement years
He served as organist for
Bloomsburg's Firet
to
master's degree by New
York University in 1933.
Mrs. Fenstemaker died
Mary Edwards
^
Distinguished Service
H C 0 tlnUeS
°
dir ect o rs
En£
a
at
Bloomsburg, Mr.
Fenstemaker taught classes
in French. Latin and
Spanish, and "many classes
not covered
by other instructors "
He commented later that he
welcomed those
mJw..
There will
be 1.576
576 delegates
deleMfPt aft-nHin«
*.
np m o°,Ta
,
RnSS
^C
.
Howard Jr., a Chicago Sun-Times
LaGrange Park, III. A daughter,
Dr
Eloign
8
31
editor lira
Ma^ton
* Pr ° feSSOr and Chairperson of the
S,ty de P artment of
'anguages and
slated for April
r
"
Re P u blican and two
Slnce 1968 wh en Nelson
Toent a,dnsReagan
captured ,he
SSS2SSS
D m cratic
rIrL McGovern
M 2
George
m
cuUures
attending, one third the
" 31 de ' egaleS atlending the
national
1
convention this summer
convennonth
B 0
S bU 8 h3S h eld two
His son,
FENSTEMAKER
Mock Convention
The spring of 1984 has a special significance
Ld,,te '°ine
to the
"
students of Rlnnm*h.,r
iini.,-«».,
BloomsburgD University.
aS a
" e W3S disc harged July
i 9i 9
manie6 Ruth Nuss a B.S.N.s!
Spanish in the Highland
Park. Michigan, high
school
and junior college from
1919
1929.
the Universi, -V as th e source
to
a,S °
Fifth
He
Pennsylvania from 1923
3 °- second
acknowledged Bloomsburg University
as a
3 980 gUest "PPearanci on
?v?r Easy
Over
East ??R?
J
a PBS program hosted
by Hugh Downs
Through the Green Thumb program,
the university is
demonstrating that older workerfare
a valuable resource
enCa cannot a ' for d
waste With the declining
mfrnt r y0Ung r W ° rkerS
g
projected for th e decade
S
1 * 111 Wil1 be needed
10 maintain living
SSStSfEJ?
standards and improvement of
productivity
Peggy Bailey, administrative assistant
in development
C °° rdinal ° r 0f tne Green Thum
b Program
on'campus
m£f V!
S
PBS
York
.
preS:dent
r
1
classmate
,
Pennsylvania Sreen
Thumb was awarded a bronze medal
by the lnternatl0nal
International
Film and Television Festival
of New
television P
it «
.k
»T
n
University firstsContinued from page
SSTSirTlMf?* he
>
SSEEhS S
Dr
Charlotte Hess
orofLsor
Larry Jones, and councTof
Mw^n
ZZ
rSSSS
^X^^ ^J*™*""
speaker
present Dr
'°
-
Re P ub,ican
National Convention of 1972 chose
and Vance Hartke.
Morris Udall and Jerry Brown
proved to be the
Democratic favorites in 1976. And
John Anderson and
John Heinz were the Republican
nominations
in 1980.
Who will win the Democratic nomination in 1984'
As alumni, you are invited to come to the campus
in
.
B
.
April and find out.
You are invited to get together with a bunch
of your
co lege friends and form a delegation.
A fee of S2 per
delegate will be charged, entitling
vou to vote on all
questions and candidates presented
to the convention
unch on the second day of the convention
and admission
to all events.
Distinguished Republicans and Democrats
will speak at
the convention. In the past such
speakers included Gerald
Ford, George McGovern. Harold
Hughes and John Heinz.
For more information, write Dr. James Percey
Democratic National Convention. Political Science
Department, Bloomsburg University, Bloomsburg, PA
17815.
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
6
1983
Conimued from page 4
She
later received her master's
degree
in
elementary
neer, he was a veteran of World War II and had retfred
in
1982 from the Aero Space Optical Division of IT&T He
was a member of First Brethren Church in Fort Wayne
He is survived by his wife, Marjorle L. Lunsford Foote
Fort Wayne, a son. Robert L. Foote, Davenport
Iowa
two daughters, Julia A. Steele. Lexington. Ohio
and
Jeanne F. Gillenwater. Terre Haute. Indiana; two sisters
Grace Conner. Bloomsburg. and Dorothy Pihlblad,
Bemus
Point. N.Y.; a brother. Paul C
Foote. New Canaan
Conn., and four grandchildren
1938
education at Bloomsburg. She taught in elementary
schools in Maryland and Pennsylvania, and for 20
years
was a teacher in the Irondequoit School System at
The death of Dorothy E. Sidler Krelnheder '38
was
reported in the April 1983 issue of The Alumni
Quarterly
In addition to the three brothers
mentioned she" is
survived by another brother, John Sidler,
of Dallas
Rochester
She was a member of the New York State Teachers
Association and was a member of the Irondequoit United
Church of Christ. Rochester Surviving is her husband
Richard A Acker
Pa
and two
field.
Mrs. Victor (Jean) Sinclair of Spring-
sisters,
Va. and Helen
Anna
Sidler of
Las Vegas Nevada
While attending Bloomsburg University, he was
active
the band, mixed chorus, Bloomsburg
Players Alpha
Psi Omega, Phi Sigma, and Musical Comedy
of which he
was co-director and co-author
in
1932
1939
Mabel E. Rinard Turse
"32
died on July 16
She was
eX J McKe chnie Jr. '39 was presented with
the
Humanitarian Award of the American Endodontic
society at its convention in Anaheim. Calif.,
on Sept 30
This special award, which was established
last vear is
a
retired schoolteacher
Born
presented
She
also lived in the Sunbury area for
awhile
While living in Hazleton. she was a
member of the
Trinity Lutheran Congregation, the
Greater Hazleton
Senior Citizens Club and the chorus of that
organization
and the N'alional Retired Teachers Association.
member
to a
not only for his
Catherine Sedlak Mueller '43 reports
that she
completing her 30th year of teaching in Creston
Iowa
She has also taught at Father Flanagan's
accomplishments
dentistry but for his achievements in civic,
educational
and religious affairs
Mc Ke nie recently has been elected trustee for the
Tk
J
Third
District of the American Dental
Association
in
Ska:
^
Elected to a
three-year term, he will
Pennsylvania.
member dentists in
A 1950 graduate
Before her retirement 10 vears ago. Mrs. Turse
worked
Area School District for approximately
10 years and had also worked at one time for
the Sunburv
School District.
While attending Bloomsburg she was active
in YWCA
and athletics. She was secretary of the Women's
Student
for the Hazleton
of
the
ADA
represent
Temple University School
Government Association.
A
second
vice
president
3re
KlS
,P
\*
ADA
the
of
McKechn.e has also been a leader
community affairs He has served
in
in
of State College.
Francis Jean "Jeannie" Foust
1980-81
local
dental and
as president of tne
Den,al Socielv *" Pennsylvania
ni
"
*
rep0I tS that she lost
yearbook m a fire and would like to
replace it Her
address .s 102 Endicott Lane. Oak
Ridge. Tenn 37830
v^T^l**?
"
uZ^h
W
Jareckl Yaretski
>33
nas died While
at
Bloomsburg ?
he played basketball, baseball
and football
lraCk team He was aclive in
Sl
"den
°!
?mJr„mi^
G
e
Association. Lettermens Club.
Dramatic
r
h and Nature
Club
Study Club. He came from Newport.
Pa
*
™
r
General
°<
s
Reeser Road. Point Ridge Farms."
i
Then-' address
Camp
H.ll
^
0*
IRK-S^-
ist
Md
'
late
and
Shady Grove
25 at lhe
patient there for 16 days
a Uin Warren Count >'- ne
b rg
He had 'been
wa s
a
a son of the
Mae R Miner Hinds He
VC yCarS and in Rockville.
?A£ E
r
J°- 2
years.
He lived
in Sunbury for many
r
lived in
Md.
tor 15
K
'
a gr
ate of B,oomsb urg High School
in 1935
As 1 stodp n t aat lo n s K,ur University
he was active on
8
5
• hi
mo
.l
n a n d Gold
paper foolbal1 captain 4)
£«.hb a11S"S
b
° ay . . n s Associa ^n- Lettermen s Club
and
£
hfiJunior
,
D
the
Prom
Committee
?m
on Ju| y 3 °- 31
'
Woody
is
married
to
Danville.
January
17.
daughter
1924, a
;
>
Mary Lou
languages and
M
n8T; ece ntW
John's testimony was strongly
in favor of the two-vear
requirement of foreign language studies
for high School
Ul m d m lhe bi
"' wi,n tne recommend?!
tTn that
tion
thTihL°
H
K
these studies
begin
as early as a level as
possible so that interested students
may continue wifh
further years of study in the
high school, since real
proficiency in language takes at
least four to six years
qU l d nUmerous recent studies
which point out the
„r!in need
! !, tor
r
urgent
people proficient in foreign
languages in
ernm nl business a " d industry
and how the L S is
Pir
l
falling behind
other civilized nations of the
world most oi
(
years
B erWICk Pa
in
*
diCd ° n Aug
JSlE&'w™^
Hospital^in Rockville.
^„Jp
She was born
Arthur A and Laura Walker Foust
Survivors include a brother. Harold
L Foust Danville
three sisters. Mrs Daniel (Lois>
Diehl. Danville
Mrs
Harry .Audrey. Davis. Newark. Del
and Mrs James
W ilma. Cr.pps. Northumberland
F. John '45. chairman of the
department
cultures at Bloomsburg University
testified before the House
Education Committee of the
a a
g,S,atUre
hearin
"
« °" House
BU?
1940
e
'
PA
,
J" William
iJlV
i ,?
John
'
of the
of the late
Dr.
1935
Day
'
of
Adven
member
Danville
t
Ralph F. "Duke" Evans '33 has died
While attending
b rg the WUkes Barre natlve
was active in Men f
r, K n
Y.M.C.A and a member o:
in the
^
'
.
•
I
'
'
'
riaiT
SS
s
r.'
B
Jrop h y !,a
Woody was also
T"?
k Tem" S T° Ur" ame
"
r
^;
a winner
a "«
1
el
in
8 1 h Sics and ch emistry in the Montgomery
r^mi^c
! ? District
^
County School
for the past 20 years He
was a
former teacher and football coach
,n the" Sunbury school
the
»
r^Lm
rS
1936
CMlpbe "
31
Bl °°-»nrg
Si
S
rl
^ t
,n
'
(
m
bur
-
CIUb
°.
J
l
Post 273
addition to his wife, are two
daughters
'
"
'
.
1946
t^^vl^V^
S
cises held on
Aug
principal speaker at
exer-
commencement
.
1941
Dress Shop. Bloomsburg
R
on
Mary Kathryn Lynch,
"
1
'
S he h3d been a 'ibrarian at
he
c
Bloomsburg Memorial School,
and also worked at
Maree's
SSZtarJiS
T
Universily She was actlve
Association Girls'
;e
A y i
B C,ub
Da
Women's
?'
in
Z»
er of United Methodist
Church
Fire Com P3ny and the
Firemen s
DUnn P0nca CI
*. Oklahoma:
M
L ,L,nds ay' Bowman. Forrest Hills
Md two
n
a
SL
grandchildren,
brother. J. William Hinds,
Se S D 0thy GenSemer PensacolaBtoomsburg
and
^th.e P Betz,
Kathleen
R p t7 M
Montgomery, Ala.
A
h e al
'.
Surviving,
* dW
She also highlighted the value
of language studio in
assisting students to achieve
a better command oi
the ir
a
age nd 10 gain a beller
understanding of the
[
6
Ugh C ° mpariS0ns with
°»*r cultureso
°
?he wor a-"
S>
VV
I^Kn^
life-long
resident of Bloomsburg, she
was the
daughter of the late John and
Sarah k*F*w Campbell
mpDe "
She was a graduate of Bloomsburg
High School
A B c
m n0na
;
b h
™*>"6- He was a World
Wa n and Korean r
war
°rl
Conflict
Army veteran and was a
member of Bloomsburg American Legion
hS^'ST,"-
m
mem
35
a
died
in 1964.
C h ard
ri o v
6
'
a .p
late
|
i
6
a'^'ho^
b° r
V^
V
0016
*
1918
°f
ln
^
Way " e «*-
died
'
Bloomsburg. son
i^L and Mildredf- Holt Foote.
Jacob
An electrical^engi
-
of the
.
Pennsylvania State Education
Association and the National Education
Association She
1
r
S PaU, S UnMed Melhodisl Church
°'
in
™*
'
Academ y
;
,
She was a
programs
McKechnie and his wife. Elizabeth,
have four children
James, an elec romc engineer;
Jeffrey, a dentist Joan
a
medical technology and Jon. an
attorney.
'
1
nV""^
8
^-'
SfflSS
DfetrTc!
,
Denfiftry
[108 Bloom Road
10 after a ,en ,h v
active
In addition he was a member
of the Pennsylvania State
Dental Council and Examining
Board and has served as
1
60 *"' 6, P ast P residenl of the
Academy of General
^,
Dentistry.
,s also a
member of the Pierre Fauchard
d
e
°f
American
5* Interna,iona
cXles' o?
r
and the
AUg
Koom Association, the Women's Chorus, the Poetry
Club
and was on the Decorating Committee for
the Senio'r Ball
8
m the Sh,ke,,amy Sch00
'
1933
'45 of
h ° me 0
"
She was a graduate of Danville High School
While attending Bloomsburg, she was
'
district dental
^
illness
'
and
°upont and Huntington
West Adams. Creston, Iowa 50801
701
1945
<
clinician for state
is
in
of
i? Cia,,0n
f
he Temple Denlal A,um
™ Society
pin
?
J
Pennsylvania
chapter
of the Academy of General'
Dentistry, and the Camp Hill
School Board
th.
the
W vomin g-
Pa
Her address
Is
Bovstown
Mills
Dentistry, McKechnie has maintained
a general dental
practice for 33 years. A veteran of World
War II he
served as an assistant professor of crown
and bridge at
the Temple dental school.
She is survived by her husband, Rex. a retired
Hazleton
area schoolteacher and former football coach
two sons
Joseph of West Chester and Thomas of
Hazleton six
grandchildren; and one sister, Martha Rinard
of Sunburv
She was preceded in death by a sister,
Florence
Kemmerer
1943
1983
Catawissa. May 25, 1912. she was a daughter
of
the late Ralph and Clara Mae Geasev
Rinard She lived in
the Catawissa area until moving to
Hazleton in 1943
in
H.gh School in 1946
Join! High School
f0 -to
burg Rahh and his
e AI| e«town
THeShf »S
vefX
„
1
Zil™*""
5 fife£S£
Veteran's
B en'»n
lhe
'»
"loom,
Continued on page 8
.
Frosh named
Scholars
in Education
Scholars
£K
Eduation Awards
1 lhe need
in
a
1«H»
new program
state fS qualified
^'irauthorized by the
the board
dire
h°
math teachers.
of the
is
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/Decembw
in
1s
It
of
-tors
Pennsylvania Higher Education
Assistance Agency
instituted this past summer
and
Bloomsburg's nominations were
made through Howard
Macau ey, dean of professional studies,
and his
committee. Its purpose is to encourage
the state's most
The program was
able students to
r
SmrwSth
make
a
SdenCe
commitment
"
to teach
thC S6C0ndar
*
Sch00ls °< the
Mteria required for nominationV ef al 3nd math ematics
score of 1000 or
ahovJnnTh-^
?
above on the Scholastic
Aptitude Test or an English test
score of 22 and a mathematic test
score of 27 on he
I
.
American Colleges Test.
Ranked n
t0P one
'
fifth of h 'gh
c!ais
their high school
hSSSS r
t
5ii«i
and
He was
a
J
field
sch001 graduation
v,cep,es, d en,. a
also a member of the Scholastic Bowl
of the National Honor Society
At
member
3
Cr ° SS country
team and
Bloomsburg
and intercollegiate
bowfing
Grimes, daughter of Mr and Mrs Larry
Grimes of
Lebanon, is a 1983 graduate of Cedar Crest
High School
She was an honor student at Cedar Crest
and participated
in the school band and winter
color guard.
J Dr
I
->
_
firSt 8l
^
-,
in
lhe
™£n«
™<*™>>°?
'
It
time. Their
Now, the twin daughters
of William and Marian
Huffnagle. 170 East 11th St,
Bloomsburg. are both
year medical students at Philadelphia
College of
Osteopathic Medicine.
first-
0 knOW them vou find out
y
L much
PU
alike, they are very much
°U
S
-
One disadvantage
lh at despite
individuals
-
of being a twin is that vou get
lose your individuality 8 says
lumped together and you
'
8 ° eS by
SS?fflS^
'
midd
'
e nami? inste'ad
seems tha t we're one person when we
1
.!
not
re really
Jane, for example, says she is more
serious more
conservative than Suzanne, who describes
herself as
casual and carefree.
Jane says that being an identical twin
in medical school
can be an added pressure in an already
pressured
environment.
"We are very aware of the comparisons that our
professors will make." she says.
"That thev will think
this one isn
doing as well as that one "
But one advantage of being a twin
is that the strong
sibling rivalry has served to
prepare them for the highly
competitive medical school experience
"There has always been very much
competition
between us." says Jane "Now the competition
is not so
much between us as among all 215 of us in
"
the class
w m s are ntenf "Pon reinforcing their individuality
J
at olfPhiladelphia
Osteopathic, and have decided not to
live
together
"It's helping us get out more
on our own " savs
Suzanne. "I feel more of an individual
here than I've ever
t
•
was
.
at Geisinger,
eC ° me
n
and an eerie ha bit
same
hriS so
being
j
fetts: irDSe
and
IQs are the same and their high
school averages were
only a tenth of a point different
0 t er a nd n were Mildred
8
R. Levitt '42 and her
i,.
K
f '/f
husband.
Mike; Annette Maresh 75. Dorothv
Tilson '40
Diane S.ebert m. Ken Norton '82.
Raymond SheeTen 78
and Doug H.ppensliel '68. Direetor
of Alumni Affairs
'
^ne
identical
a v e '° ng
^'° nd hair blue eyes
h exact
of saying ithe
same thing at the
Paramounl Buildina
-
Denise
n j...i.
graduated
with honors in 1980
For three years they worked as
registered medical
,o ogy iabora
.
nCe everythin about Hester
^
Q,^L
u f,
buzanne Huffnagle
seems
Eleanor Halch 79 a buyers
»' nn
a
.
Ph.lodelphio College of Osteopolhic
Medicine
alumni meet
Pennpy drnmg rooms
SCM
at_Ph^de^^
\J
TFpSSS?
iTlTTolllT*'^
Look™
R the
thp public
nnhlir relations
r r»
- -i —
_
By
department
NYC
^
^ ™
^ ^^^^^7,o^^
Twin alumnae study medicine
mathematics or science courses
° f N ° rman and Caro1 Darrow of
15 3 1983 equate of
Blue Ridge High
Participated in cross country and track
u"
He
'
oste opath°y
'
SSSSf
was
"I
so impressed with the
D.O.s of Geisinger "
most of whom were Philadelphia
says,
graduates.
be a
^ * ®£w
'
Jane says, that they realized
thev
3nd 6 parUcu ar
D
Jane
Osteopathic
don't know whether it is the
tvpe of person
C
S 0r thC
ain ' ng but 1 Voided I
O Theyv seemed![ to be better trained
O.
than the
I
TT
wanted
-
JSX r fiHS
ear,y for the sisters t0 decide what
Wi " enter after
in four
,y certain of one tfi,ng; lhey wont
be
^
L
;S!S£
Ration
,
15 ,ea
n g l0Ward becomin an obstetrician
g
and
KuJUHt, would
M like
Suzanne
to specialize in emergencv
medicine
In the end it will be a very
individual experience
Suzanne says.
,
And
,
that's just the
way
the identical twins would have
'
'
1
CAMPUS PROJECT recently
completed
campus
are
Larry
W
(from
Looking
beautification
left)
acting
Jones, vice president
over
project
president
a
on
Dr
for institutional
advancement John L Walker. Kawneer
manager Jack Hagemeyer, and Kawnee
plant
per-
sonnel director Gene Baysore The
Kawneer
representatives were on campus to presenl
the
firm's annual financial gift to the university.
felt
,
before.
Before entering college, the sisters shared
a long line of
activities and interests Both are
accomplished
musicians. Jane plays the violin and
Suzanne the viola
hey are charter members of the Bloomsburg
UniversitvCommunity Orchestra and played in the
Bloomsburg
University String Quartet
Both were honor graduates in Bloomsburg
High
School s Class of 1976, and both
majored in medical
technology at Bloomsburg University,
I
'
where they
TWIN CAREERS
Huffnagle
'80
are
-
Suzanne and Hester Jane
now
first-year
students
Philadelphia College of Osteopathic
Medicine
at
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
8
1983
Continued from page 6
1952
1950
rJ
Delaware
Dr
Francis R. Johnson "50 was recently appointed
acting dean of continuing education at Edinboro
UniverJohnson's responsibilities will include supervision
of the
Opportunity CoUege. the Elderhostel Program, the
Life
Experience Center, the Institute for Talent and
Summer
Academy.
The new acting dean received his master's degree
in
speech pathology, audiology and psychology
from Penn
State University. In 1976 he earned a doctorate
in higher
education administration from the University
of Pittsburgh.
Before coming to Edinboro. Johnson became
certified
as a speech and hearing therapist by the
Department of
Education and had a private practice in speech
pathology
at the Warren Medical Center
He also initiated speech
correction programs in the public
Warren City and Warren County. Pa
school
systems
of
Johnson came to Edinboro University
in
1958 as
OC iat
r0 feSSOr 0f P s ch
y °'°gy and education From
fQ -£ K
I9W to 1979
he served as administrative director of
the
university's Warren campus, before
returning to the main
,
campus as
member
a faculty
department
hnSOn S address
in the
tions
is
1,3
speech communica-
Brookview
1641°2
PA
Dr.. Edinboro,
Jounior L. Eddinger '50, retired on Sept 30 as associate
editor of the Press-Enterprise
A veteran newsman whose career spanned more than
33 years, he also taught for 23 years in the
Berwick
School District. He and his wife. Blanche
McHenrv
Eddinger
Lime Ridge,
of
live
at
R.D.3,
Box
3067
woodcrest, Berwick, PA 18603.
They are the parents of two children, Jeb and Melissa
Urgele
52 has been appointed to the
c. f
State
Task Force on Education for Economic
l
3 re ° ent announcement h? Gov
°
Dr Furgele
is superintendent of the
Brandvwine School
nortn e rn Delaware, consisting of
'l2,000 pupils
,
schools He
has been a superintendent in the area
for the past 16 years.
DuPont noted that several national
studies and reports
have indicated that there has been a
serious decline in the
qU
a PPr°Priateness of America's
y
public schools
TK Ed ucat,on Comr
nission of the States recommended
ihJvc
the
establishment of broadly inclusive
task forces representing leading business,
educational system employees
government, and educators at the local level
h
3 k
rC
under
tne ^airmanship of Lt. Gov.
/° .?'
M,>
ht ! N,
Michael
N. Castle, .s charged with the
responsibility of
5n^Q
and
18
'I!
k
e
,
P™
f
mak ng recommendations to help improve
thp' ^!^'
K
J
the
relationship
between educational programs and
t
op P° rtUni es and ^onomic
development in
n
!/
5
the State of Delaware.
duPont
said
T h e C mmiUee
l
°
rt ltS findingS to the
reP
* °
g ove ™or
by J a n 3
r gele iS 3 graduate of
Conyngham
and
e
SsSi?S
^hi
A
,
S
Township High
Where he was an outstanding all-
Pa
rnl? Sm^S
•
Exeler
Pa
The Furgeles have three
3 gF dUa,e
° f Penn S,a,e and
studPn^^ST'
student
at Delaware f
Law School. Widener University
em0r n C I en g' neer ing at Penn State;
and
!
*P
StUdCnt 31 Wallen Paupack High
School'
f
S
'
J^
i™/
Furgele received his master's degree
in Education and
from Temple University
nt
den
Career began m the Baltimore
CnnSvy pKr
c
b,IC S
^° 01 SySlem in Baltimore, Md.. in 1952
his doctorate
r
t
,
h
S
3
tea Cher
He?r72?tp5
CCepted a P° s,tlon
Sh^.c
o
C0Unty Pa
'
Furgele
left
in
in
"
•
Bristol
iDrarian and ath,etic
the Bristol Township
'
'
,
ESSfiJEt!
Township
™>
in
1968 to accept a
Oaymont School Dis
DeJ At C,a y monl he was
responsible for
complete reorganization of the total
school
ym ° nt
-
'
program
The merger
aS
beenactive
both the Eastern Business
National Business Educa
Doth o^nizations as president
501 Holden Road, Towson.
Md 21204
A ? sociatio
fUZ
^H
Uo
l
t,0n
P^f-c
Paul s address
in
and
?
Semng
'
is
C De
„
J?!!fZ
of the Wilmington School
District and 10
suburban school districts, including
Claymont into the
C
e
ounty Sch001 District was made
neeessa™
hv
a Federalf
by a
court order resulting from
a long
d g
a
nSt racia, y unbalan
schools in the area
L
F I1 rfJ
aSSUrT ed
8
admini strative responsibility for
the
>
are] o f lL
\
d
IC COm riSing ,he
northern sector in
1978 He continued
ron. !„
as Area ?
rf
suK
^d
f
I.
New
Castle County
School
n/JL
District
superintendent until he assumed
the suoerinten
n C y 0f
6 B and >' win e School
District in JuW i
wh P n ,h m
m
i
1951
in
fatt
5
51 of Hazleton
S Udders
m bUrg
died on
'
Aug
8
niVerSlty she was active
W
Her Hl.T^r
;
^
al]
" a,,ei
Association.
Newman
Club. Women's
\S
Chorus and
Future Teachers of America
sch0 Ueacher in the
Centennial
School' District
school
SSriSPJ
P
of Warminster.
Pa. for more than
20
£2C"K
LaUra v
N Smith
billow
tSS
and one grandchild
bV
r
a
USDand Robert S ""dders Jr
of
Grove three
'
i?
I"- sisters
brother, two
S?SSS
SSSW
81
a patient for nine
days
55
0f 16 vVln gert
Hilk' h a H
'
ssss:
Road,
^
52 - P ro 'essor
elementary education at
University, was the principal
speaker "(the
BlSSSl^
E WardS
live at 720
1953
Albert E. WUIiams '53 died on July 4 while visiting
his
son in Sacramento. Calif
Born in Nanticoke, he moved to Levittown 29 years
ago
U.S. Army veteran of the Korean War, he
attended
Rutgers University, and taught from 1955 until the time
of
his death in the Pennsbury School District
A
a member of VFW Terchon Post #5542 Bristol
Elks Fairless Hills Lodge #2023; Ancient
Accepted
Rile Valley of Allentown; and C. Grant
He was
BPO
Scottish
Brit
F&AM, Woodside
tingham Lodge #788
Surviving are his wife, Betty Rasavage Williams
three
sons, Gary and Albert J
both of Sacramento, and David
J., at home; and his father, Albert
E Williams Sr of
Nanticoke
,
Jean A. Skeeba Smith
widow
'53
died on Sept
She was the
30
of Ellsworth E. Smith.
Born
in
Hazleton,
was
she
daughter of Verna
Markovich Skeeba. Hazleton. and the late
Vincent
Skeeba.
Mrs. Smith had been a resident of Pottstown
for 23
years. She was a teacher at St. Pius X High
School for 11
years, resigning at the end of the 1982-83
school year
While attending Bloomsburg University she
was active
in Future Teachers of America,
Business Education Club
Maroon and Gold. Newman Club. Waller Hall
Association
and Business Education Contest.
She was a member of St Aloysius Roman
Catholic
Church where she was also a former
member of the
church's Mothers' Club.
She was a member of the Knights
of Columbus
the
Auxiliary
Surviving with her mother are three
sons. Randy
Douglass Apartments. Stowe. and
Dwayne and Mark
both at home; a daughter. Jeanne
Lyn. wife of John
Winterbottom 13
High St.. Stowe. a brother. Vincent
Skeebas, Alaska; and a sister.
Dorothy, wife of Albert
W
Domday, Hazleton.
1956
have eva,ualed
several Pennsylvania
Department of Education evaluation
teams for the
purpose of studying the
educational program™ co lege!
and un.vers. .es within the
g
State of PennfylvTnia
The Furgeles „ ve at stap Roule
l
B oomsburg
had been
Jr.,
He has served on and chaired
'
-
Where he held
position as superintendent
of the
SSdS
F,I!Lr
She and her husband, William J. Hess
St., Bloomsburg, PA 17815.
East Third
'
Si«
* ,0ng time BaUimore Counf y
edu?a tor "hS
iZf" recognized
h
bee
by the Eastern Business
n Associate
Education
as the EBEA's 1983 Educator
of
publication.
,
coach
-
ment of Education Curriculum and Instruction Conference Workshop held at Shippensburg University, and (his
year she conducted a one-day workshop at Cabrini
College, Pennsylvania.
Hess has been an adviser to the Phi Iota Chi sorority
and Bloomsburg's Pennsylvania Student Education Association. She is listed in the 1983 Who's Who in the
East
J%
,
P
U
J
Pierre S SuPont "fv
sity.
f^
the National Association for Research in Science Teach
ing in Toronto, Canada and Washington, DC, and at the
National Science Teachers Association Conference in
Anaheim, California
Last year she participated in the Pennsylvania Depart-
1
convoca,ion
k il
Wvomissing
Judith
A
Stephens
PA
iSfESSP*
,
Barnes &
ant with
S
'56
56 d ed
'
BfeSSh,™
Bloomsburg n
University,
,
Association
lives
941 3 She
Ji
?
Tucker
Co.
u
is
at
an
May
miie
1983
he was active
Dorm Men's
Association.
Business Education Club. FTA
Surviving is his widow. Judith
Centre
133
Ave
a dministrative assist
and
in
attending
Day Men
Aviation
s
Club
ub
Newman C
Bauer Andrews
'54
Elvln C. LaCoe '56 was
recently named the district
superintendent for a four-year
term by the Ab. g on
Heights Board of School
Directors. Harks
SuSt
Lackawanna County
Formerly assistant super-
2S™
3 "" °'
Jom
^SZSZ^T
College.
Ch '""I!
^tr
Wes, m
S
Ma
3
™
°'
"»
wart
*
t
nJ
r
g e
r„
intendent
services,
for instructional
Elvin joined the
as an elementary
teacher in 1963, served as
A Kuhl Edwards
r<,m
!^
WeS
'
lhe
B'oomsburg distnct from
,1
district
1958-1971
an elementary principal
and elementary supervisor
er " Mary,and
until
his appointment as
assistant superintendent in
pasi president of the
Wyom.ssing Lions Club
1974
Elvin
is
married to
Esther Lloyd LaCoe and his
son, Christopher,
man
George J
of
SuSffi
BmiaSLXSi
C ° Unly
'
and
.
Educanon
"
'
•
Va "' a
Assoclatl »"
is
a fresh-
student at the UniverScranton.
sity of
»'
C«"ege
Teache^
The
LaCOE
1006
LaCoes' address is
Colony Lane. Clarks
Summit, PA
18411
Conlinued on page 10
'
Old version
of alma mater
returns to
is
1
9fl3
BU
Only minor changes
The old alma mater
Ai^MNl^UMIEm^/December
made
back
After an absence of about
14 years the alma maipr
sung by students between
1911 and 1970 has been^
remstated, with minor changes
1
BBSS
ge
t0
iuiy T.
Bloornsburg University of
Earlier in the year, college
president James H
Ske
he A Umni Association boar?
of
TrecZTt* o IVe h
a ^commendation
address.ng the
effect of th°f
the
Vm
SSS Z
'
'.
transition on the
Board president John
m
te
W
alma mater
Thomas
'47
apppointed an ad
° SlUdy lhe issue and make a
H r n t0
,he fu " board ,nclu °ed on
'°
the
comm.ttee were members of the
Alumni Board alumni
and representatives of the
Music and English
l
?ppnm^
^m^iM
e
departments.
The committee identified four
alternatives retain the
curren alma mater (written by
Donald Messime?' 70)
ak a PP ro P ria,e changes in the
lyrics; reinstate the
?nrmT
f
formerr alma
mater (written by professor Joseph
H
Dennis in 1911) and make minor
changes in the lyrics
W
3 " nt,r y
alma
mater
or
do
"othingat
,!'
ali
T
^
P
,
ed
tGe n
'
in
discu ss>ons that many prewn alumni
tuTn?were unhappy
°L
when the alma mater
its
1970
was
S
changed and would be pleased by its
reinstatement Most
a umnl '?™ed the words to
the familiar tune
Annie Lyle) as students and have
never forgotten them
a ma mater wril,en b
y Mefsimer
mfn. iKin"
Cnd ° f com P ulsor assembly
programs
y
e a.' ma ma,er was often lau ght
sung As a
rLZ», 5
st 5
dents nc e 1970 generally were
not taught the
£mi
r
,f rehearsal
t
alma m
mater
until
for commencement
committee noted sadly that many
alumni failed to
2
Whe " " W3S P'^d at public
'
events"'
•
1%
'
9SSffSX£i
,
^^
2
tr
n
^
°,
rnmmi»lpV
ee decided
entiment
to
'° r the ° ld
recommend
its
alma
ma ^.
the
reinstatement with
minor changes in the first verse and
chorus The
comm.ttee further recommended that
the old second and
third verse be replaced by
a new second verse which
would be a combination of the two.
When the recommendation came to the full
board the
reinstatement was strongly supported.
The board was
divided, however, on the revised
second verse
After considerable discussion
at two board meetings
recor™end reinstatement
y agreed
Im^m second "and
,
third verse.
S f,r
of the old
t0
lf
Acting university president Larry
W. Jones has
concurred with the recommendation of
the alumni board
and the new-old alma mater has been
sung once again at
convocations, athletic events and other
programs.
Far above the river winding.
Midst the mountains grand
Stands our school so dear to students
Far throughout the land.
university
'
Far and wide though we mav wander
Still
our hearts are true
To our hilltop Alma Mater
We our pledge renew
Ever seaward Susquehanna
Never resting flows —
Ever upward, striving, climbing
Onward Bloornsburg goes.
(Chorus)
Bloornsburg, Bloornsburg
Alma Mater, up on College Hill
Years to come shall find us ever
True to Bloornsburg still.
Bloom alumnus heads
schools on the plains
At a time w
when
hen many
manv eriuratnrc
aro fa„i„„ »u„
educators are
JhuSl caused by declining studentfacing the dilemma
enrollments, one
Bloornsburg graduate has been part of
a boom
Please let the Alumni Office know your winter
(Florida?) address well In advance of moving
from your permanent residence to the sunny
climes. This will help us get your Quarterly to you
on time. Send us your address and effective date
as soon as you know them. Many thanks!
Oil
1
"
n
Sa?t Creek°o
Creek oill'fii?H
field,
'
additions
'
More than 95 percent of the
14,250 students live in the City of Casper,
the largest city
in Wyoming and the financial
center of the state serving
the oil, coal, gas, uranium and bentonite
industries
students travel 70 miles or more each
in the city.
secondary schools
A March
1982 article in
way
Some
to attend
The New York Times noted
the school district budget had increased
nearly 60
percent. Most of the increase was devoted
to higher
salaries for teachers, replacement of old
that
equipment and
new books.
At that time, 54 classes were meeting
in portable
classrooms, despite approval of four bond
issues for
school contruction since 1974. "It's our
biggest single
problem," Dailey observed in that article.
The student boom will continue because residents
between 20 and 35 years of age accounted for
more than
60 percent of the population growth in the
1970s.
for
district presently
there
to
and housing.
In addition a fourth junior high
school and another new
elementary building have been started.
Much of the
curriculum has also been reviewed and
updated during
that period. Foreign language
enrollment, for example
has increased by more than 30 percent
Natrona County School District, a single K-12
school
system, covers 5,600 square miles of prairie
and is the
largest district in the state.
has 25 elementary schools, three
junior high schools and three senior
high schools. Schools
for kindergarten through sixth
grade are also located at
1Ver (28 Upils) Po,son S ider
P
(205), Red Creek
fc-^ Willow
u7-n
o
P
(six),
Creek
(three), and Alcova (34)
'
Dailey notes that Willow Creek
is 70 miles out. much of
is over a single-lane
dirt road which is practically
which
mpassab le during certain periods of the
year. It was only
in the past year that the
school was linked by telephone
Cate d
° Ut in tne midd,e °< th e
h
which
figured in the Teapot Dome
scandal. The small K-12 building
houses 275 student?
within 100 yards or so of the on
pumpers Tne district
maintains 14 dwellings for teachers
'
.
two new elementary buildings, and
a new bus garage
handle 70 vehicles for service, repair
there
.
J C
E D ailey 52 a native of Danville, has been
c,,;
f °S
,
superintendent
of the Natrona County School
District in
Wyoming since Dec. l. 1979. During that
period, the
district has constructed five
elementary school
The
'Snowbird' addresses
Three schools (J. E. Ranch. Bell
Ranch and Forrest
are open only when children are
living
of c
cutbacks
Also included in the district are
the U.S. Navy
Petroleum Reserve Fields.
" The people here are
generally conservative, open
Str° ngly Supporlive of education "
says
Dailey
School taxes are extremely low
due to mineral
severance taxes at the state level and
local assessed
valuations on mineral properties.
A state equalization
program provides adequate school funds
much
of the burden
and removes
from
local taxpayers
After graduating from Bloornsburg.
Dailey earned his
8
e " Ce dGgree in Educali0 " a
' Administration
!?
rS,ty ,n 1956 and h 's Doctor
P Un,V
of Education
?
degree atl -r
Temple
S?^.
J
in 1968.
J^
e an h,S eaching career in 1952
as a ^'ence and
0
! teacher
.
i
geography
m Central Bucks High School in
Doylestown, Pa. He subsequently was
teacher and
1 D
|est °wn Township Schools in
Pa
Edison
f.«?,
if °y
(1953- «
956) principal and supervisor at
Exeter Township
,n Readln
(1956 - I96°>. a "d elementary principal
?n ?J°
h D t . sg ove f
Sch001 Distr 'ct in Pottstown (1960-1961)
t
L ^
in
1961, he
™?
became superintendent of the Pottsgrove
District with a student enrollment
of 3,000. In 1970 and
1971 he was a visiting professor at
From
Lehigh University
1972 to 1976, Dailey
was superintendent
of the
Township Schools in Levittown (14,700
students
e Bucks County Technical School
(1.900 students
?
u
Ved 10 New York t0 becom e superintendent
i?th
o
of the m
North Syracuse
Central Schools (13,400 students)
Dailey is married to Rose K. McKean
Dailey of
Danville. They are parents of two
children: a daughter
who is a graduate of Penn State, an auditor
in California
and mother of two junior high students;
and a son who
was graduated from the University of
Pittsburgh and the
Delaware School of Law. He works for
the Montgomery
County Intermediate Unit near Philadelphia
and has
three children.
Bristol
i
n
L,
i
o
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
10
1983
Continued from page 8
Robert Heldger
'64 received his doctor
s degree in earlv
education on August 29, 1983 from Nova
University. Fort Lauderdale. Fla. Bob
works for the
Bristol Township School District
in Bucks fount v and
member
childhood
1958
Dr.
James
lives in
Langhorne.
James L. Hinckley Jr. '64 was elected to the Berwick
Borough Council on Nov. 8. carrying seven
of nine
and garnering more votes than any other
Snyder '58 was one of the recipients of the
awards of the Freedoms Foundation at
He was one of twenty recipients of the
Leavy Foundation Awards for Excellence in Private
Enterprise Education More than 200 nominations were
F.
annual
sixth
He and
Valley Forge.
precincts
received by the foundation.
Jim is a Republican.
He is married to Sandra K. Vandermark HinckJey 72.
Their address is 1018 Market St.. Berwick,
PA 18603.
candidate
in a light
race for three borough coun-
Ernest A. Cole
1965
was honored as its Woman of the Year
a brunch marking National Business
Women's Week
1959
s Club,
Guests
from
Hazleton
District 8 director
Adams
'59
was recently elected
present.
to the
Sunday
board of trustees of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy
and Science.
Adams
vice president for administration at
Laboratories, where he is responsible for
is
Church.
programs including EEO, OSHA and labor relations;
employee communications, and career development.
His mailing address is 433 Dory Lane. Wayne. PA 19087
Fenn
She
State.
Shickshinnv Clubs and
Julia Squires of Tunkhannock were
is
Cross
Tu
h
b0ard of the Su squehanna
.m/ and Health
°?J Association
f
Lung
and is treasurer
Intermediate Unit. He and his wife, Barbara, live at
R.D.5, Chase Corners, Shavertown, PA 18705.
i
Vallev
of
1963
ra< uate student at
ot S Delta
Fhi
!
Kappa,
Penn
was elected to
national honor society and The
a
The results of this study have
additional research dealing with
become the focus of
the effect of computer
tne c °gnitiv e structure of students
in the
and science
Dobson is a consultant in instructional
technology using
mpU e S Stems and plans t0 d0 additional
post
F
L m V
doctoral work
this field
5
filSnf
°H
.
fields
of mathematics
-
His address
is
J.
Andrews Didriksen
"My husband
Walter and
T^!
writes as follows-
moved here
to
^
R.D.2. Box 348. Millville.
PA
17846.
d laughl elementa ry school for
12 years: 10 years
u
and tW ° yearS n the is,and of G"am
°
Tam
InrmiS'f^
K
thrilled
to be in this
new field of psychology which has to
do with the psychological factors
in physic!) illness ''
Nancy's address is 3909 Llano Drive,
Piano,
d
!ff,
'66, pastor of Christ
United
Methodist Church. Clearfield,
received the degree of
doctor of ministry in a special
service on Nov 20 at St
Andrew's United Methodist Church.
Milton The degree
rde(
Ued Th ~'08*cal
y
OhinT
? ^
Seminary
aaasss^j.w
»-raa
7
-
Elaine Kennedy '64 and Marie
Osinski Vovakes '64 had
e U ni0n
0 " and
hap"y to
eDortTha!"fh p y
v r COg Zed 0ne
another wilh no difficulty
ThX miet fo flunchu' 10 Pr inceton,
N.J.. the half-way
I
TreVOrse Pa and
NJ
i
63 " nd
rd
year's^re^ion. "
!
IKS^JT* m
Te
^
'
LivinK
'°™ W**
beit WiS hCS t0 ever
y° ne in lh * class of
,
s 31 Lukens Street
Trevose. PA
19M FlS2'i Sli
a d
9^7 Mane
m " lives at
19047
?o8
I
Hepworth
^
Street, Livingston.
N
J
of
RDi
M
*"
'
'
'
Barb is working again as a nursery
school teacher
Doy estown. The family lives at 210
Doylestown,
in
m
East Court Street
PA
18901.
is
705
Dorey
Street, Clearfield,
£ln,
&£
uT
VO
10,693
°
of °i
0
"!f Stncl
"f ^
^LS?
Woody hT
defeated
atlorne y at tne N ov 8 election
n
Republican opponent William Kreisher
?
m
Wood y was
^rS^n
l
5 fi
assign
V
-
the
vofe gette
"/eaJra-Va"
bC r6aChed 31 311 Market
St
17815
•
B 'oomsburg. PA
1969
church when
PA
16830.
at^Nortil^Sp?
6
'
?
69
nd Rand0,ph
u
,
H Hess 69 live
PA 19380 They
'
adminls!ral,ve assistant with
American
6 " 1 ,nc
IntornSni? J"
Her husband »orks
clm^T
Mdr and Youth
^chSS ll?
T haS
Police
tT
and marriage
Delawar^
The Rev. E. Zeneldeen Swartz '67 died
on July 27 in
emergency room of Geisinger Medical
Center
Born Jan. 10. 1932. in Bloomsburg
he was a son nf
late Eckley B and
Carlotta Taylor^SwarU He
spen
'
nato o
idmuyy therapy
fami
theranv
the
for
Services as coordia Drivale
IB
a ' S°
counseling.
the
hi
new^
arrival
Ses
PatriCk born 0n Nov 25 The
13 oun ces and was 22
Sh!l
long hp
McKee IV ThP
n
ffi
Westmoit. N S^slos
'
pounds
3"o
8
CS'J*
Ve
"
"""
*
13
brother. Henry Sean
EaSt Albertso^ Ave
.
did
graduate work at Bucknell
University and was 3
a
schoolteacher, last teaching at
Warrior Run
He was a former pastor at
the New Tesfampm
Assembly of God Church. Millville,
and was a member
J
g& A Semb,y
°' G0d Church
Bloomsburg
whJL hJ
where
he was a f
former Sunday School teacher
and board
-
'
By an overwhelming margin of 3.445
votes. Columbia
l,?enS
de Dem0Crat E,wood "Woody"
Har
sgfsW4saa»
gsm at m
^ J^"
l
at
17985.
Dayfon
1967
e
PA
Central Bucks until their family
came along Thev
ChaeI * g 6 3nd 0ne girl
*
Tracy JgeS
Tex. 75074.
1964
J5 L
John P. Teter '68 and his wife, Mary, are the
parents
daughter born on Sept. 12. The family lives
a
Zion Grove,
The Rev. Dennis N. Reedy
His address
*
'
at
'66
Piano a
suburb of Dallas, in March 1980. Walt
is a regional sales
manager with Stanley-Vidmar Inc
he
3f rded me lhe
°PP° rtu n"y to attend
N 0rfh Texas State University
n
North
in Denton.
Tex After
completing prerequisite work, I was
accepted into a
VhU. program in Behavioral Medicine/Health
PsycholI
State, he
National Association for Research in
Science Teaching
His doctoral dissertation was based
on the Piagetian
Cognitive Levels and their effects
on the organization and
structure of spatial scientific concepts
2S^
Nancy
Gerald O. Devlin '68 and his wife are the parents
of a
son born on Nov. 27 The Devlins live at 155
Forest Road
Bloomsburg, PA 17815.
Jack Perry '68 was recently appointed
chairman of the
math department at Central Bucks West High
School He
had been a math teacher at that school
for 15 years
He also coached the high school swim team
for its first
10 years His wife. Barbara Blaetz Perry
'68. also taught
1966
Henry D. Dobson
of
AS
1968
the
Nurses Association. She is on the advisory
board
of the Department of Nursing at
Bloomsburg University
Her mailing address is P.O. Box 417,
Bloomsburg.
District
PA
.u
trie
Big
1
Dr. William E. Price '61. noted researcher and expert
director of federal funds at the Luzerne
at the state
'68 live at
20
assistant
She is also a past president of Women's
Civic Club
Bloomsburg, and is treasurer of the
Columbia Counts
Federation of Women's Clubs. She is
active in St
Cath0liC Church and is a member
of the Red
in local history, is
papers in the field of instructional technology
and national levels
John R. Hatton '67 and Ginger Hatton
Horn Avenue, Mechanicsburg, PA 17055.
director of the Practical
er ° f Danville Sch00, Distr 'ct at Washington-
ng
at Columbia University, University
of California at
Berkeley, and the University of Rochester,
Dobson has
become a recognized authority on computer
languages
and their effect on cognitive science He
has presented
Thomas P. Knorr '67, a science teacher at Pen Argyl
Junior High School, has been honored by the
National
Science Teachers Association who named his
earth
science programs among the 10 most exemplary in
thp
3
ne
United States.
Awards will be made by the association in Boston
next
April Tom is married to GaU A. Morris Knorr '67.
Their
address is 215 N. Robinson Avenue. Pen Argyl, Pa.
18072
and
Preceding the brunch, members attended
morning services at St. Matthew Lutheran
v!tlT
work
12522
The
personnel
'63 was awarded the degree
of doctor
philosophy at the commencement exercises at
The
Pennsylvania State University.
Awarded a master of science degree in physics from
Syracuse University, and completing additional
graduate
East Fifth
at
Woman of the Year certificate was presented to
seybert by selection committee chairman
Margaret
Hunsinger. Mary Ellen Breech gave a
reading
The award recipient received her nurse's training
from
Hazleton State Hospital and her master's
degree from
Wyeth
1961
live at 1106
18603
Bonnie Hileman Fiedler '67 and her husband, James
a daughter, Rachel Claire, born
on Oct
She joins two sisters, Elizabeth and Caltlln
3
The
Fiedlers live at Butts Hollow Road, Dover Plains N V
and a past
and Professional
Women
R.
Mary, are the parents
his wife,
The Coles
are the parents of
Rita M. Seybert '65. nursing educator
president of the Bloomsburg Business
Edward
PA
Street. Berwick.
she
may be reached by phone at 389-1003. Her home mailing
address is P.O Box 453. Mifflinville. PA 18631.
Dr.
and
'67
of a son born on Sept. 23.
is
Swartz, observed their
18
Shirley Ridgway "58 has been appointed outreach
coordinator for the Bloomsburg Area Educational Opportunity Center at Bloomsburg University. Her office
located in the Waller Administration Building and
ilier
Carol Slusser Fraind '67 had an art exhibit from Sept
to Oct. 12 at the Suraci Gallery, Marywood College
Scranton,
seats
c'il
June W
his wife,
33rd wedding anniversary last Dec. If>
Surviving in addition to his wife are two daughters
Dixie Carl, Bloomsburg, and Joyce Laubach, Danville
two sons. Clifton C and Stephen E. Swartz, both of
Bloomsburg R.D.I.
^
AfrS^&ffi? bCen promoted
sp uce
% UnDu PA SOn
programmer
OffuM
p
Leonard
348
r
at
h S
?
f'H
St
a
'
y>
i;
of
is
'
BaSCl Neb
Force Gtobal Wealher
cintraT'
a
in
lne
Evelv " 1
computer
WM
the
A
'
r
Continued on page 12
*
r
^OMNj
Alums
sssr
ScKn^
ng
in
cited
FurX
^"cators
With a flag of exceCce
special plaques
"H»
highlight „,
Be
p^S
my
nt
E ac h SCho01
Unnrw,nn
^
n ' He
n a , c ar
in
Secretary Bell initiated
the Secondary School
,n an e,,or 10 ca
selected for the honor, and
Dr Fran ^
superintendent of the Brandywine
district
•Secr^
D C
in
improving the nation's
schools which aoDearori
-ss=?sb schoois
•
25SXES52r
52°,?
QUARTRRLY/Dftcember I9«a
"
'
33-
th*
*>
after
d
f
3Ch Sch ° o1
a,so receive
the
"Pe™»ce
AT THE WHITE HOUSE
P^nL
™
T
t
ayne
n S,et,en
50
Palpal 0?
R
T
X?
Brandywine
(Delaware) H.gh School; Dr
LI
The theme for the day "America Tan n«
selected from an optimfstic
.
JS^?
0f
Mm*
?»•
p^cift?
ew J e acher
GARY
—KOCHER
Back
to school usually
_
M
gh back
° dCK 10 scn ° o1
01 ne,d
held a d
deeper
^per significance
sign ficanr*.
,A
thfn
than \itt. A-??
did for most other beginning
teachers She was fo
teach in the same
classroonAvhere'she attended 6th
;
a step up the educational
"Later,
he he iVS adV3ncing a grade
going to a
n1ff!~„r
i
different school
or leaving high school for
college
For a special group of people,
this fall's back to-school
I
!"
was a guard
at Irving
Pool " she
recall
"1
-
,
S5»
_
on Allentown
s
East
she epitomized the
e 60ine back
"I can't wait," she said.
7
"
0
message
" 6 * °*
^
McHugh
JZSm
S3ys she
-
L£
«SS3
aKinlif "wT
Boose heads Maine education department
—
Dr Robert E. Boose,
s^rar*
Gov Joseph
a
member
of the
Class of 1968 has
pos o( educauon
'
E. Brennan nominated Boose, savins
he
has the background and commitment
challenge.
Boose, whose nomination
was approved by the state
Senate, said he is thrilled
to
meet
the
about the state of Maine
'
™
is
politically astute, cooperative
and
through 86 names
before Boose was chosen as
the most qualified
Boose dealt closely with New Jersey lawmakers while
he was deputy assistant education commissioner
there.
For four years, he was superintendent of schools for
Mercer County, which includes Trenton and Princeton.
During his tenure there, he implemented
a
computerized transportation network and a computerized
network for special education. Until June, he also
served
for two years as acting for superintendent
of Essex
County schools.
230,000 students are enrolled in public
and
^
'
NeW
«
'
a
%\%
'
T
/
nrZir
He said Boose is unusual in terms
department person. "He's more of a
of a state (education)
can-do person than
^
about county
y
superintendents."
Just before he was nominated
for the Maine position
Boose had accepted a job as executive
director of the
Association of Community College
Presidents in New
Jersey, starting in October
«3
f° r
e
t0 ex Perience 18 months to two
years hf*.
n a higher education situation."
Boose said The
job with the college presidents'
association was an
opportunity to get other experiences,
but the job in Maine
was an even better opportunity "
m£
?
The new commissioner said he hopes
to forge a strong
,e 8 isIato ". 'eachers and
administrators
° f pu blic edUC3,i0n And ne said
he
is willing
r.finpTn
,p I™**,
,
to seek
whatever funds
are necessary to get the
job done, even if it means raising
taxes
a
nSh,P With
n rnn
t H
r
,
JCr Sey COunty superintendents are
appointed
h ed
M UCa ,
b
comm issioner. Through the county
nm, c h Stale ,S b t0
m0nit0r local sch001 districts.
hL a good, solid
'f
He s had
career," said Paul Houston in
Th e are "° skeletons in his cl °setHe s
,T
probably considered
the best county superintendent
we
Jl
St3te
'
fair
Boose was one of three people sent
to run the district
since returned to local control
H e S r a hlened ° Ut
"
* 3 year 3nd 3 half '" one
obse r ve r s afd
Copeland said Boose is the type of
man who responds to
calls going into school
buildings to help when there are
problems. He said Boose was also
the man to call for
W en
Pr ° b emS Wtth ,he education
departme nt
"When Boose became county superintendent
at h,m as a monitor
r
,
J^ S
'
BOOSE
,r
'
in
'
candidate, said University
of Southern Maine president
was
Wh ° made sure "he ?orm S were
S
Houston
said
But Boose, he pointed out. initiated
a county busing
system for special education students,
computerized
S
UCati0n activilies establi *hed a
county system
f o^!lt?i
educat, °" - a karate district
for the more
Ir
retarded and got a sch001 f or art
off the
ground
"Boose is fair, honest, decent and
shows common
n
Sa d C
3
dire Ctor in the
Tr enlnn area
a
Trenton
for he New Jersey Education
Associate
The union doesn't usually say that
l
jersey
er
iedS
fi
filled
out,
innovative, aggressive, honest
and more. A sampling of
8
educators and others reflected
these sentiments
He s a frontline soldier." said Crosby
Copeland Jr
super.ntendent of the Trenton School
District. "We in
Mercer County hate to see him leave "
d as 3 high sch00 Principal in
Trenton when
fh.cff!! 1 u Ver
SCh0 °' diStriCt beCause 11 was
run
°
so badly
sifted
More than
" Before Bob. the role of
county superintendent
e
ga
°Se 3 f0rmer Levi,l own. Pa.,
resident
m education at Temple Universityearned his
chers sch0 ° di strict superintendents
and even
k
reporters who
have dealt with Boose praise both
his
Perf ° rmanCe as 3 vete
educator
They say he
He
bureaucrat.'
;
HnM°
rt
doctorate
New
added that his main
emphasis will be on quality
education and what's
happening in the classroom.
A selection committee
Robert Woodburv, who
headed the panel".
He said Boose is
"capable, bright and
vigorous with considerable
experience in education
from the local to legislative levels."
private elementary and secondary
schools in the two New
Jersey counties The figure is
about the same for all of
™2
and honored and excited
,
'
b0 ks can Prepare you as
much as student
?,
u
e Said " ! was a Httle
8,
until y0 uYe
Luh 'S?
with
the children and get to know
their personal ties »
The experience taught her about
making sure you're
8 y ° U C3n d ° the 1
** ,uu ,c
and doing it well.
about rules and
procedures, miscellaneous
teaching tips, a luncheon and
a
gh
gof,he°m a in
"I'm very anxious."
Te
waTsSent tacMnl "
The orientation meetings were
part learning and nan
P '
talk, a blur of instructions
pep
first class,
Brandmine
opening day
ne erm her Preparation was four
years at
ni««
"i
V
Bloomsburg
University (Class of 1983), where
she
°*
Most *****
SSSS
Before meeting her
the
"
r
d the biggest ste of a11 on the
p
"??ladder:
5s
educational
going from student to teacher
ne
S K
hy
U
P' School6th grade «^her at
Our Lady
L adv H
P?n n
Help
off Christians
¥F
of
Augustus Graham, board
-1 came
r* mo «...
a
"I
out ready
to teach the next day "
After spending about $50 of
her own money for supplies
d
SUrpr e tr6at f0r her 17
P"Pi's. she spen? severa
?n. days
H3
l!
Ml
putting
up bulletin boards, inventoryinrbooks
g
St
g
y SChedUleS de3ning lne room a n
StVna i?H
getting
ready ?J
the perennial pile of paperwork
that g
eets
sent home to parents on
'
'
..
Editoi
means
super.ntendent
and Dr
returns to old classroom
T.
Ai!
B ni n «,n Morning
m r„_ r.„
,
Allentown
C oll rEducot.on
'
'52
left
he
Frank
'
Furgele
N,
By
-
Two Bloomsburo
attended an awards
program a the
H
S eP,
ber h ° n0r,ng
del school
pnnc pals
,sTom
h
from throughout
the country From
graduates
nominations were reviewed by
15-member D aneK
i
'
During testimony before a legislative
committee. Boose
said he perceives himself as an
advocate for public
education, adding that "quality education
costs money
and I m going to ask for that money "
Among the general problems with public
education he
system that rewards good teachers
by
promoting them to administrative
positions, and low pay
which drives others out of the profession
altogether
Education is a profession that rewards
vou by 8
getting
8
you out of the classroom," he said.
said, are a
'
!
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
12
1983
Continued from page 10
Beverly Jones '69 reports some news about herself
and
Judy De/ant Wicker '69
This summer two Bloomsburg alumni held their
own
reunion on the island of Oahu Judy Defant Wicker
and
Beverly Jones, both class of "69, vacationed together
for
two weeks in Hawaii
"Judy has lived in Hawaii for the past year. She was
a
resource room teacher at an elementary school
on the
north shore of Oahu during the last school
year.
"Bev, a special education teacher in Grants. New
Mexico, met Judy and her husband the Air
Force) at the Honolulu Airport The women
hadn't seen
each other for seven years
"A lot of time was spent in reminiscing about student
teaching days at Selinsgrove State School and
Hospital In
addition. Judy and Bev did quite a bit of
sightseeing
Stanley G. Rakowsky 70. principal of Clearfield Area
High School, who has served two terms on the executive
board of the Pennsylvania Association of Secondary
School Principals, was named the new president-designate of the organization in a recent election.
He received his master's degree and has completed
course require- ments for his doctorate at Penn State.
From 1970-75 he was a teacher and coach at North
Schuylkill High School, in 1975-76 he was vice
principal
and athletic director
and he has served in
in
the
Towanda Area High
School
from 1976 to
the present.
Stan is also past president of the Clearfield Lions
Club
a member of the board of directors and
treasurer of the
Children's Aid Society, and is an active member
of the
Bloomsburg Alumni Association, the Penn State
Nittanv
Lion Club and the Elks
He also served on the PIAA District IX
"Judy and Bev are probably the only two
Bloomsburg
graduates to venture that far south in trie
U.S.
Hawaiian adventure came to a close
much
too
"Judy
remain
will
Hawaii for another vear or so She
hopes to continue teaching in a
Resource Room. Eventually, she would like to
do administrative work on the
AS '.d from teachin
g. Judy is very involved
ItHt™
k
u
with her basset
hound. The General
n * ed her s P ecial education training
inHZSUP
Ul The General
g
out of
nJ.!fl,
c^ several times!"since ne
Obedience School
in
SS^S™
A™**
I
Leonard E. PawlowsU in
n
eS
F?S F L!rm
ocXJ^S^
of
was recently promoted to
lhe bond department o?
]0,ned the bank staff in
gradUa,e f Wy ° m
Seminary
°
'69
men
*
J J"*
Leonard
,S
3
^
d
previousl v serve d the
Berwick-Bloomsburgn a n!.ii5f area as a sales
DanviUe
representative specializing in
8
mutual funds and fixed and variable
-
His address
Cynthia L. Everett AreneUa 71 and her husband.
Frank, are the parents of a son born on Nov. 22. Their
address is 2712 Old Berwick Road. Bloomsburg. PA
17815.
Gary
S. Blasser '71 reports on July 3 he was
promoted
procuring contracting officer with the Naval
Electronics Systems Command in Washington,
D C. and has been
assigned responsibility in several Navy
communications
programs.
address is 1619B South Hayes St.. Arlington,
Va.
to
^ms
annuities
is
3
West Green
Pur °? y
St.,
Grim
Nanticoke,
PA
18634.
'
69 and Robert R Griffin
•nlOfSfnt
73 are the parents of a son born on
Nov. 28 The Griffinsaddress is 1201 Highland Drive.
Bloomsburg. PA 178
5
Ts^:°zs
j£
a
Dat ve of Asnl a°d. joined
Sperry
ix
R.D.2. Box 470. Elverson.
•
address
auoRs and promotions de
is
PA
~
1973
in
Hi*
19520
Jack C. Kile "72 and his wife. Christy, are the parents of
a daughter born on Oct. 26 at the Berwick Hospital
The
family lives at 235 East 13th St.. Berwick, PA 18603.
John L. McLaughlin '72 has Joined the law firm of
Marks & Wagner as an associate who will work with the
public defender's office. John's mailing address
St., Danville, PA 17821.
West Mahoning
University
accountant,
in
Ens'
rg
!P'
H e vis
burg area^
H
W
M. ddle ?chod
P
,
[^Lf £ fT™ ^
H
Ufe-long resident of the
Blooms-
yed 35 3
f o°r
4
te
cner at
t
lne
Bloomsburg
his wife are the parents of a son,
Jeffrey Eric, born on Sept 19 The Clewells
live at 2565
Martin Road. Willow Grove.
19090.
PA
War H
*
"*
Pacl " c
lives in Virginia.
Bruce
master's
earned
degree
at
his
Penn
State University in 1974
He is a member of many
organizations including the
Pennsylvania Institute of
Certified Public Account-
and
the
Institute
His address
of
tranft
Avenue.
ington.
PA
507 HarFort Wash-
is
LeAUBY
19304
Bethanne M. Valentino Kob 71 and Leo
Kob are the
parents of a son, Stephen Leo. born on
Sept 8 The Kobs
live in Bryn Mawr, PA 19010.
Gerald W. Lorson 71 began his new duties as
assistant
principal in the Elizabethtown Area
School District's
junior high school in September.
He had taught
at
&
Berwick since 1971
Berwick, Gerald taught geography, general
business
and, since 1973, reading.
In his first year as reading teacher
Gerald developed a
program called Reading Stampede, designed to
age students
to
read more
in their leisure
time
encourSimilar
programs followed.
He was cited by Scholastic Magazines Inc. in 1978
as a
runner-up in the Great Paperback
Contest and was
named Outstanding Young Educator of the Year
in 1980
by the Berwick chapter of the U.S. Jaycees
Thomas R Evans 72 has been
promoted from head
e
B,a
" Sch001 10 assis,anl Princlpal S
, H Howell,
u
u
and
Hatboro-Horsham School District
He is a 1964 graduate of Central
!.
Columbia High School
ma te S degree from Trenton StTte
ColleTZ'j
College
f
r'
and administration
certification from Lehigh A
S
ve eran
°' Vielna ro.
L
™
SlS
u
11
years
in the
live
19090
1973
ay (P,etrange,1) Me,IU)
h
B
thZ& Ta
wi
past
summer
1
;
17067
and her husband
13
pa-
The
isa.
S
31 0 " 31 S ° Cjety f ° r
Chi,dre "
A Sit
,!
'the gr
° Up S annuaI meetin in
*
Uta h this
&
certificate In clinical
,
11
173
aa^jSBs 2; 7nS
a
S a e raduate of
North Schuylkill High School
School of Nursing and Brooks
School'
01 Aerospace Medicine, Tex
C0 p,et,l g tu
31
lhe
Air Command and
y
**
Stal?r!!S!!
a. Maxwell Air
2
Staff
College.
Force Base, Alabama
nu rse '"structor for the reserves
'
has taught
PA
rah
recently graduated cum laude from
Kutztown University, receiving a bachelor
of science in
nursing degree.
Donna was selected as flight nurse of the
year of the
ero
d,caI Evacuation Squadron,
Associate
es McGuire Air Force Base, N.J.
She was also
recognized by evaluation teams
for management of inservice education in her squadron
p,?,
^
Hatboro-Horsham district
He and his wife Virginia Hyduke
73, and two sons
at 45 Hideaway Drive.
Willow Grove.
Linda Ruth Rescigno 73 and
Glenn Louis Rowe were
married on Sept 11 and live
in Newport Beach
Calif
Linda is an accountant. Her
husband is an interior
decorating consultant
Donna Nolter 72
r2L£
S22
S
1
Efi.
MM
^n ^
0nna
Theater d Jing WoJlS
He
'72
Philadelphia.
Or?a
lan d
LeAuby
A.
Rider. Bruce taught at West
Chester University He has
previously worked for the
Keystone Auto Club of Philadelphia and as supervisor
at Ernst & Whinney, also of
1972
HvdTVr"
is
has been appointed acting
assistant professor of accounting in the school
of business
administration at Rider College.
Before his appointment at
Gary CleweU 71 and
Association.
he was the son ot the
late William
Fairfax. Va. Frank, a certified public
a computer system consultant specializing
in
financial applications.
Bruce
is a member of the
International Reading AssociaKeystone Slate Reading Association. National
Education Association and Pennsylvania
State Education
l
213
Frank W. Sullivan 72 was recently awarded a master's
in business administration by the
George Mason
He
8
is
degree
tion,
l
6
19064
Management Accountants
In
1970
PA
ants
5
R
JSgston P^.
H
1971
Amy. Beth and Laura.
children,
A 1968 graduate of Mount Carmel Area High School
Clevenstine received a master of arts degree in public
school administration from Villanova University in
1974
and a master of science degree in biology from West
Chester State College in 1977.
The Clevenstines live at 77 Forest Road. Springfield
his post at Clearfield
•We saw Sea Life Park. Iolani Palace, the Polynesian
Committee
from 1979-82 and on the Executive Board of the
Cultural Center, the Punchbowl - the U.S. Military
PennsylCemetary of the Pacific, the U.S.S Arizona Memorial, vania High School Speech League
and downtown Waikiki
In 1981-82 Stan wrote a series of articles
for the
"The alumni also took a side excursion to the island of
Pennsylvania Schoolmaster, journal of PASSP. on "ConHawaii The day before we left Oahu. Kilauea Volcano
trolled Substances: Usage and Abusage"
which provided
was erupting 300 ft into the air and could be seen from
principals with information on the status of drug
abuse
HUo. We had hoped to have a spectacular view of the
among students throughout the state and nation, with
erupting volcano.
recommendations and with support for legislation spon"The day we arrived at the Volcanoes National Park.
sored by state Sen. Michael O'Pake and enacted
into law
Kilauea was erupting only 10 feet into the air and was
by the state Senate.
inaccessible to the public So much for volcano-viewing!
He has also been a contributor to the journal of the
"While on the island of Hawaii, we took a side trip
National Association of Secondary School Principals
to
see NaaJehu, the southernmost community in the
Stan's mailing address is Box 910. Clearfield, PA
United
16830.
States. From there we drove on a very
narrow road to
South Point — the southernmost part of the U S
quickly
Richard F. Clevenstine '72 was recently awarded a
doctor of philosophy degree In science education from
Temple University
Clevenstine has been a biology and chemistry teacher
in the Ridley School District, Folsom, for
the last 12
years. He and his wife, Barbara, are the parents of three
competence from the
Carpenter Avenue. Myerstown,
PA
r
2
Vff*f CUlty
!
?£
mp
Sfg
,
and
JH^T
J LaWt0n 73 and Nad| ne M.
Hunter were
V
a
° f PoltsvU,e HosP itaI Sc hool of
Sunbury. The Lawtons live
In
Sunbury, Pa.
Continued on page 14
;
ALUMNI QUARJERLY/nprpmhor
Bloomsburg
changes name
infp
for sixth time
'University'
From Academy
in 1839 to
will
Literary Institute
and State Normal
Normal School
remain
sS £
in 1916, Slate Teachers
in 1960. and now
Collei
in
lfi^fi
'
^69
in iqo?
£85^885^
State College
a P P e rS
perm a n e nt
name
CUrfent
iS
Very ,ike,y
lo
be
The Academy was born on the
present site of Carver
U g h ntereSted CUizens wh0
wanted to proJIde
the youth
vnur°h of
n f the
tn
community with an opportunity
to secure
fundamentals of a classical education
haS S e " ed lhr0Ugh the ears
a "d today
y
vonfht from
fr^m a wide
h area as
youths
well as other students
of
varied ages have the opportunity
to pursue
the
GOING UP
a multi-purpose institution
of higher education
Why university status 9
b S e,|' S definition stat
a
university is an institution
<*
nf Ma
h
of
higher
learning providing facilities
for teaching and
research and authorized to grand
academic degrees
h"
asefie,d P°et 'aureate of England
nJi?
5 f
noted editor,
novelist and man of letters,
more vividly
in
New
i
for
Human
^
Th
are
univ e rsity
P,3Ce
Dr.
m °re BeautifuI
earthly thi "gS
Serv.ces nears comp.et.on on
campus
thought in
all its finer
m
distress or
'
will honor
ways, will welcome thinkers in
uphold ever the dignity of thought
exact standards in these things
exile, will
and learning and
will
V
hC y ° Ung in their im r essionable
P
years
f ' of«^.Purpose
the hJnH o a
shared, of a great corporate
5p
»h«.
life whose links will not
be loosed until they die Thev
give young people that close
S
a e
for
w
eartnly tnings more splendid
In £
these days of broken frontiers
1
and
coHapsing values - when every future
looks somewhat
grim, and every ancient foothold
has become somewhat
a Ua8m e Wn r ver il exists
tne free minds of men,
ur 0
;,
! fair
f
urged
on to Tfull
and
Inquiry, may still bring wisdom
J
human
-
affairs.'
Bloomsburg can certainly identify with
Masefield s
definition Bloomsburg University
today is a shining
beacon to many ambitious students
anxious
broaden
hundreds and hundreds
to
their horizons, as
it
has been
aiumoi.
to
of
Actually,
Bloomsburg has been a multi-purpose
institution of quality programs for
most of the past 10
years when the college began to de-emphasize
teacher
education
More than 50 percent of the programs offered
at the
university today did not exist before
1975.
One of the most noticable changes made with
university
status was the schools of business, arts
and sciences
professional studies, and graduate studies
and extended
programs are now termed colleges instead of schools
rhe college of professional studies has been
reorganized
into the school of education with
a teacher education
council and the school of health sciences
with its health
sciences council.
The schools are further broken down into
to
under these degree programs.
One strong
effort
is
a $10,000 feasibility study of
advanced technology program development started
earlier this year which is being funded by the
Pennsylvania Department of Education.
Neither Bloomsburg nor the other 12 state colleges
became universities offer doctorate degrees directly
Bloomsburg has a cooperative doctoral program in
elementary education
that
offers in conjunction with Indiana
University of Pennsylvania, The latter has been certified
it
confer doctoral degrees since
1968.
LRC
LRP
lab wh ch will
facilities with ( he EducaUonal
10 prOV,de both faculty
and
capabilities
will also
be in this area
The new center will also feature
several al purpose
classrooms for multimedia
presentations
e of tnese rooms will also
allow for theater-in-theround presentations and will
be equipped with a
thea ncal "gh^g astern
and carpeted floor coverings
i ahZed
laborator ies and classrooms for
elemenlarv
prStr
education, mass communication,
^
J"
nursing. psychdogT
Cati0n 3nd S ° d0,0gy wU1 be
'ocaK'the
bunding^
"The Center
Babmeau
'
the kind of facility that will
provide
opportunities for all mstructiona
sa.d^
is
"The building
will
"
programs
enhance the
university s ability to continue its
tradition
m delivering educational programs to its of excellence
"
clients
D Pa
n 0
S Planned
Ce n?e r
JvTce s
'^^
rHlan i
U n,Cati0 n StUdieSl Curr iculum
and Foundations
m?°hPm
at
mathematics
and, computer science, nursing,
psychology
Curr ,cu,um Mat erials Center.
Campus Health'
Centl^'
Center,
dean of, instructional
services, Learning
Resources Center director of the
school of education
6 SCh °° l 0f hea,th sciences and
h e dean of
cZ°J 'I
the college
of professional studies
'
-
The new building will cost less than was
anticipated In
l
982 Burkava ge-Evans architects
estimated
'
SS
fh? total ^J,
the
cost at/ approximately $5.9
million
' egi s ' ature
alloca ted
nrl/nMh! bui,d,ng amoun ted to$5.3 million, but the bid
$4.7 million.
E
,
T
,Ce l e
Versity was recent|
y
5is
J phase of the
$265,000
for a second
project
fS fnrf
'
Because
awarded
which
of
will
provide elements eliminated from
the original design
because of concerns for cost overrun
W are re Uesting an equipment allocation of $1,391
mi
nn
D
million,
Babineau said. "This money will be
used for
equipment such as security for learning
resource
3 Ce " lral vacuum s 5,em
'
•
'.'
^
- ™
3h££Sfi*
University enrollment remains stable
With
K
316 students
o.^i'6,316
b
ver
55S
registered for
fUlnt
UeS
t0
semester classes
maintain
ago
fall
stability at levels established
iP
six years
regi tration figures snow
an
.tSfnt?'
certificates. Efforts will continue to increase
offerings
!Tr
S
A new photography darkroom
expanded
courseware and
seeking information on up-to-date
curriculum materials
The Learning Resources Center will be moving
from
the Andruss Library to provide
expanded services to the
Internally, the colleges of business and
arts and
sciences remain the same as before the name
change
The university will continue to grant associate,
bachelors and masters degrees and graduate
level
develop new instructional software.
media services the
new media production
SSf,"? d U Cll ° n Lab
sldPnKw
th
,
students
with
media
production
m
The Center will become a focal point for all
education
programs on campus and a magnet for inservice
teachers
departments
and centers.
P
E. Babineau, Bloomsburg University
tutiona ' Pining, says construction
of the
-vTr
H. McCormick
Center for Human Services is
ahead of schedule.
Fifty-two percent of the work is
complete in only 50
percent of the time allocated for
the project
hre5" St
°8I 00 S(I ua re foot building is
130-feet by
9d^l! wide. When
u^ completed
240-feet
in June, the Center will
feature many expanded instructional
services
One will be new and expanded radio and
television
studios, including a main studio,
two substudios for
0
a
«ter control room plus control rooms for
?:
each studio and television and motion
picture editing
"
These new facilities will serve the entire
campus
including such instructional
programs as mass
communication and educational media
The radio set up will include two studios
with control
rooms, a recording library and teletype
area
Another element of the new building will
be a
specialized laboratory for computer
instruction with an
adjacent autotutorial laboratory
equipped with
microcomputers as well as traditional media
and
interactive video
"With the ever expanding use of
microcomputers, not
only in computer science and business
programs, but in
such fields as education, mathematics,
the hard sciences
the social sciences and the arts,"
Babineau said "this
will be an extremely important
facility to the entire
instructional program of the university "
Another facility that will feature microcomputers
will
be the new and much enlarged Curriculum
Materials
Center. Here microcomputers will be
used to catalog and
access materials, to review educational
than a
.„
In
addition to the usual
will feature a
rooms.
which
nd lhal cnance of tne endless
discussion of
ih.i
f- ? are
themes
which
endless - without which vouth
would
seem a waste of time.
.miJJSS
university
p*™..,
campus
Raymond
S;
.
companionship
~~
James
"?CTe
Z^^T
ahead of schedule
Gfw
tnan a
lhose wno nate ignorance may
s rive to know, where those
who perceive truth may
See Where Seekers and 'Mniers
I
alike
banded together in search for knowledge,
.hZ* \
building
For the Alumni Quarterly
-
,
to
new McCormick Center
By JULILE PYLF
PYLE
M
into
- The
their studies
f
enrolS
^crease
of 76
year but tne total student population
is
'
?nlt than ?k
lower
the'f
6.400 registered in 1977 when the
university's zero growth policy
was adopted
The current full-time enrollment
consists of 4 959
undergraduate and 99 graduate students
Part-time registrations include
213 undergraduate
degree and 637 non-degree students
and 408 graduate
students. Last year there were
4,879 full-time
Un
ateS 3nd
0 years ag0 tne n^ber was
4,942.
S ye a r s V*
lncre ase in full-time undergraduates
rJn
oi K
„
can be attributed
to the larger number of
commuters who
are enrolled, said dean of
admissioners Dr To m L
^
"
MnT^H
S
i
ooper.
.
.
^i-^
Coooer said admissions
Cooper
artmi^innc decisions are
... based
on
replacing students who graduate or leave for
other
reasons. This past year there were 4,593 freshmen
and 785
transfer applications for the 1,080 freshmen
and 210
transfer spaces available
Applications for admission to Bloomsburg continue
to
be very encouraging. Cooper commented. "We
do not
anticipate any changes in the near future, either
in
applications or in enrollment "
The university's zero growth enrollment policy was
based on a 1977 Planning Commission recommendation
was
noted that the existing instructional resources
and housing accommodations could not support a
larger
student population. The policy is directed toward
controlling the enrollment of full-time undergraduates
because they have the greatest impact on the academic
and housing resources.
It
J
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
14
1983
Continued from page 12
Bob and his wife, Barbara, and daughter live at 1470
Country Meadow Lane, Kernersville, N.C 27284.
Barbara Rose McCarty '73 and Mark Brandon Gorrell
were married recently. The bride is in-service education
coordinator in the housekeeping department at Geisinger
Medical Center Her husband is senior management
engineer for Geisinger System Services. They live in
and Gary S Duff were
married on July 2. Carol teaches math at Bellefonte Area
Middle School. Gary, a Penn State graduate, teaches
industrial arts at Bellefonte Area Middle School. They
live In Lock Haven, Pa.
Dave
is
Bloomsburg,
181,
Rutgers,
PA
PA
received the degree of
State University (of New
the
6 Brodsky.
17851
PA
Frank
C.
F TniSkey 74
S
'
M
of
r
Center
is
married
lA^M fSSS
3y St€VenS
,
F
nn?!
h
Treasury
'
S
to
on July 22
Sch001 of Medfcal
Dennis L.
Shana and
'
*
Adams
at 17
East
me
74 and her ^band, R
.
parents
of a daughter born on
July 22
3. Box 3785. Berwick.
PA 18603
R.D
74 joined tne
staff of the
Blooms-
,
Dl CtZ
J
and her nusband H.toshi Sato,
»r?^n? t S ° ?f a S °75
n b0rn 0n Ju,y 12 at the Berwick
a m Uy ,, es 31 R D 8 Box 309
Bloomsburg,
^
mf«I h c at0
pl ffis H,t0Shl
,
,s an as *>ciate professor
of Speech
?.
mIc rCommunication
Mass
and Theater at Bloomsburg Univer
at°
Ho^ Jt^
,
-
,
'
'
Jocelyn Davis Levan 75 and
her husband, Dennis are
he parents of a daughter. Sarah
Lynn, born on July 22 a!
8 Ce n er Their maili
"g ad dress
Pu
r
O Box 44, Middleburg, PA
o ! 17842.
&mK
scSJl 0V
'
-
,
" VeS
aS22.
207
*
Bryan Warren Reber 76 and Joanne Louise
Smith were
married on Nov
12.
Joanne works for the federal
government at Vint Hill Farms Station.
Warrenton Va
Bryan is district executive director.
Shenandoah Area
Council. Boy Scouts of America. They
live in Front
Royal.
Barbara Anne Wanchisen 76 reports
that she is a
doctoral candidate in experimental
psychology at Temple
University. She is doing research
on foraging in animals
and creative problem-solving in humans
Her work is
partly supported by a biomedical grant
received ,he master of
from the University
Dela -
m^H 8 S? weUter
°'
^
and Katherine Reichart were
,S an accounl executive
fo?
y." Ch P,erce Fenner & Smith. Inc His wife
'
'75
r,
f
,
M
?!
,
°
f
800 Trent0n
*
t0
-
75 was recently named wrestling
coach
S
(Pa
High Scn001
« a "dy
H
physical education
in the high school.
nhv^
224 Langhorne.
'
wil
also
teach
M, ChaeI WUson 75 received a
doctorate
rh!^^
,
chemistry on Aug.
13 from Texas
A&M
of
'
17847.
"
Michael Jay McGinnis 76 lives
C
at^ Hinds
mn^!
at 13
e
7 and
,tt0 )e era
J,
?
St.,
Montrose.
J
?,
PA
field
n
SSinV!
School
Paul
her husband Paul liv e
Michele completed
'
-
18801.
is
secondary trainable students
MRP analyst with Bendix Corporation.
a senior
R bert 5' riebeI 76 and Patricia Gaines were married
?
on Aug
28. The Kriebels' address is
BrandywmeTreek
a
5, 6,80 Norlh
Hagadorn * J5 East
S
^
Mi h
Bob recently was granted
BSS
'
-
a master's
degree
in
education/office administration at
Bloomsbu g
sity.
His future plans include
beginning
77
r C
!r !
1
S 0ry ce rt''icate In special
education at Mansn1vI!. c ,ty ln
August She teacnes at Elk Lake High
K«
teaching
P
Pa
at
Michigan State University
a F
H
! hp n"
e
Vh/
n
E Adams
4715 S
at
#909B, Bartlesville, Ohio 74006
in
University
noiisneinimbf
'
y
Community Hospital.
The Dills may be reached C/O General
Delivery
wyjay,
Swengel, PA 17880
program
from Shlppensburg University
assistant professor of
chemistry
yosiuji/ o, lb .na.ntiS i:ecch
GIenW °° d DriVe
Joan Faye Thompson 76 and WUIiam Alan
DM 79 were
married on Sept. 17 Joan is works at
Laurelton State
School, and William is purchasing agent
at the Sunbury
MiddIet ° Wn Townshl
P
Road A P'
from Temple She
Wasnin gton
ad
'
Mi^L PA
l
'
Wat
a d
»h?
iS
10
K
n ernber
b oa; dof%upervL r s
addreSS
is'
in
l
,
PA78 977°
Beatrice Helen Leiby Prosseda
76 and her husband
0 na
° f a daughter. Laura Jeannine."
!?
hnr n on
CdaS
31 R
° 3 B ° X ,08
MUJThy "*
ritlS
JSS^.jSTJ.JW™
PA^47
n
Christian
wif not
wrestling
Casing
:
M
MaTif
k
SS ^f ?
-
1976
oene is- employed in the investment
department of
Hamilton Bank. Reading. They live at 220
North Washington Street, Boyertown, PA
19512.
.
Dec*
the
n AUg ,0 n0tmg ,hal bei
°
"g a Minister
h
„
his skiing,
running, tennis or
ry
17814.
Zctp
SS
i
Ba0k Hapoa,im B M
Philadelphia as an
aTmSJ? e IStan
he de P uty branch manager
in
is
Univer
Nancy Ann Marie Lonker TIscher 75
and her husband
n
he birlh ° f their dau hter
*
SusanMarje"
on Sept. 11
is working for the
Radnor School
ne Crai 8 L« v engood 75 and Tracey
Lynn Campbell
u ,?! married
were
recently. The bride is employed
as an
assistant buyer at Hess's
Department Store. Allentown
Serril
D 74 has been a
PP° inted accounting
.
Product Division of amp
He
at Villanova
Rosemont, Pa.
?'^ H'
Nancy
1975
18
nSSEr
L^^°
g
L or Communications
live in
mathematics
William Albert Garrison 76 and
his wife are the
parents of a daughter. Kasey Lynn,
born on July 5 The
Garrisons live at R.D.3. Benton. PA
Adams 74 graduated
Tec^Xv
Fm^ Jane
technology. Emma
htt
hinder
E. Enterline 79 are
engaged. Both work for the Schuylkill Intermediate Unit
A Fall 1984 wedding is being planned at
St. Joseph's Church in Ashland
and Tamara Briel were married
a Senio pub,ic relations major
at Shippens/
h,If
i
.
burg University
and serves as a student assistant
u? the
,V
y PUbhC Re,ati0ns °" ice
*
e is employed b
th P Pennsylvania
ppn;l 1
r
t
the
Department
C
'
SStf S
29 in Pottsville.
75
a re ent,y
P romot ed to assistant
f
o
he First Eastern
Bank.
Bert has taken several
American Institute of banking courses
and is a member
of the Susquehanna Valley
Chapter of the American
Institute of Banking. His
address is R D.2. Bloomsburg
1974
h,,?J
'
'
RSSffA*"*
'
live at
Bloomsburg."
of
Woodward 74 and Joanne
caSrVt
J.
3
re
a'
dau e nter oi L. Wanda Barth
r«™J ui^ffF^,
d
rVlllC R
Carver state <"«*tor of the
£?£n Th!. *hb ° ogram was married
10 A,an Da ™'
ju .yTo
Leah a graduate of Mechanicsburg
High School also
e d J ° hnS
" op ! iBS Universi, y and
Unive? slty o?
?h^o
n for
f
Chicago
graduate
work. She is a manager for
the
The couple
doing social work with the elderly.
They say "hello" to all 1974-75 graduates.
cashier at
6
for
*
Eric B. and Mary Catherine
Ferenchak
may be reached at Box 328. New Knoxville.Koetterltz 75
Ohio 45871
Eric reports that he was ordained
Mount
Ruth Fullerton '73 and Roger Lee Dietz
are engaged
Ruth is a kindergarten teacher at the Beck
Elementary
Center. Sunbury Her fiance is
a wood shop superv.sor fo'r
Sun-Corn Industries, Northumberland.
A June 1984 wedding is planned
Clapton
hear
to
to
'73
Carmel Estates. Mount Carmel.
SSK?
good
assistant professor of
18603.
Trina E. Vernon Leshinski '73 and her
husband, John
are the parents of a son born Nov
3 at the Bloomsburg
Hospital The Leshinskis' address is
The KUes
working
75
17815.
Diane Boyles Derr 75 and her husband, the Rev.
Dennis Derr 74, may be reached at P.O Box 866
Belleville, PA 17004. They have two daughters age 5 and
2. Dennis, who went to Wesley Theological Seminary,
is a
United Methodist pastor in Belleville. Diane has been
26.
^.^gf
am
1
C ° mpany ,ReeC
°
doctorate
Steven Philip Kelfer 74 and his wife are the parents of
a son born on Nov. 8 The Keifers live at R.D.4. Berwick
Robert Layman '73 was recently named Bovertown's
acting borough manager Bob was named
Boyertown s
assistant borough manager in July. 1979.
He is married to
the former Patricia Ann Walker.
Thev have a son Justin
Thomas one year of age The Laymans live at 507
East
Philadelphia Avenue. Boyertown, PA 19512.
fmr!?^!
MM.
eCtriC
Her husband graduated from Bloomsburg
High School
and Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, earning his
from the University of Wisconsin
his wife, Suzanne, are the
"73
11
'
Social Security Administration in
Philadelphia
parents of a son, Daniel Eugene, born recently at
Geisinger Medical Center. The family lives at R.D.9, Box
'73
Alexander Louis Horvath
m ara
.
Heebner 74 and Tina M. Hess were married
They live in Tampa, Florida
Deer Treatment
Lon Elson Edmonds 74 and
and his wife, Cathy Cramer 75 have
a new son, Jeffrey Jay, born on June 27 He joins
Timmy
6 and Came, 3'=. Rick received his M B. A. from James
Madison University in May 1983
May
24.
director of treatment at White
Center, Bushnell. Fla
reports that he and his wife
Linda, are the parents of a daughter. Lane Erin, born on
30, 1983. The family lives at 1911 Rolling Green
Circle. Sarasota, Fla. 33582.
Jersey) on
C.
on Sept.
January
at
E
ng
bC re3Ched at 4612 Bea trice. Las
Vegas, Nev.
,
boIi'iAm
89110.
It is always
M
18042.
David G. Burgess
M.C.R.P
a four-year apprenticeship In
a full-fledged journeyman
carpenter
S
Joseph
McCullough '74 and his wife, Patricia, are
the parents of a daughter, Holly Joy, born on Sept. 22.
lives at R.D.4, Bloomsburg, PA 17815.
David
Rick Eckersley
Las
completed
th7^ dfTeTt1ue
The family
Richard Lee Miller '73 was recently appointed assistant
controller of Laneco Inc He is responsible for coordinating internal control systems as well as day-to-day
operations. Dick joined Laneco in 1980 as an accounting
manager His address is 2104 Freemansburg Avenue
PA
I
carpentry. 1 am now
with Carpenter's Local Union
visit
Easton,
10.
'
to Joseph Ronca three vears ago. The
Roncas live at 1489 Verona Drive, Pen Argyl, PA 18072.
She invites any of her Bloomsburg friends to drop her a
o™?g*?7
"On May
Stephen A. Andrejack '74 and his wife are the parents
of a daughter, Theresa Louise, born on Sept. 4.
department.
She was married
or
'74
'73
reports that she has been
teaching Spanish at Pen Argyl Area High School since her
graduation, and is chairwoman of the foreign language
line
fine here in
is
vegas.
Ann Hockenberry
Carol
Lightstreet, Pa.
Joan M. Peron Ronca
Marylou Kempf 75 writes as follows
"Just a short note to let you know all
T
a
in
business
Univer
doctoral
Bait Lansing
ey 7< and her husband Joh
" Harvey
,
L
S
f 3 d Ughter
Me,inda J °y. horn ol
u °
?,
Harveys
live at
1092 Bayless ridce,
>™ Place
Sept
S?ot
9«
26.
The
Norristown. PA 19403.
'
'
.
Continued on page 1b
.iioj^riio/-.
^vjJ.M.l ibj« ( .n
'
C^SM.U..
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
ff
I
Faculty, staff appointments
V**™* "«"*«
~»«*»
BflSa«5S.r
uS^^SS
813
"
"
-t
Bloomsburg
Tooer
Robert
i
A.B.
in
pT?
P.
PrfvSus
° f PittSbUrgh 31
Bomboy, part-time
Ph D
v assistant
Sown
instructor, English
English at Wilkes College
(1963), M S in
University (1964) Previous,
iS^^SST^
Thomas
Muskingum
College .1970. Ph D in sociology
at Wayne State
University (1979). Previously assistant
professor
,
at1
Moravian College. Bethlehem.
Penelope Broach, admissions counselor
B A in
l
d r C0 " ege (1980
in counseling
'' M Ed
r n
at Salem State College
1982.. Previously staff
associate
»soware
of housing at Salem State
College.
in
JL,
W
at
Kacapyr,
Kaeapv, instructor, economics „
B A.
University of Maryland (1978)
Previously
y
P
,'
gyj
31
.
"
-
aSSSg
«"£
management. '«
B S.
in
State Un.vers.ty (1952). B.F.T
in foreign trade at
SCh ° 01 f nlernational Management
fl^V'MB Al^hf
m busmess al? J
New York University
Ph n mTosoc.al sc.ence
Ph^D
at Syracuse University
EJW
«
1959)
.1971.
,
professor of
—
.
Staff nurse al Children s
ffiSphla
MSN
1983)
" os P i,al of
E
y andl assistant professor, philosophy and
a n?h
S l
an ropo,0gy at ^ce University
"L ropology
Ph D f
ln anth
at the Pennsylvania
i ? ? University
n
State
1975. 1980
Previously project
administrator at Novak and Company.
Brooklyn, N Y
;
nSSXT&n
.
(
)
ESSES ESSf** speciaU8t at D
~
nt of
U h B Lu pien assistant
professor, computer
infnrm
a?
f
information
systems.
B.S M.S. in mechanical
engineer
at Un.vers.ty of Maryland
1963, 1968.. Previously
CtUrer 31 Harrisbur Area
g
G
tanle y
Carr dire ctor of personnel and labor
,
»
o c?
relations. B.S. in business
administration at Bloomsburg
University (1974). Previously personnel
officer at
Department of Commerce, Harrisburg.
-
Gregory L Champagne, instructor, business
education and office administration. B.S
in
business
education at Thomas College (1981
1, M.Ed
in business
education at Bowling Green State
University 1983)
Previously graduate assistant at Bowling
Green.
.
ary L ^essman-Conroy, assistant
dean of student
.
R
food service management at
Indiana
Un.yers.ty of Pennsylvania .1981).
Previously graduate
residence director at IUP.
life
n
we. B.s. in
'
,
'
biology
life
B
S
and
at Millersville
University (1981
y d ° rm SUpervisor
M7e'rTvi! e
in
1983)
U P ward Bound program
at
William W. O'Donnell Jr.. assistant
professor
t
n Sl die B F A m theater at Penn
M^TI
FA
p
i°
Mil
•
College
Michael
0C
nw? n
S d
uKsHy
p'
•
-
'?
State
,K
ftheater
31 Wa yne State Un.versitv
instructor of theater at Lycoming
A.M.. Ph.D. in speech and
dramatic arts at
J1363),
Un.vers.ty
of Missouri 1969. 1971
.. Previous"
director nf
cont.nu.ng education at University
of
E Pugh,
assistant professor, chemistry
'S
ry 3t Universit of California at
Davis
y
.
fomPJZT
m
m chemistry
!.
Marc. A. Woodruff, assistant
professor
communication studies. B.A. in
theatre/child
development at Western Kentucky
University
Previously director of Hartwood
Theatre
at Arizona State University
gradUate assoc ' a te at Arizona State
Boris Z. Raykhshteyn. associate
professor
mathematics and computer science. B.S.,
MS Ph D in
mathematics at Yaroslavl Teachers
College 1958 1960
1965). Previously professor at Susquehanna
University^
Zone -. assistant
professor, nursing. B.S.N
u'i m°?»t;
M.S.N,
a University of Pennsylvania
Previously assistant professor
of
1
.1975)
(
1964. 1975)
nursing at Wilkes
Andrew
F Emerson, assistant professor finance
and
business law B.A in history at
Bryan College 1978)".D
University of Georgia School of Law
1981
Previously
31
C ° Unty ,TeXaS, Communit College
y
,
District
Sharon Forlenza-Stevens. assistant
professor
31 Nesbi " Memorial Hospital
(82ft
s'f?,
11969). B.S.N
at U.Ikes College (1971), M S
in maternal
child nursing at University of
Maryland (1978)
toEHII
Previously assistant professor at
Wilkes College.
Christine B Fuller, part-time instructor,
languages
and cultures B.A in Latin at Juniata College
1967)
M A in classics at Penn State 1970 Previously parttime emergency appointment in languages
and cultures
during spring semester of 1982-1983
at
(
(
1
BU
Wayne L. George, instructor, mathematics and
computer science B.S. in mathematics at
BU (1965. M S
in mathematics at Ohio State
University (1970)
Previously department head and teacher
at Berwick Area
School District.
Dennis J. Grace, instructor, health, physical
education and athletics. B.S.. M.S. in
physical education
at Indiana University, Bloomington
(1976, 1977)
Previously director of soccer for Pennbrior
Indoor
Soccer.
Ann E. Grundstrom, part-time instructor in
languages and cultures. A.B in French at DePauw
University (1959). A.M. in French at University
of
Michigan (1966). Previously French teacher at
Midd-West
School District, Middleburg.
E. Dennis Hinde, instructor, communication
studies
B.A. in social science/political science at
California State
University (1967).
A. In major advertising at Texas
Tech University (1983). Previously Instructor/teaching
M
Texas Tech University.
Hopkins III, physical therapist. A. A. in
English at Sullivan County Community College (1968)
B.S. in health and physical education at East
Stroudsburg
assistant at
Arthur
Q
?he
ne
J.
University (1981), Certificate in Proficiency in
Physical
Therapy. Previously physical therapist for Hayne
Physical Therapy, Ablngton.
S
ass.stant at Michigan
State University
at
1
B
'
Hen
guidance
life
graauaie
research assistant at Penn State
a
Urma a
ndSlS?l,
^;K sciences. B.S.. Ph D
and
allied health
in
l00msbur g University i 9 ?7
tCaCher 31 Berwick Are.
? StUdiCS
U 0 0di asslstant dean of student
m
?H in 7
M.Ed,
business administration, counseling
.
FElu' *
S ° Cia
'
KecJndarv
ry
ry) 31
t
Sa Scarlett ass istant
dean of student
SSCtfE?'
A. McDonnell, part-time
instructor
curriculum and foundations B.S.,
M.Ed
1
Nancy M. Corwin, assistant professor, art
B A in
art/music at Eckerd College 1974.
Previously teaching
assistant at University of Wisconsin
at Madison while
taking courses toward M.F.A
Sandra B. Davis, instructor, communication
disorders and special education B.S.,
M S in speech
SP
ch and lan g ua ge pathology at
Bloomsburg
,
University 1980.
1981 ). Previously speech/language
clinician at Capitol Area Intermediate
Unit. Camp Hill.
CommSy
Thomas
h
'f
.
.
198H * P°ivi n? S,y
?
Schoo.Dltrict
C " rt
in o.o
h ° maS
S P arhawk assistant professor,
sociologv
a
nSl
and
soc.al welfare. B.A in sociology
at University of
Baltimore (1973). M A. in sociology
at Un^versUy o? New
Prev,ously inslruclor at
'
Sege
busSS^
a<
B^'geograpnTS
'
associate
.
.
.
BrU( e
Remale y- Part-time
York Un.vers.ty (1970). Previously
associate professor o?
business adm.nistration at
Susquehanna University
Previously p
oart
1
Alexis A Bulka, instructor, nursing
B S N
nursing at University of Pennsylvania
1979,
«7k
.
associate Professor, marketing
and
business administration at Wayne
m^eemlnf
made
professor
finaJS
ce and Justness law A.E., B.S
M B A. in drafting8
2? hdesign, business
and
administration at Penn State
Un.vers.ty, Ph.D. in finance,
marketing, statistics at New
-
Monlgomery Count
y
15
_
in
at Geor e ia Stale University.
S S3S y FPSfe
K S ardt P"""™ instructor, English
iJ
R a ! i"J
t
31
Sh
g
'PP ens burg University (1977) M A
n
Fnoi h atV?
n English
Temple University (1981).
y
B «nomo. assistant professor,
sociology
mS social
c
f;
and
welfare.
B.A. in sociology at
W!^t?t
Elia
Ella
ec^om.cs
Eileen C. Astor-Stetson, assistant
professor
psychology. A.B. in psychology
at Rutgers, \m)
in psychology at Vanderbilt
.1977,.
l
a
1983
em
^
Th
0
UmVerSity n
lnStrUCti0nal em P'oyees were recognized by
t?u!?e™tof
irusiees
lor 7uQ
Q ^nn!f made to improve co
suggestions
ege operations Selected hv thP Fmnin^I
,he
1
were David Ruckle
"
fa S*,'"
T
72
\X ttSXI
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
16
1983
He
an engineer for Solid State Scientific of
Willow
is
Grove
1976
Continued from page 14
is
secretary on the board of directors.
Michael Alien Upton 76 and Wendy B. Upton "79 and
are the parents of a son born Oct 19. The Uptons live
at
R D 4. Arbutus Acres, Bloomsburg. PA 17815
Go,dbacns
r, I"?
R.D
2. Newtown, PA
Bettijean Brunlng "77 reports that
Doug McCourt 78
J
Deborah Ann SantelJ '77 and Richard Lee Culton were
29. and live at 6238 Jerome Boulevard
program
husband
therapist in the partial hospitalization
Geisinger Medical Center. Danville Her
at
is
a
17112
a
machine designer
at
AMP
Inc..
Hamsburg
Nanci Alice Haigh '77 lives at 11 Independence Lane
Downington. PA 19335. She writes:
in addition to a new home. I also have a new
(3 month
old' Husky pup named Pax
He brings back fond
memories of watching David and Doug McCormick
with
their husky at Redman Stadium during
football games
"For the past 2fe years I have been employed bv
MAI
Sorbus Sen-ice Division as a senior
programmer
f
support-
ing the corporate payroll and human
resources systems
morbus is a third-party computer maintenance
firm
"Please send a special 'hello to Kathv Geiger
Charene Musser. and Sally Zwicker for me.
Although we ve
ost touch, hardly a week
goes
by
that
I
don't
think
of
them and smile "
1
welcomes corre-
spondence from anyone from the Class of
78
Bettijean is an employment
representative and
employed by Paoli Memorial Hospital.
Her address
also 59 Wexford Road. North Wales,
Pa 19454
married on Oct.
PA
John Gerald Elchenlaub 78 and Sharon
Lee Melair
were married on June 10, 1983 and live
in Penllyn Pa
Sharon is employed as a junior applications
developer at
Certamteed Corp. tion in Blue Bell. John is
self-employed
61 3 COntractor with Jonn
E 'chenlaub Aluminum
Products
for Shared Medical Systems in
Michigan She also
ep ,S h a,
*2? Molchan 78 lives at 59 Wexford Road
M
?[
North Wales, Pa. 19454. and that Ann
1977
is
Jeffrey Alan Guffy 78 and Debra Maria
Reicherl were
married on July 17 Jeff is a representative
for Michelin
Tire Corp, They live in West Haven, Conn.
290A Worthington Mill Road
at
"
'
is
is
Sharon L. Pfleegar 78 is employed by
BLAST-Wellsb0
S a
pecial education ^cher. Her mailing
address
-uures,s
o n , n
Kathy Dawson Austin "77 and Paul Austin
78 are the
L 0f a dau e nter ^I'y Brooke, born on
M a°r,h?f^
,
" VeS a 1403 SeCOnd venue
^
\
R.D.3. Box 1084. Mansfield.
is
16933.
Laurie Fuehrer 78 is employed by C
M. Barlow and
Associates as community manager
of community associates. Her address is Delchester
Road. Edgemont
-
'
Tiffany "77 and Janine Julia
Lombardo 79
n
epl
1982 Tneir address is
,°
5M3-25
Sheffield Court. Alexandria. VA.
22311.
PA
J
SSnS
PA
-
,
R^jRBS?**
JJ*I«
2!iTS
fi
recording
18940
works
Linglestown,
The bride
Cheryl L. Marinchak 78 was recently
awarded the
doctor of optometry degree by the
Pennsylvania College
ry
^Philadelphia.
Dr. Marinchak's address is
°
61 Hazel Street, Delano, PA 18220.
Patty, career development counselor for Bucks
Countv
is a member of the Doylestown
Branch of the American
Association of University Women and holds
n
'
™
sporls
,
AJ
KufiS
me}PAHm
n
is
director of new radio
tfrviS'
l
KCKJ m Augusta.
Ga which went on the air Sept
was also recently married to Marjone
Lusch 01
of
Uyomissing and Lafayette College
station
Susan Dee Cooper '77 and Albert
Charles Mabus '82
«ere married recently. Susan is a
teacher m the Warrior
StriCt
Her husband works 'or Favlor
?'
y ,ive a 239 Main street Turb0 '-
Their address is 3170 Skinner
Mill Road. Apartment NAugusta. Ga 30909
o.
'
1
J.
Lawrence Nester
lD n?
a
iS
Fe ""y 78 is 3 lecturer coordinator
with
tht medical
ri >
the
laboratory technology program
at Pennsvl
omeU 77 and Mic hael C. Connell '82 live
^
Independence
Dr.. Harleysville. Pa 19438
Ann is
assistant dean of admissions
at Bloomsburg umvws
«3
Mike is a marketing representative
for Xerox
'
»t*£?
at
80,
vanta state University, Hazleton
campus
address is Box 280. R.D.3, Bloomsburg.
Sfir
PA
"77
has completed his first vear as
an agent with Prudential Insurance
Company in Lewistown. He lives with his wife. Sharon, at
R.D.3, Box 100
Lewistown. PA 17044.
Timothy Jay Shultz
"77 is
i
programmer
PA
analyst
18014
II
at
AMP
f« r
for
S
Carol Ann Bresktewicz 77 and
Calvin David Morgan
were married on Oct. 15 and live in
Hazleton. The
is
The Prevenlion/ Education Specialist
a
c
Alcohol and Drug Sen
ices. Hazleton Her husband
works
tCChniC,an af T ° byhanna A
™>' De P° l
S Tl/n
Tobyh^r
J.
Blewis 77 and Gale A. Minnich
Blewis
if addressed as follows:
Capi.
m^r MLf^
PAC
f
H«
BN
Caw.
96604
"
FP0
'
is
facility
Dallas
78 and Mark Sharkey 78 are
C
ar^e^e?a
^
and
S
S
lives
at
is
planned for the
Harland H. Shoemaker
Jr.
78 reports
that
CaS
l
1
-
fifing
78
r
^
nd JudUh Ann Fesniak were
Department
Banking
of
P °"e Dberger 78
recenl| y J° in ^ d
Howard
Johnwn fn
h
he new posilion of manager of
tour and
? travel markets,
sales & industry marketing
Cathy's
8
address is 45 Ashford St.. Apt
16. Allston. Mas" 02134i
\
iS3F\
hew
Cindy L Hause 78 received the
degree of
S
Rutgers, the State University
,of New Jersey on
M
San ^ancisco,
Barbara Ann Caruana "77
was recently named litigaadministrator
in
of the
1
D1
Ir
Jr
Dan
er
?r!
f
are "It?*
the parents
?
UI
of
W
at
May
)
tion
her
of
married
i ?
h
h a
a n
12.
Judith,
University of Pennsylvania
graduate is
a physical therapist at
PottsvUle General Hospital Ron
is
an auditor with the Pennsylvania
summer
his
P
planned
No v
Nov
ate
is employed as an
elementary leached"bv^Sanco
School District, Lancaster
Ed is employed as a sate?
Va The wedding
educat
uutdl,on
on
Deborah Anne Selgenfuse 78 and
Sgt Edward William
ga
Deborah is a teacher al
H -2?K
,
ScIm
,n Las Ve as Nev Bi
» * stationed at
? 56 LaS 8
V<?6aS A June 1984
R 0n BU
SCt^S
West
95
78 had an ^XfUbit
rnnf^
? em0DS
contemporary jewelry
at the Presidents" Lounge
Kehr Union from Sept 17 through
Oct. 15.
getting
78 and her husband Jo""
'
26
Gill
a daughter. Colleen Catherine
the
legal
department of Armstrong World Industries
Inc.
She joined Armstrong in
an analyst program-
Mary Theresa Tloczynski 78 and
Jeffrey C ShankweUer are engaged Mary is an intake
interviewer with
he Bureau of Employment
Security in Allentown Her
fiance, a graduate
1978 as
mer
business information
In
1981
she
became a project analyst in
in
services
of
the
human resources
department
Her address is 1905
Oregon Pilce. F-8, Lancaster.
Edward
Pa. 17601.
1
Coumy
"My regards
Dennis L. Kishbaugh '77
and Patti Gene Bredbenner
were married on July
23
and live at 2109 Jessup
Street. Berwick, PA
18603
he "
to all
surveys t00k P |a
BU
alumni
«»
Columbia
e " Ue
1
T
taSStP ffi?
?
Goldbach.
al
^
a 1978
'
'
C
f
195 6
l
JohS
*****
'
VetU
pS!!!n?l!
Dorn on Oc
Georgi"
*
was marTied
Sept.
Penn State graduate.
sor in charge of dissertation
^DrTo^Thorp"^
Pr°' eS
seirjmployed
'
~
Sentia
.
78 " VeS
at 4232 lltn
^
^° Ur°Ck 78 and ner husba n d Capt
1
to Scott P.
a
'
Evans School
master's program at Bloomsburg
University
P
is
H. Wise 78 and Penny
Price are eneaeed
g ra dUate 0f Pennsylvania I ate Unifer
.
rkS
l
Coa,da,e Hos P il al Ed works
for the
A°
^
6
63 SCh00
DiStriCl
Se P l 29 '^'wedding
TempK
CARUANA
WW
f
8 3
Jni
sXed
ol the Class ol 1978 .»
Wonderview. Bloomsburg
pa 1,815
The bride is a first grade
teacher al
ll iwi
u,
JSl
Kings College,
BRaSBSES*' Am c4oration
Sv
8
employed by the
is
Run
5?r
&aS®
coordinator
'77
andMre
G C ™P*°L HAS
'
'78
Marshall College in Lancaster Pa
Her husband. James Franklin
Smucker 78 is a
government account representative
for the 3M Company.
Alexandria.
Robert
Smucker
iSSSr and
Franklin
Patti
'78
Milton,
School District as a special
teacher, kindergarten through
fourth grade
1978
and his wife, Debbie Martz
a daughter born on Aug 23
The
Frantz Pe PP er man
PA 17847 She
...
e.
St
Warrior
'77
bhultz. are the parents of
family lives at 2686 Windswept Lane.
Bath,
Joan Norquest
Ka reil Ann
M
Maple
HermaS
17815
.
"^"^
?.
16 in "Xti*
Marlln
° f 3 SOn Jonn M
Ft Benning,
'-
Arm y Hos P ita
Their address
8
is
RD
.
"
T SStta"Va
Continued on page 20
^
Ia!^
Cilf^N
m
—
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
rive join Council of Trustees
Hospital
Chanty
Ball
years
°°
17
De ™"CK
Committee
ssawaasr
1983
«
,he
3nd ler nusban <*. Dr. Ali A
Alley, have five
-wiE
J
eh.dlren.
Four are college students and
the fifth is a
senior at the Wyoming
Seminary College Preparatory
Alley replaces Joseph Nespoli,
a Berwick DUSinessman
businessman
a trustee since Dec. 29, 1971
who served as
a member of the Class
p MAUNOWSKI,
nf
a
e
n genera,
Pr3C,iCe in M ° Unt Carmel
lcfMa^ c?o ^9 6 8.
J^^f
,
For a number of years, he has been
solicitor for the
Mount Carmel Area School District,
the Kulpmont
Building and Loan Association, Mount
Carmel Borough
Zoning Hearing Board, and the Mount
Carmel Public
Library, which he also served as
a trustee
97
7
he Served as a so,icitor for th
)!'
* Mount
r/rm^
n ? 'V?Industrial
Carmel District
Fund. Inc., and from
December 1977 to present, as assistant
solicitor for the
Liberty State Bank of Mount
Carmel.
He taught In the business education
Down ngton
June
Joint High School from
1965.
D&ZX^StS^
dCgree
department of the
September 1963 to
in
The new trustee is a past president of
Carmel Lions Club and advocate of the
<™
Ma ^
1967
the
Mount
Knights of
m US 6
member of the Mounl Carmel Elks
rnub.
K West
ur
S
C
End Fire Company. Fountain Springs
Country
Club. American Bar Association,
Pennsylvania Bar
^
.
Association, and the Northumberland
Bar Association
He replaces Dr. Edwin Weisbond. a Mount
Carmel
Wh SerVCd n th6 C ° Uncil f lruslees
P 0r tr
since
°
°
D ec 29 i97i °
JOHN DORIN, mayor
omciai
of
of Montoursville
and an
GTE, is a new appointee under legislation
that
number of university trustees from nine to
increased the
aS been
oi£
OIL n
Corp..
em P'°y ed
electronic
by the Williamsport plant
Buehner; standing are Leo
Jones, and John Dorin
*e
of
component
division, since 1963 He
in purchasing management
since 1966 and is
a senior buyer.
Dorin was part of the team responsible
for the design
and development of the first Flip Phone
produced by
GTE. He also served as a member of the GTE Corp
's
worldwide negotiating team with headquarters
in
Has been
commercial products.
Before working for GTE. Dorin was a member of
the
management team of the Philco Corp in Spring City Pa
where he was supervisor/manager of production
on'a
work force manufacturing transistors and diodes,
He was
responsible for a design change in production equipment
which resulted in a considerable savings.
After graduating from Taylor High School in 1954.
Dorin was awarded an electronics degree from Temple
University in 1958. He took additional graduate study
in
business administration at Ursinus College from i960 to
1962.
Dorin is a member of the Citizen's Advisory Committee
of the Montoursville Area School District and
a member
of the Pennsylvania Hazardous Waste Facilities
Advisory
Committee.
Kub-tski
Gera
d c
E
^ d iu
He is a past president of the Kiwanis Club, the
Susquehanna Valley Chapter of Credit Unions, and
the
North Central Pennsylvania Purchasing Management
Association.
He
is
a
member
of the Montoursville
Borough Council
and is a past co-chairman of the Montoursville
Area/
Lycoming United Fund. He has also been active in
Boy
Scouting, holding chairmanships at various
levels.
He and his wife. Ann Marie, have are three children:
James J., a senior in mass communications at
Bloomsburg University; Cynthia Ann. a junior in
secondary education at BU. and Michelle Marie, who
will
a freshman in business administration at
BU in January
RICHARD F. WESNER, a native of Reading is
president and chief executive officer of
Kennedy Van
Saun Corp., Danville. He is the second addition to
make
up the new ll-member council of trustees.
He earned
now
Stamford. Conn.
He now serves as treasurer/manager of the GTE
Sylvania Lycoming Area Federal Credit
Union.
From 1963 to 1966, he was an engineer responsible for
equipment support to product lines on military and
H
bachelor's and
to
;
High School,
and
Penn
is principal of Clearfield
enrolled in a doctoral program at
is
State.
After graduation fn
Bloomsburg in 1970, Rakowsky
was appointed to the faculty of North Schuylkill
High
School, where he taught English,
assisted as football and
i
track coach, and served as adviser to several
classes
In June 1975 he was
appointed assistant
high school principal
and director of
athletics at
Towanda
High School, serving
there until
Dec
1.
1976, when he
accepted his current
and
in
now working on
Geisinger Foundation,
West Branch
American
Institute of Mining"
Engineers and serves on the vestry of Christ Episcopal
Church of Danville.
STANLEY RAKOWSKY
a member of the Schuylkill Chapter 25 of the
National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame.
BPOE
Elks 1533 of Frackville, Knights of Columbus,
ciearfield
Lions Club and the Clearfield/Curwensville Country
Club
He also belongs to the Pennsvlvania State Athletic
Directors' Association. Pennsylvania Association
of
Secondary School Principals, National Association of
Secondary School Principals, Association of Supervision
and Curriculum Development, Council for Basic
Education, Clearfield Area Administrators' Association,
BU and Penn State Alumni Associations, and the Penn
State Nittany Lion Club.
He
of
of the
is
his doctorate.
RICHARD WESNER
Manufacturers'
Association and the Greater Danville Area United Way
member
graduate of Albright College
D S T NI EY G RAKOWSKY
u . ei
Superintendent's
Letter of Eligibility,
Millville, the
a
a
Secondary Principal's
Certificate and
He holds
directorships in the
First National Bank
of Danville, Girton
is
W.
Rakowsky earned
named to his current
position in 1966
He
^- Alley, Robert
Davis, Aaron Porter, Dr
He and Mrs. Wesner,
master's degree
educational
administration at
Penn State in 1972.
Since then he has
been granted a
KVS in 1963 as
executive vice
president and was
the
G
are the parents of three daughters
his
1948.
Manufacturing Co.
^^ ^T?^
Maunowski, LaRoy
position.
master's degrees in
mineral preparation
engineering from the
Pennsylvania State
University in 1947 and
Wesner came
-
is
18
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
1983
Homecc
Students para
The White Rabbit and Alice
Snow White
left
Wonderland
tor
a day to
visit
with people as part ot the Bloomsburg
greets youngsters along the parade route as
Bloomsburg University pays a
Homecom.ng
Homecoming Parade
tribute to
Walt
D sney
The banner announces a Bloomsbu
Cinderella
and Snow White
wave
to the
crowd.
The Bloomsburg University cheerleading squad showed
off
the
maroon and gold colors during the parade
)
20
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December 1983
Continued from page 16
Debra Kim Bonner Nelswender '79, recently married
Pajabon Drive. Apt. 203, Harrisburg, PA
Rene Matsko '80 is employed by Western Electric as a
business systems specialist. Her mailing address Is B6
Regency Woods, Doylestown, PA 18901.
lives at 5077
1979
William Campbell Reiley '79 was recently awarded the
degree of juris doctor from Delaware Law School.
Bill was elected as Student Bar Association
representative by his peers and competed in Moot Court
advocacy
competitions while maintaining membership in both the
American Trial Lawyers Association and Phi Alpha Delta
legal fraternity
He
also edited judicial opinions as a staff writer to the
Delaware Law Forum which is the legal periodical
published by the school.
married to Laurie Ellen Driscoll Reiley '79. She
mathematics teacher
He works in the Wilmington law offices of attorney
Thomas L. Little who has a general law practice in both
Delaware and Pennsylvania
Bill is
a junior high
is
The Reileys
live at 78110
Montclair Drive. Clavmont
Del. 19703
Jo Ann M. Carosi "79 and Peter C. Rail were married on
26 and live at 11547 Sheriden Road. Manchester
Nov
Mich
48158.
Peter is a 1978
University of Ohio
Reyna
D.
graduate
Rizzuto
of
Bowling Green
State
and Jack T
"79
Merrifield were
married on Nov 4 and live in Lancaster. Pa. Revna
is an
account representative with Hamilton Precision
Metals
Jack, a Millersville University graduate
is
on the
teaching staff at Hempfield High School.
Patrick F McCormick "79 recently received
his juris
doctor degree from Ohio Northern University
College
6 of
Law
of Ada. Ohio.
During law school, he served as a legal
intern and
student program coordinator for the
Allen County Legal
Services. Kenton. Ohio, and
participated in Kenton's
Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program.
He
member
a
is
of the Association of Trial Lawvers
of
legal fraternity
th the ,aw offices of' Thomas
America and Delta Theta Phi
mp
V d
p
i°- M
V,
Frackville.
,S
-
FJ.Hc
F
elds
and
He
Jives in
Pottsville.
Kimberly Smith McCormick
wife.
Pa. with his
William F. Johnson '79 was recently awarded
the doctor
of optometry degree by the
Pennsylvania
College
Optometry
in Philadelphia.
Johnson
lives in
of
Berwick Pa
a
A
79
nd Gre *ory S. Rodgers
S. a !5L recently
married
andJ flive in Richboro, Pa. 18954.
D
Mas?
eDeSkl 79 llVeS 31 79 Patterson
were
Carol Wolie Zack '79 was awarded
her master's degree
in nursing from Pennsylvania
State University on Aug
0
ass stant Professor of nursing
'at Wilkes
rinSl
i™.
i
-
She
Ba,re
She a,so works
-
~
a<
active in the Luzerne Countv
District Nurses
iS
° n th b° ard 0f the ' Greater Berw ck
o
Chapter of the American Red
Cross
is
cSSS SV^
She and her husband. Ronald, and
their two daughters
B
US
,79
2 ) Ha
c
^!,
Ser
'i!
1
{
SM
Charles
mS°oHd
L
W °rkS
^
m^ n
Ephra£pA 7S.
In?
"Abe" Harper
l,ve
at
33
st
'
^
f0r
™
S
Com ™n"y
We,tzel
>79
Aug
Scott
27
'
'79
and C. Heather Coates
John s Court
and
is
Mar>
a sen * or
S55 cSS
17070.
Sara
Cope Lindsley 79 recently moved to North
Carolina. She had been director of resident
care and
health planning at the Meadows Mennonite
Home in
Meadows, 111.
She is married to Clyde B Lindslev who was
appointed
general manager of the Roger L Stevens
Center for the
Performing Arts in Winston-Salem, N.C.
The Lindsleys have a son. Chris, a sophomore at Penn
Mate University, and a daughter. Kelly, a Hi grader.
Z.
Sandra (Neerenberg) Aigler
'80 is employed by the
Corporation as a staff accountant. Her mailing
address is 850 Carsonia Avenue, Apt B210, Reading, PA
U
19606.
Karen Louise Everett '80 is employed by Mr. Steak as
manager Her mailing address is 422F Society Park
'
Court, Harrisburg,
office
"My
biggest joy
is in
working with
program called Friends With
of directors of the program
Kids."
I
to the
a big-brother type
servlon the board
a
Veral COlJnties
Snyder Union Northumberland. rn.nmh
berl^nri
Columbia, plus several more. I am
matched with
a 13-year-old boy who has
become a big part of my li?e I
01
WUh
Bi " and h °Pe touring
°/
hTm up to
Bloomsburg for a visit. He wants
to attend B.U.
~
-
W?
Corey and Jamie Waters live at R.D.2.
Box 276 Old
Susquehanna Trail, Selinsgrove, PA 17870.
Brian Schell 79 and Sharon A.
Remington Schell
3 daUghler Erin NlC0le born
P en S
on
?'
f
ThP
h
The Schells
,
-
live at 2035
Main
Street,
'81
are
Oct
Northampton,
5
PA
Bonnie MacMahon '79 and Donald
Yazurlo '81 were
married on Oct.
1£ Bonnie is a claim representative wUh
0
,S a com uter
Programme;
P
?"
I B M. They
ThevTvPi
live in Germantown, Md.
S
,
Daniel Lee Kline 79 and Laura
Susan Coates
606
SS
Pmn.nvp/
d
rSn
^
"^
St
,iVe
manager
^tsteet
lD
at
Va,lev
'81
Moran were
medical student at
at Pennsylvania
Pennsylvanfa
Veronica Darlene Clark '79 and Craig
John Klesh were
Sepl 10 Ver0nica works for the
U S Post
Office ui r,
Catawissa, and her husband works
for Pennsvl
3 P Wer
Llght Co in Hazleton Th
live
at R D4
*y
K°
i 17815.
Bloomsburg,
PA
m™
JlfLl
B
Liem are
is
Ashland
planned
They
live at 2150
Queens Drive Apt A-
17110.
Cathleen M. Readdy '80 and Anthony
J.
Wiencek
(Villanova 78) were married on April
23
Cathleen is
employed by Reuben H Donnelley in Wvomissing
Pa
C6ks
al 1013 Tuck erton Road, Reading.
PA
7%05
m
Debra Kay
Sitler '80 and Timothy Paul
Kern were
recently
Debra is employed as a systems
engineer for Electronic Data Systems.
Camp Hill. Tim a
graduate of the University of Pittsburgh,
is sales man
r
Urt
Harrisburg. Their address is U58
°p
H Camp Hill.
Kingsley p
Road.
married
^his
S,
C
PA
M! , !!
to
A
a
,C
Maitho6
'
ht0 n) BUS
n
B
J.
?
K
m
,*
floi?,
10836 Haskins.
17011
reporls that she
on Aug 7
f hwno
„
was born
-
r!
Dav,d
'
.
was married
The y have a son
13. They live a
1982 °r.
Sept.
Shawnee Mission. Kan
66210.
Beth Anne Schilling '80 and Michael
Mark Moruccl
a e
Belh iS 3 SUbstitule ,eacher in
S L?if Mike
li
Schools
sales representative for
is
Kawneer
^wneer,
Inc
inc.
planned.
John Jeffrey Wengren '80 and April
Christine Mensch
r
,,y and ,,ve ai 143 N » rth
t
s
ct'^zrx
Mffi
is
*C
a
S.
y
X"aS"R
eft
a caseworker for Family
Counseling.
n M arie EIl2aDelh Fiamoncini '80
and Bruno John
A„^ o K
Andracchio
were married on Sept 24.
The bride is
employed as a caseworker at
Selinsgrove Cente
He?
were
Laura
s
Volkswagen
eV
Seot
bepl.
n
17
L
w"
80
kl
-
Susan
is
e
1980
we?e
^
Sa
I
ar r^d
m
on
and Susa " Walsh were
married on
employed by Lazarski's CatPrino
S
AUg
LewUwrPA,°7044
Roxajna Hunslnger
80 and Robert Pletchan
SO were
on Oct 9. 1982 Roxanna is
a certilleo oublie
accountant lor Ernst and
Whinney. Readin. Bob is an
is
,
'5°
6
an
J
dWard Kenl Bre "'"
? Ve
"
31
5
P,ne Court,
employed by Boyer & Ritter
CPA^
nf
mamed
I
Barbara Ann Proslck
'80
and
Michapl
I
r„n -«
'
W
gDer
%
Allen School
>79
!
a
?
n
'
and Jac q"eline T. Johnson were
Ch| cago.
III.,
teaches
first
grade
J
A,lemow„
J?&
JT
'»> llves
*
1839 S°»<»
Cn-b
St.,
in
Medford, N.J The bridegroom is
a teacher
n Bradford School of Business.
Philadelphia. They Tfve It
^South Syracuse Drive. Brandywoods.
Cherry Hill N J
'80
Bloomsburg
is a
A summer wedding
The bride
m?5J?"
PA
Harrisburg,
1.
in
"
wedding
1984
public accountant.
-
our wedding and spends a lot of time
with
us. so I almost have a ready
made family
3
6
ta
for the Sel 'isgfove area school
,?'
?
Hie/
'I will
district
and
be taking courses in the next
year at
Bloomsburg working toward her masters »
Ronald
Brian A. Auchey '80 and Deborah R Derkits were
married on June 25. Deborah, a home economics teacher
is a graduate of Mansfield
University Brian is a certified
I
was
and
'80
in
A June
Pa.
Hummels Wharf
i
M. Thomas
Christine
engaged. Christine is employed as a teacher for North
Schuylkill School District. Her fiance is a sales
representative for Paul Chevrolet-Oldsmobile-Pontiac
"The house was an inn during canal days and later
was
the farmhouse that went with
all the "land where the
Susquehanna Valley Country Club is now and
most of
i
17109.
5223
"They included Peggy and John Trathen, Mr.
and Mrs
Norton. June Edwards and President and
Mrs. James
McCormick. We were so glad they could be with us'
"We are living in an old 1855 log home and restoring it
VVe tore off all the inside plaster
upstairs in three of the
bedrooms and are refinishing the logs. The
house is in
Hummels Wharf, but we have a Selinsgrove mailing
address.
and home district office. I was elected
last year
Democratic State Committee and enjoy this
also.
PA
Melissa (Ditty) Everett '80 is a claims service representative with Nationwide Insurance Co Her address is
Woodlawn Drive. Harrisburg. PA 17109.
Corey M. Waters '79 reports as follows
'I have been wanting
to drop the Alumni Association
a
line for some time now, but have
been very busy
"I did want to finally write to
let our friends from
Bloomsburg known that Jamie Freezer '81
and I were
married on July 3. We enjoyed the wedding
with several
people who were special to us while
at Bloomsburg
"I have been working for the House
of Representatives
as a legislative aid to Rep. John
Showers for 2' . years
now and enjoy working between our Harrisburg
G.I
Ellen
t?^ n"
Temple
University His wife is a nurse
Hospital They live in Philadelphia.
,
.i
part-time nursery school teacher and Chris
year of medical school at the Hershev
Medical Center.
last
IBM
Services
Re3ding Road
'
Mary A. (Barr) Schubert '80 reports that she is
Camp Hill United Methodist Church as a
teacher of 3-year-olds on two mornings a week. She h is
son, Michael Charles, who was born on July 29, 1981. The
Schuberts live at 418 Seventh St., New Cumberland, Pa.
employed by the
months.
is a
his
in
is
"Bill
-
2!3?k So5Sr
6
.
'80
Road Bedford.
0173o
Lynne
24 and Graham, age
bISLV
"
"
Lynne Peterson 79 and Chris Peterson '80 live at 248
University Manor. Hershey. PA 17033 They
have two
sons: Noah, age
BUSSiSgBSSSSe
Continued on page 22
:
alumni return
for Career Fair
5
Farm Insurance
Co. and
21
temers Mate
WVIA-TV
-
Language jobs
discussed
at
BU workshop
"n*^
The one-day workshop on Careers in
Foreign
Languages held recently at Bloomsburg
University was
very successful, according
to Dr. Adriane Foureman
languages and cultures coordinator
for the workshop
d eXCe lent attend ance by
teachers and
,
administrators
from both the university and hieh
"
reserve
'
ad
3,S
°
ipLkers
M^^
m BU
and
^
reasons for the success sne says,
was the
Pr ° eram
P resenta "ons °y
mSSfJ^te6
tte
fr °
-
0n all known fi ^ ures Participating
were Dr
l'
E. Galant.
of California, editor of the
only French
thC U S 3nd C,air L Gaudianj
lecturer of
rom^T.i"
an e ua e es a <
University of Pennsylvania
Actingf'university president
Dr. Larry
Jones eave
rem rkS 3nd gave Several rea * ons
wh" a foreign
K
increas
important in today s*
society He said there is a need
to encourage an interest
a
e ,aneUaee bey0nd
Mane
,
•
.
ZZc
W
2Z2
ISSiVSST?
^'y
°»
re q u[?em ent
USUa tW0 or
'
*2Sr
Get,y SUpervisor ,or
associate professor and
reference librar.an, and Alex
Shiner, library assistant
.
S&JS?*^
her book with severa,
Loci^
and microforms. Roger Fromm
Rusinko writes book-length
study of English playwright
Bloomsburg Un
,S?
f
I
L
University
v ers.ty English
professor Susan
the au h °r of the first
book-length study of the
enCe at gan ,,911 - 1977)
Published by G K
Han of
o?R^!"
Hall
Boston in ?K
the S
Twayne English Author Series
k anal vzes the tn emes and
?°?
techniques of the
Hrli*
;
dramatist and places
him at a critical juncture of the old
and the new in modern English
stage history
a
n g nd,S
St success f ul dramatist
in the
Dos\ Wori5w a r n era has
K°
farces, romantic
^ ' plays and, wntten
Eramac Lhistory
dramas,
in his later years
lely CraftCd StUdi6S of
^"intessentially
„
Sn
rS£&S!
all
cooperate
6
m
in
order
society
h
s tnri v
SilSiS
levels to
to alert public
" of for eign
awareness about the
language study in today's global
Ut
°.
h0W resour ceful and
m ^tZlon^f^S ^
1
*
° ther
interesting the
***** A"
h |8»?ly-regarded high school
y
teacher of
Z
Spanish
in the Shikellamy area,
enthusiastically
presented an impressive argument
for incorporating
° areer langUage in ,ne forei
S n language
l
?P
'
t
daTsroom
Her videotapes of role playing by
students were
particularly appreciated for practical
purposes
The message conveyed by the three
speakers was
crystallized by the following notes
from a student of
French and Spanish at BU who wrote
about the
workshop
a 0r en e appears 10 De tnat Americans
must
ohllSf
/
i
change IS
their
attitude
towards foreign
S
fall
languages
If
the
behind that of other nations.
"More and more
trom Americans
foreigners will be taking jobs
s
'
our own country!"
Foureman points out nearly all teachers of foreign
languages are deeply convinced about
the importance of
studying languages.
"The workshop undoubtedly reinforced their
belief in
their mission as educators and
invited them to consider
organizing a professional cooperative
for the excellence
in teaching foreign languages/' she
said
in
,
SaTrs
His best
English
known play
EHen
awards
ng an d
n«!!!.^
'
l
n,y
,
^
in
the U. S.
is
"Separate Tables "
a " d °^ar
W °" T ° ny
The Browning Version"
.'u
is
especially
three years a 8°- "™* Winslow
Boy "
EX
^ H°Kby New
M
produced
York's Roundabout Theater
.™S
^
tou?
laUded 3nd reCCIVed SimUar
acclaim on
ayS UCh 35 " Se ara te Tables."
P
J".P! In o
Sea,
Pra.se of Love Ross." "A
The Deep Blue
Bequest to the
Nation and "Cause Celebre,"
Rattigan explored the
dark corners of human relationships
in which
conventional social attitudes fostered
damaeinelv
repressive states in adults and teenagers
When
state censorship in England was
lifted in 1968
ga Wr te
re frank, aboul subjects
that he had
y
K°,
?
dealt with obliquely
in earlier dramas
Those earlier dramas were about
college
^
ioM
m
students
life
S ee
g Pnnce celebrated the coronation of
n
fin Elizabeth
L ^"?
Queen
II. Noel Coward
adapted the play into an
American musical. The Girl Who Came
to Supper "
In yet another version, "The
Prince and the Showgirl "
he comedy enjoyed a glamorous
film production with
Lawrence Olivier and Marilyn Monroe
'
Rattigan's many film credits include
"Breaking the
U 1 Ba r er '"* " The Ye,low
Rolls-Royce" and "The
v°,
;L
V.l P. s
This year the Home Box Office
television
service has been showing a new
production of "Separate
Tables starring Julie Christie and
Alan
.
.
Bates
/" k0 s research began with a letter of introduction
,«
a
to Anthony
Curtis, literary editor of the
"Financial
of London, and authorized
1 imes
biographer-to-be of
s
ed
S
Film^n S titute
Much
*****
New York
HbrarieS 3nd the British
what Rusinko wrote about in the
book came to
life for Rusinko when
she was a guest at the home
of Mr
and Mrs. Harold French, who
were lifelong
of
frTencL of
eSP eC ,a Iy dUring nis terminal
"Iness. Mr
h H
f
, i
d ' recled
Ra"lgan's first smash hit, "French
g
Frin
521
,
Without Tears," in
1936.
Rusinko credits Bloomsburg State
College president
emeritus Harvey Andruss with encouraging
her to ajplv
PP y
for a sabbatical that enabled
her to complete her
doctorate work at Penn State.
She also thanks former department
chairman
Cecil
wnosebook on Sa ™el Daniel also appears
in
Sen S profesor Stanle Weintraub
noted
y
l
a Wh0
reCl d her doctoraJ tnesis on
Harold
! m
K
f
and
Bloomsburg
University for writing and
fZril'
was
y
^
*
.
on Rattigan by Holly Hill, who
reviews the
stage for the Times of London
-
S
away
-
'
R "s n
n
'
a
S d reSS VCr a
PP r °P riat ely followed Jones'
coS
,t she
ch gave J
conviction as
documented and pertinent facts
regarding career opportunities
available for those who
are bilingual or trilingual She
also stressed the
importance of oral-linguistic proficiency
l3St p0inl a
PP eare d to have been picked up by
Gaudiani s message
her discussion about facultv
development and reassessment as she
emphasized the
need for foreign language teachers
at
'
'
KctlUKflQ,
From him she learned of a recently published
biography co-authored by Michael
Darlow, a BBC
television director who informed
her of a doctoral thesis
Sh
J Tf
£r
Pinter,
-
research grants and a sabbatical."
Rusinko has reviewed books and
written articles for
e e
The Annual of Bernard
J^™£ y K
*
Shaw
Modern Drama." "World Literature Today "
0fL,t aryBio er a Phy: Modem
British
Studies.
nrirnTr^c
f,f
Dramatists Since World
War II." and "Critical Surveys "
n
now on sabbaticaJ leave, completing a
study
?
of
of Tnrn
Tom S°
Stoppard's plays for the
,
,
same series. An avid
theater-goer in London and New
York, the local professor
a
0 "d U ted heater Study tri s
P 10 Lor-don and has
S Ta n H bus
K
arranged
theater trips to New York for students
and
i
community
residents.
Foreign students take
part in International
5
Day
r
°? ign co ^i* 5 dis P' a -Ved
cultur^^ne
cultural items and provided
music of their
f
food dishes
native
er 31 the first International
Students Day
it
R.no m ch
n
at Bloomsburg
University.
The event was sponsored by the
International Relations
^
and
n
S??
Vem
"
presented Afghanistan. Indonesia.
pi nts
r
Lanka,
India. Ghana. Peru. Japan.
^IZS^
Sri-
Philippines. Iran
Saudi Arabia
ALUMNI QUARTER LY/December 1983
22
Continued from page 20
Also, she says Carmella Perrotta
Allentown to Philadelphia and is
Richard
J. Andrews '80 is working as a
recreational
with emotionally disturbed children
He is
associated with the Mental Health Institute
for Children
Allentown State Hospital, Allentown. Pa.
S.^ £Jr,SHTp^ w
E
S
,
, I1Jer
'
Linda J. Duziak '80 has recently been licensed
by the
state of Pennsylvania as a certified
public accountant
She is senior internal auditor for the East Coast
for CNA
James
She is a member of the Reading chapter
of Junior
League and serves on the board of directors as
treasurer
for Berks Women in Crisis, a
shelter and counseling
center for victims of domestic violence
Her address is 1342 West Wyomissing Blvd..
West
Lawn. PA 19609.
R d
Fee
^, £ a *
^0
80 and
1
11
1S
a
secretary
is
the Laborers Local 1180.
m
X V
Howatt
J.
J?5fnSrt
T A& hK8 "oPA
Pl " sbur
AP
D
for
S.?™ grV
5S5r
-025
B aiJ
V 81
,
was recently promoted
5
m
Inc
'?, and
,?
Co
Elizabeth
Jones
'81
and
III
he works as an accountant
-v be reached at
F y A ',W
works
at
hJLJL
degree
in
J1
a nd
ter
S
Fay
*
i
Susquehanna University graduate
with
management.
17815
WJ? znlak
a
81
is
and Wendell W
employed at the
O'BlossPr * rt>
PP&L
K
nuc
l
who
School District
attending West Chester University
is
e Devereux Fou n da tion in the
West
is
by
SS5K
h
n
,
101
Cent,y
r
?
6" 1
1
M^p"
Md
Mor^t^ecVaTAUhfr
marr,ed
?h
M
*
J
Kent
««ly-t
7
-
Shavertown.
*»«
//I.
*
.
.
8
JuL^n
^
n
an
81
?
r 6
31
^exas 7704
Greg Mallocn 81 wer e married
on
13418 Brid e ewa "< Lane.
Houston
'
convenience store
Shamokin. A Mar/h
in
^
,984
Chesley Ann Harris
and Francis
'81
J.
EBfi
Moroz
were
'81
married on Oct. 9, 1982 The bride is product
development
coordinator with Eastern National.
Her husband is
construction manager with Sylvan Pools.
Their address is
612 Shady Retreat Road. (f21, Doylestown.
PA.
live
at
L.
Basham
Del!
143
Alderfer
at
'
S
and
'81
Tom M.
Emmaus, PA
Street.
MBA
his
Alderfer 82
18049.
Tom
is
Lehigh University. Marci is
degree in readln at Kutztown
g
Pomeran tz &
is
Co..
sE
Philadelphia
1984
wedding
f
in
December
A
planned.
Gary Robert Heddins
'81 and Judy
Ann BaUlet '83 were
15
ary iS ,he assislanl manager
of
,
P
Scranton.
Before getting married Judy
was employed at Nichols Discount
City, Bloomsburg The
couple lives at 8 Hamilton
Terrace, Clarks Summft. PA
° Ct
WooTwlh"
V\oolworths
K
VlB
in
Jam
and Valerie Linn Behrle
y
f McC,0Ske
A g 2 ThCy ,iVe 31 2921 Perno'
St
VFfffiSLS
p . 18103 Va| erie
0wn PA
works at Beaky's
'81
u, 0 rf
'83
°o
R^i
!i
L
'
is
Dave s
A June 1984
^
Association
W&L Sales Co
ngJey
'
.!
,
Inc
in
Harrisburg
r,SDUr
g
Jeff
Jeif
is
81
1982
Brenda Martin '82, is working
at the Press-FntPmru*
newspaper. Bloomsburg, in thS
Berwick news bSZ™
Her job includes covering
Berwick borough government
and co-wnt.ng a weekly
column on the Berwick
address Is 450-F Helcha St., Espy,
PA 17815
^14^
has accepted a graduate
assistant
Ch^Xor^,'
M £f v
^S!!;.f*
'
is
Scott Barry Feinstein '81 and
Vickie Lee Cllurso '83
were married on June 18. They live
in Newton. N J Scott
is a buyer for Brown
and Filson. Inc
^ ^'
'
s^ A^5
employed by
^
summer
planned. Ellen lives at 207
Greenwood Road
,
DaVe S 3ddreSS iS 230 A
P
^L
'81 and Kimberly
Sue Hessert '82 are
e
l
CheS first grade in th e Benton
Area
n R"l Dennis is a
School District
candidate for the MBA degree
in finance from Syracuse
University
1
C
81
Y ° rk Were married «n
29^ Ja nin°eT
a secre tary with
e ,S 3
Pennsylvania Munici\t
?
Authorities
,aD
'<
Thomas Coleman were
PA
ch?
g^gSSt'ggSg
and
Diane
'81
l
pal
c
Fitness
and David Derr -81 are engaged.
Ellen
employed by McNeil Consumer Products
Co. and
.*?
*
•
the
Md
Valletta
?° fn
Oct
7™K D
and Peter Paul Ochinko '81
Susan is em P'°-ved in ^e public
ed n AugUSt 1981
is an elementary teaser
7hL
p
the Rockaway
School District. Her husband
is
a
manager with United Parcel Service.
Their ^uaress
address is
Star Route J5, Glenwood. N.J
07418.
Sd
Bo
PSC
'81
°f
5
wedding
a
-
in
No?t h tva,e
S
Hone -vbr °o k Ch ester
ir
working as a tnifr
wa
iVe ' n
,
SSSfe
Semce. £
Vincent
'
Connection Co
eie ,s employed by the United
States
J
Washington.
D C. They live in Laurel,
Secret
accountant
y
cSunty
E
may
Dennis Scott Raup
RockviMP
and Carl
81
Je n Funk 81 and Dan Smallacombe
III were
on n
O?. 8 and live in Mountainhome, Pa
Peggy
b
P ye
Ye " OW Room Pre-Educational
Center
n„n?e
l by
Dan
is employed
J.A.RelnhardtA Co Inc
working on
Jo Ann WUdonger '81 and Rex W. Lutz '81
were married
on June 18 at St. Peter's Lutheran
Church, Riegelsville
Jo Ann is employed by the
Allentown
W
mar ed
eiIL
H
'81
'
be reached at
0f ' u " Air Force Base, Neb. 68113.
uSiSity"
Diane
a,
I"
Marcl
r
Susan A. Tymusczuk
men,
81 g radua{ ed from the West
School of Medical Technology
on
k
business
Catherine Handy
Catherine
Rex
3nd Dennis Golomb ar e engaged
coordinaior and
8
S
Nor,h
Steohen
Sel^
P
lives ai 233
81
Susan Renee Dayoc
mam„g
J
V
8
s l he d rector of glance
at Marian
Ca tholir H^h'
catholic
I
High J
School
in i
Tamaqua. Pa. He received his
1 counselor education
from Penn State in 1982
ESS
Jeff s address is 3500 Second
St.. Bloomsburg. PA
is
engaged
Inc
SSWW
*
St
19401.
Bo^.^O^fW
n1
and Steven B. Richard were
married
employed as a substitute teacheMn
the
and Lewisburg school
districts
a,sincts
She also
^e
Country Cupboard Inc
f
on Aug
13
Miffl.nburg
Pa P g
SLS^ju&nn
His
70124.
CbatuOa
22. She
is
were
center
Michael
Locust
1822
is
PA
maSler
ArrKrc?
18708.
Norristown,
branch
to
marrie d ° n 0ct 29 Tht live
in WilbuTton
*
Pa. ThP
Pa
e
The hhh
bnde is a Spanish
teacher at Williams Va lev
Junior-Senior High School. The
bridegroom is a graduate
St3te UniVCrSUy 3nd 15
public
Russell Jr
Craj g St..
-
'
l
certified
Nancy J. Campbell '81 and William J.
Plichta were
married on Aug. 6. Bill is director
of recreation of the
borough of Norristown. Nancy teaches
fourth grade
elementary school. Their address
N ° r,h
employed by Thomas Jefferson University
Medical College in Philadelphia.
Her address is 440 South
Jackson Street. Woodbury. N.J 08096.
reg MaJJoch 81 were married
on
address is 134,8 Bridge -
mf3S
e VeU0W Room Pre-educatS
EK"
k 5 works
her husband
for J.A Reinardt and
(Cavagnaro) Checefsky '81 lives at 304 Sunset
PA 18452. She was married recently.
