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state college

bloomsburg, Pennsylvania

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the 1969 obiter
a reflection in passing
toni matulis

editor-in-chief

robert haller, advisor
director of pubhcations

table of contents:

Face of Famine
by Dr. Percival R. Roberts

III

from ihe private collection of
Rev, and Mrs. John Simpers,
Hockessin. Delauare.

^

I

I^A

a
•-t55?l

i/fei^

I

ron schulz,

e.g. a.

president

was born bright eyed and innocent
946th year of our Lord.
To be more exact, the date was September 16; the place was Stuttgart.
Germany. After an uneventful childhood that was spoiled by the absence
of authentic GI Joe soldier dolls and kill 'em death, everybody-in-theneighborhood-has-one tommy-guns, television, and Daniel Boone skunk caps,
my parents moved to America in 1954, and three years later we had a
I

in the

1

re-union

in

Hatboro, Pennsylvania.

one month

started school

I

afterwards, attending third grade for one day, fourth grade

two days, and subsequently being placed
and there forgotten.

for

During
I

my

in the fifth

grade

three year stay in junior high school,

played football, participated

the track team,

made

ran for

in wrestling,

friends and enemies (a practice that

has continued until today), wore black leather jackets and
suites with white socks to dances. In high school the same pattern

was

true,

we wore black socks,
more collegiate.

but then

black raincoats, and button-down

collar shirts to look

went back to Germany for three months after
and then came to Bloomsburg
because I wanted to wrestle. My freshman year
I

my

senior year in high school.

studied, read subversive books,

I

my home-made "Get Out of Vietnam" sign at Bloomsburg's protest
Vietnam protest movement, grew long hair, and wrote poetry.

carried
to the

U of P. my second year
Bloomsburg. Old North was torn down,
and other buildings sprung up all over the campus.
In early spring it was like marching through

After an unsuccessful attempt to enroll at
before the Sun was the year of change

World War

I

trenches

My Junior year

at

in the rain.

was the

surrealistic time of Slack,

the Gadfly.

M&G resignation,
in

protest (?)

march outside of Andruss Library

support of free press and speech, and continuing student awareness.

Benyo took over
as did the

the

ACLU

M&G.

Slack put

it

to the administration.

and the State Attorney General

and Schulz wrote articles of protest about
in his column for the M&G.

.

.

.

the college

I had run for CGA representative twice before and twice defeated.
But I still thought about correcting the wrongs instead of writing about them.

Sic,

Don Quixote.

So,

Pletcher. Slack, Capello.

and Schulz

started

SURGE,



but exactly what has been long
had our day of victory, felt jubilant, and then made ready
for the onslaught. It was not long before many of us knew that we were engaged
a student party united to reform something
since forgotten.

in

We

an exercise of

futility.

Fund-raising events, approval of certain club constitutions,

money

requests

buy new caps and gowns, money for ARM and ARW to buy new TV's,
such is the stuff of which CGA meetings are made.
The dragons have not been slain, wrongs not righted, and fair maidens not rescued.
It was a wonderful, inaudible year or four.
to

when teacups

floated by,

carrying the ashes of burned

BA

diplomas,

spilled over the river winding,

and floating out

to sea.

ron schulz

college council

.

.

.

homecoming
sam and dave concert

linda zerfoss

homecoming queen

parade

.

.

.

!^

"world peace through cultural exchange

•)^

homecoming queen's court

SUEMAGILL

MARY ANN HARTMAN

PAT DOUGHERTY

JUDY ADONEZIO

homecoming chairman
mark piazza

Judy Defant

Summa cum

iaude

Galen Quick

Summa cum

Iaude

Gary Fletcher
Gadfly

cum diploma

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spring arts festival

March 10

greek week

.

.

.

The

spring season was highlighted by a

of Hellenic



hell-raising

activities

week

sponsored

by the IFC and ISC.

The Attic antics began on March 23 with
Greek Sing in which the fraternities and

the

sororities

entered

in

cally bizarre talents.

Chi Sigma Rho.

SIO hosted

the

their

first

On Monday

place winner was

March 24,
Harlem Astronauts, a comic-

professional team
'all-stars";

competition their musi-

The

who

night,

challenged the fraternity

game proved

to

be delight-

fully funny.

March 25 ended with

on the
and oceans of mud
(BSC abounds in mud) the Greeks had a wild
time with the sisters of Tau Sigma Pi and the
brothers of Delta Omega Chi coming out on
top. Wednesday was the night of the Greek
Dinner where Scholarship Trophies were prea tug-of-war

terraces. Despite the rain

sented to the organizations having the highest

cummulative averages. They went to
Chi and Theta Gamma Phi. Greek
Week ended with Olympic Day on Saturday.
Among the winners were: the Chariot RacesTau Sigma Pi and Beta Sigma Delta; track and

over-all

Pi Epsilon

field events-Pi

Kappa

Epsilon.

bloomsburg players 1968-69:
streetcar

named

desire

mary poppins
henry IV
the great magician

my

sister eileen

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Cheryl goodmi
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dasso]F1970^j^,

visiting celebrities

Visiting

campus

or

trying

year

this

to

were

BSC

the

visit

number of

a

prominent writers and performers. These
ranged from the Norman Luboff choir to

New

Frontiersman Arthur Schlesinger,

Discussing the Sino-Soviet

rift

Jr.

only a few

days after the Damansky island fighting
was Dr. Vernon Aspaturian of Penn
State.

John Ciardi of the Saturday Review

(poetry) discoursed on the value of a college education,

and did so without the

pomposity the subject usually elicits
from speakers. Finally. Michael Harrington valiantly made three efforts to appear
before

the

institution,

assembled
but

ranging from an
picket

line,

him from

a

act

of

students

series

of

of God,

and personal

a

illness

his scheduled course.

this

obstacles

union
stayed

afro-american studies
The History Department,

in conjunction with the

Mu

Psi

Chapter of

Phi Alpha Theta, sponsored a conference on "Afro-American Studies:

History and Perspectives" on April 20 and 21. Within recent years, the
topic of

Afro-American studies has become one which has been

creasingly debated within the history profession specifically, and

in-

among

educators generally. The purpose of the conference was to provide a
constructive opportunity to bring together the personnel of the academic

community
a

in order to pool their various talents and contributions into
meaningful dialog that would provide greater understanding and com-

prehension of the Afro-American studies and

its

place in education,

and secondary school level.
The conference format centered around the teaching, historical contributions, and recent research related to Afro-American studies. Some

both

at the college

of the panels were concerned with the methods of incorporating this
area into the curriculum, while others dealt with recent historical re-

search

in the field

of Afro-American studies.

The

from a wide range of schools and universities
cluded many members of the Bloomsburg staff.

The

highlight

in

panelists were

drawn

Pennsylvania, and in-

of the conference was a demonstration of African

dances and ceremonial

rites,

as well as a

songs by students of the Robert
phia. Their professional-like

Vaux

program of Negro

Junior High School

spiritual

in Philadel-

performance served to confirm the view

of the conference committee that relevant and timely topics could serve
to arouse interest

and discussion.

the year of the cock

Marked by mourning, triumph, and

tumult, the 1968-69
year was by any standard a turning point for

college

Americans and

for the world. Two political murderers
Sirhan Sirhan and James Earl Ray
were apprehended
and brought to trial for the killings of Robert F. Kennedy



and Martin Luther King. Six Americans orbited the moon
in Apollo missions eight and ten. Chicago exploded in
and convulsion as the Democrats chose Hubert H.
to oppose Richard M. Nixon, who won the
election in an all-night cliffhanger. In Czechoslovakia
emerging liberty was swept aside by Soviet treachery and
riot

Humphrey

invasion. In France, Charles DeGaulle, the last surviving

World War

leader of the

people to

whom

II

generation, was rejected by the

he had brought stability and prosperity.

On

an obscure island called Damanski (by the Russians)
the Chinese) the two giant powers exchanged fire and shed blood in a portent of possible racial

Chen Pao (by

or

and ideological warfare. Nigeria continued its tortured
agony, struggling pitifully against the determined Biafrans.
It was the time of 2001: A Space Odyssey, Rosemary's
Baby, the Beatles' Yellow Submarine. Hair, and Hadrian
VII
Rod McKuen's and Glen Campbell's voices
.

.

.

.

Philip Roth.

Norman

books ...

the re-election of

.

.

Mailer, and Alexander Solzhenitsyn's

Barry Goldwater. and the
Lyndon Johnson
... the marriage of Julie Nixon and David Eisenhower,
and the death of David's grandfather, Dwight David
election of his son ... the retirement of

Eisenhower, the liberator of Europe.

was the year Ethel
months after
he was shot in a pantry in Los Angeles. It was the year of
Laugh-Ill and the mini-skirt. It was the year that saw the
start of the de-Americanization of the war in Vietnam
ahhough casualties continued to climb. It saw the release
of the crew of the captured intelligence ship Pueblo, and
the embarrassing investigation which followed. Then
North Koreans did an encore and shot down an unarmed
reconnaissance plane over international waters. The ArabIsraeli War ground on in low gear, and the number of

Kennedy bore her

late

husband's

It

last child,

Cuba forced CIA agents to travel south
This was the time when the Pope was defied and

plane hijackings to

by

train.

when he spoke his
Kennedy married Aristotle Onasis, and Mia Farrow left Frank Sinatra. The
Fortas affair shook the dignity of the Supreme Court, and
May-December marriages raised eyebrows all over the
country. It was the year of the 100th heart transplant and
the artificial creation of enzymes. From campus to campus
challenged by millions of Catholics

mind on

the

birth control. Jacqueline

flames of protest, rebellion, and progress jumped:

Columbia, San Francisco

The

liberal

mood

era seemed to have

pendulum began

nam

State,

CCNY,

Harvard, Cornell.

of the country initiated in the

come

to a

dead end

Kennedy

as the political

to swing in the other direction. In Vietthey called '69 the Year of the Cock.

1965-1969; 1966-1970; 1967-1971; 1968-1972; 1969-etc..etc.etc.. Good Morning!
Hi, I'm J
blah.
parents left
river winding



Sammy, Athens,
— New York, now?
Rocks,
no
naw, no
caught —
won't
Waverly,
— Do you have group, way
son
Your
Dear Mom: Doing
—No, I'm home Giving Thanks
Casper
south
about 30
Oh,
Bloomsburg
— Mid-terms, whats —Oh, my god—What, never saw
Yeah
good chance
1964
we've had
match
water
fairground boys — No. Mr.
along way from

who
how do know how water coming through
break
want
you
Milk Machine — Now
put
Gnaw,
handwriting
only one
expert
made
you
Gnaw, Gnaw — Hey, Mucker where
semester
2.00001 — Hey, buddy, wanna buy used book;
remains
ya—
we only wanna
Now
do
No Dean
Espy maybe;
ya
ya
Milk Machine — Ya,
who
up with
1776,
September — Buttons Frosh — That
Friendly College on the Hill

"and

blah, etc.

Who



sure

are you?"

a wrestling

that

sure plenty

blah, blah

before, well

.

.

.

.

blah, blah: great,

.

.

boys,

that stuff in the

detector test

.

.

.

.

in the state

.

.

.

didn't

I

expert

.

sure they'll use

catch

in the

All right,

.

.

.

lie-

.

.

I

it,

this

it

see

latter, in

we'll finish

brings us to

in

.

the the question

help

son,

it.

.

get those shirts? Jesus Christ,

did

a

put that stuff

to tell

just

I

.

fountains

the ceiling

is

I

.

.

Shaeffer the

the

It's

.< j» rf

of Scranton, Great,

miles

well

P«^

please;

this

for

just

tonight

pass the peas; lousy food,
College,

vacation,

cards easy

yeah,

a

loving

fine.

didn't

let's leave:

cards;

Hess's,

get

legal

this

blah, blah ... It seems as
chapter of American History next class, so please read
though I've been through all that once before, a revolving door or scratched record
.

.

that



Catch ya latter
keeps playing the same tune cause it's stuckstuckstuckstuck
that much is obsolete,
sunburned, eyes hurt
third year before the Sun





Joe

.

antique and detrimental to prog

.

.

blah, blah

.

.

.

.

Gadfly, Slack,

.

ACLU,

legal action will


—you have

crying, swearing,

be brought unless ... the constitution does not stop at Light Street
No one has helped me in preparing my case
pickets (?1, trail (?),



J-M.'^'

.



not proven

anything Mr. Blah, blah ... I'm simply innocent Welcome to the world of the
Gladfly, we are not the prophets of doom but right wing witch hunters who see
And therefore my fellow Americans I would like to place in nomination
blah, blah
.

.

the

.

name of Richard

floor recognizes the

thanks Jim

dorms

— Who

.

— Mr. Chairman, Mr. Chairman —The
Alabama — Great Day,
back

you

.

Rockerfeller Percey

chairman from the

the hell tore

— Now boys, we

all like

down

great success,

state of

to have a

little

.

.

blah, blah

in the

guys,

All right

the bridge

.

.

For responsible student

STP, Surge, petitions, signs slogans,
blah, blah
gover .... you can change things
effective at the end
Illinois
promises, ... For personal reasons I would like to
For these reasons
Now boys, we all blah, blah catch ya latter Joe
of the year
conduct
blah, blah,
the college reserves the right to deny diplomas to any
.

.

.

.

.



.

.

.

.

.

.

.

unbecoming, conspicuous behavior

.

.



.

.

.

the Gadfly

.

.

.

still is

published by Gary

.

.

Blah,

see ya latter baby, rabble rouser, publisher, F. Scoutt Fitzgerald hat, poet,
Will the first regular meeting of
writer, critic, scholar, drinker, smoker, etc, etc

blah

.

.

.

.

.

.

held in abeyance
and now the president's reply Blah, Blah
five dollars for the ping pong balls in East Hall is Hereby Approved ... the
until
You
until further study
Blah, Blah
formation of the following committees
Motel .... appear
drinking in
on or about Jan. 4
are hereby informed that

College
.

.

.

.

blah, blah ...

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

We follow all the procedures of the Joint Blah,
paper please
this is not a trial
Blah ... of course we don't ... I reserve the right to change any
suspended for a semester draft while out of school no
but simply a hearing
I
blah, blah
we want to help you elections, vote for
trial
just a hearing
hereby register my formal complaint that according to the Constitution Article
Blah-Blah
new president, student committee good luck no power academic incest
March, April, May, charge to the troops "Would you please tell me, which way I
"That depends a good deal on where you want to get to,"
ought go go from here?"
"Then it doesn't matter which
" said Alice.
said the cat.
"I don't much care where

before,,, sign this

.

.

.

.

.

.





.

.





.

.

.

.


.

.

.

way you


—So

go."



catch ya latter baby,




maybe



in

Catawissa.

.

The

voices of student dissent continued during the

campuses where

activists

have engaged

1968-69 college year. Unlike other
which have included violence and surpession
Bloomsburg have been struggling to create an atmos-

in policies

of opposing viewpoints, the "activists" at

phere where free expression and constructive reforms can be made. Student publications form
the vanguard of student opinion and thus represent a unique service to the college community,
unlike that of any other campus organization.

A
its

student-operated radio station will soon join the already operating publications. Now
And CoUl enjoys virtually unlimited editorial freedom;
principle stumbling blocks arc a small staff and a depressing inclination of the student body

in

general to misunderstand (with a woeful ignorance of the intentions and appearance of satire

appearing twice-a-weck, the Maroon

M&

or understatement! what the

C journalists

are saying.

with a psychedelic cover and then caged the minds of

its

The 1969 Olympian

seized the eye

readers with excellent writing, evoca-

and the calm assurance of a literary snowstorm. In the Ohiier candid and semicandid photography and a fresh understanding of the possibilities of creative graphics turned
tive layouts,

the yearbook into

more of an essay on

Bloomsburg than a trite
what organization and where they went
shifted from orienting freshmen to being a starting point in

recitation (as in previous years) of
to

honor each other. The Pilot

learning what goes on at

format)



Two

in short, a

years ago,

BSC

guidebook

in

to

(explicit point by point social regulations, a
in

how

more manageable

to get involved.

response to threats of censorship and authoritarianism (whether real or

what degree real
fashion somewhat between

remains uncertain) the Gadfly was born at Bloomsburg, in a
spontaneous generation theory that Louis Pasteur demolished
demonstrating the existence of germs in rotten meat, and the cabalistic approach favored

not, or to

in

the experience of being at

who belonged

by some students

who

still

the

perceive in the Gadfly's genesis the hands of militant revolutionary

The Gadfly, BSC's underground "free press," began again this past year under the
direction of Gary Fletcher. Assuming a new format and a less direct challenge to the administration, it was a journal where ail opinions could be expressed. Gary graduated in January, and
Leninists.

resumed publication later in the spring under the hand of Bill Sanders. Trying to
between his two predecessors. Sanders integrated the local problems of BSC
with those of other colleges and universities across the country. Still controversial, the unsanctioned paper's more attractive format and clear concern to avoid merely vindictive personal
attacks have earned it a status almost competitive with the \Uinion & Gold.
The 1969-70 school year will mark the beginning of monetary renumeration for the top
student editors. This long-overdue improvement was one of the last contributions of Mr.
Richard Savage who has for nine years served as an advisor to BSC's various publications.
the Gadfly

steer a course

The time he has given
culable.

