<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items?output=omeka-xml&amp;page=139&amp;sort_field=added" accessDate="2026-05-07T08:52:28-04:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>139</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>1775</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="2474" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="7567">
        <src>https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/files/original/603424bc48167a5be22a64408df683c8.jpg</src>
        <authentication>09c4a0496654acb27ca52a20011d1394</authentication>
      </file>
      <file fileId="7568">
        <src>https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/files/original/2d5ec16551d82678bddcb2274dfcda28.MP3</src>
        <authentication>3dc3ee062adb6503d6b24b67395394be</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="18">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10941">
                  <text>Audio interviews</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10942">
                  <text>McKiernan Interviews</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10943">
                  <text>Stephen McKiernan's collection of interviews includes more than two hundred interviews with prominent figures of the 1960s, which were collected between the mid-1990s to 2023 The collection provides narratives of people who were actively involved in or witnessed events in the 1960s, an era which spurred profound cultural and political transformation in the twentieth century. Interviewees include politicians, artists, scholars, musicians, authors, and veterans who delve into the decade’s most prominent issues and events, including the civil rights movement, the free speech movement, the anti-war movement, women’s rights, gay rights, segregation, the Vietnam War, Woodstock, Hippies, Yippies, and individualism.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&#13;
&lt;h3&gt;The McKiernan 22&lt;/h3&gt;&#13;
&lt;div&gt;Stephen McKiernan interviewed legends of the 1960s. When asked in 2021 where one should start when sifting through his vast collection, he provided the following list:&lt;/div&gt;&#13;
&lt;ul&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/854"&gt;Julian Bond&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1866"&gt;Bobby Muller&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1175"&gt;Craig McNamara&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/910"&gt;Dr. Arthur Levine&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/837"&gt;Diane Carlson Evans&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/942"&gt;Dr. Ellen Schrecker&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/876"&gt;Dr. Lee Edwards&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/841"&gt;Peter Coyote&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1233"&gt;Dr. Roosevelt Johnson&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/899"&gt;Rennie Davis&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1222"&gt;Kim Phuc&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/917"&gt;George McGovern&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/833"&gt;Frank Schaeffer&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/840"&gt;Rev. Dr. Frank Forrester Church &lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1240"&gt;Dr. Marilyn Young&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/842"&gt;James Fallows&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/835"&gt;Joseph Lee Galloway&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/911"&gt;John Lewis&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/839"&gt;Paul Critchlow&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/888"&gt;Steve Gunderson&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1159"&gt;Charles Kaiser&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/2407"&gt;Joseph Lewis&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10944">
                  <text>Stephen McKiernan</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10945">
                  <text>Binghamton University Libraries</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10947">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50614">
                  <text>In copyright.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="30">
      <name>Template: Simple Audio Player with Transcription</name>
      <description>This template displays an audio player by Amplitude.js with a scrollable transcription which is loaded from the "Transcription" metadata field.&#13;
&#13;
This template displays an audio player with the first attached image file as the 'cover image'. For its audio source, the template looks for the first attached audio file. If additional audio files exist, they should be combined using audio editing software, or a separate Omeka item should be made for each part. </description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="56">
          <name>Date of Interview</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38684">
              <text>24 June 2022</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="2">
          <name>Interviewer</name>
          <description>The person(s) performing the interview</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38685">
              <text>Stephen McKiernan</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="3">
          <name>Interviewee</name>
          <description>The person(s) being interviewed</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38686">
              <text>Dr. Julian E. Zelizer</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="35">
          <name>Biographical Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38687">
              <text>Dr. Julian E. Zelizer is a Professor of History and Public Affairs at Princeton University and a CNN Political Analyst and a regular guest on NPR’s "Here and Now." He authored and edited 22 books including, The Fierce Urgency of Now: Lyndon Johnson, Congress, and the Battle for the Great Society (2015), the winner of the D.B. Hardeman Prize for the Best Book on Congress. Dr. Zelizer focuses on the area of the second half of the 20th century and the 21st century of American history. Dr. Zelizer has a Bachelor's degree from Brandeis University and he obtained a Ph.D. in History from Johns Hopkins University.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="11">
          <name>Duration</name>
          <description>Length of time involved (seconds, minutes, hours, days, class periods, etc.)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38688">
              <text>1:05:29</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="63">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38689">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="64">
          <name>Digital Publisher</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38690">
              <text>Binghamton University Libraries</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Digital Format</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38691">
              <text>audio/mp4</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38692">
              <text>Digital file</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="60">
          <name>Date of Digitization</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38693">
              <text>24 June 2022</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Material Type</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38694">
              <text>Sound</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="66">
          <name>Interview Format</name>
          <description>Video or Audio</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38695">
              <text>Audio</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="74">
          <name>Keywords</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38697">
              <text>Books; Rabbi; Religious leaders; People; World, Religion, Martin Luther King; Anti-war movement, Protest; Activism; Jewish life; Judaism; Cincinnati; War; Jews; Writing.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="5">
          <name>Transcription</name>
          <description>Any written text transcribed from a sound, or alternative text from a visual medium</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="43130">
              <text>McKiernan Interviews&#13;
Interview with: Julian Zelizer&#13;
Interviewed by: Stephen McKiernan&#13;
Transcriber: Lynn Bijou&#13;
Date of interview: 24 June 2022&#13;
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------&#13;
(Start of Interview)&#13;
&#13;
SM:  00:04&#13;
Can you hear me? &#13;
&#13;
JZ:  00:05&#13;
I can hear you just fine.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  00:06&#13;
Okay, great. Well, Dr. Julian Zelizer. Thank you very much for agreeing to do the interview on your book, "Abraham Joshua Heschel: A Life of Radical Amazement," and that was an amazing book. Could you describe your, your early years, where you grew up, your early influences in your family and peers? Where you went to high school, and college, and-and how did you become interested in history?&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  00:31&#13;
Sure. Well, thanks for having me. And I grew up in a place called [inaudible] New Jersey, which is a suburb in northern New Jersey. My mother was, still is a professor of sociology. While I was growing up, she taught at Barnard College. And after I went to college, she moved to Princeton. My father, Jerry Zelizer is a conservative rabbi, in [inaudible], that is where his synagogue was at a place called the Bay Shalom, and I was an only child. So, I grew up there. And I would add, since it is relevant, my father's father was also a rabbi in Columbus, Ohio. And his father, my great grandfather was a rabbi in, in eastern Europe. So, I grew up in [inaudible] and I went to, until eighth grade, a place called Solomon Schechter Day School, which was a Jewish Day School in Cranford, New Jersey, which was half Jewish Studies and half secular studies. And then I moved to [inaudible] Public High School, where I graduated in 1987. And in high school, I started to gain an interest in history. But, it was not anything I was planning to do. To be honest, I, it was just classes I enjoyed. But I was not someone who knew exactly where everything was going. And when I grew up, I did grow up going to synagogue, every week, our house was kosher, I was the rabbi son. It was very important to shaping my identity, in retrospect. Then I went to Brandeis University, between 1987 and 1991, where I started to really gain a focus of what interested me. In my junior year, I won a fellowship at Brandeis, through the Ford Foundation, they were providing fellowships to students who might be interested in academia. And they paid you a stipend, which I am sure was not that much, but at the time seemed like more money than I ever made. And over the course of the year, you have engaged in an in-depth research project and whatever your discipline was, and worked closely with a mentor. So, I started working on the history of liberalism in Massachusetts, during the 20th century with a historian named Jim Kloppenburg, an intellectual historian. And it was coming right after Michael Dukakis had locked to George H.W. Bush in 1988, which was the real first election I focused on in-depth. And I was just curious why the label of a Massachusetts liberal had been so damaging to Dukakis and, and I spent a year working on this project using original resources. And I just really started to enjoy that kind of work. And I continued with this my senior year as a senior thesis project that ended up being like 300 pages.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  03:43&#13;
Wow.&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  03:45&#13;
And by the end, I knew I was either going to do history as an academic or journalism, one of the two, as a way to study politics. And I decided in my senior year that academia was the way to go for me, and I applied and I got into Johns Hopkins University. And I went straight from college to graduate school where I was there from 1991 to 1996, when I received my PhD in history working with someone named Luca Lamba.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  04:19&#13;
Wow. What, your history of, of the rabbi background is, I was reading in your book that your grandfather received an award the same day Dr. King received an award at a function. Could you talk about that just briefly before we get into the main part of your book?&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  04:36&#13;
Yeah, I mean, the fascinating part of working on this biography of Pashto was obviously there was an element of exploring my father and grandfather's world. Both of them went to the Jewish Theological Seminary, where Abraham Joshua Heschel was a professor for most of his career, and to look back at the world of American Judaism in the 1950s and (19)60s, when my grandfather was a working rabbi, my father was studying and then become a rabbi. And I found these points of connection, which were really amazing. I was just looking by chance, at the program, I found all this old material. I think my father, I am not sure, but I think my father had found all these boxes of material when my grandfather passed away. And he asked me if I wanted them, I took them. And in it was the program for when my father graduated and was ordained as a rabbi. And I was just kind of thumbing through it. And it turned out that Heschel, a king was there to receive an honorary degree, and Heschel was obviously there as well. And my grandfather received an honorary degree as well, at that same moment-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  04:58&#13;
Wow.&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  05:00&#13;
-in the program. So, there, everyone was in the room. And it is kind of just symbolic of this project and, and kind of how it was different from some of my other work.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  06:07&#13;
Your father and grandfather so linked to history, and now you are linked to it. And now you are teaching it, and writing about it, which is exciting. When you look at the period, 1960 to 1975, what comes to mind as a historian, and as a scholar, who is written about this era in different ways?&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  06:28&#13;
A lot of things I mean, certainly political turbulence, and social turbulence is what I instantly think of with a question like that. It was a very contentious 15 years, or however you want to demarcate the period, where some of the most fundamental elements of what America is about were being questioned. And they were being challenged from left and right. And that ranged from the way race relations were part of the history of this nation and racial inequality was so ingrained in the institutions and culture of the country, to what did the US do overseas? And what were these principles that politicians talked about when they deployed military force? And how did they compare with the reality on the ground? And those are just two of the questions. There were many others. How do we handle poverty in this country? What does the government, what is the role of the government in education? And it is just incredibly broad, and it culminates in (19)74, really, with a big question about political power and presidential power with the Watergate scandal and the resignation of Richard Nixon. So, it is just an incredibly tumultuous period, but not all in a bad way. And that is part of what I have learned, while studying, including writing this book, a lot of the questions were important ones that were being asked, and they really press the nation to think about its values, its aspects, its basic moral core, and what it was going to stand for, for the next few decades.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  08:13&#13;
You know, the life of Abraham Joshua Heschel was, I mean his whole life, you can study a certain section, and just study that for the rest of your life. Because how did this person become who he became? And this is a kind of a general question, there will be other ones later in the interview, but the life of Abraham Joshua Heschel, I think, fits into the decade known as the (19)60s and early (19)70s, as a religious leader, an intellect, an author, a thinker, and one heck of an activist, extraordinaire. Your thoughts on his role as an icon of the (19)60s and his role in Judaism in general? And I will be asking more questions too.&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  08:54&#13;
Sure, I mean, that is how the book starts, it actually starts with that framework. And I have, early in the book, one of the most iconic pictures of him, but also an iconic picture of the 1960s. It is a picture of March 21, 1965. It is one of the many marches that took place in Selma for voting rights. And this was a march where King called on religious leaders to come and, and march as a show of support from the religious community for the need for legislation to protect black American voting rights. And in that photo, which most American Jews, and many American Jews have seen at some point. King is marching alongside Heschel, Fred Shuttlesworth, John Lewis, some of the iconic civil rights leaders of the period, in both a moment of civic euphoria in some ways, and also, a scary moment. Because a few weeks earlier, the state authorities had beaten protesters simply for the act of protesting. And that picture is so important because it reflected not only activism in the 1960s, in this moment when so many Americans decided to take to the streets to demand social justice, but the role religion plays in that mobilization, something that is often forgotten. Religious leaders were integral to many of the progressive political movements of the period, and Heschel has come to embody that interconnection. So Heschel, as a civil rights activist, as an anti-Vietnam activist, as an activist who fought for the rights of Jews who are living in the Soviet Union, and much more, really does reflect some of the spirit of the 1960s. And, and a forgotten place of religion in that particular world. And simultaneously, and we will talk about it more. He was also a very important figure, which brought him to this place, in kind of being a public, religious intellectual, something we do not necessarily have any more, writing books that received widespread attention about theological questions. How do we think in the post-war period after the Holocaust, after the nuclear bomb about God, and a relationship of individuals to the divine?&#13;
&#13;
SM:  11:32&#13;
Yeah, you did a great job in every aspect of his life, very beginning when he was young. Wherever you live, there was anti-Semitism, and he had to, he experienced that, he lived in poverty. The economics conditions are not good within his family. Could you talk a little bit about how this great rabbi who became an icon of the (19)60s were how he evolved from those very beginnings when he was in Warsaw, throughout through Europe before he came to the United States in Cincinnati.&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  12:09&#13;
Yeah, I mean, he has an immigrant story, which is part of what fascinated me also about him to understand that trajectory. He grows up in Warsaw. He was born in 1907. And January 11, 1907, and, and he grows up in a family of very, that comes from very distinguished Hasidic rabbis. Hasidism is a sect of what today we would call Orthodox Judaism. But very traditional, but also very spirited. It was a kind of Jewish community that prayed with exuberance that devoted much of their life to studying the Torah, the Hebrew Bible, and more. And he grows up in Warsaw being trained to be a rabbi, he is a prodigy, his family assumes he will continue with the tradition. And his father died when he is very young, and in 1916, as part of the influenza outbreak of the time and Heschel's just nine years old. But he continues with his training, his uncle trains him as a rabbi. But during these years in Warsaw, where he lives in, in the Jewish community, and is surrounded by Judaism, in terms of synagogues, and publications, he was always interested in the secular world, even as a young boy. He becomes fascinated with a group of kind of radical Yiddish, secular poet who works nearby. And I described a scene where he goes into their offices and asked if he could publish poetry with them. But ultimately, he leaves Warsaw, which is a big move for someone of his background, and he decides he wants to study at a university. So, he goes to Vilna, first, where he goes to, a high school, essentially, that trains him in secular education. And then he moves to Berlin, where he goes to the University of Berlin, and will work on ultimately a PhD in, in Philosophy. And he continues with his Jewish studies but by the 1930s, he is a guy who is still very religious, and religion is integral to how he thinks of the world. But he is also become deeply enmeshed in the highest intellectual circles of the world at that time, in Berlin at this university of philosophers, of other kinds of social scientists. And he writes his dissertation on the Hebrew prophets, and is fascinated with these figures who told the world that they could essentially hear God, and raged about everything that was bad in the country. He teaches at an adult education school in Frankfort, a very distinguished institution. But in 1938, he was kicked out of the country. He has been watching the Nazis rise to power and in 1938 the [inaudible] rounds up Jews who were not from Germany and expelled them, including him from the country. He goes back to Warsaw, he is able to escape. But ultimately in 1940, he receives a fellowship from the Hebrew Union College, which is a seminary in Cincinnati, Ohio training reformed Jews. And the head of it a guy named Julian Morgenstern, has a fellowship program where he is trying to rescue Jewish, Eastern European intellectuals. And he hears about Heschel, and he is one of the people who receives a fellowship, and comes to Cincinnati in 1940. So, his trajectory is one that always from a young age, mixed very intense Judaic study in the Hasidic tradition, combined with a fascination with the world of the secular, intellectual university.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  16:11&#13;
Yeah, the thing is though, right away, you notice the connection between Dr. King and Rabbi Heschel, in terms of they both had deep desire for interfaith relationship in terms of social activism and the issues of the day, whether it be racism, the war in Vietnam, even Russian Jewry, which he was involved in, as well as dealing with the Catholic Church, and their-their historic treatment of Jews by saying that Jesus was-was, was killed by the Jews, these kinds of things. He was dealing with a lot of particular issues. He has got a lot of supporters, but he has got a lot of people that are challenging him, too. So, he, he is, he is one heck of a person in terms of history books. You have a quote, in the very beginning of the book, which is, you have already made references to several things. But, I am all over here. Your book is so good with respect to quotes. Wherever he lived, you got some quotes about what he said about certain conditions. And, I am trying to memorize them. So, if I ever make a speech, I can always refer to them because they are, they are unbelievable. This is one you have at the very beginning of the book. I just want to read it. And have you comment on it, commenting on it. "There is an evil, which most of us condone, and are even guilty of, indifference to evil." Dr. King was talking all about this too, indifference with something he could not stand. "We remain neutral, impartial, and not easily moved to the wrongs done unto other people. Indifference, indifference to evil is more insidious than evil itself. It is more universal, more contagious, more dangerous, a silent justification it makes possible, and evil ripping us and expansion becoming the rule and being in turn accepted." Could you comment on that?&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  18:16&#13;
Yeah, that is really, it is a, it is a very important quote in my mind to understanding some of what was driving Heschel. And it is a quote, it also resonated with King who spoke about indifference all the time, in the letter from Birmingham jail, King, famously lashed out, not against the open racists of the south. But he said, the preachers who were because they said they were being pragmatic, were not doing anything. They were the real danger, was the moderate who was more dangerous than the extremists because they allowed the extremists to continue And Heschel agreed with that. I mean, part of where this came from, was Heschel watching the Nazis rise to power. And ultimately, while he was in Cincinnati from 1940 to (19)45, watching the American political community do very little to save Jewish refugees, and even watching mainstream Jewish organizations be very timid in his mind, about making this a central issue and putting enough pressure on politicians. And it was that indifference, which terrified him and he, during the 1940s saw the cost of that indifference. It allowed Nazi Germany to literally ravage the Jewish community. It allowed, you know, the Nazis to ultimately kill many of his own family members, including his mother and three sisters, and the way in which indifference was so important in the Christian community, the Jewish community, to the heart that unfolded during the war would remain with them. And he would spend a lot of the rest of his career, talking about that, really attacking people who were not doing anything, attacking people who were sitting on the sidelines, even when they knew things were wrong. And not understanding that to not act was in some ways, becoming part of the problem, which is what that quote is about. And he talks a lot about this in the book that he publishes based on his dissertation on the Hebrew prophets. And, the Hebrew prophets were not indifferent. They were the opposite. They were people who were often considered. Often, some said they were drunk, or they were not psychologically stable, because they were walking around, screaming and raging about what everyone was accepting as normal poverty, inequality, violence, injustice. And he admired the prophets because they did not do that. They spent their whole life saying this is not acceptable. And so, I think once he reaches the 1960s, and he sees the different movements taking forth, it is almost inevitable for him, to not be indifferent, and to actually devote the last decade of his life to these political struggles.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  21:15&#13;
You know, the prophets that you just mentioned, are throughout the book. I mean, in various issues in his life, what would the prophets do? And really, he was constantly thinking about them. And during the 1960s, in the part you talk about Selma and Washington and that era, and at the very end of the book, you know, the prophets are brought up in quotes over, and over, and over again, what would the prophets do? And, you know, I wanted to mention, too, that the books that he wrote, were amazing. I know that some of the people that were involved in the Civil Rights Movement and some of the people that were activists, like Father Barragan, Daniel Barragan, who I knew, looked up to Rabbi Heschel as a mentor. Because of the you know, this, making that religion was very important in dealing with the social issues, you know of our time, whether it be the nuclear bomb, the nuclear war in [inaudible], which is what the Berrigans were going after, and the Vietnam War. So, things like this, but it is the books, you know, these books, I have two of them. But the, the books were "The Sabbath Man is not Alone, God and Man is not Alone," "Man's Quest for God and God in Search of Man." Have you, did you have a chance to read all these books?&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  22:36&#13;
Oh, yes, I read them several times. Some of them are difficult to really absorb. But I read them carefully. Because what I really started to understand as I wrote the book, was there was a clear connection between what he was writing and thinking about in the 1950s. And he is really writing about, in the Sabbath, he is writing about why religion in the modern world, "God in Search of Man," or "Man is not Alone," two other books that were famous works of his where he is talking about the relationship of the individual to God, and how the individual could open themselves up to ultimately hearing God's path of. I started to see, these are not separate from the world of activism that he ends up in, they are often treated that way. You know, first he was a writer and theologian, then he became an activist. But, when you read the book, and you read these books several times you kind of see the path that would ultimately lead him to find the activism so compelling. So, the Sabbath is an example. It is not obvious. But it is basically a book of why does the Sabbath matter? Why in the modern world of finance and consumption, should people take one day a week, which is Saturday for the Jewish people, and not do any work, not use any electricity, devote themselves basically, to prayer and introspection. And he writes about it, in terms of Jewish tradition, but he also tries to make an argument that this is an antidote to the rampant consumption that Americans were engaged in, it was a way to take control of part of the time that an individual experienced and separate it from, from that modern from that modern world. So, he is thinking about how to make the secular world a better place, through religious commitment. And in these other books, he is writing about how if someone is truly pious, if they devote themselves, to prayer, to committing, to engage in what Jews called the Mitzvoth, the good deeds that are obligated of every Jew. They, they ultimately become more spiritual, they become more pious, and they can hear what God is thinking and trying to communicate to them about the world and what is wrong in the world. And he ultimately thinks about this through the Hebrew prophets. But he thinks of it also in terms of what he has seen, from the activists all around, and including many religious activists, non-Jewish, from seeing Barragan, who are also forging these connections between their own religious slash theological beliefs, and the great issues of the day.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  25:36&#13;
Throughout the book, when you are talking about those, not the books of Sabbath, but the Sabbath itself, that was a very important day for him. And what- -no matter where he was in his life, whether, whether he was in poverty, or whether he was, you know, in New York City, being a professor. I mean, it is a very important day, something, he would not want to do something on that day that had any effect on the Sabbath. And so that was very important. Could you talk about, you know, Cincinnati becomes an important part here. I was talking to somebody about this book, and they said, why did he come to Cincinnati? But could you talk about his time in Cincinnati, and then finally, his, his moving to New York City?&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  25:45&#13;
It was. Yeah, so the Cincinnati years are quite important, although they were often overlooked. And they are from 1940 to 1945, again, he has brought here by Julian Morgenstern, who was the head of the Hebrew Union College. And he has brought on as a fellow, although they ultimately make him a faculty member. And it is a very difficult five years for him. First, he is living in a reformed seminary and reformed Judaism, basically was the effect of a branch of Judaism in the United States, and in Europe as well, that did not actually require practicing many of the traditions that more observant Jews thought were essential. So, the Sabbath, for example, a traditional Jew will not use electricity on the Sabbath, Heschel would, they will not drive a car, they won't go to a supermarket or store. But reformed Judaism was not quite as strict and allowed for all that. So, here Heschel spent five years living with these individuals who were being trained to be rabbis. But he saw, they did not keep kosher. None of, many of them could not read Hebrew. They did not have the practices or the knowledge that he thought were essential to being a rabbi. It was also during these years, that the Holocaust unfolds, then as I said, his mother and three sisters would all be killed during these years. So, he is all alone. He is living in this seminary, where kind of an oddity, and he does not really mesh with most of the students and faculty around him. And, he is listening to the events in Europe, and he is mourning as different family members perish. And it is during these years, finally, in Cincinnati, that he starts, just starts to engage in a little activism. He goes, for example, to Washington in 1943. Together with an orthodox rabbi in Cincinnati, and he participates in something called the "Rabbis March," which is a group of 400, traditional and observant rabbis again, what we call orthodox today, who marched through the streets of Washington, meet with members of Congress, they try to meet with the president unsuccessfully, to demand that the American political community does something about eastern European Jews. So, these are important years, and he is also gaining a sense of some of the differences of American Judaism as it was taking form, and what was still strong in different parts of Europe like Warsaw. And, he leaves in 1945, the Jewish Theological Seminary, which is in New York, it is a seminary, and it is also where conservative rabbis were being trained. They, a guy named Louis Finkelstein, who is the chancellor offers Heschel a full-time faculty position, in part because he thinks Heschel will be inspirational to conservative rabbis who are being trained because he has that knowledge. He has that background in Eastern European Judaism that was becoming more distant for younger generation of rabbinical students like my father.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  26:40&#13;
It is really, I have a couple of quotes again from several parts of your book and I, it just reiterates what you have been saying about what he believed in, but the quotes are just wonderfully written, and wonderfully put together. "We affirm the principle of the separation of church and state, and we reject the separation of religion, and the human situation. And, and second one I want to quote here is "To be pious, to be a pious person meant creating a connection between spirituality and progressive politics, leading to battles against social injustice, and the militarism in the lived world." And the third one, final one, here, "He would, he wanted to repair the world by ending injustice, and injustice he saw in Europe, in his youth, and in his battles." This is, you are wording this basically, in America during the Civil Rights era, his desire to end the Vietnam War, that, this, his last years of his life when he, when he is in New York, it is amazing what he did. And, he is everywhere, he is going, he is giving a speech, or he is going to a protest, or he is, you know, going to try to get groups to interface together to work against an injustice someplace in the world. Can you talk about this, the importance at this particular time in the (19)60s of the interfaith connection that he was so involved in? And so Was Dr. King, and I, and I am a firm believer after reading this book, that if Dr. Heschel had not been here, in America, there would not have been a person like him to work with Dr. King. There were a lot of people that want to interfaith within his group, but to get your thoughts on this, on this real close connection between this interfaith effort?&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  31:44&#13;
Yeah, I mean, there is a lot, of a lot of points there. On the first one, there was an interesting part of the book, and, you know, he is trying to find this balance between what is the role of religion and say, in the political world. And yet, as the first quote you read, says, he is not someone who is saying, you know, religion should guide public life, he is a believer in the separation of church and state. And so, there is always this question of what are the lines, and some of his critics would argue that sometimes they were turned off, by the way, he invoked religion, because it could lead to a kind of fervor, and, and kind of a dogmatic view of issues that isn't always best in politics. It was interesting to think of some of these debates and read them both in real time and retrospectively, but ultimately, he believed that religion just had an important role. And it was not simply that if you are religious, you will see, that you have to join, cause a and cause b, the civil rights movement, the anti-war movement, he has this other argument which is interwoven through much of his writing after 1945, where, if you have a society where religious questions which are ultimately, questions about ethics and morality, are no longer part of the conversation, no longer part of the lived experience of, of people, then secular society can become extraordinarily dangerous. And, he saw that part of how we ended up in a world where a Holocaust against Jews could happen, or where we could use technology, like the nuclear atomic bomb to just raise two cities was because spirituality had lost its place in modern society, and that these questions that gradually faded from what many people thought about and it led them to be hardened, it led them to be indifferent. And so, he was trying to kind of craft an argument about why religion, as someone who appreciated science, he appreciated modernity, he appreciated the consumer world, but he was trying to argue that even in that if we do not have this religious core, we are in danger, we will end up doing terrible things to, to each other. And he found this interfaith community when he engaged in activism on different issues that was like minded, and the interfaith element was quite important and it was really interesting, he really rejected religious leaders, Jewish or otherwise, who, you know, believed that religions had to stay separate, believed that the basic ritualistic differences between religions rendered any effort to work together as, as impossible. One example, a concrete example was between 1962 and 1965, the Vatican in Vatican two is revisiting a lot of its most controversial doctrines in the wake of WWII and the anti-colonialism. The church is trying to look at parts of the doctrine that had been used by forces of hatred, and anti-Semitism is one of it and, doctrine related to the idea that Jews need to be converted, or that all Jews are responsible for the death of Christ become what the Vatican is discussing, and Heschel is recruited as a secret liaison to the Vatican, to talk with Vatican officials, including the Pope, about these questions, and to lobby the Vatican to change its ways. Well many Orthodox Jews when they learn that this happened, it is ultimately revealed by the press that he was part of these discussions. They are furious with Heschel, they say, this kind of interfaith dialogue is not right, that you should not be discussing with Catholics or vice versa doctrine. There are two different religions, but Heschel railed against that way of thinking. And when he has involved in the anti-Vietnam war movement, it is the interfaith connections, which really drives what he does. And then finally, yes, by the end of his career, and by the time of his death in 1972, he was everywhere, it is kind of like a [inaudible] of American history at that point. And given where he started, just as a, in the Jewish community of Warsaw that this is a guy by the end of his life, presidents are aware of, Popes are aware of, the media will cover all the time, is really a mark of the kind of impact he was able to have.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  36:55&#13;
Well, he had an influence on Dr. King, for sure. And, I learned something in your book about the fact that the group that Rabbi Heschel was involved with, the clergy concerned about the Vietnam War, or clergy and laity concerned about Vietnam were the ones that invited him to speak at Riverside Church in 1960. No, yeah, (19)67 against the Vietnam War. That is so historic, I never saw the connection. I thought Dr. King just came.&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  37:29&#13;
Right. And I did not either, actually, I mean, I knew about that speech, it is one of the most important pieces, if you study the history of the Vietnam War, and the politics.  King had been very reluctant to speak out against the war, in part because many civil rights leaders did not want him too, many supported the war. In (19)67, the Vietnam War is still popular. Many were scared that if they angered Lyndon Johnson on the war, he would, you know, essentially get back at them by withdrawing his support for civil rights. And King himself was really conflicted over what to do, he famously makes a speech at the Riverside Church where finally decides to, he cannot stand it any longer. And he makes a blistering speech about the war, about the cost of the war, about what it is doing, both to the Vietnamese and here in American society. And it is a turning point, because after that King is forever part of the anti-war movement. It gives the antiwar movement broader support in many ways, because they get connected to the civil rights movement. But the way, [inaudible] was an event organized by this group, that Heschel was part of, it was-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  38:46&#13;
Yep.&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  38:46&#13;
-these religious leaders, who King was very comfortable with, he knew all of them, who invited him to speak at this event at the Riverside Church. And if you watch the old videos of it, I believe you can even see it online, Heschel is sitting there right next to him as King delivers this-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  39:03&#13;
Wow.&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  39:03&#13;
historic speech. And again, I have seen it, I have heard it, I never like focused in on who organized this thing. So, it is really I think it is an important moment. And you can see the kind of effect Heschel and his cohorts are having by (19)67.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  39:19&#13;
I wonder if even President Johnson saw that, or maybe he did, maybe he, because he was very upset with Dr. King. But, you did not hear him being upset with anybody else. But, he could have been upset with many of the others as well, who were there from different faiths. And I believe the minister there was Wyatt T. Walker, was not it? I believe that was, he was the minister at that church at that time. And I also want to bring up the fact that, the impact that Rabbi Heschel had on people from other faiths, his mentees, and they both said, they said this and I had all, they all came to my campus over the years. Daniel Barragan, Williamson Coffin, and Richard John Newhouse, and they were all they considered Rabbi Heschel, a mentor. And they were, my golly, they were powerful people themselves.&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  40:13&#13;
So yeah, they did. You are talking about some of the most important figures of that decade. And, they really admired him. And for Heschel this was important because within his own community, he was pretty controversial. And even at the Jewish Theological Seminary, some would say he had more enemies or opponents than supporters. Some of this was because he was critical of American Judaism, including the way rabbis are being trained. He did not think they were learning enough theology. They were focused more on, on textual analysis and understanding Jewish law. He was an outspoken critic of the modern suburban synagogue, he would make all these speeches, where he would say that the synagogues being built around the country were beautiful, and they offered all kinds of services, but they were devoid of prayer, they were devoid of spirit, there was no reason people would remain attached to it. And this was a direct attack on what his colleagues were trying to do, including the famous guy named Mordecai Kaplan, whose, all his writing was about the centrality of the synagogue. So, he was controversial because of his thinking, because of the way he approached the rabid and, and he was also controversial politically, again, most mainstream religion supported the war in Vietnam as late as (19)67, and (19)68, including the rabbinical assembly, and I have a statement they released in (19)67, where they condemn this group that Heschel is part of. And Heschel is really the focus because he is the Jewish leader in this group, and say they disagree with it. And they do not think what he is doing is right. So, Heschel found a lot of comfort and solace in these connections that he made outside of the Jewish world where you would have people like John Bennett, or Barragan revering him and really admiring what he was doing. And I think psychologically, at that moment in his career, this was extremely important.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  42:21&#13;
Well, the thing I noticed in the, in the book, you talk about the importance of memory; memory meant an awful lot to him. Here is this man who wrote all these great books, articles, you know, everything, taught students in the classroom. Yet he has this quote, Jewish said, or something that you put in the book, Jewish education to him, should foster Jewish memory. The vital sounds of Jewish education are not books, but the bearers of memories, those who engage with the spirit and bear witness, beware of that, which is, I cannot remember printing I am sorry about that. "Beware of that which has been passed down." Now obviously, throughout his life, he never could forget the Holocaust and every element of actions, even in the civil rights movement, when he saw the poverty and the terrible things happening to African Americans, they could not vote. They were being, they were being hanged. They were being denied their freedoms, treated as second class citizens. That memory of his he does not have to read a book for that, he witnessed it. And I think that is an important thing, too, that your memory is important. Any thoughts on that?&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  43:43&#13;
No, I think it is, it is true. Ironically, I mean he, he tried to do some of this in his book, I think he was, he was not simply concerned with people won't remember the Holocaust, because in his lifetime, that was almost inconceivable. But he did talk, he talked, for example, when he was trying to garner support for the issue of Soviet Jewry, in the early (19)60s, when it was not really an issue. There was not a movement yet. He, he reminded people to think back to the 1940s, when so much of the American Jewish community established we did not do enough to put pressure on politicians. And he worried that by the (19)60s, a lot of the Jewish community was forgetting that, and forgetting the costs that could be incurred from that kind of, you know, forgetting of the past. But, he was also really worried that American Jews were no longer able to remember that world of eastern Europe that he saw it was so glorious, even with the anti-Semitism and even with what ultimately happened yet, slightly nostalgic look, or memory of the early 20th century in that world in which he was born and raised, and he wrote a book called "The Earth is the Lord's." It is one of his, it is his first book after the war. It is published in English. And it is called "The Inner World of the Jew in Eastern Europe." And it is more, almost like a sermon or a eulogy than a book. It is a poem, all about the magic that he remembered in eastern Europe, where you had a world of Jews, who were focused on studying the Bible, studying the Torah, who devoted themselves to that over material concerns where he argued, every person regardless of wealth was equal, because knowledge was the commodity and everyone was allowed to devote themselves to that knowledge. And he talked about the enthusiasm and fervor of the Jewish community where he was raised. And of course, again, a lot of that was nostalgic, he did not talk about the immense poverty and suffering, he did not talk about some of the problems that led him to leave ultimately. But, the book is about memory. It is a plea that Americans-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  46:06&#13;
Yep.&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  46:06&#13;
-use after the war, do not forget that world, which because of the war, was now literally being lost, not just in terms of memory, but physically.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  46:15&#13;
Yeah, I, just about everything he touches is something you can learn from, you could get a young person, please read this book or please read about the life of Rabbi Heschel, and you will learn something about life. The rest of the interview, I want to concentrate on Rabbi Heschel and the (19)60s. Could you concentrate on, right now on Selma? In the book, you state that he, he was actually watching a program on the Holocaust on T.V. when they broke in and talked about what was going on in the south in Selma, and how they had beaten the protesters. And, John Lewis actually had his head cracked at that one. And, and he said, I got to go south. He could not, it was, just his reaction to what was happening in Selma. And of course, a couple days later, Dr. King organized another March, and he wanted to be part of it. Could you talk about that?&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  47:19&#13;
Yeah so, so he has, he had been following the civil rights story for, for many years already. He was an avid watcher of the evening news, he would watch it every night, he read the newspapers. And, he said that in the process of revising the Hebrew prophets, his dissertation to be a book, he, then was changing, and he was seeing the connections between what he was writing about, and the protests that he was reading about. He gets involved in civil rights, years before the Selma march. The most important I will highlight is, in 1963, Martin Luther King invites Heschel to speak at a meeting in Chicago, of interfaith leaders on religion and race. And, Heschel gives one of the keynote speeches and I quote a lot of the speech in the book because it is really, it is quite powerful. Cornell West would later say that the speech he delivered in (19)63, is "One of the most, it is one of the best speeches by a white person on race since abolition," and one of the topics. And, he basically said in that speech, which King is watching, that you cannot be a religious person, if you are a racist, that race and religion cannot coexist in the same heart. And, he attacks religious leaders who are being indifferent, who are not seeing that they have to take on this problem in American life, and the speech is covered in the press. And it really puts him on the map in the civil rights community. And before (19)65, he continues to speak in interfaith gatherings about race and religion. He does some protests and activism on the street, in New York City, on issues of education and religion. But ultimately, it is in March (19)65 that this all picks up, and it starts on March 7 1965, that is the first march, Heschel's not there. That is called and remembered as Bloody Sunday because protesters are marching and when they are on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, the authorities violently attack them, beat them, beat many of the protesters, including John Lewis, who is the head of a group called Snick, who has his head cracked open by a police baton. And, it is an important moment because the media covers it. And as you said, ABC News cuts away, they are showing the Sunday night movie, "Judgment at Nuremberg," a movie about the Holocaust, to show exactly what was taking place in the south. And, and Heschel is aware of this. He is watching this and he is following the news. And then, he gets this invitation to come to a subsequent march on March 21 where King's bringing religious leaders because the goal after Bloody Sunday, Lyndon Johnson, the president of the United States, has called on Congress, finally, he called on Congress to pass the Voting Rights bill. And so, the marches in Selma are an effort to build pressure on Congress on the administration to follow through with that promise. And then, Tim gets the invitation to go home on March 21. And he is very scared. He is truly frightened. Because going to Selma is not like a trip, I am got to get through part of a protest, Bloody Sunday shows the stakes were high that violence was a reality. And he and his family, he has a wife and daughter, are terrified. But, he decides that he has to go, he decides at this point, there is no turning back. And so, he ultimately goes, he travels there. He is picked up by Andrew Young, whose one of the important civil rights leaders who carries around a copy of the Prophet, and has read it religiously, and really admires Heschel. And then, Heschel participates in this march. And I recount kind of how the march unfolds, I found this amazing diary, where he jotted down notes about the experience that are in his archives. And it is an incredible experience for him. He feels the religious fervor from, from the event and he understands what activism can be in a new way. He famously said he felt like he "was praying with his leg," on-on that day. And he also meets, one last thing, a lot of younger Jews who were there who said they were not really religious ever, they had no connection to Judaism. But one young man who's a reformed Jew says to him, driving back to the airport, that because of that day, because of the march in Selma, and meeting and seeing Heschel who, at this point, he has changed physically, he literally looks like a prophet, he has a long white beard, his hair is overflowing, that because of that day, he understands the connection to the tradition in a very profound way. And I will add, Heschel's also horrified, he is, he is, he loves what he does, he loves the movement, but he also sees the ferocity of the, the  racism as they march, they are surrounded by, you know, Alabamians, who, you know, holding up signs, with horrible racial epithets, and often anti-Semitic ones as well, they are often connected in the minds of the white racist, and he does not ever forget just how deeply rooted racism is in this country.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  53:13&#13;
Yeah, you state in there often that he said at this time, "That racism is our most serious domestic evil," and he said, "It was easier for the children of Israel to cross the red sea than for a negro to cross certain university campuses," which is amazing. It is true. It is, you know.&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  53:35&#13;
Something that King, I mean, King and him connect on, as other civil rights leaders do in seeing some of the commonalities behind the Jewish experience, and Jewish oppression and anti-Semitism with the Black American experience. And they did not see those two as separate causes, especially in the mid-1960s. And, you know, King would talk about Moses and Exodus and often use that story in his own, in his own speeches.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  54:07&#13;
Well, his stature was certainly growing at this time, because you also state in the book that he was invited by President Kennedy to come and speak with him about the issues that were being faced in the area of race in America. And, he sent a note to Kennedy could you say when he said to him? [laughs]&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  54:27&#13;
Yeah, I mean, this is about, about civil rights and I mean, I do not have the text in front of me. But he is really, if I remember correctly, really urging the president to implore religious leaders to make this an issue front and center.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  54:48&#13;
He said, please, I got it here, "Please demand religious leaders, personal involvement, not just sound declarations."&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  54:56&#13;
Yep. Yeah, he, he wants, again, it comes back to that theme of indifference even proposes, cannot remember the details of the proposal to, to Kennedy, you know, some kind of substantive action that leaders can take to commit themselves to these causes. He is frustrated with how many people are basically willing to do nothing, even religious leaders, he respects about questions like racism.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  55:25&#13;
To show how Dr. King and Rabbi Heschel are on the same wavelength, around this time, you know, he was arrested in Birmingham, and then he wrote the letter to the Birmingham Jail. And you talk about this in your book, where King condemns the pragmatism and, incrementalism of white moderates describing them as, "a greater threat than racists extremists." And basically, what he is saying, people always say, [crosstalk] Well, wait, just wait, just wait. And Dr. King had this all the time, when he first became the new minister, in his first church. He talked about this, and they had just fired the previous minister, and because he was kind of an activist and kind of a radical in their eyes. And they looked at him and said, "What another one?" [laughs] That was early on in his career, but he was always dealing with these things. Could you talk about the, the, his involvement against the Vietnam War?&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  56:29&#13;
Yes, so, this really becomes a central part of his activist career, even though we talk about civil rights. And it was quite important, it does not even come close to the amount of time and energy that he expended on the fight against Vietnam. And he starts in 1965, which I tried to convey, it is hard to convey to a moderate reader in the book, that the idea of really starting to organize against the war in 1965, was a pretty dramatic thing to do. I mean, there was not an anti-war movement to speak of. Those who were involved in anti-war activism were seen as really fringe and pretty radical. It did not have the kind of support civil rights was starting to garner by that time, but he gets involved with a small group that will ultimately be called clergy and laymen concerned about Vietnam. It starts as a group of religious leaders protesting government efforts to crack down on anti-war protests, but quickly it reforms and becomes a group of religious leaders who are critical of the war in, in Vietnam. And the group tries to position themselves as separate from the most radical parts of the anti-war movement. For example, they do not support avoiding the draft, they do not support burning draft cards. But they use religious language and rhetoric and also religious, organizational power, meaning all the membership lists of churches and synagogues to start to grow this organization and it grows. And one of the things they do, is every year, they go to Washington, they bring members to Washington as part of a mobilization that would take place in late January and early February in (19)67, (19)68, (19)69. They would have protests, they would have rallies, they would do kind of media events that reporters would focus on, they would meet with administration officials and legislators to keep putting pressure on Washington to bring the war to an end. And what they bring to the table, in these years when the anti-war movement still did not have mainstream support, was a kind of moral legitimacy that college students could not bring. They were not the hippies and the beatniks on the college campuses who could quickly be dismissed by some politicians as just radical students. These were respected religious leaders. And the group just keeps growing and, you know, by (19)69 and 1970, they were a very important, and known, and formidable part of the anti-war movement. And King increasingly becomes more radical as the years progressed, gradually more supportive of people who are refusing to be part of the draft and going to jail for doing so. He is very defensive of college students who are engaging in protests and says they have the right to do that. And some of his colleagues said that by the end of his life, he died in (19)72, the war was consuming him. He saw this as just an epic tragedy, that was emblem of what the United States was doing wrong, and its relations with the world, and also a tragedy for the American soldiers for the Vietnamese, who were dying, for something he did not think was necessary. He was not a pacifist. But this anti-war movement defined the last real seven years of his life.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:00:18&#13;
You quoted here that he said Vietnam "is an ecumenical nightmare, for Christians, Jews, Buddhists are killing each other." And this organization he was belong to, and he was involved in it, is, was very upset with president too, in Vietnam and what they were doing to the Buddhists, themselves-&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  1:00:37&#13;
Right.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:00:37&#13;
-and other religious groups. So, not only are we talking about it, he used to say this, another quote, you put in the book, [inaudible] which was a manifestation of a world without God, well, here we are in Vietnam, the United States is supporting this temporary government, hopefully it would survive. But in reality, they were, you know, killing Buddhists. They were discriminating against Buddhists. Buddhists hated that, too. I mean, the government, and we were supporting them. So, it was, it was everything, you look at Vietnam, there is something wrong here. And it took religious leaders like Rabbi Heschel, and Dr. King and many others from different faiths to really, you know, have an impact on the world against this war. I guess we are near the end of our time here. I want to add one final, there is a quote in the book here, and I want you to just respond to it, you wrote this quote, and it was on page 230. And, and this was your quote, "What was so important about Heschel was not that he heroically risked his life. But then he became an emblem for a kind of moral heroism that inspired, and continued to inspire others long after his moment had passed. He serves as a reminder of the often-forgotten role that deep religious conviction held within progressive movements that bent the arc of the universe toward justice." Now, that is brilliantly written. But, any other thoughts on that?&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  1:02:14&#13;
Look, it was my thoughts. I mean, the book is my thought, but it is a part of the history of religion in the United States that I think has gotten, it has been somewhat forgotten. I think, I say in the book that when people think of religion in politics, in 2022, or whenever they are reading the book, the major storyline, the major issue has been the religious right, and politics, the growth of- -your moral majority in the (19)70s, in the connection of religion, to the battle against reproductive rights and, and different kinds of schooling and more. But there was this whole world in the (19)60s, which I just found fascinating, where people like Heschel, were at the forefront, at the center of progressive political movements. And they did it not just as religious people who happen to agree with progressive causes, but as people whose religion in their minds, led them inevitably to partake in fight for social justice here in the United States, the connection was impossible to ignore. That is what Heschel reflected. And I think, whatever your politics kind of recovering that world today, is something that is extremely important. And thirdly, if you are someone involved in some of these causes, the way in which religion can be part of that conversation, part of that effort is an incredibly important lesson from his life, and one that we need to examine through him, and through other figures of the time.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:02:43&#13;
Yep. I end all my interviews with a question and it is just a very fast, what word of advice would you give to future generations who are listening to this tape, 50 years from now? What word of advice would you give to them? Because the purpose of The Center for the Study of the (19)60s is not only to, you know, do to create research and scholarship materials and for students, faculty and national scholars, but to reach people who are yet unborn too, so that they never lose their, their history. But they are always thinking about where they are, where they are at right now. What advice would you give them?&#13;
&#13;
JZ:  1:04:34&#13;
Well, if I am connecting my advice, to Heschel's story, it would be what we talked about earlier that it is important, whatever your religious perspective, to keep asking questions about our ethics, our morality, our basic values in society, and to never be indifferent to those kinds of questions, and to understand that we need to always ask those questions, if we are going to have a better country. We are going to have a better community. This was an insight that I derived from Heschel, which I think is incredibly powerful. And then if we do not ask those questions, we put ourselves down the path of a very bad road. And, and we cannot afford that.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:05:25&#13;
Dr. Zelizer, thank you for a great interview. I am going to turn off the tape.&#13;
&#13;
(End of Interview)&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="81">
          <name>Accessibility</name>
          <description>Copy/Paste below: &#13;
Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45633">
              <text>Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="65">
          <name>Rights Statement</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50962">
              <text> Many items in our digital collections are copyrighted. If you want to reuse any material in our collection you must seek permission, or decide if your purpose can qualify as fair use under the U.S. Copyright Law Section 107. If you think copyright or privacy has been violated, the University Libraries will investigate the issue. Please see our take down policy. If using any materials in this online digital collection for educational or research purposes, please cite accordingly.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38683">
                <text>Interview with Dr. Julian E. Zelizer</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2475" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="7570" order="1">
        <src>https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/files/original/e30fd1fd6ea3e4c8d2cb1b49f2c45289.jpeg</src>
        <authentication>5356fad19d153f75ed864f97deae0973</authentication>
      </file>
      <file fileId="7569" order="2">
        <src>https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/files/original/3141ee307dae58dd26fd6c7cb483f2df.MP3</src>
        <authentication>93f507b97db9ab2eab5c7cf62b557e87</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="18">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10941">
                  <text>Audio interviews</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10942">
                  <text>McKiernan Interviews</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10943">
                  <text>Stephen McKiernan's collection of interviews includes more than two hundred interviews with prominent figures of the 1960s, which were collected between the mid-1990s to 2023 The collection provides narratives of people who were actively involved in or witnessed events in the 1960s, an era which spurred profound cultural and political transformation in the twentieth century. Interviewees include politicians, artists, scholars, musicians, authors, and veterans who delve into the decade’s most prominent issues and events, including the civil rights movement, the free speech movement, the anti-war movement, women’s rights, gay rights, segregation, the Vietnam War, Woodstock, Hippies, Yippies, and individualism.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&#13;
&lt;h3&gt;The McKiernan 22&lt;/h3&gt;&#13;
&lt;div&gt;Stephen McKiernan interviewed legends of the 1960s. When asked in 2021 where one should start when sifting through his vast collection, he provided the following list:&lt;/div&gt;&#13;
&lt;ul&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/854"&gt;Julian Bond&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1866"&gt;Bobby Muller&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1175"&gt;Craig McNamara&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/910"&gt;Dr. Arthur Levine&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/837"&gt;Diane Carlson Evans&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/942"&gt;Dr. Ellen Schrecker&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/876"&gt;Dr. Lee Edwards&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/841"&gt;Peter Coyote&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1233"&gt;Dr. Roosevelt Johnson&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/899"&gt;Rennie Davis&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1222"&gt;Kim Phuc&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/917"&gt;George McGovern&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/833"&gt;Frank Schaeffer&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/840"&gt;Rev. Dr. Frank Forrester Church &lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1240"&gt;Dr. Marilyn Young&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/842"&gt;James Fallows&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/835"&gt;Joseph Lee Galloway&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/911"&gt;John Lewis&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/839"&gt;Paul Critchlow&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/888"&gt;Steve Gunderson&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1159"&gt;Charles Kaiser&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/2407"&gt;Joseph Lewis&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10944">
                  <text>Stephen McKiernan</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10945">
                  <text>Binghamton University Libraries</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10947">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50614">
                  <text>In copyright.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="24">
      <name>Template: Simple Audio Player (Amplitude.js)</name>
      <description>This template displays an audio player with the first attached image file as the 'cover image'. For its audio source, the template looks for the first attached audio file. If additional audio files exist, they should be combined using audio editing software, or a separate Omeka item should be made for each part. </description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="56">
          <name>Date of Interview</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38699">
              <text>22 June 2022</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="2">
          <name>Interviewer</name>
          <description>The person(s) performing the interview</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38700">
              <text>Stephen McKiernan</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="3">
          <name>Interviewee</name>
          <description>The person(s) being interviewed</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38701">
              <text>Bruce Watson</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="35">
          <name>Biographical Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38702">
              <text>Bruce Watson is an educator and author who specializes in American culture and history. He has written several books and feature articles for Smithsonian, the Los Angeles Times, the Boston Globe, and American Heritage. Watson also publishes a blog called the Attic. He has taught at Deerfield Academy, the University of Massachusetts Amherst, Bard College, and Hampshire College. Watson received a Bachelor's degree in Journalism from the University of California, Berkeley, and a Master's degree in Elementary Education from the University of Massachusetts Amherst.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="11">
          <name>Duration</name>
          <description>Length of time involved (seconds, minutes, hours, days, class periods, etc.)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38703">
              <text>1:39:28</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="63">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38704">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="64">
          <name>Digital Publisher</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38705">
              <text>Binghamton University Libraries</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Digital Format</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38706">
              <text>audio/mp4</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38707">
              <text>Digital file</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="60">
          <name>Date of Digitization</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38708">
              <text>22 June 2022</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Material Type</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38709">
              <text>Sound</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="66">
          <name>Interview Format</name>
          <description>Video or Audio</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38710">
              <text>Audio</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="74">
          <name>Keywords</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38712">
              <text>Mississippi; Protests; Freedom; 1960s; Volunteers; South; Race; Black;&amp;nbsp; Fannie Lou Hamer; Vote; London B. Johnson; Free speech movement.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="81">
          <name>Accessibility</name>
          <description>Copy/Paste below: &#13;
Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45634">
              <text>Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="65">
          <name>Rights Statement</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50963">
              <text> Many items in our digital collections are copyrighted. If you want to reuse any material in our collection you must seek permission, or decide if your purpose can qualify as fair use under the U.S. Copyright Law Section 107. If you think copyright or privacy has been violated, the University Libraries will investigate the issue. Please see our take down policy. If using any materials in this online digital collection for educational or research purposes, please cite accordingly.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38698">
                <text>Interview with  Bruce Watson</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2476" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="7572" order="1">
        <src>https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/files/original/51bd747121c54af5d94405738f3f9e98.jpeg</src>
        <authentication>a9a6adaa484fdc34f5cfdba7c85f433b</authentication>
      </file>
      <file fileId="7571" order="2">
        <src>https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/files/original/56b971be93b7aeb0b94a44b539d6d866.mp3</src>
        <authentication>d662a106a623ea36fcfdf901c66477ab</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="18">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10941">
                  <text>Audio interviews</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10942">
                  <text>McKiernan Interviews</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10943">
                  <text>Stephen McKiernan's collection of interviews includes more than two hundred interviews with prominent figures of the 1960s, which were collected between the mid-1990s to 2023 The collection provides narratives of people who were actively involved in or witnessed events in the 1960s, an era which spurred profound cultural and political transformation in the twentieth century. Interviewees include politicians, artists, scholars, musicians, authors, and veterans who delve into the decade’s most prominent issues and events, including the civil rights movement, the free speech movement, the anti-war movement, women’s rights, gay rights, segregation, the Vietnam War, Woodstock, Hippies, Yippies, and individualism.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&#13;
&lt;h3&gt;The McKiernan 22&lt;/h3&gt;&#13;
&lt;div&gt;Stephen McKiernan interviewed legends of the 1960s. When asked in 2021 where one should start when sifting through his vast collection, he provided the following list:&lt;/div&gt;&#13;
&lt;ul&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/854"&gt;Julian Bond&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1866"&gt;Bobby Muller&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1175"&gt;Craig McNamara&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/910"&gt;Dr. Arthur Levine&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/837"&gt;Diane Carlson Evans&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/942"&gt;Dr. Ellen Schrecker&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/876"&gt;Dr. Lee Edwards&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/841"&gt;Peter Coyote&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1233"&gt;Dr. Roosevelt Johnson&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/899"&gt;Rennie Davis&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1222"&gt;Kim Phuc&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/917"&gt;George McGovern&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/833"&gt;Frank Schaeffer&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/840"&gt;Rev. Dr. Frank Forrester Church &lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1240"&gt;Dr. Marilyn Young&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/842"&gt;James Fallows&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/835"&gt;Joseph Lee Galloway&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/911"&gt;John Lewis&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/839"&gt;Paul Critchlow&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/888"&gt;Steve Gunderson&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1159"&gt;Charles Kaiser&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/2407"&gt;Joseph Lewis&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10944">
                  <text>Stephen McKiernan</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10945">
                  <text>Binghamton University Libraries</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10947">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50614">
                  <text>In copyright.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="30">
      <name>Template: Simple Audio Player with Transcription</name>
      <description>This template displays an audio player by Amplitude.js with a scrollable transcription which is loaded from the "Transcription" metadata field.&#13;
&#13;
This template displays an audio player with the first attached image file as the 'cover image'. For its audio source, the template looks for the first attached audio file. If additional audio files exist, they should be combined using audio editing software, or a separate Omeka item should be made for each part. </description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="56">
          <name>Date of Interview</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38714">
              <text>23 June 2022</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="2">
          <name>Interviewer</name>
          <description>The person(s) performing the interview</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38715">
              <text>Stephen McKiernan</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="3">
          <name>Interviewee</name>
          <description>The person(s) being interviewed</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38716">
              <text>Dr. Elizabeth Jane McCarthy</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="35">
          <name>Biographical Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38717">
              <text>Dr. Elizabeth Jane McCarthy grew up in Cohasset, Massachusetts.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;She is a nurse, educator, and activist. Dr. McCarthy served in Vietnam as a nurse in the 95th Evacuation Hospital in Da Nang. Upon returning from Vietnam, she went to nurse anesthesia school. She worked as a nurse anesthetist for several years and returned to school for her Ph.D. in Physiology from the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda. Since her retirement from the US Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, Dr. McCarthy is teaching graduate nursing students at the University of North Florida, Drexel University, and the University of Maryland.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="11">
          <name>Duration</name>
          <description>Length of time involved (seconds, minutes, hours, days, class periods, etc.)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38718">
              <text>1:35:39</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="63">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38719">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="64">
          <name>Digital Publisher</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38720">
              <text>Binghamton University Libraries</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Digital Format</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38721">
              <text>audio/mp4</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38722">
              <text>Digital file</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="60">
          <name>Date of Digitization</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38723">
              <text>23 June 2022</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Material Type</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38724">
              <text>Sound</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="66">
          <name>Interview Format</name>
          <description>Video or Audio</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38725">
              <text>Audio</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="74">
          <name>Keywords</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38727">
              <text>Vietnam war; Nurse; People, Wounded; Home; Memorial Wall; Veterans; Remember; Uniform; Hospital; Dead; Lives; 1960s.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="81">
          <name>Accessibility</name>
          <description>Copy/Paste below: &#13;
Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45635">
              <text>Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="65">
          <name>Rights Statement</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50964">
              <text> Many items in our digital collections are copyrighted. If you want to reuse any material in our collection you must seek permission, or decide if your purpose can qualify as fair use under the U.S. Copyright Law Section 107. If you think copyright or privacy has been violated, the University Libraries will investigate the issue. Please see our take down policy. If using any materials in this online digital collection for educational or research purposes, please cite accordingly.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="5">
          <name>Transcription</name>
          <description>Any written text transcribed from a sound, or alternative text from a visual medium</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="51221">
              <text>McKiernan Interviews&#13;
Interview with: Jane McCarthy&#13;
Interviewed by: Stephen McKiernan&#13;
Transcriber: Lynn Bijou&#13;
Date of interview: 23 June 2022&#13;
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------&#13;
(Start of Interview)&#13;
&#13;
SM:  00:10&#13;
Thank you, Dr. McCarthy, for agreeing to do this interview. And I would like to start the-the interview by having you, read the, read the speech that you gave at the Vietnam Memorial, the wall, on Memorial Day 2022. And we are going to start with this and then throughout the interview, I will ask questions and linkage to it as well. &#13;
&#13;
JM:  00:38&#13;
Okay. Okay, here goes. Peter Cogill, KIA, February 1967. Craig Simeone, KIA, May 1969. Eddie Murray, GIA, July 1969. Allen Keating, KIA], October 1969.  Dennis Reardon, KIA, November 1969. Those are the names on this wall, from Cohasset. A small town in Massachusetts where I grew up, eight boys in all from Cohasset died in Vietnam. This is why we have Memorial Day. This is why I march each year in the Cohasset, Massachusetts Memorial Day Parade, to remember those friends, those young boys that we lost in Vietnam, to remember the high cost of war. We are here now on Memorial Day once again, here more than 50 years later to remember this loss, to remember the high cost of war. Many of you out there also served in Vietnam. Nurses like my friend from Boston, Kathy Pines, and corpsman and medics, physicians, helicopter pilots, helicopter pilots that I never knew because your job ended when my job began: bringing the wounded to us at the hospital, and radio guys at the hospitals and in the field, like my friend Dick Churchill, who called in the choppers for the wounded. All those who helped in the hospitals and in the field cared for those wounded, please stand. And let us just thank them. And gold star mothers like Joanne Churchill, your sons were not alone, as these veterans were the ones caring for the wounded from the field to the hospitals. Can you want it that is out there who made it back? These nurses, and docs, and corpsmen, and medics are the ones that were there to take care of you. I served as an Army nurse in Vietnam, in 1970 and 1971, just after my friends on this wall, had made their sacrifice. I was not in favor of the war, and did not understand what we were doing here. But I knew many of my friends were being drafted and killed. I decided what would be of more purpose, at that time in my life, a new 21-year-old nurse, then to care for those wounded but were being drafted and sent off to war. I joined the Army Nurse Corps after 10 months working here at the Walter Reed Army Hospital. I was ordered to the United States Evacuation Hospital in Da Nang, south Vietnam. I have worked in triage or what we call here, the emergency room. What was called there priyad and receiving, receiving the wounded. I took care of 18 and 19-year-old young men, boys. I really saw a 20-year-old, shot up, frightened, alone, and afraid to die in a war they did not understand. How does a 22-year-old girl from a small town in Massachusetts tell a 19-year-old soldier that he does not have a foot or leg anymore, and they have wounds. The patient is expected to die because they were not candidates for surgery. I just tell them, or I sat with them until they died? I wonder why we were fighting this war. I thought I would find answers in Vietnam. But I did not. I did learn that war causes deaths and mutilation. So, what was it like coming home? Looking back now, I had a classic case of post-traumatic stress disorder or PTSD, I believe, I believe all of us that witnessed the atrocities of war, experience post-traumatic stress to one degree or another. I had, nightly, trouble sleeping hypervigilance, depressed, I was not eating. In those days, there was no such thing as PTSD. You were told to just put one foot in front of the other and go on with your life. For me, that meant school, work, more school, work, and having my own family. I did get some help along the way. In 1993, we had the dedication of the memorial for the nurses over there. I remember being here. We had a parade of nurses down Constitution Avenue, and each of us had our banner of our work behind, standing behind the banner for our hospital in Vietnam, and we stood behind this banner, and the veterans were on the side of the road. It was very quiet. And you would hear every once in a while, when the veteran guys in their wheelchairs, they would see the sign of their hospitals and you wish you would hear them yell out, "You took care of me, you took care of me. I remember you. You took care of me." This was so healing for all of us, for the vets, and for us the nurses. And it was for us nurses to begin to realize that we needed to heal also. We saw those atrocities day in and day out. And we needed to be healed. And that is what both of these Vietnam memorials have given us over the year. And I am glad that we do what we do every Memorial Day here. At our nurse’s memorial, we have our candlelight service in the evening, AND the storytelling in the morning, And then this Vietnam program here at the wall in the afternoon, all remembering the high cost of war. I would like to end today by sharing a poem written anonymously, by a soldier who must have been wounded in Vietnam and cared for by nurses. It is called, "Angels in War." "Listen, now I have a story to tell about some women who lived through hell. They saw it in the war in a special way, sometimes 16 hours a day. There is a story of pain and strife and agony and fight for life. Listen now to this story I tell about these women who worked through hell. But they were young, like you and me. How much more special can they be? How many hands in the night did she hold while a young boy cried out, "I am so cold." Listen now to the stories they tell. These are the women who lived through hell. Let us not forget these stories they tell. For they are our sisters who lived through hell."&#13;
&#13;
SM:  09:14&#13;
That was, I was present at the speech this year. And it was a very powerful one. And you received a standing ovation from everyone who was there. And I knew when I, you accepted the, the honor to interview you. I wanted you to give that speech so that others can hear it not only today, but 50 years from now, to remember those brave young men and women who served in that war. And, and, and of course you state the eight who died from your hometown and you went to school with. And I just want to say those names are on the Vietnam Memorial. And I will be asking you some questions about that speech as we go on with this interview. But I do I want to start, start off by saying you mentioned five names. Is there anything a little bit you can say about those names like, Peter Cogill. Could you say something about Peter?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  10:13&#13;
Peter Cogill was, he was in my class, so I knew him growing up and [inaudible] Peter Cogill. I mean, you know, I knew him growing up, 1967. So, we graduated from high school in (19)66. So, he must have gone in right after high school, went into the army. And then, Craig Simeone he lived up the street from me by the football field, and he was in my class. And, you know, a good student, I am not sure, 1959, if he, you know, went off to college or something, I do not know. My best friend there is Allen Keating, and he was a neighbor of mine. And he was, I knew him, you know, from kindergarten on up, played in the neighborhood, you know, baseball, football. I, you know, I played all of that, did all that with the guys in the neighborhood, rode our bikes. And through high school, he was the captain of our football team. Just, you know, just so well liked by all of us. And, I think Alan especially was missed by so many. I have a friend, my friend that was Dick Churchill, he still wears his, Alan's, you know, on his wrist, like a bracelet, with Alan's name on it. So, those with a 1, 2, 3, Eddie Murray, Eddie Murray was in my class too, four, four of them that were in my class, Dennis Reardon was a year older, I believe, but I knew him. He was in my brother's class.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  12:07&#13;
When they came home from war, were they buried in the hometown cemetery, or were some of them-&#13;
&#13;
JM:  12:12&#13;
Yes.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  12:12&#13;
-buried in Arlington?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  12:14&#13;
No they-they-they were buried at home because those were the funerals. I was coming home to every six months. Yeah. Yeah, I do not. I do not, you know, back then. I do not remember anybody opting to be buried in Arlington. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  12:31&#13;
Right. &#13;
&#13;
JM:  12:32&#13;
My friend Chrissy, Chris was in Vietnam with me, a nurse, Chris McKinley, and she died about 15 years ago, we think from exposure to Agent Orange. And, anyway, and she had her, she was buried at Arlington. And, but I think back then I do not know if we just did not even know you could not be buried, but they probably did not want to be. No, they-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  13:10&#13;
Right.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  13:10&#13;
-did not want to be buried in Arlington. They wanted to come back home.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  13:14&#13;
Could you talk about, could talk about your hometown, your early years growing up? What it was like being in high school before you went off to college and went off to war?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  13:27&#13;
Yeah, Cohasset is a small town on the ocean halfway between Boston and the Cape [Cod]. So, it is a lovely little town. And I went to the schools there, through high school. And, and there were about 100 kids in my class starting out in kindergarten. [chuckles] And we were all together through high school. And it was a pretty well to do town. I do not know what it was, a lot of the, a lot went on to college. And, there is, you know, there is old money there, there is roots, I mean, my family went back. My mother's family went back several generations. You know, it is one of those towns where you came over on the boat and you did not leave [laughter] and go out but you just stayed. It was very New England. My grandparents had a New England farm and, meaning, you know, with vegetables, and chickens, and a cow, and all that. But, you know that they survived on themselves. And I had a horse growing up and kept it at my grandparents. But they kept, it was really there for us, and I would go up there to ride the horse, and I could run. And then, I had another race horse when I was about 15 that was close to my home, that people had and I rode the horse all through town, I would ride the horse down to the beach [chuckles]. I never run into the water, to heel his leg, and then run him back to town [chuckles]. It was that kind of a town.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  15:22&#13;
When you were in high school, were the, were the young people in the school pretty well informed about what was happening beyond their town? What was happening-&#13;
&#13;
JM:  15:33&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  15:33&#13;
-in the (19)60s about the march on like, for example, civil rights, the march on Washington, the Vietnam War, all the things that were happening in America?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  15:41&#13;
Yeah-yeah. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah, we were, we were, we were torn like everybody else, as I was torn, you know. As a matter of fact, when I was in high school and nursing school making that decision, do I go out and protest? With the flower children, you know, go out and protest, or do I join the army? And it was, it was that, those were my decisions that I was going to do one or the other. And, you know, most, by (19)68-(19)69. Most people, families were trying to avoid the drought, that is for sure. My brothers, I had two older brothers, and my parents went to the town. I do not know, I forget, man, what we call Mrs. Bouncer, the draft commission of something. And got, got deferments, my brothers every six months, because they were in school, and to keep them out of the Army, you know, and then by the time all these guys died, they came up with a rule, but Cohasset just lost too many. And we were not going to send any more over to Vietnam from Cohasset. No we were, we were very aware, very aware. I mean, you know, I remember the day that Kennedy was shot and Martin Luther King, and very much part of the, very much part of the illusion and disillusionment of the times. They were some difficult times, were not they?&#13;
&#13;
SM:  17:28&#13;
Yeah, you bring up a question I was going to ask later, but I will ask it now, because, you know, I call, you are probably what they call the, the early boomer group, which is the front edge boomers, and they were born between (19)46 and about (19)57. And, the impact a lot of this had on that part of the boomer generation was very strong, obviously. And the death of John Kennedy in 1963, and then the deaths of Bobby Kennedy, and Martin Luther King in (19)68. It, people kind of remember, where were you when you heard that John Kennedy was killed?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  17:29&#13;
Yeah-yeah, exactly. Right. Right. We knew where we were right, what you are asking me.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  18:02&#13;
Yeah where were, how did you find out, and where were you?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  18:18&#13;
Well, I was, I was in high school, and November 22nd, and it was at one o'clock in the afternoon. And they made, and I had majorette practice, I was the captain of the majorette group, majorette. And, they made an announcement on the PA system that Kennedy had been shot. And I guess they have dismissed school or something, but I went down to the gym. And by the time I go to the gym, then they announced that he had been killed. And, of course, we did not have majorette practice. That was a first. And then I remember, we did not have school on Friday, and then the funeral was Monday. But the horse, you know, and I remember going over to my friend Linda's house with her dad, in their house, and sitting in their den watching the funeral.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  19:22&#13;
Yeah. The shock, you know, we were, I am about the same age. We were, you know, we were young and man, that was a shock to everyone. And, and then, of course, as the (19)60s moved on, then we had the, within three months, the killings of Dr. King and Bobby Kennedy, and they were equally shocking.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  19:48&#13;
Oh, right. But, it was worse. It was scary. It was, you know, and it was sad. It was, it was very painful, very painful.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  20:02&#13;
When you were, again, you were, you were young, this is before you become a nurse. But, did you start questioning about America? Where was America going? You know, we are having some of that right now in the world today. With everything going on in 2020 people are asking these questions. Is our nation going to survive these things in the long run? Did you think about that? Did you think about any of this when, you, these tragedies were happening?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  20:34&#13;
Well, I think even when I was in nursing school, I did not understand. Remember, like I said, in my-my speech there, I did not understand why we were in this war. But I had this idea in my head that the government knew why we were. And I thought, if I went over to war, I would find out why we were in this war. And, so I still have this idea that the government knew what they were doing. But boy, did I get disillusion about that? While I was in Vietnam, I think I kind of got awakened that, no, they do not know what they are doing. And I mean worse than that, it was, I mean, to be very honest with you, what I found out was that there was this thing called the military industrial complex. There were people making lots of money off of this war. And, and that seemed to be what was driving them. There was not, it was not the Vietnamese people wanting democracy, they just wanted to know where their next meal was going to be, and they wanted to visit their relatives unknowing. And, you know, who are we? And then this whole idea that they would draft 18-year old and 19-year-old, I think that was done on purpose. Because they figured 18-19-year old did not know any better. You know, they were very more, more pliable than the 25-year-old. And because when I was, l I mean, the only guys I saw wounded and blown up were 18-19-year old. So they must have just really, it seemed to be pretty purposeful.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  22:22&#13;
Were your parents for or against the war? And did you have any, what they call a generation gap in your family over that war?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  22:31&#13;
Oh, well, my father had served in World War II, and he was in the Navy. And I thought, when I came up with this idea of going into the army, I had hoped that I would, what do I say, leaned on his, his sense of patriotism or something because they had to sign papers for me because I was only, I was 19, I think when I went in, I went in as I was still a student in nursing school. So, I went into the Army student nurse program, and they take me my last year, and then I owed them too. And so yeah, my parents had to sign in. I remember that day, you know, putting the papers out there after dinner, at the dinner table, and wondering if they would be willing to do it. But they did, and I mean, I think it is kind of crazy doing it. They work so hard to keep my brothers out of war. And then they are wondering, "Oh, my daughter comes home, then wants to do this." I, you know, they just signed, I do not know, I do not know what they were thinking. But I know, I think my father was very proud because he was, in the Legion he would, and you know, Cohasset you heard my speech, we have this-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  24:07&#13;
Right.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  24:07&#13;
-Memorial Day parade. And, and he went out within Vietnam. I know they were very upset when I, I mean, I came to Walter Reed. And then I had to go home and tell them, "I got to go to Vietnam." They were very upset. They were, they were not happy about that. Like I could do something about it. You know, they accused me of volunteering. But you know, I had to go. So, off I went. And that Memorial Day that I was away my father at the parade, at the end of the parade at the podium, you know, announced that I was in Vietnam and that he had heard from me. I think that morning, I am not sure I was allowed to call home once a month and so the town, not only my parents, but the whole town knew I was over there. And what I was doing, and then, you know, to come home, and then my father when I came home from Vietnam, I think in (19)72, for Memorial Day, he asked me to march in the parade, and I said, "No, not going to march, not going to put on that uniform." And I remember my mother coming upstairs and saying, "Would you please? Would you do it for your father? You will not do it for anybody else, will you do for your father?" So I said, "Okay," so I pulled out my summary chords uniform. I went down there, and there was only two other guys and me, because most days, remember, you did not put on a uniform.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  24:07&#13;
Right.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  25:51&#13;
You would get stoned, or rotten tomatoes, or whatever. And the three of us stood proudly and walked down Main Street of Cohasset, wearing our uniform. And since then, I think there is I do not know how many, 50, I do not know a lot more have come out. You know, of course, that was a long time ago. But, so then my father asked me to give my speech a couple of years later, some time to give a talk at the end of the parade, as the guest speaker, and I remember saying to him, "Okay, I will give you my talk, but it is not going to be a talk. You are going to like." Obvious, I had a lot of anger in me, you know.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  26:33&#13;
Right. &#13;
&#13;
JM:  26:34&#13;
And I said, "Yeah, I am not going to talk about heroes. I am not going to do that. I am going to tell you the truth about what, what I observed about war." And so, that was my first anti, anti-war talk on Memorial Day. [chuckles]&#13;
&#13;
SM:  26:54&#13;
Wow, that is a lot of courage. That is a lot of courage. But yeah, you had a lot of courage and desire to serve by going to Vietnam so, that it kind of came out in your speech. You know, you talked about the military industrial complex. You know, Eisenhower warned us about that, when he was leaving office. Be wary of the military industrial complex. And he, I was telling him this stuff that Kennedy, before Kennedy became president. So it was kind of, his thoughts were right on. Some of the other events of the 1960s, just like you, if, when you first heard, he probably knew where you were, or how about the shootings at Kent State in 1970. That was a shocker too, that killed people. Yeah, you know, there has been a lot of protests, but nobody has been shot.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  27:47&#13;
Yeah. Well, 1970, so and see, I was probably in Vietnam when that went on. And so in (19)71, or (19)72, I was in Colorado, and I joined, I was going to Colorado University, and I joined the Vietnam Veterans Against the War protest group. So, I was right here with them protesting, you know, doing anything to get us the hell out of war. You know, I was pretty committed to this war was wrong, and we needed to get out of that.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  28:43&#13;
The, you chose a career in nursing, a career that helps you decide what you could do to serve your nation, which is, which is certainly honorable. And you were against the war, but you still went because of the eight that you knew had died from your hometown. You brought this up at your presentation at the Vietnam Memorial. That must have really created mixed emotions with you even when you were over there serving. Can you talk at all about, first off that the trip over, the flight over, usually when people from, who are going to Vietnam that trip over, they had a lot of feelings and when they got off that plane and felt that heat, that was the second thing and then saw others that were coming home? Just you know, that whole, your feelings over there knowing that these things are going on back in the United States. The anti-war movement was so strong. And I think part of the anti-war movement was also over in Vietnam because the African American soldiers were dealing with a lot of the civil rights issues as well that were going on in America. [crosstalk]&#13;
&#13;
JM:  30:06&#13;
Yep. Those are two separate issues. Those are two, there was an anti-Vietnam war movement in Vietnam, and there was a civil rights movement of the black soldiers that were being mistreated, you know, send off to jail. And, and we and, and that was scary. Both of that was scary. Now, the anti-Vietnam movement, I will tell you a story is that we, the docs and the nurses, you know, put, you know, we had officers and enlisted in the officers and all of that, and we, but we had a place, Lance's Bar, that where we lived in the barracks, well it was not a barrack, we call them hooches. But anyway, there is, and we would go there to, you know, get together, to say goodbye, have a party, either somebody was leaving, or somebody just came and, and would sing and have drinks, I guess, I do not know, sit around in a circle. Maybe, I do not, maybe 15 of us, 20 of us, and the docs and the nurses, you can imagine, you have got very close to these people. And at the end would always, end by singing, "You have got a friend, you have got a friend," James Taylor. And then would stomp, stomp on the floor at the end, "Peace now, peace now." Well, one night, the group had this same demonstration out on top of the bunkers, and Harvey was there. He is our radiologist taking movies of this, and singing the song, I guess and everything. Well, this got reported to somebody, I guess, the echo, and he reported to Saigon. And then Saigon had an investigation of us, and they all came up in their helicopters, and interviewed everybody. I cannot remember if I get interviewed or not, because I said I was working that night. I am sorry. I missed it, you know. [chuckles] And so, that was a big deal. So with our punishment, I remember was, they were not going to give us any medals. Of course, we laugh about it, because in those days in the army, right, if you did something wrong, they threatened you with going to Vietnam. Okay. Then when you were in Vietnam, they threatened you with going further north, near the DMZ, but we were already about as far north as you could get. [laughter] So, they took away our metals. And I remember a couple of the guys say, "You know, I was not going to wear those damn metals ever again anyway." So yeah, we had our own anti-Vietnam war demonstrations. And I remember the black enlisted guys, scaring, you know, they had weapons in their barracks and they were going to have a revolt and we had a couple of black docs, physicians, thank God, that went over and they went over, and talked to them, and calmed them down. So, we were okay. So yeah, there was there was, there was a lot going on, you know, to the, yeah, there was a lot going on.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  33:29&#13;
What was that feeling when you got on that plane heading to Vietnam? What were your- what was going through your mind there? That is a long flight.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  33:38&#13;
It is, it is. And I left from Washington, my family, I had gone home. And I was, I had to be in this wedding for my brother and I was the maid, and I was a, you know, bridesmaid. And oh, my God, my cousin had been injured in Vietnam, and my aunt is asking me to take care of them. And I am like, I was, I am like, "Oh my god, I cannot do all this people." But, and then, I got on a plane, came back here to Washington, to my friends here. And then they had to put me on a plane at [inaudible] and with my duffel bag, and that was it too, being back home in Cohasset, I remember packing a duffel bag and thinking, you know, how do you pack for a year? As a woman knowing there are no shopping malls, people. [chuckles] You know and, and figuring that all out, and packing the duffel bag, and I think they allowed me to have another suitcase, I had a croc suitcase. And getting back here to Washington and then Beth and M drove me to the airport, and then I flew to Hawaii and I called them I remember and I just cried. So then from, then on, Hawaii to Cyprus. I think I landed in Guam. And then on to Saigon, it felt like I cried every 15 minutes, I just cried. I just cried, I was alone. And then I remember being on this plane with 250 GI's. And somebody is saying, "For any second lieutenants out there, your average life is 20 minutes," or something and then someone else saying, "Look to your left, look to your right. One of you is not going to make it back." So it is a very long time, as a woman, as a young woman, 22. And, and, and I do not remember the guys like being overly friendly at all, somehow, or I might, just so caught up in myself, you know, I am scared. And then we come landing into Saigon there, and there were these, what, there is flares going off. And I thought they were bombs. Because what do I know, I do not know what bombs, I do not know anything like that, oh, my God. And, and then I got out of the airplane, yet somehow. And they put me in a hut somewhere that had concertina wire around it, for three days. And there was a guard there, and I did not know if he was guarding me to keep the enemy out or to keep me in. [laughter] I did not know what the hell I was doing. I remember reading a book, and I waited. And then they finally maybe I have got my uniforms then. Somehow, they took me somewhere to get uniforms, and put my name on the uniform. And then I went down to Saigon too, and I met with the Chief Nurse. And I remember her saying, "What are you doing here? I did not know you was coming." And I am thinking, "Oh, my God. All this. And she does not want me." But anyway, and then she goes "What am I going to do with you?" "I do not know," I thought-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  34:37&#13;
[chuckles} [chuckles]&#13;
&#13;
JM:  34:55&#13;
-you know, so then she said, "Okay, I am going to put you up with the knives at the backup." And I am going to, so they put me in a C-140 with another 200 guys. And we landed every 20 minutes or something you had to unload and load. In fact, it was nighttime by the time I got up there, and they could not safely get me over to the hospital. So, I had to stay at the airport with the red, with the Donut Dollies place. So I am like, "What the hell are you people doing here? Why would you?" Oh, but then they have got me over the 95th, somehow, somebody got me over there. And so, the Chief nurse was there. And she said, "Here, here is your mooch, go to there. Come back and see me in three days." [chuckles] Because she is such a mess, I guess she figures. So anyway, it was, it was not easy, no. And then she assigned me to the ICU. And because I had come from Reed and I had worked recovering from ICU. And then that did not work out well. So then she moved me down to this, what they call a pre-op and receiving which was, as you heard me say, essentially the emergency room. And she said, I know you can take care of your own patients down there. And you can call the shots more or less. So, I went down there and that is where I met Christy and Annie, and we just became best friends, the three of us, and uncovering the docks, you know, and we had a great team. So things, but it was, it was either. I mean it was, ugh.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  38:55&#13;
Were you there, [crosstalk] were you at this location the whole time you were in Vietnam?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  39:02&#13;
Yes. Yeah. I never went anywhere. And you know, you could not go anywhere either.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  39:07&#13;
How long were you there?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  39:10&#13;
Ten months. And you could not as a woman, of course you could not drive, of course, you did not have a vehicle. And you could not leave the compound, unless you were in uniform, in a vehicle, where the driver had agreed to take you to another military place. And the only place I went was China Beach where they had an officer's club and, you know, a change area and you know, so and that was, that was I think it was Army, might have been Navy. I do not know. But that was the only place I went to, which is often by myself.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  39:52&#13;
Were you a seven day a week nurse, or would you, did you, were you five days a week and two days off?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  39:59&#13;
No, we worked, we worked six days, 12 hours a day.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  40:02&#13;
Wow.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  40:04&#13;
Seven to seven or seven to seven.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  40:07&#13;
Wow. And what were your duties there?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  40:12&#13;
Well, that is the outright. So, down there in pre-op and receiving, I mean, I had to learn. It was taking care of the wounded, that came in. Amputations, leg [inaudible], above the knee, below the knee, hip wounds, back wounds, chest wounds, and then they came in hypovolemic shock. And so, you were, I was, I learned how to resuscitate somebody in a hypovolemic shock. So, that meant starting IV's. And, you know, my orientation to going to war as a nurse was when Bob Watson in at Walter Reed, he had been to Vietnam, he was an anesthesiologist. And he heard I was, when I am on orders, to Vietnam. So, he took me to the back, to the operating room. And he taught me how to start an IV. Because he knew I needed to know how to do that. And so, by the time I got over there to pre-op and receiving down there, I knew how to start an IV and essentially, so you know, the wounded came in on the choppers on the chopper pad, the corpsman would grab a gurney, go out and get the wounded, bring them in, we put them on the sawhorses. And then I go to work, cut off your uniforms. And started, check, get their name, get a feel on a blood pressure count, start their IV, if you can get something going in the hand, or the arm, if not, I can stick them in the external jugular, I put them head down. If they were in so much shock, I could not get into a vein, I go into the external jugular and I have gotten really good at that, and start an IV and then I would also be doing what is called a femoral tic, stick a needle with the 10-cc syringe into their femoral artery, and ask for a 10-cc's of blood to hook it to two tubes of blood, and I would send it with a corpsman over to the blood bank right across the hall. And then, he would give it to the blood bank person in exchange for two units of-of, O neg, low titer blood, because that is a universal donor. And then in the meantime, the blood bank guy is typing and crossing. So, the next units would be type specific at least. And in the meantime, I am back here starting the IV's, setting up something for blood to get the blood going. And looking at the wounds, I mean, not looking at them, changing the bandages and then oh, and then writing up an X-ray. So because we would want to get them on to X-ray if there was any abdominal or even the legs to see if there were any cracks in the wound, you know. So, we try to stabilize them enough to get them to X-ray, if they were not stable I would have to go with them to X-ray, pumping the blood, pumping the IVs, get them out of X-ray. And hopefully you have got a stable blood pressure, 90 anyway. And then take them up the hall to the operating room. And then those that were not that critically injured went over to what we call pre-op and I would come back and look at them, and try to get them ready better. For the, you know, you had to be prioritizing all the time. You know, this one is going to go, and this one we can wait. So, that is what my day was like.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  43:54&#13;
When the really seriously wounded individuals, how long were they there? Did they take them, do they take them away to another hospital after a certain length of time? And for those who were not hurt as much, what was the longest number of days that they would stay in at your location?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  44:13&#13;
I would say for about two or three days. And we would stabilize them enough so that they can transport and so, two or three days and they either went back to their unit if they were really like, you know could, if they were okay, or two or three days and they were medivac to Camp Sama. So, usually we could load them onto a bus, you know on stretchers, and take them down, they would take them down to the airport, put them on a plane, and medivac them to Camp Sama in Japan. Yeah-yeah.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  44:47&#13;
In your speech you talked about, you know, holding the hand of someone who died. Could you describe a few experiences with wounded or dying vets? What did you do for them, no names? But, what were their wounds? And were you with them when they died? You know, there is different groups here, there is those that may have lost an arm or a leg. And so they found out that they, one of their limbs is gone, and how they reacted and so forth. And those that you could not do anything for, and we were going to die. And just a couple of the times, the experiences and I do not know if you ever mentioned this at the speech, but the thing is, did you ever go back to the wall on Washington, D.C. and tried to look up somebody on the wall that you would actually try to help save?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  45:42&#13;
No, I did not come home with any names. And I think I did that on purpose. I did not come home with any names. I remember, people, maybe a little bit from Walter Reed. But I do not, but not, no, no. And what was interesting in Vietnam, we never, I guess a nurse, you are used to like, you know, you have patient conferences. You talk about the patients, right? And when Chrissy, Annie and I would get together on the picnic bench with a bottle of bourbon. We would not talk about any patient. We just stuffed it. We just stuffed it. And I remember with Tony, he was a surgeon, and Sherry and, we did not, we just did not talk about it. We just did not talk about it. And then when we, when I came home and I ended up in Colorado, and Chrissy and Annie were out there and couple of other nurses, a couple of docs, about 10 of us, especially in Cafe McKenna. That is right, she was an OR nurse. And we then, we talked, and talked, and talked, and talked, and talked. But in Vietnam, we did not talk, and I did not come home with anything. Nope.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  47:16&#13;
Yeah, I know that. I have interviewed a lot of people and read a lot of books, and some of the stories about some of the people in Vietnam who are seriously wounded. Now, some of them survived. But, they would always be talking and asking for their mom, or their brother, or their sister, or their, someone in their family because not knowing if they will ever see them again. Did you have a lot of that, or?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  47:43&#13;
No-no.  Well, you know, for the most part, and this is, I remember, if a guy came in alive, they survived. You know, because that is, that is, because we were treating hypovolemic shock, you know, and you pump them up some fluids and some fluids. They will pick up for you, they will survive. Now, the only ones that did not survive in my experience, anyway, were the head wounds, because the nurse, you know, I would call the neurosurgeon down, to come down and assess and say there is nothing I can do with this one. And so, so I would take that patient in the back. And, I would sit with him until he died. But he was not conscious, you know, but I would stay there, I would not leave him alone. But I remember thinking that consciously you know, that, I, that they came in alive. They would leave alive, for the most part, and cause most of our wounds again, were amputations, blank amps.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  47:44&#13;
Okay.  Yep. &#13;
&#13;
JM:  48:55&#13;
As long as you could catch up.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  49:04&#13;
The, you had mentioned that R&amp;R was very important. And you mentioned China Beach, I think there was a T.V. show about that. I think there is something there with China Beach. But-&#13;