,
c3S$r£ssssssa
•
Jean funk '81 and Dan
Smallacombe
t
married recently
and live in Mountainhome
Mental Health/Mental Retardation
guidance counselor In Bloomsburg
Weatherly, Pa
live in
Peckville.
m^r^S
'82 live
tCe Johnstown. Pa
St
Johnstown.
^
i^iSotzy^ st
E
N
M
Susan
St..
'
Rear Fayette
"
br^h /er
,iVC 3t 233
81
-
PA^59?5
J eaB
and John
'81
New 0r,eans He ma
!"
fS
n°
Argonne
Boulevard. New Orleans, La
l^v Sift
% H alth S vst f m
,S
Th e
Th omas Gerald
Ll
is
a
is
and Ron Kelshaw were married on
employed as a psychotherapist at
'81
-
June
ff£- *S PTft
Theresa
Her husband
They
'
'
Jv ™
Lisa Anne Stoudt
Aug. 6. The bride
Hazleton-Nanticoke
b°x
3
BR'SSSLV
•
and Kelly A. Galosi '82 were
The> "Ve 31 55 E,m St 0neonta
"
^
and
81
15213
-
m
6
618
St -
The bridegroom has a
chemistry from Dickinson College and
is a
1 chemistry deparlment at
1
p iri
degree
at
1981
3
'
Kathleen M. Kondrchek
employed bv
Robert F. Hanson 80 and Howard
C. Weisman
at La Masion Apartments,
Wayne, PA 19087
mfn ^
17815
h
schools
.,
80
n AUg 27
i3820
™
in July 1983 Tom is a
graduate of
Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
He is a navigate? in
the U.S. Air Force and is
stationed at Castle Air Force
Base In Calif The Wozniaks live in
Merced, Calir
Edwin Howard Feather III '80 and Sarah Fay
Feather
81 live at 1 Sawbuck Circle. Horsham,
PA 19044
Peter
N ° r,h
'
-
C ° rbin Swav e,y
Shamokin.
St.,
*
a
,ives
The Hun,ieys nve af r °
vi^! t were married
Hozniak
Kay Voder were married
6 a
North Anthrac '*
™J kW?
,
employed as
r2J„ \,
Geisinger
Medical
Center. Danville. Rodd
,iVeS
She
-
B. Huntley '81 and his wife are
the parents of a
ut&xs.
Insurance. Reading.
P4 ftr?
81
F Frederick DIValerio "81 is a special education
eacher with the Central Susquehanna Intermediate
Unit
His address is 665 Old Berwick Road, Bloomsburg,
PA
.
a
Perk a°sie pr,89 4 4
A„
has moved from
,('
in Center
'81
employed
therapist
|° pon
'" and Martin A. Reymer (Mav
82 and
A
'
dajean Howe,,s
w«^SafcCIoT' 51„Hv? ay,°Bn E
bride
is
employed
at the
GeMno»r m
^
»™
engaged.
DMdlw *•
,
lck
'
Pa
Tl>e
Continued on page 24
New
adult
fitness center
Alumni living in the Bloomsburg area
advantage of the newly-expanded adult
rC
may
Tom
lhe fac "'ty
1938 to 1968
retired as an associate
retired
,
professor.
Before coming to
Bloomsburg. he taught at Wyoming
Memoria
RjK ESS P
and
W
'
,
,
fe?
T
Anne Klemkosky.
vice president, Ann E
Zeigenfuse, recording secretary;
James F Peee
corresponding secretary; Grace
D. Vanderslice
positioned between the $90 community
act.vit.es fee paid by students
and the $250 paid bv nony
alumni to use the facilities.
During the last school year, the
center was located in
the basement of the gym, and
memberships were also
available to the public through the
School of
is
'
" Hinke hiSt0rian: Rosalie Mu "en.
tfi^hSSn*
National Council representative,
and Dr. Ellen M
'-
Clemens, sponsor
Extended
Programs
in an effort to extend
exercise and fitness
opportunities to adults throughout
the area.
Registration
The
response was tremendous, said
Dr. William
Sproule, director of the center.
"We are pleased that so many adults have
taken
8 ° f our exerc se equipment and recreational
fartmfi " Sproule
n
j These
facilities.
said.
people have been so
conce r ned aboul their health on a
year-round
, ,
bas s that we felt
we should expand the facilities of the
center in a more convenient location."
The new location is one of the auxiliary
gyms which is
easily accessible and has more natural
light
made easy
1
E'S
replaced by a
new procedure
filin
int0 a
inKf.?^
l
to
out biographical
fill
T
crowded Centennial Gymnasium
data cards, get class schedule
C
dS S a
ed 3nd t0 pick U calendars,
P
r
complete the majority of the
l
,
student wui
The
equipment has been expanded to include
exercise and
ergobicycles. treadmill, rowing machines,
mats, stall
bars, and an exercise stairway. Music
for aerobic and
fitness dancing is also available.
The indoor swimming pools of Centennial
Gym and
Nelson Fieldhouse can be used at noon, in
the evening
and on weekends. The indoor track and
gym area of the
paperwork through the mail
°n
firSt day of the semSer
This
«l?Sf f either
Thts fall,
fa".? students
J? picked up
class schedules at
their residence hall desks
or received them at home
one
week before the start of classes.
This aspect of the
process will be modified in
the future when those students
C3mpUS ° r commuti «g will receive
schedules
"«=uuh»
through
track at
r
Nelson Fieldhouse main arena, as well as
the outdoor
Redman Stadium, can also be used.
Most exercise and recreational offerings
are open and
Z/ZTu
assistance.
all
<
^<^^^^aV
and
Ra ig Jr dean of the College of
!;
no P res 'ded
at the induction ceremony
cited
rS
Wa rdS and accomplishments of
Mr
RvbS? and
»l his students
>
w
Rygiel
who won many national
shorthand awards.
Also inducted were Susan A.
Posey and Susan N
are
42 members in the chapter.
Serving as officers are Dominic
R. Pino Jr., president
pres,aent
Mary
RinfaSS
*
Sf'
facil.ty,
present at
te
Hign
,'
The amount
- '«^»
'
0n C nter ocated in ^ntennial
Gymnasium.
?
andl others located in Centennial or
Nelson
Fieldhouse, are available to alumni
who give a certain
amount to the Alumni Association's Annual
Fund.
Alumni and university leaders have
set that level at
$100 per year for an individual and
$125 for a family
™
This
Dec
X. Chapter of Delta Pi Eps.lon
National
Honorary Professional Graduate
FraterSi y Si B Sets
Education, during a ceremony
on October 29
take
fitness
^
'
Walters R
Rvoiol
..,oc
,e ^as
inducted as an honorary member
nnhl
of
the r
Gammayi
Centennial
in
ALUMN QUARTER
Rygiel inducted to fraternity
*
ThC direCtor or
a trained
attendant!"
times, however, to offer technical
,
For those desiring a more structured
approach
physical fitness, Sproule offers an
adult physical
mini-course each semester
S
Zfai"campus
J^,f
h nge Wa ,he resu,t of
more than a year of
?
u
l * mia
* b X the registrar's office as well as the
22 J C0mmun,t
l
£?,
mailboxes
office?
y Activities and Residence Life
'ness
The new system also involves the
payment of fees
,ma e,y threC Weeks before the "eme
te begins
L cannot
Students who
meet the payment deadline wU have
I
To
Si !no
a'rifv
lnVa idated 3nd C,ass scheduJ
e
'
15
drop^d
first
!
newspaper and the University.
Each member
w"l receive a S200 schoS^p
^"SSSSillS P
fr
.
e S hman
High
g
of the
f
J e or she
EaCh
a que
computer equipment or software
Other schools invited
to participate in the
test of
knowledge were St. Cyril's Academy
(Danvi
MUlville
Bloomsburg. Southern Columbia.
DMvUte general
cSitraJ
Columbia and Benton.
S
0nS
S
9p?n!. D
?K»
to
High School Bowl at BU
Berwick Hi e h Sch °o' won the
^h^nBowlr0m
School
sponsored by the Press-Enterprise
,
r the
f
?
cora Petition were supplied
by High
Teams of four students competed
in half-hour lono
sevens that tested then- knowledge on VlsSjW
The idea of sponsoring the event
for high school
tudents was first raised by
Bob Buehner* chairman of
oi
the University's Council of
Trustees.
'Mom and Pop'
reading
clinic
Parents are becoming teachers through a
Bloomsburg
University Readmg Clinic project which
began in the
autumn of 1982 and involves a different style
of education
reading procedure for chUdren.
Through the efforts of Dr. Edward Poostay.
director of
Reading Clinic, and members of the clinic's staff
a
system was established which trained parents
the
to help
their children learn reading skills.
program, nicknamed the
"Mom
One year later the
and Pop Reading'
Project.'' is still going strong.
"We got the idea after we began receiving too many
requests from parents who wanted us
to help improve
their child's reading ability," explains
Poostay. "My only
answer to some of those parents was, 'we can t
tutor your
child, but you can.'
"A short time later, the program's guidelines were
set
and they still hold today."
In order to participate in the program,
the parents
must be willing to attend 12 to 14 instructional
sessions
:
which last 90 minutes each At each session, the
parents
learn specific instructional reading methods,
and apply
those methods in a half-hour learning
period with their
child. During that period, the parents
are supervised bv a
^
^^stz^jr
s»P6q
fit
b9unttr do
0'
01
cui,u,ai a,,airs
Ted sha °°*
reading specialist.
According to Poostay, the benefits of the program are
evident in the parents' ability to act as a teacher's
—
*
supplement when their child has difficulty with reading
assignments at home.
Before the parents became involved in the program
he
says, they were often frustrated because they
didn't know
how to help their children with homework. Now they have
an understanding of their child's problems and
can help
F
them.
During the summer, the Berwick Area School District
asked for training assistance in the Mom and Pop
Reading Program, and the reading clinic obliged
A six-week course was set up at the Salem Elementary
School which allowed parents with children
in the school"
____JJJ^M
*r W
district to
c-Io
take part
in
the
program
v^-
"
l
; ;
,
c
.
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
24
1983
She
employed as assistant to the dean of the School of
at
Lehigh
She also serves as graduate
assistant to Lehigh's School of Education Alumni
Council
She serves as executive editor of the school of education's
newsletter, which is distributed to 8,700 educators nation-
Continued from page 22
David W. Blank '82 recently graduated from
the
Simmons School of Mortuary Science in Syracuse N Y
He has joined his father 'in the operation of the Jerre
Blank Funeral Homes in Northumberland. Sunburv
and Trevorton. His address is 1177 Packer St..
Sunburv
WW
PA
ally.
Kimberly recently organized a phonathon at Lehigh
which raised more than $25,000 for the school of
education. She also Is employed by Cities in Schools, Inc
where she counsels disruptive vouth and their families in
the Bethlehem Area School District.
Listed in Who's Who in American Colleges and Univer-
17801.
Donna Marie Ososkie '82 and Carl Dennis Mowery were
married on Oct. 29. They live at 220 West
Eighth St
Bloomsburg. PA 17815 The bride is employed
bv H H
Knoebel & Sons. Elysburg. Her husband is
employed bv
Kawneer Co.. Bloomsburg.
she is a member of the American Personnel and
Guidance Association, the American College Personnel
Association, and the Pennsylvania Personnel and Guidance Association She is also a member of Psi Chi and
Alpha Kappa Delta, national honor societies in psychology and sociology.
sities,
'
Rick DiLiberto "82 is a
first year juris doctor student at the Delaware Law
School of Widener UniverWilmington,
sity,
He
Del.
Hazleton, Pa.
He and his wife. Faith
Petrovich DiLiberto '82. a
preschool teacher, live at
Naamans Road.
Margaret Christine Lesniak
Wil-
Thomas were married on June
mington, Del. 19810.
They
Diliberto
of
Tennessee
an
industrial arts instructor
live at 8600 16th St., Silver Springs,
Turner '82 and Stephen J. Stoddard '82
were
J y 30 and ,ive at 24 La °e Ave..
West
poIT
?,
m , «07006.
Caldwell
NJ
Lisa works for Metropolitan Edison
W °rk$ '° r Cadenco Co ,n
West Caldwell
^
'
R<
^
J
Cra
rd 82 is em &<>ye1 by the Shell
Oil
ro 5f,
J?° is 3150 Walnut
Co
His m
mailing address
Bend Lane. Apt
624.
rt
-
v
Houston. Tex. 77042.
Scott
D.
married
Slmkins
'82
reports
he
plans
H
to
^
>8
31
at
Peninsula
121
Drive
Milton
1983
recent, y appointed manager of
?
nmilfir?
Dillon
Floral Products
sales branch in Bethlehem Pa
In
his new post he will oversee the
company's service to 150
FS ,nc ,ud n
jft
sh
and
department stores
nThi
f
D j g g and°Ps
in
the Z\
Allentown.
Bethlehem
Easton areas.
a
rJlSU ^ «^
as a
1
nSk
i
1
>83 is
d^or
a,tendin g Bouman Gray Medical
University to prepare fo? a career
Suann Jane Molter '83 (M.S.. Special
Education) and
Lawrence Huben Jones were married
on July 16 1983
Suann received her bachelor's
degree in elementary
education from Indiana University
of Pennsylvania^
She teaches in the Danville Area
School District Her
19 82 gradUale of Princelon
Univer Hy ?„ d
I
ha
h
,
gradUa,e
WOrk at Buckne " University
He
Maria Dawn McAllister '82 and Jon
Michael Diltz were
married on Sept. 24. They live at
3 Perry Avenue
Bloomsburg PA 17815 Maria is
employed at Wets
5 a
alS l aC
in the Central Co,umbia
°
School
Ser h K
63 " !T
11
S emP '° yed
by Pe ^'vania
*
dSJS
"SU
'
JnLilto enter medical school
hopes
,
ne
S£n
M
SUmmer and
6
i
aSh nempl°^
IS
in
and David Lee Getty were
'82
,ive at
RD
Catawissa. PA
by the Fam,1 -V Counseling and
3
m?E
'
John
is
L ° dl
the near future.
and Donna Rozanskas are
engaged
employed!?
by Sperry Univac in Harrisburg
Donna
0,Z
!
B1 °° msburg Universit
has'been set
Ha,,ibUrt °
n
Inc
«^k Springs
rySg
3
Weddin S wU1 be held
« Elysburg Pa
^ address Box Jeffrey
i,^^
Lucy
Ann mailing
City
live
W3S
Laurie Irene Miller
Ttu^
JoAnn C. Bawlec '82 lives at 5522 Bradley Boulevard,
Alexandria. Va. 22311. Telephone number is (7031 6710046. She is employed as a drug and alcohol counselor at
Dominion Psychiatric Treatment Center in Northern
Virginia She also attends George Mason University to
earn her master's degree.
Dale E. Mausteller Jr. '82 and Rochelle
R. Stout '83 and
were married on Aug 27. They live
at 148 Broadway
PA 17847 Rochelle works at International Paper
Co.. and Dale at Turbotville National
Bank
20910.
eet
B
'** iS engaged 10 Cnr 'stopher
Robert. J
Kooert
Turner Lucy Ann works at Jeffrey
Citv
Elementary School. Jeffrey Citv.
Wyo. Her fiance is
Roxanne Eva Benedict '82 and Adam John Dombrosky
were married on Aug. 20. Roxanne is assistant director of
nursing at Tremont Nursing Center. Her husband is a
computer programmer and is employed by Good Samaritan Hospital. They make their home in MinersvJUe, Pa.
r3., 3T63.
Powyr&Lig'tC^
that
April 1984.
in
is
Lexington Park. They
Hollywood. Md. 20636.
Marcia Catherine Hornung '82 and Stephen
S. Slaton
were married on July 2. The bridegroom
is employed as a
public accountant by Bogovich.
Carvl and
Showver of Sunburv. They live in the
Shamokin' Dam.
11
M
husband
certified
Mary Lou VisingaJdi '82 and Robert Krupka '82
were
married on July 23. Bob works for Securitv
Bank and
East Stroudsburg. T he Krupkas live
in
?*i K
EastStroudsburg.
Pa.
16
Md.
Schott '82 and Peter John Gillespie were
29. The newlyweds live in Bloomsburg.
employed by Community Services. Inc. Her
employed by Statewide Furniture Gallery.
is
Ricky L. Willders "82 and Barbara A. Bogart '83
and
were married on June 25. Barbara is an
associate
programmer at Sperry Corporation. Lexington Park. Md
Kicky is a computer specialist at Dynamac
Corp
and Ronald Edward
Margaret is employed
3n2lyst
Linda teaches special
education and Chris, a University
trict.
Lisa
'82
25.
as a computer analyst for Wang
Laboratories, Rockville
Md.
Her husband, a graduate of Penn State
and the
University of Maryland, is employed at
Washington Gas
Washington, DC. as a senior computer
programmer
Linda Ann Rinaldi '82 and
Chris Robert Mazzitti were
married on July 9. 1983.
Both are teachers in the
Berwick Area School Dis-
Mary Ann
married on Oct.
Mary Ann
Kathleen Ann Simpson '82 and Stephen Long are
engaged. A June 1984 wedding is planned. The bride-to-be
is a teacher in the Clarke
County Schools, Berryville, Va.
Her fiance, a graduate of Pennsylvania State University,
is employed as a
surveyor by Associated Engineering
Sciences. Inc., Hagerstown. Md.
Loretta Selig '82 and Mark Daubert
are engaged
Loretta is a substitute teacher for
Pocono Mountain
School District in Swiftwater Her fiance
is employed bv
Indian Mountain Lakes Development
Corp and Bie
Boulder ski area. No date has been set for the
wedding.
was previously a teacher at
Bishop Hafey High School.
3120
is
Education
y
No wedding date
'
°-
s
is
384.
Wyo:
™
Laurie Ann Yoder '82 and
David F Farver were
d °" 0cL
Laurie was employed by the
Bechtei
a d
g aduate 0f Williarnsport Area
ma
rn
rSS«?
1
'® works f(>r Century
and lives in Bloomsburg
8 Stitz
piJf' Inc..
!
Realty
RhKSfS
SnJS?
on
Aug
1
i.
A™
Koslosky Rhodes
a reDtS
ifff?*
f
The
family
°
lives in
.
f
21
Covered midges
Bridges
PA
17820.
David Thomas Heltman '82 and
Nancy Jane White were
married on Aug. 13. Nancy attends
Bloomsburg Unfyer
sity. Dave is pursuing
a master s degree in
Denl
S
Thh.
address
g a "d also wo?ks for
Heltmans live in Millville, Pa.
JUQ ior College
,s
business
B '°° msbur
?lSm^S
Bloomsburg.
The
K Mar,
S
,
Md
Donald C. Walp
3
1
"SoCed ^
'82
21236
*&n
«
Barbara
L.
Whitman
Avenue. Ambler,
PA
Jennie Mauger
'83
'83
lives
at
^^^
"
being
and George Jacobs
reCently
r
™
lersvifle
e
notified
Ac ,evemenl
™
™« international
™oLm*
?hi ,
i
2
.nS'u S:„aerry?aLa "ad ePr0 eSSi0na
g
'
'
by the
1
S
»'
and
^
fm^R ,dge
L
award
^
'
a
in
'
Prnned forrn.21
'83
were married
Plann^.Eli.bSK
,
,
tb „„; c
Tenn,s
and Elizabeth Anne Hittle are
Marianne Bredbenner '82 and the
Rev Michael S Mn.il
engaged. Marianne is employed
by G
M Hock
nC Her fiance
P aslor o'
Mi^flinville
i
c harge minislers to
churches
Un^TZ
Fa*»
521
19002.
are
as
,82
They
'82 and Bruce
Taylor Richie '82 were
Aug 13 Ann Marie is employed
by Johil
EfnT u"
Hopkins
Hospital. Baltimore, Md. Bruce
is studying for a
nursing degree at Essex
Community College
live at
5 Whitelaw Place, Apt. 2-B. Baltimore,
n
admissions counselor Her
Apt. E-l. 300 Hatboro
Pike. Hatboro PA 19040
resSSs * thf.T
Ph0ne
pa
Ann Marie Bright
and Randall E
Jason Randa1 '. b °™
'82
3
Catawissa,
n- C r
mSamVpor!
Community
nie An Me
'83 and Kenneth
Paul Risberg
Jr* marriedH on
were
June 18 Ken is employed as
a field
e
by S
ry E,ectroni
Systems and is assigned
to?hp
to the N
Newport?M
News Shipyard and Drydock Company
in
Newport News, Va. They live at
SlOS^oldsWSrive
Apt. 33E. Newport News.
Va. 23605.
3708
R
°«'° A-ue!
Fow
The Wedding
«"
e
82 and JOSeph P Carstens
82
H K
P '° y d by the Com ™nwealth
Federal savings
reaerai
Savm« and
»nH fLoan, Norr
5
stown Joe is a claim.:
enSSS
Kr?sfi
^V
Her ma.lmg address
is
'
,
P.O. Box
Goshen Road. West Chester!
89.
Benton
PA
17814
D
Da
r\D
^VM
S
e
h;
PA
y " Ve
19380
S
Sffi
d ,0
&
D0 " a ,d
,
"
8,2
M K °"el
rt ,
Continued on page 26
"
8 cartoon character book
SiSSpJSLWj??
W W I\
^
BsMckw^Sn&XnX**
T
J
E?
^
Kly^^
Had Walt Disney been more
persistent
became known as Mickey might
and
if
,
the mousp thai
have been caHed
Hanna-Barbera had been allowed
to use
and Wi ma F,inlstone woSld
have
ZZ'JoT
been ca He'd
'
I
to a
Bloomsburg
b °£ b
book
by
the
e industry's fading
leading animators.
* th
" ls B r as ch s sixth book. For the next six months,
,
he
be undertaking
a national promotion tour that
includes almost 70 radio and television
appearances
Disney liked the name 'Mortimer,' " says
Brasch
and had told his wife, Lilly, that 'It
has a swing But his
wife just didn't like the name, so
Disney looked for
another name with an initial 'M' and
came upP with the
alliterative
•
Mickey Mouse."
history of animation from
theoretical origins at the
*1*
its
beginning of the 19th
century, through its birth
the beginning of the 20th
at
published.
Included are almost 100
many
drawn
of
them
BRASCH
for the
Teacher
training
being scrutinized
at
By
Bloomsburg U
SUSAN BROOK
Bloomsburg Press-Enterprise
h
mg
J
51m
staff
-
~
,
'
studies
But how
it
will
change
is still
unclear
Stricter admission and retention
standards and longer
training may eventually be required.
But those are still under study and
depend at least in
part on decisions to be made at the
state level When the
changes come, they will be a result of what
Macauley
calls a planned process, rather
than a reaction to recent
critical studies of public education
Macauley says the college of profesional studies
recently reorganized, has been studying
needed changes
since 1980. well before Reagan and
other recent critics of
education came on the national scene.
"We have been looking at admission monitoring
and
our criteria," he reports 'As of now,
there are no special
requirements for prospective teachers beyond
those for
admission into teacher education programs
One program to attract better students is the
new
Scholars in Education fund, Macauley
says It grants
annual loans of $1,500 to highly qualified
students
preparing to teach math or science.
e
year the student teaches a«er graduation,
™« f??
$1,500 of the total loan is forgiven
It is a statewide competitive
program, and
approximately 50 loans have been given'out
this year
Bloomsburg was allowed to nominate only
three students
all
o
whom were awarded
grants. But only two students
accepted the awards.
"It's not that many," he said, "but
it will encourage the
teaching of math and science. These
are two areas in
which school districts are having trouble finding
finally
qualified, certified teachers.
mathematic and
Many
scientific interests
higher paid positions
"
industry
in
the
graduates with
have been accepting
computer
field or in
Macauley said he has been encouraged to find incoming
freshman students with 1100 and 1200 scores
on their
college boards (1600 is a perfect score)
who say they want
to teach math or science.
On another point, Macauley said prospective
teachers
are not yet required to take computer
courses, despite the
proliferation of com- puters in public schools.
But Bloomsburg is moving toward a policy
which will
Incorporate computer education in the
preprofessional
course sequence.
become
the all-time
^^
for the Flagstones/Flintstones?
arn y s P or trayal of
.f
The Honeymooners."
was
Ed
-
?
h> ,n 1931
'
Grim
charged that both the name
and characterization were
stolen from her.
P0pu,a vaud evllie star, claimed
violation of
j
thP boop-oop-a-doop"
the
characteristics,
^
but she lost the
that not only d d Natwick
eCOnstruct the animat ed
character
but that
?hTf
the
basic characteristics that
Kane charged Fleischer
ea,m fr m her were in f act.
°,
stolln by her from
rnrJhi vaudevillian.
!
another
Baby Esther
when
it
ele,
was shown
V
"Cartoon Monickers" also discusses
numerous
name
that of
Norton, the secondary lead
When Jay Ward created the Kirwood derby a hat
that makes the dumbest animal
smart - then placed
upon Bullwinkle's head in a series of
Rocky and
Bullwmkle segments, TV announcer Durwood
Kirbv
decided to sue.
The gag was allowed, by mutual consent, to die
out
when current production had ended
Anthony M.
new
ng
NaMck
created Betty
Be«v?2!
Boop. and within a few
months th P
Fleischer Studio found itself in
a $250.MTsui 'for
infringement by Kane who
'
to
A massive promotional campaign was launched
in 1960
and production was begun. However,
there was an
objection from the syndicate that
packaged Mort
walker s Hi and Lois'" newspaper comic
strip. The last
names for those characters were the
Flagstones, and the
syndicate raised the possibility of
an infringement suit
Brasch says that Joe Barbera then asked
Maltese to
come up with another name, and Maltese
thought of two
primitive rocks - flints - rubbing
against each other.
The result was the permanent name for the
family that
would become stars of the first continuing
half-hour
animated series on television.
When the Flintstones had a daughter, she was
named
Pebbles, two very small rocks, says
Brasch
a 1
:B arbera W aS aIso threatened by
Yogi Berra who
rf
ifVn ! ?K
u much
u ,
didn
t think
of a Jellystone bear being named
Yogi
Bear Brasch says that just about everyone
in the
industry recognized that the bear's
named was based
upon the catcher-manager's name, but
the people at
Hanna-Barbera just said that it was a
"coincidence "
Interestingly, Brasch notes that The
Flintstones was an
animated spin-off of Jackie Gleason's
"Honeymooners"
shows, and the characterization of Yogi
Bear
,£
„
Walker, Yogi Berra, and
Durwood Kirby never
° V r the inf ™gements.
Howeve% el en
w
Kit SiST
surt
Brasch. one of
nephews was named Morty Mouse, and one
of
3 ta
' igUre Was named
"' ,a " ky
Mor^meV
in
w h'ch President Reagan has
r
H
a ma, r nat,onal iSSue
WUI defi n"ely change
.°.
If
K
at Bloomsburg
University in the next few years,
says Dr
MaCauley dean of lhe co,le e of Professional
g
° leachers
f
s
Brasch. Mike Maltese, one of the
industry's top storymen. came up
with the idea to
research project that
involved extensive
interviews with the
industry's leading writers,
animators, and directors,
has never before been
illustrations,
Mickey
According
computerized animation
Most of the information,
based upon a 10-year
exclusively
During the 1930's. his mouse would
popularity leader. Interestingly, says
As
century, the Golden Age of
the 1930's and 1940's, and
the present-day
M
Mort
'
I
J?
r
Be "
Bu * s " Hardaway sending
Si iVs^'u^ ^;h
3
a sketch
d eVel0pme nl ° f Bugs was done
, .
nd
,3ter ChUCk J ° neS
BU Mc K Sn
'
the direction
-2
B ° b Clam P*«'
"Cartoon Monickers." Brasch also
looks at puns
My avonte is Bob Clampett's Tearalong
8 the Dotted
and
rClatiVe 0nuse of ethni?
"
names o
n'n, in cartoons,
situations
and the future of the industry
In
^
sZ
The quality
and story was far superior in
the
han t0day he says renewing
upon
Created by Warner Brothers,
MGM
and
?nd Fleischer
PlpSK studio
f h animators
of art
L
a nd 194 ° S
ZL
H
aCt/
H
'
-
I
0
featt^f h ™
Wil1
h
eV er t0p lhe uaIit 0{ the Disney
^
y
,
stood at the CUtting
bac
50 years t0 the hundreds
of six-minute
«hHSi°°
l 5 by
i°'
shorts produced
a dozen studios, led by
Warner
Brothers. MGM, and the Fleischers,
and to the™atures of
Disney, and notes that "even
today, they
* hold up
they
cause ,aughte and
k
m
WOnd er maybe even doub t." Brasch
m l'L
K
says, "if the
material being put out on Saturday
morning TV w 1 even
dCCade
"'^
let a,0n
e "ext half6
century'
'
it
^
'
10
anrirSfl
SeC
UgS and Porky and Daff and
Beany
y
?
1 don 1 expect 10
many
-
'
laniero
named
director of development
n^^lf^lA^i^^
a 10-year,
10-vear. $500,000
ssno nnn academic scholarship
goal
U^SSS"™
atfd
Anthony M laniero. assistant
director of College
Development at Trenton State College
since 1981 has
DireCt ° r f DeVC,0pment at
BtoLSurg
°
He was
of?
10 identify the rabbit
T /v
AV
e A
nf
namp ?
have assumed his new duties on
Dec
was sidelined briefly by an
appendectomy on Dec
to
laniero, who was selected
for the position following
—
5
but
3
a
national search, received
his bachelor of arts degree
in history and his master
of
be reached
in
May 19M
-
....
in 1979
f,ve
yea
-
0f
laniero also initiated and developed
the first Athletic
me 31 Trent0n Slate developed and initiated
a
SSti
r ° Vement
P
ject
increased scholarships and
P
fm n C
f
J°glvin
Cd
3 P ' anned
Program,
and developed a
8
k
'
S
lmlT
'
1
pSment"
'
'
egiSlative relati <>ns,
alumni
career planning and
for
At Trenton. laniero was one of
three senior-level
administrators in college relations.
The scope of his
responsibilities included marketing,
programming, public
and community relations, and
extensive work with the
office of the president of the
college.
State in 1974 and 1976
respectively.
The new director had
been professionally
associated with Trenton
On the football field. laniero served as assistant
head
coach and defensive coordinator since
1977. He will still
be involved in athletics at Bloomsburg
as he assists
Roger Sanders, athletic director, in raising
funds for
athletic scholarships
State since September 1974.
when he began a three-year
tenure as assistant football
coach and assistant
baseball coach From July
His professional affiliations include
the Council for the
Advancement and Support of Education, Delaware
Vallev
Fund Raisers. New Jersey Alumni Directors,
and the
Na jonal Football Foundation and Hall
of Fame. He was
'
1976 to August 1978. he
served as both sports
information director and
assistant director of alumni
IANIERO
603 6 di reC,0r of alumni
affairs in A "g"st
")!
Wft'lnH^m
978 and remained in .that capacity until
his appointment1
to the development post in 1981
^
In fulfilling his fundraising
responsibilities at
State, he was instrumental
in
352
t0
comprehensive county unit system
education degree in student
personnel services and
counseling from Trenton
goals tor the past tour years,
^h™.!!
s
Trenton
surpassing alumni giving
he aeve.ojea ana
,ns t, u?ed
° f trUSte6S f NeW JerSey Public
^'evision
°
^1979-^980
In 1983 he was recognized as
an Outstanding Young
Man of America, and in 1980 and 1981 he received
the
Gold Award of the Delaware Vallev
United Way
Campaign^ In 1974 he received an Outstanding
College
Athletes of America Award.
laniero and his wife. Pamela, are the
parents of two
children. Jennifer. 5. and Kristin.
3
-
-
'
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/DecpmhPr
26
1
983
1983
Happy
Continued from page 24
Jane Ann Seislove '83 has returned to
her alma mater
Spring-Ford High School, to coach the
field hockeyTeam
She is also m her second season with the
Lehigh
s Valley
y
Deadcats Club in Allentown.
The LVDC is an international team and
Jane has
3
n Canada and Bermuda She is
P'
employed by
Smith-hline Clinical Laboratories in the
automated chemistry department. King of Prussia
Her address is 921
Church Street. Royersford. PA 19468.
But
^
Lynn Marie Davis
were married on Oct.
'83
1
By STEPHANIE
is
is
Dr.
Donna Marie Polak '83 recently passed the
examination
to become a certified public
accountant She
lives at 930 Six Shellbrook Court.
Raleigh. N.C. 27609
employed by Ernst and Whinney
Jennings
'83
MBA
She
administrative director of Bucktail Medical
Center South
Ed and his wife. Judy, live in the Lock Haven
He
'83
lives at 508
works
for Perdue. Inc of Salisbury
Emory
?
,
trausser
^
has been awarded a graduate
Urg UniVCrSity t0 WOrk
a
communication.
a*
Ta£?T&V£
degree
™
p.
in
,|
opportunity to discuss McCormick's
months as chancellor.
One of the first topics of discussion concerned
the
possib. ity of McCormick's
becoming the permanent
chancellor of the system.
«1 always expected to return
do BU>," he says "My
n S
but lhe board of governors has
Slrt for
f« me to
allowed
be a candidate
'TV'
named
mosl decorated Eagle Scout in
to both the state
House anS
he spoke
81, he Was a studenl
11
governor for Pi Kappa
nifL'ft
Deltas
Province of, the Colonies
^
the national
he was a
wfnl
vEEPS.Tem3g0
P««nce Union Oratorical
-
nnt?
place second
and went
wen on
He was
to
a
national
ESSJt*
n the
Contest
0 3
ofV^ystem
nation that year
both the Boy
3nd the
Education
Scout
oTatoS
TJ
Diane Alfonsi
00 Ju
M&M
^syl^7Zt
and Douglas C Greenholt 'ia u,* ro
Dou * is employed bTwo? e
Manage
mLT?
mem Sen-.ce J?
Company in York. They live
'83
2
in
H?2l*
Vm
Slart
I
can
to get
challSU
the
i„Ti?f 2I
r,me
.
,t
!
e
W3S
/or lhe cna ncellor s offices to
be
1bUiJding
m
Evidence proves
His offices are newly constructed
hey h ° USe fewer lhan '15 off ers
and
staff iSJS^'
u
!
members He feels that the less
people,
the mor
moree
v™*"*' U1C
efficient the system becomes
C
we 1
well.
it.
!T y0nlynot
IS
lhe onl -v
<.
,
ua,it y these
that lhe s stem
y
A mott everybody wants
Almost
to
make
People possess
is
^
*mS!K£?"
at
C
«Tnick
55r
Ud
a^ rn n.,
'
5.
wh0 com "iutes
to
about every day
sl
is
********
ISMS
t
!
T
ol
sp.ru intormation
Sehnsgrove.
PA
17870
B"5
money
is
Sjjf
.t
'
S
'
" ew sys,em a '"*'
it
what
if
i*
a
-
Mvcheck etc
mm *<".'ely invest andrSalKS
folraw
; r eX a r
prefers
it
^
C
that
»*
SilS l thCSe sch00,s
°
h'°
6 offhp
f the h
PeSl needs elc of
°
'
-
we have
schools
C°
mP
'
ete trUst in lho
- Who
y
ne says.
SSes lhe univ ersity
'
life
a
in the
place
an academic plan
way
/^ays^
tremendously.
remendously
lo live Is a cnii B ii
quality ol
P
our necd s
'ne
help ,he ""employed
no needed the next day
But we don't have
m"&V^^%>% *»«
g
We atBU
'
mSSMs. aywMSB »
,hls
reas^'l^sT'
Ce
'
p
The mosl Oeaulilul
!
'"""'^ and 1 ni »y ™lss the
mUCh
m ° re
'
r
g ro:,Xer!en cc'
posslble quality
,
B
ls' iT"
^.ta"
re ™«ved
Irom the
1^ ' '"««*«•
'
uj?g!«if!*y'.f
he n 8hesl
'
-
hp
l0gelher
138,
s,aub were
how does
»
ncl Tam p u s p re^e „r CernS ,he
replace you
%V2&S
££££
w >s^.u
Box
o.
h °W
^SSLSr*
6 ° W WC
a™
"We are more appropriately
calling
He
tSSl
syslem "
to
Cg together
fi
were
sas^s- -
10
tune with exlernal variab,es
^
S
and established
effective7alh^
ma " a g eme nt Another very good
thing is
Sal Fit? nin
'«3
b0W
of his time as interim
chancellor
ide nt fy ng ° a,s and
g
objectives pu
lled lhe Sl3ff
™«
-
in
hkcfh
a
Harrisburg from
-
'
•
^ors.
-
our^fo^
P Be
fc
nSSSSIF*
^ ^
-
"
them don't know how good we
are
of
-
Ri™
interim chancellor
StrengthS are and
go
ant ,he new Pennsylvania
system to be
C ,V e
Says McC ormick That's
what I ike most
k
;
K
about this job: the excitement
attitude I
coming n 0 t
P, e Wh0
here bUt fr0m
AFSCME alumni
a
.
h P governor, and
tne
"
so
on
m n
a eXample ot callin lne
o"*e at
,"
g
y and g0t 30
evln
«he
worVdaTends
T mm
0
working so
this thing
JJp *
The highlights
Jose'>h
C
fhlngs
d
3
the excitement involved
in th's
,S« IJTk",!"!
"Many
™
vT
c
McCORMICK.
H.
4Sm £USS
™&
}
Z
JAMES
d^lopthe^^
but McCormick felt he
°re inde Pendently, and chose
a
iS in the process
of b
-
0T>ly
aS th is se P arat 'on allowed
McCormick to
,
nd
ndently bUl h3S also all0wed
hi
to run
h s^o?
iri by
h his own philosophy:
.
office
have a nice office an
efficient office, and a lean
office
n ^lrl
Or.
offices.
igin aJ p,a
nnr
in
^
permanent
do the best job
to
One of the major decisions that
McCormick has made
was to move his offices from the
Department of
f
in the
finalist
,19781
forS
Hinkel 183 and Robert
Huntsinger were
m^SLf** J,
L Beth is employed by
Sandwich
m nd
b iS e p, ° yed by
Products Gordon
products.
Go r ri nn° TH
? in the Ashland area
They live
SET?
for the
"Right now I'm trying
wVniL S
?
Bloomsburg
gift from the
in
first
?enovafed
i
Magee
visit gave student leaders
Chris Hardinger, Betsy
ara a nd S e nanie Richardson and
photographer
hSno , TT
Cr beu g
p^!I
Pennsylvania,
in
at the Hotel
position.
Steven Moran "83 and his wife. Cynthia,
live at 37 Court
Street, Montpelier. Vt. 05602. They
were married on Oct,
„^ a f Iy
Room
The
2
Court, Parkside Apts., No' 301
MD 21801.
Salisbury.
Md
on leave as president of
P
S
.
Patrick
Murphy
the
,
Glenna S. Hendren "83 reports her home address
is 657
North Mosley Road. Creve Coeur,
Missouri 63141
She is assistant director of Erickson Hall.
I S U
Terre
Haute. Indiana 47809
-
James H McCormick
and were presented to him as a
personal
Bloomsburg University student body.
was recently named
Renovo.
area
BlUy Krieg
RICHARDSON
Bloomsburg University to serve as interim
Chancellor of
he State System of Higher Education has been given
three picture montages at his office
in Harrisburg
The montages are copies of the pictures
that hang
the University
Edward F
life
Student Feature Writer
requirement
is
McCormick
H.
a
graduate of Pennsylvania State University
-
James
Dr.
misses Bloomsburg campus
and David Spencer Lansdowne
and live in Pocono Farms Lvnn
a registered nurse at Pocono
Hospital. Dave*
associated with the Lansdowne Insurance
Agencv He is
Harrisburg
in
-
.
Simon
By
27
mark on BloomsBura
m^Jr ^
left his
AARON PORTER
speaking to campus and town
audiences. Simon
"""W"
SOITIP imps
~.
8 nnfaH th^i
tha ...u:.-_
WhUes >_
in Bloomsburg need
blacks
more than blacks need to be in
"
Student Feature
Feoturo Writer
Wri»«>,
'
waiier Augustus Simon
in
In
came
Bloomsburg University'
lsto
he did much more than that
short, hP
snort
S a landmark
he h
became
^
™
to
r
Bloomsburg
kn0 Wn artist Simon was deeply
° U^
31 enrichment of
others and
!
ake
kn0W thC
0nall
inte?es/PH in th
J
woSS
l^kfta
Earlier this year, the university's
Council of Trustees
3 recomm
da tion to name the former
laundrv
U
thC
3rt
de
y
P artment - in his
~
™
SZf
t
'
1
«*»«" made by
"
Am2i?.
With his personality and
his contacts, he was
honor
The
recommendation to honor the late educator
originated with his faculty
colleagues who felt he should
mb red f0r hi S COncerns and achievements
Snrina fh
r
„
during
the five
years he
was at
Most
Bloomsburg
Those who knew him found Simon
to be a rare artist
a dmg f)a nte and teacner
°< art histo y He
:
was aaVri.
S n? sophist.cated.
h i
brilliant
articulate, perceptive and
r
mffi
P
f
o
r°S
n Wh
n a Pe
s
ud e n7s°
° P
"
M
^^
mT™
a
all
wno
who
£
art ' st and scnolar -"
^ys Percival R. Roberts
e r C halrman f the art de
°
P artr"ent. "He affected
m P t him
h
met
very profoundly "
coming
In
to
Bloomsburg, Simon accepted the
life.
As a role model. Simon wanted
students to have a
dream or purpose in life with the courage
and
perseverance to make it a reality. Through
this kind of
encouragement he hoped to improve the
retention
rate
educationa "y disadvantaged
students
C Urged tude
es P ecial| "lacks, to take part
y
in
.!?^
h ft?h domes
H
both
ic and foreign
educational activities He felt
W U d stren 8 then ^eir perceptions of the
H°rforeign
United States and
countries
uX^tZllT,
faculty
r
a S0
W3nted l ° C ° rrect "^conceptions
some members
of the university
,lversKV
community and by residents of the area
Wal S m0 n ten spoke about tne
misconceptions that
cn^
l ( had
u °/
some wh.tes
about blacks," recalls
'
Roberts. "In
slides
For
and
'
1
1
Simon once described himself as a collective
artist
While presenting images of the black
heritage and
experience he tried to understand
different cultures and
people of other races and nationalities
as well
The artists achievements before coming
were numerous, including exhibitions
at
;
W ° men S
College
v
Virginia Museum
V
ea
,
^ re
15
'
of Art,
to
Bloomsburg
Wittenborn
Un iversity of North
Richmond; the
article in " Eb °ny" entitled
UCh
"Diplomat with
POrted that when
tV°rawboned
K" ^ wil h brown eyes,SimSn was Tteencurly hair and
IIS'
h!S
7 skin,
I romping
dark-tan
-
Brooklyn
-
he aspired
S
H??
,fiC
Xe
commercia d esign
in
'
1936.
1939 he i
added another certificate in fine arts
at the
Academy of Design He won awards for his
artistic work at both institutions.
61
entered
W
New York
K$
W 0Se ta nt was not ^cognized in the United
was J?
honored!lby the French, who awarded
him
r
g,
H0n0r France becam e his home, for
it
L« r °/K e was ho
nored for his creations and was
riph a Lrf and
It debased
5 humiliated
h
not
because of his race
Simon devoted much of his life
to art
a ne^
^
•
S
,
education
During the summers of 1949, 1950
and 1951 he was the
° he AFt EdUCati0n De P a 'tment at Atlanta
u
fSSSS
2S7& l£~
<°' his exhibits there in
thr0Ugh Ju,v 1949 Sim on was
an
ins^nl^PnT.^'/n
instructor
m the Art Department at Georgia State
College
at Savannah. While there,
he organized the department
and was chairman of the curriculum
committee.
He was an associate professor of art education
at
Virginia State College in Petersburg
from September 1949
through June 1953. At New Jersey
State College in
Paterson he was an assistant professor
of art education
from September 1953 through June 1961.
(Mrs. Simon
believes her husband was the first
black to teach in the
New Jersey State College system
It was during that period
that he designed the Atoms
for Peace Exhibit for the first
United Nations Atoms for
Peace Conference held at Geneva. Switzerland,
in 1955
Simon s long-time interest in international affairs
eventually led to a position with the
U.S. Information
Agency. He was one of 64 blacks in
the agency at a time
when they were still called Negroes. But
8
'
)
i
it took him eight
years, three applications, and an
appeal to his
congressman, Harrison Williams, to win
the position
In his first assignment as
assistant cultural affairs
in
*" CSCaPe
^
that foreign
thG provinc ialism of small
gypt lhe arlist
onlv had four or f ive days a
m ?if^
month
that.^
he could devote to painting. Nevertheless
he
was able to produce a one-man show which
included 40
oil, gouache and water
color paintings. Two of them were
purchased by the Egyptian government for
the Cairo
Museum of Modern Art
and
In 1942, Simon married
Virginia Spottswood
Discharged from the military in
1945, Simon re-entered
NYU under the G.I. Bill and received
his bachelor's
degree in art education in 1948.
He earned his master's
degree in 1950 and his doctorate in
1961 in the same f eld
Simon wrote his doctoral dissertation
on Henry 0
° a ng
StUdy of tne Development of an
American M
Negro Artist 1859-1937."
J!
States,
6*1
'
Univ ers«ty to study for a
hi!Ur- s degree
H
bachelor
in art history. When World
War II
erupted in 1941. he entered the
Army and eventually
advanced to he rank of lieutenant in
the Corps of
Engineers. While in the Army. Simon
painted portraits
S SPare
3nd traveled t0 seve ral foreign
I™?-
"
college Hfe
National
h
1916-1979
produced concerts. He also served as an
official greeter
and host for visiting dignitaries. He found
Simon's professional training in art
began at Pratt
Fine and Applied Arts There he
m
-
officer at the American Embassy
in Cairo, Simon
lectured, organized exhibits, held
film shows and
Institute's School of
?S?ies
"Egyptian Merchant" (1964) by Walter
A Simon
acrylic on board Collection
of Dr. W. Bruce Welch.'
WALTER AUGUSTUS SIMON
up and down Macon Street in
be a prize-winning artist and
to
a
8
college professor of art history
As an adult, he added the goal of being
a foreign
service officer in the U.S. Information
Agency of the
State Department At the time,
these dreams seemed
relatively impossible, but Simon
started to realize them
during his formal education in the
Brooklyn public
SCOOOlSi
'
Although he wanted to share his
knowledge and
experience in black art and black
historv.as a
N actT,H
about blacks
held h
by
0
;
As director, he assisted students of
minority
backgrounds to enroll at Bloomsburg
by providing them
with support services and by
helping thein with academic
and social adjustments. He also
strove to integrate
me 8 race D|
blac
acks
into many aspects
^
Donald Bogle, brought
dem onstra e Hollywood's misrepresentation
of blacks
bfarl? Ruby Dee
n and Ossie Davis conveyed
the black
contributions to drama and poetry.
'
Montcla.r (N.J.) Museum; Inknaton
Gallery, Cairo
U.A.R. and the University of Ceylon Art
Gallery
J
Peradeniva.
bS
'
film critic
r?Si
Carolina;
'
00 " 0 "1 031
example
'
e "8e of being the first director
of the Educational
Opportunity Program, which
evolved into the Center for
C
el0P ment The program helps
students of
a. backgrounds
all
rn?rH who
H require
additional educational
support
of university
of the speakers focused
on the struggles of blacks
survive These programs helped
the audiences
unders and stereotypes and the black
experience
to
Despite his successful career
as an artist Simon
to reach higher levels
of management
witS the
'
19 8 hC WaS he -'^raf
a «airs
.!
En >j>assy
in Kabul. Afghanistan.
From
rom 1966
lMSta
foS he
h served in
to 1968.
p
the same capacity at the
n
l
(
yl0n and was chairmanof
he
S S
T£°031
Found ation, a
Fdn^Mnn i han Pr ° gram sponsor of the U S
He
was
also
responsible
far t£
De P artmen t's Cultural Presentations
Prn^mc and served
Programs
as the exhibits officer.
Simon's association with the USIA lasted
until early
wanted
of^rXAl^^
7lr J°
Si?n
?
?
-
'
?
January 1969, when he left the State
Department because
he disliked former President Richard
M. Nixon More
important, however. Simon wanted to serve
as a role
model for college students.
In February 1969. he became the
assistant
to the
president of the California Institute of the
Arts in
Valencia." His administrative position
there required him
to plan and develop fund
raisers, scholarships
endowments for the Institute, and to solicit national
foundations and major corporations interested
in art or
the Institute's black students.
Although students had already integrated
themselves
into almost every facet of college
life, Simon helped to
improve the integration process for all minority
groups
He decided to leave the Institute because he felt his
talent
and knowledge were needed at another school.
Simon learned of Bloomsburg through a friend,
Dr
TejBhan Saini, a member of the Bloomsburg faculty
who
asked him to share his experience At that time
Bloomsburg had only 37 black students in a full-time
undergraduate student body of 4,352 This black
population included 26 freshmen, seven
sophomores three
juniors and one senior
When Simon first arrived in Bloomsburg. he did not
like
the small, relatively unknown town and wanted
to leave
But three black students persuaded him
to stay
In 1974, the artist-educator developed
kidney problems
and he left Bloomsburg three years later
to return to the
milder climate of Virginia.
At Virginia Union University in Richmond, he was
the
Charles W Florence Distinguished Professor
of Art
History. He continued to counsel students
on ways to
achieve their goals, helped faculty and
administrators
with their perceptions of students, and was
involved in
the
development
of art
When Walter Simon
artist,
programs
for inner-city
died in 1979, he
left his
humanist scholar and educator
youth
mark
as an
'
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
28
The
1983
University convocation
first
BMBil
4^4
V RS, TY
^I
!
at tne
th
sp nf
bept.
!
R C PT
^
n
N
rl°
DIRECTION
7
n a SS
-
i
1
Dr
C,a, '° n
Harold
°'
S,a,e
Delan ey.
executive
?
convocation of Bloomsburg University
1
"
Re,,ring bl0l ° 9y
Tom
vice
president
C ° ,,egeS and Umversi, y' add^ sses
Pressor
Dr.
Dav.es talks with Dr Jones
»i
of
the
crowd
Donald Rabb (center) chats
before the convocation
P ROCESS, ON
-
A
long line of people
CarV6r Ha 10 Haas Cen,er
"
in
convocation
JUST DESSERT
-
A
special
l"S
'
1
^
l^FSItS™ 7J\^nV^u°^°
r.I
pnMwS^SSuSi'H
T
ak
^
caps and qowns c-rocperU
from
P
,or th e Arts for the
convocation
Ca
S,age were ,rom
stage
,
cake^ihl lorm
0,
<
le,l
>
P^t
Ca"^7T^7^e7
ALU MNI QUARTERLY/Dprpmher
Master's in
nursing OK'd
19fl3
,Q
A master of science degree in
nursing at Bloomsbum
Un versity developed from more
than flOO.SS in special
state incentive funds, was
approved by
y the state's
0 ' EdUCali ° n
Jn^rM^Kbasis the
a^art-fme
first
June a"d has been begun
on
semester of the 1983-84 school
epareS
P
graduates as
"i"l
svlcLnsTin?^^
advanced "
practice of professional
specialists in the
gTaduaU
ne
cli
!i
min,mUm
°
f
36 C editS
iS
^rSt
d
ee
P ro g r ams in Psychiatric/
^ Mmt
»F 0ffers
Umly
Hea,th and
£rm?r prepares the graduate Community HeaUh The
former
to be a clinical snecia is?
by employing analytical thinking,
creative problem
solving and responsible
decision making wit Mncreased
expertise and accountability
as they work ndeSendentlv
mm™
focus
£
is
on a specialized experience
in
working with
a
Student leaders
return to
to the
pam ?n The ^18
T
Vt nl^Fun^T:el
ZfcaZlnTJ,?,
e
i
-
Pa
Karen Chawaga
'82,
Wilkes-Barre. attended the
Saturday session.
During dinner with Dr Larry W. Jones,
acting
president of the university, and other
administrators the
0pporlunity to snare information
about the
unllereay
On Saturday morning, the group was joined
by other
r
0ff Cers and class Presidents
from the 1974Qo r 1
Pen ° dJ Jones and tne four vi presidents
made
nrSi"/ r
.,
presentations,
followed by a discussion period
Included in the larger group of former
student leadersDebbie Surdoval. Allentown, CGA treasurer,
1979 Sheri
Lippowitsch Allentown, CGA corresponding
secretary,
1981 Janet Nilsen. Mechanicsburg,
CGA recording
m
«
;
secretary, 1976; Scott
president, 1980
McCabe, Wayne,
CGA
vice
Also, Elizabeth Miller. Albany,
N.Y.. CGA treasurer
U 1 Matlock. Chantilly. Va.. CGA
treasurer. 1975
ck
Uehart Har risburg. CGA recording secretary
y
Tooi c
'
1980; Suzanne Gordon. West Chester,
CGA recording
secretary, 1982; Frank Maloney. Dallastown.
CGA vice
president. 1980; and Paul G. Janssen,
Glenside. CGA vice
president. 1978.
Also participating were Chris Hardinger.
current CGA
president, Sally Marrazzo. CGA treasurer;
CGA
,
c!
ass asatms £
in
group were Thomas A Mulhern 77,
Indiana. Pa
" '"
n !9, A,lentown and stan Toc *ek '76,
Marrone,
N
E
Bloomsburg
university
administrators and current student leaders
Past presidents of the Community
Government
Association since 1973 were invited to
return. Included
Srn
foTa"
conjunction with the direct
campus
Former student leaders returned
campus in September to meet with
that
TH
*V d
and Joanne
corresponding secretary.
°f
University nonJSiSSfflSft
nslruchonal employees with a
combined total of more
than a century of service have been
announced by acting
g
President Larry W Jones
Eleanor P Shamis, who was employed as
a descriptive
•
statistician in the office of
Institutional Research reT. ed
November 25 after 14 years of service
Jay H Fritz, plumber, and Stanley
E. Lizardi custodial
worker, will retire al the end of this
year Fritz is
on
completing 16 years, and Lizard. 13
years of service
I he retirements of
Carl E. Home. Mary J Marshall
and Valera M Valentino will be
effective January 6 1984
Home, carpenter foreman, is completing
26 vears of
service on the physical plant
maintenance staff
Marshal is a secretary in the Career
Development
C enter and will complete
nearlv 19 vears of service
Valentino is a secretary in the
University business
office wilh 18 years of service.
h
r
her
01 ,he
bee " makl "9
" ne
when vou were
calls s.nce
February
in
,
iSSS-
University grants
Scranton
Commons
heating system,
Upward Bound, Green Thumb
A number of grants have been awarded to
tn Bloomsburg
ri™™ck......
6
University recently:
A $21 600 grant to install a new heating system
in
bcranton Commons will produce considerable
savings in
heating costs at Bloomsburg University.
The grant is part of the S616.976 in federal
funds the
university has been awarded for the 1983-84
academic
ye
a C ordin g 10 Pe g Bailey,
S y
administrative assistant
?K'
,
,
In the Office of Development.
The funds, awarded by the U.S. Department
of Energy
will be matched by the university
for installation of a
system designed to reheat exhaust air which will in
turn, preheat air used in the
heating svstem
Administrative vice president Robert Parrish
said this
should result in a considerable saving
in heating dollars
^
for the building
Six staffers retire
8U ?OOmsburg
'
'
h
~
A
5149.114 grant to
Upward Bound, an
educational
program for disadvantaged high school students
will
insure these students equal access
to higher education
Another $6,660 grant from the Department of
Agriculture and Department of Education
the
Summer
will assist in
food program for Upward Bound
The university's Green Thumb program for lowincome older workers will receive $150,000
for salaries
and supporting services for the 32 participants
employed
in various capacities thorughout
the campus. Bloomsburg
has been involved with Green Thumb
since 1978
U A $30,725 grant has been awarded to special
education for educational and job development
programs
designed to enhance the job skills of
severely-retarded
adults through cooperative efforts between
the university
'
and the Shelter Workshop and Columbia-Montour
Area
Vocational-Technical School.
At the same time. $44,581 will go to
communication
disorders to train graduate personnel in
educational
techniques for children having speech,
hearing or
language impairments.
benefit
_
The Center
for
Academic Development's program
tutorial services for reading,
writing,
^
e
C(
m mu
ic ations
on? » l
? J
P sludents
*
u
school to
college.
.
!Si
'
in
mathematics
and co "nseling will receive
make
the adjustment from high
s
The Pennsylvania Department
Indus ry
s
*>i,Zbi for
of Labor and
New Job Training Partnership Acts provides
classroom training in office technology
8
diffi't'ies
l
°
° itiZenS
Wh °
ex P eriencin
g
employment
Wm
e UCatl0n
IS benefit from a state rant
g
of'si«?S
f,!r tthe
h purpose of/ °
of
$18,900 for
systematizing a procedure
which provides educational input and
curriculum
directions for vocational instructors
in working with the
i
handicapped.
Additional grants for special projects:
E $15 000 from the Petroleum Research Fund
grant-maid of the American Chemical
Society to the department
of geography and earth science.
$15,000 matching starter from
Pennsylvania
Department of Commerce through Lehigh
University and
the Ben Franklin Partnership
Challenge Grant Program
17,750 from Research Corporation Foundation
to
chemistry department
$6,700 from Pennsylvania Department of
Education
Bureau of Vocational Education to the
business education
and office administration department
$7,090 from U.S. Department of Education
to expand
college s cooperative education program.
$4,000 from Pennsylvania Council of Arts
to Office
Cultural Affairs
$890 from the U S Department of Education
acquisitions and materials for Andruss
of
Library
Grants pending for the coming year include
"a research
grant from the American Chemical
Society and a
proposal to the Pew Foundation to establish
a regional
data center for higher education in eastern
Pennsylvania
30
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
1983
Classes gather
REUNI0N
LL
" Members 01
Homecoming dinner-dance
,? I h the
k
attended
ront
left),
retired
h e Redman football teams who
are shown with Dr John A Hoch
'
teacher,
coach and administrator, and George Landis
BU ,00,ba " ,eam ,oda y The nTn'w (front)f David
n
ncluded
Linkhorst. Eugene Mornson and Wayne
Von Stetten
(back row) George Lambr.nos. Charles
Brennan, Joseph Colone, Ed Jones"
ana Angeio Albano
a
C ° aCh
'
/
° f ,he
0
(ram?em
9
Do™ ?hv7
rt
e
e,S
n a rr
°'
'
he
C
'
aSS
D
<*
1938
ln
a"«Ktonce were
(Ironl
>%3
CLASS OF
Eun.ce
1958
M-iier
Hoffman
—
The
Bowden
Hemler.
n^wJ^o^T
Ma garef
by "
iS^tJST^,
Sa
9way.
ron
'
.
'
*' Lou Na
Wayne
Jim
Snyder and
5trdUSS
>
~
and one who has
just
J mes Bridie another 20th century
British playwright
l
a riti C al b oera h
Dr Rusinko that'
P y
.
has been accepted ffor the
-Critical Survey of Drama "
SCheduled for Publication in the
-
^
.
.
hL?h£?E£2
m
il
/
^
*
.
1984™
Dr. Strauss also is represented
in two volumes of the
Dictionary o L.terary Biography "
His
critical
k Wate
S in "' British Dramatists.
article on John Mortimer
is in the
'»
D
aJtaSnSS'
is in " Br" lsh
Dramatisu.
1900-1945
1900-1945
<>
•ld°il
and his
?
.
V
volume -British Dramatists Since
World War II
Baroness Orczy, author of -The Scarlet
Pimpernel- and
detective stories, is the subject of
a piece by Dr Strauss
that will appear in the forthcoming
"Mystery Writersvolume of the -Dictionary of L.terary
Biography -
later this
year by Salem PrSss
,
and culture
°
'
^
-
Doug
of the English
- ViZ Li, n
"^
Gavltt
English profs writing for literary
reference
Two members
»
,°
S'
retired
,el
"
George Herman,
D-ck Connolley, Ray
Hargraves (fourth
Gerald Donmoyer.
Dwayne
Belles
e " eS
y
Don Hem|
Uon
Hprler.
Bowden
nell
,rom
'
y Rld
Susan
HoZ^rTT'
D nna
"° Cks He,I " ck
S?L"Tc^L S6C0ndMarow)
J,m v ™'er,
fJ'
500 Ge0f
^ O'Conrow)
ffi
DorfSan f^
n'aynGC
Sandra Raker
Margaret Wilkinson. Doro.h
BUI Calderwood.
Jack He man Nanr, 5n
PUb iShed
'
i^evision and on Indian
art
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/nprpmber
Homecoming
at
Drake Benza. (back) Doug
McClintock
MCU,n,ock
Sachett. and Robert Boyer
CLASS OF
1978 -- Class of 1978
'
members
Phil S azian
Ph
P
"
at
'.
CLASS OF
(back
1968
-
Representing the Class ol 1968 at the
Homecomma
° nl) ° 0nna McHenr
V Kre.sher. Betty Ruth Ke er
S
E
TraChy Ka,herine Matzio Mul a
Gubernot John Tra,hen Doug
Hippenstiel and
Ce
K?h
re
(fr
,
TjXZ^r \ ^
{
l
Wm
"
Edward
'
'
Dietrich
P.
Shambau9h
r
Carl J
Caro1
Abbott, j,
Homecoming
included
-
m
(front)
Pjdersen. Alicia Detweiler, Darlene Clarke.
Marsha Yeage
m
Schmucker,
Ann Molchan, Kathy McEwen Sosnov.ch, Cathy
Ann Kieffer
John
Ike
Eichenlaub, (second row) Kathy Hotchiss
Hallamore, Sharon
Gettel. John Hertzog, Kim Dilliplane,
V.ctoria Ann Engel. Jennifer RoweBender; (third row) Cynthia Shemanski-Blank,
Mary Tloczynski, Kathryn
Anderson Mulhern, Gina Scancella. Barbara
n
rZ D n
31
I9fi3
West
Peacock;
(fourth
Yorty,
Martin Boland, Paul Fruehan. Judy Gray;
Re.nert Wilkinson. Eugene Kelley. James
Schmucker,
(fifth
row)
row)
Rita
Karen
Matthew Legge David
'
White and Nicholas Giuffre
Future of television instruction looks promisinq
^
After two years of experimenting with
television
instruction, Dr. Daniel Pantaleo, dean
of graduate
and extended programs
discovered
Channel 44
44.
studies
Bloomsburg University has
promising avenue of educational
at
it provides a
instruction, giving non-traditional
college students the
opportunity to broaden their interests and
expand
their
knowledge.
Students are learning at their homes with
the aid of a
special study guide, textbook and an
instructor, earning
college credits by watching television.
Non-traditional students
who
took part in the first phase
of this developing program were
required to watch a
videotape every Saturday or Sunday throughout
the
semester on the Public Broadcasting Station
WVIA
The TV students watched the lesson with
the assistance
and had the option of telephoning
of the text, study guide
an instructor to ask questions or to clarify
particular
information on the tape
At regular intervals, college instructors
mailed
out
exams
for the students to complete using
their knowledge
of the tapes, textbook and the
study guide to help them
through. The
exams were then
sent back to the instructor
for scoring.
"There are alternative processes from college
to
college," says Pantaleo, -'but right now
we've tried this
method and it seems to have worked well."
"When the new Human Services Center is completed "
he continued, -we'll be able
to broaden our scope, using
cable systems, and if all goes well
in the future we'll also
be capable of broadcasting live,
in-home televised
whe re ne s tudents a "d teacher can interact,
ffintTh
K fthe
,!
talking
through
television."
,
According
Pantaleo. television instruction has
become nation-wide.
to
1 B ' oomsbur
com <* fom a central
PRS system out of Washington. Dg C PBS
PBS
is moderatelv
successful in offering approximately
150 different courses
to colleges across the country
wiim^If^i
Bloomsburg has been experimented with
selected
television courses since the fall
of 1981. dealing with a
diversity of subjects from
psychology to history
ALUMNI QJJARTERLY/December
32
1983
man
raves
of father-son
wrestling clinic
N.J.
On campus
By CURTIS
J.
O* Saddle Brook
summer
LaFERGE
N.J.
summer experienced one of most
to ever come along in wrestling.
This
ideas
this
I
innovative
Bloomsburg University coach Roger Sanders has
started the first Father-Son Wrestling Clinic in the United
States.
Coach Sanders' abilities and those of his staff can only
be rated by the highest standards
found the coach to be extremely friendly while still
maintaining the utmost in professional teaching ability.
In fact, all the coaches gave their all to make the
weekend enjoyable as well as a good learning experience
Assistant Coach Carl Poff. though relatively voung. has
an innate ability to teach wrestling techniques "without
losing the concept of the good-time father-son
weekend I
found Coach Poff to be one of the nicest people have
ever met.
Coach Tom Martucci. a past NCAA Division
champion, was most informative on the mat as well as in
displaying the advantages of a positive work ethic
Coach
Martucci has no qualms about getting down and showing
your boy how it is done.
Coach Tom DiCarlo from Baltimore not only gave of
himself in relation to the entire program, but
had that
I
^
69
9
captain Laune Snyder
A,b,n
Lynet,e Kyle
Jack 'e
-
'
Sriffln
and
I
I
BU
takes ho ckey crown
By HEISTER BITTENBENDER
Bloomsburg Press-Enterprise
Bloomsburg had closed down Lock Haven's
offense
Jr.
stoff
It took seven meetings
between the two schools, but
Coach Jan Hutchinson's Bloomsburg University
field
hockey team finally got Lock Ha ven's number
The Huskies replaced the Bald EagJes as the NCAA
Division II national champions with a l-fl
victory over the
playoff-host school at Huber Jack Stadium
in Lock
Haven
in
and
'
11-10 in corners.
S S^
°f
Ck Haven corners came in Dun ches
from
o
C
d b B
oomsbur S' s aggressiveness to break
P
h X plavs.
up tne second-half
came out
the second half and plaved better
n.Sl? said of in
Hutchinson
the Eagles' effort. Snyder had
three
saves that half. Murphy was busy
turning away nine
Bloomsburg scoring attempts for the
game
0 Uck
avens play " 0nce we scored
/
1 were pressuring
they came full force
"
and
to score
At one point they had three people
rJO?*
"
Although Bloomsburg dominated the
first half of plav
the winning goal by senior Deb Long,
who has her eves
set on the 1988 Olympics, came
in the second half when
the Bald Eagles were playing their
best ball
For Hutchinson, it was her second national
championship field hockey team in three
vears the
Huskies won the Association of Interscholastic
Athletics
for Women (AIAW) Division III
title in 1981 She also
coached the Bloomsburg softball team to
an NCAA
Division II crown in 1982
feels great, especially the
she said of her charges' latest
'It
win over Lock Haven
accomplishment
"
er
aS 0u r ye re the two leams nave
et seven
iimI but
h
tunes,
the u
Huskies !had never won. tying twice and
losing two of the matches on
penalty strokes
year ag0 ' lj k Haven coached
by Sharon
,
JM
m
-
.
*
Tavlor
second time by downing the
Husk.es. 4-1. The Huskies had
moved to the NCAA
^division from the AIAW that
year
Five of the Bloomsburg players
that played on the 1981
national championship team
were playing in the
won
the
S
NCAA
-
title
for the
.^K
-
-
in front of the
a Sh0t
l
rSSwft
goal
bul fhe w * re ca,| ed for
y
offsides
tnree -° n -one. the one being Deb
up their play
°°lhey Were
'
l2?2
5"f
Long, and
she messed
Cd
ever y bod y
so well, and I
thon^fu^f
°!f!to win.
thought we deserved
For their all-around play in the
game. Long and
Hershey were named Division II
tournament All03 " 5 35
Grim a " d Jennie Heiss of Lock
VW*
^
:
HaTen
It was the third
year that Long had gained AllAmerican status. The computer science
major
"
contemplating her future after graduation,
said. "I might
2&r3rs&+- "
Long had
also scored the
game-winning goal in the
Pennsylvania Conference championship
contest in which
the Huskies beat West Chester
l-o
title
g g ,ie Uurie Sn Vder Karen Nilson
H°f
Lynette Kile and
Linda Hershey. Deb Minskev was on thp
the
junior varsity squad that
*
"
year
T e ga
Wimung goal carae at 21 :2 ol the
2
second
half
n( f ! n
ty COrner Kyle brougnl
the bal1 into Hershey
aCross tne front of tne cage to
Long Long
ThrS
8
ba
aSt EagJe
g° al keeper Kate Murphy
l ino*
l\Z
Long
said
the play was an option
called by Hutchinson
I jus put the ball
into the right corner
Their
1
made a good stop and just pushed
" ersne
"
it in
h
iCl0ry
ng Sa,d " As a senior
just
0r
ur years x°K
There s no °e«er way «
am ,5d rather beat tnan Lock Haven » to ggo out and
c? Mld She tnougnt
lhe wno,e tea
Played well and
7h»i ih
t?
-
'
'
T
2L n^.
^^n
Sf
y
J^Tar tZ
5
Long took
-
-
'
m
g L Ck
Sn
a n°d a
St? m ^
ermi
was wet and
*
«™«
e standouts f or her team was
J who
hJr71nf»JS:
" u ' cmnson 10 do.
said. "It was a case where
all of the kids were
playing well It was a day when
y
everyone was clicking
m^S
^
pla^tww"-
Sy»
3 101
°'
C° nfidence and lhey
'
thinking ab ° Ut the
«*- °" e
ESS&JSi
Chi
nn!i!i
T
n said
at the
aSS***
,nslead
°'
into lne
corner where
Hu8kies ha d some other
of the
game
but couldn't
1
§uess
I
Asked what she might do for an
encore, Hutchinson
3
and Said> Maintain domination
in the
natS/^
"S? That is "the
national
competition.
type of Lon,peimon
competition we
would like to have in Bloomsburg "
Seni rS
Long Ky,e Ni,son a "d Snyder ~,.
olu,
2 will
usSSiSE
Minskey who
p
be transferring to East
3 C ° UrSe major wil1 be lost
8
from ^ls
learn
-
'
Murphy
way
™
* ««
l
-
the penalty stroke, but
the field
special something to relate to the younger
wrestlers.
the first half, shutting out the
home team 12-0 in shots and
C rnerS F 0r tne game tne
Huskies led in shots. 15-5
l»J M ?„
What makes Hutchinson's chances
saknr
*>« -
^
for a
dynasty so
Coach Bob Rohm of Bloomsburg showed a real
fondness for different techniques without causing
any
embarrassment to the less talented youngsters
Chris Poff. Coach Carl Poff's father, was
the guest
lecturer. His speech helped the boys to better
appreciate
their fathers as people
Last, but certainly not least, is Coach
Ron Russo head
wrestling coach at Columbia University.
His knowledge in
all techniques of wrestling was
one of the highlights of the
The man's wrestling ability was surpassed only
by his
ability to teach. His step-by-step
methods proved helpful
both father and son and rounded off an
excellent staff
itself gave a father and son the
opportunity to gain mutual respect for each
other I found
he coaches to be helpful not only to the informed
but to
to
The weekend
the novice.
For the novice father, it affords a better
understanding
what his son goes through in this grueling
sport and
enables the father to better understand
the purposes of
wrestling camp and to support his son
better during the
of
6
wrestling season.
It further shows the father
the rapport his son must
have with his coach. Coach Sanders has
created a
situation which allows people from
all walks of life to
meet and get along through the common
goal of making
their sons better wrestlers.
The weekend itself teaches the father
and son to better
appreciate each other and become
closer in an all-male
setting. I gives the father a
feeling of satisfaction
knowing
in
that he has helped in the
continuation of his son's
wrestling career.
0b
hiS w kend was a heck of a
good time for
hJh
o1h
J son. J?
both father
and
Bloomsburg University has a
beautiful campus with an abundance
of recreational
facilities. It provided an
opportunity for a father to get
away from it all and for those fathers who
attended
college, a wonderful nostalgic
experience
lhC mulua ' cari
for the boys, the fathers and
"g
p
coaches
become friends working toward a common
goal
rank
Coach Sanders has created an atmosphere
through
which a beginner receives a fine start
and a good
wrestler only gets better The coach
teaches that a
champion is one who gives of himself
and does his best
whatever he tries. The boys further
mature by living
away from home and meeting new
people
at
The wrestling facilities at Bloomsburg
University are of
he highest quality, and the
coaches are^well schooledTn
the latest wrestling techniques.
Academics however, are
the boys to
Z Z?f
r
fvrfcT
always
also
emphasized They teach
try their best and that
hard work can
of taIenl Tne work elhlc
these coaches
1,e aCh
t y0Ur son
wiI1 not on|
y be good for
'
K
aC
«
wrestling but in everyday life.
They stress fundamentals
and then move on to intricate
techniques. The coaches
e
r
P
8
haSiS 0n pracMce
drl " lng
b ors
.e a
.
"camp
J
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
Good year
Many
By
JOHN MICHAELS
Bloomsburg Press-Enterprise Sports Editor
for smiling all the
time.
Bloomsburg University's wrestling coach just
completed his most successful recruiting campaign
which brought PIAA Class AA state champion Bruce
Wallace, Tyrone, into the fold. Wallace is a second-team
high school All-American selected by USA Today.
Bloom U's recruiting is ranked 11th in the country by
the national publication.
Others joining the Huskies are Dan Klingerman.
Bloomsburg High School's first PIAA Class AA 155-pound
champion; Central Columbia's Mark Williams, a PIAA
SPORTMANSHIP -
David Superdock (right)
received the Arthur Ashe Sportsmanship
Award in
New York from Ashe, captain of the U S Davis
Cup team Superdock, 23, is a former
Pennsylvania
Conference champion for Bloomsburg
University
and was named to the NCAA Division
AllAmerican team last spring Winners of the
award
are chosen by the Intercollegiate
Tennis Coaches
Association and the National Association
of InterII
collegiate
Athletics on the basis of academic
standing, tennis ability, sportsmanship
on and off
the court, as well as leadership
qualities Super-
dock
is attending medical school
Medical Center.
at
the
Hershev
New head
Class A A place-winner at 185 pounds; New Jersey
runners-up Dennis Grandy and Ron Ippolite; Connecticut
runner-up Chris Tamboro.
In addition, Rick and Rocky Bonomo, former PIAA
champs from Lake Lehman High School, red-shirted last
year and are available for action when the season starts
So is Mike Rudolph, Reading, who sat out a season
BU
Dennis J Grace has
replaced Lou Mingrone as
head soccer coach
at
trainer
Arthur J Hopkins, former
physical therapist at Hayne
Physical Therapy in
Abington and Jeanes
Hospital
is the best year of recruiting we've
had credential-wise," he continued. 'Now they have to
prove it on the mats."
There's a big difference from high school to college,
especially wrestling in the Eastern Wrestling League)
and NCAA Division I.
Individually, Sanders recruited people to fill voids
in
got people in weight classes
weights.
"I also
expect Dan Klingerman and Mike Rudolph, both
."
champs, to help us
Other recruits include North Penn's Jim Kwortnik, an
honorable mention on the All-American list; Northern
Lehigh's Darren Evans, a third-place finisher the last two
years in the PIAA Class AA meet; Roger Leitzel, Upper
Dauphin, and Roger Lingle, Central Dauphin.
Three transfers will give Bloom U added experience:
Philadelphia,
is
Hopkins replaces Paul
Slocum, who resigned to
accept the position as
director of sports medicine
at the
Medical Center
NPW
in
Wilkes-Barre
Hopkins served
his
residencies at the Coast
where we needed help
where we lost people through graduation.
"Rick and Rocky Bonomo will be battling at 118 and 126
and Wallace gives us the fluctuation we needed at 167-177
Last year we had our worst record ever in the middle
in
new head trainer at
Bloomsburg University.
the
Guard Training Center in
Cape May, N.J and at
Temple University Hospital
,
in
Philadelphia.
The 35-year-old native of
Levittown. Long Island.
N.Y.. rceived his license in
physical therapy from the Hahnemann Hospital in
Philadelphia after earning his undergraduate degree at
East Stroudsburg University in 1981
He served on the Wilkes-Barre Recreation Board for
three years and was a founder of the Northeast
HOPKINS
Pennsylvania Hockey League in 1976
He and his wife. Denise, live in Bloomsburg.
An assist from Linda Hershey (Saucon Valley High
School) to All-American Debbie Long enabled the
1983
women's field hockey team to defeat Lock Haven 1-0, thus
becoming the first Bloomsburg team ever to win a NCAA
If you are interested
obtaining information
about these camps,
please contact the
Athletic Office at (717)
Championship.
Head coach Jan Hutchinson, assistant coach Sharon
O'Keefe and their team are to be contratulated for
And what a turn around in our football program! In
only his second year, Coach George Landis and his young
he guided Indiana
GRACE
conference championship and a respectable 10-7-2 mark
against a schedule that included several Division I
opponents
In 1978 and 1979 he led the Tri-State team to a two-year
record of 22-8-1, consecutive NAIA national tourney
appearances, and had eight all-conference performers
While at Bloomington High School, Grace's teams
compiled an impressive 120-21-11 record and gained
numerous titles, including the McGuire Cup State crown
in 1978 and 1979 and the Indiana Indoor Championship in
1977 He was selected as the high school Coach of the
Year in 1977 and 1978
After finishing his undergraduate studies, he became an
assistant at Indiana University where the Hoosiers
compiled a five-year mark of 94-10-5 while he was with
the team In addition, the team remained among the
nation's top ten during his tenure, spent several weeks in
the number one slot, boasted 18 All-Americans and sent 15
_
Husky squad
battled East Stroudsburg for the Eastern
Division Championship. Although the Huskies lost a close
13-7 contest, our team proved that they will be legitimate
contenders next season.
|
Bloomsburg
won
its
N.Y.,
was selected as the outstanding wrestler
The women's swimming team also opened
defeating the Naval
in
the
its
season by
Academy
almost six months until the summer sports camps
commence For those of you who have youngsters, I
encourage you to send your children and their friends to
one of our camps in football, basketball, soccer, tennis
and wrestling.
It is
helped to
Invitational
tournament.
alumni and friends of
Bloomsburg University
your contributions,
because they have
Eighth Annual
Tournament, defeating the
University of Virginia by a single point. Bloomsburg's
Tom Fiorvanti, the senior 150-pounder from Massapequa,
I would like to share a
few thoughts with you
pertaining to the Husky
Club. As you know, this
is the vehicle by which
support the Athletic
Scholarship Fund
It is important that
you continue to make
The winter seasons have already started on a
successful note. The men's swimming team won its own
Invitational Relay Carnival The basketball team beat
King's College.
The young wrestling team
in
389-4360.
capturing the laurels.
Bloomsburg
soccer players to the professional ranks.
Husky
THE A.P.'S CORNER/Roger Sanders
University-Evansville and
Trl-State University and at
Bloomington (Indiana) High
School
The 30-year-old native of
Erie also served as an
assistant at Indiana and
Clemson, both national
powers, before coming to
In 1980,
Hopkins new
counted
"Undoubtedly, this
Bloomsburg University U
Mingrone resigned after
seven years of coaching.
Grace was former head
coach at Indiana State
State-Evansville, an NCAA
Division II institution, to the
school's first-ever
trying to get the rivalry going."
letter of intent to attend Clarion and
then opting for Bloomsburg U.
"I thought we could have been ranked higher
because
of Rudolph and the Bonomos," said Sanders,
"but they've
been out (of school) a year and were not eligible to
be
"
state
at
Jon Moser (134), a two-time NCAA qualifier at West
Chester; Steve Gibble (177, 190). from the University of
North Carolina; and Dan Comfort (150. 158), Temple.
Sanders is enthused about the upcoming season.
"We have a great schedule," he says. "Indiana State
(Jan. 5) and Michigan (Jan. 6) will wrestle at Nelson
Fieldhouse and we have a home-and-home series with
Lock Haven (here Dec. 1 and there Feb. 7).
"There is also the possibility of meeting Wilkes College
on Sunday, Feb. 19. Coach John Reese and I talked about
it and we're closer than ever before. I'm
excited about
the lineup.
soccer coach
named
Husky squad
because of signing a
"We
33
for recruiters
fine wrestlers joining
You cannot blame Roger Sanders
1983
SANDERS
programs
make our
successful.
Just look at what grant-
have done to our football program in
two years.
If you haven't made your contribution in 1983, please do
so by making your check payable to Alumni Association/
Athletics and send it directly to the Alumni Office.
As we sign off another year, the Athletic Department
and our coaches wish all of you a very joyous holiday
season and a very happy new year May 1984 bring each
and every one of you the very best in health, happiness,
and success.
in-aid scholarships
-
34
ALUMNI QJ IRTERLY/December
198
I
Houk
University holds 'Russ
Night'
'RuSS Houk Night" o 1 Dec. 9 drew friends and former
dent-athletes of he i ired coach and educator from
BG x»ss the United State.'.
'hairing tht tribute were Joe Gerst 68. Mike Smith 69
an 1 Bob Surndge '75 Gcrst and Smith were wrestlers on
Rook teams, and Surridge played football for Houk.
I'.egarded as one of Bloomsburg's all-time great
co. ches. Houk was guest of honor at a buffet reception at
Ho el Ma gee before the Millersville-Bloomsburg wrestling
meet.
sii
;
I
During a brief pre-meet ceremony
at
Nelson
Fieldhouse. Houk was praised by several speakers,
including Joseph Nespoli. former university trustee;
Ro^er Sanders, head wrestling coach and athletic
director; Elton Hunsinger. university trustee and retired
BU administrator: and the three chairmen of the event
Sanders said the night "provided us with the
opportunity to honor a man who initially established
Bloomsburg as one of the top wrestling programs in the
country He started a tradition of outstanding wrestling at
the school and coached many young men who brought
national recognition to the institution and who have gone
on the distinguish themselves after graduation."
Houk served as athletic director and head wresting
coach and football coach during his years at Bloomsburg.
In four years as the Huskies' head football coach, his
teams posted a 16-16-1 record, but he became nationally
and internationally known for his dedicated involvement
in the mat sport
While head coach for 14 years, he led his teams to three
National Association of Intercollegiate Athletic National
Championships, five Pennsylvania Conference titles, and
*as named national "Coach of the Year" on three
occasions. The Huskies produced a 142-34-2 won-lost
record during his tenure
In addition, he served three four-year terms on the U.S.
Olympic Wrestling Commitee of which he was chairman
from 1972-1976. He also managed the J 972 and 1976
freestyle teams.
He is a member of the Citizens' Savings Foundation
iaJJ of Fame (Los Angeles), the Pennsylvania
Wrestling
iaU of Fame, the NAIA Hall of Fame and the
31oomsburg University Athletic Hall of Fame.
Special guests at the event were Houk's mother, wife
Jid
children
HONORED
—
New
It's just
that
some
to walk again after
football accident
For Vernon Rochester,
ie fight
goes on.
The Bloomsburg
niversity sophomore
ontinues to work towards
talking again, having been
and parking
problems should be eliminated by next
thanks to the
cooperation of the Bloomsburg Hospital and the support
fall,
Community Government
Association.
Hospital, for the construction of nine practice fields for
the university's varsity athletic and recreation programs
"We have had a real jigsaw puzzle in recent years
trying to schedule practices for athletic teams and times
for the areas to be used for intramurals and recreation
purposes," said Jack Mulka, dean of student
development.
"Also, some of the varsity game fields were used for
these purposes, which left them in poor condition for
contests against scheduled opponents."
How will the completion of the new fields also affect
into a
huge parking lot for spectators attending athletic or other
events in the fieldhouse and Redman Stadium. This
should go a long way to alleviate the complaints
concerning limited parking adjacent to the two facilities "
"We'll probably start pa king cars on grass like Penn
State does," he continuea "Whether or not we'll ever
have funds to eventually p. ^e the area remains to be
>ept. 10.
While Rochester's motor
have
mproved and he continues
seen. Also, we have to take drainage problems into
consideration."
ROCHESTER
was performed
to repair
'>
spinal cord.
After almost a week at Geisinger, he was flown to
Jefferson University Hospital In Philadelphia, where he
now going through
of recreational
"Our plans are to convert a larger portion of the
current practice and recreation area behind Nelson
paralyzed by a
spinal cord injury in a
Huskies football game on
damaged
Nelson Fieldhouse ceremony
way
.
"All I can say is. 'tremendously'." said Robert Parrish
vice president for administration
>artially
to lift weights with his everstrengthening arms, little
change has occurred in his
lower body.
After being hurt in the
game against Mansfield.
Rochester, a tailback, was
flown immediately to
Geisinger Medical Center in
Danville, where an operation
a
and
is
later on by General Services in Harrisburg. The lease
for 15 years, and is renewable for another 15 years.
The coaches of football, soccer, softball, baseball, field
hockey and lacrosse affected by the additional practice
areas are elated, according to Sanders.
They all echo the sentiments that they will now be able
to conduct practice sessions more conducive to game
situations and won't have to be hurried by a time
schedule, he said
Also appreciating the welcoming change will be
Intramural directors Ron Puhl and Joan Auten. along
with band director Valerie Rheuse and recreational
director Lou Maranzana.
Maranzana said the fields, when not in use by the
university, will be available for use by community
teams
and individuals.
"What
it all boils down to," Sanders
said. "Is our goal
Bloomsburg's fine reputation in athletics and
recreation and making the university a recognized leader
in these areas under the new state
system."
of upholding
parking?
7
-eflexes in his fingers
.
I
On July I, bulldozers began stripping off 80,000 cubic
yards of dirt to start levelling most of 15 acres of land
east of Nelson Fieldhouse, leased from the Bloomsburg
fights
in
playing fields on the
m-
...
nnt
U
not h«o»»«.
because Bloomsburg
became a university on
July 1 that earth moving equipment went into operation
on the upper campus the same day.
Tt'o
It's
of the university's
Sophomore
Former wrestling coach Russ Houk was honored
is
rehabilitative 'herapy in the hospital's
spinal cord injury center
Rochester has received phone calls from professional
football players, and Bloomsburg hea
_^ch George
Landis visited him at least once a week during the
football season to review films of the Huskies' weekly
games.
The Huskies season was dedicated
Lawnside. N.J
to the standout
from
Jerry Griffls. vice president fr student life, pointed
out
the university can't thank the ho ,pital representatives
enough for their cooperation r er the years
"We utilize the hospital I dlt'ies in conjunction with
our medical service to s»
into and also the nursing
program." he
ren. jrked. "We have leased parking
a.eas that border Lightstreet Road from them
and now
they have eagerly supported this latest upper
campus
endeavor."
"Also," he continued, "my sincere appreciation
goes
-jree
the Community Government Association,
particularly
past president Paul Stockier."
CGA
to
providing the money to build the nine fields
The effort to obtain the land took place in August 1982
when Parrish and athletic director Roger Sanders
met
with hospital administrator Robert
Spanelli and board
member Robert Beers to explore the lease possibility
They quoted a very acceptable yearly rental figure
Parrish said. It was approved by both boards
of trustees
Is
Hess
William
football
scholarship granted
A $500 football scholarship
has been provided in memory
of
Bloomsburg businessman
William J. Hess Sr by his son.
William J. Hess Jr.
The grant for a football
player is only part of a $1,500
contribution to the university's
program during the
current year by Hess, a longtime supporter of the Huskies
athletic
Born in Bloomsburg on
September 2, 1899, William J.
Hess Sr. was educated in the
Bloomsburg schools and
served in World War I. He
continued to operate Hess's
Tavern, established on East
Main Street
in 1889 by his
father, until his death on
January 25, 1945.
Hess was active
™
C
SS
.?T1
WILLIAM
J.
HESS
C until his '!TL
1930s
death.
Hess Jr. recalls that his father was
always
concerned about and supportive of
the youth of the
Bill
community.
Sr.
Democratic politics and served as
0f Co,umbia County from the
late
in
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
ALUMNI OFFICE
BLOOIDSBURG UllUERSITY
of
FLING VACATIONS
J
FROM
All rates
rates
Many
•
YOUR OPPORTUNITY
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//'"Nl
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lrom
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AGE VACATION AVAILABLE!!!
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1983
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35
QUARTERLY
Volume 83, Number
Bloomsburg State College
1
January 1983
Annual Fund
record
sets
Alumni and friends
new record
Fund.
total
in 1982
When
was
of Bloomsburg State College set a
with their contributions to the Annual
campaign ended on December
the
31,
the
$115,547.
Of that
total, $81,628
was
unrestricted gifts to the
general fund, $18,362 was designated for specific purposes, and $15,557
was earmarked for scholarships.
The corresponding figures in 1981 were $68,755 in
unrestricted gifts, $4,354 in designated contributions,
and $3,785 for scholarships - a total of $76,894.
The contributions came from over 5,200 alumni and
friends of the college. A complete report on the 1982 Annual Fund, including class totals and a listing of all contributors, will be published in the
March
edition of
THE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY.
Important changes
the Annual Fund more cost-effective,
a number of changes will be made in 1983. The most
In
order
to
make
change will be the solicitation of 1982 contributors on the approximate anniversary date of thensignificant
last gift, using first-class direct
mail and a follow-up
telephone call.
For example
an alumnus sent a contribution in
Alumni Office will mail him literature
on the 1983 Annual Fund on March 1. Sometime during
the last two weeks of March, he will receive a reminder
telephone call from the Alumni Office. The alumnus
:
If
April of 1982, the
may
send his contribution after receiving the "invitation" in the mail, or he may wait until he receives the
telephone call to make his pledge. In most cases, his
contribution will likely arrive at the Alumni Office
sometime
in April,
and that month
will
remain
niversary month. In other cases, the anniversary date
could shift one way or the other.
The new system has a number of advantages:
— It links the written, mailed message with a
telephone
— It
with each reinforcing the other.
reduces the number of mailed solicitations— in
call,
most cases— from three or four to just one.
— It guarantees each alumnus/alumna a full year
membership because the membership cards will be
dated for one year from the day the contribution is
of
received.
—
It
more evenly the Associacalendar year.
will help to distribute
tion's cash-flow during the
Over 200 students help
his an-
Phonathon
Alumni Phonathon — held in October,
— was the most successful
one ever held at BSC. Nearly $25,000 in pledges was
raised by over 200 volunteer student callers. The callers
were members of 32 campus organizations.
Recording the largest dollar amount in pledges was
the men's varsity tennis team with $2,894.07. The other
top teams were Tau Kappa Epsilon Little Sisters,
$1,245.39; Women's Choral Ensemble, $1,218.63; and the
Maroon and Gold Band, $1,210.39.
The high individual caller was Martin A. Coyne, a
senior from Hazleton, who had a total of $2,052.52. Coyne
The
1982
November and December
Solicitation of others
contributors to the Annual Fund who did not
participate in 1982 will receive a direct mail solicitation
also coordinated the tennis team's participation in the
in
February and a reminder in April. Most of these
former contributors will also receive a follow-up
phonathon.
Other participating organizations,
telephone call sometime later in the year.
Those alumni who have never contributed to the Annual Fund will receive two "invitations": in February
and in August.
were the following:
Bowling Club, Varsity Cheerleaders, Women's Swimming Team, Phi Sigma Pi, Concert Choir, Kehr Union
Program Board, Student Speech and Hearing Association, Catholic Campus Ministry, Community Government Association, Men's Swimming Team, Pi Kappa
Delta, Commuters Association, Alpha Phi Omega,
Lambda Alpha Mu, Zeta Psi Fraternity, Alpha Sigma
Alpha, Inter-Sorority Council, Circle K, Alpha Sigma
Former
Designating
For the
gifts
time, alumni will have the opportunity to
divide their gift among three categories: The Deans'
first
Fund
in
order of pledge
totals,
for Excellence (to improve and enhance academic
programs); the Athletic Scholarship Fund (to keep BSC
competitive in men and women's athletic programs),
and Unrestricted (to fund the heart of the alumni pro-
Tau, Forensic Society, Women's Recreation Association
and Co-Educational Intramurals, Women's Cross Coun-
gram, including publications, special events, student
work-study and scholarships, campus projects and
Lambda, Women's Track Team, Women's Lacrosse
Team.
Other individuals who raised more than $100 in
pledges were Marie Hollis, Lebanon; Linda Hatch,
Dushore; Sue Andrews, Park Ridge, N.J.; David Moran,
Wilkes-Barre; Mary Beth Gallagher, Warminster;
alumni services).
Alumni with questions about the Annual Fund are invited to contact the Alumni Office by letter or by calling
717-3894058.
$25,000
raises
Team, Women's Basketball Team, Montour Hall,
Project Awareness, Sigma Sigma Sigma, Phi Beta
try
Beverly Miklos, Hazleton; Rick Fenton, Lansdale; Kelli
Capparell, Clarks Summit; Bill Krieg, Flemington,
N.J.; Theresa Racek, Allentown; Tammy Marquarot,
Centralia; Sharon Wool, Shillington; Estelle Scopelliti,
Shamokin; Gail Kaucher, Reading; Carolyn Hufnagle,
Bloomsburg; Kelly Klingel, Stroudsburg; Rob Lario,
Williamsport; Brenda Beverly, West Lawn; Barbara
Seyfried, Whitehall; Theresa Anthony, Kunkletown;
David Superdock, Bloomsburg; Lisa Swartzbaugh, Hershey; Kathy Fussner, Allentown; Penny Perez, Milford;
Maggie Leiden, Altoona; John Chapin, Bloomsburg;
Grimm, Leola; Sue Cunningham, Moscow;
Dwayne Heisler, Newtown; Mike Middleton, Aston;
Marge Gillespie, Bloomsburg; Gayle Weaver, Lititz;
Colleen
Patty Kirk, Willow Grove; Terry Purcell, Mahanoy CiCyndi Rice, Mount Bethel; Dianne Gurner, Muncy;
Cheri Mausteller, Milton; May Showers, AUenwood;
ty;
Tom DiMarco, Ronkonkom,
N.Y. Robin Miller,
Catasauqua; Lisa Basci, Orangeville; Christel Pauliks,
Tafton; Dianne Uscowskas, Clarks Summit; Mary Beth
;
Murphy, Castleton, N.Y.; Chris Hunt, Williamsport;
Alan Peoples, Oakland Mills, Felicia Peters, Souderton;
Patty Piedi, Harrisburg; Sue Koenig, Denville, N.J.;
Sharon Carpitella, Warrington; Debbie Fenty, Basking
Ridge, N.J.; Donna Carter, River Vale, N.J.; Mark
Brichta, Allentown; Dianne Splendido, Wilkes-Barre;
Mary Urban, Allentown; Amy Simluns. Norristown;
Deb Kirdzik, Great Meadows, N.J.; Lori Pingitore,
Reading; Karen Brockway, Stamford, Ct.; Mary Lou
Semicek, Sunbury; April Edwards. Clarks Summit;
Jeanne Radcliff, Camp Hill; Kathy Land. Ephrata;
Marlene Prince, Pleasant Mount; Grace Wallace,
Bloomsburg.
2
News from
the
Alumni Office mailbox
George B. Fought '25 died on October 26. He taught
in Pine, Madison and Greenwood Townships. He
served as principal of the Greenwood Elementary School
1910
school
until retiring in 1964.
Fannie Brown
'10
died on September
He was a member of St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Orien-
17, 1982.
Lodge 460
F & AM,
Caldwell Consistory, Irem Temple,
and was a charter member
of Millville Fire Company. He was a member of the National Retired Teachers Association and the Pennsylvania
tal
the Columbia County Shrine,
1911
Catherine E. Garvey
State Education Association.
'11 is
Surviving are his wife, the former Virginia Walker, and
a brother, Manley Fought.
deceased.
Mary
1912
(Straub) Werkheiser
'25
recently celebrated her
The Columbia County Medical Society
presented her with a plaque "in recognition of one whose
101st
life
Florence E. (Blecker) Crouse
'12
died on
December
span indicates healthful living." Mrs. Werkheiser
Market St., Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
lives at 324
11.
The life-long resident of Danville was 91 years of age. Mrs.
Crouse was an elementary school teacher in the Danville
School District for 13 years. She was an active member of
Shiloh United Church of Christ, Chapter 186 Order of
Eastern Star, and the BSC Alumni Association. Surviving
are a daughter, a son and a sister.
birthday.
1918
1929
Criddie (Edwards) Berninger '18 died on December 20
in the Bryn Mawr Hospital. Born on April 13, 1898, in
Lansford, she was the daughter of the late Rev. Daniel Ed-
wards and Zariah Thomas Edwards. She spent many
in the Harding area, later moving to St. Davids. She
was a member of the Catawissa Methodist Church. Surviving in addition to her husband are a daughter, a son,
five grandchildren, one great-grandchild, two sisters and
years
1915
Fannie E. (Leggoe) Wandel *15 died on October 2, 1982
inSayre.Pa.
Born in Hazleton, she was a daughter of the late George
and Ella (East) Leggoe and was a member of St. Paul's
United Methodist Church. She had served on the church's
administrative board.
She was a member of the Hazleton Chapter of the Order
Eastern Star, No. 248, and both the Welliver Bible
Class and the Mary Martha Circle of St. Paul's Church.
She graduated from Hazleton High School in 1913. She
was employed as a schoolteacher between 1915 and 1922.
She was a member of the YWCA-Hazleton State General
of the
Hospital Auxiliary.
Her only survivors are a
one brother.
1920
Joseph E. Grimes '20 died on December 30. He was the
son of the late Joseph and Nora Robbins Grimes. In his
earlier years he taught high school in the
He was
District.
a
member
of the
Bloomsburg
Glad Tidings Church,
Bloomsburg.
McAlley
number of cousins.
Rath Gardner McAlley '29, who resides in Sparks,
Nevada, enjoys writing poetry and sent the following
poem to my friends and memories of Bloomsburg
1923
1
'
'
Memory Leaves
A new
elementary school in the Shikellamy School
District, Sun bury, has been named in honor
of Grace S.
Beck
'23
& *40. The 78-year-old resident of Sunbury turned
over the
Published four times a year by
your
Alumni
Bloomsburg
Association at
State College,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
At your service:
Doug Hippenstiel
'68
first
spade at dirt at the groundbreaking
ceremony in June 1981 and recently visited the completed
structure. The Distinguished Service Award of the
BSC
Alumni Association was presented to Miss Beck in 1970 in
recognition of her professional accomplishments.
Miss
to work in the school district in 1923 and
was
the elementary schools supervisor for many
years. She
retired in the late 1960s. Principal of the new
school is Ted
Beck began
Andrewlevich '62. The current elementary supervisor
Barrie Wirth '62.
is
Linda
J. Long
Alumni Records Clerk
Peggy Trathen
Bookkeeper
Eric
Thumb Program)
Dwayne Heisler
Linda Kammerdiener
Lou Maslowe
Scott Righter
Stephanie Stewart
Jeff Smith
Student Staff
And in the niches of the brain
They play a sweet yet sad refrain,
As they return and bring again
Fond memories of our lives' fast pace —
The pain, the sweetness and embrace
Of yesteryears that filled a space.
Yet through them all there shines a light,
That makes the present seem more bright,
And takes from future years the fright —
It
1924
brings bright pictures without end
Mabel P. (Carl) Lyon
Eleanor (Derr) Gilbert '24 and her husband, Fred,
observed their 50th wedding anniversary on November 26.'
Mrs. Gilbert formerly taught at the W. W. Evans School
in
Bloomsburg. They have three children, seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
Strom
Writer (Green
With little moments from the past
That fleet through time and space so fast.
The golden memories of a
Director of Alumni Affairs
Elizabeth H. LeVan
Alumni Office Secretary
Memory leaves fall thick and fast.
'24 is
deceased.
quite spectacular.
Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815.
They
live at 206
died on
November
1.
She was a
50-year member of Danville Chapter 186, Order of Eastern
Star. Surviving
Kostenbauder
is
a
sister,
Mrs. Edgar
J.
(Beatrice)
of Danville.
Ruth A. (Rarig) Bruch '29 died on November 5. She was
member of Bethany Lutheran Church, Montoursville,
Pa. She had formed the Girls' Junior Choir in the church
and was also the choir director for a number of years. She
a
was a member of the WUliamsport Music Club.
Matilda (Mensch) Waples *24 and her husband,
Russell
recently completed a 6,000-mile roundtrip
across Canada
by railroad. They report that the scenery
along the route
was
'29
retired school teacher, having taught first grade at the
First Ward School in Danville for a number of years. She
was a member of Pine Street Lutheran Church and was a
A
nephew, Atty.
Robert Buehner of Danville, is chairman of the BSC Board
of Trustees. The Gilberts live at 25 Sherwood
Drive
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Mary E. Lauver
friend.
Crabapple Lane
She once taught at the Tyson School in Columbia CounUnder the Recreation Commission, she also set up
kindergarten in Muncy and Montoursville. She taught
at
the J. George Becht School in the Loyalsock
School
ty.
District until her retirement in 1973.
Surviving are her husband, a son and two sisters.
1925
(Continued on Page 4)
ACS commends BSC
—
—
i
ib
mo
chapter
Tc Hu Rh Pd Ag Cd
In
Sn Sb
Hg
The BSC chapter of the American Chemical Society
was one of only 34 chapters in the United States judged
to be commendable by the Society Committee
on-
Tl
Pb
Chemical Education
Bl
for 1981-1982.
A
recent letter of congratulations from Stanley
Kirschner, chairman of the selection committee, to
BSC
President McCormick states that the activities of 776
chapters were reviewed, and only the above number
were given special recognition
formance.
The
m
for superior per-
Society, in
chemistry
to
its attempt to help students interested
develop attitudes of professionalism, on-
grants affiliate chapters at institutions offering
degrees in chemistry or chemical engineering.
ly
President
McCormick commended
the chemistry
department for the outstanding rating: "The students
Bloomsburg State College are fortunate to have a
chemistry faculty which is able to provide a program
Mr
of
of
high standards necessary to maintain such an accreditation. It is this kind of excellence towards
which we all
improves the quality
Bloomsburg."
strive that
CHEMICAL HONORS
of education at
—
BSC President McCormick
Pamela Sanderson, president of the BSC
the American Chemical Society, on special
congratulates
chapter of
recognition given the
local chapter. Looking on are
department chairman Roy Pointer (center) and advisors
John Plude (left) and Donald Baird.
Alumni board member remains
The following article about Edltha Eat Adams, Class
was written by Mike Stewart and appeared in
the November 12 edition of The Morning Press. Mrs.
Adams is a member of the BSC Alumni Association
Board of Directors.
of 1924,
how you could possibly make a story
would say," says 77-year-old Editha
Ent Adams, her voice strong and clear on the far end of
"Oh,
I
don't see
out of anything
Travel had been the Adamses' chief entertainment.
They had criss-crossed the country. They had followed
Abraham Lincoln's ancestors' path West, had visited
Lincoln's birthplace, his workplace, had traced his Illinois steps that would lead to the presidency. They had
crossed the ocean three times, had toured England,
Scotland and the European continent.
I
the telephone.
Indeed. Such modesty from this go-getter active in
church and community. This globe-trotting former
educator who quotes Tennyson, is conversant with the
whole of English literature and has seen all but six of
Shakespeare's plays. This living testament to the extraordinary richness, variety and vibrancy found in ordinary lives.
"Well, come on over and we'll try it," she finally tells
her caller. Good enough. Soon, she is sitting, a purring
cat on her lap, recalling in that strong voice the
highlights of her own whirlwind life
the travels, the
lessons learned, her one great love.
"I guess then we come to '65," she says. "That was
—
my husband died. It was a terrible blow to me. We
had traveled everywhere together and gone together to
school every morning for so many years. Suddenly, I
was all alone and it wasn't fun."
There is a pause. Editha Adams grips the arms of her
upholstered chair. Her eyes cloud momentarily. Then,
as a car passes outside the West Street, Bloomsburg,
home that her father built in 1899, she tells how she put
her life back together after losing, at age 61, Marion T.
Adams, the man she had known since childhood, had
gone to grade school with, to college with, and had
taught school with, she in the classroom, he as a superwhen
vising principal.
First
quite active
came work.
The bereaved woman continued teaching at Central
Columbia High School, where students had come to call
her "Granny"' which she liked because "I could tell
them things as a grandparent that I couldn't as a
parent. And talk to anyone. I never pulled any punches.
If they had a question, I answered it.
"If I hadn't had the job that first year after he died, I
don't know what I would have done. And the kids were
so supportive and kind. I just couldn't have done it
without them."
Then it came time to face private life alone.
But Marion Adams had always been the driver. "And
I was the navigator. I was the one who read the maps. I
didn't know whether I could do both. I had two choices. I
could stay home and vegetate. Or I could become my
own driver and navigator."
Happily, she did. The next year she drove — alone —
to Ontario, Canada, to a Shakespeare festival. Trips to
Arizona and the Southwest followed. Then came trips to
Hawaii and Europe, by plane. Last year, she flew to
Jerusalem for a two-week tour.
But
would have been uncharacteristic of Mrs.
who believes that "each person I meet leaves
something with me, and, conversely, I leave some of me
with those I meet" and "each thing that happens to me
opens something new" — to not stay busy, busy, busy.
She grew up in Bloomsburg and attended public
schools here, then went for two years to the thenBloomsburg State Normal School. Afterward, for two
years, she taught public school in Millville.
it
Adams
—
Then, on a senatorial scholarship, she entered Temple
in Philadelphia, learning an important lesson
"How to get around in a big city. Give me a map and
I can get around in any city. I'm not afraid of them."
After a year at Temple, she transferred to Penn State,
where she got her bachelor's and master's degrees in
English and learned another lesson
"I had a professor who was always himself. He did exactly what he
wanted to do. He taught me to be myself "
University
—
—
.
After college
Almost 83 percent
1980,
May
of the 1,101
1981
BSC graduates
and August
1981
meaningful and/or professional positions, according
report by Thomas A. Da vies, director of the Career
Development and Placement Center.
to
a
Housewife," during which she interviewed "people
associated with town projects, that sort of thing."
Since 1977 she has been a member of the advisory
board of the Columbia-Montour Area Agency on Aging.
She helps teach a Sunday School class at Wesley.
And through it all, she has carried a consuming interest
as consuming, apparently, as any of her other
wide-ranging interests — in football.
She admits that she fidgets nervously through Penn
State games. "There is nothing like Penn State to me."
—
at
83%
— 264 graduates,
—
—
j
—
-
—
"no information" graduates were deleted from
the report, the percentage would rise to 84.90.
The number of graduates, the number placed and the
percentage of graduates placed in each curriculum are
If 27
as follows
192 placed,
Business A 401, 338, 85.35%;
Business Education
37, 31, 86.11%;
Communication Disorders — 29, 28, 96.55%
Dental Hygiene
1, 1, 100%;
Early Childhood Education - 44, 38, 86.36%;
Elementary Education
96, 63, 66.31%;
Health Sciences
1, 1. 100%;
Medical Technology
18, 16, 94.11%;
Nursing
55, 55, 100%;
Public School Nursing - 1, 1. 100%;
Radiologic Technology — 2, 2, 100%
Secondary Education
37. 28, 80%;
Special Education - 115, 106 93.80%.
-
Of the 1,087 graduates who were available for placement, 900 were placed — a percentage of 82.79. Fourteen
graduates were not available for employment.
more
Church choir.
For many years, she made visits to the New York
Herald Tribune newspaper's forum on current affairs,
then lectured to civic groups upon her return.
Those talks led to a show on WCNR radio for half a
year in the early 1950s, called "Editha Adams,
Arts and Sciences
73.28%;
of
have found
teaching. After-hours, for
than 30 years, she sang in the Wesley United Methodist
Graduate placement rate
December
came
-
—
.
Allentown, and was a teacher and principal's aide
McKinJey School in Allen town.
at the
(Continued from Page 2)
1944
1930
Two anthologies
Helen (Oyer) Diehl '44 reports that she retired from
in June 1982. She taught in business departments
in Pennsylvania for 10 years and in the business department of Rim of the World High School in Lake Arrowhead,
teaching
of
poems
include works by Virginia E.
retired
teacher.
Her poem,
Cruiksbank '30, a
Fragmented. " appears in "The Family Treasury of
Great Poems" and "Miracle Upon Miracle" appears in
"Our Twentieth Century's Greatest Poems."
Miss Cruikshank has been represented in five previous
anthologies and has had several published in magazines,
including the June-July issue of Keystone Gardener. She
has won a number of contests and is a member of the
Pennsylvania Poetry Society, the Stella Woodall Poetry
Society and the National Federation of State Poetry
•
California, for 19years.
She received her master's degree from Arizona State in
Tempe. She has traveled to Alaska and Europe since retiring and plans to do a lot more traveling. She has a
daughter, Barbara, and a son, Arthur, both married and
living in California. Her husband, Andrew, died in
January 1981.
Her address is P.O. Box 203, Crest Park, Calif.
She invites any alumni visiting California to stop by.
Societies.
Her address
is
92326.
220 North Second Street, Sunbury, Pa.
17801.
1949
1932
Marvin L. Meneeley
'49
died on October
25.
He was a
Camp Hill Junior High School teacher. He was a
member of St. Peter Lutheran Church. Mechanicsburg,
retired
Rev. Oliver H. R, Rrapf '32 and Mrs. Krapf were
recognized by the Wesley United Methodist Church of
and a teacher of its adult Sunday school class. He was a
of Lowther Manor Lodge 781, R&AM, Scottish
Rite. Tall Cedars of Lebanon. Harrisburg Consistory.
Pennsylvania State Education Association and the National Education Association. Surviving are his wife, a
daughter, a son, his mother, three brothers and two
member
Bloomsburg in December in a series of services honoring
retired Wesley pastors and wives. Rev. Krapf's
hobby is
painting, and Mrs. Krapf's chief hobbies are poetry
and
music. The Krapfs have traveled extensively since their
retirement. They live at 6 West 11th Street. Bloomsburg
sisters.
Pa. 17815.
1950
1937
Stoutenburgh
Theresa Ritzo Unione '37 retired at the end of June. Mrs.
Unione taught in the schools of Pennsylvania and New
Jersey for 32 years. Upon graduating from BSC,
she
taught
the public schools of Shenandoah, Pa. for six
years. After marriage she moved to Hawthorne, N.J.,
in
where she served that school system for 26 years,
which were as department chairperson.
16 of
Under her supervision she expanded the department
from six course offerings to sixteen. She initiated a workstudy program which employers in surrounding
counties
use to the fullest. Her last contribution was beginning
a
course in word processing. The business department
of
Hawthorne High School received high commendation
from the Middle States Committee in March 1982 for
its
course offerings as well as the cohesiveness of the
Mrs. Unione has two children: Dr. Alfred J.
director of nuclear research for the
staff.
Unione,
Katherine E. (Chapin) Kump '50 recent hosted the annual get-together of the faculty and graduate students
from the master's program in communications at BSC.
He and his wife Midge are the parents of three
daughters, and they reside at 45 South 16th Street,
Allentown, Pa. 18102.
Central High School students Spencer Fisher and Kenneth Dick entertained on electric guitar. Jim Lyman '81
sang several original compositions accompanying himself
on the guitar. Ping pong matches and refreshments were
1
enjoyed by the 30 guests. Dr. Walter M. Brasch, associate
professor of English at BSC. was in charge of the gettogether.
Katherine 's mailing address
Pa. 18631.
P.O. Box 108, Mifflin-
is
ville.
1951
Empel Organization
San Francisco. Calif., and Maria Concetta Carreno.
department chairman of foreign languages at
Upper
Freehold Regional High School in Allentown,
N.J. Her
husband is director of engineering for Nabisco
Brands of
East Hanover, N.J. They are the grandparents
of three
Mrs. Unione is spending her retirement
years involved
in the Eucharistic Ministry of her church
The Uniones live at 19 Orchard Place. Hawthorne
N
J
07506.
Patricia Edwards Kirk '54 reports that her family has
been closely associated with Bloomsburg over a span of 55
years. She says the family is "very proud of our
Bloomsburg heritage and hopes it will continue for many
more years."
In 1927 her aunt, Edith R. Sitler Ruoff, was graduated
from Bloomsburg Normal School. Originally from Berwick, Mrs. Ruoff
of
grandchildren.
^
Gerald A. (Jerry) Bacon '51 has taken early retirement
from his teaching position at Northeast Bradford
High
School. He resides with his wife and son at R.D.
3, Box 277,
Towanda, Pa. 18848. Jerry would be happy to hear
from
his
BSC friends.
retired
now
lives in Fort Pierce, Florida,
from teaching. She taught both
in
and
is
Pennsylvania
and Florida.
In 1954 Patricia graduated from Bloomsburg State
Teachers College, along with her husband, Kenneth G.
Kirk. She taught several years in Forty-Fort and is now
teaching first grade in the Dallas School District.
Ken
taught in the Catawissa and Dallas School Districts, on
the
business education staff at Bloomsburg State College, and
is presently on the field staff of
the Pennsylvania
1953
Depart-
ment of Education. In August they
wedding anniversary.
will
celebrate their
25th
Dr. William H. Stoutenburgh "53 is the new
superintendent of the Allentown School District,
effective July 1,
1982. He was formerly superintendent of
the Wissahickon
School District in Ambler from July
1938
George R. Casari
'38
and
1982;
Agnes (Pinamonti)
Casari 41 report that they are
both retired now and spend
their winter vacations in
Florida. They also say they are
his wife,
grandparents since their younger
daughter had a b*hy
boy on July 15, 1982. The Casaris
live
Harper Woods, Mich.
at 19722
Woodland
48225.
1982, after a long illness.
assistant
15,
1967,
superintendent
at
June
1969;
to
30,
1, 1969 to June 30,
Wissahickon from
assistant
district
superintendent at the Washingtonville
(N.Y.) Central
School District from June 1, 1965 to March
14,
cipal of Belvidere (N.J.
1967
High School from July 1, 1961, to
May 31, 1965; elementary principal in the
Springfield
Township (Delaware County) School
District from
September 1955 to January 1960. He served as a
part-time
ple University
'40
died on August
10,
from September 1968 to June
Gary Kirk,
of
will
Pennsylvania
graduate from
in the area of
business administration.
The Kirks live at 12 Windsor Drive.
race, Dallas, Pa. 18612.
Orchard View Ter-
Tem-
Education and Doctor of Education degrees at Temple
University in 1957 and 1967 respectively. He has also completed graduate work at West Chester State College,
Pennsylvania State University and New York State
University. He has been very active in professional
and
community activities and organizations.
1959
1969.
After receiving his bachelor's degree in education
(science and math) at Bloomsburg, he earned his Master
of
Florence Stephanski Mascavage '40 died on
August 10,
1982, after a long illness. Florence, one
of the most active
members of her class, attended the 40-year reunion
in 1980
with her husband John. She lived
at 1418 Turner Street
prin-
In 1986, their son. K.
Bloomsburg University
)
associate professor of educational administration
at
1940
Florence (Stefanski) Mascavage
March
In May of this year, their daughter, Gayle
Ann Kirk, will
graduate from Bloomsburg State CoUege with a
degree in
elementary education. She will be in the last graduating
class under the name of Bloomsburg State
College.
Mary Ann Thornton Delia '59 is employed
by the Bristol
Township Schools as a teacher
of English, director of
guidance services and assistant
principal. She is active in
community
affairs,
an officer in the county Indus rial/professional management
council, and serves on
the local Little League
executive board. She and her hus-
Thomas,
10.
From
1974 to 1980. Mrs. Delia
presented the
(Continued on Page 6)
Student earns diploma, degree in same
year
MiDDnvc
JOANNE MARRONE
Bv
By
-IOANJMR"
a major."
Student Feature Writer
started when he was in the seventh
grade His
math teacher encouraged him to enter the
Johns
Hopkins University Talent Search for
the Study of
Mathematically Precocious Youth. To enter the
search
he was required to participate in the
Pre-college
Brother Andrew says he came to college
early
because "My classes in public school
were too boring I
find some college courses
just as bad." He is uncertain
what he will do after graduation:
he may go on to
graduate school, or he may look for a
It all
job.
Scholastic Aptitude Test. Out of the
2,400 seventh grade
students nation-wide taking the test, his
scores placed
him in the top 90. Although his score
did not gain him
THE ADMISSION
the
Mathematics,
summer
in the
of 1978.
So at age
13,
An-
students
THE HIGH SCHOOL student wishing to go to coUege
part-time does not have to worry
about filling out an application. All he has to do is fill
out a form from the extended programs oifice at the college
and hand it in with
three recommendations from teachers
from BSC. He currently has a 3.91 average.
Eisenberg is not the only high school student
currently
courses at BSC. There are about 20 others.
is the only high school
student attending
or guidance
counselors.
But Eisenberg
Richard Osborn, a guidance counselor
at Bloomsburg
Area High School, says it depends on the
personality of
each student whether or not he is ready
as a full-time student, according to
Ken Schnure
registrar. The others attend part-time
through the
non-degree program.
to
BSC's assistant director of
admissions, says relatively few high
school students apply for early admittance as Eisenberg
did. "If 4.500 people apply for freshman status in a
given year and five
them are interested
According
in early
admittance, that's a
to Vinovrski, the gifted
programs
lot
"
the
in
schools allow more students to
accelerate into college
faster than before. "By the time
the gifted students are
in their junior year of high
school, they have met all of
their high school requirements.
They have taken courses
such as physics and calculus, and
are left with nothing
challenging to take."
One
senior at Central Columbia. Mary
Ann Horn is
taking several courses at BSC. "I
want to be a chemical
engineer. My high school does not
have the advanced
chemistry or physics courses that I wish
to take I
thought I'd go to college to get the
courses." She hopes
to attend Perm State full time
in the
fall.
One
of her
good friends at Central Columbia, Barb
Davis, decided to take college
courses "because I felt
could handle them, I started taking
college courses
my
I
in
junior year, the
fall of 1981.
My
goal
is to
my
have
freshman year completed by the time I
start college
She hopes to enter Shippensburg State College as a sophomore
majoring in
Sharon Steiner, coordinator of the gifted
program at
Central Columbia High School, believes
college courses
provide an excellent learning opportunity
for the
psychology.
to get
my
feet
wet for when
I
gifted
"They are usually advanced in maturity and
better able to cope with things than the
average student.
They do better in a freer environment; they
can't handle the classroom. They like the
opportunity to create
and college gives the gifted student a chance to
be more
constructive."
students.
Each
of the students interviewed
college better.
agreed that they
Osborn notes that only seniors are permitted
day classes at the college, because students
go
to college full time," says
Janeen Stout, a senior at
Bloomsburg Area High School. She hopes to
attend Penn
State in the fall as a marketing major
with a minor in
psychology. She thinks she will be one
credit short
of
entering college as a second semester
freshman.
One of her classmates, Don Chomiak, agrees
with Janeen. "I thought it was a good idea to
get my foot in the
door. After my sophomore year I decided
it was time to
take a college course." He is optimistic
about attending
the Naval Academy because he has
a presidential
nomination and good Scholastic Aptitude Test
scores He
thinks taking college courses may give
him an extra
boost.
ONE STUDENT who is not currently taking a college
course but intends to take one next
semester, is
Eisenberg's 15-year-old brother, Anthony.
He is attending college early "to get a headstart,
that way when I
get out of high school I will not have to
go go to college
as long." As a high school sophomore,
he already has 15
college credits. Anthony is not sure that
course he will
be taking next semester, but it will definitely
be a
general education course.
"I take what I can in general
education courses " he
says, "for I may not be attending BSC
after I graduate
from high school. I want to do something in
the
engineering field, and BSC does not offer
engineering as
like
to attend
to be
teachers
first
subject matter It is
usually the other way around for
professors. Some professors never took an education
course."
Davis says that going from high school
teachers
writing everything out to professors
lecturing continously takes a little getting used to.
Horn says, "I expected to get everything
handed out
like in high school. Here I have
to work for things. I'm
glad I took these classes."
Bidleman observes that the pressures
on high school
students taking coUege courses is great,
especiaUy for
those like the Eisenberg brothers, who
began taking college courses in seventh and eighth
grades.
"They're fuU of fear, nerves and anxiety.
Often they
are afraid to ask questions in coUege
classes that they
would normaUy ask in their high school
classes."
"I was awfuUy scared my first few
semesters here "
Andrew Eisenberg recalls. His brother admits
to being
"a little nervous" too, when he
took his first class. "It
helped that I knew some one else had
gone through it I
wasn't the first person."
DAVIS SAYS her first class was general psychology
a
mass lecture class with about 400 other students.
That
was nice to have," she says. "I got used to
coUege
teaching that way, and
I
"Most coUege students
didn't feel intimidated."
know I'm a high school
student," says Horn. -It's usually when
they ask questions Uke 'What's your major?' or
What year are you
in''' that they find out." Davis,
Chomiak and Stout
agree, and aU four say they have found
few problems
fitting into the
don't
coUege's social environment.
Andrew Eisenberg
disagrees. "I've never had much of
worse now than ever before. I'm above
my chronological peers in inteUigence, and I'm too
young to hang around with the coUege crowd."
Receiving homework assignments from
both coUege
and high school doesn't mean these students
always
have their noses in their books. Some of them
hold parttime jobs, and most are active in the athletic
and ex-
a social
life. It's
tracurricular programs of their high schools.
Stout doesn't think that taking a coUege course
has affected her social life. She claims the key is in
organizing
her time effectively, and thinks coUege has helped
her
to
do
this.
in other
levels are
still fulfilling
their educational
requirements
major classes and one gym class a year. Seniors
who opt to attend college must still take four major
courses and a gym class at the high school.
Underclassof five
men
interested in taking college classes
must do so
at
night.
Steiner says Central Columbia follows
much the
guidelines as Bloomsburg. "It's a flexible
system.
to
go
to
According to Central Columbia's Horn, "It's hard
keeping up with both sets of classes. The time
I have
physics at the college is the same time I have
calculus
at my high school. So I can only attend
my calculus
class twice a week. I get really bogged down;
I often
have to go in assistance in calculus."
Bloomsburg High School's program is not as flexible
as Central Columbia. Students cannot take
college
courses during one of their scheduled high school
classes.
According to Chomiak, this policy limits the number
of college courses available to high school
students. He
says he can only take college courses between 1:30
and
3:30 in the afternoon, because his classes last
until 1:30
and basketball practice begins at 3:30. Chomiak wishes
he could take more: "Down here I float. I don't work
at
all. I'm bored. I float through calculus,
and physics and
English literature. CoUege is a bit more challenging."
SAM BIDLEMAN,
for
secondary enrichment coordinator
Bloomsburg High School and Middle School, points
out that a college course cannot be used to substitute for
a high school requirement, even if it is equivalent in
subject matter. According to Bidleman, "One student
took chemistry at the college when he was in ninth
grade. Now he is in eleventh grade and he finds errors
that the teacher is making
damaging situation."
Bidleman also points out
in class.
This can be a
that teaching styles differ
between high school teachers and college professors.
TRANSPORTATION to coUege can be a problem for
high school students. Anthony, who
is too young to drive
must depend on his father, WiUiam, an associate
professor of EngUsh at BSC. to drive him
to his night
courses during the faU and winter semesters.
In the
summer, he
same
Sometimes a student cannot help scheduling a college
class during one of his high school classes.
The teachers
are great about letting a student miss his
class
a college class."
full-time in the fall of 1983."
"I'm taking a course
take a course
at the college.
BERNARD VINOVRSKI,
of
who have
the academic ability to attend college
early; however, they do not want to miss
out on their
senior year." He believes a student attending
high
school and going to college part-time
gets the best of
both worlds.
receive his bachelor's degree, summa
cum laude, in
computer and information science and mathematics
BSC
BSC
is
views also provide us with the opportunity to
evaluate
the personality of the applicant, to
determine if he is
socially ready."
According to Vinovrski, "There are many gifted
his college education.
That will not be the only graduation ceremony
Eisenberg will take part in, however. Two
and a half
months after his graduation from high school, he
will
in
procedure for the gifted student is
the graduating high school senior
required with all early admittance ap-
is for
plicants and their parents or guardians.
"We want the family to think about this carefully "
says Vinovrski. "After all, the students will
never be
able to repeat the senior year of high school.
The inter-
Since that time, he has regularly taken
courses at the
college, attending the college
part-time, taking one or
two courses each semester. However,
in Eisenberg's
junior year. Central Columbia High
School allowed him
to attend BSC full-time. He is now
18, and will he
graduating from high school this June.
enrolled
it
but interview
admittance into Johns Hopkins, his outstanding
achieve-
ment did not go unnoticed.
Bloomsburg State College's Alumni Association
paid
for his first college course,
Fundamentals of
drew Eisenberg began
same as
"High school teachers are trained
and then they are trained in the
tries to
arrange his schedule to coincide
with his father's.
Horn. Davis. Chomiak and Stout wiU aU
graduate
from high school this spring with a headstart
on the
average high school graduate going to coUege.
Eisenberg wiU receive his bachelor's degree
from BSC
right before his feUow high school
graduates leave for
coUege for the first time. And his brother wiU
be going
into his junior
year of high school with 18 credits under
his belt.
CoUege is not just for the high school graduate.
If a
high school student has the ability, taking
a coUege
course can be a very rewarding experience.
6
R. Peter Beta '72 was recently named procurement
director of Metropolitan Edison Company in Reading, Pa.
He is responsible for long-range planning and the overall
1967
(Continued from Page 4)
Frank A. Thornton Memorial Award ($200) to a graduate
of Our Lady of Lourdes High School, Shamokin, who
planned to attend BSC. Occasionally helping to provide
the award were Sandra Thornton Cubbins '64 and Alice
Thornton Phillips, widow of Mr. Thornton. Mr. Thornton
was Mrs. Delia's father and served on the hoard of
trustees at BSC from 1955 until the time of his death in
operation and coordination of the purchasing and contracts functions. His address is 194 Oakmont Ct., Flying
Ferne Patricia Rarick '67 and Wilson W. Shoup were
married recently. The bride is a teacher at Southern High
School, Elysburg. Her husband is a salesman for
American General Life Insurance Company. They live in
William L. SchappeU
R.R.
Roseann Mary Sabulsky
"67 died
on July
1,
Brewer '72 and Mary K. Eberly were married
Jim is employed by Pequa Valley School District
Religious Education degree from the Southwestern Bap- as a business teacher. Mary is employed by the Office
tist Theological Seminary of Fort Worth, Texas, on
Works in Lancaster as a receptionist. They live in New
December 17.
Providence, Pa. 17560.
James William Worth
N.J. 08805.
'68
received the Master of
1973
G. Wayne Laepple '69 and his wife, Kathryn (Kiner)
Laepple '71 are the parents of a daughter, Andrea Lauren,
born on November 7. She joins a sister. Katie. The Laepples live at Rt.
3.
Box
19,
Cathy (Fiske) Gerber '73 and her husband, Glenn D.
Gerber '74 report the birth of a daughter, Amanda, bom
on March 18, 1982. Cathy is a full-time mother although
she previously worked as a social worker. Glenn is
associated with the Andrews, Dickinson & Pink Stone
Real Estate Corporation in the Delaware and Chester
County area. The Gerbers live at 812 Pleasant Hill Road,
Wallingford, Pa. 19086. They would love to hear from
alumni in this area
Robbinsville, N.C. 28771.
James
T. Prosseda '69 and his wife became the parents
daughter born on September 18. The Prossedas live at
R.D.4, Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815.
of a
Sally (Dever) Sypek '69 reports that she and her family
are living in England while her husband is on an overseas
assignment. Her address is 5 the Pines, Yarm, Cleveland,
England TS159EW. She expects
around August 1983.
Stelnhart '62 recently retired from the
United States Air Force after 20 years of military service.
At his retirement ceremony he was presented a second
J.
chief of the
Resource Management Office at the Western
Space and Missile Center at Vandenberg Air Force Base
in California. During Colonel Steinhart's
tenure at
Vandenberg, he was responsible for over half a billion
dollars worth of projects supporting missile
and satellite
launches, in addition to preparing the center for
future
shuttle operations.
Colonel Steinhart graduated from BSC in 1962 and was
commissioned a second lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force on
December
21, 1962.
He was
initially
assigned to the Office
to return
to the
U.S.
^^^^h^^^^^^^^^^^^^b
ministration.
was selected
control for the AC-130
Ron Rosso '70, wrestling coach at Columbia University,
was recognized by his colleagues recently. Ron, who has
guided the wrestling team to two straight Ivy League
championships, was named the New York State Coach of
the Year by the state's College Wrestling Coaches
Association.
at Wright-Patterson Air
responsible
for
be the chief of
Force Base in Ohio, where he was
procurement, reporting and
funding,
tracking modifications to the C-130 aircraft.
F ollowing a tour of duty with the Systems
spector General at Andrews AFB,
November
Randy L. Maoray '70 and his wife are the parents of a
daughter born on December 6. The family lives at
445
West Second St., Mt. Carmel, Pa. 17851.
Command In-
Maryland, from
1973 to
November
1975, Colonel Steinhart
Robert F. Boyer
and Marlene (Karabln) Boyer '71
September 20
who received her master's degree from
'70
the parents of a son, Travis K. on
BuckneU University, has been a business
education
teacher at Catasauqua High School since
1972. Bob who
received his master's degree from
Kutztown State' College, has been teaching at the
elementary level for the
past 13 years. He is employed by Saucon
Valley School
District. Their address is R.D.
1, Box 481-D, Macungie,
Pa. 18062.
Colonel Steinhart joined the Western Space
and Missile
in June 1977 and became the first
chief of the Resource
Management Office. Colonel
Steinhart, his wife Betty, and their
son,
William L. Derr '70 and Mary Hower Derr '68
are the
parents of a son born on November 7.
The Derrs live at SS
Country Club Drive. Bloomsburg, Pa 17815
'
Ann (Simpson) Hessel
Mollie
Michael, are
November
Pa 17821
°n
^
13
and her husband,
'73
Jerry, are the parents of a daughter. Jacquelyn. born on
1
.
The Hessels live
and
'73
Norwalk Conn
in
.
Anna Mae, became
his wife,
the parents of a daughter, Abigail Catherine, born on October 7. The baby joined a sister, Elizabeth, and a brother.
Thomas. The Heights
live
835 East Third Street,
at
Nescopeck, Pa. 18635.
1974
Bradley David Eroh
'74 and Julieann Sitler were
marThey live at West Seventh Street,
Mifflinville, Pa. 18631. Julieann is employed
by Vought Insurance Agency in Berwick. Bradley is employed
by In-
September
18.
terstate Travellers Services of Buckhorn.
Pa.
Patrice Ann (McCarthy) Kuntaler '74 and her
husband,
Richard, are the parents of a son, Rory
Patrick, born on
March 30, 1982. Pat is in her ninth year as a special
education teacher at Human Resources
School in Albertson,
N.Y. The Kuntzlers live at 36 Cromer Road,
Elmont
N Y
11003.
Snoopert Quimby
1971
(212)
730*3671.
'
P
l
-
74
and
hi* wife
™e
°Ct ° ber K1
1781 ">-
^
^
^
became the parents
Uves at
™
^
ef
^
'
h
"s *™'
Rrl-n
^
'
74
^
™<
she and
of ***lr first child,
L
A
on
0171 on 0ctober
24. 1982. JoAnne is
f"
employed by X'
the i
Greater Nanticoke Area School
District
a
g S, CIallSt Her husband is director
of the Colt
umbia County
Housing Authority and is a
1973 graduate of
gC
UVC 8t 28 E
Street Wanamie,
1
Q
9
^7
i £*
Pa
0"
0
Th ° ma8
rep0rts
herb^n^ ™^
became 016 parents
Tb ?r^
1
M.
Bras8eau
Zl^Z™
Gerald S. Frey '71 is an investment counselor
with
Chase Investors Management Corporation, 1211
Avenue of
the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10036.
Telephone
'65
was recently named
superintendent of Bensalem School
District. His contract
runs until June 30, 1986. He lives
at 63 N. Traymore Ave..
Ivy land, Pa. 18974.
*
w
,
Dampman
'
^^T
, ri
B,00msbu
•7fi
reside in Santa Maria California
1965
m
nf
?
nd
Wife Ma
ie (Marshall) Frith
K ,rth
lt f 3
son ' Jared Marshall, born on
°
n
September 14 1982.
He joins a sister. JaceUe Marie, born
Center at Vandenberg
Robert
0
was
appointed as the headquarters staff officer
for Chemical
Defense Development. In this assignment he
managed all
chemical and biological detection, protection
and decontamination projects for the Air Force.
Dr.
'^^jrhustand
k^
*
?'^'
FluCkS hve at 23 Ash Street Danv
ried on
Marlene,
to
G unship Aircraft Program
J^ZT^
^
^
Patrick T. Height
became
In 1971 Colonel Steinhart
program
dent at Geisinger Medical Center. They live in Danville
pa
November
1970
of the Air
Force Auditor General. For seven years he served as an auditor and resident auditor at bases in Ohio,
South Carolina, and Labrador, Canada. In 1967 he entered
an Air Force Institute of Technology master's degree program and was graduated from Michigan State University
in August 1968 with a master's degree in
business ad-
Dr. Timothy James McCloskey '73 and Lisa Jo Vogel
were married on October 9. The bride is employed by
Bloomsburg Hospital. The bridegroom is a pediatric resi.
Darlene J. (Yocum, Zimmerman '69 and her husband.
Gary, are the parents of a daughter born on October 12.
The family lives at R.D.3. Box 232A. Catawissa. Pa. 17820.
Meritorious Service Medal for outstanding service as
the
C.
recently.
1969
Robert
Box 640A,
Bank.
James
Col.
is
Ringtown, Pa. 17967.
John W. Liggett '72 and Doreen M. Greenwood were
married on September 25, 1982. They live at 1522 Locust
St., Reading, Pa. 19604. John was recently promoted to
operations manager of the West Lawn office of Hamilton
1968
Joan (Alper) Bukavich *62 received a master of education degree from Rutgers, the State University of New
Jersey, on May 26, 1982. She lives at 547 Central Avenue,
Lt
his wife are the parents
Their address
28.
15, 1982.
June. 1983.
Bound Brook.
and
III '72
December
of a son born on
Catawissa.
1962
Reading, Pa. 19607.
Hills,
Pa 1^3?
S
-
'
-
M
™
(Continued on Page 8)
When
some
I
sat
down with Doug Hippenstiel to discuss
ways of keeping all of you informed
Although the winter season sports are in
mid-stream
teams are off to good starts. Fan support
has
been great, with the Husky Club section
sold out for all
basketball and wrestling matches.
You may also be interested in knowing
that the Col-
different
all five
about the happenings of the Athletic
Department
throughout the year, we decided that
the best idea was
for me to communicate directly
with you through this
publication. Thus, I'm going to use
this column to keep
you updated on the progress of our athletic
program.
Since I became director of
athletics in July of
have been overwhelmed by the positive
responses
received from the alumni, community
and faculty
on almost everything we've done.
You've shown that
you genuinely care about supporting a
solid athletic program. I believe that BSC athletics, in
combination with
our outstanding academic programs,
is largely responsible for the college's excellent
reputation.
Many events have already been highlighted in
my
short tenure. One that especially
pleased me was our
very successful "ox roast" during
1982,
lege is negotiating the leasing of 15
acres of land adjacent to the upper campus which
will provide us with additional fields for intramurals,
recreation and athletics
I must take time out to
congratulate three of our
students athletes who distinguished
1
we ve
Homecoming
weekend. When the event was planned,
I had no idea of
the response that was to follow.
After seeing the super
time everyone had, there is no doubt
in my mind
that
the roast will be an annual affair.
Meeting Captain Curt
English '56, Dick Lloyd '62, and many
members of the
Class of "62 was indeed an occasion
I'll long remember.
Incidentally, the ox roast was catered
by our famous
local Hotel Magee, and the music
was provided by Tom
Austin '68, head teacher at Scott Elementary
School,
Espy, and BSC wrestling team captain,
Todd Cum'
mings.
Probably the most frequently asked question
since
taking over as A.D. concerned our football
team. It is
my
strong contention that the program is
definitely improving and will soon be recording winning
records
under Coach George Landis and his staff. The
efforts of
this season's team have generated
positive responses
from our opponents in the conference. Attendance
four
home games
at the
also reflected a positive fan response.
themselves
All-American Team.
I am pleased to report,
too, that the athletic department's move from Academic Affairs to
Student Ufe has
been well-received by not only our coaches,
but also by
our student-athletes. Thanks to two
very hard-working
men, Dr. Jerry Griff is and Dr. Jack Mulka,
the transition has been a smooth one.
By ERIC PETTIS
by saying that I not only appreciate
the financial support you've provided,
but all the other
help you have given us. Many of our
student-athletes are
now attending BSC because of your encouragement
and
perhaps, persuasion. Please continue
State College. But for Rich Lichtel, those are just
past
accomplishments.
In only two seasons as the head coach at Mechanicsburg High School, he has turned what had been a
mediocre football program into a winner. The Wildcats
were 9-2 in 1981 and are currently 10-0 thus far in 1982.
(Editor's note: This article was written before the
season was over.)
Lichtel has arisen as one of the premier coaches in the
Harrisburg area. "You have to keep it in perspective,"
he says. "You can't become obsessed with football." He
family must come before football.
Camp Hill with his wife, Bev, also a BSC
graduate, and his three children: Jeff, 11; Jason, eight;
feels that his
He
resides in
and Megan,
four.
Department. He is Gregory Paul Slocum, son
head trainer, Paul, and his wife, Millie.
December
November
The reason
in
19.
for his success is
simple —
"we
don't
pressure the kids because football at this level should be
played for fun, it shouldn't become an obsession.
Lichtel 's philosophy doesn't
time
to
change when
it
comes
teach his world cultures class to the tenth grade.
keep the kids interested," he says. "Last week
"I try to
Alumni
A
is
how
successful coach
chop sticks."
to use
important to relate the course to current
events happening in the world. "We talk about
the
it is
revolutions in South America, drug traffic in the
Middle
East, nuclear issues, or anything in the news that
interests the class," he notes.
Lichtel was the best quarterback that BSC
ever had.
Besides being the all-time leadin passer, Lichtel also
g
holds 10 other records.
"I was very fortunate to have great receivers in
invited to join
Bob
nine-day London theatre trip is being offered May
by the BSC English Department as part of a course
14-22
Study Abroad, for which undergraduate or graduate credit may be earned. Plays
chosen for the trip will span the major English
theatrical establishments such as the National Theatre,
the new Barbican arts complex that is the London home
of the Royal Shakespeare Company, the West End or
Shaftesbury theatres (comparable to New York's Broadway), and the experimental theatres like the Royal
Lichtel, but the Boston
Patriots and the Detroit Lions both offered him tryouts.
Lichtel never attended the tryouts. "I wanted first
class
treatment," he admits. "I thought I was better than I
was."
He decided to play semi-pro for the Baltimore Caps.
Lichtel once again enjoyed a successful year but he
had
regrets. "If I could do it all over I would definitely
jump
at a pro offer," he notes.
In 1969 Lichtel began his coaching career as
an assistant coach at Mechanicsburg. "Those were some tough
times because coaches came and went in a hurry, and I
London
theatre trip in
The road to a head coaching job
career was at a standstill.
was the
is
long,
and Lichtel 's
time since fifth grade that I wasn't in
football," he says. The only thing he could do was
wait.
1980 was a very long year for Lichtel, but his patience
paid off. The head coach at Mechanicsburg resigned,
and the door was open for Lichtel. After 12 years of being assistant coach, he was finally going to be at the
helm
of his
first
own team.
In his initial
campaign, Lichtel led the Wildcats
Area Conference championship.
to
their first Capital
However, Lichtel doesn't consider that his biggest accomplishment. "Eight seniors from the 1981 team went
on to reputable football colleges and some of those kids
received
scholarships," Lichtel notes.
of the 1982 squad has been a pleasant surprise for Lichtel
"they're good kids and we treat
full
The success
—
them
like individuals.
He hopes
tinue to produce quality
teams
formula will conMechanicsburg.
this
for
"Winning breeds success," he says, "and if we make
the underclassmen a part of it, then it should rub off."
He doesn't expect should rub off." He doesn't expect
next year's team to be 10-0, but the fans will expect a
winning program again and for years to come.
May
court (comparable to new York's off -of f -Broad way
of course Stratford-on-Avon.
)
and,
entitled Literary
The
would have a different job with every coach," he says.
He returned to BSC in 1974 to become the quarterback
coach. Lichtel remained at BSC until Clark Boler
replaced Ron Puhl as the new head coach. "They
brought in all new coaches and didn't ask me back."
"It
Tucker (who became an NFL all-pro) and Stan Kucharski," he notes. "And Coach Russ Houk was the
best
coach Bloomsburg ever had."
The exploits of the 1968 BSC aerial show did not go unnoticed. Scouts from many pro teams were eyeing
all
three players-Lichtel, Tucker and Kucharski.
The
Dallas Cowboys showed a great interest in Lichtel
and
even indicated that they would select him in the 1968
The Cowboys never drafted
1981. And the ten victories this season are the most by
a
Mechanicsburg team since 1954. The Wildcats will have
a chance to surpass the mark when they open the
playoffs on
feels
Corner
of our
He was born on
taught the kids
He
A.D.'s
28.
draft.
Ironically, the 1982 season was expected to be a
rebuilding year for the Wildcats due to graduation
The
to recruit for your'
of being among
the Pennsylvania Conference's finest
in all 18 sports In
the spring, the coaches and I will
be joining many of you
at area chapter meetings. We look
forward to meeting
you and renewing acquaintances. One last note:
I'd like
to welcome the newest member to
the BSC Athletic
alma mater and help us reach our goal
I
Student Feature Writer
Roger Sanders
I'd like to close
Former BSC standout
He was the leading passer in the nation in his senior
year. He is the all-time leading passer at Bloomsburg
this fall
Mike Blake. Jeanne Fetch and Deb Long
earned the
highest honor accorded a college athlete
by being
selected All- Americans. Mike, our
standout tight end
was selected as a member of the Associated
Press Little
All-American Football First Team, while
Jeanne and
Deb were picked on the NCAA Division II
Field Hockey
cost of the trip will include round trip
transporta-
and from Kennedy Airport and flights between
New York and London, hotel with continental breakfast
all
that
it
its
free
museums,
has to offer
its
in addition to the theatre,
such as
music and dance events, and the
wealth of literary and historical tradition concentrated
here.
tion to
at least five theatre tickets, a trip
to Stratford-on-Avon.'
and possibly a gathering with members of
the theatrical
profession. As in previous trips, this one is open
to noncredit participants
who may be
interested in
London and
The trip will be conducted by Dr. Susan
Rusinko professor of English. Further information
about the trip is
available from her or the English
Department office by
calling 38JM427 or 389-1429.
Reservations should be made
by January
31, 1983.
December
8
(Continued from Page 6)
The Shiners
25.
Nescopeck.Pa.
at
live
Raber Ave.,
1035
Richard Neuschwander '76 recently graduated from
Syracuse University School of Law and has passed the
Pennsylvania Bar Exam.
1975
Susan Marie Stair '76 and her husband. Gary Dean Stair
'80 are the parents of a daughter born on November 6. The
Stairs live at 203
Dorothy Lukus '75 and Wayne Levan are engaged.
Dorothy is employed Columbia Day Care Program, Inc.
and Acme Markets, both of Berwick. Her fiance is
employed by Kawneer Co. in Bloomsburg.
marketing director for Ina charter travel operator
based in Boston. She reports that she received her MBA
degree from Boston University in May 1982. She lives at 45
Ashford St., Apt. 16, Allston, Mass. 02134.
Cathy E. Poffenberger
ternational
18635.
Summerhill Avenue, Berwick, Pa.
Weekends
'78 is
Inc.,
Suzanne Sutllff Jensen '78 and David E. Jensen '81 are
the parents of a daughter, Kristi Sue, born on December
21. The Jensens live at R.D. 3. Box 423, Danville, Pa. 17821.
18603.
Todd Dennis Wenrlch
and
'78
- all
the parents of triplets
his wife recently
boys.
The family
became
lives at 1405
E, Caracas Avenue, Hershey, Pa. 17033.