When

twice a month;

he

first

now

it

the students involved with publications over those nine years

came
is

to

BSC from

printed twice a

M

Evening Poxi the
week. His efforts have done much
the Sniiirduy


to

is

incal-

C

appeared
improve the

quality of BSC's student publications.

two years as Director of Publications at BSC. produced the
and best balanced college catalog (1969), upgraded the
quality and kind of photography used in the yearbook, and opened minds to new and different
ideas in the publications field. Just as crazy and dedicated as everyone else in publications,
reconstructing, designing, proofHaller did a quite amazing amount of work in two years
reading, and creating various publications, taking and printing pictures and teaching students
to do the same, and acting as advisor to all of BSC's publications at one time or another. Haller
is pursuing a career in publications and photography and is not returning to BSC. His last
gesture was to originate the Publications Director's awards, which went to John Dietrichson
A C for photography, and Toni Matulis, editor of
for the Olympian. Tim Shannon of the
Mr. Robert A. Haller has,

in

college's best looking, best bound,



M

the OhitL'r for her graphics design of this book.

publications

^:»C

row: Linda Dodson. typist; t lack Ruch, Sports Editor; Dave Miller, Managing Editor.
Sccmui Row Mike ODay. Photography Editor; Elizabeth Cooper, copy staff; Joe Griffiths. Editor-in-Chief; Charlie Moyer. Sports Editor
Firsr

(retired).

On floor:

Pricilla Clark, typist.

"*4?

maroon and gold

dor Remsen,
time dryad.

An

Kditor, and

Tom

Funk. Copy Editor and part-

Mike Slugrin, Fcalure Kdilor: Ginny Pluu::
Editor: Bill Teilsworth. News Editor.
Mi.sshif;: Bob Schullz. Sports Editor, and Crash-and-Burn

mih: M.h

Club member.

I

d

,

\likc

Hoa.

Nc'

S;T3^.i.*^r-^

fc^:^

Left:

Gary

Below:

the gadfly
Started under the editorship of Lyle Slack
in

1967, the Gadfly. Bloomsburg's free press,

had a

difficult

time

establishing

itself

with

the "establishment". After two trials in which

was defended by Professor James
of Constitutional Law, it
seemed that the stage of repression had ended
and that a more enlightened attitude toward
constitutional freedoms would prevail. But not
so. Both Slack and Larry Phillips, a writer for
the Gadfly and the Maroon and Gold, were
refused diplomas 48 hours ahead of their exthe Gadfly

Percey,

instructor

pected graduation in

May

1968. Months

later.

the degrees were granted after pressure was put

on the administration by the American Civil
Liberties
Union in Philadelphia. Bowed,
bloody, but unbeaten, the Gadfly continues as
the

campus conscience.

Bill

Pletcher.

first

semester editor.

Sanders, second semester editor, and

Tom

Brennan. assistant editor.

I

the pilot
Mike

Olympian Editor. John Dietrickson,
was too noble to be photographed.

Stugrin, Editor.

la^eCI,

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the 1969 obiter
Toni Matulis, Editor
Robert A. Haller, Advisor

Donna Harper, Business Manager
John Dennen, Business Advisor

Tom Funk, Staff Emeritus: Mike Stugrin, David Drucker,
Liz Weiner, Claudia Zaboski, Terry Valente, Greelcs: Linda Watts,
Seniors; Terry Eyerman, Allan Maurer, Pat Budd, Ron Shultz,
Staff:

Cherie Hall.
Sports: Bill Sanders,

Bob Schultz, Clark Ruch.

Office Aides: Jeanne Burns, Elaine Undeck, Nancy Smutny, Sherri
Kindig, Aldona Kupstas, Paulette Kramer, Donna Casale, Jacquie
Feddock, Barbara Kappler, Filomena Mitchell, Susan Mitchell,

Diane

Ide.

,'*yiwa't

faculty

and administration

.

.

.

The 1968-69 college yeai marked a turning^
point for Bloomsburg as Dr. Harvey A. Andruss,
President of BSC for the past 30 years announced
his retirement, to be effective September 1969.
During his tenure, the college grew from a State
Teachers College to a State College, with university status now within sight. Dr. Andruss has been
noted for his apt handling of financial affairs for
the college in difficult times, and his struggle to
keep state college professors' salaries competitive
with private educational institutions.
Academically, the 1968-69 year was the first
for the new departments of Economics and PoUtical Science, which were a needed and appreciated
addition to the college curricular offerings. Off to
a progressive start, the Political Science Department has outlined the framework for a student
committee to give suggestions for the betterment
of the department. This committee will help to
evaluate textbooks, courses, and help select fac-

V

ulty.

A

Journalism certificate will be offered for the
fall of 1969 to accompany the curricular expansion in this field, and a full tin
journalism professor will implement the faculty.
Expansion in the Graduate Division continued
as the History Department became the first to
offer a Master of Arts degree. Soon the departments of Biology, English, Speech, and others will
open an extensive Masters program as they defirst

time in the

'

velop.

.Kf

v.

dr.

harvey

bloomsburg

a.

andruss

state college president

1939-1969

board of trustees

.

.

Standing: Dr. Harvey A, Andruss. William E. Booth. E. Guy Bangs, Edgar A,
Fenslermacher. Howard S. Fernsler. Gerald A, Beierschmitl, J. Howard Deily,
Hon. Harold L. Paul. Vice Presidenl. William A.

Secretary Treasurer. Sealed:

Lank, President. Hon. Bernard

J.

Kelley.

DR. JOHN A. HOCH
Dean of Instruction

deans

BUCKINGHAM

ELTON HUNSINGER

BOYD

Dean of Students

Director of Development, Public Relations

F.

ROBERT NORTON
Dean of Men

DR.

MICHAEL HERBERT

Assistant

Dean of

Women

MARY

A. TOLAN
Acting Dean of Women

DR RALPH HERRE
Assistant

Dean

of

Men

RICHARD HAUPT
Assistant

Dean

of

Men

RICHARD
Assistant

P,

WETTSTONE

Dean of Men

/

ROYCE O. JOHNSON
Elementary Education

DR.

DR.

C.

STUART EDWARDS

Secondary Education

directors of curricular divisions

DR.

EMORY RARIG

Business Education

DR.

WILLIAM

L.

Special Education

JONES

DR.

ALDEN BUKER

Arts and Sciences

DR.

CHARLES

Graduate Studies

H.

CARLSON

from Cirwuia £>
by Dr. Pcrcival R. Robert
detail

IJ

administrators
Robert L. Bunge, Registrar

James

B. Creasy. Assistant to the President

Robert Davenport. Counselor
Davies, Director of Placement
Bruce Dietterick, Information Specialist

Thomas

Clarence Gourley, Assistant Director of Admissions
Robert A. Haller, Director of Publications
Russell Houk, Athletic Director
Paul Martin. Business Manager
Dr. Root E. Miller, Director of Federal Projects

John Mulka. Director of Student Activities
John Scrimgeour. Director of Financial Aid
Charles Thomas, Director of Counseling
John J. Trathen. Comptroller
John Walker, Director of Admissions

art

.

.

.

William D. Alabaugh
Sarah E. Jeffrey
Eugene Rappaport
Dr. Percival R. Roberts
Constance Ward
Kenneth T. Wilson

biology
Dr. Philip Farber
Dr. George J. Gellos
Dr. Michael Herbert

Craig

L,

Himes

Dr. Jerome

J.

Klenner

Thomas

R. Manley
Dr. Donald D. Rabb, Dept.
Stanley A. Rhodes

Chairman

Robert G. Sagar
Joseph P. Vaughn
Missing: Dr. James E. Cole
Dr. Julius R. Kroschewsky
Dr. Louis Mingone

III.

Dept. Chairman

r
"T^P^-jr

/

\

business education
Charles M. Bayler
Wiliard Christian
James B. Creasy

John

Dennen

E.

Lester

J.

Dietlerick

Bernard Dill
Doyle G. Dodson

Norman

L. Hilgar

Clayton H.

Lane

L.

Hmkel

Kemler

Kenneth Kirk
Dr. Cyril A. Lindquist
Dr. Francis Radice
Dr. Emory Rarig, Dept. Chairman
Missing; Margaret Hykes

economics
Barbara M. Dilworth
Robert P. Ross
Dr. TejBhan S, Saini, Dept.
Missing; Deake G. Porter

Chairman

education
Dr.
Iva

H.M. Afshar, Dept. Chairman

Mae

Richard

Beckley
J.

Donald

Dr. Patrick J. Foley
Howard K, Macauley,

Jr.

Kenneth A. Roberts
Dr. Gilbert R.W. Selders
Dr. Margaret M. Sponseller
Dr. Donald Vannan
Lynn A. Watson
Richard O. Wolfe
Missing: Gerroid W. Hart

english
Dale M. Anderson
Anita A. Donovan
Virginia A. Duck
William D. Eisenberg

Nancy

Gill

Dr. Charles C.

Kopp

Edwin W. Kubach
Margaret Lauer
Dorothy O. McHale
Robert G. Meeker
Alva W. Rice
Dr. Jordan Richman

Susan Rusinko
Richard C. Savage
Dr. Cecil C. Seronsy
Gerald H. Strauss, Assistant Chairman
Dr. Thoman Sturgeon
Dr. Louis Thompson, Dept. Chairman
Missing: Ronald Ferdock. David P. Rein,
William C. Roth. Dr. Janet Stamm

foreign languages
Ben C. Alter
C. Whitney Carpenter
Dr. Arthur B. Conner

II

Blaise Delnis

Mary Lou John

George W. Neel
Jacqueline Rube
Dr. Eric Smithner. Dept. Chairman
Dr. Alfred E. Tonolo
Christine T. Whitmer
Missing: Dr. Edilberto A. Marban
John A. Sawyer

geography
Dr. Bruce E. Adams
Dr. John A. Enman
Dr. Wendelin R. Frantz, Dept.
Lee C. Hopple

Brian A. Johnson

.

Chairman

.

^L
/

geography (continued)

.

James R. Lauffer
James T. Lorelli
Lavere W. McCIure
Dr. William B. Sterling
Missing: Donald L. Preston

health and
phys. ed
.

.

.

Joan Auten
Roderick Clark Boler
Jerry L. Denstorff
Russell E. Houk

Joanne
Eli

McComb

W. McLaughlin

M.

Beatrice Mettler
Dr. Clarence A. Moore, Dept. Chairman

Ronald W. Puhl
Jerry E. Thomas
Earl W. Voss

M. Eleanor Wray
Missing: Douglas Boelhouwer

Henry

history

.

.

C. Turberville, Jr.

.

Dr. Edson Drake
Dr. Hans Karl Gunther
Dr. Ralph S. Herre
Louis T. Nau
Dr. Craig A. Newion, Dept. Chairman

4^^.. M

Dr. H. Benjamin Powe
Dr. Ralph W. Sell
Dr. John J. Serff
Theodore Shanoski

Anthony

J.

Sylvester

George A. Turner
Dr. Robert D. Warren
James D. Whitmer
Missing: Richard G. Anderson
John C. Dietrich
Dr. James R. Sperry

\

library
Anthony Grillo
Ming Ming Kuo
Scott E. Miller

Janet Olsen
Dr. Hildegard Pestel

Thaddeus Piotroski

Gwendolyn Reams
Ruth Smeal
James B. Walts, Director of Library Services

mathematics
Charles M. Brennan
Leroy H. Brown
Paul G. Hartung
Robert L. Klinedinst
Joseph E. Mueller

^s^Jik^k

Ronald W. Novak

Thomas

L.

Ohl

Clinton J. Oxenrider
Charles R. Reardin, Dept. Chairman

George Stradtman
June L. Trudnak
Missing: Fred E. Beers

mental retardation
Dr. Andrew J. Karpinski
Dr. John M. McLaughlin
Dr. Emily A, Reuwsaat, Dept. Chairman
Missing: Margaret S. Webber

music

.

.

.

Jack Bemis
Dr. Alden Buker

M'kJ^

'Aa^JS

Cronin
William Decker, Dept. Chairman
Nelson Miller
Stephen Wallace
Sylvis

physical science
Dr. Barrett
P.

W. Benson

Joseph Garcia

Dr. David J. Harper
Dr. Harold Lanterman
Dr. Clyde S. Noble

Herbert H. Reichard

Tobias Scarpino

Rex

E. Selk

David A. Superdock
Dr. Wilbert A. Taebel
Dr. Norman E. White, Dept. Chairman
Stephen G. Wukovitz

political science
Charles G. Jackson
Prakash C. Kapil
Richard Micheri
Dr. Robert Rosholt, Dept. Chairman
Missing: Martin Gildea
James W. Percey

psychology
Donald R. Bashore
Barry E. Cobb
Robert H. Finks
Dr.

You-Yuh Kuo
J. Murphy

James

Dr. Merritt Sanders, Dept. Chairman
Dr. Martin Satz
Dr. Louise Seronsy
J. Calvin Wallier
Missing: Dr. E. Paul Wagner

social sciences
Dr. William L. Carlough, Dept.
Oliver J. Larmi

Chairman

Jane Plumpis

Bernard Schneck

Seymour Schwimmer
Robert Solenberger
Missing: Richard J. Brook

Avrama Gingold
Robert R. Reeder

speech

.

.

.

William A. Acierno
Richard D. Alderfer
Virginia C. Doerflinger
Erich R. Frohman
Dr. Melville Hopkins, Dept.

James A. McCubbin

kJT^

Michael J. McHale
Robert D. Richey
Janice

M. Youse

speech correction
John L. Eberhart
Dr. Margaret Lefevre, Dept. Chairman
Missing: Richard M. Smith
Dr. Alice R. Wickens

Chairman

supervisors of student teachers

Benjamin Andrews
Dr. Lee E. Aumiller, Director
Stanley T. Dubelle.

Jr.

Dr. Donald Enders
Beatrice M. Englehart

Warren

I.

Johnson

Martin M. Keller
Joel

Klingman

Dr. Ellen Lensing

Milton Levin
Margaret McCem
A. Joseph McDonnell

Jack L. Meiss

James T. Reifer
R. Edward Warden
Missing; Kenneth A. Roberts

--^-

:•

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honorary

fraternities

.

.

.

T
rfi'j

f^

Officery Russell Walsh. President. Kichiird Wjlburn. Vice President. Mary Rachko. SecretaryTreasurer. Mr. Michael McHale, Advisor.

alpha psi omega
co-educational

drama

fraternity

gamma theta upsilon
co-educational geography fraternity

Left to right: Jon Black, President, Keilh Wagner. Emil Moskovich, Greg
Kanaskie, Bernard Curran. Vice President. Louis Coassolo, Roger Fetterman. Jeffrey Taylor. Thomas Bateridge. Joseph Orzechowski, Roy Hoglund. Corresponding Secretary. Kathy Jarrard. Linda Kashimba, Recording
Secretary. Missing: Mr, Donald Preston. Advisor. Gail Wisneski. Donna
Reitz, Sandy Reichart. Charles Shupe. Charles Siarkowski. Richard Bailey,
Treasurer. Nathan McKenzie, Ruth Neiberl. Gary Reichenbach.

^'^

^r
^^=^,-j

^^
r.
Offuers:

Mr.

Anthony Sylvester and Mr. Theodore Shanoski, Advisors.

John Hamblin, President.

kappa delta

pi

co-ed honor society in education

pi

kappa delta
intercollegiate
forensic fraternity
Tim Shannon, President, Mr. Erich Frohman. Advisor, Brian McLernan. MissAlan Szymanski, Vice President, Linda Naugle, Secretary-Treasurer.

Karl Kramer,
ing:

pi

omega

pi

business

education
fraternity
Dave Feather. President David
Gloria Postupak,
Eva Reed.
Standing: Brian Dreibelbis, Bev Donchcz. Tom Bcnnyhoff. Charlotte Orndorf. Bob Hank, Dr. Rarig, Advisor.
Sealed:
Keifer,

phi alpha theta
history fraternity
Richard Keen. Standing: Thomas Chase. Karen DeSandi^,
Dolores Slavik. Recording Secretary. Robert Noone.
2nd Vice President. Silling Eilen Shultz. Cheryl IlUgasch. Kneeling: Ellen Robinson, Mary Ann Michael, 1st Vice Presidenl.