&#13;
JM:  49:14&#13;
Yes-yes. Of course.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  49:16&#13;
You were up north, you were near the DMZ, were not you, you were, you were up north. So, how far away was China Beach, and describe what China Beach is all about for those who have never heard of it?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  49:21&#13;
Yeah. Well, right there was a show China Beach, and it was a real China Beach and it was not it. [laughs] And as I said it was, it, I guess it was considered it was, it was an in-country R&amp;R. So I guess, you know, soldiers would come in from the field. I do not know if they had any space for them to stay. Maybe they did, but that does not concern me. They need a place to stay. But, they did have an old club that I think served food. And the beach was just absolutely gorgeous, just absolutely gorgeous. And we would go sometimes, like real professional surgeons and nurses, and put down on a Sunday, we would be quote "off," [chuckles] and sit on the beach, and swim. But I remember sitting there one Sunday with everybody, and we are looking over to Marble Mountain. And there were bombs being dropped and stuff. I mean, you could hear the war. And we all said, "Well, we better pack it up. We are going to have business soon. We better get back to work." And that was the craziness of it all. You know. [chuckles] We were enjoying a beautiful day at the beach, in our bathing suits. I remember, I did not bring a bathing suit with me. And I had to write my mother and ask her to send me a bathing suit. I said, "But make it be one for a nun or something." [laughter] So, she sent me a one-piece bathing suit with a skirt to it, you know. So, you know, I just wanted to be, you know, I did not want to be wearing any bikinis on China Beach [chuckles].&#13;
&#13;
SM:  51:30&#13;
Now the, China Beach, it was totally 100 percent secure. Was it really? You know, Vietnam was not safe anywhere. But that was one area, you knew you were safe.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  51:46&#13;
Yeah-yeah. It I think it had a perimeter. And I mean, it was only a section of the beach and it had some kind of a fence up there. And whether, there were probably guards out there. I know we, we had, they had Air Force. There were lifeguards there that we were active duty Air Force. Because I remember talking to one and then he told me he was in the Air Force. I thought, well, that is a nice job [laughter].&#13;
&#13;
SM:  52:22&#13;
Now, could you talk about how you left Vietnam, you were there for 10 months? And I remember reading something that a United States senator helped you get home. But could you talk about when that time came when you are leaving Vietnam?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  52:44&#13;
Right, well, like in February, March, I, I came up with my five-year plan. That is what I call it, my five-year plan, which meant I want to get back, go to college. Because part of my going into was I knew I had the G.I. bill because my parents would not let me go to college and I wanted to go to college. I really, really wanted to go to college. I had good grades. I loved school. I wanted to go to medical school. But my father. and I got into five universities, but my father said "No, you are going to go to Mass General Hospital School of Nursing." Okay. So, that is my part of this thing. I had had the G.I. Bill to go to college. And so, I applied to colleges again, while I was in Vietnam, I got into two universities. And then I put the paperwork in for school. I was supposed to go home in October, but I needed to go home in August, so I could start school, the fall semester. We put the paperwork in and nothing happened, and nothing happened. So, it had to be like July, and nothing was happening. And so, the IG was coming for the day, early in the morning. I remember there was a sign up that said that the IG will be here at 7:30 in the morning, in this little room. So I said, "Okay, I am going to go and talk to the IG." So, I did, and I told him my story. And I said, "I have not heard anything." He said, "Okay, let me look into it." Well, he got back to me and said, "Oh, your paperwork was lost." So I thought really, and I said, "Chief it must have fallen out of the airplane on the way back to Washington, D.C." I was quite cynical when I said it. [laughs] And so, you know, I came back and I realized this army was not going to do anything for me to get out of here. So, I was working nights one night, and I am sitting there and thinking, "Okay, what are you going to do?" I could write to Ted Kennedy. Okay, knowing that if you write to your Senator, your days are numbered in the military. That just is not something you do as an officer. As a first lieutenant in the army, but I decided, and writing a letter from Vietnam, you know, there was no postage, but it could be, somebody could be reading it on the way out of the country. But I did, I wrote an eight-page letter to Ted Kennedy and told him my whole story, I want to go back, I am here today, and they will not let me out of here, and I want to go to school. Well, six days later, on a Sunday morning, the Chief Nurse, Lieutenant Colonel comes running down, I am working. And she said, "McCarthy, go pack your bags, you are out of here." That is how I left Vietnam.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  54:31&#13;
[laughs] &#13;
&#13;
JM:  55:04&#13;
And I went back to my room, and I packed my stuff up in my duffel bag. And I found John Robuski, who had a Jeep, I knew he had a Jeep, and we got in our flak jacket and helmet. But that time, they wanted us to wear this blackjack and helmet all the time. And he took me to the airport. And that is how I left. I never said goodbye to anybody.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  56:07&#13;
But you were on your way home. [chuckles]&#13;
&#13;
JM:  56:09&#13;
Yeah-yeah. So I got on a plane to [inaudible]. They kept me there for a few days. And then they got me on a plane to Travis Air Force Base. And they processed me out in eight hours. And, you know, now I have been on a plane for 26 hours, and they made me dress up in my uniform, not [inaudible]. And they said I could not bring any [inaudible] home with me. But you saw me, I had my [inaudible], I stuff, I stuffed in my duffel bag to bring home with me. But, that was illegal. They did not want you to do it. But, I did it anyway. But, I had to put on my skirt, and jacket, and stockings, and high heels, black heels to ride on my plane home. By the time I got to Travis I could not even put the high heels on my feet. My ankles was, my feet was so swollen, they walked me around for eight hours, processed me out of the army, and then at the last stop the guy hands me a couple thousand dollars and said "Okay, see you." I definitely did not see other coworkers. I said, "Where am I supposed to go?" He said, "Well, where do you live?" And I said, "Well, I guess Massachusetts." "Then get on an airplane and go," "Well, where is the airport?" "25 miles down the road." I said, "How do I get there?" "I do not know, grab a cab." [chuckles]&#13;
&#13;
SM:  57:33&#13;
[chuckles] Jeez, very helpful.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  57:37&#13;
Yeah. Yeah, that is how I left the Army&#13;
&#13;
SM:  57:42&#13;
Now, you had, you had talked about you had a five-year plan and your goals were to continue our education. And you know you are, you are a doctor, you got a PhD. Could you talk a little bit about, you know, your plans and then on your rival home? I have a couple of questions about post-traumatic stress disorder and Agent Orange. But I want to, just your five-year plan because it was a good one.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  58:11&#13;
Yeah, it was three years. I knew I needed three more years to get my college degree, a Bachelor of Science degree in nursing. So I had applied to, say Indiana University's School of Nursing, and been accepted into Colorado University. And then my plan was after that was to go to anesthesia school to become a nurse anesthetist because I had found out about nurse anesthetist at Walter Reed and I thought, "Wow, this is something," but I did not think I would have the guts or the know how to do it. But in Vietnam, I said, "I can do this," and then went nurse anesthetists in Vietnam too. And, you know, I figured, yeah, I can do this. If I can do that, I can do this. So-so-so that was my plan, get my college degree, and then two more years in anesthesia school. So that is what I did, I came back. I went to IUP, Indiana University one semester, then I got in my car and drove out to Colorado, went to Colorado University, and went to Loretto Heights College, finished up the degree there. And then I had applied to Fairfax Hospital School, nurse anesthesia, got in there and moved back here to Virginia, went to that program, cut through, cut through there, and then I got a job at the Washington Hospital Center for a couple of years, and then I moved up to Walter Reed again. So now, I am back at Reed civilian nurse anesthetists in 1970, (19)78. And I was working, and Bob Watson was there, the same guy that said goodbye to me, you know, I mean, you know, they have taught me how to start an IV now, and so in the whole department and Bob was my chair, and well, it was connected to the Uniformed Services University. And somehow, I found out about that, and I went over, and I talked to Bob about it. And he said, "Well, you know, you got to go to medical school," but I do not want to go to medical school, I think I want to go on to my PhD in research, to do research. So he said, "Okay," so I went over for a couple of interviews there, and they accepted me. And so I, while I was back being a student and I loved it, I absolutely loved it. I mean, it was really hard. But, I had to give up my job at Reed. And I was essentially in medical school for two years. And then you go off, and do the research for three years, basic science research. And, you know, it was great. It was, it was hard. As I said, it was very hard. But, I learned how to do some really significant research. And from there, I did a postdoc at Mammary Naval Medical Research Institute. And then FDA found me and asked me to come over and work there as their basic scientist because of my pre-doctoral work, which was in high frequency ventilation, and FDA was reviewing the first high frequency ventilators for infants, and my research was preclinical. But anyway, I was a [inaudible], I was living my hat at the time. And so that is how I got into my work at FDA. And I transferred from an Army Reserve. And I became an officer in the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, working at FDA. And so I was able to, you know, being in that uniform, Public Health Service for 20 years. With my work at FDA. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:02:08&#13;
Wow. &#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:02:09&#13;
That is a quick long story, is not it?&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:02:11&#13;
But that is a great, I mean, it is a kind of, having a goal and doing it, having a goal, and doing it. And that is, it says a lot about you. And what you have done your whole life. Did you ever experienced Agent Orange? Did you ever have any effects of that when you were there?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:02:28&#13;
Well, I do not. Well, I mean, I do not, do people have acute effects of Agent Orange?&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:02:37&#13;
Some people that have had cancer, they figured they got it from Agent Orange.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:02:41&#13;
Well, right. Right, you see, you do not have acute but long years and years later. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:02:47&#13;
I know many Vietnam vets and what they had to go through to prove they were victims of Agent Orange was kind of a living hell and. Right&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:02:47&#13;
And my friend Chrissy that I told you about, and Annie's husband that she met there, both have strange Leukemias and died come from them. And, and I often though, and Chrissy did too, but it was our exposure to Agent Orange because we were cutting off their uniforms, right, when they came in, the wounded. And we did not wear, we did not wear gloves, [chuckles] we were not wearing gloves. And we, so we definitely could have been exposed to it. I had breast cancer about 15 years ago. And I think I put a claim into VA for it, but I never really followed up on it. Thank goodness I, I had an early, very early stage. And so, my treatment was successful. Well, my end was going through, my was, of course I never got in the Agent Orange thing, but my thing was hard that was hard was PTSD.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:04:17&#13;
Yeah, could you explain how you knew you had it?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:04:23&#13;
Well, it is not like, okay, okay. Okay. Let us see. I think like, I think I said my job. Looking back, I had classic PTSD and also how I knew that was, okay, when I was getting out of the Public Health Service retiring about 15 years ago or so, or 20, I do not know, 15 years ago. They told me make sure you go to VA and get an exit physical. So this is 2006, right, 25 years or something, or 30, whatever, 40 years after Vietnam, but they said, get an exit physical. So I said, "Okay," so I went down to VA in D.C. And part of that was, I somehow, I met with a clinical psychologist and they took my history. And I told them my symptoms when I first came home from Vietnam, you know, I did not sleep for six months, I did not eat. I was depressed. I was numb. I, you know, the classic stuff. And so he said, anyway, I remember him saying to me, "You have classic symptoms of PTSD." Okay, so I guess he put paperwork in for me to get, to get process for disability for PTSD. And I remember having to do that, I had to come up with letters that I was within Vietnam, and letters of people that knew me and Vietnam, and letters from psychologists with relationship things. And, yeah, I had to do a lot of work to get that but it did finally come through. I think I got 60 percent disability. But then seven years later, they, they asked that I do a reevaluation. So, I went back down to VA again in D.C., and I was seen by this civilian old psychiatrist who said to me, "Well, you look pretty good to me right now," and that was the end of that.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:06:46&#13;
I read someplace, because I have looked up several articles on you, that you were working with a younger nurse and, a woman came in, and died in the office or something like that. And he said, you were not as emotional about that, as you know, because you have seen so much death in Vietnam.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:07:07&#13;
Yeah, yeah. So, when I came back, I was in Indiana, and I was working, I thought, okay, I guess I am an emergency room nurse now. And I got a job at the city hospital there in Indianapolis. And in the ER, and I am working evenings, and I am working with a student who was assigned to work with me, a student nurse, old lady came in with a fractured hip in her bed, and I said, "Why do not you go ahead over to X-ray with her." So the student comes back, and she is crying. And I said, "What are you crying about it," she said, "She died." And I hope I did not say this, I thought about it. I thought, you were crying over that? I was holding a 19-year-old in my arms who bled to death in my arm, two weeks ago. And that is when I knew I ought not to be here. This is not a good place for me to be. So I was so numb, I realized that, you know, so I never did, I do not think, I left that job. But shortly after that, I moved out to Colorado. And I do not think, I worked at the city hospital there. But maybe the Chief Nurse knew enough, that could see that, I was damaged goods or something and then an ER with, anyway, I remember working in a pediatric clinic, and then they put me on the jail ward. But at least, I do not know. Yeah. Anyway, that is-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:08:51&#13;
Great.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:08:51&#13;
-that is what happened.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:08:53&#13;
When you came home from the war, you said you remember a Vietnam Veterans Against, Viet Vets against the war. And you were involved in some of the protests that they did as well. Did you attend, any of the activity that took place on that one weekend where they were actually throwing their, their metals over a fence, and going up to a microphone and, and then that was the same weekend that John Kerry gave that famous speech? Before the Foreign Relations Committee with William Fulbright. You know, he said something about the fact that, you know, how can you say, how can I keep on serving in Vietnam and say, I would be the last man to die in a war that, that was so wrong or something like that. Were you there that weekend? Were you aware that was going on, as a member of Vietnam Vets of America against the war?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:09:48&#13;
No, I did not. I do not, where was it?&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:09:52&#13;
It was in Washington, D.C.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:09:53&#13;
No-no-no. No, I, do not know, I did not get involved. And really, I did not come to D.C., I did not. I was barely keeping my own life together, I think [chuckles] you know what I mean? I was not, I was not seeing like John Kerry. I mean, I did, as I said, in Colorado, and I went to a couple of meetings, a couple of demonstrations there. But even when I got back here to go to anesthesia school, I do not remember being really involved. It was not until, but then we had that, I was involved, but in a positive way, rather than a negative way. If you know what I mean, like (19)80-(19)82, we had the dedication of the wall, I was there for that. And in (19)93, I was there and that even, I went to the Congress for the hearings. You know, I was involved, but I do not remember going to any demonstrations.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:11:10&#13;
Yeah, that was just, that is how John Kerry's career really started. He gave that speech and it was a heck of a great speech. And he had a senator and William Fulbright that, that wanted him to come speak. And obviously, William Fulbright was not liked at that time by L.B.J. And so it was, you know, it was his historic time. You know, I like your comments too. You are a Vietnam veteran and how the nation treated Vietnam veterans is disgraceful upon their return. I have a story here I want you to respond to and it is just a typical example of how the vets are treated upon the return. Bobby Mahler who founded Vietnam Veterans of America, told me in an interview, and I have seen him several other times, that the reason why he created this organization was because when he came home, severely wounded, paralyzed from the waist down. He was in the hospital. And they had absolutely no wheelchairs at his hospital, and he asked for a wheelchair and he said, "We do not have any." And he thought that was ridiculous. He, people were coming home from war, and could not walk. And so he put in his mind, personally as one person, that I am going to do something to make sure this never happens again to other vets. And that is how he kind of, the reason why he formed Vietnam Veterans of America. And of course, he was one of the cofounders of Vietnam Veterans Against the War, too. But your overall comments about how Vietnam vets were treated upon their return, it is, it is upsetting.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:12:54&#13;
Well, I do not, well, I mean, which comments?&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:13:02&#13;
No, just any thoughts on how America treated its vets who served in Vietnam? &#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:13:06&#13;
Oh you are asking me what, what-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:13:09&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:13:10&#13;
-I do not, I think I do not, this is my opinion. But, I do not think a parade would have helped. And I do not think my feelings, there was PTSD, or that, you know, having experienced war, we need to heal, we need to heal. And then I guess what we did with the wall and the memorial was healing. That is healing. I mean, I do not think coming home to a parade. I mean, there was nothing to celebrate, what are you going to celebrate? You were just in a war that nobody knows why the hell we were in this damn thing. I think it is more about so, it was not I was not all about that I got spit on and that kind of stuff. It was not about me. I mean, what we needed and Chrissy and I worked on that for years. When we came home I remember you know she was out in California and had a lot to do with that show China Beach. The producers worked with her, and interviewed her. She, a lot of the shows were based on her stories.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:14:38&#13;
Who you are talking about, Chrissy? Whose Chrissy?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:14:43&#13;
Chrissy was with me and, was a nurse there in pre-op and receiving. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:14:48&#13;
Okay.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:14:48&#13;
It was, yeah, yeah, we were best friends. We got home. She was in Colorado. And you know, we stayed in touch. But she was out in California, working with the, working, and on the side, you know, we all did our Vietnam stuff on the side. Then we, what we worked on was like the Vet Centers, you know, Vet Centers, and getting veterans help that way. We, we felt very, that is what we needed, where we needed to be putting our energy away. Not so much a parade, to get them some help. And they started these Vet centers on the sidewalks, you know, that was supposed to be if you were a veteran come in, and we will help you. And we needed to get them more help that way. I do not know if that is making sense.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:15:48&#13;
Oh, yeah, it does. It is a different opinion. And that is, that is important.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:15:52&#13;
I do not think I do not think a parade would have helped. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:15:55&#13;
Right. &#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:15:55&#13;
You know, I think that the Vietnam vets they had trouble with, we had trouble because we have witnessed atrocities of war. And what are you going to do celebrate that they needed to?&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:16:08&#13;
Right.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:16:09&#13;
You know, we needed to process that. We needed to process with other veterans, with other, because you could not talk to anybody that had not been there. They did not understand. And we needed to support the veterans that way to help them get on with their lives. But I mean, and to help heal, and what they went through.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:16:34&#13;
You attended both of the- these historic events, the opening of the wall in 1982, and the opening of the women's memorial in 1993. As a veteran I have seen, I live in California, I could not come to attend. But, that picture of the wall opening is, man, there was a lot of people there. Could you, what was the feelings that, that was there, in 1982? Just-just being there, what did it, how did you feel?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:17:04&#13;
So, it was, it was very exciting. There was a lot of hoopla, there was a lot of, there was a, you know, a lot of veterans here on motorcycles. And so, there was that kind of celebration. But I think afterwards, you know, when-when, like, the wall was a very somber place. It was almost sacred, you know, and it was very different from any other Memorial. And when people would come in, like, I remember when Chrissy came in to see the wall for the first time, and my friend, Mike Camp, who was a psychiatrist. I think he was still at Walter Reed them, and we were in Vietnam together. And, and we both thought, we cannot let Chrissy see that wall by herself, and we met her at the wall. And we walked her through the wall, with her. I mean, that is, that is, that is what kind of a sites it is, when you see it for the first time. And, and then seeing the soldiers, you know, looking at the wall. So, there was a difference between to me anyway, that day when we celebrated the dedication of the wall. And then afterwards, the impact it has on veterans since, even to this day, you know that-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:18:41&#13;
Yes.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:18:42&#13;
-you have airplanes full of veterans coming in to look at that wall. And but then, you look at 1993 right, by then I was at the Uniformed Services University as a professor. I was in uniform now. And several of us went down to the dedication. Oh, yeah. Oh, my goodness. You know, all kinds of nurses came in from all over the country. And I remember this friend of mine, another friend, Janet Smart, from Colorado. She and I were friends in Colorado. I mean, you know, when we ran the streets, and we skied, and partied, and she was a ski instructor, and she had been, she was a nurse in the reserve unit. But so I left Colorado, you know, and came back and now we were, what, 20 years later or so 15 years later, and we were at the Dedication of the Nurses Memorial. I am and I look up and she is tall like I am, and I looked over, and there was Janet. And we both said to each other, "What are you doing here?" [laughter] And she said, "I was in Vietnam," and I said "Well, so was I." We had been friends in Colorado for three years, never told each other that we had been in Vietnam.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:20:06&#13;
Oh my gosh. Yeah.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:20:08&#13;
Yeah. So, I mean, that just shows you how much you can stuff it. But that so anyway, that day I told her in my speech I talked about, the somberness. But the nurse’s memorial, I feel like it is still different. I can go and sit there, and I do not know, it feels more healing, and peaceful, or something underneath the trees. And whereas the wall, you know, if you really look at the wall, it has got all those names on it.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:20:48&#13;
You know, Jam Scruggs wrote, his first book was "To heal a Nation." And, and this is a question I have asked all the people I have interviewed. When Jan used to say a lot, "This is not a political entity. This is all about remembrance. This is about making sure that we never forget those who served in Vietnam and lost their lives. And those who did serve in Vietnam and came home, and for the families of those who are no longer with us," that, you know, it was all about that, it was about healing. He goes on and it is done a great job in terms of healing, the Vietnam vets, and their families. The question is whether what the job is done with healing the nation that was so divided in, in the (19)60s? And that everybody has their own opinions on this. Do you think that wall has helped us heal as a nation?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:21:49&#13;
Yeah, yeah. I mean, I, I think it was a turning point in, in how we looked at war, I mean, every other Memorial, is memorializing the heroes coming home. And I think that this memorial, is memorializing the high cost of war, and the pain of war. And I mean, I differ from Shannon, a bit there that it is not about remembering, it is about, it is about remembering these people. But it is also, it is about remembering the high costs of war, and we ought to think twice about getting into another war. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:22:39&#13;
Right.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:22:41&#13;
But that is very opposite meaning of every other Memorial where you look at "Oh, the soldiers, the heroes." I do not get that from the wall. I do not get that from, from looking at the wall. I get that this, we lost 58,000 men for what? And that is what even the soldiers, the way those soldiers are looking at that wall, you know.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:23:17&#13;
In your view, what is the legacy of the Vietnam War? And what were the lessons learned or lost in that war?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:23:26&#13;
Oh, I was hoping that we had learned the lesson of not getting into war. Nothing good comes of it. That is all we have atrocities, and lives lost, and countries ruin. When you think, you know that poor Vietnam country, the bombing, and everything, ugh. You know, wars are not good, nothing good comes out of them. And in this whole thing, you got a question. Somebody say, well, it was the domino theory. Really? Really, that is what we were told we were there because of the domino theory. Yeah, we lost and I do not see any dominoes falling here. And Vietnam, even though it was under communist rule, it was probably, it was probably better off than-than it was when it was being at war for 15-20 years.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:24:33&#13;
Who do you blame for the war, if you know?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:24:40&#13;
I think, I think all of them you know, the military industrial complex, the people making money off to the war. They were pushing it. The lobbyists, the weapons people, the convinced, and I knew Johnson he knew it was wrong. And then Nixon, you know, he did. It was the one time voted for Nixon was because he said he would get us the hell out of there-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:25:15&#13;
Right.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:25:19&#13;
-but I thought, I thought once we got out of there that we had learned our lessons, and then you see in (19)91, 20 years later, Bush invaded Iran. And I fell apart, then I fell apart. I just did not think our country would ever do that. And that is when I really fell apart with PTSD. Because I just, I, we could not turn the T.V. on in my house. We, you know, I could not I got really depressed, I just could not believe that we were doing that again.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:25:57&#13;
And now we are talking about building another memorial for the Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, so. Because that is what I think Jan is, is somewhat linked to that effort, because he is always we are thinking about those who serve the nation, and so-&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:26:16&#13;
I am not. Yeah, right, no.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:26:20&#13;
One of the questions I want to ask before I ask my final two questions is, do you consider the activists who tried to end the war as heroes like those who served in the war in Vietnam, both are not treated well, upon the returned? Nixon called the silent majority; his group was called the silent majority during the (19)60s and early (19)70s. And they are the ones that kind of were, after those who served the anti-war protesters and so forth. But they were trying to save lives. But, the ones that were not it for just fun. The true activist one to save lives in Vietnam, not only the people who served in Vietnam, Americans, but also the Vietnamese population as well. Would you consider them? You know, the divisions of the (19)60s are such that how could you dare call an anti-war protester a hero, but today, when you are talking about today's terms, looking at Vietnam vets who I consider heroes, and, and Viet, and then the anti-war protesters who are against this war for many, many years, all ages, not just young people, if they were sincere, and bringing people home to save lives, I consider them heroes. What are your thoughts?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:27:45&#13;
What that we care about the Vietnamese people too, is what you are asking?&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:27:50&#13;
No, it was do you consider the anti-war, the people who were anti-war protesters? Do you consider them heroes too?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:27:58&#13;
Yes, absolutely. Thank God we had them, thank God. Because, you know, that helped get us the hell out of there. But if people just sat back and said, "Okay, let us keep going with this war." We were losing a 1000 men a month, were being killed. No, absolutely. Thank God for the protesters. I think maybe Nixon was who got us the hell out of there, do not you?&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:28:24&#13;
Yeah. I agree. &#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:28:27&#13;
Right? &#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:28:28&#13;
Yes.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:28:29&#13;
Yeah, thank God to the protesters. We needed more of them.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:28:35&#13;
The, I have a question too as a general question, is several people have talked about the 1960s and early (29)70s as two different groups, two different eras. The one era was 1960-(19)63, and the second era was (19)64-1975, when the helicopters flew off the Embassy in Saigon, of course, they are referring to probably the era of Kennedy, and then his death. And then the second (19)60s started in (19)64. Or do you consider it all one?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:29:18&#13;
Well, yeah-yeah, I cannot say I could separate them. You know, that. What separates them into what? I do not know. Two different eras? Yeah. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:29:53&#13;
No.  That is just something, one of the top military people at the World War II Memorial when I interviewed him-him, he broke it down in the 2 (19)60s. It is just a thought that some people have, said it was two different years in one year.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:30:08&#13;
No-no, they were not my life. They were the most influential years of my life. And they were all very much connected, that you know, then our president was killed. And that we were shooting people like Martin Luther King. I mean, then Kennedy was probably killed because of the civil rights that he was willing to, to work with. And so, it was that, and then we got this. I mean, I guess it was different than that. Then we have got another bunch of people that want to get into a war in Vietnam. [laughs]. Oh, God.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:30:56&#13;
Certainly, for the, your, your thoughts on the boomer generation as a whole? Do you have any opinions on them?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:31:05&#13;
Well, I am one, right? &#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:31:06&#13;
Yes, you are one.&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:31:20&#13;
I think, I mean, I always thought that we were very illusioned. I mean, that Kennedy, remember, Kennedy, and he, he had the Peace Corps. And, you know, there were ideals we could strive for. We were very idealistic, that whatever we wanted to do, we could do, and what, and that is what I got out of the (19)60s, you know, whatever I wanted to do, I could do it, and I was going to go do it. And I think it was a woman, a young woman that my mother could not do, or chose or did not do, the things I did, that was another generation. But I decided I was going to, I could, I could see the possibility, the possibility. And I wrote that way, if you want to think about it that way, as a woman, that, you know, there was something saying to me, I could be whoever I wanted to be, and I was going to go be it. And I do not think I would have, I think we were the first generation to be able to do that. In other words, to-to be able to go and get myself educated, to have a successful career, to be a leader, and to have my own family. I mean, I was raised that as a woman, you could not do all those things.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:32:58&#13;
That is very well said, very well said. And I want to end the, this last question. What would you say to young people, or people who are listening to this interview, 50 years from now, long after both you and I are gone, and many of our generation is, the boomers will all be gone too? What words of advice would you like to give to those people?&#13;
&#13;
JM:  1:33:27&#13;
Well, you know, again, as a woman, that this was the beginning of those opportunities. And I do not know what is going to happen like with, with the, well with the Supreme Court, and remember as a woman in 1973, that those opportunities had just begun, for a woman's right to choose. And, we did not have those rights before. And I think that is what opened up a lot of doors, and I do not know what is going to happen, if those doors are going to close. And, but we had it in 1973. We had it as women, and then, and we believed in democracy, and we believed in equality of all, you know, all, at least I did, maybe I was naive, but I believed in a country where everyone could be equal. Black people, white people, we all had equal opportunity, or at least opportunity to do good things with our lives. And I think that is being challenged now with this autocracy with the Supreme Court, and this, these cowboys and whatever, you know, I hope we are going to be able to keep our democracy going, because that is what gives us the opportunity to do what we want to do from within, inside ourselves. And that could be taken away from us. I hope it is not. But I consider myself very, very lucky that I was right on the cusp of that. And I figured out a way to do what I wanted to do with my life and to not let things like the fact that I am a woman stop me.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:35:26&#13;
Well, this has been one heck of an interview and I want to thank you very much for-for agreeing to do this. I am going to turn the tape off now and say a few more comments afterwards. Thanks again.&#13;
&#13;
(End of Interview)&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38713">
                <text>Interview with Dr. Elizabeth Jane McCarthy</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2477" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="7573">
        <src>https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/files/original/4525b62ca2a901b7dfdaa444139be635.jpeg</src>
        <authentication>2a5a8b3dbca90c992965d74960ee2e44</authentication>
      </file>
      <file fileId="7574">
        <src>https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/files/original/d57cb0b3669fed6f8a8f7e103d444924.mp3</src>
        <authentication>bdf7a7d568a10675367e38f1ead59ad6</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="18">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10941">
                  <text>Audio interviews</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10942">
                  <text>McKiernan Interviews</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10943">
                  <text>Stephen McKiernan's collection of interviews includes more than two hundred interviews with prominent figures of the 1960s, which were collected between the mid-1990s to 2023 The collection provides narratives of people who were actively involved in or witnessed events in the 1960s, an era which spurred profound cultural and political transformation in the twentieth century. Interviewees include politicians, artists, scholars, musicians, authors, and veterans who delve into the decade’s most prominent issues and events, including the civil rights movement, the free speech movement, the anti-war movement, women’s rights, gay rights, segregation, the Vietnam War, Woodstock, Hippies, Yippies, and individualism.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&#13;
&lt;h3&gt;The McKiernan 22&lt;/h3&gt;&#13;
&lt;div&gt;Stephen McKiernan interviewed legends of the 1960s. When asked in 2021 where one should start when sifting through his vast collection, he provided the following list:&lt;/div&gt;&#13;
&lt;ul&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/854"&gt;Julian Bond&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1866"&gt;Bobby Muller&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1175"&gt;Craig McNamara&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/910"&gt;Dr. Arthur Levine&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/837"&gt;Diane Carlson Evans&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/942"&gt;Dr. Ellen Schrecker&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/876"&gt;Dr. Lee Edwards&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/841"&gt;Peter Coyote&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1233"&gt;Dr. Roosevelt Johnson&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/899"&gt;Rennie Davis&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1222"&gt;Kim Phuc&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/917"&gt;George McGovern&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/833"&gt;Frank Schaeffer&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/840"&gt;Rev. Dr. Frank Forrester Church &lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1240"&gt;Dr. Marilyn Young&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/842"&gt;James Fallows&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/835"&gt;Joseph Lee Galloway&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/911"&gt;John Lewis&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/839"&gt;Paul Critchlow&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/888"&gt;Steve Gunderson&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/1159"&gt;Charles Kaiser&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href="https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/items/show/2407"&gt;Joseph Lewis&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&#13;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10944">
                  <text>Stephen McKiernan</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10945">
                  <text>Binghamton University Libraries</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10947">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50614">
                  <text>In copyright.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="30">
      <name>Template: Simple Audio Player with Transcription</name>
      <description>This template displays an audio player by Amplitude.js with a scrollable transcription which is loaded from the "Transcription" metadata field.&#13;
&#13;
This template displays an audio player with the first attached image file as the 'cover image'. For its audio source, the template looks for the first attached audio file. If additional audio files exist, they should be combined using audio editing software, or a separate Omeka item should be made for each part. </description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="56">
          <name>Date of Interview</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38729">
              <text>23 June 2022</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="2">
          <name>Interviewer</name>
          <description>The person(s) performing the interview</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38730">
              <text>Stephen McKiernan</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="3">
          <name>Interviewee</name>
          <description>The person(s) being interviewed</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38731">
              <text>Howard Ruffner</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="35">
          <name>Biographical Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38732">
              <text>Howard Ruffner was born in Cleveland, Ohio. After high school, he joined the Air Force in 1965. His experience with photography started when he worked at the Air Force headquarters in Waco, Texas. After leaving the Air Force, he started college in 1969. While studying at Kent State University, Ruffner started working as a photographer for the university's student newspaper. He was a college sophomore when the shootings of May 4, 1970, occurred. He witnessed and documented this event and his photographs appeared on the cover of &lt;em&gt;Life&lt;/em&gt;.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="11">
          <name>Duration</name>
          <description>Length of time involved (seconds, minutes, hours, days, class periods, etc.)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38733">
              <text>1:28:20</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="63">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38734">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="64">
          <name>Digital Publisher</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38735">
              <text>Binghamton University Libraries</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Digital Format</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38736">
              <text>audio/mp4</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38737">
              <text>Digital file</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="60">
          <name>Date of Digitization</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38738">
              <text>23 June 2022</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Material Type</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38739">
              <text>Sound</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="66">
          <name>Interview Format</name>
          <description>Video or Audio</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38740">
              <text>Audio</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="74">
          <name>Keywords</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38742">
              <text>Kent State shooting; Students; Pictures; National guard; Campus:&amp;nbsp; Taylor Hall; Protest; Photographs; Yearbook; Kent State University; Building; Guard; Photographer; Film; Fire.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="81">
          <name>Accessibility</name>
          <description>Copy/Paste below: &#13;
Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45636">
              <text>Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="65">
          <name>Rights Statement</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50965">
              <text> Many items in our digital collections are copyrighted. If you want to reuse any material in our collection you must seek permission, or decide if your purpose can qualify as fair use under the U.S. Copyright Law Section 107. If you think copyright or privacy has been violated, the University Libraries will investigate the issue. Please see our take down policy. If using any materials in this online digital collection for educational or research purposes, please cite accordingly.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="5">
          <name>Transcription</name>
          <description>Any written text transcribed from a sound, or alternative text from a visual medium</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="51310">
              <text>McKiernan Interviews&#13;
Interview with: Howard Ruffner&#13;
Interviewed by: Stephen McKiernan&#13;
Transcriber: Lynn Bijou&#13;
Date of interview: 23 June 2022&#13;
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------&#13;
(Start of Interview)&#13;
&#13;
SM:  00:01&#13;
Alright, can you hear me?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  00:03&#13;
No, I can hear you fine.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  00:04&#13;
Okay. Thanks, Howard. I start out, could you talk about your growing up years, where you grew up? What your parents did for a living, where you went to high school, your early interests? And were you the first to go to college in your family, that kind of stuff?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  00:20&#13;
Well, my name is Howard Ruffner. I was born in Cleveland, Ohio. I grew up in Lakewood, Ohio, attended Lakewood High School. And while I was a student, I worked my sophomore, junior, and senior years after school at various retail establishments in the Lakewood area. As far as growing up, I am the oldest of seven boys, all born eight years apart. And my dad was the general manager for a place that actually made waterproof paper and film. And, he never owned a car. So, the furthest we ever got was any place was any, anywhere anybody would take us. So growing up in Lakewood, we walked to school everywhere. And I graduated school in 1964, spent about a year after that working, and taking an extension course at Ohio State University at the same high school and then decided after that summer, almost a year later from graduation.  A friend of mine interested in the Air Force and asked if I wanted to go with him. And I said, "You know what sounds like a good idea." So I enlisted the Air Force in May of 1965, and spent two years in Waco, Texas, and about almost a little over a year and a half in the Philippines as a T.V. director. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  02:03&#13;
Wow.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  02:04&#13;
So, when I came back to the states in December of (19)68. I went back to my old job where I was working as a railroad clerk in the accounting department. I worked there until March of (19)69 when I took a leave of absence and, started university at the beginning of March 1969.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  02:33&#13;
Well, now your parents, you say your dad did not have a car now-&#13;
&#13;
HF:  02:39&#13;
Right.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  02:40&#13;
-now at home, did you ever talk over the table about what was going on in America, like the Vietnam War, civil rights, a lot of the movements that were going on?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  02:53&#13;
We talked about the Vietnam War in terms of being drafted and that kind of effort there. The, I was the, by the way, I was the first person in our family to graduate from high school. And I was the first person to attend college and graduate from college, not the only one. And all of my brothers went to Lakewood High School for college. My parents they did not own a car, but we got along quite well. He bought a house in Lakewood, Ohio, and it could have been a more, could not have been a better location because it was walkable to all the schools we had to go to. Of course that back then walkable was a mile and a half, right? Today. It is today it is two blocks. Even if you go to school today, and it is two blocks away, somebody walks with you. So we did everything alone, right. My first interest my first interest in photography, even though I worked in a camera shop in Lakewood, Ohio for a year I never took a picture never owned a camera. My first experience with photography was when I was in the Air Force, I worked in the Information Office at a headquarters that headquarters trunk Air Force in Waco, Texas. And I did PR releases and like photographer assigned to that base got me interested in photography and set out with a four by five camera taking, taking some pictures of people and stuff like that. So he my first interest became when I got involved with writing press releases and then when they take photographs of people coming back from Vietnam or different parts of the world.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  04:47&#13;
Well, you were in the military at that time for that period before you went to Kent State. Did you ever experience [crosstalk], go ahead.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  04:57&#13;
No, I, I made a conscious decision to join the Air Force and realizing that I did not have any way I was going to keep a deferment going. And back then in 1965, if you were drafted-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  05:10&#13;
Yes.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  05:10&#13;
-you just got into a line and the person in charge of the line would look at you and say, "You know, we did not get enough recruits the marine, so you are a Marine, or you are a Coast Guard-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  05:20&#13;
[chuckles]&#13;
&#13;
HF:  05:20&#13;
-go to the Navy. I did not want to have any of those choices put on me. So I made my own choice.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  05:28&#13;
That is good you know, that, you are still wearing a uniform at that time. Did you ever experience the anti-war protesters, you know expressing feelings toward people in the uniform, yours or others?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  05:42&#13;
Not while I was in Waco, Texas, no. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  05:46&#13;
And-&#13;
&#13;
HF:  05:46&#13;
Never happened.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  05:47&#13;
-when you picked on Kent State, what was it about Kent State that, why did you pick that school?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  05:55&#13;
Well, a couple of reasons. One it was, was relatively close to home, which did not matter because I was not going to be going home anyway. Two it was a state school and I could afford it with the G.I. Bill. And three because it had a strong broadcast program and I wanted to continue my broadcasting work that I started in the service. And I had always, in high school, I did record house with two of my friends, we were always involved with radio. And that was just a natural thing for me to want to be, stay in the media. And that is why I picked Kent State.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  06:32&#13;
You picked a great school. Yeah, I did not go there. But I tell you, I have visited enough to know what a great university it is. And certainly the students that come from it, having known a lot of the people from the remembrance events. It is a great school. I, obviously, I am going to ask some political questions, too, because you served in the military, you did not go to Vietnam, but you did have concerns. Did you have concerns about America's role in the war? And were you for or against the war? And did you support Vietnam Veterans Against the War, when they came home and like John Kerry, and did those hearings before Fulbright's committee on the Foreign Relations Committee talking about their experiences and how we must stop the war? Your thoughts on any of that?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  07:20&#13;
I was not for the war. I did not understand why we were in that war, respect to those people who had to go and make their sacrifice. I did not join a protest group per se, because I maintain myself as a journalist first after having gone through the Armed Forces Radio and Television Journalism School. And, so I was against the war. I supported the people against the war. But I maintained my objectivity by being a photographer and reporting on what I saw. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  08:14&#13;
And what-&#13;
&#13;
HF:  08:15&#13;
There were no protests in say, Waco, Texas, we took a bus to downtown Texas, downtown Waco every day, and there were never any protests. And in the Philippines, all we did was we heard about things, because I was in the news department over there and quad forces GB. We have heard about the news and what was going on. But it was, did not have much to do with us. We were surprised at things like the Democratic Convention, prior to (19)68, and a variety of things. And when I came back to the states, I came back to Denver, Colorado, and I saw people that were obviously against the war. And it was, it was surprising to me, it was a, I came back to a different culture than when I left.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  09:06&#13;
Wow. When you were at Kent State, I think you took those pictures on the weekend of April 30 to May 4, 1970. You had already been a student there for one year. And I think you were involved in the student newspaper and maybe the yearbook as well. Could you talk about your very first year at Kent State and what it was like? Were there protests going on, even then, number one? And number two, your experiences with the newspaper and photography?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  09:36&#13;
Well so, I started at Kent State, March of 1969. And I was unsure of my ability to be a student so I focused on getting my grades and getting stuff before I decided to do anything photographically. And a little after, after midterms for the first semester, first quarter there I thought, "Well, I think I can handle this. So, I need to find a place that offers free film in a dark room." And I did not go to the newspaper, I went to the yearbook office. And I was immediately told, "Sure, have some film and take some pictures." So, I was more aligned with the student yearbook, then the newspaper, although I did do some work for the newspaper. And my second year there after working on the yearbook for the first year, I became editor of the yearbook my junior year at Kent State, and put out the yearbook that had the stars, the red and white stripes, and the protest story inside of it.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  10:45&#13;
Now, some-&#13;
&#13;
HF:  10:47&#13;
Go ahead.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  10:48&#13;
-some of your early photographs, not talking about the protests. You take general shots all over campus or in the community or?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  10:56&#13;
Well the yearbook staff did not limit my ability to take pictures as I was still learning a lot of different things about photography. So, and I was not involved in any relationships. So, my only focus was getting great and getting an opportunity to take pictures of different groups, different things, gymnastics, rugby, sports. I took pictures of the homecoming queens. I took pictures of anything, all day long, and sometimes there were assignments from the yearbook staff to take pictures of a fraternity or sorority, or get this, or that. But other than that, pretty much left up to my own. And in the 1970 yearbook, you will see a lot more of my work as I was doing photography pretty much, all the time. I mean, any place that can give you a free film back then and a dark room, it was heaven sent.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  12:02&#13;
That is great. Do you still have any your early photos of, before the tragedy at Kent State?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  12:10&#13;
I do and the university does.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  12:12&#13;
Good.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  12:13&#13;
We have got all the yearbook, photographs and stuff. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  12:15&#13;
Super, super. In 1970, your background states that you became a stringer for Life Magazine, and covered the entire weekend from April 30th to May 4th. Could you just describe some of the pictures you took? You know, just, just some of the pictures that you remember taking of not only the protesters but also of the National Guard, people, politicians who came. Most importantly, in this particular one, we were more than the pictures. What were you, personally experiencing, you were only a sophomore, and you were a photographer, and you were wanting to take pictures? But this is, I do not know if you were thinking this was a historic happening at that time, but it was.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  13:10&#13;
Well, first let us get the record set straight here. I liked the pictures from May 1st until May 4th. And I did not become a stringer for Life magazine until the morning of May 4th. And being on campus, Kent State is a suitcase campus, a lot of students go home to visit friends, be with family, or to do a part time job. And so on the weekends, it was a pretty empty place. But, things were happening on campus that were unusual and for me, that was just another opportunity to take pictures and I did not, I did not need an assignment, and I was not thinking anything other than the fact that this is something that is happening and it needs to be recorded and my journalistic instincts said, take pictures because what else are you going to do with your time? So, I was not looking for any kind of historic event or anything like that. So what, what happened was over the weekend, May 1, I took pictures of the bearing of, bearing of the Constitution by the history graduate students. And that was pretty, non-event, 600-1000 students showed up, listened to them at noon. And by the time lunch hour was about to end, the people who organized the bearing of the Constitution realized there was a looser crowd, it was Friday. So they said, "Let us redo this on Monday. Let us go back and revisit what Nixon did and what the Vietnam War is doing, and the Constitution." And so, they were retired from that event waiting to call again on May 4th. They knew that they could not keep a crowd on May 1st, after school, or on the weekend because we would be going home. So, Friday, I did not take any pictures of downtown camp even though I did not, I did not know that, what was going on down there. I did not leave campus, but on Saturday morning, there were lots of rumors, and things that were supposed to happen or might happen about the ROTC building. So, I just followed people around and took pictures during the day. Some pictures that, not that much happened until the school set up marshals, because there was a curfew set on Friday night about being in town Friday night, and they were concerned about what was going on. The curfew extended to the university. And that evening, is when the ROTC building was burned down. I was with the editor of the Daily 10 stator. And before the building actually caught fire, we were there. But he said, "Let us go to, let us go to town." He said, "I heard that the National Guard are already in town." So, we ran down the hill or we kind of walked down the hill toward town and halfway downtown, halfway off campus, we were met by three National Guardsmen with fixed bayonets who came out and stopped us from going into town. And they asked us, "Why, where were we going?" Bill showed his press pass and we both were allowed to leave campus and then come back. We came back as the ROTC building was burning. And I did not get any pictures of that. I did not have the right equipment, flash, or rotation. But I stayed up until two or three in the morning, taking pictures of the fireman putting out the final embers of the building. And took some pictures of people in their dorms, standing, looking outside, looking to see what was happening because about two o'clock in the morning, the National Guard showed up on campus. And I can remember that distinctly because I was surprised to see these, or what I called "half-track," vehicle leading the National Guard onto the campus and surrounding the ROTC building. And I took several pictures of that, that were published in the yearbook and published in my book. The pictures there because I had to, I had to document what was going on. So, about two or three o'clock in the morning, Saturday, which would be Sunday morning. I went back to my dorm, we got up early because I heard that governor, when I got up on Sunday morning I heard that Governor Rhodes might be showing up on campus. And I walked around campus and I took pictures of the ROTC building. People returning to campus, even Saturday, {inaudible]. So this is Saturday, Sunday morning, and Governor Rhodes did show up, he arrived by helicopter or something by the airport. And I went with other photographers and we met in, at the ROTC building with General DeCorso and Mayor Cetrom, and also took numerous photographs of that. Drove to an elementary school where the National Guard were bivouacked, and we took, I took a few pictures there. And then, Sunday was pretty much quiet for me in terms of walking around the campus and just taking pictures here and there. The guards were pretty quiet. Students were interacting with the guard in a way that seemed very friendly. One of the questions I have asked myself is, "Why would a parent bring their students to a campus with nearly 2000 national guards on it, in campus and around town, and be comfortable with that?" Then I thought about it, and I thought, "You know what, they probably felt that because the National Guard was there the, the rioters and the people who were causing the problems were taken care of, and their students would be safe with the National Guard," kind of an oxymoron, if you think about it.  &#13;
&#13;
SM:  20:23&#13;
Right-right.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  20:25&#13;
It did not work out that way. So Sunday, I know that there was several gatherings of students in different locations, one by the Music of Speech building where I was, that is where we got tear gassed, so we had helicopters flying over our heads. And then there was a [inaudible], and there was a curfew on campus, but students found a way to get off campus, and head up toward the Main and Water Street or on the major intersections of downtown Kent. And I, I followed them out there and I got pictures of them sitting. And the, the whole problem with all that was going on at Kent State was the lack of communication. People today, that remember that we did not have cell phones, we did not have a T.V. in every room. People did not have the kind of information at our fingertips that we have today. And the students who went downtown and sat in the center of the street, asked for one thing, they asked for somebody, a representative from the school to show up and explain what was happening, who was in control. No one was, no one ever showed up. The guard shortened the curfew, and forced the students back onto campus earlier than the original curfew had been set up. They just made the unilateral decision to move students out of downtown Kent and back onto the campus, that Sunday evening. And I have followed students, some students had been banned, and they were in, taken into fraternity houses or, mostly fraternity houses. And I was told I could not come in because they had a wounded student in there, and so I just proceeded back to my dorm until Monday morning. Monday, about 9:30, 10 o'clock, I wandered over to the student newspaper office in Taylor Hall. And it was fairly quiet. We talked about what was going on. But then there was a phone call from Life Magazine, Chicago office, the woman on the phone asked if there was a photographer there who had some pictures from the weekend, and if she could talk to him. So, I was the only photographer who was during the whole weekend, that Bill can remember. So, he gave me the phone and they asked if I would send some prints that day of the weekend. And would I mind taking some pictures of the, whatever happened on Monday, and I agreed to take pictures on Monday, and send some pictures of that evening. That is how I became a stringer for Life Magazine that day, and you are right that, that does change your perspective, even though I-I was doing it on my own without any motivation other than just to capture images of what was going on. Now that Life magazine had given me an assignment, it made it more, gave me more focus. And one of the things that I had done earlier in the week on Saturday, made sure to get a press pass from Major Jones who was with a National Guard. So, I had a National Guard press pass that would allow me to move in and out of the lines, and that is what helped me on May 4th. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  24:16&#13;
Wow. Now you were, May 4th, when did you take your first picture on May 4th, approximately what time and where were you, when?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  24:34&#13;
[chuckles] Oh, it had been between 11:00 and 11:30, I was just walking down the hill in front of Taylor Hall and took a picture of the people standing in front of Taylor Hall. And then, I got down a little further and took a picture, a couple pictures of the crowd standing by the victory bell, and I took a few more pictures of that area. And then I thought, you know, there is only so many pictures, I can take of the students here. So, I might as well use my press pass to go down behind the National Guard because, the assignment, and I need to show both sides of the story, and at least see what the National Guard is doing. So, I walk down behind the National Guard lines, showed my press, press pass, had no problems. And all sudden, you realize it was a bigger deal than, than people might have thought it was because local T.V. stations from Cleveland were there, a national reporter named Mike Pappas was there. And they were all very interested in what was going on. I just stood and took pictures with the National Guard with their weapons, with their band, fixed band, [inaudible] ones. As they marched, as they drill, not drill, but as they gathered by the front of the ROTC building and we were about ready to go uphill. All this happened between 11:30 and say, 12:15. And around, around 12:15 or so, a jeep pulled up near the crowd and said, "You need to disperse and leave this area immediately. This gathering is not permitted, you need to leave this area immediately. Please disperse." And, the sad thing is that there was nothing going on other than students were chanting, and giving the guard the finger, and throwing stones that fell way short of the 300 or so yards that the National Guard was standing away from them. And there was no, there was no riot involved, there was no rushing of students at anything. And shortly thereafter, that is when the guard was told, "We need to break up this crowd." Now this goes back to the same situation, on Friday, May 1st, had the crowd been allowed to wait until one o'clock instead of 12:30, probably would have broken up by itself it already was divided. There was on the ground, maybe 3 to 500 students who are actual protesters, but behind them were people who are either on the way to class, or just observing. And then on top of that, there was another layer of people just observing, some people who are supporting them, but you know, on a campus of 18,000 students, you really only had 3 to 500 students were protesting, and whoever else was in that area was just an observer. And so, the guy decided to move up the hill and disperse the crowd. And I believe they did this without any reconnaissance because they had no idea how big the campus was. And they went up both sides of Taylor Hall to one side between Johnson Hall and Taylor Hall to Prentice Hall, Taylor Hall on the left. They chased students up there and then they get themselves trapped in a football field, the practice football field, which has a chain link fence that goes around three sides. And they had to make a decision as to how they were going to, what they were going to do next in terms of dispersing the crowd or not. So, there was a crowd of students across the street from the practice football field, and there was a street that separated the two, and the guard had a choice of going back down to the practice, to the ROTC building area through Prentice Hall and Taylor Hall. Or, to again confront the students and cause them to just disperse by going straight ahead and then making a right hand turn and going down between Johnson and Taylor Hall. Well, the interesting part is that to go up to Johnson and Taylor Hall would mean that they would have to climb an elevation of about 20 feet, would put them in a higher elevations than the parking lot and the practice football field. And, as they made their climb, that is the place. That is the point at which, between Taylor Hall and the pagoda structure, Guardsmen who somehow got to the very back of the line was moving up the hill, turned, some kneeled down a little bit, and fired their weapons. And I was about 80 feet in front of them and to the, to the side, John Clary, and Joe Lewis, who were within an area that I was within, and they were both shot. So, that was a pretty eye-opening experience-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  26:56&#13;
Wow.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  26:57&#13;
-because no one expected that and no one expected live ammunition. Even if they turned and fired, it was, they were shooting blanks, or shooting, maybe rubber bullets. I grabbed my cameras and knelt down on top of this grating in front of Taylor Hall. And when I started to get up, I was told, "Stay down, sit down, oh my god, they are shooting real bullets. People are bleeding up here. So, do not get up."&#13;
&#13;
SM:  31:14&#13;
Wow.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  31:15&#13;
So, that is how that event took place, pretty, pretty frightening that they actually shot real bullets. And again, I, I kind of sucked my emotions and just let my camera work for me because I took a picture of Joe Lewis, took a picture of John Clary, I got up and I started walking down towards the practice football field. I was told by some girls not to take pictures, I said, "No, my job is to take the pictures, somebody has to document this." And that is when I went down, I saw Jeffrey Miller lying in the street. And I turned to my right a little bit and I saw Mary Vecchio, I took several photographs of her, those appeared in Life Magazine. And I kept taking pictures of people, and their reactions to what had just happened. And it was, just an unreal experience walking around campus at that point in time-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  32:20&#13;
Oh man.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  32:20&#13;
-because nobody knew what was going to happen next. And you know, Alan Frank said it best when he said, you know, "Stay down, do not let, I cannot be a part of this. Do not let them shoot any more of you." Because the guard was scattered over the campus then, if you, if you take a careful look at some of the photographs, and not just mine, but many of them, you will see that even though the students are like in a huddle in a big circle, someplace. If you look close enough, you will see the guard, not too far away.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  32:56&#13;
Wow.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  32:57&#13;
And that was, that was what was scary, so.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  33:01&#13;
Did it ever, during this terrible, terrible happening, ask yourself, "Where is, where is the leadership of this campus? Where is the administration? Where are they?" And, and I, and then also, correct me if I am wrong, it was my, my information is that they were protesting against the expansion of the war into Cambodia. And that was initially, and then when the guard came on campus and showed their, their stuff that they were upset that the National Guard had, had come on to their campus. So, it was as much protesting against the war as it was against the, the National Guard being on their campus. And, and then the shooting. Oh, my God. Just your thoughts on that. Where was the administration?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  34:03&#13;
Well, my understanding is that the president of the university had just returned from a trip, I think it was to Iowa, and he was now having, during this time having lunch with General del Corso, a local restaurant. And the administration had more or less given control of the university to the governor and to the National Guard. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  34:31&#13;
Unbelievable.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  34:31&#13;
And, and the students. Like I said the evening before, I had asked for somebody from the administration to talk to them, and no one came forward. So the administration, from my standpoint, failed because they did not have control of the campus. They let the campus becoming military state and gave up. If you look at the pictures, even the administration building had National Guardsmen in front of the main door letting people in or out, so.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  35:04&#13;
Yeah, that is, this is an understatement. That was a massive failure in leadership at the administration level of the university, but it does show, which you already mentioned Mr. Frank and Mr. Lewis and others, faculty members who, who came to the scene, and were there with the students and trying to bring some sort of peace, and you know caring about the students. I mean, that says a lot about your faculty on campus. They deeply cared about the students that they were teaching. Yet, the administration was not there caring about the students that have applied and yeah, it just it was a terrible happening. And were you personally upset with the National Guard because they were on campus?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  35:53&#13;
Oh, yeah, I thought it was, I thought it was abysmal to say the least. You know, I just had no idea why they were, why they were on campus, because the ROTC building was done. There did not seem to be any other rumors, or anything going on around, other things happening. And it just made no sense that the National Guard, and what also does not make any sense is, why did the National Guard have fixed bayonets-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  36:26&#13;
Yes! &#13;
&#13;
HF:  36:27&#13;
-the whole weekend? Fixed bayonets are for hand to hand combat, concentration, close range stuff. And this is, a college campus with students, why do you need to have a fixed bayonet? When the Ohio State [inaudible] came on campus, they had batons. That is all they had. I mean, that is all they carried in their hands.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  36:56&#13;
Wow.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  36:57&#13;
They did not need a fixed weapon of any kind to show that they had control of the situation.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  37:04&#13;
In the afterwards of the tragic, I am going to say, Alan would say the killings. And, you know, I know, even Dean and John and they would say the killings at Kent State, quit saying the tragedy, the killings at Kent State.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  37:20&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  37:21&#13;
The thing is, who gave them that order? Who's the person responsible for telling them to have the, the bullets? I know, they had a lot of trials afterwards. But, did they ever come up with a final, who gave the final order for that?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  37:39&#13;
To have weapons loaded? &#13;
&#13;
SM:  37:40&#13;
Yes. &#13;
&#13;
HF:  37:43&#13;
That is not something I can address. I do not know who gave them that order, or why they had fixed bayonets. I mean, they came off the trucker strike. And they had been shot at during the trucker strike, but did not shoot back. Here they were getting stones thrown at them that cannot even get close to them. And they, they fired back at students. A lot of unanswered questions, because no one knows. There is lots of rumors as to somebody gave an order to fire. But to me, it does not matter if somebody gave an order or not gave an order. Some people had it in their mind that they were going to turn to fire, and they did.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  38:34&#13;
Governor Roads being, being on campus did not help the situation. I know he is running for office and-&#13;
&#13;
HF:  38:41&#13;
Yeah, I forgot about that. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  38:43&#13;
Yeah, and he was talking law and order. Well, guess who talked law and order, it was President Nixon and Spiro Agnew, who were going all over the country making comments about any other protesters, they were. So you know, he came and he was elected, in part because he used law and order as one of his- the issues that he was going to come into the presidency for. And because there is a lot of activism going all over the country, and civil rights, and you know all the movements that were happening, certainly the anti-war movement in Vietnam, and here, you know, you can look the, I do not know how the president of Kent State could have survived his presidency. If he was sitting down, in downtown and he was out of town, and he comes in town, and he was sitting with a military leader, and not sending anyone in his place to kind of calm students down, or talk with a National Guard, or talk with anybody in authority. The governor, you know, it boggles the mind, basically.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  39:47&#13;
He had given up his authority. I need to take a break for five minutes.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  39:53&#13;
Okay, let me turn my tape off here and I will leave my-&#13;
&#13;
HF:  39:58&#13;
I will be right back.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  39:58&#13;
-yep. Okay, we are all set. Yep. One of the questions I wanted to ask you is that, I read someplace that you were working on taking pictures, but you even gave a camera to John Philo?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  40:16&#13;
So [crosstalk], as the National Guard dispersed the crowd in front of Taylor Hall, after the crowd was already gone the, National Guard was on both sides of Taylor Hall. John Philo and I met at the base of the hill, [inaudible] hill. And John said, "You have an extra lens I could borrow, I have only got a wide-angle lens," and I said, "I have got a short telephoto lens." So, I gave him my telephoto lens to use. And he took that, and then he said he was going to go off the left side and I said, "I will go off the right side." And then we split, and we just continued covering the event. So yeah, that was a true story. And I subsequently gave that lens to Kent State University, so.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  41:15&#13;
Wow.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  41:16&#13;
Anyway, so the whole [crosstalk], huh?&#13;
&#13;
SM:  41:20&#13;
That and he used that camera to take that picture that won the Pulitzer Prize, right?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  41:25&#13;
Yeah, he used that lens. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  41:27&#13;
Wow. I hope you he thanked you. [laughter]&#13;
&#13;
HF:  41:32&#13;
He did.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  41:34&#13;
Now, you were, I am just curious about what the student newspaper staff was doing at the time that you were taking pictures because obviously they were around someplace, recording all this. Did the, in the student newspapers over a several day period, before the campus was shut down, were they writing opinion pieces or articles on what was going on?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  41:58&#13;
I could tell you I was not involved. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  42:00&#13;
Alright. &#13;
&#13;
HF:  42:02&#13;
Seriously, I was I, so after the, taking pictures that day, and they told us that the university was closed. I continued to take pictures of students as they marched or walked toward their dormitories to get their equipment and their gear, clothing, books, whatever they needed, to leave campus. I stayed until about six or six-thirty, I had to call Life Magazine back to find out what they wanted me to do with my film and the stuff I, the pictures I had taken. And I was told to put everything in a box, they bought a seat for it on an airplane out of Akron. And to, give it to somebody at the, just get it there and put it on the plane and they would get it in Chicago. And so, I did not have a car. So, one of my photographer friends, Fetterman drove me to the airport and later drove me home that night. So, I was busy getting my own stuff out of there. And, again, when we talked about the campus closing, I mean, people did not have cell phones, we did not have Uber, they had to find their own way home. And as you know, the people said the telephone lines on campus were not working. So, it was it was a tough situation for lots of students, how to get ahold of their parents, or find a way to get into town, get a bus, get something. I am sure there was some help that I did not know about because I was worrying about my own way of getting around. And that was, that was a big issue. And then the, then after everybody left, the National Guard searched all that rooms for anything that would be incriminating, and took any film, or anything that would be something that they thought they could use later.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  44:15&#13;
They went into the residence halls and did that?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  44:18&#13;
Yes, all the residence halls.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  44:20&#13;
I did not know that.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  44:22&#13;
Yeah, I think you could check with somebody else on that, but verify the fact that the rooms were searched and anybody who left a camera or left film, unexposed film, that was taken.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  44:34&#13;
Well that is another legal issue, that the university, no university should allow that to ever happen. Wow. Well, again, lack of leadership there at the school protecting the rights of students and their property, my goodness. Did you know any other students, any of the students who were killed or wounded at Kent State before this tragedy?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  44:58&#13;
I did not know any of the students who were killed at Kent State or any of the students who are wounded. I got to know Dean Kahler when he, I donated some large prints to the university. And Dean came up to me and said, "You know, that is the last photograph of me standing." So, it was taken before the shooting, and it was taken just, you know, while the crowd was growing. So, that is how Dean and I connected. But other than that, I did not know Alan Canfora, even though I know I have got pictures of him with the black flag. Alison Krauss, I had taken pictures of in 1969, when she helped protest the war on Vietnam by leading a group marched through downtown, the city of Kent. I learned of all these people through my photographs, and it is quite sad.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  45:36&#13;
Right. Now John-&#13;
&#13;
HF:  46:06&#13;
To know that, you- &#13;
&#13;
SM:  46:07&#13;
-you go ahead.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  46:08&#13;
-go ahead.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  46:08&#13;
No, you go ahead.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  46:09&#13;
You know, it is quite sad to look at the pictures. I gave a talk at Hanoi University in 2016, and I showed them a PowerPoint. And in the PowerPoint, I would show students with books in their arms and then I will say, "Oh, that is Sandra Scheuer. She is going to be dead in 20 minutes. That is William Schroeder, he is going to die in 25 minutes."&#13;
&#13;
SM:  46:38&#13;
Woah.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  46:39&#13;
And it brought tears to the students at the university because they realized the sacrifice that some students made to help in the war in Vietnam.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  46:49&#13;
Wow, that was powerful. Your book is full of unbelievable pictures. And I know it is hard to pick, but I am going to ask you to pick, if you can, just a few of the ones that you are most proud of, or the ones that stand out in your mind of the, the best picture you took on the National Guard, you took a lot of them, is there one that stands out?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  47:16&#13;
Well, it stands out would be like, for them, there was four heads in the back of their heads [inaudible] as they marched toward the guard that stand out to me. There was, there was a couple of them there.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  47:38&#13;
How about-&#13;
&#13;
HF:  47:39&#13;
Well there is one of them, in downtown Kent that is a silhouette of the National Guard with cross bayonets and in front of a service station window, and you can see bayonets in the air and their silhouettes.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  47:51&#13;
Wow.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  47:51&#13;
It was the day before.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  47:55&#13;
How about the best pictures of the protesters?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  48:03&#13;
Well, the crowd shot that is, just shows them standing there, Mary Beko with her dog, you can see just with this raised finger, yeah just that, the beginning crowd shots there. And the guard shot that stands out to me that, is one of those that was taken just as they fired their weapons because they fired, and I took a picture of them as they turned and fired. And then I got down but, as I am getting down you will see in the picture that there is one guy who looks like he has got his gun aimed for me so that stands out a lot.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  48:48&#13;
Did you think you were a goner?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  48:51&#13;
Well I know that I was standing up there and I had a, back then I had an old 200-millimeter lens which stands out pretty far, and another lens in my camera and I thought you know, "I probably look pretty silly up here, look like a target." So, I turned and went down on my knees, and.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  49:08&#13;
Wow.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  49:09&#13;
So no, but I was 6, I was only 20 feet behind, I think it was Joe Lewis, who was the first one shot. He was supposed to stand 60 feet. I was 80 feet. So-&#13;
&#13;
SM:  49:21&#13;
Now-&#13;
&#13;
HF:  49:22&#13;
-yeah, I was quiet, close enough.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  49:24&#13;
How about, are there any of the state troopers and the, you know the-the politicians that came to stand out?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  49:35&#13;
Well, yeah, they have got some nice, she would call, nice journalistic images of Governor Rhodes inspecting the ROTC building and standing with Mayor Cetrom, and General del Corso. So, got other pictures that stand out, what are this?&#13;
&#13;
SM:  49:58&#13;
How about the best of the downtown shots and the, or the campus shots, just when?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  50:04&#13;
Oh, downtown. We are using the light of the helicopters to take a picture of the students sitting down, downtown. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  50:12&#13;
Wow.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  50:13&#13;
That stands out to me. It did not have you know, back then, the equipment was a little bit different than it is today too. So, you had to be a little more in touch with your equipment, than, than that so, you did not have time to run up and take light meter readings, or even if you had a camera with a light meter in it. It is still a lot of guesswork.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  50:36&#13;
Summers in the last couple of years you met with John Cleary. Now, did you? Did you stay in touch with John, when he saw that picture? Did you stay in touch with John over the years, or was this kind of a first meeting?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  50:51&#13;
We met for the first time with at Kent State University in 2019 when I, when I, when I shared my book, we had a book signing ceremony. Yeah, so that is the first time I met him. And I shared with him some more pictures that I had of him that were never published.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  51:10&#13;
Wow. &#13;
&#13;
HF:  51:11&#13;
So yeah, John and I, we stay in touch on Facebook, but we are not, you know, buddies, in that sense. We are just good. We just have something mutual in common that we both respect and both understand.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  51:24&#13;
Right. What happened to your film after it was shipped off? Because you, I guess that they had to, you did not know what the pictures were. I mean, you had not seen them. &#13;
&#13;
HF:  51:38&#13;
Oh that is right. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  51:39&#13;
So, what happened to your pictures? And most importantly, and I am so pleased that they came back to you, and they are yours.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  51:49&#13;
So here is two stories. One, I had a handful of negatives that I gave to the life reporter that were taken between 1969 and, and they were actually probably all 1969, and maybe a few from the first, no, I do not think anything from May 1, but 1969. And they have been lost and I am lucky I found some. But the film, I just put in a box, I sent to Life Magazine, they called me at two o'clock in the morning to tell me they could not find it. Then, they called me an hour or two hours later and told me they finally got the box of film, and then we were going to send her off via processing. I think it was about a week later, not quite a week later, maybe three days, two or three days. I got a call again, real early in the morning, one or two o'clock in the morning saying that one of the photographs that I had taken was going to be used for the cover of Life Magazine. And that was interesting, because I had not seen any of the negatives, the FBI had come to my house, asking to see all my prints. And I had yet to see anything other than the cover of Life Magazine and the images inside. And the fact that they put a picture of me inside of the editors, editors page. The, the photographs, were in the hands of Life Magazine, and then the FBI came to my house when they wanted me to identify who they thought were radicals on campus. And you know, a lot of people get concerned about what the FBI is going to do. But in this particular case, the truth stands for itself. I mean, you are not going to, no one is going to get identified as a radical that I know because, they are not. But the FBI kept demanding and seeing my negatives, and my pictures and I told him, I said, "You know, they are not mine. They belong to Life Magazine, and I have not seen any of them. And as they left my house, they said, "Well if that is what you want to do with your gov. money, Mr. Ruffner." And because I never agreed to share them with them I guess. Life Magazine, Life Magazine made a decision that they did want to get involved with, you know, in a case about having the FBI come to them and say they want the negative, and the prints, and they did not want to get involved with all that stuff. So, they sent me a photo of the negative that they had of mine, and actually a friend of somebody else's too. That, they just sent me a box, full of prints of every negative, and they sent me the negatives, and they said, "We are going to let you handle this." So, it was my deal.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  55:04&#13;
Wow.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  55:08&#13;
It was a big deal. I mean, having all those, it was the first time I saw them, so I obviously took my time and went through all the pictures, and looked at them in quite amazement as to what I actually had. Because even though you think you know what you have, when you are taking the pictures, you do not really know, so. And the fact that they chose one of mine for the cover, even though there were other people there who had similar photographs, it was quite a feather, so.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  55:37&#13;
Were there other photographers besides you and John Philo?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  55:40&#13;
Oh, tons. Campus newspaper, photographer, the campus, campus photographer who worked for the University was there, two of them, they have pictures of John Cleary. Call it very, very similar to my pictures. I mean, any picture could have been used. So, yeah.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  56:03&#13;
Wow. Now, when it was all over, when the, May 4th, and people are going home, the school shut down, of course. You know, the shootings, as you well know, set a wave of protests all over the country, and anywhere close to 275-300 schools were truly affected by this. And as far as Kent State goes, how was the campus when you returned in the fall? I mean, and honestly, I want to know how you felt, because you are an individual student, you were still a sophomore. I know you might be a little older, because you served in the military. But still, you were a young, you were a young student, and you were doing your job. But now, you know that this is affected the entire nation. You got the Time, Newsweek out there. So, you are a part of history. As a young person, how did you deal with this?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  57:06&#13;
Well, let us start with fact that I kept coming back to the university before school started, because people would want to have a walk through. Rolling Stone wanted to walk through, this news group wanted to walk through. And I was one of the people they, they called to help walk people through the campus. And then, even though the campus was closed, and it did open for summer school, and I attended school summer school that year. And I took regular courses, and it was like nothing ever happened other than the fact that it did happen. Does that make sense?  I mean, things went on as normal, was not, summer school is different than a regular university, regular university time. But yeah, I went onto school and then in the fall, fall started. I got involved. I was just selected to be the editor of the 1971 yearbook, which would include the, the killings of the poor students in the routing of the night. And it was my decision as to how to deal with that in the yearbook. And I do not know if you have seen the yearbook, but Kent has always been to me, a mild campus. It is not like Columbia's or other places where they have a lot of radicals who get up on their soapbox all the time. And it is a conservative school. So, I did the yearbook in a way that shows that the shootings interrupted what would have been a normal school year. I do not know if you have seen the yearbook or not.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  57:53&#13;
Yes.  I have not, I have not seen the yearbook, no. &#13;
&#13;
HF:  59:04&#13;
Yeah, that is The Timeline. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  59:07&#13;
Okay. &#13;
&#13;
HF:  59:10&#13;
So yeah, that was quite-quite beautiful.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  59:15&#13;
You went and you stayed, you stayed with that yearbook till you graduated?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  59:25&#13;
I edited the yearbook that year, and I stayed with the yearbook, but did not do a whole lot my senior year. I did not do a lot of photography for it. I had already gotten, I have gotten married within that time, and my focus was on getting my grades, and graduating, and I graduated. I started to camp in March of 1969. And I graduated in December of (19)71. So, even editing the yearbook I got out of there fairly quickly.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  59:59&#13;
Yeah. When you did graduate, there were more trials to come at Kent State over the football field, the trials of the families who lost loved ones, lawsuits, and do you kind of cover that in any way?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:00:19&#13;
Let me say that. I was a witness of the Scranton Commission hearings at Kent State. Then I was the lead witness in the two civil cases in Cleveland, Ohio, against the guard, and I was the lead witness because I introduced all the photographic evidence. And it took three days on the witness stand. And the, the attorney for the National Guard was a very, very good attorney. And he was very difficult, but I introduced all that stuff. And then, and then when the second trial came, I was also the lead witness. And by the time I had finished, and the second witness was called, they had agreed to the settlement which they announced, which was the monetary settlement, and a letter by the National Guard that everybody else said there is an apology, but they, they disagree. So I, in second trial, I believe was in 1988. And I have to say that, Kent State has been part of my life every year since then, because of the, because I was in a unique position to have photographs for the entire weekend. I got calls from media, I got calls from eighth grade science history students who wanted to do, there is a history competition every year for eighth graders. I became involved and I am still involved as we are right now, still involved with the Kent State shootings. And, it has been a part of my entire life.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:02:21&#13;
Wow. It, what were the final results of those hearings? There was a-&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:02:29&#13;
Well the National Guard awarded [crosstalk]- -it was against the National Guard and Governor Rhodes we do not want to forget that. And in the state of Ohio had to pay, I forget what it was right now. The total amount of money but and the, the primary amount of money was going to go to Dean Kahler because he had been living in a wheelchair for so long that it was felt that he should be given something to live on. And I think the total amount of money was over $450,000. Do you recall? I am not sure. But the families of the four that died, they were compensated, then. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:02:31&#13;
-yes.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:03:23&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:03:24&#13;
Yeah. And all- &#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:03:26&#13;
They-they did not get much in return in terms of monetary. They, the idea was to get the guard to admit that they did something wrong. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:03:34&#13;
Right. &#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:03:35&#13;
And Dean Kahler got the majority of the settlements.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:03:39&#13;
The question, Howard, that you have probably been asked 100 times, maybe more, was the question that came up about maybe about, 12 years ago at one of the remembrance events that Alan Canfora opened up with, that they have a tape where somebody taped the person giving the order to shoot. Now, I do not know what has happened since that remembrance event. But, others said they thought they heard it too. Did, when you are there you are close, did you hear any money give the order?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:04:04&#13;
I did not hear anything from where I was. And I was as close as anybody. And like I said earlier, to me, it did not matter if-if there was an order because if there was an order, I only think there was a predetermined decision by a group of guardsmen to get to that point on the hill, which was the highest point on the campus at that place, and turn and fire because others behind them are totally surprised and if they say some things like though they heard a gunshot, well, everybody would have heard a gunshot. But even General Canterbury is in that photograph of the guard firing, and he looks totally surprised. So for me, it does not matter if somebody said fire or not. There was an action that required some kind of coordination between different folks to turn on fire.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:05:25&#13;
And they knew there were bullets in there too.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:05:30&#13;
Yeah, yep, they did.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:05:31&#13;
They knew they were not blanks.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:05:34&#13;
There were armor, some of them had armor piercing bullets because they went through the steel sculpture.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:05:39&#13;
Unbelievable. Yeah, that hole in this, yep, that whole skill sculpture is still there. After Kent State and let people know what your career what your what happened with your career beyond college. I think that is very important.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:05:56&#13;
Well, I went to work for, I was a photographer's assistant for a commercial photographer for almost a year. And when I decided that, that was not going to go anywhere, I chose to go to Ohio University to get a degree in something that was not production oriented, I wanted to get a degree in something that was not easy for me to do, like take pictures or run T.V. cameras. So, I got, I got my master's in communications research, which was statistics. So, and after that, I went and worked for cable T.V. for a while. And then, I did a little freelance photography and moved back to Cleveland and kind of traveled with Ohio Bell where I was a writer, photographer, and all-around PR type person, and did my career with AT&amp;T in New York, New Jersey, retired in Denver, Colorado, in government affairs. But during that entire time, I can tell you that I did give many talks at Kent State at many different locations. So yeah, my career even though I did not pursue a photographic career in its traditional sense, while at AT&amp;T I did a lot of photography, and made photography part of my job description regardless of what kind of job I had. So, did multimedia shows I did film, I did video, produced a lot of, wrote scripts. So yeah, I had a good career and, and having had the Life Magazine and the George Polk award for photojournalism, that certainly opened the doors and did not hurt me getting inside AT&amp;T getting into AT&amp;T in Ohio, giving me recognition for what I was doing.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:08:02&#13;
The thing is, I think it is great that you did this book, that it is connected to Kent State, that you are still going out, and speaking about it. These are, this is something that should never be forgotten in our history. And this is all important. One things from going, I did not go this year, because I had an operation, I wanted to go to the remembrance event. But, I think four years, I think was four years ago was my last one. But there were several, several remembrance events where some of the panels talked about the fact that the truth is still not known. And the truth is, you know, like, who gave the order, like your speculation about those possibly played plan by us, certain number of National Guard. It is the it is the unknown truth that still haunts the people who want to know the what really happened. And the truth needs to be known because of the four who died. And, and so I think that, I do not know, have you heard anything more about the person who came several years back when Alan was here regarding the shooting, and that somebody gave an order then he had a tape?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:09:15&#13;
Oh, there is, somebody found a tape. They sent it to an expert. That expert said he was able to unscramble the tape enough to actually here an order to fire. The person who, the audiologist who did that discovery has since passed away, which, I guess hurt their case about taking that to court and saying, "Here is my proof." But other than that there has been nothing else said about that tape in quite a while and I have to ask people, I mean, what? If somebody gave an order of fire, how does that change, anything? If there was no the order to fire, it is more of a conspiracy. So, this whole thing is going to go down like John F Kennedy.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:10:25&#13;
It is true. &#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:10:26&#13;
There is going to be rumors and myths about what really happened. But, you know, in this case, I know for a fact, as I sat there and witnessed it, as I stood there and witnessed it, the National Guard turned and fired, and I did not hear a shot before me, you will look at the evidence, there was nothing thrown at them to cause them to turn and fire. There is nothing on the ground. No, Kent State is a manicured campus. Taylor Hall is a manicured piece of property because it is one of the showcases on the University at the time. There is no rocks lying around, there is no, you know, so somebody is going to have to convince me otherwise. But I just feel that there is the conspiracy. And if you will notice that, if you go and look at all the records, you will notice that the people who turn and fire are almost all from the same unit, so.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:11:25&#13;
And of course, the National Guard, just like students, they are now a lot older, and many are dying. So, who were who were there, because time has a chance to affect everything. You still-&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:11:44&#13;
Except the fact that those who turned and fire were older than the National Guard.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:11:50&#13;
What was their age?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:11:52&#13;
I could not tell you that, but, but they were a part of the 107 Calvary, and they were an older unit.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:11:58&#13;
Wow. Alright. You still stay in touch with John Philo?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:12:06&#13;
Not really. No, we-we, of course, we get together on Facebook like everybody else. But, he has his life and I have mine. We are both happy with that.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:12:19&#13;
In your future, have you, have you taken pictures that you are just as proud of as the ones at Kent State in your later career, and what would those pictures be?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:12:37&#13;
Yeah, I promised myself that the last picture published by me would not be a picture of Kent State. I had an opportunity to lead a group of people to China. And some of those were my favorite photographs of foundries in China. That is something not everybody would get an opportunity to do. So, I have continued my photographic work in different ways. The annual report for the Colorado Red Cross one year, and took pictures of people from Bosnia. So, I try to continue my photographic work in ways that will surpass, although it will change, but I do not want to be known only as a Kent State photographer. So, I have been putting a lot of my work on Getty Images right now. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:13:38&#13;
Oh okay.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:13:39&#13;
Kind of spread, I got many pictures while I was in the service of popular people like Bob Loeb, and Art Linkletter, Raquel Welch you know, so I have, with General Westmoreland. I worked for, so I, you know, I continue to do photography. And right now, I am not doing what photography, I am retired. My wife and I, I have seven grandsons, we were spending more time with our grandsons, and doing kind of family photography. Nothing. We are not doing it professionally. I am just doing it as a snapshot or snap-shotter.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:13:55&#13;
Wow. I just have a couple more questions here. They are general questions. And, many people say the killings at Kent State changed the lives, changed lives forever, especially if you were a college student in the, in the United States of America. It was a shock to the youthful Boomer generation like Pearl Harbor. And FDR's death was a shock to the greatest generation. It changed. It changed mine forever. I do not know if you knew this. Alan knew it real well that I was going I go to law school and I changed everything. And when that happened, I was a senior at Binghamton University, and I graduated 1970. And I wanted to go and become a college administrator. So that, what happened at Kent State or Jackson State never happened again, I played in, I would play my own small role in that. And my story is not, is pretty typical. What happened to Kent State, to me is historic in a way that, way beyond the people even participated in it. &#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:15:38&#13;
Oh yeah.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:15:38&#13;
Because many people have written histories about the (19)60s say that, that tragedy, at Kent State, at a college that was not a radical college, but it was, you know, it was not known for that. But it happened there. And that showed to Middle America, and too, that the war had to end. And so-so that is what from historians’ point of view, but also from an individual point of view. And obviously, this has shaped your life, like no other. Do you ever have flashbacks?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:16:14&#13;
No, I do not have time for flashbacks because everything is for me, for me it is always still too current. You know, it is like our conversation today. I remembered, I can feel it. But not as a flashback, it is as a real happening that I live with all the time. As far as how it changed things, one of the things I think it changed, in its, its colleges today no longer pretend to offer a liberal arts education. They are not looking for students to be liberal arts thinkers and be generalists in that sense. A lot of schools have given up their- a degree in a liberal arts field that does not have any workplace recommendation. So to me, colleges have changed they are more, you go to college to get a job, and you get to go, you get into a program that your first two years are your regular stuff. But then you are really focused on being an engineer, being an architect, being a political science, but a liberal arts part of colleges has really become, you do not see history majors as much anymore, or English majors. Therefore, there are different schools.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:17:41&#13;
Yes. That is a very good analysis, that is so true. What do you want your, go ahead.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:17:51&#13;
No, I just, nothing.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:17:53&#13;
What do you want your legacy to be?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:17:58&#13;
[chuckles]&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:17:59&#13;
In your own words, what do you hope your legacy will be?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:18:02&#13;
That my book, on Ken State is a factual and truth telling book, because I wanted people to remember, for sharing the truth about something that was so horrific, and something that should never have happened, Kent State should never have happened. Sargent Snyder gives a talk at Kent State, and I got to hear it on a podcast once. And I disagree with it completely, because during the podcast, he says, "Just before the shooting, sometime before the shootings," he said, "Somebody decided to declare what was happening at Kent State. Students at one end, National Guard another end, somebody said this is a riot. Well, it was not a riot, but the National Guard was given permission then to go up and disperse the crowd, and because they had bayonets, and stuff and weapons, they can shoot people, and Governor Rhodes gave them that permission days ago and took advantage of it." But it should never have happened. There was never a riot. Students were at one end, guards another round. It is like it is like we have learned today, take time, let things fizzle out, and oftentimes and in very tense situations. So, the best thing to do is to let things fizzle out. That should have been what happened at Kent State and there was no need for anybody to die and no need for any of the guards to be shooting or they should, they should have said at that point in time. He should have said, "We have got this under control National Guard, you may pack up and leave your bags, leave and take your bags with you." It would have been fine.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:18:02&#13;
Yeah.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:18:25&#13;
Nothing would have happened. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:20:15&#13;
That is why the lack of leadership that we mentioned earlier that it was in the administration. I think one other thing is about Jackson State that happened, like about 10 days later.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:20:26&#13;
Yep.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:20:26&#13;
And I think Kent State is so right on the students who have been leading these remembrance events for a long time, are so ahead of America as a whole, because it was Kent State, who made sure that what happened in Jackson State is not forgotten either. And then what happens there toward African American students, and what happened at Kent State, which was predominately white students. They are all one. And even though they tried to say that the protest of Jackson State was about, about the Vietnam War, it was not about the Vietnam War, it was about racism. It was about the history of racism within that area, and Jean Jung bless his soul, came many years to campus, I met him I actually had dinner with him once when he was here on campus. And, you know, that is what Kent State should be remembered for. Also, with this tragedy is that they cared about another campus that went something, a Black college campus in Mississippi, and saw the linkage between the between the killings at their school and the killings at Kent.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:21:46&#13;
Undeserved with very little justification, no justification [chuckles].&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:21:56&#13;
Yeah, that, you know, I am interviewing another person on that later today, or tomorrow. I guess I am just some final thing. So who do you just a general question, I got three more, and that is it. Why, who was responsible for the Vietnam War? I know we went to war, and we can blame a president. But in your view, everything has dots. The history is about dots. And when Kent State happened, there was a dot directly to it linked to a Vietnam War, and to a president. But it was something, dots go back on this too. So your thoughts, what caused, who do you blame for the Vietnam War?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:22:40&#13;
I blame Nixon because, he did a lot of fakery stuff and stopped Johnson from ending the war. And you can read the history about that. But he, he did some things to cause the Vietnamese people to support his position and not go to peace talks as they had planned with Johnson. So, I blame him for continuing what he did.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:23:14&#13;
Could you also kind of talk about the great things that have happened to Kent State with respect to making that, where this happen a historic spot, not only to have the Kent State Senator, which is unbelievable. But, markers being placed making sure it is it is forever remembered in terms of remembrance. And it is historic, and just everything Kent State now in terms of the administration is unbelievable. And I-I know that they have had issues over the years, but there is no question when you hear Alan Canfora say positive things about an administration and then it has got to be good. [laughter] Because he went through many years, where there was not so good. But, just your thoughts on the site where this all happened and your thoughts as a graduate of Kent State, who went through this, that this spot where it happened is forever preserved for history?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:24:18&#13;
It has to be preserved for history because that is how we learn, and how we continue to grow. Cannot, it cannot be forgotten because we do not want to have a, it is like a T and square. It is something that should never happen again. And as long as we can remember what happened at Kent State, good chance that will not happen again.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:24:49&#13;
What is the number one lesson of Kent State and Jackson State, the two together for future generations?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:25:02&#13;
Communication, and communication with the right people making the right decisions. It is all about communication and getting rid of politics and getting rid of egos. It is all about solid communication between individuals and people, especially about things that matter most, like people's lives. &#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:25:30&#13;
Right. And my last question is a question I have been asking now for the last 15 interviewees. Your tape will be listened to 50 years from now, long after you are gone, I am gone. And most of the boomer generation will be around either, so no one will be alive when Kent State happened. And that is the purpose of our centers to make sure that there is research and scholarship on these events. So, they are never forgotten. So what words of advice would you give to young students, faculty, national scholars who are studying this story, 50 years from now, words of advice?&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:26:24&#13;
Words of advice to those of you who are listening to this tape, years from now, is really listen, and listen to the other tapes as well. And try to understand what mistakes were made, and how important it is to be able to communicate and be a part of the process and not hide from it. And Kent State should not have happened. But, protest in this country should be allowed, not violent protest, but protest, like they were at Ken State, it was just a protest. It is part of our culture, it is part of who we are. And it will never stop. But, respect communication of what is going on and respect people's lives.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:27:35&#13;
Very well said and I just want to say that I always ask a question, usually when I say what are the lessons learned and the lessons that cannot be lost from the (19)60s or from any of the Vietnam War, or even Kent State? You already answered that question. With one word, communication. &#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:27:57&#13;
Yep.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:27:58&#13;
You hit it right on the button. Howard, I want to thank you for this interview.&#13;
&#13;
HF:  1:28:05&#13;
You might, you might consider putting a link to the oral history I gave to Kent State too.&#13;
&#13;
SM:  1:28:10&#13;
I will do that. I got to deal with Binghamton University, but I will deal with that and I am going to pause the tape now. Thank you very much for the interview.&#13;
&#13;
(End of Interview)&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38728">
                <text>Interview with Howard Ruffner</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2478" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="13696">
        <src>https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/files/original/486fcd67b3b93b7cdae2e808428a762d.pdf</src>
        <authentication>73bd067c7512639fb3577b3daa44cc98</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="68">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="52322">
                    <text>.,.
R