Connie L. Anceravage '78 and Paul M. Yurczyk are
engaged. Connie is a facilities analyst for General
Dynamics in San Diego. Her fiance is an auditor for San
Diego Federal Savings and Loan. A June 4, 1983 wedding
in Bloomsburg is planned.
Karl H. Zimmerman '75 has been promoted in the Air
Force to the rank of first lieutenant. He is unit launch control officer with the 740th Strategic Missile Squadron.
Christina (Wright) Dunning '75and her husband, David,
are the parents of a daughter, Lauren Ashley, born on
Deborah (Flank) Hinton '78 and her husband, Glenn
Hinton '79, report the birth of a son, Ryan Joseph, born on
August 8, 1982. Their address is Box 294, Brodheadsville,
November 2. She joins a sister, Brooke Marie. The Dunnings live at 7400 Southern Drive, Columbia, Missouri
65201.
Pa. 18322.
Lynne Fae (Bauman) Greenly '75 and her husband,
Neil, are the parents of a son, Matthew Ryan, born on
November 17. The family lives at R.D. 1, Cochranton, Pa.
Laura M. Pollock
16314.
'75 and Dennis Grace '77 are the parents
daughter born on November 29. Their address is R.D. 1,
Box
had served as executive director for the Mifflin-Juniata
Donald F. Sharretts O '75 and his wife are the parents of
a daughter, Kasey Anne, born on December 20. The family lives at
R.D.
1,
unit of the
1977
183A. Shickshinny, Pa. 18655.
Box 35, Danville, Pa.
17821.
Lynne M. Williams '77 and John W. Murphy were marSeptember 11. Lynne is a programmer engineer
for Vitro Laboratories. John is a computer programmer
with the same firm. The couple live at 3107 Hewitt Avenue.
Silver Spring, Md. 20906.
ried on
Mary Jean Broody '75 M.S. and John Paul Mosca were
married recently. Mary Jean is a first grade teacher in
Crestwood School District of Mountaintop. She is also a
beauty consultant for Mary Kay Cosmetics. Her husband
is general manager and executive vice president of Aaron
Products of Wilkes-Barre. They live in Kingston, Pa.
Evelyn Baxevane '77 and Matthew J. Connell '77 were
married on November 13, 1982. Evelyn, who will keep her
name, teaches in the Denton (Texas School District. Matt
is employed at North Texas State University and has been
accepted into the doctoral program in higher education
administration at North Texas State. He plans to get a
Ph.D. Their address is 1209 Cordell, Denton, Texas 76201
)
1976
Susan (KubOis) Nesbitt '76 reports that her husband,
Dick, graduated from medical school at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia in June 1982. He accepted a
residency at Geisinger Medical Center in internal
medicine. They live at 101 Laura Drive, Apt. 2, Danville,
Pa. 17821.
Chris A. Hertig '76 recently received the designation of
Certified Protection Professional through the auspices of
the American Society for Industrial Security. Chris lives
at 777 Riverview Terrace, Apt. No. 11, Rochester, Pa.
Mary Anne
(Taylor) Haussener '77 was married recentMichael Haussener. They live at 10 Pine Lane .Willow
Street, Pa. 17584. Mary Anne has been an itinerant hearing specialist with I.U. 13 in Lancaster for five years.
ly to
JEAN GARTY
pursuing a career change in the
area of public relations/consumer affairs. She would like
to hear from alumni who are involved in this type of
business. Jean can be reached at 110
Apt.
4,
Linda M. (Bellak) Boland, '76 M.Ed lives
way Road, Flying Hills, Reading, Pa. 19607.
West
Fifth Street,
Bureau
of
'76 lives at 1117
Pa.
W
Binghamton in May 1982. She is employed by the
Binghamton City School District as an elementary learning disabilities resource room teacher at MacArthur
Elementary School. She lives at 317 Old Vestal Rd.,
Vestal,
NY. 13850.
.
John Nicholas DiBlasi Jr.
were married on October 9,
and his wife, Sally, are the parents
of a son, Geoffrey Ryan, born on October 8, 1982. Randy
has been with Air Products and Chemicals for four years.
He has received several promotions and is now the prin'76
area supervisor of the materials management
operating support department. He recently returned from
a business trip to Korea and has also traveled to South
America. The family lives at 525 South Berks St., Allencipal
town, Pa. 18104.
Ray Brewster
'7$
was
killed on
December
2
when
his car collided with a tractor trailer near
Midlothian,
Texas. Brewster was working as a salesman for Summers
Electric Co. of Dallas. Surviving are his parents; his wife,
the former Uerra Long; a son, Billy Eugene; a
brother
and a
sister.
Rae Shiner '76 and her husband, Donald W. Shiner
are the parents of a son, Joel Matthew, born on
Nikki
'79,
and Cheryl Ann Serafin
They
Odene Emory Campbell
'79
and
live in
his wife
parents of a daughter born on October
W. Main St., Bloomsburg, Pa.
Hazleton
25.
became
The family
the
lives
17815.
Karen J. (Waite) Vanderpool '79 and her husband,
Richard, became the parents of a daughter, Kathryn
Renee, born on September 20. They live at R.D.4, Arbutus
Acres, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Carl Poff
'79
demons '78 had an exhibition of her
in
the coffeehouse of the
Union from Novenber 2 through November
ed her master's degree from BSC in 1979.
25.
Kehr
She receiv-
Teresa "Terri" Bobbins '78 and Vincent Scott Carter '77
were married in a Renaissance-style wedding recently.
Terri is a communications consultant with Mountain Bell
in Denver. Vince is with the operations department of Colorado National Bank in Denver. They live at Apt. 1310,
3235 S. Parker Road, Aurora, Colo. 80014.
Rob Wintersteen '78 is the branch manager of an
engineering sales company based in Florida. His address
is
BSC
former
standout
matman, has been
wrestling coach at BSC. In addition to his
coaching duties, Carl has been hired as a health and
physical education instructor. After graduation, he
earned a master's degree in physical education at the
University of North Carolina where he also served as
assistant wrestling coach for three years.
Lorie K. (Mutchler) Sands '79 and her husband, Joseph,
are the parents of a daughter born on October 6. The family lives at R.D.2,
Brookside Village, Berwick, Pa. 18603.
Alan John Lonoconus
ried on
November
and Roxanne Long were marJohn is a teacher in Southern
Catawissa. The bride is a com-
'79
20, 1982.
Columbia High School
Billy
'79
1982.
named assistant
17603.
Sharon L. (Rupert)
Kimble
Joseph Hospital Early Childhood Education Center in
Reading, Pa. She also has been hired by the Reading
School District to coach the junior varsity girls' basketball team at Northeast Junior High School. Kathleen's address is 115 South Second St., Womelsdorf Pa. 19567.
award.
paintings and ceramics
S.
Kathleen M. Eckenroth '79 reports that she has been
employed by the Berks County Intermediate Unit as a preschool teacher since January 1980 and works at the St.
Doug Post '79 reports that he has been teaching for
three years and recently received a teacher of the year
Brenda Shaffer '78 reports that she received her
master's degree in special education from SUNY in
judicator.
Randy
1979
at 10C Fair-
a bank Road, Apt.
She is employed by the
Disability Determination as a disability ad-
Lancaster,
Marsha Del Yeager '78 and James F. Schmucker '78
were married on September 18. Jim is a government account representative for the 3M Company. They live at 606
W. James Street, Lancaster, Pa. 17603.
at 620
Lansdale. Pa. 19446. (215 ) 368-4385.
1978
John Richard Angus '76 and his wife are the parents of a
daughter born on November 13. The family lives at 85
Knapp Avenue, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Denise Muhlehem
ACS for the past four years.
Pa.
'77 is
15074.
C-304,
was recently appointed public
American Cancer Society in Her-
shey, Pa. She is responsible for coordinating the statewide
public relations program for the ACS. Laura previously
Leanne Grace
of
'78
relations director for the
in
puter operator at Geisinger Medical Center in Danville.
They live at 708 Mill St., Catawissa, Pa. 17820.
3463 Flossmoor Ave., Orlando, Fla. 32807.
Michael V. Broda '78 and Holly Marie Hons are engaged. Holly is enrolled at BSC and will graduate in 1983.
Mike is employed in Harrisburg. A June wedding is
planned.
Karen Lynn (Caplon) Haines '79 and her husband.
Mark, are the parents of a daughter, Elizabeth Dawn,
born on June 25, 1982. The family lives at 1140 Greenwich
St.,
Reading, Pa. 19604.
(Continued on Page 10)
Speech therapist wins award in Florida
Heather Harper '79, a 25-year-old Martin County
(Florida) school speech therapist, was selected as the
to leave us,"
The award
is
the state, according to Joyce Holmes, director of special
in Martin County.
Heather was chosen over junior and senior college
professors and speech therapists throughout Florida.
"This is the kind of award of which this community
education
should feel proud," said School Superintendent V. James
Navitsky. "Her fellow teachers did a lot to help her."
Heather was selected by the state association on the
basis of an examination of her work and a review of letters of recommendation. She received a special plaque
during the association's annual convention in Fort
"They actually went out
DOT
when she can attend
meetings.
Dr. Mary K. Badami is an associate professor of
speech in the Department of Speech, Mass Communication and Theatre at BSC. In addition to teaching several
is
a specialist
in inter-
communication — contact between persons or
groups who came from different backgrounds.
She has directed more than 20 workshops in intercultural awareness and communication skills for National Park Service employees. Course content focused
on equal employment opportunity for managers, intercultural and interracial sensitivity and managementlevel communication.
"I find intercultural communication intrinsically interesting," she says, adding that no one had to prod her
toward this field. She spent five years in Europe and
cultural
taught English to air traffic controllers
many.
"I watched
opportunities, so we came down and
work."
The young speech therapist said this is the first school
system in which she has worked, and that she plans to
went
to
stay.
"I asked her after she
won the award
if
she was going
She believes the white students on campus have a
the phone negotiating times
different speech courses, she
some good business
in
The parent told how Harper had taken the trouble to
consult with her daughter's doctor to discover the best
therapy that she could administer to help the child.
"The progress that both our children have made can
most
definitely be attributed to the time and effort given
by Heather," wrote the parent.
Heather lives in Port St. Lucie with her husband, Abe,
a sales representative.
communication is special
ILTIS
area of specialization
teacher of the year," Cornett said. "That
makes the honor even better as far as I am concerned."
Heather's work has the support of the parents of her
students. "She doesn't consider her profession just a
job," wrote one parent. "Heather is not only concerned
with developing their speech, but also with their
welfare."
Harper
By
of their
to select the
walls.
Student Feature Writer
It is three o'clock, and there are two other people in
line waiting to see the person behind the desk. She is on
great deal to learn from their Black classmates, and
that the college has an obligation to provide a positive
atmosphere for good interracial contact.
Along with her work in intercultural communication,
she also specializes in communication and sex roles.
Badami created
a progressive course at the University
Wisconsin (Milwaukee) called "Female and Male
In addition, she received a
$1,000 AMOCO Distinguished Teaching Award for her
work with undergraduates in this field.
of
Communication Patterns."
Badami reports
that a
group
of
women
faculty
and ad-
ministrators have met and plan to continue their
dialogue about the role of
women
on the
BSC campus. A
number of students have invited faculty and staff
them in a newly-founded BSC Women's Coalition.
"There are going
to join
to be exciting opportunities to talk
interest
about women's lives and men's lives on this campus,"
she says. "I see these as a good beginning."
A
native of
New York
bachelor's degree
City, Dr. Badami received a
(magna cum laude) from Fordham
University. She earned a master's degree in speech at
Hunter College and taught speech in the New York City
high school system for two years.
In addition to teaching in Munich for the University of
Maryland, she has held part or full-time teaching positions at the University of Virginia, Northwestern
University and Governors State University in Illinois.
She spent one semester as a visiting professor of speech
communication at Memorial University in Newfoundland, Canada.
She earned her doctoral degree in intercultural communication at Northwestern University and was at the
University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee before coming to
BSC
last year.
Munich, Ger-
educated American women
American community, ignoring the
larger German community, therefore failing to have a
intelligent,
stay within the
good intercultural experience," she observes.
During her five years in Europe, she was a radio commentator on a German and American friendship program. She also served as a guest lecturer and speaker
cultural exchange between German and American
women. This created the interest in pursuing work in intercultural communications.
Dr. Badami is concerned about some current issues at
the college. "I'm working with some faculty who work
with international students on this campus. I want to encourage American students
in
my
classes to
make
60 7HAT WAS "itXR OLD ftWENP'
MfftVpl HE SURE LET HMASelP
GO to SESP. U MUST p£ GiAP
100 pifMiY GET $TV WITH HIM
FUHHY- I F€El 9»~
UN-AN>efilCAn.
con-
She hopes that after spending some time getting to
know one another and exploring opportunities for fun on
campus and in town, the international students will feel
more welcome here. She wants American students "to
learn to appreciate the exciting discoveries you make
about the many different people who live around the
world."
t
workshops for
faculty on recognizing racism and sexism. These
workshops will include simulation games to make par-
Badami plans
ticipants
aware
to present several
of cultural differences.
A second major
concern of Dr. Badami
is
interracial
Her teaching and consulting aims to "help
white people understand that there is fundamental
racism in all of American society."
sensitivity.
THE CAR IOAH 1$ R»lD«=>FF
WE HAVE NO Oi/tJTANOtH6
pEVTf.. WE HAVE swe
/HQyPr /M «V/NGS- wE
B*/T" ITS
tact with international students."
Dr.
which
cations specialists.
Walton Beach in Florida's panhandle in October.
Heather travels the county in a yellow van converted
into a traveling speech laboratory. The vehicle's interior
is brightly painted and cartoon figures decorate the
Intercultural
'no,'
Heather said she decided to work with speech and
communications problems during her sophomore year in
college. "I had worked in a nursing home, and I had
dealt with children. I was aware of speech problems.
"I didn't want to work in the large classroom setting.
I liked the small group sessions, and I started studying
in the speech area."
Fred Cornett, program specialist for speech, hearing
and language, said Harper's award is unusual in that it
was made to her by an association of speech communi-
the highest given to speech teachers in
Spending one-half day at each school, she works with
about 20 students a day.
"These students range from slight to profoundly handicapped students," said Heather. "I like working with
the small groups."
She came to Martin County in January 1981. "My
mother-in-law lived down here. Abe (her husband) and I
had visited here often and we liked the area. There were
laughed Holmes, "and she said
pleased us."
"Outstanding Speech Teacher of the Year" for 1982 by
the Florida Speech Communications Association.
IKIAIIW MIDI* MRVICIS
tfefkrkt
CA
4470*
10
Diane Brown '81 and Mark Young were married on
September 25, 1982.
Cathy Ann Casterllne '82 and James F. Kessler Jr. '80
married recently. Cathy is employed at Shamokin Motor
Lodge. Jim is a marketing engineer for Weis Markets,
(Continued from Page 8)
Susan Scalamandre
were married on June
Melanie Joy Thomas '79 and Charles James
McCollum
were married recently. They make their home
at 2 North
Locust St., Shamokin, Pa. 17872.
'81
and James Wilkie Scales Jr
They live at 663 Belmont
Inc.
6, 1982.
Ave., Mt. Pocono. Pa. 18344.
Roxanne M. Bull
Chambersburg. Pa.
1980
'81
lives at 262
17201.
termediate Unit No.
Kevin Miller '82 has accepted a position in the computet
department of the First National Bank of Berwick. His address is 509 Broad St., Nescopeck, Pa. 18635.
She
is
South Main St., Apt 4
employed by Lincoln In-
Shelley Grozier
'82 and Frank Scarpino are engaged.
employed at the Benton Area Elementary
Loreen G. (Derr) Comstock '81 and her husband. Dan. School and Nichols Department Store. Frank is majoring
became the parents of a son, Adam Harrison, born on in civil engineering at Williamsport Area Community College and is also employed by Weis Markets.
September 30. The Comstocks live at R.D.
2, Brookside
12.
Shelley
Cathleen M. Readdy '80 lives at 65 Cheltenham
Drive
Wyomissmg. Pa. 19610. Last May she became engaged to
Anthony J. Wiencek of Reading, and the wedding
is
planned for April 23, 1983. The prospective bridegroom
is
a 1978 graduate of Villanova University and is employed
Village, Berwick, Pa. 18603.
by Western Electric in Reading. Cathy is
looking for a career in the Reading area.
tober 2. They live at 639
in the
is
Diane Susan Gansel
Amy Kleckner
process of
'81
and Carl
Roma were married on
Elm Street,
are engaged. Diane
Oc-
is
'82
and Jerome John O'Brien
Jr. "82
Jerome
a substitute teacher, and
is
employed at Leeds & Northrup of North Wales, Pa., as a
computer programmer. A June 11, 1983 wedding is
Endicott, N.Y. 13760.
planned.
Cindy (Broadt) Trapane "80 and her husband.
Steven,
are the parents of a daughter born
on January 3 1983
They live at 116 South 10th Street, Sunbury.
Pa. 17801.
1982
'
KEVIN KODISH
has been appointed assistant direcTheir
tor of communications for the
Association of Penn-
Diane P. Siebert '80 works for Scribner
Book Companies. Inc., as publicity and promotion
coordinator of
children's books. Her address is 440
East 85th Street ADt
2C. New York, N.Y. 10028.
Lynn Marie Landon '80 and Robert James Cromley
are
engaged. The wedding will take place on
October 8, 1983.
Roianne Hnnsinger '80 and Robert Pletchan '80
were
married on October 9. The bride is a certified
public accountant with Ernst and Whinney
in Reading. The
bridegroom is an accountant at Western
Electric
Com-
pany, also of Reading.
sylvania
State
'82
and University
(APSCUF) in Harrisburg. He began working
position on January 3.
in his
engineer for Kawneer Corporation of
Bloombure
Jr.
'82
are engaged. Jim is employed by JMB Real Estate
Co., Boston.
'80 and his wife, Lisa,
are the parents
son Joshua, born on October
28. The family lives at
Third Street, Box 129, Benton,
Pa. 17814.
Shoes, Inc..
a dental hygienist by the Lancaster School District.
Her
is a lawyer with the Lancaster County law
firm of
Nickolaus, Hohenadel and Chesters.
husband
Elaine Susan PeUetier '82 and Michael Scott
Slusser
were married on November 6. The bride was
employed as
a nurse at Williamsport Hospital. The
bridegroom, a
Pennsylvania State University graduate, is an instrument
technician employed by Philadelphia Electric
Co., Peach
Bottom. They live in Quarryville, Pa.
5® SEER
m
,
^
GfluId ' 81 reports
I
10, 1981
.
the
nationally
19 with
a degree
in
Va.
™
'
JS^^'SfW*'
6
P
M
&h nXn
^
81 *** 0660
?*.
at
Jeff
'81
were
is
10855
Daniel Todd Wilson '81
recently received a master
of
hbrary and information
science degree from
Stote
University of New York at
Geneseo. He
Ss acSpS a
-versilyTd
w?rk °f'"to?
0
National Migrant Special
Education
rZ5
Resource,
Training and Dissemination
Center The center
and Marshall Geiger '82 are
ennUJ g her master s de ree at
8
Marywood
Scranton. Marshall
is
employed by Ernst and Whinney,
International Public Ac
countants
in Allen town,
Pa.
Manne
S
'81
ar
i2
ment
;
McCor-
£™^
^ ^
'?,e
ve
p
r
reat ^terest in the technological
g,
Scanl0n
in the educational
COrpSl Stati0ned at
" Tech"ology developcommunity has been and will
continue to be a prime goal of
my office. As
otten the case, you are on
top of the issue."
are
Bob
is
Q uan
L T! ™
-
in
BSC will undertake a feasibility study
of advanced
technology program development
with funding support
from the Pennsylvania Department
of Education as a
part of a Commonwealth effort
to encourage high
technology educational activities.
The college was adf
C 10 000 award
°y Secretary of Education
Robert? G. Scanlon in a letter to
BSC President
'
'
ST?
for feasibility
'81
in
3 "1
"
Cheryl Marie Roulln '82 and Mikel
Robin Riley were
eC t y
eryl * a r ^tered
medical
technologist at the Geisinger
Medical Center. Her husband is a phlebotomist at Geisinger.
They reside
Advanced tech
program studied
*J
Sfl!l Schoolf of
?cSocial Welfare
College
married.
Uco Va"
77042.
Susan Kichman
'82 is
11
6
School of Law, where he is a
second-year student.
f ^Tr"^ ^
Brown
Brenda Kae Clarke '82 and Robert John
Crosetto
engaged. The wedding is planned for
December
D*kinson
Debra Ann Umstead '81 and
Robert Neiderer
married on September 11. 1982.
Their address
Meadowglen, No. 1101, Houston, Texas
Berwick, Pa. 18603.
na
West
Clarice has been
at 159
***** f °r member-
B°ard
St.,
Donna Ososkie '82 and Carl Mowery are
engaged Donis employed by H.H.
Knoebel, and Carl works for
Kawneer Aluminum Co. A fall 1983 wedding is
planned.
wa* married
the Port Je
School District since
J
and
teaches fifth grade. She is
working on
degree in education.
19811
s
she
They live
Street, Port Jervis, N.Y.
12771.
£J ^
September
her master
of
Randy Peters '82 and Brenda Hook
were married on
September 18. Randy is district
executive of the
Columbia-Montour Boy Scout Council.
Brenda is
employed at Berwick Hospital. They
live at 215 West Se-
tnSfJ"
??
Michael ?
Gould
on October
Mam
issue
Brenda Kae Clarke '82 and Robert
John Crosetto '81
were married on December 11. Bob
is serving as a lieutenant m the U.S. Marine Corps. They
live in Quantico,
cond
(
future
DiLiberto graduated on December
elementary education.
1981
to
204
school
students to develop assertive behavior skills
to deal with
peer pressure.
m
Tom
Apt
Ave.,
article deals with a systematic classroom
approach
in which the educator can help
elementary/middle
and Thomas J. Mulderig
'80 were
is employed by
Edison Brothers
Burlington. Mass. They live in
Leominster
'80
Glen
The
Debra Marie Butler '80 and David Alan
Mayers were
married recently. Both are employed by
the State Fish
Commission. They live in northern Bucks County.
Pa.
recently.
324
is
Diane Carol Remington '82 and Matthew J. Creme Jr.
were married on October 16. The couple live at 546 E.
Orange Street, Lancaster, Pa. 17602. Diane is employed as
for publication in a
distributed magazine.
Harry E. English
Judith R. Vargo
address
21801.
Richard A. DlLiberto '82 has been informed by "Early
Years," a journal for teachers, that his manuscript
entitled "Assertive Behavior for Children"
has been selected
He
of a
mamed
new
had worked for the Lewistown Sentinel
and the Pennsylvania Magazine.
James Oeste
Md.
Faculties
Kevin, who was active on student
publications at BSC,
received his degree in mass communications.
He was a
recipient of the William Teitsworth
Memorial Journalism
Scholarship. Prior to accepting his current
position, he
Kristina Rutter '82 and
mailing
Salisbury.
College
Robert W. Young '80 and Wendy
Houseknecht were
married on November 27. Wendy is
employed by Kelly
Service of Reading, Mass. Bob is an
architectural sales
works the Boston area.
Kathy Lynn Koch '82 and Michael Anthony DiLarso
were married on August 14. 1982. Kathy is employed
at
First Shore Federal Savings and Loan,
Salisbury. Md
Michael is employed at Perdue, Inc. also in
Salisbury.
is
most
Dan-
Barbara Ann Koslosky '82 and
Randall E. Rhodes '82
are engaged. Barbara is enrolled
in BSC's graduate
program in education of the hearing impaired.
Randall will
attend medical school. A 1983
wedding is planned.
Saundra Gottstein '82 and
married recently. Saundra is
School District
Tammy
RD. 4, Bloomsburg, Pa.
e"T
7
is
Tammy
'Boz'
Robbins were
a teacher in the Warrior
a dairy farmer They
Run
17815.
*-**vtuukn
'82
and
Karen S. Berger are
t
engaged.
Jeff is an accountant
for Giorgio Fool
Inc
ren
Sem
° r at BSC She ta
* u
employed aTMaple
Crest Nursing Home.
P
A 1983 wedding is planned
S^M
11
State grant aids development of M.S.N,
Special funds totalling $113,055 for
developing a
graduate program leading to the Master of
Science
to
in
Nursing degree have been awarded to BSC
by the Pennsylvania Department of Education.
In announcing the award, Secretary
of Education
Robert Scanlon said the money is being
allocated from a
special fund established by his department
to encourage
development of new graduate programs in
nursing to
serve areas of the CommonweaJth where such
programs
are not now available.
"We appreciate this support for our efforts
quality
to provide
programs responsive
service area,"
"The award
to educational needs in our
President McCormick commented
fund the start-up costs we will
BSC
will
incur
before students can be enrolled in the new
program
Given our commitment to the human services
(health)
mission in general and our Bachelor of
Science in Nursing degree program in particular, we
will
make an
commitment to providing a quality M.S.N program."
The special funding is for the 1982-1983 academic
equal
year
cover salaries for one full-time position for
one year,
and two positions for one semester. Additional
funds are
budgeted for educational supplies and other
expenses involved in establishing the program.
The M.S.N, is currently offered at seven other
tions
institu-
-
the University of Pennsylvania, Villanova
University, Widener University, College
Misericordia,
Perm State University and the University of Pittsburgh
and Edinboro State College.
"OUR PROGRAM
proposal cited the growing demand
of registered nurses in our service area
for graduate
education," said Dean Howard Macauley
of the college's
School of Professional Studies. "The M.S.N,
is the
minimum required or recommended for faculty in all
nursing programs, and we documented the
shortage in
this region of nurses with advanced
academic preparation. They are needed urgently in direct
care of patients
with complex problems, in administration,
and in
research and consultation as well as in education.
"The shortage is nationwide, and in the Commonwealth projections indicate that by 1985 there
will
be a deficit of 3,610 nurses with master's
preparation
The support by the Pennsylvania Department
of Education for graduate programs in nursing
is an effort to
reduce that shortage."
Growth and expansion of health care facilities in the
early 1970s and the anticipated shortage
of nurses led
BSC to plan and develop programs in the health care
field. The Bachelor of Science
in Nursing degree program was authorized in 1974 and the first students
were
enrolled the following year. During the
past four years
235 students have received the baccalaureate
degree in
nursing at Bloomsburg.
"With a graduate nursing program, BSC will
be able
needs of registered nurses in this region
who want to work toward the M.S.N, as well as
acto satisfy the
commodate
The following article about John
Ukleya '82, written by Frank Garner, appeared In
the
September 12, 1982 issue cf the Sunday Grit.
The career of John Ukleya, 21-year-old graduate of
Montoursville Area High School and Bloomsburg
State
College,
is off to
way the job situation is."
SO UKLEYA quit his weekend work with WCNR and
went directly from a summer internship into a full-time
executive position with "New Day Dawning."
lucky, the
He
show has been sold to stations in
Petersburg, Fla.; Corpus Christi, Texas,
and in Fresno and San Francisco, Calif. Other stations
are expected to buy the show soon.
fered the position as associate producer of the show.
"He liked the way I worked," Ukleya said. "I was
vance registration is necessary.
Madrigal Singers with String Chamber Ensemble, Friday, March 25, and Saturday, March 26, 8:15 p.m.,
Carver Hall. An evening of chamber music through song
and strings under the direction of John Master and a
guest faculty
member.
Senior Recital, Sunday, March 27, 2:30 p.m., Carver
Hall. Mary Kate Wilson and Alexandra Segers, violins.
Senior Recital, Sunday, April 10, 2:30 p.m., Carver
Hall.
Kimberly Smith, mezzo-soprano. Lucille Rosholt,
accompanist.
Women's Choral Ensemble and Husky Singers,
15, 8:15 p.m., Carver Hall. An evening
day, April
Friof
is
responsible for relaying the director's
New York
City,
where the
is
syndicated out
talent coordinator also is
Ukleya has met several well-known personalities, including Joey, through his work. While at
this
WNEP
summer, he interviewed such racing drivers as A.J.
Foyt, Tom Sneva, Gordon Johncock and Mario
Andretti.
He also talked with Dean Smith, coach of the University
of North Carolina, and Chris Ford, player with
the
Boston Celtics. The interviews were videotaped for
telecasts on WNEP, and segments of some of them
have
also been used on ESPN.
Ukleya
Although Ukleya is excited about his career, he didn't
it would be when he started college.
He ma-
know what
Communications was
major, and it turned
it is a big part of his work. He meets with the
producers of the show
Simon and Dick Heatherton of
New York City to map out strategy for the show, promotes it through advertisers and the media, meets with
stations interested in buying it, and seeks new locations
his college
out that
—
—
Spring musical events
The following events are tentatively planned by the
BSC music department for the spring semester:
Children's Concert, Tuesday, March 22, 10 a.m. and 1
p.m., Haas Center for the Arts. The annual concert is
designed specifically for the children of Bloomsburg
area schools. This year's program will feature instruments of the woodwind and brass families. John
Master conducts the College-Community Orchestra. Ad-
also
THE TALENT coordinator sets up guests who appear
on the show, and they are sent to Wilkes-Barre.
"We have to arrange for transportation and things of
that nature."
Host of "New Day Dawning" is Ray Heatherton, who
used to be radio's "Merry Mailman." His son is
a producer of the show, and his daughter is the vivacious
singer-dancer Joey Heatherton.
St.
pleting his 12 weeks internship and would be looking for
a job. As a result of their conversation, Ukleya was of-
TV career
"The syndicators contact stations, and we sell the
"We have to talk it up."
said the
WHILE CM COLLEGE, Ukleya began working at
Radio Station WCNR as an announcer. This summer,
while he got his final 12 credits by working at WNEP, he
also continued working weekends at WCNR, putting in
some 90 hours a week.
It was while he was working at WNEP in the
sports
department that he met Richard Simon, who coproduces "New Day Dawning." Ukleya had seen him
around the station and had chatted with him.
"I always talked to him," Ukleya said, "and never
knew who he was. I finally found out he was the producer of the show."
He mentioned in passing that he soon would be com-
to recruit
show," Ukleya said.
Mulberry St., Montoursville, is working on "New Day
Dawning," a talk show produced by WNEP in Wilkes-
He
which need
located.
Although he just completed work for a bachelor of
communications at Bloomsburg, he is
already associate producer of a televisiom program that
is expected to be syndicated nationally.
Ukleya, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Ukleya, 1008
Barre.
institutions
wishes to the technical staff.
The show, created in Wilkes-Barre,
arts degree in
Miami and
many
for shooting.
of
a good start.
the
master's-prepared nurses in this rural, but healthconscious area," said Lucille Gambardella,
chairperson
of the nursing department. "It will permit
registered
nurses who must continue to work to return
to college on
a part-time or full-time basis to earn the degree."
Recent graduate off to good start in
Editor's Note:
program
listed
varied choral music for both women's and men's voices
under the direction of two guest faculty members.
Spring Band Concert, Sunday, May 1, 2:30 p.m., Haas
Center. The annual presentation of varied instrumental
music by the Concert Band, Clarinet Choir, and Studio
Band. Stephen Wallace conducts the Studio Band and is
joined by a guest faculty director for the Concert Band
and Clarinet Choir.
Student Recital, Monday, May 2, 8:15 p.m., Carver
The spring semester recital by advanced music
students in the areas of piano, voice, string and wind inHall.
strument performance.
Concert Choir, Thursday, May 5, 8:15 p.m., Carver
Hall. The Concert Choir in a concert of varied music
under the directicn of a guest faculty member.
For additional information on these events, call the
Department of Music at 389-1284 between 8 a.m. and
4:30 p.m. Address written inquiries, ticket and reservation requests to Dr. Stephen C. Wallace, Chairperson,
Department of Music, Haas Center for the Arts,
Bloomsburg State College, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
jored in sociology his first year before switching to communications. He also became interested in theater and
acted in six plays with the Bloomsburg Players, including the leads in "The Male Animal;" "The Great
Magician," and "Checkpoint Charlie."
He has moved to Wilkes-Barre to devote
his
new
career.
full
time to
12
School reorganized
Elderhostel '83
The reorganization of the Department of Business Administration in the School of Business at BSC into
four
Come to Bloomsburg State College this summer for an
enjoyable, stimulating and inexpensive vacation by
enrolling in Elderhostel. For the third summer the col-
separate departments was approved at the December
meeting of the board of trustees.
lege will sponsor three separate
weeks of Elderhostel
and August 14 to 20.
a national program with some six hun-
The growth of the Business Administration Department, since its inception in 1974 as part of the School
of
June 26
Business, materially increased the responsibilities
of a
The change to the four departments
of accounting, computer and information
systems,
finance and business law, and marketing/management
dred colleges, universities, independent schools, folk
schools and other educational institutions in the United
Elderhostel
single chairperson.
was recommended by Dr. Emory Rarig, dean
school, and Dr. Larry Jones, vice president
academic affairs.
to July
is
7 to 13,
States and other countries that offer special low-cost,
short-term residential academic programs for adults 60
years of age and older.
of the
for
Elderhostelers live on the campus for a week, from
Sunday afternoon to Saturday morning in a dormitory,
eat their meals at the college cafeteria, take three
courses of an academic nature (no tests), and par-
Elected chairpersons, effective January
1. were
Associate Professor Robert Yori, accounting;
Associate
Professor Harold Frey, computer and information
systems; Professor Bernard Dill, finance and
business
law; and Professor Melvyn Woodward,
ticipate in evening activities.
The courses are specially designed for Elderhostelers,
with two in the morning and the third following lunch.
marketing/man-
agement.
The
total cost for a
courses,
Alumni wins
August
2,
is
week, including lodging, meals and
$180 per person.
June 26
trip
to
July
2
JEWISH-PALESTINIAN CONFLICT AND
AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY.
This course will exArab reacMiddle East as a confrontation area, Palestinian Liberation Organization, the Lebanon crisis,
and
United States intersts in the conflict.
Lynn VanderDoes
'82 was the winner
of a trip for two
Orlando, Florida, which was awarded
during a drawing on Homecoming in October. The trip
was provided
by the Wainwright Travel Service of Bethlehem.
Pa.
Lynn is teaching first grade in Hopatcong. N.J.,
amine
to
and
hopes to coach high school track in the
spring. She
would like to work on a master's degree in
physical
tennis.
As an undergraduate at Bloomsburg. she was
a
member and secretary of Sigma Sigma Sigma, a
resiin
member
Columbia Hall, representative and
of the Women's Recreation
Association and a
participant in the 50-year dance marathon
for two years
She also threw the javelin and discus on the
women's
varsity track and field team.
Vacancy
Salary schedule is dependent on
qualifications and experience (MFA, one year of experience
preferred, or the
equivalent). Half-year salaries start
at $7,567 for instructors and at $9,140 for assistant
professors
e Cl0Sing
for recei P l 01 applications is
April
,J? o
1983. Send resume, three letters
of reference, undergraduate and graduate school
transcripts, a sleeve of
^
1'
slides of recent creative work,
and a self-addressed
stamped envelope to Dr. Percival
R. Roberts
Chairperson, Search and Screen
Committee Department of Art, Bloomsburg State College,
Bloomsburg,
m
'
3. 17815.
Upcoming
named
events
g Coramunity Arts Council will sponsor
music events during the spring
semester
Mummenschanz, Tuesday. February
8
llJ^lwS
Gary Karr, string bass, with
I Solisti Aquflani
chamber ensemble, Sunday,
February 27
Dayton Ballet Company,
Wednesday. March 16
graduated
in
May.
1982. College officials
November
BSC^^T^
SSf, %^™»y.
a former
mTyyelrs
in
Society
m
Community Government
English; the
Human
Relations Planning ComAssociation- Commonwealth Assoication of Students College
Arts Council; and the College Judicial
Board. He is a program
assistant in the Center for
Academic Development and
is a former member of the
Husky varsity
football
team
33 a co™"nity leader
for
This
course will examine the recent literature
of both Jewish
and Christian authors who have dealt
with the complex
and perplexing questions surrounding the
Christian
reaction to the Holocaust. Christian
response at the time
and in more recent years
U Pr ° Vlde
f<>CUS f ° r
difficuJt but stimulating
top ic
of the Holocaust (1939-1945)
^
G.B.S. IN
ARMS.
This course will study George Bernard Shaw's top impish plays about the
military
"Arms
Man" and "The Devil's Disciple." focusing on
the plays as brilliant theater and
intriguing propaganda
and the
NUCLEAR ENERGY.
Retirements approved
The retirements of Donald Bashore,
psychology Barbara Ulworth, economics; Edson
Drake, history; Marie
PameU, nursing; and Robert Richey,
speech mass
communications and theatre, were
approved by the
board of trustees. Bashore. Dilworth
and Richey are
associate professors, while Pamell
is an assistant professor and Drake is a full professor.
Bashore, who will retire in August
will complete
M years in the field of education, 23 of1983,
which were
at
This course
is
an introduction
to the nature of radioactivity,
the nuclear fission process
as a source of energy, and the
design and operation of
conventional light-water nuclear/electric
systems.
August
14 to 20
JEWISH-PALESTINIAN CONFLICT AND
AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY.
amine
This course will ex-
the forces that gave rise to Zionism.
ttons. the Middle East as a
confrontation
Arab reacarea, Palestine
Liberation Organization, the Lebanon
crisis, and United
States interests in the conflict.
BIBLE LITERATURE: FOLK AND FANCY.
This is a
in readings in English from
Ruth, Songs, Job and
Ecclesiastes to compare distinctive
course
Miss Dilworth's retirement was
effective at the end of
the fall semester. She has
been employed at BSC since
August 1966, completing 16.5 years
at the college and
21.5 years in education.
classroom teaching.
^
Was
a
August
1976 and
^
eA by
nursi*6 department in
will retire at the
end
" ye3rS ™
who came
to
BSC
of this
semester
° f educat,on 80(1
31 years in the
which were at Bloomsburg.
May
field of education, 20 of
DEMAND
economic underpinnings of this administration's
economic policies The
major tenets of both demand side and
supply side
economics will be explored from
a historical and policy
perspective.
"
F^f^l™?
Elderhostel,
Elderhostel Program, contact
100 Boylston Street, Suite
200, Boston
Massachusetts 02116 or call 617-126^056.
Write to the
above address to receive a summer
1983
For
Elderhostel
specific information regarding
Elderhostel at
a
ntaC
Ge0ree A Turner
SorH^T
H
^
Coordinator, History
Department, or call
C<
"
^
T^
N0MICS: SUPPLY SIDE OR
c,5!^
SIDE?
This course will deal with the
'
;
Oil Company to the college
Recipients of the $100 scholarships
for the current colear
8
geM
Jr " WernemUle; James
rl n7h
60 " SheUey PiCrSOn Montrose
Donna
Polak, Wilkes-Barre; and
Theresa Racek,
SSfj-'i^S
qualities of popular
and learned Biblical writings
catalog.
in 1963, will retire in
Five BSC seniors, majoring in
business administraUon/accounting, are benefitting from
a $1,250 grant
of the
7 to 13
CHRISTIAN RESPONSE TO THE HOLOCAUST.
joumalism and economics and a minor in
history.
He is a member in Sigma Tau Delta, National
Honor
He mil complete
Bloomsburg on
August
Porter, who attended Central High
School in
Philadelphia, has a double major at BSC
in English/-
from the Shell
member
-
appointment
by Governor Thornburgh had been approved
by the
Richey.
dies
This course is an introduction
nature of radioactivity, the nuclear fission
process
as a source of energy
and the design and operation of
conventional light-water nuclear/electric
systems.
to the
Senate.
mittee;
in
NUCLEAR ENERGY.
received
10 that Porter's
Seniors share grant
Former teacher
This is a
readings in English from Ruth, Songs. Job and
Ecclesiastes to compare distinctive qualities of
popular
and learned Biblical writings.
student representative to the college's
He replaces Thomas Gordon who
notification on
nursing
patron information, times
and loca-
BIBLE LITERATURE: FOLK AND FANCY.
course
of Trustees.
Professor Drake also retired
at the end of the fall
semester after 32.5 years in education,
including 18.5 at
BSC He served as dean of the School of
Arts and
Sciences from 1970 to 1978, when
he asked to return to
the following
Ijtin, at 389-4409. for
named
;
in art
The Department of Art at BSC anticipates
a temporary, one-semester teaching position
for the fall 1983
semester in the area of design, computer
graphics,
video art and photography. Course
responsibilities include two sections of basic design
and one course in
computer graphics, video art or photography,
depending
upon the candidate's qualifications.
*
been
Board
and
dent assistant
Student trustee
Aaron Porter, a BSC junior from Philadelphia,
has
education or recreation and work with a
large company
interests include swimming, racquetball.
skiing
Her
the forces that gave rise to Zionism,
tions, the
5
'
;
Alleritown
Kawneer
gives
Elderhostel
717-389-1156
$1,500
Representatives of Kawneer
Company, Inc. of
Bloomsburg presented the company's
annual gift to BSC
recenUy This year's gift of
$1,500 is an increase o
$2^
80,
^
P8St yCarS the
!"
*
aZark^'fo
earmarked
for campus*k
beautification and making
campus recreation
'
facilities available to
the public
13
Gardner recognized for swimming feats
By TINA
KLAMUT
was
Student Feature Writer
She was a three-time national swimming
champion
college. She went undefeated in
dual-meet
competition
during her four years of college swimming.
She has
been out of college for almost nine years,
but her name
still remains on the record board
for the breaststroke
events at East Stroudsburg State College.
Mary Gardner, head coach
of the
ming and diving team, was honored
BSC women's swimfor her ac-
complishments as a student-athlete at ESSC
with induction into the
ESSC
Athletic Hall of
Fame
last
faU
came
as a surprise to her "because I thought
I was too
young." Young or not, Gardner's accomplishments
Gardner chose to remain with the swimming
program.
Gardner is in her ninth year as head coach
of the
swimming and diving teams. She has produced
16 swimmers and one diver who have earned a total of 95
AllAmerican certificates. Her current win-loss record
AAU
age-group national records in different
age
brackets until she was 16. She also swam
on several
Her 1982 team placed second in the AIAW Division
IH
national championships by winning all five
relay title
races
something no other college has ever done in the
history of AIAW swimming.
Department
is
of Health,
an assisPhysical
Education and Athletics, and has been
appointed director of aquatics this year. She is
also the director of
equal opportunity in sports, monitoring
the equality in
the sports programs at BSC.
"I really enjoy being on the
administrative end of the
athletic program," says Gardner.
"It has been a
challenging change for me."
Besides being a successful swimming
coach.
Gardner
-
is the mother of two children
Katie, two. and Tim
eight months. She currently resides
in Berwick with her
husband, Dean.
Although Gardner's formal competitive swimming
career is over, she still plans to swim
in the master's
program (for those over 25) when she has more
time
For now, her induction into the ESSC HaU of
Fame is
the finale of a very rewarding and
successful swimming
Gardner.
at
ESSC make her worthy of the honor.
A NATIVE of Hatboro, Gardner began her swimming
career at the age of eight. Swimming competitively,
she
held
In addition to her coaching
position, she
tant professor in the
stands at 54-22.
"My coaching career has been very satisfying and
rewarding, and the reason is the student-athletes
I have
been fortunate enough to have had," says
was a very rewarding finale for a memorable
swimming career," says Gardner. The induction
"It
ESSC
in college.
Shortly after graduation, she became
head coach of
both women's swimming and diving
teams at BSC, as
well as the women's field hockey
team, with all three in
their infancy. When the programs
began to develop, the
department found it necessary for two different
coaches
in
at
-
career.
American swimming teams.
She graduated from Rome (N
Y.) Free Academy in
1970, earned a B.S. degree in education
at ESSC in 1974
and an M.Ed, degree at ESSC in 1977.
During her swimming career at ESSC,
Gardner was
an AJAW national champion in the 50-yard
breaststroke
and 100-yard breaststroke in 1971 and in the
50-yard
breaststroke again in 1972. She was also a
four-time
EAJAW regional champion in the breaststroke events.
She remained undefeated in dual-meet competition
during her four years of swimming, and her times
of
32 0 in tn e 50-yard breaststroke and 1:10.69
in the 100yard breaststroke are still records.
Gardner was a three-time winner of the outstanding
female swimmer award and was named Senior
Female
Athlete of the Year in 1974 at ESSC.
In addition to her achievements in
ner was also a letter winner
in field
swimming, Gardhockey while she
Blake named
to AP team
Bloomsburg
honor of
all to
State's
his long
football field by being
Mike Blake has added the highest
list of
accomplishments on the
named
to the Associated Press
Little All- America (College Division) first
team.
The 6-2, 220-pound performer from Allendale, N.J.,
was an AP Honorable Mention selection a year ago and
has been a Pennsylvania Conference Eastern Division
first
ly
team
selection the past
two seasons. He was the on-
Pennsylvania collegiate player selected to the first
of the very few chosen in the Eastern part
team and one
of the country. In addition,
he was the only unanimous
this year and was chosen
to the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) first
selection on the
PC East team
team also.
The senior co-captain helped BSC start a new era this
season under first year head coach George Landis. The
Huskies are attempting to rebuild a program that has
seen only four winning campaigns since 1960. In 1982,
MASTER COACH
—
BSC swimming and diving coach
McLaughlin (left) was recently named a "Master
Coach" by the College Swimming Coaches Association of
America. He was unable to attend the World Swimming
Clinic in Dallas, Texas, at which the presentation was to
be made, so BSC Athletic Director Roger Sanders (right)
Eli
presented the award
McLaughlin.
year as head coach of the men's
swimming team at BSC, had to meet five major criteria In
order to qualify for the award: (1) membership in the
McLaughlin,
to
in his 21st
CSCA
for at least 10 years; (2) participation in various
(3) at least a master's degree in his
coaching institutes;
academic field; (4) a 50% or better team winning record
dual meets for a period of 10 years (BSC accomplished
this feat from the 1965-66 season through 1974-75 and had
an overall mark during that time of 89-39-2); and (5)
in
coaching at least one national champion (Dave Gibas,
1971,
NCAA 50-yard freestyle title).
McLaughlin's 20-year record now stands at
after the 1981-1982 squad recorded a 6-5 season.
Landis' squad snapped a 15-game losing streak by
recording a 7-7 tie with Mansfield State in the season's
fourth game and then got its first win late in the year by
New telephone system installed
downing Kutztown State 20-7 and closed at 1-7-1.
THE TEAM showed vast improvement and Blake was
a major reason as the tightend hauled in 29 passes for
a new phone system that brings a new dimenphone users in the adrninistration offices. Called
a Dimension PBX, the system is the latest in voice communications service.
"Growth at the college and the accompanying increase in the volume of calls made it necessary for us to
convert to the new Dimension system," said Paul Con-
397 yards for a 13.7 yards per catch average and five
touchdowns. He was the team's leading scorer. In 1981
he caught an amazing 55 aerials for 731 yards as the
Huskies threw the ball 115 more times than this past
season.
The standout ended his career with 106 receptions for
1,381 yards. "I feel Mike is very deserving of the award
after the type of season he had for us," Coach Landis
commented, "even though we didn't throw the ball as
much as he had been accustomed to. He improved
greatly as a blocker and was a fine leader for a team
that had only three other seniors. His improvement over
what I saw on films from a year ago was fantastic, and
any award he receives he has certainly earned! He will
be sorely missed next year."
Mike, a mass communications major, is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert E. Blake, Allendale, New Jersey.
BSC has
sion to
ard, director of aclministrative services.
"The new service makes many time-saving features
available, which will increase the overall efficiency of
our operation," he noted.
"One feature permits phone users to transfer calls
without operator involvement," he explained. "Another
allows faculty and staff members to consult with
another party while holding the calling person on the
line, or to include the caller in on the conversation, thus
establishing a three-way conference.
"The computerized phone system
wilj permit us to
multi-button telephones with a single line
instrument without losing the ability for our personnel to
replace
many
answer someone
else's call at their desk,"
132-112-2
Conard add-
ed.
The college administrator noted
that the system can
forward calls to another telephone.
"If a caller within the phone system encounters a busy
signal from another telephone connected to the system,
the Dimension will keep trying," Conard explained. "As
soon as both lines are free, the parties will be connected," he added.
The Dimension, installed by Bell of Pennsylvania, includes 560 telephones equipped with Touch-Tone (push-
be
programmed
to
button) service.
Donald McAuvic, Bell marketing representative, said
the system utilizes solid state telephone switching and
represents the latest state-of-the-art concept in communications technology.
A new main
telephone listing for adininistrative of-
has been established as 389-1000. The number for
student information, 389-0111, remains the same.
fices
Alumni
Psst!
r
Now
-
the lime to purchase
is
that Bloomsburg
State College
memento before the name
institution
of your
changed
is
to
Bloomsburg University
of Pennsylvania.
The following items have the Bloomsburg State College imprint
at the College Store in limited quantities:
and are available
Pewter Mugs
Shot Glasses
Glass Beer
-
-
Insulated
1.49
Desk Chairs
Pillows
3.25
-
Ceramic Coffee Mugs
Miniature Ceramic
Demitasse Cup
&
Ceramic Football
Lotus Bowl
-
Saucer
-
Carver Hall Trivet
-
-
-
Small Pennants
-
Decals
7.69
8.95
Ice
Ball
Scrapers
-
Children's T-Shirts
Stickers
Point Pens
-
3.25
Stationery
Shorts
6.99
Jackets
1.39
-
1.79
-
Stop to see the large selection or
—
— 6.95
and 1.79
-
4.99 and 5.95
5.50-10.50
23.50-38.50
call
-
the College Store at 717-784-0167.
Regular Store Hours
—
—
5.50
2.95
Adult's T-Shirts
-
a.m.
7:30 p.m.
8 a.m.
4:30 p.m.
9:30 a.m.
lp.m.
— .95
5.95-14.95
Sweatshirts - 11.95-15.95
$5.50-6.95
Sweatshirts - 8.95-14.95
8
.29
.49-2.59
-
.59
-
-
1.49
-
Baseball Caps
Ceramic Ash Tray
5.95
5.95-9.50
-
& Bumper
Key Chains
-
.79
-
Gold and Silver Charms
7.99
-
2.95
Disposal Lighters
3.95
Glass Ash Tray
11.95
Stuffed Animals
7.50
-
-
Large Pennants
Stuffed Footballs
4.50
-
4.69
Vase with Handle
Bud Vase - 6.99
Trivet
4.25-12.99
Mugs
-
Plates with seal
-
99.95
-
6.50
-
Blankets
2.75
-
45.00
-
69.95
-
Captain Chairs
2.59
-
Glasses
Mugs
3.95 and 4.50
-
3.95
-
Water Glasses
Ball
Director Chairs
Mugs
Wine Glasses
High
$31.50 and 39.99
Monday and Wednesday
Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
Saturday
Look back at the
Wide World of Sports
Kent Hagedont
p a Murphy
t
Kent Hagedom
THE ALUMNI
QUARTERLY
Volume
83,
Number
2
New Human Services Center begun
O
The new
Human
College was
Services Center at Bloomsburg
Bloomsbunj State
for President James H. McCormick
steps from excavation tn
4 . mi »-m
-m._
to nnnrniof.™
completion nf
of the u.
building.
The
culmination will be professors teaching in the facility
and students learning and taking their knowledge out
into society to improve the quality of life in
named
groundbreaking ceremonies on March 31 at the
on the lower campus.
at
.
site
In naming the $6.4 million classroom
structure "The
James H. McCormick Center for Human Services "
Pennsylvania and the world through their work."
Walter Baran, Secretary of General Services for the
Commonwealth, represented Governor Thornburgh. He
read the Governor's greeting which stated in part,
"Today launches an important effort of the Bloomsburg
Robert W. Buehner Jr., chairman of the
board of
trustees, said "There is no higher honor
the college
community can bestow upon an individual than
to name
a building in lasting honor of that
individual. It is done
on rare occasions, unique circumstances
after due and
State College community to meet the special needs
of
students and citizens. I know that your new Human
considerable deliberation.
"Dr. McCormick is a man of the highest
integrity and
uncommon decency; a man who has deep respect and
abiding concern for the educational and
intellectual
processes; a man with a deep affection and
genuine love
for the tens of thousands of students
whose lives he has
touched and a man of personal modesty and
quiet
wisdom who has always been deeply commited to,
served, and championed the cause of public
higher
education.
Services Center represents a decade of commitment
by
Bloomsburg State College, and I'm pleased that this
dream has become a reality for your fine institution of
higher learning."
Baran added, "This structure will provide continuing
educational advancement and enhancement for
Bloomsburg and the state
;
of Pennsylvania." He also
expressed the best wishes of State Secretary of
Education Robert Wilburn who was unable to attend.
State Treasurer R. Budd Dwyer, a former state
"During his ten years at Bloomsburg, he has
transformed and guided Bloomsburg State College
legislator, pointed out that
Bloomsburg because not
to a
position as a recognized leader in public
higher
education in the Commonwealth. He has
made the
pursuit of excellence a goal for all facets
of the college
community which has been achieved through
ship in
many
a healthy sign for
many groundbrea kings
educational facilities are taking place today on
campuses around the state or nation. "It will also
provide needed employment and an influx of money
his leader-
work
of
community
in the
endeavor.
"Although many individual efforts have
made this
possible through planning, we still have
a number of
$5,000 scholarship established
m m
»
s^i .
"Ac aa member
i»
K<>
t
n*
"As
of the Class
of 1942, and In consideration of the excellent educational
background that
r-
.
Bloomsburg State College provided
for
me,
I
should like
to express my gratitude by establishing
a scholarship
fund, in perpetuity, in the amount of
$5,000, the income
therefrom to be used to provide assistance to
qualified,
deserving students."
With these words of appreciation, Mildred
R. Levitt
and her husband, Mike, established the "Mildred
Eaton
Alumni Scholarship Award" earlier this year.
had indicated their intention to create the
scholarship fund when they were in Bloomsburg last
June to attend Mrs. Levitt's 40th-year class reunion.
Levitt
Levitts
Mickey, as she
is
known by her
Major nursing department facilities will be located on
and will include a nursing techniques lab.
the third floor
simulated nursing station, carrell study area, physical
assessment lab. pathophysiology lab, specimen display
area, psychological and client observation lab, health
and home care lab, student nursing organization room
and a nursing seminar area. Also directly adjacent to
these areas will be the campus health center.
photographic darkroom, and audio recording and
duplication studio, three preview rooms and the director's office; an autotutorial and computer
laboratory
with 20 computer, 20 audio-visual, and 15 educational
media stations in addition to a 24-station computer
and a computer consultant's
and television and radio studios, control rooms,
viewing storage area, director's office, and WBSC office
in addition to a reception area, conference room, and
instruction laboratory
editing booths.
Second floor facilities will include several psychology
laboratories, an animal room, a learning laboratory,
and a testing suite; a sociology-psychology laboratory;
and advanced statistics labs; the curriculum
materials center with a stack and carrell areas, and
offices, conference and storage rooms, four seminar
rooms, and four typing rooms; two specialized
statistics
classrooms for elementary education and a specialized
methods classroom for secondary education.
There will be faculty offices, offices for department
chairpersons, conference rooms, and reception,
secretarial, and storage areas for several departments
on each of the floors.
Facts and figures
Building dimensions— 3 story, 130 feet by 240 feet.
Building area— 81.000 square feet.
friends, took graduate
New York University. Adelphi University and
University. Two years ago, she retired after
Exterior facing— Brick.
Hofstra
twenty-two years of teaching at Malverne High. Long
Construction cost— $4,657,800.
Scheduled completion date— June
where the Levitts make their home. She had also
taught at Montgomery Township and West Pottsgrove
high schools in Pennsylvania and at the Adelphi School
Heating— Coal And Trombe solar wall.
Building use— Multipurpose specialized
Island,
New York.
New Yorker and a graduate of the City College of New York and Brooklyn Law School. He is
a member of the bar in New York State, and recently
Business
Mike
is
Levitts have a son, Gary,
ing in Lima, Ohio.
He
is
who
is
married and
liv-
a graduate of Hofstra Universi-
and has earned a master's degree in education administration at Dayton University in Ohio.
ty
The scholarship
students
laboratories,
offices.
in
terests.
The
classrooms end
18, 1984.
a native
retired after 32 years as an accountant and attorney,
associated with the Bloomingdale family's private in-
will
be given annually to one or more
who are majoring
in business, in financial
need, and in their sophomore or junior year.
Mildred R. Levitt 42
mathematics, sociology and social welfare, elementary
education, secondary education and educational studies
and services.
studies at
of
Michael Levitt
faculty offices. Departments located in the new facility
include nursing, communication studies, psychology,
;
_
The
The Human Services Center, when complete, will be
the college's largest instructional building and will
house laboratories, classrooms, conference rooms and
office;
administration, at the college. Other remarks were
made by Julius Kroschewsky. BSC president of
APSCUF; Paul Stockier, president of the Community
Government Association; and Larry Jones, vice
president for academic affairs.
us.
and faculty
academic departments.
areas, an audio-visual media production area, a
Introductions of attending dignitaries were made by
John L. Walker, executive director of institutional
advancement, and Robert J. Parrish. vice president for
especially glad that so many of you who
helped to make
this building a reality can be here
to share today with
offices to serve eight
in
alumni and students as well as other members
of the college
largest instructional building and will house
laboratories, classrooms, conference rooms,
The ground floor will have the instructional and
specialized facilities that include: the Learning
Resources Center, with distribution, storage and work
Representative Ted Stuban. 109th District, expressed
thanks to his colleagues from both the rural and urban
districts for support in helping to pass the bill
providing
funds for the center. He also acknowledged the hard
and his love of students, has
made, and will continue to make, a significant
difference in their lives at this college, which
is soon to
become a university."
McCormick, who came to Bloomsburg in
1973, did not
know the building would be named for him.
In his
welcoming remarks, he said "The project
has been a
cooperative effort for many years,
and we are
to,
.
for
the area," he said.
areas.
"His commitment
is
it
too
_
The Human Services Center will be a three-storied,
bricked-face facility of 81.000 square feet scheduled to
be completed in June. 1984. It will be the college's
Mickey and Mike indicated that they hope the scholarship will encourage similar gifts from other alumni.
Don't forget: This is reunion year for classes with
years ending in a "3" or an "8."
Meeting in conjunction with Alumni Weekend, June
10-12, will be the classes of 1913, 1918, 1923, 1928, 1933,
1943 and 1948. The classes of 1942, 1944 and 1945 will be
joining the Class of 1943 in a special "War Years Reunion."
Holding their reunions on Homecoming, October 22,
be the classes of 1938, 1953, 1958, 1963. 19S8, 1973 and
1978. Details on the reunions have been sent or will be
forthcoming from the respective classes. For more inwill
formation, contact the Alumni Office.
News from
the
and a former teacher of its Grace Stoner Sunday
Gass, and a member of the Hummelstown
Christ
1911
Alumni Office mailbox
School
Historical Society.
another sister, Mrs. Mary H. Steck of
a grandson, and several nieces and
Also surviving
Margaret
Johnson '11 died on March 1, 1983,
at the Carroll County Nursing Home. Her last address was
Wolfeboro. N.H. 03894.
J. (Fraseri
Chambers
is
Hill;
nephews.
1914
1912
Bessie (Kimble)
Theresa R. (Dalley) Bachinger '12 observed her 90th
birthday on February 5, 1983. After graduating from BSC,
she taught at Edwardsville Grammar School for several
Young
'14
died on April
14, 1982.
1915
years.
She was married to Frank Bachinger in 1916 and they
settled in Bloomsburg. They had 11 children. She now has
26 grandchildren and six great grandchildren.
After her children were grown, she worked as a
housekeeper for Catholic priests in Bloomsburg for over
15 years.
She attends Catholic mass and enjoys special events,
going to outings and participating in crafts, bingo, singalongs and discussion groups.
Charles Rittenhouse Wiant '12 died on February 21 at
home at Pleasant Valley R.D. 1, Sweet Valley, Pa.
He taught school at Loyalville and Mossville and had
been employed with the Lehigh Valley Railroad, Sayre.
his
In
was accepted as an apprentice
he
1915,
fish
culturalist at Tupelo. Miss., retiring in 1949 as superinten-
dent of the U.S. Fish Hatchery at Marion, Ala., the largest
fish hatchery in the world.
Following his retirement, he and his wife, Jessie,
returned
to his
its
family
home
museum
maintained a
at
Sweet Valley, where they
until the couple's
ill
health forced
closing in 1979.
He was a member of the Rotary Club, an honorary
member of Masonic Lodge. Tupelo. Miss.; a veteran of
World War I, and served as adjutant and commander of
American Legion Post in Marion, Ala.
He was a member of Pleasant Valley United Methodist
Church, and in later years was a member of the Faith
United Methodist Church, Fairmount Springs.
Surviving are his wife, Jessie, to whom he was married
for 65 years; a son, W. Lloyd, Meridian, Miss.;
a
the
daughter. Mrs. Herbert (Doris) Harvey, Sweet Valley;
grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren.
five
;
Wiant
is
featured
in
a
new book, WIANT-BOGART
CROSS COUNTRY ODYSSEY,
Harvey, his daughter. Information
who attended BSC for three years.
In her foreword, the author notes: "If you plot their
longest
way
possible, but with
died on August
9,
1982, in
1
M.
1924
Q1
^ A
W. Earl Tubbs
Hospital.
March
Greensburg, Pa. He was
'16
died on
Edgar and Annie Wheeler Tubbs.
Before his retirement, he was a
West Penn Power Company for
member
the
of
First
United
17 in
Westmoreland
the son of the late
division engineer for
He was
38 years.
Church
Methodist
a
of
Greensburg, the senior citizens' group of the church, and
a
life
member of the Greensburg Sportsmen's
Association. He was a veteran of World War I.
He is survived by his wife. Anna Cole Tubbs, three
daughters and eight grandchildren.
that they zig-zagged their
looks as
if
they took the
good reason. Jessie Wiant
remarked, We went where the roads were.' When they
had a choice of roads they tried to choose the best one
The author adds: "I hope you will find it both
always
gives
Remembering
a
my
different
view
grandparents,
I
than foresight.
think they may have
prayed their way across the continent.
Copies of the book are available for $4.75 by mail
by
writing to Mrs. Harvey at Rt. 1, Box 208, Sweet Valley,
Pa.
18656. Copies are (4 at the Wiant Museum in Sweet Valley.
Berwick Lions hosted the event which was a well-kept
secret until master of ceremonies Robert Fawcett rose to
announce the dinner was a roast for the veteran newsman.
Coming from New York were Schuyler's son Eddie, AP
sportswriter, his wife Sadie and daughter Vicki, and
brother Robert Schuyler and wife Natalie of Geveland,
teacher.
"roasters."
She
survived by her husband, B. Monroe Frey; a
daughter, Mrs. Allen (Marjorie) Roth, of Catasauqua;
and a sister, Mrs. Grace McGhee of Milton.
is
Ohio.
Hilarious recollections and
some
not-so-gentle gibes
Featured were Berwick Enterprise editor Ted
Fenstermacher, Judge Jay W. Myers, Millard Ludwig '48,
Frank Colder '31, Arthur Wark '38, Dr. Donald Rabb '46.
Boyd Buckingham '43, Lester Jones, Ed Schuyler Jr. and
Bob Schuyler.
The "roasters" recalled Schuyler's support
1917
sports during his
Nellie (Papciak) Turkiewicz '17 has moved
from
Miami, Florida, to a nursing home at 106 Greenhill Road,
Greenbelt, Maryland 20770. Phone (301 ) 441-9071.
many years
popular "young men's" Bible Class
Methodist Church, his efforts on behalf
and
his activities as a
of
local
as sports editor, his most
;it
the
of the
United
lown park
BSC alumnus.
Rep. Ted Stuban presented a citation to him from the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives listing his many
Mayor Dan Bauman gave Schuyler a
key to Bloomsburg and the Lions awarded him a special
plaque noting his distinguished service to the area over
civic contributions.
1919
Mary
many years.
C. (Blecher)
Barklow
'19
died on January 25. She
in the Danville School
District for two years and in the Passaic-Garfield,
N.J.,
District for 12 years. She was a life-long member
of St.
James United Church of Christ, Ridgeville, and the BSC
was an elementary school teacher
Alumni Association. She was the
last surviving
member of
her immediate family.
1923
'23
High School, and served as principal there
He was a developer and early instructor
Technical School, a position he held until his
tor at Milton
from 1947
SUN
at
to 1964.
retirement in 1973.
He was
a
member
of the First Evangelical
Lutheran
Club of Milton; Cedar Lodge
F & AM, Mount Carmel; Williamsport Consistory; Irem
Temple; Sunbury Shrine and Milton Royal Arch Chapter
Church
"I do my roasting at home."
Ed's address is 236 W. Ridge Ave., Bloomsburg, Pa.
later,
M. Kostenbauder
died on January 17.
He served as the founder and first vocational shop direcMiles
Boyd Buckingham presented the guest of honor a plaque
from his alma mater as a "distinguished alumnus," along
with a letter from BSC President James McCormick.
In a special tribute, Ed Schuyler Jr. spoke of his father
as the "best newspaperman and the best man" he has
ever known.
A telegram from Danny Litwhiler '38, coach and former
professional baseball player, was read.
The last roaster to speak was Florence Schuyler, who
gave her husband an affectionate tribute. She confided
.
climbing Green Horn Mountain that he would never have
done it again, if given the chance. I think that looking back
he regards them as a pretty naive bunch. But hindsight
Commons.
about such things as the guest of honor's exceptional
ability as a ticket salesman were delivered by ten
,
informative and interesting. It should at least help us
appreciate today's traveling facilities. Charles Wiant
repeatedly remarked as he recalled experiences like
Ed Schuyler '24 was honored at a "roast" in
Bloomsburg on March 20.
"It was kind of you people to come. In 20 years, when I
get old, I'll look back on this with pleasant recollections,"
Ed, former editor of The Morning Press, told a large
group of old friends at his testimonial dinner at Scranton
Nina M. (Zehner) Frey '16 died on January 28, 1982.
Born August 28, 1897, Mrs. Frey was the daughter of the
late William and Lillian Fox Zehner. A member of the
Trinity Reformed Church, she was a retired school
the narrative,
in
and Model T Ford,
was provided by the diaries kept by Mrs. Harvey's
grandparents, William and Elnora (Nora ) Wiant, and by
her father, with details and additional information from
the memories of her father and her mother, Jessie Wiant,
map. you will find
way across the continent. It
'15
written by Doris Wiant
subtitled Traveling by Partin-Palmer
route on a
Ruth (Gun ton) Farrell
York, Pennsylvania.
of Mifflinburg; Lions
17815.
Helen E. Barrow '24 was elected to the board of the
Pennsylvania Citizens for Better Libraries during the
organization's recent annual meeting. She will serve a
one-year term.
Miss Barrow has been a member of the board of
directors for the John R. Kauffman Jr. Public Library for
many years. Her address is 117 N. Sixth St., Sunbury, Pa.
17801.
298.
Surviving are his wife, a step-son, two step-grandsons,
three sisters and two brothers.
1913
Anna E.
Keller had
She died at the home of her
in West Hanover Township.
17036.
Vail,
(Cassell) Keller '13 died in March 1983. Mrs.
lived at R.D. 2, Box 1, Hummelstown, Pa.
sister,
Mrs. Hester R.
The widow of Irvin F. Keller, she was a teacher in South
Hanover Twp. and Hummelstown for a number of years.
She was a member of Hummelstown United Church of
Elizabeth (Robinson) Roland '23 died on April 1.
She was a retired teacher from Jersey Shore and
Harrisburg School Districts. She was the widow of Alfred
W. Roland.
She was a
Street
member
of the Hill Civic
Club; the Market
Baptist Church, where she was clerk; and
American Baptist Women's Society, where she was an
officer.
1925
Michael P. Walaconis
BSC he was known
'25 is deceased. While attending
as "Pokey," and was very popular
with the other students. He was active in athletics, Glee
Club and dancing. He was something of a traveler. His
hometown was Ringtown, and he was a graduate
of
Ringtown High School.
(Continued on Page 4)
BSC
offers
'red carpet'
conferences
By Dale Walmer '83
Student Feature Writer
From late May until mid-August, BSC campus
facilities are used to host summer conferences.
John
Abell. assisstant
dean
of
extended programs, has been
summer conference program since 1978.
enrollment at BSC is lowest in the summer and
director of the
Student
residence halls,
campus
recreational facilities, the Kehr
Union Building, and Scranton Commons which are used
sparingly in the summer are opened up to summer conference groups.
The summer conference program is run in accordance with college policy that states: "All campus
facilities at
Bloomsburg State College serve the educaAcademic or service
tional mission of the institution.
units of the college may sponsor conferences, seminars,
workshops, and clinics, on the college campus which
serve the educational or public service missions of
Bloomsburg State College."
All
summer
conferences fall within one of two
college-sponsored groups or of f -campus
organizations. Conference rates are established annually, with college-sponsored groups charged a lower
rate.
College-sponsored groups have included Husky sports
categories
:
camps, professional
of
societies, the
Women, and
Women's Track and
University
tional
American Association
Na-
the Division III A.I.A.W.
Proceeds from non-athletic, college-sponsored and offin the Conference Account of
the College Trust Fund. These funds are used to
replenish conference supplies, improve campus
facilities, and purchase equipment used in hosting con-
campus groups are placed
ference groups.
Off-campus groups holding conferences at BSC last
the Central Pennsylvania United
Methodist Church, the Central Susquehanna Valley
Chess Tournament, Pennsylvania Arabian Horse
Association, and YMCA Aerobics Training Workshops,
to the Pennsylvania Hairdressers and Cosmetologists
summer ranged from
Conference groups vary in size from 50-1,500, and include all age groups. Last summer there were 3,400 conferees who visited BSC, with nearly 4,500 expected in
1983.
BSC cannot compete with the luxuries that
hotels offer to conventioneers, the college does
provide basic lodging and food services, meeting and exAlthough
major
as well as cultural and recreational op-
portunities at inflation-fighting prices. The BSC campus
is within walking distance of the Bloomsburg
business
movie theatres, the municipal park and
swimming pool, restaurants, and the Bloomsburg
Theatre Ensemble. There are also state parks,
historical sites, golf courses, and amusement parks
within easy driving distance of campus.
"At BSC, we offer conference groups red-carpet serdistrict, local
vice at reduced rates," Abell said.
The summer conference management program is a
combined effort of students, faculty and staff, to meet
the needs of conference groups. Many students are
employed as desk receptionists; residence hall
managers; campus shuttle bus drivers, or food service
Edward Nardi and Richard Haupt,
of the
Residence Life staff, assist Abell in coordinating many
aspects of conference management.
"John Abell and his staff have been superb," said Ted
Christiansen, program coordinator of the Pennsylvania
Arabian Horse Association.
"We have held our summer
BSC for the past six years and have not
had any problems or confrontations with the college.
Both students and staff have bent over backwards to
meet our needs."
conference at
Rev. Fisher, coordinator for the Central Pennsylvania
United Methodists, said, "College campuses suit our
needs quite well. The facilities at BSC are modern and
more than adequate. The acoustics and seating capacity
of Haas Auditorium are perfect for our group which is
approximately 1,500. They (BSC) even ran vans on campus to minimize some problems our older people experienced
in
R.D.
1,
won
the
New
Year's Baby Contest at Bloomsburg
Hospital.
Winter sports make
getting around."
BSC proud
When you read
this column, the winter sports season
be history. Once again, we can be proud of the accomplishments of our teams. Competition in the tournaments of the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference
has resulted in second-place finishes for Women's Swimwill
The
ming, Men's Basketball and Wrestling. Competition in
NCAA tournaments began in the middle of March with
our Men's Basketball Team hosting and winning the
Eastern Regional Championship Tournament; with
eleven
women swimmers
A.
qualifing for and traveling to
n Championships in Long Beach, Califorand with three wrestlers competing in the Division
I Tournament in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
What's promising about our successful winter teams is
that they are young and will return next season with
even higher hopes for conference titles. For example,
Coach Eli McLaughlin's young swim team had only one
senior, Captain Phil Spaminato, and finished with a 7-5
dual meet season. With only a few seniors graduating,
Coach Sue Hibbs returns freshman sensation Jean
the Division
Association.
workers.
"75 and his wife, Dee,
had twin reasons to celebrate on New Year's Day: Eric,
left, and Justin, right. The Raskis, who
live at Millville
Field meet.
Profits from Husky sports camps are placed in the
Athletic-Grants-in-Aid Account of the College Trust
Fund to finance scholarships for athletes in those particular sports.
hibit facilities,
NEW YEAR TWINS - Paige Raski
nia
;
D.'s
Millen to help get our women's basketball program on
the winning track. Jean has already broken numerous
school records and is on her way to establishing herself
as one of BSC's finest in women's basketball. Charlie
Chronister,
who was
selected Coach of the Year in the
Pennsylvania State Basketball Conference following his
21-9 record, loses just one senior
point guard Terry
Conrad. The lady swimmers of Coach Mary Gardner
compiled a 9-1 dual meet log and will return all
members of her squad. Todd Qimmings and Joe Wade
are the only seniors lost to graduation on our young
grappling squad.
—
One
of the highlights of this past season was the retiring of four basketball jerseys in honor of Art Luptowski
'73,
'82.
John Willis '74, Jerry Radocha '77, and Jon Bardsley
These former stars, who received Ail-American
many of our basketball records. The
banners displayed in tribute to them in the Nelson
Fieldhouse will serve as a constant reminder of the
thrills they provided us with.
As interested alumni, you may wish to recommend
former athletes whose jerseys ought to be considered for
retirement and/or for possible inclusion into the Husky
Club's Hall of Fame. You may do this by writing a letter
of recommendation to me. We will examine the individual's accomplishments and will retain the person's
recognition, hold
name
on our overall
list
of all-time greats.
I
Corner
Roger Sanders
Sunday, May 1, 1983, at 6:30 p.m. in the Scranton Commons. The Husky Gub will announce their selection for
Coach of the Year as well as any inductees into the
Fame. We also plan to use this event as
our kickoff program for our annual fund-raising campaign for athletic scholarships. If you are interested in
Sports Hall of
attending the banquet, please call Jack Mulka
(717-389-4199) to
make
reservations.
you have any ideas for our sports program, such as
a "Knot Hole Gang" Club, please share it with me. And
if you want to ask specific questions about any aspect of
our overall program or a particular team, please plan to
attend an alumni chapter meeting in your area. We try
to schedule a representative from athletics to attend all
chapter meetings. Moreover, we are looking for fundraising ideas for our athletic scholarship fund. If you
have one, as crazy as it might be, jot it down and send it
If
me.
The important message that I want to leave with you
is to let you know that we care very much about our
alumni who follow our sports program and wish to be involved. Your interest and support help us to be
motivated as we strive for excellence. Let us know your
thoughts or ways that we can be of service to you.
Perhaps we can help you by having one of our coaches
to
This year's Day of Champions Banquet, which honors
our senior athletes as well as our conference champion-
speak to your students or
ship teams and individual state champs,
WE CARE!
is
slated for
to
your club or organization.
Eleanor C. (Sheriden) Kearns "31 died on February 27,
1982. She came from Nanticoke. While a student at
BSC
she was active in volleyball, basketball, baseball, "B"
Club, Fire Official and Library Club. Her last address was
Suite 1266, United Penn
Bank
1936
Matilda M. (Kirticklis) Kasales '36 died on February 15,
Mrs. Kasales was born in Tamaqua, Pa. on June 18,
1912, a daughter of the late Anthony and Eva Bendinski
Kirticklis. She was a member of Ss. Peter and Paul's
Building, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
18701.
1983.
Church and the Women's Club, both
1932
Rev. Oliver H.R. Krapf "32, a former member of the
Alumni Association Board of Directors, died April 14. The
retired Methodist minister was well-known in the
Bloomsburgarea.
He was born in Hopewill Junction, N. Y., and was the son
of the late Rev. Elvin C. and Annie Wieane Krapf. Most of
his life was spent in Lehighton and Bloomsburg. He was a
graduate of Lehighton High School and Drew Seminary in
Madison, N.J. He started as pastor
N.J. followed by the
in 1933 in
Johnsburg,
Muncy
Valley charge, Conyngham
charge, the Calvery of Berwick, the Selinsgrove charge,
(Continued from Page 2)
the Llyswen Church of Altoona, the First Church of
Hohdaysburg, Emporium, and the Trinity of Clearfield.
Retiring in 1972, he served as a minister of visitation at the
Wesley United Methodist Church in Bloomsburg.
He was a member of the Bloomsburg Rotary, the Torch
Gub, the Historical Society, the Golden Age Club, and the
1928
Pauline E. (Bell) Walker "28 died in September
1981,
While attending BSC she was a member of the
Tau Phi Ep^
siJon Sorority and an associate member
of the Dramatic
Club. Known as "Penny." she excelled
in basketball,
hockey and tennis. She showed a real fondness
for bright
was happy-go-lucky and alwavs ready for a good
time.
Kathryn Zurlinden '28 died on April 6. 1981. Known
as
was an all-round athlete while attending
BSC. She took an active part in basketball, volleyball, tennis and hockey. She was a member of the Girls"
Glee Club
and Mu Phi Sorority.
Conference of the United Methodist Chruch.
He is survived by his wife the former Vera Kadel; one
son, Rev. Byron K. Krapf, of Shippensburg;
two
daughters. Mrs. Paul (Sylvia) Shearer of Greensburg.
Mrs. Robin (Joy) Clark of Lexington. Ohio; one brother,
Charles E. Krapf, of Livonia. Michigan; and five
1929
grandchildren.
"Kitty." she
Her
address was 103 Colonial Drive,
Island, Ga. 31522.
last
St.
Simons
1931
Tamaqua. Her hus-
grandchildren.
1937
John R. "Jack" Gering '37 died on January 17. He had
undergone by-pass surgery in November.
He was a World War II veteran, was employed as a real
estate broker and was a member of the Good Shepherd
Lutheran Church of Berwick. A certified life underwriter,
he received certification in 1948. He was also a certified
appraiser.
Surviving are his wife, two sons and three granddaughters.
American Association of Retired Persons. He was active
in the United Way and worked for the Red Cross
and was
on the Home Health Services board. He was a member of
the Masonic Blue Lodge, Lafayette, Selingsgrove, the
Caldwell Consistory of Bloomsburg and the Jaffa Shrine
in Altoona. He was a member of the Central Pennsylvania
colors,
Thelma A. (Hartzel) Bums '29 is deceased. She
graduated from Coal Township High School and her
hometown was Excelsior. Pa. While a student at BSC her
hobby was collecting antiques, particularly umbrellas.
of
band, John, died in 1979.
Surviving are a son, Commander Joseph A., Woodbridge, Va., who is serving with the Navy, and three
1934
Ronald Franklin Keeler
'34
died on April 3 after a short
illness.
He was a teacher, librarian, minister and free-lance
writer and had lived in Grand Junction, Colorado, for the
past five years. He was the author of 16 books, numerous
articles and short stories.
He was born Jan. 29, 1913, and spent his childhood in
He was a graduate of Bloomsburg High School.
He later earned a bachelor of arts degree from Minnesota
Benton.
Nicia M. Chiavacci '31 died on December
22,
"Nish," as she was known, came from Hughestown.
BSC she was
at
active
in
athletics,
1982.
While
Girls' Chorus
Y.W.C.A., and Lantern Club.
Catherine R. Ingram
Miss Ingram came
'31
died on December 14, 1982.
from Nanticoke. Known as Kay when
she was a student at BSC, she was active
in volleyball
basketball, baseball and Y.W.C.A. Her last
address was
205-2D Main Blvd., Boynton Beach, Fla. 33435.
Bible College and a master's degree from the University
He was on the faculty at Minnesota Bible College
Minneapolis for 25 years. During that time he also spent
years as minister of the Nevis Church of Christ.
He moved
Adolf M. Zalonis
in
16
where he was an English
teacher and librarian at Strathmore High School for 15
years. He was a teacher and librarian at Intermountain
to California in 1963
Bible College in
Published four times a year
by
your
Alumni
Bloomsburg
Association at
State Colle2ge.
Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
At your service:
Doug Hippenstiel
Grand Junction at the time of his death.
avid book collector and tennis player. He was
Long
Alumni Records Clerk
Peggy Trathen
Bookkeeper
Eric
J.
Strom
Writer (Green
Thumb Program)
Dwayne Heisler
Linda Kammerdiener
Lou Maslowe
Scott Righter
Stephanie Stewart
Jeff Smith
Student Staff
March
21 in the
Bloomsburg
Born in Edwardsville, Luzerne County, Dec. 13, 1912, he
resided in Bloomsburg 36 years. He was a son of Martin
and Antonia Skunda Zalonis.
He was employed as guidance counselor at the Central
Columbia School District, retiring in 1978 after serving 23
Writers Group and recently received the Distinguished
Alumnus Award from Minnesota Bible College.
Surviving are his wife, Donna, of Grand Junction; two
a member of St. Columba Catholic Church, a
War II Army veteran, and retired in 1972 as a captain in the Army Reserve. He was a member
of American
Legion Post 273, Bloomsburg, and charter member of
the
sons, Guy, Swanger, Calif.; and Robert, Cliffton,
Colo.;
years.
He was
World
Bloomsburg Tennis Club.
two daughters, Rachel York, Downey, Calif., and Malana
Johansen, Los Angeles, Calif.; a sister, Lucy
Ennis,
He received his master's degree in education from
BuckneU University in 1948. Awarded a guidance cer-
Norwood; and nine grandchildren.
tification in 1953,
1935
Alumni Office Secretary
Linda
died on
He taught mathematics, English and history and
had a 31-year teaching career.
member of the Clifton Christian Church where he served
as an elder. He was a member of the Western Rockies
'68
Director of Alumni Affairs
Elizabeth H. LeVan
'38
Hospital.
a
He was an
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1938
of Minnesota.
he received his fellowship
in
guidance
from Syracuse University in 1961.
His wife, the former Freda Steinruck, to
whom he was
married for 42 years, died June 13, 1982.
Surviving are two daughters, Sharon
A. Zalonis,
Bloomsburg; and Mrs. Edward (Elaine)
Wuenschel
Melno Park, Calif.; four sons, Martin R., Erie;
'
Albert A. Hayes '35 of Colton, California,
died at Harrisburg Hospital on December 26, 1982.
Born in Altoona on Nov. 18, 1913, he was a
son of the late
Rev. Merrill Ake and Edna Mae
McClintock.
Following
their deaths, he was adopted
by Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Hayes, of Cornfield Farms, Berwick. He
was married to
the former Letha Culp Luta for
30 years.
He was an airplane mechanic, retiring from
Norton Air
Force Base, San Bernadino, Calif, in
September 1981. He
served in the Air Force as a sergeant in
World War II in
the Pacific Theater.
Surviving, in addition to his wife,
are one daughter
Mrs. Harry (Joy) Bowers, Etters;
sisters, Mrs. John'
(Florence) Wall, Tucson, Ariz.;
Mrs. Richard (Mary
Alice) Fye Pennsylvania Furnace;
and Katheryn
Sunbury; brother, Thomas Hayes. Berwick
R.D.
three grandchildren.
Baum
3-
and
Robert N
Berwick; Mark W., Scottdale; and Michael
G., Plainfield
N.J.; and five grandchildren; six
sisters, Monica Hankey
Amelia Yudichak, Stella Cook, Ruth Siley.
and Lucy Areares.
all
of
Wilkes-Barre;
and Florence Kornacki,
Michigan.
Dorothy E. (Sidler) Kreinheder '38
died on April 3
Born in Danville. Pa., she was the
daughter of the late
William and Minnie Roberts
Sidler. She taught at the
DeLong School in Washingtonville in 1941-42.
She lived and
worked in Middletown. Camden, N.J.,
and Washington,
D C., before moving to Las Vegas 10 years
ago. Survivors
mc ude hree brothers, William, Frank,
and Edward
Sidler, all of Danville.
Her last address was 204
Greenbriar Townhouse. Las
Vegas, Nevada 89121.
(Continued on Page 6)
Hundreds of
alumni gather
in chapters
Several hundred alumni and their guests have
attended chapter meetings thus far in 1983 in
various
locations in Pennsylvania and other states.
The get-togethers have been held in Dallas
Houston, Texas;
Wyoming
and
Valley (Dallas); Schuylkill
County (Pottsville); Lower Luzerne County
(Hazleton);
Boca Raton, Orlando and St. Petersburg, Florida;
Lycoming County (Williamsport); Johnstown, Pittsburgh, Indiana and Clearfield; Philadelphia;
and
Lackawanna-Wayne-Susquehanna counties (Scranton).
Additional meetings have been planned for the
following locations and reports will be included
in the
next issue of THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY:
APRIL
21
-
Snyder, Union and Northumberland
counties, Chadwick's,
APRIL 23 APRIL 23 APRIL 26 —
Northumberland R.D. 3.
York, luncheon at Lincoln Woods Inn.
Lancaster, dinner at Olde Greenfield Inn.
Baltimore, Md., dinner at Peerce's
Plantation.
APRIL
27
—
Berks County, dinner
at
Reading Motor
Inn.
MAY 5 —
Lehigh-Northampton counties, dinner at El
Cetro Holiday Inn, Bethlehem.
MAY 7 — Lebanon County, dinner at Quality Inn,
Lebanon.
MAY
—
Wilmington, Delaware, meeting at
Little's office, 2132 North Market Street.
MAY 17 — Bucks, Chester, Delaware, Montgomery
and Philadelphia counties, dinner at the Casa Maria
Mexican Restaurant, King of Prussia.
MAY 19 - Harrisburg, dinner at the Holiday Inn,
Second and Chestnut Streets.
12
Tom
Attorney
MAY
24
— New
Jersey, dinner at
The Willows
in
Dunellen.
JUNE 11 - Philadelphia, luncheon at the Lakeside
Inn in Spring City.
JULY
9
—
Philadelphia, picnic at the cottage of
Hacks Point, Maryland.
Orville Palsgrove in
Details about the various meetings have been mailed
or will be mailed to alumni in the specific areas covered
by the chapter meetings. For additional information,
contact the Alumni Office.
San Diego
BSC's dean of student development,
Dr. John S. Mulka "66 and his wife, Kathy '68, along with
Roger B. Sanders, director of athletics and head
wrestling coach, and his wife, Nancy, co-hosted an
alumni chapter meeting and reunion at the Hanalei
Hotel in San Diego. Ten of the 32 alumni known to be
living in the San Diego area attended the get-together.
The evening's festivities began with a social hour
during which the alums became acquainted, and
information about BSC's transition to university status
was shared. Following a superb meal in the hotel's
Polynesian restaurant, the group returned to the
Mulkas' room for more reminiscing. Questions about
On January
10,
favorite profs, Berrigan's hoagies,
new
curricular
programs, athletics and future plans were asked.
Dr. Karleen Hoffman '30 turned out to be the central
figure in the group. First to arrive
leave, Dr.
and among ths last to
Hoffman entertained the younger alumni with
stories about the rules
and regulations that governed a
on the campus during her vintage.
After completing her distinguished teaching career,
Dr. Hoffman chose San Diego and its nearly perfect
climate as her retirement home. And it was during her
retirement that she earned her doctor's degree from La
student's
life
Jolla University in 1980.
Traveling the greatest distance to attend the alumni
gathering was Frank Lorah '74, who resides in North
Hollywood. Prior to serving in his present capacity as
Associated Students business manager at California
State University, Northridge, Frank was employed at
his alma mater in a similar position.
Graduates of our highly-touted program in special
education-Kim Jamison Ibarra '77, Joseph R. Nigro
'79, Cecelia Greenaway Davis '68, and Cherie E. Vaughn
'68— all spoke proudly of their undergraduate preparation and singled out their successes to such faculty
as Dr. Andrew Karpinski, Dr. Mary Barrall Hill and Dr.
William Jones.
SAN DIEGO GET-TOGETHER
-
Alumni
in
Southern
California had a good time when they got together at San
D J an uary - Sh0WD ta P hoto are (kneeling, from
T
I??V.
I
Frank Lorah
1
left)
Sandie Schuyler
74,
'77,
Jack Mulka
'66,
Joe Nigro
'79,
Linda Redding 79, Sheree A.
Pegg 79 and Connie Ancernvage 78, graduates
of our
School of Business, journeyed to Southern California
to
find promising careers in their respective fields. Like
their counterparts in special education, all gave Apluses to the educational preparation they received at
Connie Anceravage "78, Lynda Redding 79, (standing
from left) Sandee Schuyler '77, Kathy Mulka '68 Cei
Davis '68, Karleen Hoffman '30, Cherie Vaughn '68
Sheree Pegg 79, Roger Sanders, Kim Jamison Ibarra 77
Thomas Philip Grow '47, Lovell Lindenmuth Kahley
JoAnn Mays Zogby '63, Mary Catherine Brill '82,
and James R. Babcock '52.
'82,
'56,
Hazleton
Alumni of lower Luzerne County met on March
10 at
Carmen's Restaurant in Hazleton.
A wide range of years was represented by the alumni
BSC.
The alums said good night to each other by
in attendance: Irene Boughner Mock '13,
G. Bertelle
reconvening in the hotel's pub and sipping Bailey's Irish
Laubach Lamont '14, Dan Bavolack 18, Arthur Francis
Cream. In short, a good time was had by everyone.
McLaughlin '28, Marian Hoegg Carter '29, Judith
The Mulkas and Sanders were in San Diego to attend
Charles Brutosky 74, Rosemarie Garramone '80
and
the Annual Convention of the National Collegiate
Arthur Francis McLaughlin '28.
Athletic Association
(NCAA).
Dallas, Texas
A small group of alumni met on Friday evening,
February 25, at the home of Matt Connell "77 and Evelyn
Baxevane '77 in Dallas. Also attending were Brenda
Cunningham Estradaberg '61 and her husband, Carmela
Tarole Gotthardt '50, and John and Karin Scott Furniss
78 and '80.
Houston, Texas
A large group of young, enthusiastic alumni showed
up for the informal get-together at the home of Rick and
Theresa Maniscalco in Houston on February 26.
Crowding into Rick and Theresa's new home for
reminiscing and refreshments were the following:
Jack Touey '80, Jean Lawless '81, Greg Malloch '81,
Terri Sotak '81, Stephen Squires, Angie Taormina '80.
Ed Ehret '81. Robert Speziletti '81, Darryl Kuhl, Karen
Ostanek '82, Keith Walz '81, Jim Brecker '80, Linda
Wright '81, Dave Shand '81, Novellou Smith '80, Charlie
DiDonato 79, Jessica Spangler '81, Cindy DiDonato 79,
Debbie and Bob Neiderer '81, Craig Hill '82, Joyce
Kienzle '81, Cathy Squires 79, Doug Taylor '82, Karen
Webb '81, Sharon Salvo '81, Pam Pirano, Joe Ozmina
'82, J. D. Downey '80, Randy Johnson, Sam Rubbico '82.
Wyoming Valley
This year's meeting of Wyoming Valley alumni
was
held on March 3 at the new Magee Publick
House in
Dallas.
Among
the alumni in attendance
were Alda Hunter
Linda Baker Wasley 70, Sue Osborn Keller
'57, Ruth Kester Novy '45, Kathryn
Keener Dildine '43,
Suzanne Elyse Cromack 77, Joan VanDurick Jordan '67,
Richard
'46,
Mabel Albertson Linskill '28, Coralie Hughes Thompson
'57, Karen T. Chawaga '82,
Marion E. Young '29, Jay T.
Jones 77, Richard F. Laux '52, Mary Agnes Phillips
Kratz 77, Joe A. Ellsworth '42, Tom M. Cesarini '68,
Freda Snyder Hughey '18, and Jane L. Cornell 74.
Representing the college were Dr. John S. Mulka '66,
dean of student development; Kathy Matzko Mulka
68,
alumni chapters coordinator; and Doug Hippenstiel '68,
director of alumni affairs.
Pottsville
Attending this year's meeting of Schuylkill County
alumni at the Dusselfink Restaurant near Pottsville
were the following alumni:
David Wayne Bowen '68, Esther Whalen Farrell '35,
Marlene Ruth Watson 78, Mary Margaret Yasenchak
Representing the college were John Trathen '68,
director of student activities and treasurer of the
Alumni Association; Lou Maranzana, assistant football
coach; and Doug Hippenstiel, director of alumni
affairs.
Boca Raton, Florida
the east coast of Florida gathered for a
Patrick's Day at the Boca Del Mar
BSC alumni on
luncheon on St.
Country Club. F. A. "Red" Garrity '28 once again
helped greatly by making the local arrangements.
Alumni
attendance were Jeanette Campbell '37,
Elmer McKechnie '35, Gladys Kleckner
Isabel Hester '29, Stuart Marvin 78, Diane Pletcher
Marvin 79, Don Watts '37, Arthur Knerr '34. Laurie
Johnson Gaylord 79, and James H. Williams '28. A
number of spouses and/or friends also attended.
in
Charlotte and
'25,
Doug
Hippenstiel, director of alumni affairs,
represented the college.
Orlando, Florida
The White Marlin Restaurant at Longwood, near
Orlando, was the location for the annual chapter
meeting of BSC alumni living in the northern centeral
section of Florida, including St. Augustine
on
March
and Daytona,
19.
Attending the get-together were Jean Plowright '34
'36, John H. Yeager '36, Lawrence
Evangelista '34,
and
Philip
Traupane
'39,
Patricia
Szymanek Mica
'67,
Robert E. Miller '52, Robert L. Naugle '65, Mary Ann
Levine 72, Philip Martin Levine 72. Donald R. Kleckner
'64,
Martha Schiefer
Martha Skerda Carpenter 70,
and Richard L. Marella 78.
Hippenstiel, director of alumni affairs,
Albina Zadra Davis
Doug
'12.
'31
represented the college.
St.
Petersburg, Florida
Alumni on Florida's west coast met for a luncheon at
the Bradford Coach House Restaurant in St. Petersburg
on Saturday,
Alumni
March
19.
attendance were Thelma Brandon Bittner
'28, Roy C. Smay '69, Alberta M. Green '29,
Erma G.
Shearer '29, Clarence L. Hunsicker '32, Keith L. Weiser
'56, Jennis T. Ogden '39, Irene Kornell Davis '28,
Ida
Wallace Acore '29, Mabel Gordon Goodyear '36, Lena
Rachel Oman '24, Marion Wallace States '43, Marjone
K. Perotti '28, Frances Demnicki Johnson '69, and Cyril
in
A. Lindquist, retired faculty
member
(1975).
(Continued on Page 7)
Elementary School, and served as head teacher at that
He later served as head teacher at
1945
school for nine years.
the Carl G.
(Continued from Page 4)
years.
Martha
M. Audree (Reed) Robins '38 died on October 26, 1982.
Mrs. Robins came from Mansfield, Pa. She was active in
the Sewing Club, Geography Club, Dramatic Gub and
1939
who survives.
TtrzaJh Eleanor (Coppes) Pes to '39 and Minor Amos
Leighow were married on January 8 in Bethany United
Methodist Church in Milton, Pa. The bride is a retired
teacher of the Milton Area School District. Her husband is
president of Leighow Oil Co., Inc. The newlyweds plan a
wedding trip to Vienna, Austria, at a later date.
A retired school teacher, Mrs. Kantrowitz was
graduated from Lewisburg High School in 1941. She taught
for two years in Fort Washington School District, Ambler,
and returned to the Lewisburg area to teach in the Forest
Hill School, Mifflinburg School District, and then in the
Lewisburg School District, teaching in the Linntown
Elementary School and Kelly Township Elementary
School. She retired 13 years ago.
Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs.
Karen Sadowski, Clarks Summit, and Carol Kantrowitz,
State College; one grandson; a sister, Mrs. Mary
Chappell, Washington, D.C., and a brother, Charles W
Duck, Westwood, N.J.
1942
Ida jane (Snipe) Madl '42 died on December 29, 1982. Dr.
Madl was very active in college affairs when a student.
Her activities included: Maroon and Gold Band, Maroon
and Gold Orchestra, College Council, Language Club,
Upsilon, Day Women's Association, Kappa
Women's Chorus, Representative to InterfraterCouncil, Co-Chairman of Freshman Customs,
-g
Delta Pi,
*\ a *j
Izf^WM
m^^^^m
OBITER Staff. She lived at 1100 Arizona Avenue, Ft.
Lauderdale, Fla. 33312, and attended alumni chapter
meetings in Boca Raton.
Renn
School,
Mr. Diltz was a member of Bethany United Methodist
Church, HughesvUle, its administrative board, and a
member and former teacher of the progressive Sunday
School class. He was an Army veteran of World War II,
the recipient of the Purple Heart for wounds received in
Luxemburg, and was a charter member of the Local
Chapter of Purple Heart recipients, and a member of the
Disabled American Veterans.
Mr. Diltz was a member and past master of Muncy
Lodge No. 299 F&AM, Williamsport Consistory, Irem
Temple Shrine, Wilkes-Barre, and the Williamsport and
Sunbury Shrine Clubs, and a member of Warrior Run
Chapter No. 246, and Baldwin II Command. He and his
wife, the former Ruth E. Peterman observed their 26th
wedding anniversary on September 8; also surviving is a
half sister,
Maude McHenry,
Westfield Center, Ohio.
1951
i^m^m
Gamma Theta
Lairdsville for five
sixth grade teacher at the
and was a member of the East Lycoming, Pennsylvania and National Education Associations, and the
Alpha Omicron fraternity.
died on April 5 in
'45
Evangelical Community Hospital, Lewisburg. She had
been in failing health the past six months and was
hospitalized on numerous occasions.
Mrs. Kantrowitz was born Oct. 29, 1923, in East Buffalo
Township, Union County, the daughter of the late D. Oscar
and Blanche Brunner Duck.
She was married May 18, 1946, to Seymour Kantrowitz,
Gamma Theta Upsilon while a student at BSC.
nity
(Duck) Kantrowitz
J.
Renn Elementary School at
He was currently a
i
George D. Donachy '51 is retiring at the end of the
school year as an elementary principal in the Shikellamy
School District.
His retirement has been approved by the school board.
Donachy has taught and administered educational
programs in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and West
Virginia, and has spent 25 years in the educational field in
the Sunbury-Northumberland area.
1943
He graduated from Northumberland High School and
earned his master's degree at Bucknell.
He has coached various sports, principally football and
Dr. Lee R. Beaumont '43, professor of business emeritus
at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, was recently
cited
by the International Information/Word Processing
Association for his outstanding contribution to the field of
information processing
Dr. Beaumont was presented a
certificate
Donachy began his career as principal of the Joseph
Priestley School in Point Township. He was in the Army
Air Corps during World War II, then took a position as
achievement by the Philadelphia chapter of IWP, naming
coach and teacher
basketball.
of
ham as a member of the IWP Honor Society.
He is co-author of a number of textbooks in the field of
business education, and is self-employed as a
business
He returned
education consultant in the Philadelphia area.
Dr. Beaumont's address is 933 Putnam Boulevard
Wallingford, Pa. 19086.
Marion (Wallace) States
'43 lives at 760 50th
Avenue
Robert Bunge
'47
Robert L. Bunge
retire effective as of
N.,
Petersburg, Fla. 33703. She maintains homes in
Jasper, Fla., and Franklin, N.C., as well as
St.
Bunge
to the
St.
Petersburg. She says her door is always open to BSC
alumni. She spent 28 days in China in 1981 during her
'47,
associate registrar at BSC, will
August
19, 1983.
joined the faculty in
dean
of instruction
September
1964 as assistant
and several years
later
was ap-
pointed registrar.
Over the years at BSC, Bunge served as a member of
the Representative Assembly, College Calendar Committee,
College-wide
Promotion Committee, and the
Academic Review Board. Before coming to Bloomsburg,
he was a guidance counselor at Milton Senior high school
travels around the world.
Marion reports she visited with
(Betty (Singley) Trexler '43 some time ago. Betty's
address is Star Route, Coeur D'Alene, Idaho 83814.
for four years,
was associated with
seven years, and taught science
U.S.
Radium
in the
in the
Trevorton School District.
Northumberland in 1948 as elementary
supervisor and coach and in 1957 accepted a position as
superintendent of schools in Mount Laurel, N.J. He later
was an assistant professor and director of elementary
student teaching at Wesleyan College, W. Va.
He was director pf education at the Selinsgrove Center
to
for a year, then
administrator.
returned
to
New
Jersey
an
as
became an elementary supervisor in the
Shikellamy district and has served as principal at the
Oaklyn, Beck, Rohrbach and Maclay schools.
In 1969, he
Donachy has three children and two step-children. He is
to the former Myrna Dry of Shamokin
Donachy was instrumental in forming the
Northumberland Little League in 1947 and at one time
married
Corp. for
directed
Catawissa High
address
is
Northumberland's recreation
R.D. 2, Sunbury. Pa. 17801
program.
His
School for four years.
12
Bunge and his wife, Dorothy, a registered nurse, live
W. Park Street, Carroll Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
at
Thurston S. Fulmer '53 is planning to retire at the end of
the school year as an administrator with the
Shikellamy
School District.
1948
John F. Guy '48 died on October 24, 1982. Death was
due
an aneurysm of the aorta. He had retired from teaching
in Newark, Del. in June 1982. His widow,
June (Hontz)
Guy '49 survives. Her address is 301 Country Club Drive,
Fairfield, Newark, Delaware 19711.
to
(Classes of 1942,
'43, '44,
and
4
'45)
February, notices were mailed to all graduates
of
these four classes announcing plans
for a joint reunion. If
you have not returned the form attached
to the notice
please do so in order to assist the
committee in finalizing
plans. If you did not receive a notice,
please contact
In
•
Elwood M. Wagner
1
A4A
7^7
'43
( 814-237-3612)
also wish to extend invitations to
former members of
Uiese classes to attend the
reunion. If any graduates of
these classes are in contact
with former classmates
please provide names and
addresses
Wagner.
to
Elwood
M.'
Fulmer, a native of Berwick, earned a master's degree
Bucknell
University,
Lewisburg, and his
administrator's certificate at The Pennsylvania
State
University.
He began teaching at the Joseph Priestley School in
Point Township. In 1953-54, he was an elementary
teacher
in the Pine Street School in Selinsgrove.
He returned
Northumberland as teacher and principal
Robert O. Diltz
unit of the
March
'49
Muncy
died on
March
15 in the intensive care
Valley Hospital.
14 after suffering
He was admitted on
an apparent heart attack at his
In 1952, he received his master's degree
We
at
in
to
the Charles
Steele School.
home. Born in Benton, July 15, 1925, he was the
son of the
late Otto and Lena Klinger Diltz. Mr.
Diltz was a graduate
of Benton High School. He received
his teaching certification from the former Kutztown State
Teacher's College.
572 Brittany Drive
State College, Pa. 16801
1953
University,
New York
City.
In
from Columbia
1949-50 he taught high
school in the Mifflinburg school district; 1953-55,
the fifth
grade in Palerm, Alaska; 1956-65 he taught
7th and 8th
grades at the Carson Long Military Institute
at New
Bloomfield. He also served as building
officer for the
junior high boys.
In 1965 he
came
to the
HughesvUle and taught
East Lycoming school district at
fifth grade at the former Wolf
From 1967 to 1970 he was principal of the Dr. C. W. Rice
Middle School, Northumberland.
In 1971,
Fulmer was elected assistant superintendent
He and his wife, Flora, are the parents of two
The Fulmers
live at
R.D.
2,
children
Box 490A. Northumberland
Pa. 17857.
1956
Dr. Larry Roy Fiber '56 has co-authored
a college textbook entitled "Applied Business Law."
Published by
Reston Publishing Company, the book is
copyrighted 1983
He is a professor of business education
at Shippensburg
State College.
(Continued on Page 8)
New
interdisciplinary
BSC
journal starts at
Carver, an interdisciplinary journal, has been
established at Bloomsburg State College, and
the
inaugural issue will be published later this spring.
About
four thousand alumni will be sent complimentary
scholarship and other interests of the faculty, alumni,
and others connected with Bloomsburg State College.
The inaugural issue opens with a memoir by the late
H. Keffer Hartline. a 1920 alumnus and Nobel Prize
Laureate. Another alumnus, Jerome T. Ailman of
the
class of 1871, is represented by an item from the
college
archives that describes a New Mexico stagecoach
journey he took in 1880. Also featured is a two-part
article by Cecil C. Seronsy, first chairman of
the BSC
Department of English, who died in 1981; this
copies.
Supported by funds from the Alumni Association and
the Office of the Vice President for
Academic Affairs,
Carver
will
publish articles, fiction, poetry, and art by
community, including faculty,
alumni, and distinguished guests.
The journal had its origin in informal discussions
members
of the college
among faculty which led to President McCormick's
appointment of an editorial board last spring. The
fourteen-member board includes faculty from eleven
departments and Douglas C. Hippenstiel of the Alumni
Association. The editor is Gerald H. Strauss of
the
Department of English.
Other board members are: Donald Baird, chemistry;
Barbara E. Behr, business administration; Richard
Brook, philosophy; Steven L. Cohen, psychology;
James
B. Creasy, business administration; Judith
P. Downing,
biology; John A.
Enman, geography and
earth science;
Paul G. Hartung, mathematics; Kenneth P. Hunt,
special education;
James
T. Lorelli,
earth science; Percival R. Roberts,
geography and
III, art; and George
A. Turner, history.
A primary purpose of Can or is to provide an
means of strengthening the ties between
manuscript was provided by his widow, former
psychology professor Louise B. Seronsy.
Art by three members of the BSC Department of Art
— Karl Beamer, Barbara J. Strohman, and Kenneth T.
Wilson — also is featured; and there is both fiction and
poetry by a participant in the 1982 Elderhostel program
at the college. Kath Walker, an Australian
Aboriginal
who was resident on campus in 1978, has contributed an article describing the present conditions of
her people.
poet
There also is an article that presents the rationale for
the relevance of animal research in psychology by
Alex
Poplawsky of the Department of Psychology; a piece on
naming of America by William M. Baillie of the
Department of English; and a study of the Principia
Mathematica by Patrick D. Wotus of the Department of
the
Mathematics.
additional
alumni and the campus. Another aim
is
to
showcase
Alumni are
invited to
submit manuscripts and article
ideas for the next issue of
Carter
to the editor.
New honorary degree program
Bloomsburg State College has established a new
honorary degree program to recognize outstanding
achievements and contributions.
An honorary degree is an academic award which
reflects the college's mission in the areas of
intellectual
and the arts, or public service. The
pursuit, culture
policy states that such degrees should be awarded
only
to those men and women whose lives
and works
exemplify the concepts of excellence, service and
integrity.
Those who are awarded honorary degrees vill have
made noteworthy contributions to Bloomsburg State
College, to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, or to
society in general. They will have made achievements
or been scholars in the arts and humanities,
science and
-Alumni clubs
(Continued from Page
5)
A
small group of Lycoming County alumni met on
24 at the Hillside Restaurant near Montoursville.
Attending were Debra Kay Lowe '78, Lee Ann Stump
March
Thomas C. Blass '72, Mary F. Fawcett Fry '57,
Wayne Richard Palmer '78, Alice Pennington Blair '29,
Andrew B. Lawson '23, Letha Hummel Kinley '39 and
Patricia L. Damaska '82.
Among the guests were Mrs. Fry's son, Steve, who
'77,
be a student at Bloomsburg next fall.
Representing the college were John L. Walker,
executive director for institutional advancement;
will
Kenneth Schnure '69, registrar; and Doug Hippenstiel
'68, director of alumni affairs.
Western Pennsylvania
Dr. James H. McCormick, president of the College,
and John L. Walker, executive director for institutional
advancement, met with alumni in four western
Pennsylvania locations on April 7 through April 9.
JOHNSTOWN - Attending a luncheon meeting in
Johnstown on Friday, April 8, were Carol Gesalman '68,
Darla S. Studt '74 and George A. Mathews '27 and '29.
John Walker happened to have a 1927 Obiter along
with him, and it turned out that George Mathews had
been editor of the Obiter that year.
-
These are the honorary degrees BSC
will grant:
Doctor of Law (L.L.D.), Doctor of Science (Sc.D.
>,
Doctor of Letters (Litt.D.), Doctor of Pedagogy (Pd.D),
Doctor of Commercial Science (D.C.Sc), Doctor of Fine
Arts (D.F.A.
and Doctor of Humane Letters (L.H.D.)
Except in extraordinary cases, honorary
degrees will
not be awarded to active members of
the Board of
.)
Trustees, administrators or faculty of the
college. At
least one year must elapse following
association with
the college before former trustees,
acirriinistrators or
faculty may be considered for an honorary
doctorate.
No more than three honorary degrees will be
awarded
during one academic year.
Elizabeth H. LeVan,
known by her
hug from Tony the Baker
on her last day on the job in the Alumni
Office. Betty
retired this month after 19 years of service
at Bloomsburg
State College, most of it as secretary of
the Alumni
Association. Betty kept the Alumni Office
operating
smoothly in the years before a full-time director of alumni
affairs
technology, the social sciences, education, the
health
profession, commerce, trade or industry.
-
friends as Betty, gets a good-bye
WAS
was hired
Alumni
the
in 1974.
Office,
During those early years, Betty
and much of the success of the
Alumni Association today is based on the
dedicated
groundwork which Betty completed. Betty's friends,
family, co-workers and members of the Alumni
Board of
Directors attended a retirement dinner in her honor
at
Hotel Magee on Saturday, March 26. Betty is
looking
forward to spending more time with her husband, Ray,
and her family, and doing all those things she has been
too
busy
to do. All of us
wish Betty a happy and healthy
retirement.
'Goodbye, Betty*
gather.
Williamsport
PITTSBURGH
BAKER'S HUG
Meeting for dinner that evening in
Monroeville, near Pittsburgh, were David D. Steiner '67,
Melanie Gill Smith '79, Richard L. and Eileen Gulnac
Hartman '68, and Irving T. Gottlieb '43. Also attending
were three spouses.
—
INDIANA
A luncheon was held in Indiana, Pa., the
next day with the following alumni in attendance: Dr. C.
Hess '32, Lucy Rood Stitt '27, Robert P. Martin '47,
Beth Thomas '82, Tom Mulhern '77, Kathy Anderson
C.
Mulhern
and Carl Reed '81.
The final stop on the western swing
was at Clearfield on Saturday evening. Attending the
dinner meeting were Margaret M. Hendrickson Krouse
'32, William Charles Williams Jr. '80,
Dennis N. Reedy
'66, Karen Taylor Kochkodin '73 and Jeanne
Peoples
Marsh '78.
Lackawanna
Alumni from Lackawanna, Wayne and Susquehanna
'78
CLEARFIELD —
met on Thursday, April 14, at Nichols Village
Motor Inn. Among those in attendance was Pauline
McLean Gibson '22, who was accompanied by three of
her ten children and a daughter-in-law. All six
daughters attended Marywood College and are teachers,
while all four sons are employed in law enforcement.
Other alumni in attendance were G. Thomas Hughes
'76, Margaret Thomas Beidleman '29, Frederick
Garvey
'70, Linda Grow Miller '64, Brenda N. Williams '68,
Louise LaSorsa Krafjack '55, Maurice Victor Bochicchio
'73, Patricia Bederman Miller "75, John
T. Foster '66,
Jean Zenke Foster '66, Lillian Nelson Yerkes '21 (sister
of Dr. E. H. Nelson, former faculty member and past
president of the BSC Alumni Association), Angeline
Evans Beavers '21, Jay E. Long '59, Anna Nancy
Zorskas '28 & '49, Atilla Schoen Lewis '28, Laura
Anderson Davis '25, William Richard Tierney '73, Jack
F. Gerrity '66 and Betsy Young Gerrity '68.
counties
—
LAST-MINUTE POINTERS
On her last day as
secretary in the Alumni Office, Betty LeVan tries to
summarize 19 years of experience with her successor, Peg
Trathen. The latter has worked part-time for the Alumni
Association for over three years, chiefly as bookkeeper.
will continue to serve as bookkeeper, along with her
She
new duties. Peg is married to John Trathen
'68,
director of
student activities and the Kehr Union at BSC and
treasurer of the Alumni Association. The Trathens and
their
two sons
live in Catawissa.
Roalie F. Davis '66 died on March 27 at the Geisinger
Medical Center in Danville.
(Continued from Page 6)
Born
Queens, N.Y., she was a daughter of the late
Julia Rosenberg Friedman and she lived in
the Berwick area for 30 years. She was a member
of
Temple Israel Synagogue, Wilkes-Barre, and Ohev
Shalom Synagogue of Berwick. She was past president of
Ohev Shalom Sisterhood, and was presently president of
the Columbia County Chapter of Hadassah.
in
Herman and
1959
Doane W. Hunter "59 has been appointed as the regional
advocate for the U.S. Small Business Administration in
the eight Southeastern States which includes Alabama,
Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North and South
Carolina, Florida and Tennessee. As regional advocate,
Duane will maintain contact with local businesses,
regional business groups,
SBA
A
teacher in the Berwick school system, she taught for
years at the Salem Elementary School and the Ferris
Heights building. She was on the board of directors of
CSIU, Lewisburg. She received her master's degree from
14
District Offices, as well as
BSC and also attended Brooklyn College.
and local governments to determine their needs.
announcing the appointment, Regional SBA Administrator Miller Widemire said, "Duane Hunter's
exstate
Surviving are her husband, Philip; sons, Roger,
Philadelphia, and David, Norristown; one grandchild;'
and a brother, Joseph Friedman, Long Island, N. Y.
In
perience will be valuable to his post as regional
advocate
in a very important part of the country,
and in one of our
agency's most active and effective regions for
small
business. He will be a strong advocate for
small business,
listening to their
problems and working with them
strengthen the region 's small firms
to
. '
He was awarded a M.B.A. degree from Atlanta UniverMr. Hunter, who is married to the former
Anne Dolan of Allentown, has been a resident of Stone
sity in 1980.
Mountain, Georgia, for the past seven years. The
Hunters
have three sons.
His address is
Georgia 30088.
1931
Biffle
Drive,
Stone
of
a
member
of
m^m^mh
BSC
the
4
A
A/n
jf\}
/
^mmmmm
Carl G. Hack
'67 is
deceased.
Carol Slusser Fraind
He came from Berwick.
"67
had an art exhibit called
"Spunk and Spirit" in the Kehr Union from
April 10
23. It showed a wide range of
subjects but
stressed portraits of older people who
embody old-
in 1969.
through April
Frances Helen Grey '63 died on February
address was Box 307, Bemus Point, N. Y.
fashioned qualities that she admires. Carol's
address
R D. 4, Berwick, Pa. 18603.
dentist in Alexandria, Va., and a
former
college. He was a 1921 graduate
of
is
19,
1983
Her
14712.
The Rev. Wanda K. Snyder '63 died on
February 3 She
was assistant pastor of St. John's Lutheran
Church
Phoenixville, Pa. Before her ordination
in 1982 she worked
as a speech and language therapist.
She earned her M Ed
degree at BSC in 1970. Her husband,
Leonard D. Snyder
'62, M.Ed. '67, is a social
science teacher in West
the
member
'61,
last
in 1977
Randolph-Macon. The award
outstanding
Oxenrider
1963
by Mrs. Samuel Nelson Gray, the
named for her late husband. Samuel Nelson
trustee
J.
The Millersburg High School graduate earned his B.S.
degree in 1961. Four years later he received a master of
arts degree in mathematics at Penn State.
Mountain
Conrad L. Stanitski '60, professor of chemistry
and
department chairman at Randolph-Macon College,
received the Samuel Nelson Gray Distinguished
Professor
Award at the college's annual honors convocation on
April
award is
Gray was a
Clinton
mathematics department for the past 17 years, was
awarded his doctor of arts degree in mathematics from
Idaho State University in December. His thesis was
entitled "Dyad and Kronecker Products of Matrices."
Oxenrider came to BSC in September 1965 as an
instructor. The following year he was promoted
to
assistant professor and was promoted to associate
professor
1960
Established
Clinton Oxenrider '61
presented annually to an
administration or
His address
Chester
is
of the college's
317 Highland Ave., Downingtown, Pa.
19335.
faculty.
Professor Stanitski joined the faculty
at Randolphin 1976. He received his bachelor's
degree in
science education from BSC, a
master's degree in
chemical education from the University of
Northern Iowa
and a doctorate in inorganic chemistry
from the
University of Connecticut.
Macon
He is the co-author of
numerous articles. He
three textbooks and the author of
is a member of the
American
Chemical Society, Phi Lambda Upsilon, Sigma
Xi and Phi
Sigma
Pi.
1964
David P. Cecco
Janet E. (Bonstedt) Greenleaf '64
was recently elected
president of the Holy Trinity
Lutheran School Board in
Bethlehem Pa. Janet is very active
in church and community affairs. She is married
p™
to James Greenleaf,
man
at UWgh
lT/r.°n
l address is 3191
children. Her
Z
a
Universit y- They have two
Center
St.,
Bethlehem. Pa.
Stanitski formerly held teaching
positions at Kennesaw
CoUege. Georgia State University
and Edinboro State
College.
Rupert
65
was recent 'y h°nored as
„ re
Ung C ° ach for 1983
the Connecticut
K
C hCS Association Glenn is the
coach of the
2?t
u
u o
Waterford
High School Wrestling Team.
A former state
chairman for the Connecticut
United States Wrestling
'
Joseph L. Rishkofski '61, who is
superintendent of the
Area 301)001 Dlstrict has
*
selected for
Who s Who m the East" based on his
background and
service m his chosen field. He was
previously selected for
mc usion in "Who's Who in Educational
Administration"
jn^l981. Joe may be reached
at Box 923, Berwick,
™ ™
-
Pa.
David P. Cecco '67 of Burlington,
N.J., has been appointed general agent in Burlington
by the Northwestern
Mutual Life Insurance Co., Milwaukee
C
has beenthe distrlct a gent in
Burlington since
t
1978. Northwestern
is the nation's ninth
largest life insurance firm, with assets of
over $13 billion and 115
^ °m
general agencies covering
1965
1961
hI^
^
fr
^?
e
Natl ° nal FreCStyle Wrestlin
S
Te^lce im
^Glenn
lives at 80
Rope Ferry Road, Waterford, Conn.
1966
Marc L. Bartlebaugh '66 has a new address:
Rosemont Avenue, Lower Allen Township, Camp
Hill
17011.
Home phone 763-9998. School phone 69M530.
3913
Youshock '73 and her husband
Joseph M. Youshock Jr. '66, are the
parents of a daughter
born on January 14. The Youshocks
live at 819 E Second
Street, Berwick, Pa. 18603.
Jan A. Prosseda '66 was recently named
male "Runner
Year" at the Harrisburg Area Road Runners
Club's
Annual Banquet. Jan completed a
of the
successful 1982 season
winning the 35-39 age group in
the Harrisburg
Marathon on his 39th birthday. He ran
68 races last year
and was undefeated in his age group in
the spring and fall
seasons. He set age group records
in nearly every race
along with several course
standards. He has the
distinction of being the only runner
to win the "Harrisbure
5
Grand Slam."
50 states.
He is the son of Mrs.
Pearl Cecco of Shamokin.
Lorraine M. Savidge '67
recently completed requirements for certification in
elementary school
guidance at Millersville State CoUege
and has received
e
n
ertification from
State Department
°
Sf
EdSca tion°
The certification
^
qualifies Lorraine to provide
guidance
services to elementary and
middle school students.
Lorraine attended Nyack College,
New York, working
£ere in the area of Christian
education. She received her
deg ee and maSter of education
BSC and did post graduate work
BSC,
in
tdlrT
Tom
/
reading psychology
Pa
Patricia A. (Poponiak)
by
all
Cecco was born in Danville, Pa.,
and is a 1963 graduate
of Lourdes High School in
Shamokin, Pa. He graduated
from BSC with a B.S. degree in
elementary education He
also attended Trenton State.
He joined Northwestern in
as an agency supervisor in
Burlington
Cecco and his wife, Ann, have three
daughters and live
at 7 Peachtree Lane m Burlington.
N.J. 08016.
-
5
'67
She has worked with volunteers,
receiving state
recognition as coordinator of reading
tutorial services and
right
read
to
director.
She
received
honorary life
Parents and
member of the National Education
Association and Pennsylvania
State Education Associa-
membership in the Pennsylvania Congress
Teachers and
Lorraine
°n
is
is
a
ha
member
of the International
Educat,on
?°^
Christian Foundation
N»?rZ '£
Narramore
She is currently employed in
Shamokin Area School District
H€ r
178 7 2
3ddreSS
*
of
a life
551A NOrth
the reading
^
Reading
Association and
Street
'
department
at
Sham °fcn.
(Continued on Page 28)
is
Teacher education pursues change
A decade ago,
aeo. the
thp public
nnhii/- was asking,
"Why can't
Johnny read?"
That concern has more recently shifted
toward the
source of the problem: how Johnny
is being taught.
AJthough teachers and teacher educators
are usually
departments fall. "One thing that has
always bothered
is how changes are usually
made: a lot of rushing
and sc.ssors-and-paste work, then
little or no follow up
Instead he is working with others
in the school and in
me
the field of education to engineer
a systematized
perceived as being on the defensive
against criticism,
taking initiative, acting as their own
critics, and seeking out effective
changes. The teacher
education program at BSC is one of
these few having
launched an in-depth study to change
approach to change.
The exercise in planned change
some are now
.
"Too often change
need
members
is
the top
down
T5?
work
outcome."
Seven academic units at the college are participating:
secondary education, special education, early
childhood/elementary education, business education,
educational studies and services, communication
disorders, and the reading clinic.
Seeds of the planned change were planted in 1977,
when Macauley was acting dean of professional studies
for a year. "We were preparing for a visit from
one of
with college
Five school districts are currently participating
with
in a statewide partnership program.
The
BSC
Bloomsburg, Danville, Line Mountain, Shamokin, and
Midd-West school districts are working with faculty
and
administrators from BSC's School of Professional
Studies to meet state requirements for long-range
our professional accrediting organizations, the National
Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education
planning.
Under
the state-funded College Partnership Program
Improvement, college faculty members serve
as outside consultants to local districts, bringing
for School
in
workshops for teachers, assessing the districts' role
in
the community, evaluating the use of buildings,
and
examining curriculum changes.
The partnership program was born out of concern
among State Board of Education members over the
(NCATE)."
Noting the flurry of activity to prepare reports and
presentations for the visit, Macauley realized
afterwards that there was little follow through or
monitoring of changes after the NCATE committee's
visit
too,
and recommendations, i looked at other schools,
and realized that no group seemed to have in place
a systematic
quality of education in the mid-1960s. The state
board
developed a mandate that school districts must submit
change."
long-range plans for evolving to meet changing
student
and community needs. But public schools often found it
difficult to develop adequate plans on their
own. In 1979,
the state board opened the partnership program
as a
dean
In 1979,
way
to evaluate
programs and
institute
Macauley was appointed permanently as the
and one of the first actions
of professional studies,
self-
education
Ray Babineau, Ed.D., a member of the
education faculty, who was subsequently
put on special
this
of
Administrations make decisions with
little or no input
from other levels; yet the others
are expected to carry
out the change," Macauley says.
"In this situation
gi e a V0Ice t0 3,1 the
g
p arties wh ° ™ii
l
be J5
affected by lu
the change.
Everyone can feel he or she
has a personal stake in the decisions and in their
School
He
called in
t0 aSSlSt
to
made from
he took was to search out a
mechanism for
evaluation and possible changes in
teacher
chtngT
"We wanted
bringing together
what elements
be changed, how they can
be changed most effectively,
which changes should take
priority, and what results
can be expected from the
changes.
of teacher education
quality of the teachers they produce.
Change is seldom easy, notes Howard
K. Macauley
Jr., Ph.D., dean of the
School of Professional Studies
under which most of the college's teacher
education
way
is
faculty, students, outside
educators, and
other academic disciplines to talk
about
and improve the
districts
"
change.
'
implementin
g the
Panned
do more than just a superficial
job on
Babineau says. "There's a lot happening
to
the field of education, and
changes that would keep our
in
we wanted to outline
programs abreast of new
the future." Babineau and
developments now and in
Macauley soon realized they weren't
simply preparing
for the next accrediting
committee visit, but were
talking about a game plan
for the remainder of the
1980s
and into the next decade.
In April 1982, the Pennsylvania
Department of
Education sent a team of educators
to the college to
review the change process. The
team met with the
working groups and. in their final
report, extended their
apprec.ation "for the rich, professional
experience
provided by the Bloomsburg
experimental review "
The task force is now working on thejinal
recommendation document, which is
due in early 1983
To some extent we can't wait." Macauley
admits
"Many of the faculty members are eager to
there are changes
with now."
The
first
begin, and
in
the field
we need
to get started
change, being instituted immediately
with
the concurrence of the faculty
and department heads
is
to
introduce microcomputers into the
teacher education
program. Macauley notes that many
school districts are
already purchasing equipment or
the time it takes to
add computer training to the curriculum.
"Teachers
often know less about computers
than their students
want
We
to change that as quickly as
possible." he says
Macauley's office is festooned with flip
charts and
schedule graphs that chart the
progress of the planned
change. His coffee table is stacked
high
with copies of
the position papers and faculty
responses. "We're
juggling about 18 balls right now,"
he says with a
slightly tired smile. Babineau
adds. "But we're moving
forward."
of bringing in outside help.
The Midd-West school
in the program since its
has been participating
year, 1980-81. School
superintendent Dr. Barry Smith says, "I was a new
superintendent at the start and had never been through
district
first
long-range planning. The partnership gave us realistic
help." Through the partnership, the Midd-West/Blooms-
burg team has evolved a five-year plan of regular
curriculum review and change.
"Before the partnership, we selected textbooks and
developed our courses from them," Dr. Smith says.
"Now we
set goals about
what we want to teach, then
meet our objectives. We can
see things in an organized fashion now."
The partnership program has been underway for two
years in the Shamokin Area School District. During the
current phase, the district is working on its self-image:
how faculty members regard themselves, their students,
and the district; and how students view themselves and
find appropriate books to
their faculty.
workshop
One
of the
undertakings has been a
taught to Shamokin
in assertive discipline
teachers by a Bloomsburg faculty member.
"learning is a continuous process," says Dr.
Macauley, dean
teachers,
of the
Bloomsburg program.
Howard
For
shouldn't stop with the degree." Dr.
Macauley views the workshops as one of the most
valuable tools in the partnership program.
it
At Line Mountain, the partnership program is in its
year. The district is already using the college's
first
computer system
naires on
how
to speed analysis of 1,000 questionthe school district serves the community.
A building study
is in the planning stages, and new
superintendent Dr. David Landis is optimistic about the
coming phases: "With guidance from the Bloomsburg
faculty,
we hope
to identify
an effective plan of action
meet the real needs of our students and our
community."
The partnership program benefits more than the
school district. Dr. Macauley notes that the exchange
has been like a refresher course for Bloomsburg
fatuity: "The partnership gets us out into the public
schools again. It sharpens our skills, renews our
relationships with our colleagues, and lets us re-
study program. Each
way through college by working 10 to 20 hours a week in
the Alumni Office. Seated, from left, are
Stephanie
Stewart, a freshman from Bloomsburg; Linda
Kammer-
experience the classroom.
diener,
that will
It's
worthwhile on
all
sides."
AT YOUR SERVICE - The many programs and
of the
projects
Alumni Office would not be possible without the help
of these fine students
who are
part of the college's workof them is helping to pay his or her
a junior from Manchester;
Debra
Blyler,
a
freshman from Bloomsburg. Standing, from left, are Lou
Maslowe, a junior from Doylestown; Jeff Smith, a senior
from Dushore; John Haney, a sophomore from
Fleetwood; Kerry Boll, a sophomore from Schnecksville;
and Scott Righter, a junior from Philadelphia. Dwayne
Heisler, a freshman from Newtown, was not present
for
the photograph.
10
McCormick leads
President
It's been 10 years since James H. McCormick became
president of Bloomsburg State College. In a recent inter-
"Then-Commissioner
Ziegler said he wanted
view with Jim Sachetti, Class of 1973, McCormick
discussed the past decade and shared his thoughts on
the future of BSC. Sachetti, who graduated from BSC
three months before McCormick arrived, has been
managing editor of The Morning Press
since December of 1978.
It
was June
of 1973,
in
the country."
self reluctantly putting his
dream
of being
a college
Months had gone by without a word since he had interviewed for the presidency of Bloomsburg State College.
So he mentally prepared himself for a disappointment,
and decided to proceed with plans for a summer sabbatical from Shippensburg, where at 34 he was already
serving in a major role as vice president for administration.
lege, gathering
20 college campuses.
Of course, he had no way of knowing it as he set out,
was to have a profound effect on Jim McCormick ... and Bloomsburg.
"I was doing a project with the American Association
of State Colleges and Universities, looking at personnel
but the trip
practices,"
visit
McCormick
were similar
The schools he was to
state-owned colleges in Penn-
recalls.
to the 14
sylvania.
national perspective,
I
knew
that the future of public
higher education was going to be different."
In retrospect, the word "different" barely
began to
suggest what was about to take place. In 1973, about
70
percent of BSC's students were studying to be teachers.
Students in all other programs accounted for only
30
percent.
Today
it's the teacher candidates who account
for only
30 percent, while 70 percent are students in other
professional studies, business and the liberal arts,
many working toward degrees that didn't even exist here
lO years
ago.
bee
lore like a revolution.
A
quiet one, to be
sure, but a revolution nonetheless.
And Jim McCormick, as
chance to lead
things turned out, did get his
it.
Most inconveniently, he was in Eugene. Ore., when
had given up waiting for finally came
that call he
through.
the basket case of the state
college system, barely beginning to recover from the
of Robert Nossen's short reign and the stormy
battles that led to his resignation.
McCormick
steadfastly declines to discuss publicly his
predecessor or the many controversies that kept BSC
appearing regularly in newspaper headlines across the
state from 1970 to 1972.
"I've tried to avoid that discussion," he says.
started where we were."
But he does admit that when he got the job, "Some
for his part, says he did not share their
"When
I interviewed here, even though there
were a
concerns, a lot of problems, I felt there were a lot
people here
faculty, students, trustees and the few
contacts I had with alumni
who really cared about
Bloomsburg State College and wanted to get things mov-
lot of
—
—
ing forward
and get any difficulties behind us.
So as he drove back to Pennsylvania, McCormick says
he couldn't wait to get to BSC.
Now, here it is, 10 years later. To mark the decade,
McCormick has agreed to share his thoughts. And as he
sits at a long table in the austere
quiet of the Alumni
in
Carver Hall, he recalls that the job
president in the early '70s had about
security."
it
of college
a "notorious in-
So he never "put a time frame" on how long he
might
be here, he says. "When I had the opportunity
to come,
I just tried to think about the
things that we ought to try
to do."
He
put those thoughts into his speech for the simple
swearing-in ceremony that served as his
inaugural on
Thursday, Aug.
20, 1973.
was anyone in the audience that day with the
speaker's sense of what lay ahead, he or
she might have
If
there
in retrospect
needs... Teacher education
new services to meet
remains a major func-
we must continue to aggressively explore, develop and expand other
curricular
tion of the state colleges, but
possibilities."
The message
many
too
of the cross-country trip
teachers.
had been
clear-
And McCormick says he heard
the
thing time and again as he dove into his first
year '
meeting with the college staff, with business leaders
same
and with more than 20 state legislators.
"We still needed to be recognized as a primary source
of excellent teachers for the schools of Pennsylvania "
he explains. "We just needed fewer of them. So we
knew
in our planning effort that we had to develop new
programs, and develop them quickly."
He
gives credit for getting this enormous job
done to
came up with ideas and held up well
under the stress of a major internal upheaval.
the faculty which
is
one of those leaders who always says *
in a two-hour interview, he
repeatei
ly refuses to
of
doubts.
Room
viewed
"we," not "I," and
friends in higher education couldn't believe that I
was going to get mixed up in it. They couldn't believe
that I was going to get involved."
of
new
McCormick
"We
my
McCormick,
"The thing I sensed, as I moved across the country
and saw the serious retrenchment that was going on at a
number of schools, was that it was because they hadn't
changed quickly enough from teacher education," McCormick says. "It was a tremendous trip, and from that
It's
BSC was
trauma
Loading up the family car, he and his wife Maryan
their young sons, David, 7, and Douglas, 3, hit the
road on a cross-country tour that would take them to
-
foretold the future.
"I am committed to the idea that the state colleges
must serve the Commonwealth as multi-purpose institu
tions," McCormick said. "Economic and social
changes
his family for the long drive east,
something of a shock.
and
some
up
when news of his appointment hit the press.
To some of the people who had gotten to know him
during his eight-year rise from associate professor to
vice president at Shippensburg, the announcement was
In those days,
-
require of educational institutions
The meeting in Harrisburg took place in late July or
early August, and McCormick learned he was expected
to be on the job in a matter of weeks.
So he was back in California at Sacramento State Col-
and Jim McCormick found him-
picked up on one passage which
to
Gov. Shapp, and that I
governor was going to appoint," McCormick recalls.
"So I got my family to San Franciscc and I flew across
Bloomsburg
president back on the shelf.
Higher Education Jerry
come back and meet with
was probably the person the
for
me
take in a period when many institutions
o
higher learning began to fade and decline.
For example, he speaks again and again about
the
portant contribution made by a college-wide
planning
commission which laid the groundwork for successful
programs such as nursing and computer science. It is
these and other new courses that have kept
inquiries
from high school students streaming into the
admissions
office at
a robust rate of
1
4 ?
applications for every posi-
tion,
t
McCormick says he
from the start that -the goal
setting should not be a new president coming
in and
making pronouncements about what we were going
to
be and where we were going."
"I believe in the power of people and the
collegia] approach," he explains. "My major commitment
was to
involve the people of this college and the
larger community in helping me set the goals."
Ever since his arrival, McCormick says, "I've been
trying to create an atmosphere where deans
and vice
presidents and professors and chairmen hopefully
feel
their ideas can come forth and be
considered."
And he says he believes he's done it. "I thing there's
lots of
felt
bottom-up activity going on here," he says. By
all
McCormick also sees to it there is plenty of
from-the-top-down activity, too. He likes to
bounce
memos with his ideas off subordinates and groups such
as the planning commission.
accounts,
my job is to raise new ideas with peo-j
think I'm part of the flailing around, the lookexcitement," he says.
"I think part of
pie, so
I
ing, the
it comes to making a
decision - on whethe
new program, for example - he says he nev
But when
to start a
i
loses sight of his role.
"I realize I'm the guy sitting at the
and
I
By
have
his
does not
to
own
head of the table
decisions," he said.
account, the guy at the end of the table
make
make snap judgments,
When faced
"I try to let
nor is he a worrier.
with a particularly knotty problem, he say
it ripen to the point where
you see what
you've got to do."
Is he a tough boss?
McCormick ponders
believe
replies,
the question for a
moment.
"I
do have high expectations for people." he
"and I hope I also have high expectations
I
for
myself as well."
Always the realist. McCormick says with a smile he
aware that, at any given moment, there is always son
one or some group on campus unhappy
about a decisi
he has made.
When criticized, he say he can take it. "I don't min
being challenged," he says.
"We're all searching for
truth."
McCormick admits that he gets so caught up "in the;
excitement of what I'm doing" that he
sometimes lets]
himself get overly tired. "But I've
never been to the
point
where
'To hell with
just
I
it,'
want
to
" he says.
throw up
my
hands and sayj
1
For relaxation, McCormick says
he enjoys attending
athletic and cultural events
at the college, and tries to]
19t2
ANNUAL FUND
1)
CONTRIBUTORS
BLOOMSBURG BENEFACTORS
THE
MAROON
(Perpetual Scholarships $5000)
Columbia Insurance Companies
G
Richord
Jack McDowell
CLASS
No.
No.
Solicited
Participated
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
6
16.6
9
6
$
66.6
10
22
23
32
27
30
40
49
60
53
59
46
69
325.00
20.0
40.00
4
18.2
180.00
65.00
4
17.4
8
25.0
210.00
7
25.9
65.00
4
13.3
75.00
12
30.0
1.340.00
15
30.6
230.00
10
140
160
100
Hubler
ft
302.00
Dr.
300.00
Liberty Chevrolet-Codilloc
68.3
934 71
Tom
& Mrs. Lowrence Harasym
519.71
31.6
989 71
59
59
44
42.1
1.584.71
David
32.6
1.036.92
Mr.
27.5
1.064.21
Dr.
54
54 0
1.056.71
Alvin G. Lipfert 39
Stella J. Hill '68
Wilhelmino Hayes
Michael
50.0
1,405.21
34.4
857.50
THE
($100
J.
M
Bright
48
14
29.2
342.50
1938
41.1
902.50
Irene Kornell Dovis '28
1939
78
80
43.6
628.92
Fredo Steele
1940
40.0
91
1.064.71
Lucille Jury
1941
37.4
81
25
34
32
34
36
50
40
26
1,244.13
Jasper
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
171
197
260
259
272
328
349
390
409
412
,965.50
1,811.00
52.0
547 21
Fritz
Edith Strickler
Kathryn Jones Fritz '30
Letha Hummel Kinley 39
Richord F. Laux '52
George
28
44
54
40
44
37
34
32
39
53
48
53
35.9
510.00
Robert C. Figlock 72
Francine J. Bolger 79
William H. Bailey
31.4
1.053.84
28.6
912.63
Stephen E. Phillips 80
Helen Hess Terhune 10
Georgia
35.4
928.81
1.388.13
26.1
Dotzel, Jr. '49
816.92
524.42
Ruth
457.71
Dr. Richard O.
30.2
673.48
William Paule '65
R.
31.0
906.63
Douglas
H.
24.4
755.34
20.4
947.83
23.6
1,421.05
62
62
69
22.8
945.74
91
Hope Handy 43 (MG)
Wolfe
'60
McClintock 73
Francis A. Lorah 74 +
Douglas C. Hippenstiel '68
F.
Class of 1951
Millard C. Ludwig '48
1.062.34
19.8
2.203 92
23.3
Glennis H. Rickert 14
Edna Speary Rickert 15
1.352.40
Mary
19.1
1.656.98
1.828.27
1.973,86
2,823.16
2.330.56
718
613
158
22.0
2.147.73
127
20.7
1,782.39
229
156
22.0
3.151.36
16.3
2,005.45
198
18.3
3,339.02
201
19.8
2.477.73
191
21.0
3.770.51
230
204
27.0
3,003.91
21.4
3,423.29
240
226
20.0
4,234.73
22.1
3,124.53
172
14.3
2,250 66
Betterly Maiers '33
102.50
862,63
%
donors
Class of 1922
(68,3)
Largest total
($6,430.13)
Class of 1942
'67
Liberty Chevrolet-Codilloc
Sunshine Laundry
Ronald M. Russo 70
Gertrude Gross Fleischer 07
Jane M. Elmes 72
James
Holland
E.
78 (MG)
Columbia Graphics.
Inc.
Vera Hemingway Housenick 05
Margaret L. Burns 67
Dr.
J.
Fagnani.
Jr.
Margaret Evans Lewis
74
Lawton.
S,
H. Evert
Mrs. A.
ft
Dr.
JoAnne
Betty Ruth Keller Luchak 68
Larry K. Voss 78
Dr
ft
Martho
Preston
James
F.
Snyder
'24
'58
Y. Jones '22
Kathryn M. Abbett '23-33
Gehrig
'37
Anno Jean Laubach Gehrig '37
Nancy Kiplinger Steelman 74
Editha 6nt Adams '24
Augustus Tibbs '58
Philadelphia Chopter + (MG)
Inc.
Leonard A.Winski
The Dixie Shops. Inc.
Dr.
Mrs.
K.
Panikkar
Growney
Richord U Delp
S
Fred H. Henrie
L. Lawton
Kay M. Herman Locke 66 (MG)
Corolyn L Corr 74 (MG)
Bruce R. Russell 75 (MG)
Donna Hagge Russell 78 (MG)
Geraldine Bitting Oberle 42
John H. Trathen 68
Dr.
Emory W Rang.
E. Barrow '24
Richord T Sibly 30-34
Helen
Walter
Wilbur Hibbard 31
S.
Rygiel
F, Fenstemaker 12
Margaret Bittner Parke '23
Alice Pennington Blair '29
Erma Gold Shearer 29
Dr.
Saro Dockey Edwards
amount
Randolph May
Nelson Gibble
Ridgway's Restaurant
Howard
Class of 1979
(240)
Dr. Michael Herbert
Hervey B. Smith 22
Robert A. Muscosky 69
Earl A.
8
Arnold 17
P. L
Dr.
68
F.
Thomos J. Stiner 76 (MG)
Anno Orner Gurtendort 39
Victor A. Miller '60
Albert
'44
Louise Scherer Rolland '24
Leonard
R
Wearne
76 (MG)
Hilda Albertson Heller 23
'40
18.9
25.5
III
A Bean 78 (MG)
Doris O. Bailey
28.6
22.6
Largest
G. Thomos Hughes
Jeffrey
27.1
61
of contributors
Albert H. Hitchings 52
Richord S Benyo '68
Ezra W. Horns 32
Gladys Jones Harris
Jack L. Mertz '42
21.6
number
Dorothy Englehart Zimmermon 39
335.00
21.5
Largest
Hoffman 32
Gregory Brinser 78 (MG)
Harvey A Andruss, Jr.
Roy O Zimmerman '39
30
574.84
34.6
'48
ft
Rosolyn Verona Pennington 56
'22
Wise 25
229.71
109
1982
M
Adams
->-
Mrs. William Brewster +
ft
Thelmo Brandon Bittner 28
Gladys Bakey Furlong 34
Jack Reese '52
Fice
26.0
147
144
Master's Degree Recipients
Mr
Buckingham '43
Buckingham '43
Friends of Boyd Buckingham
F
41.3
42.1
508
650
666
1023
1207
Boyd
Joanna
13
105
958
1080
1013
911
851
955
1200
Klotchok 76 (MG)
Helen Hutton Morris 28-37 +
Josephine Duy Hutchison 15
19
78
1041
J.
Francis B. Golinski 52
Judith M. Knapp 71
Suzanne E Cromack 77
Edwin M. Barton 07
16
142
119
118
129
1
6.430.13
'64
Joy Dreisbach Linn '59
Lipfert '39
61
49.4
Sandra Smith Kleppinger
William A. Turley 66
Carol Lambert Turley 71.
Mrs. Fred Campbell +
Mrs James H. McCormick
ft
ft
SOCIETY
$299)
78
1937
51.1
-
Jones 43
922.21
113
127
LONG PORCH
570.42
27.0
928 42
1951
Mr
24.1
45.0
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
Mulka 66
Kotherine Matzko Mulko 68
ft Mrs
Donold A Worts 37
S.
28
34
Steven
72
74
Fisher 69
J
John
60
42.2
50
38
50
46
78
140
189
Dr
E.~Willioms+ 15
31
81
'42
Albert
Figlock
Francis A. Loroh
23.9
69
98
Seaman Thomas
Robert C
135
1942
1943
1944
1945
W
Louise
Gerald D Fritz '41 (MG)
John D. Christion
30.4
44.4
Bakeless 15-16
THE FOUNDERS' CLUB ($143)
Martho A. Fisher '25
1934
1935
1936
151
Little
S. Evert
Douglas K Dillon
John
Thomas '47
Tom E. Williams 15
Drew K. Hosteller 76 (MG)
60
52
57
1933
Harry
($500-$»99)
Mark A Raynes 80
818.13
Thomas '42 (MG)
Seaman Thomas 47 (MG)
Kotherine
Pennsylvania Dutch Chopter +
Mogee Foundation
354.71
1.020.00
'41
W
John
Louise
174.71
33.6
Edwards '41
Eda Bessie Beilhortz Edwards
Fronds J. Stonitski 52 (MG)
79
Dennen 61
Anonymous
THE BSC TRADITION KEEPERS
22.6
35.3
+
Dawson
E.
Dr. C. Stuart
Richard S
32.2
1
+
Fleck 65 (MG)
J.