Tup

Presidenl.

sigma tau delta
english fraternity
Mary Coddington, Sharon Cravalta, Mrs. Susan Swariz,
Acting Treasurer. Standing: Dawn Wagner. Vice Presidenl. Mrs,
Elaine Mueller, Secretary, Larry Nallo. President. Miss Alva Rice.
Advisor. Missing: Bonnie Zeek. Sandy Sanford. Gail Bruch,
Robert Stoudi.
Sealed:

sigma alpha eta
Speech and hearing
fraternity
Linda Oehler. Presidenl. Linda Bell. Vice
President. Carolyn Cundiff. Secretary. Jim Riggs. TreasOfficcn
urer,

Mr. John F.bcrhart, Advisor.

The 1969 Obiier wishes

to

acknowledge the existence of the

following great and humanitarian

campus

Association of Resident

Men

organizations:

Women

Residents' Association

Day Women's Association
Day Men's Association
Amateur Radio Club
American Chemical Society
Archaeology Club
"B" Club

Bloomsburg Players
BSC Literary and Film Society
Cheerleaders

Chess Club
Circle

K

Concert Choir
Council for Exceptional Children
Forensic Society

German Club
Harmoneltes
Huski Club
International Relations Club
Bloomsburg Flying Club
Le Circle Francais

Madrigals

Maroon and Gold Band
Mathematics Club
Philosophy Club
Physics Club
Science Club
Spanish Club
Student
Studio

PSEA

Band

Varsity Club

Veterans Association

Young Republicans Club

Maybe

next year they will even get their pictures

But not

this year.

organizations

in the

.

yearbook.

.

.

athletics

.

.

.

w

Isl

row:

harl.

Derr. Bruce
Forcheski.

Bill

Norm

krammes, Dave

Shell.

Roy Smay. Art

Sell.

Jim Bonnacci. Mike Barn-

2nd row: Bill Nagy. Greg Berger. Don Schaedler. Daryl Swan, Ed Petkas. Ron Christina. Joe
Lyons, John Slutzman.
3rd row: Bob Hall. Mike Kolojejchrk. Bill Firesline. Hal Barretts, Jerry Walborn. Gerald
Lastowski. Terry Lessman, Ernie Vedral.
4th row: Tom Little. Tom Schneider. Jim McCue. Mike Holland, Tom Miller. Mark Sacco,

Hugh Jones. Lamar Kersletter.
5th row: Larry Rumbel, Steve Harmanos. Paul Skrimcovsky. John Rossi. John Davis. Marv
Serhan. Dave Bernoski, Joe Botliglieri.
6th row: Paul Calderone. mgr.. Cecil Turberville. offensive line coach. Jerry Densdorff. head
coach, Ron Puhl, offensive backfield coach. Dick Haupl. end coach. Clark Boler. defensive line
coach.
Missing: Martin Cipolla, Frank Matthews, Doug Boelhouwer. defensive backfield coach.



Date

cross country

men were led by
Moyer and Chuck Bowman in

This year's marathon
Charlie

what could have been a great season. But
the team didn't jell because they were
never able to gel into top shape.
Unfortunately all the runners were not
running well together until the last meets

when they defeated King's and Luzerne
by wide margins. Well liked by all members of the team was the personable new
Noble, who kept smiling
through a bizarre year, punctuated by the
coach, Clyde

team getting

lost

on the turnpike,

dentally finding itself

Thanksgiving

parade

in

acci-

the midst of a

behind

a

steam

and visiting Cheyney to meet
track team that had already gone home.
calliope,

a

Scaled ifrniil to havki: Charles Moyer, George
Cooke, Mike Horbal. Charles Bowman. SfondTom Henry. Jim Carlin, Dave Keher,
inK'.
Coach Clyde Noble.

BSC

Dale
Sept.

30

Opponent

^

There were many high points

for this year's hoopsters. Jim Dulaney
46 points against Lock Haven to erase the individual scoring record in one game by Dick Lloyd. Palmer Toto, the other graduating senior, led the team once again in assists, and provided the key
to the fast break which worked so well toward the end of the season.
Mark Yanchek. who started the season on the bench, ended the year

poured

in

being one of the leading scorers for the Huskies.

He

scored a high of

were 30 points down in the last quarter but by sheer desire, a great
running attack, and the shooting of Larry Monaghan and Bob Snyder,
they beat the Maurauders by eight points.
Cheyney was the game the team wanted most to win. But they
didn't. Bloomsburg froze the ball in the first half, hoping to keep the
score close. In the second half. Bloomsburg caught Cheyney by surprise

and forged

28 against Millersville.

regained the lead.

The most exciting game of the season was one which not many fans
had the opportunity to see. Playing Millersville away, the Huskies

ney won by one.

But later in the game Cheyney
few breaks went against the Huskies and Chey-

a three point lead.

A

Date

:r:rr

44
4t'^'Cl

SltinJinn:

Coach Russ Houk. Arnold Thompson. Robert Janet. James Owen, Lester Wallace. Vincent Christina. James McCue. John Slulzman,
Ron Russo. Kncelinfi: John Weiss, Wayne Smythe. Larry Sones. Wayne Heim. Keith Taylor, Michael Schull.

Russell Scheuren. Richard Lepley.

/iM/

Blucc Bcndel. Henry Pcplowskl. Kerry HolTm.m. Willi.im Manner, hilwin Beidler
Ron Brown. Dave Keller. Gary Hilz. Roberl High. Tim ( arr. Coach Hi McR..ir
Vincenl Shihan, Kil McNerlney. lee Barlhokl. Roberl McCToiky.
Houston. William Konner. Ralph Moerschhacher.

Ri.ii

S,r,i,:il

R.iu

Laughlin,

Thomas

Tliiiil

track

Ritw One: John Luczysyn, Dave Smilhers. Greg Berger. John Reeve. Tom Houston. RomTwo: Coach Puhl. Tom Troup. Tom Henry. Charles Bowman. Dave Keller, John Master.
Row Three: Bob Malukailus, John Davis. Rich Geise. Rich Brand. Mark Yanchek. Row
Foitr: Jim Carlin. Mike Horbal. Steve Ryznar. Jim Cavallero. Craig Sholwell. Tim Bittner.

BSC
April 15

Kneeling: Jeff Miller. Dale Houck. Tom Clewell. Doyle KlJnger. Jim Faulh. SliinJing:
Worley. Dwighl Ackerman. Coach Burl Reese. Gerald Fulmer. Charles Hess,

An
.

BSC
April 14

tennis

Don DeiHerick, Ron Magargle. Frank Mastroianiii, Drive Smilh, Jue Accardi, Wally Smith. Daniel
Dennis Weir; Bait. Run: Coach Clark Boler. Tom FIceger. Gary Bloom. Eric Landers. Bill Derr. Bill
Houser. Sieve Klinger. Rich Gatchell. Vance Moyer. Dave Moharter. Tom Sullivan. Ken Payer.
Front Run:

Zilo,

BSC

Opp.

April 15

Kulztown

April 19
April 22

Shippensburg
Mansfield

April 24

MillersviUe

4

April 26

Lock Haven

6
2

April 30

E. Slroudsburg

5

May

Mansfield

3

I

(cancelled)
(cancelled)

1

9

May

6

Lock Haven

I

May

8

Kutztown

3

1

double header

Bob Simons. Ed Masich, John Marshall. Head Coach Jerry Thomas,

golf

.

BSC

.

April 16

Tom Castrilli. JJm

Mayer. Bob Snyder.

WMl

campus 1969

>

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The

growing campus acquired two new
academic year. Elwell Hall is named
after a family that gave the college three generations of
service, beginning with Judge William EIwcll, who served
constantly

facilities

this past

from 1868

as a trustee of the school

to 1887. His son
and as President of the
board. George E. Elwell. Jr.. a grandson of the judge, was
an instructor in French from 1913 to 1920.

George

also served as a trustee

Elwell Hall

the largest college men's dormitory in the

is

Pennsylvania, accomodating 672 men, and offices
for the Dean of Men and his staff, recreation rooms,

stale of

rooms and storage areas within

lounges, T.V. rooms, study

nine stories.

its

It

the first high-rise structure to be

is

completed on campus, and the first hint of cosmopolitan
growth which the expansion of the college will inevitably
bring to the area.

The completion of Hartline Science Center

in

January

of 1969 marked another step forward in providing the
students
ties.

o\'

BSC

laboratories for

ment

with modern, up-to date academic

The building

facili-

contains, in addition to 22 classrooms,

departments of science.

all

On

the base-

animal room, a dark-room, an

floor there are an

On the ground floor
rooms each seating more than

isatope vault, and a mechanical room.
there are three large lecture

100 students, a botany honors

lab, a physics

honors

lab,

The

first

a micro-techniques lab, and a general physics lab.
floor contains three

faculty offices,

lecture rooms,

two seminar rooms,

three zoology honors labs, three general

zoology labs, a walk-in refrigerator room, and an ampitheatre seating

up

to

300

students.

The second

floor in-

cludes an analytical and chemistry lab. an organic chemistry lab,

an earth science

lab, a

chemistry honors

lab,

and

general chemistry labs. Also on this floor are seminar and
lecture rooms, a balance

room, and a spectroscope room.

Telescope mounting apparatus are located on the roof of
the building
scientic

in

anticipation of funds to finance further

equipment. Although Hartline Science Center

an architectural labyrinth, the structure
valuable addition to the

BSC

campus.

is,

is

nevertheless, a

greeks

.

.

.

*ft.

t-^

cm

Sigma
want to

vct;ui^aiu
lakes me

.

VCCT Deer Iflc
sigma iota omega
twent
iree skidoo
pledge
delta epsilon beta
me>
interfraternity council
's house
brotherize
delta pi
spaghetti dinner
banquet
thet
fund raising project ... pi kappa eps
amma phi
orphan
alpha phi omega
)n
party
ra
chi sigma rho ... sis boom bah
ih rah
phi sij
greek week
sisterhood
la xi
tau sigma \
ii
founder's day
stone castle
beta sig
*^i

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lams

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amurals

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clambake

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intersororit

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big man on campus
delta omega chi
riar heights
sweetheart of sigma chi
oh it
ser beer beer that makes me want to
sigma iol
pledge
dell
mega
twenty three skidoo
interfraternity coui
3silon beta
meyers house
spaghetti dinner
1
delta pi
brotherized
fund raising projec
anquet
theta gamma phi
alpha pi
party
orphan
pi kappa epsilon
mega
rah rah rah ... chi sigma rho ... sis booi
sisterhood
greek week
ah
phi sigma xi
founder
lu sigma pi
beta sig
stone castle
)uncil

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1 «'^ 4-

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-V

1

1.

2.

,

Joan Stepanitis

Boby Lou Cramer

3.

PattieQuinn

4.

Candy Heath

5.

7.

Lovey Kompinski
Sharon Kraft
Pat Dougherty

8.

Mary Ann Harlman

6.

9.

10.
11.
12.

Peggy Welsh
Marsha Henderson
Carol Rees
Joyce Chapin

Lappen

13.

Fuji

14.

Cherie Goodman
Cindie McAllister

15.
16.
17.
18.
19.

Ruth Keris, Corr. Sec.
Sharon Pinkerton
JudyClapps
Marsha Carpenter
June Whitmore
Linda Lyle, Rec. Sec.
Beth Wolfe
Cinde Rogers, V.P.
Gail Thorpe
Nancy Dornhein

20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26. Doris Haire
27. Terry Valente, Pres.
28. Kathy Sandier

Absent:
Bernie Obzut
Nancy Geiger
Chris Gruss

Karen Saunders
Kathy Mullen
Judy Henry
Cindy Fischer
Glenann Zeigenfuse

theta

gamma phi

obiter picture contest winner

1.

2.
3.

4.
5.

6.
7.

Margaret Bussa
Debbie Fenstermacher
Kathy Richards

Donna Colvello
Karen Dowse
Sharon Nesler

Maureen McAndrew

Zimmerman

8.

Pris

9.

Linda Stau
Ronnie Griebel
Mary Walton

10.

11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.

Ann

Gilmariin

SueBurk
Lois Lufkin
Kathy Beting

Snyder
PatGranteed
Phyllis

Lorraine Shema
19. Traci Treacy
20. Vickie Hoffman
18.

21. Mary StulLz
22. BarbDagle
23. Debbie Runyan
24. SueCassel
25. Linda Malinski
26. Peggy Thomas
27. PatLeiby
28. Debbie Engleman
29. Grace Nazarenko
30. Karen Bennett
31. Linda Carlson
32. Anita DeLance
33. Jennie Troutman, Hist.
34. SueHaupt. 1st V.P.
35. MoniqueCavalliero, Corr.
Sec.
36- Nancy Strauss
37. Barb Porecca, Pres.
38. Mrs. Rube. Adv.

Absent:

Marcy Ziemba
Elaine Onuschak
Donna Reed
Sandy Ekbeg
Carol Berry

Barb Russell
Linda Matty
Linda Cressman
Kathy Owen
Cheri Ziegler
Josie Malelsky
Diane Carlson
Jean Moulder

Tracy DeRenzis

Nanc^ Thomas
Antoinette Girio
Bette Harrison
Pat Buiocchi

Peg Yatsko
Suzanne Ulrich
Gloria Postupack
Kathy Ellmaker
Linda Oehler

lambda alpha

mu

.

.

.

1.

Connie Lowe

2.

Anita Dellario
Helen McAndrews
Beih Snyder
Carol Munch
Terry Horvath
Sue Steinmelz
Fran Arre. CoiT. Sec.
Kate Hospador

3.

4.
5.

6.
7.
8.
9.

10.
1

1.

12.
13.

14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.

20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.

Marion Kubesak
Judy Baumer
Kathy Prokopy
Joni Ladomirak
Bev Sylvester

Midge Orevitz
Maryann Leshanski
Sandy Smith
Sandy Marasco
Kathy Wintersteen

Pam Nicholas
Terry Wisdo
Carolyn Cundiff. Dir.
Andrea Zukowski
Donna Baum, Pres.
Jean Fronk

Nancy

Kless

Linda Dougherty

tau sigma pi
28. Annette Slusky
29. PriscillaSpivak. V.P.
30. Helen Olanowich
31. Peggy Rood. Diarist
32. Sharon Baer
33. Barb Steinhart, Rec. Sec.
34. Jeanetle Hall
35. Pat Ashworth
36.

MarcyZiemba

37.
38.

Linda Verano. Treas.
Sue Warrick
Absent:
Cheryl McAloose
Sharon Wenner

Karen Grubb
Mrs. Lauer, Adv.

chi sigma rho
1.

I.

2.
3.
4.
5,

6.
7.
8.

9.

10.
II.
12.
13.
14.

Joan Kelly. Hist.
Gloria Molnar
Robin Rothe, IstV.P.
Penny Hull
Judy Knapp
Sandy Trapani

Donna Kennedy
Bonnie Zone
Trudy Soprano
Sue Ochs
Linda Baker. Rec. Sec.
Brenda Witman
Kathy Welsh
Vicki Gross, 2nd V.P.

16.

Jo-Ellen Walsh
Mary Ann Natale

17.

Donna Euro

15.

Ann Confalone

18.

Rose

19.

Gina Hitcho, Treas.

20. Filomena Mitchell
21. Lyne Heffner
22. Jodi Kohler
23. Betsy Ross. Sgl.-at-Arms
24. Bonnie Rinehimer
25. Carol Bihier
26. Fran Handy.

Pledgemistress
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.

Ginny Rauchut
Judy Adonizio
Becky Ward, Pres.
Gail Binns
Rita

May

Karen Calisto
Diane Melkowski
Bethanne Valentino
Betsy Bruner
Nancy Nieminski
Robin Righter
Lois Gonaver
Sharon Yuraka
Pat Swartz
Justine O'Donnell
Terri Gheradini
Maria Pellegrino

Vera Kovalich
Kathy Colihan
Ginny Piledgi
Cathy Snyder
Kathy Wallwork
June Eble
Cindy Sharretts
Gail Logan
Connie Keller
Karen Laubach

54. Carta Eyer

Absent:

Kathy Dagger
Carol Gibiser

Kae Gough
Linda Hellerman
Debbie Jones
Barb Klepac. Corr. Sec.
Ruth Koons
Carole Lappen

Anne McDonough
Phyllis Rupp

delta epsilon beta

.

pi epsilon chi

0. Jack Martin
,

.

.

,

.

g.

obiter picture contest winner

Chip Dollman
Chuck Leo
Denny Frymoyer
Denny Bloom
George Sonoo
BobGuigley,
Treiis.

Steve KItnger

Ron Sekellick, Pn
Don Helwig, Corrf
Sec,

Harry Berkhciser.i
12.

V.P.
Peie Foschetti.
Sec.

Jerry Pries
14. Pete Perlow
13.