I
p

L

~

c

.

,.

./

. I
Id

... s
c

0
L
L

t
6
~

\

�����•

-•

••r·'SJ !J~
.'
p.:mpJB

•
\YJl!}'l.Y

~$ t~p~s!l!Jly ~bt3

Jtl,t;t)J~
•

a

,
I1
• ,.;;.11•:l•.I "11) 1· ~ .1&lt;1h:&lt;).

shb ikit y.:irh;c)~.

Sc&gt; hg h1iilt,
. ......... 'J'h:1J1 :µJl~s lsl-Jpl1~J!)11 Sllu~~ ll fDJlss~
.

~UI~ ~ 'IJ:ji~JI) .

•Jmvern ty Arctwes Binghamton University L1branes

��f,1atll}

Adt 1101'

MR. FRITZ HIER

SHELDON DAVIS

f.i/1101
11 wrhml

bli1m ..... .

SONIA Ni:JAME
ROBERT DAVIES

Cnp; b lllor .

.

. JERRY GIBBS
NORM DECKER

\p11111 h/1101

... HELEN HUDDA
DAVE G ARMAN

Pho101:1aph; f.J1101· .

GEORG E NEUMANN

:irt E.!1101

... HANK HANCOCK

BERNIE GARLOCK
ORLANDO BUSINO
..... DICK HAMANN
ROLAND CUILLERIER
.. . MACK VEGARD
JIM BROWN
AL HANSEN
STAN GOLDEN
JEAN FAIRBROTHER
BILL JONES
SHIRLEY DAWSON
RALPH FOREST

6

�DEDICATION

~

HISTORY

~

ADMINISTRA TION

~

CRACKER BARREL

·~

STUDENT BODY

~

ORGANIZATI ON

~

ATHLETICS

~

ACTIVITIES

~

STUDENT DIRECTORY

~

ADVERTISING

~

e
·e

e

e
e

e
e
e
e
e

�Tnple ( 1ties College, as most of us know it, 1:. only two ye.tr:. olJ, yet
as far back

JS

19 32 Syracuse University est.1blishcJ 1b University Ex

tension Program in EnJ1cott.
their

collq~e

HunJreJs of

.lrL.l

stuJc.:nts beg.in

work unJcr the Program anJ then went on to

Syr.1cuse or ~ome other un1vers1t}' to complete ''ork for their

Ltt&lt;:r, n1µht d.t&gt;sts, rnrresponJing to

Thi~

type offering prO\e,I

.1

,111

&lt;:\tcmion pro-

gr&lt;:.lt boon to .uea

of
TCC was maJe in 19•1I, '' he:n a res1-

managed this extension work
wh1d1

prev 1ou ~ I }'

8

lu,I

�been handled from the
main campus. Despite the
war and

decreased college

enrollments resulting from it,
the extension classes in Endicott
continued to grow so that by 1946
more than 225 students were enrolled for
the first year's college work and were planning to continue for degrees.
The demands for additional college courses and
educational opportunities were so compelJing that the
University inaugurated an expanded program in the falJ
of 1946. In January, 1946, the Bowes mansion in Endicott
was purchased from the International Business Machines Corporation, and now serves as the College Administration building.
In April, several vacant Jots bordering on the original purchase
were added to provide space for classroom buildings. Erection of temporary classrooms and alterations of the original building were begun in
9

�July, and by October l the College opened with 957 students enrolled.
A resident faculty of 55 members was assembled under the deanship of Dr.
G len n G. Bartle, formerly of the University of Kansas City, and a full
scale program of freshman and sophomore classes was offered.
Many remember those early days of the 1946 Fall Semester.
Classes were held in the pavilion and clubhouse in En-Joie
park, while the temporary buildings were being completed .
When they were opened, the first few weeks were

spen~

in huddling around coal stoves and listening to lectures. However, the central heating unit was completed, the students and faculty thawed out, and
Triple Cities College was firmly established.
As soon as students and faculty were
settled down m their new environment, clubs and social groups were
o rganized, and in December, the
United Student Government
was formed , with Ed Bakerman as the first president. D u r 1 n g the

io

�first year , the Colonial News, the ( olonial
Players, anJ Yanous athletic teams made their debut.
This year the college has added
"West Hall" to its facilities, and
the faculty has been increased to 73.
The outlook for 1948 is one of still more
expansion. A bigger staff will be needed,
and eighty full-time faculty members are planned for. This college, which, in two years, has
grown with great speed, has now reached the point
where it is able to offer degrees in six major fields. We
are no longer an extension school. We are in reality a fullfledged institution. The all important news about TCC assuming four-year status was announced by Dean Bartle on January 27,
1948, and probably was the most important step taken by the college
since its inception. No longer is the Southern Tier a "Black spot" on
the education al map. The future a1 &gt;ears to contain room for unlimited
expansion. We look forward hopefully to the day when the "New Look"
will becomL a reality for Triple Cities College.
11

���CHANCELLOR TOLLEY

Dr. Wilham Pe.uson Tolley, through whose
dforts Triple Cities College was foun&lt;le&lt;l .is a permanent 1nst1tut1on. 1s the seventh chancellor of
Syracuse University Dr. Tolley rece1veJ his B.ichelor
of Arts &lt;legree from Syracuse 1n 19.22, ?\.faster of
Arts 1n

t 924,

an&lt;l Doctorate of Philosophy from

Columbia in 19 30. Following his acceptance of the
Pres1&lt;lency of Allegheny College in 1931. Dr. Tolley
rap1Jly became a national hgure in higher e&lt;lucat1on,
and gamed fame as the youngest college pre,1dent
1n the Un1teJ
served

111

St.He~.

A Phi Bet.i K,1pp.1. he has

an exc.'Cut1vt· (apauty

educational organ1z.1t1ons

VICE-CHANCELLOR CRAWf-ORD

Dr. Fmla Crawford, Dean of the College of
Liberal Arts, Hea&lt;l of the Political Science Depart·
ment of Maxwell School of Citizenship, and V1ceChancellor of Syracuse Un iversity, has been a member
of the Syracuse facu lty since 1919. Well known as
a teacher, educational administrator, and civic kader,
he

i~

also the author of many books on political

science anJ economics. Dr. Crawford serves in the
capacity of advisor to Dean Bartle and 1s the im·
med iate lt.uson officer between Triple Cities College
,1nJ

yracusc University.

in

many uv1c anJ

�Within the pages of this book you will find a pictorial record and a narrative account of some of
the outstanding events of the first two years in the history of Triple Cities College of Syracuse University.
It is to be hoped that even an outsider, looking idly through this record, may sense the essential spirit
of fellowship and good-will which permeates this new institution. Those of us who have lived these
two years together as students, faculty members and administrative staff do not need this printed word
to tell us of the high morale of this College. But as time passes and as details fade from our memory,
this book will have increasing value as a remainder not only of the events chronicled but of other more
numerous and more personal episodes which are now a part of the background of each of us.
Together we have seen this College grow through periods which may be flippantly described as:

( 1) the "Sunday-School Room Curtain" stage, (2) the ''Pot-Bellied Stove" stage, and ( 3) the "One
Unit Crowded Corridor" stage, into ( 4) the "Two Unit Adequate (though temporary) Class Room"
stage. These physical stages represent educational epochs (1) for Freshman work only, {2) for Freshman and related work, and (3) for Freshman, Sophomore and related work, to the present (4) Limited
Major program of a four year college.
We are just beginning. Bigger and better physical stages and broader and more comprehensive
educational epochs lie before us. We will achieve these goals because destiny is with us and because we
are united in the objective of placing in this area a splendid educational institution, fully worthy of the
pride and esteem of the community and of ourselves

Glenn G. Bartle
Dean

15

�MR. MOSES
Although the major interest of Registrar Moses is political
science, h:s fields of study have been diversified, including
education at Lackawanna Business College, Wyoming Seminary,
Penn State Engineering Extension, Syr,1cuse University, and
Harvard Un1vers1ty Graduate School.
His teaching career began when in 1936 he joined the
faculty of Syracuse University as an instructor in political science,
and by 1938, he was Assistant Dean of Men.
With the establishing of T.C.C. as a four-year college, Mr.
Hopkins-Moses 1s seeing t.1e materialization of a vision formed
many years before "'hen he was appointed ,1s director of the
Endicott Extension of Syracuse Universtt}

MISS PLANKINTON
In August of l 9.:i6, Miss Plankinton c,1me to T.C.C to
assume the position of Counselor of Women . She obtained her
B.A. 1n English at the University of Oregon and her M.A. in
Personnel at the University of Syracuse. During the war, she
served as an officer 111 the Spars in Washington, D. C.
In addition to counseling the greatly outnumbered co-eds,
Miss Plankinton has worked in collaboration with Mr. Kimball
in planning an&lt;l executing the stu&lt;lenl personnel program, which
111clu&lt;les counseling, testing student government activities, housing an&lt;l part-time Jobs.
She has also worked with the Dean on special college planning committees and has charge of all secretarial personnel.

MR. KIMBALL
Jack F. Kimball, Director of Student Personnel, was with
the charter clan of T.C.C. in August, 1946, coming from the
University of Kansas City where he was Assistant to the Dean
of the Liberal Arts College. He graduated from this University
and also studied at Syracuse University.
During the war, he was a Navy l1euten:1nt and an assistant
personnel otl1Cer He abo taught commun1cat1ons at the Officers·
Training School, Newport, Rho&lt;le Island.
His present duties involve coordinating personnel counseling services, the student health service, the housing bureau, the
)Ob-placement bureau, extra-curricular activities and veterans'
affairs.

16

�RUDOLPH SIPPOLA
A graduate of Columbia University and As·
Treasur&lt;:r from 1943 to 1946 at Syracuse
University, Mr S1ppola ts now Business Manager
.lt TU'
~1stant

rRITZ HIER
A graduate of Dartmouth College and the
Syracuse University School of Journalism, Mr
Hier is now the Director of Public Relations and
an instructor in journalism.
HERBERT LEET
Our Librarian, Mr Leet, was a former librari.m at Ond Central School, New York and
rerel\·ed his depee from Syracuse Un1vers1ty.
MARY NEWSHOLME
The Food Director. Mis\ Ncwsholme, lus had
prior experience .It Vassar, \X'tllsley an&lt;l ''1th the
Li • go,crnmc:nt in Honolulu.

JOHN MALLORY
The School Physician, Dr. Mallory, is a gradu.lte of SyrauJSe University an&lt;l 1s .1 practicing
phym·1.rn 111 the Endicott area.
ANNE MI.ADE
The Collc:ge nurse is a graduate of the Massa·
thuseth (,encral Ho~pital in Boston. She served
I 1 months in the European Theater as a member
of the Army Nurse Corps.
From left to right: Dorothy Holmes, Mrs. Marjorie Isban, Mrs. Lillian Bell, Mrs. Jemma Theodore, Faye
Crosctto, Ruth Chermak, Mrs. Edith James, Mrs. Sally Htll1ard, Mrs. Margaret Easton, Barbara Cook, Olga
Sw1tzko, Jane Ely, Mrs. Josephine Downey, Mrs. Grace Rushmyre, Marion Mower.

17

�SIDNEY P. ALBERT, Assistant Professor
Philosophy Department Head

ETHAN 0. ALLEN, Instructor
Mathematics

MARY E. ATCHLEY, Instructor
English- Foreign Languages

THOMAS E. BATTAGLINI,
Assistant Instructor-Chemistry

JOHN P. BELNIAK, Instructor
Citizenship Political Science

WILLIAM BLACK, Graduate Assistant
Geography

( LEMENT G. BOWERS, Lecturer
Botany

BERTRAM BRODER, Instructor
Business Administration Dept. Head

BEATRICE D. BROWN, Assoc. Professor
English Department Head

ERIC BRUNGER, Instrudor
History

HILDA CHIARULLI, Instructor
Business Administration

WILLIAM L. CLAFF, Instructor
Business Administration

18

�ARTHUR CLAYDON, Instructor
Economics

CHARLES DIVINE, Lecturer
English

ROY DUBISCH, Assistant Professor
Mathematics Department Head

HAMILTON P. EASTON, Asst. Professor
History Department Head

YOLANDA FARGNOLI, Asst. Instructor
Foreign Languages

WAYNE S. FARROW, Instructor
Speech

HEINRICH E. FRIEDLAENDER, Lecturer
Economics

J.

JOHN D. HALL, Instructor
Citizenship Department Head

MARGARET HASENPFLUG, Instructor
English
EDWARD HERBERT, Instructor
English

CLARKE F. HESS, Instructor
Geography

19

ALEX GILFILLAN, Assoc. Professor
Music Department Head

�FREDERICK
Sociology

J.

HOLLISTER, Instructor

JEAN IVORY, Asst. Instructor
Citizenship-Political Science
HENRY C. KETCHAM, Lecturer
Physics
MILDRED M. KELLOGG, Instructor
English

RODNEY K. KETCHAM, Assoc. Professor
Foreign language Department Head

FERDINANDO MAURINO, Instructor
Forci,gn Languages

HELEN J. NAGY, Instructor
Psychology

MARTIN A. PAUL, Associate Professor
Chemistry Department Head

ORVAL PERRY, Instructor
Philosophy

MARTHA PITEL, Instructor
Zoology

EDWARD R. POMEROY, Instructor
Art

CHARLES RElTEMEYER, Instructor
Business Administration

20

�HAROLD E. ROCKWELL, lnstructor
Forc:rgn Languages

MARCELLE SCHUBERT, Asst. Profc:ssor
Ch&lt;:m1stry

G. RALPH SMITH, Instructor
Economics Dept. Hea&lt;l

JOSEPH VAN RIPER, Associate Professor
Gc:ology ,ind Geography Depts. Head

!·RANCES M. \X'RIGHT,
Mathematics

ln~tructor

ROBERT RUSSELL, Instructor
English

DOUGLAS SILVERTON, Asst Professor
Fnglish

\X'. PORTER SWIFT, Asst. Prof&lt;:ssor

Psrchology Dept. Head

JAMES H. WILMOTH, Asst. Professor
Zoology Dept. Head

ROBERT E. POWER . Instructor
C it1zensh1p Dept. Head

21

���Silent Night

Dr. Freud, I Presume

Oui Monsieur

24

�Workshop

Counseling

Study in Brown

25

�26

�27

�LocateJ near the heart of Jowntown EnJ1cott i~ the
suavest, most exclusive countr}' club 111 New York State-Lt·
C.ollcge des Triple Cities. Offering the best in rc:lax.ttion
facilities, Le College has at ih disposal two lounges, t'' o
recreation halls, arid is within ,1 ston&lt;:"s throw of the Monlt marte section of EnJicott.
The lounges, Cafe P1galle Downstairs and Upstairs (with
its celebrated gaming tables), are open to all members and
the1 r guests as arc the two recreation halls.
Cafe Pigalle Downstairs is famed for its Bohemian
atmosphere It is here where we find authentic "'students··
(as the denizens quaintly term themselves). It may be well
to point out at this time the distinction between · students ·
and ·'teachers"' as many tounsts make the unfortunate error
of confounding the two. In Le College des Triple Cities
there exists a strict caste system. This system consists of two
groups, the teachers" and the "'students," who have as ltttle

28

�to &lt;lo wnh c,1ch other a, possible. The group' can be d1stm
gu1shed m '.ir1ous '' .1p. Member-. of om woup dres~ m
ba;.:gy blut serge suits. come to school 1n v111tage automobiles.
and ue gener.1lly 1denttfieJ br their ~eedy look These. the
untouch.1ble:-.•ire commonly called te.1d1er\... The upper
caste, the -.tudcnt~. (,in be J1stingui&gt;hed by their surplus Arm}
clothes, r.1cy con,·erubles. and pht1num hip flasks. There 1'
a &gt;&lt;:'&lt;:re taboo against extra-curricular relation~ between th&lt;:
members of the two castes. When passing in the corridor'
a tea&lt; her may not address a student unless the \tudent speaks
first, etc However, to get back to the Cafe Do" nst,11rs, it I&gt;
strewn '' ith furniture of two periods (pre-" ar and post-war)
These lo\'efy maple pieces ,1re CO\'ere&lt;l wtlh students. The
ratio 1s ,1bout seven students to one piece, thus we have six
frust rate&lt;l male students to-- (but enough of these dry stat1st1cs) A \'is1tor to 1h1s stronghold of free-thinking ltberaltsm
woul&lt;l be 1mpresse&lt;l by the brilliance of the conversation between the students. Here, for the benefit of those less adven-

29

�turous souls, we present a transcript of a bonifide conversation between two students:
" Agnes, can. I copy your Chemistry homework ?"
"Shove off, Chauncey."
"But Agnes, you said I could copy your homework."
"I said, Shove off .. . Schmoe."
"Listen Agnes, you come across or else ... "
" Or else what?"
"Or else I'll bash you with my COMPLETE WORKS
Of SHAKESPEARE."
"Oh you will, eh?"
" Yeah, I will."
"Yeah ?"
"Yeah !"
" Yeah ?"
"Yeah- Yeah! !"
30

�Visitors of the Cafe Pigalle Upstairs will be thrilled by
the sight of some of the most daring gambling seen off the
Miss1ssipp1. Daily exhibitions of the fine art of contract
bridge are i;:1ven by Eli Clubreitstien and chc three Motleys
(part of the crew). It w.is here that Rash-Robert Rielly made
a daring attempt at a one club contract and wc.-nt down gallantly (he only had 7 y2 honor counts). Many were the fights
that took place in the Cafe Pigalle Upstairs. (It got so rough
that the management had to locate the infirmary on the prem·
ises) . No place in the Southern Tier can match the atmosphere that oozes out under the door of the old Cafe P1galle
Upstairs.
Bartie's Billiard Academy- "Ladies lnvited"-is another
place where one can absorb the lusty, Bohemian atmosphere
that abounds in Le College. Here, nestled against the boiler
room, 1s the smoke filled den where students generally discuss
pertinent political issues of the day.
31

II I

�'Six ball in the si&lt;le pocket
that i\landa b.1r fate&lt;l north)"

Sar Beowulf. &lt;lid you say

·No. Percy. I said it facc&lt;l south
take one off your score ...

You just scratched,

··vou said it farc&lt;l north."
" I s.1id, south- now will you take one off your score?"
"North."
"South- Jeduct your scratch before I belt you one."
"Oh yeah )"
"Yeah!"
"Yeah?"
"Yeah, Yeah!"
The ping-pong room is locate&lt;l J irectly across the hall
from Bartie's Academy. Here is the home of the fast, sporty
crowd- the sweaty set. The place reeks of sportsmanship.
Picture yourself watching the game-two agile opponents,

duelling over a plywood rectangle of green. . . Keen eyes

32

�\\atching each other's every move (they're both cross-eyed)
The click of the celluloid pellet and · Hcy Rollo, v. hat s the score?"
· Ninttcen-seventcen, my fayor"
P.irdon me, old chap, its nineteen-seventeen, my favor.
"Really, old scout, I don't want to be obstinate-but the
score 1s nrnc:tecn to seventeen, Ill) favor."
"Deuc1dly sorry you're right. It rs nineteen to seventeen
your favor. My fault, old chap."
"Not at .di, it's my error entirely, old scout."
· No, old m.tn. it's fl1} error."
"Dammit, it's mine."
!"lit htll 1t 1~. 1t s my error."
"Oh }e.1iiJ"
'Yuh!"
·Yeah!"
' Yeah yeah!"
And so, I ka,·c you to enjoy yourselYes at Le College
Jes Triple Cities just make yourselves at home.
33

�34

��u. s. .

BA&lt; K Row: Bob Appe, Doris Jones, Bill McCaffrey, John Fowler.
rRoNT Ro\\. Joe Lite, Mike Sejan, Mike Foley, Nancy Brown, Dennis Bottino.

Previous to the first election of a student govern·
ment. a temporary political body framed a constitution for the. USG, and on December l 2, the proposed
cons~itu t 1on was ratified. A day later, Edwin Baker·
nun became the first USG president by a piurality
of two votes.
ElcxteJ to serve under Bakerma!1·s administration
wue Lenn.ut Erikson, vice· president; Kath I ee n
Br.idy, secret.try. \Xfilli.1m Everts, tre,tsurer; and nine
members-al large: Robert Appe, Joseph Lite, Wil·
l1.11n Cur.is, Jean Fairbrother, John Heimann, Martha
I fusvar, Al,tn Pinkus, Joseph Buran, and Doris Jones.
President Bakcrman ·s first oflici.11 propos.11 was
the tnstitut1on of :rn honor system at TCC, but after
student cons1dc.ration the proposal was abandoned.
H1~hlighting the early months of the initial USG
was Bakcrm.tn·s pol1Cy d isfavoring fraternities, and
Im government"s support of a Congressiona l bill for
inueasing ,·eterans· subsistence all owance. He also
ins .ilute,I an Advisory Committee on Student Con·
Jult, composed of studenb, to rev iew cases of mis·
&lt;.onduct '' llhm the student body.
In the lmc of social activities, the USG in·
,1u~urated sc.vcral annual affairs during its first year
of operation Highlight of 1916 was ti- Mistletoe

36

Ball, but THE affair o f the school yea r was the
Spring Weekend, May 9· 10, wh ich included the
Spring Soiree and an all-day outing at Chenango
Valley State Park.
The first week of October, 1947, President Baker·
man stirred student political aspirations by resigning.
An election was set for October 29, at which time a
new president was to be elected to comp lete Baker·
man's unexpired term. Five other vacancies caused
by transfers, were also filled at the election. Before
terminating his office, however, President Bakerman
made one more proposal. In a letter to Chancellor
Tolley, Bakerman asked for reconsideratio n of the
$50 increase in tuition, pointing out that present
facilities at TCC d id not warrant the increase. No
.1ction was taken on the complaint.
USG 1947-48
" FOLEY WINS! LIBER ALS CAPTURE ENTIRE
SLATE ; 625 STUDENTS VOTE AT POLLS"
The above screaming headlines in the Colonial
News proclaimed that Mike Foley of Binghamton
had carried a strong majority over presidential candidate Richard Streb. Carrying all of his party can·
d1dates with him, "Foley &amp; Co." swept into office.

�MiC"hael Sejan became the new vice-presi&lt;lent;
l\larcia Moss, secretary; Nancy Brown, treasurer; an&lt;l
J1&gt;hn fo,, !er, Dennis Bottino, an&lt;l Wtll1.1m Rigney
dc:feat~d seven other can&lt;lidates for member-at-la rge
vacanuc:~.

Prc:salent Fole} inst1tute&lt;l a non-profit Student
Loan Agencr "l11ch a1Jed ' finanually emb.urassed"
student\, espenally veterans who found their monthly
check5 stret(hc·d heyond c.1paoty Foley abv carried
TC(\ p.irkmg problem to Endicott Police and thc:
Board of Trust&lt;:es, with the result that a paved parkm~ lot •hlpcent to West Hall was constructed by the
cit}.
On the: soc 1Jl side, President Foley w.1s inst ru ment.ti 111 obta 111mg the first name band to play for
TCC studc:nts. On December I 2, Randy Brooks,
fresh from the Cafe Rouge of New York's Hotel
Penn s} h ani.1, brought his " Golden Trumpet" and
b,1nd to our second annual Mi stletoe Ball. The USG
also sponsored the second annual Turkey Hop on
No,ember 25.
On March 3, 19•18, Joseph o·Neill polled 308
votes to John Fowler's 2 38. The 3r&lt;l USG president
entered office with Camille Roach who was electe&lt;l
vice-presiden t; Doris Jones, secretary ; Art Brehm,
treasurer; and the following nine members-at-l arge:
Jerry Gibbs, Mike Biloz, Pat Lamb, Bob Bargetzi,
Herb Call.1han, Hob Fox, Bill Walling, Bob Kenne&lt;ly, and Jim Jordan.
President O'Nc:ill, emphasizing his desire to encourage we.1ter student interest in the USG, appointtd mc:mbt rs-at-large to htad standing committees
made up of non-office holdtrs from the student body.
He also organized a coordinating board made up of
pres1&lt;lents of various student organizations , to handle
student activities.

Election Day

The Winners- First USG

Election Committee

A "Grand" Picture

I

.,.nf'\:1

'" f

f•Ut

C.,

l(111\ I 01.11 Jl·(~'l lltl llDMU
'f(tU f\f.I\

t

1PS~'t1t•tU

0 \~I LOlllflQ\ • \\II I ;t \QI I~
P'!P1ffUt' 4f l41lf.at
1 111 '"(1 fl/I • Ml l\I HllO/
• l'Clfl I 0 \
4\\1 lA 'II l
110(1 1 nri ~o

. en c,nor .\

~11'1 JOnlll "- • !'llH QR 1!111

,, 1000''

37

�FIRST Row (left to right) : Charles C. Abbey, Dorothy B. Abbey,

Harry Accurso, Lan ning E. Ace, Vivian Agana.
SrcoNn Row: Ralph Agudo, Tofik Ahmed, Donald Alford,
Remo All io, Josephine Allio.
Row: Wayne Anderson, Marilyn Andrus, Edward A. Antal, George Antonakos, Evelyn Armstrong .

THIRD

F OURTH Row : W alter Arnold , Alan Ascher, Owen Ash, Vincent

Attisani, Charles Auer.

38

�FIRST Row (left to right): Michael AveJisian, Donald AxelroJ, Stanley J. Bachman.
SECOND Row: Edwin Bakerman, John Banta, Peter
Barbone.

FIRST Row (left to right): Robert Bargetzi, Joyce
Barnes, Robert Barrows.
SECOND Row: Charles W. Bartow, Richard Bastiano,
Joseph Baxter.
TH IRD Row: Frank Beach, Edward Beall, John Bean.
FOURTH Row: Bruce K. BeGassc, Jeanette L. Bellinger, Robert Benz.
FIFTH RO\X : Paul C. Berg, Edward Bernhauer, Milton Bernstein.

39

�FIRST Row (left to right): Carol Best, H omer Biggs,
James Bihr.
SECOND Row: John Bilos, Jr., Michael Biloz, Joseph
Bishara.

FIRST Row (left to right): Russell Bishop, Eugene
Bisignani, Herbert Blanchard.
SECOND Row: Robert Blesh. Sherman Bletchman,
Holland Blinn.
THIRD Row: Geraldine Bloom, Irving Bloom, Wesley Bogart.
FOURTH Row: Allan J. Bombard, Selma Bond, Alfred Bornstein.
FIFTH Row : Dennis Bottino, Joseph Bottino, Wal lace R. Bouskill.

40

�Row (left to right): Martin Bovee, Wayne Bowdish, John
Boyce, Frances F. Brees, Arthur Brehm.

FIRST

SECOND Row: Robert C. Brewer, Wilbur I. Brewer, Harry W.
Brigham, Jack M. Brink, Allan T. Britton.
Row: Arnold M. Brown, David H. Brown, James L.
Brown, James W. Brown, Josephine Nancy Brown.

THIRD

FOURTH Row·: Marilyn Brown, Mayer Brumer, Vincent J. Bucciferro, Chester Buchanan, Jack Budd.

41

�Row (left to right): Donald Buffum, Joseph Buran, Michael Buran, Robert Buran, Leonard D. Burns.

FIRST

Row: Robert Byron, Marilyn Cain, Dominick Calabrisi,
Carmine Calenti, Herbert Callahan.

Sr&lt;.OND

Row: Thomas Callahan, Robert Callen, Alfonso Calleo,
James Campbell, James Canny.

THIRD

Row: Jim Carey, John Carey, Betty Jean Carl, George
Carlton, Irving Carroll.

FOURTH

42

�Row (left to right): Robert Carson, Lt:O Cary,
Anthony Casamo.

FIRST

Row: Clifford Casterton, Ralph Catanese,
James Cecilian.

SECOND

Row (left to right): frank Celona, E&lt;lward
Cernak, Gordon C. Champney.

FIRST

Row: Eugene H. Chernak, Kenneth Chertok, Elliot S. Chester.

SECOND

TmRD Row: William Childs, Bernal Church, Joseph
Ci alco.

Row: Ernest Cinotti, Martin Citron, James
Clapham.

FOURTH

Row: Donald Clark, Douglas Clark, Earl S.
Clark.

FIFTH

43

�FIRST Row (left to right): Harold Clark, Robert W.
Clark, Thomas Clark.
SECOND Row: William Clark, Edwin G. Clarke,
Robert Cleary.

FIRST Row (left to right): A lbert Clemente, Richard
Clinton, John Cobb, Jr.
SECOND Row: Leo J. Cody, James Cohn, Edward
Coleman.
THIRD Row: Jeannine Conklin, Frederick Conte, Roland Cook.
FOURTH Row: James Cooper, Marilyn Corell, Charles Cosby.
F1FTH Row: George Cotcher, Edwin G. Courtright,
Delwcrt Craft.

44

�FlRST Row (left to right): Richard Crapo, Claude A. Crawford,
Jr., John B. Crawford, Robert Creveling, William Crooks.
SECOND Row: Theophilus Crosby, Owen Crumb, Edward Cruty,
Roland Cuillerier, Joe Curatolo.
THIRD Row: Sarah Curatolo, Nicholas Danyluk, Joanne
D'Aprile, Roy Darpino, Marjorie Davenport.
FOURTH Row: Bruce D. Davidson, Howard Davies, Robert H.
Davies, William R. Davies, Lawrence Davis.

45

�FIRST Row (left to right): Sheldon A. Davis, Shirley Dawson,
Frank DcBencdittis, Raymond Dcchene, George Decker.
SECOND Row: Norman Decker, Raymond Decker, Paul Delorenzo, Cyril Derrick, Henry C. D'Esti.
Row: Bernard Detrick, Conrad A. DeWan, Paul H.
Dewey, Robert J. Dickerson, Charles Dieffenbach.

THIRD

FOURTH Row: Michael Dino, Robert M. Dolan, Nicholas A.
Donatelli, Roger K. Donnelly, George W. Donovan, Jr.

ENGLISH

46

�FIRST Row (left to right): James L. Donovan
George Doyle, Anne Duda.
SECOND Row: James Duffy, Jack Dumbleton, KeittDunklee.

FIRST Row (left to right): Edwin Dunn, Gertrude
Dunn, Frank E. Duntley, Jr.
SECOND Row: Charles B. Durham, Dorothy Dweres,
John Dyer.
THIRD Row: Julia Early, Robert M. Early, J. G.
Burt Easton.
f oU RTH Row: Vernon Elderkin, Jr., Oren Eldred,
Frank Elkins.
FIFTH Row: Stewart Elliott, D. Bruce Ellis, Greydon
Ellison.