Thomas
Carl A. Poff
19
18.00
120
Family +
E.
225.05
28
47
47
181
George
16.7
1
140
133
116
126
190
Jr. '63
12
21
41
William H. Gorson.
+
'49
Grimes
E.
Francis D. Sell '35
(MG)
G. M. Hock Construction Co.
100.00
2
Robert
($1000 or more)
Robert P Miller, Friends & Fomily +
Amount
5
Class of 1932
1932
Donori
'40
Inc.
Kotharine Bierman Edwards 15
Alfred J. Cyganowski 53 (MG)
THE CARVER TOWER ASSOCIATES
Total
%
C Industries.
ft
CIRCLE
$499)
Cloyton H. Hinkel
Mildred Eaton Levitt 42
James LaBar
CLASS PARTICIPATION SUMMARY
GOLD
ft
($300
Jr.
51
Anne Fowler Hibbard 32
Elvira
James Stanulonis
Harriet
L.
'35
Kocher 39
Joseph A. Giedgowd 77 (MG)
Kotherine L Ruck 42 +
Michael J Matzko
Mr. ft Mrs. Donald A Watts 37
12
LONG PORCH SOCIETY
THE
Cynthio
L.
Louis 0. Muelhof
Catherine O'Neill Deitrich
Dr Ellen M. Clemens 62
John C Poploskie '67 (MG)
Walter H. Jorecki 33
70
Dr.
Sheroton Oonville Inn
Robert R
Dorette & Froncis
Morgaret Oavis Yenchor
Welk
Josephine Holubo Drueding 30
Elwood R Hording, Jr. '68
Dr. Donold T McNelis 57
Millord C. Ludwig
R
Robert
A
Jomes
J.
James
Morion 49
Holllster
I
Gensemer '60
Gensemer
Elizabeth Derr
'61
Buckhorn Ploio Motel
Mildred G. Goodwin 2°
John E Lovelle '41
Fronk
M
AT&T Long
Robert
Lines Personnel +
(MG)
Pursel
B.
Yeoger (MG)
F
Clark
R.
Inc.
71
III
Chorles C
Nancy
C &
J
Housenick
Housenick
L.
'60
Contractors
For Emily Nikel Gledhill
by Philadelphia Chopter.
O
12
Campbell 70 by Mr.
Fischer
'29-40
Mrs Wilbur G. Fischer
For Helen Gregory Lippert
Walter
by
C. Lippert.
For Morie Cromis
Goboro, Jr. '50.
17 by Horry
J.
For Henry Biermon (1882), Ethel
Bierman Somerville 09 ond Louise
Sober Biermon by Katharine Bier-
mon Edwords
For
Clonce
Kotherine
For
George
Ralph
L.
Gellinger
E
J.
H.
by
Hubler
31
by
Hubler 8 Family, Mr &
Dooling Dr 8 Mrs C
Edwords
A.
Ruck
Ruck 42
Elizobeth
Mrs. W.
Stuart
15.
41
Beem.
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph
Mr
8
Millicent
J.
Mrs.
Finton.
Moron.
For Terry Hutlon and Emily Hutton
28 by Helen Hutton Morris 28-37
For Sylvio Cromis by Modeline
C
For Fannie Leggoe
Tom
E.
Wondel
15 by
Willioms 15
For Jone Renoldo by Lon
L.
Hor«oth 81, Julio Piccenllo.
Suzanne E.
Cromack 77
M
Hausknecht
Hausknecht
B.
&
Mr 8 Mrs. Robert P Miller 8 Fomily
8 Friends. AT&T Long Lines District
Office 8 Supervisors & Technicians.
Employees of Jomes G Biddle Co.,
Boyd Jr. Richord E. Foir
banks. Lyndo Kommon
Poulo J.
Mogoro. Rowlond H. Myers, Jr., Mr
J
Andrew
McGroth «
Theodore
T.
Zodrogo.
Daniel
8
Morkowski. Jone
73.
Mrs.
M
Kenneth
Ann
Wiest.
J.
Barnes, Robert
Ringel. William
W
Bloss,
Jomes
Mike Rotelle 81
79, Ken Krick 79,
Reitz,
Don Conlolone
81,
Bernadette
Sigol,
J.
Mr
Henson, Bob
Grace P
Mr. 8 Mrs
Ortlieb.
Family.
Tolorico.
Dr
Robert Warren. Brian Mohlstedt
Scott Young 79 Greg Falotek
Greg
Talese
John
J
Trothen 68
Doris
R.
Rarig, Jr
E
Rorig
J.
Rod ice
O
8
80-82,
Rick Moniscolco
Christy
Doug
Demansky
Bielefeld
81
Gum
Potricio B. Torsello
Jomes
Mr. & Mrs. Robert P, Miller Family &
Friends + (MG)
Shumon
Robert
Golden Arrow Motel & Restaurant
Barbara
Behr
E.
Dr.
James
Creosy 57
B.
J.
Chorles
W
Donold
Loudermilch
+
Buckhorn Plozo Motel
Dr. Gerald
Powers
W
Himes
Clyde H. Kouffmon +
Doyle G Dodson
Richord B Houpt
I
Mr. 8 Mrs Chorles P. Pursel
Robert F Yeoger (MG)
Mr & Mrs Roger Sonders
Robert C Young. Inc.
Jone M. Ringel +
Douglas C. Hippenstiel 68
Dr Michoel Herbert
Charles A. Creosy
Hutchison Insuronce Agency
Jonice C. Keil 74
John D Klingermon
Louboch Auto Parts. Inc.
Longs Supply Co., Inc.
Donold D Robb 46
Dr. Kolyon K Ghosh
Dr.
.
John A. Scerbo
Sneidman's Jewelry Store
AT&T Long Lines District Office,
Dr.
George
Lynda
J.
of
Jr.
Mrs
+
Mr. 8 Mrs. Theodore
J
Sigol
+
Bernodette Tolorico +
Mr & Mrs Kenneth Zodrogo +
Foirbonks +
P
M Honlz, Jr (MG)
Jomes A Antipos
C & J Contractors
Cotowese Cooch Lines Inc
Liso Coyne
Robert
Nespoli
Richord C. Savage +
Bloomsburg Bonk-Columbio Trust
Mrs. Christine Alichn.e
Albert J Bush
Robert
H.
Nelson Gibble
Sunshine Loundry
Julie
79 M.Ed.
Ello R. Miller +
Mr. & Mrs. Howard Sweigort +
Mr. & Mrs. George Rolond
+
L.
Abell
Chorlotte
A
Dougherty +
Elizobeth U. Rollman
+
Mr & Mrs Robert Ames +
Dorothy H. Sheoffer +
Columbio Grophics, Inc.
Dr & Mrs. Lawrence Horasym
P. L.
Lowton, Inc
Mr & Mrs. Chorles McGoffic +
Ridgwoy s Restourant
Jock McDowell
Jomes LoBar
M
Joseph
Mrs.
Liberty Chevrolet-Codilloc
Housknecht +
K. Pursel
Gilmore Family +
Mrs Hurley O. Potterson +
George E. Hubler. Jr. & Fomily +
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J. Moron +
Jomes Henson + (MG)
Cloyton H. Hinkel '40 +
Allen F. Murphy
'80.
Longenberger (36)
Mock
Moorehead
Ino Surplus
1914
Memoriols
to
General Idwol
Co.
John D Christian
Deone
Charles
B.
Fenton
Hoppel
J
Minom
Forscht Core
Loviso Sheord
Gossman
Leah Bogort Lowton
Glennis H. Rickert (16)
1915
Memonol
to
Kotherine
Little
Fonnie leggoe Wondel
Bokeless (16)
Soro A. Broce
Joseph Cherrie
Esther Dreibelbis
Kotherine Biermon Edwards +
Josephine Duy Hutchison +
Normo Hoog McCreody
Elizobeth
Tom
E
Brig
Gen
Hunsinger
W
Bloss +
(MG)
Dr. & Mrs. Robert W Meldrum
Robert W. Buehner. Jr.
Horry
Evert
S.
Dr. Barrett
Bob
Reitz
W, Benson
+ (MG)
Dr. Robert
Worren + (MG)
Howard McKinnon
Clonce A Vorgo
Mr. & Mrs
Fronk D. Englund
G
M. Hock Construction Co
Mr. & Mrs
J Dooling +
W
CHAPTER GIFTS
Philadelphia Chapter +
Pennsylvania Dutch Chapter +
BEQUESTS BY WILL
Mory Frymire Kirk Scholorsh.p
Mary D. Comerford 13
*
Williams +
1916
Allen
G
Benson
Helen Wingert Doy
Hormon Dew
Irene
Carolyn
E.
Elder
Dorothy
M
Fritz
Shoemaker Henne
Ethel
Helen
V McHugh
Florence Seorfoss
Munro
Voletto Kohny Robinson
Elsie
Hogenbuch Robison
William D. Taylor
Williom
A
Wesley
E
Hilda
Thomos
Tubbs
Wosnock Welliver
Wiegand *
Elizobeth
Jock Metzer Ford, Inc
Elton
H,
Edwords
Bornes +
Lucy B
Donold
Poulo J. Mogaro + (MG)
Rowland H. Myers, Jr + (MG)
Mr. & Mrs Andrew T. Ortlieb
+
Grace P. McGroth & Family + (MG)
Kuster
E
S Jomes Robbins
Fannie Leggoe Wondel
L.
E.
Rolph
Welsh Miller
Edno Speory Rickert
Williom C
Jomes G. Biddle Co +
Boyd.
Glrton
L.
Lee C Hopple
Mr & Mrs
Horoce Willioms
Mrs. Noncy L. Housenick
W
Kammon +
Richord
Robert
Morion Mack Kinnermon
Dr Jerrold Griffis
Dr.
Supervisors & Technicians + (MG)
Employees
Anno Tronsue Dickinson
s
Richord
1
Irene Boughner
78
Julio Piccerillo
Columbio Insurance Componies
Dr. Craig
Florence Blocker Crouse
Ruth Kline Everett
Anne French Connell 77
Yori '57
P.
Col C B. F. Brill
Beulah Anderson Bronson
Susie H
World Travel
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard
Comerchero
Fred Nicol
to Emily Nikel Gledhill
1913
66
Hollister
E
1912
Memorial
Alfaretta Stork Wilner
Dr Leonard A. Winski
Brian A. Johnson
Burel
Eudoro Wolton Womeldorf
Howard F. Fenstemaker
Mary Zerbe Leister*
Anno Reice Trivelpiece
The Mogee Foundotion
Mr & Mrs. Ralph A. Beem +
Millicent Finton +
Your Fomily Restaurant
E.
Annette Osborne Frontz
Ruth Reynolds Hosbrouke
Edno Lewis Robinson
L.
Froncis J. Welk
George P Boss
Walter A. Hoffmon
Jomes R. Louffer
Andrew M. Schmid
Boiley
Lewis
1911
Henne
Dorette Welk
Jr
Anno Kleintob Edwords
Sora F
Sheraton Danville Inn
Robert G. Shive
'49
Brill
Richard U. Delp
Lawton
Rolph L Good +
Michoel J. Motzko
Dr. & Mrs. Harold J. Bailey
Ruth Ann Bond
Thomas F, Langan
Gene M. Leiby
51
1910
Gregg
Julio
Jr.
I
8
by
M
C.
H
Robert
Chorles McGoffic Jeanne M.
White. Mr. 8 Mrs. Richard White
& Mrs.
Scrimgeour
Bierman
Somerville
Helen Hess Terhune
Preston
'53
to Ethel
Non B DeFelice
Fred H
12
Chorles W. Chronister
37 by Penn
Mrs
Loudati
For Williom Forney by Cloyton
Hinkel '40
Bloss
K.
Dutch Chapter,
For William Teitsworfh by Froncis
A. Loroh 74, Richard C. Sovoge
For Timothy
Miller by Mr
George
S.
1909
Memorial
Joe A. DeFelice
Dr & Mrs
)
Chester
Mrs. Lucy
+
Williom H, Bailey
John
For
17 by
John
+
Nicholas Corsillo
James E. Cole
Thomos A. Dovies,
Boyd F Buckinghom
Joonna Fice Buckinghom
Modeline C. Loudoti +
W. Storb. Verno E
Jones 36, L. P Gilmore Fomily. Mr
& Mrs. John Yeoger '35-36, Mr &
Mrs Donold A. Wotts 37.
4 Mrs. FredCompbell
Mr. & Mrs
Cloro DeRose
&
Dorothy H. Sheoffer. Rolph L. Good,
Roy W Brondou
Dr. George J.
Duy
Brennon
Louis D Muehlhof
Horvey A. Andruss.
P
Clyde H. Kauffman, Howard
Neldo Sweigort Ello R. Miller.
Mr
15
S
'37
Florence Corby Sippol
Richord White
JoAnne S. Growney
Thomos L. Ohl '57
Sharon Sholley Kribbs 66
Marilyn Muehlhof
Sell '35.
Storb,
For Wilbur G.
Inc
Ames, Elizobeth u Rollman,
Charlotte
A.
Dougherty.
George & Vero Rolond, Froncis D.
14
M
Dr
John A. Scerbo
For Lomor
Hutchison.
E.
College Store
Eleanor
by
Edwards
by Josephine Duy Hutchison
& Mrs William Brewster
For Karen
(MG)
Dr. Froncis
(MG,
19
Mrs Hurley O. Patterson.
For Dr John J Gress 35 by Mrs.
John J. Gress.
For Generol Idwol H
Chorles
1907
Edwin M Barton
Gertrude Gross Fleischer
Helen Mosteller Hile
Dr.
Willord A. Christian 39
MBA
Longs Supply Co..
sylvonio
Patterson
Fenstemaker
F
Emory
Mrs. Mary
(
Hurley
'63
Mr. & Mrs. Donold A. Wotts
Walter S. Rygiel
Howard
1905
Vero Hemingway Housenick
John W. Storb +
Mr. & Mrs
Mary Borroll Hill 67
Mary Lou Fenstemaker John 45
Walter C Lippert +
MEMORIAL GIFTS +
For
Given 77
Dr.
Dr.
McGroth & Fomily + (MG)
Robert J. Fleck 65 (MG)
Robert R. Sompsell 69 (MG)
Sandro Swetlond Williams 66 (MG)
Williom J. Ewell 76 (MG)
Richord C. Knause 53 (MG)
Robert Honrz '65 (MG)
Corol McCrocken Honrz 65 (MG)
Hopple
lee G. Borthold
Jr
Hutchison Insurance Agency
John D. Klingermon
Grace
Dr. Jerrold Griffis
Lee C
Meldrum
& C Industries
Mr. & Mrs Donald A. Watts +
Charles A. Creosy
Dr.
Renninger 41
Cotherine Oplinger Renninger 41
Dr.
W
Sneidmon s Jewelry Store
The College Store
Mr. & Mrs. Roger Sanders
Robert C Young,
'67
G
Tontsits
Mr. & Mrs Chorles
Y.
Nelson A. Sworts
75 (MG)
76 (MG)
Stonley Tontsits
Suson
Edword
Fisk '60
E.
Conwell
Elwood M. Wogner 43
Koy Jones Wogner 43
Betty Zehner Dietrich '45
Dr Barrett W Benson
John F Hendler '38
Jeanne M. While + (MG)
Mr. & Mrs Howard McKinnon
Morie E Foust '37
78
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard
Comerchero
Dr. Iro
Pofricio A.
Henry Bierman
to Dr.
(1882)
Roy
Brandau +
Dr George J. Storb
Mr. 8 Mrs. Fred Campbell +
S. Duy Hutchison +
Kenneth D Schnure '69
Eleonor P Shomis
G & C Industries
Mrs. Wilbur G Fischer +
Chorlotte M. Hess 52
Dr David A. Superdock 54
'30
Col
40
Linn. Sr.
E.
lloyd 62
Robert W. Buehner.
louffer
E.
Richard R
Memorial
W
Pouline Aumiller Stork
Bridge 68
Dr & Mrs Robert
Wogner LeGronde 36
Ruth
'42
Charles C. Harmony 47
Stonley G. Rokowsky
DONORS BY CLASS
Dr, 8
Dr
Merrill A. Deitrich '42
Morilyn Muehlof
Jomes
BSd FAMILY & FRIENDS
Mrs Jomes H. McCormick
Jeonne M. White +
Nancy Green Gilgonnon '57
Douglas K Dillon
Mrs. Hurley Patterson +
The Dixie Shops, Inc
Mrs John J. Gress +
S. H. Evert
Mr. & Mrs Williom Brewster +
Dr & Mrs. A K Ponikkor
Friends of Boyd Buckinghom
Kenneth Hoffman
Catawese Cooch lines, Inc.
Columbio Insuronce Componies
Weorne 44
Motzko 77
Jessie Props!
1917
Memorial
Helen Gregory lippert
Memoriol to Morie Cromis
Georgio F Arnold
Gertrude lord Blanche
to
Groce M Dovis
Agnes Maust Dieffenbacher
Nora Berlew Dymond
Non
R.
Jenkins
Cloro O'Donnell LeMin
Helen McCarthy O Toole
Mildred M. Rice
Nellie Popciak Turkiewicz
1918
Cnddie Edwards Berninger
Vido E Edwards
Hannah low Groner
Dorothy Horrison LoBor
Cora K Cotner Mottern
Edno Davenport Ohl
Moine
E.
Richardson
Continued from page 12
Violet
VanDemplos Dando
Dawson
William
Edith Hill
Leonora Walker Simons
Morion Phillips Stiteler
Edward
H. Yost
Memorial to Hurley O. Patterson
Morion Brenner Bredbenner
Crook
Rhoda L, Crouse
Mabel G Decker
Eva Ferguson Ellis
Ann
E.
Griffith
Mary A. Hess
Linda
Pfahler
1920
Ruth Johnson Garney
Warren
Henderschott
Gertrude R. Martin
E.
('40)
Fredo Steele
Esther Welliver
lillie
Horter
Coreene
Brittoin Giere
Helen Deitrick Harmon
J
Marie King Horns
Edna S. Horter
E. Dechant
50)
Rose Connor Garrahom
Beuloh Deming Gibson
T.
Cecelia
M
Gladys
E
M
Minnie
Hohn
('39)
Morie Werkheiser Hemmig
Christina Goble Jacks
Margoret J Jones
Helen Gensemer Kennedy
Stosio Roiewski Kowalski
Long
E.
Lydio Pollock
Mohoney
1927
Morgoret Keller Riehl
Morion Marshall Beisel
Naomi Bender ('53)
Ethel Price Richards
Merceo Kreigh Benner
Rachoel Long Sauers
Anita Rodda Scott
Nelle Doley Shockloss
Kothleen Somers Bonner
Bowman
L.
Chicollo
H. Evangeline Lanning Deibert
Ruth Smith Dickstein
Molly Brace Duffy
Matilda Mensch Waples
Laura Kohler Wendel
S.
Dymond Whitlock
Edno Willioms Willioms
Edgar B Sutton
1925
Katherine Rinker Allen
Geneva
Schott
Baughman
Burgess ('40)
Katherine Wilson Byers
Lillian
1923
Helen Harmon Bowes
Grace H. Brandon
Jean Young Brown
Kathryn Brennan Burke
Rhoda Wesley Burlingame
Louise Davies Colwell
Chorlotte Fetter Coulsfon
C. Ellen
Andes Howard
Ruth Bennoge LaRue
Beatrice Girton Leorn
Sterling
Grace A. Lord 50)
Helen Chudzinski Lukus
Strauser
Martha Davies Wotkins
Mildred Sechok Weiss
Glodys Dildine Whitmire
Dorothy Foote Pihlblod
(
(
63)
Wilhelmino Spangenberg Lesoius
Morion Smith Little
Catherine D Reilly
Irmo Kopp Rich
31)
Mary
Anna Zorskas
K. Gallagher
Edno Berkheiser Gottey
Victoria Smith Giger ('44)
Marion Furman Grubb
(
Ruth
Crumb Howells
Quinn Jakobsen
Isoacs Johnson
Glodys Bundy Krick
Esther Chapin louboch
41)
('49)
Memorial
to Wilbur
Ido Hensley
Fischer
Acore
W. Brandon
Pouline Nelson Brockmon
Esther Wruble Burnat
Thelma Hartzel Burns *
Elva Griffith Dovis
Regis Neely Morris
R. Lucille
Jule Prisbek
1931
('59)
Audrey Moore Cohen
Eleanor Zydonowicz Cooke
Ralph W. Davies
Emily
Maroney Fairman
Mildred
Fortner
Alberto Willioms Green
Lolo Keeler Pulling ('60)
Irene E
Guest
Dr.
Mary Hoys Harry
Myrtle Hoegg Hayes
Schalles Rosser
Geroldine Hess Ruch
Roy
J
Horing
Esther Yeager Castor
Dorothy Jones Chose
Nicio M Chiovacci
Rosino Frank Chornack
('54)
L
m
Isabel Chelosky Hester
Creveling
Albyna Zadra Dovis
James
B.
C.
Florence
G Goodwin
Ruth M. Rockwell
M. Elizabeth Von Busk.rk Booth
Jone Fohringer Brewington
Cora Wagner Burd
LoRue
*
Elizabeth A. Reilly
to Elizobeth H. Hubler
Catharine Stockhouse Acker ('52)
Lewis
Mortz DeVoe
Bertine Prosser
Hope
('39)
Pearl Schell Carls
Jock B
Vezo
Memorials
Cloire
Cormon
Violet V.
Phyllis Fowler Wilson
Margoret Davis Yenchar
Evelyn Olver Avery
Antoinette
(
40)
Sora Smith Walter
Sora Ermish Adorns 42)
Rachel Gefhing Anthony
Groce Thompson Morlow
George A. Mathews ('29)
Sadie Zapp Moyernick
Mildred Adorns McCloughan ('29)
Mildred Crothomel McCullough
Mory Dietz Miller
('50)
Virginia M. Tedesco
G
Esther Horter Bittner
Lloyd
Schell
(
Edith
L
E.
Cotherine Vollrofh Symons
1929
Mary
Eva
32)
Anno Skladony Mergo
Anne H. Morgis
Wotkins
Zeisloft
(
(
Rhea Davis Strausser
Mory Sands Vaughn
E.
('33)
Gertrude Schraeder Johnson
A. Elizabeth Myrick Jones
Minnie Rowe Keefer
Thursobert Schuyler
Richord T. Sibly 34)
Clara Zydanowicz Petedreund
Cotherine Skvorla Polacky
Helen V Coshmareck
Gertrude Hildebrond Crayton
Laura A. Dovis
Mortha A. Fisher
Hummer
Annie
Viola M. Stadler
('58)
Dorothy Hilemon
Chorles A. John
Vivion Jermyn Frey
Philbin
Wise
36)
('48)
(
Hilda
Poyne
Elizobeth Gilbert Vincent
(
Finnerty
39)
Anno Isenberg Gossler
Harold H Hidlay
Raymond T Hodges
Robinson
M. Louise Baker Stevens
Lois A.
(
Groce Reichard Gardner
Dorothy M Gorrey 32)
J.
B.
50)
Schnurefoose
A.
James H Willioms
R.
(
Cruikshonk
Jasper M. Fritz
Kathryn Jones Fritz
(
Clara Vanderslice Thomos
Mildred Gollogher Vercusky
Mary
+
Snyder ('37) '
Ethel Roberts Stafford
Mildred Phillips Stauffer
Thelmo Prosser Cooper
Catherine M Dean
Pauline Lloyd Isaacs
Bertho Randall Troino
Lehman
Brown
Nolo Kline Brown
Anna
37)
N. Rosalie Boyer Smiley
62)
(
Ethel Fowler
F.
Soroh
Lois Mitchell
Blank
Dietterich
(
Helen Hutton Morris ('37)
Morjorie Klein Perrotti
Doris Fritz Hassert
W. Seely
McLaughlin
Oce Williams Austin
Morgoret
Leslie
F.
E.
Josephine Holuba Drueding
Eleanor M. Dwyer
Miriam Edwards
Kathryn House Everift
('30)
Mory Kershow Powell
Zelma H. Ramage
Leona Moiley Pierce
Doro Wilson Risley
Mildred Ridgley Schollenberger
Helen Zydonowicz Schwoll
Linskill
Elizabeth Davies Miller
Helen Pursel Walborn
Bessie Singer Shaffer
Evadne M. Ruggles
Hervey B Smith
Helen Hess Strouch
Lucile Jury
Arthur
Bukowski
Cavanough
Helen Morgan Daubert
Groce Reinbold Davis
Jessie Cook Dovis
Dorothy Welker DeWire
Gladys Hirsch Lyon
Sutliff
Mory Fruit Forr
Hannah M. Fetterman
M
Virginia
Schoen Lewis
Morgoret L. Lewis ('37)
Lydio Taylor Martin
Wilmo
Cloire T
Winifred A. Lawless
Mobel Albertson
E.
Stacio Audelevicz
('29)
Laird ('29)
Margoret Coburn Stracko
Frances
1930
Florence E Boker
30)
Atillo
Helen Hess Evans
Morgoret Smith Morris
A
Agnes Burns Wilson
Elizabeth Roup Yeich
Lovma Crowell Young
Marian E Young
Janetto York Colemon
Ruth Allen Smith
Leoro V. Souder ( 50)
M. Roselda Schultz Sherwood
Joseph P. Siesko ('39)
Ramoge ('48)
Adelle Cryder Raymond
George B Rhown. Jr
Mary
Rowlands
M
(
H Elizabeth Williams
Or
Helen A. Kramer
Roeder
Mobel Ridall Noble
Anna Nordstrom Pearson
Roberts
Louise Scherer Rolland
Mortha Y Jones
Morgaret Murroy Luke
Antoinette Coolbough Moson
Genevieve Bohr Morrow
Mory Lawrence Poetzell
50)
(
Eleanor Derr Gilbert
Hoffman
40)
Anders Washeleski
Dowe Welker
Lillion
('36)
Florence Fest Johnstone
Mildred Bohn Kneller
Anna Gogoloch Vaughn
Conway
Kathryn
Gertrude
Jones
(
M
(
Virgin. o
Heintzelmon (51)
K.
Korleen
Helen Odell Thompson
Foe Womelsdorf Tubick
Ruth Tempest McLaughlin
Maude Stover Meyer
Moon Dice
Rachoel Kressler Erdman
T.
Bertha
Brace
Ruth Terry
Beckenbaugh
Cameron
Saro Spongier Walters
Dole
(
Mary Sweeney Ruddy
Emily Edwards Rupert
Morse Aldrich
Edith E
Max
Bery
William
John
Helen Jones Londis
Morgaret Evons Lewis
Ruth Beaver Lindenmuth
Beotrice Cornell
Lois Pfahler
Thelmo M. Noylor
John J. Opiory
Frances Hohn Blose
Adams
Anno Jones Todd
Phillips
Francis A. Garrity
Morgon
Gilbert
Carl D. Blose
*
Irene Kornell Davis
Doyle W. Ivey
Smith
F.
62)
(
Mary
Mory
Charlotte Parsons Armstrong
Grace Baylor Auten
Helen E. Barrow
Grace Wogner Beers
1922
Doris Johnson Stewart
Margaret Betty Thomas
Frances Conner Mensinger
Antonio Ashton Metzker
1924
Editho Ent Adorns
Nelson Yerkes
Bertha 8illmeyer Zong
Geroldine Diehl Cross
Lebo Stauffer
Helen Ash Stearns
Elsie
Mory Moher McElhenny
Doris
Beotrice Williams Eichner
Thelmo Bommer Stockhouse
Annie Bronson Seely
Lola Kocher Seword
Christine B
Warren L. Fisher
Agnes Moe Eyerly George
Edith Blossom Hoffman
Fronk Klem
Ruth M. Koch
Mildred Downing Major
Morgoret Deitrick Martin
Elenoro Shannon McDougoll
Josephine Allison Moyer
Helene Lowe Schlegel
Mory Gillospy Sholer
Sara Morgon Sutcliffe
26)
Jeanette Hostie Buckingham
Anna Benninger Bush
Caroline Spotts Criswell
Morgoret Oswald Gordon 30)
Martha Yavorsky Honderohon
Grace Edwards Hortman
Rhodo M, Young
Edna Sterner Durling
Mane Howeth Simmons
Eleanor Hughes Singer
Alice Robuck Smith
('29)
Hozel Epler Furmon
Mory Zimmerman Garrison
('39)
Mildred Ridall Phillips
Ruth Shannon Rhinard
Mary A. Ross
Thelmo Brandon Bittner
Louneta Loroh ('44)
Morgoret M Mothews
Grace Gotshall Pannebaker
Morgaret Ferree Stearns
1921
Isaac
Margoret Gorvey McDonald
Lucile Cook Mensinger
Lottie M. Miller
Alice Pennington Blair
Esther Lloyd Bound
Edith P. Davis
Grossman Konel
Word Karoso
Linskill ['43)
Erma Gold Shearer
Walter M. Siesko
Bornum
Boynum
Mortha M. Lingertot
Motildo Kostenbouder Tiley
S. Frances Adorns Toor
Angeline Evans Beavers
Miller I. Buck
Adeline Burgess ('25-38)
Jean C Conner ('51)
Teresa Nelson Dougherty
Pullen
Frances
Ruth Gardner McAlley
Mayme
33)
(
Evelyn Thompson Reid
Flick Richords ( 31)
Hildo Becker Scherer
Meyer
Muzetto Llewellyn Morgan
Lillian
R
Abbett
(
Bessie
Alice
M
Estella M Hyssong
Morgaret Benfield Keller
Mary Mottavi Lang
Elizabeth Louboch Schechterly
J. Seletski
to Emily Hutton
Mory
Christine
Eliiabeth Petty
F
Morgaret
32)
(
Edith Johnson
Cotherine Strine Harmon
M. Elizabeth Hortman Hosier
Dr Margaret Bittner Parke
Kothryn Naylis Pelak
Jone Park Ashburner
Anno Dovis Barrow
Fern Trough Eshlemon
John L. Fidler
Almo
S.
Morgoret Campbell Eoger
D Lucille Koufmon Foulkrod
Evo Burlingame Fry
Mildred Housch Goringer
Helen Kehler Grodwell
Helen Koralus Mosier
Kathryn Griffith Nicholls
Helen Richie Padgett
Catharine Fagley Wilkinson
Kothryn
('34)
Carpenter
Irene Rhinard Creveling
Mor|orie I. Davey
Dodson Maynard
Leona Williams Moore
Hammond Wheeler
Lucia
Young
1921
Memorio!
1926
Morion
Lois
Dr. Henry D. Rentschler,
Jr.
K Margoret Heiss Vosline
Eldora Robbins
Stroh
•
Morkley
Iro C.
H. Sterner
E.
Almo Seybert Wilson
(
M
Dorothy Bennetto Tubridy
Helen Howells Wagner
Mildred Fohr.nger Wintersteen
Suson Drum Turner
Helen Hower MocNought
Elmo L. Mopr 40)
Ruth Kahler Purnell
Peifer
Bessie Beaver Werkeiser
Alice Albee Lutz
Pnscilla Young McDonald
Grace Kishbach Miller
Elsie
Elizabeth
Mary
Lillian Fisher Long
Helen Walton Moinworing
Marr Stout
Isabel O Donnell Sweeney
Helen Andrews Thomos
Veronico Namotka Thompson
Stecker
R
James
Dr.
Geroldine Hall Krouser
E Learn
Winifred Edwards Libby
Kreidler
S.
Glodys
Jeffrey
Beotrice Berlew Jopling
Henrielto Garinger Keller
Grace Willioms Keller
Anno Ozelko Kohler
Miles M Kostenbauder
Elizabeth
Anno Geary 'Sidler
Jorrett
Mone Cobo
Sora Shumon Fox
Mory Hancock Goinsway
Mildred
E.
J.
M
Elizabeth
Hilda Albertson Heller
Amy M.
Irene Benovitz Spitz
Mary Price Stewart
Mildred Morgan Powell
Genevieve Wilson Reid
Ruth Dyer Rudy
Hompton
Morgoret M Honks
Edith
Leonora Austin Heydon
Groce Kivler Hoover
Edythe Hortmon Slanski
Jason S Potterson
Helen Arthur Gulley
1919
Morion McHugh Shadduck
Maryon Horl Miller
Mobel Lindenmuth Nicholas
Rev Raymond Edwards
Mory Shipman Edwards
E. Thelmo Jeremioh
Geise
Zolo Smith Swanson
Katherine Kase Yeager
Moher
F
Sims Meeker
Julio
Florence Breisch Drake
Dovis
Derr
M
(
36)
Dunn
Nooma Edmunds
(
41)
Eble 61)
Fronk V Fous
Florence Fawcett Fowler
Frank J Golder
(
Morgie Harrison Gregory
Continued on page
14
Anna Breyo Rinko
Bernice Bronson Gennorio
Charlotte Osborne Boyne
Ruth Welliver Seely
Elizabeth
Helen Chopmon Berkheisei
Cormer
Laura Kelley Bollinger
Margaret Sondbrook Bristol
John P Shellenberger
Ellen Veole Smith
Mory Beierschmitt Spongier
1933
Continued from page
Kenneth E. Howk ('39)
Rev Thomos lomont Henry
Anno Fowler Hibbord
Winifred Keen Howell ('59)
13
Chorlotte
Mack Kepner
Anno Rembis Chance
Thomos S Coursen
Horold M. Danowsky
Morion DeFroin Danowsky
Elizabeth
Bowmon
Cotherine R Ingrom
Bessie A. Jenkins
Thomos
Kirker
J.
Mortha Berrimon Frye
Julia
Kokoro Yaroshesfski
Felicio Czornecki Zawotski
Dorothy Sidler Kreinheder
Vonce S. Lauboch
Helen Goretski Lewis
Irene Hirsch Heister
McGeehon
L.
McNeolis
James
Soro D Morgan
Florence Byerly Hoover
Gertrude Strein Howells
Minnie
8.
Olschefsky
Albert
Marjory Roochford Sorber
(
63)
Alice Roush Stover
Raymond W.
G
('45)
Krum
Morgoref Ziegler Kunkle
Anne Homiok Labosky
Williord
Witheridge
Clarence R Wolever
Mory Gorhom Wolever
Dorothy Jones Wolfe 38)
Lowson
Dorothy Gilmore Lovell
Mary Betterly Moiers
Anne McGinley Moloney
Dorothy Foust Wright
Calvin
Esther Hutchengs Yale
Sarah Williams Mitten
Helen Stryjak Zebrowski
Irene
A. Mildred Robb Zybort
Matilda Olosh
Keith
Lois
(
W
(
401
Menges
Nous Munson
Moe
E.
Berger
(
Bertho Astleford Probert
(
Marion C. Pyle
Kenneth A Roberts
34)
Mildred Bixler Sharp
35)
Alvina Picorello Borget
Elizobeth Brooks Brood
(
261
A Brown
Robert
('52)
Louise Gori Cocchione
Robert
Herbert
Irving Ruckel
Elda Henrie Taylor
Howord Tomlinson
Sharp
T
Soro Masteller Tomlinson
Morion Murphy Uhl
Work
J.
Bokum
Bomboy
Chowones
Isoioh D.
John
Helen Frey Morkley
Wlllard A. Christian.
W
John
Utz
Walter Wosheleski
Alice Gilmore Yeager
Ruth Schield Weniger
Morqueen V White
Howard T Willioms
Bonta
Lucille Gilchrist Kindig
+
James Stonulonis
P.
Helen Shonk Yoder
Jr.
1942
Albert A. Clouser
M
Morgoret L Deppen
Dr Jomes V DeRose
Elwood H Beaver
Victor
Howord
Minoni
Utf
Fronk
Letho
Hummel
Horriet
G
Violo Disbrow Corr
Kinley
Merrill A. Deitrich
Elizabeth Hooglond
Lipfert
Aleta
Wilhelmino Hayes
Lipfert (X-38)
Mortley
William R
Dr Alex
1936
Robert D Abbott
Deilnch
McKechme
J
Robert H
Brochyus
Dons Guild Chomberlin
Kocher
I
Belz
W
Edword B Corr
Hopkins
Annabel Boiley Jones
Alvin
W
Frances Hull Burrows
Anno Orner Guttendorf
Robert P
Cloire Sirocco Bolles
John
Ferrari
J.
Stiles
A
Joseph
Ellsworth
Jr
Stuort
Parker
Hortmon
L
Borboro Straub Hortmon
Elizabeth Jenkins Porsons
Condoce
Robert J Reimord
Wilhelmino Peel Scheffler
Myrtle E Heydenreich
Dole
Hoover
Hem
Dietrich
W
Troupane
Hester Slusser Crop
Edna Creveling Whipple
Kathryn John Evons
Philip E
Mory
Jomes
Kothryn Brobst Hortmon
Virgmio Burke Troupone
Fronk M. VonDevender, Jr.
Paul
Wolter Woytovich
Mildred Eaton Levitt
Evelyn Freehofee Young
Jeon Shumon Zehner
Edno Zehner Long
Davis
E.
D DeHoven
Almedo L Derby
H. Willioms
Verno
Grace Worrell
Morris
Emily
Wogner
Ernest U. Lou
Thelmo Derr Detz
Lorno Gillow Doyle
Mordon
Blanche
Evert
Morgoref Howk Belohlovek
Dorothy Wolfe Bower (61)
Grace McCormock Fanning
Frank
Gerosky
Harris
Fronk
J.
W
Ezra
Jean Eyer Bredbenner
Maryruth Rishe Buckolew
Walter S. Chesney
Jessie Loird
Dr
('50)
Monroe Forester
Ellen
Haywood
Ello
Chester C Hess
Wilbur
J.
Hibbord
Mildred Dimmick Hinebough
HoHmon
Clapp HoHmon
Edith Strickler
Eleanor
Kathryn Benner Houser
Dr.
Clorence
L
(
39)
Hunsicker
Helen M. Keller
Marie Hunsinger Kirker
Rev. Oliver H. Kropf
Margoret Hendrickson Krouse
Fronk
Poul
J.
I.
Theron
Perch
Reichort
R.
Rhinard
(
49)
Hazel Smoll Rumble
Emily Zydonowicz Sage
V Poulme Showers
H.
Edmond Smith
Mary Broy Smith
Lois DeMott StouHer
Wagner Swortz
Thomos
Romona Oshinsky Thomos
Almo White Todd 50)
Mory A. Vollrath ('51)
Irene Dromo Walton
Dorothy Jones Word
Gladys Boyer Wilmer ('35)
Congetto Contmi Zelinsky
Evoline Rieben Bozitsko
Jomes D Pope
Foy Gehrig Clark
Dominic
Peter
R.
Bokey,
Jr.
G
Violet Reilly
Morgoret O
Glodys Ritter Cromon
Morion McWilliams Cohen
Ben
Mory DeWold Elder
Lowrence C. Evongehsto
Ruth Henson Fox
Glodys Bakey Furlong
James A. Gennaria
Ruth Radcliffe Dickerman
Catherine
Marie
Clayton H. Hinkel +
William
Hannoh Unger Houck
Albert W. Houser
Doro Toylor Smith
Kothryn Yale
Graham
(
38)
(
42)
Krumanocker Hensley
Curwood
50)
Hancock
Glodys Jones Horns
Moe Weikel
Lapinski
Dorothy Hess Linn
Dr Horry T. Nelson
Mory Meors Northrop
A
A
George R. Tomalis
Mr. & Mrs Donold A. Wotts +
Ethel Bond Woolston
Alfred S Wosheleski
Williom
Fern Yost Whitebreod
Lorraine Lichlenwolner Wiggs
Gertrude Wilson Withey
Beuloh Lowrence Mosser
Mercedes Deone McDermott
S
Menapoce
(32)
Florence Snook Borrett
Fredo Fester
George
Bowman
Wertmon Moltz
Dorothy Edgar Cronover
Helen Weaver Ditty
Mildred Quick Muller
Morion
Groce Swortwood Patterson
Jeon Phillips Plowright ('36)
Eleanor Sharodin Faust
Aeno M. Fetlermon
Pierce M. Reed
Andrew
Dorothy M.
John
Phillips Richords
I.
Leonard E. Stout
Dorothy Derr Tilson
Fred
Carl
F
T.
Visintainer
Welliver
Jeon Smith White
Cotherine Durkin
Cosari
R
Helen Pesonsky Cassano
Irene Giger Millroy
Kothryn
1938
Elmore
L.
Fetterolf
E. Fiorini
Thomos
Thomos
Louise Seamon Thomos (MG)
Ruth Jomes
Dr.
Groce
J
Williom
Raklevicz Pendleton
Anno Edwords Lindenmuth
Dorothy Moss Lipnik
Soroh Schnure Mock ('58)
Noro BayliH Morkunos
Zeiss
Stuort Straub
F
Mono
Jomes G Pugh
Agnes A. Redo
Jane Dorrow Roberts
Glodys Brennan Rohrbaugh
Roy G. Schrope
E
Smith
Osmon Trewello
Jeon Kuster Von Blohn
Mory Jone Shorpless Wagner
Fredo Shumon Louboch
Morjorie McAllo Lee
Reisler
E.
Marion Londis Morgon
Vivion Frey Poyne
Luther
Mary
Sheiman
Bernice Blaine Stout
Linn, Sr
Florence Stefonski Moscovoge
Morgoret Wolfe Klock
Thelmo L Knouss
Peck
Ruck +
Jean Lontz Smith
Morion Long Smith
llleck
Robert
L
Sylvia Feingold
Hicks
Dorothy Berninger Hippensteel
Victono Muskaloon Hower
Hunter
Kotherine
E
Bell
Podwiko
Dorothy Selecky Poltrock
H.
Govm
Lorraine Snyder Jones
Chorles L. Kelchner
Alvin S
(
Phylis
M. Glenda Conner Glossmire
Robert R. Goodman
Earl T.
Kiethline
Florence Hortline Kindt
Foust
E.
A Gehrig
Anno Jean Louboch Gehrig
Dorothy Hower German
Adeline Loyoou Hess
Mory Fagley Humphrey
Ronold F Keeler
Bernice
Thomos DeHoven
Beatrice
Eorl
Lamar Bloss
to
'
Pino, Sr
R
Soro M. Berger
Blanche Kostenbouder Millingion
('35)
Mildred A. Bonin
1940
Chorles
CLASS OF 1937
Coyne
Horo Coyne
Richard
Pearl Boer Wise
Wertmon
Jock
Alice Kealy
Dr. Doniel E.
(
Warren
Pauline Franklin Long
Grace Foote Conner
Myrtle
H.
P.
Jr.
Wagner Diehl
Kathryn Wolp Elmer
Elizabeth
Anna Chevilski Lorko
Mary Gumon McGuire
Lois Heppe McKinney
Dorothy Hartmon Moore
Hope Richards Pensyl
Frank
Betty Horter
Imboden
L
Klinger
Hoinel A. Love
Mertz
L
Helen Klingermon Michoel
Robert B Miner
Geroldine Bitting Oberle
Glodys Rinord Ruesch
Memoriols
Robenolt Coldren
Minnie Howeth Lean
Ethel Keller Long
Michael
1937
Morjorie
Lewis
P.
John H. Yeager +
Chudzinski
Anna Northrup Greene
Robert A. Howk
R.
Chorles
Ray
Dorothy Englehort Zimmermon
A
Ermo Wollgong Lotshow
O Zimmerman
Mericle
Cnspell Cobleigh
Lillion
Wogner Hilemon
Ruth
J.
W
Mervin
Lowrence
L.
Wogner LeGronde
Ruth
1934
Irmo lowton Eyer
S
Shumon Keppley
Soro
Zeisloft
Jones +
J.
Dobb
Ehrhort
H Burnis Fellmon
Carolyn Cole Fritz
George A McCutcheon
+
Schneider
E.
George
Sterling
Edno Wagner Stevens
Rosebud Golder Ungemach
Renninger
R.
Florobelle Schrecongost Schneider
Rowland
J
Melzgar
O Horo
Cotherine Oplinger Renninger
Sam Krouss
Willis
Clork
Quigley
T
Kathorine Leedom
Moe
Lois Fullmer
1939
Mildred Ford Wesner
Mory A Stohl (37)
Raymond Stryjok
Louise Brislin Thomos
Edno Lomoreaux Tobias
Pauline Reng Turek
Elizabeth Miller
Velmo Mordon Kerstetter
Elvira
Musgrave Porter
J.
Morjorie Beaver Morrison
Ellen Rhinard O'Connell
Arthur K
Genevieve Bowmon McKelvey
Unoro B. Mendenholl
Thelmo Bredbenner Menges
Catharine A. Mensch
Noomi M Myers
William
Reed
Elizabeth Row Reed
Donold A. Ruckle
Lavelle
E
Lehmon
Word Lichtel
Leo
L
Anne Quigley Green
Gerold C. Horter
Helen Culp Keiner
Froncis D. Sell
Allen W. Porr
Cloire
Irene Diehl Konrod
John
Anno Rech Medycki
Cyril F Menges
Mory
Dovis
F,
Williom G. Kerchusky
Kriegh
S
Llewellyn C. Richords
I.
1932
CLASS OF 1932
John C Adomson
Woodrow W. Aten
Ruth Haggy Boker
33)
Butler
J
Thomos
Kreiss
Froncis Litzenberger
(
Florence Morchelti Gedanic
Kafka
J.
Beck
T
John
Dr Walter H Jorecki
Moe Mantz
Gress
Helen Hortmon Cimbola
('33)
Melbo Beck Hyde
Mory Furmon James
Hirlemon Quick
Mary E Roiewski
Rebo Willioms Schmidt
Ruth E Sonner
J.
Woodrow G. Brewington
Alice Barroll Hunsinger
Doris Sechnst Paulson
Lois
Hummel
Ethel M.
John
Hornet Styer Boop
Evelyn Smith Hooven
Orvol C. Polsgrove (MG)
John
*
Edith Boyer Miller
Anno K Ollendick
to Dr.
Lauretta Foust Baker
Hinckley. Sr.
I
1935
Memorial
Chorles F Hensley
('50)
Jomes
Willord
Dorothy N. Heller
Morgoref
Ficco Stashinski
Rev. Chorles P
Beotnce Beole Letlermon
Helen Rosser
Agatha
Heckenluber
T.
John F. Hendler
Chorles H. Henrie
Jonet Reisenweover Stahr
Morjorie Jones Harrington
Martin
Robert
63)
Gerold D. Fritz (MG)
Lois Gruver Gassert
Leon H. Greenly
Isobelle Olah Horvath
Helen Dixon Korns
Hovol
Soroh Lentz Vonce
Grace
linskill
(
E
Ruth Fowler Droke
Catherine Alberfson Fuller
Florence Blylhe Kitchen
Bernard
+•
Eshmont
J.
Richard H. Foote
Knopp Hording
Irene
R
Peter
Homer
E.
Edwards +
Edo Bessie Beilhartz Edwards
Elizobeth McGoldrick Troy
Kerr
Kathryn Fowler Kindig
Mory
Shelhomer
P.
Dr. C. Stuart
Gilligon
J.
Zimmerman
1941
Charlotte Gearhart Bakey
Claraline Schlee Baylor
Ruth Shay Biery
Micholene Zuchoski Bowen
Elizabeth Howk Brown
Agnes Pinomonti Casari
Mary Driscoll Chaapel
Edward V. Dobb
'
Horriet
P.
Wanich
1943
Joyce Knorr Adamic
Rev Corl S. Berninger
Mortha Zehner Brown
Mory Trump Bruner
Boyd F. Buckingham
Joanna Fico Buckingham
Mory Evans Courfright
Mar|orle
Woyne
E
Coombs Deets
Deoner
Leo A. Donn
Reba Henrie Fellmon
Virginio
Lowheod
Irving T
Gottlieb
D.
Fletcher
Mae Grow
Ruth Hope Handy (MG)
Mobel Troy Heffelflnger
Kathryn A. Hess
Dovid M Jones
Ruth Rhodes Klowilter
Joyce Lohr Kleckner
Continued on page 15
Continued from page
Richard
1948
14
Jorman
E
A Ledyard
Bowman l ingle
Richord
R
Arnold Goringer
W
15
1943
Joseph W. Kozlowski
Morion Wilson Balliet
June Novak Bones
Richard B. Keyser
Doris
Michael Kolle&ar
Carol Shupp Heard
Wlnton H Louboch
Lois Godleski Lynn
Elizabeth Baldy Boyer
Lucy Baker Loubscher
Gecge
Nancy Sworlz Lychos
Williom M McAloose
Borbaro Shermon McCalla
Henry
Geroldine Funk McLaughlin
Rose Oomaleskie Pogirski
Morlene Gobster Klein
E.
Miller
O
Harold
E
June Hooglond Norris
Sora Eastman Orlt
Elroy
George W. Piorote (MG)
Gloria Moiniero
Bernard M. Pofnak
James
Virginia M.
Shamboch
Jean Sidler Snyder
Loro M. Snyder
Frank M. Taylor
Nora Singley Trexler
Frederick
DeBell.
J
Jr.
Dill
Thomos
Jonet
McAndrew
J.
Elizabeth Reece McMillan
Mensinger
Clair E.
Fisher
Mortim
Robert E
M
Dormer
J.
L.
Lauck
L
Frank T. Luposhunski
Marjorie Fonzo Mariotti
Dalberg
F.
Betty
Chorles
Clemens
Crawford
Price
E.
J.
Sheehon (MG)
Stonitsk. (MG)
Froncis
F
Messo
Chorles
E.
Miller
John V. Stevens
Andre M. Vanyo
James A Whibley
Henry
Anthony J. Valente, Jr.
Col Elwood M. Wagner
Stanley C. Krzywicki
Catherine Jones Wagner
Sara K Wagner
Millard C. Ludwig
June Oplinger Wandrus
Dorothy Johnson Wasco
Martha H. Wright
Philip R, Yeany. Sr
George
Thomas W. Lewis
Dr.
John
Dr.
M
Menarick
Orner
Pleviak
Luther H. Roth
E.
S.
Samuel
J
Jr.
Ohlmon Albono
Elaine
John T Bogdon
F
Skowronski
E. Rush
Rose Kraiser Schieber
William
R.
Stratlon
Donald
Willis Swales, Jr.
Alfred
G Dent
Helen Oyer Diehl
Robert
Wayne Von
Barbara Gulik Dovis
Dr. Palmer E Dyer
Sara Oockey Edwards
Mildred Palumbo Washville
1944
M
Louise Madl Allison
Frederick
Marie Baker Gallagher
Effie
Patterson
Gore
Mory
Schromm
F.
Charlotte Reichort Sharpless
Leonard R Weorne
Helen Smith Whitebread
Marjorie Sharretts Grant
M
Edna Snyder Heckmon
1949
Stetten, Sr
M. Louise Lohr Wentzel
John W. Willioms
Bernard
1951
CLASS OF
Cyganowski (MG)
Dr. Richard
W
Dr Joseph P
Zelinski
J.
Butler
J.
J.
1951
Evans
Feifer
Wondo Farnsworth Langdon
Edwin M. Allegar
Betty Jane Anello
Carol Gass Bell
Edward G. Boker
Adda Myers Barrett
Williom F Benson
Muriel
Wagner Brush
James
R.
Jean Ackermon Moyer
Ehzobelh Smith Reynolds
Florence Mills Rzemien
Mario
Mory Alorcon Donnelly
Chorles L. Edwards
Richord C. Knause (MG)
Shirley
Reisenweaver Krommes
L.
Thomos M. Donan
George N Dotzel.
F. Emmitt
Helen Tietjen Emmitt
Carleton H. Ermish
Robert
Mary
Laura 8rundoge Evans
Joan Grozel Gamble
Milton
Mory Dorsey Genke
Nancy Rhoods O'Brien
Claude W. Renninger
Jonet Shank McLoughlin
Harold
J
Louise
Adams Missmer
Miller
Porr Seybert
Anne Sobol
Taylor
Samuel J. Trapani
Helen Cromis Worrington
Helen Martin Wotts
Berlanda
L.
G. Alberta Funk Crowford
Williom R. Deebel
Ruth
Jr
Elder
P.
Dr
Creveling
Russell C. Davis
Harold
Melvo Kocher Wintersteen
Noble Fosshouer
Richard E. Grimes
Mildred Fisher Kowolsky
John Kuntzo
Anita Behler Wrislor
Nellie K. Lock
Genevieve Scheetz Hosier
George R. Hughes
Florence Foust Yeany
Mary Tyson Lauck
Richord
Leonard
Jessie Props!
Wearne
Eloise
John M. Greenly
Hummel
S
Edward
Donald
LaBarr
R.
R.
Dr. David N.
Newbury
Zehner Dietrich
Betty
Jeanne Keller Epley
Frances
J.
Foust
Mortino Guida
Joseph J Gullo
Lucille
Mory Wogner Hoffmon
Morion Zong Huber
McGeehan McElwee
Betty
Gretchen Trobock McLoin
John G. McNelis
Morvin L. Meneeley '
Daniel P
Robert
Hozel E
Millard
T
Enomo Mosgo
Elsie Floil Kull
Wilmer F Nester
Lois Dalesman Nester
Anthony J. Paulmeno
Lawrence V Pekolo
Celestine Longo Pekala
N Eudoro Berlew Lyhne
Arlene N. Superko
John
Marilyn Soiler Jackson
Mory Lou Fenstemoker John
Dr Mory Flaherty Kohrherr
1946
Jacqueline Shaffer Creasy
Isabel
Gehmon
Wanda
Dovis
Kehler Edelman
Nellie A.
Kramer
Dr
Francis
Radice
J.
H. Reichard
Robert G. Reitz
Nancy
Fisk Riley
Vivion Corey Reynor
Maxine Shirey Robbins
Nancy Powell Swales
Hervey R. Thomas
Dr Richard F. Woechler
Edward T Wassel
Barbara Horman
Adams
Laureen Rees Watts
Carolyn Hower Williams
Dorothy Kocher Pugh
Or Donald D Robb
Mortho Teel
Dora Brown
Silk
Michael
Jonet Shullz
Ungerman
Ann Papania Bergstresser
Albert
L.
Brown
Earl H. Bloke. Jr.
Robert
P.
Burns
Arlene Pope Bonner
Martha G. Bonin
Kenneth E. Borst
Jean Enamo Cerulo
Leon Coval
Roy Croop,
Ida Wilkinson
Zerby
1947
Joseph
J
Barchock
Dale
Bennett
T.
Violo M. Blue
George
Blyler
E.
Morie Yozviak Borton
Russell C. Brachman
Jr.
Janice Jones Costner
Patricio Kistler Diseroad
George Chebro
Gloria Mazzitti Ermish
Martho Hergert Clemens
Robert H. Conrad
Bertha Kravitskl Daniels
Dr
David C Evans
Harry M. Fenstermacher
Florence Logar Davis
Eugene J. Corrigan
Joseph Curillo. Jr.
Priscillo
Kotherine Chopin Fisher
Leonard
Evelyn Hirt Brosious
L
Wonda
Borth Carver
Nancy McHenry Devore
Alberta Nounos Gillespie
Charles C.
Williom
E.
Harmony
Horvath
Helen Wright Kula
Dr
Robert P Martin
Laura Davis Puhr
Helen Fehl Roberts
Lado
J.
Savelli
George W Smith
John W. Thomas
Robert W. Warrington
Vincent
F,
Washville
Max G Cooley
Harold
A Garrison
Helen Hoffman Gerringer
Joseph J Giedo
Harry J. Gobora. Jr. +
Carmela Torole Gotthardt
Joseph J. Grande
Leon E. Grant
E.
Ruppel
John
Joseph
Eugene R Schultheis
Milford E. Shelhamer
Daniel H. Thomos
Zahoro
J
Joseph A. Albano
Dr. Chorles R. Andrews
Dr.
Abbott Fenstermacher
Frank
J.
E.
B.
Andrews
Balent
Jr.
Shaffer. Jr
E.
Furgele
L.
Yergey
L.
Anonymous
Dolores Doyle Brennan
19S7
James G.Dovenport
John E Dennen
Miriam Miller Argall
Sheldon N. Erwine
John
Arlene Moyer Foreman
Harriet Link
Richard
Williom
R.
Forschner
Mory Williams Griffiths
Anno Bittner Harshborger
Potricio Boyle Hollingsworth
Williams
E.
Williom
Schroder Walker
Donold G. Paralis
Sherwood
McGovern
Evelyn Witmon Mooney
Phyllis
Montz
Edgor F Berry,
1952
F. Bell
W
Harrison Morson
Eleanor
George Thear
1950
J.
Karol
Harriet Williams
Ashner Rabuck
Emory W. Rarig, Jr.
George E. Reck
Carolyn Vernoy Reitz
Ralph W. Wire
Ammermon
George
Lyon
Dr.
Moyer
Persing
J.
Jack
Jr.
T.
Shirley
Stanley Semic
Tidey.
Kwiatkoski
LaCoe
June Reese Lynn
Elvin C.
Doris Paternoster Wandishin
1954
Palmer
Corl H. Robbins
J.
Chorles V
Keith Weiser
Donald M. Wise
Donald Wool
J
Hinderliter
Betty Smith Linn
Eileen Falvey
Barboro Berry Kissinger
Ronald G. Krafjock
Ann Gengenbach Auerweck
Carl
Williom R Miller
Violet
Norma
Jr.
Tilmont
J.
McGrew
Barbara Brace Miller
Huntsman
Irene Sones
Patricia O'Brien Price
Mike Masanovich
Robert Mozo
Mildred Dzuris
Michael Homick
Rosalyn Verono Pennington
James
Morion
H. Jack Healy
John S Scrimgeour
Thereso Charney Spiess
Cotherme
E
George
Noncy Oberdorf Harris
Lake L. Hortmon
Elizabeth Boer Schukis
John
O'Neill Deitrich
English
Barbara Bennett Nichols
Dr Thomas J. OToole
Charles H/ Taylor,
Kline
R.
Hortmon Eyer
Robert
Norman
E.
Potricio
Marjorie Felton Mackert
William J. Mielke
James Kleman
Lipski
Copt. Curtis
Linn
Poul Lopata
F
Zimmermon
195*
C Diann Jones Bouersfeld
Shirley Andre Corey
Cormel Craparo Cosper
Mory Hoffecker Coughlon
McClintock
Morrison
E.
Marjorie Downing Cosgrove
1945
Ruth Gillmon Williams
Joy S Wirth
C. Robert
Mary Condon Gehringer
Edword M. Goodhart
Thomos A. Goodwin
Leonora MocGill Goodwin
Marjorie Ayre Herbert
Arlene Gordner Hrenenko
Jimmie D. Johnson
Gerold A. Bacon
Wolter
Francis R. Bodine
Wiik
Helene Clark Flecknoe
Joanne Hester Gentry
Angelo M. Albono
Walter A. McCloskey
Shemanski
J
L.
Mildred Pliscott Furgele
Mory Fox Albano
Bonull
Glenn
Mory Kallenbach Fowler
Pauline Garey John
J.
Sylvia Krapf Shearer
Joseph
Barbara Reitmeyer
Edward
Remley
S.
Poul H. Rhodes
Glorio Harris Zerbe
Daniel Boychuck
Kothleen Mitchell Boychuck
Charles M. Brennan
Reginald
Hope Clork Rebuck
J.
1953
Poul P. Plevyok
Mogill.
Miller
E.
James K Roberts, Jr
Thomas E. Sanders
Clyde C. Adorns
Arabel Hilbush Adams
James A. Reedy. Jr
Dorothy DeMott Reichort
William G. Romig
F
William
Pocholec
F
John T. Panzelio
Donald Porry
Louise LaSorso Krafjock
Janet Ference Kwiatkoski
Virginia R. Price
J.
Edward
Jr.
Heisler
Carolyn Yost Karos
Mary
Schukis
E
Froncis
Waller Merena
Harry G. John.
Lewis A. Kohn
Mary Trefsger
Thomos
Eleonor
Haines
Gergen
E.
Jack Reese
Jack A. Gillung
E
Philip
Sarae Uhrich Homick
William J Jacobs
Franklin E. Jones
Rose Korbo Kennedy
Joan Havord Kilroy
Kenneth G. Kirk
Edwards Kirk
Joseph D. Kissinger
Jerome S. Kopec
Helen Rutkoski Korth
Feme Soberick Krothe
Patricio
Horry
P.
Burggraf
Bushey
1.
E.
Dr Jomes
Camp
Cronmer
B.
Creasy
G
Dodson
William E. Dupkanick
Doyle
Jacqueline
Mary
U.
Desmond
Epler
Miller Ertel
Grant Ewell
Ann Geary
Fisher
Margaret Duck Follmer
Rodney Follmer
John J. Ford
John Forgach
Dr. Nancy Green Gilgannon
Donald R Hare
Anabelle Leffelaor Hargreoves
VanAuken Hawk
Louise Schullery Linscott
Enolo
Marie Parrish Morgan
Judith Ulmer Higgins
Robert C. Oney (MG)
Joan Kelshaw Palermo
Ruth Fry Schumaker
Jeononne Evans Scrimgeour
Dr. David A. Superdock
Morlene Kostenbauder Holly
Harry Hughes
Joseph J. Jones
Janice
L.
1955
Home
Margaret Yohn Keller
Evelyn M. Kilpatrick
Taylor
Galiley (MG)
William D. Kautz
Autotore
Jay
A Krothe
Alice Fegley Linn
Francis B. Galinski
Virginia
William G. Gillespie
Oren A. Baker
Catherine Christian Long
Lola Deibert Gloss
Albert T
Martin
F.
Mackert
Charlotte Motuleski Hess
Marcella Cedor Belles
Robert
J
Maremck
William
Michael
Irene Zielinski McCarthy
J
Hill
R.
Bernot
Janice Yozvtok Borton
Albert Hitchings
Dovid W. Jenkins
Belinsky
III
Nanette Hoy Crossmon
W Konyuck
Jeanne Krzywicki
Robert E Cumens
George W. Derk
Robert
Betty
Jeanne Kelder Gunn
Hazel Chopped Guyler
Dqnald L. Hoar
Colvin
Charles K. Jacobs
Richard
Loubscher
E
F
Laux
Hoffmon Dunkelberger
Patricia Phillips Feifer
Isoioh L McCloskey
Nancy Hyde McNabb
Dr. Donald T McNelis
Margaret Croft Moore
John P. Moss
Con tin
"«
S
William. R. Norton.
Sonja Bendinsky Norton
Dolores Wonot Palladino
Charles R. Perry
Sylvfo Morcheski Gross
Morion Schoffroth Harrer
E. Hendershot. Jr.
Marian L. Huttenstine
Milton M. Wiest
Rose Pavlick Radzinski
James
Robert G. Roiney
Gerald
Rodman
Thomos
Lorry
Joseph F Kleczyntki
Noncy Wurster Knorr
Edwin C Kuser
'»
I
»
>
»
«
Continued from page
Donno Wilcox Murphy
Thomos L Ohl
i!
i
15
Kenneth O. Paisley
Reimensnyder
J.
Dominick
I.
Repice
Morilyn Ritter Roielle
Borboro lent* Schulfz
Edword M. Setor
Kenneth R. Smith
Dr. Donold R Stubbs
Barbara Tuckwood Thomas
John Woyurko
Robert P Yon
Jay R
Eugene
P.
Jonet
Fry
Jeon
L.
Kathleen Nebus Speranzo
Harold
E.
Robert
R.
Gaughan
Gower
Robert A Hollingsheod
Jone Smith James
L
Jones
Blonche Rozelle Jones
Mary Mojikos Klemkosky
Potnoo
Parolis
Leonard
B.
Knepper
Kruk. Jr
Lobyock
Joy Dreisboch Linn (MG)
John R. Longo
E.
Ruth Helgemo Maioriello
John
K.
Masters
Thomos
Thomos
M
Vincent. Jr
L.
Henninger Wogner
Phyllis
Joon Kotch Wolko
Jomes H Willioms
Morlene Stoude Willioms
Dr.
W. Horris
Mory Pomes Hess
Lois Myers Hicks
Jomes
Stinson
S
C.
Wojaechowski
Dr. Richord O.
Dr. Robert
Mary
John
Edword
Funk
L.
II
Gilbert McCormick.
Jr.
Filomeno Grocomo McGlode
Kenneth M. Miller.
Lois M. Miller
Jr.
Borboro Campbell Burggraf
Morgoret Coole Byrne
Kane Cicero
M Clemens
Worthy J. Cumberlond
Poliscok
Joy Eoton Wissinger
Fleck
Gloria Gilbert Boyer
Morris
Philip E. Underkoffler
Fisher
J.
Machmer
Wolfe
Ronold G. Wolfe
1961
Patricio Dunnigon Adomsky
Anthony A. Alostick
Rondoll P
E.
Beckman
Jeon Schell Bonto
Bernice
Joyce
Bretschneider
Dascola
Ellis
L
Dorothy Strodlmon Dayton
Albert W. Dazley
Richard S. Dennen
George
Donoto
Winifred W. Donkochik
Gory W. Erwine
Brendo Cunmnghom Estrodo Berg
J.
Borry F. Foust
Sonio Timo Foderoro
Paul J. Freireich
Somuel W. Gonis
Dr
Ray
Gensemer
George
Iro B.
L.
Jeffrey E. Girton
R
J.
Patricio
Wodsworth Kimball
Roy
Frank
Anno Pelak
Borboro Foy
L
Poust
Phillips
Joanne Shoffer Pileski
Bari E. Poormon
John
Rankin. Jr
J
Sandra Reber Richter
Doniel L Ritzmon
Smith Rochfort
Jill
Frederick
Robert
Soxton
E.
W
Chorles
Scarantino
Schiller
F.
Petzok
J.
Donold
O Brien
J
Oman
C.
Virginio A. Palmer
Keller
Jomes E. McMonus
Lmdo Schmidt Moss
Thomos V Nowrocki
Mancuso
Moyon
Millord, Jr
L
Williom
Kelchner
William
W
Kenneth P Miller
Kenneth Robert Miller
Nancy Rodgers Miller
Richord V Miller, Jr
Donold A Mitchell
John W Knorr
Tereso Biogiotti Lewis
Borboro Flonogon lizzul
James J. Maier
Dennis J Motzoni
Shirley Nickles Bartlett
Borboro Kindig Berlin
Dionne Bosolo Berlin
Corol Ranee Bongort
Paul C. Boyer
Leiss
Jr.
J.
Marcholonis
Carole DeFroncisco Millord
Jocobs
J
Morvm
Anderson
Myrno Bossett Anderson
Mory Beck Austin
Clyde G. Boker
Krothe
R.
Wisdo
1962
Myles
Dr.
Teddy Oakey
Williom
Otto H. Donor
Borboro Curry Eskilson
A
A
J
Corl
Woyne A Hoch
Willioms
P.
Robert A Moyefskie
John W. McCorkill
Hoines
D.
F.
Richord
Virginia Steinhort
Joon Stockhouse Wolfe
Nick
Lowrence M. Troutman
D Clork
Delores Regan Dixon
Don
Mahoney
John
Mory
Korrin Fordyce
Jr
Corol A. Haswell
W
Michoel
Hilemon
Hilemon
Bernice Kocher
Louise
Larry
L.
William
Eleanor D Bobber
Rush L. Canouse
Thomos
Ronald
Richord A. Slaber
Judith Witmyer Stevens
Berg
William H. Gorson,
Evelyn H. Gimber
Doro Forney Jorrett
Emil G Kasorda
Somuel E. Keiser
Roy E. Shiftier,
Vernon F. Sinn
Bornhart
Elliott
Wolter
Hess
Irene Schnoors
W
Dovid
Schromm
Betty
Abe
Dr
Lindo Mousteller Price
Ruth Shelhomer Price
Borry O. Smith
Rev Edword E. Prowont
Dennis W. Reiter
Betsy Whitenight Strunk
Ellen
Ronold
Dovidheiser
L
O Donnell
Morgoret
Elizabeth B. Puckey
Bangs
L
Elizabeth Pingor Dudinyak
Jessie B
A
Demeter
V.cki Wotts Egli
Lorraine Yeager Roberts
1959
Shoffer
Kroltchak
Nancy George Krotzer
Keith L Kramer
Michael M. Kush
Louise Nye Lark
Jomes K MocNeol
Corol Schlagel MocNeol
Derkits
F
Joon Welliver
Robert
Paul T
Wood
G Richard Wynn
Krum
Williom Stevenson
Eileen
Nicholas Pituch (MG)
B.
Shirley Klock DeFacis
Robert
Lydio Gobbi Gourvitz
Helen M Grim
Somuel W. Haupt, Jr.
William
Normon N Wismer
Beotrice Hess Roberts
Koppenheffer
Joan Leidy Kroftchok
Constance Rojewski Curran
Cloire Dilley Dale
Sudock
Dole B. Sullivan
Robert H. Wolters
W
Morgoret Wilkinson Wightmon
I.
O
Dr
Victor A. Miller
Joanne Atkinson Woldron
Daniel West
Mory Heotley West
Thomos
Williom
David R Gerber
Helen R. Moder
John H. McCarthy
Sarah Sands Swisher
Augustus Tibbs
Annorita D. Koch
Potncio Biehl Cronford
Borboro Peeling Criswell
Hoch
Morgoret A. Hosey
Robert C. Houck
Judith Thomos Isenberg
Muriel Trow
Will Steltz
Morgoret Stiles Christino
Ronold W. Cranford
Edword S Stokes
John N Straw
Gensemer
King
E.
Donald R Kleckner (MG)
Sondro Smith Kleppinger
Pagnotti
Annette Ritter Rohrbach
Dorothy McNeil Schweizer
Dr.
David C. Laubach
W
David
Francis
Elaine
Richord
Christina
J.
Noncy Engel Evons
Sondro M. Evans
Morlene O Hollo Froney
Mory Dorm Gnoll
Thereso Yost Hortmon
P Joseph Jennings
John T. Kovich
Helen Salfi Kruk
Doniel Kwosnoski
Morilyn Rinehimer Lehew
Michoel Lesko
Dorothy Born Lesko
Thomos
L. Little
Lloyd
Livingston
E
Corol Lewis Livingston
Joon Hinkel
Richord
R.
Mochomer
Joseph A. Moier Jr
Eugene R Molinowski
Kenneth Mertz
Melvin A. Montonye
Kathleen Sinkler Montonye
Worren W Moser
James J. Nogle
Robert E Neory
Dr.
Borboro Kolet Nied
Corimor Shultz Patrician
Lynn
Poul
J.
John H. Somsel
Noncy Hondshow Silverman
Dr
Michael E Sinco
Chorles R. Sipos
Priscillo
J.
Richord R. Roke
Gory G. Rupert
Noncy McFerron Rupert
Moses L Scott
Dr. John E. Sills, Jr
Don
Springer
E
Mory Rogowsky Springer
Poul R
Styer
Nelson A. Sworts (MG)
Delores Keen Tironi
Richord D Walters
Bonnie Jones Wicks
Louro Brown Willord
Joonne Sipe Wimmer
Bernodine Ardiere Windsor
Joonn Moys Zogby
Livziey
Lloyd
Corl Lynn
Robert M.
Price
J
Smith
Robert
J.
Sleinhort
Robert
J.
Strunk
Wolter H. Veranda
Borboro Jomes Viielli
Mory McHose Wolloce
Neol J Weaser
1964
Harold C Andrews
Anne Golder Boker
Gory A Bornabo
Corolyn Miller Bortz
John H Bousch. Jr
Diane A Bensinger
Bonnie Zehner Block
George A
Blosick
Ronald C Boston
Joseph P Cosorello
John M Chyko
Harold
J
Cole.
Froncs
J
Curran
Richord
G
Jr.
Davolo
Donno Brown Dovis
Jomce Clemens DeFinnis
James E Diehl
Dovid W. Dinsmore
Judy Reitz Dunkelberger
J. Eddlnger
Ernest
Shuba
R.
Somuel A
Storti
David
L
Stuempfle
Arthur Tinner
L
Lorenzo R Tironi
Dr
Donold T Watk.ns
Dovid B. Weover
Orvo Wynings Webb
George A Weigond
Donno Shoffer Weigond
1965
Fronk
G
Robert
E
Angelo
Joseph M. Apichello
Robert P Auker
Borfield
III
Edword Beck
Fronces Walker Berry
Dole R. Bittenbender
Shirley Krogle Bittenbender
Robert
M
Roy
Bower
E
A
Dovid
Blue
Jr
Dovis
Noncy Troutman DeJesus
Geroldme Miller DeMilio
Fronk C
Dowrnan
James
Eisenhardt,
F
Rocco A. Forte
W
James
Goss,
Dr. Robert A.
Roy
Gross
E
Jr
Green
II
Potncio Eoler Gross
Donno Bogord Gulluni
Elaine Schraeder Hockenberg
Corol McCrocken Honlz
(MG)
W. Jay Hurst
Thomos
J.
Kaczmarek
H. Rick Kessler, Jr.
Worren R Eldr.dge
Koren Shields Kitchen
Joseph R. Koons
Alex M Kozlowsk.
N Foust
Raymond A Fino
Jeon Houck Fino
John
A
Foderaro
Jr.
Borboro Nicholls Foust
Robert J. Fleck (MG)
Robert
Richord
Sr.
Hughes
D Jomes
B. Kennedy
Robert
Barbara Schaefer Shutovich
Fronces Scott Snyder
Irmo W. Springman
Fisk
R.
Patricio Lello
Genevieve
E.
J.
Haefner
Helgemo,
J. Michael Helveston
Virginia C. Hesel
Ann M Hocker
Choplick
T.
Richord
William
Richord
Avo Hilner Shippy
Normon J Shutovich
Robert H
Rose Coulter Stnne (MG|
Dr. Stephen L. Stuorl
Clarence
Swode
Austin
Shirley
Sue Bogle Lindner
Spentzos
E.
M. Joyce Laure Sheridan
Dale
Snyder
Thomos
Virginio Hordy Cocco
Wolloce I. Knepper
Rev Byron K Kropf
Shultz
Archibald
Soro Moster Charles
Paul H. Kellogg
Janice Souder Shultz
T.
Jeonette Ide D Agostine
Housenick
Joonne DeBrovo Jones (MG)
Scott
Williom
Chester
Gary I Reddig
Jomce L. Reed
Blair
Wright
J.
James S. Case
Mory Brock Cheney
Petz
L.
Jonet Bohstedt Greenleof
Howard G. Griggs
Ruth H. Benscoter
Ronold H. Beury
Borboro Uram Paskewitz
Wilbur G. Person
Corl
Nanette Evons Wenrich
1963
Makoro
Mourer
Froelich
J
Gloria Zubris Froelich
Millhouse
J.
J
George
i
Darlene Scheldt Derkits
Gory M. Dietz
Kotherine Poloni DiSimoni
C/oire H.
William C. Sheridan
Gerald
Robert
Wotts
Yeonish
Chorles C.
Rindgen
Annette Willioms Roush
John A Soloto
Dorothy Stoudt Schweitzer
Mane
Thomo
F.
Elizabeth Derr
Helen Rhown
J.
Russell
Sw.shei
F
Esther McMichoel Franklin
Poulette B. Furmon
Patricio A.
Constontine
Williom
Fronk
O'Brien
F
L
Joseph P McGroorty
Albert P
Nancy Ridoll Peters
Edna Keefer Powell
James
Williom
Kenneth A Swott
Vero Reorick Derk
Fred U Dyer
John L. Eberhort
Dr. Luther C. Notter
Dr.
P.
Jomes W.
Lewis
E.
Eugene
Wendel
Wendel
6.
Ellen Snyder
Elizabeth Slock Applegate
Poul A. Luzenski
Sondro Mourey Stinson
Donold D Stroub
Morcia S Bailey
M. Donold Miller
Sarah Ridgwoy Morrison
Soondro McBride Myers
H. Kitchen
Rose Fatzinger Kuser
Fronces Goglione Little
Gory F Anderson
Dr Boyd E Arnold
Raymond C. Horgreaves
George T Hermon
John P Hermon Jr
Corol Ely Hermon
Rev. James E Johnson
Bernard
Schultz
L
I960
Margaret Brinser Donmoyer
Franklin M. Duncon
James M. Gustove
Joon Yohn Horclerode
L.
Montz
Croig R
Donold R Coffmon
Morjorie Myers Corroo
Gerald R Donmoyer
Lynda
W. Schloyer
Lorraine Toylor
Williom Calderwood
E.
Rev. Roy
Normon
Helen Pedergnono Boron
Joseph J Barros
Fredo J. Bills
Bernard
Ralston
R
Schell
E.
Rjchord
Raymond
Carl A. Unger
1951
W
,-,
Bernice Dietz Snyder
Paul H Spohr
Dolores Slonton Senn
Roy
.
Lillian
W. Kreisher
Charles
P.
Liverton. Jr.
Continued
Gretchen Gum Jomiolk«w«tf
Gareth T, Kase
Thomas V. Keeney
John W. Kerlish
Continued from page 16
Deon A long
Donald C. Love
Ronald J Lobas
Susan Sworls lunger
Mohoney
Richard
Richard
R. Monley
Showers McCorkill
Edword K. McCormiek
H. Lewis
Morjorie Harper Lilley
Mory Llewellyn
Megargel
J.
Down
Ensley Michoel
Glenn
R.
Timothy C. Moyer
William Paule
B Jean Davey Roe
Paul L. Rhine
Kistler Sitler
W
Cecelia Mistol Toth
Williom A. Turley
Virginio Wright Tinner
A
'
Manlynne Kolnik Welsh
Wendell
Charles W. Werner
Richard T. Williams
Wholen
I
Donald L. Whitebreod
Roger H Willioms
Sandra Swetlond Williams (MG)
Janet Hoke Winkler
Ido Cooper Wynings
Bonnie Seorch Yeisley
Steible Zochorda
1966
Mortho Zubris Borchik
Marc L Bortlebough
Noncy Jones Bartoo
Jomes
Young
Karen Doty Young
Biscombe
J
Susannoh Wilson Brody
Victor R Campbell
Susan Hommerquist Carlson
Dozimoe Poul Carmo
Borboro Urbos Connor
Dovid F. Conner
Rose M Chik.
Kenneth G Cromwell. Jr.
Alice Koch Cromwell
Dorothy Brighton Denes
Linda Klock Dent
James
L.
Derr
T.
Lois Moyer Dooley
Mary A. Dowd
Barbara Robison
J
Donald
Dowmon
Dubil
Dugan
Mory Woodruff Dumbauld
Wayne A Eddowes
B.
Carole Justice Evons
David H Evons
Joseph
P.
Fozzan
Gory C. Fenstermocher
Rosemary A. Fogorty
John
T.
Foster
Jeon Zenke Foster
Irene Frantz
Jerry D. Fritz
Richard H. Fulmer
Ann Wyott Fulmer
Monlyn Button GrasJey
Dale
W
Greenly
Gum
George A Hanno
E.
Burel
Jay D
Carlo Overhiser Auten
Bryan J. Bolovoge
Samuel R. Bashore
Morion Siegel Bashore
Suzonne Reiff Berg
Glen H. Book
Edword
Harter
Richard C. Heller
Sharon Kuchinskas Herr
J.
Boulton
Patricio Born
Corlonn Nelson Broglie
Margaret L. Burns
Suson Shepherd Caldwell
Corlson
J
Patricio A.
Conwell
Cronford
B.
Barry L. Denes
Mory A Devore
Brendo Horleman Dorshimer
Spencer L. Empet
Larry H Endy
Michoel P Fitzpatrick
Alexandra Griesemer
Joseph D. Fleming
Jomes J. Fritz
Frederick
W. Dute.
Jr.
Edwards
Jonelle Simcox Edwards
M
Evans
III
Phillip D. Folk
Thomos S Fowles
Allen W. Handwerk (MG)
Robert D Harvey
Dr.
Hicks
Mory
Borrall Hill
Nila Sorensen Hill
Schuyler,
Jr.
Laird D. Shively
Gordon
Alon W. Shoop
Diane Mei Ling
Ann MocPherson Leorn
Kam
Robert
Dovid D. Steiner
Gront D. Stevens
Melody Cruys Lovelidge
Dr. Rosemory B. Lubinski
Patricio P. Stickler
Betty Ruth Keller Luchok
Regis C. Stirling
Thomos
F.
Vincent
J.
Gary
L
John
J.
Rochelle Groziano Worhurst
Robert F White
Mory
Heitz
Corol Michael Zoblocky
Terry
L
Christine Todd Alcoroz
Mary Jo Alter
Morilyn Miller Ambrose
Frederick
Bausch
Benyo
T.
Dawn
Corol
Mary Moloney Mounlz
Kotherme Matzko Mulka
John A, Murray
Linda Morgan Noidna
Robert
Noncy Horris Ostrelich
Robert R Bridge
Comille Washington Brown
Dennis
Byrne
Sandra Ingram Pascal
Borboro Tate Pench
Donno Redwinski Byrne
Gale Branch Burns
Paul
Jomes
L.
Poechmann
Terry M. Carver
Robert
L.
Reed
Thomos M. Cesarini
George E Chellew
Ronald
L.
Roberts
W
Connie Geiser Clewell
Patricia
Way Cobb
Richord P. Conner
Richard A. Philipkoski
Clyde C. Rogers'
Diana Cray Cornwell
Sandra Roberts Croll
Arocelio
Flo
Olin
Davis
L
Gerald O Devlin
Susonn Strine Doletski
Condace Nahodil Donachy
Terry
S.
Eddinger
Edward
B. Kern
Sandra Burkharl Kern
R.
David C. Huseman
Joseph C. Huttemonn
Robert
F.
Klemkosky
Kline
Stephen G. Korol
Judith Yarnall Kovol
III
Russell C Rudy
M. Louann Rhoades Rudy
Dono Houck Samuels
E.
Schlegel
Noncy Bricker Shaffer
Gordon
Sivell. Jr.
Joyce Johnson
Sivell
Marian Horris Eisenhower
Elizabeth Porosky Skoski
Charlotte
Ruth A. Slonoker
Shoron Bergeron Spollone
Barbaro Brown Spoulding
Jock
R.
Green Empet
Evans
Pomelo M. Evons
S.
Toy lor
Hummel Thomos
Lindo
J.
Trothen
Thomas R Fiorey
Lorraine Zack Tucker
Renee Heupcke Vergari
Joseph W. Walton
Neil
T.
Fleischer
Carl T
Kathleen Hoftke Gacod
G Richard Garman
John
John Genoa,
Jr.
Thomos
Potricio Derr
George
Kislyn
Worhurst
Watto.
S.
Daniel
R.
Jr
Jr.
Weaver
R.
Eward
Fisher, Jr.
J
L.
Foltz
Gobb
Shoron Lunger Guinn
Shirley
McHenry Guy
John C Hamblin
William J. Harris,
Wayne
F
Jr.
Heim
Betty
McCutchen Heintzelmon
Suzanne Bower Heller
Dole C. Henne
M
Edward R, Hess
Douglas M. Hill
Antoinette Mafulis Hoehle
William
Dole
L.
Thomos
E.
Hoffner
Houck
P.
Houston
Sylvia Boblick
Houston
Beverly A. Jones
Noncy Chomoni Kfcplon
Jone Thomas Keifer (MG)
C. Donnell Kelly
Gloria Molnor King
I.
Ray Kline
Fronk
R.
Kocher
Mory Kwosnoski Krebs
Jesse
R.
Kresge
Eloine
Jerman Kurtz
Kothleen Horsf Kuzmiak
Gail Bower Landers
B. Woyne Louboch
Joon Molnor Laubach
Morsho Montgomery Lepley
Janet Tazik Mojikos
Linda Watts Mollin
Gerald M. Mascavoge
Kathleen A. May
Charlotte Tourney McBride
Shaw McClofferty
Moyer McClure
Cheryl K. McHenry
Margaret W. McKee
Kothy J. McGuire
John A McKay
Goil
Douglos R McRoberts
Jomes A. Metzler
Margie Van Billiard
Welsh
Gorman Whitenight
Miller
Betsy Ross Montileone
Eloine F
Roddy A. Fisher
Poul D. Fowler
Evans
Virginia
Siegmann
R,
Evons. Jr
E.
Eugene M. McClaHerly
Shuey
L.
Dennis
H.
Shotwell
L.
Gory
John
Ronold
Piatt
E.
Joon Buonassisi Fefterman
William H. Hoffman
Niccol
I.
Dione Boone North
Kothleen Jarrard Osberg
Michoel
Potncio Zelner Kaczmorek
Althea Kleppinger Keiler
Montgomery
Moody
Wells Moreou
Willord B
Gloria Jonasik Gurick
Lyons
Schulten Moffett
Jr.
Sondra Loucks Gorfunkel
Dovid C Gay
Williom A. Gionnetta
Larry L Grant
Sondro Sanford Gribbin
Majikos
Judith H. Michaels
Dietterick,
L
William
Philip
II
Linda Horner Mills
Geroldine Long White
Irwin F. Zoblocky
Clothier
Cobb
Kondace Caputo
Helen Mullineaux -Marcott
E McSurdy
Eileen A Zehner Meiser
Karen Sollidoy Mellinger
Voneida
Waples (MG)
G
J.
Stephen F Foltz
James
Thomas
Kaczmorczyk
Linn
Linda Van Saders Stirling
Charles R Swank
Beverly Hoonzl Folk
Frederick M, Fertig
B.
A
Paul
Corl
Albert
Koren Undek Lesch
So
(MG)
Dovid A. Feather
Robert M. Fink
Learn
E.
Noncy Trowbridge Stackhouse
Robert F Holly
Linda B. Johns
Lola M. Hunsinger
Morjorie Francis James
Fitzpotrick
John C
Susan R
Keith C
Cermanski
P.
Potricio Secrest
Sharon Sullivan Laczo
Williom R. Large
Caryl Custer Large
Sandra Clancy Larson
Katharine Amacher Lauer
Anita Dobson Shaffer
F. Costrilli
John
Doyle
Modelyn Woll Kush
Jr.
Thomas
Shoron Enslin Dodson
Howard C Ebersole
Susan L Engstrom
Kieski
Stevonn Fecher Krueger
Austin A. Kurtz
Somsel
M Savidge
Harry M. Soxton,
E. Schmidt
III
Donno Fenstermocher Knouse
John W. Bilder
Borboro Kiner Bornman
Dovid W. Bowen
Ruth D. Correll
Charles
Corol Harter Klinger
Richard S
John C Corr
David P. Cecco
Corol
Constance Eaton King
O
Berry
J
Rebecco Pickel Davis
Gail Bruch Deans
Judy Bryant Roberts
1968
Bower
Kelchner
James B. Rolley
Mory Reckord Rolley
James J. Rosini
Thomos A. Solerno
Soro Thomos Urisko
A Anderson
Gerold
Wilbur
Derricott
Gerard p. Dick
Nqncy Andrews Didriksen
Thomas H Diehl
Connie McMichoel Donahue
Anthony H. Dooley
Alex
1967
Koshlok
F.
E.
H.
Joseph M. Youshock. Jr.
Suson Miller Zimmerman
Cloreen Oberlin Beamer
Gladys D. Bingamen
G
Luzi Kerr
Kay
Borboro Bensinger Welch
Ronold
Berkheimer
L
Sworlz Chellew
Donald J. Cloyton
Suson Fritz Cloyton
Karas
Willord
Bennett
T.
Patricio
Shimko Houck
Brendo Wolfe Kaiser
Noncy Fisher Karom
Poslock
Zeisloft
Zoronski
Charles F Bowman
Janice T. Bowman
Loretfa Hauser Horwith
J.
G
Jomes M. Bonocci
Richard W. 8ower
Douglas C. Hippenstiel
Nancy
Lorraine
Lee
Girord M. Histed
Williom T. Honfz
Jomes A. Hoosty
E.
Robert
Jeon Booth Starner
B
Ruth
J. Hill
Albert
Jr.
Mory Sipe Spering
N Straub
Robert M. Stroup
Stello
Remley
Alano Motter Remley
Carol Rhodes Rhinard
Russell
R Colorusso Scorontino
Susan Godsholl Schiller
Charles W. Sorber
Henry I Spering
Carol
Drew
Dr
Bowman
Gene
Hartmon
Dorothy M. Hauber
Goyle Yeoger Hess
Louis
Judy
Zongardi
1969
Eileen Gulnoc
(MG)
J
Nancy Thomos Agurkis
Koren Dowse Arner
Corl M Beogle
Eva Chitty Beogle
Hartman
I.
M
Zalonit
John
Fronk
Potricio
C. Poploskie
Lorry
Mary
Richard M. Stackhouse
Jeon Sobol Stonkiewicz
Borboro
John
Ouigg
L
Richord
E
N
Robert
Kofhleen Doon Grugan
Glenn E. Holterman
Elwood R. Harding. Jr.
Louise Eyster Pileri
Prosseda
S.
Sondro Houser Wilburn.
B Wolverton
Roymond
A Grugan
Lorry
James F Pegg
G. King Perry
Hoplomozian Pogharion
Dr Gory
Snyder
Thomas J Toth
Corol Wertmon Watters
Mulka
S
David L Reimold
Susan Burnett Roskos
Wesley J. Rothermel.
Shively
Borboro Twitmire Smith
Williom
A
Jon
Ido Gingrich Smith
Robert
John
*
Sharon Hodgett Griggs
Gene C Gruber
Brendo Rice Nestlerode
Nickolo Hoosty Oram
R. Miller, Jr
Patricia
Siller
I
Roberto
McMonimen
1
Thelmo D Goodman
Mary Hutchison Grody
Donno M Greco
Myro Schlesinger Griffith
Patricia Szymonek Mico
Mory Beck Miller
John D. Montgomery
Terrence L Morgan
Corol Koons Munson
Carol Ripo Oliver
H. Sherrott
Undo Ransom
Noncy
P.
David
Ronold
Edword
Gory
Dr.
Jr.
Rita P. Seybert
Jode
Capp Mononi
Jomes
Joseph Schein
Nancy linde Schueck
Larry
Edith
,
McGinnis
Michoel V Mellmger
Dr.
Edwin B. Messick, Jr.
Dorothy Wilkes Miller
R. Rupert, Jr.
Robert Sonds.
J
F.
Anne
Jo
Mojor
Gertrude Hoffer Mondak
Dorothy Krakowski Norbury
Joseph I Nutoilis
Glenn
Ruth
Corol GesalrWaW (Rfi/d)'
Kothryn E. Giger
(
D Landers
Morjorie Milani McCormick
Koy Herman Locke (MG)
Jeremy R Lomas
Morrison
"
1
Phyllis E. Mo|or
Melindo Armstrong Molmros
R Randolph May
Gerald P. McBride
Leda G McClure
Kunkel
Jomes
Donna Eckhart Meose
William
R.
KVatf "
Kwosnoski
Joyce Llewellyn Laskey
Kay Petersen Llverton
Corole Gerhard Lorenz
Angelica Socco Mohoney
Louise Beltz Louboch
Judith
B.
Phillip
Sharon Sholley Kribbs
Joseph P Kubert
Rugh Mohan
J
John
Richard A. Klingermon
Frederick J. Klock
Shirley Carl Lutz
Patricia
Francis
David'l':
Judith
Mueller
Dopp Murray
Robert A. Muscosky
Linda Wimmer Nicholson
Kothrine Merritt Niemiec
Donno Corson Oloh
Joseph
Albert
P. O'Neill
J
Orth
Continued
18
Continued from page 17
Christopher
Gessler
L.
Brendo Stonebock Shoemaker
Rosolio Goldstein
Koren Balser Wieder
Ronald Wilcha
Croig
Gloria Wilson
F.
Robert A. Wolf
Ann
Paulette Wiest Wolfgang
Adorn J Skelding
Gerold E Snyder
Gray
T. Greenawalt
Donald M. Grubb
Alan G Gryshuk
Deborah Choffee Gryshuk
Gribbin
J
P. Griffiths
Dolto
Heckman
Mory Koschok Pierce
Hornel Hummel Poechmonn
Thomos P Prohco
Shoron Spry Reed
Connie Cromley Reimold
Dolores Politzo Higgms
lindo
Cinde Rogers Hippensfiel
Dorothy Heller
Rupert
E
Donno Murroy
A
Carol
Charles
Shupe
Clark M. Benfield
Williom Hyde.
George
Jr.
Jones
E
Jr
Cheri Ziegler Skelding
Morcello Ziembo Koczmorcik
Roy C. Smoy
Priscillo
Zimmerman Koyes
Lelond A. Smelt* (MG)
Noncy Geiger Smith
Kramer Smolick
Boyd
Goil
Jocqueline A. Kent
Judith Henry Spence
Doniel A. Kliomovich
Kenneth C Stonion
Rev. Doyle
T
Keiser
H
S.
Stroub
Kenneth Kreider
S.
Swortz
Loretta M. Kukol
Solly
Tropone
Philip B.
James A
Monique Covolliero Loutenschlagi
Donno L. Lehmon
Trick
Catherine H
Vonderslice
Marsha Corpenter Vogt
Morgoret L. Woltemyer
Donno Reitz Watson
Rondel K Wesfley
Richord A. Wilburn
Frances
Vorgo Londis
Georgonne Lone
Joseph K. Louginiger
J
Hondy Wright
Yonchek
Evelyn Kovalchick Lewis
Bernice Obzut Linn
Jennifer Troutmon
Lomos
Peter W. Longo
Connie M. Lowe
J. Suson Cassel Ludwig
Hummel Mack
Ellen
Judith Adonizio
Nancy
Grifosi MocNeill
Fronk
Suson
McVey Marker
C. Yortz
Virginio
Susan
Davenport Yoder
Yodock
Sitler
Esther W. Zobitz
1970
James B Martin
Joonna Hertweck McClure
Morie Stufscovoge McDonold
Kothleen Wintersteen McWill.oms
Mielke
Ralph C Moerschbocher III
Memorial To Koren E. Campbell
Connie Beinlich Albertson
lldro J.
Ruth N. Andrione
Fronk C Boker
Russello
Suzanne Seymour Moron
Horold D Borretts
Dale E Beaver
Mildred Moyer
Corol
Borboro Dogle Beaver
Thomos C. Bedisky
Richard Beierschmitr
Michoel
E.
Judith
G
Richord
Jr.
Bieber
L.
Bingomon
Dennis W. Bishop
Daniel A. Bobeck
Patrice
Murray Bognet
Dennis D Bohr
Ann H. Brondt
James R. Bubb
Colleri (MG)
Ashworth Callen (MG)
Borboro K. Campbell
Potricio
Corol Stephany Campbell
Mortho Skerdo Corpenter
Eugene E Cioffi III
E.
Cioffi
Clewell
Donald A Corbin
Jone Reed Corbin
Bernard J. Curron
Joseph I Dorlington
Brent C. Davis
Monlyn Polmer Dovis
Donold
R
Doniel R
Deitterick
Difeo
Carol Adorns Dorword
Elaine M. Eiswerth
Mory McGinnis Evons
George F Fousnought
Eileen McCoffery Fousnought
Kothryn Ellmoker Feist
Roger J Fettermon
Evelyn Livezey Fettermon
F.
Fissel
Sheryll Ebeler Fredrick
Friedmon
C.
Linda LoFover Perry
Gerard
J.
Frymoyer
Pierotti
Sandro HoHow Piesvoux
Debbie Engelmon Porter
Morgoret Boyer Porsell
Mary M. Rachko
Stonley G. Rokowsky
Reitz
I
Leslie A.
John N.
Coolbough
Jonet Nossol Nash
Ronold
Pauline Groybill Buchonon
Thomos
Munch
J.
Rohrboch
Lindo Lyle
Rossmon
Constance D. Ruppen
Ronold M. Russo
Helen McAndrews Solomone
Potricio Robbins Sounders
Noncy Niemenski Seksinsky
Anthony F Selvoski. Jr.
Marvin
T.
Serhon
Jock W. Shorbough
Elizabeth
Hodek Shorbough
Robert
Shelly
S.
Lorroine
M
Roberto R
Robert
E
Shemo
Sikulo
Simons
Suson H. Skiptunos
Henry A Snyder
Morgo
Snyder
Judith Urso Snyder
Kothleen McFadden Stimmel
Stewort O Stroble
Poul
F
Szymonski
Tearpock
Betty Weiss Underwood
R.
Doniel
J.
Jomes F. Volania
Pomelo D VanEpps
Mary Wolton Veet
Joseph Vezendy.
Mono
W
Roymond
Jr
Pellegnno Vezendy
Jomes M. Wornogiris
Lindo Boker Wosley
Michoel
Stubbe
Beverly
S.
Lindo K. Alberts
Morgoret Blusius Doty
Dwight P. Edris (MG)
Keith M. Edwards
Catherine Brennon Angerson
Kerry S. Ayers (MG)
Williom
John
J.
Donno
W
Fonner
Gantz III
George
Dovid Gerbench
Jomes W Gilhooley
J
C.
Vincent l Gorski
Borboro A. Hoos
John J. Hoile Jr
Lesley
Hones
J. Barry Hortmon
Noncy Fetterolf Hickey
Doro K. Hillegos
J.
M
Philip
Irey
III
Maxine Bushey Jones
Susan Burke Keepnews
Charles
Daniel
J.
John J. Lowrence. Jr.
Theodore R Lowson, Jr.
Howard P Lewis
Lucindo
Linker
J.
W
Gerold
Jonet
R.
James
F
Lorson
Mortin
McCool
Alice E. McCrocken
Dovid J McDermott
Donndo Wesley McHenry
Claire
McNelis
E.
Timothy
Williom
T.
J,
McToggart
Megorgell
Thomos M. Miller
S Morgon
Gerold
G
Frederick
Morris
Borboro Hershey Myer
Corol Confer Myers
Koren Lauboch Odium
Charles F. Petry, Jr.
Alan
J. Phillips
Donno
Elaine
Little Pierolti
D Pierson
Michael A. Pillogolli
Darlene Bortz Pittner
Jomes R
Woyne
Plotukis
E Roke
James P Re.chart
Edwin W. Rhinord
Robert W Ropp
Sondra Jefferson Rupp
Doris Remsen Sochetti
Janice Tomkinson Schneck
Klink
L.
Phyllis
Hoos Klouser
Robert
E.
Dale
Knorr
Kostick
J.
Borry
P.
Krieger
John D. Lotshow
Connie leiby Lauboch
Judith J Lawrence
Suson Moeri Lee
Christine Yonish levin
M
Philip
levine
MoryAnn Poulos Levine
John W. Liggett (MG)
JoAnn H Long
Potrick Lyons
Charles
N Mockes
Brian
Ma|Or
I
James P Malkomes
Rose Lucorelli Molkomes
Vicki Edwards Morsh
III
C Bootmon
Noncy Fruehon Bohr
Patricia Cooney Booth
Mory Barry Boudmon
Pryslok Bower
Mogee Louchmen
Klinetob
Goil Stonk Kolendo
Shirley
Ann
Helen Beckley LoBont
Kline
L
B.
Dovid C Koehler
Michoel H Kolb
Robert I Kolendo
C. Bloss
Bonnie Bodger Koch
G Kolody
Corol
Ronald
Blosi
N Bower
Krommes
Jones
Kindt
B.
William
Rodney R Bicker)
Fred
S.
Jack
Michoel E Bickhort
Joan lowson Bigelow
Thomos
Johnson
P.
E.
Kenneth
Bertha Busocker Bennicoff
L
Jogo
E.
Aldono Kupstas Kortorie
Barbara Foust Keorns
Shoron Hawkins Bedisky
Corol Schmidt Belcher
Dione Holye Belusko
Jeffrey D. Kleckner
Doboroh Serowicz Kovalich
Robert
Cheryl Lobarr Boslinelli
Charlotte D Becker
Corol Kishbough
Bruce
Maurito
A. Richord Boslinelli
Wayne
Inkrote
R.
Robert A. Ireland
Steven E. Janke
Bortos
F.
Hunl
E
Leonard
Anderson
Suson Housenick Kees
Richord
Bruce
Ronold
Michael D Adorns
Jackson A. Aileo, Jr.
Jr.
Mory A Eglanski
S. Homiak
Dione Crouthomel Hosoge
Audrey E. Hower
Ulanoski
Donno Mendicmo Dobrowski
Hessling
R.
Jungmonn Hibschman
Albert
Tunis
J.
Horns
Herrold
J.
Peggy K. Holdren
Jeonette Alessi Holohan
Tompkins
1972
Depew
Christine Weiss Hoff
Connie Keller Nespoli
Borboro Porreco Nielsen
John P. Pociolti
Bell
Horry K Berkheiser.
Beth Wolfe Berney
Hummel Moerschbocher
Jr.
Mortho Seymour Denkenberger
Donold A. Dennis
Robert H. Dilks.
C. Stine, Jr.
F
BethAnne M Valentino
Anthony Vigilanti
Gregory J. Viola
Richord G. Wolck
Diana Spongier Wolck
Ralph D Weller Jr
Horry E. Woolcock
Moxine Schlesinger Yeoger
Pomelo Crowl Yeoger
Shirley K. Young
Potricio M Young
Joseph J. Wieczorek
JoAnne Kohler Wieczorek
Dione Pupkiewicz Cuirle
Williom J Dovies
Sylvia
Jr
E
Edword
Joanne
Robert
Williom H. Cluley (77)
Ernest L Confer
Richard L Coup
Klinger, Jr.
Fronk
Woyne
Roy
Fronk
Burns
William E. Chapped.
Gory A Clewell
Jr
Suson
I
Potricio Stetz
Corol Lambert Turley
Campbell
Irene Guzevich Casari
David A. Keifer (MG)
Dr.
Donold
Betty Zablocky
Morilin J
Richord N. Bradwell
Carolyn Spongier Jacobs
Shelby Treon Horer
II
Mory Guydish Steppling
Carolyn Volence Swindro
Elizabeth A. Jones
Irwin
E
A. Steppling
Gulkowsky
J.
Dovid P Guzofsky
Diane Green Hall
Maryonn Leshonski Sucheski
Bergolis
J
Florion
Janet Belfonti Stein
Roymond
L
Robert A, Guthelnz
Spollone
Susan Leabhart Spearing
Becker
J
George
Brendo Burkhort Inghom (MG)
Thomos
Jr.
Oever Sypek
Leonard T Thomos
Verdun C. Thomos
Robert
Neol
Rosaline
Sosor
P.
Robert C
Edward W. Beishline
June Bloss Berkheiser
Glenn A. Bieber
Gory S. Blasser
Edword C Boudmon Jr
Schultz
Berry Shumoker
J
Roy E Hoglund II
Koren Kroll Horwoth
Donold M. Houck
Thereso Gherardini Houck
Shotwell
I.
Louise Sitler
Dovid
1971
Kerry C. Hoffmon
Jone Skomsky Gittler
Shaffer
R.
Cynthip Sharretts Sibole
Dwight M Ackermon
Diane Carl Ardan
Vicki Hoffmon Boir
Carol Greco Borhydt
Lee G. Barthold III
Donold F Becker
Regino F Hepner
John J. Higgms Ji
Rosmi
J
Roymond
Mark Yonchek
Thomos Lloyd Henry
Michoel 0. Seksinsky
lenore Tibbett Shannon
E.
Gittler. Jr.
F.
Michoel Weinberg
Kenneth 0 Schnure
Reinhold A. Schultz
Dennis
William
John P. Gross
Barbara Lawser Hoin
Theodore A. Hortz
Suson Zimmermon Sollode
Robert R. Sompsell (MG)
Kenneth 0. Saunders
Jock
Seymour
L.
Jomce Fenton Potey
Morgoret K Poyne
Ronold
Jomes
Gory
Kothleen Mortin Weover
Joseph
Joseph
J.
Downe Schrontz Pender
Borboro Foremon Pierce
Ellen
D Weaver
Peter
Gloria Grablutz
Polkendo
Suson Schohl Polkendo
Russell
Lindo Buck Marston
Robert C
Bowen
Jr
Ann
Jeffrey
W. Brouse
Ronold S Brown
R.
M
Campbell (MG)
Richord
Derolf
J.
M
Anne
Price Dennis
Diellerick
Robert D. DiSebastian
Borboro Dodson
Joy D
Domboch
Jomes J. Doyle
Regino Foir Dunn
Jane M. Elmes
Borboro Petteng.ll Evons
M. Jocqueline Feddock
Bruce
S.
Felix R
Fehr
M
Mitchell
E
Morris
Borboro
Neuhord
J
Kathleen Roorty Nickerson
Williom H Orcutt
Robert
Parry J r
W
Thomos
Parry
J
Shelly
J. Portion
Lindo Zimniski Portion
John B Poul
Claudio Schod Poul
Theodore C Pedergnono
Noncy Pfleegor Plott
Borboro
Wynn
Robert P
Donno
M
Ploiukis
Pochokilo
Polinsky
Louise Yeany Pool
Kent
1. Prizer
Robert M. Robb
Donald
Fernandez
Mitchell
J
Jean Glavich Nebzydoski
Koy Hohn Nell
Judith A. Chappell
Maroget
John
Miller. Jr.
Miller
Pamela Griffin Morris
Suzanne U Murphy
Chombers
Lynn Croft Dovies
Karren Winkler Dovis
D
Lansing
Butterweck
Joonne Cino Checket
Pomelo Penoyer Cincotto
Christine H. Conner
Lorry
Suson
Velmo Avery Burrows
Dennis
M
Chorles
Shirley Fester Brofee
Gory
McElwee
Monlyn Hondschuh McMenomin
Louis J. Melovoge
D Michoel Brouner
Thomos E. Breit
Noncy E Brink
J
M
Doniel A. McKinney
Sherri Kindig Brondt
Richord
McClosky
Borboro Standcliffe McClosky
W
Roffensperger
Fred Ramin, Jr,
Daniel W. Rorig
E.
Richord R. Fettermon
Peggy
J.
Fiedler
Robert C. Figlock
Robert E. Fisher
Alexis
Gamble Fonner
Williom
Judith
John
E.
Fox
Gildea,
Edword
Kothy
Charney Gantz
J.
Dr. Steven D. Rovert
Connie Smith Rovert
Kothleen Eisley Reich
Jr.
L.
F.
Rillstone
Ritter
Rosolyn M. Roberts
Continued
Continued from page 18
Theresa Zoranski
Kevin Hays
1972
David J. Robinson
Kenneth B. Robinson
Brendo Bollock Ross
Linda Neyhord Runge
Gina V. Sanson©
Frank
KiHy
S.
Roberto
Ball Schildt
Schildt
Dovid
R.
Dovid
Celestine
Alfred
Wrono
O
David
Sofilko
Mann
Williom D Kelso
Kathryn A Kirk
Stout
Louise Ranck Stroup
Collins
Alan
Stump
L.
Vincent
Michoel
Korl
Tropone
Vorono
T
J.
Vitale
Cloudio Zehner
S.
Webb
Paul R. Wolverton
David C. Wright
Paul M. Yonigo
Yoder
Joseph Zokorchemny
Jr
1973
Jeon
Mary Ann D Abbott
Barbora Brumbaugh Adams
Richard C Adams
Carolyn M. Arndt
Mary Boron Bonnon
Carol Droke Benzo
Alan D Bigelow
Bluff
Antoinette Pocanowski Botke
Thomos
Bnggs
I
Marlene Klacik Morkle
Diane Yost Maturoni
Jerry
W
Robert B
Stanley
Brosh
Burnett.
Douglas
Susan Pope Byorek
Mary Jane W Cordone
Frances Holgate Corr
Beth Bonfield Chrusch
Dianne Fluhr Coleman
Mark
Constable
J.
G
Timothy
Corby
Rosemary K. Corby
Suzonne Hoggerty Cordier
Penny Wolker Cragle
Jonet Capiga Dahlquist
Dovid R Dickens
Lonny C Dietterick
Gary E Donnelly
Sherry Shirk Donnelly
Lorry
Linda
A Donovan
Hermon Drumm
Thomas
J
Dunn
Richord
J.
Eckersley
Mary Broyan
Anne
Ernst
Evons
R
McClintock
F.
Patricio Noble McClune
Jerome J. McDonald
Ronna S McMurtrie
Irene Foy McNully
Chorlene Proch Meckes
Rondoll Miller
Anthony
Milore
J
W. Minnich
Scott
Lindo
Moser
Joseph J. Myers Jr
Dovid R Navryki
Jon
E.
M
Nazor
Richard F
Neidig
Mory L. O'Neill
Alwyn R Pointer
James J. Polushock
L.
Ponuski
Anne Nuss Potterson
Povlichko
F.
Daws Pecsek
Louise
Anthony
J.
Peluso
Mecone Peluso
Eileen
Mono Soxe
Pettenger
Froncis L Plumly
David H. Pool
Daniel
I
Rovino
Judith Toborowski Reese
Gory L Rilter
Joan Peron Ronco
Mildred Scholl Rose
Gwendolyn
Eloine
J.
Francine
Kerstelter Rosenfeld
Rusetski
R.
Rutulo
James P Sachelti
George Sanderson
Maryellen Gaughan
Cynthia
L
Georhort
Cothy Fiske Gerber
J
Deon Giambrone
Maureen O'Donnell Whitehead
Richord C. Whitmire
Lindo Gottlieb Williams
Mork
Leo A. Wisneski.
Gerold L Witte
Cheryl
Sharon lomoreoux Kohrherr
Jr.
E. Korpics
Carol Connor Kunkel
Donno Kuchak Yonigo
Lindo
Patrice McCorthy Kuntzler
Yerges
Debro
Popomok Youshock
Janet M. LoShay ('77)
Robert M. Loubach
J
Patricio
Kohrherr
C.
Ruth Rhodes Zalonis
Jonet Kuppinger Zanzinger
Froncis
J
Robert
F
Ziskowski
1974
Anderson
A Andrejock
Keith D Anthony
Rebecco Scurry Apple
Corol Hunsmger Bankus
Cynthio Hunt Barroll
Wanieto Bendinsky
Corol Menig Bennett
Dovid
E.
Beyer
Dovid
S.
Beyerle
Judith A. Beyerle
Mary Engel Bigelow
Donna L. Bubb
.
Kurtz
L
Mary Beth Lech
Thomos S. Leedom
Morris H Leighow
Roymond P Leister
Rhondo Hotalon Leister
Linda Long Jeffrey
Suson Hoddad Leitzel
Carol Foustner Lesusky
Jomes
R. Lett
Joseph M. Litchko
Angela Urbschat Looby
Fronk C. Loroh +
Horry M. Lumadue
Murray
Kathleen A.
Lutz
Lyrwi
Ann K. Buchholtr
J Roymond Burnett (MG)
Mory KazofcMojor
Suson Hennessy Martin
Nancy Padgett Camellin
Carolyn L. Carr (MG)
Steven
Elizobeth F
Holden
Cortieri
A
McClellon
Sally Derr
G
McCloskey
McClure
MoUy Casey
Cynthio Pogona McCfure
Marilyn Leo McCool
Paula Deatrich Christian
Mory Weiskopf McGarve'y
Morgoret A. Cistone
David
Potncio Gottsholl Cluley
Robert I. Compton. Jr.
Salvotore A.
Raymond Consorti
Mory Angle Coploff
Jone L. Cornell
Lindo Ruoss Cureton
Robert L. Dibble. Jr.
Elizabeth
P.
Dimpter
Robert D Dodge.
Mary
Jr.
Torsello Dougherty
David V
Droppo
Karen Irwin Eberle
G
Raymond
Edwards
M McGhee
Michael
J.
Meisinger
P. Miller
Rosalind VanHouten Milore
Rondo Punda Minnich
Larry R. Moser
Ann W Moser
Dovid B Moyer
Noncy Nebhut Moyer
Dennis M. Myers
Donoto J Nieman
Pomelo Schinski Evans
Dovid C. Nyce
Rolph D O'Bonion
Joseph J. Ochotny.
Ronold
J
Dr. William P
Albert
J.
Bradley D. Eroh
Williom
Evons
Fagnani, Jr
Potricia
Fahrenboch III
Chaopel Fahrenboch
Timothy
J
R.
Kathleen
Forrel
R. Forrell
Weber
Jane A. Weber
Gory E Wilson
John R. Wolff
Ernest
Ruth
Yotes
Yerger
E.
E.
Henrietto Partridge Zobrenski
Janet C. Zogorski
Jomes
Zanzinger
J
1975
Koren W. Abernethy
Leonard C. Adams
Donna
Ambler
Kroll
Jon M. Andes
Anonymous
W
Dovid
Badger
Melodie Halkett Badger
Grace Wolewski Bekaert
Dole
Dorell Squier Orzolek
Sandro Ho'fpster Ososkie
Mary Boyd Palmer
Michele Chlebove Pennebacker
Helen Hollenboch Peters
A
Gregory
Bitler
D Blow
Paul
Corol Hendricks Boerner
Linda M. Bokus
Arlene Trush Boles
Kathleen Fndirici Bosse
Mory Cummings Bower
Jomes J Boylon
Janice Rompolo Butz
Elizabeth Chandler Campbell
Groce
Corter
E.
Andrew
J.
Chennka
Janet Fioro Cherinka
Richord T Christian
A
Christie
Eunice Zeigler Compton
Cureton
Judy Flicker Curron
Fronk Dattilo
C. Eric
Williom Deletconich
Cathy Kraus DeWald
Joseph
T. DiGiocomo. Jr.
Brendo Boyer DiGiocomo
Mary Lepley Doto
Carolyn Driedger
Christina D Dunning
Cotherine Cromer Eckersley
Lee K. English
Daniel
Jr
O'Neill
Bell
Bergman
J
Jerald
Mecca
CraigAnn Mehrmann
James
Kornes Watson
Wotts
Elizobeth R
Craig A.
Dione Dickinson
Christine Schmidt Lewis
Patrice
Ingrid
Eury (MG)
L.
Judy Collier Fosnacht
Ines T
Fernandez
Eleonoro Ehrhorn Fisher
John H.
Morilyn
J.
Flowers
Thomos
T
Foss
Flick
Moryonn Kwiatkowski Fieo
Andrea
Sharon
Richord C Pohle
Kothy Whitmire Fowler
David B Fresch
Diane DeFrancesco Fry
Susan Burkovage Pohle
Joseph
P. Fissel
Cynthia Foulke Forney
Constance Poh Goney
Koren Craholl Gehrett
Glenn D Gerber
James
Petruska
L.
R
Pollock
A Polumbo
Catherine
A Galati
Linda Golis Gardner
Joseph P Govio
Noncy
Jomes
Dorothy A. Rice
Ann Gruber Gibbons
Scheffey (MG)
R
A Schwonger
Richord
Terry
Schwenk
Secundo
R.
J.
Linda Sterner Shook
Eloine Opp Sheotler
Sides
Gory Alon Smith
David
P. Sitoski
Joonne
Vitale Sitoski
Sharon Whitteker Snyder
Helen D Strosky
Rosonne LaBrute Testo
Harris G. Theodore
Dianne Velten Thompson
Angela Falzone Grody
Debra Kern Green
Keith
Groydon A. Gulliver
Dennis M. Guyer
Koren Terry Klingermon
Ronald L. Koch
Audrey Horns Koehler
Kenneth A. Vioni
Kothy E. Woltman
Mark
Ann Shuman Gimpert
Lindo S. Gough
Griffin
Suson Kovetski White
Terrence J. White
II
Klinger
Geehan
Michoel A. Suchanick
Dorothy H. Swortz
Robert R
L
Gerhord
J|ll
Cotner Gibos
Frances M Gilroy
Wenner
Jeffrey R. White
R. Urffer
Williom G. Vorgo
Sheryl Greiner
A Sherwood
Gable
Rondoll
Dennis
Kempski
Henry M. Kipp
Kenneth J. Kitchen
Roger M. Savage
W
E.
F
Robin Ratushny
Jack
Fry
Linda Hinchcliffe
Keil
Joseph
Marcio Borlon Tuerk (MG)
Chorles H Updegroff. Jr
Ruth F Urbon
Robert D. Port
Fred
A
Jonice C
Melonie Wengrenovich
Tempesco
J.
Janet Hoffman Porzel
Robert A. Reed
Moryonn Wonyo
Kenneth
Villari
C Wogner
Richard J. Word
Mildred P Worwick
Jomes B Weber
Suson Sheoffer Weber
Charles F Wehinger
Lawrence
Koye E. Tennant
Kathleen M. Dorcey Tierno
Lorry C Toy
Chorles A. Tuerk (MG)
Beth Delong Gerlins
Dovid P. Gibos
Gregory R Folatek (MG)
Ruth McCloskey Federchak
Brendo R, Fisher
Lorry
III
Edith Romig Rabuck
Marcia Kuligowski Rado
Vito
Forish
W
Joseph
Jocques
Constance Pour Jarrord
Christine M. Jendrzejewtki
Glenn M Johansen
Lydia Lambert Johansen
Marybelh Pornell Johns
J Gregory Koshello
Genevieve H. Keating
lindo
Mary Jean Cosole
Morris
J
Molly
Jr.
Bushner
J.
McClellon
L.
Jeanne
Jeffrey A. Brodbeck
Colleen
LeGotes
Peter D. Nell
Robert W, Bluff
Donno Mullen
Kull
F.
Dennis
Joyce Kerr Beom
Sonyo Rutkowski
Stephen
Jonice Evans Mark
J
Abbott
Corl J
Kormon
Kostick
Robert H. Louver
Oren M Woodruff
Pomelo Nicholos Woodruff
A
B.
Joyce
Keith R
Irene Gulycz Wehringer
Monetlo McMicken Weller
Jeanne A DeRose Wilson
Corol
Garry
Juleanne Degenhart Kraft
Woltman
E.
Kniezewski
J.
John A. Vontine
Raphael Palucci Vontine
Morcio Wonnamocher Vermuth
M
Linda Schoeffer Kniss
Michael P Trocy
J.
Klowitter
T
Klinetob
William R Klmgermon
Deborah Dixon Timm
Linda Bennick Tinsmon
Samuel
Samuel
L
Diane
Swartz
L.
Kotch
J
Helen T. Keller
Margery Hollar Keller
Spring
Steele
L.
Polricia
Jenkins
J.
Kathleen Furman Jenkins
Kim W. Johns
Dole E. Koshner
Barbora Strohm Smith
Michael
Hulteman
Edith Seifert lompietro
Virginia Piott Ide
Michael A. Smallets
Susan Dornemon Smallets
Barry
M
Carolyn
Seebold
Elaine Lemoncelli Severs
Bart J. Slough
Robert C. Sluzis
F.
R. Hughes
Donald Hummel
H.
Paulelte Chobok Schredl
Helen
Honoberger
L
Kristi Eglody House
Carolyn Gunster Howland
Sorinelli
J.
Richard
Hammer (MG)
Donald Hedish
Dennis L. Holbrook
Karen Thomos Holbrook
Tressler
R.
Kenneth
E
Williom
J.
Richord
J
Naomi M.
J.
Gibisser
Douglos P Goerlitz
Susan M Gottlieb
Borry
Gray
L
Pomelo Westley Gray
Robert J. Grebb
Amy Scholles Gyory
A Hagerman
Borbaro
Doran
Hamonn
Gory W. Hommer (MG)
Anne Stefonik Hanna
J.
Hanno
Normon
Cheryl A.
Richards
Sempo
Darlene Nowell Signore
Michoel
F.
Grahom
Dennis A. Greenly
Jock R
Rolph
J.
Slingerlond (MG)
Smith
Nancy
Hale
Jeon
Peter A. Sopka
Patricio A.
A Horns
Daniel
Koren
Hellmuth
Edward D Spellmon
Koren Kreigh Spellman
Spadoni
T.
A
Barbara
Stasiuk
Nancy Kipl.nger Steelman (MG)
Jr
Holl
I
Anna Shostoy Sneeringer
Susan McMinn Snyder
Borbaro
Noncy M. Hoffman
Jeanne lalesto Hofmonn
Glossner
J.
R.
Michele Seliga Himelright
David A. Hoffman
M
Mory Ann Gohrig
Barbora Haug Good
Micki
William
L.
Kathleen Cheruko Glessner
Kathleen
James Slamon
C. Harlan
Regino
M
Horfmon
Houber
Denise Kriesher Houser
Noncy A Hessinger
Joseph L. Hilgar
Sharon Young Hilgor
Janice Spears Hopkins
Judith A. Stine
Borbaro
Joon Radziewicz Stoutfer
Michele Walloce
Jeonne Graver Stranzl
Lewonne
Harold C. Hoover, Jr.
Jeanette M. Imbrogno
Troutmon
Cheryl A. Innerst
Allen B
Twordzik
Christine Daggitt Inscho
Joseph
Ulrich
Dovid H. lobst
Richord
Trometter
G
Richord E. Robison
Jane Endrizz. Scheffey (MG)
Slater Gerhart
Swope
E.
S.
Szewczyk
Szulanczyk
B.
Hudock
Hummel
Hunt
Russell A Horn
Cvnthia Cragle Horn
E.
Continued
K«»y
20
Sondro Myers ThoVnds
Mary
Continued from page 19
George E. Jonsson
Juliet Wilhoms Joremko
Donno E Jones
Jeonne M. Josbeno
Deborah Roth
lindo Appel Kennedy
||
Koren S. Kornes
Oione Geise Keister
Wolter O. Keisfer
Morylou Kempt
Kathleen
Gene
Kerick
A. Wentzel
Lindo Stockmon Wentzel
Beth
Rebecco Schrum Keyser
Werkheiser
L
Knouss
Sondro Fink Knowlden
Jeffrey R.
Down
Joon Reborchok Koch
Timothy J. Kokolus
Geraldine A Konicki
Gwendelyn Reider Yerk
Carlton W. Young
Gory T Zelinske
Noncy Boysen Zelinske
Kathleen Klemick Korbich
Susan Schaeffer Krempasky
Thomas S. labor
(MG)
Zimmermon
Korl H.
Louise
1976
Patricio Bocich
Ackermon
'
Kile
Rondoll S
Kimble (MG)
Michael
Klotchok
J
Jr
Lone Hetrick Kumer
Anne
Jomie
Clifford C.
Lehman
Lewis
Don
(MG)
Peter W. Longo
Anthony A. Lovecchio
Craig
Madora
Michael G. Malanga
Cynthia Storer Malongo
Judith Billman
Kothleen M. Barrett
Lynn McCormick Motncian
Lorry A.
Mayer
Gene
McCarty
L.
Mory A. McGonn
McGee
Melissa Grotton
Charles A McKnett
Oione Blessing Meeker
Meeker
Robert
B.
Sandra
K. Millard
Richord
Minnick
L.
Cotherine
J
Aileen Wombold Modrick
Gregory W Morion
Nancy Ann Mowrer
Moron Mulvey
Linda
Motzura
McCoy
E.
Robert
Woyne
Gale Minnich Blewis
Brewster
J.
II
Morie Lundy Callahan (MG)
Gory J. Campbell
Jomes E. Campbell
Morcy J. Campbell
Koren Ickes Chiodo
Barry I Cimino
Peter
Clare
J.
Mehrer
Mengel
J.
Phillip K.
1
Buckley
McGinnis
J
Elizabeth A. Miller
Martin
Forrest B
Moryann
Dell
Crowl
Jomes
Bonnie
Stephen
Lisette
Robert
DeCorolis
J
Michele
Dubuski
Sellitto
DeSera
Ostimchuk
Oswold Jr.
Overbaugh
J.
C.
Judith Spotts Davis
J.
T.
Gregory
Doiley
L.
Graham Oxley
Sovage Oxley
Koren Sheffer Ozycz
Suson M. Pork
Jone E. Porry
Martha Harris Buckley
Joseph F. Bukofski
Coryn Fernondez Compbell
Douglas H. Cauti
Patricio Noel Chose
Michoel A Chiodo
Kim S. Christion
Deborah Weissinger Christian
Mory Motoni Cleory
Susan Snyder Myers
Kermit T. Nester
Joon Karris English
Cathy Evans Eury (MG)
Goyle Telthorster Nester
Corol Boehret Potey
Elizabeth Knecht Colleron
Debro Edwards Evons
Mariellen Pentka
Josephine Fiolkowski Evans
Koren Gehrung Evons (MG)
Terry
Mory
O Brien
T.
Charmoine Fent O'Horo
Charles V. Palmeri
William
Chester
T. Pasek
Marlene Wells Posek
Kathy DeGlos Potterson
Donna M. Peroni
Webb
Michele
Purdy
Kenneth
F.
Fronces P
Reigle
(MG)
Joseph A. Rutecki
Louis N. Soros
Ann
Dale
T. Schilling
Schmeltzle
R.
Mork
Schweiker
S
A
Robert
Schweppenheiser
Glenn W. ShoHer, Jr.
Olgo Cheddor Shaffer
Rebecca Stong Shoppell
Cherie Aderhold Sherouse
Robert A. Shoop
Daniel R. Signore
Michael
E.
III
Smith
Splone
J
L.
Sweitzer
Marcio Klinger Sweitzer
Robert P Swiotek
Ann G Swobodo
Moryonne Sable Swope
Dovid M. Sysko
Wayne
N. Szynal
Slonely
Roger
L.
I
Tontsits
Thomas
Feriod
Reid
Michele
Christine
Thomos
E.
F.
A Roman
William A. Russell
Ann Kush
Frain
J.
J
Frazier
John D. Gasper
Sue A. Geiger
Jeon M Generose
Gory W. Gill
Jomes
R.
Kit Griffiths
Brion
Gruber
Harper
P.
Denise
L.
Jonis
Elizabeth Figure Soroult
David R Espe
Stephonie Shoro Sorns
Lawrence Evans
Noncy Green Evans
Ellen Scolise
E.
Schoefer
G
Roseonn
J.
Schwonger
Frederick C. Shoppell
Harvey
House
Christopher A. Herlig
J.
Mory
J.
Drew
K.
Hockenberger.
Hoover
Jr
Hostetter (MG)
Richard T Howenstine
Koren Stank Howenstine
G. Thomos Hughes III (MG)
Lindo Horn Hughes
Robert P Hughes
William D Ide
Andrew
F.
Jinks
Melonie Kuser Johnson
Jr.
Filmeyr
L.
John P Fineron
Patricio
A
Finn
Aungst Floska
David A. Shoemaker
Sondro L. Shupp
Lindo
M
Dovid
F.
Rosemarie
Victoria A. Frace
K.
Simko
Rosonne Wolf Smith
Susan Stoddard Howk
Edwords
Everett
Robert
Robert A. Smith
K.
I.
Claire
Howord
Maureen
Terri
Michelle Roessner Schultes
Albert Gory Scicchitano
Mory Lowery Skwierz
Harris
Ellis
E brig hi
Marlojeon Twilley Foy
Schaffner
Suzanne Laverick Horrington
I.
Richord B. Durbano
Russell
Russell P. Soroult Jr
Randy
Munro Grohom
Dodd
L.
Eugene C. Dorsi
Jeon M. Dougherty
George A.
Carl
Gingrich
Russell
Dillmon
J
Mory Payne Sandor
Mory
Koren Marquette Gingrich
William M. Glavich
Elizabeth
Borbaro
Robel
Noncy Yeoger Roehrig
Joseph
DeRisi
J
Tino M. deVries
Reiner
Thomas
llona Szijorto Ide
(MG)
Rodcliff
L
Clare Cintolo Fleck
John
John V. Stevens
Brady M. Stroh
Thomos
A
Fisher
F.
Patricio Fell
Diane R. Snyder
Barbara A Sorber
Morirose Schofield Soulherton
Robert
Korl
L.
Peters
Michael A. Popiak Jr
Kathleen K Powlus
Dovid
Susan
Todd A. Foy
Moryonne Coriese Feno
Dovid M. Furman
Moria J Golabinski
Adorn A. Robito
Russell
Foil
Holly Smith Fornese
Dennis
Reponshek
Donno Hogge
Williom A.
Patricio
Susanne D Rodice
Matthew P. Raski
Noncy Sheaffer Roudenbush
Ewell (MG)
J.
Matthew J. Connell
Anne French Connell
Richord B Cooper
Suzanne E. Cromock +
Eloine D Dodurka
J.
Sondro Risner Smith
Steven M Snyder
Michael J. Sobolesky
Alecia Boyer Spoyd
Foley
Fox
Jane Dudzinski Fulton
Suzanne F. Garcia
Jean E. Gorty
Kathy L. Geiger
Mory Stopleton Spiegel
Thomas S Geiger
Joseph A. Giedgowd (MG)
Bruce H Gill Jr.
Dione Rice Gill
Goil D. Sprout
Morion Goldberg
Susan
M
Stoir
Kenneth W. Stovorski
Craig E
Steigerwalt
JoAnn F. Steponitis
Thomos J Stiner (MG)
Jeffers
Golden
Woodson Gooden
Gary L. Gordon
Betty
Daniel
Anno
E.
Grant
Gilly Grolz
Kim
Rosa Solines Stroh
Lucyann Giovannini Greggo
Dione E. Gross
Terry K Guers
Cincloir Strollo
Cotherine C Surok
Thomos
E.
Gray
E.
Klinedinsl
Marilyn K. Klock
David
Kmetz (MG)
J.
Dione Donotelli Kmetz (MG)
Cynthio Gumpert Knauer
Karen Kalbach Koch
George M. Komo Jr.
Michoel V Kowolick
Kathleen M. Kunowski
Dovid
Logner
S.
Lee
Dixie E
Randall C. Leitzel
Thomas A. lindeman
M
Jean
Lockord
Jomes
H. Longacre
Ronold
W
Loroh
Anno M. Lux
Mary Higgins
Stephen
B.
Moffelt
Mojor
Maureen A Marcus
Deborah Roncoloto Morlin
Gwen McConlogue Mortz
Mory Motty Mossic
Peggy Flynn Mattern
L. Matzko
Cynthio
Daniel K. Mouroy
Dione Leschinsky Mauroy
John A McCauley
Dovid R. McCollum
Ann M. McGorry
Christine Lorenc McLaughlin
Kimberly Ann McNolly
Glen J. McNomee
Stephen F. Mitchell
Lindo Costor Mondschein
Bernord
Volerie
Mont
L
Jr.
Monteith
J.
Dovid P Morgovnik
Jerome E Mucha
Any Westcott Myers
Gail Hick Nolf (MG)
Joon A. Norquest
Dovid J Nunzioto
(
79)
Kirk Ohlinger
Dovid
Orgler
E.
Mory Burrichter Orgler
Suson Steckline Overbey
Cynthio D. Peters
Dovid A. Pfoff
Cynthia
J.
Phillips
Koren Gebouer Piehl (MG)
Scott
L.
Pietrack
Elizabeth Price Pitcher
Bernodette Pogozelski
Thomas
J
Porambo
Charles A. Provaznik
Patrick F. Prediger
Malti
A Prima (MG)
Bettionne
Ann
Doniel R. Strobel (MG)
Donno
Daub Kosper
Dovid M. Kelly
Thomas O Kern
Stephen S. Kline
Bonser
Bettijean Bruning
E.
A Koniper
Carol
Eloine Boris Borgio
Leo
E.
Konoskie
J.
Corol
Boland
J.
Neuschwonder
Cynthio Rambocher Neumann
Robert M. O Connor
Susan Kobilis Nesbitt
David
Byron
J,
George A Boschini
Katherine Mason Boschini
Michoel J. Bower
Phillip J. Bower
Koren M. Bowman
Richord
Carl
Bocchicchio (MG)
Donna Bowen Minnick
Robert J. Mondschein (MG)
Lizobeth A, Morgan (MG)
O'Donnell
William T. O'Donnell
Crowl
John
Gary A. Bogart
Jennings
Romoine G. Johnson
Moryrose Guerrieri Johnson
Joseph P Kolkowsky
Blockus
F.
Bernard R. Miller III
Suson Madden Miller
Deborah B Clore
Deborah Nesbitt Colemon
Laurie Neibouer Costello
L.
Jomes
L.
Donald I. Johns
Nancy L. Johnson
Blewis
J
James
S.
Richard
Barbara Bates-Comer
Vonessa A. Bauer
Evelyn Baxevone
Lynn M. Bensmg
Kathleen McQuillan
Deborah
Missimer
J.
Michael
Billy R
III
Stephen
Cecil
Stanley D. Barrett
Mann
L.
Donald K. Bechtel
Diane Winters Bicjan
Williom
Anthony 0. Mangiaracina
Sandy A. Mossefti
I.
Judith Youskites Barlow
Athene Chiadis Blow
Menelius
Sigrid E
William
Jr.
Ashenfalder
Pierce Atwoter III
Eva Mekeel Mock (MG)
Ann
Baker
L.
R.
Christine Slivko Babcock
Stovroula N. Marinakos
Lundergan
Albert
E.
Duonne
Robert G. Mock (MG)
Donna Murroy Alexander
Gory L. Aurond (MG)
Peter F
Adorns
C.
Donald
Lynn Wolkins Lundy
June Gengler Lyden
Lucini
Carol
Shermon G. Lord
Charles
Ayres
Doniel F. Babcock
John C. Babcock
Dennen
Judith
Bruce M. Albertini
lesisky
Robert A. Hoffman
David A. Hopkins
L, Houser
Lee M. Houser
Joan Buchmon Houser
David B. Hughes
Michoel C. Hutnick Jr
Kim Jamison Ibarra
Kathleen W. lezzoni
Jr.
Corol Bruno Adorns
Dovid Lezinsky
Linn
Harold S. Hobensock Jr
Cathy Myers Hobensock
1977
Jr
III
Hoyden
W. Hlnkle
Brian
Zwolly
L.
L.
Sandra K. Hemmig
Koren Beasley Hiller
Anonymous
Chorles
S
Florence
Donna Socoloski Yonkovlg
Landis
J.
John W. Horvey
Cheryl A. Havilond
Ellen B. Yotes
loporte
P
Werkheiser
Whitoker
v
Nanci Haigh-Fitzgibbons
L.
O
Gail
David A. Ladonis
Joseph R lonciano
L.
Carol Batzel Hoile
Francis X
Kumet
Ruth A. Lefchak
M
(MG)
Robert S Kriebel
M
Roxaflrry Ri'HogvnbucJv
Theo Tafner
Suson C. Tontsits (MG)
Down Antrim Trout
Unger (MG)
Jerome A. Volana
James T. Waechter
Jonet Gowisnok Walsh
Barbara A. Wanchisen
Cheryl Kercsmar Woybright
Carolonne Naylor Wegmon
Mary McCudden Knouss
Patricia Romoncheck Kokolus
Thaddeus C. Kosciolek
Ruth
Jonet Moshirvsky Sf\ildrfczyk
Dovid
Brendo Laylond lehr
Roger L. Lentz
Francis
'•
Kilkenny
J.
Mehnda
Yannick
L.
G
Gregory
Cynthio
Joonne Kohon Wood
Joseph P. Woods
Pomelo Kuchok Woods
Mary-Elaine Wszolek
Undo Logo Klein
Eleanor Nowok Knorr
Elizabeth Roberts Landau
Wegmon
Gary L. Weigel
Noncy Shute Weigel
Louonne P Welker
Kennedy
O Boyle
Weber-Coto
Bradley K
Keyser
J
H Watts
L.
Susan Kessock
Woshick
Rita Lucion
Suson Yarish Weber
Dono Lerew Keough
Mark
J. Toborowski
Ronold C Tomoshefski
Gail Anderson Tress
Eileen
A Kennedy
Trieste
Andrew
Randall
Robert O Kennedy
Judith Smith
Tir|on
Compton Quinn
Potricio Seilher
Dr
Nancy
J
Quinn
Romin
Judy A. Reed
Karen Devito Reighn
Roger L. Ritchey
John W. Roehrig
Bethany Gibble Rosenberg
Janice Minnich Rynhart
Continued
Continued from page 20
Palricio
Eloino C. Salodygo
Scott
Carolyn McMaster Salerno
R
J
M
Jean
Loline
Schweitzer
I.
Scott
Paul G. Seif
Georgonne Hugick
Mary M Semon
Seit
Kaihy
Jomes
Gessner
Maureen Bottone Giordono
Janet T. Gorg
Rebecca J. Groby
Joyne
Arthur
J.
Steven
J. Hill
P. Sisson
Sitler
Stradtmon
Robert
Higgins
Steven C
Anthony
MoryAnne
Christopher
Taylor
Genevieve Cabacar Thompson
Mory-Lyn Wynne Tomosura
Jack H. Troy
Ron D Troy
Janice Briggs Turner
Linda Pulaski Unger (MG)
Drone Nork Vorgo
Christine M. Venezia
Dale C. Voorheis
Morybeth Walewski
Dione L. Wechter
Rito S. Wechter
R.chard D Welker
Beverly Morcy Wetering
Diane Schoneker Wholen
Williams
Lynn Apicello Wukitsch
John D Wylie
Paul
Hudok
Jr.
Jonkiewicz
S.
J.
Sandra
A
Eugene
R. Kelley
Robin
1978
Garry Abdo
Borry W. Adorns
Jeanne
Adams
John D Bochert
Dole R Baker
M
8olaban
Jeffrey A. Bean (MG)
John 0 Bergen
Edword R Bezdziecki
James W. Bischoff Jr
Kenneth D Blonk
Steven W. Styers
Adele
T.
Jr.
Tierney
T.
Tierney
Troxell
Jr.
Cindy Kotulko Twordzik
Anne Furmon Usuka
Daniel C. VonWyk
J.
Vorgo
Lorry K. Voss
Margaret H Koziski
Mory E. Kuprevich
Penny A. Kunsko (MG)
Ronald P Kurylo
G. Dale Wogner
Thomos
P.
Charlene Gerbino Kurylo
Brian K. Lane
Rito
Harry M. Worren
Jennifer Mountz
M. Fox
Robert
L
Williom
Frescatore
Jr
Gallen
F.
A Gathman
Elizabeth
M
Morgoret
Thomos
Judith
R.
Gehrmger
George
Gilbert
L
William A. Golden
Bernodetle M. Gondell
Debro 0 Good
Sue Corey Grosley
III
Weaver
Hodun Yurkiewicz
Joonn Schultz Zeigler
Barbara A. Zelenski
Lorry
Geraldine Scully Andregic
Morlin
Phillip
Stuart
J
Kevin
M
Marvin
Mothews
1979
George R Antochy
Laura Adolphson Antochy
Koren M. Arcuri
Morgaret A. Armstrong
Joan Matten Boiley
Guinther
Beverly Baker Gursky
Elizabeth A. Gursky
Karen Capion Haines
Glenn
Hessling
S.
Carole
Hutchison
S.
Barbara
R.
Jablonski
Thereso Michno Jacopetti
Jone Nogle Jonkiewicz
Suson Varano Jeffreys
Mark
D. Jensten
Vincent
June
J.
Deborah A. Kellerman
Diane
Kimbyrlee Sandt Bartleson
Carol A. Killheffer (MG)
Ellen M. Bonetski
Evo Bocconero Botsko
Jeffrey E Brondt
Jomes P McLaughlin Jr
Poul M McLinko
Nancy Chapmon McNomee
Gail
Paul
Irene Shubin Merklin
T
Brazil
Steven J. Bright (MG)
Gregory K Brinser (MG)
Kothryn M. Brior
Croig D
Jone Bowie Bubak
Ronnie L Bucher
Weeks Burke
Thomas J Colvorio
John M. Cannon
Anne
Covollucci
(MG)
D'lgnozio Covollucci
A Cherry
Lenore
Mono
Chlibkewycz
Lowrence
P
Cirillo Jr
Robert G. Conrad
McKlnnon Cooke
Bortlett
Beaver
Joseph R Bell
Lauren Ball Bell
Joy L. Bender
Kellerman
L.
Daniel
L.
Kline
Susanne M. Koch
Bernard S Koskulitz
L.
Eck
Cathy
E.
Laura
M
Peischl
Poffenberger
Pollock
Brilt
Dovid
Beth
E.
E.
Michael
Brooks
Buchter
C. Burrell
Reese
Joan C. Riffitts
David A Rinehimer
Nancy Bauer Rilchey
Kelly A. Roe
Ruth
Germon Ruch
Colleen
E.
Rudelitsch
James
Burrell
Jeffrey Carruthers
Lombordo
Osman
Dovid A. Cress
Patricio
M
Crone
L
Matzko
Paul
S.
Deborah
Georgio
Joseph P McDonold
Bruce
Rush
I
R. Russell
Robert P
(MG)
Ruzzo
Elyn
Molly A. Finley
Joanne M. Sokowski
Gregory T. Salerno
J.
Rysz
Potricia
Philip
J.
L.
Cuthbert
Cyganowski
Daly
Beth Norcross Daly
J. Danner
Nancy Slack Donner
Daniel
J
Vansickle
Wogner
Moore Worren
A
Wosheleski (MG)
M
Waters
Beth Dwyer West
A Whiteheod
Charles A. Wilson IV
Anne Shaloke Wilson
James A Williams
Megen L. Willioms
Yohn
Young + (MG)
Audrey VanGorder Zarkoski
Poul A Zenyuh
Victorio M. Zydzik
Sally A.
McCobe
Lonce
Volenti
Jeffrey P
Vicky Emery Wright
Mauro
Catherine Stanton Cuff
Michael T
Lorie
Timothy C. Moy
Louro Moore McAuliffe
Terry K. Rupert
Torok
Catherine M. Welch
Manco
Judith Stout
W
Beth Anselm Torok
Corey
Kothryn M. Malone
Cynthio
Coniglioro
Keith
Potricia
Daniel C. Confolone + (MG)
A
Taylor
Christine M. Wossell
Louis M. Mannangeli
Sandra Stawchansky Martin
Diane Pletcher Marvin
Peter
Sweinhort
Edword Terschak
Joel
Rito
Borboro Kehler Cimino
Veronica D. Clark
Carol Nosek Coniglioro
Sterling
Dorlene A. Stutzman
Dennis
Swank
Tracey Cooke
Angelo R. Lorenc
Ann Ryon Lowry
Evangeline A. Lunn
Edward M Madolis
J.
McCarty
Scott R.
1980
Jr
Carol Cunningham McLinko
Diane M.
Altieri
Charlene M. Mervine
Victorio
A
Altieri
Jody L. Millard
Dione Tyson Miller
Richard
J.
Andrews
Robin S Miller
Sr.
Chorles D Stothopoulos
Daniel W. Steel
Ann
T
Margoret Ehrhorn
Stephen D Fox
Nadine Sioma Snyder
Morybeth Soda
Donald N. Sproehnle.
John J. Stopert
Palmer
J.
Jr
Beth K. Snyder
R
Moryonne
Janine
Lynn A. Cathers
Cory II
Edword J Silvo
Karen J. Smoy
Marion R. Smith
Wayne
Brito
Lynn Morse Reichort
Mark Duckworth
Elisabeth A Dunnenberger
Janet Coywood Dunscomb
Sharon Petrusnek Durbano
Faith Cook Ebright
Sharrow
Shea
E.
E.
Carol
Robert C
Alyce Starke Dondera
Kim
Paglialungo
Sharon Mosso Crimian
M. Detweiler
Susan
R.
Susan J. Lilly
John B. Lockwood
Thomos
Mark A Diefenderfer
Jomes R. Domenick
Mark A. Sevec
Albert
Stomm Branch
Hollie Baskin Monwiller
Dawson
Schell
Catherine M. Seefeldt
Janet
Lorry
E.
Scharnitz
Bnan D
Debro Norman Neuschwonder
Virgimo Hoeschele Norquest
R
Alicio
M
Scott
Carmelita DeCusotis Truitt
Robert E. Umbenhauer
Levan
Morio Word Connon
Creveling
Corol Scheirer Sauerzopf
Terry P. Troy
Lawrence
Mary A. Quakenbush
Jone A. Raker (MG)
Crane
E.
Joseph A. Santanasto
Anne Yeager Sorrow
Virginia
Sally Powell Brozil
Robinson
Rogers
Cynthia Kuchorik Ruscitto
Mory Lynn Sampson
Thomos
J.
Reitz
C.
A
Borboro Neely
S.
Jr
Reitz
L.
Cheryl Shoffler Lane
Lee
Jr.
Joseph P Reese
Ann
Thereso Sweeney Bochicchio (MG)
Froncine J. Bolger (MG)
Boron
Raker
T.