Mr. William
Acierno.
Adviser
.

John Wolk

Dan

Barretts

Re^

delta

omega

chi

.

.

I
/ -J)

i^

J^

ir-

lea

t

^

>*»

mm

.Wi':

m&rM^

1

^-

kai?^^'
honorary mention



obiter picture contest

delta pi
1.

Mike Dugan

beta sigma delta

John Dasch
Bill

Lewis, Hist.

John Luczyszyn, Treas.
Bob Beam, Sgt. at Arms

Tom

Beier



Ken Dugan
Ed Austin

Corr. Sec.

Bruce Harding
Art Worley
Denny Lesko,

Speaker

the House
Dave McDermott
Gary Metarko
Bill Murray

Tom

Wisler

Bob Wynne,

Pres.

Willie Jones. Rec. Sec.
Paul Monaghan
Dr. Jones, Adv

Lynn Lomas
Buddy Steppling
Absent:
Rich Anderson, V.P.

Bob

Phillips

Larry Soans
John Parker
Bob Matteson
Terry Shoener
Fred Garvey
John Charles

.

1.

Jerry Perotti, Hist.

2.

Harold Zofkin
William Bennett
William Dorneman

3.

4.
5.

6.
7.

8.

Dave Smithers
Eugene Cioffi
William Parker
William Evans

10.

Charles Bowman
Robert Maddon

11.

Blair

12.

Robert Brown
Doyle Klinger

9.

13.
14.

Monie

Dave Schaeffer

15.

Robert Harris

16.

James Reichart. Rec.

Sec.

17.

Rick Williams

18.

Mike Engles. Sgt.-at-Arms
Mike Puhack

19
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.

TomYerger.

3rd. V.P,

Dale Beaver
Terry Burns, Alumni Sec.
Jack Hannon

Ted Irwin
Gary Bennett
James Riefenstahl
Daniel Bobeck
Absent:

Stephen Foltz. Pres.
Marshall Mehring, 1st V.P.

WilliamMurphy. 2nd V.P.
James Pail. Treas.
Joe Pail. Corr. Sec.

John Walchonski
Joe Prokay

JohnQuinn

Tom Chase
Robert Stroble

James Meehan
Robert Hochlander
Robert Boyer

Ken

Splitt

Ed Hess

Tom
Tom

Bender
Baily

Charles

Bowman

alpha phi omega

.

.

.

.

1.

Paul Drozic

2.

Jim McDonald, V.P.

3.

Tom

4.
5.

6.

Breznitsky, Corr. Sec.
MikePillagalli

Chuck Fealherstone
Dale Carmody, Rec.

7.

Jim Gavin,

8.

Tom

9.

10.

Bob

Sec.

Hist.

Bateridge
Colahan. Treas.

Jake Ripa

12.

Bernie Hanlon
Rich Lepley, Sgt.-at-Arms

13-

Jim Warnagiris

1

1.

Mark Ferraro
Craig Pancoe
Dennie Bishop
17. Fred Keiser
18. Wayne Kresge
19. John Carter
20. George Jones
Dave Sosar
21
14.
15.

pi

kappa epsilon

16.

.

.

.

22.
23.
24.

John Mears
John Lazar

Gene McGee,

Spkr. of the

House
25. Dave Kozma, Pres.
26. Mr. James Lauffer,
27. Bill Harris

Absent:
Bill

Andres

Dave Geltzer
Chris Tomlinson
Jay Hollinger
Charlie Boland
Ken Stanton

Adv.

phi sigma xi
1.

2.
3.

Chip Gamble
Jim Bubb
Ed Beidler

23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.

4. Jeff Miller, Pres.
5.

DanZito

6.
7.

John Lawrence
CarlUrbas

8.

TimCarr

JimMcCabe
Ron Buckley
Jim Flynn. Corres.
Rick Bush
JackWylie
Dave Price
Tom True

9.

Dave Blackman

Absent:

10.

Jerry Edwards
Neil McSweeny

John Hutchings
John Burwell
John Ritter

11.
12.
13.
14.
15.

John Cramer
Jack Graf

19.

20.
21.
22.

Danny Difeo
Ted Lawson
George Calvert

17.

18.

Bruce Bendle

Dan Murphy,

Pete Gatski
Jerry Morgan

Roger Lehnowsky
Tom Wilson
Mark Yanchek, V.
JimCarlin

16.

Sec.

Treas.

Mike Seksinsky
Rich Dura
Pres.

Joe Lauginiger
Gary Schmidt, Rec. Sec.

BobSchultz
Chick Kishbaugh
Mr. Brook, Advisor

V;^^.'

.-r

2,

Randy Hess. Pres.
Pat Slavin. Sgt. at Arms

3-

Jim Wallace

4.

Dr. Warren. Adv,
John Rossi
Jim Bonacci

1.

5.

6.
7.
8.
9.

10.

Randy Reich
Fran DeAndrea. Rec.
Ed McKay
Jim Smith

13.

Jon Black. Corr. Sec.
Russ Anstead
Frank Mastroianni

14.

Denny Weir

15.

Art Sell

11.

12.

16.

RonSchultz

17.
19.

Mark Piazza
Wayne Heim, Hist.
Tony Pusaten. V,P,

20.
21.

Dave Moharter
Lenny Diehl

18.

Sec.

Absent:

John Carney. Pledge
Master

Bob High
John Williams, Treas.
Dave Arnold
Larry Monaghan
Bill Mastropietro
Palmer Toto

Dave Shell
Dave Boster
Bob Wilson
Rich Bergey
Deubler

Bill

Greg Yocky
Colen Hannings
Dwight Ackerman
Howie Lewis
Greg Viola
Charles Huckel
Bob Mellor

Ed MacKay

sigma

iota

omega

from berkeley
An

to

bloomsburg

.

.

.

interview with Patrick J. Foley, Associate Professor of Education at BSC from 1968 to 1969, by Toni
Matulis.

As he said in one of his letters: "Oh, yes, the University has a great
man in philosophy, but how often do you get to see him? You have to
make an appointment three weeks in advance. Then the secretary will
probably cancel it about a week before you get there because the man is
in

New York

so on." Savio said
in the

book or meeting a deadhne for a publisher, and
the only time you see him is sitting rows and rows up

writing a

amphitheatre.

him once

or twice a

You need

a pair of binoculars to see him.

week delivering

And

is

ism

so

— an

cessed.
the

it

"Do

was

not bend, fold or mutilate me.

I

am

the call of the humanist in an age not

a

human

being."

marked by human-

age marked by the computer in which the students are pro-

The

students are seen as mindless entities to be pushed through

academic treadmill, and out they go with

their degrees.

Mario Savio

have a tremendous respect for Savio. But unfortunately,

I

think the

revolution has fallen into the hands of the nihilists, the irrationalists,
those

those

who want to throw bombs for the sake of throwing bombs, and
who have recoursed to violence. This is not the rational discourse

and persuasive methods

A. Definitely.
Q. Did you see the transition at Berkeley when you were there from the
genuine, sincere desire for reform to what is now generally seen in the

pubHc's mind as an irrational student movement

to gain

power which

they don't really need?

saw

the disintegration.

me; you must take my word as
began to occur, I think, in Berkeley

to

were also the neo-Trotsky-ites, neo-Marxists of one kind
who do not want to reform the institution, but
rather who want to burn it down and destroy it. As a result, you have the
open confrontations with faculty and with administrators. So this ele-



students

ment of violence, shall we say, this non-democratic element, probably
began about 1966-67 with the entrance of the S.D.S., Third World
Liberation Front, especially at San Francisco State. This is another aspect of the movement running Red. or irrational, as like to put it. These
no
S.D.S., Third World Liberation Front, black militants
students
1





major reforms of the institutions. If they
do wish change, they want to bring it about by violence with the use of
machine guns and hand grenades. I see striking parallels between the
trators in order to bring about

destruction of the universities

in

Germany

in the

I

recall

1930's with the rise of

one hand and the Nazis on the other, and the
violence 1 see on the campuses today.
The university today is a very visible and vulnerable social institution,
and while it may not be destroyed, it can be seriously impaired by the
violent elements in the society. In other words, academic freedom is en-

Communists on

the

dangered because of these

nihilists

who

are attacking the foundations of

society, but they're leveling their charges against the university, run

white

establishment

that

is

racist,

that

is

hypocritical, ad infinitum, ad nauseam. But

one pleasant afternoon in
1967 as I was walking from the bookstore through the campus, I stopped
and heard a young orator. I think he was a student, or an ex-student. He
was speaking to a group of about 200 people, screaming incoherently,
trying to make his points and put them across. This student was a follower of Mao Tse-t'ung, and he believed that the end-all and the be-all.
the way the truth, and the light, came from Peking. He was a die-hard
I

listen

the kind of thing that

there

or another

the

that Savio counselled.

Q. Originally, then, you sympathized with the movement?

A. Yes ...

Then

is

longer wish to engage in rational dialog with faculty or with adminis-

said that's not education. That's training.
I

"You must

very dogmatic:
in 1966-67.

kind of an education

comings that are apparent in the great urban universities which are
anonymous, cold, impersonal. And what Mario Savio was saying in es-

And

to destroy rational dialog because he thinks he has the truth.

a lecture before a couple of thouhell

He wants
He was

words, he wants to destroy the fabric of America by revolution.

truth." This

so he was pointing out that, plus a lot of other specific short-

sence was,

irrational.

hear

sand students. Savio was saying: "What the
this?"

You

To my way of thinking, this student was profoundly
But more important than that was the fact that he attempted
to subvert democratic principles and democratic procedures. In other
Chinese Communist.

with the

way

capitalistic,
I

am

by a

materialistic,

really disillusioned

the student revolution has run. Initially,

I

think

I

gave

whole-hearted intellectual assent to the cause for which Mario Savio was
destroyed. And he was destroyed academically. The Regents have passed
an informal agreement that Mario Savio will never agam be allowed to
matriculate at any public university
the student

who

in

the state of California

got the whole thing going, and

now

.

.

he's finished.

.

This

is

«

Kennedy

There

another element in this whole student revolution

is

The Black Panthers,

militants.



the black

developed in Oakland,
1965-66. So today you have

for example,

which is a neighboring town of Berkeley, in
two forces two groups trying to bring about change in a violent manner: the black militants on the one hand, and the S.D.S. and the Third
World Liberation Front on the other. The white radicals and the black



militants are the props of the student revolution.

Q. Both these elements are lacking at Bloomsburg. Where would you say
that

Bloomsburg

A. First of

all,

I

is

in this student evolution-into-revolution?

coming from Berkeley

think that

to

Bloomsburg,

have

I

run the course from the twenty-first century into the nineteenth century.
I

slopped

in

century. But

— perhaps

Massachusetts for a while
I

think that

have lived

I

that

is

the twentieth

in three centuries in less

than a

year.

Rudolph

Professor

future in the present.

Williams said that California represents the
future of this civilization is now going on in a
California. I would say that Berkeley is probably
at

The

micro-cosmic way in
in the vanguard of the California culture of the twenty-first century. But
I see reverberations of this California ethic
it's even difficult to say





no

can see this profoundly affecting
American civilization in the next ten to twenty years.
Specifically, with respect to Bloomsburg, I can see quick changes
coming in the next two or three years with the influx of certain kinds of
students to Bloomsburg. In the past, I think Bloomsburg had students
it's

an ethic

it's

really

ethic.

I

dents

who

are not at



backgrounds

stu-

are sort of intimidated by the whole intellectual process.

They

coming almost exclusively from small towns,

home

ideas for the

rural

with ideas. They are being introduced to the world of

first

time in their

lives.

Perhaps one can sympathize with

some cases a fear. But in any event, I see in the
Bloomsburg enrolls more students coming from Philadelphia,

their reticence, almost in

future, as

Harrisburg, Pittsburgh, our urban centers, along with a greater percent-

age of black students, the changes will
If for

example, you have

come

quickly.

in the future, let's

say in two years, about 50

black students, and maybe a dozen members of S.D.S., this

is

all

you

some dramatic changes. This has been
the pattern of rapid change, and at some institutions, violence. For
example, at Harvard less than 200 S.D.S. and black militants were involved in the confrontation at Cambridge. The same was true at Columneed,

it

seems

bia, Brandeis,

to

me,

to initiate

Chicago, and San Francisco Stale.

taking place at Bloomsburg

in

I

can possibly see

about two or three years.

this

.2??w

Oi
SIX

CENTS



i

n.

»

UNITED STATES

Sl>

alma mater
Far above the river winding
Midst the mountains grand,
Stands our college, dear to students
Far throughout the land.

Far and wide though we may 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 Bloomsburg

goes.

Chorus:

Bloomsburg, Bloomsburg, Bloomsburg College
Up on College Hill;

Years

to

come

True

to

shall find us ever

Bloomsburg

still.

class of

1969

.

.

P^

d7k
ROBERT K. ACE
Business

Accounting

BARBARA
ACKERSON
Elementary
French

M£M

JUDITH ADONIZIO

DAVID

Elementary
Art

Special Education

Business

Speech Correction

Accounting

S.

ALLEN

JT^ 4t^

JOS.

BAINBRIDGE

WILLIAM ANDRES

JAMES BENDER

DONNA BENJAMIN

ROBERT BENNETT

Secondary
History and Gov't.

Elementary
Art

Elementary

hm^

Elementary

THOMAS
BENNYHOFF

Geography

Business

WILLARD BENNETT

Physical Ed.

BEVERLY BERGER
Elementary
Psychology

Accounting

RICHARD BERGEY

GENE BERKHEIMER

ALLAN BERRY

Secondary

Elementary

Secondary

English

Geography

Social Studies

^^

CAROL BIHLER

GAILBINNS

PAMELA BIXLER

DAVID BLACKMAN

M

Special Education

Elementary
French

Business

Elementary

Elementary

Elementary

Secretarial

Math

English

Biology

Speech Correction

C.

BLOSCHOCK

1^

^4%fe
ANTHONY BOGDEN

SYLVIA BOBLICK

WILLIAM BRENNAN

DONNA BRIOR

BONNIE BROBST

Liberal Arts

Elementary

Secondary

Biology

History

English

^k ^k 4ili
ROGER BROBST

ROBERT BROCKi

EUGENE BROKUS

Secondary

Secondary

Social Studies

Social Studies

Secondary
French

BARBARA BROWN

^
ANN

L.

BUCKLEY

kT

^

ANN LOUISE BUCKLEY.
BUDD, 209

R.D. No.

4, Danville. Pa.;

PATRICIA JEAN

Stelko Ave.. Phillipsburg. N.J.. Obiler 3.4: Literary and Film

RONALD

Society 3; Psychology Club 1 ; Dorm Council 3;
LEE BUFFINGTON. 24 Carolyn St.. Harrisburg, Pa.. Business Club; Varsity Club; Golf;
L. BUGGY. P.O. Box 29, Shamokin. Pa. 17872, Sigma Alpha Eta

ANNA

PATRICIA ANN BUIOCCHI. 813 Price St.. Dickson City. Pa.,
Bloomsburg Players 1; Student PSEA 3, Hospitality Comm. 1,2; Newman
Club 1,2; Lambda Alpha Mu 2,3,4; Le Cercle Francais 2,3; DONNA
MARIE BURO, 27 Center St., Bemardsville, N.J.. Delta Epsilon Beta 3,4;
Freshmen Orientation Staff 2,3; Le Cercle Francais 1; Newman Club 1;
Intramurals 3; RONALD LEE BURROWS, 922 E. Kase St., Shamokin,
Pa., Chess Club 3; Math Club 3; EDWARD MICHAEL BURTSAVAGE,
915 E. Third St., Berwick, Pa., BasketbaU 3,4; MICHAEL THOMAS
BUTLER, 343 Center St., Milton, Pa. 17847, Basketball I; Intramurals
1,2,3; TIMOTHY ALLEN CAIN, 202 Pine St., Berwick, Pa., Bloomsburg
Players 2; THELMA MARIE CANNISTRA, 103 S. Franklin St.. Shamokin, Pa., Newman Club 1,2; Sigma Alpha Eta 3,4; Archeology Club 2,3,4;
PAUL W. CANOUSE JR., R.D. No. 2, Berwick, Pa., Phi Beta Lambda
1,2.3,4; Day Men's Association 1,2,3, Secretary 4; MARY LYNN CANTAFIO, 735 Willow St., Scranton, Pa., Phi Beta Lambda 1,2,3,4; Bloomsburg Players I; Newman Club 1,2,3,4; KANDACE ANN CAPUTO, 1209
Walnut St., Allentown, Pa., Bloomsburg Players 1,3; Newman Club; JOHN
ANTHONY CARESTIA, 142 W. Main St., Bloomsburg, Pa., Freshmen
Orientation Staff 1; Varsity Club 1; Newman Club 2; Football 3; Intramurals 2; MARY DIANE CARLSON, 516 Juniper St., Quakertown, Pa.,
Student PSEA; Lambda Alpha Mu 2,3,4; CGA Hospitality; Newman Club
1,2; Intramurals 2,3; JOHN MICHAEL CARNEY. 55 Goldengate Rd..
3.4;

JOHN

P.