47

�FIRST Row (left to right): William Ellison, Conrad
Ellner, Daniel J. Emilio.
SEC.ONO Row: Lennart V. Erikson, Edward Esserman, Joseph W. Esworthy.

FIRST Row (left to right): Howard R. Evans, Thomas
Evans, William Everts.
SECOND Row: E. Jean Fairbrother, Samuel Falbo,
John Fallon.
THIRD Row: William Farber, John Fedukc, Phillip
Feinburg.
FOURTH Row : Alvin Fenner, James Ferrara, Mary
A. Ferrari.
FIFTH Row: Joseph Fetcho, William Fiester, Frank
Filetto.

48

�Row (left to right): Jules Finkclstc:in, Lenore Finkelstein.
Gerald Fl.inagan, R1Chard Flynn, Edward M. Foley.

FIRST

Stemm RO\'&lt;'· John Forem:in, R.dph Forest, \X'tlli:im I.. Formanek, John M Fowler, Robert F. Fox.

Row: Robert French. Robc:rt Fncnd, Vernon C. Fritz,
Paul P Frtyal. ( Herbert Fry

THIRD

Row: John Fuller, Frank M. Furman, Nell1c C,a&lt;los,
Robert Gallagher, Anthony J. Gance.

FOURTH

49

�FIRST Row (left to right): Bernard Gariock, David Garman,
Edith Jane Garson, Edward M. Gavin, Thomas J. Gavin.
SECOND Row: Alan H. Geiser, Thomas W. Gent, Jr., Vincent
Giarusso, Marjorie Gibbs, Richard Gibbs.
TrnRo Row: Edward J. Gildea, Joseph G. Gilg, Loren D. Gilliam, Richard J. Gillies, Thomas L. Gillson.
FOURTH Row: Robert Glanville, Raymon&lt;l A. Glazier, Donal&lt;l
K. Glover, Stephen R. Gober, Erwin Gol&lt;lberg.

50

�FIRST Row (left to right): Stanley D . Golden, Inge
Goldschmidt, Frances Goodenough.
SFCOND Row: Walter Gorman, Diane Goundry, Laurence Grant.

FLRST Row (left to right): Sally Grass, Dolores
Green, Osca r J. Green, Jr.
SECOND Row: Ralph V. Green, Myron E. Gregory,
Everett ]. Grimm.
THIRD Row: Alan Grubow, David Guerdat, Charles
Guernsey.
FOURTH Row: William Gullborg, H erbert Haas,
Harry A. Hafler.
Row: John P. Haggerty, Richard E. Haggerty,
Jack 0. Hall.

FIFTH

51

�FIRST Row (left to right): Herbert Halliday, Richard E. Hamann, William Hanak.
SECOND Row: Carlyle Hancock, Allen Hansen, James
Hargreaves.

FIRST Row (left ro right) : Gus H aroldson , Robert
H artman, Robert J. Hastings.
SECOND RO\X': Willi am Hebenstreet, John H eimann,
George H . H einsohn.
THIRD Row: William C. H erciga, John J. H eron , Jr. ,
Richard Herzer.
FOURTH Row : Alvin Heyman, Clayton Paul Hilliard,
John W. Hinds.
FIFTH Row: Howard L. Hinman, William R. Hoag,
Thomas J. Hohn.

52

�FIRST Row (left to right): Robert E. Holl, Robert E. Hood,
Philip L. Hopkins, George Horkott, John Horkott.
St COND Row: William Horsey, William Hotchkiss, Karl Houseknecht, Russdl Howe, E&lt;lwarJ Hric1ga
Ro\\ : John Hud;tk, Helen Hudda. Eliubcth Huencr, John
Hunt. Gu1Jo Iacovell1.

THIRD

FoLRTH Ro\\·: Jo~cph L1nnone, Robert Isb.1n, Richard A. Ives,
Thomas Ivory, Andrew Jacoby.

53

�Row (left to right): John James, Hedwig Jasielonis, Warren Jennings, Jr., Maria Jimenez, James Johnson.

FIRST

Row Thomas J. Johnston, James E. Johnstone, David
Jones, Dons Jones, Henry Jones.

SECOND

Row: Thomas G. Jones, William Jones, James R. Jordan,
Donald J. Joseph, Arthur Jubin.

THIRD

Row: Louis Jurena, Leo Kales, Arthur Kalliche, John
R. Kane, Robert Kankus.

FOURTH

54

�FIRST Row (left to right): John
V. Kars, Julian Kasmer.

J. Kar,

Jr., Charles

SECOND Row: John Keigher, Eugene Kemp, Robert
Kennedy.

FIRST Row (left to right): Francis Keough, E. Mark
Kerestes, Harold Kerstein.
SECOND Row: Barbara Kessler, Gerald R. Killam.
William Kinch.
THIRO Row: Gordon D. King, Jack D. Klingman,
Edward Koast.
FOURTH Row: Robert Kolosk i, John Konik, John
Kostyun .
FIFTH Row : George Koury, Neil Krewson, Henry P.
Kroeger.

55

�FrRST Row (left to right): Owen Kroeger, William
Kucharek, Marion Kulik.
SECOND Row: Nicholas Kul ik, Stephen Kuratnick,
Nicholas L. Kustas.

FtRST Row (left to right): William G. Kustas, William J. Kustas, Edward Kwiatkowski.
SECOND Row: Roger Lakin, Patricia Lamb, Howard
Landon.
THIRD Row: Robert LaRue, James Lauder, John J.
Leary, Jr.
FOURTH Row: Leonard Levitt, John Lewis, Ralph
Linnell.
FIFTH Row: Russell Lisson, Joseph Lite, Harry Littlejohn.

56

�Row (left to right): Dons Li\'1ngs~on, Franc1~ Look. Lawrence Loveland. Austin Lowry, \Xlalter Ludl.un

FIRST

Ro\\: Ralph Lulkoski, Joseph I.pich, Alfred McC.iffrcy,
\X'tlliam McCatTrcr, Joan McConnell.

SFCOND

T11rno Row: William McCormack, Harold McCormick, Edward
McCusker, Lawrence McGrath, Barbara J\kGuirc.
fouRTli Row: James McHale, Jeanne J\lcHcnka, William McMahon, Robert A. McNair, Robert D. McNutt.

�Row (left to right): Peter Macan, John M.1ck, Robert
Mahar, William Maher, Howard W. Maines.

FIRST

SECOND RO\\: Chester Majka, Thom:is Makrcs, John C. Malik,
Jr., Herbert Maltby, Floyd Mangus.
Ro\\-: Joseph Manning, Arthur M.rnso, Anthony P. Marano, Samuel Markanan, Wood Markham.

T11IRD

fOURl H Row: Joyce Martin, Raymond Martin, Donald Mat-

thews, Carolyn Mayer G reene, William Mayer.

58

�FIRST

Row (left to right): Michael Mazzei, Beverly
J. Meagher, George Meaker.
Row: William Melinsky, Davi&lt;l Merrilees,·
Bertram Mersereau.

SECOND

Row (left to right): Joseph Meyers, Julian H.
Michel, Arlene Michlik.

FIRST

Row: Kenneth Midgley, John Mikolasko,
Edward Mikulski.

SECOND

Row : George Miller, Joseph Miller, Jr., Leo
Miller.

THIRD

Row : Robert Miller, Raymond Mills, Donald M . Millstone.

FOURTH

Row: Elmer Minckler, Peter Mistretta, Bruce
E. Mitchell.

F1FTH

59

�Row (left to right): Hobert Mohney, John
Moore, Frederick W. Morgan.

FIRST

S1 coNn Row : Leroy W. Morgan, Jr., Leslie P. Morgan, H. Melville Morrison.

FJRs1 Ro\X' (left to n~ht) : James Mowry, Daniel
Mullane, J. William Murphy.
Ro\\: William T. Murph}', Robert
ray, David P. Needham

S1 &lt;.ONI&gt;

J

Mur-

Ro\X: Russell Nedcy, Soni,1 Nc:Jame, Clifford
H. Nellisscn.

THIRD

hH

Row: Dolores Nemeth. Robert Nculon,
Arthur Neumann.

1n11

Fwi H Row: Ge:Ort(e Neumann, Ward A. New'clrn andcr, James Nichol.

60

�Row (left to right) : Roberta A. Noland, Gerald W. Norton, Harold Notew:ire, Richard Nusom, Leslie O'Brien.

FIRST

Row : James O 'Connell, John O ' Day, Yvonne M.
O'Keefe, Donald Olver, Joseph G. O'Neill, Jr.

SECOND

Row: William R. O'Neill, Jr., William Orban&lt;l, Leo Orzol, Nicholas J. Packs, Pasquale Paglia.

THIRD

Row: Robert Palcncar, Jr., Aliccmae Panza, Michael
Pavlyak, Harold Pearson, Michael Pensak.

FO URTH

61

�Row (left to right): Robert Perham, Francis Perkins, Du
Wayne Pettyjohn, James Phillips, Louis E. Piwrilli.

FIRST

C. Pizzillo, Phillip
Pouk1sh, Richard Powell, Robert Powell.

St&lt;.ONO Row: Franklin D. Pieplow, Mario

Row: James E. Pratt, Malcolm Pratt, Robert
Fletcher R. Preuss, Ralph H. Prince.

THIRD

J.

J.

Prekopa,

Row: Charles Putrino, Peter Pyecha, William Quinn,
Edward Radin, Louis Ravera.

FouRTH

62

�1-'msT Row (left to right): Harold Ray, Albert Reed,
Gerald Reif.
SECOND Row: Ira Reiss, George Rejebian, Matthew
Rennie, Jr.

Row (left to right): Franklin Ressigue, Steve
Ricciardi, Hyle V. Richmon&lt;l.

F 1RST

SI.KONO Row: Otto Rieth, William Rigney, Robert
Ritchie.
Row: Broderick Roach, Camille M. Roach,
Esther Robertson.

THIRD

Row: Tait Robertson, Warren l. Robinson,
Robert Ro&lt;lgers.

FOURTH

Row: Stanley Rogge. Madl}•n Romani, Barbara
Rood.

FIFTH

63

�Row (left lo right): George Rose, Leo Rose,
Leonard Rose.

FIRST

Srco:-.:n Row: Nisse! Rose, Dic:trich Rosenberg, Edward Rosenberg.

Row (left to right) : Joseph S. Rosenbloom,
Floyd E. Ross, RicharJ Rounds.

FtRST

SrcoNn Row: Everett A . Rowe, Michael A. Rudik,
Franklin Rury.
Row: Robert Russc:ll, William Ryan, Walter
Ryczko.

THIRD

Row: George R}'dcr, Anthony H. Sacco,
Peter S.1dowitz.

FOURTH

F1rrH Row: John Salcmmc, Richard Salisbury, Stanlcv Salisburv.

�FIRST Ro~ (left to right): Alfred Sanges, I. Thomas Saraceno,
Edythe Scales, Theodore Scarinzi, Stephen Schaefer.
SECOND Row: Rhoda Schaffer, Stuart Scheiner, John Schroeder,
Edwin Schumacher, Abraham Schwartz.
THIRD Row: Richard Scott, H elene Scully, Aysel Sea rles, John
Sedor, M ichael J. SeJan.
FOURTH Row: Monica Sema nek, Ernest Scrnecky, George Shamu lka, Eugene H . Shapan, Wi ll iam Sharpe.

65

�FIRST Row (left to right): Paul M Sheely. Wa lker L Sh&lt;.rwooJ,

John K. Shields, Joseph J. Shm&lt;ler, Frederick Shipko.
SECONO Row: J. Richard Singe:!, Norman Skeirik, Annc:ac
Smith, George R. Smith, Sidney M. Smith.
R0\1c: Lynford C. Snell, Jr, Max Sommerstem, Charles
Sopoliga, Ralph Sorber, Richard Spearbeck.

THIRD

FOURTH Row: Charles Speich, John Spence, Edward Spring

man, Walter Stanzel, Harry Stem.

66

�Row (left to rig ht ) : Michael Sternik, John
Stewart, Charles Stoddard.

FIRST

SECOND Row: Jeanne Story, Richard Streb, Bernard
Sullivan.

FIRST Row (left to right): Charles T. Sullivan, Dona ld A. Swift, Wanda Swift.
SECOND Row: Calvi n R. Symons, John Tallis, William F. T almadge.
THIRD Row: Earl Tarr, Richard Taylor, Cyril Tegeler.
FOURTH Row: Thomas Terry, Merrell Thallinger,
Walter Thompson.
FIFTH Row: Edward Throup, David Tillotson, Bernard T inkleman.

67

�FIRST Row (left to right): Gerald Toman, John
Tompkins, Joseph Trabucco.
;ECOND Row: James Tras, Lewis Tripp, Sally Truesdell.

FIRST Row (left to right): Alan Tucker, Leonard
Turgeon, Richard Turner.
SECOND Row: Ruth Tuthill, William Tuthill, Erwin
Tuttle.
THIRD Row: Robert Tybring, Richard Ulmer, Lorraine Valletta.
FouRTH RO\'V': Gordon VanAtta, Reuben Van Bruggen, William f. Vanco.
fIFTH Row: Marcia Moss Vanda, Franklin Van
Volkinburg, Charles Mack Vegard.

68

�Ro\\ (kit to right) SJm ~f. Vi .1k I lmund Vitkus.
Hc:inz Von PcchmJnn, M.1rdaje.111ne \\ .1gncr, fllwooJ
\X J~OnC'r

F1Rs1

S1

Yvonne \Vakeley. Joel H. Walker, Kenneth
Ro\\
Walker, Harry \\'allace, Willi.im \X',dlrng

COl'\D

'I HIRD Ro\\ : Rost Marie \X'abh, Don.dd \X'1rd, Emm.1 M \X ar·
nc:r, Rid1ard Warner, \Xldlis Warnc:r
Ro\x: (Lur Waterman, Gordon \\'.latk1r. s, Barbar.1
Webb, William Weber, Jr., John Wedge.

Fou1t1H

�FtRST Row: Irwin Weissman, Theodore Wenger, Grace Wheeler,
Ralph W. Whittemore, Edgar M. Wilcox, Jr.
SECOND Row : George C. Wilklow, Harry Williams, Mary Ellen
Williams, Harold 0 . Wilson, Norman W. Wilson.
Row: Frank Windisch, Douglas W. Wing, Samuel H.
Winterstein, Harold B. Wood, Lee Woodmansee.

THIRD

FOURTH Row: Warren Woodworth, Mark F. Wynn, Orville R
Yeager, Robert H. Ziegler, Richard S. Zinn, Jr.

70

�FIRST Row (left to right): John E. Zuidem:i, Albert
Brown.
SECOND

Row : Byron Conroe, John Callahan.

THIRD Row : James E. D exter, Albert

J. Durland.

FOIJRT H Ro w : C lement Joyce, Kenneth B. Latham.
FIFTH

Row. Jerome B. True.

(TheJe p1C1111e1 were received a/fer this
wus Jent to the printen)

Jec/1011

71

�72

�73

�BACK Row. Mr. Hier, Stanley Gol&lt;len, Jim Brown, Dave Garman, Ronnie Cuillerier, Bernie
Garlock,
George Neumann, Al Hanson, Bob Davies, Al Clemente, Annette Smith.
FRONT Row: Mack Vegard, Sonia NeJame, Shel Davis, Jerry Gibbs, Helen Hudda,
Dick Hamann, Norm
Decker, Carlyle Hancock.

The colonists of old were pioneers working the
new fields for those who followed. It thus seems
appropriate that this, the first yearbook of Triple
Cities College, takes the name of those pioneers.

"The Colonist" acquired its name as the result of
a contest won by Gordon VanAtta. Originally, plans
were made to publish at the end of the college's first
year, but the technical difficulties involved made this
inadvisable.
In October, 1947, an active committee was formed to draft plans for the first issue. Shel Davis was
elected editor, with Sonia NeJame as assistant. Jerry
Gibbs handled copy and makeup, with Dick Hamann
head mg advertising, Mack V egard, business manager;
Helen Hudda, sport editor; and Bob Davies acting
as managing editor.
Assistance was given the committee by Miss Plankinton, Mr. Kimball and Mr. Hier, and with the
help of a cooperative staff, the pictures and material
needed to provide a complete record of activities at
the college were gathered for publication.
74

�BACK Row: Mr. H all, Jim McHale, Tom Ivory, Otto Reith , Joe Rosenbloom, Fr.ink Resseguie, John I lin&lt;ls,
Joe O'Neill.
FRONT Row: Art Brehm, John Fowler, Bob Kennedy, Tom Callahan, Miss Ivory, Ray Glazier, Leslie
Morgan.

Pfficm:

neye&lt;l to a conference of sc.hools hel&lt;l at Syr;tcuse
University. TC C students, representing Australia,
mtroduce&lt;l the Palestine problem to the agenda.

. ....... RouE.RT P. KENNEDY
Pre1ide11t ..... .........
. THO.MAS CALLAHAN
......................
_
Vice-Pre1ident
Jo11N FOWLER
..
.......
.
..........
.
Secretary .......... .
R. BRFHM
ARTHUR
.........................
.
....
Trea.s11rer
D. HALL
JOHN
.
MR
Famlty Advisors . ·- ..............
Miss ]1:.AN

JvoRY

Formed in the fall o f 1946, the International Relations C lub has been responsible for an active prog ram of movies, speakers, forum discussions and the
sending of students as delegates to sever.ii confe rences.
In April, 1947, IRC student delegates, represent·
ing Belg ium in discussions, attended the Model General Assembly of the United Nations held at Swathmore College. This trip was followed by the "Danse
de Nations" sponsored by !RC.
In October, 1947, students attended the Herald
Tribune Forum held in New York City. On another
trip-to the Middle Atlantic Division conference of
IRC clubs students observed the United States in
action. At the end of the semester members jour-

75

�!laJ1it.t1JJ l/dm lnlJ tt:at lOn f!la6 .
Students and faculty desmng a closer contact
with the business community and an opportunity to
discuss business topics-espec ially those subjects not
covered in the college course-organ ized the ""Bus
Ad" club in Decemb~r. 19-16. The purpose of the
club was to promote and bring to the attention of the
membership actual facts on general operations of
business from competent sources.

President . . ........................ STANLEY J . BACHMAN
Vice-President ............................ Mti.x SOMMERSTF.IN
Adt1ocate.... ............................. CHARLES SAPOUGA
Treasurer.... . ............ ........... .... ROBERT CALI EN
Publicity Director......................
.THOMAS LYNCH
Secretary .. ...... .................... .............. LEO J. CARY
Faculty Advuors .................. MR. BERTRAM BRODER
ANO

MR.

RALPH SMITH

A club constitution was formulated and several
guest speakers presented. Frank Knapp, Assistant
Treasurer of Endicott-John son, gave a talk on "'Credits
and Collections." Robert Austin, Personnel Director
of IBM, spoke on " IBM Personnel Policies." Eleanor
Irvin, a member of the IBM Personnel Department,
gave a lecture about "Application Letters."
The club also sponsored movies, field trips, and
Dean Budd, of the Wharton School of Finance, who
spoke to the "'business ad" students. A Masquerade
Ball held at the opening of the second semester
proved a gala affair. The club's biggest surprise and
greatest success was the Surprise Dance thrown in
April.

BA&lt; K Row: George Shamulka, Herb Fry, Frank Elkins, Bill Weber, Herb Blanchard, John Tompkins,
Edward Gavin, Bernie Garlock, Russell Howe, Thomas Gavin.
SECOND Row: Robert Callen, Ralph Green, Joe Lire, Don Millstone, Bob Creveling, Bill Gullborg, Clement Joyce, Ronald Barber, Steve Kuratnick, Bernie Sullivan, David Tillotson.
T111Rn Row: Jim Cohn, Joe Cerullo, Alan Ascher, Mike Brumer, Stan Golden, Hubert McCartl1y, Robert
Holl, Ignazio Saraceno, William (rooks, Stan Bachman, Mr. Broder, Max Sommerstein.
FRONT Row: Charles Sopoliga, Mario Pizzillo, Brod Roach, Owen Kroeger, Hank Kroeger, Abraham
Schwartz, Kenneth Latham, Alfred Sanges.

76

�BACK Row: Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kankus, Richard Scott, Clayton Hilliard, Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Gent, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Durham, Mr. and Mrs. Reed.
SECOND Row: Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Johnston, Mr. and Mrs. Hubert McCarthy, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
Resseguie, Mr. and Mrs. William Crooks, Mr. and Mrs. William Hanak, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Jurena,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Auer, Mr. and Mrs. Llewellyn Burge, Mr. and Mrs. Frank McHenka.
FRONT Row: Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fox, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Elderkin, Dr. and Mrs. Van Riper, Dr. and
Mrs. Friedlaender, Mr. and Mrs. Aysel Searles, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Van Atta, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Wilson.

President ............................................ AYSEL SEARLES
Vice-President ............................ GORDON VANATIA
Recording Secretary .............. MRS. CAROL D URHAM
Treas11rer ...................................... RICHARD H . Scorr
Faculty A dvisors ........ DR. HEIN.RICH FRIEDLAENDER

AND DR. JOSEPH v AN RIPER
The Golden Circle, when organized in November, 1947, was originally called the Married Veteran's
Club. The re-christening climaxed a decision to extend the membership to non-veteran married couples.

Lively pinochle and bridge tournaments, predance parties, dinner meetings, skating and bowling
have led to the formation of new friendships among
wives and husbands. In the spring of 1948, The
Golden Circle sponsored a college dance for the
benefit of its members.
Not all the club's activities were social in nature.
Committees assisted in solving the problems of housing, transrortation, cooperative buying, and other
projects o mutual interest. At Easter, the club provided baskets for 150 children in the county orphanage.

77

�BACK

Row: Jim Johnson, Daniel Emilio.

Row: Jeannine Conklin, Barbara Rood, Barbara Webb, Keith Dunklee, Ed Epringman, Sally
TruesJelL

FRONT

famlty Ad1 isor ....

MR. ALEX G11..FI1..l..AN

This small and select group, organized in the
fall of 1946, was centered in the preparation and
performance of compositions specially w ritten for
double quartets.
All periods of musica l development were represented in the compositions selected that year for performance. Although the main emphasis was on the
larly English Madrigal and the Italian and European
contrapuntal forms, their repertoire also included
several American compositions in the folk and legendary styles.
The Madrigal Singers were unable to grant all
the requests for concerts because of unexpected
changes of personnel. They hope to be able to meet
all future requests with a well-rounded and complete program.

78

�Music Hath Clurms

The Chorus and Glee Club were among the first
groups organized at T.C C.
Active support of the students, residents of the
surrounding area, and faculty members, was soon en·
listed. A wide range of American and European
compositions was studied and performed by the
Chorus.
Thompson's "'Alleluia'" was the original composition performed by the Chorus. Later it presented .L
full evening's concert in conjunction with the Gk-e
Club at Maine, N Y.
The major work performed publicly by the Glee
Club was Elmore's 'The Prodigal Son."" with Keith
Dunkke as b.1ritone soloist. At the rolk.~e Christmas
assembly. it performe&lt;l the Chorale from Bach's
'"( hristmas Oratorio" and joined the Chorus rn .1
rendition of '"Alleluia. "' Jn the spring it repcate&lt;l
"The Pro&lt;ligal Son" for the college assembly.

BA&lt; K Row: Wayne Anderson, Floyd Mangus, Bill Vanco, Bill Norton. Ralph

Catane~c.

Lo ren Gilliam,

Will is Warner, Ed Springman. Charles Guernse}. Keith Dunklee, Jr,ing ( arroll.
FRONT Ro\\ : H enry Jones. Jeannine ( onklin. 13arbara Rood, I IO\\ .1rd

fa .rns, Pd&lt;:r B.1rbone, Sally T ruesdell, Mari lyn Andrus, Nisse! Rose, Evelyn Armstrong, Barbara Webb.

79

�The first copy of the Colonial News rolled off
the presses under the direction of Donald Sowter,
Editor-in-Chief, and a practically all-veteran staff on
November 22, 1946.
In February of 1947, Owen Crumb was chosen
Editor-in-Chi ef and Aysel Searles, Managing Editor.
Notable stories du ring this "journalism era" were
the expose of Elmer, the "tell-all columnist," and the
account of the notorious "Miss Sally Kent ," who
appeared in front page head lines in a local daily.
Early in the fall of 1947, Editors Crumb and
Searles relinguished their posts to Co-editors Tom
Callahan anJ Ed Gildea. Under the Callahan-Gil dea
regime many notable editori,tls appeared, with Miss
Sara Cues '\, riting" the gossip column.
In February, 19·18, a new staff, with Owen Crumb
once again in the "slot," took over. Those members
who had survived the fall term sat down for some
swap shop talk at the regul.u banguet held each
semester for outgoing editors.
The News has been an instrumental factor in
unify ing the college's rather dispersed student body.
Through its pages the students have been able to keep
in constant touch with all activities.

BACK RO\X': Bill Jones, Shiriey Dawson, Jim JordaA, Grace Wheeler, Dick Ham,rnn, Bernie Garlock, Jim
Carey, Harry Accurso, Bob Davies, Jim Brown, Bob Friend, Gilda Parisio, Jerry Gibbs, Shel Davis.
FRONT Row : John Kar, Tom Callahan, Dolo1es G reen, Ed G ildea, Al Hanson, Helen
Hudda, Barbara
Rood, Annete Smith, Stanley Golden.

80

��BAc K Row (left to right): Ht-rb C.allalun. John Spence. George Hemsohn, Cal Symons.
FoutnH Row: R.dph ( .1tancse, llarry Accurso, Camille Roa(h, Charles Guernsey, ( het
Buchanan, W.dter
Thompson, B.1rbara Rood.
T111Rn Row. Ditk Clinton, Elc.1nor Sullivan, Jim O'Connell, Ruth Tuthill, Vrncent Giarusso,
Cmnrne Caknt1, Dirk Single.
Si «&gt;Nil Row Hank Jone~, Bob Bargltzi, Pat Lamb, Mike Btloi, John O'Connor, lh&gt;b
Buran, Mr.
Maurino.
FRONT Row: Dr. Ketcham, Anne Duda, Miss Atchley, Jean Thomas.

0 f/1ce1s:
Presi,Jenl . .
RcmFRT B:\RGETZI
i' 1t1:·PreJJJt11t . ............. .... .. .
MIKI BILOZ
Si•crelury . . . ........... ........ ..........
SONIA N1 JAME
'[ft IJftrt!/'

Kl·ITH Dl1'&gt;:K!.EE

f.mtll) A.lriso1 r .............

Y Knc HAM
MR. FFRDIN'AND O MAl RINO
DR. Rot&gt;Nt

Heated by the embt:rs from a pot bellied stove
.ind frt&lt;:d on rntft:e and douglrnuls, Le Cerde Fran
lais, one of the first IJ.ngmgc dubs of T.C.C, was
org.inized, its purpose- to adv Jnce an lppr&lt;:uatio n
of French ( ulturc.
Meetings were gre.1tly diversified with the inclusion of le.:ttmcs by students and instru, tors, French
n·tordings, g.une nights, and films, one of the outstanding of \\hich \\;\S " Mona l.is.i."
A fr.1ture of the lir~t year's program was a pi(nic
hdd at Joyte B.1rnc's country home. ln the spring of
l'H R. " I a Ft:te &lt;ks l"om," (The Feast of the.: Fools)
\\,\S caml·J out in a typic.1lly French tr.1dition. mm·
plcte with t.mdles. checkered l.1blcdoths, .rnd .1ltendcnts we.iring French berets.
Tht• monthly newsp.iper, · Fkur de Lys," pub
h~hcd in rrcnch .ind rn-cditcd by lhrb.ua Kessler
.md Darhar.1 Rood. indudes dassroom ane&lt;.:&lt;lotes,
c.1rtoons, and f.itulty m1.:~sag&lt;:s.

82

�FIRST Row (left to right): Barbara Kessler, Betsy Huener. Dr. Heinrich FriedlaenJer, Dr. Rodney Ketcham, Inge Goldschmidt, Helen Scully, Joyce Barnes, Edythe Scales.
SECOND Row: James Campbell, George Neumann, E&lt;lwarJ Cern.1k, Ralph C10tanese, Richard Warner,
Thomas Gent, OuWayne Pettyjohn, Robert Friend, George Heinsohn, Richard Ives.
THIRE Row: D ave Merrilees, Vernon Fritz, Don Buffum, Dick Bastiano, Jules Finklestein, Homer Biggs.

President ····································--·-·····- RICHARD IVES
Vice-Preside11t ............................ ING E GOLDSCHMIDT
Secretary ........................................ BARBARA KESSLER
Treasurer .......................................... BETSY H UENER
Faculty Advisor
DR. HEINRICH FRIEDLAENDER
The latest addition to the ever grow ing extracurricular activities of Triple Cities College was the
German Club. Formed in January, 1948, this organization had for its purpose, the promotion of gooJ
fellowship among students of the German language.
Highlight of the semester's programs was the
speech by Dr. Friedlaender on "Goethe, His Life
and His Times." This talk was illustrated with songs
by Kenneth Chertok and readings from " Faust" by
Otto Reith.
For the International Night affair, the club contributed a German Band and vocalists.
An informal meeting was held late in the Spring
at a German restaurant, to close out the year's activities.

83

�.!Jtallan- .eta/,.~.

BA&lt;.K Row : Eugene Bisignani, Tony Sacco, Mike Mazzei, Miss Fargnoli, Fred Conte, Peter Barbone, Ralph
Catanese, Joseph Iannone, John Cary, James Johnson, Carmine Calenti, Conrad Ellner, Mr. Maurino,
Nick Donatelli.
FRONT Row : Jim Carey, Thelma Carey, Dennis Bottino, Margie Davenport, Remo Allio, Bob Bargetzi,
Josephine Bottino, Dick Ives, Joe Bottino, Daniel Emilio, Vivian Cook, John Salemme.

President
........... .......... JOSEPHINE BOTTINO
Vice-President ........ .............. ... . .... RICHARD IVES
Secretary
............................ . FLAVIO MANGERS
Treamrer . . . ..... ... ....... .
ROBERT BARGETZI
Family Advisors .......... MR. FERDINANDO MAURINO
Miss YOLANDA FARGNOLI
A college precedent for language club newspapers
was set by the Italian Club in publishing its newsette,
"'II Crespuscolo" (Twilight), a monthly pubiication
originated anJ eJited by Remo Allio.
"'JI Circulo Italiano," was formeJ early in the
first semester. Informal meetings were held with the
purpose of learning the culturn l background of Italy.
Progr.1ms consisted of speakers, skits. films and recordings of cl.1ss1Cal and semi-classical ltalian music.
Dinner ml·etings in Ita lian restaur.mts, or "Sc.1mp:.1gntos" as the outings were c:.1lleJ, were supplementcJ b}' member entertainmen t.
A movie was held in an Endicott theater in Febru.1ry the pron:cds of which \\ere used by the club
for .rn ards to deserving ltalian students.

84

�Row: Mr. Rockwell, Rosemary o·connell, Tom Gillson, Bill Weber, Nisscl Rose, S:tm V1t.d1, R.tlph
Catanese, Bob I3argctzi, Joyce M.irtin, Al I Ianson.

BACK

Row: M.ucia Vanda, Maria Jiminez, Eugene Bis1gnani, Bill Davies, Helen Hudd,t, Fr.uKcs Brees,
Miss Fargnoli, Marge Davenp.irt.

fRONT

President. ... . ..... ........ .............. TOM B1sGINANI
Vice-President ................................
BILL 0AVIF.S
Treasurer ......................................... JOHN MALIK
Serrelary
.......................... MARIA JrMINFZ
f ,1mlty Advuors ...... . . MR. HAROLD ROCKWELL
ANI)

Miss

YOLANDA FARGNOLI

Highlight of the I 9tf7 activities of the Spanish
Club was a full course Spanish di nner al the Hotel
Frederick, followed by Spanish entertainment and
group singing in Spanish.
El Cirrnlo Hispano was formed in November,
1946. by 1 group of Spanish students who wished to
stimulate interest in our Good Neighbors. The first
year's activities incluJcJ lectures given by Latm Am
ericans living near the college, anJ La Pos,1da, .1
Spantsh P,1rty. The entertainment featured guitar
pl.iying and songs by the club's local South American
friends anJ the struggles of students and faculty with
a Pinata.
Latest addition to the club's activities is El Eco.
a newspaper wntten in Spanish. Helen Hudd,1 and
frances Brees edited this sheet of Spanish 1..hit chat
85

�BA&lt;K Row: Robert Miller, Jim Jon.Jan, Bi ll Hotchkiss, Frank DeBenedittis, Dietrich Rosenberg, Anne
Meade, Bernie Garlock, Ed Rosenberg. Jim Ctrey, Yvonne W,tkeley, Norm De&lt;ker.
SECOND Ro\\- . D.1, e G.uman, Doris Jones, Jorce Martin, Fr.1.nk Duntley, Dolores Green, Miss Chiarulli,
C1.mdle Roach, Thelma Carey, P.wl DeLoren.w, Bob rrienJ, Vivian Cook, Bob Ritchie.
T111Ro Rmx·. Merrell Thallingcr, George Miller, Jim Johnstone, Da\'e Tillotson, Al Durl.md.

Pres11/ e/I/ • • • .•
V1re-Prertde11/ ..... .
Serrelt1r;
Tre.1J11rer

CA\1 IL LE

RoA&lt; 11

FRANK OUN rI .EY

. DOLORES GREEN
THELMA CAREY

Org.mized before any sports schedule had been
formu lated, this club Aourished from the beginning.
W ith one of the largest memberships among schoo l
attivities. th is g roup provided an outlet for student
p.1rti(ip.1.tion in sports.
The K. of C. a lleys in Endicott were used last
ye.tr, "·ith the Alexis Smith team captu ring the
ie.1guc title. Alley-men Knapik, DeLorenzo, Tinklernan, Johnstone and Friend spa rked this crew to a
four g.1me m,1rgin over the Jo.rn D.ivis, Betty Hutton,
and Lucille 13all teams deadlocked in second place.
At .1 banquet held after the l.tst strike had been
m.1de, the members of the dub received awards for
thci r effarts for the 19.if 6 -17 se,ison. Members of the
winning and runners-up squads, as well as individual
winner~. received trophies.
This ycar·s plans ca lled for a banquet to dose out
the c.1mp.1.1gn. Trophies were handed out to indiv1du.d winners of Men's and \Xlomeo's hig h, sing le,
trip le and high average.

86

�No longer were the basketball games of the
Green and White accompanied by merely a din of
voices and cheers. "Something new was added."
With the introduction of a TCC Band, basketball
1-:ames took on the aura of what is commonly called
"the collegiate atmosphere."
All TCC Stokov. skis, He1fetzes, and Krupas (and
hopefuls) were eligible for membership. Smee the
band was comp.1r.1t1vcly new, activity '",1s !united to
rehearsals within the spacious walls of "West Hall,"
and the noisy outings al the TCC basketball games.
Howard Evans, .is~istant conductor, set to music
the words of the school song &gt;\rittcn by Mrs. Hopkins :Moses.
With the: r,1pid growth of the school, this organimay one day reach S}'mphonic proportions.

~ation

BACK Row: Howard Evans, Barbara M(Guire, William Gullborg, Claire Waterman, Ed Springman, Bill
Norton, Stephen Schaefer, Herbert Blanchard, Harry Brigham, Jack Hall, ]. Alex Gilfillan, director
FRONT

Row: Owen Kroeger, Don Buffum, Lairy Lon:l.ind, Joyce Barnes, Jeanne Story.

\
87

�' -- . '

.._ ~-:,·~~J.~~- :.

IF:.;~~"~

::~..

:

(Jq{,_o!JJal Pla1~!j .•

13AC.K Row : Edythe Scales, Shirley Dawson, Spero Arbes, Erwin Goldberg, George Heinsohn, Harry Ac-

cu rso, Dave Garman, Tony Casarno, Annette Smith, Jerry Gibbs, Jeannine Conklin.
Row : Torn MakrCl., Dave Merrilees, Sonia NeJame, Otto Reith, Dick Singe!, Dolores Green, Tait
Robertson, Dr. Hasenpflug.

FRON 1

Pre1iden1 _

. --·-·---·-----·--·---·----·-·- Orro K. REITH

boring U-E High School, and the Players quickly

Vice-Pre1ide11l
······--··-··-·--··-· ..... SoNv. NEJAME
T rea.Jurer .
_ ······-···--················ DAVID MERRILEES
Secrelary .... .. ................. .... ..... RICHARD S1NGEL
Fawlty AdviJorJ . . .. . ... MR. WAYNE fAAROW

made plans for future performances.
At the Spring Convention, Eugene O'Ncill's one
act play, Ile, was the feature presentation, with Sonia

ANO DR. MARGARET HASENPFLUG

NeJame and Otto Reith turning in fine performances.

With the presentation of the radio play, The Pfql
Jo Overlhrow ChriJlmas, at the Oiristmas Convocation in 1916, the Colonial Players launched a schedule which was to give the student body dramatic
entertainment, and the Players. themselves, valuable

The annual award given by the P layers to two of
its members for outstanding acting and participation
in all group activities was presented to Sonia Nejarne
and Otto Reith for 1946, culminating the dramatic
group's first year of activity.

!&gt;tage experience.
Harry Accurso, and a strong supporting cast
Larry McGrath and Betty Oune starred in the

featuring Monica Semanek, George Heinsohn, Sonia

groups' next presentatjon, the three act comedy,

NeJarne, Otto Reith, Tom Makres, and Eugene Shapan, rollicked through Kaufman and Hart's famous

CJ,111dia. Under the able direction of Dr. Sidney Al bert, Cl1111d1a rnme to life on the stage of the neigh·
88

comedy, The Alan UVho Came to Dinner, in the fall

�of 19-17, \\ ith a generous response from the audience
inJicating the play's success. This play was Jirected
by Mr. Wayne Farrow.
l3enn Levy\ delightful fantasy, 1\l rs. 1\( 0011/ir,ht,
\\ ith Dr. Marg,1 ret Hasenpflug directing, was st.1ged
in March , featuring Sonia Nejame and Spero Arbes
and a brilliant supporting cast.
Throughout the year, memb.:rs participated ac
tively at meetings, gave lectures on the theater, played
recordings of Shakespeare and other classical productions, and presented several radio plays.

89

�BACK Row: Mr. Perry, Jim O'Connell, Frances Brees, Raymeta Chaffee, Shel Davis, Dr. Albert
FRONT Row: Joe Meyers, Conrad Ellner, Bernie Tinklcman.

President .. .... . .... ....................
Vice-Pres1de11t . .
............ .....

AL BORNSTEIN
JOSEPH MEYERS

Program Chairman .................

PRANCES BREES

Students of Aristotle, Plato, Descartes, Perry, and
Albert who wished co air their own philosophical
views as well as d iscuss philosophicai questions pertaini ng to religion, science, art, and politics, gathered
for the first time on the evening of November 26,
194 7. A rap of the gavel and the Philosophy Club
was a reality.

Secretary .... .
RALPH FOREST
Treamrer ...
...................
RAYMETA CHAFFEE
h1mlty AdviJOrJ ... . . ..... OR. SIDNEY P. ALBERT
AND MR. ORVAL PE.RRY

Discussions led by such students as Conrad Ellner and Frances Brees were fuel for the philosophical
flames of the clubmembcrs. Controversial questions
turned out to be hig hly en lightening, and the real
heydays came when Dr. Piper of Syracuse came south
to speak to the club on ''Religion Values." He was
followed by Mr. D.1yan, also an instructor on " the
Hill," who spoke on the much discussed subjtct o f
.. Existentia lism." TCC's own Dr. Brown addressed
the club on "Shakespeare and Phi losophy."
Club members ended the year with a much
broader interpretation of the elements which determine the varied philosophies o f the world.

90

�;:-;F'jj~,,JO'l~;;·~:g;,c;e?y-~,
-

President -------------------------------------- MONICA SEMANEK
Vice-President -------------------------------- DOLORES GREEN
Secretary ---------------------------------------- SHIRLEY DAWSON
Treasm·er ------------------- --------------------- ANNETTE SMITH
Faculty Advisors ------ Miss ELIZABETH PLANKINTON
AND MISS YOLANDA FARGNOLI

The Pandoran Society, formed in the fall of '46
and originally called the Co-Ed Club, is the only
girl's organization at T.CC and serves in the dual
role of a service and social club.
Two annual programs inaugurated by them include the "Hayride" and the "Carnival of Hearts."
At the latter, a King and Queen are elected. This
year's choices were Pat Lamb and Mike Biloz.
The first Mother and Daughter Tea was held in
December, 1947. A Bridge Party was sponsored with
the proceeds going to a Czechoslovakian orphan girl.
Pandoran was also active in raising funds for the
Friendship Train, collecting food for Europe, assisting in the American Red Cross Drive and in the
polio campaign.

Pandoran' s spirit and cooperation exemplify the
spirit and cooperation of the whole school.

BACK Row: Inge Goldschmidt, Elaine Conklin, Edythe Scales, Ruth Tuthill, Jerry Gibbs, Jean Blesh, Helen
Hudda, Jean Thomas, Martha McManus, Vivian Cook.
FOURTH Row: Joanne D' Aprile, Frances Goodenough, Betty Jane Carl, Dorothy Dweres, Anne Duda,
Marilyn Brown, Olga Lakomek, Dorothy Earley, Shirley Dawson, Marge Davenport, Joyce Martin,
Miss Plankinton, Jeanette Bellinger, Sally Grass, Frances Midgley, Arline Michlik.
THIRD Row: Eleanor Sullivan, Dorothy Walker, Rosemarie Walsh, Jean Fairbrother, Doris Jones, Evelyn
Armstrong, Dolores Green, Carol Byrees.
SECOND Row: Annette Smith, Rhoda Schaffer, Gerry Bloom, Marilyn Andrus, Murial Bishop, Julia Early,
Sonia NeJame.
i~RONT Row: Joan O'Connor, Maria Jiminez, Betty Clune, Nancey Frey, Pat Lamb, Monica Semanek, Grace
Wheeler.

91

...

�President ................................................ JACK WEDGE
Vice-President ... . .•.............. .......... BILL MAYER
Sec-re1,1ry ................ .................................. ED ANTAL
Treasurer ............................... ... JOHN HORKOTT
Genernl Officer.......... . . ...
. ]AMES LAUDER
H istonan..
....... .. .... .... .... WILLIAM TUTHILL
Faculty Advisors ................. MR. (HARLES DIVINE

Adelphi Social
Group Approved
By Perso nnel

AND DR.

T"hc third men" sod.ti org;ini1.a
1ion of 1 CC is nuw .i reality with
"t he announceme nt of the formation
ot the t\delphi Club. At a recent
meeting, Jack Wedge w as elected
presiden t. Bill !\.fayer vice-presidrnr Ed Antal ~~cretary, and John
Horkott U'l!asurcr. Jim Ca rey will
be general officer.
Aiming to promote social. int&lt;llectu.11 and cultur:il fellowship
the members chose the name Adel phi !xc.iuse it connotes brother·
hood .
The Adelphians already have 3
~cholar~hip program underw;iy. A
scholM~hip to be given annually to
an in,oming 1;tudent to help defray
tuition expens~ bas been approved
by the administrati on. and as soon
as details have been completed, the
fund will be administered by the
,ollege

w.

PORTER SWIFT

One of the latest clubs to join the scene at TCC
was the Adelphi. Formed early in 1948, it became
the third men's social organ ization. Aiming at social, intellectual and cultural fellowship, members
chose the name Adelphi with its connotation of
brotherhoo d.
A scholarship fund for incoming freshmen was
established by the Adelphi. The award will be given
annually to an incoming student to help defray tuitlOn expenses. The plan has been approved by the
administrat ion, and as soon as details are cleared up,
the fund will be administere d with the aid of the
college.
Plans for functions were in the tentative stage
at the time this book went to press and could not
be included in the club's activities.

Row : Mr. Divine, Bill Mayer, Ed Antal, John Horkott, Dr. Swift.
SrAnn: Hugh Jamieson, Jerry Flannigan, Bill Tuthill, Walt Stanzcl, Jr., Jack Wedge, Jim
Carey, Claude
Crawfor&lt;l, Jr., George Ryder, James Lauder, James Clapham.
BACK

92

�BACK !\ow: Bill Hor:,ey, Owen Crumb, Bill Bartow, Arnold Brown, Ernie Cinotti, Bob Barrows, Gus
Haroldson, Tony Casamo, Jack Schroeder, Bob Clark, Herb Callahan, John Foreman, Jim Hargreaves,
Ed Esserman, Mr. Smith, John Hinds, Dan Mullane, Bill Keal.
SECOND Row: Bob Travis, John Salemme, Jim Brown, Harry Accu rso, Dick McCa llum, Chuck Abbey, Sid
Smith, Art Manso, Ray Dechene, John Heimann, Camille Roach, George Neumann, Joe Manning.
Bi II Kuchinskas.
FRONT Row: Donald Millstone, Russ Lisson, Steve Zinn. Wallv Oates. Len Burns, Dick Streb.

Officers:
President ...... .. ........ ............................. Sm SMITH
Vice-President ....................................... ART MANSO
Secretary .......................................... CHARLES ABBEY
Treasurer ............................................ RAY DECl-iENE
Famlty Advisors ................... MR. ROBERT RUSSELL
MR. JOHN BELNIAK
In November, I 946, a group of 22 students
formed the "Baccacia" Society to promote good fel·
lowship and lasting friendships.

football and basketball leagues, finishing high in both
sports.
A recent addition to Baccacia act1v1ty was the
scholarship fund set up by the organization to help
worthy individuals. The first award will be made in
November, 1948.

In an effort to dispel pre-exam depression, Baccacia presented their first annual Gloom Ball. January,
1947. In March, complete with corpse and coffin,
they honored the Irish with Patty's Wake. At the
beginning of the new school term, the organization
put on the Shipwreck dance in true nautical style.
An Academic Aid Committee for the benefit of
its members has aided many a "gloom-ball" v1Ct1m.
Not content with being scholars, the Baccacians
have proved themselves in the field of sports. They
arc actively represented in the college intramural

93

�------......... .
'

~

;'

J04

·.., '

BACK Row: Bob Blesh, Jim McHale, Del Craft, Cal Symons, Mario Pizzillo, George Donovon, Frank CeIona, Jim Jordan, Joe Baxter, Art Neumann.
SECOND Row: Wally Bouskill, John Kar, Al Reed, Harry Stein, John fowler, Bob Murray, Bill O'Neill,
Charles Guernsey, Joe Meyers, Dick Powell.
THIRD Row: Bob Kennedy, Art Brehm, Bill Everts, Dick Hamann, Bill Sharpe, Bob Carson, Charles Speich,
Jack Keigher, Don Buffum, Harry Hafler, Mack Vegard, Mike Brumer, John Malik, Ed Koast, Tony
Dyer, Paul Sheely.
FRONT Row: Lennart Erikson, Bill Jones, Mike Biloz, Keith Dunklee, Bob Bargetzi, Ronnie Cuillerier,
George Heinsohn, Jack O'Day.

President ................................ ]AMES ]. MCHALE
Vice-Preside111 ..................... LENNART N. ERIKSON
Secretary ........ ............................ WILLIAM A . JONES
TreaJ!lrer ..................................... FRANK P. CELONA
f,JC1tl1y Advisors ....................... MR. JOHN D. HALL
MR. FREDERICK J. HOLLISTER
The second men's social fraternity to be formed
at T CC appeared in October, 1947. The name
Goliards was derived from a group of wandering
medieval scholars in Europe during the 12th century.
These scholars wrote songs and verse attacking the
abuses and vices of the period and g lorified nature,
wine, and women- all of which they loved ardently.
The aims of the TCC Goliards included performing service as well as social functions. In November
the club sponsored a successful European Relief
Drive for cash donations and clothing. In January,
a Maroon Key society was organized to play host to
visiting ath letic teams.
The Goliard's recreational activities have included
a Christmas party to supplement the festivities of the
Mistletoe Ball weekend, a post-exam night field trip,
the college intramural basketball champs and a Mardi
Gras dance.
.

94

�MAROON Ktv: James D. O'Connell anJ Charles L .
Speich, ro-rhai1111e11: Michael Biloz, Mayer Brumer, Frank P. Celona, George W. Dono\·an, Jr.,
John A. Dyer, anJ DuWayne H. Pettyjohn.
The Maroon Key, an honorary society that
operates in cooperation \\1th the college athletic department, was formed in January by the Goliards.
Membership in the Key rotates within the club.
The function of the Key is to entertain and
assist visiting athletic teams. The Key meets v1s1tors,
directs them to the college and playing areas, com
pletes arrangements for their meals and local transportation, helps the players with their equipment,
looks after their dothes, and takes care of them
during time-outs in the capacity of towel custoJians
and slicers of oranges.

anJ to promote good will and sportsmanship by being of service to ··rivals" on the playing courts.
Student programs similar to the Key are wellcst•tbl ished in many other colleges.

The primary purpose of the Maroon Key is to
establish friendship between TCC and other colleges

BA&lt;.K Row: Tony Dyer, George Donovan, Jr., DuWaync Pettyjohn, Mike Biloz, Charles Speich.
FRONT Row: Mike Brumer, Jim O'Connell, Frank Cclona.

95

�96

�•
97

�Reversing Greeley's advice, Gene Welborn came east to take over direction of sports activities at Tcq
The little man from the Hoosier state was appointed to his present position May 29, 1947. He succeeded
Bob Redman who took over football at Bloomsburg State Teachers College in Pennsylvania.
Genial Gene assumed his coaching duties here around the first of July, when he organized an intramural sports and recreational program for the
summer session.
He acts as instructor m physica l education and
health along with his coaching duties.
A graduate of Anderson High School, Mr. Welborn received his B.S. degree in physical education
from Indiana University in 1941 and his M.S. at
the same school. At the Hoosier College he was
head trainer of the hockey team during his senior
year and assistant trainer of the football and track
squads for three years.
Gene enlisted in the Navy in 1942. Serving fo r
three years, he was discharged as a Chief Pharmacist
in 1945, whereupon he returned lo the Banks of the
Wabash to start his coaching career.
Handicapped by inadequate facilities and forced
to use public gyms and playing fields, Welborn has
nevertheless endeavored to give the school a well
rounded athletic program. With an increase in manpower and improved athletic facil ities, the little guy
will give TCC something to shout about yet.

98

�-

.

·
·
CJ·
earle'
,ee'cl
·· ;~:.··~/,
.
•,

The 1947-48 cheerleading squad proved an invaluable asset to student interest at basketball games
and pep rallies. Headed by Joyce Barnes, the squad

;

~-

The squad did an exceptionally tine job of bolstering school spirit at the games and pep rallies
this year.

included Barbara Rood, Nancy Frey, Betsey Huener,
Pat Lamb and Edythe Scales .. Milton Bernstein and
Dave Merrilees brought the number of cheerleaders
up to eight when they joined th~ squad in January.
The cheers were developed with the aid of Mrs.
Hopkins Moses who aho wrote the Triple C1t1es
College song. The tune was then set to music by
Howard Evans. Miss Plankinton acted as faculty
advisor for the group.
The original cheerlcading squad was formed in
De(ember of · 15, when T.C.C. was entering the
first basketball season in its history. The first sguad
consisted of Stuart Scheiner. Mary Lou Curtis, Larry
D,l\ 1s and Joyce Barnes.

99

.

�Row (left to right): Bob Clark, Mgr., Bill Walling, Chet Buchanan, Al Bornstein, Shel Davis, Bob
Isban, Pete Sadowitz, Gene Welborn (Coach).
FRONT Row: Dick Herzer, Ed Radin, Pete Biloz, Dick Powell, Joe Ludka, Jim Heavner.
BACK

Despite the return of seven lettermen and five

82-35. The Oneonta collegians had too much speed

J-Vs, plus a new coach, the Colonial Cagers had a

and reserve strength.

rough second season in intercollegiate competition.

Powell, TCC captain, was the game's high scorer

Sporting a very respectable 7 won and 3 lost record

with 14.

Surprisingly enough, bick

from last year, the local hoopsters found themselves
pitted against teams of high calibre throughout their
17 game schedule. As a result, Coach Gene Weiborn's charges were only able to cop four decisions

The Ithaca Frosh outlasted the Colonials in a high ,
scoring tilt at Ithaca, and won out, 79-70. Isban and
Powell paced the Wellborn men.

while dropping thirteen. Poor practice conditions and
fre&lt;juent injuries to key players played havoc in

The smooth clicking Colgate Frosh spoiled the
team's home debut, by taking another high scoring

hampering the Green and White's efforts.

contest, 93-75. Weak defensive play hurt the locals.
An impressive Hartwick quintet rudely jolted the
locals in the first game of the 1947-48 campaign,

100

Isban and Powell once again supplied the scoring
punch for the Green and White.

�...--~J.e-

---~

"~

Two Points

Bert's Boys

Victory number one of the season was chalked

70-24, and the Cornell J-Vs, 68-52. Against Cornell,

up against the Scranton J-Vs, 32-28, in a game

the locals found themselves without the services cf

marked by rough play. Heavner was high man wilh

Powell, but nevertheless, managed to stay on even

13 points.

terms with the "Big Red" until the final quarter.

The Scranton game was followed by successive

The bad breaks which seemed to plague the squad

los:;es to State Tech, 41-39; Cornell J-Vs, 51-34; and

all seo.son reappea red in the second Scranton game,

the Syracuse frosh, 75-44. The Orange men, sparked

when the Miners won out in the closing seconds of

by sensational John Kiley, proved to be the Green

the game, 35 -33, after TCC Jed all the way.

and White's toughest opponent all season.
Swish!
The opening round of the "Battle of the Extension Schools" was won by TCC, when they edged out
Utica College, 62-58, on the Vestal High hardwood.
TCC grabbed an early lead but had to fight off a
strong Utica rally in the closing moments of the
game.
Playing at Wilkes College, the Colonials were
nudged out, 34-28. Then followed defeats by Ithaca
frosh again, 5 3-46, the undefeated Syracuse Frosh,

101

�Battle Under the Boards

Hyle the Human Adding Machine!

On the Bench

Utica college evened the count by beating their
fellow extension school rivals, 77-64. Playing without Heavner and lsban, the Green and White managed to grab an early lead and held it until the final
quarter.

Joe

Ludka, recent addition to the squad,

led the loser's attack with 20 markers.

In the best game of the seaso1-1, TCC dumped
their local rivals, State Tech, 45-44, before a large
crowd on the State Tech court. The victory snapped
a Jong State Tech winning streak. Pete Sadowitz,
with his fine play, plus 11 points, sparked the
Colonials, but it was Bill Walling who clinched the
victory with a foul shot in the last 1 S seconds of
play. Whew!
102

�Hook Shot

Rebound

Back home again, Welborn's five ltcked Wilkes
College, 58-50, with Powell, Lu&lt;lka, Heavner, and
Bornstein all hitting the double figures.

The .final game of the season found the wellbalanced Colgate Frosh team victorious in a 62-1 ·1
walkaway. The bucket seemed to have a lid on it
that night for the Green and White.

Despite the losing season, Captain Powell, Bob.
Isban, Jim Heavner, Joe Ludka, Bill Walling, Al
Bornstein, Ed Radin, and Pete 5.ldow1tz performed

Lay-Up

admirably, many times against insurmount.1ble odds.

103

�Row (left to right): Ed Mikulski, Tom Gilson, Bob Dickerson, Bob Gallagher, Bob Koloski,
George Horkott, Frank Furman, Herb Callahan, Art Rybak, Jack Schroeder.
FRONT Row : Mike Buran, Danny Semels, Jim Maynard, Don Axelrod, Al Hansen, Chet Fish.
BACK

George "Spud" Forbes, instructor at Union-

the curtain raiser. Hartwick jumped to a quick lead

Endicott High School, was appointed track coad1

in the dashes and distance runs, but the Green and

early in March, 1948. The Niagara University grad-

White roared back in the field events and narrowed

uale took over a squad that dropped four meets last

the gap. 'W ithout big George Horkott in action,

season.

however, the Colonials missed first place in the shot
put, and that was the margin of victory for Hart-

April of 1947 saw T.C.C. inter-collegiate track
competition for the first time. Twenty-five men an-

wick. Final score: Hartwick 55, T.C.C. 53, Oneonta
State 8.

swered Coach Redman's call to .he cinder paths.
On May 7, The Colonials traveled to Utica to
The Hartwick Indians and Oneonta State Teach-

meet a powerful Mohawk team. Handicapped by

ers College squads invaded T.C.C. on April 27 for

lack of depth, T.C.C. was overpowered in the run-

104

�t'I
..

ning events. Again the Green an&lt;l White field team
le&lt;l the way for the locals, scoring in the shot, discus,
javlin and pole vault. Final score: Mohawk 92,

T.C.C. 29.

Jn a return meet with Hartwick and Oneonl.1 at

the teacher's field, the Colonials battled Hartwick
through a cold drizzle only to have the Indians
squeeze out a 54-53V2 triumph.

A strong, well-balanced Sampson squad romped
to a 95-27 victory as the Green and White closed out
a disappointing season.

The squad worked under extreme handicaps.
Lack of depth in the running events, and lack of a
full time coach hampered the locals. With the addit1on of a full time track co.ich, prospects for the
spring season should improve.

105

�BA&lt;.K Row (left to right): Bob Redman (coach), Art Kalliche, Carmine Kibbler, Jerry Toman, Tom
Terry, Russ Lisson, Bob Bargetzi, Leo Cary, Pete Macao, Bill Walling. Bill Curtis (manager).
FRONT Row: Vince Miniccucia, Jerry True, Dennis Bottino, Mike Pavlyak, Torn Bisignani, Ted Scarenzi,
Larry Sifflard, Carmine CaJenti.

T.C.C. 4 .......................................................... Utica 1
T.C.C. 5

·········---····-········-··············-········· Bucknell 4
T.C.C. 8 ......................................... Hartwick 8 (tie)
T.C.C. 7 ·················--···-····-····---·····-···-····· . Colgate 10

Rain and snow were the leading battery mates

9 at Johnson Field, when the Green and White met

for the 1947 baseball season. Time and again games

Utica College, a fellow off-spring of Syracuse Uni-

were postponed or canceled as the elements and not

versity. A sensational pitching performance by Pete

the home runs made the headlines. "Neither snow

Macao, who fanned 14 and allowed only five sca:ter-

nor sleet nor rain" hamper the postman; but TCC

ed hits, enabled the Redmen nine to walk off the

baseball found the going a little rougher.

victor, 4 to 1.

The first wind-up of the season took place May
106

Art Kalliche, Colonial right fielder, scored the

�first run in TCC baseball history in the second
inning. Calenti and Terry started making it a habit
when they dented home plate with two more runs
in the third frame.

Bucknell College was victim number two for
Macan as the Colonials won a 5-4 decision in 10 innings. The ace right-hander rebounded from a threerun bombardment in the third canto to rack up 15
strikeouts and showed superb control in the clutches.
When Kalliche slammed a line single to right scoring Calenti and Walling, the men from Endicott
were only one run down. Then in the ninth, Coach
Redman called for a "squeeze play," Macan's sacrifice bringing home Kalliche with the tying run. Tom
Terry, Colonial first sacker, blasted a single to center
to knock in the winning tally in the tenth.
A free-hitting slugfest against Hartwick at
Oneonta ended in an 8-8 tie after 10 torrid innings.
The game was called because a high school contest
was slated for the same grounds.

After four other games were called off because
Spring was a little late in coming that year, TCC lost
its final tilt to Colgate, 10-7.

As this book goes to press, Gene Welborn had
just made his initial call for 1948 baseball aspirants.
An eight game schedule is planned.

107

�· /.ennlJ
~

..

:.·

Row (left to right): Sam Freeman, Ed Shoemaker, Hyle Richmond
FRONT Row: Dick Strickland, Jule Michel, Jack Lewis. Joe Rosenbloom.

BACK

Hampered by the lack of " noonday sun," TC.C's
first intercollegiate tennis team compi led a won two,
lost three record for the season's net play.
With rain limiting pre-season pract ice to three
days. the Colonials were whitewashed in their first
match with Hartwick College, 7-1. Only Dack
Strickland was able to win against his opponent.
With Strickland and Jack
games and List services, the
edge out Utica College, 3-2.
for this match, and results
wisdom of the move.

Lewis exhibiting steady
TCC' ers rebounded to
Positions were shuffled
v.ere indicative of the

The sc:iuad showed the temper of 1b 1mpro,ement
in its second meeting \\ ith Hart\\ ack. After the score
h:iJ been tied at three-all, the Iroquois won the two
fin.ii p.urings ,1nd the match, 5- ~.
A second '1ctory over Utica and a 6-2 loss to
Bucknell rounded out the season\ schedule.
The: sax ktt&lt;:rmen were: Datk Stnckbnd, Jack

LC\\ as. Joe Rosenbloom, Julie M1thtl, Hric Rich
mond, .md .un hceman. Rosenbloom, Richmond,
and Machel returned this season.

108

�UA&lt; K Row (left to right) : Danny Semels, Leslie M ori.;.tn , Ji m Johnstone
FRONT Row: Richard Clinton, Fred Sangc~. Dick Mer(C:r, Bill B.tkcr

The 19·1- T C.C. golfers, although hampe:rcd in
pre se,1son practice by nun, sno", and wet grounds,
holed out a ). 2 won-lost tally for the round o f games.
It was till best T.C.C. tc:am record in 1947 spring
sports.
T ( C

golfers overpowered

Hartw1Ck College

l 5 ~ 2 -2 Y2 .tt home, on the E. J. course, and "as agam
vi(torious l2 6 over H artwi(k on the Oneonti Golf

course.

T.C.C. outclassed the Utica Coll ege sextet

12~ 2 21/2

m

J

match played du ring a cold driving

rain on the home E. J. course. Both losses we.re at
the hands of a crack tc:am from Cortland State
Teachers College coached by Tony Tesani.
George Mercer and Fred Sanges were T.C.C.'s two
top men and bore the brunt of the teams' att.1ck
\\1th thei r consistently good golf.
they scort"d in the 70' s.

109

More than once

�loacli Voot!tall --

Row ( k·ft to right) : Al Bormtein, Dick Herzer, Bob F ricnd, Bob Isban, Shel Davis.
FRONT Ro\\: · John Bilos, Mike Biloz, Jim Heavner.
BM K

T.C.C followed the trend of other post war colk:ges with an increased interest 111 sports. September,

Rodman House subdued the Roses 18 to 6 and the
Barrels edged out Villanova 6 to 0.

1917, saw the formation of an eight tc.:am touch

football league undl'r thl' supervision of Gene \Xfelhorn.

e\·eral members o f the te.1ms mt:l amI atIopted

Every game brought forth a new star, but "Merccr and Co." continued to shine throughout the sea-·
son along with Terry of the Ghosts, Richmond of

a ~et of rule~ s1mil.ir to s1x-m.1n footb.dl rules.

Rodman House, Biloz of the Gamecocks, and CallaIn the opening g.1me the G.1mecork~ downc.:d the

han of Baccacia.

Ghosts 2 l to 6 under the lc.1Jership .ind p.ming of
Al "Bullet" BormtC'in. In the other g.imes of the
opening round Baccacia defeated the Cits 21 to 6,
110

The G.1mecocks and

Baccacia domin.ltcd the

league. It was the game of the year when the two

�undefeated teams met.

"Mercer and Co." were

rushed continuously by the charging Gamecocks line
but were unable to make much headway. \X/hen the
final whistle sounded the Gamecocks emerged victorious by handing the Baccacians a 34 to 0 setback.

At the end of the season Dick Mercer emerged
with a scormg total of 7-i points. In second and third
places were Mike Biloz of the Gamecocks and Tom
Terry of the Ghosts who garnered 46 and 36 respectively.

Each member of the Gamecocks was presented
with a gold medal at the end of the !&gt;eason.

111

�9t. Va;cJit _fiaJlcet6a/l L
-·

BACK

Row (left to right): Gene Welborn (coach), Shel Davis, Ralph Linnell, Julie Michel, Bob Oark.
Row: Chet Buchanan, John Bilos, Frank Pieplow, Raymond Mills.

FRONT

TCC's J.V. baskr eers faml little better than their
big brothers, winning five an&lt;l losing eight.

Schapiro's, the J-V didn't hit winning ways until
they stopped State Tech 37-32 and a close 35-33
victory over the Vestal Legion.

Suffering defeats in their first three encounters
against Hartwick College J-V, Baccacia group, and

Playing the Utica College J-V before mid-year
vacations, the men from Lincoln Ave. suffered a
38-32 defeat. 1n the next outing, they swamped the
Wilkes J -V, 45-28 with Pieplow racking up 11.
St. Anthony's stopped the locals 44-36. Vestal
Leg ion reversed an earlier decision, winning 54-50.
Mills with 12 points was high for T.C.C. John
Bilos sunk 19 points in a losing battle i;.gainst Utica
College J -V, 47-45.
In a game played at State Tech, the Green and
White repeated their early season win by a 41-35
triumph. In the final regularly scheduled game, the
Colonials, led by Davis with 14 points, again bested
the Wilkes J-V, 57-44.
In the first annual affair between the junior varsity and the winner of the school intramural basketball league, the Champion Goliard five came from
behind to whip the J-V 47-44 in a thrilling last
minute drive.

11 2

�...9nt'camutal ll/iJlcet6all
'

The Goliard cage quintet clinched the intramural basketball championship with a well earned
38-27 victory over the third place Wolverines in the
final game of the season. The Goliards were without
the services of their ace, Joe Rosenbloom, but the
smooth working combination of Biloz, Brumer,
Bletchman, Cripps, Heyman and reserves Bargetzi,
Craft and Symons were more than enough for the
opposition.
In the game against the Colonial J.V.'s the
Giliards proved their ability as champions by staging
a last minute rally to overtake the TCC Yearlings
47-44.

Runner up to the Goliards was Baccac1a with six
wins against one loss suffered at the hanJs of the
Goliards. The remaining six teams were the Wolverines, Ramrods, Ramblers, Stone Crushers, Dribblers and Independents who finished in that order.

113

.

�11 •1

��Brook's Bliss
First Edition

Spanish Clubbing

Ou r Campus (Snow Job)
Photo by H.irrington

116

�Punch W ithout J udy
Cheers

Introducing John

K. P.
Zo What

IVO

1 17

�It's Been

a 1-Ia.rd

"C Clirnates Are ...

Brick Wall

w·inter

Uncle Ed

118

�Triple Sillies

Student Sandwich

C. A. R. E

. Chamber
Gastric

119

�Party Posting

( hest Another Student

Boom Town

la Rockwells

120

�Uncle Tom's Cabin

Round Top

-....
Wreathed

10

Non Campus Mentis

Smiles

121

�First Man, First Year

Last Man, Last Year

College Reception

The Following Men ...
He Was H er Man

....

12.2

�Printer's Mistake

Keep Off the Grass

Lit for Christmas

One of His Bad Days

Dance Time

123

�Moving Up Day

Smile Pretty

Mammy

Choo-Choo

Destruction

124

�Food for Thought

Platonic Study

S'no-Fun

Campus on the Pampus

Blueprinters

l25

�Pre-Fab Lab

Final QuMter, Final Minute
126

�Research

'fhe Boys

Grass CJ ass
127

�128

�129

�niloz. M icha&lt;'!
Hi loz, PPtcr
Bishara. Joscr&gt;h
Bishop, Ru&gt;1.-wll

Abbey, Chnrlei&lt; C.
Abbey, Dorothy n.
Abdallah, F'rcd
Acrurso, Harry
Ace, I.anninf( E.

118 North 2nd St... Mcchnnksvi lle,
703. Ilroad St., Endicott,
160 Ouk St... Rin1ehamt.on,
68 Valley Road, Scotia,
109 B&lt;.'vicr St., Binghamton.