L.
Doreen Yocuboski Malott
J.
Robert
Mabel D. Raski
Rhonda L Reedy
W
Doris Buro Calvario
Kevin
Preston
L.
Mory Slusseor Przewlocki (MG)
Mary Pulley
Leo I. Quinn III
M
Leslie
James
Peterson
Lauren
Krause
Lisa Kroynok
Kenneth J. Krick + (MG)
Chen Bohler Kroboth
Kothy Predmore
Robert W. Costello
Joan
Lois
Jr.
Lindo A. Kotkoskie
Cheryl Hitchens Prima (MG)
Hilarie
G
Sharon
A
Pennesi
Perrett
Befteann M. Kramer
P.
Peifer
Peiffer
J.
L.
Carole K
Debra J. Mongelli
Michoel D. Mowery
Cindy A. Mull
Kristy
Willian
Deborah Dovidson Bergen
Carl W. Berntsen (MG)
Moryann Bingaman
June Santello Bischoff
Lorroine Dzurisin Merrick
Ann M. Molchan
John F. Mondschem
Brosious
Albert E
Corl A. Merrick
Edword C Overberger
Dovid P Poyonk
Williom D. Shupp
Michael M. Baker
L.
Oblos
Gerard M. Seltzer
Kothleen Vecchi Mazurik
Therese M. McFadden
A
A Osmun
Albert H Oussoren
Heidi Custer Seitz
Hinton
E.
Helen A. Hobon
Bette L. Hoover
Sharon Unger Houseal
Cynthia Shemanski Blonk
Donna
W
Borboro
Richard M. Rudock
Carol
Monbeck
Gail A Monners
Susan Bremer Mannix
L. Manwiller
Suzanne Marburger
Jeanne Peoples Marsh
Novinskie
Edward
Rebecco K
Carol
Lyons
Nitroy
S.
Kothy
Barbara Hewitt Lorah
Earl R Lowry
J.
J
Chorles
Deboroh
William
J.
Thomos
Corl A. Poff
Deborah Arrowood Wood
Lisa M. Wood
Thomos E. Young
Limbert
E
Lindo
Jomes R. Harfan
Carl D Harraden
Gregory A. Heaps
Rebecco Heilman Heffner
A
L.
Suson
Thomos M. Polyniak (MG)
M. Wiest
Karen Reinert Wilkinson
Hendrick E. Williams Jr.
Kimberly A. Winnick
Ricky K, Loubach
Corol
Dione
Foley
Kristin
Victoria T
Walmer Walker
Paulette
Flick
J.
Diane Teel Flyte
Denise Reed Gross
Nan Y. Gross
Vercoe
Scott E.
Mussoline
J
Edword J
James F
Flanagan (MG)
Laurie Johnson Gaylord
Tuttle
Robert S Twaddell
Poul A. Twordzik
Martin
J
Williom C. Pott
Fink
I
F.
Robert
T.
Francis J
I
Tumos
Diane Berardi
Moryonne Rizzo Kirk
Gory S. Kneiss
Theodore V Konas
Sara
I.
Richard
Robert B
Kile
Emmick
L.
Koren A. Fenicle
Wllliom
Kerstetter
L
JohnXiehl
Diona Covington
Eckenroth
Jeffrey Stello
Anne Dowd
Keller
M
Samuel K Edmiston
Mory Ellen T. Ekberg
Donald H Elsenbaumer
Joni
(MG)
Mock
Moore Jr.
Moroz
Moyer (MG)
Mitchell
Myers
Neborok
Charleen M. Nicholas
Dougherty
Kothleen
A Spero
T
L.
Elizabeth Rauhouser Stein
Kenneth
Jr
Jerzok
Dovid F Jones
Eleanor J. Hassold Keeler
Robert P Kellenberger (MG)
Bruce
Yori Jr
Terry H. Zeigler
Mory
J.
Lindo Okker Lechner
Yinger
J.
Thomos
M
21
Christine Kosoloski Mussoline
Cynthio S Dongoski
Adele
Robert
Lowrence
Dubbs
Doreen K Dubinsky
Smeck
E.
Dill
Domenick
*
Mitchel
Volerie Schott
Sondro
Joseph J. Dominick
John R. Donel
Michoel
Sitler
Raymond G. Supper
Mark A. Sverchek
Jerome D. Theobold
Morion L. Thompson
Houseal
lee A. Stump
Kothleen Dawes Swank
Gail Hamlin Sylvester
Jr.
Susan J. Staof
Kathleen Weber Stoley
Roger P. Starski
Horn
J
Jr
Sinopoli
Catherine
Deborah Flank Hinton
Eloine Hontz Hockenberger
James E. Holland (MG)
James E. Hollister
Jr.
M
David
Suson Kadash Hinkle
Georgio Wohal Smeo
Anthony L, Smith
Laura Wessner Smith
Anthony Stompone III
Kenneth E. Stolorick
J
Shields
F
A
Williom C
Harlond H. Shoemaker Jr.
Ronald T Shoemaker Jr.
Hasay
F.
Edword A. Herbert
Dovid
Robert
C.
Shepperson
Lea A. Simcox
A
Carol A. Dickerson
Dale
J.
lindo
Suson Devries-Amelong
Scott
Andrew
Edmond
G
Schutl
T.
Williom
G
Lowrence
Delp
S.
Cheryl Boratto DeSimone
John J. Sexton
Brendo A ShoHer
Raymond A. Sheelen
Sharon F Gettel
John H Millhouse
Daniel
J.
Shustack
J.
George
Jr.
Richard A.
Timothy
F
Teresa
Ronald
II
Oantonio
R;
Bruce D Dehoven
Kathleen I Delissio
K.m
Schultz
R.
Shultz
S.
Jomes
,
Schmucker
F
Dovid
A. Gessner
Dill
Solmoo
Elizabeth Jones Samarin
Virginio L Schenk
Furniss
Norman
A
William
Michael Grosso
Kothy Hotchkiss Hallamore
Jon Crossmore Homme
Geraldine
Robert
-
rosso
F
W
John
Edna Bromfield Schott
Sandra Mutter Schucker
Sandra R Schuyler
Kay
Frontz,
Frontz
Thomas J. Fulton
Dena Smith Funk
Salmon
Sombor
Judge Soros
Polrick
A>
H
Joseph
A
Antellocy
_
.,
Continued
22
Continued from page
Johanna W As tier
2
J. Azor
Angela MoMeo Bachert
A
A
Kothy
Dole
Lynch
Malandra
Moloney
J
Richard P Moniscalco
W
Charles
Carol M. McClain
Amy
Boncal
Eloise H.
Boudeman
E.
Rev. Willard
W
David
Bradley
E.
Charles
Ens-Marie B Bunnell (MG)
Claudia Ashton Bush
Goyle Weisenfluh Corruthers
Daniel
Glenn A Chestnut
Deborah Forrell Chestnut
Betty
Cluley
L
William
S.
Corby
I
Craver
Mary
Merk
Mennili (MG)
S.
Melanie
R.
Patricio Fuchs Fulton
Janet Scott Furniss
A
David
Gardner
Geiger
Brion M Geigus
Phyllis Guilloume George
Gerald
J.
Cindy Cline
German
Kevin G. Gildeo
A
David
Gary
Gimbi
Golbitz
S.
Gregory V Goodridge
Robert
Graham
T.
Tomye D
Borry N.
Griffin
Grimm
Kimberly H. Groner
Ann Dougherty Hoch
Robert M. Hafner
Brenda Koppenhaver Hafner
Gregory R. Hamilton
Rickey D
Harrison
Pamela S Hortzell
Joseph F. Hepp
Leslie Richcreek Herneisey
Lois A. Hertzog
Victoria
L.
Potti
Peiffer
Pisano
E.
Karl A.
Donno
Kepner
I
Kinder
Suson M. Kingsley
Ed word Klepeisz
Robert
M
Kuhn
n
Cynthia A. Kuhns
Michelle L.Kummerer
Carole Y. LaRoche
Vincent J. LoRuffa
Jill
I.
A
Heidi
Jr
Purvis
Jr.
loylon
Kevin M. Lazarski
Dennis A Leighow
David M. Lescinskl
Elizabeth Fittrer Cole
Kathleen Greco Coll
Potncio Knight Connolley
John W. Conrad Jr.
Melonie S Conrod
Brion F. Costenbader (MG)
Kevin
Roth
Mork A. Raynes (MG)
Cathleen M. Reoddy
Chris
John E. Reenstro
Jone A. Reiner
Susan
Jr
W
Joseph
Rowley
P Belh Rubincom
Jonet Rusnok
Susan E. Rutledge
Cynthia A. Darozsdi
Dayoc
R.
Roslevich (MG)
Noncy J.
Angelo S.
Jr
Amy
Oaklond Ringhoffer
Ann Kopuschinsky
Cusatis
J.
D. Michael
Virginio Borr Riedy
Kristine
Crosley
R.
Noncy E. Defrees
Suzanne M. Degenhort
A. Richter
Lori
Coll
J.
Marie E. Cummings
Theresa M. Cunningham
Rabenold
L.
Venn Cavonough
Frank
Dinsmore
Dissman
Dotoli
H. Dougherty
Barbara A. Downes
Borboro A D Ziadosz
Patricia R
Ebert
Janet M. Schipp
Deon L. Edwards
Pamelo J Ellis
Noncy E. Erwine
Mork
Schoenagel
Scott E. Eveland
Scholl
Donno
Cheryl
Edward
Schellhammer
J
C.
Leslie
Sampsell (MG)
L.
J.
E.
A
Ray Shaddoy
Sr.
Audrey K Shryock
Kothy M. Shughart
Diane P Siebert
A
Michele
Sies
Carol A. Sitler
Eric
W
Faith
Slingerlond
Ganss Smeck
Croig R
Smith
Kathryn
L.
Robert
J
Snyder
Snyder
Gory Dean
Christine L
Ferrise
Brian D. Fry
Jr.
Ronold T Shoemaker
Constance B. Shope
Feather
Dovid W. Fraser
Cothy McGuire Fraser
Sheots
Peter Shiner
J
Stoir
Joyce Chesnutt Stothopoulos
Dennis M. Fuhrmon
Nancy A. Fumanti
Koren
Anne
J.
L.
Gollucci
Geiger
Robert C. Gennaria
Margaret A. Gerrity
John B. Gillespie
Michael A. Goc
Keith A.
Gogel (MG)
Clarice Dillon Gould
Morta Herr Griest
John C. Gross
Debra I Hallock
Tino Devlin Stello
Lisa M. Honuscik
Chesley A. Harris
Pomelo Burd Stroup
Debra Mincemoyer Harvey
Lorello F
W'lliom G. Heiss
Doniel
J.
Sutcliffe
Swank
Susan
R.
Henninger
Gregory P Talese + (MG)
Mory Wydilo Tloczynski
Matthew J. Trogeser
McGovern Herr
Debra S. Hodge
Joonne Recupero Trogeser
Carey
Janet
Lori L
Horvoth +
Huels
L.
Koren
Sinnwell
S.
Charles G. Smith
Dorothy A. Snyder
Louise A. Lisicky
Edwin W. Snyder
Jonet R Snyder
Jessica Spongier
Robert T
Loroine C. Lucas
Linda
Spezioletti
States
L.
Geraldine A. Lynch
Manuel
Theresa M. Modara
Brion C. Mahlstedt + (MG)
Anne G. Swavely
Gregory
Robert M. Thomas (MG)
Malloch
B.
M
Malocu
Mono
Liso
Weeosf
Joonne M. Westwood
Daniel J Wiesl +
Melchiore
Gerald
L.
Jeffrey
A
Webb
L.
Alison VandenBosch
J
E
Tomko
Houser Vance
Karen
May
Mayer
Mory J. McGovern
Lorie M. Medvetz
Alice
Silfies
Mildred Lauer Vosinda
Dennis C. Velas
Enger Mautz
L.
L.
Swisher
L.
Susan A. Tymusczuk
Maturani
Lauren
Sandra
Stacey
R. Stivers Jr.
Pomelo
Mastracchio
J.
L.
Radune
Miller
Dovid
A
Dovid
P.
Lindo
Mitchell
Williams
Wise
Wright
E
Mork A Yochera
Jeanette D Mitroko
Michael
Mix
Paula Sneidman Mix
Lynn A. Monsaert
Lee F Mueller
Gisele F. Nikop
Joan C O Connor
Edward B Oravitz
Jone
Jennifer
Kimberlee Jones Pavkovic
Jeffrey R. Jenkins
Scott R.
Jill
Denise Llewellyn Quinn
Denise
Roxanne M Bull
David M. Bulzoni
Daniel T Canuso
Laurie Luberecki Cicorelh
Puderboch
M. Quiggle
Thomas W. Quigley
James I Quinn
E.
Brown
Joseph A Celin
Price
Lisa
Lois
+ (MG)
Bilotta
Brokenshire
I
Diane A. Brown
Linda
A Polombo
C.
Bielefeld
David
J.
Ruth A. Shuhler
A Lotshaw
Susan M. lisiewski
John
Ross G. Brotlee
Hilary
Lotourette Landers
LaBraico
Sheri A. Lippowitsch
Gloria
Patricia Carochilo
Polenchor
J.
J.
F.
LoMonico
J.
T.
Christopher
Boyce
+ (MG)
Peggy A. Sappington
L. Sawina
Sharon Remington Schell
John L Settelen
Patricio L. Shoener
Cynthia Smith
Beam
III
Sondone
L,
Woyne
Carmen Vega Moloney
Jr.
Taryn Besen
Jeffery G. Pittenger
Bonnie
Jr.
Balonis
T.
Sharon M Opielo
Moriann Wiencek Parasido
Suson M Poscorello
Kothy
Hobyak
Jane M. Holcomb
Todd E. Hoover
Sally A. Houser
Michael D Joggard
Murray J. Johnson Jr.
Pamelo Rumberger Jones
Mark Koronovich
Susan Palangi Koronovich
Renee Miller Kauffmon
Debro Fortuno Keener
Laurel
E.
Douglas
Linda
Miller
Acor
Anderson
Peter
Brett E
M
J.
Ann Marie
A
Timothy
Sherri
Joseph G. Santangelo
Mark H. Locey
Mary F. LoMus
Morsho Rehrig long
Linda Selling Aceto
Wendy A Nyborg
Kemmerer
to
Francesco Aceto
Janet A,
Margaret Hilgor Scholl
Hirt
Zarkoski
1911
Robert
Raisso A. Prus
(MG)
J.
Michael W. Rotelle
H. Kratzer
Timothy
Young
Young
Dennis A. Artley
Beth A. Bailey
Susan Kingeter Puderboch
William K. Purse
Fischer
Robert
Bette
Jeffrey A. Foust
J
W
Robert
Moore
Jomes
Donna
Robert
Donold F. Neidig
Molcolm B. Neilon
Laurie
Linda
Yeoger
T.
Patricio G.
Memorials
Terry Mizdol Evans
Michael W. Front
Ruth
Sharon M. Robinson
Amy Kleckner Roma
Judith A. Kroh
Wilds
Deboroh Kospiah Mitchell (MG)
Lone Keating Mitchell (MG)
Judith A. Momorella
Dominic
Epler
A
RinghoHer
Jeff S.
Kromer
S.
Pamela
Katharine E Wiener
Lee E Zimmermon
Kimberly A. Zucal
Cynlhio Siegrist Poyonk
Daniel J. Duimstra
Joseph F Earley
Nanette
Robbin H. Miller
Joann Matoni Mischionti
Joseph M.
Olen L. Domey
John D. Downey
Deboroh I. Drado
Pomelo J. Duart
Theresa Duffy
Whitman
Wiegand
S
Reed (MG)
Reiflnger
L.
Kevin D. Riedy
Kathleen J. Riley
V. Kmiecinski
Kathleen M. Kondrchek
Tommy
Merced
Meachum
James G. Mortimer
Morton
I
Bethony G. Moser
Vicki L. Myers
James S. Nosh
Doran
P.
J.
George
Mcllwoine
Scott
David P. Crowford
Nancy A. Deiling (MG)
Randy L. Deitrich
Marianne P. Deska
Melisso G. Dewort
Kathleen Ryan Domenick
Lawrence F. Dooling
Nancy
Michael
Weiss
Werkheiser
Gmo
Lorraine D. Mongiello
Cynthia
L
Cathy Homish Yonniello
Earle J
Denise M. Connelly
Kevin L. Connolley
J.
Janice
Quigley
R.
Barry
Kersey
L.
McGorry
Carolyn D. Coldren
Cole
Jean D. Kiewlak
Barbara E. Klunk
Kathleen
Frank
J
Lindo
Colleen A. O'Neill Willioms
L.
L
Richard
Cassels
J
Mortin Jr
Heidi Schmaulfuhs
James F Brecker
Debbie
+ (MG)
Deboroh A Morkle
Bruce
Wagner
D Wotts
Weismon
Vicki Reeser
Mortin
Brian
Patrick C
Hutchinson
B.
Allison
Gail D.
Malott
E.
Lisa A. Bogefti
E.
Jr
L.
S. Jones
Theresa E. Jones
Frank S Kedl
Robert G. Wagner
Luxford
Donna M. Moncuso
Carolyn Nork Boone
Hulse
Cynthia Johnson Vass
Froncis T
Bloss
T.
Denise
Carol B Vincenti
R.
Hughes
Christine
Linda G. Loeser
John
Bizup
Victoria
Vonce
Jeffrey C. Long
Samuel
John C Berquist
Irvin J. Betsker
M
Dawn
Eileen R
A Bator
Kathleen A Boumon
Barbara
lori
Alice
Robert
Louis M. Vonnicolo
Michoel
Timothy C. Barrett
Cynthia L Bartynski
Mease Umbenhauer
Carol D. Lewis
Morsho A. Linn
Pamelo Kafica Lockwood
E
J Yavorchok
Yoder
1912
Jill
A. Bielitsky
Frank H. Brooks
Melindo
Cootes
J
Leslie Hollacher Crosley
C. Peirson
Delia
I
Ann Morkowski +
Joseph C Ozmino
Christy Demonsky Talese + (MG)
Michoel
T.
Thomas
J
Price
Juliette
L
Abell 79
Price
Master's Degree
Rodney T Jones 82
Trena D Kerstetter
Moureen C Alderfer 77
Thomas J Andregic '80
John W. Bornett
Calvin
Borto
E
81
78
Borto 75
Alexis' S
Morgoret
L.
A
Richard
Bouingartner
79
Brosch 71
79
Edgor W Brubaker 70
Nancy Jomes Bruboker 69
Phyllis H. Britton
Ronold C Bulford 78
Vlocia Zaharis Campbell 78
A Conway 79
Loretta
Elaine
M
Dovid
L.
Theresa
D'Alfonso 77
E.
Gilgonnon
81
Edward Y. Given 77
Gory R. Glessner 77
Donald J. Golden 77
John
J.
Charles
M
R.
III
Heller
Himes '66
Jerome C Horon '80
Borkmon Rodgers 70
W
Deboroh
Rovito 77
Socco
J
'80
Richard K. Schiebel '81
Corlton R Sheets '74
Gregory J Shively 81
Sandro K. Sholley '68
Marie B. Slanina 76
Rebecca
Stonislaw
C.
'82
Steward 72
Christine M.
Wendy
Thomas
'80
Upton 79
Sondro R Walker 75
B
Mory Beth Weber 78
71
William F Hibschmon
H. Belle
Stephen E Phillips 80
Morgoret P. Piper 80
Barbara R Rees 76
Bonnie C Riegel 68
Warren
75
Jr
Ostrowski 76
Penles 81
W
Good 74
Gorman 79
Harmony '81
Haupt
E
B.
M
Leslie
David W. Stecher 78
Beth Benjamin
Rebecca
Christine
Moleski 74
McCormick 76
Morleen Grof Montono 75
Robert
Deborah Marinello Evans 79
Fear 72
Karen M. Gotes 66
Juanita
S
Erlo
Dervrich 79
J.
Elizabeth
M
Joan Hond Dupkonick '67
Sister Suzanne M. Duzen '81
Robert
Anthony
Deotrich 79
Patricio E
77
John King '67
Alan M. Kush 75
Dovid W Lohmon 79
Rochoel L. Lohman 79
70
Richard O. Wilhour 68
Dorothy J. Wilson '82
Karen I. Wintrey '76
Jomes
J.
Zubritski
75
23
Alumni
Fund drive
Association
sets
Alumni and friends
of
record
Bloomsburg State College
set
two records in 1982 with their contributions
to the annual
phonathon and to the Annual Fund.
The phonathon-held in October, November
and
December-was
the most successful ever held
at
pledges was raised by over 200
volunteer student callers who were members
Nearly $25,000
BSC
in
of 32
pus organizations.
Contributions to the Annual
cam-
Fund
also hit a new high
When the campaign ended on December 31 the
was $115,547.
Of that total, $81,628 was unrestricted gifts
to the
general alumni fund, $18,362 was designated
for specific
purposes, and $15,557 was earmarked for
scholarships.
in 1982.
total
Total income of the Association in 1982,
including
terest on investments, was $137,725.
The contributions came from over
5,200
in-
alumni and
friends of the college. A complete report on the
1982 Annual Fund, including class totals and a listing
of all contributors, is included in this issue of THE
ALUMNI
QUARTERLY.
If you contributed to the 1982 Annual
Fund between
January 1 and December 31, 1982, your name should
be
your name was omitted or incorrectly listed, please accept our apology and contact
the
Alumni Office so we can make a correction in the next
included on the
issue of
list. If
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY.
Last year 105 alumni contributions were matched
by
employers, for a total of $6,760. Included in the Annual Fund Report section of this issue is a list of over
61
900 businesses which
employees
to
match contributions made by their
educational institutions. Please check the
list to see if your employer is on the list.
If so, ask your
personnel office for the form which must be submitted
with your contribution. If you have questions about the
matching
gift
program, please contact the Alumni Of-
fice.
Special recognition this year goes to the following
classes:
Class of 1979
Class of 1922
— largest number of contributors (240).
— largest percentage of contributors
(68.3%).
Class of 1942
— largest dollar total
($6,430).
order to make the Annual Fund more cost-effective,
a number of changes have been made this year. The
In
most significant change is the solicitation of 1982 contributors on the approximate anniversary date of their
last gift, using first-class direct mail and a follow-up
telephone call.
The new system has a number of advantages:
— It links the written, mailed message with a
telephone
call, with each reinforcing the other.
reduces the number of mailed solicitations during
the year from three or four to just one.
It
— It guarantees each alumnus/alumna a full year
membership because the membership cards will be
dated for one year from the day the contribution is
of
received.
— It will help to distribute the Association's cash-flow
more evenly during the calendar year.
Former contributors to the Annual Fund who
did not
participate in 1982 have been sent a direct mail solicitation. Follow-up telephone calls will be attempted at
some time during the rest of the year.
Three different
were used
year in conhave addresses:
one to alumni who were part of the 1982 Annual Fund,
one to alumni who have been part of prior annual funds,
and one to alumni who have never been part of an annual fund. Unfortunately, some alumni received the
wrong letter. We regret that this happened, and we are
working hard to get the "bugs" out of the new alumni
records system. Thank you for being patient.
letters
tacting over 22,000 alumni for
this
whom we
24
Before the
new name change why
not order that Bloomsburg State College
Class Ring that you have been wanting.
Your Josten's College Ring includes
these Deluxe Features at No Extra Charge:
Yellow OK Gold or White
Synthetic Birthstones or Sunburst Stones
All Birthstone Colors Available
Full Name Engraved or Fascimile Signature
1
Stone Encrusting
There are a few BSC
gift
items
in
*
stock:
Bumper Stickers • Decals
• Charms • Nylon Gym Bags
• Clothing • Ceramic Mugs
• Pewter Mugs • Pennants
Bloomsburg Univers
of Pennsylvania
During our years at Bloomsburg,
we all
heard
bits
and pieces of our
were exaggerated or distorted with
and pieces have been woven together in
college's history. Often the stories
each
telling.
Now, those
bits
•Profile
Of e Vast,
c5\
living ^Legacy*
handsome hardcover book, written
by Eda Bessie Edwards, Class of 1941,
and published by the Alumni AssociaThis
contains a collection of the most
and interesting events in the
Bloomsburg State College
from its founding in 1839 to 1979.
tion,
significant
history of
Please indicate
of copies desired.
copies at $8.50 (Alumni Office)
proceeds from the sale of the
will go to the Alumni Association, to be used for Alumni
All
book
projects.
number
copies at $9.95 (mailed)
— $_
—$
Name
.
Class Year
Address
City
.State.
Zip.
Phone Number
Please
make checks payable to BSC Alumni
Association.
Matching grants available
from these corporations
Industries
AMF
ARA
Inc.
D
ft
0)
Inc
ol
Chesapeake
N A (ALL)
NA
Maine
Co Foundation
ol
New
The Bankers
Inc
(all liM)
Bankers
(U.4)
York
Co
Lile
2
()
SP R
Co
Aetna Insurance
(2 3)
Aetna Lite 4 Casually (ALL) SP.
MO
Lutherans
lor
Products
4
Chemicals
D
ft
Inc
3
(2
2
2
D SP
Akzona
Beatrice
Foods Corp (ALL)
Bechtel Power Corp (2 3)
SPR
•AKTion Associates Inc (ALL)
(2 3)
Inc
"Albany International Corp (ALL)
SP
Alexandei
4 Aleiander (ALL)
Alexander
A
Baldwin Inc (I 2 3)
"Allegheny International Inc (I)
D
Allendale Mutual Insurance
0
4 PR)
0
Co
Aluminum Co
D
inc
Bethlehem
R D
(ALL)
Amerada Hess Corp (ALL)
American Airlines
Inc
American Bank &
trust
(ALL)
D SP
Co
Pa
ol
(ALL) A
Inc
Blue Bell Inc
SP
Boise Cascade Corp (ALL)
American Can Co (ALL) R
(I
"Boston Edison
2.3)
American Express Co (ALL),
The Bowery Savings Bank
R.D
Bernd Brechei
(I
2
Brunswick Corp
"American Medical International Inc
3)
Buckeye International
Amencan Mulual Insurance Cos
Bucyrus-Ene Co R
American National 8ank A
Co
Trust
Bullalo Savings
ol
American Optical Corp
('2
SP
3)
0
0 2 4)
American Standard Inc (ALL).
American Stales Insurance
American
Company
CONOCO
3
(J
C
2.3/ R 0
R D
(ALL)
Inc
D
Amstar Corp (All)
"Anchor National
Insurance
Lite
D
Canadian General
(All)
The Andersons (ALL
I
"Anheuser-Busch Companies Inc
ft
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The Barton-Gillel Co (ALL)
(ALL)
D
Airco Inc
2
4)
BarclaysAmerican Corp (l
Barnes & Roche Inc
(ALL)
Barnes Croup Inc (ALU
Barry Wrighl Corp (All)
R D
Inc
York Corp (I
Chicago
•C R Bard
SPO
The Aerospace Corp (ALL)
New
Trusl
Edison Company (All )
The Dexter Corp
SPR
3)
Detroit
AWG
Diamondback
"Chesebrough-Pond s Inc
0
3)
Oeposn Guaranty National Bank
telephone
Chesapeake Corp bfYL (1.2.3). R
SP
Chicago Pneumatic
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AidAssn
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Co (ALL) R SP
D
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ft
Corp (l.UM).A
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America (All)
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RD
(All).
Air
ol
Bank
D
Services Inc (ALL)
Abell
Bank
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Abbot laboratories
A S
2 PR)
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Corp (ALL)
Ball
ACF
— AJumni
— Spouse sGm
—
Employees
Status Required
Eligible
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Eligible
— Outside Onectois Company
— Companies added since
ol
last
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l
to
I
Match
Eligible
year
3)
A
ft
26
Matching grants available
SPR D UM
3)
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im
Co (ALU.R.O
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South
MioVJie
WW
inc
2
fJ
John Nuveen & Co Inc
Co
Middlesex Mutual Assurance
Norton S Co Inc
SP
3)
Lite
Co
Insurance
Co (ALL)
Reliance insurance Co (ML) SPR
Republic National Bank ol New York
Reliance Electric
MKfland-RossCorp t2 3 4)
0
MftUMk Banks
0
inc (ALL).
MMtan * Co
Oklahoma Gas and
Co [ML P*)
Minneapolis Stai 4 tibune Co
Milton Bradley
Co
ins
lite
2
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Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp
R 0
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SPD
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Naico Chenwal
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PET
National Bank ot Detroit
National Distillers
4 Chemical Coip
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Bowes
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Inc
Pittsbuigh National
(ALL).D
(ALL) A.
New England Mutual
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Porter Painl
2.3) A
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inc (2)
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(AIL)
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North American Phillips Corp (ALL)
fl.O
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Illinois
(ALL)
SP
fl.
Co
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fl
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Northwestern Fmancal Corp
The Northwestern Mutual
(1.
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Quaker Chemical Corp
(AIL)R
(Ml)
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Quaker Slate
SPR
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D
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0
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Union
Co (ALL)
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Union Mutual
0
fl.
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(ALL)
Union
America (ALL)
Oil
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(Ml)
ft.
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( i. 2.
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United Airlines Inc
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Professional Schools Eligible
Colleges Eligible
Colleges Eligible
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Eligible
All— All Four Types of Institutions Eligible
UM— Limned
PR
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to Specific Institutions ot
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SP —Spouse s Gift Eligible
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D
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since last yeai
7
210.00
3
200.00
25.00
1
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50.00
50.00
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25.00
i
140.00
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2
50.00
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2
20 00
Nationwide Foundation
Warner & Swasey
3
225.00
1
10.00
Western Electric
Quaker Chemical Foundation
Worner Communications. Inc.
2
75 00
70.00
25.00
75.00
50.00
Weslinghouse
Bell Telephone
Coopers & Lybrond
Armstrong Cork
110.00
25.00
100.00
50.00
75.00
25.00
Woterhouse
(Anonymous)
Royal Globe Insurance Co.
Avon
IBM
AT&T Long
4
375.00
Constructors Inc
100.00
25.00
••
$
150.00
330.00
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Lines
1.460 00
150.00
50.00
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30.00
Peat, Marwick, Mitchell Foundation
100.00
General Electric
Nabisco
Hamilton Bank
100.00
PP«L
200.00
25.00
15.00
Donnelley & Sons Co.
Industries Foundation
Suburban Propane Gas Corp.
R. R.
37.50
PP&G
25.00
St.
29.42
50.00
Regis Paper Co.
30.00
Equitoble Life Assurance Society of U.S.
225.00
McDonnell Douglas Foundation
100.00
Illinois Bell
450.00
Reynolds Industries.
Crum 8
A
20.00
1
Inc.
Philip Morris
—
and
—Junior
— Community
100.00
1
EXXON
0
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70.00
2
4
R. J.
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1
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ft
Co (Ml)
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2
1
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United Energy Resources. Inc (ALL).
Telephone Co
25 00
Hewlett-Packord Co.
Hospital Corp. oi
(2 3)
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SP
124.26
1
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Eaton Corp.
William
3). fl
3
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& Casualty
25.00
379.42
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0
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$
10
Dun & Brodstreet
A
ol
Total matching $
Alcoa
D
ft
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The Travelers Insurance Co (Ml) SP
(Ml)
0
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(Ml), fl. 0
Corp
(ALL)
Transamenca Corp
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Southern Bell Telephone
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(Ml) R D
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Corp (ML) D.
(Ml) 0
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(1). fl
fl
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3)
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1
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Johnson & Johnson
D
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Tolal: 934
MATCHING GIFT PARTICIPATION
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Bethlehem Steel
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SP
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(ALL)
(2 3)
Textron Inc
J
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(12
4).
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(12
0
0
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J Walter
SP
fl.
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Corp (3)
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fl,
(7
fl
(Ml)*
A
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CPC
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Texasgull Inc
D
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(4)
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A
1 PR). SP.
fl.
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Co (1.2.3) D
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Corp (ALL) SPD
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inc
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R .0 SP
(2 3)
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D
Commerce Bank
Time Inc (Ml).
Scott
Corp (ALL). A
& Moran CPA's
N
ol
Times Publishing Co
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2)
(1
Paul
Inc
William
D
fl 4)
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(12
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4 Co
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Texas
UM)
SPR D
SPR D
Joe Minerals Corp (ML)
SI
Cos
ft
ft
(Ml
Including matching gifts received holiday mail-waiting and
immediately after Jan. 1, 1983 re: TR. 1-3
*• Some matching gifts pending have not yet been received. •*
Thomas
The Times Minor Co (ML)
SP
Polaroid Corp
3.
D
Plamlield Cytology Laboratory Inc
England Merchants National
BankCAUJ SflflO
0
SP
(1)
Schering-Plough Corp (ALL).D
D
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^
Inc ff
2
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'The Pioneei Group Inc (Ml).SP.D
NatomasCo (ALL)
New England
Co (AU).*.D
The Pillsbury Co fl 2
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fl
(MO UM.O
Inc (I)
Texas Gas Transmission Coip (ALL).
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fl 2. 3).
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4)
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Ops
fenneco Inc (ALL)
Santa Fe Industries Inc (ALL),
R D
Weyeihaeuser Co
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Texaco Inc (1 1)
insurance Cos
ft
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(I)
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Inc
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(Ml) D
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(Ml) D
Phillip Morris Inc
3).
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SP
(1.2)
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Sandcj
4)
National Sieef Corp
SPD
Texas Eastern
SAFECO
0
Electric
Western Publishing Co
Coca Colo
(ML UM). SP
Corp
STPCoip
0
D
(ML)
SP O
(12)
(I 2. 3)
Phillips Petroleum
National Medical Enterprises Inc
Inc
UM) SPD
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SPR 0
(All)
Philadelphia National Bank (ALL)
2 3)
Co (All) R
fl,
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New
Inc
Insurance
National
New
New
UM
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National Energy Inc (PR)
New
Co
RYCOInc (ML)
SKF induslnes
R D
Phelps Dodge Corp (ALL).SP.R .O
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Rust Engineering
SCM
SP
Inc
Ptizer Inc
Can Corp (ALL) D
National
PR)
Petro-Tex Chemical Corp
fl.O
(1)
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Western
Whirlpool Corp (ALL),
1982
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(
SPD
SPR D
Peoples Energy Corp (All)
NLT Corp (ALL)
NRC
2
PenruoilCo (ALL)
ft
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Co
Light
YarwayCorp (2 3.1). SPR.D
Arthur Young and Co (ALL) SP
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Valley National Bank ol Arizona (I)
(ALU.R.O
Inc
Assurance Co
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3).
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(ALL)
C Penney Co (ALL)
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Hill
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Pennsylvania Power
(Ml)
2 3) 0
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(ML).*
COMPANY
Pechmey Ugme Kuhlmann Corp
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D
patlng
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Inc
Wells Fargo Bank
Westvaco Corp (ML).
* D
(MO. D
(ALL). D
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Welch Foods
Urban Investment and Oevelopmenl
Corp (ML)
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fl
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ol
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Royal insurance (ALL)
Marwick Mitchell & Co
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Co (ALL)
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Corp (ALL)
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(Ml)
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Morion-Norwich Products Inc
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Co (All)
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Pan American
Morrison-Knudsen Co
& Associates
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Inc (1.2)
Paalic Resources Inc
ft
ol Indiana
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Webster Inc
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Rockelener Family
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Am (ALU.R.O
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Rochester
Montgomery Ward 4 Co (ALL).*
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Stanley
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United Virginia Bankshares Inc (ALL)
Co (ALL)
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(2 3)
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The Minnesota Mutual
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Old Stone Bank (ALL)
Ol.n Corp
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Republic Steel Corp (ALL)
2
fl
Old National Bancorporation
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United Slates Trust
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United Stales Tobacco
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Minnesota Mining X
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Sperry
Co
Insurance
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& Co (P*)
0 Raybm Assoc Inc (ML)
Arthur
SP* 0
Norton Co (ALU
Michigan General Corp (ML)
United Mutual Savings Bank (2 3)
United Parcel Service
fl.O
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Rand McNaify
Northwestern National lite Insurance
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Mtffwoan Bell telephone Co
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Northwestern National Bank ol Si
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Metropolitan Lite
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40.00
25.00
15.00
Bechtel Foundation
50.00
G.K. Technicians
20 00
Allendale Mutual Insurance Co.
10.00
—Greater than lioi Match
$6,760.00
27
)C to university status
make at least an appearance at every one. Also, he says
he's involved in supporting the athletic pursuits of his
sons, now 17 and 13.
And sometimes
in
in the
summer, you can
find
him
lost
mower on
thought aboard a grass
a small farm
raises Arabian horses.
beyond Buckhorn, where Maryan
But McCormick says there is little need for relief from
a job which he likes as much as his. "I enjoy the campus, I enjoy the students, and I feel that my work does
make a difference in students' lives."
Although he has a reputation as a meticulous planner
who holds firmly
to the belief that well-done homework
the best guarantee things will come out right, McCormick is not above giving some credit to timing and luck.
is
In fact, one theory he has to explain his success at
bringing diverse people and groups together is based on
the purely random timing of his birth.
"A few years ago, when Margaret Mead was here to
speak, she talked about the generation of people that
have been kind of in between," McCormick says. "You
know those that grew up before World War II lived in
one kind of environment, and then the kids of the '60s
—
— grew up in another.
the television, the nuclear
"I've sort of been in between, just because of my age
(44), and I've found during my years here that I've been
communicate with trustees and governors, and
be very able to remain very close to my students,
and sometimes see where they both were coming from."
McCormick says he gets a lot of his best ideas from
students, and goes out of his way to meet with them. He
says he can frequently be found having a coffee in the
able to
still
some
college union, or surprising
the
students at lunch
in
commons.
"I try to live
some
of
my
time
in their
world," he ex-
"But I'm not one of them and I don't pretend to
be. They know I'm not and I know I'm not."
He also meets with a variety of students on a more
formal basis; for example:
"Eight or ten times a year we randomly select three
or four students," he says. "We have them to lunch and
ask, 'Now how you feeling about Bloomsburg?'
plains.
"I enjoy it,"
McCormick
students feel, but
really do.
I
know how the
think they're pretty
says. "I don't
And
I
relaxed."
Another important group with whom McCormick says
he has worked very hard to establish a good relationship
is regional legislators, who each year help influence the
ultimately-critical decision
the state give
How much money
:
should
BSC?
provement funds
to build the badly-needed human services center scheduled to begin rising behind the library
McCormick
this year.
ing decade: quality.
McCormick
academic
can't help but boast, "There's not another
building being built in the state college
system."
It's happening here, he says, because "there's a feeling that if Bloomsburg's given the resources, it will do a
good job managing them."
McCormick says he got votes for the new building
because he started in 1973 "building bridges" by asking
legislators what the college could do to better serve
their constituents.
Despite this success on both sides of the Capitol aisle,
McCormick says he has never traded favors
In 10 years, the college
budget has grown from $13.7
million to $32 million. But the dollars flowing out of Harrisburg have not always kept up with development here;
that has been McCormick's single biggest frustration,
and the problem over which he has labored the hardest.
Several years into his tenure, McCormick began
fighting what he called "the million-dollar gap." The
state formula for allocating money among the state colleges did not take into account productivity, he explains,
and while BSC's enrollment had grown to make it the
third largest school in the system, the college budget
was mired in its old position — ninth.
It was about that time McCormick faced what he
remembers as the toughest period of his presidency.
In
for votes.
understood that in order to be appointed
here as a faculty member, that you have to have the appropriate credentials and go through the proper affirmative action searches," he says.
"And when it comes to student admissions, I have yet
to force the dean of admissions to take a student in ten
years. Before I would embarrass the institution on an
academic integrity issue, I would do without the vote."
But McCormick, who seems ever vigilant that his
words not offend any of his many and diverse constituencies, quickly adds, "I don't want to seem arrogant
about that. It's not to say we don't listen to legislators'
concerns, try to help them, meet with their constituents.
We think we must listen and respond, but maintain the
"I believe
it's
All this
and more
is
needed
feels is the
if
BSC
number one
is to
attain
what
com-
priority for the
he says, "when the new frontiers are
how many new buildings can you
add or how many students can you admit. The frontiers
of the '80s will be quality. How can we make that
chemistry program better, stronger, or more in tune
with the needs."
Also, planning. "We must continue to develop new
programs, in technology for example, perhaps in computers, robotics, health sciences. We must be alert to
the changing needs and to see how we can position
ourselves on the high ground to be able to respond to
those changing needs, that changing world."
Part of this ability to respond will come from faculty
and staff development, which he also views as a priority, "We won't be hiring a lot of new people," he explains, so it's important that those already on the staff
"It is a time,"
not going to be growth,
have time
to
do research and related work
in their
fields.
Two other areas McCormick has targeted for the '80s
are improvement of the students advisement process
"a problem all the years that I've been here," he says
—
— and recruitment of minority students and faculty.
All these things will be important, he explains,
because the college "market" is shrinking. With the
baby boom over, there are fewer students graduating
from high schools these days, and whereas 41 percent of
all Pennsylvania high school graduates used to go on to
some form of higher education, that figure has dropped
years of successfully balancing his
budget while setting in motion major changes in the
school's educational mission, McCormick found himself
academic and fiscal integrity."
In the coming decade, McCormick realized
signing notices to 23 professors that they would have to
be laid off.
supported higher education out of the legislature.
"I've always been proud of the fact that we have not
had a deficit budget," McCormick says. "I retrenched
'em because I had to balance my budget."
"It was very, very difficult for me to sign those letters," he says, "but as soon as I did, we went out and
fought with every bit of energy to raise the money to get
them back."
aspects of fund raising that have been traditions at
are going to have to be more aggressive, and
help ourselves with fundraising," he says. "I think
that's going to have to be a mark of the future of this
the process?
"I have not been looking for another position," McCormick replies, adding that he has turned down other of-
The battleground, of course, was Harrisburg. And it
was there that his years of what he calls doing "a lot of
university."
fers to leave
1977, after several
listening" to legislators paid
off.
He was
able to raise
enough new budget money to withdraw the letters.
A less dramatic but more significant result of BSC
lobbying in the Capitol
allocation formula
was
the gradual revision of the
which sent more money Blooms-
burg's way.
And McCormick topped that two years ago by winning
a near unanimous House vote that gave BSC capital im-
increasingly difficult to cajole
That's
why BSC
is
more money
it
will
be
for state-
moving more and more
into
private schools for years, but have not been used extensively at public schools: appeals to alumni, to corporations
and
to
major foundations.
"We
has many unmet needs.
For example, he feels the library should be enlarged. A
residence hall should be built on the upper campus to
relieve housing pressures in existing dormitories and
The
college, he explains,
still
downtown. New laboratory and instructional equipment
is needed in the sciences to train students in the
burgeoning health fields. And a number of buildings on
campus are 10-15 years old, and in need of preventive
maintenance.
into the mid-30s.
For
all
these reasons,
the planning
McCormick has
just overhauled
commission with the hope that the new
will be as successful in coping with the 80s as its
forerunner was with the '70s.
The only question that remains: How long will an administrator with a track record like his be here to guide
group
BSC
over the past 10 years.
"However," he continues, "this is not to say that, at
my age, I would rule out a change or two before retirement."
But he says that, for now, his family is happy here, he
continues to be professionally excited and challenged by
his work, and he feels he has won the support of the college community.
"I just want to be the very best president of Bloomsburg State College that I can be."
Ray T. Hock Jr. '69 and his wife are the parents of a
daughter born on April 12. The family lives at R.D. 5,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
28
(Continued from Page 8)
Lorraine (Zack) Tucker '68 lives at 173 Starboard Pt.,
Roswell, Ga. 30076. She was chosen Teacher of the Year
1981-1982 by the staif at Beaver Ridge Elementary School
in Norcross, Georgia.
John R. Bilder '68 of Fountain Springs is seeking the
Republican nomination for controller of Schuylkill
County. He earned his bachelor's and master's degrees in
political science at BSC and is working on a master's
in public
administration at the Capitol
Perm State University.
John teaches government and sociology
in
Campus
of
the North
a member of the executive
committee of the Schuylkill County Republican Party, a
member of the executive committee of the North Schuylkill Education Association, and is a member of the board
of trustees of Ashland State General Hospital.
He was a former graduate assistant in the political
science department at BSC.
Schuylkill School District,
is
Elwood "Woody" Harding,
'68
has
announced
his
manager, worked his way up to major account manager
and now is field sales manager. His address is 21 Jackson
Rd., Lake Heritage, Gettysburg, Pa. 17325.
Michael T. Butler '69 is a teacher at Watsontown
Elementary School. His address is 27 Spottswood Drive,
Milton, Pa. 17847.
Julie W". Howell '69 is a teacher in the Phoenixville Area
School District and is recognized through the state and the
nation for her efforts in creating a computer program for
that district, beginning at the junior high school level. She
was recently honored by the Pennsylvania Jaycees as the
Outstanding Young Woman Educator of 1983. Julie's
capabilities have been recognized by Commodore Computer Corp., whose machines are used in the district. The
company has selected her and the Phoenixville Junior
High School as a resource center for the nation to provide
imput for materials and instruction.
She is also very active in church affairs as well as
in
several professional associations.
intention to seek election to the office of District Attorney
for
Columbia County.
has been an assistant with
Attorney Harding
District Attorney's office since
January
3, 1977.
the
In the past
1970
six years he has been actively involved in the prosecution
of many criminal cases and has worked closely with law
enforcement agencies throughout the County. In 1982
alone, the District Attorney's office with which he is
associated
filed
287
informations involving
charges and processed 23
criminal
and misdemeanor
appeals from summary and
felony
cases, in pre-trial and post-trial hearings and before
appellate courts. As Assistant District Attorney he has
handled juvenile delinquency cases and
represent
1979,
to
appointed on April 9,
Commonwealth in support and paternity actions.
also
In addition. Attorney
solicitor to the Children
1977 to the present.
is
Barbara (Steinhart) Lerch '70 and her husband,
Richard, are the parents of a daughter, Virginia Rae, born
on January 11. The family lives at R. D. 1, Elysburg, Pa.
municipalities, including Benton Township, Fishingcreek
Township, Roaringcreek Township, Jackson Township,
South Centre Township and the Millville Area School
District.
Woody was raised in Bloomsburg where he graduated
from Bloomsburg High School in 1964. In 1968, he
graduated with highest honors from Bloomsburg State
College. While attending Bloomsburg, Woody worked
part-time at the Magee Carpet Company. After
graduation, he taught school for thre" years and received
a master's degree in education from emple University.
September of 1971, Woody enrolled in Villanova Law
School. As a result of his scholastic achievement, he was
1971
Francis B. Lingovsky '71 and Lois Marth Wanamaker
are engaged. Lois is completing graduate work at BSC,
She is employed by the Central Susquehanna Intermediate Unit at Lewisburg as a special education teacher
for blind and visually impaired students. Frank is
employed by the Hazleton Area School District as an
ECIA-Chapter 1 reading specialist and Pennsylvania
State University, Hazleton
tor.
Campus, as a reading
instruc-
An August wedding is planned.
editor
of
the
school's
legal
The Villanova Law Review. In his senior
year, the faculty honored him with the school's award for
publication,
outstanding legal writing for the article which he wrote
and published in the Villanova Law Review concerning
immunity from prosecution. Woody graduated from
Villanova Law School with honors in 1974 and was
inducted into the national legal honor society, the Order of
graduation
from
law
school,
Attorney
Harding was employed as a trust officer with United Penn
Bank. Then in 1975, Woody established his private law
practice in Bloomsburg. He is presently a partner in the
law firm of Smith, Eves, Keller, and Harding in Bloomsburg, where he resides with his wife, Dolores, and
daughter,
Amy.
Attorney Harding, who is amember of the Democratic
Party, stated that his objective in seeking the office of
District Attorney is to use his background and experience
to
effectively enforce the criminal laws in
Columbia
County.
Lynn Croft Davies '72 had an exhibit of her paintings
and weavings in the Presidents' Lounge of the Kehr Union
from January 16 through February 12. Her address is 145
Robin Lane, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Ann (Balanda) Yeager
Julie
'72
and her husband,
Steven, are the parents of a daughter, Jessica Lauren,
born on January 18, 1983. The Yeagers live at R. D. 3, Box
3120,
Berwick, Pa. 18603.
Kathleen A. (Molnar) Polastre '72 has been appointed to
serve as a consultant to the recently-formed education
committee at BSC.
Dr. Howard McCauley, dean of professional studies and
services, named Kathleen to the panel because of her
experience within the public school system, as well as her
enthusiasm and innovative teaching techniques. She is the
only committee member who is not on the faculty at the
college.
Following receipt of his degree, Don worked in
Bethlehem's home office purchasing department as an
associate buyer. He was promoted to buyer, maintenance,
repair and operating supplies group, in 1981, the position
he held until his current appointment.
He resides in Montoursville, Pa.
Alan Dakey
was
'73
recently elected president of the
vice-president of the
Wayne County YMCA. He is
Honesdale Dime Bank. Alan and
his wife, Diane, live at
Honesdale, Pa. 18431, with their
daughter, Janet. He is a member of the Central United
Methodist Church, the Honesdale Area Jaycees, and
Lodge 218, Free and Accepted Masons.
130
Shady
Joan
S.
Lane,
Corson
'73
has been certified by the American
Bloomsburg Family Counseling and Mental Health
She serves as a consultant for the Susquehanna
Valley OB-GYN Association and a counselor for St.
Matthew Lutheran Church in Bloomsburg. Her address is95 Friar Lane, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Klingerman '73 and his wife, Karen Nina (Terry)
report the addition of a second son to their family,
Bill
'74,
Brad Nelson was born on June
brother, Bryan, age
10, 1982.
He
joined an older
3.
Bill is wearing 10 years of service in the Industrial
Engineering Department of U.S. Steel in Fairless Hills,
Pa. Karen is on a child-rearing leave from her position as
a middle school English teacher for the Bensalem School
District.
The Klingermans
live at 49
Sharon Drive, Richboro, Pa.
18954.
1974
Betty Cecelia (Sorber) Austin '74 and Stephen F. Austin
are the parents of a daughter born on March 24. The
Austins live at R.D. 2, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
'74
The committee has been formed
to
review the various
education curricula provided by the college. Revisions
will
be
made
to provide
students, enabling
to
them
handle
a
more
to
practical experience for
and be
situation
upon
better understand
classroom
graduation.
Robert Wynne '69 taught biology for six years after
graduating and then tried his hand at acting in New York
City and Los Angeles. He is now an artist in Nashville,
Tennessee, where he designs record covers and posters.
He is also co-owner of the Murray Hill Music Company.
business administration in 1973.
Clinic.
1972
prepared
1969
following year he left his position to attend Bloomsburg
State College and received a bachelor of science degree in
of the
the Coif.
Following
The appointment of H. Donald Hummel '73 as
purchasing agent for the Bethlehem Wire Rope Division of
Bethlehem Steel Corporation has been announced by
James H. Wirt, division general manager.
A Williamsport native, Don attended Williamsport Area
Community College and worked for a local business
before he joined Bethlehem Steel's Williamsport plant in
1968 in the production scheduling department. The
Nurses' Association as a clinical specialist in adult
psychiatric and mental health nursing. She is on the staff
In
associate
Hummel '73
William J. Lawton '73 and Nadine M. Hunter are engaged. Bill is employed by the Shikellamy School District.
Nadine is a registered nurse and is employed by Dr. Ivor
F. Lewis of Sunbury. A summer wedding is planned.
the
also solicitor to other local
H. D.
17824.
was
Harding has served the county as
and Youth Services Agency from
He
Kocher Kressler '70 and Robert W. Keller are
is employed by the Bloomsburg Area
School District and is a fourth grade teacher at Memorial
Elementary School. Her fiance is the owner of the Suburban Fence Co. of Espy.
Shirl
engaged. Shirl
traffic convictions.
His participation has included court appearances on
behalf of the Commonwealth in the actual trial of criminal
appointed
Q7^
%J
M.S I
Victor Keeler in '69 was recently named salesman of
the year by Yale Industrial Trucks— Plant Improvements
Inc. This marks the third time Vic has received the honor.
He began working with the firm in 1979 as account
1968
degree
1
Kathleen, a graduate of Our Lady of Lourdes Regional
High School, received her master of education degree at
BSC in
1982.
She is employed as a third grade teacher at Weatherly
Area School District and is a member of the district's
Long-Range Planning Curricula Committee and serves as
president-elect of the Weatherly Education Association.
She lives at R.D. 1, Box 57F, Weatherly, Pa. 18255 with
her husband, Robert, and son, Joseph.
Trudy Mae (Pond) Snyder '74 and her husband, Allen,
are the parents of a son born on March 15. The Snyders
live at Rt.
1,
Box 575, Laramie, Wyoming 82070.
Thomas Daniel Samide
'74
and
his wife,
Barbara Jean
(Bean) '75, are the parents of a son born on March
family lives at R.D. 5, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
17.
The
Edward J. Fait '74 and his wife, Deborah, are the
parents of a son, Corey Edward, born on April 6 at
Sunbury Community Hospital. He joins a brother, Kyle
Edward. The Faits live at R.D. 1, Box 42, Mt. Pleasant
Mills, Pa. 17853.
(Continued on Page 30)
Laubach
commemorative
The following
article was written by
Brenda Martin
a writer for The Morning Press, Bloomsburg.
Benton residents are asking that a postage stamp
be
issued across the country in conjunction with
a week-
•82,
long local celebration planned for late next
year to
honor the late Frank C. Laubach.
That stamp, which would be emblazoned with
a picture of the Benton native who became an
international
when he taught millions of people around the
world to read, would only be a portion of the celebration
of the 100th anniversary of his birth. Laubach
was born
dignitary
September 2, 1884.
The borough plans
2-9, 1984,
to designate the week September
as National Literacy Week and hopes Gov.
Dick Thornburgh will also declare Literacy Week
throughout the state.
The borough hopes that the greatest "honor for a
great man" will be a postage stamp issued in his honor.
At a meeting Monday night, borough council members
signed a petition to be sent to postal officials in
Washington in hopes the stamp will be approved.
The man behind the drive to get the stamp, Kenneth
B.
McCahan, who is president of the board of directors
Frank and Effa Laubach Memorial Library of
of the
Benton, said elected officials in the state and federal
governments have also been asked to support the move-
FOREIGN VISITORS
-
Edwin Eggers
of
New
Zealand shows his family his work with computers at BSC.
ment.
"We have asked
the stamps
all of
program
the elected officials to petition
Washington
ask them to issue
"We need all the
help possible with the Postmaster General."
The post office had previously been asked to commemorate a stamp in Laubach's honor, according to
McCahan. But that request was turned down last Oca
stamp
in his
in
honor,"
McCahan
New Zealander studies at BSC
to
said.
tober.
summer in New Zealand. The birds celebrate with
a resounding chorus each dawn. But the Eggers family
is too far away to hear just now. Edwin Eggers and his
wife and sons have come half-way round the world to
Bloomsburg, while Ed studies at Bloomsburg State
College on a Rotary Foundation grant.
It's
"But now they're reconsidering issuing a stamp," he
McCahan, who said he "has a whole attache case"
full of information about Laubach, said the man was
born and raised in Benton until he graduated from
Bloomsburg State Normal School in 1901.
After that Laubach became famous when he spearheaded an international literacy movement known as
education,
"Each
study abroad."
said.
one, teach one."
The opportunity
study abroad has special meaning
to New Zealanders, as Ed explains: "We have only 3V4
million people in the country. That means we don't have
to
many
opportunities to receive the kind of specialized
training that's available here. Additional post-graduate
when we can
find
it,
usually
comes from
An educator, Ed was a teacher and school principal in
Zealand for 17 years. He left his home of Palmerston North (population 70,0001, where he is now a school
New
TV link sought
psychologist for the state's Department of Education, to
study special education at Bloomsburg.
BSC has
applied for grant funding to support a
telecommunication link that will provide educational
opportunities to adults in the Bloomsburg area. The
programming
capability will potentially provide college
working adults that will add to the
level courses for
present adult education offerings of the college.
A specific focus of the grant proposal will include
programming
for the
homebound, unemployed and the
"We have six staff psychologists, including myself,"
Eggers explains. "We're responsible for school-age
children with learning problems— what Americans term
mental handicaps, learning disabilities, or emotional
disturbances." In addition, the psychologists work with
preschoolers to recognize and intervene in develop-
mental problems as early as possible.
"I had three particular reasons for coming here,"
Eggers says. "First, I wanted to study and gain some
greater depth in some aspects of my field. Second, I
needed some time away from my day-to-day work, to
re-evaluate the emphasis of my work and to determine
the possible need for a fresh direction. Finally, I wanted
to learn about microcomputers and how they can be
.
older community. Television delivery of educational
opportunities are particularly suited to providing
educational opportunities in these environs due to
geographic terrain, uncertain weather, and energy
costs.
used
in special
education."
The educational exchange
will ultimately benefit New
Zealand. Eggers hopes to finish his study in Bloombsurg
with a master's degree in the education of exceptional
persons.
He hopes to advise the Department of Education when
he returns home about the applications of microcomputers as teaching aids.
Initial studies
have shown that microcomputers are an
excellent teaching tool for children. Those with physical
or emotional handicaps can, in some instances, make
unexpected advances because they relate better to the
one-on-one computer experience than to the classroom
and can manage their own learning.
Before leaving home, Eggers and his colleagues used
a patched-together computer system from available
materials— what New Zealanders call a "Heath
Robinson" and Americans know as a Rube Goldberg
invention. "It's unconventional, but
it
does the job,"
Eggers says.
By
the time his year of study in
Bloomsburg is done,
Eggers hopes to be well versed on the merits of
American computer hardware and which programs and
equipment are most applicable to learning situations in
New Zealand, which includes extensive home study
programs for children and adults in isolated locations.
Eggers notes that educational exchange programs
have made a substantial difference in New Zealand over
recent years. "It once took about ten years for new
developments in education to become a fact at the
chalkboard. Exchange programs have helped to reduce
that time tremendously."
Researchers busy answering questions
Their interests stretch from yesterday into tomorrow.
In one corner of the
Bloomsburg State College campus,
a biology professor studies bone remnants from the
Pleistocene Epoch. In another, a history professor
explores how robots will change the American
These are just a few of the more than 80 research
projects currently underway at the college. Several
dozen faculty
and, in
some
members
are involved
in
the research
cases, graduate and undergraduate
students are also taking part. The studies span a wealth
of
academic
Light
Education.
Some examine
fields:
psychology, sociology, education,
history, business, physics, English, art, chemistry,
mathematics, computer science, biology, and the health
sciences.
Some of the studies focus on people: How do we
absorb unspoken information? Why do consumers prefer
one advertisement over another 9
Some examine institutions: How important are the top
boarding schools to career success? Do our public
the past:
How
did industrialists shape
the Pennsylvania anthracite coal industry?
won
Who
really
campaign debates?
Do certain chemicals
influence memory? What effect does humidity have on
the 1960 presidential
Some
workforce.
Company, and
schools discourage children from the natural learning
process?
delve deep into science:
the Pennsylvania
In addition to granting the use of
Department
its facilities,
of
the
college provides support in the form of research grants
and release time. About
$4,000 is available each year
through the faculty grants program. Several faculty
members have
$20,000 is being used
also been able to use release time, in
which research is made an alternative work
assignment. Each semester a maximum of six faculty
members can abtain a small amount of release time to
pursue approved projects in field research, public
service, teaching development, and the creative arts.
Research projects culminate in reports to industry,
formal papers and presentations at professional
conferences, and journal articles. Within the past five
years, BSC faculty members have produced nearly 80
publications and presentations. Because many projects
stretch over two or more years (some run as long as ten
years), more publications and reports will be
Institutes of
forthcoming.
long-range radio signals?
And some may change
the way we live: How do
wrappings and containers interact with their
contents? Does sewage sludge, sometimes used as
fertilizer, leave potentially harmful deposits in the soil?
plastic
The majority of the BSC research projects are being
done by the faculty on their own time and primarily at
their own expense. In recent years, more than $95,000 in
support has come to the institution or to individual
faculty members from federal, industry, and private
sources. During the 1983-84 fiscal year, approximately
from sources including the National
Mental Health, Pennsylvania Power and
Mark
30
S.
Schwelker
*75
from Rider College, N.J. He
employed by Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith
is
center city Philadelphia office. He is also a
member of the Middletown Township board of supervisors
in their
Bucks County. His address
in
SCHOOL
-TO
LEFT
M
-
56
is
Shadywood Road,
Levittown, Pa. 19056.
HE ALSO
Susan Linda (Kobilis) Nesbitt '76 lives at the Highlands
101, Wall and Orange Streets, Danville, Pa. 17821.
No.
Melodee Lyn Yoder
'77
and her husband, Michael, are
The Yoders
the parents of a daughter born in February.
West Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815.
Linda (Baker) Wasley '76 and her husband, Albert, live
Church St.. Plymouth, Pa. 18651. Linda is a fifth
grade teacher in the Lake-Lehman School District. Her
husband is the owner of Al Wasley Jewelers in Plymouth.
at 33
Barbara E. (Poley) Herring '76 and her husband,
Kenneth, are the parents of a son born on April 12. The
family lives at R.D. 2, Frankford Avenue, Tamaqua, Pa.
18252.
and her husband, Rock,
are the parents of a son, Zachary Lawrence, born on
January 25, 1983. He weighed six pounds and 12 ounces.
Bonnie Joan Lethbridge '77 and Jeffrey Randolph Hull
were married on October 9, 1982. Their address is R.D. 6,
Box 314, Sussex, N.J. 07461.
David Michael McCollum '77 received the master of
education degree in elementary education from Shippensburg State College on December 18, 1982.
Karen Denise (Gallagher) Lemoncelli '77 and Ernest D.
Lemoncelli '77 have moved from Houston, Texas. Their
new address is 15 Harbor Oaks Circle, Safety Harbor, Fla.
33572. Ernest is employed by Augat, Inc., a manufacturer
of electronic interconnection components and systems. As
a factory representative he covers the Tarn pa /St.
Petersburg Area. The Lemoncellis invite all of their
friends who get down their way to be sure to stop in or call.
1978
(Seidel) Miller '76
Alecia Ann (Boyer) Spayd '76 and her husband, Mike,
are the parents of a daughter, Sarah Elizabeth, born on
November 28, 1982. The family lives at 10 Laird St., West
Lawn, Pa.
received the master of education
of a
1976
Abby Denise
'77
degree in special education from Shippensburg State College on December 18, 1982.
Michael Charles Hutnick '77 and his wife are the parents
daughter born on February 2. The Hutnicks live at 470
Riverview Ave., Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
CATS.
live at 109
Eva May Hogan
recently received a master of
arts degree in administration
19609.
Maxine Kay Davis
'78 received a master of education
educational administration from Shippensburg
State College on December 18, 1982.
degree
in
Scott Frasso '78 and Sharon Suglta were married on
May
They
28.
live at 523 N. Lafayette St.,
Allentown, Pa.
18104.
(Continued from Page 28)
Judy Ann (Johnson) Sterner '74 and her husband,
Larry, are the parents of a daughter born on March 10,
1983, in the Berwick (Pa.) Hospital. The family lives at
R.D. 1, Stillwater, Pa. 17878.
Pamela
(Schulfa ) Bair
'74
and Rickey G. Bair
'74 live at
Star Route Box 136A, Rebersburg, Pa. 16872. Rickey is the
fiscal manager for the Child Development Council of Centre County.
Pam
is
the assistant
program
director of the
Day Care Homes Program of the same organization.
Mike McDevitt '74 has been teaching at Danville High
School for eight years and has been affiliated with the
girls' basketball program for the last seven. He is now in
season as head coach. Mike
Walnut St., Shamokin, Pa. 17872.
his fifth
lives at 831
'75
and Bruce
Loch recently
formed a new partnership under the name of Loch and
DiGiacomo, Certified Public Accountants, located at 1045
C.
N. 175h Street, Allentown, Pa. 18104. Both are members of
the American and Pennsylvania Institutes of Certified
Public Accountants.
Sherman G. Lord '75 and Rose Rico were married on
7. Sherman is employed as an audiologist
for Moyer
May
and Bell Associates of Sewickly. Rose is employed by the
Hershey Chocolate Company in Hershey.
Donna Elaine Jones
and Stephen Charles Cassel
were married recently. Stephen is a graduate of Clarion
State College. Both are teachers in the East Pennsboro
'75
School District.
Carolyn
Driedger '75 reports that she has been
employed by the U.S. Geological Survey Glaciology Project Office since 1978, studying glaciers as a water
resource in the Pacific Northwest. Her address is 24 S.
"D" Street, Tacoma, Wash, 98408.
Dennis M. ODonnell '75
Hughes Aircraft Company
dress
is
is
in
23314 Lockness Ave.,
Patricia
Bederman
married
'75
Ronald
an estimator employed by
El Segundo, Calif. His ad-
Harbor City,
Calif. 90710.
writes that on June
E.
Miller,
13, 1981,
a
she
school
psychologist/counselor in
the Mountain View School
Kingsley, Pa. "After returning from our
honeymoon in Couples Resort, Jamaica, we bought a
District
in
home
Dalton. About the
in
same
time,
I
was hired as
mathematics coordinator for the Developmental
Education Department at Keystone Junior College. I
really love my job and frequently come in contact with
students who plan to transfer to a four-year institution
after KJC. I never fail to put in a good word for BSC
because I remember all the good times BSC gave me. It
was a wonderful experience— I will always cherish those
memories."
Pat earned her master's degree
education at Mary wood College in 1982.
Her address
is
in
mathematics
110 Miles Street, Dalton, Pa. 18414.
'76
received the master of
pensburg State College on December
18, 1982.
Katz Underwear Company, Honesdale, recently ap-
Edward "Ted" Thompson
as sales representative for New Jersey and Southeastern Pennsylvania,
with complete responsibility for the sale of the Katz line in
pointed
this territory.
Ted
is
'76
the great-grandson of
Edward
A.
Katz, former chairman of the board of Katz. Ted was a
district manager for the Rite Aid Drug Company prior to
his
employment with Katz. He and his wife, the former
of Huntington, West Virginia, live in
Sandra Clatworthy,
North Wales, Pa.
Mike Sharkey '78 and Patricia Dallas '78 are engaged
and plan to be married in October. Their address will be
7410 East Moreland Dr., Annadalle, Va. 22603.
Linda Craul '78 and David Turner are engaged. Linda is
employed as a sales administration manager by BristolMyers Products, New York. David, who is a graduate of
the University of Maine,
is
a district sales manager for
A May wedding
Bristol-Myers Products, Washington.
planned.
is
Richard Lee Marella
'78 and his wife, Diane, are the
daughter, Lindsay, born on August 17, 1982.
The family lives at 303 Oleander Drive, Palatka. Fla.
parents
of a
32077.
West
1975
Joseph T. DiGiacomo Jr.
John Casimir Lydzinski
science degree in Geoenvironmental Studies from Ship-
Dromgold Lichtenberger '78 received a master
education degree in special education from Shippensburg State College on December 18, 1982.
Claire
1977
of
Bernadette (Zoppetti) Sham is '77 and her husband,
Matthew, are the parents of a son, Joseph, born on March
27. The family lives at 3101 Oakview Drive No. 46, Temple,
Texas 76502.
Drive,
Kim Clark '77 and his wife, the former Holly Moore of
Bloomsburg, are enjoying their son, Grant John, who was
a year old in January. Kim is employed as a salesman for
Earl Latsha Lumber Co. in Harrisburg. The Clarks live at
303 Maple Road, Middletown, Pa. 17057.
Mary Anne (Southerton) Reichart '77 and her husband,
Randy, are the parents of a daughter born on March 21.
The Reicharts live on Rohrsburg Road, Orangeville Pa
17859.
Lee Ann Stump
'77
recently announced her candidacy
for the position of Muncy School Board Director.
She has been employed the past four years at Jones
Real Estate in Muncy.
She has been a Muncy Borough Auditor for the last three
years, been actively involved with the Muncy Area Community Project Steering Committee, and is presently a
member of both the program and audit committees for the
Muncy Area Merchants Association.
Lee Ann has been a volunteer coach for the girl's
elementary basketball program for five years, and is also
a Friend of the Court volunteer. She attends the Muncy
Baptist Church.
Lee Ann lives at 9 Schuyler Avenue, Muncy, Pa. 17756.
Timothy Jay Lawall
'77
and
his wife, the
Derr, are the parents of a son born on
Berwick (Pa.) Hospital. The family
March
former Debra
13, 1983 at
lives at R.D.
1,
the
Wap-
wallopen, Pa. 18660.
Evelyn Baxevane '77 lives at 1209 Cordell St., Denton,
Texas 76201. She is a special education teacher in the Denton Independent School District, teaching trainable mentally
is
retarded students at the local junior high school. She
to Matt Connell '77.
married
Maria
may
L. (Williams)
Anthony
'77
and James W. Anthony
be reached at Box 85, Bear Creek, Pa. 18602.
Maria reports that they are expecting a baby in May.
'77
Donna
L. (Krick)
McGlinn
Pa.
Whitfield,
'78 lives at 3205
19609.
Her
present
Wassner
position:
housewife.
Katherine Diane (Kenner) Smith '78 M. Ed. and her
husband, Lawrence, are the parents of a son, Brandon
Michael, born on September 9, 1982. Kathy is employed
by the Selinsgrove Area School District, where she has
taught first grade for seven years. The Smiths live at
R.D. 3, Box 102-A Selinsgrove, Pa. 17870.
Paul G. Janssen
became
Cheryl,
Jr. *78 reports that he
the
Elizabeth, on June
11,
parents
1982.
Paul
a
of
is
and
his wife,
daughter,
Sara
the assistant to the
township manager of Cheltenham Township. The
Janssens live at 651 Brooke Road, No. D51, Glenside
Pa. 19038.
David J. Howells '78 is employed as a sales engineer
by Mine Safety Appliances Company. His address is 3324
Pin
Oak Lane,
Mountville, Pa. 17554.
Janet (Caywood) Dunscomb '78 reports she was married to John Dunscomb on May 29, 1982. Her address is
2501 W. Sunflower, No. N-l, Santa Ana, Calif. 92704.
Elizabeth M. (Jones) Samarin '78 recently wrote to
bring us up to date on her career history.
Upon graduation, she was employed by GTE Service
Corporation as a member of their financial associate
development program consisting of three six-month
assignments in various organizations and subsidiaries of
GTE. One of her assignments was with GTE Sylvania in
Muncy, Pa. and the other two were in California. She
chose to stay in the Los Angeles area with GTE and
later became employed with Data Products Corporation
in Woodland Hills, California, where she is the accounting manager for the medium and high speed printer
divisions.
She was married in July, 1981. Her husband is
employed as vice president-finance controller with BAP
Geon Automotive Parts in Long Beach; Calif.
Her address is 1021 Sixth Street, No. 303, Santa
Monica,
Calif. 90403.
Continued on page 32
The proof is
in the professors
By Katherlne E. Fisher '50
"Let us each drink a toast as each of us recalls
Ivy-covered professors in ivy-covered halls ..."
(from "Bright College Days" by Tom Lehrer)
Times have changed since the 1950s when Tom Lehrer
penned those irreverent words. Tradition-bound pro-
simultaneously, or in whatever sequence the students
choose. Students also select appropriate sound effects
and assist in writing the narrative script. During the
fessors are a rarity at
students with their
are eager to explore
Bloomsburg State College. Most
new and
different concepts in lear-
ning.
To
cite a
"taste" of
few
is
to slight the
many, but perhaps a
campus
instructional innovations will
your appetite to visit and learn more.
whet
Teaching Intercultural Communication last semester,
Dr. Mary Kenny Badami, associate professor, Communication Studies, gave as the first week's assignment,
American Cultural Patterns, by E. C. Stewart.
Upon completion of the book, students were to write a
the book,
750-word essay answering the question, "Am I a
typical' American?" Think about that. What is a
"typical" German? Russian? Japanese? As a term project (for those brave students who returned the second
week! ), one option was to spend 15 to 20 hours with an
international student, research a five-page paper on the
foreign student's homeland, and maintain an informal
journal on the highlights and impressions from each
meeting with the student. At the conclusion of the contact hours, a comprehensive analysis was to be written
on all learnings from the project. The knowledge thus
acquired by both the international, and the American
students, could never have been found in a textbook.
The international students were often amused at what
the American students thought they "knew" about
foreign countries. Times change faster than textbooks!
At the end of the semester, Dr. Badami's students and
the contacts" celebrated their new knowledge, and
new
friendships, at an off-campus party.
//////////
Since 1975, Dr. Donald A. Vannan, professor of educa-
their
Department of Elementary and Early Childhood
Education, has been teaching some of the most laidback students on campus. Dr. Vannan developed an
adaptation of a relaxed learning/teaching method which
controlled experiments have shown to result in dramatic
tion,
achievements grade-wise, as well as retention-wise.
Originally developed in Bulgaria by Dr. Georgi
Lozanov, "suggestology", as the method is called, was
originally developed to teach foreign languages.
Adapted suggestology, as developed by Dr. Vannan, is
used with prospective elementary teachers enrolled in
the elementary science methods course. To implement
his teaching technique, Dr. Vannan changed the
classroom environment, revitalizing the traditionally
drab classroom with flowers, real and artificial, then
decorating the walls with colorful pictures and inspirational quotations.
As instructed by Dr. Vannan, students relax
themselves using deep-breathing exercises and purposeful tension/relaxation of all muscles in the body.
Variety in the intonation of lecture material is extremely important and it ranges from shouting to whispering.
Background recordings of Mozart, Haydn and Lizst are
used. Demonstrations are done for, and with, the
students. Students also teach sample lessons to their
peers.
Questioning the "ivy-covered" tradition that learning
occurs only in stiff -backed discomfort, free from any
Vannan's initial experiments yielded
The fall, spring, and summer
control classes received 6.5%, 18.5% and 9.0% of A
grades, while the "relaxed" classes earned 80%, 82.4%
and 72.0% of A grades. Suggestology has spread to
Canada, Russia, Austria, and various European coundistractions, Dr.
some amazing
tries,
results.
as well as the United States.
Dr. Vannan's article, "Adapted Suggestology and
Elementary Science at Bloomsburg State College," appeared in ERIC Resources in Education, in August 1978.
In 1979, an article titled "Adapted Suggestology and Student Achievement" was published by Dr. Vannan in the
Journal of Research in Science Teaching. Also, Dr. Vannan and his adaptation methods are discussed in the
book, SUPERLEARNING, by Ostrander & Schroeder
(1979), in which they give the results of Vannan's experiments, and terms these results "spectacular"!
//////////
In Non-Print Media (Communication 503), Dr. Walter
M. Brasch, associate professor of English and Journalism, gives his students "hands on" experience in
preparing a multi-media show. Students, some of whom
have never held a camera, are expected to photograph
pictures for slides which will be shown on three screens
techniques, Donald feels he can train "almost any willing person off the street."
show, selected students perform musical numbers on
stage while the rest of the class handles lighting, sound,
and slide projection. Dr. Brasch continually amazes
Although Donald much prefers the one-on-one ratio of
students and teachers, no student is turned away unless
the enrollment exceeds 200 per session, which it has
sometimes done. Otherwise, anyone
is
welcome, even
own capabilities. "I can't" is never
an acceptable excuse. He demonstrates to the students
how they can (and will! ). The assumption is that you
can't learn to swim until you get into the water! If there
is hesitation, Brasch shoves — which makes for frantic
students with physical handicaps such as deafness.
Using interview techniques, rather than traumatic
paddling at times.
average growth was found to be two full skill levels. Letters from scores of grateful parents, teachers, and
students verify these findings. A happy side-effect has
been that the attitude improvement has also raised
grades in other subjects because the children now have
Brasch himself is a "doer" — having authored six
books and more than 200 articles on a smorgasbord of
subjects. His books have received excellent reviews. He
says, "My undergraduate classes give me the most
joy." When not "pushing" students, he is often lending a
sympathetic ear to their problems and frustrations.
Brasch 's creative methods have practical results. After
improving the writing and editing skills of students, he
advises them on how to get articles published in
newspapers and magazines. A by-line is a "cloud-nine"
experience for budding journalists. Ivy would have to
grow pretty fast to sprout on this professor!
!
of
mathematics
is
nothing
new
— but, like the
common
cold, it has made generations of students
miserable while little has been done to find a "cure."
Other educators have worked with mathophobia in
adults. Sheila Tobias, author of
Math Anxiety, has
discussed Donald's work with him and agrees on the importance of changing attitudes as early as possible.
In the 1970s, Professor Donald organized the first
Mathophobia classes at the college. Sessions are still
held in the spring, summer and fall for students from
grades two through eight. They meet to be tutored for
one hour each day in the summer sessions, and for one
hour a week in the spring and fall sessions. B.S.C.
students majoring in elementary education do much of
the tutoring — all on a volunteer basis. Donald strives
for a one-on-one ratio of students and teachers, saying
"It has a magical effect!" The rapport established with
"their own" teacher plays a large role in the "healing"
process. Instruction is individualized and is always an
affirming experience. There are no tests, no pressures,
no frustrations, and no one is ever ridiculed for making
a mistake.
Teaching materials developed by Donald are colorful
and unorthodox. The "learning style" of each student is
respected and students select where they want to be
at a desk, squatting on the floor, or on their tummy in
the hallway! It's fun, it's noisy, and it's successful! Experiments show that each of us has a "best way" to
learn. For some it is auditory learning; for some,
visual; some learn better with background noises; some
must have absolute quiet. For students who are easily
distracted, seating them by a window can mean failure.
Donald explains, "Many children are forced into learning styles which simply will not work for them."
On June 20-24, in Kehr Union, Donald is coordinating a
learning styles workshop for K through 12 grade
teachers, as well as school administrators. A team from
the Rita Dunn Program, St. Johns University, N.Y.C.,
will discuss research which demonstrates that every
student, regardless of age, economic status, or I.Q., has
an individual learning style, and that academic achievement increases, and attitudes improve, when these differences are acknowledged and used for the benefit of
the student. Experts in reading and administration will
be present at the workshop, as well as enthusiastic
educators who have already made use of these innova-
—
tions in teaching.
Donald's regular Mathophobia courses are conducted
busy Hartline, and because of the number of students
and the style of teaching, space has been a concern.
However, the cooperation of President James McCormick and Registrar Ken Schnure has kept the program
running smoothly in the spring and fall sessions. Sumin
sessions are conducted in various school districts —
Bloomsburg, Berwick, Southern, etc, — all free of
charge. Donald, and all his teachers, donate their time.
Sometimes, students who have been helped by the program, return later to teach. Teachers need not be college educated. With his special materials and training
mer
session,
On one
a student's needs are assessed during the first
and are reevaluated at the end of the semester.
occasion when traditional testing was used, the
confidence in themselves. Parents living 20 miles away
have transported their children to the Mathophobia sessions.
Professor Donald's Mathophobia program was
selected as Bloomsburg State College's 1982 entry for
the G. Theodore Mitau Award, an award for construc-
and change which is presented annually
American Association of State Col-
tive innovation
to a
member
of the
leges and Universities. This highly competitive
//////////
Another B.S.C. innovator who embraces change has
been heralded in numerous area publications. When
Professor Richard Donald is mentioned, local residents
nod affirmatively ... "Oh yes, Mathophobia
However, get-well cards are not in order. While
Mathophobia is "catching on", it is not "catching."
Fear
testing,
was won
award
by Southwest Texas State University,
but Bloomsburg's Professor Donald has won the acclaim
of peers, educators, parents, and literally thousands of
students. Donald has the enthusiasm and zeal of an
evangelist. The "darkness" of mathophobia is far from
being conquered
but there is "one little candle" burnin 1982
—
ing brightly at
Bloomsburg State College!
Creativity is contageous! Students exposed to it, will
seek new and better ways of doing things. Only one
thing is "ivy-covered" at B.S.C. — a worn-eut old
sentence which has been discarded and trampled underfoot in the rush of progress: "We can't try anything
new, we've always done it this way."
Cooperative
EcLD. program
announced
Graduate study at BSC has been expanded to the
doctoral level through a cooperative doctor of education
degree program in elementary education offered jointly
with Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
The cooperative doctoral program was announced by
Dr. Daniel C. Pantaleo, dean of Bloomsburg's School of
Graduate Studies and Extended Programs, after
presidents of the two state-owned institutions had signed
the memorandum of understanding establishing the
relationship. The Ed.D. degree will be awarded by IUP,
which has had an approved doctoral program
for
several years.
Students admitted to the program by BSC may take
up to half of their post masters credits at Bloomsburg,
with the remaining work, as well as residency requirements, to be completed at IUP.
"This cooperative program will make it more
convenient and less expensive for graduate students in
this area to work toward a doctoral degree," Pantaleo
said. "Bloomsburg has faculty members who are well
and to serve
on examination, advisory, and dissertation committees.
We can offer a needed service in this area without
duplicating established programs."
Dr. William O'Bruba, who chairs the BSC department
of elementary and early childhood education,
qualified to offer doctoral level instruction
coordinated planning for the cooperative program and
serves as the director at Bloomsburg. He was the first
doctoral candidate to earn the Ed.D. degree at IUP.
"This program can be implemented at Bloomsburg
with
little
said.
"We
or no extra costs to the college," O'Bruba
already have the faculty members and the
necessary courses.
It's
a cost-effective
program
that
enables us to make full use of the resources we have."
Graduate students may apply to Bloomsburg for
admission to the program and faculty members of both
institutions will screen the applications. Students
who
are admitted must complete 12 credits of post masters
study with niinimum grades of "B" before applying of
the written and oral candidacy examination.
and Thomas Charles Vought
employed at Bloomsburg
Hospital. Tom is employed by Step-By-Step, Inc. in
Bloomsburg. An April wedding is planned.
32
Ellen Marie McDonnell
are engaged. Ellen
II
Continued from page 30
Cheryl Lynn Marinchak
'78
traveled to the island of
are engaged.
toFebruaryll.1983.
Cheryl, a fourth year intern and student at the Pennsylvania College of Optometry, Philadelphia, is a
member of the Student Optometric Service to Haiti
(SOSH), a team of 20 four-year optometry students from
Linda Lee Danowsky '81 M.Ed, was married to Todd
Eugene Beaver on February 26, 1983. Linda is a teacher in
the Milton School District.
the college.
Since
its
SOSH
has provided free viimpoverished people each year
inception in 1968,
sion care to thousands of
Charles G. Smith
Haiti.
for
eye care
Ernie F. Jackson
is
of the
wholly under
SOSH team and
the
direction
their services. In 1982 over 7,000 patients
were examined
their two-week
Betsy Gathman '79 reports that effective February 1,
she was promoted to vice president of human
resources at Comprehensive Benefits Service Company,
Inc. CBSC is a third-party administrator specializing in
1979
employee
Chew Street, Allentown.
Carole Susan Hutchison '79 and Kevin Donald Hocking
are engaged. Carole attends Northampton County Area
Community
She is employed by the Easton
employed by Snyder Amusements. A
College.
YWCA. Kevin
is
wedding date has not been set.
(
Wilk) Gunther
'79
has assumed the position
of head nurse of the Critical Care Units at Good
Samaritan
Hospital in Pottsville. Victoria is a member
of the
American and Pennsylvania Nurses Associations;
Association for Practitioners of Infection
Control;
Intravenous Therapy Association; and American
Nurses
Association Council of Primary Health Care
Nurse
Practitioners.
Her
address
consulting and administration. Its
Linda J. Coleman '79 is the manager of Edison Brothers
Shoe Store, a leased department in Hess's Chambersburg
Mall, Franklin County, Pa. Linda lives at 1537 Lehigh St.,
Easton, Pa. 18042.
Tony Jankiewicz '78 and Jane (Nagle) Jankiewicz '79
have moved to 3813 Wick Place, Wexford, Pa. 15090. Tony
is women's sportswear buyer for Gimbel's in Pittsburgh.
Jane is a cost reimbursement accountant for Sewickley
Valley Hospital. She is pursuing a master's degree in
business administration at Robert Morris College, Pittsburgh.
Laurie (Johnson) Gaylord '79 lives at 7234 Carmel
Ct.,
Boca Raton, Fla. 33433. She is a teacher of the hearing impaired at the Tamarac Elementary School. She is
working
toward a master's degree in computer education
at
Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton.
Victoria T.
benefits,
headquarters are in suburban Philadelphia. Her address
is 255F Rexton Drive, West Chester, Pa. 19380,
Raymond
Fisher are
engaged. Patricia is employed by SMS Corporation as a
buyer. Her fiance is employed by Mobil Oil Corp. as a
senior financial analyst. A July wedding is planned.
1330 l2
is
601
Ridge
Avenue
Pottsville, Pa. 17901.
Mike Burkhart '79 and Carol Colburn were married on
July 9. 1982. They live at 326 Bala
Terrace West, West
Chester, Pa. 15380.
,
-f
is
f\Of\
Mark Karanovich '80 and his wife, Susan (Palangi) '80,
are the parents of a daughter, Elizabeth Eileen, born on
March 4. Elizabeth was born on her due date at 1 1 41 p.m.
She weighed seven pounds, five ounces and was 20 i 4
inches long. Mark is employed by Chase Home Mortgage
Corporation as a first mortgage originator. Susan
is
employed
Anne Arundel County as a teacher. The
in
family lives at 8858
Tamar
Dr., Apt. 301, Columbia,
Md
21045.
Kelly Galosi '82 and Peter Howatt '80 are engaged and
plan to be married on August 27 in Lebanon, Pennsylvania. Pete is head of operations for Ostego Farmers
Feed Co.
Inc. Kelly will get
in
her master's degree
in
speech
May.
18, at
the
in attending the celebration should
write to: CAS 10th Anniversary, 219 Pine
St., Harrisburg
Pa. 17101. Jeff lives at 2304 North 4th St.,
in
students and to the profession, and involvement
extracurricular activities.
Harrisburg Pa
17102.
First Lt. Brent C.
Bankus *79 was recently awarded
Army Achievement Medal. A tank commander,
Brent was also named to the captain's promotion
list.
tiie
He has served
half of a three-year tour of duty
in
Germany. He and his wife, Mary, and
John and Courtney, live in Mannheim.
West
their children,
Kevin Wixled '79 exhibited his most recent works in the
Schuylkill County Council for the Arts Galleries 3 at the
Art and Ethnic Center in Pottsville, Pa., from February 13
through March 13. "New Works" combined oils, acrylics,
watercolors and gouaches.
Susan E. Sharrow '79 teaches grades one and two
at the
Covenant Christian School in Meadville. Her address
is
336 Jefferson St., Meadville, Pa. 16335.
Deborah Kellerman
'79 lives at 924
Wheeler Ave., Scranton, Pa. 18510. She is employed as an itinerant
hearing
therapist for the Luzerne County Intermediate
Unit No
18.
Ann Marie Fiamoncini
and Bruno Andracchio are
employed as a caseworker at
'80
engaged. The future bride is
Selinsgrove Center. Her fiance is a psychologist at Selinsgrove Center. A fall wedding is planned.
Marty
Hahn '80 and Lori Kay Stadler are engaged.
employed by Keek's Drapery Mfg. Co. in
Bloomsburg. Marty works for Bloomsburg Dye Co., Inc.
Lori
C.
is
1981
Eric Fehr
manager
of
and Susan Cole are engaged. Susan is
Fashion Bug in Bloomsburg. Eric is a sales
'81
representative for D.A. Fehr, Inc. of Pittsburgh.
1984 wedding is planned.
A spring
1982
Cathy L. Crist '82 has been appointed assistant
administrative secretary at Columbia-Montour Home
Health Service, Inc. Cathy's address is R.D.
5,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Sandra K. (Rawls) Kelsey '82 and her husband, Jeffrey,
are the parents of a daughter born on April 15.
The
family's address is P.O. Box 89, Benton, Pa. 17814.
Michael
Bernsten
and Pamela Dianne
wedding is planned.
'82
1984
Steve is employed as a claims representative for All State
Insurance Co. in Whippany, N.J. Pamela is a senior at
BSC.
Scott Behrent '82
America as a
His address
is
is
employed by the Boy Scouts
district executive in Bershire County,
34 Bartlett
Avenue,
Pittsfield.
of
Mass.
Mass. 01201.
Laurie Ann Yoder '82 and David F. Farver are engaged.
Laurie is employed by Bechtel Power Corporation. Her
fiance is a service representative for Dictaphone Corporation of State College. An October 15th wedding is planned.
Vivian G. Schoeller '82 is an associate systems
analyst
with Burroughs Corp. of Radnor, Pa. Her
address is 1300
Fayette Street, 203 Morton Blvd., Conshohocken
19428.
Sherry Martucci
ried on
February
'82
and Joseph P. Gaccer
26,
1983, in St.
"82
were mar-
Elizabeth's Catholic
Church, in Whitehall, Pa. Joe is employed by The Sperry
Corporation, in Cape Canaveral. The newlyweds live in
TitusviUe, Fla.
Barbara Elaine Mettler '82 and Paul William Manning
are engaged. Barbara is a teacher at tlfe Danville Head
Start. Paul is
employed by his father as a piano technician
Manning's Pianos and Organs. No date has been set for
the wedding.
at
Terri L. Starner '82 and Mark S. Springer were married
on August 21, 1982. Terri is an associate installation
director for Shared Medical Systems in Wayne, Pa. Mark
is a medical student at Hahnemann University. The
Springers' address is Stiles Alumni Hall, Apt. 211, 325
North 15th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 19102.
Barbara Ann Koslosky '82 and Randall E. Rhodes '82
were married recently. The newly-weds live in Catawissa,
Pa. Randy will attend medical school.
Brian D. Duart
'82 is employed by Tree-Ring Research
Annex of University of Arizona, as a
computer programmer. Brian's address is 9224 East 29th
Laboratory,
Mary Beth Weeks
and James Snyder '82 were marJames is employed by AMP,
a computer analyst. Mary Beth
was formerly a credit analyst with Morgan Guaranty
Trust Company in New York City. They live in Marietta,
ried on
September
'81
18, 1982.
Street, Tucson, Arizona 85710.
Inc. of Harrisburg, Pa. as
Pa.
Bonnie MacMahon '79 and Donald
Yazurlo '81 are
engaged. An October wedding is planned.
Bonnie is
employed as a personal lines insurance analyst
with Aetna Life and Casualty in Parsippany, N.J.
Don is a computer programmer with I.B.M. in
Franklen Lakes N J
at
Pa
Anyone interested
June
A. Cable
:
to fellow
celebration, a banquet on
'81, a contemporary Christian musician,
Carver Hall on April 6. His wife, Dodi,
operates his sound system. They play at churches,
colleges, retreats, nursing homes and coffeehouses. They
have been a warm-up act for David Meece and Randy
Stonehill. The Cables live at
1519 Colgate Drive,
Bethlehem, Pa. 18107.
Steven
Embers Convention Center in Carlisle, Pa., will honor all
those who have played a part in the first 10
years of CAS.
of
The
Mark
Peckmann are engaged. A June
Michael Lewis Mixell '80 recently received the Joseph
Leyburn Kramer Award at the Dickinson School of Law.
The award is presented annually to a third-year law student who has demonstrated academic excellence,
adherence to strict ethical standards, fidelity and loyalty
Students.
employed as an auditor by Northampton County. Her
is employed by Lifetime Doors, Inc.
performed
±zf&\)
pathology
Jeffrey Albert Hunsicker '79 is serving on a
committee
planning a celebration in honor of the tenth anniversary
of
the founding of the Commonwealth
Association
206-A Buker Street, Ft.
'81 live at
fiance
1983,
Carol Killheffer '79 and Bruce Keene were married on
July 3, 1982. Carol is a business systems programmer
analyst at Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. Their address
was promoted to first lieutenant in
November 1982. Ernie and Debbie
Jean Marie Lewis '81 and Mark Charles Miskowski are
engaged. The wedding is being planned for August. Jean
mission in Haiti.
Cheryl's address is 61 Hazel Street, Delano, Pa. 18220.
Patricia Carolyn Ricci "79 and
Westminster Drive,
'81
in
(Richards) Jackson
Benning.Ga. 31905.
the
of
interns are not paid for
and treated by the SOSH team during
is
Army
the U.S.
in Haiti.
The project
members
'81 lives at 24
Dallas, Pa. 18612.
Members are volunteers who work together
each year to plan and make possible a two-week clinic
in
is
Kevin James McCloskey '81 and Valerie Linn Benrle
An August wedding is planned. Valerie is a
senior at BSC. Kevin is employed by American McGaw, a
division of American Hospital Supply Corporation.
from January 28
Haiti for voluntary patient care duties
'81
Kathleen Greco '81 and Frank Coll '81 were married on
August 7, 1982. Kathy is employed at Pixie Pre-School in
Spotswood, N.J. Frank is an instillation director at Shared
Medical Systems in New York City. They live at Percola
Avenue, Jamesburg, N.J. 08831.
Dale E. MausteUer Jr. '82 and Rochelle R. Stout are
engaged. Dale is employed by Turbotville National Bank.
Rochelle is a senior at BSC. The wedding will be
August
Kristina A. Rutter '82 and
married on April
9.
James H. Oeste
The newlyweds
live in
Jr., '82
were
Winston-Salem,
N.C.
Continued on page 34
Dr. C. Whitney Carpenter, who
retired from the
department of Languages and Cultures
in January was
awarded a master of education degree from
Teachers
College, Columbia University, on
January 26.
This is Dr. Carpenter's fifth degree
education. He holds an A.B. degree in
Cornell University, an M.A. degree
in
in
higher
German from
German from
the
University of Southern California, an
M.S. degree in
educational administration from
Bucknell University
and a Ph.D. in German from New York
University He
is also a graduate of Culver Military
Academy
James
R. Lauffer, associate professor of geography
and earth science at BSC, received his Ph.D. degree in
geology from the University of Delaware. His thesis was
"Hydrochemical Study of Shallow Ground
Water Peripheral to Rehoboth Bay, Delaware."
entitled
Lauffer came in BSC in 1966 as an assistant professor
and was promoted to associate professor in 1972. He
received his B.S. degree in geology from Allegheny
College in 1956 and his master of science degree in
geological sciences from the University of Hawaii in
1964.
Dr. Lee Hopple, professor of geography, published an
"Germanic European Origins and
Geographical History of the Southeastern Pennsylvania
article titled
Schwenkfelders" in the Winter 1982-1983 issue of
Pennsylvania Folklife. He is a student of the major
religious groups comprising the southeastern
Pennsylvania Plain Dutch population and has published
nearly a dozen papers on the European origins and
geographical history of these peoples.
Dr. Ujagar Bawa, professor of economics at BSC,
addressed a special convocation at Hanover College
(Indiana) on March 22. His topic was "Productivity and
Recession."
Professor Bawa was born in Pakistan and received his
degrees from Guru Nanak Khalsa College in Pakistan,
University of Pennsylvania, and Cornell University. He
came to BSC in 1970 and has been involved in numerous
academic and administrative activities. He was
formerly a
member
of the faculties of Wilkes College
and Howard University.
Among his distinctions while at BSC have been
serving as associate vice president for academic affairs
during 1974-75 while a search was being conducted for a
Dr. Walter M. Brasch, associate professor of
English
and journalism, is author of The Only Alternative
for
KFAD," an article about TV news operations, that
appears in the second edition of THE FOURTH
permanent appointee. He was one
ESTATE,
academic year. He is a member of the executive board
and founding life member of the Eastern Economic
Association and a founding member and director of the
Guru Nanak Foundation of America, Washington, D C.
He was awarded a meritorious certificate of
excellence in teaching and was designated as a
Commonwealth Teaching Fellow in the Pennsylvania
State College and University System for 1976-77.
a textbook written by Roy Paul Nelson, dean
of the College of Journalism, University
of Oregon, and
John Hulteng, professor of journalism, Stanford
University. The book was published
in
January by
Harper and Row.
A 50-page monograph about place-name development
and marketing is scheduled to be published in June by
the American Name Society. Dr. Brasch's book,
of three judges for
selecting candidates for graduate studies under the
Fulbright-Hayes and other foreign sponsored programs
covering the Near East and South East for the 1978-79
COLUMBIA COUNTY PLACENAMES
(June 1982) was
reviewed by the Journal of the American Name Society
as "perhaps the best" in the country and a "model for
similar studies."
Highest
percentage
of Greeks at
Bloomsburg State College has the highest percentage
"Greeks" in the state college system, according to a
report presented to the Board of Trustees recently by
Robert G. Norton, Dean of Student Life.
Although many of the private colleges and universities
of
in the state rank higher, BSC ranks first of the state
schools with 21.1 percent of its students affiliated with a
fraternal organization. Shippensburg State College
ranks second with
percent students involved.
In his report to the board, Norton noted the growth of
fraternities
members
and sororities
of all
membership
were
16.9
is
BSC. In 1977, the combined
fraternities and sororities was 842;
at
now estimated
at 1,050. In 1977 there
13 organizations; in 1983 there are 19.
Norton also reported that BSC's Greeks on an average
get higher grades than non-affiliated students. The
average sorority cumulative average is 3.14; the
average for full-time undergraduate women is 2.81. The
average fraternity cumulative average is 2.68; the fulltime undergraduate male's average is 2.64.
Historically, Norton said, Greeks have been involved
in service to the college, community and national
organizations. On campus, fraternal organizations
volunteer their time as Visitation Day guides, ushers at
cultural events, work at concerts, and work at the Red
Cross Bloodmobile visits on campus.
The Inter-Fraternity Council and Inter-Sorority
Council worked together last year to raise
approximately $600 for the Easter Seal Society and $750
for the American Heart Association.
An
individual fraternity with 25 members raised $550
for the National Muscular Dystrophy Association, and
each organization also raises money each year for their
specific national philanthropy.
Each year many alumni
of
Greek organizations return
BSC for reunions, spring formats,
members and Homecoming. In 1981,
to
registered at
Some
Homecoming, with
induction of
175
new
Greeks
195 in 1982.
organizations, Norton said, have very strong
alumni groups.
Two examples
are Delta Pi (the alumni
association manages and owns their home, the Craig
Mansion), and Sigma Iota Omega (the alumni
contribute to a scholarship fund).
The Eighth Annual BSC Band Alumni picnic will be
16, 1983, at the Bloomsburg Town
Park. For further information, contact Dr. Steve
Wallace, Department of Music, BSC, or Brenda
Hafner
held at noon on July
2114 Johnston Dr. #7. Bethlehem, Pa. 18017.
Marlene Boyd Vallin, department of communication
studies, was awarded her Doctor of Philosophy degree
at Penn State University on March 5. Her thesis was
entitled, 'A Study of Public Communication Based Upon
the Evaluation of Speeches Delivered by College
Students in a Basic Speech Course."
A number
BSC
Decker is trying to keep an up-to-date mailing list
concert choir alumni. If you haven't been
receiving information from him during the past year,
please send him your current address. Write: Concert
Choir Alumni List, Department of Music, BSC.
Bill
of all
appointments for the second
the 1982-1983 college year were approved by
of faculty
semester of
the board of trustees.
The new appointments included:
Dr. Abha Ghosh, assistant professor in the Center for
Academic Development in the capacity of tutorial
coordinator and research analyst;
Susan M. Hill, J.D., temporary instructor of finance
and business law;
The Department of Languages and Cultures is
sponsoring a three-week trip to Mexico from May 28 to
June
18.
Approximate cost
was
$12,000
raised for the area's hospice
American Cancer Society, United Fund, Heart Fund,
American Diabetes Society, Easter Seals, Mental
Health, Multiple Sclerosis and Red Cross.
John
S.
Baird
Jr.,
professor of psychology, had an
article published in the
Shu-Chen Li, temporary instructor of mathematics;
Joan B. Stone, temporary instructor of nursing;
Gideon J. Wray, temporary instructor of accounting;
Lewis V. Wray, temporary instructor of marketing/management.
Jean R. Atak, a resident of Lewisburg, was approved
on a part-time basis for the semester as temporary
journal,
The appointment
Linda M. Nicholas as an adjunct
department of philosophy and
anthropology was approved. She began her duties last
November and will continue through the end of the
semester.
member
of
in the
Approved by the board for the 1983-1984 academic
year was the appointment of Dr. Boris Raykhshetyn as
associate professor of mathematics and computer
science.
John D. Hohmann was approved as an assistant
He began his duties on December
and will continue to June 11.
wrestling coach.
11
program
administered by the Columbia-Montour Home Health
Services, Inc. Sponsored by the Kehr Union Program
Board, the marathon has raised money for the
Harriet Laine, assistant professor of biological and
faculty
For more
Sixty-one persons danced for 50 hours in the annual
dance marathon held at BSC in February. Nearly
allied health sciences;
assistant professor of psychology.
is $750.
information, contact Professor Allen Murphy.
February issue
of the
TEACHING OF PSYCHOLOGY. The
APA
publica-
and Reliability of Student
Faculty," and criticizes some recent studies
tion is titled: "Validity
Ratings of
in
student evaluation of teaching.
The Department of Communication Disorders has
been awarded a training grant of $35,261 by the
Department of Personnel Preparation of the Special
Education Programs of the U.S. Department of
Education. This grant money will be used to provide
clinical and teaching material, conferences and inservice workshops for speech pathologists, audiologists,
and educators of the hearing impaired.
The BSC Forensic Society held its first High School
Speech Tournament-Workshop on January 22. Over 125
high school competitors and coaches from more than 10
high schools were in attendance. The participating high
schools spanned an area from Scranton to Chambersburg.
Students competed
Joseph Quinn, a native of Girardville, has been named
purchasing agent at BSC, replacing Lloyd Anderson who
retired in September after 15 years of service.
Quinn, who had been an administrative officer with
the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, began his new
duties on January 10. He served nearly three years with
the Liquor Control Board before becoming a purchasing
agent.
From
March 1980, Quinn was assistant
manager of Pennsylvania Pacific, a
manufacturing firm in Warminster. He earlier
July 1978 to
plant and office
pallet
held managerial and supervisory positions with Cartex
Corp. in Morrisville, Magic Marker in Cherry Hill, N.J.,
and Cleve Pack Corp., Cranbury, N.J., while attending
Penn State University.
interpretation,
in extemporaneous speaking, prose
humorous interpretation, oratory, poetry
interpretation and dramatic interpretation.
The tournament was directed by graduate assistant
Marian Wilson, assisted by graduate assistant Fred
Deets and members of the Forensic Society. Harry A.
Strausser III is president of the society, and Professor
Harry C. Strine III serves as director of forensics.
The Forensic Team also won the first place
sweepstakes— for the third year— in the 1983 Winter
Collegiate Forensic Association's tournament in
Montreal in January.
Coordinator and director of the tabulation room was
graduate assistant Fred Deets. Accompanying the team
as judges were graduate assistants Marian Wilson and
Denise Byers.
34
OBITUARIES
1982
Dr. H. Keffer Hartline '20, who was born in Bloomsburg
of the 1967 Nobel Prize in physiology,
died of a heart attack on March 17 at Fallston General
and was a co-winner
Angela Marie Ciampi '82 recently graduated from Geisinger School of Medical Technology,
Hospital in Maryland. He was 79.
A resident of Hydes, Md., he was professor of biophysics
at Rockefeller University from 1953 until he retired in
Francis John Tomashefski '82 recently graduated from
Geisinger School of Medical Technology.
Cynthia Ann Bell '82 recently graduated from Geisinger
School of Medical Technology.
1974.
Eldoras (Leiby) Deterick '82 recently graduated from
Geisinger School of Medical Technology.
Jeffrey
Wasilewski
'82
eye."
Hartline did research
Cheryl Lynne Cleaver '82 has been named Columbia
County's American Cancer Society Nurse of Hope. She is
Medical Center.
American Cancer Society unit direcCheryl was chosen for the honor because
to local
tor Betty Scott,
'
her 'concern for her fellow man
"Her hope is to enlighten and educate those who fear
cancer," Scott said of the Nurse of Hope, "as well as give
aid and comfort through service to those already afflicted
with cancer."
Cheryl will attend the state Nurse of Hope program or
1
of
'
H. Keffer Hartline '20
April 5-7 as a representative for Columbia County.
Ann (Soback) Koast, 1316 W. Front St., Berwick, Pa.
March 9. Death was attributed to a heart attack.
died on
The College Archives
is
seeking copies of the following
publications.
Yearbooks prior
to 1916; Obiters for 1917, 1920. 1921
1923, 1924, 1925, 1927
and
1928.
College catalogs, circulars, bulletins for years prior
to
1869-1870. 1870-1871, 1871-1873. 1876-1877, 1877-1878
1879-1880, 1880-1881, 1882-1883. 1892-1893. 1895-1896
1952-1953,
and
1954-1955.
Pilots, or student
1903-1904. 1904-1905,
handbooks, for vears prior to 1900
anything between 1906 and 1928
1977-1978.
Alumni Quarterlies: Volume 76
80 i4), V. 81 il. 4) and V. 82 (1).
1
4), V. 77 il, 3
V
4)
Surviving are her husband, John, to whom she was
37 years; a sister, Helen Soback, and a brother,
Andrew Soback, both of Berwick.
New planning board formed
Dr. C. Stuart Edwards,
'41,
has been
named to
new planning
commission.
Dr. Edwards, past president of the Alumni
Association, will join 21 other voting members on the
College-Wide Committee for Planning. Also serving on
the commission will be four college managers,
11
one AFSCME staff, two RepresenAssembly members one faculty and one
student), two CGA students, and one community
(
representative.
The purpose of the commission is to develop strategic
plans for the college's future and to prepare recommendations for consideration by the Representative Assembly
will
and
for the President's approval. The commission
deal with program, enrollment, personnel, facilities
and fiscal requirement plans.
The Planning Commission will be responsible for
developing strategic and long-range plans that take
Student Life and the student body.
The commission will be a standing committee of
the
Representative Assembly, and will keep the
Assembly
informed of planning activities.
The
specific functions of the Planning
will include:
Commission
Making recommendations on all planning policies.
2. Reviewing and recommending
the college's
mission, philosophy, goals and objectives.
3. Recommending long-range
allocation distributions
among the major budget categories.
4. Requesting, reviewing and
making
recommendations related to plans submitted
by the
major budget category officers: President,
1.
APSCUF faculty,
tative
Vice
President for Academic Affairs, Vice
President for
Administration, Vice President for Student
Life and the
Executive Director for Institutional
Advancement.
5.
into
consideration the changing needs of the citizens of
Pennsylvania. The commission will also be responsible
for continuing to develop
an attractive campus, to
improve the educational and other facilities, to develop
faculty and staff, expand research, and the college
accreditation processes.
The new planning commission will work closely with
the offices of the President, Academic Affairs,
Institutional Advancement, General Administration,
the electro-physiology of the
which he
developed through the study of the optic nerve of the
horseshoe crab and other marine animals.
Dr. Floyd Ratliff, Dr, Hartline's co-leader in the University's Vision Research Laboratory, said "Hartline's basic
studies on the integrative action of the retina provided the
foundation for practically every advance in the neurophysiology of vision."
Dr. Hartline joined Rockefeller University, then called
the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, as a professor of biophysics in 1953. He had been professor and
chairman of the Jenkins Department of Biophysics of
Johns Hopkins University since 1949.
In 1972, he was named to the Detlev W. Bronk Professorship, established in the honor of the scientist who was
Rockefeller University President from 1953 to 1968.
Haldan Keffer Hartline was born in Bloomsburg, Dec.
22, 1903. He received a bachelor of science degree from
Lafayette College in 1923 and his medical degree at Johns
Hopkins in 1927.
He had been a member of the space science board that
preceded the National Aeronautics and Space Agency. He
is credited with influencing formation of NASA and
establishing
its lines
of biological research.
School.
She was head nurse at the AC&F for 17 years, chief
physical therapist at Berwick Hospital for seven years;
and nurse at BSC for 12 years. She was an active
member of the Red Cross in Civil Defense, and was a
member of Pennsylvania Nursing Association. She was
a member of St. Annunication Orthodox Ukrainian
Catholic Church, Berwick.
married
represent the Alumni Association on BSC's
in
Surviving are his wife. Elizabeth, sons Daniel, Peter
She was in ill health for two years.
Born in Newark, N.J., she was the daughter of the late and Frederick, and three grandchildren.
Hartline Science Center, a science building at BSC, is
AJex and Anna Hercha Soback. A resident of Berwick
named for Hartline and his parents, Dr. Daniel S. Hartline
area for 40 years, she was a graduate of Mifflinville
and Harriet Franklin Keffer Hartline. His parents were
High School in 1938, and the Bloomsburg Hospital nursboth teachers at the college, then the Bloomsburg
ing program in 1941. She took post graduate courses at
University of Pennsylvania and East Stroudsburg State
Literary Institute and the Bloomsburg State Normal
College.
1896-1897, 1897-1898, 1898-1899, 1899-1900, 1900-1901
1901-1902, 1902-1903, 1903-1904, 1904-1905, 1933, 1946-1947
for physiology with
retina, or the electrical characteristics of vision,
Thomas R. Levan '82 and Tina M. Klinger are engaged.
Tina is a student at the Danville Area School of Practical
Nursing in Washingtonville, Pa. She is employed parttime at McDonalds in Bloomsburg. Tom is employed at
Weis Markets in Catawissa.
a nurse at the Geisinger
Award
They were honored "for their discoveries concerning
the primary chemical and physiological processes in the
and
William Ruggiero Jr. "82 is employed by Silver's Enterprises, Inc. in Easton, Pa. He is also proprietor of "Dun
All the Lights," a mobile disc jockey service. His address
is 1434 Roseto Ave.. Roseto, Pa. 18013.
According
the 1967 Nobel
Stockholm.
Catherine
(Barry)
Wasilewski '82 live at 413 South Lime St., Lancaster, Pa.
17602. Jeff is assistant manager of Davenports, Inc. of Lemoyne, Pa.
employed as
He shared
Drs. George Wald, Harvard University, and Ragnar
Granit, of the Royal Caroline Institute of Medicine,
Reviewing and approving college-wide
accreditation studies.
6.
Monitoring the implementation of the
enrollment
program, personnel, fiscal and facilities
plans and
making recommendations for adjustments.
The Planning Commission will meet as
required
generally once a month throughout the
academic year
and on occasion during summer sessions.
Sessions may
be convened by the Director of
Institutional Planning,
the Chairperson of the Commission
or the President of
the college.
In 1965, the
Alumni Association
a Distinguished Service Award.
ceived the Nobel Prize.
at the college
Two years
gave him
later he re-
Dr. David Mullen, 57, of 147 Chinquapin Way, Athens,
Ga., professor of education at BSC from 1959-1961,
died
April 1. Death was attributed to a heart attack.
After leaving BSC, he worked for the Pennsylvania
Department of Education, Harrisburg, for two years,
followed by two years at George Peabody College
for
Teachers in Nashville, Tenn., as a college dean.
For the past 15 years, he served as professor of
education at the University of Georgia.
Surviving are his wife, Rosemary; a son, David
Jr., and
twin daughters, Lauri and Debbie, all of Athens,
Ga.
W. Horace Williams
of 40 E. Fifth St.,
Bloomsburg,
home. He was 84 years old.
Born in Bradford, England, he was a son of the late
Wilford and Annie Peacock Williams. His family
moved
to Louisville, Ky, in 1910, and to Bloomsburg in
1912.
He graduated from Bloomsburg High School in 1917
and later attended Penn State University. He was
manager of the former Leader Store in Bloomsburg
from 1926 until it closed in 1940. He owned a men's
clothing store from 1940-16 and was then employed
as
sales representative by a New York City
advertising
firm. He was later employed by Bloomsburg
State Coldied on
March
1
at his
lege as a comptroller until retiring in 1968.
He was a member of St. Matthew Lutheran Church,
Washington Lodge 265 F&AM, Caldwell Consistory,
and
Irem Temple Shrine, Wilkes-Barre. He was a
former
member and past president of Bloomsburg Rotary Club,
an Army veteran of World War I, a member
of the
American Legion Post 273, and a life member of
Elks
Lodge 436. He was a member of Phi Kappa
Psi fraternity of
Penn
State.
He was preceded
in death by his first wife, the
A. Pauline Kneis, on Dec,
21, 1957.
former
Surviving are his wife, Elizabeth Brown
Miller
Williams, a son, John W. Williams,
Haddonfield, N.J.;
and one grandson.
ALUMNI WEEKEND
June 10-12, 1983
RESERVATION FORM
MEALS
Friday,
Number
June
Cost
1983
10,
Total
Annual Alumni Banquet
Scranton
Commons
Saturday, June
ot
$9.00
$
at
$2.50
$
at
$3.50
$
at
$9.30
$
at
$9.30
$
1983
11,
Breakfast
Special Buffet in Scranton
Picnic Lunch
Commons
Carver Lawn
DORM RESERVATIONS
.
Each reservation
is $9.30 per person
per night,
including linen service.
Friday night, June 10, 1983
Saturday night, June 1 1 1983
,
NAME
CLASS YEAR
ADDRESS
1
'
This service will help the coUege in two
ways: the
Public Information Office will be able to
determine
.
PHONE NUMBER
A group of BSC alumni scattered around the state
are
Alma Mater as "correspondents. The
Alumni Office has asked them to clip any
articles about
BSC or its graduates which appear in their local
newspapers.
serving their
how
news releases are being used by the newspapers
to
reach BSC alumni and the general public,
and it will
help the Alumni Office to collect news
items like mar-
1
its
TOTAL
AMOUNT ENCLOSED
PLEASE
MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO
$
riages, deaths, promotions, retirements,
etc for
ALUMNI QUARTERLY.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION."
"BSC
THE
Our honor
SCHEDULE OF ACTIVITIES FOR ALUMNI WEEKEND,
JUNE
FRIDAY, JUNE 10
3 P.M. to 6 P.M.
4 P.M.
roll of correspondents includes:
Patricia Hollingsworth '54, Gettysburg;
George Dotzel '49, York;
10-12 1983
Timothy McTaggart 71, Columbia;
Cleo L. Hontz '27, Ephrata
Registration
in Carver Hall lobby.
Early-Bird Get-Together for Class of
1933
President's Lounge, Kehr Union
5:30 P.M.
Hour In lobbies of Scranton
Photo session for Class of 1933
Lobby of Scranton Commons
Social
6 P.M.
6:30 P.M.
Annual Banquet
Scranton
of the
Claraline Baylor
Commons
Howard Demott
Alumni Association
Commons
10
A.M.
to
Breakfast
P.M.
East Stroudsburg
Honesdale;
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Brewington '35, Berwick;
n
9
(Ztu
on
n
'
C
°"
f
hl> ye0r
*
PU
Tc
n S
be
9
r::tto n fo?:
thtre
t
'J L'
Umni ° re
Jh e PMCe
'
i$
Atilla Lewis '29, Clarks Summit;
Richard Menapace '34, Jenkintown;
Sadie Zapp Mayernick
Lewis Kohn
'
^*
*
^V*' "
1
1
"9
" ,Mp#rV,Md
°'
1
- show sons and
!•» *****
'27,
Yeadon;
Levittown
'19,
Helen Roberts
'
,Qk *
'48,
Grace Miller
invl,ed f ° StQ ov ernight on Friday and
y
Saturday in El well
$9 3 ° Per perS ° n DOr ni 9 ht which
»"e cost of linen
'
,
'49,
George A. McCutcheon '39, Dallas;
W. Leonard Carson '54, Forksville;
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip R. Yeany '43, Ambler;
Lucy Rood Stitt '29, Indiana;
Margaret Hendrickson Krouse '32, Clearfield;
(Details will be mailed to classes)
>«i£n? M
'28,
j
(Swimming, tennis, racquetball, etc.)
Reunion dinners for Classes of 1942-1945, 1948
Evening
Pottsville;
Eloise N. Fasshauer
Featuring alumni, students and faculty
Recreation
2 P.M. to 5 P.M.
'42,
Sterling Strauser
Bus tour of campus for Class of 1933
Walking tours of the campus
Annual business meeting of the Association
Carver Hall Auditorium
Picnic Lunch on Carver Hall lawn
(Scranton Commons if it rains)
Talent Showcase in Carver Hall Auditorium
Noon
2
M. Claire Balles
Refreshments will be available.
in Scranton Commons
A.M.
10 A.M.
11 A.M.
11 A.M.
Selinsgrove;
John P. Chowanes '39. Shenandoah;
Lucille M. Guida '45, Roseto;
June E. Norris '43, Bethlehem;
Joyce E. Hay '44, Easton;
Hazel F. Carter '44, Allentown;
Registration in Carver Hall Lobby
9
'35,
Sara Dersham Laubach '39, Mifflinburg;
Mrs. Edward Dobb '41, Milton;
Pauline Ditty '48, Shamokin R.D.
2;
Honoring the Closs of 1933 and Recipients of the
Distinguished Service Awards for 1983
SATURDAY, JUNE 11
9 A.M. to Noon
'41, Lititz;
Lauretta Baker '35, Lock Haven;
Beatrice Bieber '65, Muncy;
Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Hartman '42, Sunbury
R.D.
Royersford;
Reading.
'47,
Volunteers are still needed to clip articles in the
following newspapers
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Pittsburgh Press
News, Huntingdon
Centre Daily Times, State CoUege
Evening Sentinel, Carlisle
Lebanon Daily News
The Patriot, Harrisburg
Patriot-News, Harrisburg
Sun-Gazette, Willi amsport
The Grit, Williamsport
Times-Tribune, Selinsgrove
Standard-Speaker, Hazleton
Carbondale News
Times-Herald, Norristown
Phoenix, Phoenixville
Forest City News
Scranton Times
Scranton Tribune
Sunday Independent, Wilkes-Barre
The Record, Wilkes-Barre
Times-Leader, Wilkes-Barre
Citizen's Voice, Wilkes-Barre
Free Press, Quakertown
Glenside
News
Willow Grove Guide
Daily News, Philadelphia
Review, Philadelphia
Roxborough Times, Philadelphia
Local News, West Chester
1;
THE ALUMNI
QUARTERLY
Volume 83, Number 3
Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania
July 1983
McCormick
interim
chancellor
Dr. James H. McCormick, president of Bloomsburg
University since 1973, has been named to serve as interim chancellor of the new State System of Higher
Education. He will head the
Bloomsburg University,
new system, which
includes
June 30, 1984.
During the next year a search committee will look for
a permanent chancellor. Dr. McCormick has not
until
decided if he will be a candidate.
"Right now, my intention is to stay one year and then
return to Bloomsburg, " he said. He has been granted a
one-year administrative leave by the University
trustees.
Dr. McCormick said he is looking forward to the new
assignment.
"I am pleased to have the opportunity to serve in the
new system," he said. "It's a real challenge and an exciting time."
That challenge includes overseeing a budget of $400
million, 10,000
employees and
75,000 students, as well as
formulating policy for the new system.
J. Edwards Smith, chairman of the Board of Governor's search committee, said Dr. McCormick was unquestionably the best person for the job.
"Dr. McCormick is highly respected by the members
of our Commonwealth's higher education community for
his vision, his sensitivity
and his administrative abiliSmith said.
Robert Buehner, speaking for the University trustees,
said McCormick 's work over the past decade will make
ty,"
the transition a relatively easy one.
"We are in a strong position," Buehner said. "McCormick goes to Harrisburg with the support and best
wishes of the board. He has done an outstanding job serving Bloomsburg, and we are certain he will do an
outstanding job to get the
new
state
system estab-
lished."
The McCormick family will continue to live at
Buckalew Place, the president's home, during the next
year. His elder son, David,
Academy
entered the U.S. Military
at West Point on July 1. Douglas, 13, is a stu17,
dent in the Bloomsburg Area School District.
Dr. McCormick, a native of Indiana, Pa., served at
Shippensburg University as a professor and vice president for administration between 1965 and 1973.
N
£Z!^^u
G
~^
u
H.McCorm.ck
Human
building
located
^ m ^ Jm
^gn
tap
Serv.ces Center, a new classroom
between Bakeless Center for the
named acting president
for new Bloomsburg University
Dr. Larry W. Jones has been
named
acting president
Bloomsburg University until June 30, 1984. He has
served as provost and vice president for academic afof
fairs since 1981.
An
dean of the faculty from 1978-1981 and acting dean of the
School of Business and Economics from 1979-1981. He
held various administrative positions at Moorhead State
University between 1973 and 1978. In 1977-1978 he served
as assistant to the president and American Council on
Education Fellow in Academic Administration at
Oregon State University, while on sabattical from
Moorhead.
He earned his bachelor's degree
Oregon
in 1971.
junior high mathematics in Los Angeles
(1962-1963 and 1964-1965), senior high mathematics in
Eugene, Oregon (1966-1967) and junior high
mathematics in Eugene (1967-1968). From 1969 to 1971
he was a graduate teaching fellow in the Department of
Curriculum and Instruction of the College of Education
at the University of Oregon.
He subsequently was an assistant professor at
Moorhead State University (1971-1973), associate proMoorhead (1974-1976), visiting professor at
Oregon State University (1977-1978), and professor at
Eastern Montana College (1978-1981).
He is a member of a number of professional associations and has published numerous articles. He has been
active in the civic life of the communities in which he
has lived. His hobbies and interests include theatre,
reading, sailing and jogging.
fessor at
away'
gift
DR. LARRY W. JONES
message
Alumni
to
This important year of transition from Bloomsburg
State College to Bloomsburg University will offer many
challenges and new opportunities for your Alma Mater.
I am pleased to serve the University
during this important period in its history.
As acting president
It is my desire to work closely with all constituent
groups of the University
students, alumni, faculty,
support staff, trustees, and others
to continue the
significant progress of the institution accomplished by
the leadership of its fine presidents throughout the
—
—
at
He taught
his 'going
A
acting provost and vice president for academic af-
was expected to be selected by July 18.
Dr. Jones came to Bloomsburg from Eastern Montana
College, where he was academic vice president and
fairs
of
and
Com-
Jones
North Dakota
State University in 1962, a master's degree at North
Dakota in 1964, and a doctor's degree at the University
dr. james h. Mccormick
Humanities and Waller Administration Building
is June 1984
pletion date
years.
year
the
Academic and administrative decisons made
will
have long-reaching effects
Commonwealth
at large.
We
for our students
this
and
are continually striving
provide our region of this state with quality programs
and services which are made possible through your supto
port.
In this year of transition,
we hope each
of
you
will
—
support Bloomsburg University in some manner
perhaps by recommending a prospective freshman candidate, attending an alumni chapter meeting, sending us
new
idea, or attending an event.
Bloomsburg appreciates the faithful support of its
alumni and is eager to continue its relationship with
each of you. On behalf of Bloomsburg University, I look
forward to welcoming you back to your Alma Mater at
any time, but especially to Homecoming 1983 as we
begin a new era at Bloomsburg.
a
Blooms burg University
2
From
Alumni mailbox
the
Ann J. Jarrett '23 died on June 20. Born in Taylor. Pa.,
she was a daughter of the late John and Laura Evans Jarrett. She taught in Taylor Elementary School for 45 years.
She was a member of St. Luke's Episcopal Church in
Scranton and was a member of the Pennsylvania Retired
Teachers Association.
1905
Elizabeth (Mertz) Lesher '05 died on June 1 in the
Leader Nursing Home, Williamsport, where she had been
a resident for two and one half years.
Born in Point Township, Aug. 18, 1882, she was a
daughter of the late William H. and Emeline Moyer
Mertz. Her husband, Harold V., died in 1973.
She was a 1901 graduate of Northumberland High School
and was the oldest living alumnus of the school. She
taught in several of the township one-room schools, as
well as Mountain dale and Glasgow, Pa.
Mrs. Lesher was a member of Trinity Lutheran Church,
Point Township, and the Ladies Friendly Bible Class. She
served as teacher of the adult Sunday school class for
many years. She was also a member of the Point
Township Garden Club; charter member of the Northumberland Grange No. 218; and the BSC Alumni
Association.
Surviving are the following children, Charles M. of Northumberland, Miriam Hunter of Williamsport, Edith Rapchick of Olean, N.Y., and Theron S. of Charlestown, Ind. ;
15 grandchildren;
two great-grandchildren; and a
brother.
A
Boyd Mertz
of
Northumberland R.D. 2.
Delaware State represen-
son, Herbert A., a former
tative, died in 1972.
tennis player.
Dr. Margaret Bittner Parke '23, who donated $5,000 to
Alumni Association in 1980 to establish a perpetual
scholarship, died on May 30 while visiting relatives in
the
Louisiana. She resided in Brooklyn, N.Y., at the time of
her death.
The scholarship has been presented since 1981 to an
outstanding English major, which was Dr. Parke's
primary field of interest.
Born on January 6, 1901, in Mauch Chuck (Jim Thorpe),
Pa., Dr. Parke graduated from Bloomsburg in 1923, from
Pennsylvania State University in 1927 (B.A. degree), and
Teachers College of Columbia University with an M.A.
degree in 1930 and an Ed.D. degree in 1945.
1915
Shirley James Robbins '15 died on June 1 in Clemson.
South Carolina. He was born in Benton. Columbia County
Pennsylvania on January 14 1897
He was
a practicing attorney
in
Dobbs Ferry New
York, for forty years.
He was married to the late Bernice Beishline Robbins.
Surviving are his daughter, Dorothy Robbins Dedder of
Clemson, S.C.; one grandson and three great-grand-
Three brothers and four sisters also preceded her in
death.
Surviving is a sister, Harriet, with whom she lived.
While attending Bloomsburg University she was an avid
children.
While attending Bloomsburg he played the violin
and
of the orchestra. He was very studious and
took up the study of Spanish.
1910
was a member
Frank R. Adams
'10.
formerly of
St.
Johnsbury,
Vt.,
May 2 at Cottace Hospital. Woodsville, Vt. Funeral
services were held at Grace United Methodist Church,
St.
died on
Johnsbury.
1919
He was born in Rupert,
Pa. on September 20, 1891, son of
the late Samuel P. and Harriet M. Strausser
Adams.
He was a graduate of Dickinson College. Carlisle, and
attended the University of Vermont at Burlington.
Harriet K. (Golden)
Dunn
"19
died on
March
31, 1983.
He taught high school in Columbia County and
in
Culver. Indiana, before going to Vermont
where he was
superintendent of schools in the South Londonderry
Area,
Born in Hawley, Pa., she was the daughter of the late
Michael and Mary Ellen Hughes Golden.
Mrs. Dunn was a member of Queen of Peace Roman
Catholic Church in Hawley and its Altar and Rosary Society. She was a graduate of Hawley High School,
Class of
1915. She was an elementary school teacher for many
years, teaching third grade in Hawley and Scranton
Barton and
schools.
He was
a veteran of World
during WWII in 1944
His son, Graydon, was killed
I.
m Belgium.
Johnsbury. The Frank R. Adams ElemenJohnsbury, Vt. was named in his honor.
St.
tary School in
War
St.
Mr. Adams was
a
member
of
the
Grace United
Methodist Church. He was a past member
of the St
Johnsbury Rotary Club and a member of
the American
Legion Post 58 and Passumpsic Lodge No.
27, F&AM
He is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Arthur
(June)
Sydow, Mentor. Ohio; Mrs. Richard
(Frances) Stone
Hanover. N.H.; six grandchildren; a
niece.
Harriet
Adams, Bloomsburg. Pa. and a number of cousins.
;
Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Mary Margaret
Hollenbach, Rinebeck, N.Y.; one son, John M. Dunn,
Pittsburgh; six grandchildren; several nieces
and
nephews.
Mary
A. Hess "19 died recently. She had been hospital-
ized for several weeks.
Miss Hess had been a resident of Trevorton Road all her
She was a retired schoolteacher, having taught in
Pennsylvania schools for 42 years. Most of her teaching
life.
1913
Ina
Surplus ) Moorehead 13 died on June 2 She and
her
husband. Curtis G. Moorehead, who died in 1968, owned
a
grocery business in Scranton for more
than 40 years.
Before that, she was a teacher and
(
'
.
principal
at
Gouldsboro ( Pa High School.
Mrs. Moorehead was born in Gouldsboro,
a daughter of
the late Robert and Josephine Cross
Surplus. She was a
member of Simpson Methodist Church, and Annette
Chapter 10. Order of Eastern Star, both of
Scranton,
where she was a past worthy matron.
Surviving are a brother, Carl Surplus of
Bangor, Pa.
.
)
and several nieces and nephews.
MARGARET BITTNER PARKE '23
Born in Trevorton, Aug. 4, 1899, she was a daughter of
the late Harvey L. and Flora Clemens Hess.
career was in the Trevorton School District.
She was a 1917 graduate of Trevorton High School. She
was a member of Christian and Missionary Alliance
Church, Elysburg.
Miss Hess is survived by one sister, Mrs. Stella Berger
of Trevorton Road, Shamokin R.D. 1, and one
brother,
Dr
Chester C. Hess of Indiana, Pa.
While a student at BSC, she was very active
curricular affairs and
was
in extraparticularly interested in good
penmanship.
Of her time at Bloomsburg, she wrote: "I had been at
Bloomsburg for only one year and two summers, but that
was the precious time that determined the course my life
would take. It never ceases to impress on me what
the
right kind
of education can mean. The influence
of
Bloomsburg runs throughout my life."
Dr. Parke was active for over 50 years
as an educator
and author. Prior to retirement she was
a professor of
education at Brooklyn College of the
City University of
New York.
She was presented with many awards,
including the
Distinguished Service Award of the
Bloomsburg Universi-
Alumni Association in
"Who's Who of American
ty
1973.
She was recognized
Women" and
in
several other
publications.
1923
On December 24, 1937, she married Roger
I. Parke a
commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve until his death'in
1968.
1914
Leah B. (Bogart) Lawton "14 and her husband,
George
celebrated their 67th wedding anniversary
11
on May
of the First Presbyterian Church
of
Berwick and its Sanctuary Choir. They have
two living
daughters and five grandchildren. Their
address is
Both are members
Berwick, Pa. 18603.
Mildred M. (Hess) Harrington '23 died on May 8. She
in Benton on November 9, 1898, the daughter of
the late Cyrus and Elizabeth Cole Hess.
She taught school for five years in the Benton area and
five years in Irving, N.J. She was a member of the
Brandon United Methodist Church, a member of the Grass-
was born
RD
'
1'
mere Garden Club and
the
Columbia County Home-
makers.
Surviving are a daughter, two sons, nine grandchildren,
two great-grandchildren and two brothers.
In "International Who's Who
of Intellectuals" are summarized her aims and ambitions: "To
live a useful life, to
teach and guide, to search for better
answers to educational problems, to write books,
to develop school and colege curricula, and thus contribute
to the improvement of
teaching and supervision of teaching "
Memorial contributions may be sent to the
Bloomsburg
University Alumni Association to
be added to the scholarship fund which she established.
(Continued on Page 4)
Alumni Quarterly
Distinguished Service Awards
^
3Sl£££fe«*«* ~*«
the
^7
Before joining ,k.
»
the Bloomsburg
faculty
Sy
ye"s
a
in I960
Dr
He has received several awards in
recognition of his
contributions to the field of medicine.
He is a member of
Phi Kappa Phi, Alpha Omega
i,liamsport
BuckneU he also ^"ght as an
assistanTn
assistant
nf
professor
of economics
Since joining the faculty
as an instructor in 1960
he
has been promoted to
assistant professor (1%2,
The
1948 to recognize alumni
at
'
Awards
who have excelled
I
in
a nL*
S
the University
as secr etary, treasurer,
vice president and board member
of the former BSC
Facuitv
a
h
3
f
a?dp!
and
Pi Omega
Ome P Pi (national honorary °
fraternities) and a
number of state and national
business assSatSs He
was the speaker for this
year's Awards Convocation
at
w£5
,w aT*
\f ^
He and
his wife, the
many
articles to textbooks
He
and journals
The James H. Sterner Professorship"
in the Department of Medicine at the University
of Rochester
Medical Center was established by the
board of trustees
on November 14, 1979. The chair
honors
^ Slion
r
Alpha, and Cosmos.
has contributed
to
) an (1975 >to
his teaching assignments,
he has served as assistant
to
,dent (1965- 197 ° and
P
197M972 '" an
o
sum r sessions and continuing
summer
education .1972-1973
Ts\e^T
D lstingulshed Servjce
«t 3354-0
at
He
his service to
and
Eastman Kodak Company
*** former Patric,a L Hudson
uve
Monte Hermoso, Laguna Hills. California
92653
to the
-
the father of three children
by a prior marriage
(A complete listing of Dr. Sterner
's accomplishments
«
is
can be found on page 3171 of Who's
Who in America
Presenting the Distinguished Service
Award to Dr
Sterner was a contemporary. Edward
)
F. Schuyler. Class
former Mary M. Sauers
are th P
Mark Kilian. a graduate of
parents of two children:
and Moira Ann (Dee,, a student
B oomsburg. They reside at 7
York Road
at
in
Bloomsburg.
Presenting the award to
Dr. Creasy was Dr
Jr., Class of 1951, dean
of the College-of
Rang
Dr.
Emorv
SSu.
James H. Sterner
A native of Bloomsburg. Dr. Sterner
graduated from
Bloomsburg State Normal School
in 1925 and then
earned his bachelor's degree at
The Pennsylvania State
University in 1928.
He received
his
medical degree
at
Harvard Medical School in 1932. He
was house officer at
New England Deaconess Hispital in
Boston (1931-1932)
interned at Lankenau Hospital,
Philadelphia (1932-1934,
and was chief resident (1934-1936,.
next
32 years he was filiated
with Eastman
x^r*
Kodak Company, Rochester, N.Y.,
various
in
DR.
JAMES B. CREASY
57
A native of Bloomsburg. Dr. Creasy received his
bachelor's degree in business education
at Bloomsburg
He earned his Master of Science degree in
business administration at Bucknell
University in 1960
In 1974 he received a Doctor of
in 1957.
Education degree from
The Pennsylvania State University. His
dissertation was
entitled,
"A
Descriptive Analysis of the Full-Time
Teaching Faculty in Pennsylvania's Colleges
and
Universities." The study included
personal,
demographic, and professional characteristics
of 21,228
members in 118 colleges and universities. The
study was arranged around six crucial
issues facing
faculty
higher education: tenure, faculty
rank, work, age, inbreeding and
mix by academic
discrimination.
roles'
director of industrial medicine
(193M9, associate
d re Ct0r ,194 9- 1951 ».
medical director
n9^?cL i H W3S ah0
,
associated with the University
if
o
of Rochester School
of Medicine as an instructor
of industrial medicine and toxicology
(1940-1951,. associate
professor of medicine (1951-1958,,
and clinical associate
professor of medicine (1958-1968,.
He also taught
^d
?
VT
preventive medicine and community
health (1951-1968,
In 1968 he moved to Houston
to become a professor of
environmental/occupational health at the
University of
Texas School of Public Health.
Since 1976 he has been
clinical professor of occupational
medicine at the
University of California College
of Medicine at Irvine
He has served on numerous national
and international
advisory bodies concerned with
ui
of
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Published four times a year for alumni
and
friends of Bloomsburg University
by the
Alumni Association
medicolegal board for Operations
Crossroads (Bikini experiment, in 1946.
11
in 1956. his
elementary education with
major
Umversity of
™X ^
m
elemendegree
in
E
M^d
enaohSmsS
Z
K
hQman
devel °Pment education
and
UniVGrSlty 0f
im.
He
professional career as a hearing
and
speech therapist with the
Allegheny County SchooTin
Pittsburgh 1956-1%! and
,.
UiSi moved
«^?i
a
1,00
t^h
JL ^?
1
,
to the
Mm
gomery County Public Schools,
where he has been a
speech and
At your service:
Doug Hippenstiel
THOMAS J. 0 TOOLE '56
DR.
Dr. O'Toole earned his
bachelor's degree
tary education at Bloomsburg
industrial medicine toxicology, radiation protection,
cancer control, occupational and environmental
health. He was a member
toe interim medical advisory
board for the Manhattan
tt-oject of the Atomic Energy
Commission (1945-1947)
and a member of the radiological
safety section and
hearing therapist (1961-1963).
supervisor of
speech and hearing programs
(1963-1967
and
'68
1968-1969)
(1969-1973). director ofsuiUCati ° n 31,(1 SCrV1CeS
1973-1977). director
<
ofmulti-facihty programs (1977-1978).
of
and director of
special education and
related services
1981-presenU
Dr. O'Toole is a fellow
of both the Maryland
Director of Alumni Affairs
ZlS ^
Peggy Trathen
i
Alumni Office Secretary-Bookkeeper
Z
1
'
I
Linda
Long
Alumni Records Clerk
American Speech and Hearing
Association. He received
C3te ° f C
C31 com P*ence in
speech pamXgy
.
fro^'
from the national
unit and honors from
toe Maryland
J.
Jane Dildine
Assistant Alumni Office Secretary
Eric
Writer (Green
Kim McNally
T
w
r
^ ?
York and
-
cil
Katherine Mulka '68
Alumni Chapters Coordinator
3 COnsultanl
^^^on
3tl0nal
.
0
DisorteS^
S Of
*** of New
^
With Co
"
^ca^n
The educator has written
numerous
Students
U
10
in
ad-
State Directors of
He has also been active in the Counfor Exceptional Children
and is now president-elect
ia
Special
Education
Writer-Composition Editor
JohnHaney
Dwayne Heisler
Linda Kammerdiener
^e
1982
^ ***
Thumb Program)
77
Debbie Blyler
Kerry Boll
^
HC h3S
extrerae,
in
aTha serving on various committees y a
ASHA,
and panels
leadership roles. He has
served on state and national
the
*e
Strom
articles for
publication and has presented
many scholarly papers at
conferences throughout the
country
31,(1
Wife Mary are
Wenis of three
Lou Maslowe
Scott Righter
Stephanie Stewart
Jeff Smith
ma
xx^r
£?
ide at 217
^
Romng Ro3d
G
-
Presenting the award to Dr.
O'Toole was
DR. JAMES H. STERNER
'25
3
y Maiers a member of the 50-year class
former colleague of Dr. O'Toole.
(
~-
Mary
1933,
g
.
Better-
and a
4
Bloomsburg University
Continued from Page 2
(
>
'35 was honored on July
judging the Millville Independence Day
Parade for the past 30 consecutive years. Woody was
presented an engraved plaque just before the start of the
83rd Annual Parade. Woody is married to the former Jane
Fahringer '31. Their address is 2000 N. Vine St., Berwick,
Wood row (Woody) Brewing ton
1929
1924
Virginia (Dawe) Welker *29 and her husband, Asher,
recently celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary.
Mrs.
Asher retired from teaching in 1973. Mr. Welker has been
Anna (Cawthern) Bressler "24 died on AprU
29 in
Ashland State General Hospital where she had
been a patient for four weeks.
Bom in Shamokin, Sept. 27, 1903, she was a daughter of
the late George and Fannie ( Parker Cawthern.
She was a resident of Kulpmont most of her
three children and six grandchildren. They
Ridge Ave.,Sunbury, Pa. 17801.
life. Mrs
Bressler was a retired school teacher and
taught in Kulpmont and York school districts. She was married
to the
late Howard Bressler.
Mrs. Bressler was a member of First Methodist
Church
Kulpmont, and the Retired Teacher's Association
live at 229
1937
Lou Peck
ment.
Year" and was
awarded a bronze plaque mounted on teakwood. At last
count he had over 1600 hours for his two and a quarter
years of service. His wife, Claire, has worked with the
multiple handicapped for more than 16 years. She works
at the North Country Learning Center for Down's Syndrome children. The Pecks live at 2 Parish Court, Stony
degree
Brook, N.Y. 11790,
qualified in 1982 as "Volunteer of the
'31
died on
May 30.
in Forrestport,
M^S-^SSmm ^^^St^S^^
Bloomsburg
in education from Bucknell
University in 1954, and
doctorate in 1956 from Pennsylvania
State University
He
ht
and was principal of the Mount Pleasant
Township School from 1931 through 1933
and was princl P al of
Fifth Street School in Bloomsburg
from
1934-41. He had retired in 1971
iQ7i after
a «0 r a
„ career
. as an
educator in the Willingboro, Pennsbury
and Levittown
school districts, and had been
instrumental in the opening
of the Clara Barton School in
Bristol Township.
™
last
residence was in Middletown,
^^
™
^
tennis
Her
Md
1925
Mr. Pennington was a member of the
Pennsylvania
Retired Teachers Association,
the Retired Teachers
Aviation of Bucks County, the American Association
of
etlred Persons and tne National
Education Association
Gladys R. Stecker '25 died on April 30 at the
Wilmington
Medical Center. She was 77 years old.
Miss
Stecker was a
£e was a We member
of BPOE
native of Bloomsburg and, after graduating
No. 436, Bloomsburg the
from BSC, at- J?
tended Rutgers University and Glassboro
C Grant Bnttingham Lodge No. 788
State College
F&AM- Ancient AcShe taught at the Penns Grove-Cameys
cepted
Sottish Rite,
— Valley
'
of Bloomsburg
uiuu
Point elementary
J vt
Caldwell Consistory,
schools, retiring in 1964. She lived
mt°ry, and was a 32 degree Mason,
Mason.
at Penns Grove N J at
the time of her death.
Surviving are his wife, the former
Ruth O'Connor- four
sons: James, W. Harry and
Larry W., all of Dallas Tex
Maynard J. Jr.. Levittown; two
daughters: Sally Lou
t
,
O
Hazel E HoM '27 of Elysburg
R.D. 1 died on June 11
She resided her entire life in
the house in which she
was
born m RaJpho Township.
Northumberland County
,ate
WaJter
Hannahi
e
htf
tgradeattte
h
W
^
:
^
EJvsbur?n„S^
Me
-
^.etv^f^h ^h
T«2L T
rS
.
^
i
311(1
3
member
Tu^™ * * ™
Wfl<5
&
^
Irnnom f«
of
^
Helen (Dunleavy, McManus '27
died recently. Born in
Carmel Aug. 30, 1906, she was
a daughter of the late
Francis and Mary (Kelly)
Dunleavy
Mrs. McManus was a schoolteacher
until retiring in 1970
g
from Spotswood (N.J.) Elementary
School
She was educated in Mt.
Carmel schools While at"* W3S 3
<* ^e Senior
ML
lif^^^f
of
"
aform er member
of
Churchof Our
Lady, Mt. Carmel. Her husband,
Albert McManus, died
'
e
"
J*™:
was
-
Ameha (Mattem)
was
Margaret E. (Rhodes) Artley '39 reports that she completed 26 years in the classroom in 1981. She is
retired and
lives with her husband on their farm
in
Franklin
Township. The Artleys are the parents of three
daughters
Two, Dazimae (Artley) Carmo '66 and Kennee
(Artley)
Moyle 75 are Bloomsburg alumnae. The Artleys
3, Box 468, Catawissa, Pa. 17820.
live at
R.D.
Clark.
elementary teacher
in
the Line
1940
Miles G. Smith '40 died on April 15
was 65 years of age.
Mr. Smith was born March
in
21, 1918, in
Tyrone, Pa. He
Berwick, the son
of Millard
and Helen ( Mensinger (Smith
his master's degree in
education from
Bucknell University and taught 36'*
years at Clearfield
High School, where he was head of the math
department
Mr Smith was a member of Trinity United Methodist
Church, where he was a member of the
administrative
board and taught the men's Sunday
school class and the
young people's class.
He received
H e W3S
3 member of toe Clearfield Lodge
No. 314
member and past exalted ruler of BPOE Lodge
a member of the board of
directors of Demolav
r &AM,
» A ,,
r
a
No.
540,
v.ce president of the
Clearfield Republican Party a
member of the Clearfield Zoning Board,
secretary for the
board of directors of Clearfield
Hospital
n
f^ittStwSEZ
•_*«•, „
PfiliratoH at
.
"kt
"o««-iauuii.
,
attending Bloomsburg she
was interested in athleticsand
was a member of the Rural
Life Club
She was preceded
in
death by her husband
Nathan D
19 1976 Survivoi^
mdude two
^^ ^
I^'a^X^^
M
^^ento,
st^n
Wh<
'
'
;
,
fs
°°
3t h °me
°
™L^r
number J meces ^ d "ephews.