CERNANSKI

NANCY

L

CHAMONI

THOMAS C CHASE

Liberal Arts

Elementary

Secondary

Political Science

History

History

Levittown, Pa. 19057, Varsity

Qub

3,4; Basketball

1,2,3,4; Intramurals;

Sigma Iota Omega; MARSHA HANNAH CARPENTER, 604 Ave. L.,
Matamoras, Pa., Student PSEA 2; Theta Gamma Phi 3,4, Recording Secre-

MARSHALL CHILDS

EVA

Secondary

Special Education

WILLIAM
CHRISTIAN

Math

Speech Correction

Liberal Arts

B

CHITTY

Psychology

tary 3, I.S.C Rep. 3;

DONNA LYN CARSON, 1527 Burkhardt St., HellerI; CGA Publicity Comm.; Bloomsburg Players

town, Pa. 18055, Obiler

Mu 2,3,4; Huski Club 1,2;
584 James St., Hazleton, Pa., Maroon
and Gold 2,4, Assist. Copy Ed. 3; CGA Awards Comm. 1,2,3,4, Chairman
2,3,4; Bloomsburg Players 1; Physics Club 2; Student PSEA I; JOHN
PRIME CARTER, 60 N. Sheridan St.. McAdoo, Pa., Pi Kappa Epsilon 4;
Swimming 1; FRANCES RITA CASEINO, 413 Vine St., Emporium, Pa.,
Bloomsburg Players 1; Newman Club 1,2; THOMAS F. CASTRILLI, 92
Geneva Street, Bath, N.Y., Phi Beta Lambda 3,4; Varsity Club 3,4; Newman Club 1,2; Golf 1,2,3,4; Intramurals 1,2; CHARLES DAVID CELLI,
302 Park Blvd., Berwick, Pa.; American Chemical Society 3,4; Bloomsburg Players
JOHN PATRICK CERMANSKI, 100 Merion Ave., West
NewConshohocken, Pa.; German Club
International Relations Club
man Club 3; Wrestling 2; Huski Qub I; NANCY L. CHAMONI, 913
Wheeler Ave., Scranton, Pa.; Bloomsburg Players 1,2; Student PSEA 3.4;
PSEA

1,2,3,4; Student

3,4;

Lambda Alpha

JAMES LAWRENCE CARTER,

1

;

1

1

;

;

THOMAS C. CHASE,

150 W. Avenue, Mount Carmel, Pa.; MARSHALL
I, Montgomery, Pa. 17752; Science Club 2; EVA
Concert Choir 1,2,3;
Bloomsburg Players 1,2; Sigma Alpha Eta 1,2,3,4; WILLIAM CHARLES
CHRISTIAN, 600 South Front Street, Sunbury, Pa., Veteran's Association
3.4; Intramurals 3,4; Psychology Club 3,4; DALE A. CLARK, R.D. 2,

CRAIG CHILDS,
DALE A CLARK

ROGER A.CLARK

CAROL A COAKLEY

Secondary

Liberal Arts

Biology

Geography

Elementary
Psychology

B.

CHITTY,

Berwick,

R.D.

12 Richardson Ave., Wakefield, Mass.

,

Alpha Phi Omega 3,4; Freshman Orientation Staff 2;
244 Fourth St., Northumberland, Pa., Intra-

Pa.,

ROGER ALAN CLARK,
murals 3;

Broad

St.,

Day Men's Association 4; CAROL ANN COAKLEY,
Nescopeck, Pa., Student PSEA 4; International Relations Club
444 W. Main St., Bloomsburg, Pa., Obiter 2; Phi
i

CARL JAMES COBB,
Beta

Lambda

1,2,3,4; Student

PSEA

3,4; Phi

Sigma

Pi 3,4; Wrestling

1,

JOHN ALAN COOPER,

664"
Kindred St., Philadelphia, Pa., Literary and Film Society 3,4; Bloomsbv g
Players 4; Freshman Orientation Staff 2,4; Intramurals 1,2,3,4; C,
Intramurals

1,2;

Psychology Club

2;

Committees, Hospitality 1, Social Recreation 1,2, Orientation 3, Big Name
Entertainment 1,2,3,4, Pep Club 1,2; Football Manager 3; Psychology
Club 1; TANA GAIL COOPER, 115 Qinton Street, Danville, Pa., Le
Cercle Francais

CARL J COBB

JOHN A COOPER

TANA G COOPER

Business

Secondary

Accounting

English

Elementary
French

1,2.

RALPH COPE

RALPH EDWARD COPE, 49 Tamaqua St., Audenreid, Pa. 18213,
SARAH JANE COPELAND, R.D. No. 3, Coates-

Veteran's Association 4;

NANCY

ville. Pa.;
LOUISE CRAFT, R.D. No. 1, Hughesville, Pa. 17737,
LOUISE CRAMER, Old Farm Rd.,
Student PSEA 1,3,4;
Bedminster, N.J.,
and G Band 1; CEC 1,2,3,4; Theta Gamma Phi 2,4,
CRAVEN, 279 Broadway, TurbotTreasurer 3 ISC 3 ALBERT
ville. Pa., Student PSEA 4; Le Cercle Francais 1,2; Intramurals 1; LINDA
CRESSMAN, 396 California Rd., Quakertown, Pa., Concert Club
1,2,3, Secretary 3; Freshmen Orientation Staff 3; Lambda Alpha Mu 2,3,
CRIM, 139
Vice-Pres. 3; Madrigal Singers 2,3; DENNIS
Columbia Ave., Bloomsburg, Pa., Alpha Phi Omega 2,3,4; Football 1;
Wrestling I; Tennis 2,3,4; Intramurals 2,3,4;
Homecoming Comm.;

BARBARA

M

;

WAYNE

;

RUTH

HOWARD

CGA

Bloodmobile

Comm; CONNIE JEAN CROMLEY,

1010 Bloom

St.,

Dan-

EDWARD THOMAS

Business

Student PSEA; Bowling;
CUFF, 105 N.
Vine, Mt. Carmel, Pa.; MICHAEL LEE CUNNINGHAM, 64 Youmans
Ave., Washington, N.J.,
1; Varsity Qub 1; Phi Sigma Pi 2; Intramurals 2; Delta Omega Chi 4, Vice-Pres. 2, President 3; Wrestling 2;
DAGGER, 113 N. Hyde Park Ave., Scranton, Pa.,
Delta Epsilon Beta 2,3,4; Harmonetles 1; Freshmen Orientation Staff 2;
Student PSEA 2; Huski Club 1,2,3,4; Intramurals 1,2; JOHN L.
DAMASKA, 1600 Bloomingrove Rd., Williamsport, Pa., Am. Chemical
Society; Literary and Film Society; Science Club; CANDEE MARIE
DANDINI, 926 La Salle St., Berwick, Pa.,
and G Band 2,3; Day
Woman's Association 1,2,3,4; CAROL'VN
DANNEKER, R.D.
No. 3, Box 233, Williamsport, Pa., Phi Beta Lambda 1,2,4, Vice-Pres. 3;
Newman Club 1,2,3,4; Resident Advisor 3,4; JUDITH LIANNE DAPP,
227 N. Franklin St., Boyertown, Pa., Obiter 2; Phi Beta Lambda 1,2,4,
Secretary 3; Freshmen Orientation Staff 2,3,4; Newman Club 1; Pi Omega
Pi 2,3,4; JOHN RICHARD DARGIS, 5 Orchard St., Pittston, Pa., Delta
Omega Chi 2,3,4, Vice-Pres. 3; Student PSEA; Intramurals 2,3,4;
1. DAVIS. Rummel Rd., Milford R.D. No. 1, N.J., Intramurals; Philosophy
Club; Psychology Club; JUDITH
DEFANT, 127 E. Maple St.,
Hazleton, Pa., Student PSEA 3,4; Newman Club 1,2,3,4;
1,2,3,4;
CEC 1,2,3,4; Kappa Delta Pi 4, Vice-Pres. 3; Huski Qub 3; President of
Waller Hall Dorm Council 2;
JANE DEHAVEN, R.D. No. 5,
Bloomsburg, Pa., Phi Beta Lambda 3,4; Harmonettes 1,2,3,4; Bloomsburg
Players 3,4; Intramurals 2; ELIZABETH J. DELANCE,
18 W. Oak St.,
Shenandoah, Pa., CEC 2,3; Newman Club 2;
Committees, Hospitality
1; RUSSELL F. DELP JR., 501 Duke St., Northumberland, Pa., Phi Beta
Lambda 1; Circle K 3; Science Club 3; FRANCES R. DEMNICKI, Route
1, Benton, Pa., Spanish Club 2,3,4; Newman Club 1,2; Student PSEA 2,3,4;
THERESA BEVERLY DERENZIS, 544 Fairview Ave.. Bangor, Pa.,
Women's Representative 1,2, Big Name Entertainment Committee 3;
Bloomsburg Players 1.2; Lambda Alpha Mu 3,4; Huski Club 2; KAREN
A. DESANDIS, 524 Marion St., Scranton, Pa., CGA Election Board 3;
Newman Club 1,2,3; Intramurals 2;
Dining Room Committee 3;
Big and Little Sister Coordinator 3; Student PSEA 4; Fire Warden
3; WILLIAM FRANKLIN DEUBLER, 210 Mill St., Sayre, Pa. 18848,
Sigma Iota Omega; Football 1; Track 2; SALLY
DEVER, 17 Chestnut St., Tresckow, Pa. 18254, Spanish Qub 1,2; Student PSEA 1,2,3,4;
Newman Club 1,2,3,4; CAROL
DEWALD, 221 Dewart St., River-

Secretarial

side, Pa.,

WILLIAM DEUBLER

SALLY DEVER

CAROL DEWALD

Business

Elementary

Accounting

Spanish

Secondary
Speech Theatre



ville, Pa.,

CGA

KATHRYN ANN

M

ANNE

MARY

SUZANNE DILLMAN

ALFRED DIORIO

Liberal Arts

Business

Math

General

Secondary
History and Gov't.

DOYLE DIETTERICK

ANN

CGA

KATHRYN

1

CGA

CGA

CGA

ARW

DOMALAVAGE

KATHLEEN DIPIPPA

B.

Elementary
Spanish

Secondary
French

CAROL
DOMBROSKIE

ANN

ANNE

Alpha Psi Omega 2,3,4; Literary and Film Society 3,4; Bloomsburg Players 1,2,3,4, Secretary 2; DOYLE LEROY DIETTERICK JR.,
317 Grant St., Berwick, Pa. 18603, Chess Club 3,4; SUZANNE ELIZABETH DILLMAN, Main Street, Lavelle, Pa., Phi Beta Lambda 1,2,3,4;
Student PSEA 2,3,4; Pi Omega Pi 2,3,4; ALFRED J. DIORIO, 4005
North Fairhill St., Philadelphia, Pa., Literary and Film Society 3; Intramurals 1,2,3; KATHLEEN MARIA DIPIPPA, 913 LaSalle St., Berwick,
Pa., Theta Gamma Phi 2,3,4; Spanish Club 2; BARBARA JOSETTE
DOMALAVAGE, 1225 West Coal St., Shenandoah, Pa.. Le Cercle
Francais 1,2,3; Kappa Delta Pi 3; CAROL ANN DOMBROSKIE, 12
South Grant Street, Shamokin, Pa., Intramurals 1; Women's Extramural
Basketball;

MICHAEL DORMER
Business

Accounting

WILLIAM

DORNEMAN
Secondary
Social Studies

JANICE DOVAN
Elementary
History

CGA

Hospitality

Committee

1;

MICHAEL WILLIAM DOR-

Mt. Carmel, Pa. 17851, Phi Beta Lambda 1;
7421 Beverly Rd., Philadelphia, Pa., Alpha
Phi Omega 2,3,4, Vice-President 3; Intramurals 1,2,3,4; CGA Committees,
Hospitality 2,3,4, Dining Room 3,4, Election Board 3; JANICE PAULA
DOVAN, 806 Birkbeck St., Freeland, Pa., Pilot 2,3.

MER, 404

WILLIAM

South Market
J.

St.,

DORNEMAN,

nU^ '^

^f^^>c?

?j

I

r

-Hi

C^rr^^

\k dtM

KAREN DOWSE

ROBERT DRUMM

ANDREW DUCSIK

PAUL DUFALLO

Elementary
Psychology

Secondary

Business

Secondary

History

Business

Science

Accounting

English

Social Studies

Secretarial

CHERYL DYER

THOMAS DUNN

BEVERLY DUVO

MARKFERRARO

CONNIE FIKE

ROBERT FINK

Elementary

Elementary

Secondary

Geography

Social Science

Earth Science

THOMAS FIRESTINE

CYNTHIA FISCHER

Business

Secondary

Business

Accounting

Biology

Accounting

DENNIS FISHER
Elementary
Social Studies

ALBERT FISHER

^
SUSAN

A.

FRITZ

A

SUSAN ANGELINE FRITZ, 323 Franklin St., Bethlehem, Pa., HarDIANNE KATHLEEN FRYE, 425 Chamber
monettes
German Club
St., Danville, Pa., Spanish Qub 1,2,3; Student PSEA 3,4; Water Ballet 2,3;
"B" Club 4; GERALD WILLIAM FULMER, 610 East Third St., BloomsI

1

;

;

Club 3,4; Tennis 1,2,3,4; Intramurals 1; PHILIP
126 Park St., Nanticoke, Pa., Bloomsburg Players
2,3,4; International Relations Qub 1; Men's Glee Club 3,4; Tennis 1;
Track 2; Intramurals 1,2,3,4; LUCILLE GLADYS GAETA, 3510 150th
St., Flushing, N.Y. 11354, Bloomsburg Players 2; Archaeology Qub 1;
CHERYL ELAINE GALFORD, State St., MillviUe, Pa., Harmonettes
2,3,4; Athenaeum Club 1 JOYCE A. GALLI, 803 Main St., Peckville, Pa.,
CEC; EDWARD JOSEPH GASPER, 340 West Green St., West Hazelton,
Pa., Pi Epsilon Chi 3,4; Amateur Radio Qub 2; Smdent PSEA 1; Intramurals 1; Phi Sigma Pi 3; Gamma Theta Upsilon 4; PETER RAY GATSKI, R.D. No. 1, Bloomsburg, Pa., Phi Sigma Xi 2,3,4, Vice-President 2;
burg,

Varsity

Pa.,

LAWRENCE GABB,

^

^tki
JOSEPH D

LINDA

GOODERHAM

GOUBA

Business

General

Liberal Arts

;

KATHRYN

D.

GOUGH
Business

Accounting

Sociology

CHARLES GAY,
KATHLEEN ANNE

Football 1 Intramurals 2,3,4; Psychology Club; DAVID
78 Franklin Ave., Tunkhannock, Pa., Intramurals;
;

GAY, 427 West Coal St., Shenandoah, Pa., Literary and Film Society 3;
Student PSEA 3; CGA Hospitality Committee 1; KATHLEEN ANN

GEARHART,

kJl

KURT GRABFELDER

Social

St.,

Danville, Pa.,

Day Women's

Association

Recreation 2;

WILLIAM ANTHONY GIANNETTA,

144 East

Dunmore, Pa., Delta Omega Chi; Alpha Phi Omega 2; Student
PSEA; Newman Club 1,2; Intramurals 1,2,3; Archaeology Club 4; Men's
Resident Association 4; CGA Committees, Hospitality 4, Election Board
4, Dining Room 4; CAROL ELIZABETH GIBISER, 833 North Maxwell
Pine

CHARLENEG.
GRACI

Business

Special Education

General

422 Church

NANCY EALER GEIGER,

54 Jolan Dr., R.D. No. 4, Allentown,
Pa., Theta Gamma Phi 2,3,4, President 3; Bloomsburg Players I; English
Club 4; Student PSEA 4; International Relations Club 1; Huski Club 4;
CGA Dining Room Committee 1,2, Chairman 3; GEORGE E. GEISE,
1623 Baer Ave. Ext., Hanover, Pa., Football 1,2; DAVID BARRY GELTZER. 926 West Third Street, Hazelton, Pa., Pi Kappa Epsilon 1,2,3,4,
Corresponding Secretary 1,2, Executive Board Member 2,3; Phi Sigma Pi
1; Intramurals 3; Bloomsburg Players I; CGA Committees, Hospitality 3,
1,2,3,4;

St.,

Allentown, Pa., Delta Epsilon Beta 2,3,4, Vice-President 3; Class
Freshman Orientation Staff 3; Sigma Alpha Eta 1; REBECCA
LEE GILLIAM, 400 Bloom St., Danville, Pa., Le Cercle Francais 2,3,4;
GILLIS, 115 Delaware Ave.,
Kappa Delta Pi 3,4; ROSEMARY
West Piltston, Pa., Bloomsburg Players 1; Newman Club 3; Intramurals 1;
ROSALIE P. GIOVANNI, 78 Italy St., Mocanaqua, Pa., Student PSEA 4;
St.,

Mental Ret'd.