N.
N.
N.
N.

Adams. Roy J.
Agann. Vivian
A1...-udo, Rnl1&gt;h
Ahml'd, 1'ofik
Alcxnn&lt;ler. V/ilma

42 LuKk St.. J oh nson City.
41 Ilr&lt;&gt;nd Ave .. flinghnmt.on,
62 Cott.nJtc Sl.. Middletown,
114 Laur&lt;'I Ave, llinghnmt&lt;&gt;n.
97 Harry L. Road, Johnxon City,

N.
N.
N
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y
Y.
Y.

Hlanehard, ll&lt;•rlu•rt. W.
Blt•sh. J&lt;&gt;an
Ble•h. Robt·rt
lllt•f.&lt;'hmnn. Sherman
Blinn. Hollund

Alford, Donald
A llnrd, Joseph
Allio, Jo"oJ&gt;hinP
Allio, &amp;mo
Aloi, Carmello

3n Tremont A\'C'.. Ilin&gt;rhnrnt.on.
161:1 RiHrvi1•w Drive. ~~nclirott.
1001 Brund St.. ~:ndkott.
1206 North St.. Endkott.
203 N. Nantieok&lt;• A\c .. Endicott.

N
N
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.

Bloom, Irvin~

Y.
Y.
Y.

Hogu.r-t.. Wc.w..;l &lt;.•y E.
Uomharcl. Allan J.
Bond, Selma E.

13 C&lt;&gt;lumbin Ave.. Middletown.
778 Chenango St .. lli ni:hamt.on,
553 Chenan&gt;ro St... nin.chamt&lt;&gt;n.
171 Main St., Binf(hnmton,
lR Thompson St.. Hinithamton.

N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.

Hornst&lt;'in, Alfr&lt;'&lt;I

Y.
Y.
Y.

Bottino, l &gt;&lt;•nnis
.Uott.lno, Jo~eph
Bot.lino. Jrnwr&gt;H 11&lt;"

N

Y.

llouskill, Walla&lt;' &lt;' R.

162 Helen St.. Bin1&lt;hamvrn,
South Cherry SL.. Poughke&lt;•r&gt;•i&lt;'.
Box No. i n9, Middletown,
317 [•'rnnt St... Owego,
26 \" C r:indall St .. Binghamton.

N.
N
N.
N.
N.

Y.

Bove~. Martin

Y.

Bowdish. Wnyn&lt;.·

Y.
Y.
Y.

llows(•r. Rol&gt;&lt;: rt
Boyce. John

Anclc•rfwn. Wayn~

Andrus, Marilyn
Andrews, Ruth
Anvlc. Mildr&lt;'I
Anhou.:-;c, Freel

Antal, Edward A.
Ant.unako~. GC"OrS.~C'

API&gt;&lt;'. Rolxort
ArhC'K , Spero
Arm i-.troruc J,i;\.&lt;.'lyn

Arrnslron1e. MNtd
Arnold. Wall•·•·
Arnold. Wt.'Sl(•y
A Mrht·r. Alan

A,h, Chnrks
Ash, Ow&lt;•n
Atth~ani.

R o tx•1·t
Attisani. Virn:enL

Auc•r, Charlos
Avt:disinn, .MichaC'I

Avery, Ethel
Ax!'lrod. Donal1!
lhH·hman. St.anlt•y J .

Buk ..·rmttn., fo~c..lwi n
Banta, John
llnrbt?r. Ronald
Barborw. P&lt;•t('r

llnrf.!'t.llfd. Rnb•·rt
Barm•s,

KR

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
N. Y .

B1~ignani. 11.=ugenc

Blo&lt;1m.

Brink, Jack M.
Llnll.On, Allan T.
B rown . Albert
B rown, An n Loui~c
Brown, Arnold M.

D&lt;&gt;RuylPr. N. Y.
117 Grand Ave.. MiddleUJ\\ n. N. Y.
22 On&lt;rn1la1rn St .. Johnwn City, N. Y.

B rown.

Whilnc.·y Point.. N

,JO)'l'('

Jamt..~t.ow n,

Y.

1:rn Euchd A ve ..

Hnrlo\\, \\'illinm

220 Pomand\•r Road. Min&lt;•oln. N . Y.
207 M.lin SL, Maybrook. N. Y.
110~ Moni·oc St.. Endkott. N. Y.
62 Huntin1:ton Sl.. Lowell. Mass
R . ll. I, Chcnan1&lt;0 Forks. N . Y.

Ua.t.tistn, llolJ&lt;•1·t

nuxtt.•r. Jo-..t.·ph
Beach, Fn:rnk

B&lt;•all. Jo;d\\ard

'i·W Chc.•nnnK&lt;&gt; St.. Bin~hamtun. N.

Bt}nn, John

lh.•t&gt;rs. GPor..:\•
Bt· Ga~sc. Brue~ K.

lkllinit&lt;·r. Jeanett&lt;'. L.
Bl•ruh.• r, Danil•l
Bt•ni, Roh('rt

ll&lt;'rR. Paul C.
B£&gt;rnhnu&lt;.•r. F.dward
Ur-f"n~tl•in,

Milton

Jie,l, Carol
llid,H•ll, Ronald
Hi~gs, Ilom(:r
Hihr. Jnml''S
Ililos, John, Jr.

l~I

Brow1'l, Jante!:J W.

Brungcr.

Y.

l{&lt;'&lt;f Cn"&lt;·k. N. Y.
P&lt;•nrl St .. V"stal, N . Y.

ii Knt..•clnnd Ave., lhn1-rhamt.on, N. Y.
272 Main St.. Johnson City, N. Y.
Rewey Av~ .. Ncwark Vatlt&gt;y,
912ti 90th St.. Woodhaven,
25 Dayton Sl.. Johnson City.
24 Berkley St .. Johnson City,
4 A11nctle Ave .. UinJ.thamton,

Tioga Center.
700 J\lnin St .. John'°n City.
Gn...,n.
Howard Ave.. Bin1&lt;hamton.
16 Hill A,c., ~:ndicott.

N. Y.

N J.
N Y
N Y
N Y
N Y

gt., BinJ~hamt.on, N. Y.

Butler, Ed"ard Jo'.
Llyct'li, Carol

Cuin. M.arilyu

N . Y.

Catabrisi, Dominit·k
Caldwell. J oseph A.
Calt&gt;nti, Carmint.&gt; J.

Bin1~hamton,

1701 Muin St..
601 North St..
2121,:, t.ilwt'ly 11.,.,...
2107 Wat,;on B lvd.,
5 HAJK&lt;.'r:i, Av&lt;.•..

N

Y.

r:nctkot.l.
r:nt11rntl,
Endic" tt.
r:nd1cott.
J.;ndicoll,

N. Y
N. Y
N. Y
N. Y.
N Y

210~ Watson Blvd .. r:ndicot.t. N . Y.
400 llannnh St.. r:ndicott. N. Y.

Buran. Rob.&gt; r t
llurdick, F:Ji,alk·th
Burns, Lt'Onard l).

N. Y.

N. Y.

108 Hom•· St.. Kinl{~tun. N Y.
31 Tallnrnn St., Oswc"lto. N. Y.
120 L&lt;x1mi. Av&lt;· .. Yonkcn;. N . Y.

Buffum, IHniald
Buran, Jm.;t•ph
Buran, Mh•h aitl

!lush, A rnul&lt;l
Bu~ino. Orlando

N. Y.
N . Y.
N. Y.

264 Jo'mnt. St., llin1ehamt.on. N. Y.
14 Fulh•r Roa&lt;l.

llu&lt;'.h:uw,n. Cht·ster
lluohl, Ja1·k

N. Y.

130

~:dwarct~

I Mill St... Gr~'C·nt".
24 linker St.. ,Jo hnM&gt;n City,
2 Annette A v~ .. Binghamton.
2·1 Bnk&lt;'r St.. John,un Cit y.
3 13 K r:d wa r d St.. " ndi cott,

Charil~

Callahan, )(,•rlk-rt
Cidlnhan. John

Y
Y
Y.
Y

44 1 Front St.. Ow&lt;•1&lt;0. N Y .
1410 Kt•Y e• AV&lt;'., Sch&lt;·1wt·tady, N. Y .
R. D. l, Adum, , N. Y.
111ompson. Pa.
3 Elberon Plact'. Albany. N. Y.

Buccift•rro, Vin&lt;"t'nl J.

Byron. H.ol&gt;l'rt
Cnbrcra, Chal'lC'~ T .

N. Y.
N. Y.
N . Y.

Y

R. 0. I. Oneida. N. Y
312 S. Liberty AH·.. r:ndicott. N. Y
30 r: Jizabcth St....John&amp;111 City, N Y

Nancy

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

N. Y.

N. .Y

504 Flor.•nt'&lt;' St.. gndicot l. N Y
l n s.~&lt;·~o ll St, Philadt.•h,hrn, Pa
1$7 Crary A v&lt;•.. lhn1&lt;hamton. N . Y

Hrown&lt;'. Clifford
Brum\•r, Muyor

N. Y.

Y.

SOll Mounutin ViC'w llriv.,, hndicolt.. N. Y
IOG JW,,.cvcll Avt•.. r:nd icoll. N. Y

David H.
H. Marylin
Jao k U.
James L.

Jo~wphin~

Y.

1~ 1 7

1802 Ddawar&lt;' St.. S&lt;·ranton, Pa.
30 RiKl•·Y l'lae&lt;-. Nt·w Rochell&lt;'. N . Y .
::o Rish·y Place•. N&lt;•w IW&lt;-hcll&lt;'. N. Y.
29 125th St.. T r oy, N . Y.
45 Jurvis St.. llinghamton, N. Y.

B rown,
B rown.
B r own.
Brown.

N. Y.
N . Y.
Conn.
N . Y.

405 Chancellor Ave .. Nt•wark.
15 Seward A vt.~ .. 1&lt;:11tiw&lt;.&gt;ll,
2 18 Jtobbl&lt;• A vc• .. r:nd1cotl.
15 S•wurd Avt•. , 1-; ntfw&lt;•ll,
54 Hunt. Av•·.. llamburi:.

Y.
Y.
Y.

K. D. I. Wult.on. N. Y.

Br&lt;'&lt;:S, Frances F
Brehm. Arthur R.
Brcw&lt;•r, Hob.&gt;rt C.
Br&lt;•w&lt;•r. Wilbur l.
l! r igham , Harry W.

N. Y.
M uss.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

30 Vullt•yvi&lt;·w St.. Onmnla.
504 Loder Avt•.. Endicott.
10 Lincoln A\"c•. J:o:nchc-ott.
1650 Chun&lt;'I St , N~w l!avc•n.
376 Fin&lt;t St.., Newbut1'h,

4

Stoneboro. l't•nn~ylvania
219 M11in St.. Bin1:hamton. N. Y.
4·1 Fox St.. Owci:co. N. Y.
21 Homer Ave .. Lat·chmont. N Y.
61 Leroy Sl., llin1:hamton, N. Y.

R. D. I. N&lt;•wark Valley,
5G Ocean Ave .. Salem.
144 Pinnacle ltoad. ltochcster,
132:l Ditrnn., Ave.. Brooklyn.
G Eliza beth St.. llin1&lt;hamtun,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

4 En.&lt;t. Av&lt;•. Uinl!humton. N.
3 Easl Ave .. Uin•?hamt.on, N
10 Full&lt;'r !load, llinl!hamwn. N .
Hru,ht.on. N.
11 Clark St.. V&lt;'Stal, N .

Htl'(;.kinrj&lt;lKe, Phi lip A .

Htirrnws, Rol.M.&gt;t l

Bn'.:it.iRno, Hichunl

GC'r:ildin~

16 Hi ll Av&lt;'.. Endioot.t.,
16 Hill Ave.. r:ndicott.
Highland Ave.. Bim:hamt.on ,
Jam&lt;'&gt;&lt; St... Ct•P&lt;' Vincent.
411 Juek110n Av&lt;'.. r: n dicot.t,

4:12 f-"'ront St .. Owt.·'-~o. N Y
l'ia l'rosped. St.. Bin.:harnt.on, N. Y.
188 Conklin Ave .. llinghamt.on. N. Y.
21~ W!k~hington

AH .. ~:ncticott.
107 Arthur Ave .. Endicott.
49 Murray St .. llin.chamton.
17 llroukd alc Place. Rye,
121 r~rie St .. Owtogo,

:n

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.

Y.
Y.

Conklin !toad, Conklin. N. Y.
11 Garlit•ld Av~ .. Endicott, N. Y.
Ou le he~ A \"l'.. l'oughkcC'p?iic. N . Y.
4:l Cla1·k St., Vraminghnm, Ma-;~.

315 Jackson, Ave., Susqud1anna, Pa.

�1224 Ave. "V". Brooklyn, N.
2 Sand St., Afton. N.
32-1 Robbie A ve .. Endicott, N .
61 El·li·ed1t&lt;' St.. Ilini:hamto n. N .
5 Cnth&lt;'rirw St.. V&lt;'~Lal, N

Callahan. Thomas G.
Callen. Rebert J.
Callro. Alfonso
Campbell. Clarence E.
Campbell, Elwood

Carc.•y, Jim
Ca1ey. John J .

Ca&gt;amo, Anthony R.
Caster ton. Clifford
Catanese, Ralph R
Cecilian. Janw . Sr
C~!onn.,

Cr&lt;'\(·lini:, Jt11bert
Critn&gt;..,, Jo l'J) r
Cronin, Jame~ R

G7 Uc&gt;t-•th&lt;H'&lt;'n St., Uinghamt.u n, N . Y.
Tully. N Y.
51~ Monti:omn y St.. M idd letow n, N. Y .
408 lkthl&lt;·h&lt;'m l'ik&lt;', l'hilnddph in, Pa.
~ Fn•lcrick St., J ohnson City, N Y.

Carl. ll&lt;'t!Y J &lt;'nn
Carlton . Gror1te 0.
Carroll, Irving
Cnn;on. Robert
Car y. Leo

Frank

CnM&gt;k .... Willium

Crosby. Th&lt;"Philu• A.

156 West !14th St.. N&lt;'w Yo r k City.
11 Florl:nce Ave., Binghnmto n.
1 Orchard St.. Sufkrn.
2538 Harton Ave., i:il-ht•n•'&lt;'llldy,
13~ llnH1k•lnlt• Av&lt;• .. IW.·h&lt;'&lt;tt•r.

N
N.
N
N.
N

Y.

Crumb, Owt·n

Y.
Y.
Y.

\ruty,

R. D. I, F:ndicott,
903 North St.. Endi &lt;"oll.
125 Ilnkn St... Johnson City.
10 Church St., Ilinglrnml.o n,
Maple A ve .. N l'wn r k Valll'Y.

N.
N
N
N.
N

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Ccrnnk, Edward
Ceru llo. J os&lt;-1&gt;h S.
Chaml)('rln in, J ohn
Chambt:da in. Philip
Champne~-. Gordon C.

63 Broad St., Binghamto n,
Chapmnn, Ft·un&lt;'is 1':.dwarcl
37 C. F J . nlvd.. Johnson City.
Chai.muck , Donalt!
41 3 Arthur Ave.. t; ndi«otl.
Chermak, Eu1ten• JI.
it I Walton Aw .. N&lt;•w York City,
Ch.-rt.ok. Kt•nn•l.h
634 Jlrondway. Pat&lt;•r on,
Che~t,•r, El hot S.

Cino tti, Ernest
Citron, Martjn
Clapham, James
Clurk. Donald
Clark, DouR"las W .

Y

N. Y.

N. Y
N. Y
N Y.
N J.

Cuillt•ri&lt;'r, Roland
Curat..olo, .l(lt'
l&gt;an&gt;luk, Ni.-holas

n· Apr il&lt;•.

Daw. 011, Shi rlt&gt;Y

204 Odell A ve.. Endicott, N. Y.
3924 Clarendon Road. Urook ly n , N. Y.
94 Wa!.l'r St. , llin1thamt. on, N. Y.
29 Johnson A ve., llin1thamto n, N. Y .
103 C le,·ehind Ave .. Endicott

DeLon•nzo . Pau1 P .
Dennis, Richard V.
!Nrric k, Cyril J.
D'Esli. H t•ni y
!)et.rick. Ue rnnrd

c.

Y.

Uicff&lt;onbach, Charle&lt; E .

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y

D ino. M ichru.'J

Clugstone, James Leer
Cobb, John, Jr.
Cody. Lt.&gt;0
Cohn, Jam""
Cole, Howard

34 Way St.. lh nichamt.on ,
71 Clifton Illvd .. Uinghamt.on.
18 Gl'orl(e St., H10Khnmt on.
21 Orchard Road, Larchmon t,
59 Mc!ltoster St., Owt'gO,

N. Y.
N . Y.
N . Y.
N Y.
N. Y.

Coleman, Edward
Collin11wo od, Bernard
Comfort, William
Conklin, Elaine
Conklin. Jeannine

410 Ostranckr A'•·· Ri,·crhcad ,
2111 Lincoln Ave .. Endicott,
Luca. S t., G ree ne.
15 Hooper Road. J ohnson C ity,
R . D . I. Apalac hin.

N
N.
N.
N.
N.

Conroe, B yron
Conk, Frederick
Cook, Holu111l
Cook. Vi..,·ian
Cooia·r , Jamt.•-; G

110 Walnut St.. llini;hamto n.
n Grand Ave .. Johnson City,
23 Par!. SL. Cortland.
13 Bt•aC'on St.. H1n1r:hamton,
179 MatLhl'WS Sl., llinv.hamt.o n ,

N
N.
N
N ..
N.

N . J.
Ct10n.
N Y
N Y.
N Y

N
N
N
N.
N

26 Hill A v&lt;'., F.ndicott.
35?; y,..,t.nl lll•ad. V&lt;•atal.
162 Oak SL. llinicllamlo n,
155 l...nur&lt;•l Ave., Binghamto n,
20 Mill&lt;'r St .. llin1thamt.o n.

N.
N
N.
N
N

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

506 Davia A v(' .. Endicott.
265 K Gene&gt;&lt;~"' St., Auburn.
HPI.! Carhart Avt' .. UinJ:humW n.
6!1 Madi,on St • Corllrtnd.
106 Madison A,c., E&lt;lnicolt..

N
N.
N.
N.
N

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Jinx 2'1. Colley, l'a.
27 Holland St .. lhm:hnmto n. N Y .
603 Florene&lt;• St., F;ndiroll.. N Y.
346 Mtun St.. 1.ak ~ !'lucid, N. Y
223 llrrmond A vr .. ~:ndicolt., N Y.

Dixon. Rlchnrd
Dolan, Robt:' rt M.
Donatelli, Nicholas A .
Donnelly, f!.o1&lt;er
Donovan, Cf'rltr1ote W., Jr.
Donovan. Jame?J l...

10 Garde n St.. Walton.
629 W Gray St.. ~:lrm rn ,
H Frunt S t .. llini:hnmto n.
Crl'Stmont Hond. llmgh nmton,

Donovan. Robert F
Dopp&lt;'I, H arold W.

12~

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y
Y.

Dove. Albert
Doyle, Gt&gt;011&lt;&lt;'
Druker. Robert
Duda, An ne
UufTy. J am,,

309 Adamo A"' • Endicott,
325 lliv&lt;'Tllide Drrvc. Hinl(hamto n,
119 Crt'Stmo nt Road. IlmKhamt.o11 ,
272 East SL. 1''.to&gt;t.ham11uin.
22 B••nnetL A v~ .. llin1thn mt.o n ,

Y
Y.
Y.
Y ..
Y.

l)uml&gt;l1·t... n. J11ck
Dunk lo~. K••ith
J)outn ln
1'~""111

Dunn. c;..•rtrud(•

131

Y.
\"

84 Cr&lt;"slmonl !toad. Binghamto n, N . Y.
R D. l , Endi&lt;'oll. N . Y .

Dcxh&lt;'1mcr . HoberL
Dexter. Jam&lt;'&gt;! E.
Dic kt•rso n, l&lt;obcrl J

Dunn ,

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y

S t..onchc..•nirt'. Albany, N Y
9 Sturc"'vun l St.. JuhnS&lt;&gt;n C ity. N. Y.

Oe\\('y, Paul

{)11n11,

Y

22 1 Ouk II ill Avt•. 1':11ch rott. N. Y.

Oe Wan, Conrad

519 Waw r ly St.. Wuvl'rly, N.
Clarke, Edwin
64 Oak S t .. llini;hamto n. N
Cleary, RobcrL
329 Odell A ve.. Endicott. N.
Clemt'nte, Alber t S.
I.. N.
Cline. Richard 75-28 651.h Drive, W est Fo1·&lt;'St Hills. L.
Cincinnatu s, N .
Clinton. Ric hard E.

208 Wayne St.. Endwell.
531 v~.,.La l Road, Ve..tal,
...... Easl Ri ver Road. Wc• t llcncrictt.a .
llox 94, Ua inb r idKe.
309 Clara St . Endicott.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Y.

I 4 Gnte St.. Pou•i:hki·t·p~1P, N
17 Front St. V,·:-.tal. N

flet•ht•rw, 1Ul1mond

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Earl S.
Harold R.
.RobcrL '!I·
Thomas J .
William L.

N
N
N
N.
N

310 Ea•l R iv&lt;'rsick i)rivc, Oh•an, N . Y.
2 l1001wr l!l111d, 1-:nclwC'll, N Y
103!1 0«&lt;•an l'urk way, Brooklyn, N Y
21 S. Wt"'t S t , AllC'nlown . !'a.
2 1S SL Charll'S SL, Juhn,on Cuy. N Y.

Davi"'· Ho l•·rt 11 .
l)a,·iN. William
Davi._, l...awrt'Ol'l"
l&gt;avis, ~hc•ldon

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Clark,
Clark.
Clark,
C la rk,
Clark,

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

ZJ:~

l)avidto.un. lhur&lt;.• Dow
l&gt;a\'it ~. Jiu\\ nrd

Oerk&lt;•r, G1'011&lt;e
t'&gt;t.."t"kcr. Normau
Decker, n.aymond

N.
N
N.
N.
N

lfift W. 1.akt.• R•I., G(·nt~l'O, N Y
:IJ McKrnh·y .\ \(', i-;nclh·ntt. N Y
115 1':n.•l 72 St. N&lt;•w Yo1·k City, N Y

Jcmnnc

llarplno. Roy
Davt•nporl . ~iolnnJ.t;t.•

Ut• Ht •nt&gt;d ittiH, Fr.111k

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Palh'nburs: :.
101 Ml. l'IC'IU!Rnt St.. D.-rby.
202 W . Washingto n Av!'.. Elmira,
20 HofTmnn A vt•. y ,.,.1.al,
111 Jt.'j&lt;~ut Sl.. S&lt;·h~ne&lt;·tu.ty.

Stamford,
283 Clint.on St. llinghum" "'·
156 Grund A vt.·. John ...on City,
207 N. 11.oos&lt;•v••ll. AH•.. 1';nchrott.
152 Brond Avt,o., Hnuchnmt.o n

ft~d\\Rnl

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

24 $prim: St., Cuba.
866 r:l•mcre P lace, The llronx,
South Ot.., clic.
22 Garfield A ve .. Endicott.
23 G rant Ave., Endicott,

Childs, William
Chodos, Edward
Church, Bernal
Chwalow, Dnvid
Cialeo, Joseph F.

4 'h llt'llt'VU&lt;' A\•t'.. llin1thamt.o n,
14 Vi ridl St.. B1n1thnmt.on,
1!1 1 L1b&lt;•rly St., J.&lt;:ndirolt.
9.tfi v~·~lnl. Ave.. BinKhHmtA&gt;n.
177 Crnry Ave-., JhnJ!hamto n ,

Cou"t'. Norman R .
Craft. Delwt'rt
CrnPo. Hirhn n l J .
Crawford. Claude. Jr.
Crawford. J ohn I.I.

311 Dorn Ave., llounil Broo k. N. J .
24i Fro n t St .. Uin1tham ton, N Y.
5 De rby Av&lt;'.. Aubum, N. Y.
184 Broad St.. Schuylen·i llc. N. Y .
114 Robin•on St., BinR:hamt on, N Y.

Campbell, James
Cnnny. Jam&lt;'• J.
Ca1&gt;&lt;&gt;ui. John

9 J'lcasant CL Drive, Ilinghamto n,
24 E~&lt;&gt;wood Rortd. Binghamto n,
UM Main St., Binghamto n.
193 N . Baldwin St.., John&amp;0n City,
304 Dwir:ht. Avl'., J.&lt;:ndicolt.

Cordrey, Glen
Conc•ll, Marilyn
Cosby, Chari""
Cot.cher. G&lt;'Or1te
Courtrighl , Grant

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N
N
N
N

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y

Mnnch,•slc r l(omJ PouJ,:hkt"&lt;'l)sl&lt;', N. Y.

N Y.
N . Y.
N. Y.
Mn"'"·
N Y

:1 ll:mlin1t Av1·. v..,.u.1. N
w.,.,lu ~ ms:-.

Y.

l'a
ai?U M1u11 ~t., Hrn~hamtnn. N \
25 C• .. •r.:e St• O"-t'g'o, N \'.
lL lo'. 0 .. Ml)nt.gomt•l"y, N Y.
S4"l·und St,

�104-25 88th Ave., Richmond Hill,
Duntl&lt;'Y, Frank E., Jr.
4 93 Glenwood Ave., Rochest&lt;'r,
DurhRm, Charil'&gt;&lt; B.
Cadosia,
Dul"lnnd, Alb&lt;'rt
318 W. 104th St., New York City.
Dwc•rt•s, Dorothy
45 Monr()(' Ave., Larchmont.
Dyer, J ohn
162 Brnnd Ave., Binghamton,
R. D. 1, Deposit,
R. D . 1, De1&gt;&lt;&gt;•it.
Ve!!tal Center,
Box 282, Endwell,

Earley, Dorothy
ERrly, Julia
Enrly, Robert
F.a..ton, Burt
Elderkin, Vernon, Jr.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.

Falbo, Samu&lt;'I
Fallun, J ohn
Farb&lt;•r, William

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.

Ferru.ru, Jamt."8

Gorman William 1'...
Goudey. Mimi

N. Y.

Goundry, Diune

N. Y.
N. Y.

Grabowski, Ch&lt;'Ster W .
Gl'anl, Laurence
GrlUls, Sally D.

19 S&lt;1uire• Av&lt;•.. Endicott,
ll Jone• St., Din1&lt;hamt.on,
R. D. 2, Vcslal,
255 Court St., Binghamton.
'11 Crestmont Road, BinKhamt.on,

N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N

Y.

Finkel•tein, L&lt;•norc
Flnnascun, Gernld
Flynn, Richard
Fuley, Edward M.
Ford." Jamt'H

71 Cn.,;tmont Road. Binghamton,
Greene,
Hollins St.. Uinghn.mton,
122 Cho11in SL, Bin1ehamton.
317 Front SL . Owego,

N. Y.
N. Y .

Grc'f&lt;ory, Myron E.
Grimm, Everett. J.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Grul&gt;ow, Alan

Grt.'\!O, Carolyn Mayer

Grt."t'n, Dolor-..~

O•car, J .. J r.
Grc-en , Ralph V.

Cn~·n,

790 N. Charlott&lt;· St. Pottstown Pa.

ll nic1&lt;erty, Richard E.
Hall, Jack 0.
Halliday, Herber~
Hamann, Rit•hurd K

Gnh:. Le

N
N.
N.
N
Chcnant:o Brid).(t'. N

1Ji-;

R. ll

Gnltu).:ht..'r, Jnrnts T.
Gulln~h1.:r,

lh&gt;lH•rt
{;anl·~. ,..\nthot1)' J ,
Gutlocl... lkrna1 d G.
{;l\rmu.n, Duvi&lt;l

Has.~.

2!&gt;

Hcrbt•1·t.

Hnd"·ll. Guy T.
llafler, Hany A.
llUICJ(Crty, John P.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

l, Ch\.•nangu l-'ork . N Y.
St.. BinJthamt.un N. Y.
Jun~ St .. ~:ndicott. N. Y.

30 ltivervicw Av&lt;' .. Uinghamt.on.
108 Vincent SL, llinl(hamlon.
93 Grand Blvd., Hinghamton,
41 Adams St., Brn1:hamton,
2~3 \I" Cou rt SL, Bin1ehamlon,
73 Benncll Ave .. Binghamton,
26 lknnett Ave., Binghamton,
26 Brookfield Road, Bin1ehamton,
74 Cuok Sl., Johnson C ity,
134 Monroe Ave., Brock1&gt;0rt,

N. Y.
N. Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.

Y.
Y.
Y.

Y.

132a Soulh Broad St., Norwich, N. Y.
32 Schiller St., Bin1:humt.on, N. Y.

244 7U1 SL, Renova, Pa.
108 W. Wendell St., Endicott, N . Y.
1305 E. Main !:'t., Endicoll, N. Y .
525 Paden SL, Endicott, N. Y.
203 Cl,•velaml Avt•., Endicott., N. Y.

Fox Hobl•rt
Fn.·nrh Robt!rt
Frit·nd Hob&lt;•rt
Frat;(;, Vt•rt•&lt;'n C.
Fnynl, l'aul I'.

Jtill Ri'".._.r\ii(•v.· Dri\"t•, Endicou.
It ll. 2, Jumt·•tuwn,
5 Schultz St., Port Jt•rvi,.
41~1 N. Mt.:Kinl('} AH: .. Jo:ndicott,

Harris. N. Y.

Outlook Farm, Windsor, N. Y.
605 R""8 SL, Coudcr.1l0rt.. Pa.
4 Stone SL, llinghumton, N. Y.

Bullis !toad Marilin, N. Y.
68 W. Main St., Coble!kill, N. Y.

Gullbor1e. William H.

C. H..rhcrt

1145 Vest.al Av&lt;·., Uin1ehamt.on, N. Y.

8!» PcnnKylvunia Avl•., Somervil le, 'Ma.'iS

1025 i-;x•.'t"•r A\•c., W. Pilt.t:;ton, Pa.
!Oil Nurth St., ~;ndicott. N. Y.
114 Bernice St. Johnson City N. Y.
33 Ja.:kson Ave. Endicott N. Y.
Whitn&lt;·y Point N. Y.

Fr~,

Y.
Y.
Y.

Gul'rdat, David E .
Guernsey, Charles R.

Fun•man, John ll.
Fon•st, Ral11h
Furmanek, \\ 11lium L.
Fowlt•r John M
Fox Hichard

Fulh·r, Juhn
Fut mun. f'rttnk l\1.
(;utlo .. Nt~Hi"·

N. Y.

Y.
Y

N. Y.
N. Y.

61 McMuskr St,. Bath. N. Y.
1910 K Main St., ~:ndicutt, N Y.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

26 Massachw;elts Ave., Juhnson City, N
88 Cre!&lt;tmont Houd, BinJ(humton. N.
N &lt;•wark VnllPy, N.
5 Mildred A w., Binghamt.on. N.
1
204 '.: l'ro&lt;p&lt;.&gt;ct St.. F:ndicott. N.

Golden, Slanley D.
Goldfurh. Kenneth
Goldschmidt., ln1ee
Go&lt;&gt;denouRh. Franc&lt;'ll I.
l.orman, Walter

2tl Br~w!-.ll.•r SL John:-,on City N. Y.
24i \\"uds''-"orlh Avt!. Nl•w York City N Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

F&lt;·tcho Joseph,
F1et1ll-r, William
l"ilctto, Frank J.
flnkcl•tein, J uk'll

F t:rrnri, Mary A.

4 Clay St.• V&lt;11tul,
22 Raiford Rond, Vt"St.al,
22 Huiford Road. Vr..lal.
47:1 17th St... Brooklyn.
34 Fowl1•r Ave .. Port Jervis,

II McDonald A vf!., UinJ(humt.&lt;m N.
Gilman, John
72 Tompkins SL, Binghamton, N.
Giunt.a. Agatino Gio,anni
35 ~;n&lt;li cott. Av&lt;'.. John&gt;-011 City, N.
Glanville. Robl, r L
4 Alkndnlt• Road, Bin1&lt;hamton, N .
Glazier. Raymond A.
60 Farr A ve., Juhnsun Cily, N.
Gleason, Albert. C.
Glover. Donald K.
Glover, W. Donn.Id
Gober Stephen R.
Godwin, Gl&lt;'nn G.
Gt1ldbcrg, Erwin

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

336 Clint.on St., llinp;hnmt.on.
38 1" Moeller St., Binghamton,
i9 Knt•eland Ave .. Uin.cha.mton.
214 Wayne St.. Mexico,
13 Kni1eht. Ave., Endicoll,

Fl'&lt;lukt', John
~-einbcrg, Phillip
Feldman , Sylvia R.
fo"t.•nner, Alvin

Y.

Gilg, Joseph C.
Gilliam, l': mmn M.
t.Hham. Loren 0.
Gillie&gt;;. Richard J.
Gillson, Thomas L.

128 W . Wt•ndcll St., Endicott., N. Y.
104 Grant Av&lt;'., Endicott, N. Y.
54 llospilal St., Carbondal&lt;'. Pa.
59 Main SL, Vestal, N. Y.
991 PrC!lident St., Brooklyn, N. Y.

EverU!, William

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N. Y.
N .Y.
Mass.
N. Y.
N. Y.

1700 Tracy SL, Endicott.
862 E. 15th St.. Brooklyn,
11 Mary St., llinghamt.on,
110 E. Franklin St., Endicott,
308 W. Main St., Endicott.

FnirbrothC'r, E. Jean

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

N. Y.

N. Y.

N. Y.

311 S. Franklin St.. Walkins Glen, N.
Ellison, William
Ellner, Conratl 6~-12 Yellowstone Blvd .. Forest Hills, L I , N.
6 Evans St., Binghamton, N.
Emilio, Daniel J.
6 Evnns St., Bi1&lt;nhamton. N.
Emilio, Henry D.
Lisle, N.
Ensi1&lt;n , H ugh
Erickson, L ennart N.
E~errnan. Edward
F.•wurthy, Jos&lt;'Ph W.
Evans, Howard H.
Evan., Thonins W.

Binghaml&lt;m.
Binghnmt.o n.
Binghamton,
Binghamton,
St., Endicott,

120 Hudson A ve., Nedrow, N. Y.
Gl'rman, Ro!x&gt;rt W.
109 M ilan A ve., F;ndicolt, N. Y.
Giarusso. Vinrcnt J.
83-52 Talbot St.., Kew Gardens, J.. I., N. Y.
Gibbs. Ma rjorie S.
R. D. 6, Lancasll.'r, Pa.
Gibbs Richuccl
317 Cherry St., Eli,.a.Jx·th, N. Y.
Gildea, ~:d"ard J.

N. Y.
N. Y.

514 Vestal Rond, Ve;tal,
14 N&lt;'ahwa Pinc&lt;'. Oneonta,
783 D" ighl Avf.'., Holyoke,
97 Front St., Vestal.
Box 28, Trian1de.

ElclrNI, Marilyn
Eldn·d. On·n
Elkins. Frank
!':Iii,., D. Bruce
Ellison. Greydon

33 Fayclle St.,
42 Crary A Vf•.,
42 Crary Ave.,
65 llnld win St.,
201 K Main

Garson, Edith Jane
Gavin Edwnrd M .
Gavin, Thomns J.
Gcis&lt;'r, Alan II .
C1·nt, Thomlll! W ., Jr.

Y.
Y.

Hannk , Willium

llancoek, Curlylc
Hnuitchak, lh.-rnard
A lll'n C.
Jlarlo{rt:aV&lt;•tt, Jumc.:s
Harold!'On, (;u:-,

Jlanst·n

llurrinf..."'ton, Gt..•on:e-

)1un~t.·ll

llartman,

Ga&lt;

liu~tings,

:!:\ Crossmon St, Al\•Xnndria Ua}, N. Y.
6 .I:::otun Pla&lt;.·c. llinKhamt.on, N. Y.

132

ltobcn.

ltolx·rt J .
Ila} man. Rolwrl C.
llt•a\int,_• T, Jttmt·~

C.

509 River Tt'rrnn• ~~nd i&lt;'&lt;1t.t,
Box 38, Maine,
It. D. I. Owe1:0.
20!1 Lincoln Ave. Dunkirk.
33 C. F. J. lllvd .. John•un City,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y
Y.
Y.

Y.
Y.

8 Arthur St.., llin1:hamt.un, N. Y.
R. D. I. Bruck It y. Pa.
205 Chc..-gtnut Avt•., Ml•tu&lt;"ht.•n, N . .J.
5:1 ~.uclid Avt• .. W"1'twood, N. J.
105 Cypr&lt;''" Sl., Westwood, N. J.
407

~:.

Franklin St.,

~;ndicotl.

N. Y.

tiH J&lt;'ronl. St.. Owej.~O. N. Y.

79 Front SL, Bim:hamt.on, N. Y.
5:;2 l'ntll•n St . Endicotl.. N. Y.
111 Mt·Kinlt•y Ave. Endicott, N. Y.

�2806 Albany St.. Scheneetad y,
160 W. 95th St .. New York City,
92-29 7ith St... Woodhave n,
... .... 414 Squi r &lt;'S Ave .. Endicott,
R1•d C r &lt;'ck.

Hebenstree t, William
Heimann , John
Heinsohn, George H.
Herciga, William C.
Heron, John J., Jr.

R. D. 1, Ilrookfi&lt;•ld RD., Northport N. Y.
Hencr, Richard P.
116 Jeffen«m Ave .. Endicott. N. Y.
Heyman, Al vin
3403 f'rcdcrirk St.. Endwell, N. Y.
Hill, Franklin Guilford
26 Division St., Ilinl(hamto n, N. Y.
Hilliard, Clayton Paul
832 W. 3rd St., WilliamsPO rt, Pa.
Hinds, John W.
Hinman, Howard L.
Hoag, William R.
Hohn, Thomns J .
Holl, Robert E.
Hood, Rob&lt;&gt;rt E.

67 Ha rrison Avc .. Lock r&gt;&lt;&gt; rt, N. Y .
36 Harrison St., John,on City, N. Y.
31 Orchard Av&lt;o., Johnson City, N. Y.
Conklin Road. llin1~hnmton. N Y.
Main St., Mildred, l'a.

H ood, Robert K.
Hopkin•, Philip L.
Horko tt. G&lt;"orge
H orkoll, John
Horscy, Willinm Jl.

97 F t'Ont St.. 0w&lt;'it0. N. Y.
6 Bunks St.. Cortland. N. Y.
35 Gl· rnrd Ave., Binghamto n, N Y.
60 GC"rnrd A ve., Binghamto n. N. Y.
424 Swarthmort.&gt; Av&lt;!., Swarthmo re, Pu.

9 Seminary A ve . . Bina.rhamt.an,
108 Park Pine&lt;•. Wnv1•rly,
259 II rand SL, ~;rmiru,
2 Herk1•loy A vo., Yonkt•r.,
322 Prosp«t St.., lli11i.:ham1&lt;1n.

Knsmer. Julian F.
Keal, William
Kcc. Philip G.. Jr.
Kcigh1·r. Jack
Kellam, Rob&lt;•rt

18 1 St&lt;•lln ((ond, llini.:haml&lt; in. N Y.
240 Whiw !lul l ltoad, All~rny. N. Y .
Y
8~4 0 1•i!fin l'urkw,.y, B n&gt;0klyn. N
15 LonKvic•w Road. J.ivi n1{Nton. N . J.
5~ Main St.. ll1ni.:hnml on. N . Y.

Kt.)mp, f~Uftt.'nc• T.
h.••nnl'dy, F r&lt;'&lt;leri("k L.
K&lt;nncdy, Robert P.
Kt..\()UKh, Frum·is
Kt•re.,t&lt;"-S, 1-: . Mark

577 Muin St .. Ow&lt;'!&lt;o. N Y.
\V aymnrt. Pa.
726 S. Wayne St .. l..ewi,town , ra.
:rn Lincoln Av{'.. H inghumt.on . N. Y.
44 S. SnruC&lt;" St .. Mt. Cnmwl. J&gt;n_

N.
N
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Kline. H erberl A .
Klini.:man, Jack D.
Klinko. Donald I'.
Klinko, Robert K
Ko..-.st. ~~dwanl

Hudda, Hd&lt;"n B.
Hudy. Mal'l!aret
llue ne r. Elizabeth
llunl'crfor d. Clark L
Hunt, John

5 Brady St.. Johnson City.
8 Seymour A,c., lhnithanl(.o n.
R:l Lu, k SL. Johm1on City.
W1'SL ~: nJ Ave., llinghumto n,
1103 Monroe St.. Endicott,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N

Y.

Kohn•t.am, Rob&lt;•rt S.
KolO$ki. Rnb&lt;•rt S.
Kom1nus, Pnu l
Konik. John C.
Kostun. Mnry

Ian none,

J o~eJ.&gt; h

V.

Ingraham. Roh•:rt
lngr~sia, Sulvalor&lt;•

JackM&gt;n, R1drnrd J1tmt"S

N.
N
N.
N.
N.

.lnm~. Arlin(•
Jam&lt;'&gt;&lt;, John A .
Ja.mie~on . .Joh11 ll.
Jnmie-;.on. Jo:..tt&gt;h JI
Jash.•lonis. lh·dwi~ J.

56 Harrison ~t.. Johnson Cit)~.
:i09 8. Lib&lt;·rly Avt·, Endicott.
2tr) Main St., Binghamto n.
1:! llak"r St . Johnson City.
5 l&gt;own~ Ave. . Binschnmlo n,

l\
N
N

Jennings, \Vurrt'n 0., Jr. 629 Ch(&gt;namto SL. lh n~hamton,
4005 llhnrn St.., F.lmhun&lt;t. L. I .
Jimc1wz, M1ma C.
30l Glt•n Av&lt;o,, Port. ClH·~tcr.
Johan~(•n, Howard
141 ll udson St., Johnson Cit)'.
Johnson. Jnmt·:-;. E.
111 Filmor'-' A\'t• .. 1:-:ndiroll,
John~on, Vir~dnin t..
John .... ton,

John~tone. James
Jon~.

Dori:-;

Jont·~.

ll c.mry 1-:.

Jon" . Riehnrcl
Jon&lt;«, Thomnx
Jon(."'i, \Villium
Jordan. Jam&lt;.,.
JoS&lt;•fth Donald

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Joycc. Clcm«nt V.
Jubin, Arthur
J urenu. Loul-;

ltttlc. . l.eo
Kallielw. 1\rlhur A,

328 Squi l'&lt;'S A v1•., ~:ndirott,
107 llill A v.-.. lfodicotl.
141 Matthews St.. lhughaml.u n.
237 Grand Av&lt;'., J oh nson City,
405 K 237 St., Nt•w York City,

Y
Y.
N. Y.
N Y.
N. Y.

405 K 237th St.. N,·w York City,
K1"0(lst('r, Ow~n A.
65 Cnrlton St.. Johnson City,
Ku .. harek, William W.
35 Haught.on SL. \Vor,·t•!d..t.•r ,
Kurhin"ka.'i, \Vlllinm W.
304 C linton St., lli nl(hnmton,
Kulik. Marion
304 Clin1&lt;1n St... llini.:hamto n.
Kuhk, Nochola.;

N . Y.
N. Y

N Y.
N. Y.

I.akin. f!ov:cr E.
1.akom&lt;'&lt;'.. Olga
I.amh. Putri1·ia
1-MlnlJl man. n.ugcr
Lanclon. llownrd A

Kwrn.tkow~k1,

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

N.

G.
A.
R
J.

N . Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Kuru.tnick , Sll-1&gt;h••n
Kust:.L.-;, N icholas L .
h.ustog, Will1n m G.
Kust..ilM, Willinm J.

7 L&lt;•wi., St.. Vt'Stal. N. Y.

P.

L.;.l..,..kow:-.ki, AJl.&gt;t•rt

N

Y.

N

Y.

LnutJP1'. Jaows II.
l.tLUlh·r, LamlH.'rt D .

Ll'ary, John J .. Jr.
1.c Buron. Ruh&lt;•rt. I&gt;.
Lc.'tlt•rfr1 rad, Robert

Y.

L•·frh('(· k . i\.lt•xan&lt;kr
l.t.;"\'il.l, 1.A.'0111ll"&lt;l ll.
J.t'\\ 1~. John \V.

12 lliv:..Jow St., llinv:hamto n. N
fi HiKhlnnd A\',&gt;., Lnkt! Pia ·id ~
11 Vincinia. Av&lt;... Johrh.on Cily. N
I Julian St.. Bini.:hamto n. N
507 Ma1n St .. Pou ..thlwt'P!'l.H!, N .

Y

Y.
Y

1.tn114 I. Ruh•h W
L 1~....,n.

Y

133

r&lt;.u:.-dl M .

M AM.

N . Y.
N Y.

R7 SmiLh St.. PouJ!hk,"('tHic, N
1r, Mont.c.·lnff A v,• . . But.uvia. N
J lh•ll,·vu&lt;.• A\it'., Bim:hnmt. on, N

V.

Y.
Y.

12 1 Wl'st St.. Johnson City, N. Y .
642 Ch&lt;•nuns:o St. Port Dkkuuw~m. N Y .
!)72 Ctwnan'-!o St .. BinKhum t.on. N Y.

Lllthum. Kc nn&lt;•th II , Jr.

N J.
N . Y.
N. Y.

N

N

7GH Sl.."l.h• St.. BiriJ.:hnmt.on , N. Y.
4fi Bax t.t•r St. Binl{hamt. on, N Y.

I.arham, J am,"8; fo;.
Larko. Jusc1&gt;h f'.
Laltu10, Rol.k•rt

Y.
\".

Y
Y..

N
N

254 Ra ih·o«d AV&lt;' .. S&lt;-rnnton, P u .
142 M antuon. Poughk..""Cpsic, .N Y .

1::-;dwnrd R..

ll&lt;''erly l'laee. John-on City, N
27 Endicott A"&lt;'-. Johnl')on Cit.)', N
iSO ChPnanm&gt; St.. Bin..:hnmtn n,
S Con,.cdon Phlct,, Binj.thnmto n,
1.:7 Ddst•a Drin·, \V():'\tvillc.
1 J.I lknnett St.. Ho1 ncll.
113 Tillo~on St.. ('n11nntln1v:ua,

27 I.imfrn St.. Biu~i;humt.on. N . V.
7 l~tnnn St.. Bini:hamto n. N. Y.

l $&lt;oym our St.. Binghumt.o n,
R. I&gt;. 3. lhni.:hamt on.
1008 Mon roe Si.... ~;n.ii..ott.
39 Bloominudull' Av(• .. (;lovcnw illc.
169 Pros1&gt;«ct St.. llin~hamt.on,

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
N. Y.

N

:l2 Curtis Pinet.•. FH·donia, N. Y.
3-;a2 UinH.'Y Av(• _, !-it"runt.on. Pu.

Jon{'S, David N.

1617 Riv('rvit•w J)riv\', t:ndit·ott, N . Y.
A v&lt;• .. Johm;on City, N Y'.
27 Lind&lt;·n SL. BinJthamt. on, N . Y.

M R!-.~ac-hus&lt;'tls

Kro&lt;1{('r. Ht•nry ..

,J.

Thoma~

1!&gt;5

K0&gt;1tyu m , John
Kot.chick. J ohn (,., Jr.
Koury, Geors.t(' E.
K rC'w8Qn, Nt'il

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N ..Y
N. Y.

2102 Rh en:icw Uri\'t'. Enclic-ott.
16 Jt"ffor"°n Ave.. Bini.:humto n,
4U lleh•n St .. llin1drnmto n.
30 Th&lt;..• Arena. B111){hamton.
21~ Mtuli wn A'"'" EnJirott.

Isbnn, Rol&gt;&lt;•rt
Ives , Rkhnrd A.
Ivory, Thomas H.
Jacoby, Andn·w

66 Cr&lt;K"kcr Av••., J ohnKon C it y, N . Y.
Cincinnnlu. .'i. N . Y.

J\in$!', Cordon 0.

Cincinnatu s.
R. 0. 2. V&lt;"&lt;tal,
30 Jul iard St., Bainbridge ,
69 Dal&lt;lwin St, Johnson City,
82 Prosvt.•1:t. St., Uinghnmt.o n,

104 Crock~r Avc .. Johnson City,
113 Nuntkokc Av&lt;'., Endicott,
505 F lot l'll CC St.. Endicott,
Gn:&gt;.t.•nc.
124-10-103 A,.,., Richmond Hill.

316 lwbin-.1n St.. lli11i.:hamt on. N. Y.
213 Front St., Jlinv:hamto11, N. Y.

Kess)('r, Barbara. A . T.
Killam, G&lt;"rul&lt;l R.
Kindt, William H .

Hotchkiss. W illiam J.
Houseknec ht, Karl
Howe, RuSRcll
llrici1rn, Edward
Hudak. John

Hurlburt, Richard B.
laCO\'Clli, Guido

9 F'ran k St., JhnghamtJ m, N. Y .

Kt•r:stt'in. Harold

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N Y.
N. Y.
N. Y .
N Y.
N . Y.

Kan&lt;'. John R.
Knnku•. Rob&lt;-rt C.
l\ar. John J., Ji-.
Kar.&lt;, Char)1.,. J.

Kamp, Ilernnrd

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

92 Carrollton "'". t; lm1ru,
146 Laurd Av,... llinidtamto n,
l"b Cuurt. SL. Huudmml.o n.
368 Clinl.•m St, llini:haml&lt; m,
40 Mu ry SL. llini:homl&lt; m,
1&lt;;ds1:cwood l(nad, BinsdmmtJ m.
IZ .Madih(Ut A"'' . Endl&lt;·oll,
6:~ Mary St., lhr1t.~hamton,
31 Vnll&lt;.&gt;y St.., lli11d111mton,
2:17 W. Walnut St., J,onv: U.·ach,

1109 Monroe SL , ~:ndi&lt;'Ott.
29% ll&lt;'Clford A V&lt;'. llmoklyn,
22:~ Jl orw.·1• Avt• . , i'1llmyru.
16 Ba&lt;l&gt;:t'r St. t:nd t&lt;"olt,
37 Wenll'r l'urk , Hochc.tcr,

N
N
N
N
N

Y
Y.
Y.
Y
Y.

N
N
N
N.
N.

Y
Y.
Y.
Y
Y

N. Y

N

Y

N . J.

N. Y.
N Y.

�2 Bigelow St.. Binghamton. N . Y.
47 M urray St.. llinghamto n, N . Y.
25 Narwood St.. Johnson C it y , N . Y .
28 E. 32nd St.. lndianaPolis. Ind.
7 Garfield Ave .. Binghamton, N. Y.

LiU!, Joseph
Littlejohn, Harry
Livingston. Doris
Look. Francis
Loveland. Lawrence W.

30 Dedford Ave., Monticello.
603 S. Liberty A ve .. Endicott,
150 Park Ave.. D inghamt.on,
Campbell.
4 Mary St.• Vestal,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

M&lt;'ddaul(fl, Fran k D.
M&lt;!e, James Henry
Melinsky, William
Mercer, George L.
Merriam, John

I..owry, Alllltin C.
l ..owry, Donaldson, Jr.
Ludington, Lloyd
J.udka, Joseph M .
Ludlam, Walter

45 Front SL, Owego, N .
45 Front St., Ow&lt;~o. N.
Maine, N.
58 Acad.,my St., Johnson City, N.
16 Allen St., J ohnson City, N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

B&lt;Jx 343, Apalachin, N. Y.
Merrilce-s. David
106 Vest.al Road, Vest.al. N . Y.
Mersereau, B ert.am
825 S. Manor. Yo r k. Pa.
Meyers, Joseph
48 Schiller St.. Dinghamt.pn. N. Y.
Michalyshin. George
295 Centr a l Park W., New York City. N . Y.
Michel, Julian IL

Mc CafTrey,
M cCaffrey,
McCallum.
McCarthy,
McConnell,

Alfred A.
William
Richnrd
Hubcrt
Joan

Weot River Road, Oswego.
5 Sumner Ave .. J3inghnmton.
136 Smith St., Me rr ick. L. I..
124 Murray St.. Dimchnmton.
3204 Ma.rm• Ave .. Endwell,

N.
N.
N.
N.
'"·

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Miller, JoseJJh. Jr.
Miller, George
Miller. Lro
Mill~r. Robert
Miller. William E.

Carhart Ave .. Binghamton.
204 W&lt;'St Main St.. r:ndicott.
27 Liberty St.. Monticello,
2302 Muin St.. Endicott,
285 Main St.. Owt•go,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Mills, Raymond E.
Millstone. Donald M .
Minckl.,r. E lme r C.
Mislr&lt;'tta. Peter
Mitchell, Uruce K

Y.

Mohney, H&lt;'rl&gt;ert, Jr.

McCormack, William
McCormick. Harold H.
McCrnnor. Craig J.
McCusk&lt;•r , Edward F'.

McGt'ath, Lawrence

201 S. Wa.&lt;hingtno St.. Bingh amton, N

McGuire. Barbara
Mcllal&lt;'. Jam&lt;"' J.
McH&lt;•nkn, JNt.nO&lt;• I....
McMahon. Lawrence J.
?&gt;l&lt;'Mahon, William T.

Fr~dc•rick W .
Morgan. LcRt&gt;y W . Jr.

Y.

Morgan. Leslie P.
:-.!orrioon, 111&lt;'lville
Mowry, Jame~ R.
Mullan&lt;'. Daniel
Murphy. Alfred ....

Mack. John P.
32 New York Ave ...Johnson City,
Jl.fRck. Marion II. ( M rs.) 32 N&lt;•w Yorh Av~ .. Johnson City.
'.'vlnddon. John K
2:1 Way St.. llinghamt.on,
Mahar. Rolwrt
82 C:h,·stnut St, llinghamton.
'1uhcr, \\"ilham P.
S;) S. \Va~h1n~!"ton St.., Hinghamt.c1n,

N.
N.
N.
1'
N

Y.
Y.
Y
Y
Y.

Murphy, J . Willinm
Murphy, William T .
Murra.y, llar bnra J.
Murray, Robert J .
NH&lt;lham. David P.

~I nitwr&gt;,

llowu rd \\..

3t0 (~rant 1\Vt.· . . Jo;ndi&lt;.-oU.. N . Y
l'il'r&lt;'« St .. Hini:hamtun. N Y
Stuy\",••w.nt St . Uin.,dnunton, N Y

!'Vlakrt~. Thomtt..~

2~1

~lalih,

1a1 Ml\ttlwwl'&gt; St.• Binghamton . N

.John C .. Jr.
Midtbl" llt-rl&gt;&lt;·rt
\111n1tu~. Floyd
MannjnJ.f, Jo:.l'J&gt;h J.:.
Manho, Arthur
Marano. Anthony P.

Mar.:vu('\, Sum

Mnrknrinn.

\nlhnny

Marknrinn. gamut•I
'lllrkhnm, Wood c·.
\larko, Gt-or~t.·
Mnrtin. CcRnt~ L.

Nt.~umann .

St.. l-:11dirott. N. Y.

O N Lyon St.. l\auwia.
t:itl Viu I Avt·. Mt"&lt;.'futnics\'illt·,
1.;u Pitu- Sl. . l!in.cham t.on,
2200 K North St.. ~:ncJicott,

N. Y
N. Y.

Noland, Rolx•rta A.
1'orlon. GC'r:dd W.
Nut..i:•warc·. Harold
\;usom. Rfr·h.a.r d M.
Oates, Walter E.

218 Hill """· ~:nc.ficott. N. Y
9(; Cn..,.tn'lont Hoacl, Binghamton. N. Y

:!2 l«&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;!·\•t•lt Av&lt;'., ~;ndicott.
R. D. 2, illnghamwn.
~2 lh•ethoven St.. llin1ehaniton,
Martin, Raymuntl
421 Loder S t .. Wave rly.
Ma.~lt.~Ht.~r. Hn rol&lt;l W.
M.attht.•\\.'S, [)onnld J. i3 Pt•nnsylvnnia A\"t.&gt;., Bin){hamton.
406 McKinky Av&lt;' .. ~ndic.·ott..
2t) Bt·nnctt ..\,., , Binj.thamtuu,
18 1 :.: Stuy,·t...,nnt St . Bin'-!"hamurn.
l n ::;i Churlvs St.. Johnson &lt;.;it)-.

N.
N.
N.
N
N.

Arthur R.

N ..·wst.·hwander, Ward A.
Nichol. James
Nou.k~. VY-illiam

N. Y
N. Y.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N. Y.

.N. Y.

N. Y
N Y.
'vVh1tl\&lt;'Y Point, N. Y.

O' llrien. Le.Ji., ...
O'Connell, James 0.
U'(.;on nor. Donald J.
O'Connor. Joa n
O'Oay, John
O'KC&lt;•fe. Yvonn&lt;• M.
ol.,ndt•r. Edward S.
()Ivel". Don ald
O'Neill. Jo'&lt;•ph G., Jr.
O'Neill. Willinm R .. Jr.

134

N.
N.
N.
N.
N

Y
Y.
Y.

Y.
Y

N.
N.
N
N.
N.

Y
Y.
Y
Y.
Y.

13 Seminary A v&lt;' .. llinghamt.on. N. Y
19 L&lt;-wis SL, Johnson City, N. Y
635 4th SL. Niagara 1''alls, N. Y.
1256 Parkwood Wvd .. Schenectady. N . Y.
100 Peunsylvanra Av&lt;~ .. Cre:-;twood, N Y

Nt•umann. f:&lt;.'Org(' I•".

1&gt;1·1 Corli"s A"&lt;'·· Juhmmn City, N. Y
Is1 C.:orli~K Av(l., Johns.on City. N. Y
12 l5 l•'nmt St. H11uchamton, N l'.

'1urlin. Joyce
".\lnrtln, L-.·onnrcl L.

\\t\tlht•w•. John H.
Mnyer. \\'ilhttm C.
~tau.,•1. Mh:httt.•l
\lec1t1ther. ll&lt; vel"ly J.
~lt:akt.·r. Ct•onct.• K.

Y

7 B~·llt•\'\IC AH• .. Hnhch~unton. N. Y.
i 10;, ~\1onro&lt;.

301 Vestal A ve .• Vest.al.
705 C henango St.. Tlingh11mton,
R. D. J, l'ort Crane,
North Roan. Ueacon.
R. 0. 2, Waverly,

N&lt;•ilt•y. Uustwll A.
Nt·.Jam(". Sonia
N;·llissen, Clifford H.
~&lt;·nwth. Oolor&lt;'s I!;.
N&lt;·ulon, Hobert

~!)

..~htJka. Cht..&gt;sh'r Tl

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

304 North St.. Endicott. N . Y.
43 Olive St.. Johnson City. N. Y.
R . 0. I, Aft.on. N. Y
294 Robert SL. Elmira, N. Y
R. D. I, N &lt;'w Milford, Pu.

Morell, Prank J.

Y.
Y
\'.
'i.

.Macan, Pc.•tcr

641 W . Muin St.. Y.:ndkott.,
100 Avon dale !'ark. Roche;t&lt;•r.
R. D. l. Vestal,
1 15 JefT&lt;'n&lt;on A ve.. Endicott.
12 Shaver St.• Sodu.&lt;,

M orKnn,

N.
N
N
N.
N.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

216 Lester Ave .. John&lt;on City, N . Y.
245 W. 75th SL. New York City, N. Y.
54 Wa.&lt;h in;:-1.on Ave.. Endicott, N . Y .
243 W . 701.h St.. N ew York City. N. Y.
Lop..,,, Pa.

Moor&lt;!. John

S We&gt;t St.. Geneva, N. Y.
2506 Watson Tllvd.. ~:ndicott. N . Y.
94 Windsor l'lae&lt;" B r ooklyn. N. Y.
258 Main St., llinghamton. N Y.

407 K Mnin St.. 1'nclicotl,
:1 LinMn St.. Bin1thumt.on.
407 N. Dwight Ave., En&lt;licotl,
40 Conklin Av« .. Binghamton.
31 Spring For&lt;'St A\•e.. ll1nghamton,

McManis. Martha
M&lt;·Nair. Robert A.
M&lt;·Nutt. lwbert D.
Mahle. Willir.:n

54 U nion St.. Johnson City,
308 Dadg c r A'•e.• E ndicott.
511 Exchan11:e Ave.. Endicott,
22 Mathe r St.. Binghamtun.
. 96 Murray St.. Binghamton,

Michlik, Arlene
M idgley~ Frances
M id gley, Kenneth
Mikolasko. John
Mikulski. Edward

Lulkoski, Ralph S.
392 Prospect St.. Dinghamton, N. Y.
I.yl"1!, Dona.Id
188 Pennsylvania Ave., Binghamton, N. Y.
Lynch. Joseph
139-21 Foch Blvd., S. Ozone Park. L. I. , N. Y.
Lynch, Thomas V. Trailer Village, Oak Dale Road. J. C ., N. Y.
MacNeal, Stuart
R. 0. 3, Montrose. Pa.

3lli r'ult.on SL r:lmir.1.
75 JW,•t.hov,•n St.. Hin.s:chu.mton.
212 Gurli&lt;•ld A\e., J,;n1licott,
Trt&gt;mont. Ave .. Binghamton.
229 C-Onkhn Av&lt;: .. l.lrnghrunton.

N.
N.
N.
N.

60 Wayne Av&lt;' .• Whit&lt;• Plain,.
GO W aynt• AvL-., Whit&lt;&gt; Plain".
481 Court St.. Binghamton,
Jt. D. I. Conklin.
130 Helt•n St.. Rin1&lt;h11mton.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

2 l.lellev u&lt;• Av e. Ui n ghamton,
Box 13, r;ndwell.
19 r'ront St.. Owei&lt;o.
67 Cl&lt;•vdand Avt•., B1n~hmnton.
465 p,~nn~ylvania Avt...... l&lt;'f'\.•..:port,
610 1-lroad St .. r:ndicotl..
51 1 Soul.h St.. E nc.licott.
17 H astings S t .. llinl(ham to n ,
17 Schu bert St., Binghamton.
R. D. I. Kirkwood.

Y.
Y
Y.
Y.
N . Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y

Y.

N . Y.
N. Y

N Y.
N. V
N . Y.
N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

64 Walnut SL. Binghamton, N. Y
42 Adams SL. lh m:hamtno, N. Y
3 14 r' ran cis Ave .. r:ndicott. N. Y.
117 Oak St.. lli ngham t.on. N. 'i.
Plcu.."anl M ou nt~ Pa~

�Orband, William
Orzol, Leo L . ...
Packs, Nicholas J.
Paglia, P11S&lt;1uale
Palencar, Robert, Jr........ .
Palmer, Ralph
Panza, Aliccmae
Patton, Marie A.
Pavlyak, Michael
Pearson, Harold

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Rood,
Root,
R&lt;&gt;se,
Ro..,,
R&lt;&gt;se,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

16 Adam• St.. Endicott,
Ros.,, Niss.,I
34-40 Robert St.. J ohnson City,
R&lt;&gt;senberg, Dietrich
38 Robc?rt St .. Johnson City,
Roeenberg , Edward
311 E. Edward SL. Endicott,
Rosenbloo m, Joeeph S.
.... 84 PleRsant Ave ,.Johnson City,
Ross, Floyd E.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.

18 Evan• SL. Bi11ghamt on,
76 Main St .. Bainbridge ,
64 Jarvi• SL. Binghamto n.
66 Mary St.. Binghamto n.
39 Mygatt St., Binghamto n.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Binghamto n,
Binghamto n,
Binr&lt;hnmto n.
Binghamto n,
Binghamto n,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.

674 Chenango St., Binghamto n,
............ 15 Eli7.abeth St., Binhgamto n,
18 Sturdevan t St., Johnson City,
4 Elm St., Binghamto n,
604 South St., Endicott,

Pendorr, J ncob
Peneak. Michael
Perham, Robert
Perkins. Francis
Perl, Robert M . .

502 Grandview Ave., Brooklyn,
384 Main St.. Oneonta,
190 Front St., Binghamto n .
207 Lee Ave.. Endicott,
26 Am•bry St., Binghamto n,

N . Y.
N. Y.

26 Dirkinson St.,
1'6 Hawley SL.
..... 44 Kirkwood A\e.,
128 Helen St.,
70 Thorpe St..

Ryczko, W.ilter
Ryder, George E.
Sacco, Anthony H.
Sachs, Leonard N .
Sadowiu, Peter, Jr.
Salemme, John
Salisbury, Rkhard M.
Sali,bury, Stanley W.
Sampson, Rubert W.

127 Virginia Ave.. Jonhson City,
302 Squire.. Ave., Endicott,
141 Rohineon St .. Bin1&lt;hamt on,
22 Bigelow St., Binghamto n,
24 Pearne St.• Binghamto n,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.

Hair Moon Pond Road, "Nashingto n.
\Vhitney Point,
41 Schubert St., Binghamto n,
6 Britnall Pl.. Binghamto n,
60 Bradley St.. North Adnms,

N.
N.
N.
N.

H.
Y.
Y.

1611 Wi therill St., Endicott,
57 Walnut St.. Binghamto n,
103 Huguenot SL, New Rorhelle,
160 Lester Ave.. J ohnson City,
207 Robinson St., Binghamto n,

N.
N.
N
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.

Y.

14 Grant Avf'.• Endicott,
Saraceno. Ignazio
43 Milford St., Binghamto n.
Savidge, fWgpr D.
7 N. Clevf'lnnd Place, J.:ndirotL
Sealt-8. Edythe M.
18 Jay St., lllnghnmto n.
Scarinzi. Theodort A.
Mnine,
Scheerer, Stephen H .. Jr.

24 West St., Johnson Citi•.
107 Squires Ave., Endicott,
Conewang o Valley,
Lorraine.
14 Park St.. Binghamto n,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Schaffer, Rhoda
Scheiner, S tuart L .
Schroeder, John A.
Schumnch er, F,dwin C.
Schwartz. Abraham

R. D. I, Union Springs. N . Y.
330 Quincy Ave., Srronton, Pa.
1'4 Park Ave .. Binghamto n, N. Y.
626 Maple :,\t.. Endicott. N. Y.
South Gibson, Pa.

Scott. Richard H.
Sculley. Gt'Orge A., Jr.
Scully, Helen K.
Searlt'ff, Aysel, Jr.
Sedor, John

Putl'ino, Charles
Pyeche., Peter
Quinn William
Rndin, Edward
Raeder Fredrick
Rath, Richard G.
Ravers., Louis
Ray, Harold L.
Recd, Albert C.
Recd, William C.
Re ir. Gerald W.
Reis~ Ira
Reiehian. George
Rennie, Matthew F .. Jr.
Ressigue, Franklin B.
Ricciardi. Steve
Richmond , Hyle, V.
Ridley, Earle D.
Reith, Otto K . .....
Rigney, William

Y.

M&amp;es.

Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

SeJan, Michael J.
Semanek. Monica
Sernecky, Ernest W.
Shaffer, Leon
Shamulka, Ct'Orge

102 Euclid A ve.. Altamont.
R. D. I, Falconer,
905 Broad St., Endicott,
.... 210 Dudley Ave., Endicott,
82 Main St., Binghamto n,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Shapan, Eugene H.
Sharpe, William C.
Shaver, Gordon D.
S hear, Ralph E .
Sh.,.,ly, Paul M .

Castle Cr""k Rd., CRstle Creek,
23'h Grant Ave., Endicott,
65 Chestnut SL, Binghamto n.
220 Hill Ave.. Endicott,
68 Ple.,..nt SL, Westfield,

N. Y.
N . Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
Mau.

Sheffield, Robert P.
She rwood, Walker L.
Shields, John K.
S h inder, JOf!&lt;•ph ,T.
Shipko, Frederick J.

135

'

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N.
N.
N.
N
N.

Y.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Dubois, Hallstead, Pa.
Sandell, James E .. Jr. ..
192 S. Main St.. Glovenwill 1'. N . Y.
Sanges, Alfred
10 Fayette St.. Binghamto n. N . Y.
Santalucia , Joseph
408 N. Nanticoke A,·e.. Endil-ott. N Y.
Santodona to. Louis
81 Pine St.. OinghRmto n, N . Y .
Santoni. Dominic

310 Wes t Franklin St., Endicott,
260 Humbolt Parkway, Buffalo,
128 Chapin SL, Binghamto n,
60 Hays St., Binghamto n.
126 Ackley A ve.. Johnson City,

Ritchie, Robert E.
Roach. Broderick G.
Roach. Camille. M.
Robertson, Esther E.
Robertson , Tait
Robinson, Warren A . ....
Roda"ers, Robert
Rogire. Stanley
Roma, Carlo
Romani, Madlyn

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Y.
Y.