3
f
of
'
a sister
>
and an Army Air
Force veteran of World War 1 1
Mr Smith was basketbaU coach at
Clearfield High
School for 15 years and was the
first person to be honored
by the school as teacher of the
year
He was married to the former Lola
Brown, who survives
with two daughters. Judith
K. Smith, Atlanta, Ga.. and
Mrs. Dante (Jean) Filetti,
Charleston. S.C.; a granddaughter. Mara Smith Filetti;
and a sister Mrs Robert
(Jean) Pritchard. Worcester
Mass
Pa., along with
1941
1 935
in
Survivors include a son,
Joseph, Hillsborough Township. NJ.; a daughter,
Mrs. Eileen Baldwin N J
a
aster Mrs. Catherine McFadden,
Mt. Carmel- a brother
Frank Dunleavy, and two
grandchildren
S (C,a rk) Schwalm '31 died
recently. She had
,
anUary 80171 h ^gerstown.
Upper
i on July 30,
Township,
1912, she was the daughter
§
D^el and
JJp
M
'
-
S'lr
7
If£?^
National
oil
3nd Susan C Aver
*- Levittown; 15
great-grandchildren; two stepsons.
Connor, Middlesex,
tJ£?^
-
"
as She
^P
'
six
N.J.; a stepdaughter Laurel
N
u Connor, Levittown, and four stepgrandchildren.
°Township
yearS
W3S a merab€r <*
0diS Church and
^e Missionary
th
piSarTy
5,
^M
a
'a
grandchildren
1939
•
'
1927
reports that he keeps busy in his retireweek at the State
Hospital Pharmacy in Stony Brook. He
'37
volunteers about 20 hours a
he was an educator and a former
resident of Bloomsburg before
moving to Levittown 16
years ago.
Mr. Pennington graduated in 1931 from
Mrs. Bressler came from Kulpmont and
was a graduate
Mount Carmel High School. Known as
"Annie" while
bsc.
player.
He
University
Maynard J. Pennington
Born
)
in
Pa. 18603.
1931
Survivors include a sister, Miss Fannie
Cawthern
Baltimore, Md.; a brother, George
Cawthern, Baltimore'
Md., and several nieces and nephews.
Uwrlotte Irene (Zearfoss Johnson '24 died on
AprU 21.
bhe was born on June 9. 1905. She came from
Mountaintop
Pa. While attending BSC she became
an excellent
work
banking business for 50 years. The Welkers have
in the
)
of
4 for his
J*!!*"?.
^^
10 "
^J
*
The Honorable John E. Lavelle '«
was recently aDpomted to the board of trustees
^*
ot the
of tte Northeastern
He r«*"«y a on a
e Blooms burg recycling facility.
^,°
His address
J?
North
?°
^f
f
902
Authori
Ninth Street, Selinsgrove, Pa. 17870.
(^odTZritan
Moomsburg Umveraty's Dirtngulshed
Service Award
in
is
1942
-SSnS
a
r
re„rt
in
l,^
^
"
He was an Army veteran
of World War
II
^ ^te^^ ^ ^
U
lownsbip.
p
Hee was
M ^hodist Church,
a volunteer for the
(Continued on Page 6)
Alumni Quarterly
Vincent Price returning
'Alumni Memories'
Many
memories flood the mind
and soul
when walking through our
alma mater
where learning was our
goal.
The walkway
Vincent Price
lions, quiet at last
*
The fund was established at Bloomsburg
State
Teachers College in 1958 using
a $1,500 gift from Verna
S 3 U
US Twent y- five years later,
"
the colipaJ has
I
u
tege
become
Bloomsburg University, and the endow
ment fund has grown to approximately
$80 000
Mrs Jones made the original donation
on behalf of
and Dan> ah0 a raduate of
^e Class of
«
Voi It
u was whis wish
1936.
that a gift be made to the
college
and in making the donation to
start an endowed artists
and lecture fund, Mrs. Jones
Where have all our classrooms
gone'
Long Porch, I ggy s gravei
dorm9
Supplanted! Progress marches
on.
^
-
Long lawns of green seem
smaller
vanished the sunset view
of Carver Tower
because they've razed old
'
Waller.
If one could find
a hall intact,
would memories of stone
and' brick
be quite enough to call
us back?
Times spent with good,
25 years
returnine tn
returning
oc
Ri™mch..,.„ 25
to Bloomsburg.
years
Uege hist0ry as the first /"est
of the
f
PnH
Tit
Endowed
Artists and Lecture Fund.
pass.
'
after
is
r
placed on indoor pedestals,
they'
dare not roar as virgins
beckon us
Bloom
to
Edwin Markham
recalled the visit of poet
to the campus while she
and her husband were students.
The endowment, begun in
1958. had trebled then
quadrupled by the end of 1960. By
1965. it had grown to
more han $20,000; by the end of
1974, the balance was
almost $55,000^ Now, thanks to
continuing donationsvestments, and contributions
from the college Community Activities Fund, there
is almost $80,000 in
the fund to
be used to bring "famous
figures on the Educational
Artistic and Uterary Worlds"
to the Bloomsburg cam-
old friends
to
reminisce on teacher
classes, fun-time's precious
dividends.
Bloomsburg, by any name, we
share with pride
he d closely in a bond of
friendship strong
with colors of maroon and
gold securely tied
This year's schedule of events,
selected by members
Community Arts Council with Ted
Shanoski
director of Cultural Affairs, is
highlighted by the return
of actor Vincent Price for
a three-day residency with the
College-Community Orchestra Nov. 11-13.
The fall series of events begins with the
Paratore
Brothers piano duo. who will
perform in concert in Haas
Center on Sept. 22 at 8:15 p.m.
of the
80 percent
of 1982 grads
are employed
The second fall event will be the
Riverboat Ragtime
Revue at Haas on Oct. 8 at 8:15 p.m..
followed by the
Gerald O'Niel Lecture Series on the
Carver Hall stage
on Oct. 21 at 2 p.m.
The Pittsburgh Chamber Orchestra
will open the
spring semester at Haas Center
on Feb. 5 at 2 30 p
Following will be Will Stutts' one-man
theater in Carver
Hall on Feb. 22 at 8:15 p.m.
The Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble
and Pittsburgh
com P lete ^e spring schedule on March
RfTf
18 at 2:30 pjn.
Alumni can purchase a Community Patrons
Card
"season ticket" at a reduced rate of
$15 for the year
(Tickets to all these events would
cost $58 if purchased
m
Bloomsburg University graduates of the
class of 1982
did not find the job market as
tough as they had expected^Their placement rate of 80 percent
compares
favorably with marks recorded hy
four previous classes
rep ° rt f0r last year
»k
Too,
mat
891 are meaningfully
'
s
U27
^
graduates shows
or professionally employed
in a position that re-
Seven hundred sixty are employed
quires a.college degree, 102 are
in graduate school. 29
are in the service, and 207 are
seeking jobs or are
underemployed. No information was
available on 15
separately.)
VINCENT PRICE
graduates and 14 were not available
for employment
A year ago, the report gave a placement
rate of 82 8
percent of the graduates of 1981;
in 1980, the percentage
was
82.2; in 1979, 84.1,
and
"Considering the adverse economic conditions
and the
University Placement Council's not
so bright' employment outlook for college grads, we're very
pleased with
our graduate employment picture."
Tom Davies. director of career development,
commented. "We thought it
might fall below 80 percent in 1982, but
our students
worked extra hard to get positions."
A placement
rate of 100 percent was reported for
the
114 students in the communication
disorders, nursing '
dental hygiene, public school nursing,
and radiologic
technology programs. Over 90 percent
was reported for
medical technology (95.6) and special
education (91 5)
Business administration had the
highest number of
graduates placed (359), which was
total 432. Business
83.6 percent of the
Education placed 85.4, 32 out of 38
Teacher education areas, particularly
elementary
education, continue to be slow. Of the total
103 elementary education grads, 32 received
in-state teaching positions and nine out-of-state jobs,
while seven are continuing their education, and eight others
are meaningful
employed for a total percentage of 56.0. Early
Childhood
Education placed 25 of its 37 grads for 67.5
percent.
Although the secondary education area had
fewer
graduates,
it
Katherine Fisher earns
her doctorate at age 55
in 1978, 80.3.
fared considerably better at 73 percent
employment of its 26 total grads.
The Arts and Sciences curriculum was second
in
number of graduates at 269. One hundred eighty-eight
were employed for 72.1 percent. The comparatively
new
major of mass communications had the most grads in
Arts and Sciences with 47. of which 37 have been
employed (80 percent).
AllAnnnfr n ^4 «l.
The ffollowing
article was written by Pat
Parker of the
Press-Enterprise, Bloomsburg, and
appeared in the
i
4 issue of the
A
great
.
Mav
Berwick Enterprise.
many
students will graduate on the 15th
of
this month from Bloomsburg
State College - most of
teem in their early 20s. But this year is
a first, both for
BSC and for one particular graduate, who at
age 55
is
believed to be the oldest student to
receive a master's
degree in the school's history, according
to the records
of
Bernice Long of the graduate department.
The degree to be awarded is an MA in
Communication
Katherine Fisher of Mifflinville, whose
overall grade
is 3.83 and includes all
As throughout her
major - proof that age is no barrier
to ability and
to
point average
determination.
Kay is the daughter of Ethel Chapin of
Berwick, and
the late George Chapin. She got
her undergraduate
degree from BSC in 1950, and always
wanted to continue
her education, but after her
marriage, she moved to
Kankakee. 111., for several years, then
back to Pennsylvania near Valley Forge, where
she became involved
in all the activities surrounding
the rearing of three
children.
Eventually, she accepted an executive
position with
National Ministries, American Baptist
Churches there
serving as assistant-director of the
Mission Interpretation
Department.
Her work included a great deal of writing
and editing,
a field that she discovered was what she
really liked to
do, so with her children
well on the way to being grown
she apphed for and was
awarded a graduate assistantship at BSC, and returned
to this area to realize
at last
ner dream of continuing her
education
*
Kay's oldest son, Millard Fisher
Methodist minister
in
m, is now a
Lancaster. Her daughter
Shan
Kay who will be married May 21 to
Timothy Ambrogi
a Vulanova graduate, from
Berwyn. soon expects to
sign a contract as a band
vocalist; and son
Spencer a
Columbia High's "Godspell" earlier
graduate in June
With Dr. Walter M. Brash, author
of six books, as her
advisor, Kay really worked
for her degree, supporting
herself m part by tutoring a
writing lab for undergraduates and substitute teaching
in secondary schools
ui Berwick, Bloomsburg
and Central Columbia, but now
hopes to find permanent employment
in a field where
sue can continue using her
writing
guitarist for Central
this year, will
talents.
She has an article currently
appearing in the May
Sunday Digest, has a feature story in the
current Alumni Quarterly
and is completing
issue of
a multi-media
script for the Northumberland
County Juvenile Court
System. (In her spare time, she is
also teacher of the
adult Sunday School Class at
First United Methodist
Church in Berwick.
All of which proves, it's
never too late to go back to
school
to share with others what
you've learned
through living
or follow a dream that got
temporarily
sidetracked in the mainstream
of life.
-
-
6
Bloomsburg University
(Continued from Page
warehousing program
4
work release program of Lehigh County Prison and Good
Shepherd Home and Rehabilitation Center, Allentown, for
the last several years.
He and
his wife, the
former M. Virginia Arbogast,
observed their 36th wedding anniversary
last
June.
Surviving, in addition to his wife, are a son, William L.
in
the state of Pennsylvania.
a comprehensive high school in
He is currently finishing his se-
cond year at Truman High School.
Gobora has been president of the Bucks County
Business Education Educators Association and secretarytreasurer of the Bucks County Cooperative Education
Coordinators
Association.
He
is
presently
recording
Co bum, Centre County; a daughter, Cynthia F„ at secretary of St. Peter and Paul Orthodox
Catholic Church.
home; two brothers, Paul, Cressona, and Claude R., EmA native of Danville, he graduated from high sohool
maus; a sister, Arlene Christ, Montoursville, Lycoming there in 1946. He majored in
business education at
County; and a grandson.
Bloomsburg.
Warren was also a retired educator, being a graduate of
Gobora is president of the Philadelphia Chapter of
Kutztown University and Perm State University.
Bloomsburg University Alumni. His wife, the former Conof
nie Stanko, is also a native of Danville
and is a 1952
Bloomsburg graduate. She was recently elected to a
three-year term on the Alumni Association
Board of
1943
Directors.
A daughter, Kim, graduated from Bloomsburg in May
been elected to the Board of and was president of her class. The Goboras
are also the
Directors of the Life Underwriters Political Action
Com- parents of two sons, Harry in and Edward. The family
mittee of Pennsylvania. Magill holds a master's
degree lives at 19 Jonquil Lane in Levittown.
from Bucknell University. He has also completed the
Purdue University Life Insurance Marketing courses,
the
Purdue University Pension and Profit Sharing course
and
Life Insurance Agency Management Association
Schools.
His address is R.D. 1, Sugarloaf, Pa. 18249.
Andrew
F. Magill '43 has
1952
Former
1947
Harold W. Swisher
'47 is retiring at
after 36 years of teaching
the end of July 1983
and administrating at Warwick
High School. Harold's address
is
234
Owl Hill Road
Pa. 17543.
S.
was
in-
of the Detroit Pistons recently. He
built his
reputation as an assistant with the Philadelphia
76ers. Chuck says his goal is to make the
playoffs. His address is 1153 Sea Gull Lane, Cherry Hill,
N.J. 08003
NBA
JOAN & ROD KELCHNER
RODNEY KELCHNER
'56,
'56
has been appointed by Gov.
Thornburgh
James Babcock
was recently appointed an associate
Mahanoy City, Mahanoy Township
Regional Board. Jim is a principal in the
Nelson T. Davis
director
Remley,
'52,
named coach
Lititz '
1948
Reginald
basketball standout, Chuck Daly
ducted into Bloomsburg University's
Athletic Hall of
Fame on May 1. Chuck has enjoyed success coaching
basketball at Duke University, Boston College
and the
University of Pennsylvania. He was a
member of the
PRISM and TV Channel-17 broadcast team until being
Remley
live at
Route
2,
and his wife, Pattie Bowman
Box 2092, Gap, Pa. 17527. Remley
'48
'52
the
of
Agency. His address
a retired school district superintendent.
His last assignthe Pequea Valley School District.
The Remleys
have four children and five grandchildren.
Remley was
named Lion of the Year" and belongs to
BPOE 436 and
the Pennsylvania Retired
Superintendents Association
is
is
35 East Spruce St.,
Mahanoy
Pa. 17948.
Citv
J'
president since Dr. Janet Travis
left the post to become
assistant commissioner for higher education in
charge of
community college system,
A 20-year veteran of Mansfield, Kelchner has served
the state's
as
ment was
a history professor, coach, assistant dean of men,
and
dean of student affairs. For the past three years he
served
as dean of development and external relations.
1954
'
to serve as president of Mansfield
University
of Pennsylvania, effective July 1. He had
been acting
In the latter position he has been
involved in all phases
of the school's operations, including
At the 195th annual conference
of the Central Pennsylvania Conference of the
United Methodist Church
1950
W. Leonard Carson '54 was
issued
membership. Rev. Carson
~—
is
_
Harry J. Gobora, Jr. '50 has been named Teacher
Year by the senior class at Harry S. Truman High
of the
School
„
r ge
,
°\
io
^ ™ty
*
Rev
full
the
me
serving
aci
vuig
United Methodist Church.
He
degree from Lancaster
Dlv
^
conference
ZZ7e
r orks\
received
Theoloeical
Seminary in 1982. The conference
Township.
was held on the
BIoom
Gobora has been an educator for 33 years, with
sburg
University. Receiving
24 years °!
ordination as
deacon at the same conference
of serv.ce in Bristol Township.
was the Rev
clZ
in Bristol
Kimber
D
alumni relations
public relations, athletics, grants, contracts
and continuing education.
In that capacity, Kelchner feels he
won the support and
respect of all segments of the college community.
"As a faculty member, I maintained ties with
them
And the trustees are people I worked with
and feel very
comfortable with. I have a good rapport,"
he said
"Following Dr. Travis' new job announcement,
the
Alumni Association took the lead and wrote
a letter of
support for me. followed by an open
endorsement from the
Faculty Association, student organizations
and the board
of trustees.
1956
James Nicholas
'56 died on May 10.
He was 46 years old
principal of Lake-Lehman High
School. He colapsed at the monthly school board
meeting and was
transferred to Nesbitt Memorial
Hospital where
He was
pronounced dead.
Born in Plymouth, Nicholas was
the son
Leslie and Catherine Robbins
Nicholas. He
of
Lake-Lehman School District High School
he was
of the late
was principal
and taught at
Kingston High School before the
jointure and
Wyoming
Valley West after the jointure.
He was public relations
director for Wyoming Valley West
six years and directed
all the musicals for the
district. He also directed
musicals
for the Jewish Community
Center. Another six years was
spent as a radio announcer for
a local station
He received his master of arts at New
York University
and presently was studying for his
doctorate at Perm State
University.
HARRY GOBORA JR. '50
He is presently
a teacher-coordinator in the
Cooperative
Education Program. During his tenure
with the district
he has helped hundreds of young
people and adults secure
posUions in the "World of Work."
In his many contacts
with the business community,
he has acted as a leader in
forging the excellent school
district-business relationship
During his 24-year tenure in the Bristol
Township School
District he has taught 16
years at Wilson High School
served as supervisor of business
education for the district
0
re
31
four years at Demaas High
\ Delhaas
School. While at
High School he initiated the first
£l^
^
^J
^
He was listed in "Who's Who in the East"
and also was a
member of Wilkes College Chapter of Phi
Delta Kappa
He was a member of Kingston
Council, the Church of
Chrnt Uniting, Kingston, and a
member of its parish
council. He was on the board
of Child Development, president of Wyoming Valley
football conference and
president of the wrestling conference
Surviving are his wife, the former
Jessie
^
vice
Watkins; sons
r at
y omin g Valley West, and Brian'
m*?' at Child Development,
employed
both at home
Jim Nicholas was highly regarded
L
I
my behalf."
W
and the community, reflected
in the school district
euE
in very nice
written by Mary Ann Kelly,
associate editor o The Dallas
Post, and Lee L. Richards,
sports writer
had the four main constituencies acting
on
As president, Kelchner hopes to keep
the
communication open.
"You need to meet with and talk with
lines
of
students. That's
very important. Most
of them know who I am You
can't
function in a school like this if you
avoid your key groups "
After graduating from Bloomsburg
High School and
Bloomsburg University, he taught
at Millersburg Area
High School for eight years. He
received a master's
degree in history at Bucknell University
Kelchner lives in Covington, a few
miles south of
campus
with his wife, the former
Joan Laubach of
Bloomsburg. They are parents of four
children Amy 25Matthew, 24; Mindy, 22; and Ted, 20.
:
1957
Rod
C.
Folimer
'57
was recently promoted
tion of vice president of the
Citizens
Rod
to the posi-
Savings Association
when Northeast Sav-
joined the association in
1980,
ings and Loan merged with
Citizens.
He is a former member and
chairman of the Wayne Industrial Development
Authority, as well as former
treasurer of the Honesdale Area
Pool Association He is
b^LT^T™
an
£ aendovvment
Ac
Association,
member
^.
member
of the Pike
^
of the National Rifle
of the Honesdale Elks
Lodge 2228
and the Fraternal Order of
Eagles. He is marked to
the
former Connne Pentecost.
The Follmers have three
children, Kim, Mark, and
Bonnie.
His address is 5 Crestmont
Drive, Honesdale,
Pa. 18431.
(Continued on Page 8)
Alumni find
contributions
in attics
B S N S Quarter1
^
^\7Z
K
dated September,
3).
'
'V^e
1.
Number
1894, has been presented
toTe
University archives by Lois
Pfahler Jones, Class of
1922
along with a very nice
note
''Dear Friends, I've been
cleaning out boxes of
thines
which have accumulated here
at my Elyria
h0
f
yeafS 50016
a rT
g
ft
'
:
^-oVTohlvZ.
tem
T °?Ns
^
arte ^Voi.i,No.3.
•'My uncle, Dr. G. E. Pfahler,
graduated that year
^"cement and
atuX^f^!^^
0™*' which w
^d
also
J oir,ed
lists the
Dr. Sutliff and Professor
Albert were two of my
instructors
"My aunt. Mary Pfahler, and a cousin,
Elsie Pfahler
graduates. Elsie was in the
Class of 1919 or
?£>
roTmS
f publication.
J*
committee for
"I planned to send
it to you and now
read in The
Alumn. Quarterly that you are
looking for old volumes,
Hope it s as enjoyable to you as it
was to me
^° Wh ° te 3 graduate of ^ Un iverJJ!!^0^
aSS
196?1 and
now an en 8 ineer
S?r
t p ^"'
? °
tor
tj-T.E.
Products
°nly
n
'
f
fa
Mountain View, California
I have never been
able to attend any of
the Homecoming events. Several
classmates have sent
me pictures of our 40th, 50th and 60th events
"I was a teacher in several
Pennsylvania schools
before I married and moved to
Ohio. Then I did
substitute work and Good Old Testing'
in Elyria Schools
from 1956 to 1974. I still enjoy children,
but I'm no
in
•I
am
so sorry
ALL SMILES - Jennifer Horn,
when she became
16, was obviously happy
the first student admitted to
Bloom
Francis ..r^,, ...
°f
Ser's
"*
^
of 1935
longer physically able to work.
First University applicant
"Best wishes for continued school
success."
Obiters presented
Two Obiters
1926 and 1928
have been presented to
tjie University archives in
loving memory of Wilber
Gwynne Fischer, Class of 1929, by his wife.
Zelda A
Fischer, and the Manahans
Ken Sr., Lorna M.. and
Ken Jr. Mrs. Manahan is Mr. Fischer's
daughter He
died on January 1, 1982.
-
-
follows family tradition
-
Mr. Fischer taught English
in the
Bloomsburg University's
first applicant for admission
continuing a family tradition.
Early o„ July i, just after the
school opened its offices
for the first time as Bloomsburg
University of Pennsylvania, Jennifer Louise Horn,
16, showed up at the admissions office to apply for admission.
is
Nanticoke Area
School District for 40 years before
retiring in 1970 from
the Pulaski Junior High School
in Glen Lyon.
t0
Bloomsburg
He came
t0 receiv e his bachelor's
1940
He was
degree in
Her grandfather, Francis "Doc" Sell,
a Boyertown
graduated from Bloomsburg State
Teachers'
College in 1935. It had long been
Sell's dream that one
day Jennifer would follow in his
footsteps by attending
Bloomsburg. When he learned the
college would become
part of the new State System of
Higher Education on July 1, he thought it would be
nice if his granddaughter
were the first student to apply to
Bloomsburg Universirealtor,
a son of Karl
Ludwig and Mary Jane (Jennie)
Fischer of Glen Lyon. He was an active
member of the
Glen Lyon United. Methodist Church
all of his life until
moved to New Jersey in 1975.
He was a past master of Nanticoke Lodge
No
he
SNAM,
541
Nanticoke; past high priest of the
Knights
Templars. Nanticoke; member of Irem Temple
Shrine
Wilkes-Barre; member of Caldwell Consistory
(32nd
Degree), Bloomsburg; member and chaplain
Jennifer is well-acquainted with the
University having accompanied her grandfather
on numerous trips to
Bloomsburg. The Sells often come to
Bloomsburg from
of the
Golden Age Club in Deptford, N.J., member
of the
Almonesson (N.J.) United Methodist Church and
the
Almonesson Senior Citizens Club.
Two
their
older sisters. Lillian Fischer Moore and
Viola
Fischer, and a brother. T. Edison Fischer,
also attended
M
Bloomsburg.
Mrs. Fischer's address is Apt. A-ll. Knights
Bridge
Condominium. Winding Way, WestviUe, N.J. 08093.
home
welcome.
Philo handbook
A
1910
copy
of the Constitution
of the
to the
1658 State
Shamokin. It belonged to her father, the late Dr.
Victor J. Baluta, Class of 1912, who was admitted to the
society on September 14, 1912. Dr. Baluta was
a general
practice physician in Shamokin from 1927 until his
death
Street,
He was married
former Hattie Dauksha,
and they were the parents of two other children: Mrs.
William (Frances) Rumberger, Sunbury, and Mrs.
Thomas (Mary Lou) Falcinelli, Silver Spring, Md.
to the
and
to eat at
Plans are underway to observe the 100th
anniversary
of Dr. Frank Laubach's birth next
fall in his hometown
of Benton.
Known
and By-Laws
Philogogian Literary Society was presented
University archives by Albina Chaplinsky,
in 1977.
for a ride"
no doubt one of our most loyal alumni "
"He will do just anything we ask him
do for his alma mater. It's very
appropriate that his
granddaughter is the first applicant to
Sell is
to
Bloomsburg
University."
Jennifer, the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John E. Horn
of Boyertown, will be a senior
at Boyertown Senior
High School. She is a member of the
tennis
Jr.
tional
Honor Society, and
is
team Nahead statistician for the
track team.
Her interest in track may also be hereditary
for her
grandfather was quite a track star while a
student at
Bloomsburg. It is believed that he was the
first
Bloomsburg student to win a state track title,
accomplishing this on May 11, 1935.
Jennifer is also a member of the
youth and government program at the YWCA, and has
participated on
Scholastic Scrimmage, a television
game show for high
school students on Channel 39. Allentown.
Because of her good academic background,
including
scholastic Aptitude Test scores and class
rank. Dr. Tom
Cooper, dean of admissions, indicated
that Jennifer will
be the first student offered admission
as a member of
the Class of 1988 at Bloomsburg University.
She plans to
major in accounting and computer science.
Laubach celebration in fall
Directors.
still
Boyertown "just
"You never know when you're going to turn
around
and find Doc standing there." said Doug
Hippenstiel
director of Alumni Affairs. Sell's trips
to Bloomsburg
nave become even more frequent since
he was elected
to the alumni board of directors
in 1981.
Quarterlies presented
Also presenting several copies of THE ALUMNI
QUARTERLY to the archives was Richard Grimes '49,
Harrisburg. Dick has served on the Alumni Board of
Additional contributions of various publications are
in
Hotel Magee.
"Doc
Hippenstiel added.
as "the Apostle to the Illiterates"
and "the
Teacher of Millions," Dr. Laubach,
Class of 1901 has
been described as a "confidant of
governments, expert
in teaching mass literacy,
and Christian mvstic
challenger of the world's complacency,
whose name is
synonymous with the word compassion."
He
in
considered the father of adult literacy
not only
the United States, but throughout
the world
is
movement now more than
in basic
in a
50 years old.
which resulted
education for an estimated 60 million
adults m
and 312 languages.
The birthday anniversary wiU coincide
with National
103 countries
Literacy Week. September 2 through September
9.
Directing the preparations for the observance
is the
board of directors of the Laubach Library in Benton.
They are searching for memorabilia such as books,
photographs, cards, newspaper and magazine
articles to
be loaned or donated to the library's permanent
collecAnyone with such articles is asked to contact Ken
tion.
McCahan
(717-925-6452) or Marjorie Hess (717-925-2314).
In further tribute to this world-educator
and man of
God, the library board is seeking the issuance of
a commemorative stamp honoring Dr. Laubach. Alumni may
support this request by writing to Mr. Paul
VanCoverden, Senior Representative Philatelic Programs.
Government Relations Department,
U.S. Postal Service,
475 L'Enfant Ave., Washington, D.C. 20260.
Bloomsburg University
8
(
Continued from Page 6
1959
Mary Anne (Majikas) Klemkosky '59 was recently
honored as 1983 Woman of the Year when the Anthracite
Charter Chapter of the American Business Women's
Association
(ABWA)
held
its
award dinner
1962
1966
Gary Rahler '62 was recently installed as president of
the Lititz Lions Club. Gary's address is 239 New Haven
Drive, Lititz, Pa. 17543.
Judith E, (Mann) Myers '66 is a teacher with the Penn
Manor School District. She is also a dance instructor at
Carol's Academy of Dance. She is active in the National
Right to Work Committee and PSMLA. Her address is
30
Kathryn K. (Kerllsh) Ellis '62 and her husband,
Truman, are the parents of a daughter, Rebekah Lynn,
born on March 7, 1983. The family lives at 2211 N.E. 115th
at the Potts-
ville Club.
Mrs. Klemkosky now becomes eligible to compete for
1983 Top Ten Business Women of ABWA and
"American Business Woman of ABWA" awards. Reci-
Washington
St., Seattle,
the
S.
1963
Edward
in taxation
Joseph A. Rado, Jr. "63, a senior sales
representative of
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., placed
more than $5.7
million in personal insurance in 1982.
He was recently
recognized by qualifying for the President's
Council. He
Three-time
Athletics
|
National
)
Intercollegiate
of
wrestler, Bill
Garson
was
'63,
1964
is
secretary of Delta Pi Epsilon.
In addition to her professional affiliations, she
is
burg. She has also taught in the Blue Mountain and North
and at the McCann School of
Business.
Schuylkill high schools,
The daughter of Mary Majikas of Girardville and the
Matthew Majikas, she is married to Ronald R.
Klemkosky. They have two sons, Gregory and Mark.
Roadrunners,
Dr. Albert C.
Hoffman
'64,
13-year faculty
member
dean
Her address
at
of the
return to
chemistry department.
Hoffman assumed the position on July 1.
Hoffman was a member of the biology
department
serving as assistant chairman from
1974-1980 He was
granted tenure in 1973 and became a
professor in 1977
I e
Cei ed
mast€r s
doctorate
^
'
degrees from
l /o
y
North
Carolina State University.
Before teaching at Millersville,
Hoffman was a
research assistant at the University
of
K,
Pittsburgh and a
nigh school biology teacher in
Milton.
His address is 60 Oak Lane,
Lancaster, Pa. 17603
late
1960
^
Judith
manager
(Wibnyen Stevens
ter '
Ci
,
Barbara T. (Twitmire) Smith '65
is a teacher
VaUey High School. Her husband,
u banon
I
-
'60 is
u No
-
'
S Box 323, Brownstown,
S
n 17508.
Pa.
is
a classroom teacher
Her
13
.
Sally Riefenstahl '60
married on June
11,
2S^^ T
Sh
Hatboro. Pa.
"^e address
and Frank Suntheimer
1983. Sally
te
nome in
mgh
were
has been a high school
Sch0° 1
-
was
^
ke their
installed recently as the
new
s
toerapist
*? y
?
C
'61
r tCh6n
and
Michael Eyet were mar3 remedial rea
^cher in
I.
^
*
!
toe Mt Carmel Area
School District. Her husband
a
Pennsylvania State University graduate,
is
a selfemployed fuel dealer.
'
?
is
ELWOOD HARDING '68
1606 Ridgedale
"e^uaie ur.,
Dr
director of financial aid
at Susquehanna University, has
been elected as one o
ten
'65,
Attorney Elwood "Woody"
Harding '68 won an impressive victory over his
opponent in the primary held on
garne nng
Democratic nomination for
nil,,/
,
C° Unty Woodv took an
ea Iv ead .Mr' °,
SC° rmg 3 resou nding victory,
?"
5.038
to ?oi ?
S
° PPOnent ms 56 Dercent of ^e party's
r^lMtfi'
!
baUoting was aho
higher than that received
by any other
?T
-
™
the
Gretehen Letterman
t
National
Danville Business and Professional
Club for a one-year term. She
is a speech
working with the Central Susquehanna
Intermediate Unit. She and her husband,
Calvin, have two
daughters, Cynthia and Michele,
and a son, Wayne The
Ryans live at R.D. 2, Danville, Pa. 17821.
Women
NEA and PBEA. Their address
Lancaster, Pa. 17601.
muus
Association of Student
raters He began his
Financial
Aid
t
Ad
twc-year term
J u£ at toe"
organization's national convention
in Anaheim, LliforPrCSident 0f the Pennsylvania
Association
ASSOClatlon
of Student Financial
Aid Administrators
^ uehanna
Su
rentivZ^^
8
'61
at Con-
£p£
Weaver. The Smiths have two
Barbara has memberships
in CVEA PSEA
SV!J
Joyce E. Ryan
of
chtfdren
Harold,
for Victor F.
Edward Mccormick
'59
1961
president
1965
estoga
Shnf
^
aS 3
c
^
member
in 1970.
of
He
is
also cur-
th * national
College
tee of the Financial
Aid Division of the Middle
States
Regional Assembly of the
College Board.
M
J U
cGovern
f
? ! fby the French has been awarded a scholarshin
funded
Government through the French
f ° r f0Ur weeks
of stud v in Avignon
m /u
ly. John has been a
French teacher for the past
12 years to
the Mt. Lebanon School
District. He is one of 35
members
of American Association
of Teachers of
French frL
'
l
r'^T*
the U.S. to receive this
££i
IT *8
of the
2
^
-
0 y C ndUCt d
hour s^n rn !
!
V?
8 Carnpaign that Evolved long
0i Pe ° p,e but a11 the
paid
e P ub,ican candidate.
William S.
?
rSeisher in
Kreisher.
nth
m
the November
General Election.
off
H
?Z
'
™*
1969
5
^oughout
10
^uage
French Language and culture
scholar^
and
civilization
in this
a
is
Jane E. (Weikert) Higinbotham '68
was recently
promoted to accounting officer in the controller's
division
at Hamilton Bank. She joined the
bank
Hoffman has been the acting dean since September
when Richard Sasin resigned the position to
1980,
a
is
NEA/PSEA, and
Pen Argyle, Pa.
Millersville State College, has been
appointed
school of science and mathematics.
in-
mittee as a worker for fundraisers.
She has been a member of the Anthracite Charter
Chapter of ABWA since its inception in 1982.
She earned her master of education degree at Blooms-
York
Pen Argyl High
School,
full-time teaching in the
volved with several community organizations, including
Eastern Star, Ladies of Elks, and Troop 124 Scout Com-
of
volunteer of the American Cancer Society.
1741 Verdan Drives., York, Pa. 17403.
Louis J. Guarino "68 and his wife, the former
Nancy
Labour, are the parents of a son born on July 6
The
Guarinos live at 702 LaSalle St.. Berwick, Pa. 18603
Carl and Carole (DeFrancisco) Millard, both '64,
are
the parents of a son, Craig Louis, born
on October 30, 1982.
Carl is a business education teacher at
secretary/organizer of the Business Ad-
A member of several education associations, she also is
active in the Schuylkill Branch of American Association of
University Women, serving as editor of its newsletter. She
She
member
as a staff accountant in 1980 and was promoted to
senior staff ac
countant in 1982. Her address is 6066
Hampton Court East
Petersburg, Pa. 17520.
MARY ANN KLEMKOSKY '59
is
^,^
QhX
^V*Q
Leaherta E. (Taylor) Mortorff "68 is a special
education
teacher with the Lincoln Intermediate Unit
No. 12.
Washington State House of Representatives and is president of PACCO, Inc. in Tennino, Wash. His mailing
address is Box 596, Tennino, Washington 98589.
and
'67 received a master of science degree
from Widener University on May 21, 1983.
12,000 agents in
inducted into the Bloomsburg University Athletic Hall
of
Fame on May 1. Bill was inducted into the NAIA Hall of
Fame in 1980. Bill was very involved in campus activities
while attending Bloomsburg. He is a member of the
instituted,
B. Kern
'
company's
Association
NAIA champion
^
1
is
ranked number 15 among the
the United States and Canada.
visory Committee.
Lancaster, Pa. 17603.
1967
awards will be announced at the national
ABWA convention in Las Vegas, Nevada, in October.
She is a teacher of business education and chairperson
her department at Pottsville Area High School. For the
past five years, she has served as coordinator for the
Cooperative Occupational Training Program, which she
St.,
98125.
pients of these
of
Pearl
M
T
S
eralEphrataHigh
Sc^iL duuress
at'e^L ^rZ
Granger Drive,
l
«s 101
17540.
Lancaster, Pa.
2
The
country.
(Continued on Page 10)
AJumni Quarterly
New 'Hall
he induction of Chnrk n„i..
of Famers'
m.
„_ ,
KJ
The
tra^TsT SStSjST
» sconng Blth 216 poinls a „ d
B """mbUre
'
™
S
*
^^WM. Ho**
J
ve scored 203 points (
°r
*
^
'
'
ZZT
^r"/o
P
1
^^^^
«£3
for
After one year as Athletic
Director, I can honestly say
have never enjoyed working
more than I have this
year. It has certainly been
a very productive year
In the January edition
of the QUARTERLY
SPORTS SHORTS
'
coaching
g
Big Five
PCnt f ° Ur years as an assis ^nt
coach for the Philadelphia
l 76ers
under Billy Cun-
fifteen acres
Wh
liSter
° guided his tearn to
M^?!
NCAA tournament appearance,
'
its
up-
all of
'
Bloomsburg
63
East Regional title. Francisco, a 6-3
junior guard from
WUkes-Barre, was named the tournament's
Most
Valuable Player as he scored 42 points,
pulled down 12
rebounds and blocked 12 shots. On the
season, he led the
Huskies in scoring with 14.7 points
per game and was second on the club in rebounding with
an average of 5 0
per game.
Noack, a 6-5 freshman from Whitehall,
was one of four
freshmen who saw plenty of action.
Along with making
E-B-All-Freshman team, he was previously
named
.T
the ECAC Division II Co-Rookie
of the Year along with
Jeff Buckson of Southern Connecticut.
At 12.2 points
CHUCK DALY '52
per
game. Noack was the Huskies' third leading
scorer He
led the team in rebounds with
5.7 per game and foul
shooting where he hit 80.2% of his
free throws
BILL G ARSON was a three-time NA1A champion,
a
three-time Pennsylvania Conference
champion, a fourtune NAIA All-American, and in 1980 was
inducted
the
NAIA
into
Hall of
Fame.
As a freshman. Garson placed fourth at
heavyweight
in the NAIA tournament in Lock
Haven, while helping
the Huskies, under head coach Russ
Houk, to the national title. A year later, Garson
captured the 191-pound
title as Bloomsburg finished
fifth.
In 1962, both Garson and the Huskies
again reigned as
national champions. Garson again wrestled
in the 191pound class that year.
Garson s career came to an end in fitting fashion in
1963, as the WiUiamsport native won the
NAIA
heavyweight crown in front of the Huskies' hometown
fans.
m
e. who were selected
SSHI
rlLP7 Department
Jr
by
the Athletic
as the outstanding senior
athletes for 1983. These four
young people have certainly
made significant contributions to our
athletic
Regional
the
The team
finished second nationally.
Along with wrestling, Garson was involved in many
campus activities in his years at Bloomsburg. He served
on several Community Government Association committees, was a student member of the Pennsylvania
State
Chronister guided the team to a 23-10
record, his third
20-win season in succession. In his 12
years as the
Bloomsburg coach, he has never had a losing
and
season
his career
record stands at 216-104.
Paul Slocum, athletic trainer at Bloomsburg Universihas resigned that post to
ty for the past 10 years,
become
at the
5.
He
the
manager
of the sports
medicine department
NPW Medical Center in Nanticoke,
is
effective July
a certified athletic trainer.
Congratulations to the men's tennis
team and the
women's
softball team for winning
Pennsylvania State
Athletic Conference championships.
It was the fifth consecutive PSAC title for Coach
Burt Reese's netmen
Hutchins0D,
s softball team advanced
to the
JSTtS".
NCAA Division U regional finals
Heart
of Connecticut. Their
and lost to Sacred
season record was 33-4
program
mPlify eXC6Uent r0le
plans
now
The Day
Friday,
for our 450 student-
Champions Banquet again was a tremenIt was nice to see so many
alumni
and supporters turn out to honor our
athletes
Russ Houk and Stu Edwards did their
usual
of
dous success.
friends,
fantastic
job of introducing our Hall of
Fame inductees, Bill Garson and Chuck Daly. By the
way, Chuck Daly was
recently hired as head basketball
coach of the
Detroit
Pistons.
Spring sports produced All-Amencans
in women's
track and field and men's tennis.
Patty
became
Davenport
the first female to
become an
NCAA n
All-
Amencan as she placed fourth in the nation in
the high
jump. Marty Coyne and Dave Superdock
teamed up to
become Ail-Americans in tennis.
Dennis Grace, a graduate of Indiana
University
Bloomington, Indiana, and former coach
at Clemson
University has been selected to
replace Dr Lou
Mingrone as the head soccer coach.
He brings a tremendous amount of knowledge,
experience, and enthusiasm
to the program.
We're in the planning stages of sponsoring
a Robert
Redman Day
at one of our home football
games this
Dr. John Hoch, Dean Emeritus,
and Dr. Charles
Brennan will be coordinating this
affair. Former players
of the late Bob Redman
will be receiving invitations to
this event.
fall.
We have scheduled a Russ Houk night
December
9,
when we wrestle
on Friday
Millersville. All of Russ'
former athletes and friends will be
invited to honor him
at this occasion. If you are
interested in information or
being involved in these two special
events, please contact me.
forget, too,
to register for the Ox Roast,
t
catered
by Hotel Magee, at Homecoming. This
event was one of
our most successful. Hopefully,
the
to attend
RUSS HOUK NIGHT
Millersville vs.
mode ls
atWetes
Don
Make
fields for in-
this very worthwhile
project
Congratulations to Gwen Cressman,
swimmer from
Philadelphia, and Barry Francisco,
basketball player
from Wilkes-Barre, for their
selection as the outstanding
underc^ss athletes and to Dave
Superdock, tennis
player from Bloomsburg, and
Diane Alfonsi, basketball
ra
f0
,,er fr °
Pottsvill
surprised everybody by finishing
second in
the Pennsylvania State Athletic
Conference and earning
a slot in the NCAA Division
East
n
new
ST/rT-fw"
,
(CGA) for ?
funding
The Huskies, who entered the season
with only one
senior, looked upon the 1982
season as a rebuilding year
Bloomsburg recorded upset victories over
nationally
ranked Cheyney and Philadelphia
Textile to win
anticipate using the
tion
the
All-Freshman squad
we
84.
^amurals. recreation, and varsity
athletics. Recognition
C Communit Government
Associay
third straight
was named the E B
Division II Coach of the Year.
Francisco was named to
magazine s Division II second team
while Noack
was selected to the publication's
Detroit
referred
with Bloomsburg Hospital
to lease
ofland on Mt. Olympus (new
name for
per campus). On July 1st
machinery began moving sod
o convert this land to nine
playing fields. During the
and Glenn Noack, were accorded
post-season honors by
Lastern Basketball magazine.
CflSoS-ffl
head COach for tne CJeveland
rZ.r *»He was bFiefly
Cavahers.
recently named coach
the
I
to the negotiations
Charlie Chronister, head
basketball coach, and two of
his Bloomsburg University
players, Barry Francisco
in the history of the
BILL GARSON
Roger Sanders
I
'
of
ner
tathy Sheridan, along
with
3 744 winn,n Percentage.
e
Over
Penn won 20 of 25 Big Five
games for an
V
'
ng
Da,y the best i"tra^ity
g
T^f
Cor-
seniors Terry Conrad
and
Todd Cummings. represented
the over 500 athletes
who
competedforthe University during
the past academic
0rd f ° r
rTn H
record
A.
D.'s
of the 18 varsity
y™£ at bTe
an, fo^s ,he
V
th °Se yCarS Daly
s s < uads
four"'
our Iyy
?crowns and three Big
l League
Five titles while
g
At Penn Da^' S tean^sr'eco^
e?a
Re P r esentative in the
president of PACc°.
t0Wn/g ° Wn
support group, presented
the award
In addition, four
current BSC student/athletes
presented a review of the
successes
^
si*
Daly then moved on to
Boston College Universitv
two ye ars
spending six
5?-? n
that
penod
,s
'
sutawnqr High School, he
spent
^
lZ
CS 35 3 State
bUrg profess or emeritus
M. Eleanor Wrav
l0
pm,
p^S~
r
^^SS^
°^
stateof°W^h
Bloomsburg
December 9
WATCH NEXT QUARTERLY FOR DETAILS
day
will
come when
we will have to use the entire Nelson
Fieldhouse Arena
for this event. Homecoming is
scheduled for October 22
The Huskies will be hosting the Wolves
of Cheyney.
At a time when the conference is becoming
more and
more competitive and we are striving for
national
recognition, it is even more important
for you, our
alumni and friends, to "GET INVOLVED."
If every
alumnus would donate between $10 and
$25 to the
General Scholarship Fund, we will have
a better base
to
build our future to even greater
heights. If you haven't
contributed this year, please do so today.
It will be
greatly appreciated.
YOUR HELP!
WE NEED
9
Bloomsburg University
10
(Continued from Page 8)
G.
Wayne Laepple
Patricia (Leiby) Rogers "71 and her husband, Scott S.
are the parents of a son, Zachary David, born on May
'69
brings us up to date with the
leap from the
classroom at Danville Junior High School to general
manager of the Graham County Railroad in Robbinsville,
N.C., last February, I am once again on the move. In May,
I
became
5.
-
120 miles
is
10 times the size of the
The family
lives at R.D. 2,
Box
19,
ried
Troy, Pa. 16947.
Reverend William H. Cluley '71 was ordained at the
twenty-second Annual Convention of the Lutheran Church
in America's Central Pennsylvania Synod.
His address is
manager of the Maryland and
Delmarva Peninsula. The new
assistant general
Delaware Railroad on the
railroad
Karen Marie Gable '74 and Richard Spinicci were marrecently. Karen is employed as the ad systems
manager with Reuben H. Donnelley in Scranton. Dick is
employed as a loan specialist with the Small Business Administration in Wilkes-Barre. They live in Kingston, Pa.
'72,
made the quantum
following note: "Having
P.O. Box 4320, R.D.
Graham
Patricia Ann (Long) Nalin '74 and her husband, Dennis,
are the parents of a son, Christopher Michael, born on
Spring Grove, Pa. 17362.
4,
May
County.
"Kitty and
Alabama
520-E
is
Ave., Salisbury,
Md.
21801
—
only 30
minutes from the beach!
(Hummel) Poechmann
Work degree in May
Harriet
received her Master
'69
at
Barry.
Delaware
Melanchton W. Mench '69 and Mary K. Quinlan were
married on June 4. They live at 634 N. Carolina Ave., S.E.,
Washington, D.C. 20003. Both are audit managers with the
U.S. General Accounting Office in Washington, D.C.
Richard F. Hartung '69 writes as follows: "To bring
I have just retired from the
Bristol
Township School District, where I was employed
in
School
asked
m
Tripoli. Libya, until all
to leave in
'72
North
Companies
the Americans were
address
Senior
Short Street, Danville, Pa. 17821.
John L. McLaughlin '72 received his law degree on June
4 from the Dickinson School of Law, Carlisle. He is
associated with the law firm of Marks & Wagner. John, his
wife, Susan, and their two sons live at 213 W. Mahoning
Danville, Pa. 17821.
St.,
of August 27 will be
P.O. Box 6735, Hawalli
Kuwait, Arabian Gulf. Of course I shall
return home each
summer. I shall be able to be reached at my
permanent
1975
is 121
Cheryl (Labarr) Bastinelli "72 and her husband,
Richard '72, recently became parents. The family lives at
8 Chip Lane, Flying Hills. Reading, Pa. 19607.
Gough Avenue. Ivyland Boro
Sherman George Lord '75 and Rose Mary Rico were
May 7. The bridegroom is director of
audiology at Moyer and BeU Associates,
Sewickley They
Pa. 18974. telephone (215)674-3444."
married on
live in Coraopolis,
1973
1970
Gary Allen Smith
Janet M. Nossal
ried on
December
'70
and was
was awarded a Master of Business
Administration degree by Shippensburg
University on
and William L. Nash HI were mar1979. They are the parents of
a
bom
on March 28 1983
Kishbaugh
Kishbaugh
on
'78
Hazleton
Educational Association. She
Joseph s Church. Wyoming.
was a member
May 28. The Kishbaughs live in Albertsville, France.
of
J. Chatkiewicz '73 and his wife are
the parents
on May 2. The family lives at R.D 2
Box 32
Catawissa, Pa. 17820.
of a son born
i
Lyn
Maturam
is
a
brother
James J LeVan '70 and Ruth Elaine
Kohn are engaged
The bnde-to-be, a nursing graduate
of Widener Universien
ye
£°, ? at Shriller s Hospital for Crippled
Children,
'
Rev
17402
Blair Russell
a teacher in the Bristol
An October wedding is planned.
Blair is
SKSZT
Monie
'70
and
his wife, Sandra, and
Lehigh Road, York, Pa.
senior pastor of the First
Presbyterian
Pa aBndn 15 a
a
**
two children
live at 2875
*"« -
™*
C
il ? »
L
,Kess,er
»
,
Village,
73
-
Rwyan
'73
and her husband, Dr
^eir address is 200 Forest Road, Sher^
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
? m
h
P aS ,e
31,(3 ***
Jm Wnbewust) '73
?' t
are the parents
of a son born on June 21.
The baby is the
couple s second son. The
family lives at 9139 Grant Ave
Manassas, Va. 22110.
J?h?
PAUL BLOW '75
'73
reports that she went to Brazil
in
1977 to teach at the Amazon Valley
Academy which is a
school for the children of
American missionaries
Presently she is teaching the Bible
to Brazilian young peo^
pie. Her address is CP. 334.
64.000 Teresina, Piaui, Brazil
thf
^
Sub
Club.
tion
?5
"Ts" ^ ^
„
and
W
WaS reCent,y named as a
qualifier for
InSUranCC 0on
''Presidenr
This honor was earned
through national
I
°'J? ?
,'
Margaret (Blusius) Doty
'71 and her husband.
Robert
are the parents of a son. Daniel
Christopher, born recentaddress
68 Avenue of Two fr^™.
*
Rumson
'74
and Robert Samuelian are
engaged
supeS at
tteLtT^r
Long Term Care Facility of
Danville State
the
U~
f,ance holds a degree in
electrical
of
Hospital
^
e^in^tag"K
Chadds Ford Electronics. A^all
wSg £
Ba^NA* M*3ry
«£?'
~
?'k
competi-
expXe
S^TiESt'™38 therap€Ut,C actlviUes
Her
recognition for outstanding
marketing
professionalism. Paul is
married to the
They ,Ive at 210 E1
Mary Ann McGann
Janet LaShay
Z'JiO!*
and her h "sband, John
Anthony Jacob
Maturams hve at R D
2. Bogart
'
1974
1971
N.J. 07760.
Maturani
the parents of a son.
^
Deborah Dinstel
toeir
'
St
wood
is
81
?
RnZ Danville,
n
Road,
Pa. 17821.
Y.
Jim
V Yost
are
Pr
at
Surviving in addition to her
mother
Thomas Tissue, Setauket, Long Island,
N.
District.
and Caroline E. (Artman)
are the parents of a son, Eric Arthur
born
'73
Anthony
Wyoming, the daughter of
Irene Linn Tissue and the late Kenneth
Tissue. She was a
graduate of Wyoming High School, Wilkes
College and
bad attended the University of
Madrid in Spain, and the
University of Scranton. She was a
teacher at the Grebey
Junior High School, Hazleton. She
was a member of Pennsylvania State Education Association,
the National
Educational Association, and secretary
of the
Philadelphia.
by
a former marriage, is in first grade.
Linda is a
teacher's aide a couple mornings a week.
Her mailing address is R.D. 2, 3ox 306-C. Howard, Pa.
May 29 in Nesbitt Memorial
life-long resident of
Township School
Linda M. (Golis) Mattern "75 reports she was
married to
Ron Mattern on October 9. 1982. Linda's daughter,
Renee
16841
Carl A.
21 inches long.
She was a
Pa.
It is
She weighed eight pounds and four ounces
Tanya A. Tissue '70 died on
Hospital in Kingston, Pa.
'73
May 7. 1983.
29,
daughter. Adrienne Marie,
their first child.
Jeanne Marie Johnston *74 received her degree as an
osteopathic physician from the Philadelphia College of
Osteopathic Medicine in June.
Kuwait as
in
of Kuwait,
US. address which
served as personnel officer for the Department of Commerce since July 1981, and was previously employed at
Bloomsburg in 1980-81 as a personnel analyst III. He is
enrolled in the MBA Program at the university. Stanley
and his wife, Barbara, have two children. They live at 6
High School.
December of 1981.
American School
Stanley E. Carr '74 has been appointed director of personnel at Bloomsburg effective May 19, 1983. Stanley has
was recently named 1983 Big Sister
Philadelphia Area Big Sister/Big
Nancy lives at 6601 Hilltop Drive
Year by the
Brother Association.
Brookhaven, Pa. 19105. She teaches office practices and
accounting in the Business Education Department
and
coaches varsity girls' lacrosse and hockey at the
Since that time, I have returned to Bristol
Township, only to decide to try my hand at teaching
overseas again. I
shall be working at the American
School of Kuwait
Hopefully, someday soon. I shall land
a job in Saudi
Arabia or Egypt.
My new
Center, Bushnell, Fla. Tina is employed in the Neonatal
Intensive Care Unit at the Geisinger Medical Center.
A
September wedding is being planned. The couple will
reside in Tampa, Fla.
Nancy E. Brink
Africa. During that time I taught at
the Oil
Dexter Ave., Evansville
David C. Heebner '74 and Tina M. Hess are engaged.
David is director of treatment at White Deer Treatment
19808.
of the
for the
past 14 years. During two of those years,
however, I
taught for one year and travelled the other
live at 109 S.
-Charles County, Md. for the past six years. She established a medical library service at this facility. Michelle
is
employed at Lancaster County Library in Lancaster, Pa.
as business services/reference librarian. Her address
is
751 E. Market St., No. 38, Marietta, Pa. 17547.
1972
people up-to-date,
The Nalins
Michelle Seliga '74 reports that she recently earned an
M.S.L.S. degree from Catholic University in Washington,
D.C. She worked at Physicians Memorial Hospital in
R. David Weller '71 and his wife, Marietta (McMicken)
'72, are the parents of a son, Craig Andrew, born
on April
12, 1983. Craig joins a brother, Brett David, age six, and a
sister, Joyce Marie, age 3^2.
The Wellers live at 2709 Burnley Road, Wilmington,
Marywood College,
Scranton. She lives at 8 Oldt Drive, Williamsport. Pa.
17701 with her husband, James '68, and two sons, Lee and
of Social
17.
Ind. 47714.
Daniel D. Zito '71 recently received a Master of
Business Administration degree from Lehigh University.
He is employed as assistant to the president of Easton
Publishing Co. He lives at 208 Oxford Drive, Easton, Pa.
18042 with his wife and two children.
are also happy to announce the arrival of
Andrea Loren Laepple, who was born on November 7 and
is doing fine. She joins Katie, who is five now.
Our address
I
'
^
'75
recently
was promoted
to
former
e
branrh
2™ «*£ ~i£S3
J0Uled Marine MidJ and
hi
September
^XESE
^^.^^^^^
an^n
""T
organization. She is working
toward a certificate from th P
(Continued on Page 12)
First issue of 'Carver'
published
Alumni asked
to contribute
y
r
f
Potion,
°
the first
of "aMEr!!:™
or
CARVER, the inter-disciplinary
? !f
journal of
B oomsburg University has
mad?its
issue
debut The inaugural issue contains
articles dealing with
mathematics, experimental
psychology. American
history, and hterary
analyse, as welfa's
S^poetry
A
limited
number
of copies are available
from the
y
AJumn ' A^^iation and the
Office of the
rl
Vice President
for Academic Affairs
Alumni are invited to submit
either a manuscript or
a
proposal for consideration.
?
SK
Articles in all fields
£
w5
considered, but they should
be written for an audknc^
o non-specialists. October
30 is the deadline for
co
plete manuscripts for the
1984 issue
Serving as editor of CARVER
is Dr. Gerald H
°f
of English faculty
since 1961 The editorial
stceT*.
board responsible for the first
£ue included Donald Baird, chemistry;
Barbara E
Behr, business administraUon;
m
^P"*™*
Richard Brook
W^W.
StCVen L Cohen
Jam'es B.
Creasy, business administraUon;
,
Judith P. Downing
Enm an> ge ° graphy
earth s «ence;
raul G. Hartung, mathematics;
K
CWhS:
-
'
•
PailGH^ ^
T^TT
James
-
JOURNAL
Kenneth P. Hunt
geography and
R R0b€rts In art; George A.
Turner, history; and Doug
Hippenstiel, alumni affairs
special education;
DEBUTS
Carver, the new interdiscipUnary journal of Bloomsburg
University, made
its debut in June. Dr. Gerald
H. Strauss (second from
left), editor, presents a copy
to Dr. Larry W. Jones, acting
T. Lorelli,
PCrCiVal
-
Dresden
of the
University. Looking on are Dr.
James H.
McCormick interim chancellor of the new
State System
Higher Education, and Doug
Hippenstiel, director of
o
alumni
affairs.
Alumni gather in chapters throughout
Eight alumni chapter meetings
have been held since the .ast issue
of
S.U.N. Chapter
a meeli" 8 of Sn der
Un »°n and Nory
UnU,i n April 21 were
Ha
°
d
th
,? ri
pw?
^l
J.
Markunas "34, Virginia E
L Hartman
CnCe ?9 Ted J Andrewlevich
557^™:
* 5'
62. L. Irene Frederick
Young '35. Laura Kelley Bollinger '33. and Frank
Garrigan '66
24
V?'
U
e
"
r
'
'
-
Representing the University were
Doug Hippenstiel
SSS&Sf
£T
a,,airs;
and
Q " - A™SSSL
rt
York
Meeting for lunch at Lincoln
Woods Inn
April 23 were Leahetta
E. Taylor
6
T ^
D
in
79.
Representing the University
were Dr. Jack S Mulka
Dean of student development;
Kathy Mulka. alumni
rd
0r; Charles Chron,ster
^ad
ball coach; and Doug
Hippenstiel. alumni office
M?Z r
r'
.
penstiel,
fices of
Mulka '69, Melissa McDonie Pugliese
79. Judith Witmyer Stevens "60, Barbara Twitmire
Smith '65, Reginald
Remley "48. and Judith Mann Mayers '66.
Rainey
Set-
office.
Pennsylvania Dutch
The annual dinner meeting of the Pennsylvania
Dutch
Chapter of Bloomsburg alumni was
held in Reading on
W
'
Kathenne Moyer Reinert '67, Dale E. Biever '58
Catherine K. Biever '58. Karen
Suzanne Karnes 75
Donald G. Franklin '65, Ronald Cranford '63,
Patricia
Biehl Cranford '63, Joseph P. Griffiths
70, Dawn Osman
TreweUa 42, Louise E. Seaman Thomas '42.
John
Thomas '47. Sharon Faith Gettel
Mahoney '67, Elaine Brumbaugh
W
78, Angelica Sacco
'67. Michael L. Mehle
and Edward B. Kern '67
Representing the University were Roger
Sanders
athletic director and head wrestling
coach; Charles
67,
Sandra Burkhart Kern
'67
'52,
12.
Robert
Ban
G
^
at-
Poorman
E.
>38
-
C.
'46
Laurie Dnscoll Reiley
79, Harry M. Saxton
Marilyn Friedman Moore '57.
Jr. '67.
and
Representing the University was
Doug Hippenstiel
alumni office.
Harris burg
^
mi rom
Harrisburg area met at
!
Downtown
on May 19. Attending were
Ai
i
tan
^
the
Hobday
Dr. Alex J
39
Chard E Grunes 49 Kerr
y Avers
79
72 Charlotte Hensel 72, Steve
Andrejack 74' Craigann
74, Thomas Lenker 75, Janet Negry
75
Tom and Marcia Sweitzer 75. Al Oussoren
79. Donna
Kinder 80, Michael Mixell '80, Stacy
MixeU '81. and Kay
}
f?^Vu'
'
^
'
-
-
Mehrmann
Schweitzer
77.
Representing the University were Dr.
Jack S Mulka
dean of student development;
Kathy Mulka, alumni
chapter coordinator; Steve
Wallace, chairman of the
music department; and Lou
Maranzana, assistant foot-
'
ball
coach.
April 27.
Those in attendance included George
Derk '55
Vera A. Derk '60. Mark J. Constable
73. Francis "Doc"
Sell 35 John G. Genelow
77, Mildred A. Kline Genelow
78, Helen Fehl Roberts 74. Jennie
Reitz Mattern '30
Nancy Jane Kratzer '64. Barbara Nicholls
Faust '65
Little '61,
at the law of-
May
'
M
Doug Hippenstiel, alumni
Wilmington on
Ce
D
Plevyak '50, Alfred J.
Dilhplane 78. Gwen S. Miller '69.
Linda Oehler Miller
70. Edward Jerry Miller "69. and Peter
J. Eshmont '41
Representing the University were Elton
Hunsinger a
University trustee and retired aciministrator;
Dr Steve
Wallace, chairman of the music
department- Tom
Davies. director of the Career
Development Center- and
Little '62 in
Kay Gaglione
34,
Baltimore
Meeting for dinner at Peerce's Plantation
near
Towson on April 26 were Keith Kull 73,
Leo J Lehman
'41, Joe J. Gieda '50. Cissie
Dickinson Gieda "43
Dale Hunsinger '65 Paul
Cyganowski '53. Kim
Tom
Gennar,a
James A Gennana
u lT
Wilham ^TT
Reiley 79. Eugene F. Sharkey
Representing
'50.
Wilmington, Delaware
Delaware held a get-together
in
'57.
Doug Hip-
office.
tending were Dottie Stec
Blocksom
the University were Dr. Jack
Mulka
dean of student development; Kathy
Mulka, alumni
chapter coordinator; and Doug
Hippenstiel, alumni of-
Frederick D. Young
alumni
Alumni
.
fice.
York on
Mortorff '68, Rev
5 ° rah Ann Fedastj an Ever
78%nd
fitnf Lynn Reedy
!
Rhonda
w
StU3rt
wasTu^T
Chronister, head basketball coach;
and
That same evening. April 23,
Lancaster area alumni
at the Olde Greenfield Village.
Alumni in attendance included Jeffrey and Catherine
Barry Wasilewski
Jim and Marsha Yeager Schmucker
78, Louis J
met
Epler
Bayliff
30
Srrow
Lancaster
-
m
Furman 51
28. Nora
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
U.S.
Alumni
living in
New Jersey
New Jersey met
for dinner at the
Willows Restaurant in DuneUen, N.J..
on May 24. Attending were Nelson A. Swarts '62,
Bernard L. Donegan '63
Jacquie Feddock 72. Delores Keen
Tironi '63, Lorenzo
Tironi 64, Louis S. Gabriel '50,
Richard E. Jarman
50, Wayne F. Heim '69, Joseph
J. Shemanski '55. James
M. Bonacci '69, L. Anthony Saraceno
74, J. Harrison
R
Morson '56. John Phillips '57. Ralph
W. Davies '29
Dorothy Pichel Schneider '51. Joyce
Morgan Houser
Edith Quinn Jakobsen '27.
Richard C. Stout '49.
S.
McMane
'61
Michael'
and Ernest R. Shuba '64
Representing the University were
Dr. James H McCormick. president; Charles Chronister.
head basketball
coach; George Landis. head
football coach; Elton Hunsinger. University trustee;
and Doug Hippenstiel. alumni
office.
82,
*
Bloomsburg University
12
(Continued from Page 10)
(Kmush) Gathman 75 and Randall Robert
Bonnie
Gathman
are proud parents for the second time. A son,
Adam Randall, was born on March 28, 1983 at Bedford
County Memorial Hospital, Bedford, Va. They have
another son, Christopher Allen, age 3. Bonnie is still
teaching third grade at Body Camp Elementary School,
and Randy has recently become a senior procedures
analyst for the Administrative Operations Dept. at Dominion Bankshares Corporation in Roanoke, Va. The family
lives at 3013 Sleepy Ridge Drive, Bedford, Va. 24523.
'78
and Diane (Hoglund) Bachinger
6. The Bachingers
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
John F. Bachinger
'76
'75
are the parents of a son born on July
live at
R.D.
4,
1976
Barbara E. Poley Herring '76 and her husband, Robert
J Herring, are not the parents of a son, as reported in the
Debra Lee (Floyd) Rilk '76 and her husband, Walter,
are the parents of a son, Corey Lee, born on June 14. Their
address is Box 133, Benton, Pa. 17814.
Denise M. Kissel '76 and Kenneth A. Fegley were
married on June 11. They make their home in Shamokin,
Pa. The bride is a business teacher in Shamokin Area
High School. Her husband is a self-employed contractor.
Deborah Jean Lurhi-Mistal 78 received her degree as
an osteopathic physician from the Philadelphia College of
Osteopathic Medicine in June.
J. David Arnold 78 received his doctorate in psychology
from the University of New Hampshire in September 1982.
He
is
a professor of psychology at St. Lawrence Univer-
sity in Canton, N.Y.
78 and William Ferry were married
employed as lecturer/coordinator of
the Medical Laboratory Technology Program at the
Patricia Dreisbach
X 977
on
^mm^^^m
James
P. Chiavacci "77 and I^igh Ann Charles were
married on April 30. James is employed as the education
supervisor at The Wood Schools. Langhorne. His wife,
a
graduate of Clarion University and Edinboro University,
is a reading specialist at a private school
for learning
disabled students and a reading consultant at a school
for
children with handicaps. They make their home
in
Newtown, Pa.
May 2.
Patricia
is
Hazleton Campus of Pennsylvania State University. Bill is
a shepherd. The newlyweds live at their farm in Scotch
Valley, R.D. 3, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Marsha Del Veager) Schmucker 78 and her husband,
Jim 78, live at 606 W. James St., Lancaster, Pa. 17603.
Jim is a 3M sales representative, and Marsha is employed
by J.C. Penney Co., Inc.
(
.
last issue of
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY. The Herrings
We regret this error and apologize for
have no children.
the inconvenience
it
caused.
Charles Porvaznik '77 and his wife are the parents of a
daughter, Erin Michelle, born on April 14. The family
lives at 895 Railroad Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Deborah Ann (Fedastian) Evert 78 is a business
teacher with the Carroll County Board of Education. She
and her husband, John, live at 16 W. Middle St., No.
3,
Hanover, Pa.
Timothy Da wait
May
'76 and Carol Avellino were
married on
Carol attends Bloomsburg where she also is
14.
employed.
Tim
employed on the computer services
They make their home at 450A
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
is
staff at the University.
Spanish Village,
Capt. David Orgler
Commendation Medal
'77
was recently awarded the Army
Md. He is married
silon
17331.
Deborah
a
is
member
of Delta Pi
Ep-
(Gamma Xi).
at Fort Detrick,
to the former Mary Burrichter '77.
signed to Fort Sam Houston, Texas.
He has been
reas-
Margo Lee Paradis '77 and Charles "Sonny" Fox were
married on February 19, 1983. Lea Ann Simcox 77,
Margo's good friend and BSC roommate, caught the wedding bouquet! Sonny works for Hughes Helicopters in
Mesa. Margo had spent five years working as a learning
disabilities teacher with the Centennial School District
in
Warminster, Pa. She also worked as a marching band instructor with the Archbishop Wood High School in Warminster for six years. She considers herself "semiretired" from teaching but may find a new position
Alfred M. Schoch, Jr. 78 and Marjorie Sue Lusch were
married on April 30. Marjorie is a substitute teacher in the
Schuylkill County school system. Al is a newsman and
sportscaster with radio station
WPAM in Pottsville.
They
live in St. Clair, Pa.
Thomas E. Dawson 78, an agent for Prudential Insurance Company, sold more than $2.9 million of insurance in 1982. He recently won the company's award
of
honor. His address is R.D. 2, Danville, Pa. 17821.
Tom is
also active in the Danville Elks.
in
Arizona in September 1983. Margo's mailing address
P.O. Box 18274, Fountain Hills, Arizona 85268.
is
Kim McNally '77, who is copy editor of PressEnterprise, Bloomsburg, recently won a
second-place
award in the Pennsylvania Women's Press Association
contest for page layout and design.
Connie L. Anceravage 78 and Paul M. Yurczyk were
married on June 4 in Bloomsburg. The bride is employed
by General Dynamics in finance and management
in San
Diego. Her husband is employed as an internal
auditor by
San Diego Federal Savings and Loan. They
live at 1333
Thomas Ave., San Diego, Calif. 92109.
John M. Cannon 78 and Maria Ward Cannon 79 live at
Medina, Ohio 44256. The Cannons
(
Maria
L. (Williams)
Anthony
'77
and her husband, Jim,
are the parents of a son, Ryan James, born
on June 12.
Their mailing address is Box 85, Bear Creek,
Pa. 18602.
MICHAEL RAINONE '76
Michael L. Rainone
'76
was recently promoted
to assis-
tant treasurer of Industrial Valley Bank,
responsible for
loan portfolio
management and commercial lending for
a
also
portion of the Center City Loan Center portfolio.
He is
handling commercial lending based out
of IVB's Food
Distribution Center Office in South Philadelphia
Mike joined IVB's consumer loan division
in 1978
and
since then has served as assistance manager
of IVB's
Conrail Operation Center and assistant manager
of the
1518 Walnut Street office. Until his recent
promotion, he
was a commercial loan assistant
at IVB's
Girard Avenue
office.
Mike is a member of the American Institute of
Banking
ATB) and a Fourth Degree Member of the Knights
of Columbus. Mike and his wife, Gail, live in Audubon,
Pa.
(
1979
Pat (Seither) Quinn 77 and her husband,
Karl, are the
of a daughter, Kristen Elizabeth,
born on
September 28, 1982. The Quinns live at 10 Cherry
Lane
wedding to George W. Murdock.
Leesburg, Va. 22075.
for the
Hershey Chocolate Company, Hershey, Pa. Her
husband,
Richard Nilsen, is assistant principal and athletic
director
of Big Spring
High School, Newville, Pa. and is working
toward his doctor of education degree at
Temple University.
The Nilsens
live at 5500
Gloucester
St.,
Mechanics-
burg, Pa. 17055.
Mayo '76 and Dr. Robert L. Albertson were
May 21. Lois is employed as a medical
on
technologist at Berwick Hospital.
Her husband is an optometrist. They live at 439 E. Third
St., Berwick, Pa.
18603, where Bob also maintains his offices.
Robert Scott Norris 76 and
Debra Joy Wagner are
engaged Debra is employed by
Easton
0
Smin^ *
(Pa.) Hospital.
3
gr3duate
SSSra toSSHS*
°f
PHnceton
*****
at the
Theological
^sbyterian
a September 24
William Campbell Reiley 79 received
the degree of
Law School from Widener University on May 21, 1983.
Timothy R. Hessert
'77 was awarded the
M.D. degree on
by Pennsylvania State University at the
Milton S
Hershey Medical Center. Dr. Hessert is doing
his residency in psychiatry at Hospitals of the
University Health
May 22
Thomas J. Hessling '77 was recently named
manager of
Murphy store in Dansville, N.Y. Tom started
his
career with Murphy as a
management-trainer at the
Melanie
Smith
79 and her husband. Jeffrey are
the parents of a daughter,
Meghan Joyce, born on May 25
Melanie is a teacher of the emotionally
disturbed. She is
employed by Intermediate Unit
No. 1. Theif mailing address is P.O. Box 403, Fayette
City,
(Gill)
Pa. 15438.
the G. C.
firm's New Martinsville, W. Va. Murphy's
Mart.
his wife, the former Janet Ice of
New
parents of two sons, Chris and
Jaclyn Nicole.
Tom and
Martinsville are the
Tommy, and
a daughter
Lois Elaine
roamed
Rhonda Lynn
Reedy 79 is a staff accountant with Dentsply Inter. Inc. She lives at 513
Piedmont Circle, York Pa
17404. She reports that she is
planning
Juris Doctor, Delaware
Center, Pittsburgh.
Janet (Stump) Nflsen '76 received a Master
of Science
degree in biology from Shippensburg University
in May
1983. She is employed as quality assurance
auditor
report they are expecting their first child in July.
John is
an assistant district manager with Carnation Co. and
works in the Cleveland-Pittsburgh market.
Sue Ann Sagan 77 and David Fredrick Roadarmel
were
married on April 9. The bride is a reading specialist
in the
Milton Area School District. The bridegroom
is employed
at Rose Pools Inc., Lewisburg.
The newlyweds live at
R.D. 1, Milton, Pa. 17847.
parents
)
1099 Southport Drive,
1978
Edmund
Ronco 78 recently was awarded a master's
degree in finance by St. Louis University. He is employed
by American Telephone & Telegraph International in
J.
Basking Ridge, N.J. He lives in Hampton, N.J., with his
former Donna Widdoss, and their two children.
wife, the
Thomas J. Renaldo 78 received his degree as an
osteopathic physician from the Philadelphia College
of
Osteopathic Medicine in June.
n£?r£
Mifmn
Mifflin
D
-,
171
Cha r,es
'
J
79
and Alan
A Streisel are engaged.
°yed as teachers
/^^? are emp,Lewistown,
Pa. Wedding
«cuuuig
r
County
School District
of the
in
plans are incomplete.
Al Lonoconus 79, Southern
Columbia track and field
coach recently finished
second in the Eastern Regional
^^^^
Lisa
Ann Kreischer 79 received her
B.S. degree in nurs0
*? m Th0mas Jeffer *>n Uniiersi
Phi.nVrV
y
While at Jefferson, she wds
inducted into Sigma Thetii
Tau, Delta Rho Chapter.
National Nursing Honor
Society
(Continued on Page 16)
Alumni Quarterly
Graduates
gather for
Alumni
Weekend
Three class reunions and the annual business meeting
Alumni Association highlighted Alumni Weekend
on June 10-12.
Activities began on Friday evening with the annual
banquet of the Alumni Association. Guests of honor were
of the
members
of the Class of 1933 (the 50-year class) and the
three recipients of the Distinguished Service Awards
(Dr. James H. Sterner, Class of 1925; Dr. Thomas J.
O'Toole, Class of 1956; and Dr. James B. Creasy, Class
of 1957).
The Alumni Board of Directors held its regular
meeting at 8:00 a.m. on Saturday, June 11, in the faculty
dining room of Scranton Commons and the Alumni
Room in Carver Hall.
Registration was held in Carver Hall lobby on Friday
afternoon and Saturday morning from 9 a.m. to noon.
An open house was held in the Presidents' Lounge of
Kehr Union from 9 to 11 a.m., affording alumni the opportunity to visit with college faculty members and administrators.
The annual business meeting was held at 11 a.m. in
Carver Hall Auditorium, at which time eight directors
were elected. Elected for three-year terms on the board
of directors were Francis D. Sell '35, Boyertown;
Elwood Wagner '43, State College; Sara Dockey Edwards '44, Berwick; Constance Stanko Gobora '52, Levittown; Ronald W. Cranford '63, Gilbertsville James E.
Holhster 78, Bloomsburg; and Karen T. Chawaga '82,
Wilkes-Barre. Elected for a two-year term was Helen E.
Barrow '24, Sunbury.
;
At the conclusion of the business meeting, the new
board met briefly to elect officers.
A picnic lunch followed at noon on the lawn of Carver
Hall. During the picnic, a newly-planted dogwood tree
on the lawn of Carver Hall was dedicated to the Class of
1933.
Following the picnic, a talent showcase was held at 2
p.m. in Carver Hall Auditorium, featuring Jim Lyman,
Class of 1981; Steve Lindenmuth, Class of 1983; Joanie
Lander, Class of 1985; Lavon Wills, Class of 1985; John
Couch, a member of the music department faculty;
Joseph and Judy Steever, Class of 1980 and 1984; John
Garcia, Class of 1986; and Anita McCoy, Class of 1985.
On Saturday evening, two reunions were held, with the
"War Years Classes" (194243-44-45) at Caldwell Con-
and the Class of 1948 at Hotel Magee.
Student coordinator for Alumni Weekend was John
Kaney, a junior from Fleetwood.
sistory
13
14
Bloomsburg University
return for Alumni Weeke:
Alumni Quarterly
15
tend
FIFTY-YEAR CLASS—Attending
Class of 1933 were (seated)
the reunion of the
Edna Creveling Whipple,
Berenice Cuthbert Elfert, Laura Kelley Bollinger,
Pauline Reng Turek, Irene Naus Munson, Charlotte
Osborne Stein Bayne, Lois Lawson, (Row 2) Violet
Gemberling Shirk, Adelaide Hausch Kline, Ann Chance,
Irene Hirsch Heister, Evelyn Heiser Reefer, Emily Landls Sopensky, Alda Giannini Strazdus, Mary Furman
James, Anna Mary Leiser
Tobias, Emily
Wagner
Bitter,
Zeisloft,
Edna Lamoreaux
Ruth Fowler Drake, June
Mensch Strausser, Frances Evans Parker, Bob Parker,
(Row 3) Thomas Coursen, Mildred Bixler Sharp, Violet
Snyder Hoffman, Matilda Olash, Harriet Styer Boop,
Mary Jenkins Zook, Louise Shipman Evans, Mary Ahearn
Reilly, Kenneth Roberts, (Row 4) Jack Lewis, Ruth
Jackson Richards, Mary Stahl, Martha Ma it Karns, Anne
McGlnley Maloney Betty Boyle Church, Kathryn Wenner
Thacher, (Row 5) Charles F. Hens ley, Florence Byerly
Hoover, H. Grace Worrell, Larue Gass Herr, Mary Betterly Malers, K. Louise Brislin Thomas, Ethel M. Hummel,
,
Mae Mantz Krelss, (Row
6) Grace R. Hartman, ElynorG.
Burke, Gertrude S. Howells, Marion DeFrain Danowsky,
Dorothy Schild Francis, Bethia Allen King, Evelyn Smith
Hooven, (Row 7) Frances A. Reynolds, Creda Houser Van
Blargan, Miles B. Potter, Josephine E. Pack Brest, John
A. Early, Frank J. Greco, (Row 8) Dorothy Criswell
Johnson, Lucy Bitetti, Claire Musgrave Porter, Allen W.
Parr, Eugene M. Keefer, Harold M. Danowsky. (Glen Ed-
wards Studio)
Bloomsburg University
16
i
Continued from Page 12)
Sharon Dona to) Arnold '79 is a marketing assistant at
Lawrence National Bank in Canton, N Y.
Dave and Sharon may be reached at 40 East Main St.,
(
the St.
Canton,
NY.
Jill Johnson '80 recently passed the certified public accountant examination. She is employed as a revenue
agent for the IRS at Reading, Pa. She is currently pursuing her master's degree at Albright College in Reading.
Wayne L. Sawlina
of
Carl Poff 79, assistant wrestling coach at Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815.
in
1965. He was a lifetime resident of Shamokin and a computer programmer by occupation.
13617.
was recently awarded his Master of Arts degree in
Physical Education from the University of North Carolina
where he formerly was assistant wrestling coach for three
years. He lives at 920 McGuire Road, Apt. 16, Bloomsburg,
'81 died on April 22 at his home.
Shamokin, November 18, 1959, Wayne was a son
Frank Sawlina and the late Thelma Spade, who died in
Born
Stephen Craig Sneidman '80 and Linda Jane Harris are
engaged. Linda is employed at Berwick Industries Inc.
Steve is employed by Weis Markets in Bloomsburg. A
June 1984 wedding is planned.
Wayne was a
He was
1977 graduate of
Shamokin Area High
a member of Christian Missionary and
Alliance Church, Shamokin.
Survivors include his father, one sister, Debra L.
Sawlina, at home, and the maternal grandmother, Mrs.
School.
Kathy M. Shughart '80 received a Juris Doctor Degree
Florence Spade, Shamokin.
from the Dickinson School of Law on June 4.
Paul C. Zlegenfuss '81 and his wife, Martha (Vlattas)
Matthew W. Simone '80 has been selected to appear in '81, are the parents of a son, Stephen Paul. Paul is a secthe Outstanding Young Men of America Publication. He ond lieutenant in the U.S. Marine Corps. Their address is
recently received a Juris Doctorate Degree upon gradua- 208 Myrtlewood Circle, Jacksonville, N.C. 28540.
tion from California Western School of Law, San Diego
make their home in Lancaster, Pa.
Betty Jane C. Bavington '81 and Martin A. Reymer
Calif.
were
His selection to this honor was based on his scholastic married on May 28. The bride is employed by Columbia
County
Children
and
civic
service.
and
He
was
Youth
Services.
Student Bar Association
The bridegroom is
Melissa (McDonie) Pugliese '79 and her husband, Joel,
representative, treasurer of Phi Alpha Delta, interna- employed at the Computer Clinic, Inc. of Bloomsburg.
live at 25A Hampton Lane, Neffsville, Pa. 17601. Both are
They
tional
law
live
at
fraternity
28
Perry
Avenue,
198041.
and president, 1982-83; coorBloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
employed at Armstrong World Industries.
dinator of the Bar Review Course of America and corresponding secretary for the graduation committee.
Angela Susan DotoU '81 and Robert
P. Jackson were
During his law school career, Simone received the married on June 5 in St.
Andrew's Episcopal Church in
following awards: Phi Alpha Delta Outstanding Member AUentown Her husband
was graduated from Higham
Award '8142 and '82-83; Student Bar Association Civic Lane High School in Nuneaton,
England; The University
Service
Viclri Lynn Myers '80 was awarded a Master
Award,
and
of
Commentary Student of the Year.
London and Illinois Institute of
of Business
Technology Both are
He
Administration degree by Shippensburg University
and
his wife, the former Dotti Koch of Hazleton, employed by Drum Owen
on
Valve Co. in Nazareth. They live
May 7, 1983.
reside at 3405 Villa Lane, San Diego, 92123, where
he is in Nazareth, Pa.
employed as an estate planner and legal counselor with
the Donald R. Clauson Co. Inc.
Jeanne Danielle Kiewlak '81 and Gary Richard
Richard John DtFrancisco '80 and Joanne
Marie
Mrs. Simone is employed in the neonatal intensive care Beveridge were
married on May 7. Both are employed at
Pitingolo were married on April 16.
Both are special
unit of Children's Hospital, San Diego, and also
serves as the Geisinger Medical Center in Danville. They live at
education teachers employed by the Central
Susquehanna
a member of its Emergency Transport Team.
1102 Susquehanna Avenue, Sunbury, Pa. 17801.
Intermediate Unit. The bride
Kathy Jo Barto '79 and Randall Marc Johnston were
married on April 23. Kathy is employed by Commonwealth National Bank, Harrisburg. Her husband is
employed by Commonwealth National Bank, York. They
1980
is
University graduate. They
make
a Pennsylvania State
their
home
in
Sunbury
th?
Jerry L. Bolig '80 was recently appointed
auditor by the
board of directors of the Snyder County
Trust Co. Jerry
has been employed in the bank's Selinsgrove
office for a
year and a half. He lives at 302 W. Sassafras
St Selinsgrove. Pa. 17870.
E
n
Bradley
i
>8
°
was ordaine
Philadelphia^ His home church
Methodist Church, Chester.
He
University School of Theology
Bi2U|
iJrfln^
Lon
Ann is employed
!
is
in
Community United
attended
the
Boston
"
6ngaged t0 David A Pacchioli.
in the marketing
department at
-
Elizabeth Anne Chandler '81 graduated on June 22 from
West Jersey Health System School of Medical
Technology. Her address is 440 S. Jackson St..
the
Woodbury
N.J. 08096.
Mary A. Smith '81 was recently promoted to first lieutenant in the U.S. Army. She entered military
service
August
24, 1981
as a second lieutenant and was assigned to
the Personnel
ned on May
Susan
an accountant at W. M. Wagner
Sales Conine. Winfield. Her husband
is a self employed
farmer. They live at R.D. 1, Elysburg,
Pa. 17824.
14.
is
Emergency Care Research Institute
Fivmmrth MeetUlg
An October wedding is planned
^
mSTJ
St.
M
"
e G,owatski *«• and
Robert Frank were
tT
Elizabeth
Ann Seton School
"*h
S^a »
in
the U.S. Air
Minersville
Fan*
Beach Air Force Base, South
Carolina. They
SuteenthAvenueSouth.SurfsideBeach.S
Her
at
MvS
live
aM2i
I.S?
Sandra K. (Davis) Packer "80 and her husband
Dean P.
Packer '81, are the parents of a daughter
born on July 1
The Packers live at 720-B, Old Westminster
Road Westminster, Md. 21157.
and Resource Management
Institute at
Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana. Lt. Smith
serving as adjutant and student detachment
commander
at the Organizational Effectiveness
Center
and School,
Training and Doctrine
is
presently
Command, Fort Ord.
Joseph Kalinoski
'81 and Debra Kerris
are engaged. The
attending Lock Haven University. Joe is
studying toward a
at the University of Pittsburgh A
bride-to-be
is
June
wedding
MBA
2,
1984
is
planned.
Mark Alan Cable '81, a Christian singer-songwriter,
gave a concert on June 18 in the social hall of
Berwick
Assembly of God, sponsored by Uplift, The
Christian
Singles Ministry.
Michael L. MixeU '80 graduated in the top
six of his class
at the Dickinson School of Law.
He is now associated with
the law firm of Stevens and Lee
in Reading. He and his
mfe, Stacey Swisher MixeU '81, live at
33-E Gulfstream
Drive, Flying Hills, Reading, Pa. 19607.
1981
ELIZABETH DOUGHERTY '80
Elizabeth
Ann Dougherty
"80
graduated magna
cum
laude from Dickinson School of Law,
Carlisle, this past
spring. She was third in her class.
She was comments editor of the
DICKINSON LAW
and won the James S. Bowman
Memorial
REVIEW
Award given
to the senior
achieving the highest
the course in Pennsylvania practice.
marks
in
Elizabeth will be employed as a law
clerk for Judge
Richard Wickersham of the Superior
Court of Penn-
Margaret Jane Lowthert '81 and Lawrence
Joseph Dool'80 were married on April
16. Larry is a management
mg
analyst with the U.S. Civil Service.
They live in Las
Cruces.N.M.
88001.
Second Lieutenant Jeff Ringhoffer '81 and his wife
Kris
(Oakland) '80, live at 4041 Olive Road, Apt.
407, Pensacola, Fla. 32514. Jeff is a former president
of the Community Government Association.
sylvania.
Mark was president
of Christian
Mary Ann (Missy) Paskey '81 and Michael Flynn
are
engaged. Missy is employed as promotion
coordinator for
the Daily Intelligencer in Doylestown,
Pa. Her fiance a
University of Delaware graduate,
is employed as'
jeweler for Custom Jewelers and
Gems, Ivyland Pa The
wedding will take place June 16, 1984.
Michael T. Huben
'81 was recently
promoted by PennBank and Trust Company of Pottsville
to manager of the Ashland
office. Mike started with Penn-
sylvania National
She was a member of Woolsack Honor
Society
ing Law school, served as a law
clerk for the
and dur-
law firms
of
McNees, Wallace and Nurick in Harrisburg
and Laputka
Bayless, Ecker and Conn in Hazleton.
At Bloomsburg, Elizabeth was a Spanish
major.
Karen
L. Schick '81
and Thomas J. Rampulla were mar-
May 7. Karen is employed as a marketing
representative by Horrigan American Co. Inc. Tom
is the
manager of Nazareth Beverage Center. They live in
Nazareth, Pa.
ried
on
sylvania National in June 1981
as an officer trainee
his wife, the former Carol
Zinda of Centralia
and
1900
Walnut Street, Ashland, Pa.
Amy
Grace Stamets '80 and Michael John Huss
were
married recently. The bride is a
secretary
Julie
at
Allied Industries.
of the Fellowship
Athletes at Bloomsburg and has dedicated
his music to
spreading the word of Christ.
He has been singing at churches, coUeges, coffeehouses
nursing homes and at youth retreats
throughout Pennsylvania and neighboring states, accompanying
himself
on guitar and harmonica to bring a
message and create a
light, enjoyable atmosphere
touching people of all ages
His address is 1519 Colgate Drive, Bethlehem,
Pa. 18017.
Grumman
Her husband is an engineer with Bechtel
Power Corporation at the Berwick
nuclear site They
make their home in Bloomsburg
Ellen Marie McDonnell
and Thomas Charles Vought
II were married on April 30.
Ellen is employed at
Bloomsburg Hospital. Tom is employed by Step-By-Step
Inc. in Bloomsburg. They live at 203
Nassau Street Danville,
Pa. 17821.
Hart Dougherty
are engaged.
'81
'81
UVe
live
He
at
17921.
and Joseph
P.
McGarry Jr
Amy is a speech pathologist employed by the
Montgomery County Intermediate Unit
in Norristown
Her fiance is a student at Delaware
Valley College and is
employed by Zenco Machine and Tool
An October wedding is planned.
Co. of Doylestown
(Continued on Page 18)
Alumni Quarterly
17
Computer program earns Sperry grant
For the second consecutive year, Sperry Corporation
Computer Systems has presented Bloomsburg Universiship
Bloomsburg's integrated central information system
Worldwide News, an education, research,
and training publication circulated widely in the
number
thering of
was designed by key personnel in University Computer
Services for the Sperry computer system installed
at the
University. The program integrates four major
systems: student information, budget and encumbrance,
management data and academic services. The management data includes personnel, revenue, student schedul-
In accepting the grant, John L. Walker,
executive
director for Institutional Advancement,
ty with an unrestricted grant in recognition
of
its
leader-
in both the academic use of
computing and the
development of computer-based administrative
systems
In announcing this year's
$7,500 contribution, Charles
J. Reylek, Sperry sales manager, Harrisburg
branch,
said, "Ths Sperry Corporation is committed
to the fur-
human
enhances
com-
puter industry.
Bloomsburg's integrated central information system
resources development through education, and the high technology of computer
corporations
like ours is central to the success of the
future of our
country. A partnership of industry and education
and promotes these ideas. Customers of our
products and services provide the basis for our
growth
and direction for future planning."
Two years ago, the Sperry Corporation featured
in
the Sperry
ing, housing, financial aid, student accounting,
definition, academic records, and enrollments.
"One
ed for sound decision making," Doyle G.
Dodson, director of Computer Services, explained.
"We have also
been able to address the need for sharply
increased
research and classroom support." The
original Sperry
1100/21 computer system has been
updated to 1160/61,
which doubles the memory capacity and
increases the
of terminals available to students,
faculty
and
administrators.
"We
commented
are pleased that Sperry has chosen to
recognize
Bloomsburg. The
course
gift is a fine example of corporate
support for higher education. Such gifts from
business industry, foundations and individual donors
will help to
provide the margin of excellence in our
programs
of our objectives in planning
our current computer system and in developing the integrated
information program was to provide quick access
to data need-
and
services."
Thousands
enjoy
at
summer
Bloomsburg
By the end
summer programs at Bloomshave brought nearly 4,000 people to
the Bloomsburg area. According to John Abell, assistant
dean of the College of Extended Programs, the 1983
of August,
burg University
will
summer
calendar includes 30 conferences with attendees ranging from school children to senior citizens.
Before the summer is over. 3,500 people will spend
a
weekend or more in the campus dormitories, while 500
more will commute to the area for special programs.
Church conferences are drawing the largest number
of participants. The United Methodist Church Conference attracted 1,500 people in June, and a Lutheran
Youth Conference in August will bring another 1,200.
Senior citizens will take college classes in three weeklong Elderhostel sessions this summer.
Some of the summer visitors will use their time for
specialized learning. This summer the campus will host
three computer workshops, a learning styles workshop
an advanced placement calculus
workshop, high school student council leadership training, and a workshop for athletic trainers.
Athletics will be another important part of the summer programs. Among the offerings are three tennis
for educators,
camp
sessions, four wrestling
camps, two basketball
camps, a Husky school
for football, and a Bloomsburg
University Junior Tennis Tournament.
Professional, educational, governmental, or business
groups interested in using the college's conference/workshop facilities should call John Abell at
717-389-1004.
Five Arts
—
GRADUATES OF 1886 This is one of several old
photographs which Murray and M. Rebecca
West
Hackenburg bought at a recent auction in Berwick
The
photo is identified on the back as
"Harrisburg girls
Class of 1886, B.S.N.S." The ladies
are identified as
-
(seated) Emma Murphy, M. Elfleda Barnes
Gottschall,
Josephine Koser, (standing) Emma M. Fisher, ?
Barnes, and Mae E. Eaton. The Hackenburgs are 1950
and 1941 graduates, and their son, Randy, is a 1969
grad.
They reside
at R.D.
3,
Box
12,
Danville, Pa. 17821.
& Science teachers honored
Outstanding faculty,
1983
Five teachers in the College of Arts and Sciences
have
been honored as outstanding faculty members for 1983.
The award recipients, announced by the Arts and
Sciences Student Council, are Peter Bohling, Ph.D.,
associate professor of economics; Charles Brennan",
Ph.D., professor of mathematics; William Carlough,
Ph.D., professor and chairman of philosophy
and anthropology; Marjorie Clay, Ph.D.. associate professor
of
philosophy and anthropology; and James Sperry,
Ph.D.,
professor of history.
Faculty are nominated and selected by the 18-member
and cannot receive the award in two consecutive
council
years. Criteria for this year's selection included concern
for individual students, quality of advising,
excellence
as a teacher, accessibility outside the classroom,
and
participation and involvement in the University beyond
classroom
DR. WILLIAM CARLOUGH
DR.
PETER BOHLING
DR. JAMES SPERRY
DR.
CHARLES BRENN AN
activities.
This year's recipients were honored by the council
at
an informal reception held April 17 at the home of Arts
and Sciences Dean G. Alfred Forsyth.
Bloomsburg .University
18
(Continued from Page 16)
Diane Susan Gansel '82 and Jerome John O'Brien, Jr.
were married on June 11. The bride was a substitute
teacher for the Berwick-Bloomsburg area. Her husband is
employed as a computer programmer with Leeds & Northrup at North Wales. They live at Harleysville, Pa.
Jeffrey P. Ehring *81 and Judith Carol Clayton are
'82
engaged. Jeff is employed by Donald K. Ehring Inc. in
Langhorne. Judith, a Shippensburg University graduate,
teaches at the Village School ho use A November wedding
is
planned.
Timothy Alan Latshaw '81 and Charlene Lynn Snyder
were married on May 21. The bride is employed in the
medical records department at Geisinger Medical Center.
Tim is a teacher at Sun Area Vo-Tech School in New
Berlin. They live at Mahoning Terrace Apartments,
Catherine Ann (Barry) Wasilewski '82 and her husband,
Jeffrey '82, live at 413 South Lime Street, Lancaster. Pa.
17602. Catherine is a registered nurse employed at the
Lancaster General Hospital. Jeff is assistant manager of
Davenports', Harrisburg, Pa.
Danville, Pa. 17821.
William
Roanne Heisner '81 and Richard Tombasco were married in June. The newly-weds live at 1742 Dawn Circle,
Whitehall, Pa. 18052. Roanne is a procurement assistant
at Pennsylvania Power and Light Co. Rich is a nuclear
analyst with the
S. Barron '82 is working as a sales represenAshland Oil and is currently residing in New
Hampshire. He was married on June 25 to Nancy
Kressler, a would-be Class of 1983 graduate who transferred from Bloomsburg to Mansfield in early 1982. She
tative for
plans to
same firm.
make
Their address
Thomas E. Leipold '81 and Carol A. Kunicki are engaged. A July 14, 1984 wedding is being planned. Carol is
an internal auditor for the Miller-Wohl Co., Seacaucus,
N.J. Tom is attending the University of Toledo College of
Mary
a career
is
54 M>
Ellen Klinger
employed as a
in
the special education field.
Amherst St., Nashua, N.H.
-
HUSBAND-WIFE DEGREES
Robert and Kimberly
McCall were one of two married couples who received
degrees at commencement exercises in May. They were
among 882 undergraduate and graduate candidates
03060.
'82 is
a registered nurse currently
nurse at Lankenau Hospital in
staff
receiving degrees.
Kimberly, daughter of Mrs. Wilma Steinour, Hanover,
Pa., was awarded a Master of Education degree in
teaching of the hearing impaired. She previously earned
a
Philadelphia.
Law.
Teresa Tafelski '82 is employed as a correctional officer
with the Federal Bureau of Prisons in Pleasanton, Califor-
Her address
nia.
1085 Murrieta Blvd., Sunset
No. 124, Livermore, Calif. 94550.
1982
Deborah Metrick '82 and Joseph F. Barlek '81 are
engaged. The bride-to-be is a medical technologist at
Polyclinic Medical Center, Harrisburg. Joe is an accountant for Deioitte Fashions
and Sells
wedding is planned for September 17.
in Allen town.
The
Lessie
Bachelor of Science degree in elementary education in
1979 and is a 1975 graduate of Delone Catholic High School.
Robert, son of Mr. and Mrs. James McCall, Jr.,
Lancaster, Pa., graduated summa cum laude with
a bachelor
of science degree in business administration
majoring in
computer/information science. He is a 1975 graduate of
Towers
Ann Bowman
'82 and Stephen Edward Diltz
were
Stephen is employed by Diltz Equipment Sales, Lime Ridge. They make their home in
Lightstreet, Pa.
married on
Lisa
Kathleen A. Mulroy '82 is a clerk with Valley Forge Information Service in King of Prussia, Pa. Her mailing address is 2415 Hillside Drive. Norristown, Pa. 19403.
is
May
Manheim Township High School.
21.
Ann Hackenburg
and Daniel Ross Mitchell were
married on May 14. Lisa is a graduate student in speech
pathology at Bloomsburg. Her husband is employed at
Faylor Middlecreek. They live at R.D. 1, Beavertown, Pa.
'82
Roxie D. Chilson '83 and Marvin Kennedy Shrawder
were married on June 11. The bride is employed as a
nurse at Geisinger Medical Center. Her husband is employed by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board in
Bloomsburg. They live at R.D. 2, Danville, Pa. 17821.
17813.
Deanna Kay Musser
were married on May
Northumberland, Pa.
'82
and Thomas Joseph Wallish
They live at 345 Twelfth St
17857. The bride is a special
education
teacher with Central Susquehanna
Intermediate Unit. Her husband is employed
at PP&L
28.
Washington ville.
Polly Jane
Thomas
'82
and Philip Dean Tharp were
married on May 14. Polly is a registered nurse at GeisMedical Center, Danville. Her husband is a
locksmith at Keister's Keys, Selinsgrove.
inger
Peggy Ann Stahl '82 and Thomas Daniel Makowski
were
married on June 4. Peggy is employed
at Geisinger
Medical Center in the Pediatrics
Department Her
husband, a Penn State graduate, plans a
career as
Brian David Santell '82 and Melanie Ann Tosloskie were
married on May 7. They live in Bear Gap, Elysburg.
in the U.S.
trol
a pilot
Air Force.
Miriarirlx»rraine Harrar "82 and Robert Joseph
Muller
are engaged. Miriam
is
employed by Perdue Farms
Md. Bob, a graduate of East Stroudsburg State
College and Pennsylvania State
University, is
Salisbury,
employed
by Sanders & Thomas Inc., engineering
consultants Horsham. A May 1984 wedding is planned.
Gail
'82 and David Heimbach '82
were marThe bride is employed in the general accounting office at Hess's. Her husband
is retail sales
manager for Stadler Distributors of PlumsteadviUe They
liveinAllentown.Pa.
Dan Snyder '82 started as a teller at the West Milton
State Bank on May 2. He will also
continue his job at the
Fence Restaurant. His address
Columbia, Pa.
is
R.D.
1,
Box
394
New
17856.
Dennis E. Beaver '82 and Linda Ann
Hoffman are
engaged. Dennis attends Gettysburg
Lutheran
Theological Seminary and plans to become
an ordained
minister. Linda attends Bloomsburg
University and also
is employed at the Amity
House Restaurant in Lewisburg
A July 1984 wedding is planned.
Richard Eric Jansson '82 and Denise Julia
Gasper are
engaged. Dick is employed by Western
Electric as a computer programmer in Piscataway,
N.J. Denise, a Perm
State graduate, is working toward
a master's degree at
Bloomsburg. She is employed as
a speech-language
pathologist by Schuylkill Intermediate
Unit 29 A June
wedding
is
%
Laurel C. Mowery '82 and Jeffrey L. Archey
were married on May 21. The bride is employed
as a registered
nurse at Geisinger Medical Center. The bridegroom,
a
Lock Haven University graduate, is a teacher
at
Bloomsburg High School.
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
They
live
at
R.D.
Jean Marie Fillman *82 and James Hockenbury,
Jr. are
engaged. The bride-to-be is employed as a
special education teacher with the Lincoln
Intermediate Unit 11 of
York, Pa. Her fiance is employed by the
physical therapy
department of Nesbitt Memorial Hospital in
Kingston
The wedding will take place August 20 in
St. Charles
Church in Sugar Notch, Pa.
Lisa
Ann Hague
9,
'82 and
1982
Jeffrey E.
Somers
'82
were mar-
m the Evangelical Congregational
Church in Plymouth Meeting, Lisa is
employed as a second grade teacher in East Stroudsburg,
and Jeff is sales
and marketing coordinator for Eagle Lake
Corporation
Gouldsboro. Their address
Stroudsburg, Pa. 18360.
is
216
Park
ding
and Carl F. Kobeski were marThey live m Factoryville, Pa. The
'82
on April 16.
bridegroom, a Pennsylvania State University graduate,
employed by United Parcel Service.
is
is
planned.
Linda Michelle Singletary '83 and Charles F. Cowher,
engaged. Linda is employed part-time at Amity
House Restaurant in Lewisburg. Her fiance is a graduate
of Delaware Valley College. He is employed
by Personalized Landscaping, Reading. An October 15 wedding
Jr. are
is
planned.
1
Cynthia Ann Bell '82 and George R. Kibbe II were
married on May 21. They live at Owings
Mills, Maryland.
ried on October
Judy Balliet '83 and Gary Heddens '81 are engaged.
Judy is employed by Nichols. Gary is an assistant
manager for Wool worths in Scranton. An October wed-
in
Avenue
Dave Superdock "83, senior co-captain of the 1983
Bloomsburg University men's tennis team, was honored
on May 11 at the NCAA Division II Tennis
Championships
Banquet by being named as the 1983 recipient of the
Arthur Ashe Award as the nation's outstanding
studenttennis player.
The banquet was held in San Marcos, Tex., site
of the
II tourney where Superdock
competed. Southwest Texas State University was the host institution.
The award, which is named after the former
Wimbledon
champion, is given annually by the Intercollegiate
Tennis
Coaches Association (ITCA) to the Division II
Division
player who
best exemplifies the same characteristics
that Ashe
himself displayed during his illustrious
career.
To be considered for the award, an athlete
must fulfill
major categories: scholastic and
extra-curricular
four
achievement, sportsmanship and character,
humanitarian concern for others and a high
level of tennis accomplishments.
After being chosen as one of the four
finalists out of 170
candidates, Superdock was then named
by the members
of the ITCA to represent the
Eastern Region in the national competition and was then
selected as the winner
over representatives from the South,
Mid-West and West
1983
While at Bloomsburg, Superdock
compiled awardwinning statistics both on and off the
court.
planned.
Mary Jane Fedder
ried
is a secretary at M-L Appliances
and Televisions,
Shamokin. Brian is a computer programmer at ConCentral Inc., Bloomsburg.
Ann Reiss
ried in April 1983.
1984
The
bride
Inc.,
Joanne Irene Zimmerman '83 and Douglas Caffey
Rogers were married on April 30. Douglas, a 1976
graduate of East Stroudsburg University, is employed by
Safety Light Corp. in Bloomsburg. They make their home
at 236 Legion Road, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Donna Mae Stewart '83 and Glenn A. Wagner
Jr were
married on May 28. Donna Mae is employed
as a hostess
at Perkins Cake & Steak at Hummels
Wharf. Her husband
is a heavy equipment engineer
for Local 542 and is employed at Sunset Rink, Shamokin
Dam. Thev live in
Hummels Wharf,
Pa.
Dave was named
to the
Who's Who
of
America Among
College Students, and during
his junior year he was
honored by the ITCA as one of the
nation's top scholarathletes for Division
Superdock
y
II.
will attend the
L ^emtf
Pennsylvania State UniversiHCrShey MedlCal "enter
l0Cated 31
Alumni Quarterly
19
NEWS BRIEFS
Bloomsburg University expects an
enrollment of beween 4,900 and 5.000 full-time undergraduate
students
for the 1983 fall semester.
Admission figures recently
announced by Dr. Tom L. Cooper, Dean
of Admissions,
snow the number is consistent with the
University's efforts to maintain steady enrollment
at the level
established six years ago.
Cooper said his office stopped accepting
applications
for the fall semester on May 6
when University student
capacity was reached. At that time.
4,593 freshmen and
785 transfer applications had been processed
for the
1,080 freshmen and 210 transfer spaces.
Cooper said
freshmen applications were 2.1% above
the level
reached last year, while transfer applications
remained
at the
same
level.
Students indicated that they chose
Bloomsburg,
Cooper said, because of its quality programs,
reasonable cost, strong faculty and good
academic
reputation, desirable location, and
accessibility to
major
highways.
"This success should be a source of pride for the
entire University community," Cooper
said. "We expect
enrollments to remain stable throughout
most of the
1980s because of the academic strengths
which have
been established over the years."
Last year, 4.879 full-time undergraduates
were
en-
rolled for the fall semester.
YEAR CLASS — Members
of the Class of 1948 held
their reunion dinner at the Hotel
Magee on Saturday, June
35-
Benefield honored
Richard A. Benefield, a prominent Bloomsburg entrepreneur and a member of the Bloomsburg University
Business Advisory Beard, was honored as Businessper-
son
of the
Year by the state chapter
da. Phi Beta
Lambda
of Phi
In attendance were (seated) Eleanor Stunnan, a
guest; Ralph E. Seltzer, Nancy Evancho Seltzer and Betty
11.
Beta Lamb-
a broad-based business service
corporation consisting of 300,000 students, of which there
is a local chapter at the University.
is
Other members of the advisory board are Dr. Harvey
A. Andruss, president emeritus of the University; E.H.
Alkire. Air Products and Chemicals, Allentown; Clayton
Daley, retired president, Wise Foods and Drake
Bakeries. Inc.; Robert Ellis, president. Quality Inn,
Lancaster; James M. Gustave '58, assistant national
manager. Jack Daniels Distillery; Harriet Kocher
'39. regional franchise representative for
Quality Inns,
Edward
J. Kreitz '50, director of
marketing, K-Mart International; Richard F. Laux
president, United
Penn Bank; Dr. James Murphy,
'52,
chief,
four-year programs, State Education Department;
George W. O'Connell "58, vice president for sales and
marketing, Brown Company (Gulf-Western Industries);
Frank Rabold, retired vice president for administration,
Bethlehem Steel Corp.; Janet Sherman, manager,
secretarial services, Geisinger Medical Center.
Robert Nearing, director emeritus of First Eastern
Bank, N.A., was recognized
retiring
for his
The average freshman
The average freshman signing up for classes at BSC
was 18 years old, from between 51 and 500 miles
away, and a "B" student in high school.
Most freshmen made Bloomsburg State their first
choice for a college, choosing it for its good academic
reputation and going there in hopes of getting a better
last fall
sales
International;
years of service upon
from the board.
Released time grants
Six Bloomsburg University professors have been
awarded released time grants for the summer. The
grants were awarded on the basis of competition. Each
mer he
complete a novel, his seventh book.
Prof. I. Sue Jackson, Department of Sociology and
Social Welfare, received a grant for public service. Ms.
Jackson, who is active in community-based organizations, earned the grant on basis of her proposals,
"Facilitating Democratic Functioning in Small Community Organizations."
will
courtesy of the Cooperative Institutional Research Prothe American Council on Education
and the University of California, Los Angeles.
The survey, the result of questions asked matri-
gram conducted by
culating freshmen in the Fall of 1982. reveals
teresting things about the Class of 1986.
some
in-
For instance:
—Most BSC freshmen come from unbroken homes
where the father works full-tune and the mother works
only part-time, if at all. Most parents had at least high
1
More than half (57 percent) think they have
a good chance to be satisfied with college.
their field.
But less than half
to get a job to
pay
(45 percent) think they will be able
and less than
have a good chance to make
for college expenses
half (44 percent) think they
at least a
Among
B
average.
the objectives
new
students considered to be
essential or very important:
—Be
d.. ttuuiuiiig
—Raise a family
...
.....u
i.^.vj
v
.j
percent)
(73 percent)
Recipients of the creative teaching grants are Dr.
Judith Downing, of the Department of Biological and
Allied Health Services; and Dr. Riley Smith, of the
English department. Dr. Downing will develop
well off financially (69 percent
—Help others in difficulty (62 percent)
microcomputer software for a course in microbiology.
Dr. Smith will develop a course in sociolinguistics.
—Be successful in their own business (42 percent)
—Have administrative responsibility (40 percent)
—Keep up with political affairs (32 percent)
Recipients of the research grants are Dr. David
Superdock, Department of Physics, who will study environmental radiation monitoring, and Dr. Susan
Rusinko, English department, who will study the works
of playwright Tom Stoppard.
(
Most women are planning careersas business executives (14 percent), elementary teachers (13 percent),
completed college.
Most BSC freshmen (82 percent) think their chances
are very good for getting their bachelor's degree and
most 71 percent) think they will be able to find a job in
award during summer 1981, and the
award in summer 1982. This sum-
Most men expect careers as business executives (23
percent), computer analysts 119 percent), and accountants 17 percent). Eleven percent of the freshmen men
The majority of students entering BSC last fall intended to major in accounting or business administration in
preparation for a career as an accountant, a business
executive or a computer programmer or analyst.
This profile of the average BSC freshman comes
one sum-
college research grant
cent).
are undecided.
school class, or three weeks salary.
Dr. Walter M. Brasch, associate professor of English
and journalism, was awarded the creative arts grant.
He is the first Bloomsburg professor to receive grants in
three separate fields. He previously received the
mer
study for women are accounting 13 percent),
nursing (10 percent) and elementary education (9 perfields of
job.
school educations, but while 20 percent of the fathers
had college degrees, only 12 percent of the mothers had
of the six professors will receive a reduction of
creative teaching
Fisher; (standing) Stanley C. Krzywicki,
Mrs.
Krzywicki, E. Ann Baldy Boyer, Dr. Lea Boyer,
Bertha
M. Stunnan, June Novak Bones, and Salvadore Bones.
L.
—Be
I
—Obtain the recognition of colleagues (54 percent)
—Develop a philosophy of life (47 percent)
—Promote
racial understanding (27 percent).
The most popular
fields of
study for
men
are account-
ing (19 percent), business administration (13 percent)
and computer science
(12 percent).
The most popular
accountants (12 percent) or musicians (10 percent). Only 7 percent of freshmen women are undecided.
Perhaps the strangest questionon the survey dealt
with activities engaged in by students during the past
year. The results:
Eighty percent drank beer, 77 percent attended a conpercent took vitamins, 70 percent stayed up all
night, 59 percent attended a religious service, 50 percent
cert, 71
wore glasses or contact lenses, 46 percent played a
musical instrument, 32 percent wrote a computer program, 20 percent took part in a demonstration, and 21
percent took a computer-assisted course. Only 8 percent
smoked cigarettes frequently, 28 percent said
they jogged frequently, 4 percent took a tranquilizing
said they
pill,
and almost
2 percent
had taken sleeping
pills.
Bloomsburg University
20
Free seminar
Promotions
The College of Professional Studies offered a free
three-day, hands-on seminar in the use of the microcomputer to 1983 graduates in education. Held the week
commencement, the seminar provided instruction
who did not have the opportunity to
gain expertise in this technological area. The seminar
was filled to capacity.
Instructors were Julie Abell, Dr. Harold Bailey, Dr.
Charles Brennan, Dr. June Trudnak, and Robert Abbott.
Go.est lecturer was Dr. Bernard Fradkin, dean of instructional services. Seminar coordinator was Dr.
Mat-
The following faculty members have been promoted
Leo G. Barrile, sociology and social welfare, from assistant to associate professor; Barbara E. Behr,
finance
and business law, associate to professor; Lucille A.
Gambardella. nursing, assistant to associate; Frederick
C. Hill, biological and allied health sciences,
associate to
professor; Brian A. Johnson, geography and
earth
after
for those students
thew Zoppetti.
Professor honored
Dr. Walter Brascb, associate professor
of English and
journalism, was honored for Best
Education Writing in
1982 in a national competition
sponsored by the Pacific
Coast Press Club, an association
of journalists in
science, associate to professor; Lawrence L.
Mack,
chemistry, associate to professor; David J.
Minder'hout,
philosophy and anthropology, associate to
professor;
Joseph R. Pifer, geography and earth science,
assistant
to associate; George A. Turner, history,
associate to
professor.
'
California,
New
Bloomsburg University
Oregon and Washington.
Tenure granted
On recommendation by the University-Wide
Tenure
Committee, the following faculty
members have been
granted tenure: Ellen B. Barker,
psychology; Leo G
Barnle. sociology and social
welfare; Stephen S
Batory business administration;
Jean E. Berry," nursing; Walter M. Brasch,
English; Robert L. Campbell
nursuig; Michael C. Estrada,
admissions; Charles J
'
e
llZT
,
o
J
C. Kincaid
ment Program during the month
Mark S Melnychuk, biological
and
NMC V A Onuschak, nursing;
CbemiStr5 Peter B Venut
°. b^iness ad-
HCati0n;
?thh
J
24 participants
-
SC,eDCeS:
-
mii-ct
\
ministration;
Anne
K. Wilson, sociology and
social
of June.
He was one
of
chosen from higher education ad-
Trustees reorganize
Robert Buehner Jr., associate
director of legal services for Geisinger System
Services, Danville, has been
Eight students of French visited
Quebec City in
accompanied by Dr. Ariane Foureman
and
re-elected
chairman of the council
Bloomsburg University.
May
Dr Marv
Also re-elected were
of the faculty.
vice chairman;
In the report of the 1982
last issue of
Annual Fund, included
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY,
of trustees for
Bob Griffin 73 and Marge Griffin 69 were omitted
from the President s Club list and from their
respective
class listings.
Dr. Lee Beaumont 43 was omitted from
the Long
Porch Society and from the list of Class
of 1943
con-
tributors.
LaRoy Davis
67,
FeasterviJJe
and Lucy Szabo 73, Berwick,
secretary.
Own your own Husky
The Husky, the
mascot
official
of
Bloomsburg
alma
University, can now be yours, to show-off
your
mater's university status.
This handsome 18" X 24" color poster, suitable
for
framing, is printed on a special German
paper dou-
ble coated to
add
The Husky is wearing the
school colors of maroon and gold around his
neck
and stands proud in front of a deep blue sky.
The
photograph was taken by senior Kevin
Lynch
photography editor for the Obiter and
photographed
for the Alumni Association.
Now you have the opportunity to own this handsome Husky for just $2.50, plus $1.40 for postage
and handling. All proceeds will go to the
lustre.
Obiter to
help reduce escalating costs of future
yearbooks
The poster is also an excellent gift for any
,
Bloomsburg
friend of
University.
Please complete and mail
to:
HUSKY POSTER
c/o Alumni Affairs
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg University
Bloomsburg, PA 17815
Universil
of Pennsylvania
-posters at $3.90 (moiled) equal $_
Nome,
.Class Year
Address.
City
Phone Number
.State
will
.
Zip.
in the
the following
omissions were made:
"
Students visit Canada
Lou John
"Ben
ministrators in national competition.
-
"'
participating in the
Program participant
Dr. Daniel C. Pantaleo, dean of the
College of Extended Programs and Graduate Studies,
participated in the
Z
Carnegie-Mellon University Higher Education
Manage-
'
James
is
the program to encourage industry,
government, and
academic institutions to plan joint ventures
to encourage development of advanced technology
programs.
,
Hopple, business administration;
partnership
Franklin Partnership," a program for
attracting and
developing advanced technology business
and industry
in Pennsylvania. Governor Dick
Thornburgh initiated
be shipped carefully
in
heavywall mailing tubes.
Dr. Seronsy honored
Dr. Louise Seronsy, professor of psychology
at
Bloomsburg University from
1966 until her retirement in
1973, was honored by the Mental Health Association
of
Columbia and Montour Counties for her key contributions in establishing and nurturing local
mental health
services.
Khan
at meeting
Dr. Saleem Khan, associate professor of
economics,
invited to attend a meeting of the National
Advisory
Council for South Asian Affairs on April
was
29 at the
Department of State in Washington. A morning session
dealt with recent visits by the prime minister
of India
and the president of Pakistan. Afternoon sessions
featured trade relations and immigration laws.
Article published
Dr. Donald A. Camplese of the psychology
department
and Dr. William S. O'Bruba of the department of
elementary and early childhood education department
have an article entitled "Beyond Bibliotherapy" included in the second edition of Reading Horizons: Selected
Readings. The book is published by the Reading
Center
and Clinic at Western Michigan University.
Presents paper
Dr. Lynne C. Miller, department of biology and allied
health science, presented a paper at the 59th Annual
Meeting
of the
Pennsylvania Academy of Science at
Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Her paper, entitled "The
Sell-
Cure Mechanism
in Hookworm Parasitosis with Nippostrongylus Brasiliensis in Pediatric, Adult, and
Geriatric Laboratory Rats," was also the subject of a
recent faculty research grant awarded by Bloomsburg
University.
Reading Conference
Dr. AJvin Granowsky, educational writer and consultant from Dallas, Texas, was the principal speaker
at
the 19th Annual Reading Conference at Bloomsburg
University. His topic, "Ughting Up Kids' Eyes," took a
light-hearted look at the serious issues of sexism, handling of diverse ethnic groups and races, and the "keep it
pure" mentality that affect the writing
of
books used
in
our schools.
Receives scholarship
Suzanne L. Lawrence, a Bloomsburg University senior
from Boyertown, has been awarded a |1,000 scholarship
by the Pennsylvania Institute of Certified Public Accountants.
Miss Lawrence was selected by ths trustees of ths
scholarship fund from 59 candidates nominated
by colleges and universities from throughout Penn-
PICPA
sylvania.
Sociology Careers Day
Five recent sociology graduates returned to campus
this spring for the second annual Careers Day of the
Sociology /Social Welfare Department. They discussed
the current job market, their present positions and
made suggestions to current students regarding
graduating from college, moving into the labor force,
the prospects
and
possibilities for sociology
and
social
welfare majors.
The returning alumni were Dennis Abruzzi 74, vice
president of Leaseway Transportation Corp. in Birmingham, Michigan; Ann Howell '82, a candidate for a
Master's Degree in Social Work at Mary wood College;
Pam Kramer 79, controller and expediter for Bechtel
Corp. at the Bell Bend Nuclear Plant; Lynne Mustapich
'82, a hospital social worker in Clinton, Maryland; and
Annette Starrantino '80, caseworker in the Division of
Mental Retardation in Delaware.
The panelists discussed their particular professions
with reference to the type of education they had reits relationships to present positions, and provid-
ceived,
ed illuminating insights into the various kinds of jobs
that students with a B.A. in sociology or social welfare
might seek.
Article published
Nancy Dlttman, Department of Business Education and Office Administration, had an article published
in the March, 1983, issue of the Journal of Employment
Counseling. Her article is entitled "How to Hold a SucDr.
cessful Career Planning Conference for
Women."
Mock convention
The
1984 Presidential
tradition at
Nominating Convention
Bloomsburg
—
will
—
a
be held in Centennial
Gymnasium
on Friday, April 6 (7-10 p.m.), and on
Saturday, April 7 (9 a.m. to 4 p.m.).
Alumni who would
like to participate in the
vention should contact
ty
Alumni Affairs
Doug Hippenstiel
Office.
mock
in the
Career Fair
Bloomsburg graduates returned to campus for the sixth annual career fair sponsored by
the
Career Development Center on March 30. Representing
their respective employers were
Marshall Mehring '69,
personnel manager, Ralston Purina Company;
Mark
Yachera '81, sales representative, Xerox Corporation;
John James 74, copy products sales representative,
A number
con-
Universi-
of
Eastman Kodak Company; Steve
J. Bright 78, director
Ernst and Whinney; Glenn Lang 74, New
Jersey Department of Higher Education; and Catherine
G. Branscom '64, admissions administrator, The
of recruiting,
In-
stitute for
Paralegal Training.
Article published
Dr. Brian Johnson, department of geography and
earth science, had an article published in the
March-
April, 1983, issue of the Journal of Geography.
"Who Is
On Our Streets?" examines methods of tabulating,
analyzing and mapping pedestrian traffic in a
town's
central business district.
Conference held
spring Business and Office Education Conference,
sponsored by the Department of Business Education and
Office Administration, was held on campus
on April 30.
The conference was entitled "New Technology Im-
A
plications for the Office
The
Gamma
and the Curriculum."
Xi Chapter
The University
Delta Pi Epsilon, honorary
graduate fraternity for teacher education, held an initiation ceremony and business meeting after
the conference concluded.
of
Forensic team 12th
Bloomsburg University's forensics team came back
from the 33rd Pi Kappa Delta Speech and Debate Tour-
nament as the only east coast school in the top 12.
The tournament, held in Estes Park, Colorado, was
at-
tended by 730 competitors and coaches from 109 colleges
and universities representing 35 states.
Summer school
A
total of 1,572
enrollment
undergraduate and graduate students
registered for the first six-week summer session and the
first three-week session at Bloomsburg
University. This
is an increase of over 200 students
compared to a year
ago, according to Dr. Daniel Pantaleo, dean of the College of Extended Programs and Graduate Studies.
chemistry; Dr. Andrew Karpinski, communications
disorders and special education; Dr. Richard Alderfer,
communication studies; Harold Frey, computer and information systems; Dr. William O'Bruba, curriculum
and foundations; Dr. Woo Bong Lee, economics; Dr.
Louis Thompson, English; Dr. Bernard Dill, finance and
business law; Dr. Wendelin Frantz, geography and
earth science; Dr. Jerry Medlock, health, physical
education and athletics; George Turner, history; Dr.
Mary Lou John, languages and
cultures; Dr. Melvin
Woodward, marketing/management; Dr. John Kerlin,
Jr., mathematics and computer science; Dr. Stephen
Wallace, music; Dr. Nancy Onuschak, nursing; Dr.
William Carlough, philosophy and anthropology; Dr.
David Harper, physics; Dr. Robert Rosholt, political
science; Dr. J. Calvin Walker, psychology; and I. Sue
Jackson, sociology and social welfare.
Assistant chairpersons are Dr. Gerald Powers, communication disorders and special education; A. J.
McDonnell, Jr., curriculum and foundations; and
Sharon Kribbs, nursing.
Psychology meeting
Four presentations were made by Bloomsburg University faculty and students at the annual meeting of the
Eastern Psychological Association in Philadelphia. Participants were student Michelle Mathis, Dr. James H.
Da ton. Dr. Connie Schick, Dr. Michael Gay nor and Dr.
Jean R. Atak.
Also attending the meeting were Dr. John Baird, Dr.
Steven Cohen, Dr. Alex Poplawsky, adjunct professor
Peggy Forsyth, and Dr. Al Forsyth, dean of the College
of Arts and Sciences.
I
Seminar on money
The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia and
University's Center for Economic Education co-
the
May 19. Speakers discussed the
and the money supply and its
impact on the personal lives of Americans.
sponsored a seminar on
relationship of the
FRB
fill two posiand director of
development.
After an unsuccessful national search
last year to
the combined position of director of
planning and
fill
development, Dr. Raymond Babineau of the
faculty was
asked to serve as director of institutional
planning during the 1982-1983 academic year. Mrs.
Peggy Bailey an
administrative assistant in the grants office,
continued
to serve as acting director of
development.
Since the effort to combine the two functions
was not
successful, it was decided to divide the
responsibilities
once again and conduct a separate search
for each position.
The director of institutional planning will be a
halftime position during the fall, spring
and summer
terms and will be appointed after an internal
search has
been conducted. The appointment will be for
a threeyear term.
The
Department chairpersons
The following faculty members have been elected
department chairpersons: Robert Yori, accounting;
Barbara Strohman, art; Dr. James Cole, biological and
allied health sciences; John Olivio, Jr., business education and office administration; Dr. Roy Pointer,
Searches underway
conducting searches to
is
tions: director of institutional planning
be
full-time position of director of
filled
development
will
through a national search.
Reorganization
The College of Professional Studies, under the
Dean Howard K. Macauley Jr., has been
leader-
ship of
reorganized into the School of Education and the School
of Health Sciences.
is
Directing the School of Education on a half-time basis
Dr. Ray Babineau. The school includes the Depart-
ment of Curriculum and Foundations, the Department
Communication Disorders and Special Education, the
Multicultural Education Center and the Curriculum
of
Materials Center.
Directing the School of Health and Sciences on a halftime basis is Nancy Onuschak. The school includes the
Department
of
Nursing and programs
in Allied Health.
Sabbatical leaves
recommended by the UniversityWide Sabbatical Committee, for the 1984-1985 academic
year at full pay have been approved for: Dr. Stephen D.
Beck, mathematics and computer sciences, first
semester; Ronald R. Champoux, communications
Leaves
of absence,
disorders, second semester; Paul G. Hartung,
mathematics and computer science, second semester
Brian A. Johnson, geography and earth science, first
semester; Robert B. Koslosky, art, academic year (onehalf pay ); Arthur W. Lysiak, history, second semester;
Colleen J. Marks, special education, first semester;
James W. Percey, political science, second semester;
Joseph R. Pifer, geography and earth science, summers
of 1984 and 1985; William J. Sproule, health, physical
education and athletics, summers of 1984 and 1985;
Gerald H. Strauss, English, second semester; Barbara
J. Strohman, art, academic year (one-half pay); H.
Cecil Turberville, Jr., health, physical education and
athletics, academic year; J. Calvin Walker, psychology,
summers of 1984 and 1985; William S. Woznek, elementary and early childhood education, first semester.
Approved for sabbatical leave for the full academic
year at one half pay was Dr. Christopher Armstrong,
sociology and social welfare. Lucille Gambardella, nursing, was approved for sabbatical leave for the academic
year without pay.
22
Bloomsburg University
U.S. judge gives good advice
.1» T 1
T* nj
<
•>
The Honorable
Harry T.
Edwards of the United States
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, used
the
topic "Reflecting on the Past to Chart a Course
for the
.
p.
Future" in his commencement address
graduates on May 15.
First, an individual should be self-reliant and
autonomous. Every person is literally capable of making himself; he can therefore be held responsible for his
character and his fate.
Second, all men are created equal. Everyone should
therefore stand equal before the law and should have an
equal chance for economic and social advancement.
Note that the touchstone is equality of opportunity, not
Bloomsburg
to
Judge Edwards focused on two salient features of our
and derived from them a series of sug-
nation's history
gestions regarding the
respond
them.
to
ways the graduates might
the opportunities and tasks that lie ahead
of
text:
I
am
so pleased to be here today to share in
the festivities of this graduation ceremony. I commend
the graduates for their academic achievements and
my
talk today, I will try to capitalize on your mood.
ask you to reflect, not only on your own past, but
on our nation's past, in order to set in context your own
unanimous commitment to these values that has
our country great. But when you pause to think
about it, the durability of our commitment to the foregoing ideals is rather extraordinary.
To be sure, the creed has undergone some slight
and aspirations and thereby strengthen and
enrich the sense of purpose with which you approach the
tasks ahead.
modifications. But, for the most part, the significant
events in our history have derived, not from alterations
our values, but from progressive extension of the
THE FIRST THEME I ask you to consider is the
powerful and distinctive way in which ideology has
figured in our cultural and political development.
Few
nations have ever been as dependent as we have
been on
a system of ideas
not only for the structure of our
government but for our sense of cultural identity. As
Professor Samuel Huntington has recently observed,
Americans, to an extent unparalleled among modern
in
tenets of our ideology into ever
ment of woman's suffrage after the turn of the century,
the attack on racial discrimination that began
in the
mid-twentieth century, and the assault on sex
discrimination that has only just begun. But the ideal
In the late eighteenth century, the United States
literally coalesced around an ideology
a unique configuration of convictions, hopes, and fears,
drawn from
a variety of European intellectual traditions,
-
has remained virtually unchanged.
make no effort here to assess the various
theories that have been offered to explain our
historical
commitment to a firm set of ideals. Rather, I will ask
you to consider the effects of the stability of our
itself
modified to
I will
the unusual circumstances of life in the
British North
American colonies, and welded together by the
founders
fit
of our nation into a potent engine of
revolution. In the
T.
Edwards, principal speaker
creed.
For me, possibly the most important effect of the
system is the resulting atrophy of
our capacity for critical self examination. So
many of us
have for so long accepted the principles that
I have
mentioned that they have become "submerged" in our
stability of our value
its
at the
May
was appointed to the United
States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia on
February
He
exercises,
20, 1980.
a graduate of Cornell University
(1962) and the
University of Michigan Law
School (1965). He graduated
from Michigan with high distinction
and was a member of
the Michigan Law Review
and the Order of the Coif
em5er f 016 faCUlty at
°
of
is
M
w^TL^
Ed^cJZJi
1976 until 1982
age
at Harvard Un,versit
y from
where he taught a course in law
and higher
turer ui law at
E
J Udge
Mat
.
M^TS
WarclS
?,
T
uT
Harvard Law School and as
a
guished Lecturer in
Law at Duke Law School
f0r
^ ******
member
.
?
tional Policy
Studies
at Harvard, a
visory council for the School
of Industrial
Uons at Cornell University,
a
board for toe Institute of
of the ad-
and Labor Rela-
member of the advisor^
Law and Economics at the
* member of the Visiting
*"»*
XZS y * *?^ versity
SEES,y*rf
lv
Educa-
of
0110380
«
we must remedy
this
cultivate the habit of self-
for the interaction of businessmen, workers, and voters
a model founded upon the concepts of independence,
—
—
competition, and bargaining
is truly appropriate
within the family. In your future careers and private
lives, I
hope that you
will
avoid such thoughtless distor-
tions of our traditional values.
I
ALSO HOPE
that you will recognize that world conmay require further adjustments,
ditions in the future
or even abandonment, of certain ideals heretofore
viewed as inviolate. I say this because you will confront
numerous, seemingly impossible, challenges in attempting to find your place in society following graduation.
My years as a judge have caused me to understand that,
as available economic and environmental resources
in
this country continue to decline, and the number
of
claimants continues to grow, the competition for
resources becomes unbearably intense. I have found
that a great many cases that we hear in court
are extremely difficult to resolve because of these and other
equally troubling considerations. For example, complex
cases - and inconsistent solutions — continue to
arise in
connection with the use of nuclear power, preservation
environment, health care for the poor, govern-
of the
ment employment programs, food stamps and other
welfare programs, the availability of contraceptives
for
children without parental consent, busing
and affirmative action, capital punishment, religion
in the
public schools and euthanasia. Everyone agrees
that the
underlying problems need to be addressed, but
there is
rarely a consensus with respect to the solutions.
Obviously, there is a glaring need for some
"new
thinking" in certain of these areas.
A redefinition of the
problems, perhaps, or a better, clearer understanding
of
the conflicting forces that impact on
the problems. It
may be that these problems require a new analytical
method
for arriving at solutions.
There are often too
ultimately satisfied;
moreover, the best solutions frequently
may lie
somewhere other than at the point of the
precarious and
tentative equilibrium struck among
competing
many
interests,
and no one
is
interests
In
due course,
this
it
be up
will
"new thinking"
-
deal with these issues
Distin-
" Dresent, y ser™g as a member of the
1
of social
political life. To take one example, the flowering
of
the ideal of equality of political power and economic
opportunity gave rise (in part) to the steady expansion
of
manhood suffrage in the early nineteenth century, the
elimination of chattel slavery in the 1860s, the establish-
peoples, identify their nationality with their
political
creed.
Judge Harry
more spheres
and
—
ensuing decades, the components of that
ideology were
modified and realigned. But, by the early
nineteenth
century the principal features of the
creed were well
-
made
efforts
commencement
prosperi-
tually
I will
We must
intelligently to the
our principles when they prove inappropriate. I offer
you one example: I spoke earlier about the steady
growth of the principle of equality in ever more spheres
of social life. Most of us would agree that each of those
extensions has been desirable. But there are some instances in which proposed applications of the principle
may be highly questionable. As an example, I would cite
relations between parents and children. In my view, recent developments in the law have proceeded too far in
the direction of establishing a social system where
parents and their children are viewed as autonomous
and "equal"; in other words, we have been overly concerned with identifying and strengthening the "rights"
of children as "against" their parents. And we have
paid too little attention to the preservation and development of the bonds between them. The source of the problem, I think, is our inability or unwillingness to consider whether a model of human relations appropriate
and moral ad-
FEW
happy occasion, wondering what the
gave the ideology
And material
to social
OF YOU will find any of these tenets startling
or even open to serious question. To this day, most
Americans regard the foregoing ideals as common
ground. To a large extent, it is our long-standing, vir-
future will bring.
established. Six basic principles
shape and strength:
inevitable.
a tradition,
scrutiny, regain a capacity for modifying or qualifying
vances.
—
In
is
and progress naturally lead
ty
is
TO RESPOND
cultural defect.
Sixth, history is linear. If the first five principles are
years and are anticipating, with mixed emonext phase of your lives. Your families and
friends, who join you here today, likely are given to
similar thoughts
musing over the chain of events that
to this
challenges of the coming decades,
respected, progress
tions, the
have led
democratic and should confine
for the
it is
A liberalism
not challenged to reexamine and
renew itself."
IF WE ARE
its activities,
liberal tradition is
colossal liberal absolutism.'
'a
Third, the legitimacy of government derives from the
continuous consent of the governed. The state should be
man's labor are his by natural
Thus whatever goods a man does acquire in free
competition with others belong to him absolutely and the
government is bound to protect his ownership.
last four
forms
wrong with the
thus established
Fifth, the fruits of a
—
it
is
equality of condition.)
right.
is a time for reflection
for
backward and forward glances. You, the members of
the graduating class, undoubtedly are giving some
thought to the character of your experiences over the
our habitual ways of thinking and
inclined to raise one of those
content but the fact that
its liberal
that
»
political issues.
in their pursuit of the degrees to be conferred today.
A commencement
blem aptly: "What
not
sense can be developed by education or experience, but
is usually corrupted by exposure to the temptations of
power. Therefore the "common men" are fundamentally trustworthy and are the best judges of moral and
perseverance in surviving nearly two decades of
formal education. And, on behalf of the graduates, I offer "thanks" (with love) to their parents, spouses, other
family members and friends who have supported them
their
in
we
values to the surface and seriously ask: does it remain
viable and valuable in its original form; should we continue to adhere to it? Garry Wills has described this pro-
most part, to the facilitation of consensual social and
economic activities of private citizens.
Fourth, every man has a "moral sense" that enables
him intuitively to discern right and wrong. That moral
QUARTERLY.
embedded
acting. Rarely are
(
Because Judge Edwards" address was well received
by his audience, especially the faculty, the text of his
speech is shared with readers of THE ALUMNI
The
culture,
workable
to you to develop some of
come up with approaches to
that lead to better and more
to
results.
YOU WILL BE SERIOUSLY
hampered in any atyour vision is narrowly
I fear that you will find
that the
follow the "straight and narrow"
path will
tempt at "new thinking"
if
focused. Unfortunately,
temptation to
be great.
Since the seventeenth century,
Americans have been
peculiarly prone to organize
themselves into what
-
Robert Wieb as cultural "segments"
selfperpetuating, closed circles of
like-minded people
within such circles that we
social life;
have conducted most
and
it is
to
them
our senses of self-worth.
that
we commonly
(
It is
of our
look for
Continued on Page 23
Alumni Quarterly
.
.
to students graduating in
.
Continued from Page 22,
The typical forms assumed by such "segments"
have
changed in the course of our history. In the
colonial
(
period, they were
most often defined by traditional
and allegiances; examples included the
aristocracy that spanned the British
colonies, the
These problems are not without solutions. Americans
once had a very strong tradition of participation in
"voluntary associations. Writing in the 1830s. Tocqueville observed that Americans
frequently and spontaneously
af-
finities
adherents
of particular religious sects,
members
—
and the
provement
of the characters of the participants: "When
people attend to public affairs, they are necessarily
drawn from the circle of their own interests and
region, on one hand,
and race, ethnicity, or
examples included Creoles, ScotchIrish Appalachian farmers, and Boston
"Brahmins "
Since approximately the 1920s, the most
important
cultural segments in America have consisted
of occupational groups and associations.
Twentieth-century social
class, on the other
snatched at times from self -observation ... Feelings and
opinions are recruited, the heart is enlarged, and the
...
mind is developed ..."
enclaves, in other words, tend to have functional
bases;
a person's goals, friendship network, sense
ply new fields of knowledge, and partly by their
members' desire for increased income and social
af-
-
aspect of our collective and individual lives
from our
health and legal rights to our recreation and tastes
in
clothes
is ministered to by a well-defined, selfperpetuating priesthood. Membership in one of these
-
vocational sects typically is the crux of a person's identhe principal defining feature of his social and per-
tity,
am
a nurse," or "I am a lawyer" comes
more quickly to the lips than "I live in Washington,"
like Stevie Wonder," or even "I am a Catholic."
sonal
life.
"I
THE HISTORICAL SUBDIVISION
of
American
I
socie-
and the changing criteria by which
those cells have been defined, have had countless effects
on our culture and politics. Several of those effects are
particularly important.
ty into social cells,
One
effect is the constriction of our capacity for
pathetic understanding of associates, spouses and
carpool-mates.
we choose people
sym-
-
with people
who come from
of his life,
does a person
or live
in
other social worlds. Confronted with a truly novel
character, we may recoil uncomprehendingly.
to
Your own "many prolonged, repeated experiences"
are likely to bring you to a similar understanding.
Your
efforts will be more fruitful and happy
if you begin with
Ishmael's insight.
might be derived from that extraordinary
novel; the one I would have you consider today is the
idea of moderation. Melville grasped and brilliantly
depicted a principle that we, today, too often forget:
single-minded devotion to any one goal
unhealthy, but potentially destructive.
As the book dims
in
is
not only
your memory, you are
likely to
remember Ahab
only as a maniacal captain, crazed by
the loss of his leg. But there was much that was respectable, indeed heroic, in Ahab's quest. His search for
the
white whale was, at bottom, a search for insight
— for
the meaning of life. If you didn't know the outcome of
the story, you might be inclined to commend such a
yearning to penetrate to the heart of the mystery of ex-
—
wrong
what is insane - about Ahab's
purpose but its single-minded intensity.
Nothing matters to the captain except achieving the insight he believes he will gain by finding and killing the
whale. He would — and does
sacrifice everything to
istence.
What
quest
not
is
is
its
Ahab's foil is Ishmael, the narrator. He too is a seeker
after insight. But two things render Ishmael's quest
healthy and enable him to survive. First, he recognizes
and accepts the limitations of his powers of perception.
He is aware that, in looking at "things spiritual," we
are
oysters observing the sun through water."
Second, Ishmael recognizes the importance of maintainall "like
and cultivating one's ties with other people. In a
wonderfully evocative passage, he describes the feeling
—
energy policies; you
man
state
insights
—
to list,
IN CLOSING, I ask you to reflect for a moment on the
lessons to be derived from one of the classics of
American literature
Melville's Moby Dick. Countless
ing
Most of you have, thus far. been shielded from the full
force of these pressures. The invigorating variety of the
student body in which you have moved, the broad spec-
ready
squeeze case eternally."
will
that end.
hobbies and even our vocabularies and syntaxes come to
resemble those of the people with whom we have surrounded ourselves. After years of such adaptation, we
lose our capacity even to converse - on all but the most
am
realize his full potential.
—
essentially like
ourselves. Gradually, usually unconsciously, our habits,
superficial level
shape and quality
-
groups of "specialists" have coalesced, hardened, and
subdivided. The result is that, today, almost every
heart
the bed, the table, the saddle, the
fire-side, the country
now that I have perceived all this, I
and
for the frail of heart
sometimes too
frightening to consider. Beginning in about twenty
years, you will be among the leaders of our great society. You will decide our education,
environmental and
;
status,
cases
beginning with Aristotle
is the recognition that concerted political activity is enlivening and elevating.
Selffulfillment and true freedom depend upon action
only
by participating in the basic societal decisions that
fect the
Since the 1870s, specialized occupational groups
have
been proliferating in American society. Stimulated partly by the need for cadres of experts to
develop and ap-
man must eventually lower, or at least shift,
his conceit of attainable felicity; not
placing it anywhere
in the intellect or the fancy; but
in the wife, the
TOMORROW, with your degree in hand, you face the
world. The challenges that await you are too
numerous
-
of status,
peace that came over him when, while kneading
the
that comes from the head of the whale,
he and his
shipmates joined hands: "For now. since by many
prolonged, repeated experiences, I have
perceived that in
of
Tocqueville's insights are keen, but not novel. Central
to a long and important tradition in political theory
-
and conversation often are shaped by his or her work.
During the past century, these factors have been reinforced by an independent economic and cultural
development: the process of "professionalization."
May
oil
all
im-
overlapping
-
their efforts
variety of economic and social goals. As Tocqueville
shrewdly observed, the most important benefit secured
through voluntary collective action is not improvement
of the outcomes of political and social processes,
but
of often sharply defined local
political parties
or factions. In the nineteenth century,
segments were
more often defined on the basis of two
variables
combined
— to pursue a wide
23
for
will run our major businesses; you
our spaceships; you will control our local,
and federal governments; you will find the cures
cancer and heart disease; you will find ways to join
nations in peace; you will feed and house the poor;
and
you will be protectors of freedom and liberty in this
land.
You will be able to meet these challenges because you
have been trained to identify questions of importance;
to be skeptical of quick answers; to probe alternatives;
to persist in the face of difficulties; to remain
broad in
your thinking; and to act without sacrificing quality and
compassion.
There is only one more thing that I will offer, possibly
as a word of advice. When you started college,
each one
of you possessed some unique talents and
interesting
personal traits having nothing whatsoever to do
with
your educational training. Hang on to these personal
possessions. These are the things that make you special.
Hang on to your favorite sweat shirts; keep on playing
or listening to Beethoven; paint your pictures; sail
your
boats; climb your mountains. In other words, stay in
touch with
life and with the people around you other
than just those in your occupation. I believe that in the
end analysis, your relationships with your spouse,
children, close friends, and parents, will prove to
be
much more
significant than
You should
hold.
any particular job
that you
strive to be a great teacher,
businessman, nurse, or whatever, but not to the excluI do not tell you this to suggest that you
should be inattentive to your work; rather; I am merely
urging you to keep a balanced perspective on life.
I thank you for inviting me to share this wonderful
ocsion of all else.
casion with you.
Good
luck, best wishes,
and God-speed.
trum of ideas to which you have been exposed in the last
four years, and your freedom, as yet, from occupational
specialization have kept your horizons wide. But in the
coming years, you will no longer have the luxury of such
a wonderfully variegated and stimulating atmosphere.
Those
of
you who are
in specialized occupational
powerful pressures. Specialized training
itself is often valuable and liberating; it prepares and
frees you for wider participation in our society than is
often possible without it. But its cultural concommitants
are frequently stultifying. The next time you are at a
cocktail party — or college reunion
observe the
groups of business managers discussing recent
areas
will face
—
developments
in the stock market, the circles of nurses
or doctors talking about their more "interesting" pa-
teachers discussing curriculum problems, the computer programmers "talking shop";
watch how awkward they become when some random
social event prompts a realignment of the groups. It is a
fate to which all of us are condemned, to some extent,
by the occupational specialization necessitated by
tients, the school
modern
avoid
its
But if you
worst effects.
society.
make an
effort,
you can
A SECOND EFFECT of our cultural segmentation is
first. By rooting our interests and identities in narrow, relatively homogeneous groups, we
related to the
have allowed our sense
of social responsibility to
wane.