Secretary 3;

ANN

MARIA ANTOINETTE

Athenaeum Club

1,2;

Williamsport, Pa.,
burg Players 1,2;

Lambda Alpha Mu;

Newman Club

DIANE GRIFFITHS

CHRISTINE GRUSS

MARGARET GRYBAS

Secondary
French

Secondary

English-Spanish

English

1,2;

CGA

Hospitality

Committee

St.,

2,3;

ARW

Resident Advisor 3,4; ELIZABETH A.
Lewisburg, Pa.;
W.
GOLDTHWAITE II, 3716 Green St., Harrisburg, Pa.; LOIS JEAN
GONAVER, 6229 Morton St., Philadelphia. Pa.; Delta Epsilon Beta 3,4;
CEC 2; LINDA JOYCE GOODERHAM, 1102 North Franklin St.,
Shamokin, Pa. 17872, Athenaeum Club 1; Psychology Qub 2; JOSEPH
DANIEL GOUBA, 518 East Center St., Shenandoah, Pa., Olympian 3;
Newman Club 1; Track 2; Intramurals 2,3;
GOUGH, 1234 Center St., Ashland, Pa., Delta Epsilon Beta 2,3,4, Treasurer 2,3; Phi Beta Lambda 4; KURT CHARLES GRABFELDER, 321
Ashbourne Rd., Elkins Park, Pa. 19117, Phi Beta Lambda 2, Student
PSEA 3,4; Varsity Club 3,4; Wrestling 1,2,3,4; CHARLELN
GRACI, 3805 Bonnybrook Rd., Harrisburg, Pa. 17109, CEC 4; JOHN
GRAF, 221 South Ninth St., Quakertown, Pa., Phi Sigma Xi 2,3,4; Maroon
and Gold: Intramurals 1,2,3,4; DIANE ARLENE GRIFFITHS, 1016
Fifth St., Moosic, Pa. 18507, Harmonettes 1; Spanish Oub 2,3, Treasurer
Resident
3; Bloomsburg Players 1,2; Freshman Orientation Staff 2,3;
Advisor, Election Committee; CHRISTINE
GRUSS, 337 Foster
St., Scranton, Pa., Theta Gamma Phi, Social Chairman 3; CGA Hospitality
Committee, Chairman 3; Bloomsburg Players 1; Le Cercle Francais 1,2,3,4;
Newman Club 1,2; Huski Club 4;
GRYBOS, 150
South Spruce St., Mt. Carmel, Pa., Literary and Film Society 4; Student
PSAE 4; MARILY READLY GUBERNOT, 115 Marshall St., Shamokin,
Pa., Day Women's Association 1,2,3,4; L-VTWE GUILLORY, 30 Bee St.,
Laceyville, Pa., Concert Choir 2,3,4; CEC 1,2; Sigma Alpha Eta 2,3,4;
Huski Club 3,4; Student PSEA 4; JERE GEORGE GULDEN, 24 South
Eighth St., Quakertown, Pa., CGA Hospitality Committee 1,2,3.

Bloodmobile Committee

GLADKOWSKI,

Secondary

GIRIO, 1219 Penn

Literary and Film Society 3; Blooms-

3;

Bucknell

ROGER

University,

KATHRYN DOROTHY

GRACE

ARW

MARY

A k.

4iU

MARILYGUBERNOT

LYNNEGUILLORY

JEREG. GULDEN

Elementary

Special Education

Secondary

English

Speech Correction

Social Studies

MARGARET ANNE

RANDY
HACKENBURG

BARBARA HACKETT

FRANK HADUCK

Secondary

Secondary

Secondary

English

Social Studies

History

MARCIA A. HALL

JOHN HAMBLIN

Elementary

Secondary
History

Secondary
Spanish

BEI lb HARRISON

HAGENBAUGH

CHERIEHALL

MARCELLA

Elementary

Secondary

L

HALL

Elementary
English

Geography

KATHLEEN
HAN2LIK

LINDA

WILLIAM
HAM ERSK Y

FRANCES HANDY

BERNARD HANLON

COLIN HANNINGS

Elementary

Elementary

Secondary

English

English

English

ALANT HARRIS

FREDERICK HARRIS

LINDA HARRIS

LUTHER HARRIS

WILLIAM HARRIS

Secondary
Chemistry

Secondary

Secondary

Liberal Arts

Social Studies

Enghsh

Sociology

Secondary
Chemistry

RANDY WAYNE HACKENBURG,

R.D. No. 3. Danville, Pa., Student
Archaeology Club 1,2,3, Secretary-Treasurer 3; BARBARA
R.D. No. 2, Danville, Pa.. Bloomsburg Players 3; Student PSEA 3; Literary and Film Society 4; FRANK GEORGE HADUCK,
1210 Spring Street, Duryea, Pa., Student PSEA 2; Football 3,4; Intramurals 3,4; LINDA C. HAGENBAUGH, 23 Vulcan Road, Levittown,

PSEA

3;

JANE HACKETT,

Pa.,

CGA.

Committee 2,3; Student PSEA 2,3,4; CHERIE
2019 Roosevelt Avenue, Williamsport, Pa., OlymBand 1; Student PSEA 3,4; IntemationaJ Relations Club

Hospitality

ELIZABETH HALL,

M

CHERYL HAWTER

CATHY HEACOCK

ROSS HECKERT

Elementary
Psychology

Secondary
French

Secondary

Geography

G

pian 3;
and
LYNN HALL, 2901
3; Le Cercle Francais 2; Intramurals 3;
Four Mile Drive, MontoursviUe, Penna., CGA, Big Name Entertairunent
3,4, Hospitality Committee 2,3; Student PSEA 3,4; Newman Club 1; Intramurals 3; Huski Club 1,2; MARCIA ANNE HALL, 624 Hamilton
Street, Bowmanstown, Pa., Harmonettes I; Freshmen Orientations Staff 2;
Student PSEA 1 Intramurals 1,2; Huski Club 1,2; JOHN C. HAMBLIN,
Box 31, Swiftwater, Pa., Concert Choir 1,2,3,4; Pres. Concert Choir 3;
Men's Glee Club 1,2,3,4; Pres. Men's Glee Club 2; Kappa Delta Pi 3,4;
Intramurals 1,2,3,4; Phi Alpha Theta 3,4; Philosophy Club 4; WILLIAM
DAMIAN HAMERSKY, 163 Newport Street, Glen Lyon, Pa., American
Chemical Society; Student PSEA; Intramurals; Science Club; FRANCES
JEAN HOPE HANDY, R.D. No. 3, CoatesviUe, Pa., Bloomsburg Players
1; Delta Epsilon Beta 2,3,4, Corresponding Secretary; Student PSEA 1,2;
HANLON, 44 Cleveland Ave., Colonia, N.J., Pi
BERNARD
Kappa Epsilon. Executive Board 2; Football 2; Intramurals 1,2,3; COLIN
MACKENZIE HANNINGS, 608 Denstine Avenue, Lansdale, Pa., Sigma

MARCELLA

;

THOMAS

Omega; Literary and Film Society 3,4; Freshmen Orientation Staff
Phy Sigma Pi 2; Intramurals 2; KATHLEEN MARY HANZLIK, S.
i^Uertown, Pa., Freshmen Orientation Staff 3; Stu221 Linden Avenue.

Iota
2,3;

'

PSEA 1,4; ARW Committee, Resident Advisor 3; ALAN THOMAS
HARRIS, 79 Oak Street, Wilkes-Barre, Penna., American Chemical Society; Huski Club 4; FREDERICK AUGUSTUS HARRIS, 61 Pine Street,
dent

Bloomsburg,

LINDA HECKMAN

WAYNE HEIM

BYRON HELLER

Elementary

Secondary

Secondary

Art

Geography

Social Studies

Pa., Varsity

Club

2,3,4; Football

1.2.3.4; Intramurals

1,2;

LINDA ELIZABETH HARRIS, 1155 Eynon Street, Scranton, Pa., ConClub 2,3; Student PSEA 3; ARW 1,3; LUTHER E. HARRIS III, 826

cert

Richmont
1.2.3;

Olympian 3; Football 2,3; Intramurals
1.2; International Relations Club 4;
774 Main Street, Simpson, Pa.. Pi Kappa EpsiAmerican Chemical Society 2; Debating Club 1,2; Blooms-

Street, Scranton, Penna.,

Baseball

Business Club

1;

WILLIAM HARRIS,
lon, Rec. Sec. 3;

JR.,

burg Players
BETTE L. HARRISON. Main Street, Benton, Pa., CGA
Committee, Hospitality 3; Student PSEA 1; Lambda Alpha Mu 2,3;
RICHARD K. HARTMAN, 2260 Adrian Street, Harrisburg, Pa., Literary
RICHARD FRANCIS
and Film Society 1 International Relations Club
HARTUNG, 1 East 12th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa., Pi Kappa Epsilon;
Bloodmobtle,
Maroon and Gold 1; Bloomsburg Players 1,2,3;
3; KENNETH EUGENE HASSINGER. 231 Market Street. Middleburg. Pa.,
Bloomsburg Palyers 2; Intramurals 2; Huski Club 2; ROBERT THOMAS
HAUCK. Fifth Street, Miftlinville, Pa., CGA, Constimtion Committee 3;
1

;

1

;

K

;

Bloomsburg Players 1 ; Pi Omega Pi 2,3,4,
Circle
1 ,2,3, Corres. Sec. 2,3
Vice-Pres. 3,4; Day Men's Association 1,2,3. Sec. 2, Pres. 3; FRANCIS
;

LEONARD HAWKE, 580 Seybert Street. Hazleton, Pa.. Math Club;
CHERYL ANN HAWTER. 936 North Irving Ave., Scranton, Pa., CEC
1,2; CGA Committees, Hospitality 3. Dining Room 1,2; CATHY VIOLA
LINDA HELLERMAN

DONALD HELWIG

Secondary

Elementary

MARSHA
HENDERSON

English

History

Elementary
English

HEACOCK.

709 Park St.. Bloomsburg. Pa., Le Cercle Francais 2,3,
ROSS ALAN HECKERT, Box 1 16, R.D. No. 1, Hemdon. Pa.
17830; LINDA LOU HECKMAN, 212 South Washington St., Boyertown,
Pa. 19512, CEC 2; Bloomsburg Players 2; Student PSEA 3,4; ARW, Secretary-Treasurer of West Hall 3;
FREDERICK HEIM, 695
Cherry St.. Columbia. Pa. 17512, Sigma Iota Omega 3,4; Varsity Club 3,4;
Wrestling 1.2,3,4; Track 2; BYRON MARTIN HELLER,
15 Mahoning
St., Milton, Pa. 17847, Student PSEA 3,4; International Relations Club 1;
Phi Sigma Pi 3,4; LINDA CHERYL HELLERMAN, 18 North Ridge Rd..
Perkasie. Pa. 18944, Delta Epsilon Beta; Spanish Club 1,2; Literary and
Kappa Delta
Film Society 3,4; Sigma Tau Delta 3,4; Bloomsburg Players
Pi 3,4, Corresponding Secretary 4; DONALD CHARLES HELWIG. 702
Center St., Ashland, Pa.. Pi Epsilon Chi 3.4. Corresponding Secretary 3;
Concert Choir 1,2,3.4; CEC 3.4; Men's Glee Club 1,2; Student PSEA 4;
Phi Sigma Pi 3,4; MARSHA JANE HENDERSON, 219 Pinehurst Rd.,
Wilmingtom, Delaware 19803, Theta Gamma Phi 2,3,4, Secretary; Smdent
PSEA 1,2; DALE CHARLES HENNE, Oley, Pa. 19547, Intramurals;
International Relations Club; Footnote; Phi Beta Lambda; INA
Treasurer;

WAYNE

1

1 ;

MAE

HENNING. Box 36. Mehoopany,
dent PSEA 2,3; CGA Hospitality

DALE HENNE

INA KENNING

JUDITH HENRY

Business

Elementary

Elementary
French

Accounting

Pa., Freshman Orientation Staff 3; StuCommittee 1; JUDITH LEE HENRY,

21 South Sixteenth St., Lewisburg, Pa., Theta
Secretary; Student PSEA 1,2; Intramurals 1,2.

Gamma

Phi, Corresponding

DAVID HERRING

JANE HERRING

EDWARD HESS

FRED

LEE ROY HESS

RANDOLPH H.HESS

Business

Elementary

Liberal Arts

Secondary

Liberal Arts

Liberal Arts

Accounting

Social Studies

Biology

Geography

Business

Sociology

R.

HESS

:kdiM
CHARLES HESTOR

GARYHEYWOOD

LYNDA HINE

LORRAINE HIPPAUF

Secondary

Secondary

WILLIAM
HITCHINGS

Secondary

Math

Elementary
Psychology

Elementary

English

German

Special Education

Physics

RAY HOCK

Mental Ret'd

RAYMOND
HOLLINGER
Secondary

Geography

DALE HOUCK

RALPH HOOVER

BRUCE HOPKINS

SANDRA HORNE

KATHLEEN HORST

BARBARA HOSKINS

Secondary

Secondary
Speaking Theatre

Elementary
Psychology

Secondary

Elementary
Spanish

Geography



English

DAVID VICTOR HERRING, 128 East Main St., Blootnsburg, Pa., Phi
Beta Lambda 2; JANE LOUISE HERRING, 203 Summerhill Ave.,

EDWARD

Berwick, Pa., Day Women's Assoc. 1,2,3,4; Student PSEA 4;
ROBERT HESS, 145 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa., Alpha Phi
Omega 2,3,4, Historian, 4; Science Club 1,2,3,4, President 4; FRED
RICHARD HESS, 615 Second Street, Nescopeck, Pa.; LEE ROY HESS,
R.D. No. 2 Orangeville, Pa., Phi Beta Lambda; RANDOLPH
HESS, 32 Beechwood Drive, Reiffton, Reading, Pa., Sigma Iota Omega,
V. Pres. 3, Pres. 4; CGA Orientation and Pep Committees; Circle K 1;
Huski Club 2; V. Pres. Junior Class; CHARLES
HESTOR,
311 Shamokin St., Trevorton, Pa.;
DOUGLAS HEYWOOD, 304
Witmer Road, Horsham, Pa., Delta Omega Chi; Wrestling 1,2,3; Intramurals 2,3;
MARIE HINE, 825 W. Walnut St., Shamokin, Pa.,
Student PSEA; Bloomsburg Players; Psychology Club; LORRAINE
HIPPAUF, Box No. 43, Femdale, Pa.,
and G Band 1,2; German Club
1,2,3; Student PSEA 3; Huski Club 3; Delta Phi Alpha 3; CGA. Dining
Room 1,2,3, Hospitality 2,3, Bloodmobile 3;
Resident Advisor 3;
WILLIAM
HITCHINGS, 1216 Maple Street, Bethlehem, Pa.,
Delta Pi 2,3; CEC 3,4; Freshmen Orientation Staff 3; Phi Sigma Pi 2;
Swimming 1; IFC 2,3; RAY
HOCK, R.D. No. 5 Bloomsburg,
Pa., Physics Club; Student PSEA;
JOSEPH HOLUNGER,
2225 Patty Lane, Warrington, Pa., Pi Kappa Epsilon 3,4; Newman Club

HARTMAN

EDWARD

GARY

LYNDA

HUMMEL

THOMAS HULL

DONNA HUMMEL

HARRIET

Special Education

Secondary

Liberal Arts

Speech Correction

English-Spanish

Sociology

ANN

M

ARW

EDWARD

THOMAS
RAYMOND

1,2,3,4;
Pa.,

RALPH RONALD HOOVER,

Alpha Phi Omega

R.D. No.

4,

1020

2,3,4; Intramurals 3,4;

Alpha

Dallas, Pa.,

Psi

Omega

E.