108 Downs Ave.. Binghamto n. N . Y.
117 Sunrhte Driv(", Sunrise Terrace.
Bin.:h&lt;tmt on. N . Y.
28 Pine SL. Binghamto n, N. Y.
746 Elm St., New llnven, Conn

16 Harry L. Drive, Johnson City,
Brownville ,
.. 660 4th Ave., Williamsp ort,
Moira,
38 Ackley Ave., JohllllOn City,

Plahanski, J. Richard
Potter. Rel!"inald W.
P ouki•h. Philip J,
Powell, Rirhard J.
Powell. Robert E.

-

Ruffo, Salvatore J.
Rury, Franklin ..
Russell. Robert C.
Ryan. William J.
ltybak, Arthur R.

N. Y.
N . Y.
N . Y.

320 Bermond Ave., Endicott, N. Y.
101 N. Elmer Ave.. Sayre, Pa.
2007 Tracy St . Endicott, N. Y.
126 Squires Ave.. Endicott. N . Y .
76 Beals St., Canandaig ua, N. Y.

Piccirilli, Louis E .
Pieplow, Franklin D.
Pinkus, Alan
Pizur, Anthony
Pizzillo, Mario, C.

Pratt, James E.
Pratt, Malcolm
Prekopa, Robert J.
Pruess, Fletcher
Prince, Ralph H.

Rounda, Richard C.
Rowe, Everett A.
Rozboril, Marion J.
Roz.,nberg . Martin
Rudik, Mich11el A.

Box 42, Port Crane, N . Y.
233 Endwcll St., Johnson City. N . Y.
9 Snow A ve., Binghamto n, N. Y.
R. D. 2, Susquehan na, Pa.
249 St. Charles St.. Johnson City. N. Y.

Perricone, Frank J.
Perrone, Ferdinand
Pettyjohn. Du Wayne ..
Pczzula, Kenneth
Phillips, James

Barbara ................. SS Falrriew Ave., Binghamto n, N . Y.
76 Matthew.. St.. Binghamto n. N . Y.
Robert C. ............ .
980 E. 27th St.. Brooklyn. N . Y.
George ..... ............ .
151 Adams Ave, Endicott, N . Y.
Leo M.
Leonard .................. .. . 1813 N. SSrd St., Philadelph ia, PL

84 South St., Binghamto n, N.
68 Sowden St., Binghamto n, N .
416 Adams Ave., Endicott. N .
116 O'Dell Ave., Endicott, N.
163 Lester Ave., Johnson City, N .

N.
N.
N
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

1576 E . 9th St.. Brooklyn, N . Y.
711 Wnl to11 Avt'. . Bronx. N . Y.
13 Colvin Rond. &amp; an&lt;dnle. N Y.
292 111ain St., Binghamto n. N . Y.
218 Pinc S t .. Tnmuc1un. Pn.
Earlville.
107 Bird•11ll S t Endirott,
7\lh DnviK St.. Binghamto n.
134 Chapin St .. Binghamto n,
13 Brown SL, Binghamto n,
15 1.till'!I St., Uinghnmto n,
33 May SL. Uinghnmto n,
309 W 65th St., New York rity.
5 Hiram St., JohnROn City,
1615 Newell Road. Endicott,
1773 E. 3 lst St., Brooklyn,
Wolcott St .. lt&lt;•d Creek,
106 W . Wendell St.. Endicott,
4 Donald St.. Johnson City,
Box 725, Bath.

N.
N.
N
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N . Y.
N. Y.
N . Y.

N. Y.
N . Y.
N
N.
N.
N
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

29 Arthur St., Binghamto n, N Y.
R. D. 3, Binghamto n. N. Y.
Glen Ca.•tle, Utnirhamto n. N . Y.
213 N. Ri ver St.. Wilk&lt;'sllar Te, l'a.
67 Jarvi1 SL. Binghamto n, N. Y.

�N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

4 Mill St., Binghamton.
48 Front St.. V&lt;'f!tal.
302 Glen A v1·., Elmira,
322 Center St., Olean,
R. D. 4, Binghamton,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Smith, Sidney M.
Snell, Lynford K., Jr.
Sochor, John
Sommers t.ein, Max
Sopoliga, Charl&lt;'f!

204 Grand Ave., Freep0rt, L. I.,
Chenango Forks,
301 McKinley Ave., F;ndicott,
13 California A ve., Middletown,
27 Julian St., Binghamton,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.

Sorber, Ralph R.
Spear, David
Spearbeck, Richard L.
Speich, Charle• L.
Spence, John A.

7 Evelyn St., Johnson City,
1 Harrison Ave., Endicott,
97 S. Washington St .. Binghamton,
614 Davis Ave., Endicott,
Hyde St., Whitney Point.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.

Binll'hamton,
Binghamton,
Ilinlfhamton,
Binghamton.
Orone Park,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.

Smith,
Smith,
Smith,
S mith,
Smith.

George R.
Ira J.
Ivan, Jr.
Marie
Robert M.

31 Orton Ave.,
S p ringman, Edward N.
63 Park St.,
Stanzcl, Walt.er K, Jr.
94 Mary St.,
Stapleton. Newell R.
10 Be r wick Ave.,
Stark. Marjorie
134-11 Sutt.er Ave., S.
Stein, Harry

Sten•horn. Edytha
Sternik, Michnel
Stewart, John P .
Stoddud, Chari&lt;•• II .
StonestrPet, Wayne

1603 Riverview Drive, Endicott.
24 Borchard St., Rochester,
45 Bennett Ave.. Binghamton.
Mile Road, Suffern.
145 W a.shin1eto n Av'"• Endicott,

Sullivan. Be rnard
Sullivan, Chari&lt;'" T.
Sullivan, Eleano r T.
Sullivnn, Thomllff J.
Surine, Dnvid E.

5 12 Chenango St., Binghamton,
Brushton,
11 Crestmont Roud. Binghamton,
7 Beverl y Place, J ohnson City,
490 Grand Ave .. J ohn•on City,

TalliM, John H.
TalmadlC&lt;'. W illi11m F.
Tnrr, l!~arl G.
Taylvr. llichard P.
Tt•1wlcr, C:&gt; ril T
T"rry. Thom..,. £.
Thallini&lt;cr. Me rrell E.. Jr..

n~:r11nrd

Y.

Y.

Y.
Y.

Y.

II St. J ohn A ve., Binghamton,
47 1 Chenango St., Binghamton,
120 Conk lin Avt•., Binghamton,
105 Talcott, St., Owel(o,
9 Curran A ve., Binghamton,

N
N
N
N.
N.

Y.

Valky, J ohn
Valetta. Lorrai n~

Y.
Y.

Van Atta , Gordon V.

Y.
Y.

Van tlrUl'l&lt;&lt;'n, Reuben
Vanco. :William F.

9 Curran A ve.. Bini&lt;hamton .
29 Summe r St.. Adams,
10~ W . Union St., Endicott
110 Conklin Ave., Binghamton,
l!!O H~len St... Binghamton,

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Wagner , Mardajeanne

N. Y.

N. Y.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

33 C. F. J. Blvd., Johnson City,
1000 Broad St.. 1'.:nchcntt..
!14 St. Chai Iv• St .. Johnson City,
4121 7th Ave., Umoklyn,
11 Stnn l&lt;•)' S t .. Bini:hamton,

N.
N.
N
N.

Y
Y.
Y
Y
Y

53

N Y,
N. Y .

N. Y

fiOl J t.•nninK~ St., Endicott. N. Y.
tm1111t Rourl. Bin.chamtnn, N Y
21 Adam~ Av('., 1-; nd ieot t , N Y.

Crt·~

Ulai ·•h•ll Ave., C0&lt;•ym11n•. N Y
Bo~ 525, Uinl'hnmt.on, N Y

Wnlluck, .Merrill
Wnllinic, William f'.

40 W. S6th St.. N ew York C'ity,
11 Banks Av&lt;• .. John•on City,
20 l''c,w lcr A vt.•.. Juh n ~on Citl,
50~ Jun&lt;' St., 1&lt;;ndirott.
29 Rol)('rt St .. Johnson City,

\Vnrn~r.

Emma M .

11 l

WnMson,

Cruvt~n

E.

Watkin,, Stuart
Wataon. John
W&lt;•bl&gt;, IJnrhara Jone
Webb, Llt•rt
W1•bt• r, William, Jr.
W~l!'e.

J o hn
Weintraub, Robert I.
Irwin

W e nge r. Th«&gt;dore R.
We&lt;t. Charles I'.

Tomo n. G'--rnht

\Vhe,•pl('r, Gr&amp;C't.'

'r'1m&lt;·k. William

\\'h, ·c.•h• r , Stunlt•y ..;.

Whith•m&lt;&gt;n'. Halph W.
Wh)'h•. .Jamt•:o(

\Y h kman. Leonard

136

Ave .. Susqut•hnnna. Pa.

N Y
N \'.
N. Y.
N . Y.

N. Y.

H. D. 1. Joh noon Cit&gt;'. N. Y.
R D I, V,•;tal, N. Y.

Wutermnn. C'luir
\Vntkins, Gordon

Wt.·i~Mmnn.

Jiu.~k~on

6 Birch St., Bin1thnmton, N . Y,

Wa rner, Hichard
Wnrnt•r, Willi!\.

450 H a rry L. Div•·· Johnson Cit y, N. Y.
39 Stet..cm l{&lt;md Tupper Lake, N . Y.
llnkshie, N. Y.
'f,•m1,kinl4, Ida
Chur,·h S t ., H aJl,t&lt;nd, Pa.
Tomv"'ins, Harold l·'.
'fompking, John
22 N Handolph An .. l'oughkt'&lt;'l••ie. N. Y

N Y
N. Y

132 llt•rch St., R. D. I. Ve&gt;itnl. N. Y.
120 l ,nurel A'•e.. Hing hnmton, N Y.
G Du•kinsou Ave .. Bin,zhamton, N Y.

Ward, Dunold G.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N

Wnlk,•r, Dorothy
Walker, J O&lt;'I H .
Walker. Kenneth
Wall, Howad R .. Jr.
Wullnce, Hurry C.

\Val!'.h, Rmw Marit.•

43 l'ine St .. De11o•it. N. Y.
Aclam• Cent&lt;-r, N. Y.
1108 E. Mam St., Endicutt. N. Y.
5 T erry Ave., BinS&lt;hnmton, N. Y.
R. D. l, l&lt;'riend•ville, Pa.

Y
Y.
Y
Y.

N.
N.
N
N.
N.

WaS&lt;oner, Ellwood
Wakt•l••Y, Y vonne

N . Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Y.
Y.
Y

1!10 H elen St., Binghamton.
20 Oh·ision. Sidney,
57 North St., Bin1&lt;hamton,
68 Mitchell Ave.. Binghamton .
28 Euc lid Ave., Binghamton,

Vitkus . Edmund, Jr.
Von P&lt;'Chman, H einz

Y.

N. Y.
Mn-..
N. Y
N . Y.
N. Y

5 16. W . .Main St, t:nclirott,
\'nncln, Marcia Moss
20 Campbt•ll Roacl, Uini&lt;hllmt.un,
Van f; tten . Ric hard C.
2!1 Ct!clar St., Ui n1&lt;hnmton.
Van VolkinburJC, Franklin
bHO l'urk Plnrt", .,; lm ira.
V&lt;•S&lt;ard, C. Mack
601 ', Ouk Hill Ave.. Jo:n•lit·ott,
Vitale, Sam M . .

N. Y.

N.
N.
N.
N
N.

Y.

Tuthill. William B.
Tuttle, Ervin
'fybring, Robert C.
Ulmer. Richard E.
Unold. H oward J ., Jr.

W. C hurch St., J&lt;;lmira, N . Y.
New Grant St.. W ilkes-Barre , Pa.
67 Pearl St., Uninbridi:e. N . Y.
R . D. 2. 1':1mia, N. Y .
2ri Di visio n St .. Binghamton, N. Y.

36 Dickinson Av&lt;'., Binghamton,
24 Evans St .. BinS&lt;hnmton,
23 Franklin Av&lt;'., Binghamton,
37 Crar)• Ave., UinKhnmto n .
l-\7 S. ('lwny St .. l'oughkeep•ie,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N

Turcotte. Robert W .
Turin'&lt;&gt;n, Leonard A.
Turner, Richard H.
Turner, Rob&lt;&gt;rt J .
Tuthill. Huth

Y.
Y.
Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.

129 St. Ma r ks Place, Brooklyn,
25 Clapp Av'"· Wa ppingers Fall•.
2713 H elen SL. Endicott.
219 Hari·i•on Ave., Johnson City,
1015 Harison St., Syracu••".

Truc'9dell. Sally
Trusler. John ll.
T shulos, James
Tucker, Alan S., Jr.
Turcotte. Charles

~Oi•.~
35~

Tnft, Darwin 0.

Tink lt:man.

True, Jerome B.

Gouldboro. Pa.
Roo'ev••lt Avf!., llini&lt;hnmton. N . Y .
i M unsell St., Binghamton. N. Y.
604 Jennings St .. ~:ndicott, N. Y.
SOi'~ W . Church St., Elmira, N . Y.

Surplus, Arthur W.
Sutlilf, William 0.
S wan, Edwnrd
S wa rtz. Arla ncl J,
S wift, Donald A

Thoma.. Frk nk K
Thomp•on. Walte r F
Throup, Eclwnrd S.
Ti llot&gt;on. Davi d

Tripp, I.-&lt;'wi s

129 Schubl'rt St., Binirhamton, N . Y.
Country Club Road, J ohnson City, N. Y.
Interlake n, N . Y.
12 Mitchell Ave., Uin1&lt;hamton, N. Y.
.. Uox 533 Wyalusing, Pa.

Story, Jeanne
Streb. Richnrd W ,
Stroud, Jam&lt;'f! B.
Stuart, Alan
Stumpf, John

Swift, Wanda E
SymonN, Calvun H.

Ton1•r. Frank E.
Trabucco, J oseph
Trns, J amc:-s

N. Y.

19 Ansco Road, Johnson City,
8 Highland Ave., Bini&lt;hamton,
161 3 Rugby Road, Schenectady,
17 Bayk'&lt;!s Ave., Binghamton,
101 Adams Ave., Endicott,

Singe). J . R ichard
Skeir ilc, Norman
Slutzky, Sidn&lt;'Y
S mith, Anne tte
Smith, Durwood

i Jclt&gt;Sll Terrace. Vt• .... tnl. N. Y.
510 \V. Ma in St.. F:nd kc&gt;tt. N Y.
425 Front SL. Owt.-.go, N
12r1 Front St. ()\\'('j..:'O,
10!1 M)'i!lllt St.. lli ni&lt;hnmton.
12:. Birdsall St.. ~:ndicott,
l ~l Hol&gt;in•on St.. Binghnmton.
95 Maple St., R utherford,

Y.

N. Y.
Y.
N

N. Y
N. Y.
N . J.

S Wt'!lt•·rly Way. Binghamton. N. Y.
162 Park Ave., llin1thamton, N. Y.
:;1 Davi• St.. Binghamton. N. Y.
l:l9 l't•url An• .. Johnson City, N. Y.
35 Vine SL. Bini&lt;hamto n, N. Y.
214 St.

Chari~

City, N
llr. lwn N
({. D. I. Vt .. cal, N

St.

Joh11 so11

1 iN Wi lJo\\ ~t.. Juhn"on Cit)

14 Kimble: l{c.u&lt;I. \ c·

1111,

Y
Y.
\'.

N

Y

N

Y

�Widmer, Ilerman
Wilcox, Edgar, Jr.,
Wilcox, Harmon
Wilklow. George C.
Willet.a, J ohn N.
Williams , Donald R.
Williams , Harry E.
Williams , Mary E.
Willson. Harold
Wil!lOn, N orman

H0-30 Beach Ave., Flushing ,
13 Arlhur Av~ .. Endicott,
.......26 North St., Ringham ton.
White St., Highland .
R. D. 1, Greene,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

316 Floral Ave., John50n City, N. Y.
Rushville . Pa.
67 Murray St., llingham tcn, N. Y.
117 McKinley Ave., Endicott, N . Y.
2 Lincoln Ave., Endicott, N. Y.

89-04 148th St., Jamaica, L . I ..
Windisch , Frank F.
Hinsdale,
Wing, Douglaa W.
59 Ch.,,.tnut St., Bingham ton.
Winlersw in, Samuel H.
21 Commonw ealth Ave., Middletow n,
Wolfi;on, llllrold
42 Bevier SL, Bingham ton,
Wood, Calvin

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

609 Jo:xchange Ave., Endicott..
Wood. Harold D.
387 Riverside Drive, Johnson City,
Woodman see, Lee F.
R. D. 2, Endicott,
Woodwor th, Warren J .
224 Riverside Drive, New York City,
Wynn, Mark F .
R. D. 2, Vcst.al,
Yeager, R. Orville

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y
Y.
Y.
Y.

Ziegler, Robert N.
Zinn, Richard S .• Jr.
Zowinc, Thomas M.
Zuidema, John E.

R. D. 2, Johnson City, N. Y.
227 Swalhmo re Ave., Swarthm ore, Pa.
21 Lake Ave., Middl&lt;•town, N. Y.
lf&gt; Emerson Place, Bingham ton, N. Y.

137

��139

�Al

Kinds of Writing Instruments Repaired
for "youse guys" and "gals"

17 Washington Ave.
Endicott, N Y.

/l/,\/ II l\llUi
}'II f/,,

I

&lt;

''''//

.,111/1//,

"'" ( ''"''"'''"'". I'

(If

1Jt

TRIPLE CITIES COLLEGE

,,,

Your ENDICOTT THEATRES
• STATE

• STRAND
•

•

l YRIC

'.\1111111 •

lu

)"utfl

lit

ELVIN

1/ /; 11/erl.11111111:11("

FOR COLLEGE GOING CLOTHES
Correctly Styled, Modestly Priced

In goo&lt;l r'1crchond1se, the Best Known Nome!&gt; Are Seen at Mc l •'&lt;.m's

�VAUGHN'S

NEWING MOTOR CO.
FORD CARS AND TRUCKS

Home of

\111«

I&lt; ' I

I I

Endicott, Nev. York

Hart Schaffner &amp; Marx
and

Botany " 500" Clothe s
STUDENTS KNOW . .
"/ /, 1/ //

•

/r tht

NEW YORK RESTAURANT
f ,,11/&gt;1 B11111/

Lr•u·,

11 1'111&lt; 1

h}(,J ,11
1'11r11/J/1

Union District

Phone 1025
Endicott

WITH BEST W ISH ES

FOR CONTINUED SUCCESS

to THE COLONIST

and TRIPLE CITIES COLLEGE

•
HOTEL FREDERICK
In Endicott

19 Washington Ave

Endicott, N Y

�WILSON SPORTING GOODS

STRAND CONFECTIONARY

THE SPORTING GOODS
OF CHAMPIONS

Endicott

-

Washington Ave

"Alex" and "Moy"

FOR YEAR-ROUND FUN

ENDICOTT SUPPLY CO.

AMERICAN LEGION POST 82
Endicott, N Y

137 W as hington Aven ue
Phone 3276

Endicott , N Y

Arr- m11Jit 1011ed /(er/&lt;Jlll"alll

DAVID'S
69 Court Street
f.1111 0115

/or

Y 01111g

P.1.1f)f(lllJ

DRESSES

SUITS

COATS

SPORTSWEAR

FOR THE PARTICULAR DRESSER
ITS

BEN'S

CLOTHES
SHOP

Q11.zli1; (./o1h111g .111tl /"111111rhmg.1
/~,

pu I

I

11/,,111 ,

Corner Main and Willow Street!.
Johnson City

�TICKE TS and RESER VATIO NS

SOCHOR TRAVEL SERVICE
Phone 1267- W

1408 North St

Endico tt N Y

•
ALL AIRLINFS

Men's Notio nally Adver tised Shoes
at
Cut Rote Prices

DAVE LEWIS SHOE MARKET
12 Court Street
Bingh amton , New York

ALL STEAMERLINES
HOTELS

RESORTS

TRAVELLERS CHECKS
MONEY ORDERS

Me etin g the Ch alle nge of A Ch ang ing
Th rou gh ED UC AT IO N
Wo rld

The

youth be
Complex1t1es of the world about us deman d that our
We
goal
tional
educa
full
their
attain
given every oppor tunity to
its
take
to
hope
youth
can
tion
educa
h
have learne d that only throug
1es
&lt;1bil1t
respon
ond
t1ons
obl1go
the
prope r place in the world, and fulfill
of democ ratic citize nship in a free n::ition
ence to the
onscio us of its glo rious herita ge, and with firm adher
youth will
ican
Amer
great,
princi ples that hove mode this nation
-addence
confi
te
resolu
with
meet the chall enge of a chang ing world
life,
of
way
ican
Amer
the
of
vancin g to new heigh ts in fulfill ment
liberty a nd happi ness.

C

"Etern al vigilance is the price of Libert y,"

and the free, unfelte red press of Americ a is the
watchd og guardin g the rights and interest s of the
people.

THE BI NG HA MT ON PRESS

�END ICO'TT
JOH NSO N

TANN ERS and SHOEMAKERS

ENDIC OTT, NEW YORK

�We Congratul ate

THE COLON IST
on I ts Initial Issue

And Wish It and

TRIPL E CITIES COLLEGE
Continue d Success

ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY

Offices in Endicott and Vestal

END ICOTT NATIONAL BANK

UNION - ENDICOTT OFFICE
Mo rine Midland Trust Company

Deposit s insu red up to $ 5,000 for each depo~ 1tor by Federal Deposit lnsuronce Co rporation

�THE HEART OF YOUR YEAHUOOK

b1f
BERTHOLD STUDIO
10 Court Street
Binghamton, New York

SUISIDIAIY, GOLD TONI STUDIOS, SCHOOL DIVISION

Telephone 7 -6955

HARRIS ARMY &amp; NAVY STORE
290 Main Street
Johnson City, New York
b·erythiJJp, for Sporl, IP'orl .111cl /Jre.r.1

W

E. L Hilkins

S Krolls

E. L. HILKINS CO.

THE CAY CO.

J EW EL ER S

Eve1y1hi1Jg fo1· the Office
Our

121 8 North Street
Phone 545

Endicott

3211J

)'ear

46 Wash ing ton Avenue
Endicott, N. Y.
Phone 440

�DRESSES

SUITS

COATS

/•'tl'&lt; l&lt;t

TRI-PHI SHOPS
Bonghoml o n

52 COURT STREET
BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

End1coll

LITTLE BOOK SHOP
John~on

1\ f.ilt' (IJ

SW IMMING
BASEBALL

)'n11t

Wotche-.
P"n and Pencil Sets
Diamonds
Clocb
Wedding Ronqs
Ron~on Lighter&gt;
Brocele"
Rong Mountings
Me n 's Jewelry
ond o compl e te •ne of
Wotch Bracelets

COSTUME JEWE LRY

City

ff.-.i.fq11,/l/ tl

GOLF
SOFTBALL

RALPH J. ROGERS

-

I

TENN IS
BADMINTO N

THE HOUSE OF SPORTS
HUNTING

FISHING

In Foci - - - " Eve rything"

2 0046

7 M orn St

Binghamt o n

WALLACE DRUG STORE
12 Washingt on

Avi.:n~JC

•
MEN'S QUALITY SHOP
51;/e

Ce11/t'r

Jrn Bnth .\11·11

Jl/J

Bo) 1

ECONOMY DRUG STORE
60 Washing ton Avenue

24 6 Morn Street
Joh nson City, N . Y

' f 11 / ;11.f1, of/ \//It&lt;' i

J})

�HAMMOND'S FLORIST

WILBER'S

I DEAL FLOIVST

CREDIT JEWELERS
-

DIAMONDS

JEWELRY

WATCHES

Phone 978

•
Expert Watch Repairi ng
H eadrf"nt ters for G1 ad11,1tirm Gifu

•
Phone 7 - l 466
7 - 9 Court St -

' \ /'

Binghamton

280 Mai n St.

J ohnson C ity, N. Y.

,

HEADQUARTE'RS IN ENDICOTT
Fis hing Tackl e

Rifl es -

Shotgun s -

-

Ammun ition

E. E. INDERLIED HARDWARE CO.
4 Washington Ave.

WHAT'S IN A NAME?
In HATS It's DOBBS
In SHIRTS It's WINGS
In T IES It's McCURRACH
In HOSE It's WESTMINSTER
IN A STORE IT IS--

~

ENDICOTT'S HABERDASHER

�THE COMPLETE
DEPARTMENT
STORE

FOUNDED IN THE
INTEREST OF SERVICE
TO PARTICULAR SHOPPERS

HAMLIN'S

WELLS- MESSEMER
DODGE - PLYMOUTH -

SALES - SERVICE

RED CROSS DRUG STORES

Oldest Dodge Dealeu in the Tnple Cities

Johnson City

Binghamton
1302 Main St.

Endicott

Endicott, N. Y.

In the Service of Greater Endicott

• ENDICOTT DAILY BULLETIN
Complete AP, Local News

• RADIO STATION WENE
ABC Network Affiloote
1450 on your radio

Read!

Listen!

�THESE ARE IBM
PRODUCTS, SERVICES
Electri c Punched Card Accounting Machines
and Service Bureau Facilities
Proo f Machines
Electric Test Scoring Machines
Electric Typewriters
A ttendance Tim e Recordi ng Systems
Job Cost Re cording Systems
Master Electric Clock Systems
Program Signaling Systems
Fire A larm Systems
Recording Door Locks
Laboratory Panels
Nurses' Call Systems

I BM
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION
World Headquarters Building, 590 Madison Ave., New York 22, N. Y.

�All The Sharp Squire s
Shop The Eskuir e

THE ESKUIRE
Down 1n Union
A lexand er a nd W es Ha rvey

COLETTl 'S DINER
A GOOD PLACE TO EAT

I Look Best in . . .

MORTON COY
CLO TH ES

13 0 4 E Main St.

Endico tt, N Y

Printers &lt;if The Colonist

48-5 0 Com mer cial Ave.

Bing ham ton, New York

Dial Bing ham ton 4-32 25

���</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="27">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28047">
                  <text>1948 - </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28048">
                  <text>Binghamton University Yearbooks </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28049">
                  <text>Harpur College -- Students; State University of New York at Binghamton -- Students; Harpur College; State University of New York at Binghamton; Students; Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="37">
              <name>Contributor</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39021">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;Blythe E. Roveland-Brenton, Director of Special Collections &amp;amp; Library Preservation&lt;br /&gt;Caitlin Holton, Digital Initiatives Assistant&lt;br /&gt;Maggie McNeely, University Archivist&lt;br /&gt;Erin Rushton, Head of Digital Initiatives&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39022">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;Binghamton University’s yearbook was published under several different titles. It was first called &lt;em&gt;The Colonist&lt;/em&gt; in 1948, then became &lt;em&gt;The Yearer&lt;/em&gt; in 1970, &lt;em&gt;Pegasus&lt;/em&gt; in 1973 and finally &lt;em&gt;Binghamton University&lt;/em&gt; in 2004. Yearbooks are a popular resource for alumni and can be used for primary source research. Each book typically contains class lists, class photos, candid photos, faculty and academic department information, campus and institutional facts, illustrations and ads, and editorials. They document student organizations, campus events, athletic teams as well as local and global events. Yearbooks offer a window into the traditions and culture of a time and place from the point of view of a select group of students on behalf of the student body. They are among the richest sources of student-driven content for an academic institution. For more information regarding yearbooks and the history of the University, please contact &lt;a href="https://www.binghamton.edu/libraries/about/special-collections/"&gt;Special Collections&lt;/a&gt; at 607-777-4844 or speccoll@binghamton.edu.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;We welcome your comments about &lt;span&gt;&lt;span&gt;our collection of digitized yearbooks.&amp;nbsp; &lt;a href="https://binghamton.libwizard.com/id/c6121588e483da04f66dba76f0460bb5"&gt;Please share comments via our feedback form&lt;/a&gt;.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Acknowledgment of sensitive content&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Binghamton University Libraries provide digital access to select materials held within the Special Collections department. &lt;span&gt;Historical yearbooks provide a vibrant window into life at the University.&lt;/span&gt; However, they also expose insensitive, and at times offensive, racial and gender stereotypes that, though once commonplace, are now acknowledged to cause harm. The Libraries have chosen to make these volumes available as part of the historical record but the Libraries do not support or agree with the harmful narratives that can be found in these volumes. &lt;a href="https://www.binghamton.edu/libraries/about/collections/digital/"&gt;Digital Collections&lt;/a&gt; are created for educational and historical purposes only. It is our intention to present the content as it originally appeared.&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39023">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;The yearbooks in this collection are copyrighted. If you want to reuse any material in this collection you must seek permission, or decide if your purpose can qualify as fair use under the U.S. Copyright Law Section 107. If you think copyright or privacy has been violated, the University Libraries will investigate the issue. Please see our take down request policy.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;If using any materials in this online digital collection for educational or research purposes, please cite accordingly. When citing documents, researchers / educators should credit Special Collections as the custodian of the collection.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The following is a suggested citation: Binghamton University Yearbooks Digital Collection, [yearbook title and year], Special Collections, Binghamton University Libraries.”&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39024">
                  <text>1948-1972</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="117">
              <name>Is Part Of</name>
              <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50596">
                  <text>&lt;a href="https://archivesspace.binghamton.edu/public/repositories/2/archival_objects/38366" target="_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;Binghamton University Student Publications: Yearbook, 1948- present&lt;/a&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="32">
      <name>Template: PDF</name>
      <description>Choose this for any item where the file type is PDF. This template and others do not support mixed file types (PDF and image attached to same item). If you have mixed file types, you can either create another Omeka item or contact Digital Initiatives for assistance converting from pdf to image or vice versa.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="81">
          <name>Accessibility</name>
          <description>Copy/Paste below: &#13;
Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45637">
              <text>Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="58">
          <name>Collection</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52324">
              <text>Binghamton University Yearbooks</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Digital Format</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52325">
              <text>PDF</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="54">
          <name>Identifier</name>
          <description>dc:identifier</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52326">
              <text>THE COLONIST_1948.pdf</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="139">
          <name>PDF Layout</name>
          <description>This field specifies how the pages of the PDF will be laid out. Enter only the CASE SENSITIVE keyword without quotation marks. [default: 'FacingContinuous']&#13;
Options:&#13;
'Single' - Only the entire current page will be visible and Zoom will be set to page width.&#13;
'Continuous' - All pages are visible in one scrollable column and Zoom will be set to page width.&#13;
'Facing' - Up to two full pages will be visible and Zoom will be set to page height.&#13;
'FacingContinuous' - All pages visible in two scrollable columns and Zoom will be set to page height.&#13;
'FacingCover' - All pages visible as whole pages, with an even numbered page rendered first. (i.e. The first page of the document is rendered by itself on the right side of the viewer to simulate a book cover.)&#13;
'FacingCoverContinuous' - All pages visible in two scrollable columns, with an even numbered page rendered first. (i.e. The first page of the document is rendered by itself on the right side of the viewer to simulate a book cover.)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52486">
              <text>FacingCoverContinuous</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38746">
                <text>Colonist 1948</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38747">
                <text>State University of New York at Binghamton -- Students&#13;
school yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38751">
                <text>Student yearbook of Triple Cities College (1948-1950), Harpur College (1951-1965), and the State University of New York at Binghamton (1966- present).</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38752">
                <text>Endicott, N.Y. : Triple Cities College ; Binghamton, N.Y. : State University of New York at Binghamton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38754">
                <text>State University of New York at Binghamton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38755">
                <text>1948</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38756">
                <text>In Copyright</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2479" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="13695">
        <src>https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/files/original/1eba00c064bdfb879554c92f0d2f3f47.pdf</src>
        <authentication>a05604e126df6f29030c3ca4a31146ea</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="68">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="52318">
                    <text>..
. ..

,J
l

t

..
'"

-· , .

�����In the first three years of its existence, Triple Cities College nas undergone man) changes. \\'hen its doors were first opened, 01 rather, its windows,
for it "as through \\hat is nO\\ a librarr \\ indc)\\ that many of us entered
these bui l&lt;lings for the first registration, the college ofYered on ly freshman
courses. Since then, sophomore and junior courses have been added as the
demand for them has warranted their inclusion in the academ!C program.
Meam\ bile, the first pre-fab building containing _classrooms, labs, offices. :ind
a cafeteria \\ as completed, and a second soon followed . Farly in I &lt;)48
approval of Triple Cities Co llege as a four year college with majors offered
in six fields \\as announced.
June 6, 19'19 marks the end of this first period of growth and transformation. On that day the first class of graduates will attend the Commencement at yracusc University. For these in dividuals, this commencement
marks the end of a period in their lives. For the college as a whole, however,
it means only that a first stage of development lus been completed.
To a future of many graduates, of increased facilities, and an everincrcas111g number of opportunities for those who wish to take advantage of
them, we dedicate this, the Colon ist of 1949.
TIIF YEARBOOK STAFF

��fii

I

COLONIAL LIFE
This i.r the .rlory of t1 Iii/le 111ome
1l'ho lit•es in the big u·hile ho11re
011 li11ml11 A 1e1111e .

twenty-one more assignments per student. Not that
he: was sure just \\'hat it meant, but he readily agreed
with Da\ e Garman that a four to one ratio was
much better than the pioneering days of '46 when
nine to one was the status &lt;]LIO. School spirit soared
high in his little heart, and Teeny watched with avid
interest the progress of the Goliard clothing drive.
One could hardly see his cold little nose

Came the Fall, and Triple Cities College: for the
fifth time opened its doors to a new and ~hiny group
of freshmen. Not far behind this ma~s of undeveloped gray matter came another eager an imal of
note, also seeking a higher education. This was
"Teeny Squeege", the "eddicated mouse". Our talc
deals with "Teeny Squeege" and his adventures at
TCC.
"Teeny Squeege" was very greatly impressed with
the: Freshman Convo, and he, along with approximately 250 others, entered the massive doors of the
Colonial imbued with high ideals so high that they
carried him to the second floor loun.ge where a vigorous card game was holding forth in the.: hands of
four seniors
"eeny", "meeny", "miny", and
"schmoe". Teeny liked this room. lt was friendly
&lt;llld not only that, where else could he hear all the
campus news and views,

.ro u•ell

11'.1s

ii hidden he11e,;/h the old clothes ...

Teeny's tiny cars were still very receptive (he
hadn't been subjected to "History and Usage of the
English Langu,1ge" yet), and on one of his jolly
jaunts down faculty lane he overheard a delightful
little con,·ersation between Miss A. and Mr. H. 'bout
a delightful party held at the former's home for all
faculty eligibles the night of October 1 5. T eeny,
percepti,·c little soul that he was, considered it quite
thoughtful of them (the faculty) to so fortify themselves before braving the thousand "odd" P hi Beta
K,1ppas (the students) al the Student-Faculty Reception later that evening. Teeny was soon to find out
that this wa~ quite a common occurence among the
intellectu,tl circle- especially during "Zero Week"
\\'hen finals arc in full ~wing,

11·i1ho111 ploll'ing 1hro11gh a Colonial News?
He didn't know the fellow yet, but he wa~ glad to
hear that Camille Roach had become TCC President.
It "'as .dso nice to kno\\' that twenty-one new appointments had been made to the faculty as far a~
he could deduce (correctly) this me.mt exactly

.wd "p,1rt; .. has 110 familiar ri11g
for the .rtlfdenl ...

6

�common Ir known .h tht· student lounge, \\ lwr~ he
\\,ls soon. to find out if on&lt;.'s fnc·nJ \\~rt• not in the
loc.11 bistro. book stort·, or c.1rd room, th.tt' \\ hne
he \\,is. In his new .ind ht·\\ ihkring UI\ iron mt nt he
found anothn f nc:nd. R.ilph Fon:-.t ( l.1tt•r to h1.:&lt; om&lt;.'
editor of the ( olon1.1l NC\\S) \\ho 1nfornwd him
th,1t the first gr.1du.ltlnt; t l.1-.s ,1t 'IC ( l1.1d org.1nizcd.
.md th.it the Jifty lour members thuc:of would
gr.1du.1te under the ~W.ltU'&gt;t' l 111\ us1t r h.1nner".
!r.c:c:ny\ little eyes f;u;ly P?PP&lt;:d \\ hrn 1.~'tll)h told
h11n about the P.indoran S.1d1t 11.t" kills '.mtt' .lt
L.1kev1&lt;:\\ Inn
u•ht·rt nothmg rlumg1 r th.111 col, .w,/ ,f!,il/
ll'l'rt lht· orde1 of the ,., 'nmg.
So nuny little things plc.l\c:d Tcl'll)' l1kl the
time: Jerrr Gibbs won till' fir .. t .innu.d B.icl.lll.l
schohr-.hip :l\\ard, the I .111 !·ling .ll the l.c:.g1011 the
Biz Ad · 'pook" D,111(c· \\hat \I 1erd1c' .ind ,i.:hosh

Still sun·cying the situation on ·Grub tred"
(l;ngl1sh Dep.trtmcnt H.1bitat). our little: hc:ro lc:arn1sscl Rose: \\ ,1s going to h1.:.1d th&lt;: \\ orld
c:d th.it
Student 'c:r\'ICC Fund dri\'e, that Clark I lungc:.rford
lud become editor of the Colonial l ews..111d th.it
Gury Bloom lud won an "A" in h1stor} for h&lt;:r
feature on l\lr. Lull m the colleges sp.1-,modic.tl
pu1odic,1l. Teeny thrilled to this in tclletlu.11 com
munic,1tion of 'mmJs on a higher b·L-1". He ,1bo
unCO\'erc:d the fact, :mother news he.1d;111er, th.ll
· \\ e'vC' got something". That made him vcr} lupp}
now all he had to Jo was find it 1
E&lt;1ger to dep.1rt from the sombcr int&lt;:llcctu.11
atmosphere that from force of habit w.1s begi nning
to envclop him, Teeny Sc1ueege hasti l}' scurried ,1fter
Bob Bargctli ( c1uite the pace setter') \\ho \\ ;h on
his w.1y to the prc:sse~ with " In and Out of th&lt;.
Lockcr Room". Quickly glancing over the cop}' p.iper
(he \\.is now enrollC'd in Remedial English). Tc:c:nr
read that Fr,111k Rurr had been elected Pr&lt;:s1d&lt;:nt of
the Pm Topplers, th.it the Bonecrushc.·1' had b.tttc:.·rc:d
l3.tccaci;1 by ,1 38-7 score, that Edie c1les had bt.:com&lt;:
h&lt;:.1d cheer lc:.1d&lt;:r for Coach Welborn\ ,Ktl\C: .1th·
letes, and th.it Joe Ludka and "Y;ttdu" Logan
1/'t'll'

th&lt; .~1.100111 I orlr
,// th.ii J''Jf'lfl f f,11/0 11't &lt;I/ t I&lt; Ill
Yc:s, little T &lt;:cn}' SlJUt.:&lt;.gc rull1 lond cnllq!t' life
.1nd \\,IS fillc:J \\Ith th" c:.omt.1nt d&lt;:.,1rt to do t\tr\'
thing in Im tiny )10\\Cr to bttll:r th1-. \\Ond~rful 11&lt;:~\
home of his. Csu;1lly. he \\,I'&gt; t1l11t1.· h.1pp}' .ihout the
cour~e of C\Cnts. but on( d,t} (.tftt•r .1 p.1rtinil.1rly
trying cl.1ss Ill l31i-1ness Lt\\) he r&lt;:l eiYcd .1 bitter
d1s.1ppo1ntmc:nt the: Goli.irds \\Ou ld not t.1kc:. .1 qu.1rt
of hlood from him for th&lt;: rnmmun1t1· hloo,I h.rnk
TLcny \\.ts \cry di-hc.irtcnc:.·d .111d slc&gt;1' I}·. 111th ho\\'e,I
11·1:1t

.11il/ .rroriJll!, high for t/11: Grun .//Iii
II 'hilt: slog,w.

Following this mental exertion. Tc:en} one&lt;. mort
scampere&lt;I off to meet ne\\ and g reater .1dvc:nlur&lt;:s 1n
the "G r.1nd Cc:ntr.d S'..1l1on" of the Colona.tl. more

7

�playing of new TCCers Gene Kobylarz and John
Leney, and the fact that Harry Accurso had "switched
to Chesterfields".
Excitement was in the air as Baccacians an&lt;l Pan&lt;lorans discussed the fonner's Shipwreck dance the
nile of
ovember 12 where starboard arms and
boatswains' mates

da11ced lo the t1111e of the Sophi.rtic,1/eJ.
Goiiard members were feeling pretty good about their
,·ictory of November 9 over the Spoilers with a final
score of 13·9, Adelphians were boasting the results
of their recent 12-2 win over Baccacia, Loyal TCCers
were lauding junior varsity basketball players Bill
Simmons, Louis Picciano, Ray O'Malley, Rube Rubenzahl, and Jack Burlingame, Dr. Brown was ex·
pressing satisfaction at Marilyn Andrus' becoming
president of Clarendon, Bob Koloski and Dottie
Holmes were congratulating each other on their high
bowling scores and Doc Ketcham was congratulating Chet Buchan.tn for having passed !'examen Je
f rancais ·10.
All in all, Teeny decided that this was a pretty
nice \\•orld, and with a new lease on life scurried
after Pat Lamb and Mike Biloz who were on their
way to "Ye Olde Book Store" with the latest details
on the USG Turkey Hop

ll'here Be-Bop and soda pop
head, he trod lo the Cafeteria, bent on drowning hi~
sorrows :rnd sci f in thousands of little cups of proverbial coffee. I3ut our little sufTerer was lo encounter
,111 eYen more unhappy situation, for on his determined journey. he was of necessity forced to pass the
mysterious and foreboding Zoo Lab where hundreds
of felines (cats) were eagerly awaiting his approach
so he thought (Dr. Swift would term this attitude
.. inferiority complex" ). But how was he to know
that inside those four grubid (a portmanteau word
combin,1tion of gruesome and morbid) walls, Dr.
Wilmoth, armed with weapons of enormous propensity, \1 as lowering above said animals, gloating at his
great accomplishment for lo, he had killed them
and they had died

t111cl ll'ere 11011• pre.ren·ed i11 f or111aldeh)de,
c".111.ri11g 110 end of grief lo 1111111ero11s 'f'CCers
reciuired lo indulge in one year of science.
But Teeny couldn't remain sad for long too
many nice things were going on around him for him
lo continue in his present slate of mind. Local bistro
babble was in high gear with Helen Hudda (student
director of " Juno and the Paycock") ahead by a
league in her enthusiastic reviews

of Co/011i,i/ to-dos.
Although he couldn't (1uite become accustomed lo
the clattering chatter of fifty people at the same
lime, Teeny did manage to salvage ciuite a bit of enlightening news such ,ts Dave Merrilees' election
to the editorship of the Colonist, the Colonial Players' production of Sean O'Casey's play with Johnny
Gorton and Irene Veit carrying off top honors for
t hci r respective portray&lt;lis, the addition of another
page of print to the Colonial News, the brilliant ball-

8

�,md comstalk.r. t111ke;s .111d p11mpki11.r hnt
111:re cl.111ced hN11'/\/ b1 cou11t1; /m111pi111r.
Jim Larham \\,JS there: too, and Tt:cn} c:njoy&lt;.:d he.1r111i.: him tell dda about the Biz Ad St.1g P,1rty o(
December 2 where ( laydon :rnd ( l.itf
.111,/ 0.r£'r .mt! Gr&lt;1/
hdcl frnth 011 the ec 011111111c r1/11.1/1011
of th~ 11.1/1011 ...
Then: was so much going on and so nuny people
talking at once: rn chis little: store o( knO\\ ledge: (they
sell tc:xt-books hc:re somc:times) th.it Teeny almost
missed seeing J\1iss Pitel, one of the: quic:ter 1m:mbc:rs
of our congregation
extre111el; inro/11:,/ in &lt;111 1J.\p/,111.11io11
of ti f&lt;1mlf.J Chri.rt111.1J p.111; tl&gt;c 111fc· of
Den:mber I 1 \\here refrc:shm&lt;:nts .tnd skits
1oppet! the II.ft of hits
,mt/ h.111 11.·u let Jo11·11
ll'ith 110 stude11fs .ll'OH//cl
Tc:eny likc:d this sp.1rkling personJlit} .inJ dc:t"idc:d
to follO\\ hc.r to Pandor;1n He.1dt1u.1rt&lt;.:rs \\ h&lt;:re .1
\'igorous d1scu~s1on. led by twenty girk \\'a~ in full
S\\,I}'. Topic: new \\Omc:n·s son,11 group on t.11npus.
Tc:enr tjueegc: "as gbJ to heJr this. for though he
h.1dn"t been hc:rc: too long, he did rc:al1Zt; the: 1111port.1nce of competition for healthy collc:g1.1t&lt;: .1tmos
phere, .ind he was sure that the Th.ili,\!1s with B.1rh
Rood .it the hdm. \\uuld · hll tit~ hill". T&lt;.:u1r
\\,ltched wtlh 1.kl ight th&lt;.: jo111t P.1ndor.111-'l lt.di.1n
(hristm.1s p.irty hdd 111 till loungL soon ,1fter
u•hcre pu11ch .me/ cool1t.1 ,111,/ /")O/fr I 111ghte1
rr,11trilmtecl high/) to the f1n11.!I) 1p1111
of the &lt;:\ening. Our little hero swt:llc:d with pnde
.tt the wonderful work .1t1.omplished b) the. P.l!1dor.1n g.ils in their r.1ffle titkct s.dt for the. brnl'fit
of the C:1ncer Dri\·c.. the g.111h of "hit h .tmounted
to $) 1'i.00. anJ his l11tle c:yt:s grt:\\ wider .u1d "ider
.ts he \'ltwed the l\\Llll} liH gifts to be r.1ffled th&lt;.:
nite of the M1stl&lt;:toe B.dl
1n/ h .1 hl.u i md ll'htt e p11 pp)
,11 I l'e he ,u/ of I hu11 ii I
I le Jud he.ird so much .1bout tlm 1\11\tl&lt;:tot H.tll th.it
T&lt;:eny m.1de up Im mind to .momp.tny Bdl \'\',tiling
to tht• aff.ur of the year
II' hen holl) .1111/ 111irth /Oi 1111 j&gt;ll'1•tl goo,/ 1l•n1
,m./ I h1: 11111 Jlt Ill.It' rfJ o 1 of \,1111 Om1.1h11c' r h./11.!
11·1th h!I /1111er ti/Id po/1.ir 11•1 n lc11i/i,1g ,/ h.111,/
to till tremendous slKtc..ss of this third annual C:\'tnt.
T here: were lots of holid.t}' .ifL11rs t.1k1ng pl.it&lt;.
now, and Te&lt;:ny rn;td:: sure th.it he: 1111v.ed non&lt;. of
them. I !is little: s1dc:s .tlmost burst, so h,1rd did ht
laugh at the: Intc:rnatio11,d N1µht .tt th&lt;. I t:gion
ll'here l.m.~lltl,f!J gm!lpr fm111 &lt;'' ') rer;l(J//
lc11f th1:n 1.1le11!.1 111 .i gi.111./ ,u/111111.111011.
of the: se.1son·s acti\'lt1c:s. Tt·~nr l1ktd &lt;:spen.dlv \\di
the. G&lt;.rman Clubs oom·p.th band '' ith lc.:.1dcr Gwrg&lt;:
Neumann, Sam V1t.dc's delightful rt11d1tio11 of Bes
s.une \1ud10 111 Sp.111ish .1nd lt.tli.111, .ind D.111ny Bo:tino in L.1 ·1 raq,1t,1 ·. and he fell in loH· with Ltrry
;\ltC,rath's inimit.1ble int&lt;:rpr&lt;.:t.ttion of .1 't.111-un··
dancu

�ti'// h

11101 e

,/JI,/

11.11 )

1·1111 a11d

rigor I h,m Vix en ,111,

/ Pr.111rer.
(hri stm .1s tree s bed eck ed
with colo red ligh ts,
shin ing ball s, and si lver
icicles a ll sho wed Teen}'
S(1uc:cgc th.lt old St. Nic k
wou ld soo n be com ing
dow n th&lt;: chim ney , .ind with
this
rn111J, he and the thou s.m d "'od hap py tho ugh t m
d" TCC ers v.1c.1tc:d
( olon ial wal ls,
unti l thei r retu rn on Janu,1ry
3.
.t

rig.rrelle

11'&lt;1.r

.rm oleJ

111

the h,i/ls

Tee ny was •I very brig ht ··ed
dica tcd mouse:·· and
his obs erva nt littl e eyes (he
was in Doc Ken t's mat h
clas s) percc:iv c:d that a " new
look " pol iq' had in\'ad ed the Col onia l dur ing
his ,1bs tcnc c in the form
of brig ht rc:d lino leum for
eve ry floor
r111t!

i"f on11r1111•e rig n.r /or et ·e1) doo
r

H e: .tlso percc:1vc:J the appc:.tra
nlC of the: Dio nys 1ans ,
the: new est in coll ege frat erni
ties with Bob Den nis
.1s its first pres iden t, ;tnd
the: Eng lish Clu b in the
proc ess of form.1tion und er
the: dire ctio n of Joh nny
Gor to:i .
By this tim e. (it was the last
wee k of the: term )
Tee ny kne w that this was
Zer o Peri od (the: only
tim e whe n the loun ge, libr
ary, and cl.tssrooms are
fair ly tiui et), and he hea rtily
app rov ed of B.1cc.icia's
G loom Ball, thei r trad itio
nal last flint( befo re the..
"glo om'.' of final exa ms sett
les on TC C

.md ''plea.re ht11 e 111erC) .1" is the
oft he.II'&lt;! ple.i
of lllf// /ero lfs class rlflle rs.

Lot s of new and exc itin g
thin gs occ urre d ·wit h
&lt;he com men cem ent of the
new sem este r crea ting
muc h enth usi.ism in Tee ny's
tiny cgu ilib riu m suc h as
the " Wh am Be Bop " jam
sess wn held in Pro f Gilfilla n's st udio s .ibovc: the boo
k stor e, the high ly success ful Biz Ad Day fe;1turin
g exh ibit s, tour s, mov ie;
.ind dan cing to the tun e of
the Sop h istic ats ( ag.iin ') ,
and the pro duc tion of "Bi ogr
aph y" wit h new st.1rlet
Jean Bb h com ing to the
fore ,

.111.! Did S111gel, .r/Ndenl prod110:
1, in th&lt;· fore
01/Ce 11101"£'.
Tee ny,

perc hed atop Dot tie Wa lker
's pro ps for
the: pby , discoverc:d thru beh
ind- the- scen e con vers ation , that ther e was somc:th
in' new coo k in' on cam pus
1n the form of " The Cla ren
don ", TCC 's first lite nry
mag.1zine. Not that he had
any defi nite inte rc:s h
alon g that line (he had not
take n Mr. Rob erts ' Eng lish 10) ). but Tee ny was
plea sed to le.irn that Mr.
Bro der· s pica for "mo re: cult
ure" had fin,dly bee n
1
hea rd
So n:an y new thin gs wer e hap
pen ing all the tim e,
th.it bef ore Tee ny kne w it
the sem este r had end ed
.ind all he cou ld do w•is rem
inis ce abo ut the won derful time s he had had pee ping
arou nd Col oni. il corners and out of peo ple' s poc
kets 'spe cial ly the: b.isketb ,tll g.11ne of Ma rch 2 betw
een Facu lty Men and
Fire ston e Bom bers whe re he
had a wea t dea l of fun
wat chin g the &lt;lllt ics of che
er lead ers Atc hley .rnd
Far gno li (tw o mem bers of
our illu strio us facu lty
\t.llT)

tl'ho.re rioto11s che en .ii the rmd
of each h,i/f
imp irit ed T erm; SqNeege·s 1111
/e her1 r/ to

O\'erflow
JO

\~ith

mer rim ent. Erv Gol dbe rg, spo
rts edit or

�of "The Colonist" \\,h there too, taking notes on the
~ame with Sampson (6'\-6 1, f.\\'or of TCC)
Jntl
on Bob Marechek, Vince J•u.kson, P&lt;:ter S1do1\ 1tz
and Pete Smyk and on the w.md bobter111g c:lfrct
''1th which the}' inspired th&lt;: TCC rohorts. Teeny
noted with pride th.it Bob lsb;m and · Su.ippy"
Hubbs were responsible: for some mighty hne bJll
playing.
The gala feeling of gaiet}' re\"i,·ed itsc:lf '' 1th1n
Teen}' as he recall&lt;:d the grand success of the Cir
nival of H ear~s and the glowJ11g exprc:ssions of d&lt;:
light on the countenances of Ruth Tuthill and (lark
I lungerford as Prof Silverton crownt·d thc:m King
and Queen of Hearts, and he Jlso rel I\ &lt;:d 1n poig
n;int nostalgia the Adelphia Spring Mix. Goliard
Mardi Gras, and B;1cocia Scholarship 'tom p. three
of the most outstanding affairs of the re.ir
1l'he11 hooJ..r 1rere c.i.rl dfJll"ll 111 pl.ire of hu1
.111d P,111clor&lt;111.r .111d Th.1'1.111.r.
A warm feeling of s.itisfaction swept over Teen}' as
he thought of all these c.1mpus capers, and especi.dlj·
when he: was reminded of the excellent work accomplished by new President Johnny Horkott and his
crew: Bob Kuchinskas. Pat Bliss and St;lll lhchman.
"Yes, My Darllllg D.rnj.!hter" \\as :ibo included in
Teeny's memory book and the perform,inces of
.. cotty" D.iwson and Vi1·ian Cook, and the comu
s.ition of the latter about the: French Club's F&lt;:tt
des fous" which included
"le .rlJle IJPu111e de rtife fr,111t,1is
el g.irron.r el de111oi.refle.r .ner he11:t''
el hea11ro11p food. 11111.rir &lt;111d e11/erl&lt;Ji111111:11/.
Highlightin g his list of spring time hits \IUC. Senior
weekend, TCCs first, 11 ith otl1cers l:d Vitkus .ind
Doris Jones paving the way . .ind the "Holid,iy for
Spring", the Colonial's second Jnnu;tl college rc:,·ic:"
''1th Albert, Herbert, Hasenpflug .ind Bro"n
and llll/1/1!/0llJ J/11,fr111s ''goi11g lo /011'11"
i11 their 111111111.1/1011
of th1: "Hie1" ecl11r.ilio11
ri111,1/io11 of the Jl!,11.
8111 of the ///,///) c1 t'nl.r h,• rn11/cl n t.11/.
Tcell) lol'l.:d th, he.rt of ,i//
Spring 11"eeke11d i11 lfr1y
when
/&lt;1mll)- .1tl111i111.rtr.ilio11, .rl11rle111.r c111,/ ,ti/.
i11 /01111,i/ .11/irc e111/){://nhe,/ the h,i//
and next day
i11 1e,111.r r111d .r1ce.1/er.r .111cl /ril'oln11.r 111nod
.111,/ .rocl.i pop .111.I lotr oj joncl
(and cheese for Teeny St1ucegc:) p1cn1cked at St.Ile
Park at the All Colle,gc: Outing, and till fin.ti e\ent
of a highly successful year.
Yes, indeed, concluded Teeny Stjuecge. (\uth the.
m.1ture \1 isdom characteristic of the collc:,ge -;opho
more). this Triple Cities College: is a prttty wonderful place and 11 ith these happy thoughts tn mind
we bring to a close our ~torr of the l1ttk· mouse.
ll'ho finr 111 the IJ1g 11'/&gt;1/e /&gt;01111:
011 Li11co/11 Al'e1111t! ...
11

�"E1 w/t) Recep1io11 To11ight &lt;.JI / ldi11
gto11 Il otet"
Cnlo11i,tl Nell's. Oct. 15 . 1948

�13

�C HA1 C LLLOR \X' ILLIA M PEARS ON T OLLE Y
''ill long be remembered b}' students of Triple Cities
(ollcge . It was throug h his efforts that Triple Cities
( ollege ,,,i, first founded, and then expand ed to a
pcrm.tnent, four ye.ir college .
Dr. Tolle} 1s the sc:venth thance llor of Syracuse
University A natl\e of Binghamton, he received his
Bachelor of Arts degree in 1922 and Master of Arb
in 192 1 from Syr&lt;Kuse University. H e. then prou.:eded to Columbia University. "her&lt;: he received his
Doctorate of Philosophy in 1930.
In 19 3 I Dr. Tolley was appointed to the presidc:ncy of A llcghtn} College and ''as wel I on the '' ·'}'
to bct'oming a nation.ti le,1der in higher education.
He r.1pidly gained Lime .is the youngest rnllege president in the United States.
A Phi 13et.i Kapp.t, Dr. Tolle}' has scrYed in ,tn
&lt;:xc:cu;l\e position 111 m.rny ci,·1t and educatronal orga111Lat101h both at Syr.1cuse ;ind, often in an adYisorr
c1p.1t 1tr, at T riple Ci tr&lt;:~ College.

Vl( I C llA1 CELI.OH 1"11 LA G. C RA\VF ORD. a
gr.idu.ilc of Alfred Un1,c:rs1ty, h.1s been .1 memb&lt;:r of
the ~yrarnse uni\ ers1ty F.ilttlty s1nu.. I&lt;) 19. Sime
I').' I he h.1s btcn .1 professor 111 the: Sd1ool of
( 1t1·
n:nsh1p ,ind Pub)i( AfT.im, ,ind Dean of the Coli&lt;:gc
of l.1h&lt;:r,d Art'&gt; s1n(e I') )8 Dr ( r,l\\ ford is also
I le.id of the Pol1t1cd Suencc Dcp.trtmcnt of the r-.t.ix wcll ~diool of ( ililcnship.
Dr ( r,l\\ ford )us t.tught sumnit rs at th&lt;: L'n1H:r·
stl} of ~t.rnford ,111d Alfrnl L1 nl\crs1tr. .111d ts .i
rm:mh u of the Amem .in Polttit.d Stien(&lt;: A'&gt;sou.1·
11011, 1 at1011.1I .\!uniu p.d l..&lt;.:.1guc , ,ind the: Amerit.111
1\"o&lt; r.lt1on of Ln1,·ers1ty Profcssors
\\'1,kh· kno\\ n .is .1 teacher, educ1t1on.1I adminis
tr.itor ..111d ti\ t&lt; ludc:r. Dr. ( r.1\\'ford h.is .dso written
nuny hooks on polit1c.11 sc1UK&lt;: .ind ctonom1t's.
lmmed1.ltl Ji;i-on o!lrccr bct,,ec:n Triplt (itic:s
( ollq.:e .wd ~yr.Kuse l'rn\C: Nty. Dr. ( r,t\\'ford sen·es
in the cap.1t1ty of .id,isor to Dean H.utlc.

1-l

�DE AN GL EN N G. BA RT LE

�lllNJA; \111 HOPKIN~ MOSE~ was \\ell pr&lt;:p.trc.:cJ for his duties as Rq.:1strar b&gt; his studies ,lt
Lit k,rn ann.t Businc:ss (ol legc:. \X'}'orning Seminary.
Penn "it ate: l:ng1nec:r Exl&lt;:nsion_ ~yracusc L niv&lt;.:rs1ty,
and H.1n.u d Ln1,c:r"ty Graduate: School Althou gh
pnrn:ml} .t pol1tiuil &gt;cic:ncc rn.ijor. it 1s C\ idcnt th.it
i\lr ,\fosc:s i-. ''di \'&lt;:rscd in many fic:lds.
An instructor in political scic:nce at Syr.icusc l}n1
\'C:rs1ty in 1916, l\fr i\fosc:s r.1p1dly ad,,intc.:d lo the
position of Ass1st.lnt De.in of i\l&lt;:n.
Ont of lht pioneers in the forn1.1t1on of TC (,
Mr Mos&lt;:s .1cted ,is resident d1renor of the yr.KusL
l '111,c:rs1ty I xtc:nsion School .lt Endiw tt.
~IR

i\flSS l:L!ZA BETH PLAN KINTO &gt; , Counsellor of
\X'ome n ·from 1916 to 1')·18, 1s no'' D1rcdor of Stu
dent Pcrsonn&lt;:I. she is on&lt;. of thrc:t ,,·omen in the:
country to hold th.it position.
he obLtined he1 13. A. in English at the Univers1t}' of Oregon .ind her ,\f. A. 111 personnc.l al yr.1cusc: University. During the "ar she servc.:d as ,1 Sp.H
otlicer in \'&lt; ash1ngton_ D. C.
l111g the;
i\11\S Pl.111k1nton. still in chargt of toun~cl
ental
instrum
1s
also
coeds,
of
r
numbe
g
ever-in treasin
in plannin g and executing the studen t pc:rsonncl pro
gram, speci.d college plannin g tomm1ttces and has
clurge of all seuct,m al personnel

.,
,\!R J:\C K F KlMBA I L. formc.:r D1rc:clor of stucl&lt;.:nt ·Pc:r~onncl, 1s now on !&lt;.:a' c.: of .1bsc:ncc. con
ttnuint: his sllld1b .it ( olumb1.1 Uni,ers ity. J\1r.
K1mb.ill pre' 1ousl} ser\'cd .is .1ss1l&gt;t.int lo the: De.in of
tht Libu.d Arb ( ollegt .it K.111s.1s ( 1ty L'niv&lt;.:rsity,
from '' lmh he gradua ted before studpn g .it Syr.icuse
L'n1,ers1ty.
;\fr K1mb.ill \\,IS ,1 N,l\\' Lieuten.int .ind ;:n As
sl\t,int Puson nd Otlicer d1;ring the ''.tr H&lt;: .ilso
t.1ught .1 tours&lt;: 111 commun1t.1tions .it the Oflirer's
Tr.1in1ng thool .1t t\•.port, Rhod&lt;.: Isl.ind
(oord1n.1t111g ptrsorr nd tOunsc.:llmg sen 1c&lt;:s, stu
cknt ht.11th \&lt;:f\ ltts. hous111g..ind JOb plat&lt;:mc.:nt was
;\fr K1111b.ill's di1d dut} .1t Triple C1t1c.:s Collq.:&lt;:.

16

�MR. MARION A. NELSON rece1,cd his B. S.•tnd
1\f. A. in Business Administr.1t ion .ind faonom1cs at
the Urn,-c.rs1ty of outh D.tkot.1. He t.tught .lt North
western Unl\crsity before becoming Business f\Ltn.t ger .ti Triple ( ities College.

MR. M l( H AE L SCELS I, new Counsellor of Men, is
wc:ll known in the Triple Cities area. He is a graduate
of Union-Endicott High School and recei,·ed his de·
p,ree from l.ouisian.t St.tte UniYersit}' in 19W.

NURSE ANNE MEADE 1s a gradu.lle of the 1\1.1ss.1chusells Grneral Hospital 1n Boston . Sh&lt;: .ilso serYed
;ts member of the Army Nurse Corps 111 the Furopun
Theater.
DR. JOHN MALLO RY, hours one to two. is &lt;l
gradu:1te of Syracuse University. In ;tddit1on to Im
services to the college, he is a pr.tdi c1ng phr1cian 111
the End icott area.

l\fR. FR ITZ L. HIER, director of public rc:l.1t1ons
and instructor of Journalism , is a gradu.1te of D.trt
mouth College. He received his M. A. from Syr.1cuse
L' ni,·ersity.

f\1R. H t.RBERT LEET is a gradu&lt;tte of ~yr.1rnst
Uni,·en1ty. He served as a member of the librar}
st.tfT of the Q,·id Centr,11 School before assuming his
duties as T(( Librarian 111 September 19·1'.

17

�SIDNEY P. ALBERT. Arnstant Prof&lt;.:ssor
Philosophy Department Head
l:THA

0. ALLE, , !nstrudor

~fat hc:mancs

MARY E. ATCHLEY, lnstrudor
English
THOMAS E. BATT AG T.I N I, Assistant Jmtrudor
( hcmistry

P. 13ELNIAK, Instructor
JOH
( 1tizc:nship and Political cicncc.
MICH AEL BOC..H1 AK. lnstruttor
Foreign Langu•tgc
CLEMENT G. BOWERS, Lccturt·r
Botany Department Head
BERT RAM BRODER, Assist.int Profc:ssor
Business Adm1nistr,lt1on Dep.1rtmc:nt Ifr,id

18

�BEATRICE D. BROWN, Associ.1te Profc:ssor
English Department Head
ER IC BRUNGER, Instructor
History
HILDA CHIARULLI. Instructor
Economics and Bu\iness Administration
ARTHUR (LA YOON, Instructor
Economics and Business Administr.1tion

IRV ING CRESPI, Instructor
Sociology
WILLJAM L. CLAFF, lnstructor
Business Administration
YOLANDA FRAGNOLI, Assistant
Foreign Language

ln~tnlltor

WAYNE S. FARROW, Instructor
Speech Department Head

19

�JA( OB I JSUITAL. l nstrudor
Biology
·
HI.I NR I(! I

rRIEDLA '\LXR. I &lt;:llur&lt;:r

l:l01101111( '

I L'C I '\ ~· C. GERHART. lnstrudor
Busints' Admin1str.• tion

J GILI'Al.LEN, 1\,,m1.1t&lt;: Prof&lt;:ssor
,\fusit D&lt;:partmrnt Hud

1\ I LX

,\f ARGARET H ASL P l· LL·(, , !nstruttor

English
r D\X' t\RD HERBERT. Inst rm tor
bnglish

( LARKE F HESS. In,trnttor
G &lt;:ogr.1phr

A LBl:RT \'. HOl SL t\ssou.itc. Professor
HistOr) .rnJ Pol1t1ul Srrc.n((: D&lt;:p.trtm&lt;:nt H ead

20

�ALFRED ). HOTZ, 1\ ss1st.rnt Proft"or
Polit1c.~I c1c1Kt an ! Intcrn .• tion.tl R c:l.1t.01h
JEA I VORY, Assist.mt [n,trudor
C1tizcnsh1p .rnd Poln1ul Stirnt&lt;:
MILDRE D l\L Kt:l. l.OC.C •. Inst ruuor
English

JAMES R. r. K l·., I . A-so.i.ttc Pro tlssor
Mathematics Dc:p.rnmrnt I lc:.1d

HE1 RY ( . KE1 CHAM. 1\sw.t.1nt Prolc"or
Ph ysic~

RODNEY D. KLTC H1\,\I . Assoti.ite Prolt"or
Foreign Langu.1gc Dtp.trtme nt He.tel
ROLLA ND L U1Z. Jn,tructor
History

SEYMOu R 1\!A 1 0:. lnstrullor
Citiztnsh1p .rnd Politit.tl • ti&lt;.ncc

21

�LOTTE MEDAK,
Music

In~tructor

DAVID MOLYNEAUX, Assistant
Psychology
JOH, M. O'BRIEN, Associ,1tc: Professor
llusincss AJmrnistr:ition
jt\( OB OSER, Instructor

Economics

MARTIN A. PAUL, Associate Professor
Chemistry Department Head
ORV AL PERRY, Instructor
Philosophy
LA W'RENCE PISANI, Instructor
ociology
~1ARTHA

Zoo log;-

22

PITEL, Instructor

�ED\X' ARD P01\IEROY, lnstructor
Art
OSCAR REED , Instructor
Psychologr
(HARLES REll l:;\WYER, Instructor
B usine~-. Adm1111~tr;?t1on

CONSTANCE REPS, Instructor
Foreign Lrnguagc:

\\'ALTER ROBERT ', l c:ctun:r

Speech
HAROLD ROCKWELL,

ln~tructor

Foreign L.1ngu.1gc:
CHARLE SAA;\I, Instructor
Psychology

DOLiG LAS · 1L\'LR TON,
English

Assi~t.1111

Profr.,sor

23

�G. RALPH SMITH, Instructor
Economics Department He.tJ
\X'. PORTER SWIFT, Assist.mt Professor
Psychology Dep.irtment I lead
JOSl:PH VAN RIPER

Associate Professor
Geography Department He.1J

ALFRED VOGELE, Assistant Professor
Zoology

KEN ETH T. \Xt ALDOCK, Instructor
Che:mistry
PAUL WE IGAND, Assistant Professor
Foreign Language

JAr--1 E

H. WILMOTH, Assist.mt Profe:ssor
Zoology Department He.1d

FRANCES WRIGllT, Instructor
M.1thema1 ics

24

�FmsT RO\X': Willi,1111 Gunsc:t, H i:li:n Rutll:r. Alth&lt;:a l\lil kr.
S1cor-.n R!)\'C Syl\'1a /\1 omscy, \X'ilm.1 J.1ck,on.