The more we make common cause with the members
one group, the less duty we
Behind too many injustices
titude: "I care
themselves."
about
feel to aid or
in
our society
my people;
of
educate others.
lies
the at-
others can fend for
-
ALUMNI ARTISTS
Participating in an exhibit of
alumni art, entitled "A Decade of Alumni Art, 1970-1980 "
were (from left) Lynn Da vies '72, Susan Grace '74,
Doniia
Shaffer
Sharon demons '79, Jack Lamed, arJody Millard "79, John Veneski '76, and Dan
78,
tist/critic;
Grant
Not present for the photograph were Eris-Marie
Robert Behr '71, Alessla Cribben 80, Don
Sproehnle "79, John Stugrin '73 and Kevin Wixted '79. The
'77.
Bunnell
exhibit
'80,
was shown in
to April 28.
the
Haas Gallery
of Art
from April
7
24
Bloomsburg University
Alumni Scholarships awarded
Alumni scholarships worth $16,800 have been
presented to 46 students who will be studying
at
Bloomsburg University this fall. Most of them were
presented during a special program at the University
on
Sunday, April 24. Three were presented at high
school
awards programs.
This year's recipients include:
David M. Kessler, Bfoomsburg. recipient of the
Oscar
H. and Sarah H. Bakeless Alumni Scholarship
($300),
given in
memory
of these
former members
of the
University faculty.
Melanie G.
G- Berger, Pine Grove, recipient of the
Walter S. Rygiel Alumni Scholarship
($300), given
honor of this retired professor and former
Maureen Chism,
Chism. Parkside,
ParksiH. recipient of the Boyd F.
Buckingham Alumni Scholarship ($300), given in honor
in
chairman
of the vice president
of
emeritus of the University.
Linda J. Teets, Hummelstown, recipient of an Alumni
Scholarship for a student in the College of Professional
the
Department of Business Education.
Paula A. Osman, Muncy, recipient of the
Mildred
Eaton Levitt Alumni Scholarship
($500), given by Mrs
Levitt, Class of 1942, and her
husband, Meyer, in ap-
Studies ($300).
Kelly L. Obert, Newfoundland, recipient of an Alumni
Scholarship for a student in the College of Professional
Studies ($300).
preciation for the education she received
at Bloomsburg.
Gail B. Hartman, Phoenixville,
recipient of the NorH.lgar Alumn. Scholarship
($250), given in memory
of this business professor
by G&C Industries Inc
Bloomsburg, to a deserving student
in the College' of
Business.
Melissa A. Harris, Monroeton, recipient of the Howard
Fenstemaker Alumni Scholarship ($300), given in
honor of this retired faculty member and former
man
Rosemarie A. Heck, Harleysville. recipient of the
John A. Hoch Alumni Scholarship ($300), given in
honor
of this retired professor and administrator.
James F Tomedi, Bloomsburg, recipient of an Alumni
.
Scholarship for a student in the College of Arts
and
Sciences ($300 ).
Jeffrey C. Eschbach, Bloomsburg, recipient
of an
Alumni Scholarship for a student in the College
of Arts
and Sciences ($300).
Gail M. Musser, Bethlehem, recipient of the
Harvey
A. Andruss Alumni Scholarship ($300),
given in honor of
the president emeritus of the University.
F.
presi-
dent of the Alumni Association.
Catherine Simpson, Bloomsburg, recipient of ths
James Bryden Alumni Scholarship ($300), given in
memory of this professor of communication disorders.
Marianne K. Wingeard, Harrisburg, recipient of
the
Laurie A. Snyder. Shoemakersville,
recipient of an
Alumni Scholarship for a student in
the College of
Business ($300).
Glenn A. Manahan, Towanda. recipient
of an Alumni
Scholarship for a student in the
College of Business
($300
Emily Reuwsaat Alumni Scholarship ($300), given in
honor of this retired professor of special education.
Cheryl A. Kutchinsky, Shenandoah, recipient of the
).
Cynthia
J. Albitz, Gilbertsville,
recipient of the
Bruce Albert Alumni Scholarship
($300) given
memory of the former president of the
Alumni
ass
R
of 1924 Alumni Scholarship ($300), given
to a student majoring in special education.
in
Associa-
Kathryn M. Thomas, Kulpmont, recipient of
the
Margaret Bittner Parke Alumni Scholarship
($400),
given by the late educator and author
to recognize an
English major for outstanding achievement.
Betsy J. Wollam, Huntington, N.Y., recipient
of the
William Teitsworth Alumni Scholarship
($300), given in
memory of this member of the Class of 1971 who
was a
former editor of the student newspaper.
Linda S. Angst, Tamaqua, recipient of the
President's
Alumni Scholarship ($300), given
in honor of the incumbent president of the University.
KESSLER
TOMEDI
HECK
ESCHBACH
VfUSSER
BERGER
Bruce P. Warnke, Barrington, N.J.,
recipient of the
Ercel D. Bidleman Alumni Scholarship
($300) funded
by a monetary gift to the University
which has been
used to create a scholarship in
his
memory
Ellen M. Troxell, Pottsville.
recipient of" the Class of
Alumni Scholarship ($300), given in honor
of the
1968
class.
£3
OSMAN
Susan M. Jurgill, Centralia, recipient
of the Kimber C
Kuster Alumni Scholarship
($300), presented in memory'
y member wh0 was ^ tne c 'ass of
I
HARTMAN
1913
SNYDER
MANAHAN
ALBITZ
TEETS
Darla S. Snyder, Bloomsburg,
recipient of an Alumni
Scholarship ($300J for a student
in any currjcu]um
Margaret A. Lessie. Laureldale,
recipient of the
AJumm Scholarsh 'P <*300).
graduate who provided this fund
J Jon es Hatbor °. rec 'P«ent of the
of the 1894
}
mZ"
c
b
'
Mary
memory
in
Timothy M.
and friends of this member
of the Class of 1981 and
former president of the Sigma
Iota Omega fraternity
Jean M. Millen, Whitehall,
recipient of a Lucy McCammon Alumni Athletic Scholarship
($475) presented
in honor of this retired
member
of the faculty
taught physical education
and coached
who
many teams
Kathy Watson, Erie, recipient
of a Lucy MCL
McCammnn
*nmon
Alumni Athletic Scholarship
($150)
eb0rah A L° Dg F,eetwo<>d
recipient of a Lucy Mcra
A
Cammon
Alumni
Athletic Scholarship
$300)
Kelly A. Knaus, Edinboro,
recipient of a Lucy McCammon Alumni Athletic Scholarship
^
-
'
.
,
i
($125)
Sman
m£Z *"
Philadel Phia. recipient of
a Lucy
Alumn. Athletic Scholarship
,$350)
P ,per '. Burlin gton, N.J., recipient
of an
ff
Nelson Alumni
Athletic Scholarship
'
McGimmon
E HN.L
E.R
memory
of this
member
^
,$250) given in
of the Class of 1911.
a former
Son"
PrCSident
^
f
° thC Alumni
P T
Mahanoy *> reci ie "t of an
P
NeUon
J.
Nelson Alumni
Athletic Scholarship
($450)
G
-
f
lbb,e
\?
£^
i^"™'
ZL^r'
EI
*
EH
fnhn
John
'
^"fctfon.
,
L.
miil°H
EH
N.J-, recipient of
W^Barre.
recipient of
an
^T™ Ath,CtiC Sc*H»larahip(f700)
recipient
m
MeFadden,
Oakland.
N.J..
of the
6
HMoS gten
J
Martin A. Coyne, Hazleton.
recipient of a Clyde S
GD3BLE
FRANCISCO
COYNE
FRY
FRITZ
an
AtWetic S^larship
(1700)
84 0,
s
Reichart Scholarships
^
Three Bloomsburg area high
school graduates are
° f Pau
Reichart
Scholars!, ps o attend Bloomsburg
h
T
Un.versity.
The scholarships are
presented annually by the
Columb.a
"3S
V
-
m^^X:^ "
Z1
r
SThoVrH
The
Insurance Com-
ReiChartl f0Under and chai
™"
of
- «* *ass of
1983 recipients are
Diann Kindig, a 1983 eraduatP
Columbia High School; Mark
graduate of Southern Columbia High
School; and JiU S
Harvey, a 1982 graduate of
Bloomsburg High
of Central
Tapped
i
Kindig,
who
School.
will receive $1,400, is the
daughter of Dale
of Lime Ridge. She expect
to major
J
and Joyce Kindig
in
special education.
Tappe will also receive $1,400. He is
the son
and Florence Tappe of Catawissa
R.D.
3.
study radiologic technology.
He
of Charles
plans to
Harvey was a 1982 recipient of a
$1,400 scholarship
and earned an additional grant of
$1,300 this year bv
maintaining better than the minimum
C-plus average
her freshman year. She is the
daughter of Charles R
and Donna L. Harvey of Bloomsburg.
At least one additional recipient
in
be selected in
1984 and the three current recipients
will be eligible for
additional grants by maintaining
at least a C-plus
average.
There were
will
HONORS
—
Receiving
special
recognition
Awards Convocation on
at
the
April 24 were two alumni, a student leader and a retired
administrator. Shown with
University President James H.
McCormick, left, are
William F. Gittler Jr.
'72 and Jane Glttler '12,
recipients ot
certificates of appreciation; Paul Stockier
"83, recipient of
the Senior Award; and Dr. William
G. Williams, recipient
of a certificate of appreciation.
36 applications for this year's
scholar-
ships.
4
Gittlers: quiet contributors'
The William F. Gittler family, retired college administrator William G. Williams and senior student
Paul
Stockier were honored at the 14th Awards
Convocation
on April
24.
Certificates of appreciation,
summa cum laude
awards, Service Key Awards and Who's Who certificates were presented to 200 students at
an awards
luncheon in the Scranton Commons. The other awards
were made at the convocation.
Haas Center
In honoring Mr.
Stockier received the senior award
for his service to
coUege during the past four years.
Sr. and Mr.
and Mrs. William Gittler Jr., President James McCormick referred to the family as two generations of quiet
his
many
activities at
Bloomsburg, Stockier
members of Gov. Thornburgh's transition
tee which provided guidance toward
moving
commit-
to universi-
ty status on July
1.
For the past year, Stockier has been vice
chairman
Region Six of the American Student Association
Other participants on the awards program
were vice
President for academic affairs Larry Jones,
vice president for student life Jerrold Griffis, dean
of student life
Robert Norton, director of student activities
John
Trathen, and awards committee chairman
Donna Polak.
During the day's activities, recognition was
for
excellence' in the academic, as well as in the extracurricular and community areas." McCormick
said.
The two certificates of appreciation were accepted by
William Gittler Jr. and his wife, Jane, both 1972
graduates. Mr. and Mrs. William Gittler Sr. were unable
to
Among
was president of the Community Government
Association, which is the highest student-elected
office.
The Huntingdon Valley native was one of three
stu-
dent
contributors to Bloomsburg University and the communities of Bloomsburg and Catawissa.
"Their generous giving has resulted in a 'margin of
director of personnel and special advisor to the president, for his work
a
According to McCormick, Gordon conscientiously
represented student concerns and views
and served as
board secretary, which "testifies to the
the
for the Arts.
McCormick praised Williams, former
Thomas Gordon received
respect of his
and Mrs. William Gittler
to attend.
trustee
trustee colleagues."
James B. Creasy '57, professor of accounting and a
Bloomsburg alumnus, delivered the convocation address
at the
Former student
trustee award.
129 students
who graduated
recipients, 10 service
given to
with honors, 31 Who's Who
key recipients and
35 other reci-
pients of special awards.
improve and expand communications among
employees.
Creasy pointed out in his address that most of today's
prominent people do not take a "large view of their
S.
leadership assignments, but simply tend the machinery
of that part of society to which they belong.
panies.
"The cure is not to work against the fragmentation of
leadership, but to create better channels of communica-
High school graduates Diann Kindig, Mark Tappe and
Jill
Harvey receive their Paul I. Reichart Alumni Scholarsnips from Paul Reichart of Columbia Insurane
Com-
tions among the leadership groups, which you must
do
as you enter today's job market."
Hubler Scholarship
The Elizabeth H. Hubler Alumni Scholarship
was
awarded to Alex Wolfgang, a senior at North
Schuylkill
Junior^Senior High School, during an
awards assembly
J
on June 7.
The $1,000 scholarship is presented annually
by Miss
Hubler's nephew, George, as a memorial
to the former
educator and supervisor in the school
district. Miss
Hubler served on the board of directors of the
Bloomsburg University Alumni Association from
1948
until her death in 1982.
This was the second scholarship
presented in memory
of Miss Hubler to a North Schuylkill
graduate who will
attend Bloomsburg University
—
HUBLER SCHOLARSHIP Alex Wolfgang, center, accepts the Elizabeth H. Hubler Alumni Scholarship from
Dorothy Snyder, Miss Hubler's niece, who represented the
family. The $1,000 was provided by Miss Hubler's nephew,
George Hubler. At left is Doug Hippenstiel, director
alumni affairs at the University.
of
.
.
%
.
Bloomsburg University
The Norman Hilgar scholarship
A
scholarship fund has been established in memory
of
L. Hilgar, a well-known and popular professor of business administration, who died on
April 28.
1974. He began his teaciung career at the Plum
Township High School where he also served as assistant
basketball coach for two years and as head coach dur-
Norman
Dr.
He was
59 and had been hospitalized since March 22.
Contributions may be sent to the Alumni Office, made
payable to Bloomsburg University Alumni Association
with a notation that it is for the Hilgar Memorial
A
ing the 1955-1956 season.
He joined the Bloomsburg University faculty in 1956
as a professor of business administration. He served as
Fund.
native of Grove City in Butler County, he was
on March
He graduated from Grove
20, 1924.
chairman
bom
of the
department from 1977
School and served in the Army Air Force as
a radio
operator and gunner for three years during
World War
practice with his other responsibilities.
His wife, Katherine E., died on June
He
received a B.A. degree in commerce at
Grove City
College in 1949, a master's degree in
commercial education at the University of Pittsburgh in
1953, and a doctor
of education degree at the University
of Pittsburgh in
DR. NORMAN HILGAR
McHale
home; one granddaughter and one
Gene Murphy, John Hobbis and Shirley Pahls as
McHale who
townspeople.
Production crew members were Hitoshi
Sato, lighting
design; Scott Baughter, technical director;
Jim Huff-
man, master electrician; Richard Weiss, stage
manager; Jim Buller, lights; Julie Pyle, props;
Wendy
Hernck and Paul Marth, set construction.
directed here 19 years ago.
Rosemary Renn Gerber and Janice Feimster
Walters
67 were freshmen when he cast them
as Kate and Bianthe
Shakespeare's comedy. In "Our
in
women each played
several
cameo
roles
Gerber is secretary of the departments
of languages
and cultures, philosophy and anthropology
at the
University, while Walters has been
an English instructor in the Center for Academic
Development and now
works with the Educational Opportunity
Center
townspeople and children were included
in the
cast. Allen Murphy played the
narrator, or Stage
3*11
Many
Manager.
>.
Others
?5
What
Bloom
Dr. J. Almus Russell, 86, retired
faculty
on June 25 at Bloomsburg
Hospital.
member, died
He had been
in
health for three weeks.
Born
Career Development
in
Mason, N.H., he was the son
of the late
ill
Jason
RusseU A raduat€ of Dartmouth
8
™.
College in \^°Z
1920, he received his
leS
"
The Career Development Center
can offer the following
services to Bloomsburg University
Alumni:
(3)
tional
master's degree from
Cornell University in 1925, and his
doctorate in 1932
During the early part of his life he
had served as a high
career counseling
<2) credential
list
openings
Alumni
(consists primarily of educa-
from
living in the
Room
12 of the
retirement
The
Ben Franklin Building
Transcripts
languages
meeting of
field of
He was
Wilson
'
the organization of the
University's department of
nursing in the mid-1970s and
served as the first^part
H
ment chairperson.
Rlnnnfcf
Bloomsburg
^M
° 35 years 16 of whicn
V
In addit.on to teaching
French
he participated
cs
tn
to
m p us
tf
in
f
r
were at
and Latin
various baroque performances
on
'
emer
status and privileges were
granted
Smithner and three other 1983
retirees: Robert L
47, Michael McHale and
Robert Richey
i^
Bunge
86
1939. He and his wife, the
former Frances Carothers
celebrated their 42nd wedding
anniversary on^ath 9
Surviving, in addition to
his wife, are a son.
Charles
a N Y a daughter Mrs
:
y
Fredencksb
^g. Va. seven
in
&£TV^
Z
lh?M
-
-
-
^^en;
1938-45
and a
sister.
Louisville, Ky.
at
in 1965.
his
nickname
of
"Uncle
Sam"
to the
°! Amenca He was a "th°r of more than
t
30C published articles
in the field of literature,
history
'
and antiques.
kh
I
He was
a
member
Resurgam Lod ge No
quest, including the first
request
^Srr«Sl7
si g
qaeStS
m
T**
*
and bear the
Consustory, and the
He was
a
of the First Presbyterian
3] f&AM, Mitchell,
Bloomsburg Royal Arch Chapter
No
member
the Columbia-Montour
Torch
Club and the Bloomsburg Rotary
Club where he served
f r
yearS He was the
tf^Sf"*
of
K°
the Bbomsburg
club to serve as district
governor o
Rotary Du* nct 737 He was a
member
of
™m™r
"
«rewed
to
the
Registrar of Bloomsburg
Universirv
Church
S.D.; Caldwell
.
.
of
SvP^TfJMenS°
iLsr
.
^Jf"
1
v eteran of
* f
death by his
first
'
aub
-
Co'lumbT
- *~
Ciety the
s
Susquehanna
and the Mod
Wo «-ld War
S
he was preceded in
wife, the former
Louise P.
ern
I.
DR.
J.
2£t
grand-
;
reat -e rand
R^DhTAHH^
"aipn
f
(Adelle) Lonng,
:
-
'
recognized as a national authority
on Samuel
who gave
m^lv
education
She was instrumen-
tal in
Washington and Jefferson College,
Washington Pa
from 1945-17; and at Bloomsburg
from 1947 until his
immediate area are also welcome
to use the career library.
Interested individuals should
contact the center at 389-4070
for more information.
center is located in
lj
?" Kcom P Ieted 29 years in the
niS";offwhich
mne
were at Bloomsburg.
1
school teacher for six years.
He was a professor of English at Dakota
Wesleyan
University in Mitchell, S.D.,
services
vacancy mailing
and cultures, were approved
at the June
the University trustees.
Dr. Russell dies at age
can do for you
(1)
The retirements of Dr. Gertrude Flynn,
professor of
nursing and Dr. Eric Smithner.
professor of
;
in the cast
were Craig Himes, Dr. GibbsRebecca Ermish, Mrs. Gibbs; Laura
Green, Emily
Webb; John Robbins, Mr. Webb; Neil
Strine Wally
Webb; Ann Coyle, Mrs. Webb; Jesse
Whitenight, Simon
Stinson; Harry Strine, Constable
Warren and Professor
Willard; Sean Strine, Joe Croweli;
J. Scott Atherton
Howie Newsome; and Mary Lou John,
Darlene Hobbis
U.
sister.
show
directs final
retired at the end of the spring
semester.
Coming back for the occasion were two
actresses who
were in "Taming of the Shrew," the
first show McHale
Town"
7, 1982.
Surviving are three daughters, Peggy Scholl, Trexlertown; Katie and Nancy Hilgar, both at home;
three
sons, Joseph L. 75, Barto; Paul A. and John E.,
both at
'Our Town," staged at the University
in April, was
the last production directed by
Michael J.
ca respectively
to 1980.
Dr. Hilgar was known as an authority in tax and accounting theory, and he combined a small active tax
City High
ALMUS RUSSELL
Mrs.
Mark October 21-23,
1983 on your
calendar and plan on joining us for
Homecoming '83 at Bloomsburg
OCTOBER
University
s
SATURDAY
m
2
3
4
9
10
II
#17
24
22
1983
w
r
5
12
13
!
6
18 19 20(2
25 26 27
31
OCT. 1983
911a.m.
Registration
Coffee
10 a.m.
& Doughnuts,
Carver Hall
Combined Parade with Bloomsburg
Town of Bloomsburg
H.S. and the
11:30 a.m.
1:30p.m.
Ox Roast (prepared by Hotel Magee)
Nelson Fieldhouse. reservations only
Football kick-off time
Redman Stadium
2nd year George Landis and Huskies,
vs. Cheyney. Half-time Spectacular
with all-New Husky Marching Band
6p.m.
7p.m.
9p.m.
•
•
Social
Dancing
Hotel Magee will cater Its fine food at the Caldwell
Consistory on Market Square
Phil Spaziani, 13. and his band "Breakthru" will
provide exciting,
•
Dinner-Dance
comes back to
Bloomsburg
Dinner
versatile,
top 40 dancing music
Trip for two to Orlando, Florida will
be awarded
Dick Benefield of Hotel Magee
AREA HOTEL
Best
120
LISTING
Western— Danville
Exit 33. 1-80
Phone: 275-4640
Rooms— Lounge— Entertainment
Superb Restaurant— Pool
Singles $27.50
Hotel
Formerly Holiday Inn
Magee
Located in Downtown Bloomsburg
Serving Fine Food
and
Warm
Hospitality
Phone: 784-3200 for Reservations
Reception at the President's Home for members of The
Bloomsburg Benefactors, The Carver Tower Associates The
President's Club, The Executive Club, The Maroon
and Gold
Society, The Long Porch Society, The Founders' Club,
The
Centennial Club.
SHERATON DANVILLE INN
1-80
4 Pa.
54. Exit 33(717) 275-5510
Indr. Tropical Crtyrd,
7
Htd Pool
Whrpl. Saunas. 2-Lounges, 2-Rstrnts.
Relaxing Rooms. Bang. Facilities
c
E
c
o
CD
_3
3 £ <
"O
C
O
o
o E
o
o
$
to
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"D
3
The ALUMNI
Volume
83,
Number
QUARTERLY
Bloomsburg University
4
of Pennsylvania
December
1983
Doctorate,
medallion
presented
University
firsts
Two significant "firsts" occurred during Winter
Commencement exercises on Dec. 18: presentation
first
University Medallion and the
first
of the
honorary
doctorate.
Recipients of the medallion were Marco and Louise
Mitrani. whose lives have been inextricably entwined In
the life of their community and the region for half a
century.
The first honorary degree, the Doctor of Pedagogy, was
conferred upon Howard Fowler Fenstemaker in
recognition of his distinguished career in the field of
education and for his contribution of service to his alma
mater and
his community.
The commencement address was delivered by
Dr.
Charlotte Hess, professor of elementary education in the
curriculum and foundations department. She joined the
BU faculty in 1972.
The Mitranis are residents of Bloomsburg. where Mr.
Mitrani Is chairman of the board of Milco Industries. Inc
Mr. Mitrani. a native of Andhanapolis, Turkey, came to
the United States in 1920; Mrs. Mitrani emigrated to this
country from Sofia, Bulgaria, in 1921.
In addition to their community service, the Mitranis
have made significant philanthropic contributions to
local, regional, national and international organizations.
For many years, the Mitranis have been patrons of the
arts. Specifically, they have supported the cultural
programs of the University, are charter members of the
Community Patrons program, and are consistent
supporters of the programs provided by the University's
music and theater departments.
During the past several years, the University has been
involved in the initial stages of an effort to improve the
acoustics in the auditorium of the Haas Center for the
Arts.
The first stage of this project is nearing completion
This work, which includes an orchestra shell and an
acoustical "eyebrow" reflector panel, has been made
possible entirely through gifts from the Mitrani Family
Foundation.
This initial presentation of the University Medallion
acknowledged the Mitranis" many contributions to their
community, their years of service, civic mindedness,
philanthropy, and their very special relationship with
Bloomsburg University.
The medallion is a cast pewter replica of the bronze
medallion worn by the president of the university during
academic convocations as a symbol of the leadership
responsibilities vested in that office. The medallion,
designed and sculpted by Richard E. Bonham of
Catawissa, is circular in form, symbolizing the bringing
together of a special group of people mutually interested
in the University's mission.
Howard Fenstemaker was born in Berwick on Oct. 19,
1893, the son of the late George C. and Adella Fowler
Fenstemaker. He was graduated from Berwick High
School in 1910 and from Bloomsburg State Normal School
in 1912.
After-teaching a year in Dallas Township, Luzerne
County, and two years in Berwick, he enrolled in the
University of Michigan. He received his bachelor of arts
degree, magna cum laude, in 1918, and was inducted into
the Michigan chapter of Phi Beta Kappa
Continued on page 5
—
AWARDS
Howard Fenstemaker (left) was awarded the first Bloomsburg University
honorary degree, and Louise and Marco Mitrani (center) were given the first University Medallion
winter commencement services Dec 18. At right is acting University president Larry Jones.
SPECIAL
Two new
A scholarship in memory of
Dr. Cecil C. Seronsy has been
established by his wife, Dr
Louise B. Seronsy. The
scholarship in English studies
will be awarded annually to a
Bloomsburg University student
enrolled in a program of study
leading to a bachelor of arts
scholarships
Pasadena,
f
degree In English/General
English Option or a bachelor of
science degree in Secondary
English.
Dr. Seronsy, an
internationally recognized
scholar in Renaissance
literature, died on Oct 11,
department
A
1981
An emeritus
professor of
Calif.
His professional society memberships included the
Modern Language Association of America, the American
Association of University Professors and the Renaissance
Society of America
One of those rare scholar-teachers whose love of
literature and ideas was shared with students, friends and
colleagues, Dr. Seronsy will be remembered by them as a
teacher who was inspiring, a scholar whose intellectual
curiosity was constant, and as a Renaissance man whose
wit and humor will remain in the memory of those who
knew him.
When he retired from Bloomsburg in 1973. a Seronsy
Renaissance Collection of rare books was established in
the Harvey A. Andruss Library.
Dr. Louise Seronsy retired from the BU psychology
CECIL C
English and former
chairperson of the English
department, he retired in 1973 after
21
SERONSY
years at
Bloomsburg
Before that he was instructor of English at Purdue
University and was a teaching fellow in general education
at Harvard University.
He was educated In the Lowellville, Ohio, schools and
later earned his B.A. at the University of Virginia and his
A. and Ph.D. from Harvard University.
His book, "Samuel Daniel," a critical and biographical
study of the Renaissance poet, critic and historian was
published in 1967. In addition, Dr. Seronsy published
many articles in the most highly respected scholarly
M
journals.
Recognition of his work took the form of a 1964 grant
from the Huntington Library and Art Gallery in
in 1973.
has been
provided by Harriet Jarrett of
Taylor, Pa., as a memorial to
her sister, Ann J Jarrett '32,
who died earlier this year
The gift has been placed in
the university's investment
portfolio, and the interest will
be used to provide an annual
gift of $5,000
perpetual scholarship
in
memory
of the alumna
Jarrett was born in
Taylor, daughter of the late
John and Laura Evans Jarrett
She taught in the Taylor
Elementary School for 45
years, and was a member of
the Pennsylvania Retired
Teachers Association.
Ann
ANN JARRETT
"32
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
1983
Alumni class notes
1912
1904
Carrie L. Mutl) Rose
'04
Howard F. Fenstemaker '12 lives
Carroll Park, Bloomsburg. PA 17815.
has died.
Greta M. Udelhofen Keenleyside
1907
Edna
P. Clive Potts
Brundage Pentecost
'07
Gertrude G. Gross Fleischer
'07
J.
died on Oct. 19.
died on Nov 6
1909
Jessie R. Fleckenstlne Herring '09 died on Sept. 10 in
Paoli, Pa.
Born in Orangeville, she was a daughter of the late
George and Elizabeth Fisher Fleckenstine. She lived in
the Orangeville area most of her life.
Her husband. Judge Clinton Herring, died in 1940.
She was a teacher in the Orangeville area, and a
member of the United Church of Christ, Orangeville.
Surviving is a daughter, Mrs. Robert L. (Elizabeth)
Wiggins, West Chester, with whom she lived for nine
years
'12
'12
at
4
Spruce
St.,
has died.
has died.
1913
Ruth E. Harman Seeley '13 died on Oct 20 She had
been in ill health for one year
Born June 25. 1892 in Fairmount Township, she was a
daughter of the late James and Mary Stevens Harman
She taught school for several years in Nescopeck. She
was a member of Bethany United Methodist Church,
Berwick, where she served as superintendent and teacher
in the primary department from 1928 through 1980.
She was a charter member of Berwick Grange, a
member of the Garden Club, and Berwick Senior Citizens
Surviving are a son. Jay E. Seeley, Springfield; two
daughters, Mrs Max (Mildred) Giger, Almedia; Mrs.
Austin (Julia) Loreman, Salisbury, Md., seven grandchildren; 11 great grandchildren; two brothers, Stanley
Harman, State College; and Lee Harman, Lewistown",
and a sister, Helen Bowes, Berwick
1910
Sara F. Lewis
her
"10
reports that she
own home and takes care
is in
good shape, runs
of her
business affairs
Miss Lewis says she would be delighted to hear from
any of her classmates — she lives at 26 East Pettebone
St., Forty Fort, PA 18704.
Edward H. Yost
'18
died at Arlington,
Va on Dec
4
Born in Bloomsburg, he was the son of the late Alfred
N. and Bess Holmes Yost. He was last employed as
superintendent of Ix and Sons Textile Mills at New
Holland. Pa., retiring in July 1977
He was formerly associated with Bloomsburg Mills. He
was a member of the First Presbyterian Church, a 50-
1911
Edna Lewis Robinson
Sara Lewis, '10)
lives at 223 Pearl St. Burlington, Vt. 05401. Mrs Robinson
has a daughter nearby and several grandsons, granddaughters and greatgrandchildren
'11,
(sister of
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Published four times a year for alumni and
friends of Bloomsburg University by the
Alumni Association.
At your service:
Doug
Hippenstiel '68
year member of Washington Lodge 265 F&AM. and
Caldwell Consistory. He was a life-member of Bloomsburg Elks, and a member of the Bloomsburg Moose
Lodge.
His wife, Margaret Girton Yost, died on Feb. 9, 1978.
Surviving are a son, Albert N. Yost, Vienna, Va., and
five grandchildren.
Harry and Emma Jane Snyder Martin
Her husband, Frederick, preceded her in death.
of the late
Mrs. Wolff taught in a one-room schoolhouse in
Barnesville and in Mahanoy City and Woodbury, N.J
schools
While attending Bloomsburg University she
displayed a real talent in music.
She was last employed by Atlas Powder Co., Reynolds
years
She was a charter and founding member of the Word of
Life Bible Church and Christian Academy, Orwigsburg
Surviving are a son, Fred W. Wolff, Allentown; a
daughter. Alice, wife of Robert Machamer, Hometown; a
granddaughter, and three great-grandchildren
Government.
We
have been advised that Edna R. Pursel D'Agostino
more than nine years ago.
Mrs. D'Agostino was a day student while attending
Bloomsburg. She pursued the Normal Course and was a
'21
died
supporter of Philo
1922
Esther Jane Saxe
'22
died
on
Aug.
3
in
Berwick
Hospital
Born
she was a daughter of the late
William Penn and Rose Ide Saxe, and lived in Berwick
for 23 years. She received her master's degree at Penn
State University. While attending Bloomsburg she was
in
Carverton,
vice-president of Philo and active in GAA and YWCA.
She was a former regent of the Moses Van Campen
Chapter DAR, stale chairman of the student loan
committee
of
DAR. and
past president of the Regents
DAR.
She was chairman
of Fowlersville Cancer Crusade,
president of Fowlersville Homemakers, and past president of the Columbia County Homemakers.
She served on the executive committee of the Columbia
Agricultural Extension Service. She was a teacher in the
Dallas area for many years She was secretary of the
retired teachers association, a life member of the TAU
Delta Kappa Gamma, international society for women in
education. She was a member of Fowlersville Methodist
Church.
for 28
Director of Alumni Affairs
Peggy Trathen
Alumni Office Secretary-Bookkeeper
Linda
J. Long
Alumni Records Clerk
Jane Dildine
Assistant Alumni Office Secretary
Eric
grandchil-
Mildred Downing Major '21 died on Sept. 8. She was
born in Dallas Township on January 30, 1903 Surviving
are her husband, Elmer L.; a son, James A.; a sister,
Inez Kresge; and three grandchildren. At Bloomsburg,
she was active in Callie Drama, YWCA and Student
Club of
Alice C. Martin Wolff '18 died on June 10 in Coaldale
Hospital
She was born April 8, 1897 in Mahanov City, a daughter
13
1921
faithful
1918
herself
Her husband, William, died in 1945.
Surviving are two sons, two daughters,
dren, and a sister, Helen Terry of Berwick
Isabel Jones '22 died on Nov. 13, 1982. Miss Jones came
from Peeley, Pa. and was a graduate of Hanover
Township High School. She joined the Leventeens early in
her junior year and was one of their best members
Luclle M. Snyder '22 died on Sept. 23. As a student at
Bloomsburg she was known as Snyder She came from
Hazleton, Pa and was active in Philo, YWCA, GAA, and
pursued the Normal Course.
1919
Strom
Writer (Green
Thumb Program)
Kim McNally77
Writer-Composition Editor
Katherine Mulka '68
Alumni Chapters Coordinator
Students
Debbie Blyler
Kerry Boll
John Haney
Dwayne Heisler
Linda Kammerdiener
Elsie Perkins Powell '19 reports that she taught at
Mansfield University from 1925 to 1943 and at Wyoming
Seminary from 1943 to 1968.
She still does some teaching but at her home. Her
address is 161 West Shawnee Ave., Plymouth, Pa.
18651.
Alice Neely Elston '19 died on Oct.
Hospital, Paris, Tex.
1
in St.
Joseph s
A
Lou Maslowe
Scott Righter
Stephanie Stewart
Jeff Smith
life-long resident of Lehman, she was the
daughter of
the late William R. and Louella Major Neely. She
was a
graduate of Lehman High School She had taught in
the
Wilkes-Barre and Lehman school districts. For
many
years she had served as tax collector for
Lehman
Township.
While attending Bloomsburg she had a wide circle
of
friends among her schoolmates and
was active in the
1923
Grace
S.
Beck
died on July 16. She was a prominent
in the Sunbury and Shikellamy
school districts.
In 1982, the Shikellamy Area School District
named the
'23
educator for 46 years
new Grace S. Beck School in her honor
Born in Irish Valley, March 26, 1904, she was the
daughter of the late David and Alverta Dunkelberger
Beck.
She was a 1921 graduate of Shamokin High School.
Miss Beck began a teaching career for the former
Sunbury School
District. Her positions included elementary principal at the Maclay School In 1934,
elementary
Continued on page 4
D ^
_
I
MM*
|
ALUMNI QUA RTERLY/December
Bloomsburg U
faculty
Rabb and Webber
retirina
T e re irem ents of Dr Donald Rabb and Dr
Margaret
u/
i,
;
K
Webber
have
been
approved bv the Bloomsburg
r
C ° UnCl1
TrUStees
Both
wil1
retire at
°
f
from 1965
During that time, he was instrumental
successful program in medical technology
and later became curriculum coordinator
for the
program.
For the past two years, he has coordinated
and chaired
meetings of program directors and education
coordinators from the university's affiliated
hospitals
with science department faculty and
administrators from
the end
of7hTs vear
Rabb, a professor of biological and allied
health
sciences, wilfbe completing 37 years
as an educator 26 of
which were at Bloomsburg. Webber, a
professor of
communication disorders and special education
will be
completing 15 years at Bloomsburg and 21
years in
education.
'
U MARGARET WEBBER came
to
Bloomsburg
m
the College of Professional Studies
Rabb has also served on numerous
Boroughs
Association and the Columbia County
United Way
The Rabbs live at Benton R.D.2. They
have three
children, two of whom are Bloomsburg
University
graduates, and six grandchildren.
,
in a
number
of reading
and education
associations
DONALD RABB came
assistant professor
associate professor
A Donald
Bloomsburg in 1957 as an
He was promoted to
to
in biology.
in 1959
graduate of Bloomsburg
and
to full
in 1946.
professor in 1963
6
payable
n8br00k Hlgh SCh ° 01, SUVer Spring
By KERRY SCOTT BOLL
warm-hearted, fatherly, and ready to listen
Dr. Robert D. Warren, history professor
and advisor
Sigma Iota Omega, has announced his retirement in
December after 20 years of service to Bloomsburg
is
to
University
"I don't mind what month
you decide to retire " said
Al Forsyth when Warren announced
his plan' to leave
"
'But we will have to argue about the
Dr
year
Forsyth, dean of the School of Arts and Sciences,
said
he tried to convince him not to retire "because we
need
Bob Warren who
When Warren came
fr0m 1962 "
important aspects of Warren's
Others seem to agree:
David
Dr.
;
Hill,
best interests of students in
Deianey, SIO brother:
"Doc Warren is SIO. He's always been there when
you
need him.
James Hughes, another SIO brother and former
founded of the Social
Warren student:
"The Doc is someone everyone can relate
how old or how young. "
Bloomsburg alumnus Eric Koetteritz:
(SIO). At that time social
fraternities were not
permitted on the
Bloomsburg State College
campus.
Through hard work and
determination, SIO became
to
no matter
recognized by the
-
community as'
Omega,
Iota
first social
family."
Warren's guidance has
helped SIO become
Bloomsburg's largest and
most financially stable
fraternity. He encouraged the fraternity
Warren plans to continue being the adviser to SIO
saying that Greek organizations tie graduates
to the
WARREN
to use some of its
scholarships in the investment
portfolio of the University
A native of Sumrall, Mississippi, Warren attended
public schools in New Orleans. He received his bachelor
of science degree from Appalachian State University,
and
his master's degree and doctorate from Georgetown
University.
Warren was a commissioned officer In the U.S. Navy
from 1944-1955. He went on to teach In Northwood (Md.)
High School from 1957-1962 and later taught in
to establish five
spokesman
from
retires
BU
Kenneth C Hoffman,
special advisor for
university relations, retired
at the end of the fall
semester.
He was appointed
Bloomsburg faculty
to the
in 1970
as director of publications
and journalism instructor
He taught journalism
classes, served as advisor
to student publications,
and
coordinated college
publications for six years
before being assigned
responsibility for both
public relations and
publications
He continued to serve as
adviser for the yearbook
and the student handbook
A native of Lime Ridge, he was educated
in Berwick
public schools and earned his
bachelor of arts degree in
journalism at the Pennsylvania State
University
rnalls
career began as a high school
"L,
reporter
ltl°u
for the
Berw.ck Enterprise and included seven
years as
sports editor of the Enterprise and
nearly 24 years as an
Associated Press photo editor in New
York City
He returned to Berwick in 1966 when he
purchased the
printing business established by the
late Harrv
HOFFMAN
J
'
Campbell
He
is
a
member
of
APSCUF.
E
the faculty association
and the American Newspaper Guild.
At Bloomsburg
University, he has been a member of
the Representative
SCrVed 00 SeVera committees and task
He
'
'
forces
is
also a
member
of the College
Public Relations Association
and University
Retired
Shakespeare
University, and this link encourages alumni
to
to
Bloomsburg.
In addition to continuing his
fraternity,
Warren has agreed
Husky Club, an
director of the
work with
to
the
professor dies
Janet Stamm. a retired professor of
English who
specialized in the study of Shakespeare and
Elizabethan
literature, died Dec. 8 at her Sherwood
Village
was
"He's been the pillar on which the number one
fraternity is built. Acquaintances with
people with the
heart like Doc has are few in a lifetime."
Because of his good relationship with the brothers
Warren has been able to establish the largest Greek
alumni association
330 SIO alumni brothers support the
fraternity with advice and social
contributions.
"We have shared our successes," Doc says. "SIO is mv
fraternity.
money
Veteran campus
life.
comptroller of Community Activities
Warren keeps the
news
Tom
to
Improvement Organization
Bloomsburg's
Md -
,
mind.
Bloomsburg in 1964, he
new job and
college
Office
1
19
^' Warren completed his doctorate in United
c. ?
Mates
diplomatic history by writing his doctoral
dissertation: "Hawaiian Pioneer:
The Life of Samuel
Northup Castle. " Since then, he served on
numerous
campus committees and was the chairman of
the history
'
department
Students have looked upon Warren not
only as an
adviser but as a friend. Forsyth believes
growth and
development of the students have been the most
relate well with their
started a
officially
'
?964
-
more faculty like
students."
to
as history prof
retires
Student Feature Writer
Sigma
may be sent to the Alumni
"BU Alumni Association/Rabb.
Contributions
as chairman of the biology department
Warren
He
Biology Research Fund has been
to enhance
undergraduate and graduate research in the
department
Dr James E. Cole, department chairperson, expects
a
substantial portion of the research fund to be
used for
supplies and equipment to carry on research
associated
with the new Honor's Program initiated
this academic
year, as well as for research associated with
the graduate
6
programs.
A
he earned his master of
Force during World War II. He taught in the Allentown
and Benton school districts before joining the Bloomsburg
Rabb served
D Rabb
established by the Department of Biological
and Allied
Health Sciences. The fund will be earmarked
science degree in education at Bucknell University
in 1949
and his doctorate in education at Penn State in 1959.
A native of Benton, Rabb spent three years in the Air
faculty
university-wide
committees, including homecoming, academic
affairs
budget and finance, planning commission,
search and
screen and alumni day.
In the community, he has been
active with the
American Red Cross. American Heart Association
Benton Borough Council, Columbia-Montour
1968
as an assistant professor, was promoted
to associate
professor in 1970 and to full professor in
1972
The Philadelphia native earned her bachelor of science
degree in elementary education at State University
College in Oneonta. N Y. She received her
master of
psychology degree in reading and her doctorate in
psychology at Temple University.
She taught in Fords, N.J Binghamton, N Y and
at
Temple before coming to Bloomsburg. She holds
memberships
to 1973
in initiating a
1983
come back
SIO
serve as executive
athletic booster
organization which raises funds from alumni and
friends
He will also attend a number of alumni
chapter meetings.
of the University.
.4 scholarship fund has been established
in honor of Dr
Warren's retirement. Colleagues, friends and former
students are invited to contribute to this fund by
sending
checks payable to BU Alumni Association/Warren
home She
70.
Born
Bucks County, she was the daughter of the late
Rev. Frederick K. and Mary M. Stamm.
She graduated
from high school in Brooklyn, and received her
bachelor's
degree from Mount Holyoke College in Massachusetts
and her master's degree and doctorate from the
in
University of Pennsylvania
in
Philadelphia.
She taught at Bloomsburg
from 1965 to 1977, serving as
an associate professor in
English and later a full
professor.
She began her career at
Susquehanna University in
1947 where she taught
English and French.
Later, she taught at
Bradford Junior College
Haverhill, Mass. Cedar
in
;
Crest College, Allentown,
where she was also dean of
women; Monmouth
College,
Monmouth, N.J., and
Muhlenberg College,
Allentown.
ota^h
STAMM
ALUMNI QUARTER LY/Oecember
4
1983
She gathered together her three sisters — Betty Broadl
Grant of Fayetteville and Rose
Marie (Train of Williamsport — and the quartet, along
with father Fred, enjoyed a time of reminiscence and
singing of Christmas songs with Mrs. Werkheiser, who
Continued from page 2
supervisor in the Sunbury district from 1947 to 1961, and
director of elementary education and curriculum coordi-
of Lewisburg. Marjorie
nator of the district In 1961.
She was named elementary principal
of the Sunburv
in 1963 In 1964 she was cited in Who's Who
American Education for her work in education.
Her last position was a elementary principal for the
was
School District
in
Lois' third-grade teacher.
Mrs. Werkheiser lives at 324 Market
PA
Shikellamy School District
Miss Beck was a 50-year member of St. John's United
Methodist Church. Sunbury; a member of the Order of
the Eastern Star, Sunbury; Business and Professional
Women of Sunbury; Mary Derr Rockefeller Auxiliary to
the Sunbury Community Hospital; Pennsylvania State
Education Association; National Education Association;
American Association of University Women; and Delta
Kappa Gamma Sorority; a former president of John R.
Kauffman Jr Public Library; and a former member of
the Community White House Conference on the Aging
Her only survivors are cousins.
Clinton Weisenflub '23 died on July 18
Rendham, Pa
and was
a
Bloomsburg,
17815
1926
Gilbert "Sonny" Morgan '26 was killed in an automobile
accident on June 20. Mr. Morgan came from Old Forge,
Pa. and was a graduate of Old Forge High School.
His home address was 310 McClure Ave., Old Forge, PA
18518
was
a life
Kappa
of the Delta
Gamma
Sorority.
1927
He was known
as
Flu" at Bloomsburg and was a
rare ability He was active in athletics,
standing 7-feet 4-inches in his stocking feet.
1929
of
Alice Marjorie Meiss '27 died at home of a heart attack
*
on Nov. 25
She was born Dec 24, 1901, in the home she lived in,
and was a daughter of the late Henrv
and Florence
Kirkendall Meiss She was a graduate of Berwick High
School Miss Meiss taught in the public schools of Bangor,
Pa., and Berwick until her retirement in 1967 She was a
member of the Wesley United Methodist Church, Nescopeck. the Berwick Garden Club, and the American
Association of Retired Persons.
Surviving are a sister. Lorraine Meiss. at home, and a
brother. Guy Meiss, Alexandria, Va
W
1924
A tribute to a classmate by Ed Schuyler:
"Carl D. Blose "24, a talented and "respected educator,
has traveled the course of four score years plus one.
"Carl was a student up on Normal Hill long before
there were thoughts that some time in the future our
Alma Mater would gain university status.
" He was low-key in his days at
the school, during his
successful career as an educator, and in retirement But
he always did the job at hand and did it well.
"We were reminded of this talent each five vears when
he and his wife and classmate, Frances Hahn" Blose tvho
survives him. took an active role in our reunions.
"The best way to describe Blosev is that he went
through life not asking 'See what I did''' but rather 'What
can I do to help 9 and then doing a thorough job
regardless of the status of the assignment
"His death occurred on Aug. 17. 1983, following surgerv
at Good Samaritan Hospital, Lebanon ."
Frances Blose lives at Cornwall Manor Gateway 2-H,
Cornwall. Pa. Also surviving are a son, the Rev William
Blose, Shamokin, Pa., five grandchildren, and a
sister
'
Dora Blose, Elysburg, Pa
Mary E. Dietz Miller '27 died on July 24 at the
Geisinger Medical Center in Danville
Born in Valley Township. Dec 19, 1904, she was a
daughter of the late Henry and Mary Churm Dietz
A Danville resident her entire life, she was an
elementary teacher in Danville's Second Ward until she
retired in 1969. While attending Bloomsburg she was
known as Liz and was very diligent in her studies to
prepare herself for a career in teaching.
A member of the Pine Street Lutheran Church. Mrs
Miller was a member of the national, state and county
teacher associations, the American Association of Retired
Persons, American Legion Post 40 Auxiliary, and the
Geisinger Medical Center Auxiliary and volunteer services
Surviving is her husband, Edmund L.. with whom she
celebrated a 4lst wedding anniversary in Dec. 1982 She
was the
member
last
of her
immediate family.
24
Mary Louise "Becky" Becker '29 died of cancer on May
in Mercy Hospital, Scranton. She was a graduate of
Scranton Central High
While attending Bloomsburg, she was an honor student
and a member of the Mu Phi Sigma Sorority She also
was active in basketball and hockey
Mary Louise Howeth Simmons '29 died on Aug
address of record was 211 St Matthews
last
Westminster,
She worked
for 34 years
She was
a
Md
Court,
21157
Rosewood State Hospital
at
Her
23
in
Owings
Hills
graduate of Forest Park High School
of
Baltimore, Md
While attending Bloomsburg University, she was active
in basketball, baseball, hockey, YWCA and Glee Club
She loved music and played the piano.
Mrs Simmons was
Lutheran
Church
in
a
member
of St
Hampstead
Mark's Evangelical
and the LCW and
Gainer's Class of the church, Ionic Chapter ^73, OES of
Reisterstown, GFWC Woman's Club of Hampstead. Auxiliary to Hampstead Volunteer Fire Department, American
Association of Retired Persons, Manchester and Hampstead senior citizens clubs, Friends of the Village-Carroll
Lutheran Village, Maryland Classified Employees Association Inc., and American Association of Mental Deficiency.
Born in Baltimore, she was the daughter of the late
Arthur and Lulu Boyer Howeth
She is survived by her husband. Wilbur J Simmons
Wllma Dietterich Bowman
1925
'27 and her husband, Wilanniversary of their wedding on
lard, celebrated the 50th
July
6.
Mrs
Melba Davis '25 died at Nanticoke Hospital on April 19.
Miss Davis was a native of Buttonwood, Wilkes-Barre
Pa
During her 45 years of teaching in the Hanover
Township Schools, Miss Davis taught music, elementary
grades and was for one year acting principal of Hanover
Green Elementary School. While attending Bloomsburg
she was active in basketball and tennis. She
also served
as a fire captain in a very efficient manner.
She was a member of the Douglas Presbyterian Church
in Lee Park where for many years she
was director of the
Chancellor Choir.
Miss Davis is survived by her sister. Verna Norton
one
niece and two nephews.
Bowman was
a teacher in the Berwick Area
Her husband was an automobile dealer in
Berwick The Bowmans have two children and four
grandchildren They live at 829 East Second Street
Berwick,
PA
18603
Kathryn "Kitty" Gemmell Westpfahl '27 died on Sept
Mrs Westpfahl came from Scranton, Pa. and was a
graduate of Scranton Technical High School
While attending Bloomsburg, she was president of the
YWCA, member of the Phi Lambda Club, and treasurer
of Mu Phi Sigma sorority She was also a
member of the
Art Club and the Sewing Club
7
Mrs Westpfahl was not only active in her own school
was a member of the National Student Council of the
but
been notified that Dora Baker "25 has
died
while a student at Bloomsburg she was
known as "D B "
The 1925 Obiter states that she was serious, considerate
and industrious.
1925
Althea "Tela" Farley Betz '27 has died Mrs Betz
came
from Mmersville, Pa., and was a graduate of Township
y
High School
While attending Bloomsburg and was very fond
ofdancing She also had a fine repertoire of jokes and
was
known to be very amusing.
Mary Isaacs Johnson
illness
Vivian Harris Hollenbach '25 has died
Tay,or Pa and was a graduate of
Taylor High School
1930
School District
YWCA.
We have
tSELSK A° m
member
While atlending Bloomsburg, she was secretary of (he
class and a member of the Phi Gamma Tau
she was very athletic and excelled in tennis,
Sororitj
winning with her partner, the junior tennis tournament
She also played basketball, hockey and baseball She was
a member of the Glee Club.
She was a member of the National Education Association, the National Retired Teachers Association, a life
member of Pennsylvania State Retired Teachers Association, and a member of the Cumberland County Retired
Teachers She also belonged to the Fort McClure Chapter
of the DAR, Bloomsburg.
Surviving are two sons, Stephen H. Ohl, Camp Hill;
Donald W Ohl, Chicago, a daughter, Donna E Munkasey, Reston, Va.; a brother, Harold Ward, Hanover; and
five grandsons
junior
He came from
graduate" of Old Forge High
School
musician
St.,
of St. Matthew Lutheran Church, Bloomsburg.
Mrs. Ohl was a retried schoolteacher in Mechanicsburg,
where she was a reading specialist. She also taught in the
Harrisburg, Allentown and Columbia County areas she
member
Johnson
She
WUifred "Winnie" F. FoUmer Creasy '30
died in
Flemington. N.J on Aug. 27
She was born in Orangeville, a daughter of the
late Dr
and Harriet Brady Follmer Her earlier
days
spent
were
Bloomsburg,
She received her master's degree at
the University of
Pennsylvania She taught school for many
years and was
employed as a social worker in New York
and Pennsylf
WaS
ember 0f the Remington United
Mp lhnHi«fph
M
Methodist
Churchi.-in New
Jersey
Survivors include her husband,
William; one son. Dr.
Ci; eas R'dgewater, N.J one daughter.
Evelyn
y.
XiJS
22
ZTa*',*™
and two grandchildren
,
Vera Ba »
'27
died on Oct 7 after a lingering
bv her husband, David O
390 West Flores, Green Vallev
survived
is
in
later residing in Langhorn and
Flemington, N.J.
While attending Bloomsburg, she was
active in mixed
chorus, geography club, YWCA,
current events club
literary club, social control
committee and girl's athlet-
Her home was
1931
Arizona 85614.
'
,
student Lois Sharretts sang for her.
That student, Lois Sharretts Mattera
of Staten Island
* Y came to Bloomsburg for a special visit after being
contacted through her father. Fred
Sharretts of Blooms
C
D "? ta(*y" Stackhouse
Acker '31 died on July
99 at the t
22
Rochester (NYi General Hospital
where she
had been a patient for 10 days
e Wa
r
n
J0rda
Townshi
"
Lycoming
T^!
Mary Straub Werkheiser '25. a retired Bloomsburg
er
h0 is now 102 recently told her
companion
u
w
Marion Meixell
of a dream she had in which a
former
1928
C. Elizabeth
Aug
16
"Bibs" Ward Ohl '28 died at her home on
She was the widow of Donald P. Ohl.
A member
and the
of the Trinity
Women
of Trinity.
Evangelical Lutheran Church
Camp Hill, she was a former
Mavy 29K ,QOQ°
M
a nd
au
M
hStht
Life Club
]
!l
tZZl^™^
County,
P-
°'
"*
<*"*
"
Bloomsbur e- she was active In volley
11 B,00msbur
S Pla -V ers a nd Rural
Continued on page 6
P
ALU M» N
University
QUARTERWfJece^^
;
honored for
Green Thumb
Older workers program
rec?nMy
SbUre U " iVerSUy won a
di '<*™t
^S^fom&'&B
or society's
„ri
r
y ei °
o iniiM ,
group o ( peop,'e w„„
„»
Kind of award
« hie ™»™' for which
ward was
rePn»«ntative
Z?£Z2££X£ SnV
S6rVeS 3S the host ^"cy
thelaS flSS S2S
mb P/° gram in lhe slale
Thwf
nere are
ar P 32
W people
nSnl? employed
as office assistants
i
ES'
'
keynote
5 h ann ' versa --y ceremonies,
he sa.d
,',
ESSEft MB™"*"'
'** «-
S Z
^
"Bloomsburg has successfully bridged
the g
ean
P
a d
d 35 eV denCed by S wi
Sness to hi
"
fo r v
/ PCS f
US ty
em P lovm ent " he said.
Since
K
°K
8, B,00msburg nas
served as »» model agency
mr ntht K
Lock Haven
West Chester University, and
Columbia County
organizations such as the Red
Cross, Bloomsburg and
Berwick school districts. SunCom,
Berwick Hospital
P
My
,
Corporation, and Volunteer
Recycling
e
ga in ed nati0nal rec °gnition
through
r,Il „ Thumb on a television
Green
documentary shown on
I
recognition of the film s value.
.
etit
n included more than 4 000
'°.
Grants from
30
30 different countries, of which only
10 percent won
awards. A segment for the
documentarV was filmed on
a ring n PBS resuUed
5n "ationw.de
°
ImSSt
'
'
publicity for the university
^
nuhSnt
C service
K^Si^S
write for
more
1
"
radio and
ann °uncements were aired
'
0r
academic
a,,a
^
information.
SS"
SSU
'
-
taught French and
1926 when he joined the
faculty of BSTC.
He took graduate courses
at the University of
to
He was awarded
l
and
in 1947
a
he married
faculty
member
On April 6 and 7, 1,500 students from colleges
throughout Pennsylvania and surrounding
states
gather in Centennial Gym for Bloomsburg's
fifth
will
National
Presidential Nominating Convention.
The purpose of the convention is to give students
the
chance to express their views on current Issues
through
the adoption of a platform, and to
nominate the persons
they think are best qualified to run on
the democratic
ticket for president and vice president
The 1984 Presidential Nominating Convention
will be a
Democratic convention modeled after the actual
Democratic National Convention that is held every
four
years In New York City.
™i board of
SmdEL
of
Bloomsburg.
During his 37 years as
' S adViSOr to tne AIu
a
extended
in
1945.
5,OUd " on s
Award
Mr. Fenstemaker's participation
in college activities
beyond the classroom. In addit
on to h work on
countless committees, he
was director of both the band
and orchestra and he served
as organist for
commencements for 15 years
His musical activities'began
with piano lessons at the
age of 10 years and continued
through his
days, his teaching career
and into his retirement years
He served as organist for
Bloomsburg's Firet
to
master's degree by New
York University in 1933.
Mrs. Fenstemaker died
Mary Edwards
^
Distinguished Service
H C 0 tlnUeS
°
dir ect o rs
En£
a
at
Bloomsburg, Mr.
Fenstemaker taught classes
in French. Latin and
Spanish, and "many classes
not covered
by other instructors "
He commented later that he
welcomed those
mJw..
There will
be 1.576
576 delegates
deleMfPt aft-nHin«
*.
np m o°,Ta
,
RnSS
^C
.
Howard Jr., a Chicago Sun-Times
LaGrange Park, III. A daughter,
Dr
Eloign
8
31
editor lira
Ma^ton
* Pr ° feSSOr and Chairperson of the
S,ty de P artment of
'anguages and
slated for April
r
"
Re P u blican and two
Slnce 1968 wh en Nelson
Toent a,dnsReagan
captured ,he
SSS2SSS
D m cratic
rIrL McGovern
M 2
George
m
cuUures
attending, one third the
" 31 de ' egaleS atlending the
national
1
convention this summer
convennonth
B 0
S bU 8 h3S h eld two
His son,
FENSTEMAKER
Mock Convention
The spring of 1984 has a special significance
Ld,,te '°ine
to the
"
students of Rlnnm*h.,r
iini.,-«».,
BloomsburgD University.
aS a
" e W3S disc harged July
i 9i 9
manie6 Ruth Nuss a B.S.N.s!
Spanish in the Highland
Park. Michigan, high
school
and junior college from
1919
1929.
the Universi, -V as th e source
to
a,S °
Fifth
He
Pennsylvania from 1923
3 °- second
acknowledged Bloomsburg University
as a
3 980 gUest "PPearanci on
?v?r Easy
Over
East ??R?
J
a PBS program hosted
by Hugh Downs
Through the Green Thumb program,
the university is
demonstrating that older workerfare
a valuable resource
enCa cannot a ' for d
waste With the declining
mfrnt r y0Ung r W ° rkerS
g
projected for th e decade
S
1 * 111 Wil1 be needed
10 maintain living
SSStSfEJ?
standards and improvement of
productivity
Peggy Bailey, administrative assistant
in development
C °° rdinal ° r 0f tne Green Thum
b Program
on'campus
m£f V!
S
PBS
York
.
preS:dent
r
1
classmate
,
Pennsylvania Sreen
Thumb was awarded a bronze medal
by the lnternatl0nal
International
Film and Television Festival
of New
television P
it «
.k
»T
n
University firstsContinued from page
SSTSirTlMf?* he
>
SSEEhS S
Dr
Charlotte Hess
orofLsor
Larry Jones, and councTof
Mw^n
ZZ
rSSSS
^X^^ ^J*™*""
speaker
present Dr
'°
-
Re P ub,ican
National Convention of 1972 chose
and Vance Hartke.
Morris Udall and Jerry Brown
proved to be the
Democratic favorites in 1976. And
John Anderson and
John Heinz were the Republican
nominations
in 1980.
Who will win the Democratic nomination in 1984'
As alumni, you are invited to come to the campus
in
.
B
.
April and find out.
You are invited to get together with a bunch
of your
co lege friends and form a delegation.
A fee of S2 per
delegate will be charged, entitling
vou to vote on all
questions and candidates presented
to the convention
unch on the second day of the convention
and admission
to all events.
Distinguished Republicans and Democrats
will speak at
the convention. In the past such
speakers included Gerald
Ford, George McGovern. Harold
Hughes and John Heinz.
For more information, write Dr. James Percey
Democratic National Convention. Political Science
Department, Bloomsburg University, Bloomsburg, PA
17815.
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
6
1983
Conimued from page 4
She
later received her master's
degree
in
elementary
neer, he was a veteran of World War II and had retfred
in
1982 from the Aero Space Optical Division of IT&T He
was a member of First Brethren Church in Fort Wayne
He is survived by his wife, Marjorle L. Lunsford Foote
Fort Wayne, a son. Robert L. Foote, Davenport
Iowa
two daughters, Julia A. Steele. Lexington. Ohio
and
Jeanne F. Gillenwater. Terre Haute. Indiana; two sisters
Grace Conner. Bloomsburg. and Dorothy Pihlblad,
Bemus
Point. N.Y.; a brother. Paul C
Foote. New Canaan
Conn., and four grandchildren
1938
education at Bloomsburg. She taught in elementary
schools in Maryland and Pennsylvania, and for 20
years
was a teacher in the Irondequoit School System at
The death of Dorothy E. Sidler Krelnheder '38
was
reported in the April 1983 issue of The Alumni
Quarterly
In addition to the three brothers
mentioned she" is
survived by another brother, John Sidler,
of Dallas
Rochester
She was a member of the New York State Teachers
Association and was a member of the Irondequoit United
Church of Christ. Rochester Surviving is her husband
Richard A Acker
Pa
and two
field.
Mrs. Victor (Jean) Sinclair of Spring-
sisters,
Va. and Helen
Anna
Sidler of
Las Vegas Nevada
While attending Bloomsburg University, he was
active
the band, mixed chorus, Bloomsburg
Players Alpha
Psi Omega, Phi Sigma, and Musical Comedy
of which he
was co-director and co-author
in
1932
1939
Mabel E. Rinard Turse
"32
died on July 16
She was
eX J McKe chnie Jr. '39 was presented with
the
Humanitarian Award of the American Endodontic
society at its convention in Anaheim. Calif.,
on Sept 30
This special award, which was established
last vear is
a
retired schoolteacher
Born
presented
She
also lived in the Sunbury area for
awhile
While living in Hazleton. she was a
member of the
Trinity Lutheran Congregation, the
Greater Hazleton
Senior Citizens Club and the chorus of that
organization
and the N'alional Retired Teachers Association.
member
to a
not only for his
Catherine Sedlak Mueller '43 reports
that she
completing her 30th year of teaching in Creston
Iowa
She has also taught at Father Flanagan's
accomplishments
dentistry but for his achievements in civic,
educational
and religious affairs
Mc Ke nie recently has been elected trustee for the
Tk
J
Third
District of the American Dental
Association
in
Ska:
^
Elected to a
three-year term, he will
Pennsylvania.
member dentists in
A 1950 graduate
Before her retirement 10 vears ago. Mrs. Turse
worked
Area School District for approximately
10 years and had also worked at one time for
the Sunburv
School District.
While attending Bloomsburg she was active
in YWCA
and athletics. She was secretary of the Women's
Student
for the Hazleton
of
the
ADA
represent
Temple University School
Government Association.
A
second
vice
president
3re
KlS
,P
\*
ADA
the
of
McKechn.e has also been a leader
community affairs He has served
in
in
of State College.
Francis Jean "Jeannie" Foust
1980-81
local
dental and
as president of tne
Den,al Socielv *" Pennsylvania
ni
"
*
rep0I tS that she lost
yearbook m a fire and would like to
replace it Her
address .s 102 Endicott Lane. Oak
Ridge. Tenn 37830
v^T^l**?
"
uZ^h
W
Jareckl Yaretski
>33
nas died While
at
Bloomsburg ?
he played basketball, baseball
and football
lraCk team He was aclive in
Sl
"den
°!
?mJr„mi^
G
e
Association. Lettermens Club.
Dramatic
r
h and Nature
Club
Study Club. He came from Newport.
Pa
*
™
r
General
°<
s
Reeser Road. Point Ridge Farms."
i
Then-' address
Camp
H.ll
^
0*
IRK-S^-
ist
Md
'
late
and
Shady Grove
25 at lhe
patient there for 16 days
a Uin Warren Count >'- ne
b rg
He had 'been
wa s
a
a son of the
Mae R Miner Hinds He
VC yCarS and in Rockville.
?A£ E
r
J°- 2
years.
He lived
in Sunbury for many
r
lived in
Md.
tor 15
K
'
a gr
ate of B,oomsb urg High School
in 1935
As 1 stodp n t aat lo n s K,ur University
he was active on
8
5
• hi
mo
.l
n a n d Gold
paper foolbal1 captain 4)
£«.hb a11S"S
b
° ay . . n s Associa ^n- Lettermen s Club
and
£
hfiJunior
,
D
the
Prom
Committee
?m
on Ju| y 3 °- 31
'
Woody
is
married
to
Danville.
January
17.
daughter
1924, a
;
>
Mary Lou
languages and
M
n8T; ece ntW
John's testimony was strongly
in favor of the two-vear
requirement of foreign language studies
for high School
Ul m d m lhe bi
"' wi,n tne recommend?!
tTn that
tion
thTihL°
H
K
these studies
begin
as early as a level as
possible so that interested students
may continue wifh
further years of study in the
high school, since real
proficiency in language takes at
least four to six years
qU l d nUmerous recent studies
which point out the
„r!in need
! !, tor
r
urgent
people proficient in foreign
languages in
ernm nl business a " d industry
and how the L S is
Pir
l
falling behind
other civilized nations of the
world most oi
(
years
B erWICk Pa
in
*
diCd ° n Aug
JSlE&'w™^
Hospital^in Rockville.
^„Jp
She was born
Arthur A and Laura Walker Foust
Survivors include a brother. Harold
L Foust Danville
three sisters. Mrs Daniel (Lois>
Diehl. Danville
Mrs
Harry .Audrey. Davis. Newark. Del
and Mrs James
W ilma. Cr.pps. Northumberland
F. John '45. chairman of the
department
cultures at Bloomsburg University
testified before the House
Education Committee of the
a a
g,S,atUre
hearin
"
« °" House
BU?
1940
e
'
PA
,
J" William
iJlV
i ,?
John
'
of the
of the late
Dr.
1935
Day
'
of
Adven
member
Danville
t
Ralph F. "Duke" Evans '33 has died
While attending
b rg the WUkes Barre natlve
was active in Men f
r, K n
Y.M.C.A and a member o:
in the
^
'
.
•
I
'
'
'
riaiT
SS
s
r.'
B
Jrop h y !,a
Woody was also
T"?
k Tem" S T° Ur" ame
"
r
^;
a winner
a "«
1
el
in
8 1 h Sics and ch emistry in the Montgomery
r^mi^c
! ? District
^
County School
for the past 20 years He
was a
former teacher and football coach
,n the" Sunbury school
the
»
r^Lm
rS
1936
CMlpbe "
31
Bl °°-»nrg
Si
S
rl
^ t
,n
'
(
m
bur
-
CIUb
°.
J
l
Post 273
addition to his wife, are two
daughters
'
"
'
.
1946
t^^vl^V^
S
cises held on
Aug
principal speaker at
exer-
commencement
.
1941
Dress Shop. Bloomsburg
R
on
Mary Kathryn Lynch,
"
1
'
S he h3d been a 'ibrarian at
he
c
Bloomsburg Memorial School,
and also worked at
Maree's
SSZtarJiS
T
Universily She was actlve
Association Girls'
;e
A y i
B C,ub
Da
Women's
?'
in
Z»
er of United Methodist
Church
Fire Com P3ny and the
Firemen s
DUnn P0nca CI
*. Oklahoma:
M
L ,L,nds ay' Bowman. Forrest Hills
Md two
n
a
SL
grandchildren,
brother. J. William Hinds,
Se S D 0thy GenSemer PensacolaBtoomsburg
and
^th.e P Betz,
Kathleen
R p t7 M
Montgomery, Ala.
A
h e al
'.
Surviving,
* dW
She also highlighted the value
of language studio in
assisting students to achieve
a better command oi
the ir
a
age nd 10 gain a beller
understanding of the
[
6
Ugh C ° mpariS0ns with
°»*r cultureso
°
?he wor a-"
S>
VV
I^Kn^
life-long
resident of Bloomsburg, she
was the
daughter of the late John and
Sarah k*F*w Campbell
mpDe "
She was a graduate of Bloomsburg
High School
A B c
m n0na
;
b h
™*>"6- He was a World
Wa n and Korean r
war
°rl
Conflict
Army veteran and was a
member of Bloomsburg American Legion
hS^'ST,"-
m
mem
35
a
died
in 1964.
C h ard
ri o v
6
'
a .p
late
|
i
6
a'^'ho^
b° r
V^
V
0016
*
1918
°f
ln
^
Way " e «*-
died
'
Bloomsburg. son
i^L and Mildredf- Holt Foote.
Jacob
An electrical^engi
-
of the
.
Pennsylvania State Education
Association and the National Education
Association She
1
r
S PaU, S UnMed Melhodisl Church
°'
in
™*
'
Academ y
;
,
She was a
programs
McKechnie and his wife. Elizabeth,
have four children
James, an elec romc engineer;
Jeffrey, a dentist Joan
a
medical technology and Jon. an
attorney.
'
1
nV""^
8
^-'
SfflSS
DfetrTc!
,
Denfiftry
[108 Bloom Road
10 after a ,en ,h v
active
In addition he was a member
of the Pennsylvania State
Dental Council and Examining
Board and has served as
1
60 *"' 6, P ast P residenl of the
Academy of General
^,
Dentistry.
,s also a
member of the Pierre Fauchard
d
e
°f
American
5* Interna,iona
cXles' o?
r
and the
AUg
Koom Association, the Women's Chorus, the Poetry
Club
and was on the Decorating Committee for
the Senio'r Ball
8
m the Sh,ke,,amy Sch00
'
1933
'45 of
h ° me 0
"
She was a graduate of Danville High School
While attending Bloomsburg, she was
'
district dental
^
illness
'
and
°upont and Huntington
West Adams. Creston, Iowa 50801
701
1945
<
clinician for state
is
in
of
i? Cia,,0n
f
he Temple Denlal A,um
™ Society
pin
?
J
Pennsylvania
chapter
of the Academy of General'
Dentistry, and the Camp Hill
School Board
th.
the
W vomin g-
Pa
Her address
Is
Bovstown
Mills
Dentistry, McKechnie has maintained
a general dental
practice for 33 years. A veteran of World
War II he
served as an assistant professor of crown
and bridge at
the Temple dental school.
She is survived by her husband, Rex. a retired
Hazleton
area schoolteacher and former football coach
two sons
Joseph of West Chester and Thomas of
Hazleton six
grandchildren; and one sister, Martha Rinard
of Sunburv
She was preceded in death by a sister,
Florence
Kemmerer
1943
1983
Catawissa. May 25, 1912. she was a daughter
of
the late Ralph and Clara Mae Geasev
Rinard She lived in
the Catawissa area until moving to
Hazleton in 1943
in
H.gh School in 1946
Join! High School
f0 -to
burg Rahh and his
e AI| e«town
THeShf »S
vefX
„
1
Zil™*""
5 fife£S£
Veteran's
B en'»n
lhe
'»
"loom,
Continued on page 8
.
Frosh named
Scholars
in Education
Scholars
£K
Eduation Awards
1 lhe need
in
a
1«H»
new program
state fS qualified
^'irauthorized by the
the board
dire
h°
math teachers.
of the
is
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/Decembw
in
1s
It
of
-tors
Pennsylvania Higher Education
Assistance Agency
instituted this past summer
and
Bloomsburg's nominations were
made through Howard
Macau ey, dean of professional studies,
and his
committee. Its purpose is to encourage
the state's most
The program was
able students to
r
SmrwSth
make
a
SdenCe
commitment
"
to teach
thC S6C0ndar
*
Sch00ls °< the
Mteria required for nominationV ef al 3nd math ematics
score of 1000 or
ahovJnnTh-^
?
above on the Scholastic
Aptitude Test or an English test
score of 22 and a mathematic test
score of 27 on he
I
.
American Colleges Test.
Ranked n
t0P one
'
fifth of h 'gh
c!ais
their high school
hSSSS r
t
5ii«i
and
He was
a
J
field
sch001 graduation
v,cep,es, d en,. a
also a member of the Scholastic Bowl
of the National Honor Society
At
member
3
Cr ° SS country
team and
Bloomsburg
and intercollegiate
bowfing
Grimes, daughter of Mr and Mrs Larry
Grimes of
Lebanon, is a 1983 graduate of Cedar Crest
High School
She was an honor student at Cedar Crest
and participated
in the school band and winter
color guard.
J Dr
I
->
_
firSt 8l
^
-,
in
lhe
™£n«
™<*™>>°?
'
It
time. Their
Now, the twin daughters
of William and Marian
Huffnagle. 170 East 11th St,
Bloomsburg. are both
year medical students at Philadelphia
College of
Osteopathic Medicine.
first-
0 knOW them vou find out
y
L much
PU
alike, they are very much
°U
S
-
One disadvantage
lh at despite
individuals
-
of being a twin is that vou get
lose your individuality 8 says
lumped together and you
'
8 ° eS by
SS?fflS^
'
midd
'
e nami? inste'ad
seems tha t we're one person when we
1
.!
not
re really
Jane, for example, says she is more
serious more
conservative than Suzanne, who describes
herself as
casual and carefree.
Jane says that being an identical twin
in medical school
can be an added pressure in an already
pressured
environment.
"We are very aware of the comparisons that our
professors will make." she says.
"That thev will think
this one isn
doing as well as that one "
But one advantage of being a twin
is that the strong
sibling rivalry has served to
prepare them for the highly
competitive medical school experience
"There has always been very much
competition
between us." says Jane "Now the competition
is not so
much between us as among all 215 of us in
"
the class
w m s are ntenf "Pon reinforcing their individuality
J
at olfPhiladelphia
Osteopathic, and have decided not to
live
together
"It's helping us get out more
on our own " savs
Suzanne. "I feel more of an individual
here than I've ever
t
•
was
.
at Geisinger,
eC ° me
n
and an eerie ha bit
same
hriS so
being
j
fetts: irDSe
and
IQs are the same and their high
school averages were
only a tenth of a point different
0 t er a nd n were Mildred
8
R. Levitt '42 and her
i,.
K
f '/f
husband.
Mike; Annette Maresh 75. Dorothv
Tilson '40
Diane S.ebert m. Ken Norton '82.
Raymond SheeTen 78
and Doug H.ppensliel '68. Direetor
of Alumni Affairs
'
^ne
identical
a v e '° ng
^'° nd hair blue eyes
h exact
of saying ithe
same thing at the
Paramounl Buildina
-
Denise
n j...i.
graduated
with honors in 1980
For three years they worked as
registered medical
,o ogy iabora
.
nCe everythin about Hester
^
Q,^L
u f,
buzanne Huffnagle
seems
Eleanor Halch 79 a buyers
»' nn
a
.
Ph.lodelphio College of Osteopolhic
Medicine
alumni meet
Pennpy drnmg rooms
SCM
at_Ph^de^^
\J
TFpSSS?
iTlTTolllT*'^
Look™
R the
thp public
nnhlir relations
r r»
- -i —
_
By
department
NYC
^
^ ™
^ ^^^^^7,o^^
Twin alumnae study medicine
mathematics or science courses
° f N ° rman and Caro1 Darrow of
15 3 1983 equate of
Blue Ridge High
Participated in cross country and track
u"
He
'
oste opath°y
'
SSSSf
was
"I
so impressed with the
D.O.s of Geisinger "
most of whom were Philadelphia
says,
graduates.
be a
^ * ®£w
'
Jane says, that they realized
thev
3nd 6 parUcu ar
D
Jane
Osteopathic
don't know whether it is the
tvpe of person
C
S 0r thC
ain ' ng but 1 Voided I
O Theyv seemed![ to be better trained
O.
than the
I
TT
wanted
-
JSX r fiHS
ear,y for the sisters t0 decide what
Wi " enter after
in four
,y certain of one tfi,ng; lhey wont
be
^
L
;S!S£
Ration
,
15 ,ea
n g l0Ward becomin an obstetrician
g
and
KuJUHt, would
M like
Suzanne
to specialize in emergencv
medicine
In the end it will be a very
individual experience
Suzanne says.
,
And
,
that's just the
way
the identical twins would have
'
'
1
CAMPUS PROJECT recently
completed
campus
are
Larry
W
(from
Looking
beautification
left)
acting
Jones, vice president
over
project
president
a
on
Dr
for institutional
advancement John L Walker. Kawneer
manager Jack Hagemeyer, and Kawnee
plant
per-
sonnel director Gene Baysore The
Kawneer
representatives were on campus to presenl
the
firm's annual financial gift to the university.
felt
,
before.
Before entering college, the sisters shared
a long line of
activities and interests Both are
accomplished
musicians. Jane plays the violin and
Suzanne the viola
hey are charter members of the Bloomsburg
UniversitvCommunity Orchestra and played in the
Bloomsburg
University String Quartet
Both were honor graduates in Bloomsburg
High
School s Class of 1976, and both
majored in medical
technology at Bloomsburg University,
I
'
where they
TWIN CAREERS
Huffnagle
'80
are
-
Suzanne and Hester Jane
now
first-year
students
Philadelphia College of Osteopathic
Medicine
at
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
8
1983
Continued from page 6
1952
1950
rJ
Delaware
Dr
Francis R. Johnson "50 was recently appointed
acting dean of continuing education at Edinboro
UniverJohnson's responsibilities will include supervision
of the
Opportunity CoUege. the Elderhostel Program, the
Life
Experience Center, the Institute for Talent and
Summer
Academy.
The new acting dean received his master's degree
in
speech pathology, audiology and psychology
from Penn
State University. In 1976 he earned a doctorate
in higher
education administration from the University
of Pittsburgh.
Before coming to Edinboro. Johnson became
certified
as a speech and hearing therapist by the
Department of
Education and had a private practice in speech
pathology
at the Warren Medical Center
He also initiated speech
correction programs in the public
Warren City and Warren County. Pa
school
systems
of
Johnson came to Edinboro University
in
1958 as
OC iat
r0 feSSOr 0f P s ch
y °'°gy and education From
fQ -£ K
I9W to 1979
he served as administrative director of
the
university's Warren campus, before
returning to the main
,
campus as
member
a faculty
department
hnSOn S address
in the
tions
is
1,3
speech communica-
Brookview
1641°2
PA
Dr.. Edinboro,
Jounior L. Eddinger '50, retired on Sept 30 as associate
editor of the Press-Enterprise
A veteran newsman whose career spanned more than
33 years, he also taught for 23 years in the
Berwick
School District. He and his wife. Blanche
McHenrv
Eddinger
Lime Ridge,
of
live
at
R.D.3,
Box
3067
woodcrest, Berwick, PA 18603.
They are the parents of two children, Jeb and Melissa
Urgele
52 has been appointed to the
c. f
State
Task Force on Education for Economic
l
3 re ° ent announcement h? Gov
°
Dr Furgele
is superintendent of the
Brandvwine School
nortn e rn Delaware, consisting of
'l2,000 pupils
,
schools He
has been a superintendent in the area
for the past 16 years.
DuPont noted that several national
studies and reports
have indicated that there has been a
serious decline in the
qU
a PPr°Priateness of America's
y
public schools
TK Ed ucat,on Comr
nission of the States recommended
ihJvc
the
establishment of broadly inclusive
task forces representing leading business,
educational system employees
government, and educators at the local level
h
3 k
rC
under
tne ^airmanship of Lt. Gov.
/° .?'
M,>
ht ! N,
Michael
N. Castle, .s charged with the
responsibility of
5n^Q
and
18
'I!
k
e
,
P™
f
mak ng recommendations to help improve
thp' ^!^'
K
J
the
relationship
between educational programs and
t
op P° rtUni es and ^onomic
development in
n
!/
5
the State of Delaware.
duPont
said
T h e C mmiUee
l
°
rt ltS findingS to the
reP
* °
g ove ™or
by J a n 3
r gele iS 3 graduate of
Conyngham
and
e
SsSi?S
^hi
A
,
S
Township High
Where he was an outstanding all-
Pa
rnl? Sm^S
•
Exeler
Pa
The Furgeles have three
3 gF dUa,e
° f Penn S,a,e and
studPn^^ST'
student
at Delaware f
Law School. Widener University
em0r n C I en g' neer ing at Penn State;
and
!
*P
StUdCnt 31 Wallen Paupack High
School'
f
S
'
J^
i™/
Furgele received his master's degree
in Education and
from Temple University
nt
den
Career began m the Baltimore
CnnSvy pKr
c
b,IC S
^° 01 SySlem in Baltimore, Md.. in 1952
his doctorate
r
t
,
h
S
3
tea Cher
He?r72?tp5
CCepted a P° s,tlon
Sh^.c
o
C0Unty Pa
'
Furgele
left
in
in
"
•
Bristol
iDrarian and ath,etic
the Bristol Township
'
'
,
ESSfiJEt!
Township
™>
in
1968 to accept a
Oaymont School Dis
DeJ At C,a y monl he was
responsible for
complete reorganization of the total
school
ym ° nt
-
'
program
The merger
aS
beenactive
both the Eastern Business
National Business Educa
Doth o^nizations as president
501 Holden Road, Towson.
Md 21204
A ? sociatio
fUZ
^H
Uo
l
t,0n
P^f-c
Paul s address
in
and
?
Semng
'
is
C De
„
J?!!fZ
of the Wilmington School
District and 10
suburban school districts, including
Claymont into the
C
e
ounty Sch001 District was made
neeessa™
hv
a Federalf
by a
court order resulting from
a long
d g
a
nSt racia, y unbalan
schools in the area
L
F I1 rfJ
aSSUrT ed
8
admini strative responsibility for
the
>
are] o f lL
\
d
IC COm riSing ,he
northern sector in
1978 He continued
ron. !„
as Area ?
rf
suK
^d
f
I.
New
Castle County
School
n/JL
District
superintendent until he assumed
the suoerinten
n C y 0f
6 B and >' win e School
District in JuW i
wh P n ,h m
m
i
1951
in
fatt
5
51 of Hazleton
S Udders
m bUrg
died on
'
Aug
8
niVerSlty she was active
W
Her Hl.T^r
;
^
al]
" a,,ei
Association.
Newman
Club. Women's
\S
Chorus and
Future Teachers of America
sch0 Ueacher in the
Centennial
School' District
school
SSriSPJ
P
of Warminster.
Pa. for more than
20
£2C"K
LaUra v
N Smith
billow
tSS
and one grandchild
bV
r
a
USDand Robert S ""dders Jr
of
Grove three
'
i?
I"- sisters
brother, two
S?SSS
SSSW
81
a patient for nine
days
55
0f 16 vVln gert
Hilk' h a H
'
ssss:
Road,
^
52 - P ro 'essor
elementary education at
University, was the principal
speaker "(the
BlSSSl^
E WardS
live at 720
1953
Albert E. WUIiams '53 died on July 4 while visiting
his
son in Sacramento. Calif
Born in Nanticoke, he moved to Levittown 29 years
ago
U.S. Army veteran of the Korean War, he
attended
Rutgers University, and taught from 1955 until the time
of
his death in the Pennsbury School District
A
a member of VFW Terchon Post #5542 Bristol
Elks Fairless Hills Lodge #2023; Ancient
Accepted
Rile Valley of Allentown; and C. Grant
He was
BPO
Scottish
Brit
F&AM, Woodside
tingham Lodge #788
Surviving are his wife, Betty Rasavage Williams
three
sons, Gary and Albert J
both of Sacramento, and David
J., at home; and his father, Albert
E Williams Sr of
Nanticoke
,
Jean A. Skeeba Smith
widow
'53
died on Sept
She was the
30
of Ellsworth E. Smith.
Born
in
Hazleton,
was
she
daughter of Verna
Markovich Skeeba. Hazleton. and the late
Vincent
Skeeba.
Mrs. Smith had been a resident of Pottstown
for 23
years. She was a teacher at St. Pius X High
School for 11
years, resigning at the end of the 1982-83
school year
While attending Bloomsburg University she
was active
in Future Teachers of America,
Business Education Club
Maroon and Gold. Newman Club. Waller Hall
Association
and Business Education Contest.
She was a member of St Aloysius Roman
Catholic
Church where she was also a former
member of the
church's Mothers' Club.
She was a member of the Knights
of Columbus
the
Auxiliary
Surviving with her mother are three
sons. Randy
Douglass Apartments. Stowe. and
Dwayne and Mark
both at home; a daughter. Jeanne
Lyn. wife of John
Winterbottom 13
High St.. Stowe. a brother. Vincent
Skeebas, Alaska; and a sister.
Dorothy, wife of Albert
W
Domday, Hazleton.
1956
have eva,ualed
several Pennsylvania
Department of Education evaluation
teams for the
purpose of studying the
educational program™ co lege!
and un.vers. .es within the
g
State of PennfylvTnia
The Furgeles „ ve at stap Roule
l
B oomsburg
had been
Jr.,
He has served on and chaired
'
-
Where he held
position as superintendent
of the
SSdS
F,I!Lr
She and her husband, William J. Hess
St., Bloomsburg, PA 17815.
East Third
'
Si«
* ,0ng time BaUimore Counf y
edu?a tor "hS
iZf" recognized
h
bee
by the Eastern Business
n Associate
Education
as the EBEA's 1983 Educator
of
publication.
,
coach
-
ment of Education Curriculum and Instruction Conference Workshop held at Shippensburg University, and (his
year she conducted a one-day workshop at Cabrini
College, Pennsylvania.
Hess has been an adviser to the Phi Iota Chi sorority
and Bloomsburg's Pennsylvania Student Education Association. She is listed in the 1983 Who's Who in the
East
J%
,
P
U
J
Pierre S SuPont "fv
sity.
f^
the National Association for Research in Science Teach
ing in Toronto, Canada and Washington, DC, and at the
National Science Teachers Association Conference in
Anaheim, California
Last year she participated in the Pennsylvania Depart-
1
convoca,ion
k il
Wvomissing
Judith
A
Stephens
PA
iSfESSP*
,
Barnes &
ant with
S
'56
56 d ed
'
BfeSSh,™
Bloomsburg n
University,
,
Association
lives
941 3 She
Ji
?
Tucker
Co.
u
is
at
an
May
miie
1983
he was active
Dorm Men's
Association.
Business Education Club. FTA
Surviving is his widow. Judith
Centre
133
Ave
a dministrative assist
and
in
attending
Day Men
Aviation
s
Club
ub
Newman C
Bauer Andrews
'54
Elvln C. LaCoe '56 was
recently named the district
superintendent for a four-year
term by the Ab. g on
Heights Board of School
Directors. Harks
SuSt
Lackawanna County
Formerly assistant super-
2S™
3 "" °'
Jom
^SZSZ^T
College.
Ch '""I!
^tr
Wes, m
S
Ma
3
™
°'
"»
wart
*
t
nJ
r
g e
r„
intendent
services,
for instructional
Elvin joined the
as an elementary
teacher in 1963, served as
A Kuhl Edwards
r<,m
!^
WeS
'
lhe
B'oomsburg distnct from
,1
district
1958-1971
an elementary principal
and elementary supervisor
er " Mary,and
until
his appointment as
assistant superintendent in
pasi president of the
Wyom.ssing Lions Club
1974
Elvin
is
married to
Esther Lloyd LaCoe and his
son, Christopher,
man
George J
of
SuSffi
BmiaSLXSi
C ° Unly
'
and
.
Educanon
"
'
•
Va "' a
Assoclatl »"
is
a fresh-
student at the UniverScranton.
sity of
»'
C«"ege
Teache^
The
LaCOE
1006
LaCoes' address is
Colony Lane. Clarks
Summit, PA
18411
Conlinued on page 10
'
Old version
of alma mater
returns to
is
1
9fl3
BU
Only minor changes
The old alma mater
Ai^MNl^UMIEm^/December
made
back
After an absence of about
14 years the alma maipr
sung by students between
1911 and 1970 has been^
remstated, with minor changes
1
BBSS
ge
t0
iuiy T.
Bloornsburg University of
Earlier in the year, college
president James H
Ske
he A Umni Association boar?
of
TrecZTt* o IVe h
a ^commendation
address.ng the
effect of th°f
the
Vm
SSS Z
'
'.
transition on the
Board president John
m
te
W
alma mater
Thomas
'47
apppointed an ad
° SlUdy lhe issue and make a
H r n t0
,he fu " board ,nclu °ed on
'°
the
comm.ttee were members of the
Alumni Board alumni
and representatives of the
Music and English
l
?ppnm^
^m^iM
e
departments.
The committee identified four
alternatives retain the
curren alma mater (written by
Donald Messime?' 70)
ak a PP ro P ria,e changes in the
lyrics; reinstate the
?nrmT
f
formerr alma
mater (written by professor Joseph
H
Dennis in 1911) and make minor
changes in the lyrics
W
3 " nt,r y
alma
mater
or
do
"othingat
,!'
ali
T
^
P
,
ed
tGe n
'
in
discu ss>ons that many prewn alumni
tuTn?were unhappy
°L
when the alma mater
its
1970
was
S
changed and would be pleased by its
reinstatement Most
a umnl '?™ed the words to
the familiar tune
Annie Lyle) as students and have
never forgotten them
a ma mater wril,en b
y Mefsimer
mfn. iKin"
Cnd ° f com P ulsor assembly
programs
y
e a.' ma ma,er was often lau ght
sung As a
rLZ», 5
st 5
dents nc e 1970 generally were
not taught the
£mi
r
,f rehearsal
t
alma m
mater
until
for commencement
committee noted sadly that many
alumni failed to
2
Whe " " W3S P'^d at public
'
events"'
•
1%
'
9SSffSX£i
,
^^
2
tr
n
^
°,
rnmmi»lpV
ee decided
entiment
to
'° r the ° ld
recommend
its
alma
ma ^.
the
reinstatement with
minor changes in the first verse and
chorus The
comm.ttee further recommended that
the old second and
third verse be replaced by
a new second verse which
would be a combination of the two.
When the recommendation came to the full
board the
reinstatement was strongly supported.
The board was
divided, however, on the revised
second verse
After considerable discussion
at two board meetings
recor™end reinstatement
y agreed
Im^m second "and
,
third verse.
S f,r
of the old
t0
lf
Acting university president Larry
W. Jones has
concurred with the recommendation of
the alumni board
and the new-old alma mater has been
sung once again at
convocations, athletic events and other
programs.
Far above the river winding.
Midst the mountains grand
Stands our school so dear to students
Far throughout the land.
university
'
Far and wide though we mav wander
Still
our hearts are true
To our hilltop Alma Mater
We our pledge renew
Ever seaward Susquehanna
Never resting flows —
Ever upward, striving, climbing
Onward Bloornsburg goes.
(Chorus)
Bloornsburg, Bloornsburg
Alma Mater, up on College Hill
Years to come shall find us ever
True to Bloornsburg still.
Bloom alumnus heads
schools on the plains
At a time w
when
hen many
manv eriuratnrc
aro fa„i„„ »u„
educators are
JhuSl caused by declining studentfacing the dilemma
enrollments, one
Bloornsburg graduate has been part of
a boom
Please let the Alumni Office know your winter
(Florida?) address well In advance of moving
from your permanent residence to the sunny
climes. This will help us get your Quarterly to you
on time. Send us your address and effective date
as soon as you know them. Many thanks!
Oil
1
"
n
Sa?t Creek°o
Creek oill'fii?H
field,
'
additions
'
More than 95 percent of the
14,250 students live in the City of Casper,
the largest city
in Wyoming and the financial
center of the state serving
the oil, coal, gas, uranium and bentonite
industries
students travel 70 miles or more each
in the city.
secondary schools
A March
1982 article in
way
Some
to attend
The New York Times noted
the school district budget had increased
nearly 60
percent. Most of the increase was devoted
to higher
salaries for teachers, replacement of old
that
equipment and
new books.
At that time, 54 classes were meeting
in portable
classrooms, despite approval of four bond
issues for
school contruction since 1974. "It's our
biggest single
problem," Dailey observed in that article.
The student boom will continue because residents
between 20 and 35 years of age accounted for
more than
60 percent of the population growth in the
1970s.
for
district presently
there
to
and housing.
In addition a fourth junior high
school and another new
elementary building have been started.
Much of the
curriculum has also been reviewed and
updated during
that period. Foreign language
enrollment, for example
has increased by more than 30 percent
Natrona County School District, a single K-12
school
system, covers 5,600 square miles of prairie
and is the
largest district in the state.
has 25 elementary schools, three
junior high schools and three senior
high schools. Schools
for kindergarten through sixth
grade are also located at
1Ver (28 Upils) Po,son S ider
P
(205), Red Creek
fc-^ Willow
u7-n
o
P
(six),
Creek
(three), and Alcova (34)
'
Dailey notes that Willow Creek
is 70 miles out. much of
is over a single-lane
dirt road which is practically
which
mpassab le during certain periods of the
year. It was only
in the past year that the
school was linked by telephone
Cate d
° Ut in tne midd,e °< th e
h
which
figured in the Teapot Dome
scandal. The small K-12 building
houses 275 student?
within 100 yards or so of the on
pumpers Tne district
maintains 14 dwellings for teachers
'
.
two new elementary buildings, and
a new bus garage
handle 70 vehicles for service, repair
there
.
J C
E D ailey 52 a native of Danville, has been
c,,;
f °S
,
superintendent
of the Natrona County School
District in
Wyoming since Dec. l. 1979. During that
period, the
district has constructed five
elementary school
The
'Snowbird' addresses
Three schools (J. E. Ranch. Bell
Ranch and Forrest
are open only when children are
living
of c
cutbacks
Also included in the district are
the U.S. Navy
Petroleum Reserve Fields.
" The people here are
generally conservative, open
Str° ngly Supporlive of education "
says
Dailey
School taxes are extremely low
due to mineral
severance taxes at the state level and
local assessed
valuations on mineral properties.
A state equalization
program provides adequate school funds
much
of the burden
and removes
from
local taxpayers
After graduating from Bloornsburg.
Dailey earned his
8
e " Ce dGgree in Educali0 " a
' Administration
!?
rS,ty ,n 1956 and h 's Doctor
P Un,V
of Education
?
degree atl -r
Temple
S?^.
J
in 1968.
J^
e an h,S eaching career in 1952
as a ^'ence and
0
! teacher
.
i
geography
m Central Bucks High School in
Doylestown, Pa. He subsequently was
teacher and
1 D
|est °wn Township Schools in
Pa
Edison
f.«?,
if °y
(1953- «
956) principal and supervisor at
Exeter Township
,n Readln
(1956 - I96°>. a "d elementary principal
?n ?J°
h D t . sg ove f
Sch001 Distr 'ct in Pottstown (1960-1961)
t
L ^
in
1961, he
™?
became superintendent of the Pottsgrove
District with a student enrollment
of 3,000. In 1970 and
1971 he was a visiting professor at
From
Lehigh University
1972 to 1976, Dailey
was superintendent
of the
Township Schools in Levittown (14,700
students
e Bucks County Technical School
(1.900 students
?
u
Ved 10 New York t0 becom e superintendent
i?th
o
of the m
North Syracuse
Central Schools (13,400 students)
Dailey is married to Rose K. McKean
Dailey of
Danville. They are parents of two
children: a daughter
who is a graduate of Penn State, an auditor
in California
and mother of two junior high students;
and a son who
was graduated from the University of
Pittsburgh and the
Delaware School of Law. He works for
the Montgomery
County Intermediate Unit near Philadelphia
and has
three children.
Bristol
i
n
L,
i
o
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
10
1983
Continued from page 8
Robert Heldger
'64 received his doctor
s degree in earlv
education on August 29, 1983 from Nova
University. Fort Lauderdale. Fla. Bob
works for the
Bristol Township School District
in Bucks fount v and
member
childhood
1958
Dr.
James
lives in
Langhorne.
James L. Hinckley Jr. '64 was elected to the Berwick
Borough Council on Nov. 8. carrying seven
of nine
and garnering more votes than any other
Snyder '58 was one of the recipients of the
awards of the Freedoms Foundation at
He was one of twenty recipients of the
Leavy Foundation Awards for Excellence in Private
Enterprise Education More than 200 nominations were
F.
annual
sixth
He and
Valley Forge.
precincts
received by the foundation.
Jim is a Republican.
He is married to Sandra K. Vandermark HinckJey 72.
Their address is 1018 Market St.. Berwick,
PA 18603.
candidate
in a light
race for three borough coun-
Ernest A. Cole
1965
was honored as its Woman of the Year
a brunch marking National Business
Women's Week
1959
s Club,
Guests
from
Hazleton
District 8 director
Adams
'59
was recently elected
present.
to the
Sunday
board of trustees of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy
and Science.
Adams
vice president for administration at
Laboratories, where he is responsible for
is
Church.
programs including EEO, OSHA and labor relations;
employee communications, and career development.
His mailing address is 433 Dory Lane. Wayne. PA 19087
Fenn
She
State.
Shickshinnv Clubs and
Julia Squires of Tunkhannock were
is
Cross
Tu
h
b0ard of the Su squehanna
.m/ and Health
°?J Association
f
Lung
and is treasurer
Intermediate Unit. He and his wife, Barbara, live at
R.D.5, Chase Corners, Shavertown, PA 18705.
i
Vallev
of
1963
ra< uate student at
ot S Delta
Fhi
!
Kappa,
Penn
was elected to
national honor society and The
a
The results of this study have
additional research dealing with
become the focus of
the effect of computer
tne c °gnitiv e structure of students
in the
and science
Dobson is a consultant in instructional
technology using
mpU e S Stems and plans t0 d0 additional
post
F
L m V
doctoral work
this field
5
filSnf
°H
.
fields
of mathematics
-
His address
is
J.
Andrews Didriksen
"My husband
Walter and
T^!
writes as follows-
moved here
to
^
R.D.2. Box 348. Millville.
PA
17846.
d laughl elementa ry school for
12 years: 10 years
u
and tW ° yearS n the is,and of G"am
°
Tam
InrmiS'f^
K
thrilled
to be in this
new field of psychology which has to
do with the psychological factors
in physic!) illness ''
Nancy's address is 3909 Llano Drive,
Piano,
d
!ff,
'66, pastor of Christ
United
Methodist Church. Clearfield,
received the degree of
doctor of ministry in a special
service on Nov 20 at St
Andrew's United Methodist Church.
Milton The degree
rde(
Ued Th ~'08*cal
y
OhinT
? ^
Seminary
aaasss^j.w
»-raa
7
-
Elaine Kennedy '64 and Marie
Osinski Vovakes '64 had
e U ni0n
0 " and
hap"y to
eDortTha!"fh p y
v r COg Zed 0ne
another wilh no difficulty
ThX miet fo flunchu' 10 Pr inceton,
N.J.. the half-way
I
TreVOrse Pa and
NJ
i
63 " nd
rd
year's^re^ion. "
!
IKS^JT* m
Te
^
'
LivinK
'°™ W**
beit WiS hCS t0 ever
y° ne in lh * class of
,
s 31 Lukens Street
Trevose. PA
19M FlS2'i Sli
a d
9^7 Mane
m " lives at
19047
?o8
I
Hepworth
^
Street, Livingston.
N
J
of
RDi
M
*"
'
'
'
Barb is working again as a nursery
school teacher
Doy estown. The family lives at 210
Doylestown,
in
m
East Court Street
PA
18901.
is
705
Dorey
Street, Clearfield,
£ln,
&£
uT
VO
10,693
°
of °i
0
"!f Stncl
"f ^
^LS?
Woody hT
defeated
atlorne y at tne N ov 8 election
n
Republican opponent William Kreisher
?
m
Wood y was
^rS^n
l
5 fi
assign
V
-
the
vofe gette
"/eaJra-Va"
bC r6aChed 31 311 Market
St
17815
•
B 'oomsburg. PA
1969
church when
PA
16830.
at^Nortil^Sp?
6
'
?
69
nd Rand0,ph
u
,
H Hess 69 live
PA 19380 They
'
adminls!ral,ve assistant with
American
6 " 1 ,nc
IntornSni? J"
Her husband »orks
clm^T
Mdr and Youth
^chSS ll?
T haS
Police
tT
and marriage
Delawar^
The Rev. E. Zeneldeen Swartz '67 died
on July 27 in
emergency room of Geisinger Medical
Center
Born Jan. 10. 1932. in Bloomsburg
he was a son nf
late Eckley B and
Carlotta Taylor^SwarU He
spen
'
nato o
idmuyy therapy
fami
theranv
the
for
Services as coordia Drivale
IB
a ' S°
counseling.
the
hi
new^
arrival
Ses
PatriCk born 0n Nov 25 The
13 oun ces and was 22
Sh!l
long hp
McKee IV ThP
n
ffi
Westmoit. N S^slos
'
pounds
3"o
8
CS'J*
Ve
"
"""
*
13
brother. Henry Sean
EaSt Albertso^ Ave
.
did
graduate work at Bucknell
University and was 3
a
schoolteacher, last teaching at
Warrior Run
He was a former pastor at
the New Tesfampm
Assembly of God Church. Millville,
and was a member
J
g& A Semb,y
°' G0d Church
Bloomsburg
whJL hJ
where
he was a f
former Sunday School teacher
and board
-
'
By an overwhelming margin of 3.445
votes. Columbia
l,?enS
de Dem0Crat E,wood "Woody"
Har
sgfsW4saa»
gsm at m
^ J^"
l
at
17985.
Dayfon
1967
e
PA
Central Bucks until their family
came along Thev
ChaeI * g 6 3nd 0ne girl
*
Tracy JgeS
Tex. 75074.
1964
J5 L
John P. Teter '68 and his wife, Mary, are the
parents
daughter born on Sept. 12. The family lives
a
Zion Grove,
The Rev. Dennis N. Reedy
His address
*
'
at
'66
Piano a
suburb of Dallas, in March 1980. Walt
is a regional sales
manager with Stanley-Vidmar Inc
he
3f rded me lhe
°PP° rtu n"y to attend
N 0rfh Texas State University
n
North
in Denton.
Tex After
completing prerequisite work, I was
accepted into a
VhU. program in Behavioral Medicine/Health
PsycholI
State, he
National Association for Research in
Science Teaching
His doctoral dissertation was based
on the Piagetian
Cognitive Levels and their effects
on the organization and
structure of spatial scientific concepts
2S^
Nancy
Gerald O. Devlin '68 and his wife are the parents
of a
son born on Nov. 27 The Devlins live at 155
Forest Road
Bloomsburg, PA 17815.
Jack Perry '68 was recently appointed
chairman of the
math department at Central Bucks West High
School He
had been a math teacher at that school
for 15 years
He also coached the high school swim team
for its first
10 years His wife. Barbara Blaetz Perry
'68. also taught
1966
Henry D. Dobson
of
AS
1968
the
Nurses Association. She is on the advisory
board
of the Department of Nursing at
Bloomsburg University
Her mailing address is P.O. Box 417,
Bloomsburg.
District
PA
.u
trie
Big
1
Dr. William E. Price '61. noted researcher and expert
director of federal funds at the Luzerne
at the state
'68 live at
20
assistant
She is also a past president of Women's
Civic Club
Bloomsburg, and is treasurer of the
Columbia Counts
Federation of Women's Clubs. She is
active in St
Cath0liC Church and is a member
of the Red
in local history, is
papers in the field of instructional technology
and national levels
John R. Hatton '67 and Ginger Hatton
Horn Avenue, Mechanicsburg, PA 17055.
director of the Practical
er ° f Danville Sch00, Distr 'ct at Washington-
ng
at Columbia University, University
of California at
Berkeley, and the University of Rochester,
Dobson has
become a recognized authority on computer
languages
and their effect on cognitive science He
has presented
Thomas P. Knorr '67, a science teacher at Pen Argyl
Junior High School, has been honored by the
National
Science Teachers Association who named his
earth
science programs among the 10 most exemplary in
thp
3
ne
United States.
Awards will be made by the association in Boston
next
April Tom is married to GaU A. Morris Knorr '67.
Their
address is 215 N. Robinson Avenue. Pen Argyl, Pa.
18072
and
Preceding the brunch, members attended
morning services at St. Matthew Lutheran
v!tlT
work
12522
The
personnel
'63 was awarded the degree
of doctor
philosophy at the commencement exercises at
The
Pennsylvania State University.
Awarded a master of science degree in physics from
Syracuse University, and completing additional
graduate
East Fifth
at
Woman of the Year certificate was presented to
seybert by selection committee chairman
Margaret
Hunsinger. Mary Ellen Breech gave a
reading
The award recipient received her nurse's training
from
Hazleton State Hospital and her master's
degree from
Wyeth
1961
live at 1106
18603
Bonnie Hileman Fiedler '67 and her husband, James
a daughter, Rachel Claire, born
on Oct
She joins two sisters, Elizabeth and Caltlln
3
The
Fiedlers live at Butts Hollow Road, Dover Plains N V
and a past
and Professional
Women
R.
Mary, are the parents
his wife,
The Coles
are the parents of
Rita M. Seybert '65. nursing educator
president of the Bloomsburg Business
Edward
PA
Street. Berwick.
she
may be reached by phone at 389-1003. Her home mailing
address is P.O Box 453. Mifflinville. PA 18631.
Dr.
and
'67
of a son born on Sept. 23.
is
Swartz, observed their
18
Shirley Ridgway "58 has been appointed outreach
coordinator for the Bloomsburg Area Educational Opportunity Center at Bloomsburg University. Her office
located in the Waller Administration Building and
ilier
Carol Slusser Fraind '67 had an art exhibit from Sept
to Oct. 12 at the Suraci Gallery, Marywood College
Scranton,
seats
c'il
June W
his wife,
33rd wedding anniversary last Dec. If>
Surviving in addition to his wife are two daughters
Dixie Carl, Bloomsburg, and Joyce Laubach, Danville
two sons. Clifton C and Stephen E. Swartz, both of
Bloomsburg R.D.I.
^
AfrS^&ffi? bCen promoted
sp uce
% UnDu PA SOn
programmer
OffuM
p
Leonard
348
r
at
h S
?
f'H
St
a
'
y>
i;
of
is
'
BaSCl Neb
Force Gtobal Wealher
cintraT'
a
in
lne
Evelv " 1
computer
WM
the
A
'
r
Continued on page 12
*
r
^OMNj
Alums
sssr
ScKn^
ng
in
cited
FurX
^"cators
With a flag of exceCce
special plaques
"H»
highlight „,
Be
p^S
my
nt
E ac h SCho01
Unnrw,nn
^
n ' He
n a , c ar
in
Secretary Bell initiated
the Secondary School
,n an e,,or 10 ca
selected for the honor, and
Dr Fran ^
superintendent of the Brandywine
district
•Secr^
D C
in
improving the nation's
schools which aoDearori
-ss=?sb schoois
•
25SXES52r
52°,?
QUARTRRLY/Dftcember I9«a
"
'
33-
th*
*>
after
d
f
3Ch Sch ° o1
a,so receive
the
"Pe™»ce
AT THE WHITE HOUSE
P^nL
™
T
t
ayne
n S,et,en
50
Palpal 0?
R
T
X?
Brandywine
(Delaware) H.gh School; Dr
LI
The theme for the day "America Tan n«
selected from an optimfstic
.
JS^?
0f
Mm*
?»•
p^cift?
ew J e acher
GARY
—KOCHER
Back
to school usually
_
M
gh back
° dCK 10 scn ° o1
01 ne,d
held a d
deeper
^per significance
sign ficanr*.
,A
thfn
than \itt. A-??
did for most other beginning
teachers She was fo
teach in the same
classroonAvhere'she attended 6th
;
a step up the educational
"Later,
he he iVS adV3ncing a grade
going to a
n1ff!~„r
i
different school
or leaving high school for
college
For a special group of people,
this fall's back to-school
I
!"
was a guard
at Irving
Pool " she
recall
"1
-
,
S5»
_
on Allentown
s
East
she epitomized the
e 60ine back
"I can't wait," she said.
7
"
0
message
" 6 * °*
^
McHugh
JZSm
S3ys she
-
L£
«SS3
aKinlif "wT
Boose heads Maine education department
—
Dr Robert E. Boose,
s^rar*
Gov Joseph
a
member
of the
Class of 1968 has
pos o( educauon
'
E. Brennan nominated Boose, savins
he
has the background and commitment
challenge.
Boose, whose nomination
was approved by the state
Senate, said he is thrilled
to
meet
the
about the state of Maine
'
™
is
politically astute, cooperative
and
through 86 names
before Boose was chosen as
the most qualified
Boose dealt closely with New Jersey lawmakers while
he was deputy assistant education commissioner
there.
For four years, he was superintendent of schools for
Mercer County, which includes Trenton and Princeton.
During his tenure there, he implemented
a
computerized transportation network and a computerized
network for special education. Until June, he also
served
for two years as acting for superintendent
of Essex
County schools.
230,000 students are enrolled in public
and
^
'
NeW
«
'
a
%\%
'
T
/
nrZir
He said Boose is unusual in terms
department person. "He's more of a
of a state (education)
can-do person than
^
about county
y
superintendents."
Just before he was nominated
for the Maine position
Boose had accepted a job as executive
director of the
Association of Community College
Presidents in New
Jersey, starting in October
«3
f° r
e
t0 ex Perience 18 months to two
years hf*.
n a higher education situation."
Boose said The
job with the college presidents'
association was an
opportunity to get other experiences,
but the job in Maine
was an even better opportunity "
m£
?
The new commissioner said he hopes
to forge a strong
,e 8 isIato ". 'eachers and
administrators
° f pu blic edUC3,i0n And ne said
he
is willing
r.finpTn
,p I™**,
,
to seek
whatever funds
are necessary to get the
job done, even if it means raising
taxes
a
nSh,P With
n rnn
t H
r
,
JCr Sey COunty superintendents are
appointed
h ed
M UCa ,
b
comm issioner. Through the county
nm, c h Stale ,S b t0
m0nit0r local sch001 districts.
hL a good, solid
'f
He s had
career," said Paul Houston in
Th e are "° skeletons in his cl °setHe s
,T
probably considered
the best county superintendent
we
Jl
St3te
'
fair
Boose was one of three people sent
to run the district
since returned to local control
H e S r a hlened ° Ut
"
* 3 year 3nd 3 half '" one
obse r ve r s afd
Copeland said Boose is the type of
man who responds to
calls going into school
buildings to help when there are
problems. He said Boose was also
the man to call for
W en
Pr ° b emS Wtth ,he education
departme nt
"When Boose became county superintendent
at h,m as a monitor
r
,
J^ S
'
BOOSE
,r
'
in
'
candidate, said University
of Southern Maine president
was
Wh ° made sure "he ?orm S were
S
Houston
said
But Boose, he pointed out. initiated
a county busing
system for special education students,
computerized
S
UCati0n activilies establi *hed a
county system
f o^!lt?i
educat, °" - a karate district
for the more
Ir
retarded and got a sch001 f or art
off the
ground
"Boose is fair, honest, decent and
shows common
n
Sa d C
3
dire Ctor in the
Tr enlnn area
a
Trenton
for he New Jersey Education
Associate
The union doesn't usually say that
l
jersey
er
iedS
fi
filled
out,
innovative, aggressive, honest
and more. A sampling of
8
educators and others reflected
these sentiments
He s a frontline soldier." said Crosby
Copeland Jr
super.ntendent of the Trenton School
District. "We in
Mercer County hate to see him leave "
d as 3 high sch00 Principal in
Trenton when
fh.cff!! 1 u Ver
SCh0 °' diStriCt beCause 11 was
run
°
so badly
sifted
More than
" Before Bob. the role of
county superintendent
e
ga
°Se 3 f0rmer Levi,l own. Pa.,
resident
m education at Temple Universityearned his
chers sch0 ° di strict superintendents
and even
k
reporters who
have dealt with Boose praise both
his
Perf ° rmanCe as 3 vete
educator
They say he
He
bureaucrat.'
;
HnM°
rt
doctorate
New
added that his main
emphasis will be on quality
education and what's
happening in the classroom.
A selection committee
Robert Woodburv, who
headed the panel".
He said Boose is
"capable, bright and
vigorous with considerable
experience in education
from the local to legislative levels."
private elementary and secondary
schools in the two New
Jersey counties The figure is
about the same for all of
™2
and honored and excited
,
'
b0 ks can Prepare you as
much as student
?,
u
e Said " ! was a Httle
8,
until y0 uYe
Luh 'S?
with
the children and get to know
their personal ties »
The experience taught her about
making sure you're
8 y ° U C3n d ° the 1
** ,uu ,c
and doing it well.
about rules and
procedures, miscellaneous
teaching tips, a luncheon and
a
gh
gof,he°m a in
"I'm very anxious."
Te
waTsSent tacMnl "
The orientation meetings were
part learning and nan
P '
talk, a blur of instructions
pep
first class,
Brandmine
opening day
ne erm her Preparation was four
years at
ni««
"i
V
Bloomsburg
University (Class of 1983), where
she
°*
Most *****
SSSS
Before meeting her
the
"
r
d the biggest ste of a11 on the
p
"??ladder:
5s
educational
going from student to teacher
ne
S K
hy
U
P' School6th grade «^her at
Our Lady
L adv H
P?n n
Help
off Christians
¥F
of
Augustus Graham, board
-1 came
r* mo «...
a
"I
out ready
to teach the next day "
After spending about $50 of
her own money for supplies
d
SUrpr e tr6at f0r her 17
P"Pi's. she spen? severa
?n. days
H3
l!
Ml
putting
up bulletin boards, inventoryinrbooks
g
St
g
y SChedUleS de3ning lne room a n
StVna i?H
getting
ready ?J
the perennial pile of paperwork
that g
eets
sent home to parents on
'
'
..
Editoi
means
super.ntendent
and Dr
returns to old classroom
T.
Ai!
B ni n «,n Morning
m r„_ r.„
,
Allentown
C oll rEducot.on
'
'52
left
he
Frank
'
Furgele
N,
By
-
Two Bloomsburo
attended an awards
program a the
H
S eP,
ber h ° n0r,ng
del school
pnnc pals
,sTom
h
from throughout
the country From
graduates
nominations were reviewed by
15-member D aneK
i
'
During testimony before a legislative
committee. Boose
said he perceives himself as an
advocate for public
education, adding that "quality education
costs money
and I m going to ask for that money "
Among the general problems with public
education he
system that rewards good teachers
by
promoting them to administrative
positions, and low pay
which drives others out of the profession
altogether
Education is a profession that rewards
vou by 8
getting
8
you out of the classroom," he said.
said, are a
'
!
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
12
1983
Continued from page 10
Beverly Jones '69 reports some news about herself
and
Judy De/ant Wicker '69
This summer two Bloomsburg alumni held their
own
reunion on the island of Oahu Judy Defant Wicker
and
Beverly Jones, both class of "69, vacationed together
for
two weeks in Hawaii
"Judy has lived in Hawaii for the past year. She was
a
resource room teacher at an elementary school
on the
north shore of Oahu during the last school
year.
"Bev, a special education teacher in Grants. New
Mexico, met Judy and her husband the Air
Force) at the Honolulu Airport The women
hadn't seen
each other for seven years
"A lot of time was spent in reminiscing about student
teaching days at Selinsgrove State School and
Hospital In
addition. Judy and Bev did quite a bit of
sightseeing
Stanley G. Rakowsky 70. principal of Clearfield Area
High School, who has served two terms on the executive
board of the Pennsylvania Association of Secondary
School Principals, was named the new president-designate of the organization in a recent election.
He received his master's degree and has completed
course require- ments for his doctorate at Penn State.
From 1970-75 he was a teacher and coach at North
Schuylkill High School, in 1975-76 he was vice
principal
and athletic director
and he has served in
in
the
Towanda Area High
School
from 1976 to
the present.
Stan is also past president of the Clearfield Lions
Club
a member of the board of directors and
treasurer of the
Children's Aid Society, and is an active member
of the
Bloomsburg Alumni Association, the Penn State
Nittanv
Lion Club and the Elks
He also served on the PIAA District IX
"Judy and Bev are probably the only two
Bloomsburg
graduates to venture that far south in trie
U.S.
Hawaiian adventure came to a close
much
too
"Judy
remain
will
Hawaii for another vear or so She
hopes to continue teaching in a
Resource Room. Eventually, she would like to
do administrative work on the
AS '.d from teachin
g. Judy is very involved
ItHt™
k
u
with her basset
hound. The General
n * ed her s P ecial education training
inHZSUP
Ul The General
g
out of
nJ.!fl,
c^ several times!"since ne
Obedience School
in
SS^S™
A™**
I
Leonard E. PawlowsU in
n
eS
F?S F L!rm
ocXJ^S^
of
was recently promoted to
lhe bond department o?
]0,ned the bank staff in
gradUa,e f Wy ° m
Seminary
°
'69
men
*
J J"*
Leonard
,S
3
^
d
previousl v serve d the
Berwick-Bloomsburgn a n!.ii5f area as a sales
DanviUe
representative specializing in
8
mutual funds and fixed and variable
-
His address
Cynthia L. Everett AreneUa 71 and her husband.
Frank, are the parents of a son born on Nov. 22. Their
address is 2712 Old Berwick Road. Bloomsburg. PA
17815.
Gary
S. Blasser '71 reports on July 3 he was
promoted
procuring contracting officer with the Naval
Electronics Systems Command in Washington,
D C. and has been
assigned responsibility in several Navy
communications
programs.
address is 1619B South Hayes St.. Arlington,
Va.
to
^ms
annuities
is
3
West Green
Pur °? y
St.,
Grim
Nanticoke,
PA
18634.
'
69 and Robert R Griffin
•nlOfSfnt
73 are the parents of a son born on
Nov. 28 The Griffinsaddress is 1201 Highland Drive.
Bloomsburg. PA 178
5
Ts^:°zs
j£
a
Dat ve of Asnl a°d. joined
Sperry
ix
R.D.2. Box 470. Elverson.
•
address
auoRs and promotions de
is
PA
~
1973
in
Hi*
19520
Jack C. Kile "72 and his wife. Christy, are the parents of
a daughter born on Oct. 26 at the Berwick Hospital
The
family lives at 235 East 13th St.. Berwick, PA 18603.
John L. McLaughlin '72 has Joined the law firm of
Marks & Wagner as an associate who will work with the
public defender's office. John's mailing address
St., Danville, PA 17821.
West Mahoning
University
accountant,
in
Ens'
rg
!P'
H e vis
burg area^
H
W
M. ddle ?chod
P
,
[^Lf £ fT™ ^
H
Ufe-long resident of the
Blooms-
yed 35 3
f o°r
4
te
cner at
t
lne
Bloomsburg
his wife are the parents of a son,
Jeffrey Eric, born on Sept 19 The Clewells
live at 2565
Martin Road. Willow Grove.
19090.
PA
War H
*
"*
Pacl " c
lives in Virginia.
Bruce
master's
earned
degree
at
his
Penn
State University in 1974
He is a member of many
organizations including the
Pennsylvania Institute of
Certified Public Account-
and
the
Institute
His address
of
tranft
Avenue.
ington.
PA
507 HarFort Wash-
is
LeAUBY
19304
Bethanne M. Valentino Kob 71 and Leo
Kob are the
parents of a son, Stephen Leo. born on
Sept 8 The Kobs
live in Bryn Mawr, PA 19010.
Gerald W. Lorson 71 began his new duties as
assistant
principal in the Elizabethtown Area
School District's
junior high school in September.
He had taught
at
&
Berwick since 1971
Berwick, Gerald taught geography, general
business
and, since 1973, reading.
In his first year as reading teacher
Gerald developed a
program called Reading Stampede, designed to
age students
to
read more
in their leisure
time
encourSimilar
programs followed.
He was cited by Scholastic Magazines Inc. in 1978
as a
runner-up in the Great Paperback
Contest and was
named Outstanding Young Educator of the Year
in 1980
by the Berwick chapter of the U.S. Jaycees
Thomas R Evans 72 has been
promoted from head
e
B,a
" Sch001 10 assis,anl Princlpal S
, H Howell,
u
u
and
Hatboro-Horsham School District
He is a 1964 graduate of Central
!.
Columbia High School
ma te S degree from Trenton StTte
ColleTZ'j
College
f
r'
and administration
certification from Lehigh A
S
ve eran
°' Vielna ro.
L
™
SlS
u
11
years
in the
live
19090
1973
ay (P,etrange,1) Me,IU)
h
B
thZ& Ta
wi
past
summer
1
;
17067
and her husband
13
pa-
The
isa.
S
31 0 " 31 S ° Cjety f ° r
Chi,dre "
A Sit
,!
'the gr
° Up S annuaI meetin in
*
Uta h this
&
certificate In clinical
,
11
173
aa^jSBs 2; 7nS
a
S a e raduate of
North Schuylkill High School
School of Nursing and Brooks
School'
01 Aerospace Medicine, Tex
C0 p,et,l g tu
31
lhe
Air Command and
y
**
Stal?r!!S!!
a. Maxwell Air
2
Staff
College.
Force Base, Alabama
nu rse '"structor for the reserves
'
has taught
PA
rah
recently graduated cum laude from
Kutztown University, receiving a bachelor
of science in
nursing degree.
Donna was selected as flight nurse of the
year of the
ero
d,caI Evacuation Squadron,
Associate
es McGuire Air Force Base, N.J.
She was also
recognized by evaluation teams
for management of inservice education in her squadron
p,?,
^
Hatboro-Horsham district
He and his wife Virginia Hyduke
73, and two sons
at 45 Hideaway Drive.
Willow Grove.
Linda Ruth Rescigno 73 and
Glenn Louis Rowe were
married on Sept 11 and live
in Newport Beach
Calif
Linda is an accountant. Her
husband is an interior
decorating consultant
Donna Nolter 72
r2L£
S22
S
1
Efi.
MM
^n ^
0nna
Theater d Jing WoJlS
He
'72
Philadelphia.
Or?a
lan d
LeAuby
A.
Rider. Bruce taught at West
Chester University He has
previously worked for the
Keystone Auto Club of Philadelphia and as supervisor
at Ernst & Whinney, also of
1972
HvdTVr"
is
has been appointed acting
assistant professor of accounting in the school
of business
administration at Rider College.
Before his appointment at
Gary CleweU 71 and
Association.
he was the son ot the
late William
Fairfax. Va. Frank, a certified public
a computer system consultant specializing
in
financial applications.
Bruce
is a member of the
International Reading AssociaKeystone Slate Reading Association. National
Education Association and Pennsylvania
State Education
l
213
Frank W. Sullivan 72 was recently awarded a master's
in business administration by the
George Mason
He
8
is
degree
tion,
l
6
19064
Management Accountants
In
1970
PA
ants
5
R
JSgston P^.
H
1971
Amy. Beth and Laura.
children,
A 1968 graduate of Mount Carmel Area High School
Clevenstine received a master of arts degree in public
school administration from Villanova University in
1974
and a master of science degree in biology from West
Chester State College in 1977.
The Clevenstines live at 77 Forest Road. Springfield
his post at Clearfield
•We saw Sea Life Park. Iolani Palace, the Polynesian
Committee
from 1979-82 and on the Executive Board of the
Cultural Center, the Punchbowl - the U.S. Military
PennsylCemetary of the Pacific, the U.S.S Arizona Memorial, vania High School Speech League
and downtown Waikiki
In 1981-82 Stan wrote a series of articles
for the
"The alumni also took a side excursion to the island of
Pennsylvania Schoolmaster, journal of PASSP. on "ConHawaii The day before we left Oahu. Kilauea Volcano
trolled Substances: Usage and Abusage"
which provided
was erupting 300 ft into the air and could be seen from
principals with information on the status of drug
abuse
HUo. We had hoped to have a spectacular view of the
among students throughout the state and nation, with
erupting volcano.
recommendations and with support for legislation spon"The day we arrived at the Volcanoes National Park.
sored by state Sen. Michael O'Pake and enacted
into law
Kilauea was erupting only 10 feet into the air and was
by the state Senate.
inaccessible to the public So much for volcano-viewing!
He has also been a contributor to the journal of the
"While on the island of Hawaii, we took a side trip
National Association of Secondary School Principals
to
see NaaJehu, the southernmost community in the
Stan's mailing address is Box 910. Clearfield, PA
United
16830.
States. From there we drove on a very
narrow road to
South Point — the southernmost part of the U S
quickly
Richard F. Clevenstine '72 was recently awarded a
doctor of philosophy degree In science education from
Temple University
Clevenstine has been a biology and chemistry teacher
in the Ridley School District, Folsom, for
the last 12
years. He and his wife, Barbara, are the parents of three
competence from the
Carpenter Avenue. Myerstown,
PA
r
2
Vff*f CUlty
!
?£
mp
Sfg
,
and
JH^T
J LaWt0n 73 and Nad| ne M.
Hunter were
V
a
° f PoltsvU,e HosP itaI Sc hool of
Sunbury. The Lawtons live
In
Sunbury, Pa.
Continued on page 14
;
ALUMNI QUARJERLY/nprpmhor
Bloomsburg
changes name
infp
for sixth time
'University'
From Academy
in 1839 to
will
Literary Institute
and State Normal
Normal School
remain
sS £
in 1916, Slate Teachers
in 1960. and now
Collei
in
lfi^fi
'
^69
in iqo?
£85^885^
State College
a P P e rS
perm a n e nt
name
CUrfent
iS
Very ,ike,y
lo
be
The Academy was born on the
present site of Carver
U g h ntereSted CUizens wh0
wanted to proJIde
the youth
vnur°h of
n f the
tn
community with an opportunity
to secure
fundamentals of a classical education
haS S e " ed lhr0Ugh the ears
a "d today
y
vonfht from
fr^m a wide
h area as
youths
well as other students
of
varied ages have the opportunity
to pursue
the
GOING UP
a multi-purpose institution
of higher education
Why university status 9
b S e,|' S definition stat
a
university is an institution
<*
nf Ma
h
of
higher
learning providing facilities
for teaching and
research and authorized to grand
academic degrees
h"
asefie,d P°et 'aureate of England
nJi?
5 f
noted editor,
novelist and man of letters,
more vividly
in
New
i
for
Human
^
Th
are
univ e rsity
P,3Ce
Dr.
m °re BeautifuI
earthly thi "gS
Serv.ces nears comp.et.on on
campus
thought in
all its finer
m
distress or
'
will honor
ways, will welcome thinkers in
uphold ever the dignity of thought
exact standards in these things
exile, will
and learning and
will
V
hC y ° Ung in their im r essionable
P
years
f ' of«^.Purpose
the hJnH o a
shared, of a great corporate
5p
»h«.
life whose links will not
be loosed until they die Thev
give young people that close
S
a e
for
w
eartnly tnings more splendid
In £
these days of broken frontiers
1
and
coHapsing values - when every future
looks somewhat
grim, and every ancient foothold
has become somewhat
a Ua8m e Wn r ver il exists
tne free minds of men,
ur 0
;,
! fair
f
urged
on to Tfull
and
Inquiry, may still bring wisdom
J
human
-
affairs.'
Bloomsburg can certainly identify with
Masefield s
definition Bloomsburg University
today is a shining
beacon to many ambitious students
anxious
broaden
hundreds and hundreds
to
their horizons, as
it
has been
aiumoi.
to
of
Actually,
Bloomsburg has been a multi-purpose
institution of quality programs for
most of the past 10
years when the college began to de-emphasize
teacher
education
More than 50 percent of the programs offered
at the
university today did not exist before
1975.
One of the most noticable changes made with
university
status was the schools of business, arts
and sciences
professional studies, and graduate studies
and extended
programs are now termed colleges instead of schools
rhe college of professional studies has been
reorganized
into the school of education with
a teacher education
council and the school of health sciences
with its health
sciences council.
The schools are further broken down into
to
under these degree programs.
One strong
effort
is
a $10,000 feasibility study of
advanced technology program development started
earlier this year which is being funded by the
Pennsylvania Department of Education.
Neither Bloomsburg nor the other 12 state colleges
became universities offer doctorate degrees directly
Bloomsburg has a cooperative doctoral program in
elementary education
that
offers in conjunction with Indiana
University of Pennsylvania, The latter has been certified
it
confer doctoral degrees since
1968.
LRC
LRP
lab wh ch will
facilities with ( he EducaUonal
10 prOV,de both faculty
and
capabilities
will also
be in this area
The new center will also feature
several al purpose
classrooms for multimedia
presentations
e of tnese rooms will also
allow for theater-in-theround presentations and will
be equipped with a
thea ncal "gh^g astern
and carpeted floor coverings
i ahZed
laborator ies and classrooms for
elemenlarv
prStr
education, mass communication,
^
J"
nursing. psychdogT
Cati0n 3nd S ° d0,0gy wU1 be
'ocaK'the
bunding^
"The Center
Babmeau
'
the kind of facility that will
provide
opportunities for all mstructiona
sa.d^
is
"The building
will
"
programs
enhance the
university s ability to continue its
tradition
m delivering educational programs to its of excellence
"
clients
D Pa
n 0
S Planned
Ce n?e r
JvTce s
'^^
rHlan i
U n,Cati0 n StUdieSl Curr iculum
and Foundations
m?°hPm
at
mathematics
and, computer science, nursing,
psychology
Curr ,cu,um Mat erials Center.
Campus Health'
Centl^'
Center,
dean of, instructional
services, Learning
Resources Center director of the
school of education
6 SCh °° l 0f hea,th sciences and
h e dean of
cZ°J 'I
the college
of professional studies
'
-
The new building will cost less than was
anticipated In
l
982 Burkava ge-Evans architects
estimated
'
SS
fh? total ^J,
the
cost at/ approximately $5.9
million
' egi s ' ature
alloca ted
nrl/nMh! bui,d,ng amoun ted to$5.3 million, but the bid
$4.7 million.
E
,
T
,Ce l e
Versity was recent|
y
5is
J phase of the
$265,000
for a second
project
fS fnrf
'
Because
awarded
which
of
will
provide elements eliminated from
the original design
because of concerns for cost overrun
W are re Uesting an equipment allocation of $1,391
mi
nn
D
million,
Babineau said. "This money will be
used for
equipment such as security for learning
resource
3 Ce " lral vacuum s 5,em
'
•
'.'
^
- ™
3h££Sfi*
University enrollment remains stable
With
K
316 students
o.^i'6,316
b
ver
55S
registered for
fUlnt
UeS
t0
semester classes
maintain
ago
fall
stability at levels established
iP
six years
regi tration figures snow
an
.tSfnt?'
certificates. Efforts will continue to increase
offerings
!Tr
S
A new photography darkroom
expanded
courseware and
seeking information on up-to-date
curriculum materials
The Learning Resources Center will be moving
from
the Andruss Library to provide
expanded services to the
Internally, the colleges of business and
arts and
sciences remain the same as before the name
change
The university will continue to grant associate,
bachelors and masters degrees and graduate
level
develop new instructional software.
media services the
new media production
SSf,"? d U Cll ° n Lab
sldPnKw
th
,
students
with
media
production
m
The Center will become a focal point for all
education
programs on campus and a magnet for inservice
teachers
departments
and centers.
P
E. Babineau, Bloomsburg University
tutiona ' Pining, says construction
of the
-vTr
H. McCormick
Center for Human Services is
ahead of schedule.
Fifty-two percent of the work is
complete in only 50
percent of the time allocated for
the project
hre5" St
°8I 00 S(I ua re foot building is
130-feet by
9d^l! wide. When
u^ completed
240-feet
in June, the Center will
feature many expanded instructional
services
One will be new and expanded radio and
television
studios, including a main studio,
two substudios for
0
a
«ter control room plus control rooms for
?:
each studio and television and motion
picture editing
"
These new facilities will serve the entire
campus
including such instructional
programs as mass
communication and educational media
The radio set up will include two studios
with control
rooms, a recording library and teletype
area
Another element of the new building will
be a
specialized laboratory for computer
instruction with an
adjacent autotutorial laboratory
equipped with
microcomputers as well as traditional media
and
interactive video
"With the ever expanding use of
microcomputers, not
only in computer science and business
programs, but in
such fields as education, mathematics,
the hard sciences
the social sciences and the arts,"
Babineau said "this
will be an extremely important
facility to the entire
instructional program of the university "
Another facility that will feature microcomputers
will
be the new and much enlarged Curriculum
Materials
Center. Here microcomputers will be
used to catalog and
access materials, to review educational
than a
.„
In
addition to the usual
will feature a
rooms.
which
nd lhal cnance of tne endless
discussion of
ih.i
f- ? are
themes
which
endless - without which vouth
would
seem a waste of time.
.miJJSS
university
p*™..,
campus
Raymond
S;
.
companionship
~~
James
"?CTe
Z^^T
ahead of schedule
Gfw
tnan a
lhose wno nate ignorance may
s rive to know, where those
who perceive truth may
See Where Seekers and 'Mniers
I
alike
banded together in search for knowledge,
.hZ* \
building
For the Alumni Quarterly
-
,
to
new McCormick Center
By JULILE PYLF
PYLE
M
into
- The
their studies
f
enrolS
^crease
of 76
year but tne total student population
is
'
?nlt than ?k
lower
the'f
6.400 registered in 1977 when the
university's zero growth policy
was adopted
The current full-time enrollment
consists of 4 959
undergraduate and 99 graduate students
Part-time registrations include
213 undergraduate
degree and 637 non-degree students
and 408 graduate
students. Last year there were
4,879 full-time
Un
ateS 3nd
0 years ag0 tne n^ber was
4,942.
S ye a r s V*
lncre ase in full-time undergraduates
rJn
oi K
„
can be attributed
to the larger number of
commuters who
are enrolled, said dean of
admissioners Dr To m L
^
"
MnT^H
S
i
ooper.
.
.
^i-^
Coooer said admissions
Cooper
artmi^innc decisions are
... based
on
replacing students who graduate or leave for
other
reasons. This past year there were 4,593 freshmen
and 785
transfer applications for the 1,080 freshmen
and 210
transfer spaces available
Applications for admission to Bloomsburg continue
to
be very encouraging. Cooper commented. "We
do not
anticipate any changes in the near future, either
in
applications or in enrollment "
The university's zero growth enrollment policy was
based on a 1977 Planning Commission recommendation
was
noted that the existing instructional resources
and housing accommodations could not support a
larger
student population. The policy is directed toward
controlling the enrollment of full-time undergraduates
because they have the greatest impact on the academic
and housing resources.
It
J
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
14
1983
Continued from page 12
Bob and his wife, Barbara, and daughter live at 1470
Country Meadow Lane, Kernersville, N.C 27284.
Barbara Rose McCarty '73 and Mark Brandon Gorrell
were married recently. The bride is in-service education
coordinator in the housekeeping department at Geisinger
Medical Center Her husband is senior management
engineer for Geisinger System Services. They live in
and Gary S Duff were
married on July 2. Carol teaches math at Bellefonte Area
Middle School. Gary, a Penn State graduate, teaches
industrial arts at Bellefonte Area Middle School. They
live In Lock Haven, Pa.
Dave
is
Bloomsburg,
181,
Rutgers,
PA
PA
received the degree of
State University (of New
the
6 Brodsky.
17851
PA
Frank
C.
F TniSkey 74
S
'
M
of
r
Center
is
married
lA^M fSSS
3y St€VenS
,
F
nn?!
h
Treasury
'
S
to
on July 22
Sch001 of Medfcal
Dennis L.
Shana and
'
*
Adams
at 17
East
me
74 and her ^band, R
.
parents
of a daughter born on
July 22
3. Box 3785. Berwick.
PA 18603
R.D
74 joined tne
staff of the
Blooms-
,
Dl CtZ
J
and her nusband H.toshi Sato,
»r?^n? t S ° ?f a S °75
n b0rn 0n Ju,y 12 at the Berwick
a m Uy ,, es 31 R D 8 Box 309
Bloomsburg,
^
mf«I h c at0
pl ffis H,t0Shl
,
,s an as *>ciate professor
of Speech
?.
mIc rCommunication
Mass
and Theater at Bloomsburg Univer
at°
Ho^ Jt^
,
-
,
'
'
Jocelyn Davis Levan 75 and
her husband, Dennis are
he parents of a daughter. Sarah
Lynn, born on July 22 a!
8 Ce n er Their maili
"g ad dress
Pu
r
O Box 44, Middleburg, PA
o ! 17842.
&mK
scSJl 0V
'
-
,
" VeS
aS22.
207
*
Bryan Warren Reber 76 and Joanne Louise
Smith were
married on Nov
12.
Joanne works for the federal
government at Vint Hill Farms Station.
Warrenton Va
Bryan is district executive director.
Shenandoah Area
Council. Boy Scouts of America. They
live in Front
Royal.
Barbara Anne Wanchisen 76 reports
that she is a
doctoral candidate in experimental
psychology at Temple
University. She is doing research
on foraging in animals
and creative problem-solving in humans
Her work is
partly supported by a biomedical grant
received ,he master of
from the University
Dela -
m^H 8 S? weUter
°'
^
and Katherine Reichart were
,S an accounl executive
fo?
y." Ch P,erce Fenner & Smith. Inc His wife
'
'75
r,
f
,
M
?!
,
°
f
800 Trent0n
*
t0
-
75 was recently named wrestling
coach
S
(Pa
High Scn001
« a "dy
H
physical education
in the high school.
nhv^
224 Langhorne.
'
wil
also
teach
M, ChaeI WUson 75 received a
doctorate
rh!^^
,
chemistry on Aug.
13 from Texas
A&M
of
'
17847.
"
Michael Jay McGinnis 76 lives
C
at^ Hinds
mn^!
at 13
e
7 and
,tt0 )e era
J,
?
St.,
Montrose.
J
?,
PA
field
n
SSinV!
School
Paul
her husband Paul liv e
Michele completed
'
-
18801.
is
secondary trainable students
MRP analyst with Bendix Corporation.
a senior
R bert 5' riebeI 76 and Patricia Gaines were married
?
on Aug
28. The Kriebels' address is
BrandywmeTreek
a
5, 6,80 Norlh
Hagadorn * J5 East
S
^
Mi h
Bob recently was granted
BSS
'
-
a master's
degree
in
education/office administration at
Bloomsbu g
sity.
His future plans include
beginning
77
r C
!r !
1
S 0ry ce rt''icate In special
education at Mansn1vI!. c ,ty ln
August She teacnes at Elk Lake High
K«
teaching
P
Pa
at
Michigan State University
a F
H
! hp n"
e
Vh/
n
E Adams
4715 S
at
#909B, Bartlesville, Ohio 74006
in
University
noiisneinimbf
'
y
Community Hospital.
The Dills may be reached C/O General
Delivery
wyjay,
Swengel, PA 17880
program
from Shlppensburg University
assistant professor of
chemistry
yosiuji/ o, lb .na.ntiS i:ecch
GIenW °° d DriVe
Joan Faye Thompson 76 and WUIiam Alan
DM 79 were
married on Sept. 17 Joan is works at
Laurelton State
School, and William is purchasing agent
at the Sunbury
MiddIet ° Wn Townshl
P
Road A P'
from Temple She
Wasnin gton
ad
'
Mi^L PA
l
'
Wat
a d
»h?
iS
10
K
n ernber
b oa; dof%upervL r s
addreSS
is'
in
l
,
PA78 977°
Beatrice Helen Leiby Prosseda
76 and her husband
0 na
° f a daughter. Laura Jeannine."
!?
hnr n on
CdaS
31 R
° 3 B ° X ,08
MUJThy "*
ritlS
JSS^.jSTJ.JW™
PA^47
n
Christian
wif not
wrestling
Casing
:
M
MaTif
k
SS ^f ?
-
1976
oene is- employed in the investment
department of
Hamilton Bank. Reading. They live at 220
North Washington Street, Boyertown, PA
19512.
.
Dec*
the
n AUg ,0 n0tmg ,hal bei
°
"g a Minister
h
„
his skiing,
running, tennis or
ry
17814.
Zctp
SS
i
Ba0k Hapoa,im B M
Philadelphia as an
aTmSJ? e IStan
he de P uty branch manager
in
is
Univer
Nancy Ann Marie Lonker TIscher 75
and her husband
n
he birlh ° f their dau hter
*
SusanMarje"
on Sept. 11
is working for the
Radnor School
ne Crai 8 L« v engood 75 and Tracey
Lynn Campbell
u ,?! married
were
recently. The bride is employed
as an
assistant buyer at Hess's
Department Store. Allentown
Serril
D 74 has been a
PP° inted accounting
.
Product Division of amp
He
at Villanova
Rosemont, Pa.
?'^ H'
Nancy
1975
18
nSSEr
L^^°
g
L or Communications
live in
mathematics
William Albert Garrison 76 and
his wife are the
parents of a daughter. Kasey Lynn,
born on July 5 The
Garrisons live at R.D.3. Benton. PA
Adams 74 graduated
Tec^Xv
Fm^ Jane
technology. Emma
htt
hinder
E. Enterline 79 are
engaged. Both work for the Schuylkill Intermediate Unit
A Fall 1984 wedding is being planned at
St. Joseph's Church in Ashland
and Tamara Briel were married
a Senio pub,ic relations major
at Shippens/
h,If
i
.
burg University
and serves as a student assistant
u? the
,V
y PUbhC Re,ati0ns °" ice
*
e is employed b
th P Pennsylvania
ppn;l 1
r
t
the
Department
C
'
SStf S
29 in Pottsville.
75
a re ent,y
P romot ed to assistant
f
o
he First Eastern
Bank.
Bert has taken several
American Institute of banking courses
and is a member
of the Susquehanna Valley
Chapter of the American
Institute of Banking. His
address is R D.2. Bloomsburg
1974
h,,?J
'
'
RSSffA*"*
'
live at
Bloomsburg."
of
Woodward 74 and Joanne
caSrVt
J.
3
re
a'
dau e nter oi L. Wanda Barth
r«™J ui^ffF^,
d
rVlllC R
Carver state <"«*tor of the
£?£n Th!. *hb ° ogram was married
10 A,an Da ™'
ju .yTo
Leah a graduate of Mechanicsburg
High School also
e d J ° hnS
" op ! iBS Universi, y and
Unive? slty o?
?h^o
n for
f
Chicago
graduate
work. She is a manager for
the
The couple
doing social work with the elderly.
They say "hello" to all 1974-75 graduates.
cashier at
6
for
*
Eric B. and Mary Catherine
Ferenchak
may be reached at Box 328. New Knoxville.Koetterltz 75
Ohio 45871
Eric reports that he was ordained
Mount
Ruth Fullerton '73 and Roger Lee Dietz
are engaged
Ruth is a kindergarten teacher at the Beck
Elementary
Center. Sunbury Her fiance is
a wood shop superv.sor fo'r
Sun-Corn Industries, Northumberland.
A June 1984 wedding is planned
Clapton
hear
to
to
'73
Carmel Estates. Mount Carmel.
SSK?
good
assistant professor of
18603.
Trina E. Vernon Leshinski '73 and her
husband, John
are the parents of a son born Nov
3 at the Bloomsburg
Hospital The Leshinskis' address is
The KUes
working
75
17815.
Diane Boyles Derr 75 and her husband, the Rev.
Dennis Derr 74, may be reached at P.O Box 866
Belleville, PA 17004. They have two daughters age 5 and
2. Dennis, who went to Wesley Theological Seminary,
is a
United Methodist pastor in Belleville. Diane has been
26.
^.^gf
am
1
C ° mpany ,ReeC
°
doctorate
Steven Philip Kelfer 74 and his wife are the parents of
a son born on Nov. 8 The Keifers live at R.D.4. Berwick
Robert Layman '73 was recently named Bovertown's
acting borough manager Bob was named
Boyertown s
assistant borough manager in July. 1979.
He is married to
the former Patricia Ann Walker.
Thev have a son Justin
Thomas one year of age The Laymans live at 507
East
Philadelphia Avenue. Boyertown, PA 19512.
fmr!?^!
MM.
eCtriC
Her husband graduated from Bloomsburg
High School
and Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, earning his
from the University of Wisconsin
his wife, Suzanne, are the
"73
11
'
Social Security Administration in
Philadelphia
parents of a son, Daniel Eugene, born recently at
Geisinger Medical Center. The family lives at R.D.9, Box
'73
Alexander Louis Horvath
m ara
.