Sunbury

St.,

Shamokin,

BRUCE PAUL HOPKINS,
2,3,4;

Maroon ami Gold

Class Officer 3; Bloomsburg Players 1,2,3,4, Treasurer

2,

I;

President 3;

SANDRA GLENNIS HORNE,

2132 Cypress Road, Bethlehem, Pa.,
Bloomsburg Players 1,2; Freshmen OrientaPsychology
3,4;
Club 2,3,4; KATHLEEN KAY
HORST, 813 Pointview Ave., Ephrata, Pa., Literary and Film Society 3;
Bloomsburg Players 1,3; English Club 2; Student PSEA 2; CGA Bloodmobile 2.3; BARBARA LEE HOSKINS, 19 Wilson Ave., West Chester.
Pa., Literary and Film Society 3,4; Bloomsburg Players 1 Newman Oub 1
Psychology Club 2,3,4, Treasurer 3; DALE L. HOUCK, 1249 Vine Ave.,
Williamsport, Pa., Varsity Club 3,4; Tennis 1,2,3,4; Intramurals 1,2;
DONALD M. HOUCK, 401 Water Street, Danville, Pa., Science Club 2;
Physics Club 3,4; Kappa Delta Pi 3,4; THOMAS PAUL HOUSTON, 85
Literary and Film Society 3,4;

tion Staff 3; Student

JEFFREY

HUMMEL

Elementary
Psychology

SUSAN HUNT

JOHN HUTCHINGS

Special Education

Elementary

Mental Ret'd.

Geography

PSEA



;

ANN

Lincoln Street, Waverly, New York, Track 4; Swimming 3; JULIE
HOWELL, 407 Terrace Street, Honesdale, Pa., Student PSEA 3,4; Math
Club 3,4; LESTER M. HOWERTER, R.D. No. I Box 108, Shamokin,
Pa.,
and G Band 1,2;
HUGO. Main St., New Albany, Pa.;
LEON HULL, 709 E. Dewart Street, Shamokin, Pa.,
Student PSEA 1,2,3,4; Sigma Alpha Eta;
EILEEN HUMMEL,
R.D, No. 2, Berwick, Pa., English Club; Literary and Film Society;
HARRIET ANNE HUMMEL, 7 Gearharl Street, Riverside, Pa.,

M

CAROLYN MARY

THOMAS

DONNA

CGA—

Hospitality 2,3,4. Election Board 2,3.4;

ROBERT IKELER.

Secondary
French

Secondary

Secondary

History

Social Studies

JR.

CHERYL ILLIGASCH

Newman

Bloomsburg Players
Psychology Club 3; JEFFREY
4;

Club 2,3; Intramurals 2,3;
370 King Street, Northumberland, Pa.; SUSAN KAY
310 Hawarden Road, Springfield, Pa.. CEC 4. Historian; JOHN
MICHAEL HUTCHINGS. 3115 Greenleaf, Allentown, Pa., Phi Sigma
Xi Pres. 2,3,4; Student PSEA 3; Phi Sigma Pi 3,4; Intramurals 1,2,3;
ANN MARIE HUTZ, 13 Calvin Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Spanish Club 4;
Student PSEA 2; Le Cercle Francais, Secretary 1,2,3,4; Kappa Delta Pi 3,4,
Treasurer; ROBERT BOYD IKELER, JR., R.D. No. 2, Bloomsburg, Pa.,
2,3,4;

S.

ANN MARIE HUTZ

"B" Club

HUMMEL,

HUNT,

Student

PSEA

3,4; Intramurals 1,2,3;

1347 Crestwood Road, Bethlehem,

CHERYL THERESA ILLIGASCH,
PSEA; FRANK STEPHEN

Pa.. Student

JABLONSKI, 158 Spruce Street, Sunbury, Pa., Intramurals; GLORIA
JEAN JANASIK, 364 Martzville Road, Berwick, Pa., CGA 3; Science
Club 2,3, Treasurer; Student PSEA 3; Landettes 3; CONNIE LESLIE
JARRARD, 122 N. Jackson Avenue, Endicott. New York, CGA 3; "B"
Club

FRANK JABLONSKI

GLORIA JANASIK

CONNIE JARRARD

Secondary

Secondary

Elementary

Science

Biology

Physical Ed.

1.2,3,4, Treasurer 3; Intramurals 1,2,3,4.

KATHLEEN

SUSAN

A.

KITCHEN

DAVID

E.

KITE

WILLIAM KLEMICK

Liberal Arts

Business

Liberal Arts

Psychology

Accounting

Chemistry

BARBARA

M.

RUTH

A. KOONS
Elementary
Art

EILEEN KOTZER

SARAH KOWALSKI

Secondary

Secondary

English

English

ANTHONY

LINDA LECHNER

LANNY LEE

NANCY LEFKO

Elementary

Special Education

History

Speech Correction

Elementary
Psychology

GAIL LEHMAN

JEAN

G.

LONG

KATHLEEN MAY

MARY MAYEWSKI

SUSAN MAZUR

Business

Elementary
Psychology

Secondary

Secretarial

^1^
THOMAS

English

^^ PP

^t

'"F

d^A
MARGARET

^1^-"^

^^^

^\

i^ ^i ij^
NATHAN

McKENZlE

McKEE
Business

Elementary

General

Geography

M.E. McWILLIAMS
Elementary
French

f'-^.*^^

SHARON McWILLIAMS
Liberal Arts

French

BRIAN McLERNAN
Secondary
Eng. -Speech-Drama

JAMES

R-

MEDLAND
Secondary

Malh

EDWARD

McNERTNEY

dik
BETTY

McPHERSON

DOUGLAS
McROBERTS

Liberal Arts

Elementary

Secondary

Malh

English

Biology

MARSHALL

JEFFREY

A.

MILLER

JERRY

E.

MILLER

PEGGY

A.

Liberal Arts

Business

Business

Math

Accounting

Accounting

TERRI MIRIELLO

ALEXIS

Elementary

Elementary

Geography

Biology

B.

MISCO

MILLER

STANLEY
MIZIKOSKI
Liberal Arts

Psychology

GLORIA

E.

JEAN A MOULDER
Liberal Arts
English

ROBERT

L.

tfA&fe
OMAN

BARBARA OLUSZAK

JAMES

Secondary

Business

P O'NEILL
Secondary

English

Accounting

Economics

ALBERT J. ORTH
Elementary

Geography

ANN MARIE

L

CATHERINE

JOSEPH

A.

RUSSELL

Special Education

Secondary

Speech Correction

History-Gov't.

OWEN

PALKENDO

JTi
PETER PERLOW

EDWARD PETRAS

FRANK PETRASH

M.

JAMES PHILLIPS

REBECCA PICKEL

Special Education

Business

Liberal Arts

Secondary

Mental Ret'd.

Accounting

Secondary
History and Gov't.

Sociology

Math

Elementary
Spanish

JANICE PIOS

ANTHONY

Elementary
Art

Business

PIRRAGLIA

PETROSKAS

Business

DOROTHY
POLLOCK

THOMAS PRATICO

Liberal Arts
Political Science

General

Elementary

Accounting

GARY FLETCHER

JOHN R POGWIST

Accountmg

Business

Biology

DAVID PRICE

JOSEPH PROKAY

JAMES PROSSEDA

Secondary

Secondary

Secondary

Physics

Math

Geography

MARGARET
PUROSKY
Secondary

NOBLE QUANDEL

GALEN QUICK

Secondary

Liberal Arts
English

Social Studies

English

194

LINDA RANDALL

MICHAEL RANK

ERNEST REBUCK

DONNA REED

WILLIAM REH

SANDRA REICHART

Secondary

Liberal Arts
Business

Secondary

Elementary

Business

Secondary

Accounting

Geography

Spanish

History

Sociology

KATHY REIMARD

DONNA REITZ

Elementary

Elementary

Elementary

Geography

Geography

Spanish

CARLENERENNER

PHYLLIS REPP

LAURA REYNOLDS

LINDA REYNOLDS

Elementary
Psychology

Elementary

Secondary

History

Spanish

F

RICHARDS

1^
ALBERT ROGER

ALBERT CHARLES ROGER. 242 Blackberry Ave., Bloonisburg, Pa.,
Concert Choir 1,2; Debating Club
and G Band
Bloomsburg Players
1,2,3, Treasurer I; Assembly Organist 1,2,3; Speakers Bureau; BERNARD
E. ROMANOSKI, 322 Center St., Shamokin, Pa., Circle K 2; Intramurals
1,2; Baseball
2, Recording Secretary 3; Student Judiciary Board 3;
JANE MARIE ROMPALA, R.D. No. 2, Meshoppen, Pa. 18630, Obiier
3; Student PSEA 2,3,4; Newman Club 1.2,4; Sigma Alpha Eta 1,2,3,4;
LINDA JOAN ROSINI, 1306 Faxon Parkway, Williamsport, Pa., Bloomsburg Players 1,2; Student PSEA 3,4; Hospitality Committee 1,2; BETSY
JANE ROSS, 44 Jacqueline Drive, Paoli, Pa., Delta Epsilon Beta 2,3;
Sigma Alpha Eta 2,3;
President of Freshmen Council, President of
East Hall 3; JUNE C. ROWLANDS, R.D. No. I, Forestville, Pottsville,
Pa., Phi Beta Lambda 1,2, Treasurer 3; CGA Election Board, Hospitality
Committee 3; BARBARA A. RUFFING, 1560 W. Mountain Avenue. So.
1

Ifh

;

M

1

;

1

I

;

MRA

ARW

PATRICIA SECREST

BETTY SEIDEL

Liberal Arts

Elementary

Psychology

English

RONALD
SEKELLICK
Special Education

Mental Ret'd.

Williamsport, Pa.

1

770 1, Obiier

SELL, R.D. No. 2, Box
Mu. Recording Secretary
retary 4; Cheerleaders

2;

CEC

I;

BARBARA JANE

166, Clarks Summit, Pa. 1841
3;

1,

RUSLambda Alpha

Lambda 2,3,4; CGA, Recording SecCaptain 4; Freshmen Orientation Staff 3;

Phi Beta

1,2,3

Student PSEA 3,4; Bloomsburg Players 4; ROBERT R. SAMPSELL, 15
Railroad Ave., Milton, Pa.;
KAY SANFORD, 4900 E. Trindle
Rd., Mechanicsburg, Pa., Obiter 2,3; CGA, Awards Committee 2; Bloomsburg Players 2; Sigma Tau Delta 3,4; Student PSEA 1,4;
Big and

SANDRA

ARW

Sister Coordinator 3; KAREN LEIGH SAUNDERS, 10 Dahlia
Lane, Levittown, Pa. 19055, Theta Gamma Phi; Bloomsburg Players 1,2,
3; German Club 3; Student PSEA 3; JOSEPH S. SCALA, 326 LaSalle
St., Berwick. Pa.;
A. SCHAEFER, R.D., Kintnersville. Pa.;
CHARLES R. SCHAEFER, R.D. No. 2. Orangeville, Pa. 17859; BARBARA ELIZABETH SCHALL, 560 Westmoreland Ave., Kingston, Pa.,
Mock Republican Convention 4; Dear Coed 4; English Club 4; PETER
Little

NORMAN

WILLIAM SCHLADER,
MICHAEL
SEKSINSKY
Special Education

DANIEL SHAFFER

JOSEPH SHANNON

Secondary

Secondary

Social Studies

History

1016 W. Lynn St., Shamokin, Pa., Math Club 4;
1035 Phoenixville Pike, West Chester, Pa.
19380, Phi Sigma Xi; Freshmen Orientation Staff 4; Basketball I; IntraExecutive
murals 1.2,3,4;
Council 2,3;
Student Judicial Board
3; KENNETH D. SCHNURE, R.D. No. 2, Milton, Pa. 17847, Student
PSEA 1,2,3,4; SUSAN SCHOHL, 132 Spring Garden St., Easton, Pa.,
CEC 1,2,3,4; Hospitality Committee 2; Off Campus Girls Council I;
LOUISE SCHRANTZ, 803 Willow Road, Hellertown, Pa., CGA
Hospitality Committee 1,2,3,4; CGA Election Committee 3.4; Student

GARY OWEN SCHMIDT,

MRA

MRA

Speech Correction

DAWNA
PSEA

2,3,4;

SCHRUM,

ARW

HOLLY ANN

1,4,

1504 Almond

Judiciary 2, Vice-President 3;
Williamsport, Pa., Resident Advisor; Fresh-

St.,

Council; Committee on Academic Affairs; ROBERT
25 Rodney Dr., Newtown Square, Pa., Phi Sigma
Xi 2,3,4; Sigma Alpha Eta 1,2.3,4; Intramurals 1,2,3; REINHOLD A,
SCHULZ, 124 Jacksonville Rd., Hatboro, Pa., Sigma Iota Omega, Social
Chairman; CGA President 4; Literary and Film Society; Intramurals; Huski
Club; CANDA LEIGH SCHWENKE, 316 Tule St., Montoursville, Pa.
17754, Bloomsburg Players; Student PSEA; Intramurals; PATRICIA
JANE SECREST, 22 Park Place, Apt. 3, Lewistown, Pa. 17044; BETTY
LOUISE SEIDEL. Front St., Washingtonville, Pa. 17884. Harmonettes
2.3; Student PSEA 1,2,3; RONALD EUGENE SEKELLICK, 725 Center
St., Stowe, Pa. 19464, Pi Epsilon Chi President 3; CEC 2,3,4; Veteran's
Association 2,3,4; MICHAEL DENNEN SEKSINSKY, 1008 N. Front
St., Milton, Pa., Phi Sigma Xi 2,3,4; IFC Representative 2,3; Chess Club
2; Circle K I; Newman Club 1,2,3,4; Sigma Alpha Eta 2,3,4; DANIEL R.
SHAFFER, 1444 W. Walnut St., Shamokin, Pa., Literary and Film
Society 3,4; Newman Club ,2,3,4; Huski Club 2,3,4; JOSEPH ANTHONY
SHANNON, 5359 Charles St., Philadelphia, Pa.; TIMOTHY R, SHANNON. 305 State St.. Millville, Pa., Debating Club, Treasurer 2, VicePresident 3,4; Bloomsburg Players 2; Newman Club 3; Pi Kappa Delta I,
President 2; Speakers Bureau I; Philosophy Club I; JAMES MICHAEL
SHAUGHNESSY, 221 East Pine Street, Mahanoy City, Pa.. Delta Pi
2,3,4; Phi Sigma Pi 2; Intramurals 2,3,4; VIRGINIA JANE SHAW, 1024
Poplar St., Scranton, Pa., Bloodmobile 2,3; Resident Advisor 4;

men Off-Campus

EDWARD SCHULTZ,

TIMOTHY SHANNON

J,

SHAUGHNESSY

VIRGINIA

Liberal Arts

Business

Elementary

Speech

Accounting

English

SHAW

1

r^ AiM 4iM
C. SHEPPERSON
Liberal Arts

CHARLES SHERBIN

Business

Accounting

Business-Econ.

Speech Correction

GERALD SHEPERIS

Special Education

GERALD FRANCIS SHEPERIS, 723
CHARLES EDWARD SHEPPERSON,
Pa..

Intramurals

1.2,3;

Road. Wilkes-Barre,

Spruce St„ West Pittston, Pa.;
803 East 2nd St., Bloomsburg,

CHARLES STEPHEN SHERBIN,

Pa., Phi

Sigma

Pi;

624 Main
Sigma Alpha Eta; Intramurals.

wWf

*^^

'

T^

CHARLES SHUPE

HAROLD SHUTT

J.

Secondary

Elementary

Business

Elementary

Secondary

English

Geography

Accounting

English

Geography

SUSAN SHOUP

ROBERT SIPIDA

^Md^

SHUTTLESWORTH

C SIARKOWSKI

NANCY STANTON

ROBERT STAUFFER

P

Elementary

Liberal Arls

Secondary

Spanish

Social Science

Math

LAWRENCE

STEINBACHER

,-

SUSAN

SWARTZ

SWIST

BONNIE

TAYLOR

^

JEFFREY TAYLOR

Ai^ J.M
ROBERT TAYLOR

TOM TAYLOR

Business

Business

Secondary

Secondary

Secondary

English

Accounting

Secretarial

Geography

Math

Biology

JANET M.TAZIK.

LINDA

K.

Secondary
English

R,

LOUIS

TENTROMONO

Secondary
Chemistry

200

STANLEY

Elementary

S.

Secondary
Chemistry

TOPPER

JAMES

R.

P.

THOMAS

Secondary

Math

ELLYNTORREGIANI

PALMER M.TOTO

Elementary
Psychology

Secondary
English

JANE E. THOMAS

LEONARD THOMAS

NANCY THOMAS

Elementary
Biology

Elementary
Psychology

Elementary

CHARLOTTE

TOUMEY
Business

General

^

JAMES

A.

Secondary
French

Math

TRICK

PATRICIA A TROY
Elementary
Biology

LINDA M. UNGER

DAWN E. WAGNER

Elementary

DONALD A.
VENEMA

Secondary

English

Secondary

English

BERNELL

Y.

VEET

Biology

ELIZABETH WALSH

MICHAEL

D.