G&lt;:nc Valk. Clthc:ryn Lron, Carol Hi t(htock .
Rea r. H c:rbert Leet.

i\1.1qonc: h b.111, M.irilyn Bornb.trd, J .1ne Uy. Ruth (herm 1k, Manon Holl.ind.
~1 coND Ro\\ : Dorothy Holmt~. l\1am Conc:r. .\1.1bd Br.1111 . .\1.tqoric
Krnnu&lt;l. Dom ~1m~c:r, Josephine DO\\ nc:y.
FIR'&gt;! Ro\\ :

25

�"f 11110

PrfJ/J

Cre11·

L ooks lo !rid;''

Coloui,tf

1\ e111,

Oct. 29. 19.:f.8

��F1R-..1 Ro\\

Jult,1 R1tkarJ, Ralph Forest, Clark I lungerford. 1ld&lt;:n HuJd,1. Barb.ira Rood, i\!r. Hier.
S1 &lt;0:-.-1&gt; Rm\ : David Merri lees, Robert Bar.getz1, Jeanne Thomas, Donald Englehart, Frances Kozlo\\'ski, M.trilyn Bro\\'n, Philip Breckenridge, Beatrice Thorson, J\Cary Ann Schaarschmidt.

THE COLON IAL NEWS
The hrst edition ol the ( olon1.1I 1 e\\~ of tht f.ill
term of 19 18 \\.is published under UH.. direction of

on Sl\eral it&lt;:ms of importance to TC C students 111
eluding the org&lt;t111z.1t 1on of the Senior Class.

former cd1tor J11n ( lugstone. A permanent staff \\'.IS
s&lt;:t up hc:fort· the next issue, however. under the
c:ditorsh1p of (lark Hun.gerford. His staff. though
incxpcm:nced. did ,t rnmmendabl&lt;: job of \\f1tin].:,
uliting. &lt;tnd even .1ssist111g in the shop mah up of
the ( oloni.il NC\\ s during the Lil I term.

Near the end of the first term, Editor Clark J l ungerford resigned to .1ssume a position \\ ith a local
newsp.1per. 1\Lrnaging Editor Ralph Forest assumed
the Editorship .it this point and directed the paper's
.1cti\ 1ties for the remainder of the term and throughout the spring term. The Coloni.tl News extra of
;\farch ) .set a record for promptness by publishing
the: results of the spring USG dection only fi\e hours
after the polls closed. Another News scoop was the
announcement of the .1ddition of the seventh major
\\Im h could be obta111ecl at TC (.

After inuc.hing the paper\ inrnm&lt;: by the .1ddi11on of sc\·er,tl nt:\\ .1,h-ertiscrs. thl nC\\ s w.is .1bl&lt;: to
&lt;:xp.1nd to six p.1g&lt;:s, for the tir\t turn. in its h1storr.
'I his six p.tge form h,1\ bet:n used rn1tc tht:n Lxc&lt;.pt
on tht· Ott.is.ons ol \ .1~.1t10ns. ex.un \\ &lt;:t:ks .ind such
o•ht:r t11n&lt;:s .is .1 short production sd1edulc p&lt;:rm1tted

The stJff\ .\Cll\ 1t1ls \\ere t lim.1xed by the third
,111nuJI publ1cat1om banquet m 1\Lir.

onlr four p.tgLs Tht Ne\\ s scooped lot.ti nC\\ sp.1pers
28

�FALL TERM

l !lh

Editor

M'\nagin g- Ed it o r

Fen tu re ~
S ports
New~

Ct•rry

Bloom

Mnnn.:-ing

~l ak e- u p

llu ~ ine ~ s

l lt•lt•n H udtlu.
J ulia Ric-knnl

Ed ito r

Hnlph Fote :-it

S ho1&gt;

Robc·r l Bnr)td:t.i

fo~dito rial S taff

1 !11~

Clark Hun).!'t•rfonl

Libra rian
l&gt;l~nnil'l,

J:u·k

\\'~ch.tt:.

Fon-st
llt•kn ltudcln

S po rt• Editor
0

1' l'\\" Editor

Marilyn lhdwn

~ e" ~

Cnrolyn Mn1·ks

StnlT

Boh lloocl

.Julin Hi1.'kn rrl

A dH.' rl1 "iin1t Mnnng- e r
~t arihn Bro\\ n

Fn·cl Ahchdlnh

Flora But•hnnnn. David ~h~rrilt·t"", Rc·~)" U' \\ olft'o

Don E nglt.•hart. Bob

Edito r

Al11n Stuart

Bnrlmra Hood

Ad,·ertising

Halph

l&gt;on

nu~i O {' "i S

Mnnasr er

Hi hu rtl Cr:qw:&gt;

fo~ngh·hnrl ,

Fran 1'o1-1nwNki. ("hm·k Bud11t1 -.. k) .

ancl Boh I&gt;ono\nn

Harry At·rur ... o, Jt:ann,~ T humU!-0, l h t•k Strd&gt;.
Thorson. \\' iJlinm Dot&gt;·. John A rnold. Frant°iN Kozlow-

,... t"nt u re S taff
Bt.·~Hrin•

ski, Phil

Hrt~ck t•nrids:t·

Uusi neRs Staff

F e ature ~ lnfT l&gt;i«k
l&gt;h·k Sn li!'lh\lry

Bt•atric.·t.• Thor »oll . M nry A nn St•hu:trschmidl

Cov1 SlnfT

Strch,

Ni~ ...... t

Ro:-t•, .Jt·unru.•

Thoma~.

uncl

l·~r11it..· St•1·rwckh·

Adverti~ing S ta ff

Rolwrt Stunt', J a«k Gilman. Jw·11uPlint· C:n1!-lc·.
Jamt·' L auch•r. K i,•th l&gt; unklc•t•

Tht• PolH·y of lht.• Coloni.;d N"t·w i~ din·t'lt•d hy an c·clil&lt;H"iul
H.ulph Fon· l, ll t•lt•n ll udtla. Juli:1 Hidrn r1I
Boh Hood. ll nrry At·l'ur•·P•. and CamillP Hoach

Tht polic)· of tlw ('01.0NIAL NE\VS i-. 1tirt•rtt·cl Ly nn
t•&lt;litorinl hoard c:onsistinK uf ('lurk B unJ..:-t•rfonl. Ralph Fon·st.
Gt•1Ty B loom. Rolu.•rt Bar ~t·t;d, ,Julia l?itkarcl, ancl l lt.·Jt.n ll uclda

h~ 1 arcl t.•ompra1't«I or

UNITED WORLD FEDERALIS TS
PreJi.le11/ . .

V1t1:- PreJu/e111

S1:ael,11J
'f're.i.r11rer ..
r.1mllJ Adi isou .. - ..... .

N 1s~ 1 1

A. Rosi

j.

11\\:\R I

\'&lt;fi ll. JAM

The: reorg,rniz,1tion of tlw Un ited World l"&lt;:d&lt;:r.d
ish in Janu;iry. 1919 ,,,\s retu , ed b) an c:n1husi.ht1l
anJ e.1gc:r member~hip. UnJ&lt;.r direction of the otf1

F R !' DI· IU(°K M OR(,\'
. .. P H ll LIP

J. Poi

K ISH

M R. H O T/. /\l R Al Ill Rl.

MR Bi

tus .rnd ''1th the assist.inn: of the f.Kulty .1dvisors
the U\X' I· took pa rt in m.iny .1tll\ 1ties during thl'

I &lt;'-L\K

sp ring term.

Richard G illies, Fred Morgan, Nisse! Rose,
Robert Stone, am V ita le

Spomored by thl' U\'Q F ' 'ere radio bro.1dt,1sh
OY&lt;.r '&gt;tat1ons \X!EN E in End icott .tnd \Xf NB F 1n
Uingh.1mto11 .tnd a bureau providing speakers ''ho
,1Jdn.ssc:d nnous clubs .111J org.1niz.1t1ons throughout
tht commun ity. In the spnit of world sc:n ite the
&lt;IS a co-sponsor for the \'Qorld Student

U\XI F alleJ

Ser,•ice FunJ drive and organized a CARE drive.
Dc.kg.1tes representing thl' U\X'F of T C( took
p.1rt in tht ~lode:! Re,·1e" ( onftrcncc: to Re:' 1sc. the.·
Cnited '\ ,1tions Charter held /\Lmh 18 to 20 .1t
H.1, c:rford ( ollegc. Pennsyh an1a.

During the yea r the Fc:der.dists held meetings .111d
dist uss1on groups to .icyu.tmt its members with the
club\ purposes and ,1ims.

29

�rmsT Rmx: Helen Hudda, Robert&lt;\ 1 oland, Frances KozlO\\ ski, Mary Ann Ferrari, Margaret Hudy,
Beatrice
Thorson, lk.ttrice; Z,1mp1.
Si CON!l Rmx·: George Do} le, Jeannt Thomas, William Donnelly, Father Aylesworth, Camille
Roach, Rose
M.1r1e Walsh, Jan1utline Gruse. Mary Ellen Williams.
T111Rll Rm\: Leonard Ziska, Conrad Dewan. J. Rich.ml Singe!, Thomas
Mikolasko, i\fario Pizzillo, Augusto
G.1lluc10, John Konik. Robert Hog.in, Jo.in O"Connor, Barbar,1 McGuire, /\Luy Povlock, Ele.inor
Sullivan.
Robut Koloski, t-.l.1rilyn Brown, John Ring.

NEW MA N CLU B
Pr, .r1.fr111

CAMILLI ROACH

V1re-Pro11/1' 11/
l?t·1rm/111., Seot'l.ll)
( m n •.rprJ11.l111;; St crt'l.111
'Jr1•,11111a

/;,1mlt1 /l,/11.rorc

In Ottober of 19•18 the Newman Club of Triple
Cities College was formed to promote Catholic Culture and Catholic Fellowship among students of the
Catholic Faith. The purpose of the club is to deepen
the spiritu.ll and enrich the temporal lives of its
members through a b11anced program of religious,
intellectu.11. and ~ocial activities; to weld the C1tholic
students into a common union; and to assist the college and its stud&lt;:nts whenever possible.

\'&lt;111 LIAM MAllAR
J1 A:&gt;.1'.I T110MAS
Ro&lt;&gt;1 MARii \XI ALSll

\X/11.UAM DoNNFJ.LY
:0.[R~. Pl RRY -~'ll MR SIL\ I RT01'.'

The Most Reverend Walter A. Forcy, Bishop of
the Diocese of yrncuse. officially approved the establishment of the Newman Club by appointing Father
Ch.tries Aylesworth as Chaplain.
The members of this club expect to be accepted
by the National Federation of Newman Clubs in the
ne.tr future, thus joining over fi\•e hundred international groups in a common unity.
30

�AG AP EA NS
Presiclu1/ . .. .. . .....
V1re-Pre.rid1'11/
Sffrt·/,11 }-'Jll!.1J11rer .
P11blio1) Direr/o r .
/ lc/11.rrn.r

i\fR. ( LAYDOI' \.

DO/\ALI &gt; STot 'T
MARY

A""

NAGOR:- .:Y
McO~rn1 R
L:-1 A MAR1Y:-.:1 K

A:-.;!\

T111
Riv.

SMllH, R EV

13Al\KS

In the spnng of 19·19 the Pro:est.1nt Studc.:nts of
T CC formed the Agape&lt;ln Club. l n order to increase
the religiom and social fellowship of the.: students, a
steering committee formed the original pl:tns for
the orgmiz ation. ubse9uent org.1nizaticn followed,
pcrm.inent officers "ere elected, and club ,1cli,·it ies
planned.
During the spring term the Agapeans sponsored
many soci,11 acti' iti&lt;.:s for their members including
s9uare dances, sbting parties. and soci.11 group parties. On se,·er.d occasions tht group attended the
churches of the community as a group.
FtRST Ro\X': Donald Stout. Barbara Murray, Thelma
Martynek.
S1co:--.1&gt; Row: Re'" Henry C. Banks, Ann McOmber, Robert
C reveling . Mary Ann

31

agorny

�WINTER SPORTS CLUB
Prerid£'111 ............. .
Vice-PffJide11/

BR!'( E DFA(.ON
WILLIAM GO\\'

\X1A LTUl RANDALL

Sen'l'l.11') ..

'f l't.lf/11(' /'

. .

•

JOAN o·co:-.=Notl

Early in the fill of 19 18 SC\ era I intercsteJ stu·
dents banded to~ether to form the winter sports
club. The purpo,e of the formation of this organization wa~ to m.1kc possible the gre.ttcr enjoyment
of winter athletic ,t(ll\ 1tics by the students as a group.

mo\ ies on skiing, skating, and tobogg.1n111g to students. On several occ..sions, when wc,tthcr conditions warranted, groups of hickory cnthmiasts journeyed to Montrose, Pennsylvania to u,e the '&gt;k 11ng

During the f.111 tc:rm otlicer&gt; were chosen and
pl.ins \\ere dr.rn n up in order to provide the club
members with the greate:st amount of winter sports
activity within the limited faci li ties &lt;l\ .1i lable. Clubsponsored ~crv1ccs included obtaining .ind show ing

This winter the we.1thcr rnrtatled m.tn) alliYit1es
of the Winter Sports ( lub. With little rnntinucd
mid weather and sti II k-~s snow, many of the planned
acti\·ities &gt;\'ere unable to be carried out.

facil ities there.

Ro\X" \'V'altcr t.inzel, Joan o·connor, Bruce Deacon, William "Gow, Jack Burlingame.
P.1tri(i.1 Bliss, Rohcrt Musa, Marie Jimenc.z, John Brewer. SJm Marcone, \Xl illiam Clark, far!
~J &lt;O:&gt;.I&gt; Rm\
(I.irk, M.1uri((· Passagno, Eleanor Sullivan, Paula Davis.
FI RST

32

�Ro..x•: Edward S(humacher, Thom:is Blau,·c.lt. Robert Burhinsky. Arthur Ryhak, fah1 .trd 1\nt.d. Roht"rt
Appe, John Horkott, William McCaffcry.

FIRST

SECOND RO\X': Joseph Bishara, Jack \X!eJge, Thom.1~ l,·ory, \X/1ll1 am Tu thill, CL1ude Cr.11\ ford. John Moor&lt;:,
Robert Root, Clark Hungerford, Walter Stanzel. Robert Kohnstam, Philip Breckenridge, George R)du,
Robert Klin ko, Thomas Terry, J.1mes Lauder, J.1mes Norris.

ADELPHI
Adelphi started off the sou.ii "111rl for till F.ill
Term of 1918 with a Fall Mix D&lt;llllt on Odoher ' l.
under the Gener.11 Ch.mmanship of Ld Ant.ii

Ro111R1 APPi
Pre.riden/
1
\'( AL l IR
·1 A:--:i'I l
Vice-Pre.ridwt .. ...... .... .
Grrn1c,1
RYDI R
Serrelar)
1
\X 1LLIAM \XI Al.LI"&lt;·
Tret1.r11rer
THOMAS T1 RRY
Gener.ti 0//1cer ...
MR. POMl .ROY, MR. $\X'IFT
Family Adi irou .

On October 30, ten n&lt;:11 members were admitted
to the org.111izat1on al .1 form.ii ceremony al the home
of Thom.is Terry. On December l .1 · Montl ( .1rlo
Orgy" ""'' held ,lt the summer w tt.1gt of ( l.1ude
( rawford on Quaker Lake.
A spaghetti dinner was held on Febru.try 21 for
the purpose of presenting new members lo the dub.
These ne" members "ere installed .it a formal &lt;eremony on February 2 1.
Thc. Adelphi Spring Mix 11,is held on March
tht .1ffair was direcred by a committu.: he.1ded
J.1d;. \X'edge.

1:

br

The St"(ond Annu.il Adelphi B.1m1uel w.1s hdd
l.1tc in the spring. The annual aw.1rd w.1s prestnted
to the Adclphian who had contribut&lt;:d thl' most to
the club during the year

33

�BACCA CIA
Ric HA Rn l\f 1 RC

Pre.ride11/ ........ .•
V10:-Pre.riJe111

\X' 1111 AM

RAY\101'.ll D1c1-11:-..1

.\ erret.11) . .. ....... ... .

I rt i.r11rer
r.1ot!f) /1,/ 11.rors

1R

H oR'.-&gt;EY

l: ll\\ ARll E ss 1 RMA1'
i\ [ ll

B l I NIAK,

1\fa

SM ITH

Scl1ol.mhip was granted lo Jerry Gibbs of Kt\\ Gardc::m, Long Island in No' &lt;:mbc:r 19 IH T he scholarship rs supported by the proteeds from the ~cholar­
ship Stomp. A third B.1n.1ri.rn sponsOrl·d eYent is
the annual "Ship\\ reek D.rnce"' ,\l which tveryone
who attends is invited lo come tn olJ cloth&lt;:s ,rnd
act sailor-l ike.

In No,embcr, 19-16, a group of twcnty-two slu
d&lt;:nls formcd the Baccacian Society to promote good
ftllO\\ship and lasting friends.
During their first year the 13accacians originated
a "'Gloom B,lll" which was held just before th&lt;. week
of ex,ul1S. This yea r a third annual "'Gloom B.lll "
was hdd at th&lt;: Endicott Legion, thus m.1king 1t th&lt;:
oldtst social club sponsored affair on the coll&lt;:ge
&lt;.tlend.1r.

In addition to their sou.ti .ind schol.irship acti \ 1ties the B.Kcauans h.t\"C: ,rn Audemir Aid Committee designed to help members \\ ith sd1ol.tst1c
problems.
The clL_ib is also prominent in collet:.: intr.1mural
le.1gues; lia\·111g been ch.1mp1on of th&lt;. 19 18 softl)Jll
le.IJ.:UC and runner up in the 19 18 19 19 b.1sketbail
lc.1gue.

Another B.Kcaci.1 First is the l3acu1u.1 Schol.tr
ship. Banau,1 \\.ts the first studcnt organiz.1tion lo
gr.rnl ,\ chh s&lt; hol.1r:.hip. The first annual B.lcrnu,1

Frn s 1 Rmx : I f aro ld Noteware, Ernest Ci not ti. Rith.1rd Strdi, Ceorge R. i\ 1c1cer, John S.demme,

Lel,tnd

()'( onn&lt;:ll, Willi ,1111 Kuchinskas, Howard Johanson, Robert 1-fayman.
~I&lt; o·,.i1 Rm\ : John Hogan, William Ke.ii, Alan Stu.Ht, Lambert Lauder, Robert Callen, Arnold Brow n, Don-

.tld Mdbtone, Gus H aroldson, C1mille Roac h, Charles Abbe, [ Jward Esserman.

34

�Ro\\ : John Gorton, T.1it Robc:rlson, Robe.rt Dc:nnis, Donald F11glch.1rt, S.un \'V'intc:rstei n.
St&lt; oNn Rm\ : Elton R. D!lbon, Joseph ( Je,1ry, Toshio Takenak.i, \Vdliam Ard:c:r. V1ncc:nt ( hrz.111, A. \\ ii
Jiam H.m1son, J.11nc:s MacArthur, Robc:rt Perh,un, D,l\'iJ Dopp, Charlc:s Engli~h. Robert D1utc:.
F1 1\sT

DION YSIA
R OBJ'Rl D1 NNIS
Preride11/
T AIT Roll! RTSON
V1re-Pre.rulc11/
...... .. Do, A t n fa,c.11 H ART
Sare/&lt;1r;
JoHN GrnnoN
Sgt.-.11-A1111.r .. .... ...... .
SAMUi!. \V'JNIIR~ll l 1'
Trr&lt;1.r11rer
1\ IR CltLSPl , MR. W 11 :-101 11
F.1m/1y AJ1iw1 .r .

Dionpia is the: most recently org.mized of the
clubs &lt;ll TCC Founded early in Decc:mbc:r, tt
h.1s since gro"n and developed until it i ~ now on a
p.ir with the other social clubs.
The Dionpi.lllS Jun. enjoyed sC\ c:ral p.1rt1&lt;:s and
outings du n ng recent months. Among the most
memorable is the: ea rl y i\Luch outrng at the summer
home of T ai l Robert-.on at Quaker Lake. On .mother
onasion the Dionpi.ms sponsoreJ ,1 rollc:r.sk.1t1ng
p.irty.
The Dionys1ans ente1ed J team in the intr.unur.il
baskc:tball lc:.1gue, .rnd also h,1Ye t.1ken their place
with the othc:r soci.11 clubs by assisting "1th till Red
Cross Jr!\ c: anJ other \1 orthy causes
~O&lt;ial

35

�l3,1xter. Stanley Golden, \X1 dl1.1m l:llison. J.1rne:s
Thomas, Donald Buffum, Harry Hafler, Robert \X'&lt;:mtraub, Donald GIO\u, Fr.ink ( don.1, l\ l1d1.1&lt;:1 Biloz
icholas Donatdli, Robert Ctrson, \X' d
::i1 co:-.-n Rm\ Robert Att1san1, Charles Putrino, Albert S. Clemente,
l1am Kuch.ink. Joseph Trabucco, John Malik, Larry McGrnth, John A. Dyer, Howard Wall, (ah 1n Symons, Kieth Dunklee. Vernon Fritz. Robert Bargetzi, Orlando Busino, Rich.ml Dennis.
T11 1RD Row : W ill iam Weber, Frederick Burgess, Wi lliam D.1vies, Pau l Sheely, Paul Stewert, Dclwert C.r.ift,
John Bdos, DuWayne Pettijohn, George Donovan, Rich.ml Rath, Arthur Neumann, J. Richard Singe!.
Raymond Trabuno, Lennut Erikson.
l-IRs·1 Rm\: John Kotd1ik, James ( lugstone, Joseph W.

The Goliards, T( C's l.1rgest men's sou.ti dub.
began its second year 1n October. t 9 ·18. A group of
ne\' members, two dozen in number, ''ere 1n1ti.ued
e,1rly in the fall.

GOLIARDS
l'r1 r1,h i1/
JIire-Pu: r1i!t:11/
' '' (/'(!ft11)

.

.

l\ I AIUO Pl/.ILLO
F RA:-..-K Cl LONA
.

1 n·.t&lt;llr~T
/· 1mfl.J ;1.fri 1or.1 ..

MR.

N.1med for a g roup of wandering schol.trs "Ito
traveled across Europe, maki ng merry &lt;Ind doing
J.(OOd, the Goliards of Triple Cities College sc:l out
in 19 18 to live up to their aims of performing ser·
'ice to the needy as well .ts t.1king part m fratern.11
act I\ 1ty of a social nature.

K l 11 II DUNKLEE
\'(1 11 l IAM EVFRTS
MR . BR l ' NG l•R.
Ron-...1 Y Krn HAM

Early in October. the organization sponsored a
CARE drive fo r clothing and household needs fo r
needy pc:oples of se,eral foreign countries. (A RE
p.1ckages were sent to England, France, Italy,
the Union of South Africa, and elsewhere. Packages
of clothing also were sent overseas after .1 collection
drive hc:ld at the college under Goliard Sponsorship.
The Goliards broke blood -bank records for the
second time "hen more than fiftr pints were don.ited
to the second Goliard Blood Dri\"e,
( rowning event of the year for the Goliards \\,ts
the i\1.mli Gras staged M:irch 18. Amon~ other
.1cl11c,·emcnts the Goli.•rd~ won their second con-;ecut1' e intramural basketb,111 championship.
36

�MARO ON K EY
Jo111'. A. DnR

Ch.11n11.111

G l'OR&lt;.i

O t t\'(/ AYNF P 1 I 1 IJOH~
ARTHl'R

Dol'&lt;oV.&gt;\1'.

(A 1 v1~ SYMo;-.;s

l t'MAN1'.
FRA1'.K (110:-. ....

The prim.try purpose: of the: Kc:y is to &lt;.:st.1blish
f n&lt;.:nc.bh1ps "1th othc:r (Ollegc:s .1nJ to promote gooJ
''di and sportsmamh1p by bc:mg of s&lt;.:n 1tL to .1thlc:til rivab.

The Maroon Key is an honor.iry soci&lt;.:ty that
operates 111 coopc:ration "ith the college athletic dep.irtment. It w,1s formed in Janu.1ry, 19-18 by the
Goliar&lt;ls. Under a permanent committee, membership in the: Kc:y rotates with in the Goliard mernbc:rsh1p.

TCC 's high stand.1rd of sportsnunsh1p lus been
m.11nt.1int:d .md promoted b} the efforts of the
~1.iroon Kc:y in its s1xtc:c:n months of work.

The funtt1on of the Maroon Key is to entc:rtain
;1nd ;1ssist al l visiting athletic te.im~. T he Key members rnc:et visitors and di rect them to col lege playing
.ire.b and completes arrangements for their lolal
tr.insportat1on .md mc:.1b. They .1bo assist 'is1t111g
players with thc:ir e(1u 1pment and uniforms.

All students "ho have seen the Key in .1ll1on
cmnot hdp but feel proud of tht school's hosp1t.d1ty
to ,-is1ting tc;uns, extt·ndcd through the l.ibor of th1'
group.

Row·: George Dono,an. John A. Dyer, Du\X'.1yne Pettijohn
SH OND Rmx-: Ca lvin Symons, Arthu r Neum.mn, Frank (clon.i.
FIRST

37

�GOLDEN CIRCLE
Pre.rule11/

1'11 0\IA!&gt;

V iw-Pri:.riiien/
Secretary

J.

J oH!'JSH&gt;N

( llARLI ~ DL 1 RllA.\I
Mli'.NIF

Corre.rprmdi11g Snrl!l.;r) . ....... .
Treamrer
Fa&lt;"11lty /IJ11.rou . _

SALLY

Scon
Al IR

JACK HAI I.

l\lR.

VANRIP!·R.

1\lR. l·RJJ DLAENll l R

and .1rtive program. There has been a succession of
p.irllcs, such as the annual I lallo"'e'en party at 1.3.irtle
1-1,111, card tourn.1ments, a new Year's Eve p.irt}&gt;
covered dish suppers, square d,incing. pitnKs dur111g
the spring months and just pl.un .. gab fests". The
club h.1s sponsored 1h own b.1sketb.1ll and b.1s&lt;:b.1ll
tc:ams "ho pro,·ed their rm:nl extremely ''ell in the
intramural league.
At both Chri~tmas and l.astcr time, the club pre
pared indiv rduJI gifts for th&lt;.: d1ildren of th(· Sust1uehann.1 Val ley Home.

The Golden Circle Club, in the second year of its
lifc, is still proving to be a successfu l social club for
the mJ.rried students of TCC. To most of the students of thc college 1t 1s probably still known by its
first adopted n.1me of M.1rried Vets Club.
Unlike most college social clubs the Golden Circle
did not c&lt;:.1se attinti&lt;:~ during the summer months.
Those members of the club who remained in the
vicinity of the Tnplc ( ities had many very enjoyable
get togethers.
Du ring this school year the club has had a varied

Ro\X': \fr. and Mrs. Thomas Johnston, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph VanRiper, l'\fr.•ind Mrs. H. E. Fr1edlaenJer, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Durham.
~1 coi'.n Rm\ . Mr. .ind Mrs. John Keighc:r, Mr. and Mrs. J.1ck Hall, Mr. an&lt;! J\lrs. RiclurJ Scott. Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Aucr, Mr. and J\ l rs. An,lrew Carakcr.
T1111rn Row: Mr .•rnd Mrs. Robert Kankus, Mr. ,ind Mrs. Louis Jurena, Mr. and Mrs. W il liam Hanak, J\!r.
&lt;ll1d i\lr\. \'(fill1.un Hebenstrc:el, Mr. and Mrs. William Childs, Mr. &lt;tnd Mrs. Harold \X'ood, M •. and Mrs.
Frank Resscguie, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Elderkin, Jr.
FIRST

38

�FIRST Rm\: Evelyn Armstrong, P.1tricia Lunb. Vi\ i;1n Cook. Helen Hudd.1, Shirley D.n is, Mary Anne Rob
inson, Ruth Symons, l3arb.1r.1 Field.
SF&lt; OND Rmx·: Jeanne Thomas, Miss Pitel, P.1tricia Bliss, Carol Byers, Gc.:r.tldinc Bloom, lean Bksh, Barbar.1
Murray, Dorothy \Xfalker, Joan O"C..onnor. EiviL1 D.1polito, i\fos Fragnoli, Regin.1 \Xtolfc, Miss Plankinton.
T11 1RD RO\\ : jc,rn Fairbrother. N.111cy Courtrn.:y, Rose t\f.irie \Valsh, Laura B.tkl'r, J\l.uy Ann Sch;ursdimidt.
Marilyn Andrus, Marie Jimcnc::z, Jeanc::tt&lt;. Bellinger, J.1cqucline Gruse, M.1 rilyn Brown, Frances Midgley,
Jean i\!,1cDougall, Julia Rick.ml. Jerry Gibbs. Juli.1 Early, Trudy Dunn, 1'1.H}' Secs.
F&lt;H'RTll Ro\\: Ele.rnor ulli\'an, Marguente Rounds. Doris Jones, J.rnis Veitch

Prerid1•11/ .

PAND ORA N

•

V1ce-Pre.ri,Jt'11/ ...
Sare/,11) •.... ......
/'1' e&lt;1Slll'I!/'

The second active year of the P,1ndoran Society
found the girls of the club part1cipat1ng in .1 whirl
of dances ;1nd parties, sponsoring St\·er.d sen·1cc projeds includi ng a cann:r dri\·e which nc::ttc::d O\er
tlm.:e hundred dollars adding to their silYer fund
.rnd .1iding the .rnnu,11 Red Cross c.1mp:11gn.
On the soual .1ge11d.1

\1

1:.1atlt1 A.!l'i.rors .

HFI

ere the tr.1dit1on.il S.1d1e

Ruth Tuthill and CI.irk Hungerford were ckcted
king and c1uc::en, the spring pirn1r. and the fin.ti
dinner dance.

39

I il'Dl&gt;A

PATRIC IA

Buss

JACQUI UNI G1WSI·

Mi ss
1'f1ss PLA:--;K1-..:10:-;.

I h\1 kins parties, the ( .1rni\·al of Hearts, .it "hich

FN

l\1ARll JIM!NI /

F ARC.NOl I.

Miss

Pm 1.

�FmsT Rm\
::i1

DJ\•1d Merrilces, \'(/arrcn Robinson, Leon.ml Martin, \'&lt;'alter Arnold, Norman Skeirik.

c ONIJ Rmx : R,1Jph Shear, Sam Winterstein, Louis Picci ril11 , Arnold Bush, John Madden, Ralph Sorber.

T111RD Ro\\ : 1rving

Cirroll, Eugene Kozlowski, James L. Brown, George Rej ibian. John R. Kane, Harold
Doppd, George R. Smith.

Fot 'RTH Rm\· i\l.irtin Bovee, jo\eph Fetcho, Sam Falbo, Fred Shipko, Edward Cern,ik, Robert Frederick.

SAIENS
Prt' r1.l111t
Vfft -Prt riclc11/
\'nTe/.11)

Trt',/.• ltrcr ...

Sage.111/-,ll ·/I1111 s
r.1ot!t; /l,/11 111n • ••

\X1 A l, ll

R AR'10LD

R A I I'll SORBFR
FRF() S 111PKO

Josi

PH

lR\'I

i\lR. H1 NRY
MR

FFTc 1-1 0

(, CARROL.I

Knc

HA\f,

BATTACL 1:-.-1

The S.1iens ( lub \\as formed in the I.He Spring of
.1 group of scKnce and m.1thernat 1cs students
''ho fdt th.it stud&lt;:nts m.1joring in these fields were
not .1dcqu.1tely rtprc::sc::nted in the exi~ting soc1.1l org.1n1utions of th.it time The word S.uens" 1s .1
19 tH by

Greek word me.ining science and the membership is
primarily made up of science and mathematics ~:tu ­
dc::nts, but the club itscl f is ch iefly concerned with
the social activities of its members rather th.in their
sc ien t 1fie studies.
This club has sponsored no all school .iffairs, but
lus lud sevc:r.il outings, p.uties, and dinners for its
members .ind guests. The Saiens club has been represented in .111 intrJmural athletics. After on ly &lt;I li ttle
more th.in a rear of existence it has g rown from the
orig111.d membershi p of sixteen to a capacity size of
Ii fty.

�emcth, Barbar.1 Rood. Paula Da' 1s, Jeanne Story
SECOND RO\\ : Ruth Gdg, I rcne V cit, M.irian Wesley, M.irilyn C11n, ( arol Armst ron,g, Thc.lm.i J\l.irt)·nck ,
M arilyn Eldred. Mary Ann Ferrari.
F1RST Ro\\ : Janet Forbes, Dolores

THAL IAN
Pre.riJent ..
Vice-P,.e.ridwt ... .
Secref,11) . ..... .... .. ..

l3AJUIARA

7'1 e,rr11re1
P11h/irit; Chr111111r111
F.imlty Adi 1.rmJ

ROOD

]EANNI STORY
jA1' 1

r FoRnrs

At a (.ind light T ea on Novembe:r 22,

l 9·48,

Thalians, second women's society at Triple Cities
College, ''as organized for the purpose of promoting
comradeship among the students. Among the activities of the group ha1·c been assistance to the Polio
Dri\'e, cooperat ion with the Colonia l Players, cntert.1inmcnt of the incoming freshmen. and part1c1pat1on
in the social acti,·ities of the college.

•1 l

Do101u-s N 1 M FT ll
PAt I.A DAVIS

l\11ss

An 111 1 Y, l\11ts . R1 rs

�RO\X' : E&lt;l"ar&lt;l D1ffenbach. Donald Milbtone, Rhoda Shaeffer, Gus HarolJson, John Salemme, Joseph
Bottino, Ralph Whittemore.
S1 c ONn Rmx: Albert ( lemc:nte, Pl11lip Pouk1sh, John Konik, William Hotchkiss, Paul DeLorenzo, Hobart
Mohney, Joseph Cerullo.
T111Rn Ro\X : Ted Wilcox, Hilda Chiarulli, Dorothy Holmes, Vincent Chrzan, Anne Meade, N icholas Donatelli.
FollR rn Row: John J.1nK~. Robert Koloski, Doris Jones, David Garman, Robert Ritchie, Owen Kroeger,
'
Louis Piccirilli, Fredemk Burgess.
FIFTH Row: Thom.is S.ireceno, Frank Duntlc:e. DuWayne Pettijohn, Alvin Heyman, Frank Rury. Michael
Biloz, Robert Mead, George Miller.
FIRST

PIN TOPPLERS
-··· ..... .
P11:.ri,/e111
Vtrt'·Preridml . ....... ..

-r,.,

,lf//11'1

P.1ml/_1 Adn.ror ....... .

FRANK! I N

Early in the fall the TCC bowling league got
unJer way. College bowling fans organizeJ and
formed eight teams- Snickers, Ping. Super-five, Butterfingers, Forever Yours, Fifth Avenue, Oh Henry,
and Powerhouse. Each Sunda}' night the keglers of
TCC met ,1t the K. of C. alleys in Endicott and vieJ
for stan&lt;lrngs and prizes. In the miJ&lt;lle of the year
the pin topplers bowling act1v1ties were transferred
from the K. of C. to the Laurel Bowlo&lt;lrome in
Binghamton. One of the most popular members of
the bowlin,g league w;1s treasurer Bob Ritchie. It was
Bob who furnished the prize money for the high
scorers .1fter each Sunday's performance.

RURY

RALPH WH1r11·MORF

ROBl·Rl

RITCHIE

HILDA (lllARULLI

At the completion of the bowling season 111 the:
spring of 19·19 the ten -pin enthusiasts met at their
annual ban(1uel where prizes were awarded to the
season's outstanding bowlers. Awar&lt;ls were presente&lt;l
recognizing the year's winning team, the high single
g.1me, male and female, the high triple games, m.dc
.md female. and the high &lt;l\'era,ge.
42

�SOCIO LOGY CLUB
Pre.ride111

BARJ\ARA f\ftJRR 1\Y

Roni

V ice-Pn.ridc:n/ ....
Sc:cre/ar;-1 rt!&lt;Hllrer
f,l(ltlf)

TAIT

Ad1·1sor.r ...

RT

Ar rISA1' 1

Roni

RTso:-.

MR. CRLSPI, MR. PISANI

club lus also brough t in various spukcrs .unon.µ
whom, were l\ l r. MacGon•1e, a n.ltin~ of Africa, 11ho
t.1lked about the trib:il customs of lus pe:opk i\lr.
In·ing Jacks \\.is .rnother outst.rnd 1ng '&gt;pe.1kt·1 presented by the club; he spoke on the ( lmit.d tn:.1t

The Sociolog} Club is one: of the nc:west org.rnizations on Campus. It w,\s formed in the Lill of
I ~H8 by students intere~ted in the \'arious sociological
fi&lt;:lds which might present any vocat1on.tl possibilities.
The class work in this field was supplemented by
a trip to the Elmira Reforrnatorr, attend,rnce at a
tri.d in Binghamton, and 1110\'ies on such topics as
religious prej uJic&lt;: and raci,d discrimin.1tion. 1 he

ment of ju\'ende del1nt1ue:nts.
Membership in the club is oprn to •ln}' student
who might be inten~sted 1n ,1ny ph.1se of sociology.

RO\'&lt;' : Tait Robertson. Barbara Murray, Robert Attisani.
RO\X' : l\largaret HL1dy, Lennart Erikson, William O'Neill, John
Si
THIRI&gt; RO\\: l\lr. Crespi. John Chamberlain, Camill&lt;: Roach, Mr. Pisani.
FIRST

COND

'53

~1alik,

Cuolyn l\Luks.

�Ro\\'.': Eh-ira Dapolito, Laura Baker, Mary Ellen \1Villiams, Edi.th Story, Mary Ann Sd1a.mchmidt, B.u
bara Meak&lt;:r, Beatric".' Thorson.

FIRST

Sr &lt;&lt;&gt;Nil Row: Nant y Courcncy, Margue:rite: Rounds, Ann McOmbe:r, Beatrice: Z 1mp1, Je:.inne Thomas, Dorothy
P.1Ck.1rJ, Margaret Hudy, Elynor Slhenke:, t-fildrcd Crooks.
T1111m Rm\: Anthony Pizur, William Vanco, Irving C.1rroll, Fr.lllk Humphrc:y, Frank Bc:,1th, Harry \X!,tll.1ce,
Robc:rt F1td1, Ralph Robbins, John Moore.

CHORUS
The: chorus and glee club are t'' o of thl c:xtra
turrtrnL1r att1v1t1e:s that were organ1zc:d early I.1st
fall .ind h,1, e been meeting regularly throughout the
}Tar Tim woup has the .1ctive support of stutLnts,
rt·s1dc:nh of the surrounding arc:.1, and f.1ut!ty
mc:·mbc:rs.
A large range of American and Europc:an compos1t1ons \\,tS studied and pcrformc:d by the group
.1s well as ,ti] periods of music Jevc:lopment which
\\C:re represented in the compositions selected for the
ye.tr.
The ( hristmas convocation m.1rkc:d one:
top perform,l!ltes of the: group. It presented
her of the tr.1d1tional Christmas favorites 111
the most SlKcessful all rollegc assemblies
st hool ye.tr.

of the:
a m11none of
of the

The progr.11n included the · C.uol of the Russi.lll
( htldrrn" from \X'hitc Russia arrange:d by 11 B.
G.llll. · Ch.1mon Joycuse Je Noel" b}· Gc,·.1ert .111d
( .1nt1&lt;1ue tk od" by Ad.1ms.
These org.l!11z.lt1on~ also presented .1 bnll1,1nt
sprtng prof:r.1111 which included another ,·cry success
ful tontcrt .ind .1 p.irt in the .tll college: re' ie"

44

�BAND

i\IADRIGAL SINGERS

One: of the: first mus1C.1I groups to be: org.1n izc:d
.it Tnpk (1t1&lt;:s College \\,IS the b.inJ. Dc:sp1te a
,hort:ige of sp.ice .ind practice time the band h:is
(Ont111ued to m.iint.iin operations and presented a
short concut .lt the: basketball games during the
191 7 1918 basketball se,1son. The b.ind \\as m1ssc:d
::it th&lt;. g;1mc:s this year but it is hoped that the}' wi II
be: .1blc: to .1ttc:nd next year.

This sm.111 anJ sc:lect group. org.inm.:d 111 the Lill
of 19-16, ''as centered in the prepar.ition .tnd per·
formance of compositions espto.il ly '' nttc:n for dou·
ble guartets. All periods of musital developmrnt
were represc:nteJ in the .group of tompos1t ions sekd
ed for this ye,1r.
The f\ladrig.11 Singe rs have ende:norcd to gr.int
all ret1uests for concerb durmg the }'Cilr but , bc:ta use
of a heavy schedu le and ch,111gi11g personnel, h:\\'e
been unable to Jo so.

The highl ight of the: b.ind"s act ivities for the f.11 1
tc:rm of I ') 18 ''.is the p.irt played by the band in the
( hnstnu... ( onYOt«Hion at Union-Endicott High
Sd1ool. Dcsp1t&lt;. a shortage of band members during
th&lt;. f.tl I tu1~1 tht band "as reorganized .ind pl.1yed .in
import.lilt p.trt 111 the: Spring Re' ie''.

T he Madrigal Singers were .lll 1ntegr.tl p.irt of
the ( hnstm.1s Con,·ocation .1nd did much to aid 111
the success of the Spr111t( Re' ie"

Fmo.;1 Ro\\. B.1rb.1r.1 i\kGuirc:, John ( .1pozz1, f\l.m.rn \X1esky. D.1,1d Preshur, M.iry Ann Sd1.1.uschm idt,
(lurks l·nglish, Je.1nne Story.

S1 c O'-ll Ro\\ : I lerbert Fry, \X1 illiam Gullborg. Gc:orge Ncum.1nn, Harry Brigham. J.isl-. R.111k111, Owc:n Kro&lt;.
ger, Li'' rencc Lo,c:land, Donald Buffum.

45

�1·rns1 Ro\\: 1lc:len I ludda, Elton R. Dickson, ( l.1ra Jean Albee, Sam Winterstein.

Lirk I lungerford, Mary Povlork, R.dph Forest, Thom.is Makres, J. Rich.1rd S111gel, D.1, id Mt·r
rilec:s, J\lary Ann N.1gorny, Maq• Ellen W il li.um.
T 11 11ui Ro\\: Junc f\latteson, Ann MlOmber, John Moore, Vinccn~ Ch rzan, Frances Kozlo,,ski, Ruth Gilg,
i\lyr.1 Suc 1les-,el, Carolyn Marks, Leo Miller, Glenn G0Jw111, T hom.is Ivory, ( lurb Engli-,h, John
Zu1dc:m,1, H.irry Brigham.

:-i1 &lt; oi'I&gt; Rmv: (

COLONIAL PLAYERS
... J.

Vic« Preri.!01/

s·,,, rt

I.II')

'f rct.r/11'£ 1
r.1ml11 11t/1 /1011

.. Biography", ''as presented ,11 Bmglumton C1:ntral
High School. It was JirccteJ br f\lr. \X'.1yne F.irrow
anJ st.1rreJ Jerry Gibbs as J\Luion Froud, a painter,
and La rry McGrath as a roung magazine publisher.
John Gorton appeared as an aspiring Sen.llori.11 cinJidate and Harry Accurso as a Europe.111 mus1tian.
Jean 131esh appeared as the hopeful polit1ci.in's liancee,
and Joseph Bishara portrayed the rolc: of her father,
a wealthy southern magazine publisher. Tom i\Llkres,
appeareJ as a friend of Miss Fraud's and Irene Veit
as her maid.

Rrc HARD S1'lc..1 1.
T HOMAS i\fAKRl:S

P1 t r1c/,•11/ •

i\IR

JrRRY G11111s
DAvm Mr RR 11.11-s
FARRO\\. MRS. I IASI NPFI l'(,

The ( olon1.d Pl.1rcrs' first production of the sc.1son w.1s "Juno .ind the Paycock," prc:sented .1t Vestal
Cc:ntr.11 s~hool on November 1 l .111d t 3. The play
w.1s dirc:dc:d by Dr. Margaret Hasenpflug, TCC
English lmtructor. Irene Viet as Juno, a hard-working
d.\llghler of the sod, ,111d John Gorton as the Pay~ock. hc:r pseudo sc.:.1 c.1pt.1in husb.rnd led a cast which
1ndu&lt;kd ' I om J\!.tkre., as &lt;l friend of the capt.1in,
lohn ~loorl .1s lohnnr .111d 1 anq Faust .is J\Luy, the
~.1pt.un., d1tldr~n .•ind J.1ck Gilman. Leo Miller, Lois
Sduc.:1btr, Lirry ~kGr.ith, Vin,e Chrz.m. Tom h·orr.
Did, Smt:c.:I. ( .trol} n i\Ltrks, Fr.in Kozlo" ,k1, Ed
Bull..1n,I Bob Thorn&lt;. m supporting roles.

Vestal C..entral was the scene.: of th&lt;. third produr·
t1011 of the season, :tvLuch 2 1 and 2'i. "Yes, f\ly D.1rl111g Daughter," JirectcJ by ~Ir. F.1rrO\\ .ind featuring
Vivian Cook as Ann ~1urr.1y. Harr, A(rurso appc:.u
cJ ,1s Titus Jarwood, an old f ric.:nd R.llph For('st
pl.iyed the p.irt of Le:" 1~ /\f urr.1y, Ann\ hu~b.111d, .ind
Simley DJ.\\SOn portrayed Ellen, thc.:ir d.1ughter. Art

On Fc.:brn.1rr 2) .ind 26 a thre:c act comc:dy.
46

�Neumann appcarcJ as Ellen's liance ,111J Fr.111 Brees
as Ann's sister. Marilyn AnJrus plareJ M,trtha, the
Murray's maiJ.
Richard S111gel heaJed business :llld publicit}'
crews for the three productions; he \\as assisted by
H .ury Briglum, Wiliam Kucharek, Steve Gober, Simley t-. lullcn, Sue Hessel, Charles English, and Jelll
Blesh. Properties were supplied by Ann McOmber,
J\lary Povlock, Jean Albee, Dorothy Walker, Marr
Ann Nagorny, and June Matteson.
Phil Chamberlain and O,we Merrilees altern.tteJ
as Electrici,t n and Stage Manager fo r the plars and
were .1ssisted by John Madden and Sam \Xlinterstc111.
Members of the stage crew were Glenn Godw111, Alan
St u.trt, George Butts, Bob Dickson, Sherm.111 l \'CS,
D.1r\\'1n LinJscr. Charles English. V111rc ( hrz.rn. Ld'' .ud lkal, and John Zuidema.
Others ''ho aided in production ''&lt;.:r&lt;: ~I.tr}' Ulen
\\ 11li.1ms. .Lily Grass, Tom t-.1.tkr&lt;:s. Sh1rlc.:r D.t\\SOn,
.rnd the v.tr1ous soci:tl clubs '' h1ch suppltcd ushers
for the produtt1ons.
Members of thc Colon1,tl Pl.1rcrs l·nioycd sC\'l't.d
post production p.trties, .1 dinner, .tnd thc thml .tn
nu.ii dub outing, .1t '' h1tl1 \\ ,l\ prl's&lt;:ntt:d thc ( lub\
,t\\.trd to the [\10 mc.:mbcrs of thc dub ''ho lOn
tributcd the most &lt;luring the sthool }' C.ir.

47

�Frnsi Rmx·: Thomas Ivory, Regina Wolfe, Miss Ivory, David Garm.rn.
SI&lt; 0:-.11 RO\'C fr,rnk Rcss1guc,

issel Rose, Jerrr Gibbs, fred Morgan, John Moore.

INTERNAT IONAL RELATION S CLUB
Next on the conference list was the MoJel

Prui,/t-111 . ..... .

THOMAS I VORY

Vice-Pu r1,/c111

DA\'ID GARM:\N

Security Council at Syracuse University in December.

Fl.ORA B UCHANAN

Another session of this model Secu rity Council was

Serrel.11')

'/'n:&lt;1.r11rer

tions.

held ,1t the University of Rochester in April.

RFGINA WoLH

Miss l voRY. MR. HOTZ

Future plans of the club include the establishment

The lntern,1t 1on.tl Relations Club started a round

of ,1 speakers· bun:au m,1de up of students who will

of .Ktl\ 1t1(·s t:Ml}' in the fall of 19 18 \\ ith meetings

spe.1k on subiects rel&lt;:\'.tnt to international rclat1ons,

on 1nternat1on,tl affairs. speakers, .md panel discus-

.ind the production of sc' era! radio progr.un~ on in-

sions.

tern,1tional affai rs.
The group abo plans to sponsor an essay contest

Deleg,1lc:s from the group attended the first in a
sc:ne~ of confcrencc:s Jealing with international rela-

for .1rea students.

48

�PHILO SOPH Y CLUB
Prnicle11/
Vice-Pre.riden/
Secrt:1.1r)
Tre.1J111'c1

Progr,1111 Chm1111.1.1
Famlt) A.11 i.rfJn

Nc.irl} h' cnt} members .lltrnded the mccting .ind
took part in thc discussion.

R\ J PH F0Rrs1

L 1-o KororO\\
St

I'

H I SSH

A debate by R.1lph Forts! .rnJ Robert Stone con
cern111g "'Go"crnment by 1.)..pt:rts" and the qucstions
wl11ch fol lo" cd "ere the substance of the second
meeting. held 111 the upst.1ir~ lounge.

1·1uD Gos\JA'-

J&lt;&gt;AN O'Coi'\"-:rnt
P1 RRY

1'1R. ALBI RT, MR.

L'nion l·nd1cott High 'd1ool te.tCher, J\frs.
H c~s. w.1s guest spc&lt;tktr at the third meeting of the
club. She g.1, c .1 short k·tture on the "Aims and
Purposcs of H it:h School Educ.1tion ...
I\

The Philosophy ( lub 1s .rn org.1niz.1t1on which,
like other Jep:utment.tl clubs, 15 dc:signed to aid students in background for their classroom work.
At the first meet ing of the f.111 term at the home
of J\ fr. Orville Perry, club advisor, a disrnssion w.1s
ccessary for Religion".
held reg.1rding the '"Faith

Discussion mcctmgs .ind guest speakers were the
program for the remain.Ju of the sd1ool ye.u.

Joan O"Connor, Fr::d Gosman, Ralph Forest, ~uc Hessel. Lt:o Kopolow.
SFCONI&gt; Rmc Mr. Perry. J.1rt1uclinc: Gruse. Carolyn i\1.trks, Elton R. D1tkson. Ruth Gdg. J.Kk R.rnkin. i\fr.
Albert.

FIRST RC)\\ :

49

�CLARENDON CLUB
MARILYN ANDRtrs

P1·er1cle11/ •

ARTHCR NFUMAN:S

V1ce-PrL•.ridt!11/

\'(/ANDA S\X'IFT

Sart'f,111 •••.•..

FRANCES BR 11 ~

Tre.lfllrer _ .

r:.imlt; Adi isrnJ

MRS. BRO\\ N AN[) ENGi.iSi!

0EPARTMI NT

The ( larendon Club is both a social and intel lc.:rtual outlc:t for English majors. The greatest aim of
the ( lub to date has been a TCC. literary m.1gaz111e
cillc.:d "The ( larendon". The initial mo\'e toward
this pub) I( at 1011 w.is in the appointment of Gerry

for Professor Terhune: after h is address on his experiences in England while doing rcsc.mh on the " Ru·
b.1iyal of Omar Khayam". The tlub .tlso had :in
initiation party for ne\\ mcmbcrs ,1t the home of
Mrs. Brown and ,rn inform.ti .ind ,\ dmner party at

Bloom to the post of editor. With the help of the
Inglish Department and mterested students, this
puhltrnt1on pro,·eJ to be all that ''as hoped for it.

the home of Miss Atchley.
Organized early in l 9-l8 the Clarendon ( lub has
since nearly doubled in size. It lus fulfilled its purpose as the first honor.uy satiety .it TCC.

Other .1ctl\·it1es for the past ye.ir indudcd a tea

s\\ ift, Manlyn Andrus, Frances Brecs.
Easton, Gcorgc Neumann, Geraldine Bloom. Raymeta Cluffec, Paul Berg. R.tlph Forest,
Burt
51 c ONI&gt; Row:
1\rthur N.:um.1nn.
FIRS I

Ro\X" \X1 ,1nda

~o

�john Komk. I lob.trt l\loh
ney, Da\·i&lt;l Tillotson. Leo Cary. \Vtlliam Donnelly, St.rnl&lt;:r Golden, Robert I°fog.1n. D.n 1d Prc.:'ihur, Fred
1\bd.ill.1h, William Barno. Joel Walker.
SrcoNn Rmc Owen Kroeger, Vincent Chrz.rn, H.irold Pearson, Robert Cre\eling. \X'tlliam C.ullborg. Thomas
Blauvelt, Maria n \Xtesley, Edmund Vitkus, Fr.1n k Filetto, I Jubert J\kCirth}'. Bruce D.n itbon.
Ro\X: Edw&lt;Hd Dodson. Frank Duntlec, John Bilos, Robert Rrtchie, (hen A~h. J. Richa rd Sin~d. Fr,rnk
1Rn
T1-1
\\'indisch, Mario Przzillo. Joseph ( ur.ttolo. Russc:l I Howe. Jos&lt;:ph ( erullo, \\'illiarn ( I.irk. R1clurd ( r.lpO.
Broderick Roach, I larrr Brigh.1m, Robert lsb.rn, Fr.mk Rur). I krbut Fr}, u,, .1rd G.n Ill, Thom.ts G.n m.
Fmsr Ro\\: i\lyron Gregory, Fr.rnk Morell, Donald Alford, W'tlli.1111 Kuchmk,

BUSINE SS ADMIN ISTRAT ION CLUB
Pn r1di11
V1ti Pn ri,/e111

Joi

L WA ! Kl R

\\;r11 r I AJ\t DONNI Lr Y

Sarel.11) ...

Ru~s 1 1.1.

TretiSlll'l:r
/Id I Oc.1/e .......... .

SoCl.il C h.1i1111.111

The businc.:ss adm1n1str.1tion club\ opc.:r,ll1ons for
the ye.u listed .1 forrnid.1ble .lrr.ir of .1dl\ 1trc.:s .ind
projects L1rly in the yur .in c.:xtensn c.: m&lt;:mbcrsl11p
carnp.11gn rncrc.:ascd th&lt;: l lub·s size to O\-C.:r one.: hun
dred and frftr members.
In No\·c.:mbcr till' 'B1z.1d ( lub" spomorcd thc.:
Spook D.rntc fcaturrn~ the.: \\Cll knO\\Il lkl.1 Lugosi
,ls guc.:st. Latc.:r in the. tc:rm club mc:mbc.rs. fautlty
members ..rnd local busrnc.:ssmc:n rnd at thc.: f.tl I b.rn·
tiuet hc:ld 1n the: Johnson C1ty Arnerrc.1n Legion Club
house. l lc:re the first issue: of the dub\ periodic.ii
publication the: "Uizad Times". \\'.IS 111tro,luced
Club attr\·rtrcs continued 1n high gc.:.ir durrng the
spring term. The highlights of the: dub-spomor( 1
Uusine:ss Adm1nrstr.1tion day were: .rn .1ddrc.:ss by Dr
Har\'C:)' A. Andruss, prc:s1dc.:nt of Bloomsburg St,tll
Teachers ( ollege and the.: husrne:ss shm' dirc.:cted by
Stanley B.1c hman and hc:ld 111 '' c.:st hall I !en. four·
tc.:en business mad11ne and records m.111uf.1cturers .ind
B1z.1d O.iy' e:nJc.:d
dealers drspl.iyed th&lt;:1r producb
with the. d 1b mcmb&lt;.:rs ,rnd thetr ~u&lt;:sl\ d.1nc1ng to
the music of the "Soph1-tocah" at the Johnson ( 1ty
Moose: Hill Abo during the spring term a second
banguc:t for club mc:rnhe:rs \\,ts he:ld.
Throughout the: ye.tr l&lt;:ctun:s .rnd spc.:u.d tutorin,1.:
sessions \Hre among the.: more: cultur.d :ittinti&lt;:s of
the dub.

l. 10 (ARY

•

P11h/1ol) Ch.11m1.111

T-&lt;1rnlt; Ad11wr.r .

. A11RA 1t A \I

Hm\ 1

Sc H\X ART/

DA\11) T ILLOTSO:'\
JAMI'!&gt; } {OLLI.RA:'\
J\ [ R. BRO[) I R ANll

J\ IR.

SJ\111 11

51

�1 ·m~r

Ro\\. Jo;1n O'Connor. Mary Ann Fc:rrar1, Jc.innc Thonus, Jacqueline: Gruse:.
c OND Rm\ : Mr~. R cp~ Mid1.1cl Bilo1., P.1lricia Limb, Gcraldine Bloom, Chesler 13uch.rnan, l\ir. Ketch.1111.
T1111w Ro\\: \X'.ind.1 $\\ 1ft, Alfonso ( .illc:o. Robert Bargetzi, Glenn Godwin.
S1

Fol R 111 Ro\\ : John Kotchik. Ann Bro\' n. Ek;inor Sul Ii\ ,in, Robert Attisani, Frederick Burgess, Frank Toner,
~.unuc:I V1t.lle. Dennis Bottino, lktty Je&lt;ln Carl.

FRENCH CLUB
Pn:.r11/e111 .......................... .
VJ r,'-P1u1Je111
Sccu:l,11') .. ..
71'£,IJl//"(:I'

. .....

..

................. .

/-',u11/1y At!l'lsors .

MKHAIL Bii.OZ

G1 RAJ

DINF BLOOM

PATRICIA LAMll

(111,srrn Bue HANAN
MRS. RI PS, MR. KETCHAM

Carrying out the French traditions of entertainment and rnlture, the French Club combined all its
resources to pro\·ide a well rounded program for the
ytar. Fe.1tures of the group's activities during the
p.1~t few months have included a French film, "Carnet de BJI", a French page in the: interna1ional newsp.1pcr. an informal con\·er~ation group ..ind &lt;I "Fae
de Fous''. The French contribution to International
, 1ght included an Apathe D.1nce. •I cm-can chorus,
.ind a moJd Frend1 Village.

52

�GERMAN CLUB
President
Vice-Presiden!
Secret.11)
Tre,u11rer .....
F,1r11ft) /l,/i 1.rors .

E1rn i'\ Goi iHllH&lt;.
DA \'In

i\1 i RR Ii 11-S

BAIUIARA K1ssu R

Dt

\\'A\' I·

\[R
MR

Pi

T llJOll'\

\\' i i(,t\,ll,

ROD'\!\" Kil( H:\\I

Highlighting the club\ .1d111tr progr.1m \\,1s tht
presentation of .111 Oom p.lli b.md under the &lt;Ii re&lt;
cuma1111. :rnd .1 tlm:e-.1d Gc1 nun
t1on of George
Schuler" pre.,tnted .ts a p.trt of
Fahrendc
skit. "The
the intcrn.ltion.11 night progr.1111. The German ( lub,
under the diredion of Doroth}' \\',tlkcr, contnbutcd
to the intenution.11 ne" sp.1per
( lub mcetmgs \\Ut higldighted by .1 scric~ of
spuktrs, group singing .rnd thi: prcsent,1tion of
se,·eral short pl.1ys.

\Xlith the advent of college activities in the spring
semester of 1948, the Germ•m Club was initiated to
take its p lace as one of the outstanding features of
the ext ra-curricular life at TCC. The org,1nization,
founded by Dr. Ketcham anJ sever.11 interested stu ·
dents, has grown to prominent size .1mong the lang
uage clubs. The p:ist year has seen the 1m:mbersh1p
roles expanded through the st&lt;lllnch c.1mpaigning of
i\ l r. \X1 eig,md and the members of the German Departmen t.

Jm \'&lt;' interstctn, Mr.
\\' eigand.
Si.co:-.n RO\'C P.tul Dewer. l r\·ing Carroll. Fr.inces Kozlo,,ski D.md Jones. \\'il11.1m l lotchk1ss. \\' dli.un I I.tr·
rison, l\farilyn Eldred. Cbr,1 Jean Albee, Tom Gent. Conr.1d De\\,tn.
f'IRST RO\'\': George Neumann, Du\X!ayne Pettijohn, Erwin Go!Jberg, Dorothy \\' Jlkcr.

53

�IT A LIAN CLUB
Pre.riden/
Vice-Pu r1dc111

SAM VITALF

jOSFPll (EHUl.1.0

Sar1:l.ll)

Gi:oRGI· DoYL 1

Tu:.irttn:r

EL\'IRA DAPOLITO

Miss FARC,")Ll, :-.fa. P1sA-.:1

The: It.1l1an ( lub was organizc:d in the fall of

the opera ·Tl Traviau" ''as one of the highl1ghh of
111tern,1tional night, as was the Italian food sc:rved
by the members of the: club.

19·17 to provide a cultural background for the Italian

stuJc:nts &lt;It Triple ( ities College:. During the first
yc:.ir of its c:xistcnce the: club published its own nc:wspaper. ··11 Crespuscolo". For the past yc:.ir, howen:r,
the: club has incorpor.1teJ its news in th&lt;: ·Tower of
Habel", an 1ntc:rn·1t1on;tl newsp.1per publishc:d jointly
by the language clubs.

On March 12, II C1rculo Italiano prc:sented ,1
motion picture version of .. Rigoletto" c.11led .. II Re
Se Di,·ertc" at the Lyne Thc:,1tre. Proceeds from this
e\C:nt were uscJ to aid the club's scholarship fund,
from whid1 J\\ards are presented each year to out
standing students of It.tlian at TCC

The Jt,ilian Club's prc:sentation of .1 portion of

FIRST Row: ~[ 1ss fargnoli, George Doyle, Elvira Dapolito, Sam.Vitale, Mr. Pisani.
S1 &lt;.o!\1&gt; Ro\x: h1g&lt;:ne Iannone, V1nan Cook. i 1cholas Donatell1, Alphonso Callc:o.
T11rnn Ro\\ : .un Falbo, Dennis Bottino, Robc:rt Bargctl:i.

54

�R.tt h, J\l.uy Ellen \X1 dltams,
FmsT Row: Miss Fragno li, Ruth Gilg, Don.ild Alford, Robert Kolosk i, Richard
J\fr. Rockwell.
Fry, Patm i.1 Bliss, M.1riS1 &lt;OND RO\X' : Helc:n Hudda, John Ring, Marian Wesley, l3arb.1ra McGuire, Herb&lt;.:rl
Vitale.
Sam
Jimenez,
M.ine
EnJ.(lish,
harles
(
Perl,
lyn Brown, M.1rg.uet Hudy, Robert

SPA NIS H CLU B
jt.\ll S TRAS

Pre11tle11/
Vir~ - Pre1itle11t

.. ......... .

Secrel.11")

•.•..•.••....• .... •. . .

Do!\ A ID

Tre,1J11re1 .............. ......... .......•......
r:.mt!ty A,/ii.ror.r

Al FORD

R1c11 ARI&gt; Rt.rH
HoBI RT Ko1 osi-:1

Miss l"t.R&lt;.r--011.
MR. Ro&lt; K\X'l 1.1 .

Jimenez were co ch.t1rm&lt;:n of the romm1ttee in charge
of writing and editing the Spanish newspaper.

El Ci rcu lo His pa no is composed of students who
are studring Spanish and have org.mized to learn
more about the cultural b.1ckground of Latin Americ.1. The meetings included lectu res by Mr. Rock
well on :irt and customs, and the showing of several
movies depicting life in Mexico, Bolivia, Brazil , and
ot her countries in South America. Torn Bis1gnani
.tnd Al Hansen ga,·e an informative and colorful J c
scription of their stay in Mexico during the summer
;it one of the meetin~s. The program comm ittee ·was
he,1ded by Elinor Ltthman ; P.1t Bliss and Marie

The gal.t affair of the year for the Spanish Club
was Intern ati onal Night. The dernrat1on committee
was headed by Donald Alford , assisted by Herbert
Fry and Robert Koloski. Barb.1ra i\.kC1uirc, Man.in
Wesley, Viv1,1n Cook, M.1r1c Jimenez, and Ruth Gdg
were on the refreshment committee. Pl.t} mg his
guitar and sing ing '" Bcsarne Mud10", S.un Vitale re·
ce1YeJ St\'er,tl rec1uc:sts for encores from the: audience.
55

�Fms 1 Ro\\ : P.1tric1a Lamb, Da\•id Mcmlees, Helen H udda, Robert Frederick, Frances Kozlowski.
51 &lt;.01'.1&gt; RO\c Em in Goldberg, M.1rg;1rc:t Hudy. Ann BrO\\O, Ann McOmber, Mary Povlo(k, \Xfanda Swift,
Riclurd Cr.1po.

THE COLONIST
the Colonist office. These pictu res were taken in
mid-December, as we re most of the ~rou p pictures
and SC\ era! candid and athletic photos. Final photographic work was completed e.trly in the: new year.
This year, for the first time, .1 senior class ~as
organized, and a section of the book \\&lt;lS de\·oted exclusivc:Iy to this group. PI.ms for future: ye.ubooks
include enlargement of this section.

The Colonist was organi zed soon after the be·
J.(inni ng of the fall term under the direction of a
lOmmiltee of interested students with the aid of Mr.
H ier .1nd Miss Plankinton. On November first an
editori.d st.1tT \\as chosen from ;HnOnJ.( the members
of the full st.1tT to direct the \\'Ork of the Colo111st
Earlr in No\ ember ,trrangements were made to
luve a photogr.tpher take portrait pictures of all
st1aknts whose pictures were not .1lready on hie 111

56

�Art Editor I I.ink 11 ,tnlOtk
.\rt E&lt;l1tor Orl.111,lo llLh1110

Sports Editor J'r v Goldberg
Photography Editor Bob Frc&lt;lcrick

[ditor O,t\ t

:-. ! unlu.:~

Bu~inc~~ ~Lrn.1ger

D1tk ( r.tpo

Assistant Editor
1lc:len H udd.1

M,inaging E&lt;litor
Gerry Bloom

Ralph Forest
Marilrn Brown
\XI an&lt;l.1 5" 1ft
Mary PO\ lock
Patricia Lamb
John Madden
Ann Brown

lrYing Carroll
Frances Ko:.dowsk1
Sue Hessel
Charles English
Robert Early
Michael J.ibo
Margaret I Iudy
F,1mll) Ad11.ror, Mr. Fritz H ier

57

(I.irk L. Hungtrfor,I
( Lu.1 J Albc.:e
Ann ,\kOmber
Sa mud \V intcrstc.:i 11
P.tul Dewey
\X' ill 1am Gow
D,n id Jones

�"/ !o1kot1 Sell' USG Presid&lt;·11('
Co/011i,d /\eu s. 1\f,tr.