Heebner 74 and Tina M. Hess were married
They live in Tampa, Florida
Deer Treatment
Lon Elson Edmonds 74 and
and his wife, Cathy Cramer 75 have
a new son, Jeffrey Jay, born on June 27 He joins
Timmy
6 and Came, 3'=. Rick received his M B. A. from James
Madison University in May 1983
May
24.
director of treatment at White
Center, Bushnell. Fla
reports that he and his wife
Linda, are the parents of a daughter. Lane Erin, born on
30, 1983. The family lives at 1911 Rolling Green
Circle. Sarasota, Fla. 33582.
Jersey) on
C.
on Sept.
January
at
E
ng
bC re3Ched at 4612 Bea trice. Las
Vegas, Nev.
,
boIi'iAm
89110.
It is always
M
18042.
David G. Burgess
M.C.R.P
a four-year apprenticeship In
a full-fledged journeyman
carpenter
S
Joseph
McCullough '74 and his wife, Patricia, are
the parents of a daughter, Holly Joy, born on Sept. 22.
lives at R.D.4, Bloomsburg, PA 17815.
David
Rick Eckersley
Las
completed
th7^ dfTeTt1ue
The family
Richard Lee Miller '73 was recently appointed assistant
controller of Laneco Inc He is responsible for coordinating internal control systems as well as day-to-day
operations. Dick joined Laneco in 1980 as an accounting
manager His address is 2104 Freemansburg Avenue
PA
I
carpentry. 1 am now
with Carpenter's Local Union
visit
Easton,
10.
'
to Joseph Ronca three vears ago. The
Roncas live at 1489 Verona Drive, Pen Argyl, PA 18072.
She invites any of her Bloomsburg friends to drop her a
o™?g*?7
"On May
Stephen A. Andrejack '74 and his wife are the parents
of a daughter, Theresa Louise, born on Sept. 4.
department.
She was married
or
'74
'73
reports that she has been
teaching Spanish at Pen Argyl Area High School since her
graduation, and is chairwoman of the foreign language
line
fine here in
is
vegas.
Ann Hockenberry
Carol
Lightstreet, Pa.
Joan M. Peron Ronca
Marylou Kempf 75 writes as follows
"Just a short note to let you know all
T
a
in
business
Univer
doctoral
Bait Lansing
ey 7< and her husband Joh
" Harvey
,
L
S
f 3 d Ughter
Me,inda J °y. horn ol
u °
?,
Harveys
live at
1092 Bayless ridce,
>™ Place
Sept
S?ot
9«
26.
The
Norristown. PA 19403.
'
'
.
Continued on page 1b
.iioj^riio/-.
^vjJ.M.l ibj« ( .n
'
C^SM.U..
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
ff
I
Faculty, staff appointments
V**™* "«"*«
~»«*»
BflSa«5S.r
uS^^SS
813
"
"
-t
Bloomsburg
Tooer
Robert
i
A.B.
in
pT?
P.
PrfvSus
° f PittSbUrgh 31
Bomboy, part-time
Ph D
v assistant
Sown
instructor, English
English at Wilkes College
(1963), M S in
University (1964) Previous,
iS^^SST^
Thomas
Muskingum
College .1970. Ph D in sociology
at Wayne State
University (1979). Previously assistant
professor
,
at1
Moravian College. Bethlehem.
Penelope Broach, admissions counselor
B A in
l
d r C0 " ege (1980
in counseling
'' M Ed
r n
at Salem State College
1982.. Previously staff
associate
»soware
of housing at Salem State
College.
in
JL,
W
at
Kacapyr,
Kaeapv, instructor, economics „
B A.
University of Maryland (1978)
Previously
y
P
,'
gyj
31
.
"
-
aSSSg
«"£
management. '«
B S.
in
State Un.vers.ty (1952). B.F.T
in foreign trade at
SCh ° 01 f nlernational Management
fl^V'MB Al^hf
m busmess al? J
New York University
Ph n mTosoc.al sc.ence
Ph^D
at Syracuse University
EJW
«
1959)
.1971.
,
professor of
—
.
Staff nurse al Children s
ffiSphla
MSN
1983)
" os P i,al of
E
y andl assistant professor, philosophy and
a n?h
S l
an ropo,0gy at ^ce University
"L ropology
Ph D f
ln anth
at the Pennsylvania
i ? ? University
n
State
1975. 1980
Previously project
administrator at Novak and Company.
Brooklyn, N Y
;
nSSXT&n
.
(
)
ESSES ESSf** speciaU8t at D
~
nt of
U h B Lu pien assistant
professor, computer
infnrm
a?
f
information
systems.
B.S M.S. in mechanical
engineer
at Un.vers.ty of Maryland
1963, 1968.. Previously
CtUrer 31 Harrisbur Area
g
G
tanle y
Carr dire ctor of personnel and labor
,
»
o c?
relations. B.S. in business
administration at Bloomsburg
University (1974). Previously personnel
officer at
Department of Commerce, Harrisburg.
-
Gregory L Champagne, instructor, business
education and office administration. B.S
in
business
education at Thomas College (1981
1, M.Ed
in business
education at Bowling Green State
University 1983)
Previously graduate assistant at Bowling
Green.
.
ary L ^essman-Conroy, assistant
dean of student
.
R
food service management at
Indiana
Un.yers.ty of Pennsylvania .1981).
Previously graduate
residence director at IUP.
life
n
we. B.s. in
'
,
'
biology
life
B
S
and
at Millersville
University (1981
y d ° rm SUpervisor
M7e'rTvi! e
in
1983)
U P ward Bound program
at
William W. O'Donnell Jr.. assistant
professor
t
n Sl die B F A m theater at Penn
M^TI
FA
p
i°
Mil
•
College
Michael
0C
nw? n
S d
uKsHy
p'
•
-
'?
State
,K
ftheater
31 Wa yne State Un.versitv
instructor of theater at Lycoming
A.M.. Ph.D. in speech and
dramatic arts at
J1363),
Un.vers.ty
of Missouri 1969. 1971
.. Previous"
director nf
cont.nu.ng education at University
of
E Pugh,
assistant professor, chemistry
'S
ry 3t Universit of California at
Davis
y
.
fomPJZT
m
m chemistry
!.
Marc. A. Woodruff, assistant
professor
communication studies. B.A. in
theatre/child
development at Western Kentucky
University
Previously director of Hartwood
Theatre
at Arizona State University
gradUate assoc ' a te at Arizona State
Boris Z. Raykhshteyn. associate
professor
mathematics and computer science. B.S.,
MS Ph D in
mathematics at Yaroslavl Teachers
College 1958 1960
1965). Previously professor at Susquehanna
University^
Zone -. assistant
professor, nursing. B.S.N
u'i m°?»t;
M.S.N,
a University of Pennsylvania
Previously assistant professor
of
1
.1975)
(
1964. 1975)
nursing at Wilkes
Andrew
F Emerson, assistant professor finance
and
business law B.A in history at
Bryan College 1978)".D
University of Georgia School of Law
1981
Previously
31
C ° Unty ,TeXaS, Communit College
y
,
District
Sharon Forlenza-Stevens. assistant
professor
31 Nesbi " Memorial Hospital
(82ft
s'f?,
11969). B.S.N
at U.Ikes College (1971), M S
in maternal
child nursing at University of
Maryland (1978)
toEHII
Previously assistant professor at
Wilkes College.
Christine B Fuller, part-time instructor,
languages
and cultures B.A in Latin at Juniata College
1967)
M A in classics at Penn State 1970 Previously parttime emergency appointment in languages
and cultures
during spring semester of 1982-1983
at
(
(
1
BU
Wayne L. George, instructor, mathematics and
computer science B.S. in mathematics at
BU (1965. M S
in mathematics at Ohio State
University (1970)
Previously department head and teacher
at Berwick Area
School District.
Dennis J. Grace, instructor, health, physical
education and athletics. B.S.. M.S. in
physical education
at Indiana University, Bloomington
(1976, 1977)
Previously director of soccer for Pennbrior
Indoor
Soccer.
Ann E. Grundstrom, part-time instructor in
languages and cultures. A.B in French at DePauw
University (1959). A.M. in French at University
of
Michigan (1966). Previously French teacher at
Midd-West
School District, Middleburg.
E. Dennis Hinde, instructor, communication
studies
B.A. in social science/political science at
California State
University (1967).
A. In major advertising at Texas
Tech University (1983). Previously Instructor/teaching
M
Texas Tech University.
Hopkins III, physical therapist. A. A. in
English at Sullivan County Community College (1968)
B.S. in health and physical education at East
Stroudsburg
assistant at
Arthur
Q
?he
ne
J.
University (1981), Certificate in Proficiency in
Physical
Therapy. Previously physical therapist for Hayne
Physical Therapy, Ablngton.
S
ass.stant at Michigan
State University
at
1
B
'
Hen
guidance
life
graauaie
research assistant at Penn State
a
Urma a
ndSlS?l,
^;K sciences. B.S.. Ph D
and
allied health
in
l00msbur g University i 9 ?7
tCaCher 31 Berwick Are.
? StUdiCS
U 0 0di asslstant dean of student
m
?H in 7
M.Ed,
business administration, counseling
.
FElu' *
S ° Cia
'
KecJndarv
ry
ry) 31
t
Sa Scarlett ass istant
dean of student
SSCtfE?'
A. McDonnell, part-time
instructor
curriculum and foundations B.S.,
M.Ed
1
Nancy M. Corwin, assistant professor, art
B A in
art/music at Eckerd College 1974.
Previously teaching
assistant at University of Wisconsin
at Madison while
taking courses toward M.F.A
Sandra B. Davis, instructor, communication
disorders and special education B.S.,
M S in speech
SP
ch and lan g ua ge pathology at
Bloomsburg
,
University 1980.
1981 ). Previously speech/language
clinician at Capitol Area Intermediate
Unit. Camp Hill.
CommSy
Thomas
h
'f
.
.
198H * P°ivi n? S,y
?
Schoo.Dltrict
C " rt
in o.o
h ° maS
S P arhawk assistant professor,
sociologv
a
nSl
and
soc.al welfare. B.A in sociology
at University of
Baltimore (1973). M A. in sociology
at Un^versUy o? New
Prev,ously inslruclor at
'
Sege
busSS^
a<
B^'geograpnTS
'
associate
.
.
.
BrU( e
Remale y- Part-time
York Un.vers.ty (1970). Previously
associate professor o?
business adm.nistration at
Susquehanna University
Previously p
oart
1
Alexis A Bulka, instructor, nursing
B S N
nursing at University of Pennsylvania
1979,
«7k
.
associate Professor, marketing
and
business administration at Wayne
m^eemlnf
made
professor
finaJS
ce and Justness law A.E., B.S
M B A. in drafting8
2? hdesign, business
and
administration at Penn State
Un.vers.ty, Ph.D. in finance,
marketing, statistics at New
-
Monlgomery Count
y
15
_
in
at Geor e ia Stale University.
S S3S y FPSfe
K S ardt P"""™ instructor, English
iJ
R a ! i"J
t
31
Sh
g
'PP ens burg University (1977) M A
n
Fnoi h atV?
n English
Temple University (1981).
y
B «nomo. assistant professor,
sociology
mS social
c
f;
and
welfare.
B.A. in sociology at
W!^t?t
Elia
Ella
ec^om.cs
Eileen C. Astor-Stetson, assistant
professor
psychology. A.B. in psychology
at Rutgers, \m)
in psychology at Vanderbilt
.1977,.
l
a
1983
em
^
Th
0
UmVerSity n
lnStrUCti0nal em P'oyees were recognized by
t?u!?e™tof
irusiees
lor 7uQ
Q ^nn!f made to improve co
suggestions
ege operations Selected hv thP Fmnin^I
,he
1
were David Ruckle
"
fa S*,'"
T
72
\X ttSXI
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
16
1983
He
an engineer for Solid State Scientific of
Willow
is
Grove
1976
Continued from page 14
is
secretary on the board of directors.
Michael Alien Upton 76 and Wendy B. Upton "79 and
are the parents of a son born Oct 19. The Uptons live
at
R D 4. Arbutus Acres, Bloomsburg. PA 17815
Go,dbacns
r, I"?
R.D
2. Newtown, PA
Bettijean Brunlng "77 reports that
Doug McCourt 78
J
Deborah Ann SantelJ '77 and Richard Lee Culton were
29. and live at 6238 Jerome Boulevard
program
husband
therapist in the partial hospitalization
Geisinger Medical Center. Danville Her
at
is
a
17112
a
machine designer
at
AMP
Inc..
Hamsburg
Nanci Alice Haigh '77 lives at 11 Independence Lane
Downington. PA 19335. She writes:
in addition to a new home. I also have a new
(3 month
old' Husky pup named Pax
He brings back fond
memories of watching David and Doug McCormick
with
their husky at Redman Stadium during
football games
"For the past 2fe years I have been employed bv
MAI
Sorbus Sen-ice Division as a senior
programmer
f
support-
ing the corporate payroll and human
resources systems
morbus is a third-party computer maintenance
firm
"Please send a special 'hello to Kathv Geiger
Charene Musser. and Sally Zwicker for me.
Although we ve
ost touch, hardly a week
goes
by
that
I
don't
think
of
them and smile "
1
welcomes corre-
spondence from anyone from the Class of
78
Bettijean is an employment
representative and
employed by Paoli Memorial Hospital.
Her address
also 59 Wexford Road. North Wales,
Pa 19454
married on Oct.
PA
John Gerald Elchenlaub 78 and Sharon
Lee Melair
were married on June 10, 1983 and live
in Penllyn Pa
Sharon is employed as a junior applications
developer at
Certamteed Corp. tion in Blue Bell. John is
self-employed
61 3 COntractor with Jonn
E 'chenlaub Aluminum
Products
for Shared Medical Systems in
Michigan She also
ep ,S h a,
*2? Molchan 78 lives at 59 Wexford Road
M
?[
North Wales, Pa. 19454. and that Ann
1977
is
Jeffrey Alan Guffy 78 and Debra Maria
Reicherl were
married on July 17 Jeff is a representative
for Michelin
Tire Corp, They live in West Haven, Conn.
290A Worthington Mill Road
at
"
'
is
is
Sharon L. Pfleegar 78 is employed by
BLAST-Wellsb0
S a
pecial education ^cher. Her mailing
address
-uures,s
o n , n
Kathy Dawson Austin "77 and Paul Austin
78 are the
L 0f a dau e nter ^I'y Brooke, born on
M a°r,h?f^
,
" VeS a 1403 SeCOnd venue
^
\
R.D.3. Box 1084. Mansfield.
is
16933.
Laurie Fuehrer 78 is employed by C
M. Barlow and
Associates as community manager
of community associates. Her address is Delchester
Road. Edgemont
-
'
Tiffany "77 and Janine Julia
Lombardo 79
n
epl
1982 Tneir address is
,°
5M3-25
Sheffield Court. Alexandria. VA.
22311.
PA
J
SSnS
PA
-
,
R^jRBS?**
JJ*I«
2!iTS
fi
recording
18940
works
Linglestown,
The bride
Cheryl L. Marinchak 78 was recently
awarded the
doctor of optometry degree by the
Pennsylvania College
ry
^Philadelphia.
Dr. Marinchak's address is
°
61 Hazel Street, Delano, PA 18220.
Patty, career development counselor for Bucks
Countv
is a member of the Doylestown
Branch of the American
Association of University Women and holds
n
'
™
sporls
,
AJ
KufiS
me}PAHm
n
is
director of new radio
tfrviS'
l
KCKJ m Augusta.
Ga which went on the air Sept
was also recently married to Marjone
Lusch 01
of
Uyomissing and Lafayette College
station
Susan Dee Cooper '77 and Albert
Charles Mabus '82
«ere married recently. Susan is a
teacher m the Warrior
StriCt
Her husband works 'or Favlor
?'
y ,ive a 239 Main street Turb0 '-
Their address is 3170 Skinner
Mill Road. Apartment NAugusta. Ga 30909
o.
'
1
J.
Lawrence Nester
lD n?
a
iS
Fe ""y 78 is 3 lecturer coordinator
with
tht medical
ri >
the
laboratory technology program
at Pennsvl
omeU 77 and Mic hael C. Connell '82 live
^
Independence
Dr.. Harleysville. Pa 19438
Ann is
assistant dean of admissions
at Bloomsburg umvws
«3
Mike is a marketing representative
for Xerox
'
»t*£?
at
80,
vanta state University, Hazleton
campus
address is Box 280. R.D.3, Bloomsburg.
Sfir
PA
"77
has completed his first vear as
an agent with Prudential Insurance
Company in Lewistown. He lives with his wife. Sharon, at
R.D.3, Box 100
Lewistown. PA 17044.
Timothy Jay Shultz
"77 is
i
programmer
PA
analyst
18014
II
at
AMP
f« r
for
S
Carol Ann Bresktewicz 77 and
Calvin David Morgan
were married on Oct. 15 and live in
Hazleton. The
is
The Prevenlion/ Education Specialist
a
c
Alcohol and Drug Sen
ices. Hazleton Her husband
works
tCChniC,an af T ° byhanna A
™>' De P° l
S Tl/n
Tobyh^r
J.
Blewis 77 and Gale A. Minnich
Blewis
if addressed as follows:
Capi.
m^r MLf^
PAC
f
H«
BN
Caw.
96604
"
FP0
'
is
facility
Dallas
78 and Mark Sharkey 78 are
C
ar^e^e?a
^
and
S
S
lives
at
is
planned for the
Harland H. Shoemaker
Jr.
78 reports
that
CaS
l
1
-
fifing
78
r
^
nd JudUh Ann Fesniak were
Department
Banking
of
P °"e Dberger 78
recenl| y J° in ^ d
Howard
Johnwn fn
h
he new posilion of manager of
tour and
? travel markets,
sales & industry marketing
Cathy's
8
address is 45 Ashford St.. Apt
16. Allston. Mas" 02134i
\
iS3F\
hew
Cindy L Hause 78 received the
degree of
S
Rutgers, the State University
,of New Jersey on
M
San ^ancisco,
Barbara Ann Caruana "77
was recently named litigaadministrator
in
of the
1
D1
Ir
Jr
Dan
er
?r!
f
are "It?*
the parents
?
UI
of
W
at
May
)
tion
her
of
married
i ?
h
h a
a n
12.
Judith,
University of Pennsylvania
graduate is
a physical therapist at
PottsvUle General Hospital Ron
is
an auditor with the Pennsylvania
summer
his
P
planned
No v
Nov
ate
is employed as an
elementary leached"bv^Sanco
School District, Lancaster
Ed is employed as a sate?
Va The wedding
educat
uutdl,on
on
Deborah Anne Selgenfuse 78 and
Sgt Edward William
ga
Deborah is a teacher al
H -2?K
,
ScIm
,n Las Ve as Nev Bi
» * stationed at
? 56 LaS 8
V<?6aS A June 1984
R 0n BU
SCt^S
West
95
78 had an ^XfUbit
rnnf^
? em0DS
contemporary jewelry
at the Presidents" Lounge
Kehr Union from Sept 17 through
Oct. 15.
getting
78 and her husband Jo""
'
26
Gill
a daughter. Colleen Catherine
the
legal
department of Armstrong World Industries
Inc.
She joined Armstrong in
an analyst program-
Mary Theresa Tloczynski 78 and
Jeffrey C ShankweUer are engaged Mary is an intake
interviewer with
he Bureau of Employment
Security in Allentown Her
fiance, a graduate
1978 as
mer
business information
In
1981
she
became a project analyst in
in
services
of
the
human resources
department
Her address is 1905
Oregon Pilce. F-8, Lancaster.
Edward
Pa. 17601.
1
Coumy
"My regards
Dennis L. Kishbaugh '77
and Patti Gene Bredbenner
were married on July
23
and live at 2109 Jessup
Street. Berwick, PA
18603
he "
to all
surveys t00k P |a
BU
alumni
«»
Columbia
e " Ue
1
T
taSStP ffi?
?
Goldbach.
al
^
a 1978
'
'
C
f
195 6
l
JohS
*****
'
VetU
pS!!!n?l!
Dorn on Oc
Georgi"
*
was marTied
Sept.
Penn State graduate.
sor in charge of dissertation
^DrTo^Thorp"^
Pr°' eS
seirjmployed
'
~
Sentia
.
78 " VeS
at 4232 lltn
^
^° Ur°Ck 78 and ner husba n d Capt
1
to Scott P.
a
'
Evans School
master's program at Bloomsburg
University
P
is
H. Wise 78 and Penny
Price are eneaeed
g ra dUate 0f Pennsylvania I ate Unifer
.
rkS
l
Coa,da,e Hos P il al Ed works
for the
A°
^
6
63 SCh00
DiStriCl
Se P l 29 '^'wedding
TempK
CARUANA
WW
f
8 3
Jni
sXed
ol the Class ol 1978 .»
Wonderview. Bloomsburg
pa 1,815
The bride is a first grade
teacher al
ll iwi
u,
JSl
Kings College,
BRaSBSES*' Am c4oration
Sv
8
employed by the
is
Run
5?r
&aS®
coordinator
'77
andMre
G C ™P*°L HAS
'
'78
Marshall College in Lancaster Pa
Her husband. James Franklin
Smucker 78 is a
government account representative
for the 3M Company.
Alexandria.
Robert
Smucker
iSSSr and
Franklin
Patti
'78
Milton,
School District as a special
teacher, kindergarten through
fourth grade
1978
and his wife, Debbie Martz
a daughter born on Aug 23
The
Frantz Pe PP er man
PA 17847 She
...
e.
St
Warrior
'77
bhultz. are the parents of
family lives at 2686 Windswept Lane.
Bath,
Joan Norquest
Ka reil Ann
M
Maple
HermaS
17815
.
"^"^
?.
16 in "Xti*
Marlln
° f 3 SOn Jonn M
Ft Benning,
'-
Arm y Hos P ita
Their address
8
is
RD
.
"
T SStta"Va
Continued on page 20
^
Ia!^
Cilf^N
m
—
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
rive join Council of Trustees
Hospital
Chanty
Ball
years
°°
17
De ™"CK
Committee
ssawaasr
1983
«
,he
3nd ler nusban <*. Dr. Ali A
Alley, have five
-wiE
J
eh.dlren.
Four are college students and
the fifth is a
senior at the Wyoming
Seminary College Preparatory
Alley replaces Joseph Nespoli,
a Berwick DUSinessman
businessman
a trustee since Dec. 29, 1971
who served as
a member of the Class
p MAUNOWSKI,
nf
a
e
n genera,
Pr3C,iCe in M ° Unt Carmel
lcfMa^ c?o ^9 6 8.
J^^f
,
For a number of years, he has been
solicitor for the
Mount Carmel Area School District,
the Kulpmont
Building and Loan Association, Mount
Carmel Borough
Zoning Hearing Board, and the Mount
Carmel Public
Library, which he also served as
a trustee
97
7
he Served as a so,icitor for th
)!'
* Mount
r/rm^
n ? 'V?Industrial
Carmel District
Fund. Inc., and from
December 1977 to present, as assistant
solicitor for the
Liberty State Bank of Mount
Carmel.
He taught In the business education
Down ngton
June
Joint High School from
1965.
D&ZX^StS^
dCgree
department of the
September 1963 to
in
The new trustee is a past president of
Carmel Lions Club and advocate of the
<™
Ma ^
1967
the
Mount
Knights of
m US 6
member of the Mounl Carmel Elks
rnub.
K West
ur
S
C
End Fire Company. Fountain Springs
Country
Club. American Bar Association,
Pennsylvania Bar
^
.
Association, and the Northumberland
Bar Association
He replaces Dr. Edwin Weisbond. a Mount
Carmel
Wh SerVCd n th6 C ° Uncil f lruslees
P 0r tr
since
°
°
D ec 29 i97i °
JOHN DORIN, mayor
omciai
of
of Montoursville
and an
GTE, is a new appointee under legislation
that
number of university trustees from nine to
increased the
aS been
oi£
OIL n
Corp..
em P'°y ed
electronic
by the Williamsport plant
Buehner; standing are Leo
Jones, and John Dorin
*e
of
component
division, since 1963 He
in purchasing management
since 1966 and is
a senior buyer.
Dorin was part of the team responsible
for the design
and development of the first Flip Phone
produced by
GTE. He also served as a member of the GTE Corp
's
worldwide negotiating team with headquarters
in
Has been
commercial products.
Before working for GTE. Dorin was a member of
the
management team of the Philco Corp in Spring City Pa
where he was supervisor/manager of production
on'a
work force manufacturing transistors and diodes,
He was
responsible for a design change in production equipment
which resulted in a considerable savings.
After graduating from Taylor High School in 1954.
Dorin was awarded an electronics degree from Temple
University in 1958. He took additional graduate study
in
business administration at Ursinus College from i960 to
1962.
Dorin is a member of the Citizen's Advisory Committee
of the Montoursville Area School District and
a member
of the Pennsylvania Hazardous Waste Facilities
Advisory
Committee.
Kub-tski
Gera
d c
E
^ d iu
He is a past president of the Kiwanis Club, the
Susquehanna Valley Chapter of Credit Unions, and
the
North Central Pennsylvania Purchasing Management
Association.
He
is
a
member
of the Montoursville
Borough Council
and is a past co-chairman of the Montoursville
Area/
Lycoming United Fund. He has also been active in
Boy
Scouting, holding chairmanships at various
levels.
He and his wife. Ann Marie, have are three children:
James J., a senior in mass communications at
Bloomsburg University; Cynthia Ann. a junior in
secondary education at BU. and Michelle Marie, who
will
a freshman in business administration at
BU in January
RICHARD F. WESNER, a native of Reading is
president and chief executive officer of
Kennedy Van
Saun Corp., Danville. He is the second addition to
make
up the new ll-member council of trustees.
He earned
now
Stamford. Conn.
He now serves as treasurer/manager of the GTE
Sylvania Lycoming Area Federal Credit
Union.
From 1963 to 1966, he was an engineer responsible for
equipment support to product lines on military and
H
bachelor's and
to
;
High School,
and
Penn
is principal of Clearfield
enrolled in a doctoral program at
is
State.
After graduation fn
Bloomsburg in 1970, Rakowsky
was appointed to the faculty of North Schuylkill
High
School, where he taught English,
assisted as football and
i
track coach, and served as adviser to several
classes
In June 1975 he was
appointed assistant
high school principal
and director of
athletics at
Towanda
High School, serving
there until
Dec
1.
1976, when he
accepted his current
and
in
now working on
Geisinger Foundation,
West Branch
American
Institute of Mining"
Engineers and serves on the vestry of Christ Episcopal
Church of Danville.
STANLEY RAKOWSKY
a member of the Schuylkill Chapter 25 of the
National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame.
BPOE
Elks 1533 of Frackville, Knights of Columbus,
ciearfield
Lions Club and the Clearfield/Curwensville Country
Club
He also belongs to the Pennsvlvania State Athletic
Directors' Association. Pennsylvania Association
of
Secondary School Principals, National Association of
Secondary School Principals, Association of Supervision
and Curriculum Development, Council for Basic
Education, Clearfield Area Administrators' Association,
BU and Penn State Alumni Associations, and the Penn
State Nittany Lion Club.
He
of
of the
is
his doctorate.
RICHARD WESNER
Manufacturers'
Association and the Greater Danville Area United Way
member
graduate of Albright College
D S T NI EY G RAKOWSKY
u . ei
Superintendent's
Letter of Eligibility,
Millville, the
a
a
Secondary Principal's
Certificate and
He holds
directorships in the
First National Bank
of Danville, Girton
is
W.
Rakowsky earned
named to his current
position in 1966
He
^- Alley, Robert
Davis, Aaron Porter, Dr
He and Mrs. Wesner,
master's degree
educational
administration at
Penn State in 1972.
Since then he has
been granted a
KVS in 1963 as
executive vice
president and was
the
G
are the parents of three daughters
his
1948.
Manufacturing Co.
^^ ^T?^
Maunowski, LaRoy
position.
master's degrees in
mineral preparation
engineering from the
Pennsylvania State
University in 1947 and
Wesner came
-
is
18
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
1983
Homecc
Students para
The White Rabbit and Alice
Snow White
left
Wonderland
tor
a day to
visit
with people as part ot the Bloomsburg
greets youngsters along the parade route as
Bloomsburg University pays a
Homecom.ng
Homecoming Parade
tribute to
Walt
D sney
The banner announces a Bloomsbu
Cinderella
and Snow White
wave
to the
crowd.
The Bloomsburg University cheerleading squad showed
off
the
maroon and gold colors during the parade
)
20
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December 1983
Continued from page 16
Debra Kim Bonner Nelswender '79, recently married
Pajabon Drive. Apt. 203, Harrisburg, PA
Rene Matsko '80 is employed by Western Electric as a
business systems specialist. Her mailing address Is B6
Regency Woods, Doylestown, PA 18901.
lives at 5077
1979
William Campbell Reiley '79 was recently awarded the
degree of juris doctor from Delaware Law School.
Bill was elected as Student Bar Association
representative by his peers and competed in Moot Court
advocacy
competitions while maintaining membership in both the
American Trial Lawyers Association and Phi Alpha Delta
legal fraternity
He
also edited judicial opinions as a staff writer to the
Delaware Law Forum which is the legal periodical
published by the school.
married to Laurie Ellen Driscoll Reiley '79. She
mathematics teacher
He works in the Wilmington law offices of attorney
Thomas L. Little who has a general law practice in both
Delaware and Pennsylvania
Bill is
a junior high
is
The Reileys
live at 78110
Montclair Drive. Clavmont
Del. 19703
Jo Ann M. Carosi "79 and Peter C. Rail were married on
26 and live at 11547 Sheriden Road. Manchester
Nov
Mich
48158.
Peter is a 1978
University of Ohio
Reyna
D.
graduate
Rizzuto
of
Bowling Green
State
and Jack T
"79
Merrifield were
married on Nov 4 and live in Lancaster. Pa. Revna
is an
account representative with Hamilton Precision
Metals
Jack, a Millersville University graduate
is
on the
teaching staff at Hempfield High School.
Patrick F McCormick "79 recently received
his juris
doctor degree from Ohio Northern University
College
6 of
Law
of Ada. Ohio.
During law school, he served as a legal
intern and
student program coordinator for the
Allen County Legal
Services. Kenton. Ohio, and
participated in Kenton's
Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program.
He
member
a
is
of the Association of Trial Lawvers
of
legal fraternity
th the ,aw offices of' Thomas
America and Delta Theta Phi
mp
V d
p
i°- M
V,
Frackville.
,S
-
FJ.Hc
F
elds
and
He
Jives in
Pottsville.
Kimberly Smith McCormick
wife.
Pa. with his
William F. Johnson '79 was recently awarded
the doctor
of optometry degree by the
Pennsylvania
College
Optometry
in Philadelphia.
Johnson
lives in
of
Berwick Pa
a
A
79
nd Gre *ory S. Rodgers
S. a !5L recently
married
andJ flive in Richboro, Pa. 18954.
D
Mas?
eDeSkl 79 llVeS 31 79 Patterson
were
Carol Wolie Zack '79 was awarded
her master's degree
in nursing from Pennsylvania
State University on Aug
0
ass stant Professor of nursing
'at Wilkes
rinSl
i™.
i
-
She
Ba,re
She a,so works
-
~
a<
active in the Luzerne Countv
District Nurses
iS
° n th b° ard 0f the ' Greater Berw ck
o
Chapter of the American Red
Cross
is
cSSS SV^
She and her husband. Ronald, and
their two daughters
B
US
,79
2 ) Ha
c
^!,
Ser
'i!
1
{
SM
Charles
mS°oHd
L
W °rkS
^
m^ n
Ephra£pA 7S.
In?
"Abe" Harper
l,ve
at
33
st
'
^
f0r
™
S
Com ™n"y
We,tzel
>79
Aug
Scott
27
'
'79
and C. Heather Coates
John s Court
and
is
Mar>
a sen * or
S55 cSS
17070.
Sara
Cope Lindsley 79 recently moved to North
Carolina. She had been director of resident
care and
health planning at the Meadows Mennonite
Home in
Meadows, 111.
She is married to Clyde B Lindslev who was
appointed
general manager of the Roger L Stevens
Center for the
Performing Arts in Winston-Salem, N.C.
The Lindsleys have a son. Chris, a sophomore at Penn
Mate University, and a daughter. Kelly, a Hi grader.
Z.
Sandra (Neerenberg) Aigler
'80 is employed by the
Corporation as a staff accountant. Her mailing
address is 850 Carsonia Avenue, Apt B210, Reading, PA
U
19606.
Karen Louise Everett '80 is employed by Mr. Steak as
manager Her mailing address is 422F Society Park
'
Court, Harrisburg,
office
"My
biggest joy
is in
working with
program called Friends With
of directors of the program
Kids."
I
to the
a big-brother type
servlon the board
a
Veral COlJnties
Snyder Union Northumberland. rn.nmh
berl^nri
Columbia, plus several more. I am
matched with
a 13-year-old boy who has
become a big part of my li?e I
01
WUh
Bi " and h °Pe touring
°/
hTm up to
Bloomsburg for a visit. He wants
to attend B.U.
~
-
W?
Corey and Jamie Waters live at R.D.2.
Box 276 Old
Susquehanna Trail, Selinsgrove, PA 17870.
Brian Schell 79 and Sharon A.
Remington Schell
3 daUghler Erin NlC0le born
P en S
on
?'
f
ThP
h
The Schells
,
-
live at 2035
Main
Street,
'81
are
Oct
Northampton,
5
PA
Bonnie MacMahon '79 and Donald
Yazurlo '81 were
married on Oct.
1£ Bonnie is a claim representative wUh
0
,S a com uter
Programme;
P
?"
I B M. They
ThevTvPi
live in Germantown, Md.
S
,
Daniel Lee Kline 79 and Laura
Susan Coates
606
SS
Pmn.nvp/
d
rSn
^
"^
St
,iVe
manager
^tsteet
lD
at
Va,lev
'81
Moran were
medical student at
at Pennsylvania
Pennsylvanfa
Veronica Darlene Clark '79 and Craig
John Klesh were
Sepl 10 Ver0nica works for the
U S Post
Office ui r,
Catawissa, and her husband works
for Pennsvl
3 P Wer
Llght Co in Hazleton Th
live
at R D4
*y
K°
i 17815.
Bloomsburg,
PA
m™
JlfLl
B
Liem are
is
Ashland
planned
They
live at 2150
Queens Drive Apt A-
17110.
Cathleen M. Readdy '80 and Anthony
J.
Wiencek
(Villanova 78) were married on April
23
Cathleen is
employed by Reuben H Donnelley in Wvomissing
Pa
C6ks
al 1013 Tuck erton Road, Reading.
PA
7%05
m
Debra Kay
Sitler '80 and Timothy Paul
Kern were
recently
Debra is employed as a systems
engineer for Electronic Data Systems.
Camp Hill. Tim a
graduate of the University of Pittsburgh,
is sales man
r
Urt
Harrisburg. Their address is U58
°p
H Camp Hill.
Kingsley p
Road.
married
^his
S,
C
PA
M! , !!
to
A
a
,C
Maitho6
'
ht0 n) BUS
n
B
J.
?
K
m
,*
floi?,
10836 Haskins.
17011
reporls that she
on Aug 7
f hwno
„
was born
-
r!
Dav,d
'
.
was married
The y have a son
13. They live a
1982 °r.
Sept.
Shawnee Mission. Kan
66210.
Beth Anne Schilling '80 and Michael
Mark Moruccl
a e
Belh iS 3 SUbstitule ,eacher in
S L?if Mike
li
Schools
sales representative for
is
Kawneer
^wneer,
Inc
inc.
planned.
John Jeffrey Wengren '80 and April
Christine Mensch
r
,,y and ,,ve ai 143 N » rth
t
s
ct'^zrx
Mffi
is
*C
a
S.
y
X"aS"R
eft
a caseworker for Family
Counseling.
n M arie EIl2aDelh Fiamoncini '80
and Bruno John
A„^ o K
Andracchio
were married on Sept 24.
The bride is
employed as a caseworker at
Selinsgrove Cente
He?
were
Laura
s
Volkswagen
eV
Seot
bepl.
n
17
L
w"
80
kl
-
Susan
is
e
1980
we?e
^
Sa
I
ar r^d
m
on
and Susa " Walsh were
married on
employed by Lazarski's CatPrino
S
AUg
LewUwrPA,°7044
Roxajna Hunslnger
80 and Robert Pletchan
SO were
on Oct 9. 1982 Roxanna is
a certilleo oublie
accountant lor Ernst and
Whinney. Readin. Bob is an
is
,
'5°
6
an
J
dWard Kenl Bre "'"
? Ve
"
31
5
P,ne Court,
employed by Boyer & Ritter
CPA^
nf
mamed
I
Barbara Ann Proslck
'80
and
Michapl
I
r„n -«
'
W
gDer
%
Allen School
>79
!
a
?
n
'
and Jac q"eline T. Johnson were
Ch| cago.
III.,
teaches
first
grade
J
A,lemow„
J?&
JT
'»> llves
*
1839 S°»<»
Cn-b
St.,
in
Medford, N.J The bridegroom is
a teacher
n Bradford School of Business.
Philadelphia. They Tfve It
^South Syracuse Drive. Brandywoods.
Cherry Hill N J
'80
Bloomsburg
is a
A summer wedding
The bride
m?5J?"
PA
Harrisburg,
1.
in
"
wedding
1984
public accountant.
-
our wedding and spends a lot of time
with
us. so I almost have a ready
made family
3
6
ta
for the Sel 'isgfove area school
,?'
?
Hie/
'I will
district
and
be taking courses in the next
year at
Bloomsburg working toward her masters »
Ronald
Brian A. Auchey '80 and Deborah R Derkits were
married on June 25. Deborah, a home economics teacher
is a graduate of Mansfield
University Brian is a certified
I
was
and
'80
in
A June
Pa.
Hummels Wharf
i
M. Thomas
Christine
engaged. Christine is employed as a teacher for North
Schuylkill School District. Her fiance is a sales
representative for Paul Chevrolet-Oldsmobile-Pontiac
"The house was an inn during canal days and later
was
the farmhouse that went with
all the "land where the
Susquehanna Valley Country Club is now and
most of
i
17109.
5223
"They included Peggy and John Trathen, Mr.
and Mrs
Norton. June Edwards and President and
Mrs. James
McCormick. We were so glad they could be with us'
"We are living in an old 1855 log home and restoring it
VVe tore off all the inside plaster
upstairs in three of the
bedrooms and are refinishing the logs. The
house is in
Hummels Wharf, but we have a Selinsgrove mailing
address.
and home district office. I was elected
last year
Democratic State Committee and enjoy this
also.
PA
Melissa (Ditty) Everett '80 is a claims service representative with Nationwide Insurance Co Her address is
Woodlawn Drive. Harrisburg. PA 17109.
Corey M. Waters '79 reports as follows
'I have been wanting
to drop the Alumni Association
a
line for some time now, but have
been very busy
"I did want to finally write to
let our friends from
Bloomsburg known that Jamie Freezer '81
and I were
married on July 3. We enjoyed the wedding
with several
people who were special to us while
at Bloomsburg
"I have been working for the House
of Representatives
as a legislative aid to Rep. John
Showers for 2' . years
now and enjoy working between our Harrisburg
G.I
Ellen
t?^ n"
Temple
University His wife is a nurse
Hospital They live in Philadelphia.
,
.i
part-time nursery school teacher and Chris
year of medical school at the Hershev
Medical Center.
last
IBM
Services
Re3ding Road
'
Mary A. (Barr) Schubert '80 reports that she is
Camp Hill United Methodist Church as a
teacher of 3-year-olds on two mornings a week. She h is
son, Michael Charles, who was born on July 29, 1981. The
Schuberts live at 418 Seventh St., New Cumberland, Pa.
employed by the
months.
is a
his
in
is
"Bill
-
2!3?k So5Sr
6
.
'80
Road Bedford.
0173o
Lynne
24 and Graham, age
bISLV
"
"
Lynne Peterson 79 and Chris Peterson '80 live at 248
University Manor. Hershey. PA 17033 They
have two
sons: Noah, age
BUSSiSgBSSSSe
Continued on page 22
:
alumni return
for Career Fair
5
Farm Insurance
Co. and
21
temers Mate
WVIA-TV
-
Language jobs
discussed
at
BU workshop
"n*^
The one-day workshop on Careers in
Foreign
Languages held recently at Bloomsburg
University was
very successful, according
to Dr. Adriane Foureman
languages and cultures coordinator
for the workshop
d eXCe lent attend ance by
teachers and
,
administrators
from both the university and hieh
"
reserve
'
ad
3,S
°
ipLkers
M^^
m BU
and
^
reasons for the success sne says,
was the
Pr ° eram
P resenta "ons °y
mSSfJ^te6
tte
fr °
-
0n all known fi ^ ures Participating
were Dr
l'
E. Galant.
of California, editor of the
only French
thC U S 3nd C,air L Gaudianj
lecturer of
rom^T.i"
an e ua e es a <
University of Pennsylvania
Actingf'university president
Dr. Larry
Jones eave
rem rkS 3nd gave Several rea * ons
wh" a foreign
K
increas
important in today s*
society He said there is a need
to encourage an interest
a
e ,aneUaee bey0nd
Mane
,
•
.
ZZc
W
2Z2
ISSiVSST?
^'y
°»
re q u[?em ent
USUa tW0 or
'
*2Sr
Get,y SUpervisor ,or
associate professor and
reference librar.an, and Alex
Shiner, library assistant
.
S&JS?*^
her book with severa,
Loci^
and microforms. Roger Fromm
Rusinko writes book-length
study of English playwright
Bloomsburg Un
,S?
f
I
L
University
v ers.ty English
professor Susan
the au h °r of the first
book-length study of the
enCe at gan ,,911 - 1977)
Published by G K
Han of
o?R^!"
Hall
Boston in ?K
the S
Twayne English Author Series
k anal vzes the tn emes and
?°?
techniques of the
Hrli*
;
dramatist and places
him at a critical juncture of the old
and the new in modern English
stage history
a
n g nd,S
St success f ul dramatist
in the
Dos\ Wori5w a r n era has
K°
farces, romantic
^ ' plays and, wntten
Eramac Lhistory
dramas,
in his later years
lely CraftCd StUdi6S of
^"intessentially
„
Sn
rS£&S!
all
cooperate
6
m
in
order
society
h
s tnri v
SilSiS
levels to
to alert public
" of for eign
awareness about the
language study in today's global
Ut
°.
h0W resour ceful and
m ^tZlon^f^S ^
1
*
° ther
interesting the
***** A"
h |8»?ly-regarded high school
y
teacher of
Z
Spanish
in the Shikellamy area,
enthusiastically
presented an impressive argument
for incorporating
° areer langUage in ,ne forei
S n language
l
?P
'
t
daTsroom
Her videotapes of role playing by
students were
particularly appreciated for practical
purposes
The message conveyed by the three
speakers was
crystallized by the following notes
from a student of
French and Spanish at BU who wrote
about the
workshop
a 0r en e appears 10 De tnat Americans
must
ohllSf
/
i
change IS
their
attitude
towards foreign
S
fall
languages
If
the
behind that of other nations.
"More and more
trom Americans
foreigners will be taking jobs
s
'
our own country!"
Foureman points out nearly all teachers of foreign
languages are deeply convinced about
the importance of
studying languages.
"The workshop undoubtedly reinforced their
belief in
their mission as educators and
invited them to consider
organizing a professional cooperative
for the excellence
in teaching foreign languages/' she
said
in
,
SaTrs
His best
English
known play
EHen
awards
ng an d
n«!!!.^
'
l
n,y
,
^
in
the U. S.
is
"Separate Tables "
a " d °^ar
W °" T ° ny
The Browning Version"
.'u
is
especially
three years a 8°- "™* Winslow
Boy "
EX
^ H°Kby New
M
produced
York's Roundabout Theater
.™S
^
tou?
laUded 3nd reCCIVed SimUar
acclaim on
ayS UCh 35 " Se ara te Tables."
P
J".P! In o
Sea,
Pra.se of Love Ross." "A
The Deep Blue
Bequest to the
Nation and "Cause Celebre,"
Rattigan explored the
dark corners of human relationships
in which
conventional social attitudes fostered
damaeinelv
repressive states in adults and teenagers
When
state censorship in England was
lifted in 1968
ga Wr te
re frank, aboul subjects
that he had
y
K°,
?
dealt with obliquely
in earlier dramas
Those earlier dramas were about
college
^
ioM
m
students
life
S ee
g Pnnce celebrated the coronation of
n
fin Elizabeth
L ^"?
Queen
II. Noel Coward
adapted the play into an
American musical. The Girl Who Came
to Supper "
In yet another version, "The
Prince and the Showgirl "
he comedy enjoyed a glamorous
film production with
Lawrence Olivier and Marilyn Monroe
'
Rattigan's many film credits include
"Breaking the
U 1 Ba r er '"* " The Ye,low
Rolls-Royce" and "The
v°,
;L
V.l P. s
This year the Home Box Office
television
service has been showing a new
production of "Separate
Tables starring Julie Christie and
Alan
.
.
Bates
/" k0 s research began with a letter of introduction
,«
a
to Anthony
Curtis, literary editor of the
"Financial
of London, and authorized
1 imes
biographer-to-be of
s
ed
S
Film^n S titute
Much
*****
New York
HbrarieS 3nd the British
what Rusinko wrote about in the
book came to
life for Rusinko when
she was a guest at the home
of Mr
and Mrs. Harold French, who
were lifelong
of
frTencL of
eSP eC ,a Iy dUring nis terminal
"Iness. Mr
h H
f
, i
d ' recled
Ra"lgan's first smash hit, "French
g
Frin
521
,
Without Tears," in
1936.
Rusinko credits Bloomsburg State
College president
emeritus Harvey Andruss with encouraging
her to ajplv
PP y
for a sabbatical that enabled
her to complete her
doctorate work at Penn State.
She also thanks former department
chairman
Cecil
wnosebook on Sa ™el Daniel also appears
in
Sen S profesor Stanle Weintraub
noted
y
l
a Wh0
reCl d her doctoraJ tnesis on
Harold
! m
K
f
and
Bloomsburg
University for writing and
fZril'
was
y
^
*
.
on Rattigan by Holly Hill, who
reviews the
stage for the Times of London
-
S
away
-
'
R "s n
n
'
a
S d reSS VCr a
PP r °P riat ely followed Jones'
coS
,t she
ch gave J
conviction as
documented and pertinent facts
regarding career opportunities
available for those who
are bilingual or trilingual She
also stressed the
importance of oral-linguistic proficiency
l3St p0inl a
PP eare d to have been picked up by
Gaudiani s message
her discussion about facultv
development and reassessment as she
emphasized the
need for foreign language teachers
at
'
'
KctlUKflQ,
From him she learned of a recently published
biography co-authored by Michael
Darlow, a BBC
television director who informed
her of a doctoral thesis
Sh
J Tf
£r
Pinter,
-
research grants and a sabbatical."
Rusinko has reviewed books and
written articles for
e e
The Annual of Bernard
J^™£ y K
*
Shaw
Modern Drama." "World Literature Today "
0fL,t aryBio er a Phy: Modem
British
Studies.
nrirnTr^c
f,f
Dramatists Since World
War II." and "Critical Surveys "
n
now on sabbaticaJ leave, completing a
study
?
of
of Tnrn
Tom S°
Stoppard's plays for the
,
,
same series. An avid
theater-goer in London and New
York, the local professor
a
0 "d U ted heater Study tri s
P 10 Lor-don and has
S Ta n H bus
K
arranged
theater trips to New York for students
and
i
community
residents.
Foreign students take
part in International
5
Day
r
°? ign co ^i* 5 dis P' a -Ved
cultur^^ne
cultural items and provided
music of their
f
food dishes
native
er 31 the first International
Students Day
it
R.no m ch
n
at Bloomsburg
University.
The event was sponsored by the
International Relations
^
and
n
S??
Vem
"
presented Afghanistan. Indonesia.
pi nts
r
Lanka,
India. Ghana. Peru. Japan.
^IZS^
Sri-
Philippines. Iran
Saudi Arabia
ALUMNI QUARTER LY/December 1983
22
Continued from page 20
Also, she says Carmella Perrotta
Allentown to Philadelphia and is
Richard
J. Andrews '80 is working as a
recreational
with emotionally disturbed children
He is
associated with the Mental Health Institute
for Children
Allentown State Hospital, Allentown. Pa.
S.^ £Jr,SHTp^ w
E
S
,
, I1Jer
'
Linda J. Duziak '80 has recently been licensed
by the
state of Pennsylvania as a certified
public accountant
She is senior internal auditor for the East Coast
for CNA
James
She is a member of the Reading chapter
of Junior
League and serves on the board of directors as
treasurer
for Berks Women in Crisis, a
shelter and counseling
center for victims of domestic violence
Her address is 1342 West Wyomissing Blvd..
West
Lawn. PA 19609.
R d
Fee
^, £ a *
^0
80 and
1
11
1S
a
secretary
is
the Laborers Local 1180.
m
X V
Howatt
J.
J?5fnSrt
T A& hK8 "oPA
Pl " sbur
AP
D
for
S.?™ grV
5S5r
-025
B aiJ
V 81
,
was recently promoted
5
m
Inc
'?, and
,?
Co
Elizabeth
Jones
'81
and
III
he works as an accountant
-v be reached at
F y A ',W
works
at
hJLJL
degree
in
J1
a nd
ter
S
Fay
*
i
Susquehanna University graduate
with
management.
17815
WJ? znlak
a
81
is
and Wendell W
employed at the
O'BlossPr * rt>
PP&L
K
nuc
l
who
School District
attending West Chester University
is
e Devereux Fou n da tion in the
West
is
by
SS5K
h
n
,
101
Cent,y
r
?
6" 1
1
M^p"
Md
Mor^t^ecVaTAUhfr
marr,ed
?h
M
*
J
Kent
««ly-t
7
-
Shavertown.
*»«
//I.
*
.
.
8
JuL^n
^
n
an
81
?
r 6
31
^exas 7704
Greg Mallocn 81 wer e married
on
13418 Brid e ewa "< Lane.
Houston
'
convenience store
Shamokin. A Mar/h
in
^
,984
Chesley Ann Harris
and Francis
'81
J.
EBfi
Moroz
were
'81
married on Oct. 9, 1982 The bride is product
development
coordinator with Eastern National.
Her husband is
construction manager with Sylvan Pools.
Their address is
612 Shady Retreat Road. (f21, Doylestown.
PA.
live
at
L.
Basham
Del!
143
Alderfer
at
'
S
and
'81
Tom M.
Emmaus, PA
Street.
MBA
his
Alderfer 82
18049.
Tom
is
Lehigh University. Marci is
degree in readln at Kutztown
g
Pomeran tz &
is
Co..
sE
Philadelphia
1984
wedding
f
in
December
A
planned.
Gary Robert Heddins
'81 and Judy
Ann BaUlet '83 were
15
ary iS ,he assislanl manager
of
,
P
Scranton.
Before getting married Judy
was employed at Nichols Discount
City, Bloomsburg The
couple lives at 8 Hamilton
Terrace, Clarks Summft. PA
° Ct
WooTwlh"
V\oolworths
K
VlB
in
Jam
and Valerie Linn Behrle
y
f McC,0Ske
A g 2 ThCy ,iVe 31 2921 Perno'
St
VFfffiSLS
p . 18103 Va| erie
0wn PA
works at Beaky's
'81
u, 0 rf
'83
°o
R^i
!i
L
'
is
Dave s
A June 1984
^
Association
W&L Sales Co
ngJey
'
.!
,
Inc
in
Harrisburg
r,SDUr
g
Jeff
Jeif
is
81
1982
Brenda Martin '82, is working
at the Press-FntPmru*
newspaper. Bloomsburg, in thS
Berwick news bSZ™
Her job includes covering
Berwick borough government
and co-wnt.ng a weekly
column on the Berwick
address Is 450-F Helcha St., Espy,
PA 17815
^14^
has accepted a graduate
assistant
Ch^Xor^,'
M £f v
^S!!;.f*
'
is
Scott Barry Feinstein '81 and
Vickie Lee Cllurso '83
were married on June 18. They live
in Newton. N J Scott
is a buyer for Brown
and Filson. Inc
^ ^'
'
s^ A^5
employed by
^
summer
planned. Ellen lives at 207
Greenwood Road
,
DaVe S 3ddreSS iS 230 A
P
^L
'81 and Kimberly
Sue Hessert '82 are
e
l
CheS first grade in th e Benton
Area
n R"l Dennis is a
School District
candidate for the MBA degree
in finance from Syracuse
University
1
C
81
Y ° rk Were married «n
29^ Ja nin°eT
a secre tary with
e ,S 3
Pennsylvania Munici\t
?
Authorities
,aD
'<
Thomas Coleman were
PA
ch?
g^gSSt'ggSg
and
Diane
'81
l
pal
c
Fitness
and David Derr -81 are engaged.
Ellen
employed by McNeil Consumer Products
Co. and
.*?
*
•
the
Md
Valletta
?° fn
Oct
7™K D
and Peter Paul Ochinko '81
Susan is em P'°-ved in ^e public
ed n AugUSt 1981
is an elementary teaser
7hL
p
the Rockaway
School District. Her husband
is
a
manager with United Parcel Service.
Their ^uaress
address is
Star Route J5, Glenwood. N.J
07418.
Sd
Bo
PSC
'81
°f
5
wedding
a
-
in
No?t h tva,e
S
Hone -vbr °o k Ch ester
ir
working as a tnifr
wa
iVe ' n
,
SSSfe
Semce. £
Vincent
'
Connection Co
eie ,s employed by the United
States
J
Washington.
D C. They live in Laurel,
Secret
accountant
y
cSunty
E
may
Dennis Scott Raup
RockviMP
and Carl
81
Je n Funk 81 and Dan Smallacombe
III were
on n
O?. 8 and live in Mountainhome, Pa
Peggy
b
P ye
Ye " OW Room Pre-Educational
Center
n„n?e
l by
Dan
is employed
J.A.RelnhardtA Co Inc
working on
Jo Ann WUdonger '81 and Rex W. Lutz '81
were married
on June 18 at St. Peter's Lutheran
Church, Riegelsville
Jo Ann is employed by the
Allentown
W
mar ed
eiIL
H
'81
'
be reached at
0f ' u " Air Force Base, Neb. 68113.
uSiSity"
Diane
a,
I"
Marcl
r
Susan A. Tymusczuk
men,
81 g radua{ ed from the West
School of Medical Technology
on
k
business
Catherine Handy
Catherine
Rex
3nd Dennis Golomb ar e engaged
coordinaior and
8
S
Nor,h
Steohen
Sel^
P
lives ai 233
81
Susan Renee Dayoc
mam„g
J
V
8
s l he d rector of glance
at Marian
Ca tholir H^h'
catholic
I
High J
School
in i
Tamaqua. Pa. He received his
1 counselor education
from Penn State in 1982
ESS
Jeff s address is 3500 Second
St.. Bloomsburg. PA
is
engaged
Inc
SSWW
*
St
19401.
Bo^.^O^fW
n1
and Steven B. Richard were
married
employed as a substitute teacheMn
the
and Lewisburg school
districts
a,sincts
She also
^e
Country Cupboard Inc
f
on Aug
13
Miffl.nburg
Pa P g
SLS^ju&nn
His
70124.
CbatuOa
22. She
is
were
center
Michael
Locust
1822
is
PA
maSler
ArrKrc?
18708.
Norristown,
branch
to
marrie d ° n 0ct 29 Tht live
in WilbuTton
*
Pa. ThP
Pa
e
The hhh
bnde is a Spanish
teacher at Williams Va lev
Junior-Senior High School. The
bridegroom is a graduate
St3te UniVCrSUy 3nd 15
public
Russell Jr
Craj g St..
-
'
l
certified
Nancy J. Campbell '81 and William J.
Plichta were
married on Aug. 6. Bill is director
of recreation of the
borough of Norristown. Nancy teaches
fourth grade
elementary school. Their address
N ° r,h
employed by Thomas Jefferson University
Medical College in Philadelphia.
Her address is 440 South
Jackson Street. Woodbury. N.J 08096.
reg MaJJoch 81 were married
on
address is 134,8 Bridge -
mf3S
e VeU0W Room Pre-educatS
EK"
k 5 works
her husband
for J.A Reinardt and
(Cavagnaro) Checefsky '81 lives at 304 Sunset
PA 18452. She was married recently.
,
c3S$r£ssssssa
•
Jean funk '81 and Dan
Smallacombe
t
married recently
and live in Mountainhome
Mental Health/Mental Retardation
guidance counselor In Bloomsburg
Weatherly, Pa
live in
Peckville.
m^r^S
'82 live
tCe Johnstown. Pa
St
Johnstown.
^
i^iSotzy^ st
E
N
M
Susan
St..
'
Rear Fayette
"
br^h /er
,iVC 3t 233
81
-
PA^59?5
J eaB
and John
'81
New 0r,eans He ma
!"
fS
n°
Argonne
Boulevard. New Orleans, La
l^v Sift
% H alth S vst f m
,S
Th e
Th omas Gerald
Ll
is
a
is
and Ron Kelshaw were married on
employed as a psychotherapist at
'81
-
June
ff£- *S PTft
Theresa
Her husband
They
'
'
Jv ™
Lisa Anne Stoudt
Aug. 6. The bride
Hazleton-Nanticoke
b°x
3
BR'SSSLV
•
and Kelly A. Galosi '82 were
The> "Ve 31 55 E,m St 0neonta
"
^
and
81
15213
-
m
6
618
St -
The bridegroom has a
chemistry from Dickinson College and
is a
1 chemistry deparlment at
1
p iri
degree
at
1981
3
'
Kathleen M. Kondrchek
employed bv
Robert F. Hanson 80 and Howard
C. Weisman
at La Masion Apartments,
Wayne, PA 19087
mfn ^
17815
h
schools
.,
80
n AUg 27
i3820
™
in July 1983 Tom is a
graduate of
Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
He is a navigate? in
the U.S. Air Force and is
stationed at Castle Air Force
Base In Calif The Wozniaks live in
Merced, Calir
Edwin Howard Feather III '80 and Sarah Fay
Feather
81 live at 1 Sawbuck Circle. Horsham,
PA 19044
Peter
N ° r,h
'
-
C ° rbin Swav e,y
Shamokin.
St.,
*
a
,ives
The Hun,ieys nve af r °
vi^! t were married
Hozniak
Kay Voder were married
6 a
North Anthrac '*
™J kW?
,
employed as
r2J„ \,
Geisinger
Medical
Center. Danville. Rodd
,iVeS
She
-
B. Huntley '81 and his wife are
the parents of a
ut&xs.
Insurance. Reading.
P4 ftr?
81
F Frederick DIValerio "81 is a special education
eacher with the Central Susquehanna Intermediate
Unit
His address is 665 Old Berwick Road, Bloomsburg,
PA
.
a
Perk a°sie pr,89 4 4
A„
has moved from
,('
in Center
'81
employed
therapist
|° pon
'" and Martin A. Reymer (Mav
82 and
A
'
dajean Howe,,s
w«^SafcCIoT' 51„Hv? ay,°Bn E
bride
is
employed
at the
GeMno»r m
^
»™
engaged.
DMdlw *•
,
lck
'
Pa
Tl>e
Continued on page 24
New
adult
fitness center
Alumni living in the Bloomsburg area
advantage of the newly-expanded adult
rC
may
Tom
lhe fac "'ty
1938 to 1968
retired as an associate
retired
,
professor.
Before coming to
Bloomsburg. he taught at Wyoming
Memoria
RjK ESS P
and
W
'
,
,
fe?
T
Anne Klemkosky.
vice president, Ann E
Zeigenfuse, recording secretary;
James F Peee
corresponding secretary; Grace
D. Vanderslice
positioned between the $90 community
act.vit.es fee paid by students
and the $250 paid bv nony
alumni to use the facilities.
During the last school year, the
center was located in
the basement of the gym, and
memberships were also
available to the public through the
School of
is
'
" Hinke hiSt0rian: Rosalie Mu "en.
tfi^hSSn*
National Council representative,
and Dr. Ellen M
'-
Clemens, sponsor
Extended
Programs
in an effort to extend
exercise and fitness
opportunities to adults throughout
the area.
Registration
The
response was tremendous, said
Dr. William
Sproule, director of the center.
"We are pleased that so many adults have
taken
8 ° f our exerc se equipment and recreational
fartmfi " Sproule
n
j These
facilities.
said.
people have been so
conce r ned aboul their health on a
year-round
, ,
bas s that we felt
we should expand the facilities of the
center in a more convenient location."
The new location is one of the auxiliary
gyms which is
easily accessible and has more natural
light
made easy
1
E'S
replaced by a
new procedure
filin
int0 a
inKf.?^
l
to
out biographical
fill
T
crowded Centennial Gymnasium
data cards, get class schedule
C
dS S a
ed 3nd t0 pick U calendars,
P
r
complete the majority of the
l
,
student wui
The
equipment has been expanded to include
exercise and
ergobicycles. treadmill, rowing machines,
mats, stall
bars, and an exercise stairway. Music
for aerobic and
fitness dancing is also available.
The indoor swimming pools of Centennial
Gym and
Nelson Fieldhouse can be used at noon, in
the evening
and on weekends. The indoor track and
gym area of the
paperwork through the mail
°n
firSt day of the semSer
This
«l?Sf f either
Thts fall,
fa".? students
J? picked up
class schedules at
their residence hall desks
or received them at home
one
week before the start of classes.
This aspect of the
process will be modified in
the future when those students
C3mpUS ° r commuti «g will receive
schedules
"«=uuh»
through
track at
r
Nelson Fieldhouse main arena, as well as
the outdoor
Redman Stadium, can also be used.
Most exercise and recreational offerings
are open and
Z/ZTu
assistance.
all
<
^<^^^^aV
and
Ra ig Jr dean of the College of
!;
no P res 'ded
at the induction ceremony
cited
rS
Wa rdS and accomplishments of
Mr
RvbS? and
»l his students
>
w
Rygiel
who won many national
shorthand awards.
Also inducted were Susan A.
Posey and Susan N
are
42 members in the chapter.
Serving as officers are Dominic
R. Pino Jr., president
pres,aent
Mary
RinfaSS
*
Sf'
facil.ty,
present at
te
Hign
,'
The amount
- '«^»
'
0n C nter ocated in ^ntennial
Gymnasium.
?
andl others located in Centennial or
Nelson
Fieldhouse, are available to alumni
who give a certain
amount to the Alumni Association's Annual
Fund.
Alumni and university leaders have
set that level at
$100 per year for an individual and
$125 for a family
™
This
Dec
X. Chapter of Delta Pi Eps.lon
National
Honorary Professional Graduate
FraterSi y Si B Sets
Education, during a ceremony
on October 29
take
fitness
^
'
Walters R
Rvoiol
..,oc
,e ^as
inducted as an honorary member
nnhl
of
the r
Gammayi
Centennial
in
ALUMN QUARTER
Rygiel inducted to fraternity
*
ThC direCtor or
a trained
attendant!"
times, however, to offer technical
,
For those desiring a more structured
approach
physical fitness, Sproule offers an
adult physical
mini-course each semester
S
Zfai"campus
J^,f
h nge Wa ,he resu,t of
more than a year of
?
u
l * mia
* b X the registrar's office as well as the
22 J C0mmun,t
l
£?,
mailboxes
office?
y Activities and Residence Life
'ness
The new system also involves the
payment of fees
,ma e,y threC Weeks before the "eme
te begins
L cannot
Students who
meet the payment deadline wU have
I
To
Si !no
a'rifv
lnVa idated 3nd C,ass scheduJ
e
'
15
drop^d
first
!
newspaper and the University.
Each member
w"l receive a S200 schoS^p
^"SSSSillS P
fr
.
e S hman
High
g
of the
f
J e or she
EaCh
a que
computer equipment or software
Other schools invited
to participate in the
test of
knowledge were St. Cyril's Academy
(Danvi
MUlville
Bloomsburg. Southern Columbia.
DMvUte general
cSitraJ
Columbia and Benton.
S
0nS
S
9p?n!. D
?K»
to
High School Bowl at BU
Berwick Hi e h Sch °o' won the
^h^nBowlr0m
School
sponsored by the Press-Enterprise
,
r the
f
?
cora Petition were supplied
by High
Teams of four students competed
in half-hour lono
sevens that tested then- knowledge on VlsSjW
The idea of sponsoring the event
for high school
tudents was first raised by
Bob Buehner* chairman of
oi
the University's Council of
Trustees.
'Mom and Pop'
reading
clinic
Parents are becoming teachers through a
Bloomsburg
University Readmg Clinic project which
began in the
autumn of 1982 and involves a different style
of education
reading procedure for chUdren.
Through the efforts of Dr. Edward Poostay.
director of
Reading Clinic, and members of the clinic's staff
a
system was established which trained parents
the
to help
their children learn reading skills.
program, nicknamed the
"Mom
One year later the
and Pop Reading'
Project.'' is still going strong.
"We got the idea after we began receiving too many
requests from parents who wanted us
to help improve
their child's reading ability," explains
Poostay. "My only
answer to some of those parents was, 'we can t
tutor your
child, but you can.'
"A short time later, the program's guidelines were
set
and they still hold today."
In order to participate in the program,
the parents
must be willing to attend 12 to 14 instructional
sessions
:
which last 90 minutes each At each session, the
parents
learn specific instructional reading methods,
and apply
those methods in a half-hour learning
period with their
child. During that period, the parents
are supervised bv a
^
^^stz^jr
s»P6q
fit
b9unttr do
0'
01
cui,u,ai a,,airs
Ted sha °°*
reading specialist.
According to Poostay, the benefits of the program are
evident in the parents' ability to act as a teacher's
—
*
supplement when their child has difficulty with reading
assignments at home.
Before the parents became involved in the program
he
says, they were often frustrated because they
didn't know
how to help their children with homework. Now they have
an understanding of their child's problems and
can help
F
them.
During the summer, the Berwick Area School District
asked for training assistance in the Mom and Pop
Reading Program, and the reading clinic obliged
A six-week course was set up at the Salem Elementary
School which allowed parents with children
in the school"
____JJJ^M
*r W
district to
c-Io
take part
in
the
program
v^-
"
l
; ;
,
c
.
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
24
1983
She
employed as assistant to the dean of the School of
at
Lehigh
She also serves as graduate
assistant to Lehigh's School of Education Alumni
Council
She serves as executive editor of the school of education's
newsletter, which is distributed to 8,700 educators nation-
Continued from page 22
David W. Blank '82 recently graduated from
the
Simmons School of Mortuary Science in Syracuse N Y
He has joined his father 'in the operation of the Jerre
Blank Funeral Homes in Northumberland. Sunburv
and Trevorton. His address is 1177 Packer St..
Sunburv
WW
PA
ally.
Kimberly recently organized a phonathon at Lehigh
which raised more than $25,000 for the school of
education. She also Is employed by Cities in Schools, Inc
where she counsels disruptive vouth and their families in
the Bethlehem Area School District.
Listed in Who's Who in American Colleges and Univer-
17801.
Donna Marie Ososkie '82 and Carl Dennis Mowery were
married on Oct. 29. They live at 220 West
Eighth St
Bloomsburg. PA 17815 The bride is employed
bv H H
Knoebel & Sons. Elysburg. Her husband is
employed bv
Kawneer Co.. Bloomsburg.
she is a member of the American Personnel and
Guidance Association, the American College Personnel
Association, and the Pennsylvania Personnel and Guidance Association She is also a member of Psi Chi and
Alpha Kappa Delta, national honor societies in psychology and sociology.
sities,
'
Rick DiLiberto "82 is a
first year juris doctor student at the Delaware Law
School of Widener UniverWilmington,
sity,
He
Del.
Hazleton, Pa.
He and his wife. Faith
Petrovich DiLiberto '82. a
preschool teacher, live at
Naamans Road.
Margaret Christine Lesniak
Wil-
Thomas were married on June
mington, Del. 19810.
They
Diliberto
of
Tennessee
an
industrial arts instructor
live at 8600 16th St., Silver Springs,
Turner '82 and Stephen J. Stoddard '82
were
J y 30 and ,ive at 24 La °e Ave..
West
poIT
?,
m , «07006.
Caldwell
NJ
Lisa works for Metropolitan Edison
W °rk$ '° r Cadenco Co ,n
West Caldwell
^
'
R<
^
J
Cra
rd 82 is em &<>ye1 by the Shell
Oil
ro 5f,
J?° is 3150 Walnut
Co
His m
mailing address
Bend Lane. Apt
624.
rt
-
v
Houston. Tex. 77042.
Scott
D.
married
Slmkins
'82
reports
he
plans
H
to
^
>8
31
at
Peninsula
121
Drive
Milton
1983
recent, y appointed manager of
?
nmilfir?
Dillon
Floral Products
sales branch in Bethlehem Pa
In
his new post he will oversee the
company's service to 150
FS ,nc ,ud n
jft
sh
and
department stores
nThi
f
D j g g and°Ps
in
the Z\
Allentown.
Bethlehem
Easton areas.
a
rJlSU ^ «^
as a
1
nSk
i
1
>83 is
d^or
a,tendin g Bouman Gray Medical
University to prepare fo? a career
Suann Jane Molter '83 (M.S.. Special
Education) and
Lawrence Huben Jones were married
on July 16 1983
Suann received her bachelor's
degree in elementary
education from Indiana University
of Pennsylvania^
She teaches in the Danville Area
School District Her
19 82 gradUale of Princelon
Univer Hy ?„ d
I
ha
h
,
gradUa,e
WOrk at Buckne " University
He
Maria Dawn McAllister '82 and Jon
Michael Diltz were
married on Sept. 24. They live at
3 Perry Avenue
Bloomsburg PA 17815 Maria is
employed at Wets
5 a
alS l aC
in the Central Co,umbia
°
School
Ser h K
63 " !T
11
S emP '° yed
by Pe ^'vania
*
dSJS
"SU
'
JnLilto enter medical school
hopes
,
ne
S£n
M
SUmmer and
6
i
aSh nempl°^
IS
in
and David Lee Getty were
'82
,ive at
RD
Catawissa. PA
by the Fam,1 -V Counseling and
3
m?E
'
John
is
L ° dl
the near future.
and Donna Rozanskas are
engaged
employed!?
by Sperry Univac in Harrisburg
Donna
0,Z
!
B1 °° msburg Universit
has'been set
Ha,,ibUrt °
n
Inc
«^k Springs
rySg
3
Weddin S wU1 be held
« Elysburg Pa
^ address Box Jeffrey
i,^^
Lucy
Ann mailing
City
live
W3S
Laurie Irene Miller
Ttu^
JoAnn C. Bawlec '82 lives at 5522 Bradley Boulevard,
Alexandria. Va. 22311. Telephone number is (7031 6710046. She is employed as a drug and alcohol counselor at
Dominion Psychiatric Treatment Center in Northern
Virginia She also attends George Mason University to
earn her master's degree.
Dale E. Mausteller Jr. '82 and Rochelle
R. Stout '83 and
were married on Aug 27. They live
at 148 Broadway
PA 17847 Rochelle works at International Paper
Co.. and Dale at Turbotville National
Bank
20910.
eet
B
'** iS engaged 10 Cnr 'stopher
Robert. J
Kooert
Turner Lucy Ann works at Jeffrey
Citv
Elementary School. Jeffrey Citv.
Wyo. Her fiance is
Roxanne Eva Benedict '82 and Adam John Dombrosky
were married on Aug. 20. Roxanne is assistant director of
nursing at Tremont Nursing Center. Her husband is a
computer programmer and is employed by Good Samaritan Hospital. They make their home in MinersvJUe, Pa.
r3., 3T63.
Powyr&Lig'tC^
that
April 1984.
in
is
Lexington Park. They
Hollywood. Md. 20636.
Marcia Catherine Hornung '82 and Stephen
S. Slaton
were married on July 2. The bridegroom
is employed as a
public accountant by Bogovich.
Carvl and
Showver of Sunburv. They live in the
Shamokin' Dam.
11
M
husband
certified
Mary Lou VisingaJdi '82 and Robert Krupka '82
were
married on July 23. Bob works for Securitv
Bank and
East Stroudsburg. T he Krupkas live
in
?*i K
EastStroudsburg.
Pa.
16
Md.
Schott '82 and Peter John Gillespie were
29. The newlyweds live in Bloomsburg.
employed by Community Services. Inc. Her
employed by Statewide Furniture Gallery.
is
Ricky L. Willders "82 and Barbara A. Bogart '83
and
were married on June 25. Barbara is an
associate
programmer at Sperry Corporation. Lexington Park. Md
Kicky is a computer specialist at Dynamac
Corp
and Ronald Edward
Margaret is employed
3n2lyst
Linda teaches special
education and Chris, a University
trict.
Lisa
'82
25.
as a computer analyst for Wang
Laboratories, Rockville
Md.
Her husband, a graduate of Penn State
and the
University of Maryland, is employed at
Washington Gas
Washington, DC. as a senior computer
programmer
Linda Ann Rinaldi '82 and
Chris Robert Mazzitti were
married on July 9. 1983.
Both are teachers in the
Berwick Area School Dis-
Mary Ann
married on Oct.
Mary Ann
Kathleen Ann Simpson '82 and Stephen Long are
engaged. A June 1984 wedding is planned. The bride-to-be
is a teacher in the Clarke
County Schools, Berryville, Va.
Her fiance, a graduate of Pennsylvania State University,
is employed as a
surveyor by Associated Engineering
Sciences. Inc., Hagerstown. Md.
Loretta Selig '82 and Mark Daubert
are engaged
Loretta is a substitute teacher for
Pocono Mountain
School District in Swiftwater Her fiance
is employed bv
Indian Mountain Lakes Development
Corp and Bie
Boulder ski area. No date has been set for the
wedding.
was previously a teacher at
Bishop Hafey High School.
3120
is
Education
y
No wedding date
'
°-
s
is
384.
Wyo:
™
Laurie Ann Yoder '82 and
David F Farver were
d °" 0cL
Laurie was employed by the
Bechtei
a d
g aduate 0f Williarnsport Area
ma
rn
rSS«?
1
'® works f(>r Century
and lives in Bloomsburg
8 Stitz
piJf' Inc..
!
Realty
RhKSfS
SnJS?
on
Aug
1
i.
A™
Koslosky Rhodes
a reDtS
ifff?*
f
The
family
°
lives in
.
f
21
Covered midges
Bridges
PA
17820.
David Thomas Heltman '82 and
Nancy Jane White were
married on Aug. 13. Nancy attends
Bloomsburg Unfyer
sity. Dave is pursuing
a master s degree in
Denl
S
Thh.
address
g a "d also wo?ks for
Heltmans live in Millville, Pa.
JUQ ior College
,s
business
B '°° msbur
?lSm^S
Bloomsburg.
The
K Mar,
S
,
Md
Donald C. Walp
3
1
"SoCed ^
'82
21236
*&n
«
Barbara
L.
Whitman
Avenue. Ambler,
PA
Jennie Mauger
'83
'83
lives
at
^^^
"
being
and George Jacobs
reCently
r
™
lersvifle
e
notified
Ac ,evemenl
™
™« international
™oLm*
?hi ,
i
2
.nS'u S:„aerry?aLa "ad ePr0 eSSi0na
g
'
'
by the
1
S
»'
and
^
fm^R ,dge
L
award
^
'
a
in
'
Prnned forrn.21
'83
were married
Plann^.Eli.bSK
,
,
tb „„; c
Tenn,s
and Elizabeth Anne Hittle are
Marianne Bredbenner '82 and the
Rev Michael S Mn.il
engaged. Marianne is employed
by G
M Hock
nC Her fiance
P aslor o'
Mi^flinville
i
c harge minislers to
churches
Un^TZ
Fa*»
521
19002.
are
as
,82
They
'82 and Bruce
Taylor Richie '82 were
Aug 13 Ann Marie is employed
by Johil
EfnT u"
Hopkins
Hospital. Baltimore, Md. Bruce
is studying for a
nursing degree at Essex
Community College
live at
5 Whitelaw Place, Apt. 2-B. Baltimore,
n
admissions counselor Her
Apt. E-l. 300 Hatboro
Pike. Hatboro PA 19040
resSSs * thf.T
Ph0ne
pa
Ann Marie Bright
and Randall E
Jason Randa1 '. b °™
'82
3
Catawissa,
n- C r
mSamVpor!
Community
nie An Me
'83 and Kenneth
Paul Risberg
Jr* marriedH on
were
June 18 Ken is employed as
a field
e
by S
ry E,ectroni
Systems and is assigned
to?hp
to the N
Newport?M
News Shipyard and Drydock Company
in
Newport News, Va. They live at
SlOS^oldsWSrive
Apt. 33E. Newport News.
Va. 23605.
3708
R
°«'° A-ue!
Fow
The Wedding
«"
e
82 and JOSeph P Carstens
82
H K
P '° y d by the Com ™nwealth
Federal savings
reaerai
Savm« and
»nH fLoan, Norr
5
stown Joe is a claim.:
enSSS
Kr?sfi
^V
Her ma.lmg address
is
'
,
P.O. Box
Goshen Road. West Chester!
89.
Benton
PA
17814
D
Da
r\D
^VM
S
e
h;
PA
y " Ve
19380
S
Sffi
d ,0
&
D0 " a ,d
,
"
8,2
M K °"el
rt ,
Continued on page 26
"
8 cartoon character book
SiSSpJSLWj??
W W I\
^
BsMckw^Sn&XnX**
T
J
E?
^
Kly^^
Had Walt Disney been more
persistent
became known as Mickey might
and
if
,
the mousp thai
have been caHed
Hanna-Barbera had been allowed
to use
and Wi ma F,inlstone woSld
have
ZZ'JoT
been ca He'd
'
I
to a
Bloomsburg
b °£ b
book
by
the
e industry's fading
leading animators.
* th
" ls B r as ch s sixth book. For the next six months,
,
he
be undertaking
a national promotion tour that
includes almost 70 radio and television
appearances
Disney liked the name 'Mortimer,' " says
Brasch
and had told his wife, Lilly, that 'It
has a swing But his
wife just didn't like the name, so
Disney looked for
another name with an initial 'M' and
came upP with the
alliterative
•
Mickey Mouse."
history of animation from
theoretical origins at the
*1*
its
beginning of the 19th
century, through its birth
the beginning of the 20th
at
published.
Included are almost 100
many
drawn
of
them
BRASCH
for the
Teacher
training
being scrutinized
at
By
Bloomsburg U
SUSAN BROOK
Bloomsburg Press-Enterprise
h
mg
J
51m
staff
-
~
,
'
studies
But how
it
will
change
is still
unclear
Stricter admission and retention
standards and longer
training may eventually be required.
But those are still under study and
depend at least in
part on decisions to be made at the
state level When the
changes come, they will be a result of what
Macauley
calls a planned process, rather
than a reaction to recent
critical studies of public education
Macauley says the college of profesional studies
recently reorganized, has been studying
needed changes
since 1980. well before Reagan and
other recent critics of
education came on the national scene.
"We have been looking at admission monitoring
and
our criteria," he reports 'As of now,
there are no special
requirements for prospective teachers beyond
those for
admission into teacher education programs
One program to attract better students is the
new
Scholars in Education fund, Macauley
says It grants
annual loans of $1,500 to highly qualified
students
preparing to teach math or science.
e
year the student teaches a«er graduation,
™« f??
$1,500 of the total loan is forgiven
It is a statewide competitive
program, and
approximately 50 loans have been given'out
this year
Bloomsburg was allowed to nominate only
three students
all
o
whom were awarded
grants. But only two students
accepted the awards.
"It's not that many," he said, "but
it will encourage the
teaching of math and science. These
are two areas in
which school districts are having trouble finding
finally
qualified, certified teachers.
mathematic and
Many
scientific interests
higher paid positions
"
industry
in
the
graduates with
have been accepting
computer
field or in
Macauley said he has been encouraged to find incoming
freshman students with 1100 and 1200 scores
on their
college boards (1600 is a perfect score)
who say they want
to teach math or science.
On another point, Macauley said prospective
teachers
are not yet required to take computer
courses, despite the
proliferation of com- puters in public schools.
But Bloomsburg is moving toward a policy
which will
Incorporate computer education in the
preprofessional
course sequence.
become
the all-time
^^
for the Flagstones/Flintstones?
arn y s P or trayal of
.f
The Honeymooners."
was
Ed
-
?
h> ,n 1931
'
Grim
charged that both the name
and characterization were
stolen from her.
P0pu,a vaud evllie star, claimed
violation of
j
thP boop-oop-a-doop"
the
characteristics,
^
but she lost the
that not only d d Natwick
eCOnstruct the animat ed
character
but that
?hTf
the
basic characteristics that
Kane charged Fleischer
ea,m fr m her were in f act.
°,
stolln by her from
rnrJhi vaudevillian.
!
another
Baby Esther
when
it
ele,
was shown
V
"Cartoon Monickers" also discusses
numerous
name
that of
Norton, the secondary lead
When Jay Ward created the Kirwood derby a hat
that makes the dumbest animal
smart - then placed
upon Bullwinkle's head in a series of
Rocky and
Bullwmkle segments, TV announcer Durwood
Kirbv
decided to sue.
The gag was allowed, by mutual consent, to die
out
when current production had ended
Anthony M.
new
ng
NaMck
created Betty
Be«v?2!
Boop. and within a few
months th P
Fleischer Studio found itself in
a $250.MTsui 'for
infringement by Kane who
'
to
A massive promotional campaign was launched
in 1960
and production was begun. However,
there was an
objection from the syndicate that
packaged Mort
walker s Hi and Lois'" newspaper comic
strip. The last
names for those characters were the
Flagstones, and the
syndicate raised the possibility of
an infringement suit
Brasch says that Joe Barbera then asked
Maltese to
come up with another name, and Maltese
thought of two
primitive rocks - flints - rubbing
against each other.
The result was the permanent name for the
family that
would become stars of the first continuing
half-hour
animated series on television.
When the Flintstones had a daughter, she was
named
Pebbles, two very small rocks, says
Brasch
a 1
:B arbera W aS aIso threatened by
Yogi Berra who
rf
ifVn ! ?K
u much
u ,
didn
t think
of a Jellystone bear being named
Yogi
Bear Brasch says that just about everyone
in the
industry recognized that the bear's
named was based
upon the catcher-manager's name, but
the people at
Hanna-Barbera just said that it was a
"coincidence "
Interestingly, Brasch notes that The
Flintstones was an
animated spin-off of Jackie Gleason's
"Honeymooners"
shows, and the characterization of Yogi
Bear
,£
„
Walker, Yogi Berra, and
Durwood Kirby never
° V r the inf ™gements.
Howeve% el en
w
Kit SiST
surt
Brasch. one of
nephews was named Morty Mouse, and one
of
3 ta
' igUre Was named
"' ,a " ky
Mor^meV
in
w h'ch President Reagan has
r
H
a ma, r nat,onal iSSue
WUI defi n"ely change
.°.
If
K
at Bloomsburg
University in the next few years,
says Dr
MaCauley dean of lhe co,le e of Professional
g
° leachers
f
s
Brasch. Mike Maltese, one of the
industry's top storymen. came up
with the idea to
research project that
involved extensive
interviews with the
industry's leading writers,
animators, and directors,
has never before been
illustrations,
Mickey
According
computerized animation
Most of the information,
based upon a 10-year
exclusively
During the 1930's. his mouse would
popularity leader. Interestingly, says
As
century, the Golden Age of
the 1930's and 1940's, and
the present-day
M
Mort
'
I
J?
r
Be "
Bu * s " Hardaway sending
Si iVs^'u^ ^;h
3
a sketch
d eVel0pme nl ° f Bugs was done
, .
nd
,3ter ChUCk J ° neS
BU Mc K Sn
'
the direction
-2
B ° b Clam P*«'
"Cartoon Monickers." Brasch also
looks at puns
My avonte is Bob Clampett's Tearalong
8 the Dotted
and
rClatiVe 0nuse of ethni?
"
names o
n'n, in cartoons,
situations
and the future of the industry
In
^
sZ
The quality
and story was far superior in
the
han t0day he says renewing
upon
Created by Warner Brothers,
MGM
and
?nd Fleischer
PlpSK studio
f h animators
of art
L
a nd 194 ° S
ZL
H
aCt/
H
'
-
I
0
featt^f h ™
Wil1
h
eV er t0p lhe uaIit 0{ the Disney
^
y
,
stood at the CUtting
bac
50 years t0 the hundreds
of six-minute
«hHSi°°
l 5 by
i°'
shorts produced
a dozen studios, led by
Warner
Brothers. MGM, and the Fleischers,
and to the™atures of
Disney, and notes that "even
today, they
* hold up
they
cause ,aughte and
k
m
WOnd er maybe even doub t." Brasch
m l'L
K
says, "if the
material being put out on Saturday
morning TV w 1 even
dCCade
"'^
let a,0n
e "ext half6
century'
'
it
^
'
10
anrirSfl
SeC
UgS and Porky and Daff and
Beany
y
?
1 don 1 expect 10
many
-
'
laniero
named
director of development
n^^lf^lA^i^^
a 10-year,
10-vear. $500,000
ssno nnn academic scholarship
goal
U^SSS"™
atfd
Anthony M laniero. assistant
director of College
Development at Trenton State College
since 1981 has
DireCt ° r f DeVC,0pment at
BtoLSurg
°
He was
of?
10 identify the rabbit
T /v
AV
e A
nf
namp ?
have assumed his new duties on
Dec
was sidelined briefly by an
appendectomy on Dec
to
laniero, who was selected
for the position following
—
5
but
3
a
national search, received
his bachelor of arts degree
in history and his master
of
be reached
in
May 19M
-
....
in 1979
f,ve
yea
-
0f
laniero also initiated and developed
the first Athletic
me 31 Trent0n Slate developed and initiated
a
SSti
r ° Vement
P
ject
increased scholarships and
P
fm n C
f
J°glvin
Cd
3 P ' anned
Program,
and developed a
8
k
'
S
lmlT
'
1
pSment"
'
'
egiSlative relati <>ns,
alumni
career planning and
for
At Trenton. laniero was one of
three senior-level
administrators in college relations.
The scope of his
responsibilities included marketing,
programming, public
and community relations, and
extensive work with the
office of the president of the
college.
State in 1974 and 1976
respectively.
The new director had
been professionally
associated with Trenton
On the football field. laniero served as assistant
head
coach and defensive coordinator since
1977. He will still
be involved in athletics at Bloomsburg
as he assists
Roger Sanders, athletic director, in raising
funds for
athletic scholarships
State since September 1974.
when he began a three-year
tenure as assistant football
coach and assistant
baseball coach From July
His professional affiliations include
the Council for the
Advancement and Support of Education, Delaware
Vallev
Fund Raisers. New Jersey Alumni Directors,
and the
Na jonal Football Foundation and Hall
of Fame. He was
'
1976 to August 1978. he
served as both sports
information director and
assistant director of alumni
IANIERO
603 6 di reC,0r of alumni
affairs in A "g"st
")!
Wft'lnH^m
978 and remained in .that capacity until
his appointment1
to the development post in 1981
^
In fulfilling his fundraising
responsibilities at
State, he was instrumental
in
352
t0
comprehensive county unit system
education degree in student
personnel services and
counseling from Trenton
goals tor the past tour years,
^h™.!!
s
Trenton
surpassing alumni giving
he aeve.ojea ana
,ns t, u?ed
° f trUSte6S f NeW JerSey Public
^'evision
°
^1979-^980
In 1983 he was recognized as
an Outstanding Young
Man of America, and in 1980 and 1981 he received
the
Gold Award of the Delaware Vallev
United Way
Campaign^ In 1974 he received an Outstanding
College
Athletes of America Award.
laniero and his wife. Pamela, are the
parents of two
children. Jennifer. 5. and Kristin.
3
-
-
'
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/DecpmhPr
26
1
983
1983
Happy
Continued from page 24
Jane Ann Seislove '83 has returned to
her alma mater
Spring-Ford High School, to coach the
field hockeyTeam
She is also m her second season with the
Lehigh
s Valley
y
Deadcats Club in Allentown.
The LVDC is an international team and
Jane has
3
n Canada and Bermuda She is
P'
employed by
Smith-hline Clinical Laboratories in the
automated chemistry department. King of Prussia
Her address is 921
Church Street. Royersford. PA 19468.
But
^
Lynn Marie Davis
were married on Oct.
'83
1
By STEPHANIE
is
is
Dr.
Donna Marie Polak '83 recently passed the
examination
to become a certified public
accountant She
lives at 930 Six Shellbrook Court.
Raleigh. N.C. 27609
employed by Ernst and Whinney
Jennings
'83
MBA
She
administrative director of Bucktail Medical
Center South
Ed and his wife. Judy, live in the Lock Haven
He
'83
lives at 508
works
for Perdue. Inc of Salisbury
Emory
?
,
trausser
^
has been awarded a graduate
Urg UniVCrSity t0 WOrk
a
communication.
a*
Ta£?T&V£
degree
™
p.
in
,|
opportunity to discuss McCormick's
months as chancellor.
One of the first topics of discussion concerned
the
possib. ity of McCormick's
becoming the permanent
chancellor of the system.
«1 always expected to return
do BU>," he says "My
n S
but lhe board of governors has
Slrt for
f« me to
allowed
be a candidate
'TV'
named
mosl decorated Eagle Scout in
to both the state
House anS
he spoke
81, he Was a studenl
11
governor for Pi Kappa
nifL'ft
Deltas
Province of, the Colonies
^
the national
he was a
wfnl
vEEPS.Tem3g0
P««nce Union Oratorical
-
nnt?
place second
and went
wen on
He was
to
a
national
ESSJt*
n the
Contest
0 3
ofV^ystem
nation that year
both the Boy
3nd the
Education
Scout
oTatoS
TJ
Diane Alfonsi
00 Ju
M&M
^syl^7Zt
and Douglas C Greenholt 'ia u,* ro
Dou * is employed bTwo? e
Manage
mLT?
mem Sen-.ce J?
Company in York. They live
'83
2
in
H?2l*
Vm
Slart
I
can
to get
challSU
the
i„Ti?f 2I
r,me
.
,t
!
e
W3S
/or lhe cna ncellor s offices to
be
1bUiJding
m
Evidence proves
His offices are newly constructed
hey h ° USe fewer lhan '15 off ers
and
staff iSJS^'
u
!
members He feels that the less
people,
the mor
moree
v™*"*' U1C
efficient the system becomes
C
we 1
well.
it.
!T y0nlynot
IS
lhe onl -v
<.
,
ua,it y these
that lhe s stem
y
A mott everybody wants
Almost
to
make
People possess
is
^
*mS!K£?"
at
C
«Tnick
55r
Ud
a^ rn n.,
'
5.
wh0 com "iutes
to
about every day
sl
is
********
ISMS
t
!
T
ol
sp.ru intormation
Sehnsgrove.
PA
17870
B"5
money
is
Sjjf
.t
'
S
'
" ew sys,em a '"*'
it
what
if
i*
a
-
Mvcheck etc
mm *<".'ely invest andrSalKS
folraw
; r eX a r
prefers
it
^
C
that
»*
SilS l thCSe sch00,s
°
h'°
6 offhp
f the h
PeSl needs elc of
°
'
-
we have
schools
C°
mP
'
ete trUst in lho
- Who
y
ne says.
SSes lhe univ ersity
'
life
a
in the
place
an academic plan
way
/^ays^
tremendously.
remendously
lo live Is a cnii B ii
quality ol
P
our necd s
'ne
help ,he ""employed
no needed the next day
But we don't have
m"&V^^%>% *»«
g
We atBU
'
mSSMs. aywMSB »
,hls
reas^'l^sT'
Ce
'
p
The mosl Oeaulilul
!
'"""'^ and 1 ni »y ™lss the
mUCh
m ° re
'
r
g ro:,Xer!en cc'
posslble quality
,
B
ls' iT"
^.ta"
re ™«ved
Irom the
1^ ' '"««*«•
'
uj?g!«if!*y'.f
he n 8hesl
'
-
hp
l0gelher
138,
s,aub were
how does
»
ncl Tam p u s p re^e „r CernS ,he
replace you
%V2&S
££££
w >s^.u
Box
o.
h °W
^SSLSr*
6 ° W WC
a™
"We are more appropriately
calling
He
tSSl
syslem "
to
Cg together
fi
were
sas^s- -
10
tune with exlernal variab,es
^
S
and established
effective7alh^
ma " a g eme nt Another very good
thing is
Sal Fit? nin
'«3
b0W
of his time as interim
chancellor
ide nt fy ng ° a,s and
g
objectives pu
lled lhe Sl3ff
™«
-
in
hkcfh
a
Harrisburg from
-
'
•
^ors.
-
our^fo^
P Be
fc
nSSSSIF*
^ ^
-
"
them don't know how good we
are
of
-
Ri™
interim chancellor
StrengthS are and
go
ant ,he new Pennsylvania
system to be
C ,V e
Says McC ormick That's
what I ike most
k
;
K
about this job: the excitement
attitude I
coming n 0 t
P, e Wh0
here bUt fr0m
AFSCME alumni
a
.
h P governor, and
tne
"
so
on
m n
a eXample ot callin lne
o"*e at
,"
g
y and g0t 30
evln
«he
worVdaTends
T mm
0
working so
this thing
JJp *
The highlights
Jose'>h
C
fhlngs
d
3
the excitement involved
in th's
,S« IJTk",!"!
"Many
™
vT
c
McCORMICK.
H.
4Sm £USS
™&
}
Z
JAMES
d^lopthe^^
but McCormick felt he
°re inde Pendently, and chose
a
iS in the process
of b
-
0T>ly
aS th is se P arat 'on allowed
McCormick to
,
nd
ndently bUl h3S also all0wed
hi
to run
h s^o?
iri by
h his own philosophy:
.
office
have a nice office an
efficient office, and a lean
office
n ^lrl
Or.
offices.
igin aJ p,a
nnr
in
^
permanent
do the best job
to
One of the major decisions that
McCormick has made
was to move his offices from the
Department of
f
in the
finalist
,19781
forS
Hinkel 183 and Robert
Huntsinger were
m^SLf** J,
L Beth is employed by
Sandwich
m nd
b iS e p, ° yed by
Products Gordon
products.
Go r ri nn° TH
? in the Ashland area
They live
SET?
for the
"Right now I'm trying
wVniL S
?
Bloomsburg
gift from the
in
first
?enovafed
i
Magee
visit gave student leaders
Chris Hardinger, Betsy
ara a nd S e nanie Richardson and
photographer
hSno , TT
Cr beu g
p^!I
Pennsylvania,
in
at the Hotel
position.
Steven Moran "83 and his wife. Cynthia,
live at 37 Court
Street, Montpelier. Vt. 05602. They
were married on Oct,
„^ a f Iy
Room
The
2
Court, Parkside Apts., No' 301
MD 21801.
Salisbury.
Md
on leave as president of
P
S
.
Patrick
Murphy
the
,
Glenna S. Hendren "83 reports her home address
is 657
North Mosley Road. Creve Coeur,
Missouri 63141
She is assistant director of Erickson Hall.
I S U
Terre
Haute. Indiana 47809
-
James H McCormick
and were presented to him as a
personal
Bloomsburg University student body.
was recently named
Renovo.
area
BlUy Krieg
RICHARDSON
Bloomsburg University to serve as interim
Chancellor of
he State System of Higher Education has been given
three picture montages at his office
in Harrisburg
The montages are copies of the pictures
that hang
the University
Edward F
life
Student Feature Writer
requirement
is
McCormick
H.
a
graduate of Pennsylvania State University
-
James
Dr.
misses Bloomsburg campus
and David Spencer Lansdowne
and live in Pocono Farms Lvnn
a registered nurse at Pocono
Hospital. Dave*
associated with the Lansdowne Insurance
Agencv He is
Harrisburg
in
-
.
Simon
By
27
mark on BloomsBura
m^Jr ^
left his
AARON PORTER
speaking to campus and town
audiences. Simon
"""W"
SOITIP imps
~.
8 nnfaH th^i
tha ...u:.-_
WhUes >_
in Bloomsburg need
blacks
more than blacks need to be in
"
Student Feature
Feoturo Writer
Wri»«>,
'
waiier Augustus Simon
in
In
came
Bloomsburg University'
lsto
he did much more than that
short, hP
snort
S a landmark
he h
became
^
™
to
r
Bloomsburg
kn0 Wn artist Simon was deeply
° U^
31 enrichment of
others and
!
ake
kn0W thC
0nall
inte?es/PH in th
J
woSS
l^kfta
Earlier this year, the university's
Council of Trustees
3 recomm
da tion to name the former
laundrv
U
thC
3rt
de
y
P artment - in his
~
™
SZf
t
'
1
«*»«" made by
"
Am2i?.
With his personality and
his contacts, he was
honor
The
recommendation to honor the late educator
originated with his faculty
colleagues who felt he should
mb red f0r hi S COncerns and achievements
Snrina fh
r
„
during
the five
years he
was at
Most
Bloomsburg
Those who knew him found Simon
to be a rare artist
a dmg f)a nte and teacner
°< art histo y He
:
was aaVri.
S n? sophist.cated.
h i
brilliant
articulate, perceptive and
r
mffi
P
f
o
r°S
n Wh
n a Pe
s
ud e n7s°
° P
"
M
^^
mT™
a
all
wno
who
£
art ' st and scnolar -"
^ys Percival R. Roberts
e r C halrman f the art de
°
P artr"ent. "He affected
m P t him
h
met
very profoundly "
coming
In
to
Bloomsburg, Simon accepted the
life.
As a role model. Simon wanted
students to have a
dream or purpose in life with the courage
and
perseverance to make it a reality. Through
this kind of
encouragement he hoped to improve the
retention
rate
educationa "y disadvantaged
students
C Urged tude
es P ecial| "lacks, to take part
y
in
.!?^
h ft?h domes
H
both
ic and foreign
educational activities He felt
W U d stren 8 then ^eir perceptions of the
H°rforeign
United States and
countries
uX^tZllT,
faculty
r
a S0
W3nted l ° C ° rrect "^conceptions
some members
of the university
,lversKV
community and by residents of the area
Wal S m0 n ten spoke about tne
misconceptions that
cn^
l ( had
u °/
some wh.tes
about blacks," recalls
'
Roberts. "In
slides
For
and
'
1
1
Simon once described himself as a collective
artist
While presenting images of the black
heritage and
experience he tried to understand
different cultures and
people of other races and nationalities
as well
The artists achievements before coming
were numerous, including exhibitions
at
;
W ° men S
College
v
Virginia Museum
V
ea
,
^ re
15
'
of Art,
to
Bloomsburg
Wittenborn
Un iversity of North
Richmond; the
article in " Eb °ny" entitled
UCh
"Diplomat with
POrted that when
tV°rawboned
K" ^ wil h brown eyes,SimSn was Tteencurly hair and
IIS'
h!S
7 skin,
I romping
dark-tan
-
Brooklyn
-
he aspired
S
H??
,fiC
Xe
commercia d esign
in
'
1936.
1939 he i
added another certificate in fine arts
at the
Academy of Design He won awards for his
artistic work at both institutions.
61
entered
W
New York
K$
W 0Se ta nt was not ^cognized in the United
was J?
honored!lby the French, who awarded
him
r
g,
H0n0r France becam e his home, for
it
L« r °/K e was ho
nored for his creations and was
riph a Lrf and
It debased
5 humiliated
h
not
because of his race
Simon devoted much of his life
to art
a ne^
^
•
S
,
education
During the summers of 1949, 1950
and 1951 he was the
° he AFt EdUCati0n De P a 'tment at Atlanta
u
fSSSS
2S7& l£~
<°' his exhibits there in
thr0Ugh Ju,v 1949 Sim on was
an
ins^nl^PnT.^'/n
instructor
m the Art Department at Georgia State
College
at Savannah. While there,
he organized the department
and was chairman of the curriculum
committee.
He was an associate professor of art education
at
Virginia State College in Petersburg
from September 1949
through June 1953. At New Jersey
State College in
Paterson he was an assistant professor
of art education
from September 1953 through June 1961.
(Mrs. Simon
believes her husband was the first
black to teach in the
New Jersey State College system
It was during that period
that he designed the Atoms
for Peace Exhibit for the first
United Nations Atoms for
Peace Conference held at Geneva. Switzerland,
in 1955
Simon s long-time interest in international affairs
eventually led to a position with the
U.S. Information
Agency. He was one of 64 blacks in
the agency at a time
when they were still called Negroes. But
8
'
)
i
it took him eight
years, three applications, and an
appeal to his
congressman, Harrison Williams, to win
the position
In his first assignment as
assistant cultural affairs
in
*" CSCaPe
^
that foreign
thG provinc ialism of small
gypt lhe arlist
onlv had four or f ive days a
m ?if^
month
that.^
he could devote to painting. Nevertheless
he
was able to produce a one-man show which
included 40
oil, gouache and water
color paintings. Two of them were
purchased by the Egyptian government for
the Cairo
Museum of Modern Art
and
In 1942, Simon married
Virginia Spottswood
Discharged from the military in
1945, Simon re-entered
NYU under the G.I. Bill and received
his bachelor's
degree in art education in 1948.
He earned his master's
degree in 1950 and his doctorate in
1961 in the same f eld
Simon wrote his doctoral dissertation
on Henry 0
° a ng
StUdy of tne Development of an
American M
Negro Artist 1859-1937."
J!
States,
6*1
'
Univ ers«ty to study for a
hi!Ur- s degree
H
bachelor
in art history. When World
War II
erupted in 1941. he entered the
Army and eventually
advanced to he rank of lieutenant in
the Corps of
Engineers. While in the Army. Simon
painted portraits
S SPare
3nd traveled t0 seve ral foreign
I™?-
"
college Hfe
National
h
1916-1979
produced concerts. He also served as an
official greeter
and host for visiting dignitaries. He found
Simon's professional training in art
began at Pratt
Fine and Applied Arts There he
m
-
officer at the American Embassy
in Cairo, Simon
lectured, organized exhibits, held
film shows and
Institute's School of
?S?ies
"Egyptian Merchant" (1964) by Walter
A Simon
acrylic on board Collection
of Dr. W. Bruce Welch.'
WALTER AUGUSTUS SIMON
up and down Macon Street in
be a prize-winning artist and
to
a
8
college professor of art history
As an adult, he added the goal of being
a foreign
service officer in the U.S. Information
Agency of the
State Department At the time,
these dreams seemed
relatively impossible, but Simon
started to realize them
during his formal education in the
Brooklyn public
SCOOOlSi
'
Although he wanted to share his
knowledge and
experience in black art and black
historv.as a
N actT,H
about blacks
held h
by
0
;
As director, he assisted students of
minority
backgrounds to enroll at Bloomsburg
by providing them
with support services and by
helping thein with academic
and social adjustments. He also
strove to integrate
me 8 race D|
blac
acks
into many aspects
^
Donald Bogle, brought
dem onstra e Hollywood's misrepresentation
of blacks
bfarl? Ruby Dee
n and Ossie Davis conveyed
the black
contributions to drama and poetry.
'
Montcla.r (N.J.) Museum; Inknaton
Gallery, Cairo
U.A.R. and the University of Ceylon Art
Gallery
J
Peradeniva.
bS
'
film critic
r?Si
Carolina;
'
00 " 0 "1 031
example
'
e "8e of being the first director
of the Educational
Opportunity Program, which
evolved into the Center for
C
el0P ment The program helps
students of
a. backgrounds
all
rn?rH who
H require
additional educational
support
of university
of the speakers focused
on the struggles of blacks
survive These programs helped
the audiences
unders and stereotypes and the black
experience
to
Despite his successful career
as an artist Simon
to reach higher levels
of management
witS the
'
19 8 hC WaS he -'^raf
a «airs
.!
En >j>assy
in Kabul. Afghanistan.
From
rom 1966
lMSta
foS he
h served in
to 1968.
p
the same capacity at the
n
l
(
yl0n and was chairmanof
he
S S
T£°031
Found ation, a
Fdn^Mnn i han Pr ° gram sponsor of the U S
He
was
also
responsible
far t£
De P artmen t's Cultural Presentations
Prn^mc and served
Programs
as the exhibits officer.
Simon's association with the USIA lasted
until early
wanted
of^rXAl^^
7lr J°
Si?n
?
?
-
'
?
January 1969, when he left the State
Department because
he disliked former President Richard
M. Nixon More
important, however. Simon wanted to serve
as a role
model for college students.
In February 1969. he became the
assistant
to the
president of the California Institute of the
Arts in
Valencia." His administrative position
there required him
to plan and develop fund
raisers, scholarships
endowments for the Institute, and to solicit national
foundations and major corporations interested
in art or
the Institute's black students.
Although students had already integrated
themselves
into almost every facet of college
life, Simon helped to
improve the integration process for all minority
groups
He decided to leave the Institute because he felt his
talent
and knowledge were needed at another school.
Simon learned of Bloomsburg through a friend,
Dr
TejBhan Saini, a member of the Bloomsburg faculty
who
asked him to share his experience At that time
Bloomsburg had only 37 black students in a full-time
undergraduate student body of 4,352 This black
population included 26 freshmen, seven
sophomores three
juniors and one senior
When Simon first arrived in Bloomsburg. he did not
like
the small, relatively unknown town and wanted
to leave
But three black students persuaded him
to stay
In 1974, the artist-educator developed
kidney problems
and he left Bloomsburg three years later
to return to the
milder climate of Virginia.
At Virginia Union University in Richmond, he was
the
Charles W Florence Distinguished Professor
of Art
History. He continued to counsel students
on ways to
achieve their goals, helped faculty and
administrators
with their perceptions of students, and was
involved in
the
development
of art
When Walter Simon
artist,
programs
for inner-city
died in 1979, he
left his
humanist scholar and educator
youth
mark
as an
'
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
28
The
1983
University convocation
first
BMBil
4^4
V RS, TY
^I
!
at tne
th
sp nf
bept.
!
R C PT
^
n
N
rl°
DIRECTION
7
n a SS
-
i
1
Dr
C,a, '° n
Harold
°'
S,a,e
Delan ey.
executive
?
convocation of Bloomsburg University
1
"
Re,,ring bl0l ° 9y
Tom
vice
president
C ° ,,egeS and Umversi, y' add^ sses
Pressor
Dr.
Dav.es talks with Dr Jones
»i
of
the
crowd
Donald Rabb (center) chats
before the convocation
P ROCESS, ON
-
A
long line of people
CarV6r Ha 10 Haas Cen,er
"
in
convocation
JUST DESSERT
-
A
special
l"S
'
1
^
l^FSItS™ 7J\^nV^u°^°
r.I
pnMwS^SSuSi'H
T
ak
^
caps and qowns c-rocperU
from
P
,or th e Arts for the
convocation
Ca
S,age were ,rom
stage
,
cake^ihl lorm
0,
<
le,l
>
P^t
Ca"^7T^7^e7
ALU MNI QUARTERLY/Dprpmher
Master's in
nursing OK'd
19fl3
,Q
A master of science degree in
nursing at Bloomsbum
Un versity developed from more
than flOO.SS in special
state incentive funds, was
approved by
y the state's
0 ' EdUCali ° n
Jn^rM^Kbasis the
a^art-fme
first
June a"d has been begun
on
semester of the 1983-84 school
epareS
P
graduates as
"i"l
svlcLnsTin?^^
advanced "
practice of professional
specialists in the
gTaduaU
ne
cli
!i
min,mUm
°
f
36 C editS
iS
^rSt
d
ee
P ro g r ams in Psychiatric/
^ Mmt
»F 0ffers
Umly
Hea,th and
£rm?r prepares the graduate Community HeaUh The
former
to be a clinical snecia is?
by employing analytical thinking,
creative problem
solving and responsible
decision making wit Mncreased
expertise and accountability
as they work ndeSendentlv
mm™
focus
£
is
on a specialized experience
in
working with
a
Student leaders
return to
to the
pam ?n The ^18
T
Vt nl^Fun^T:el
ZfcaZlnTJ,?,
e
i
-
Pa
Karen Chawaga
'82,
Wilkes-Barre. attended the
Saturday session.
During dinner with Dr Larry W. Jones,
acting
president of the university, and other
administrators the
0pporlunity to snare information
about the
unllereay
On Saturday morning, the group was joined
by other
r
0ff Cers and class Presidents
from the 1974Qo r 1
Pen ° dJ Jones and tne four vi presidents
made
nrSi"/ r
.,
presentations,
followed by a discussion period
Included in the larger group of former
student leadersDebbie Surdoval. Allentown, CGA treasurer,
1979 Sheri
Lippowitsch Allentown, CGA corresponding
secretary,
1981 Janet Nilsen. Mechanicsburg,
CGA recording
m
«
;
secretary, 1976; Scott
president, 1980
McCabe, Wayne,
CGA
vice
Also, Elizabeth Miller. Albany,
N.Y.. CGA treasurer
U 1 Matlock. Chantilly. Va.. CGA
treasurer. 1975
ck
Uehart Har risburg. CGA recording secretary
y
Tooi c
'
1980; Suzanne Gordon. West Chester,
CGA recording
secretary, 1982; Frank Maloney. Dallastown.
CGA vice
president. 1980; and Paul G. Janssen,
Glenside. CGA vice
president. 1978.
Also participating were Chris Hardinger.
current CGA
president, Sally Marrazzo. CGA treasurer;
CGA
,
c!
ass asatms £
in
group were Thomas A Mulhern 77,
Indiana. Pa
" '"
n !9, A,lentown and stan Toc *ek '76,
Marrone,
N
E
Bloomsburg
university
administrators and current student leaders
Past presidents of the Community
Government
Association since 1973 were invited to
return. Included
Srn
foTa"
conjunction with the direct
campus
Former student leaders returned
campus in September to meet with
that
TH
*V d
and Joanne
corresponding secretary.
°f
University nonJSiSSfflSft
nslruchonal employees with a
combined total of more
than a century of service have been
announced by acting
g
President Larry W Jones
Eleanor P Shamis, who was employed as
a descriptive
•
statistician in the office of
Institutional Research reT. ed
November 25 after 14 years of service
Jay H Fritz, plumber, and Stanley
E. Lizardi custodial
worker, will retire al the end of this
year Fritz is
on
completing 16 years, and Lizard. 13
years of service
I he retirements of
Carl E. Home. Mary J Marshall
and Valera M Valentino will be
effective January 6 1984
Home, carpenter foreman, is completing
26 vears of
service on the physical plant
maintenance staff
Marshal is a secretary in the Career
Development
C enter and will complete
nearlv 19 vears of service
Valentino is a secretary in the
University business
office wilh 18 years of service.
h
r
her
01 ,he
bee " makl "9
" ne
when vou were
calls s.nce
February
in
,
iSSS-
University grants
Scranton
Commons
heating system,
Upward Bound, Green Thumb
A number of grants have been awarded to
tn Bloomsburg
ri™™ck......
6
University recently:
A $21 600 grant to install a new heating system
in
bcranton Commons will produce considerable
savings in
heating costs at Bloomsburg University.
The grant is part of the S616.976 in federal
funds the
university has been awarded for the 1983-84
academic
ye
a C ordin g 10 Pe g Bailey,
S y
administrative assistant
?K'
,
,
In the Office of Development.
The funds, awarded by the U.S. Department
of Energy
will be matched by the university
for installation of a
system designed to reheat exhaust air which will in
turn, preheat air used in the
heating svstem
Administrative vice president Robert Parrish
said this
should result in a considerable saving
in heating dollars
^
for the building
Six staffers retire
8U ?OOmsburg
'
'
h
~
A
5149.114 grant to
Upward Bound, an
educational
program for disadvantaged high school students
will
insure these students equal access
to higher education
Another $6,660 grant from the Department of
Agriculture and Department of Education
the
Summer
will assist in
food program for Upward Bound
The university's Green Thumb program for lowincome older workers will receive $150,000
for salaries
and supporting services for the 32 participants
employed
in various capacities thorughout
the campus. Bloomsburg
has been involved with Green Thumb
since 1978
U A $30,725 grant has been awarded to special
education for educational and job development
programs
designed to enhance the job skills of
severely-retarded
adults through cooperative efforts between
the university
'
and the Shelter Workshop and Columbia-Montour
Area
Vocational-Technical School.
At the same time. $44,581 will go to
communication
disorders to train graduate personnel in
educational
techniques for children having speech,
hearing or
language impairments.
benefit
_
The Center
for
Academic Development's program
tutorial services for reading,
writing,
^
e
C(
m mu
ic ations
on? » l
? J
P sludents
*
u
school to
college.
.
!Si
'
in
mathematics
and co "nseling will receive
make
the adjustment from high
s
The Pennsylvania Department
Indus ry
s
*>i,Zbi for
of Labor and
New Job Training Partnership Acts provides
classroom training in office technology
8
diffi't'ies
l
°
° itiZenS
Wh °
ex P eriencin
g
employment
Wm
e UCatl0n
IS benefit from a state rant
g
of'si«?S
f,!r tthe
h purpose of/ °
of
$18,900 for
systematizing a procedure
which provides educational input and
curriculum
directions for vocational instructors
in working with the
i
handicapped.
Additional grants for special projects:
E $15 000 from the Petroleum Research Fund
grant-maid of the American Chemical
Society to the department
of geography and earth science.
$15,000 matching starter from
Pennsylvania
Department of Commerce through Lehigh
University and
the Ben Franklin Partnership
Challenge Grant Program
17,750 from Research Corporation Foundation
to
chemistry department
$6,700 from Pennsylvania Department of
Education
Bureau of Vocational Education to the
business education
and office administration department
$7,090 from U.S. Department of Education
to expand
college s cooperative education program.
$4,000 from Pennsylvania Council of Arts
to Office
Cultural Affairs
$890 from the U S Department of Education
acquisitions and materials for Andruss
of
Library
Grants pending for the coming year include
"a research
grant from the American Chemical
Society and a
proposal to the Pew Foundation to establish
a regional
data center for higher education in eastern
Pennsylvania
30
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
1983
Classes gather
REUNI0N
LL
" Members 01
Homecoming dinner-dance
,? I h the
k
attended
ront
left),
retired
h e Redman football teams who
are shown with Dr John A Hoch
'
teacher,
coach and administrator, and George Landis
BU ,00,ba " ,eam ,oda y The nTn'w (front)f David
n
ncluded
Linkhorst. Eugene Mornson and Wayne
Von Stetten
(back row) George Lambr.nos. Charles
Brennan, Joseph Colone, Ed Jones"
ana Angeio Albano
a
C ° aCh
'
/
° f ,he
0
(ram?em
9
Do™ ?hv7
rt
e
e,S
n a rr
°'
'
he
C
'
aSS
D
<*
1938
ln
a"«Ktonce were
(Ironl
>%3
CLASS OF
Eun.ce
1958
M-iier
Hoffman
—
The
Bowden
Hemler.
n^wJ^o^T
Ma garef
by "
iS^tJST^,
Sa
9way.
ron
'
.
'
*' Lou Na
Wayne
Jim
Snyder and
5trdUSS
>
~
and one who has
just
J mes Bridie another 20th century
British playwright
l
a riti C al b oera h
Dr Rusinko that'
P y
.
has been accepted ffor the
-Critical Survey of Drama "
SCheduled for Publication in the
-
^
.
.
hL?h£?E£2
m
il
/
^
*
.
1984™
Dr. Strauss also is represented
in two volumes of the
Dictionary o L.terary Biography "
His
critical
k Wate
S in "' British Dramatists.
article on John Mortimer
is in the
'»
D
aJtaSnSS'
is in " Br" lsh
Dramatisu.
1900-1945
1900-1945
<>
•ld°il
and his
?
.
V
volume -British Dramatists Since
World War II
Baroness Orczy, author of -The Scarlet
Pimpernel- and
detective stories, is the subject of
a piece by Dr Strauss
that will appear in the forthcoming
"Mystery Writersvolume of the -Dictionary of L.terary
Biography -
later this
year by Salem PrSss
,
and culture
°
'
^
-
Doug
of the English
- ViZ Li, n
"^
Gavltt
English profs writing for literary
reference
Two members
»
,°
S'
retired
,el
"
George Herman,
D-ck Connolley, Ray
Hargraves (fourth
Gerald Donmoyer.
Dwayne
Belles
e " eS
y
Don Hem|
Uon
Hprler.
Bowden
nell
,rom
'
y Rld
Susan
HoZ^rTT'
D nna
"° Cks He,I " ck
S?L"Tc^L S6C0ndMarow)
J,m v ™'er,
fJ'
500 Ge0f
^ O'Conrow)
ffi
DorfSan f^
n'aynGC
Sandra Raker
Margaret Wilkinson. Doro.h
BUI Calderwood.
Jack He man Nanr, 5n
PUb iShed
'
i^evision and on Indian
art
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/nprpmber
Homecoming
at
Drake Benza. (back) Doug
McClintock
MCU,n,ock
Sachett. and Robert Boyer
CLASS OF
1978 -- Class of 1978
'
members
Phil S azian
Ph
P
"
at
'.
CLASS OF
(back
1968
-
Representing the Class ol 1968 at the
Homecomma
° nl) ° 0nna McHenr
V Kre.sher. Betty Ruth Ke er
S
E
TraChy Ka,herine Matzio Mul a
Gubernot John Tra,hen Doug
Hippenstiel and
Ce
K?h
re
(fr
,
TjXZ^r \ ^
{
l
Wm
"
Edward
'
'
Dietrich
P.
Shambau9h
r
Carl J
Caro1
Abbott, j,
Homecoming
included
-
m
(front)
Pjdersen. Alicia Detweiler, Darlene Clarke.
Marsha Yeage
m
Schmucker,
Ann Molchan, Kathy McEwen Sosnov.ch, Cathy
Ann Kieffer
John
Ike
Eichenlaub, (second row) Kathy Hotchiss
Hallamore, Sharon
Gettel. John Hertzog, Kim Dilliplane,
V.ctoria Ann Engel. Jennifer RoweBender; (third row) Cynthia Shemanski-Blank,
Mary Tloczynski, Kathryn
Anderson Mulhern, Gina Scancella. Barbara
n
rZ D n
31
I9fi3
West
Peacock;
(fourth
Yorty,
Martin Boland, Paul Fruehan. Judy Gray;
Re.nert Wilkinson. Eugene Kelley. James
Schmucker,
(fifth
row)
row)
Rita
Karen
Matthew Legge David
'
White and Nicholas Giuffre
Future of television instruction looks promisinq
^
After two years of experimenting with
television
instruction, Dr. Daniel Pantaleo, dean
of graduate
and extended programs
discovered
Channel 44
44.
studies
Bloomsburg University has
promising avenue of educational
at
it provides a
instruction, giving non-traditional
college students the
opportunity to broaden their interests and
expand
their
knowledge.
Students are learning at their homes with
the aid of a
special study guide, textbook and an
instructor, earning
college credits by watching television.
Non-traditional students
who
took part in the first phase
of this developing program were
required to watch a
videotape every Saturday or Sunday throughout
the
semester on the Public Broadcasting Station
WVIA
The TV students watched the lesson with
the assistance
and had the option of telephoning
of the text, study guide
an instructor to ask questions or to clarify
particular
information on the tape
At regular intervals, college instructors
mailed
out
exams
for the students to complete using
their knowledge
of the tapes, textbook and the
study guide to help them
through. The
exams were then
sent back to the instructor
for scoring.
"There are alternative processes from college
to
college," says Pantaleo, -'but right now
we've tried this
method and it seems to have worked well."
"When the new Human Services Center is completed "
he continued, -we'll be able
to broaden our scope, using
cable systems, and if all goes well
in the future we'll also
be capable of broadcasting live,
in-home televised
whe re ne s tudents a "d teacher can interact,
ffintTh
K fthe
,!
talking
through
television."
,
According
Pantaleo. television instruction has
become nation-wide.
to
1 B ' oomsbur
com <* fom a central
PRS system out of Washington. Dg C PBS
PBS
is moderatelv
successful in offering approximately
150 different courses
to colleges across the country
wiim^If^i
Bloomsburg has been experimented with
selected
television courses since the fall
of 1981. dealing with a
diversity of subjects from
psychology to history
ALUMNI QJJARTERLY/December
32
1983
man
raves
of father-son
wrestling clinic
N.J.
On campus
By CURTIS
J.
O* Saddle Brook
summer
LaFERGE
N.J.
summer experienced one of most
to ever come along in wrestling.
This
ideas
this
I
innovative
Bloomsburg University coach Roger Sanders has
started the first Father-Son Wrestling Clinic in the United
States.
Coach Sanders' abilities and those of his staff can only
be rated by the highest standards
found the coach to be extremely friendly while still
maintaining the utmost in professional teaching ability.
In fact, all the coaches gave their all to make the
weekend enjoyable as well as a good learning experience
Assistant Coach Carl Poff. though relatively voung. has
an innate ability to teach wrestling techniques "without
losing the concept of the good-time father-son
weekend I
found Coach Poff to be one of the nicest people have
ever met.
Coach Tom Martucci. a past NCAA Division
champion, was most informative on the mat as well as in
displaying the advantages of a positive work ethic
Coach
Martucci has no qualms about getting down and showing
your boy how it is done.
Coach Tom DiCarlo from Baltimore not only gave of
himself in relation to the entire program, but
had that
I
^
69
9
captain Laune Snyder
A,b,n
Lynet,e Kyle
Jack 'e
-
'
Sriffln
and
I
I
BU
takes ho ckey crown
By HEISTER BITTENBENDER
Bloomsburg Press-Enterprise
Bloomsburg had closed down Lock Haven's
offense
Jr.
stoff
It took seven meetings
between the two schools, but
Coach Jan Hutchinson's Bloomsburg University
field
hockey team finally got Lock Ha ven's number
The Huskies replaced the Bald EagJes as the NCAA
Division II national champions with a l-fl
victory over the
playoff-host school at Huber Jack Stadium
in Lock
Haven
in
and
'
11-10 in corners.
S S^
°f
Ck Haven corners came in Dun ches
from
o
C
d b B
oomsbur S' s aggressiveness to break
P
h X plavs.
up tne second-half
came out
the second half and plaved better
n.Sl? said of in
Hutchinson
the Eagles' effort. Snyder had
three
saves that half. Murphy was busy
turning away nine
Bloomsburg scoring attempts for the
game
0 Uck
avens play " 0nce we scored
/
1 were pressuring
they came full force
"
and
to score
At one point they had three people
rJO?*
"
Although Bloomsburg dominated the
first half of plav
the winning goal by senior Deb Long,
who has her eves
set on the 1988 Olympics, came
in the second half when
the Bald Eagles were playing their
best ball
For Hutchinson, it was her second national
championship field hockey team in three
vears the
Huskies won the Association of Interscholastic
Athletics
for Women (AIAW) Division III
title in 1981 She also
coached the Bloomsburg softball team to
an NCAA
Division II crown in 1982
feels great, especially the
she said of her charges' latest
'It
win over Lock Haven
accomplishment
"
er
aS 0u r ye re the two leams nave
et seven
iimI but
h
tunes,
the u
Huskies !had never won. tying twice and
losing two of the matches on
penalty strokes
year ag0 ' lj k Haven coached
by Sharon
,
JM
m
-
.
*
Tavlor
second time by downing the
Husk.es. 4-1. The Huskies had
moved to the NCAA
^division from the AIAW that
year
Five of the Bloomsburg players
that played on the 1981
national championship team
were playing in the
won
the
S
NCAA
-
title
for the
.^K
-
-
in front of the
a Sh0t
l
rSSwft
goal
bul fhe w * re ca,| ed for
y
offsides
tnree -° n -one. the one being Deb
up their play
°°lhey Were
'
l2?2
5"f
Long, and
she messed
Cd
ever y bod y
so well, and I
thon^fu^f
°!f!to win.
thought we deserved
For their all-around play in the
game. Long and
Hershey were named Division II
tournament All03 " 5 35
Grim a " d Jennie Heiss of Lock
VW*
^
:
HaTen
It was the third
year that Long had gained AllAmerican status. The computer science
major
"
contemplating her future after graduation,
said. "I might
2&r3rs&+- "
Long had
also scored the
game-winning goal in the
Pennsylvania Conference championship
contest in which
the Huskies beat West Chester
l-o
title
g g ,ie Uurie Sn Vder Karen Nilson
H°f
Lynette Kile and
Linda Hershey. Deb Minskev was on thp
the
junior varsity squad that
*
"
year
T e ga
Wimung goal carae at 21 :2 ol the
2
second
half
n( f ! n
ty COrner Kyle brougnl
the bal1 into Hershey
aCross tne front of tne cage to
Long Long
ThrS
8
ba
aSt EagJe
g° al keeper Kate Murphy
l ino*
l\Z
Long
said
the play was an option
called by Hutchinson
I jus put the ball
into the right corner
Their
1
made a good stop and just pushed
" ersne
"
it in
h
iCl0ry
ng Sa,d " As a senior
just
0r
ur years x°K
There s no °e«er way «
am ,5d rather beat tnan Lock Haven » to ggo out and
c? Mld She tnougnt
lhe wno,e tea
Played well and
7h»i ih
t?
-
'
'
T
2L n^.
^^n
Sf
y
J^Tar tZ
5
Long took
-
-
'
m
g L Ck
Sn
a n°d a
St? m ^
ermi
was wet and
*
«™«
e standouts f or her team was
J who
hJr71nf»JS:
" u ' cmnson 10 do.
said. "It was a case where
all of the kids were
playing well It was a day when
y
everyone was clicking
m^S
^
pla^tww"-
Sy»
3 101
°'
C° nfidence and lhey
'
thinking ab ° Ut the
«*- °" e
ESS&JSi
Chi
nn!i!i
T
n said
at the
aSS***
,nslead
°'
into lne
corner where
Hu8kies ha d some other
of the
game
but couldn't
1
§uess
I
Asked what she might do for an
encore, Hutchinson
3
and Said> Maintain domination
in the
natS/^
"S? That is "the
national
competition.
type of Lon,peimon
competition we
would like to have in Bloomsburg "
Seni rS
Long Ky,e Ni,son a "d Snyder ~,.
olu,
2 will
usSSiSE
Minskey who
p
be transferring to East
3 C ° UrSe major wil1 be lost
8
from ^ls
learn
-
'
Murphy
way
™
* ««
l
-
the penalty stroke, but
the field
special something to relate to the younger
wrestlers.
the first half, shutting out the
home team 12-0 in shots and
C rnerS F 0r tne game tne
Huskies led in shots. 15-5
l»J M ?„
What makes Hutchinson's chances
saknr
*>« -
^
for a
dynasty so
Coach Bob Rohm of Bloomsburg showed a real
fondness for different techniques without causing
any
embarrassment to the less talented youngsters
Chris Poff. Coach Carl Poff's father, was
the guest
lecturer. His speech helped the boys to better
appreciate
their fathers as people
Last, but certainly not least, is Coach
Ron Russo head
wrestling coach at Columbia University.
His knowledge in
all techniques of wrestling was
one of the highlights of the
The man's wrestling ability was surpassed only
by his
ability to teach. His step-by-step
methods proved helpful
both father and son and rounded off an
excellent staff
itself gave a father and son the
opportunity to gain mutual respect for each
other I found
he coaches to be helpful not only to the informed
but to
to
The weekend
the novice.
For the novice father, it affords a better
understanding
what his son goes through in this grueling
sport and
enables the father to better understand
the purposes of
wrestling camp and to support his son
better during the
of
6
wrestling season.
It further shows the father
the rapport his son must
have with his coach. Coach Sanders has
created a
situation which allows people from
all walks of life to
meet and get along through the common
goal of making
their sons better wrestlers.
The weekend itself teaches the father
and son to better
appreciate each other and become
closer in an all-male
setting. I gives the father a
feeling of satisfaction
knowing
in
that he has helped in the
continuation of his son's
wrestling career.
0b
hiS w kend was a heck of a
good time for
hJh
o1h
J son. J?
both father
and
Bloomsburg University has a
beautiful campus with an abundance
of recreational
facilities. It provided an
opportunity for a father to get
away from it all and for those fathers who
attended
college, a wonderful nostalgic
experience
lhC mulua ' cari
for the boys, the fathers and
"g
p
coaches
become friends working toward a common
goal
rank
Coach Sanders has created an atmosphere
through
which a beginner receives a fine start
and a good
wrestler only gets better The coach
teaches that a
champion is one who gives of himself
and does his best
whatever he tries. The boys further
mature by living
away from home and meeting new
people
at
The wrestling facilities at Bloomsburg
University are of
he highest quality, and the
coaches are^well schooledTn
the latest wrestling techniques.
Academics however, are
the boys to
Z Z?f
r
fvrfcT
always
also
emphasized They teach
try their best and that
hard work can
of taIenl Tne work elhlc
these coaches
1,e aCh
t y0Ur son
wiI1 not on|
y be good for
'
K
aC
«
wrestling but in everyday life.
They stress fundamentals
and then move on to intricate
techniques. The coaches
e
r
P
8
haSiS 0n pracMce
drl " lng
b ors
.e a
.
"camp
J
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
Good year
Many
By
JOHN MICHAELS
Bloomsburg Press-Enterprise Sports Editor
for smiling all the
time.
Bloomsburg University's wrestling coach just
completed his most successful recruiting campaign
which brought PIAA Class AA state champion Bruce
Wallace, Tyrone, into the fold. Wallace is a second-team
high school All-American selected by USA Today.
Bloom U's recruiting is ranked 11th in the country by
the national publication.
Others joining the Huskies are Dan Klingerman.
Bloomsburg High School's first PIAA Class AA 155-pound
champion; Central Columbia's Mark Williams, a PIAA
SPORTMANSHIP -
David Superdock (right)
received the Arthur Ashe Sportsmanship
Award in
New York from Ashe, captain of the U S Davis
Cup team Superdock, 23, is a former
Pennsylvania
Conference champion for Bloomsburg
University
and was named to the NCAA Division
AllAmerican team last spring Winners of the
award
are chosen by the Intercollegiate
Tennis Coaches
Association and the National Association
of InterII
collegiate
Athletics on the basis of academic
standing, tennis ability, sportsmanship
on and off
the court, as well as leadership
qualities Super-
dock
is attending medical school
Medical Center.
at
the
Hershev
New head
Class A A place-winner at 185 pounds; New Jersey
runners-up Dennis Grandy and Ron Ippolite; Connecticut
runner-up Chris Tamboro.
In addition, Rick and Rocky Bonomo, former PIAA
champs from Lake Lehman High School, red-shirted last
year and are available for action when the season starts
So is Mike Rudolph, Reading, who sat out a season
BU
Dennis J Grace has
replaced Lou Mingrone as
head soccer coach
at
trainer
Arthur J Hopkins, former
physical therapist at Hayne
Physical Therapy in
Abington and Jeanes
Hospital
is the best year of recruiting we've
had credential-wise," he continued. 'Now they have to
prove it on the mats."
There's a big difference from high school to college,
especially wrestling in the Eastern Wrestling League)
and NCAA Division I.
Individually, Sanders recruited people to fill voids
in
got people in weight classes
weights.
"I also
expect Dan Klingerman and Mike Rudolph, both
."
champs, to help us
Other recruits include North Penn's Jim Kwortnik, an
honorable mention on the All-American list; Northern
Lehigh's Darren Evans, a third-place finisher the last two
years in the PIAA Class AA meet; Roger Leitzel, Upper
Dauphin, and Roger Lingle, Central Dauphin.
Three transfers will give Bloom U added experience:
Philadelphia,
is
Hopkins replaces Paul
Slocum, who resigned to
accept the position as
director of sports medicine
at the
Medical Center
NPW
in
Wilkes-Barre
Hopkins served
his
residencies at the Coast
where we needed help
where we lost people through graduation.
"Rick and Rocky Bonomo will be battling at 118 and 126
and Wallace gives us the fluctuation we needed at 167-177
Last year we had our worst record ever in the middle
in
new head trainer at
Bloomsburg University.
the
Guard Training Center in
Cape May, N.J and at
Temple University Hospital
,
in
Philadelphia.
The 35-year-old native of
Levittown. Long Island.
N.Y.. rceived his license in
physical therapy from the Hahnemann Hospital in
Philadelphia after earning his undergraduate degree at
East Stroudsburg University in 1981
He served on the Wilkes-Barre Recreation Board for
three years and was a founder of the Northeast
HOPKINS
Pennsylvania Hockey League in 1976
He and his wife. Denise, live in Bloomsburg.
An assist from Linda Hershey (Saucon Valley High
School) to All-American Debbie Long enabled the
1983
women's field hockey team to defeat Lock Haven 1-0, thus
becoming the first Bloomsburg team ever to win a NCAA
If you are interested
obtaining information
about these camps,
please contact the
Athletic Office at (717)
Championship.
Head coach Jan Hutchinson, assistant coach Sharon
O'Keefe and their team are to be contratulated for
And what a turn around in our football program! In
only his second year, Coach George Landis and his young
he guided Indiana
GRACE
conference championship and a respectable 10-7-2 mark
against a schedule that included several Division I
opponents
In 1978 and 1979 he led the Tri-State team to a two-year
record of 22-8-1, consecutive NAIA national tourney
appearances, and had eight all-conference performers
While at Bloomington High School, Grace's teams
compiled an impressive 120-21-11 record and gained
numerous titles, including the McGuire Cup State crown
in 1978 and 1979 and the Indiana Indoor Championship in
1977 He was selected as the high school Coach of the
Year in 1977 and 1978
After finishing his undergraduate studies, he became an
assistant at Indiana University where the Hoosiers
compiled a five-year mark of 94-10-5 while he was with
the team In addition, the team remained among the
nation's top ten during his tenure, spent several weeks in
the number one slot, boasted 18 All-Americans and sent 15
_
Husky squad
battled East Stroudsburg for the Eastern
Division Championship. Although the Huskies lost a close
13-7 contest, our team proved that they will be legitimate
contenders next season.
|
Bloomsburg
won
its
N.Y.,
was selected as the outstanding wrestler
The women's swimming team also opened
defeating the Naval
in
the
its
season by
Academy
almost six months until the summer sports camps
commence For those of you who have youngsters, I
encourage you to send your children and their friends to
one of our camps in football, basketball, soccer, tennis
and wrestling.
It is
helped to
Invitational
tournament.
alumni and friends of
Bloomsburg University
your contributions,
because they have
Eighth Annual
Tournament, defeating the
University of Virginia by a single point. Bloomsburg's
Tom Fiorvanti, the senior 150-pounder from Massapequa,
I would like to share a
few thoughts with you
pertaining to the Husky
Club. As you know, this
is the vehicle by which
support the Athletic
Scholarship Fund
It is important that
you continue to make
The winter seasons have already started on a
successful note. The men's swimming team won its own
Invitational Relay Carnival The basketball team beat
King's College.
The young wrestling team
in
389-4360.
capturing the laurels.
Bloomsburg
soccer players to the professional ranks.
Husky
THE A.P.'S CORNER/Roger Sanders
University-Evansville and
Trl-State University and at
Bloomington (Indiana) High
School
The 30-year-old native of
Erie also served as an
assistant at Indiana and
Clemson, both national
powers, before coming to
In 1980,
Hopkins new
counted
"Undoubtedly, this
Bloomsburg University U
Mingrone resigned after
seven years of coaching.
Grace was former head
coach at Indiana State
State-Evansville, an NCAA
Division II institution, to the
school's first-ever
trying to get the rivalry going."
letter of intent to attend Clarion and
then opting for Bloomsburg U.
"I thought we could have been ranked higher
because
of Rudolph and the Bonomos," said Sanders,
"but they've
been out (of school) a year and were not eligible to
be
"
state
at
Jon Moser (134), a two-time NCAA qualifier at West
Chester; Steve Gibble (177, 190). from the University of
North Carolina; and Dan Comfort (150. 158), Temple.
Sanders is enthused about the upcoming season.
"We have a great schedule," he says. "Indiana State
(Jan. 5) and Michigan (Jan. 6) will wrestle at Nelson
Fieldhouse and we have a home-and-home series with
Lock Haven (here Dec. 1 and there Feb. 7).
"There is also the possibility of meeting Wilkes College
on Sunday, Feb. 19. Coach John Reese and I talked about
it and we're closer than ever before. I'm
excited about
the lineup.
soccer coach
named
Husky squad
because of signing a
"We
33
for recruiters
fine wrestlers joining
You cannot blame Roger Sanders
1983
SANDERS
programs
make our
successful.
Just look at what grant-
have done to our football program in
two years.
If you haven't made your contribution in 1983, please do
so by making your check payable to Alumni Association/
Athletics and send it directly to the Alumni Office.
As we sign off another year, the Athletic Department
and our coaches wish all of you a very joyous holiday
season and a very happy new year May 1984 bring each
and every one of you the very best in health, happiness,
and success.
in-aid scholarships
-
34
ALUMNI QJ IRTERLY/December
198
I
Houk
University holds 'Russ
Night'
'RuSS Houk Night" o 1 Dec. 9 drew friends and former
dent-athletes of he i ired coach and educator from
BG x»ss the United State.'.
'hairing tht tribute were Joe Gerst 68. Mike Smith 69
an 1 Bob Surndge '75 Gcrst and Smith were wrestlers on
Rook teams, and Surridge played football for Houk.
I'.egarded as one of Bloomsburg's all-time great
co. ches. Houk was guest of honor at a buffet reception at
Ho el Ma gee before the Millersville-Bloomsburg wrestling
meet.
sii
;
I
During a brief pre-meet ceremony
at
Nelson
Fieldhouse. Houk was praised by several speakers,
including Joseph Nespoli. former university trustee;
Ro^er Sanders, head wrestling coach and athletic
director; Elton Hunsinger. university trustee and retired
BU administrator: and the three chairmen of the event
Sanders said the night "provided us with the
opportunity to honor a man who initially established
Bloomsburg as one of the top wrestling programs in the
country He started a tradition of outstanding wrestling at
the school and coached many young men who brought
national recognition to the institution and who have gone
on the distinguish themselves after graduation."
Houk served as athletic director and head wresting
coach and football coach during his years at Bloomsburg.
In four years as the Huskies' head football coach, his
teams posted a 16-16-1 record, but he became nationally
and internationally known for his dedicated involvement
in the mat sport
While head coach for 14 years, he led his teams to three
National Association of Intercollegiate Athletic National
Championships, five Pennsylvania Conference titles, and
*as named national "Coach of the Year" on three
occasions. The Huskies produced a 142-34-2 won-lost
record during his tenure
In addition, he served three four-year terms on the U.S.
Olympic Wrestling Commitee of which he was chairman
from 1972-1976. He also managed the J 972 and 1976
freestyle teams.
He is a member of the Citizens' Savings Foundation
iaJJ of Fame (Los Angeles), the Pennsylvania
Wrestling
iaU of Fame, the NAIA Hall of Fame and the
31oomsburg University Athletic Hall of Fame.
Special guests at the event were Houk's mother, wife
Jid
children
HONORED
—
New
It's just
that
some
to walk again after
football accident
For Vernon Rochester,
ie fight
goes on.
The Bloomsburg
niversity sophomore
ontinues to work towards
talking again, having been
and parking
problems should be eliminated by next
thanks to the
cooperation of the Bloomsburg Hospital and the support
fall,
Community Government
Association.
Hospital, for the construction of nine practice fields for
the university's varsity athletic and recreation programs
"We have had a real jigsaw puzzle in recent years
trying to schedule practices for athletic teams and times
for the areas to be used for intramurals and recreation
purposes," said Jack Mulka, dean of student
development.
"Also, some of the varsity game fields were used for
these purposes, which left them in poor condition for
contests against scheduled opponents."
How will the completion of the new fields also affect
into a
huge parking lot for spectators attending athletic or other
events in the fieldhouse and Redman Stadium. This
should go a long way to alleviate the complaints
concerning limited parking adjacent to the two facilities "
"We'll probably start pa king cars on grass like Penn
State does," he continuea "Whether or not we'll ever
have funds to eventually p. ^e the area remains to be
>ept. 10.
While Rochester's motor
have
mproved and he continues
seen. Also, we have to take drainage problems into
consideration."
ROCHESTER
was performed
to repair
'>
spinal cord.
After almost a week at Geisinger, he was flown to
Jefferson University Hospital In Philadelphia, where he
now going through
of recreational
"Our plans are to convert a larger portion of the
current practice and recreation area behind Nelson
paralyzed by a
spinal cord injury in a
Huskies football game on
damaged
Nelson Fieldhouse ceremony
way
.
"All I can say is. 'tremendously'." said Robert Parrish
vice president for administration
>artially
to lift weights with his everstrengthening arms, little
change has occurred in his
lower body.
After being hurt in the
game against Mansfield.
Rochester, a tailback, was
flown immediately to
Geisinger Medical Center in
Danville, where an operation
a
and
is
later on by General Services in Harrisburg. The lease
for 15 years, and is renewable for another 15 years.
The coaches of football, soccer, softball, baseball, field
hockey and lacrosse affected by the additional practice
areas are elated, according to Sanders.
They all echo the sentiments that they will now be able
to conduct practice sessions more conducive to game
situations and won't have to be hurried by a time
schedule, he said
Also appreciating the welcoming change will be
Intramural directors Ron Puhl and Joan Auten. along
with band director Valerie Rheuse and recreational
director Lou Maranzana.
Maranzana said the fields, when not in use by the
university, will be available for use by community
teams
and individuals.
"What
it all boils down to," Sanders
said. "Is our goal
Bloomsburg's fine reputation in athletics and
recreation and making the university a recognized leader
in these areas under the new state
system."
of upholding
parking?
7
-eflexes in his fingers
.
I
On July I, bulldozers began stripping off 80,000 cubic
yards of dirt to start levelling most of 15 acres of land
east of Nelson Fieldhouse, leased from the Bloomsburg
fights
in
playing fields on the
m-
...
nnt
U
not h«o»»«.
because Bloomsburg
became a university on
July 1 that earth moving equipment went into operation
on the upper campus the same day.
Tt'o
It's
of the university's
Sophomore
Former wrestling coach Russ Houk was honored
is
rehabilitative 'herapy in the hospital's
spinal cord injury center
Rochester has received phone calls from professional
football players, and Bloomsburg hea
_^ch George
Landis visited him at least once a week during the
football season to review films of the Huskies' weekly
games.
The Huskies season was dedicated
Lawnside. N.J
to the standout
from
Jerry Griffls. vice president fr student life, pointed
out
the university can't thank the ho ,pital representatives
enough for their cooperation r er the years
"We utilize the hospital I dlt'ies in conjunction with
our medical service to s»
into and also the nursing
program." he
ren. jrked. "We have leased parking
a.eas that border Lightstreet Road from them
and now
they have eagerly supported this latest upper
campus
endeavor."
"Also," he continued, "my sincere appreciation
goes
-jree
the Community Government Association,
particularly
past president Paul Stockier."
CGA
to
providing the money to build the nine fields
The effort to obtain the land took place in August 1982
when Parrish and athletic director Roger Sanders
met
with hospital administrator Robert
Spanelli and board
member Robert Beers to explore the lease possibility
They quoted a very acceptable yearly rental figure
Parrish said. It was approved by both boards
of trustees
Is
Hess
William
football
scholarship granted
A $500 football scholarship
has been provided in memory
of
Bloomsburg businessman
William J. Hess Sr by his son.
William J. Hess Jr.
The grant for a football
player is only part of a $1,500
contribution to the university's
program during the
current year by Hess, a longtime supporter of the Huskies
athletic
Born in Bloomsburg on
September 2, 1899, William J.
Hess Sr. was educated in the
Bloomsburg schools and
served in World War I. He
continued to operate Hess's
Tavern, established on East
Main Street
in 1889 by his
father, until his death on
January 25, 1945.
Hess was active
™
C
SS
.?T1
WILLIAM
J.
HESS
C until his '!TL
1930s
death.
Hess Jr. recalls that his father was
always
concerned about and supportive of
the youth of the
Bill
community.
Sr.
Democratic politics and served as
0f Co,umbia County from the
late
in
ALUMNI QUARTERLY/December
ALUMNI OFFICE
BLOOIDSBURG UllUERSITY
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