WAGNER
Elementary
Social Science

JOHN WALCHONSKI

CLIFTON T WALLS

Secondary

Elementary

Social Studies

Geography

BERNELL Y. VEET,
tion Staff 2; Student

30 East Holly
3,4;

St.,

Hazelton, Pa., Freshman Orienta-

Newman Club

1,2,3,4;

CGA

Committees,

Pep 1,2,3; "B" Qub 3,4; DONALD ANDREW
VENEMA, 1417 Elwood Rd., Williamsport, Pa., Intramurals 3; DAWN
ELIZABETH WAGNER, RD. No. 2, Box 340, Drums, Pa., Maroon and
Gold 2,3,4; Concert Choir 1,2,3,4, Robe Chairman 3; Bloomsburg Players
2,3,4; Sigma Tau Delta 3,4, Vice-President; Student PSEA 1,2,3,4, Newsletter Chairman; MICHAEL D. WAGNER, 203 East Main St., Mt. Joy,
Pa., Student PSEA
Intramurals 3; JOHN R. WALCHONSKI, 607 Pike
St., Bethlehem, Pa., Alpha Phi Omega 2,3; Newman Club 1,2; Intramurals
3; CGA Hospitality Committee 1,2; CLIFTON THOMAS WALLS, Box
13, Elmhurst, Pa., Chess Club 1,2,3; Veteran's Association 2,3,4; ELIZABETH M. WALSH, 829 Pine St., Kulpmont, Pa., Literary and Film
Society 3; Bloomsburg Players 1,2,3,4; Alpha Psi Omega 3,4; Newman
Club 1; ARW Assistant Resident Advisor 3; Bloodmobile Committee 3;
Dear Co-ed Staff 3; RUSSELL WILLIAM WALSH, 129 Farmbrook Dr.,
Levittown, Pa., Bloomsburg Players 1,2,3,4; Alpha Psi Omega 2,3,4; Intramurals 1,2; MARGARET L. WALTEMYER, 316 Bridge St., Spring City,
Hospitality

^I^^

1

PSEA

1,2,3,

1 ;

RICHARD WILBURN

JOHN R WILLIAMS

MARCIA WILLIAMS

Business

Business

Elementary

Accounting

Accounting

Pa., Student PSEA 2,3,4; EDWIN FRANCIS WALTERS III, 251 Pine St.,
Catawissa, Pa., Student PSEA 2,3; Phi Sigma Pi 3; Intramurals 2,3;
Psychology Club 2,3, Vice-President 3;
WARD,

LAWRENCE ANTHONY

Hazelton, Pa., Pi Kappa Epsilon 2,3,4, Corresponding Secretary
3 Bloomsburg Players I Freshman Orientation Staff 3 Men's
Glee Club 1; Newman Club 1,2,3,4;
1,2,3,4, Treasurer 2, President
JEAN WARD, 300
3, Senior Advisor 4; Dorm Counselor 3,4;
Lycoming St., Milton, Pa.. Delta Epsilon Beta 2,3.4, Songmaster 3, President 4;
Committees, Big Name Entertainment 3.4, Pep 3,4, Co-Chairman 4; Cheerleaders 1,2; Studio Band 1,2,3,4; Intramurals 3; JACQUELINE WASHBURN, RD. No. 1, Bloomsburg, Pa., Student PSEA 3,4;
WASKEVICH, 103 Spruce St., Wilkes-Barre,
PATRICIA JULIA

906 Alter
;

St.,

CGA

;

;

;

MRA

REBEKAH

CGA

ANN

LINDA A WILLS

LINDA E.WIMMER

DOROTHY

Elementary

Elementary

Elementary

Geography

Social Studies

S

WINDT

PSEA 1,2,3; Newman Club 1;
JEAN WATTS, R.D. No. 1, Millville, Pa.,
Pa., Student

Pep Committee

Psychology Club 2,3;

1,2,3,4; Cheerleaders 1,2,3,4,

ARW

LINDA

Obiter Senior Editor 4;

Co-Captain

CGA

3; Literary

and

THOMAS

Election Committee 2,3;
C. WEIKEL,
312 Albright Ave., Allentown, Pa., Circle K 1; German Club I; Football
1; Wrestling 1,2,4; Track 2,3; Intramurals 1,2,3,4; Delta Omega Chi 2,3,4;

Film Society

3;

BARBARA ANN WELLIVER,

201 East Fifth St., Bloomsburg, Pa.,
PEGGY LOU WELSH, Damascus,
Harmonettes
Pa., Theta Gamma Phi; Newman Club; ANDREW S. WERT, RD. No. 2,
Mifflintown, Pa., Psychology Club 3,4; International Relations Club 2;
CHARLES THOMAS WERTZ, 52 Kinsey St., Montgomery, Pa., Student
PSEA 4; Archaeology Club 4; Intramurals 1,2; International Relations
Club 4; RANDEL KENNETH WESTLEY, RD. No. 2, Douglasville, Pa.,
and G Band 1,2,3,4, Student Manager; Men's Glee Club 1; Student
PSEA 1 .2.3,4, Publicity Chairman; International Relations Club 1 HARRY
LEWIS WHITE, JR., 632 Brown Ave., Milton, Pa. 17847, Phi Beta
Lambda 3,4; Chess Club 3,4; WELDON BARRY WHITENIGHT, R.D.
No. 2, Orangeville, Pa., Phi Beta Lambda 2,3,4; Intramurals 2,3,4; WILLIAM THOMAS WHITLEY, JR., 155 East Dewart St., Shamokin, Pa.,
Intramurals; RICHARD ALLEN WILBURN, 27 South Lime St., Quarryville. Pa., Phi Beta Lambda 3,4; Bloomsburg Players 1,2,3,4; JOHN
ROBERT WILLIAMS, Main St., Eldred, Pa., Sigma lota Omega; Phi Beta
Lambda 3,4, President; MARCIA LEE WILLIAMS, Route 1, Sterling,
N.Y., CGA Secretary 4; LINDA ANN WILLS, Box 35, R.D. No. 1, Clarks
Summit, Pa., Bloomsburg Players 3; CGA Hospitality Committee 1,2;
and G Band 1
LINDA E. WIMMER, First Ave., Richlandtown, Pa.,
Student PSEA 1,2,4; DOROTHY S. WINDT, 415 North Hills Ave.,
Glenside. Pa. 19038, "B" Club 3,4; Lambda Alpha Mu 2,3,4; Women's
Extramural Basketball 1,2; Class Float Committees 1,2; CGA Pep Committee 2; PAUL MICHAEL WISDA, 348 West Third St., Wilburton. Pa.,
Delta Pi 3,4; Phi Beta Lambda 1; Newman Club 1,2; Intramurals 1,2,3;

Maroon and Gold

2,3,4;

1 ;

M

;

WILLIAM WISE

PAULM. WISDA

DIANE

Business

Business

Business

Accounting

General

Accounting

J

WISE

M

DIANE

GAIL WISNESKI

BRENDA L. WITMAN

Elementary

Business

Geography

General

SUSAN

WOHLHEITER
Elementary
English

J.

WISE, 426 Monroe

St..

Berwick, Pa., Phi Beta

Lambda

1,2,3,4;

WILLIAM ROBERT WISE, Box 283. Berwick
Heights, Berwick, Pa., Wrestling 2; GAIL BETH WISNESKI, 801 Juniper
St., Quakertown, Pa., Student PSEA 1,2; Gamma Theta Upsilon 2,3,4;
BRENDA LOUISE WITMAN, 294 East Main St., Adamstown, Pa.,
Pi

Omega

Pi

1,2,3,4;

Delta Epsilon Beta 2,3,4 Recording Secretary 2,3; Concert Choir 1,2;
Student PSEA 3; SUSAN AGNES WOHLHEITER, 130 Confair Parkway,
R.D. No. 1, Montoursville, Pa.

,

-

v--'

^

M 'M

JOAN WOODS

JUNEWOODSIDE

GARY WOOLCOCK

BARBARA WULFERT

ROBERT WYNNE

Secondary

Secondary

Secondary

Secondary

Elementary

Social Studies

Math

Secondary
French

Biology

Physical Ed.

English

MARGARET YATSKO

^

^

FRANK YARTZ

JOAN MARIE WOODS, 225 Wall St., Danville, Pa., Literary and Film
Society, Secretary 3; JUNE MINCEMOYER WOODSIDE, R.D. No
Millville, Pa.; GARY JOHN WOOLCOCK, R.D. No. 1, Orangeville, Pa.,
1

Concert Choir 1,2,3,4; Intramurals 1,2,3,4; Men's Glee Club I; Student
PSEA 3; BARBARA ANN WULFERT, 126 S. "niird St., Catawissa, Pa.,
Athenaeum Club 1; Student PSEA 4; Le Cercle Francais 2,3,4, President
3; ROBERT LEMANT WYNNE, 407 S. Second St., Bangor, Pa., Beta
Sigma Delta, Corresponding Secretary 3, President 4; CGA Vice President
3, Social Recreation Comm. 2, Pep 2, Decoration 1,2, Hospitality 1, BNE

Chairman

3; Freshman Orientation Staff 1,2,3,4; Bloomsburg Players
1; Freshman Class Advisor 4; FRANK C. YARTZ, 1303
Honesdale, Pa., Delta Omega Chi 3,4;
and G Band 1,2;
Varsity Club 4; Phi Sigma Pi 3,4; Basketball 1; Track 2,3,4; Intramurals
1,2,3,4; Huski Club 1,2;
THERESE YATSKO, 251 N.
Penna. Ave., Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Phi Beta Lambda 2,3,4; Freshman Orien2,3,
1;

Huski Club

Main

M

St.,

MARGARET

tation Staff 2;

Lambda Alpha

Mu

2,3,4;

DONALD

Newman Club

1;

Big-Little Sister

Co-ordinator 2;
H. YEAKEL, 824 N. 3rd St., Emmaus, Pa.
18049, Circle K 1,2,3,4; DARLENE JEAN YOCUM, R.D. No. 3, Catawissa, Pa., Spanish Club 2; Athenaeum Club I; Student PSEA 4; Kappa
Delta Pi 4; FRED YOHEY, 321 E. 15th St., Berwick, Pa., Business Ed.
Club 2,3,4; JAMES
YOHEY, R.D. No. 1, Berwick, Pa
Bloomsburg Players 1,2,3; LEE ELLEN YOHN, 11 Cross St., Danville,
Pa., Spanish Club; JOHN
YURCHINKONIS, 34 Antler Ave.,
Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; ESTHER
ZABITZ, 901 Ave. E, Riverside, Pa.,
Student PSEA 3,4; Kappa Delta Pi 3,4; Phi Alpha Theta 3,4;
M. ZAHAY, 530 Hemlock St., Freeland, Pa., Student
PSEA 3,4; Obiter 1; Bloomsburg Players 1,2,3,4; Newman Club 1,2,3,4;

LAWRENCE

GEORGE
ANN

MARGARET

LINDA JANE ZANESKI, 1244 Pulaski Ave., Shamokin, Pa.; DOLORES
JEAN ZARING, 308 W. Sunset Ave., Ephrata, Pa. 17522, Phi Beta
Lambda 1,2,3,4; Student PSEA 2; BONNIE KAY ZEEK, 236 Orchard St.,

Berwick, Pa., Literary and Film Society 3; Sigma Tau Delta 3,4; InternaClub 2; Day Women's Board, Freshman Rep., Sophomore
Rep., Junior Rep.; GLENANN ZEIGENFUSE, Dutch St., Lavelle, Pa„
Theta Gamma Phi 3,4; CGA Women's Rep. 3; Class Secretary 2; Freshman
Orientation Staff 2,3; Decoration Comm. 2; Standards Comm. 2; Hospitality Comm. 2,3; Student PSEA 4; LINDA
ZERFOSS, 127
Robert St., Nanticoke, Pa., Bloomsburg Players 1 Newman Club 1 Sigma
Alpha Eta 1,2,3,4; CHERI ANN ZIEGLER, 233 E. 7th St., Lansdale, Pa.,
German Club 1; Lambda Alpha Mu 2,3,4; Intramurals 1; Huski Club 3;
Elections Comm. 2,3; SUSAN JANE ZIMMERMAN, 411 Park Ave.,
R.D. No. 2, Milton, Pa., Harmonettes 1;
and G Band 1,2; Literary and
Film Society 3; Smdent PSEA 4; Studio Band 2,3,4.
tional Relations

MARY
;

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Above

L»f/L

it all: Ron Shultz. Standing
Darlene Yocum, Margaret Grybos. David Feather. Joe Sligora. Bill Yerger, Larry
Seated: Sally Teals. Connie Fike, Ginny Lesevich, Dolores Slavik, Bonnie Zeek, Dawne Schrantz.

who's

who

in

Ward, Barbara

american colleges

Russell,

l^i

Standing: Van Booth. Charles Hester, Kay Keyes. Galen Quick, Bill Evans. Seared: Gail Landers. Linda Cressman. Linda Bell.
Nol pictured: Judy Defant. Bruce Hopkins, Ed McNertney, Frank Mastroianni. Bob Matuza, Alan Szymanski.

Nancy

Strauss.

senior ball
genetti's lodge

hazleton

may

24, 1969

"SSSSSSS

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accaTaTireai e exeicise^

Sunday, may 25, 1969
11:00 a.m.

fl*

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commencement,

may

25, 1969, 2:00 p.m.

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jSCSiii

professional page
The

staff of the

1969 Obiter wishes

to express

its

.

.

sincere appre-

who gave this yearbook
help make this expanded

ciation to the following professional people
their confidence

volume

and financial support to

possible.

*:*%

Bernard M. Carr. D.D.S.
Oral Surgeon
205 Northeastern Bldg. Ltd.
Hazleton, Pa.
18201
Charles

S.

Cheleden, Esq.

President, Liberty Federal Savings and

202 North Broad

Loan

Street

Philadelphia, Pa.

L.F. Ritmiller,

M.D. and T.C. Corson, M.D.

587 E. Fifth Street
17815
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Ralph E. Dendler, D.D.S.
214 West Main Street
17815
Bloomsburg, Pa.

,^;.#y»>*

Louis G. Feo, M.D.

814 Pine

JP

r-%:i\

«*'«

Street

19107

Philadelphia, Pa.

Clyde H. Jacobs, M.D.
Ophthalmologist

Bowman

Bldg.,

370 Market

Street

17801

Sunbury, Pa.

JohnJ. Miller, D.D.S.
422 Jefferson Street
17815
Bloomsburg, Pa.
F.W. Reese, M.D.
404 Market Street
17815
Bloomsburg, Pa.

Samuel Schlesinger, M.D.
10 West Broad Street
18201
Hazleton, Pa.
Szal, M.D.
3457 Englewood Street
19149
Philadelphia, Pa.
George Webster Taggart, M.D.
2 East Broad Street

JosephJ.

18201
Hazleton, Pa.
J. Vanderslice, Esq.

George

Attorney-at-Law
175 Center Street

Bloomsburg, Pa.
Marshall D. Welsh,
1

East

Main

17815
Jr.,

D.D.S.

Street

Bloomsburg, Pa.
L.A. Winski, M.D.

17815

State Street
Millville, Pa.

17846

^

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*'»

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editor's

message
The 1969 Obiter

is

just

what

its

meaning

a

states

flection in passing of the '68-'69 college year at

re-

BSC.

Nothing more. Nothing less. It is different from our rigid
form yearbooks of the past simply because this year was
unique.
style

It

could not be accurately recorded

in the

dated

and format of previous Bloomsburg books.

The 1969 Obiter is not a catalog for prospective stucampus guide for parents, or a memorial for

dents, or a

departing faculty members, or a brag book for big men on
campus. This Obiter is a candid and interpretive study of

Bloomsburg

as it really was in '68 and '69. Every page was
designed with a reason and for a purpose, even though I
was forced to remain with convention in some respects.
The members of the college community who are in the

know

will understand.

Many, many

sincere thanks to Mr. Robert Haller,

creative advisor.

never

let

He was

He

me down.

is

the only person at the college

Infact,

my
who

he was more than an advisor.

the helpful equivalent of a whole staff, and a friend

besides.

Peace to Mr. Michael Gilroy, my ever-smiling, imaginayearbook representative from Bradbury, Sayles,
O'Neill, our publisher; and to Mr. Charlie Clegg, Bradtive

bury's patient production
like to

thank

my

man

in

New

York.

I

would also

pseudo-staff for the work they didn't do.

Because of them, I learned a great deal about yearbooks
and about people.
"When I was young, I was new and I knew. Now I am
not young and I do not know." But I'm learning pretty
.

damn

.

fast.

Toni Matulis, Editor

index
Academic Affairs

.

.

i-c.

S'a

c o cr
B 3S

m

s

7

Si

:/;CL

Si
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BRADBURY, SAYLES, O'NEILL— PARAGON

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