4. 1949

��Rm\: Jury Gibbs. \~'dliJm \X'all1ng. CJmille Roath. Doris Jonc:s, J\l1diac:l 13iloz.
St c.0:--:1&gt; Rm\. J.1nc:t Forbes. D.n 1d Dopp. Edward Ant.ll, Robert lsban, J\l1ss PJ,111k1nton. Robert B.1rg&lt;.:tz1,
ichol.1s Don.1telli, P.1tric1a Lamb.
FIRST

UNITED STUDENT GOVERNM ENT
After lu\'ing ser\'cd as V1n:-Prc:sidenl of studc:nt
go\'ernment during the spri ng of 19 18, ( .unill e
Ro.1ch was ele\'ated to the top lJ G position in the
fal l upon the failure of c:x-President Joe O'Neill to
ret urn to college. Mich.tel Biloz was namc:d VicePresident and Doris Jon&lt;.:s and Bill Wa lli ng became
&lt;:cretary .111d Treasurer, rcspecti\'ely.
During the fall term the: U G sponsored .1 stu
dc:nt faculty reception .ll th&lt;: Arlington Hotc:l and •t
Thanksgiving-time T urkey Hop at the Gc:orge F.
Pa\'ilion. The feature t\·ent of the Lill term was the
USG sponso red Mistletoe l3.1ll, ,1Jso at the Gc:orgc F.
Pa\ ilion.
T he fall term :..rn USG sponsored co.it hooks in

60

�the halls and classrooms and a wider lounge door,
but a USG backc:d football petition was again rejected as was &lt;I pica for a five day week.

The: spring of 19·19 sa" a hot I} contested b,1tdc
for all of the USG posts for the next year. In the
field were the Repre\ent.1ti' e P,trty he;ided by John
Horkott; the LiberJI P;irty, lead by Denny Bottino,
the Student \X'elfare P.irty of Tom (I.irk ..rnd se\'c:r.d
independent candi&lt;.L1tes, including presidential .1spirant Joe Baxter. The members of the Represcntat1\'e Party were swept into ofTice, along with thret
other members-,1t-large. B.irbara Rood, '"th 3U
\Oles, led all candidates 1n her successful bid for a
member-at-large post in the new administration.

The student body leaders, unJer pressure from
the students and the student newspaper, imestigated
conditions in the lounge and bookstore with no startling changes resulting. Some changes were effected,
however, a5 the cafeteria installed sugar and cream
dispcnsc:rs and slightly more varied menus. The fall
USG also increased the elf1Ciency of the student
goYernment by establishing a regular, once a-week
meeting time and eliminating much of the red tape
'' hich had hampered previous administrations. It
dre\\ up ,ind approved a ne\,. constitution for the
United Student Government in order to expedite the:
handling of student affairs.

The outstanding C\'Cnt of the spring term was the
spring "eckcnd planned by the USG. This included
a spring formal, the Spring Soiree, .rn outing. a
second annu;1l spring rcrn&lt;., and ,1n open house for
parents and friends of TC C stud&lt;.:nts.

Row: Marilyn Brown, Patricia Bliss. John Horkott, William Kuchinsb~. Stanley B.1chm.inn, Barbara
Rood.
Sl'COND Ro\X: Arnold Brown, Vernon Eldcrk1n, Harold \X'olfson. Thom.ts Terry. 0;1\'id Lauder, Al.rn 11.tnsen.
FIRST

61

�\'1tl Prcmknt Robut Appe, SecretJ.ry Doris Jonc:s, Treasurer Jerome True, Presi&lt;lcnt EJmund

Vitku~.

THE CLA SS OF 1949
Robert Appe. ''ho '' .1s clct ted Vie&lt;:· President, is
( rom Middletown, N. Y. He is a former Navy Lieutcn.111t, hdd an otlice in the USG for two years, was
the first President of Adelphi, and was a member of
the Business Administr.1tion Club. As a General
Bus111ess nujor, Bob is pLtnn111g ,1 career as ,1 salesman .
Jerome True, c:lcctcd Tre.1surer, is from Syracuse
.111d is a veteran of the Army Air Force, in wh1Ch he
flew twenty-fi\'t missions with the 8th Air Force in
Europe. Jc.rry is one of the college's b.1seball lettermen and is one of the charter members of Adelphi.
Jerry, a General Business major. is preparing for a
position as salesm.in.

The I •J 11) gr.1du.1ting d.1ss of Tnpk ( 1tic:s ( ollcgt
org.111ized on Ottober J 2. 19 18 .rnd c:lectcd officers
!or tlK }'l.lr.
Edmund V 1tkus of Endicott bec&lt;llll&lt;.: President of
thl tir,t Srn1or (Liss. l.d ..1 ,·c:tcran of the Arm} 1\ir
Forll, '' .1s .in 1nstrultor on B-29\. At TC C hi
maiorcd 111 An:ounting. prcp.ir.1tory for a position .is
.1 Cost AtlOUntant.
Doris Jonl' of Joh11\0n ( 1ty "&lt;h chosen class
A 111.11or 111 Gener.ii Bus111css. Doris in~et rd.tr\
tends to be&lt;.:ome .1 Plrsonnel Tc:chn1t 1,1n. lks1Jc
bl1ng .1 munber of the P.111dor.1ns .ind the Businc:ss
Adm1111,tr.1tion ( lub, DorJS held ollicls 111 the: l.JSG
for two .111d one half ye.us.

62

�63

�LA="'-1:-..G E. Ac 1., Bus. Adm.

l3us. Adm. Club '18,

',jy,

R1 MO ALllO, Lib. Arb: It.titan Club · 16, · 17, • 18,

· 19, Trc.1surer · 16; II Crlpuscu lo, Editor' 18, · i9;
Young Rcpubltcan Club· 18.

J. ANDRl'S, Lib. Arts: ( 1.ircndon Club· 18,
· -19, Prcsident · l9; Spanish Club · 16, ' 17; I nternational Rclat1ons Club · 16, '1"'; In ter-Faith Group
· 16, · 17; P.1ndoran Society· 1S, ··19; Chorus '46, 47.

1'!.4.IUJ YN

Roni RT N. APPi. Bus. Adm.; U. . G. M embC'r-.ltlarge · 16, · 17. Colon1.d Playcrs · 16, · 17: en10r
(lass \'i((:-Prcs.; Adelphi · 18. '·J9. Pres. '-18. · 19:
Youth Fellowship Prts. · 17; Bus. A dm. Club 18,
'49.

S I A"l.IY J. BACllMAN, Bus. Adm.; Bus. Adm. Club
'16, '.J7, · 18, '19, Pres. · 17. '18: Gavel Club '·18;
Jewish Fc llow~hip · 18, 'i9; First College Rc,·icw
Student Coord in.itor · 18.

D1,:-..1-. I. Bon1No, J. ib Aris; Clarendon ( lub · 18,
'19. 1t:t11.111 Club' 16.. 17, '18. «19, Pres .. 18: Sp,1n1sh Club · 18, · 19: French Club '·JS, '-19: Baseball
· 17, · 18. 'i9, (apt.tin · 18: U. S. G. Membcr-.tl largc '18, ',l9.

J. C.-\1 I 1 '\, Bus. Adm.: Ll&lt;KC.Ki.1 · i8, · 19:
Bus. Adm. ( lub · 16. l.,, · 18. · 19, T rc.1surer · 18:
lntramur.d Baskc:tb.111 · 17, • 18.

Ro11rn1

Lib. Art'&gt;: Clarendon Club · 18,
· 19: Philosophy ( lub · 16, · 17, " 18, ·-19, T reasurcr

RAY:-111 ,, ( llAFF I 1,

'48.

\RK. Llus. Adm : 13.tlt.!Ci.t . 16, . n. ··18,
· 19. B.tskttball l\.L1n.1gcr · 18 · 19. Golden Circle
'.18, · 19. 13us. Adm. Club · 17, '.18. • 19.

RoBI HT ( I.

64

�Lt'.O Coin', Bus. Adm.; Uus. Adm. Club '.16, '.i7, · 18,
'19.

111

RY D'EsTI, Lib. Arb; p.inish Club

'.17, ·

18, '·19.

RorHRT J. DICK FRSON, Bus. Adm.; Golden Circle
'48, '-19; Bus. Adm. Club' 16, · 17, · 18, '-19; T rack
'47.

t.f1&lt; HAIL 01:--;o, Bus. Adm.; Bus. Adm. Club · 17,
· 18. '19; Golden Circle · 17, '18, · 19.

GEORGI' W. DONOVAN, lib. Arts; U.S. G. Memberat-large '-16; Goliards · 17, · 18, '·19; French Club
'46, '-17, ',J8; Art Club · 16, '17, · 18 ;· Maroon Key
'-i7, '·18, '. 19.

Ro11rn1 M. DRl 'CK l'll, Lib. Arts; Spanish ( lub · 18,
·-19.

J.

G. B1 1 R1 EASTO , Lib. Arts; ( larendon Club '18,
· 19; Protestant Group '18. '19.

Emx ARD ESSEl\MAN. Bus. Adm.; B,1cc"t(1,t '·17, '.18,
· 19, Treasurer '·18; Bus. Adm. Uub '·18, '19; Intramural Football '18; Int ramura l Softball · 18; In'·19.
tramura l Basketba ll

"rn.

ED\\'ARI&gt; M. F011 Y, Lib. Arts; U S. G. Pres. '·t7,
· 18; Youn.a Dcmocntic ( lub · ~8.

65

�M . FoRJ \J , Lib. Arts; Cl.irendon Club '-18.
· 19, Pres. · 19: Philosophy Club · 17, · 18, · 19. cc.
· 17, Pres. · 18; Ncwsp.1pcr · 17, ".18, · 19, E&lt;l. · 18,
· 19: French ( lub · 16: ( oloni.il Pl.1yers · 17, · 18;
Yearbook · 18, · 1&lt;).

RALPH

A1 HI RT G1. 1ASON, Bus. Adm. : Golden Circle · 17,
' i8, · i'J; Bus. Adm. Club · 18, · 19.

CAROLYI" M AY I R GRI Hd. Lib. Arts ; Claren&lt;lon
C lub '18, 'i9, Treasurer · 19.

jA&lt; K 0 . HAI 1, Bus. Adm.: Golden Circle: '.O, '·18,
' 19, T re.burcr · 18; B.ind · 16. · 17, -'!8.
0

Wn 11:\M H A:-..AK , Bus. Adm.; Golden Circle '17,
· i8, · 19; Protestant Club · 18, · 19; Bus. Adm. Club
· 16, '·17, ··18, ·.19; Intramural Softball '•18: Intramural Basketba ll · i8, ' 19.

Rt '55 1 1 I lowr, Bus. Adm.; Protestant Club ' 18, · 19:
Bus. Adm. Club · 18, '19.

Trea ~urc r

·-18.

Ron i RT C. ISBA"-, Bus Adm.; B.1cc.1na '·18, '19; Bus.
Adm. Club · 18. · 19: Varsity Basketball '16, '17,
'18, · 19: Tntramurnl Football '·17, '18; Intramural
'oftball '• 18; U. '. G. Mcmbr:r-at-largc '18, ' •J().

DORIS 0. JONI' S, Bus Adm. : Sp.wish Cl ub '46, T rc:1surer · 16; Pandoran ocicty · 18, '.19: Pin Toppl crs
' 16, '17, '·18, ' 19, Pr:::si&lt;lent · 16; U.S. G. Secrct.uy
'.16, · 17, M embcr-.ll-Lirgc '-18; Secretary of Senior
Cl &lt;lSS ·18, . 1').
0

(HAR LI s J. KAR5, Bus. Adm.; Spanish Club · 18, '49;
Bus. Adm . Club '18, '19.

66

�FRAM IS

Q

KI Oll&lt;.iH,

Lib. Arb.

JAMt:s E. L ARllA\t, Bus. Adm.:
Bus. Adm. ( lub 'I7, 'I8, '19.

Adelphi ·-18, ·-19;

RICHARD 1'lc.CA1 LUM, Bus. Adm.; Baccacia · 16. · 17,
'48. · 19, Vice-Pres. '18; Bus. Adm. Club '48, '19.

G10R&lt;.1. R. Mm&lt; 1 R. Lib. Arb; £3.1cc\C1.1 · 16, · 17, ',18,
'19, Pres. 'i8, '19, Golf · 1"7, • 18, '19; Ga, el Club
'18,

"·•9.

AR!Hl RR. N1 l MANN, Li b. Art~; Golian.ls' 17, '.18,
'49; ( larendon Club' 18, '•19; A. V. C. Pres. '·16;
Maroon Key ',18, '19.

G 1.&lt;&gt;RGF F.
I L'.\f1\'-IN, Lib. Arts; C1.trendon Club
' 18, ' 19: Germ.in ( luh ' 17. · 18, ' 19: Band ' 17, ',18;
C1mer.1 Club · !""', Pres. '17; Telescope Club '.cJ8;
Bacrnci.1 ·4-; Yearbook. · 18.

RIC.HAR!&gt; Nt ~OM,

Lib. Arts; Philosophy Club · 17;
In ternational Rel.llions (Jub · 18.

D1·WAYN1. PI !TI.JOHN,
0

Li b. Arts; Goliards · 17, '·l8,

'19; German Club ' 18, ' 19, Tre.1surer ' l8: Maroon

Key 'I7, . 18.

ROHi.RT Po\\: I l I, Bu~
'i8, 'i9.

67

Adm.; Bus. Adm. Club "17,

�·1All Ro111 RnOI\, Lib. Arts; Dionysia ·.:is, · 19, VicePres. · 18; Sociology Club ··18, · i9, Sec. · 18: Col
onial Players · 17, '18: International Relations ( lub
'•17•• 18.

FRANKLIN RURY, Bus. Adm.; Pin Topplers '16, '.17,
' 18, '19, Pres. '18, · 19; Bus. Adm. Club · 17, ·IR.
' 19: Gavel Club '•18.

Ro111 R1 SAMPSON, Bus. Adm.: Bus. Adm. Club '.17,
'•18, '49.

AYsl L SFARLI s. Bus. Adm.: Colonial News · 16, · 17,
Bus. Mgr. '16, '.17; Spanish Club '47; 13.iccaci,1
· 18; Radio Club · 17; Golden Circle · 18, · 19, Presi
dent · 19; Bus. Adm. Club · 'i8, ·49.

0

( HARi.iS SOPOLIC.A, Bus. Adm.; Golden Ci rcle '18,
· 19: Bus. Adm. Club '•17, '48, '49.

Ric ll ARll W. Srnrn, Lib. Arts; Baccacia · 16, · 17, · 18.
"19, Pres. · 16, · 17; A. V. C. ··16. '47, '·i8, Chm.
' 17, · 18; Colonial News '.J8; Third Party Club
· 18; J ntcrnational Relations Club · 17; Sociolo~y
Club ' 18; Spanish ( lub · 18.

JFROMI B. TRt'I, Bus. Adm.; Adelphi '48, ·49; Baseball '&lt;-17; Senior Class Treasurer.

R1&lt;. ll ARD W. TR UsLFR, lib. Arts.

A1

°''°' J. T t'&lt;Kl R, Bus. Adm.; Bus. Adm. Club '·17,
. 18, . 19.

68

�GoRDFN C. VAN ATTA, Bus. Adm.; Golden Cm il'
'·17, '-18, '19, Vice-Pies. '18; Bus. Adm. ( lub "1-.
'48, '·i9.

\X11LLIAM VAl\CO, Bus. Adm.; Bus. Adm. Club '.46.
. 17, '·18, '49.

VnKus, Hus. Adm.; Bus. Adm. Club · 17,
'.18, '·19; Golden Circle '•18, '19; Ncwm.1n Club
·-18, '.19; lntr.rnrnr.d !3.1sketball · 17. '18, · 19; Senior
Cl,1ss Pres. '·19.

EDMUND

Kt

NN1 ·1 11

\XI AI.Kt R, Bus. Adm.; International Rcl.1-

tions Club

'17,

'18; Adelphi · 17. · 18, · 1').

Rosi MARii· \':(/Al SH, Lib. Arts; P.1ndor.1n Soucl}
'l7, '18, '•t9; Ncwm;1n Club '18, '19, Sccrc:t.1ry
'18; Spanish Club '16, '.17; Clarendon Club '19.

OttVILLF YFAGrR, Lib. Arts; Inter-Faith Group '.17;
Protestant Club "18; lntcrn.1tiona l Rel,1tions Club
',18.

Josi PH M. ALLARD, Lib. Arts.

JoHN KNu1., Bus. Adm.

)OHN Ht'NTY MAITHFw~,, Bus. Adm.; Golden Circk
· · 18. · 19; Bus. Adm. Club · 18, · 19.

69

�Fmsr Rmx·: Charles C. Abbey, Dorothy B. Abbey,
Fred Abda ll.1h, I Jarry
Donald 11. Alford.
)J

J.

Accurso, C. Jean Albee,

ro·\n l\n\\ Josephine G. Allio, Richard M . All is,
Ld,,.ird Ant.ii , Geor.i;c C. Anton.1kos, \'(li lliam i\L
Arther, [,·c:J}'n T. Armstrong.
Mary (. Armstrong, John Arnold, Walter B. Arnold, 1\ l.1n Ascher, Owen B. Ash, Richard

T11 1Rll Ro\\ ·

E.

A~h.

fr(·nc: Aten, Rohert Atli~.rni, Vincent
Attis.1111, (furies H. Auer, Benjamin T. Avery,
L 1ura J ll.1ker.

rnl 1u 1t Rn\\

70

�l·msT Row: Leighton E. lhkom, John M. B.u1t.1,
Mich;icl B,1r.in, Peter 1:3.irbone, \X1 il l1am F. B.irno,
Gabriel P. Barrie.

Rmx·: Winifred l3arrows, Ridurd B.1rton.
Joseph W. B,1xter, F1ank J. Be;1cl1, Ed\\';irJ Lk:1l l,
Raymond N. Bell.

51 COND

THrnll Ro\X: Jeannette Bellinger, Cl.irk 13c:nnc: l. \'&lt;1 il

li,1111 E. Bennc:tt, Willi,un Bensburg. P.tul Bug.
Robert J. 13ermrdini.
Ro\\; Irving Bernstein, Homer Biggs, J.1mc:s
Bigney, Jamc:s E. B1hr, John Bilos, J\1 1ch,1cl Biloz.

FOL I\ 111

71

�WOULD YA CARE TA
HELP ME PRACTICE-·

ER-· STUDY MY--- - PSYCHOLOGY/

Row: Joseph P. Bishara, Russell P. l3ishop. E.
Thomas Bisignani.

FIRST

Ro\X : Thomas Blauvelt, Je•lll A. Bi&lt;:sh, I lol1.rnd l3. Blinn.

S 1 CONll

RO\x' : Patricia Bliss, Ger.ildinc: Bloom, Allan
Bombard.

THIRD

J.

Selma E. Bond, Anthony J. Bors, Jo·
seph R. I3ottino.

F ol'R·1 H Ro\X·:

Row : Martin C. l3o\"ee, \Xlaync Bowdish,
Phili p Brecki nridge.

Fll·TH

Row: Frances F. Brees, John Brewer, I !arr}'
W. Brigham.

S1x·111

51 v1

i'.'.TH

RO\X' : J.tek M. l3rink, Je.111n inc: B1oss, Ann

L. Brown.

72

�Fm~1

RO\\: Arno!J M. Brown, David H . Brown,
H. Marilyn Brown.

S1&lt;ONn Rmx·: Jack D. Brown, James L. Brown,
RicharJ H. Brown.
THIRD Ro\X': Charles B1 unger, Chester A. Buchan,111,
Flora Buchanan.
Row: Ch.ules Buchinsky, Robe rt J. Buch insky, DonalJ E. Buffum.

FOURTH

FIFTH Row: Joseph E. Buran, Michael S. L. Buran,
Robert Buran.
SIXTH Row: Frederick C. Burgess, Jack Burl ing.1me,
Leon:ud D. Burns.
SFVFNTll Row: Arnold A. Bush, Orlando F.
George Butts.

Bu~ino,

73

�RO\'&lt;': ( harles T. Cabrera, J\farilp1 V. Cun,
Dominick (al.lbris1, Joseph Caldwell, John ( alhh.1n, Alfonso V . Calleo.

Al LAST.'
A GvvO

FIRST

cu~ OF
CAFETERIA

C~~E/

Robert H . Cah·ert, Robert K. Campos,
John ( apoa1, Andrew J. Caraker, ( larence ( .ird,
Betty Jt-.in Carl.

0

S1 &lt;OND RO\\ :

T1111rn Row: Irving Carroll, Robert R. Carson, Leo
( ary, R1 ( h;trd J. Cary, Clifford E. Casterton , Fr.mk
P. ( c:lona.
Fou1n 11 Ro\\ : Edw.ud S. Ccrn.tk, John Ch.11nberl.1in,
Gord on ( hampney, P.tul (.1. Chase, Eugene I I.
( hcrm.1k, \X11Il1am L. Childs.

74

�John G Chompz.1k, Vincent C hrz,1n,
Joseph F. Ci.ileo, Ugo Cianuosi, Ernc~t V. ( motti,
Ronald Ci priano.

F1 RsT Ro\'\':

James E ( L1plum. Donald V. Clark,
fJrl S. ( Llrk, lhrold R. (I.irk.
(I.irk,
Doui.:l.1s
Thom,1s J. Clark.

l·CO ·I&gt; RO\\' :

T1 111rn Row: William Cl.irk, \Xli ll ram L. (I.irk. Ed
''in G. Clarke, Joseph ({(.';try, Robert ( I&lt;:.iry, /\I
berl S. Clemente.
Ro\\: Richard Cl111e. James (lugstone.
(harks E. Coleman, Bernard Collrngwood, Byron
Conroe, Frederick Conte

F ot JRJll

7'&gt;

�Row: Vivian C. Cook, Harold Cooper, James
G. Cooper,.

FtRST

Snor-;n Row: E. Grant Courtright, Dclwcrt Craft,
R ichar&lt;l J. Crapo.
Row: Claude A. Crawford. John Cra\' ford,
Robert Creveling.

T111R1&gt;

Row: Donald Cross, Eugene F. Crowley,
Edward T. Cruty.

FOURTH

Row: James M. Cunningham, Joseph P. Curatolo, Sarah Curatolo.

FIFTH

Row: Ray G. Dann, Elvir,1 D.1polito, Bruce D.
D.1vi&lt;lson.

S1xT 11

Row: Willi,tm D.wics, P,1uL1 D,1vis, 13ruce
F. Deacon.

SrvrNTH

76

�FIRST Row: Raymond A. Dechene, Norm.rn K. Decker, Raymond ( . Decker.
SFCOND Row: Henry L. Del Cano, P.1ul P. De
Lorenzo, Richard V. Dennis.
THIRD RO\X' : Robert K. Dennis, Cyril
nard T. Detrick.

J.

Derrick, Ber

l·OURTH RO\X' : Conrad A. Dewan, Paul H. Dewey,
E. Robert Dickson.
Fin 11 Row: Charles E Diffenbach, Americo R. Di
Pietro, Sebasti,111 DiStcfano.

SIXTH Ro\X·: Robert F. Diutc, Richard Dixon, Robert
M. Dolan.
SFVENTH Row: Nichol.is A. Donatelli, Roger Donnelly, William E. Donnelly.

~•LW

1tJ

i\\EET Tl-IE

DEADLINE

77

�Rm\ : Rohcrt F. Dono\ an, D,n id Dopp. H arold '\i/. Doppc:I, Gc:orgc D oyle:, Jamc:s G. Duffy,
J.t(k Dumhlc:ton.

FIRST

Rm\ · M K(·ith Dunklc:t, Ccrtrudc C. Dunn,
Frank I.. Duntlc:y, C!iarlcs B. Du rham, J. Anthony
Dyc:r, Juli.1 E. Early.

SH.O'\l&gt;

111m11 Rm\': Robc:rt M . Early, Vernon I!. Eldc:rkin,
M.iril yn l·ldrc:d , Stc:wul B. Elliott, D. Bruce: Ellis,
Grc:ydon Ellison.
D.101c:I J. Emilio, I kn rr h111l10. Don.!IJ 1· EnJ;ldurt, Ch.1rb Lnglish, Lc:nn.ut N.
Ln kson, Robc:rt T. L\ ,tns.

Fot'Rl 11 Ro\\

78

�FIRST Rmx: Thomas \Y/. b"111s, \Y/tlliam J. Evc:rb,
U.go M F.1bnz10. L Jc:.1n Fairbrother, Samuc:l J.
F.dbo, John FeJukt.

I GOTTA

GO TA Mt

HOME

Srcol'.n Row·: James \X1 . Feeler, Phillip Feinber.g,

ANO STUDY
ME-·· ·

Ro~.1lyn

,

Feinberg, john Ferr,mti, M,1ry Ann l·er-

r.ui, Joseph Fetcho.

EN6U5r\

B.1rbar.1 Field, Frank J. Fdcllo, Lenore:
Finkelstein, Robert Fit(h, J.111et L. Forbes. Winston
H. Foster.

T11mn Rm\':

•

roi RI II Ro\\: John 1\1 !·owler. DurnooJ Fr.1z1cr,
Robert A. FreJemk. Robert R. French, ELune
Fri~ch, Vernon C. Fritz.

79

�Fll\ST Row: C. Herbert Fry, Paul P. fryt,d, Francis P.
Gallagher.
SrcoNn Row: Augusto V. Gallucio, Anthony M
Cance, David A. Garman.
THIRD Row: Edith
Thomas Gavin.

J.

Garson, Edward M. Gavin,

FOURTH Row: Thomas W. Gent, Byron P. George,
Phillip Gialanella.
FtFTH Row: Anna M. Gianfrate, Vincent
Jerry S. Gibbs.

Giaru~~o.

SIXTH Row: Joseph G. Gilg, Ruth E. Gilg, Richard
J. Gillies.
Si v 1 NTH Ro\\:·: John F. Gilman, Agatino G. Giunta,
Donald W. Clever.

80

�F1RSI Rm\: ·tephen R Gober, Glenn God" in, fa.
"in Goldberg.
S1 co:-.: ll Rm\ : ~t.rnlc:y Golden, Krnnc:th Goldf.uh.
\\!alter J. Gorman.

T11urn Ro\X: John F Gorton, Fre-1 (,ro,man, \\rtll.ird
Gow.
FoUR ill Ro\X' : Chester~'.

G rabo"sk1. R1thard Gra

per, S.tlly D . Grass.
F1F1 H Rmx·: Oscar V. Green, Myron E. Gregory.
Jan1ueline Gruse.
IXTH Rm\: \\ltlliam H. Gullborg. Harry A. H.1fkr,
RKh.ird [. l-1.1.µgerty.
Stn' 1 H Rm\ : Herbert S. Hall1d;1y, Carlyk I Lin·
cot k, A 11 en 11.msen.

81

�Fm\I Ro\\· Gu., H.iroldson . Akx.tndu \\'. 11.tmson.
Rolxrt I Listing~. Robert (. I laym.rn, \X'ill1am R.
I kbenstr&lt;:t t, William C. l lcrcig.t.
S1&lt;.0'1&gt; Rm\: John T. llcron, :-.l)r.1 Sue Hessd. Al-

' 111 Heynun, \\ 1111,1111 R. Ho.1µ. Robert A. Hog.tn,
Holl&lt;.:ran.

J.tml·s I

T1111m Hm\ · Rohe rt 1lood. Fdg.tr A Hopkr. George
1 lorkott, \\'dl1,1111 B I lorsey, \X'illiam J. Hotch
k1-.s, Fredernk i\! H ubbs.
Fol

It 111

Ro\\ . John Hud.tk. Hc:lcn ll. Hudd.1. 1\1.tr

g.iru I Jud), Ir.ink R. I lumphreys, Robert G. Hum
phrcys. ( I.irk I.. I l ungerford .

82

�j

I rns1 Rmx . Guido l.ico\ &lt;:111. Jo... eph V l.111onnc.
~hunun h es. Thom.1-, hory, ~!id1.1d J.1bo. t\n
dr&lt;:\\ J.1rnb;-.
~'

&lt;0:-.11 Rm\: John t\. J.11nc:.... Rudolph J. J.11us.1k,

\X'.im:n

Jc:nnrn~....

Jurn.net,

I low.ird N J1'h.1nsc.;n.

R.iymond \X'. Jc:\\t.11, l\Llrit.

Ti 1m11 Ro\\ : J•lll1&lt;:s E. John ...on, Thom.ts J. .Johnston,
D .1, 1d Jones. Rid1.1d 0 . Jont.s. Do11.1ld F. Joseph,
( lc:mrnl V. Joyce.

Rm\: Louis Juruu. t\rthur t\ K.1ll1d1c:
Bruno K.immsky. John R. K.111&lt;. Robut ( K.111
km, Juli 111 F. Kasmc:r

Fc&gt;!'RI II

�\

FIRST Ro\X: Philip G. Kee, John J. Kc.ighcr, Eugrne
Kemp, Frederick L. Kennedy. l l.1rold Kerstein,
Barbara A. Kessler.

Si COND Ro\\ : William H. Kin(h, Elton (. Klein,
Robert E. Klinko, Eugene Kobylarz, Robert J. Kolo!&gt;k1, C1rl Kolosn,1.
Rm\ : P.tul Kominos. John (Juries Konik. Leo
Kopolo'\, John Ko,tyun, John I.. Kotchik , George
E. Koury.

T11 1Rn

F&lt;n·R1H Ro\\. Lu~ene Ko:do\\skt , Frame~ L. K c.z·

lowskt, Owtn A. Kroeger, \\1 ,1ll.1u Kubk:r, \\'tllum \X'. Kud1.m:k, Ni(hol.1s Kulik.

84

�1d101.is L. K u~ta~.
RO\\': Stephen Kur.1tnick,
\\'dli.1m J. Kust.1s, Ed'' .ml R. Kwi,1tkowsk1 , P.1tric1.1 L.1111b, EJw,trd A. Landon.

rrnsr

51

&lt;or-.n Rm\: Rithard Ltngl.in d. Robert LaRue,
J.unes H I auder. Lambert D. Lauder, Thom.ts 1'!.
Lawson, Alexander I.cfchcck.

T11mn Ro\\': John W. Lewis, R.1ymond K. Li,•ingston, L1wrence Lo\C:l.111d, Norm.111 L. Lovitch,
William H. Lowe, Jos&lt;.ph l\f Lud ka.
Ro\\ : Thom.is V. Lynch, Peter Mac an,
J.uncs \\I. Mac Arthur, J(;.tn l\1 ,1d)oug.1ll, John
P.1t rick ;\[ack, Marion 13. Mack.

Fol R 111

85

�Ro\\ : John Ed'' ard f\l.1dden, Robert Thom.1s
f\Ldur, William P. Mah,1r.

F11\s 1

S1

&lt;O"-ll Rm\ · Cbester f\L11k.1, Thom.b P. M.1krcs,
John C. i\1.dik.

rioyd l\Llngus, Anthony P. l\f.1rano.
,\L1rconc.

·1 HIRD Ro\\ :
~am

Fm Rl 11 Re)\'\': \X1oo,1 l\1.lrklum, S.1mud l\l.1rk.m 1n,
( arolyn Marks.
Joseph B. M.1 rks, Lcon.1rd L. f\L1rtin,
Rnrmond Martin.

FI FTH R O\\':

Six rH RO\\ : Thelma C. l\Lirtrnek. Clurks A . i\l.is-

terson. June C. i\fattcson.
RO\\: Do1uld J. !\L1ttht:\\S, George \\ '.
\1.uthc:ws. Miduel L. i\f.iae1.

1'1 '\."TH

86

�Fuhr Rmx: Alfrc:d ~ltC.1ffrey, \X'illi.im L l\k( .1f

frq·. I lubut J\k( arthy.
S1

&lt;ol\I&gt; Rm\: \\ dli.1111 r. i\fc( orm.1ck, John I·. ~fl.
Glynn, John MtC0\\,111.

Ro\\ : L.twremt L J\fcGr.1th, l:hrb.1r.1 J\lt
Guire, Robert A. J\1tN.1ir.

THIRI&gt;

Fm 'I\ 111 Rmx : Ann J\lcOmber, B.irb.tr.1 Me.1kcr,
Gc:or~c: K. Meaker.
Fil 111 Row: rr.1nk ~fedd.iugh. \X1 illiam A. Melin
skr, John Mem;1111.
Ro\\· [),\\id,.
Fr.totes I. J\I idglty.

S1x1 H

~!errilees.

Hertr.1111 J\lers&lt;:ruu.

Rm\: John i\fikol.isko. Edw.trl! J\ l1kubk1,
George J\ l dl&lt;:r.

S1v1'\111

DQAMAllCS

•

OH YOU -- ···
LOVELY---r.c.c . CO-EDS
( GAO.' .. WHAT AN

ACTQR I AM!;

87

�RO\x: Leo Miller, Raymond l:. Milb, DonalJ
M. Millstone, Elmer C. Minckler, Edith t-l issavagc, Bruce J\1 itchell.

F1RST

rco:-..·n Row:

Hob.1rt ]. J\lohney, John Moore,
Frank Morell, Frederick Morg.10, Leslie P. Marg.in, H. Meh die: Morrison.

T111RD

RO\v: St.tnley G. Moses, Daniel MuJJ,rne, Jo-

seph Willr.un ~forphy, 13arb.ua J. Murr.iy, Robert
A. i\fus.1, M.iry Ann Nagorny.
Fot RI 11 Ro\\ . Dolores 1emcth, J.1111es N1thol, Robc.rta A. ol.1nd, James F. oms, l larold otc
w.irc, L&lt;.:slic O'Brien.

88

�Lcl.mJ \\I. ()'(onnd l. Jo.111 i\f.1r1c
DonalJ E O lvcr. R.1ymonJ F. 0' M.d
Icy, \Xlilli.1m F. o·Ncdl, Dorothy P.1ckard

FIRST

RO\\:

f f ( onnor.

J. P.1lem.ir.
Joseph P.d mcr, H.1rold P.1rsons. 1\Ltumc P. P.ts·
sa,gno, Michael P,1, ly.ik.

Sic nNr&gt; Ro\\': P.m1u.1lc ]. P.1,gl1.1. Robert

Rmx: H :irold A. Pearson, Geor,gc Peet, \ 11
ch.1cl Pcnsak, Robert Pcrh.11n. Fr.mcis Perk 1m,
Robert Perl.

T H IRD

Fot RI H RO\X': Louis N. Pitu.1110. Louis P1(nnll1,
F r.inklin D. Pieplo''. Anthony Pizur, M.trio C
P1:wllo. Phil ip J. Pouk1sh.

�Ro\-.:1 : Mary J. Povlock, Robert
D.tvid Preshur.

FIRST

l'COND Row: Fletcher R. Preuss,
Charles R. Putrino.

J.

Jo~eph

Prekop.1,

Purcell,

THIRD Row: Walter Randall, Jack E. Rankin, Micha&lt;:! J. Rano.
FouR IH Row: Richard Rath, Albert Recd, William
C. Reed.
FIFTH Row: Roderick W. Reeder, Gerald W. Reif,
George Rejebian.
SIXTH Row: Frank B. Resseguie, Steve Ricciardi ,
Julia E. Rickard.
SI·HNTH Row: William Rigney, Roberty Riley,
John Ring.

90

�FIRST Ro\X': Robert E. Ritchie, Broderitk G. Roa(h,
Camille Roach.
ECOND Row: Ralph L. Robbins, Mary Ann Robinson, Maurice Robinson.
T111RD RO\X: Warren Robinson, Robert Rodgers,
Stuart Rodman.
FOURTH Row: Stanley Rogge, Barbara RooJ, George
Rose.
FIFTH Ro\\: Leo Rose, Nisse! Rose, Gcr.dd Rosenberg.
SIXTH Row: Floyd E. Ross, Margueri te V. Rountb,
RicharJ Rounds.
SEVENTH Row: William
William Ryczko.

J.

Ryan, Arthur Rybak,

91

�RO\X : George E. Ryder, Anthony M. Sacco,
Peter Sadowitz, John Salemmc, Richard Salisbury,
Stanley Salisbury.

FLRST

S1 c.o~n Row: RKhard Sammons, James E. Sandell,
Louis J. Santodonato. Ignazio Thomas Saraceno,
Nichol.ts Sass,tn1, Edythe Mane Sc.ties.
Timm Ro\X.: Theodore A. Scarinzi, Mary Ann
Schaarschmidt, Stephen H. Schaefer, Rhoda Schaffer, Edw111 Sc hunucher, Abraham Sdrn utz.
Rmx·: Richard H. Scott, Helene K. Scully,
Mary Sees, i\11chael Sejan, George Slumulka,
Ralph E. Shear.

Fot'RTH

92

�EVELYN IS

A GIRL'S

hecly, Don.tlJ A. ShcfTidJ,
Robert P. hctficld, John K Shields. Frc:dcmk
Sh1pko. Lt\\ rcnce SilHrstein.

FIR sl Rm\: Paul M.

NAME· ·MY GIQL'S
NAME IS EVELYN
:.MYGlk'L 1S AG1QL/

SH .o:--.n Rmv : R1ch.ird Sin~d. Robert J. Smn~. or111.111 Skc:1rik. Cll.lrlcs ' kinnc:r, Le'' 1~ Slo.1t, Gc:orgc
Smith.

T1111rn Row: Lowell Smith. Robert A . Smith, John
Snopkow&lt;ki, Albert G. Snow, R.tlph R. orber.
R idu rd L. pearbcck.
Fm·R 111 Rm,·: Paul A. Stables, \Xl,\lttr St.1nzd, Sid

ncy Sterner. Robert
John P. Ste\\ art.

93

r . Stcpb.1th, M1d1.1c:I Stcrn1k.

�Frnst Rmv: DaviJ A. Stone, Robert Stone, Wayne
Stonestreet.
S1&lt;0:-.1&gt; Row : Jeanne Story, Donald Stout, Willi.1m
trauss.

T1111rn Rmx : Joseph Stulir, Charles Sudbrink, Bern.ud Sullivan.

rot

Eleanor T. Sullivan, William 0. Sutt iff. Norman Swag Ier.
Rlll RO\\":

FIFTH

Rmx·: DonalJ A. Swift, Wanda Swift, Mari-

lyn C... Sykes.

Sr-.;

111

~hio

Rm\' : Calvin Symons, Ruth E. Symons, ToTakenaka.

Sr' 1:,; rn Ro\\': Cyril Tegeler, ThomJs T e.-ry, Mcrrc.11 Thallinger.

94

�rmsT RO\X: Howard J.1mes Thom.ls, Je.tnne Thomas,

Robert T. Thorne.
Ro\X : Ueatrice Thorson, Ed" .ird S. Throup.
[),1, id Tillotson.

· 1 C.Ol'.ll

Row: Milton Tischler, Gerald Tom.111, I lar
old F. Tompkins.

TH IRD

Fou 1n 11 Row: Joseph Trabucco, James Tr.is, Lewis
Tripp.
F11 111 Ro\X' : Richard H. Turner, Ruth Tuthill , \X' illiam Tuthill.
Ro\\ : En in Tuttle, Robert C. Tybring, ( lurles D. Tyler.

S 1x ·1 H

RO\\ . Rich.1rd Ulmer. John VanGorden,
Irene Veit.

Si:\'1 l'."111

POLI TICS

�Ro\\: ]&lt;1n1s Veitch, FreJerick V1t.1le, Sam
Vitale:, I lcinz vonPcchmann, Ellwood W.1gor..:r,
Dorothy \X'a lker.

rrns1

S1 c 01'1l Ro\\ : Joel I!. Walker, Harry \'{lall.H.:e, \X1il
li.im F. Wallin~. P.llll R. Walsh, Don,tld \Xf&lt;1rd,
Ritl1.1rd \Varner.
\Xlarncr, Gordon \'{/atkins,
Stu.irt \\',1tkim, W 1ll1.1m Weber, John E. Wedge,
R.ilph \Veikl.

THmI&gt; Ro\\ : \'&lt;lill1s L

Frnm 111 l{mx: Robert I. \Xle111trnub, In' in Weis~­
man. Lois \X'elch. Theodore \X'enger, FreJeril
\\lest0tl, ~Lin.in \'&lt;'csley.

96

�F1Rs 1

Rel\\: J.1111&lt;.:s \V'&lt;.:stfa ll , [ugc:nc \Xlhitncy, RJlph

irmon \X'ilcox. Gc.orgc \X' ilklo''. H.trr} \X' dli.uns.

\\'. \X1 h1ttemorc, H

SH 0:-;1&gt; Rm\· Kcnnuh \Vdli.uns, M.1ry Ell&lt;.:n \'V'il li.uns. 11.irold 0 \V1llson, Fr.ink \X'1ndisch, S.unuc:I
\X'111tc:rski11, Regina \Xlolfc.
T1111rn Rm\: H.irold \X'olf,011, Adclbc.:rt C. \X'ood.
I Lirold \X'ood, l.tc: \'&lt;'oodm.tnscc, LeRoy E. \'&lt;'or
slLr, ( O\t.1~ Z.1de~
Ro\\: Bc:.1trtcc Z.unpi, R.1ymo11J Zl·dno.ird Z1sk.1 L&lt;.:on.ud P. Z1sk,1. Thoma'
Ed''
' ' llZ,
Zu1dc:m.1.
John
Zow1nc.,

F ot'HTll

97

�··colr111i,i/r StiJ1g 1 ech llornel.r. 59-55 .

r1/

Co!oJ1i,i/ f\'eu

U-E'"
1.

Feb. 25. I 949

��COACH
GENE
WELBORN
One of the busiest men at Triple Cities College
today is Gene Welborn. Besides ha,·ing the full-time
job as director of athletics, Welborn spends a good
part of the winter months as the head coach for the:
Varsity and Junior Varsity Basketball Squads. 1\fost
of his time in the spring is taken up as the mentor
of the Green and White Diamondeers. He de' o.es
his sp.ire time to instructing in Physical Education.
Mr. Welborn received his appointment in May
and assumed his many and varied duties here: ;It
Triple Cities in July of t9·i7.
Mr. Welborn, a man from the mid - we~t, was ,1
graduate of Anderson High School. He attained his
B. S. in Physical Education from lndian,t University

'' lwr&lt;: he also studied for his M. S. While at the
" I loosier ( ol kge", Gene gained much valuable

coa(hing experience as head trainer of the Indiana
I lolk&lt;:y team during his senior year. He also served
as the: .1ssistant trainer of the football and track
st1uads for three years at this same school.
Before starting his coaching career, Welborn enlisted in the avy in I 942 and was discharged three
years l,1ter after reaching the rank of Chief P harm.1( ist.

111 vie:'' of all the: handicaps that he has encountered, Gene Welborn has re:illy done a commendable job at Tripi..: Cities College. These handi(,1ps indude, especially, lack of proper training faulit1es :ind C:\en lack oJ sites to pL1y home varsity
games, &lt;Ind then lack of adequate manpower, which
'' to be: c:xpect&lt;:d in a school of such recent origin.
In the t"o years that Welborn has held his pos1t1on he has managed to gi,·e the college a wellrounded .lthleti( program. He initiated \Try successful rntramural softb.111. b.isketb.111 .ind football
lc.1gucs to provide ,111 students with much needed
rcuc.1t 1011. r\~ he gets more and more assistance in
the ro.1d1ing dep&lt;irtmc:nt. the: college can expect much
bcllt:r ,1thlc:t1c results.

100

�Jantt Forhe\.
Frances Koz lowski, Beatrice Thorson, Edythe Scales, P,itricia Lamb, Barbar.1 Me:ikcr,

CHE ERL EAD ERS
This ye.tr the chec:rh:ading squ.id l1ter.1llr st.irted
from ··scratch"". All of the old ch&lt;:ers "ere .ib.in
doned and some excellent ne'' ones worked out. The
fight song written by Mrs. I lopk1m Moses and set to
music by Howard fa ans, still r&lt;:m;t1ns TC ( s numbc:r

W ith only Edythe Scales, Pat Limb, .ind B.irb
Rood returning from List year's group. it w.is ne(essary to hold several weeb of spirited tryouts in order
to complete ,1 squad of seven feminine cheerleaders,
Fran Kozlo,,ski, Bea Thorson, l3arbar:t Meaker, md
J.met Forbes were the new members of the squad.
"Edie:" Sc.tics w;is elected captain of the group.

one pep tune.
The d1ee rleadin~ sc1uad has tome .1 long \\,iy
from the one wl11ch ,,,is formed in D&lt;'cembc:r I') J'i.
It has become 1nd1spens1ble .it th&lt;: b.iskc:tb.tll g.ums
and with the cooperation of the \tudent body, lus
done .i fine JOb of arousing sdiool spirit .ind interest
1n th&lt;: athlc:t1c CYCnts at TCC.
raculty ad\ isors to tlus woup ar&lt;: [\f ISS PL1nkinton .md Mr. B&lt;tttagl1111.

101

�Rmx•: Fred Hubbs, Gene Kobylarz, Pelc. S.1JO\\ itz, 13dl \XI al ling.
Si CONll Rmx·: Co.1th Gene \X'elborn, Pete Smyk, Vince Jackson, Bob lsban, Mike Rano, f\1a1uger Rudy
J.in.1s.1k.
F1R s1

BASKETBALL
Triple Cities College finished the intercollegiate
b.1sketb.dl season with ,t tc.am ,dmost entirely different
from thc. one that st.1rted the season Fortunately 1t
".is .1 much imprO\ eJ team. The won 8 and lost I 2
r&lt;:cord is not in itself a true ind1c..1t1on of the ul1ber
of pl.1} of the sc1u.1J.
At th&lt;: start of the s&lt;:.1son. Co.Kh Gene \XI &lt;:!born
l1.1d onlr t\\O returnrnj? l&lt;:ttermen. Bob lsb.tn, third
hiJ.!h scorer I.1st ye.ir .ind Bill \'( .tll1ng, aggrc:ssr\·c.·
gu.1rd.

tater dumped in 17 baskets from the field and 13
out of I'\ foul shots. Ludka, Isban ;1nd Leney with
t 6, I i .rnd I 3 points rcspcttively. paced the Colonials.
The \Velbornm&lt;.n journeyed to \X1 ilkes-Barre to
lose a 7 1-5 5 decision to Km gs College. The Kingsrnt:n lud too muc.h t l.1ss .ind experience for the men
from Fnd1cott. Joe l.udka ag.1in led the Coloni.tls
\\1th t ) points.
T. ( (. gained the \\inning side of the lctlgcr
in ih third game of the season. The locals, playing
at the Union- Endicott f ligh School gym, triumphed
OH:r Keystone Junior ( ollcge. 82 61. Bill Walling
led th&lt;. .llt.Kk as c. \·cry m.1n on the sc1uard scored .ind
fi\·e of them hit the hoop for double figures. After
the g.rnK, Joe Ludk.t w.1s dedc::d capt.un of the tc.1111.

A Ill\\ ind!\ idu,d staring record \\;ls est.1blished
in th&lt;: Tri pk ( 1ties by Phil Sekerd1.1ck, l.mk Wilkes
( olk-gc: For\\.trd. as he l&lt;:&lt;I his tumm.1tes to a -7_7 3
Ylt!Ory OH:r the: Grec.n .tnJ \\'hill' b.1sk&lt;:teers in their
first g.1mc. of th&lt;: se.1son. The 6-foot. )-inch Keptonc:
102

�The Ute T ech I lornets stung Co.1d1 Gt:nc \Vtlhorn 's charges in an overtim e game, 62 61. The
a&lt;.tion p.1cked game ended on a contro' ers1.il note
with
O\ er the timing as the win ni ng b.1sket was scored
.ind
Ludk.i
fou r seconds of p l.iy rem,1in ing. Capt.
Boh lsban led the losers '' ith I.'&gt; .ind 12 points.
A highl ight o f the basketb all season w.1s the
fo ur-colle ge cage tou rney sponsor ed by T. C. C.
Other particip ants were W ilkes College , Ut1L1 College and Sta te T ech. T he games were p l.1yed on the
State T ech Aoor and p lans were formula ted to m.1ke
this tourney an a nnual event. A ll four te.uns arc
more or less conside red to be natura l riva ls.
The Colon i,tls gJ ined sweet revenge by defeatin g
St.1te T ech in the openi ng round of the tourn.1ment.
·I0-3'i. W il kes Co llege a lso gai ned a first round \ICtory over Utic,1 College . 62-5 ). Bob bban \\ ith I 3
poi n t.. and Gene K obylarz wit h 9, sparked the fast
mo,·ing T. C. (. Jttack in a game p layed .1t a terrific p.1Ce.

H eight '' .is th&lt;. dt&lt;.iding f.1dor .\\ \X'ilkcs defcattd the Grtll1 .md \\ lutt· for tht tourney dumpio n slup. in tht second round of rnmplli tion Tht'
\X' dkesme n won '\I 18 in the ,,,1n1ng .;ernnds of the
g.um:. K obyl.iu: and lsbn .1g.11n bl 'l (. ( w ith
I I point:. c1d1. Sl.ltt: 1t'&lt;h g .1rnered third pl.Ke
honors by triumphinJ.t O\"tr Ut1c.1, 70.61. C.trl l.ueb b&lt;.rt, Utica forn.ird .111J h igh srnrer of the tourne}
''as ,l \\ ;1rded t he '"outst andmJ.t p l.1yer" trophy. lsb.111
and Kobyl.irz ''ert: n.1med to the all -tourm:y tum.
T he \X' ilkes c1uintet JefcJted the End1tot ters for
the th ird time:, by a '\ 1 3H count at Ki ngston. P,1. It
,,,1s the most decis1Ye dc:fcJt ,\l the 11.1nds of the
P&lt;:nnsyh-.1ni ,ins. T he g.une ''.is close for thrt·e
periods but \X' dkes pulled J \\ .1y in the List l]Uarter
with 27 counters as .1gainst only I \ for T C. C.
\X1clborn .ibo lost .1 kc} pl.1ycr fo r p.irt of the scason
.1s John Lcncy \US stricken ''1th ;1ppend 1citis htfort'
the g.une.
A rough game at the U. [. gym s.rn the loss of
lsb.tn and K obyLtrz .1s Utic.1 dc:fcatt'd the ( olon i.1b

103

�7S-66. Fortun.1tely their injuries were: not su1ous
enough to permanently harm the: team.
~t;1'e Tc:d1 ,1nd Triple: C1tu:s Collc:g&lt;: staged .1n
other thrdlc:r in a Polio Bendit g.une \\1th the Hor
nLh uking the decision. 62 60. H&lt;trd luck continued
to plague. the Green ;111d \X'h1tc: as high scoring c1pt.11n Joe: Ludka ''as lost to the st1u.1d for the rl'ma111dcr of the season dut to ,1 knee injur}

The: local hoopstc.rs lost two of their nc:xt th rec
&lt;:mounters &lt;l\l ,J}' from home. L'tiu t:arned .1 65 5 '&gt;
'' 111. Samp,on took ,1 59-5 '&gt; deu ... on and Kt"}"'&gt;tone
\1,1s defeated. 63-55. The. End1cotters 11crc bolstered
by the addition of three.. new pL1yers to the st1u 1d.
Vince Jackson, Bob l\1.1n.:cltak and FreJ Hubbs. 1 h&lt;:s&lt;.
men leJ the Colo111,ds to thur second 11ttor} 1n .1
ro1\. .1 76-67 Jeus1on 01 er Alb.1ny St.ttc Te.1d1c:rs
( oliew:.
A smooth-working Kinp ( ollege tJuinte:t .1g.1in
dde.!lc:d the Wc:lbornmen H5 52. Jatkson led th&lt;:
losers' att,1ck with 16 m.1rkc..rs.
An 01c:rA01\ throng .tt U. E. 11 itnessc:d '] C. (
snap ,1 ! 5-game St.itc: Tet h 11 in111ng struk '°'9· 'i "I
'' hc:n the intra-uty m als met for the: fourth tinll'.
As 1t turned out, thc:y 11 crt. the only ones .1bi&lt;.: to be.11
thl Hornt:ts this season. This contest also st.irted a
four g.une ''in ~treak for the Green and \X1 h1 tc:
J.tckson, Kobyl.trz .111d lsban led the Lincoln 1\ l'e.
quintet to a 59-5) l'ictory Ol'er Ut ica School of (ommerte. Another spine.: tingling game saw T. (. ( .
g.1in its fifth win 111 11\ last six starb, by sh.tding
S.unpson. 6.'&gt;-6l. Both tc:.1ms set a fast p,1tc: during
the. contest which 1\,1s not dc.:cided until the. fin.ii
seconds of play. Honorable: mention must be gl\en
to the: l.wgh -fillc:d prd1minMy, in '' hi ch tht ( ollegc
f.t&lt;u lty sciuad defeated an Endicott Oldtimc:rs StjU&lt;td,
I ) 12.
\Val ling's foul shot in the: last 5econds of pi.t\'
g.ll&lt;: the: Green and \X'hitc: 1h fourth win in .1 row.
a 62-61 deus1on O\·tr Gc:nc:sc:c Junior ColkJ.!C:. hb.1n
''as lllgh scorer ,,·ith ' 1 points
Another last second score decided the: game: '' ith
Alb.111y State Te:ichc:rs College:. This time: t\lb.tn}'
lundc:d the Coloniab the defeat 51-52, 111th ,1 b.1ske:t
st111k iu~t prior to the final buzzer. The: Endicotters
l1.1d nude up .1 12 2) dc:licit at h.ilf tim&lt;; '' ith .l bl.1zing 22 point rhird period. Bob rsb.m \\ lS 'hot"
ag.1in 11 ith 20 markers.
In the final game of the. se.1son the Y. l\I. (. A.
P.1ragons of Binghamton defc:atc:d T. (. ( . 7) 6 ).
M.trcthak :111d Jackson p.1ccd the Collc.:gi.111s '' ith I 1
pomts each.
10&lt;-i

�o, R,1} O'~!.llle\. B1 II ~1mmons.
Fmsr Rmc Robert A. Sm1th, Jack Burlingame:, Louis Picci.rn
R.1110, St.111 Rubt:nz.1hl, P.1ul \\ yd1ulo~. M.1n.1gcr
Si:co:-..1&gt; Rmx: Co.lCh Genl \X'&lt;:lborn, John F. Murphy, i\lih
Rudy J.1n,1sak.

JU NI OR VA RS IT Y BA SK ET BA LL
The Triple C1t1es (allege: Junior Varsity Basketb.dl squ.1d lud a \·cry poor season. The Colonial
Juniors ''ere .1blc to \\In only .1 small pcrcent,1gc of
their games.
SeYer.d of the squ.1d's losses were by only a fe,,
points. \l(lilkes College took a 17-·10 d&lt;:tis1on. Keystone Junior (allege won i6-·i i in the I.1st seconds
of pl.1y. Kings (allege beat the Green and \l(lh1te
J.1yn:cs. i I ) ~ and Alb.u1y State Tcacht rs ColleJ.?&lt;: won
.1

56-'i j delision. On the other side of the lcJgcr,

the 15- 1 'I 'Klory O\'Cr St,1tc Tech was ont of t l.c
locab best pl.i} cd g.unc.

105

�FmsT Row: Hyle Richmond, Ed Radin, Ray Glazier.
SECOND

Ro\X : Phil Breckinridge, Joan O'Connor, Julian Michel.

TENNIS
winner. She won her position among the r.1cquetswingers by el iminating some of the huskier and
embarrassed representatives of T. C. C. male-dom.
Joan is from Binghamton.

T. C. C. 's victory-less Tennis squad absorbed
sc:Yen defeats in seven matches. Hartwick netted the
first victory 6-) at Recreation Park in Binghamton.
Singles winners for T. C. C. were Joan O'Connor
and Hyle Richmond, and lone victors for the
Colonials in the doubles were George Koury and
Julian Michel. Harh\ ick also won the return match
in Oneonta, 6-1. Utica College also won two matches
from the T. C. C. racc1uet wielders, 7-2 and 8-1. The
R. P. I. Frosh punched out a 6- 3 victory: Hobart
Colkgc gained a 7-2 ''in .ind \'&lt;filkes beat T. C. C.

Joseph Berry, a Binghamton attorney, was appointed coach for the tennis team. Berry, an outstanding figure in Triple Cities sports circles since
his high school &lt;lays, is a graduate of Binghamton
Central H igh School, the Manlius School and Cornell Uni versity. Last year, Berry and his partner
won the mixed doubles crown in the annua l Broome
County tennis championships. For many years Berry
IJJ.s p.trticipated in area amateur tennis tourneys. He
is also an official umpire of the U. S. Eastern Lawn
T ennis Association.

I - 1.

One of th&lt;: high lights of the tennis season was
the play of Joan O'Connor. T. C. C. 's girl athlete.
Miss O'Connor trolled out her best shots .1gainst al lm.dc opposition, and ",is th&lt;. team's most consistent

106

�Jim Johnstone, Les Morg.rn, Newell Stapleton, Co.lCh John Budd.
Dick Cli nton.
Srco:-rn RO\\': Jatk Jamieson. Al Sanges, Mario P1zzillo, l'vL1n;1gc:r
FrnsT RO\X':

GO LF
when Ditk Mercer was stricken with ·1ppend icil1s.
T. C.. C. took it on the chin .1ga111, I 0-8, when they
tra\c:led to Utica for a match with Utica College:

The 19 18 golf team Jud, for the second str.1ight
year, the best T. (. (. team relOrd in spnng sports.
The: Colonial golfers finished the st·ason with an
excellen t +2 won lost record. John Budd, pro at
the Endicott-Johnson golf course, acted as coach for
the sguad.
Al S.1nges was elected c.1ptain of the team after
the golfers won their opening miltch of the season,
l '&gt;Y2-1oy7 , against the linksmc:n of Hartwic k College on the E. J. course. Dick Jam1e~on shot th&lt;:

The Tripk Cit1&lt;.:s Linksmen g.1inc:d rnengc: for
their loss by outputt ing Utica 12-6 on the En Joie
Worker s course. Pizzillo, Jami&lt;.:so n and Sanges were
the day's meda lists as each chipped in with a 76.
Les Morgan and J11n Johnstone both h.1d an off d.1y
.is Utica garnere d .d i its points from them.
T . C.. C. fin ished its gol f season at Oneont.1
against l l.1rt\' ilk College:. P1zztllo .1g.11n led the:
( oloni,1ls lo \Ktory, 'il/2 2y2, by c.1rding a 7 ). Dick
J.1m1eson \\,IS dose behind him with a 7 1.

da; ·~ low round \\ 1th a 7 8.
Tht ( olonial m,1shie- '' ic:lders journeyed to T roy
for their next cont1u&lt;.:st, as tht}' &lt;.:kcd out .1 I·) victory O\·er R. P. I. Mano Pizzillo nc:got1Jted the rainsoaked cou rse with a low 77.
T he Green and \\/h1te was h.1ndc:d its first loss
of the se.1son 6 ) \\her. I lobarl College innc.l ed
End icott. The sguad also lost its No. th rc:c man

The consistent ly lo"' scores of Pi Z1.tllo .ind J.1rnic:son, plus tl1e steJdy golfing of Sanges, St.1pleton,
Morgan and Johnstone contrihu tc:d lo a line record
.ind .1 su((essful se.1son.
107

�Fms1 Rmx·· Sherm Bletchman. Dennis Bottino, Pete Macan, Jim Hearner. Bob Bargetzi. Art K.1ll1che
SH 0:-:1&gt; Ro\\:' : Coach Welborn. Mike Pavylak, Da,·e Bro" n, Ted Scarinzi. Bill \X' alltng, Tom zo,, inc, 13ob
Hood, Cmncn ( alc:nt1, Bill Custis, Mgr.

BASEBALL
Dc:sp1te the: fact th.it the T. C. C. Colorn,ils shifted from high 'iChool to sandlot to industrial b.1seball

opener against the Ithaca &lt;...ol lege frosh at lth,ica by

fidds for thc:ir home games, they still managed to

the Ithaca nine, six to four, behtnd the masterful

romp1k a fair, won 'i, lost 6, record for the 19 18
b.1scb.1ll season Four of these six losses "ere br one

together.

a score of 2-0. Coach Gene \'qelborn's team outhit
pitching of Pete Maran, but could not put two blows

run, '' ith [\\ o of the g.1mes going extra innings.

The locals lost a he.irt-breaking 1

F.ulurc to l11t '' ith men on base lost the seJson

~

extra-inning

contest to Hartwick College at Johnson Field. T. C.

C. hel&lt;l a 3-1 lea&lt;l going into the ninth inntng, but
when the thir&lt;l out was mac.le, I !art\\ 1ck lud knotted
the count. The visitors went on to wtn in the tenth
off relic:fer Sherman Blc:tchman, \\ho repl.Ked Jerry
Fbnagan in that fateful ninth.
The Green and \"qhite found th&lt;.: formul.t for
'ictory by knocking off State: T&lt;.:th I 1- ~ .tt Johnson
Fick!. Four of the 16 hih g.unered br T. C. C. went
for extra bases.
The Colonial baseb:dlers were limited to two hits
as they bowed 5-4 to the Utica Colltge nine in a

108

�loosely pl.1yed contest at Utic.1. This was another
extr.1-inning affair.
Sherm l31etchman spun a neat four-hitter to shut
out Keptone College. '&gt;·O 111 a game played .it Johnson Field. The Colon1&lt;1b scored .ill of their runs
on two hits and &lt;ln error in the initial stanza. Bletchman had things in control all afternoon. The Keystoners gained re' cnge" fc" Jays later on their home
field as they slugged out .t 9-8 \'ictory. Coach \X'clborn laid part of the blame for the loss on a muddy
ficlJ.

H.irtwick sludeJ T. (. ( ) 2 ,\l Oneont.t for
their second one-run Y1ctory OYer the Colon1.1ls. The
diamondeers from fndtCott were only able to get five
s.tfe blO\\s \\Jule Jerry Fl.tn.1g.1n g.1,e up six to H.irt"' irk.
The loc.1b then tr.1Yeled to Ith.Ka to absorb .1 '}-)
beating administered by the ltluc.1 College nine.
l3letchnun leJ the Colornals to '1ltory OYer the
Utica College Tangerines 9-6, to .wenge an early sea
son loss. Sherm held the Utes to six h1h while strik
111g out four and \\,dking fi,·e. (o.1ch \Velborn's
charges bl,1sted cleYen bingles 10clud111g .i double by
Carmen Calenti, ofT t\\O Ut1c,1 hurlers. T. C. C.
started ''1th two runs in the first but the 1maders
from upst.tte ew York came b.1ck "ith five t.1llies
in the fourth. The l.111coln A\e. nme picked up two
runs in the fifth, two 111 the sixth anJ added three
more in the eighth. L tic a garnered one more run in
the ninth to end the: scoring. He.l\·ener and Brown
paced the local att.tck \\ 1th two hits each.

R.1in at the. cnJ of fl\t' innings of play brought
,1 ha! t to th&lt;: destruction h.mJed to the State Tech
Hornets by the Triple ( 1t1es College nine. Five hits
scored ele\'en runs for the \X'elbornmen while Tech
w.1s :tble to g.irner only one tally. l3ig P&lt;:te J\facan
held the Tedi batters to four S&lt;tfeties, two of them
scr,ttch infield hits. anJ g.1ve up but one walk. \Xfel born\ ch.trges recel\ed ,1 total of ten free passes as
two Tech pitchers couldn't loc.tte the plate.
Behind the one-hit eitching of Macan, the Green
and White drubbed \\/ilkes College 6-2 at Johnson
Field. ~Lie.in ''as abo b,ltting star for T. C. ( b)'
getting l wo hits in three attempts. Three errors
spoiled a shutout for Pete.

T. C... C lost ih chance to finish the se.1son with
.i . 500 percentage when the I.1st sdieduled game
.tg.iinst \X'dkes College .ti \'{'dkes-B.irre \\,IS w,1shed
out.

109

�Frn.\ 1 RO\\': Don Ch.1trnuk, Jim Jordan, 1lc.:rb C tllah,1n, Art Rybak, George Horkott, Joe Ludb, Earl CL1rk.
~I c Ol\ill Row : 0 .1ve Jones, C.h.1rlc:s Turkott, Dick 11&lt;.:rzer, Bob Klinko.
T1111w

RO\\': Herb Mohney, Al Hansen, Dick H,111unn, Pal Paglia.

TRACK
George "Spud" Forbes, instrudor at UnionEnd1rntt High School took O\'er the reigns as T. C.
( .'s t r.ilk to.1ch in April of 1918.
The Ni.1g.1r.1 University graduate took his Slju,1d
to Sc r.1nton, P.1. to compete in the first annu.tl Anthr.1C'ite g.unes .1gainst teams from Scranton University, 1th,1c.1 College. \Xl ilke~ College, Kings ( ollege.
Susc1ucl1.11111,1 ( ollege and Keystone Junior College.
Sp.irked by Earl (Endur,mce) Clark. who won both
tht 1111k .md two mile e\'ents. T. C. C. c.1pturcd 12
pl.Kc med.1b .inJ fin1~heJ s&lt;..&gt;eond 111 the meet. Scr.rnton Cniq:rs1t}'. with more th.in double the number
of T C C &lt;.:ntrics. took ti rst place honors.

((
110

�The: se:ason's se:cond rne:e:t saw the Colonial nn
dcrrncn how to a stronge:r R. P. l. .1ggregat1on, 69- 39,
at Troy. 1 cw York. Art Rybak, sgu.1d capt;1in,
r.ipturcd first 111 both the polc\•,1ult .tnd javc1111
thro'' , ,md second in the discus, to spark the losers.
Utica College, another extension of Syr.Kusc University, pl.1yed host to T. C. C. in its next meet. The
Gree:n and \'&lt;lhite returned home on the long end
of a 701 2 -·10~ 2 score, thus gaining its first victorr
of the season. Art Ryb.1k again took indi,·idu;tl
honors.
In the next meet, a~ Hartwick, T. C. (. droppe:d
.1 -2-'iO decision to a more evenly balanced Hartwick track and field squad. Coach Forbes' men gar
nered four first places, th re&lt;:: of them 111 the field
events. Klinko scored the only track first m the 220
yard hurdles, '' hile \Xl ilson 111 the high jump, Rybak
in the pole-vault and Callahan in the bro.id )Limp
ga,·e the green .111d "bite its other firsts.
In th&lt;: first home conte:st, ag.u mt Cort i.ind St.1tc:
Teache:rs College Frosh, the Ice.tis dropped a dose:
one, 59'. z-5.)Yz· Hobert Mohney c.1ptured two hrsts
the I 00 .ind the 220 while Cl.irk broke the tape
in the mile and tied for first with Ryb.1k 111 the

I Iorkott of I

double "111.
lhrO\\.

(. (.
I le

the only .1thkte to g.1111 .1
the shot-put ,1nd tht d1stus

\\,b

\\Oil

pole-vault.
The st1u,1d lin1sh&lt;.:d the s&lt;.:.tson ''1th &lt;I won 2, lost
3 rc:tord for dual me&lt;.:ts. I..1tk of de:pth in tht· run
ninJ!. en:nh prev&lt;.nttd the tr.1tksters from compiling
a better record.

In the return meet "1th Utica College, the T. C.
run and-jump boys ran roughshod over the:1r
"Brethren" from upstate by a 69-+J score. George

C.

111

�ATH LETI C AW ARD S
Letters were pr&lt;:sented to membc:rs of the basketball
.tnd bas&lt;:b.111 squads by Co.lCh Gene \\'elborn. ( o.1ch
George "Spud" Forbes gave out the: letters to the
members of the Green and \'V'hite track team and
Co.1ch John Budd did the honors for the Coloni.d
golfers. \'V'clborn also presented the: letters to the
members of the tennis team since: ( o.tch Joe l)errr
\1 as unable to attc:nd the festiYities.

Till '&gt;tcond .111nual A\\ .1rd, Dmn&lt;:r ",1, held on
tht t:\ c·nint: o( M.t}' _) 1, I&lt;) i8, ,II the Hot&lt;:! Frederrck.
Tht purpose of thi-, g.1thering w.1s to shO\\ recogn111on of the fl:.1h perform&lt;:d br the ,1thle:te:s of Trrple
C1t1t:' ( ollet:c:.
i\f.lJOr .rnd minor kttc:rs \\C:rc: &lt;l\\ .irded to lift}'
onl .1thktc::s rlprtst11t1ng fi,e int&lt;:rcollegi.llc:: sports.

Another highlight of the evening was the trophy
a\1 arde:d to Richard Powell, (apt.11n of the I&lt;) 17- 18
baske~b:dl squad. A similar trophy 1s to be given
each year to the basketb.111 team capt.tin.
Benjamin Hopkins-Moses, T. C. C.. registr.1r, did
.in excellent job .1s master of ceremonies. The guest
spc:.1ker for the dinner was Lew Andreas, director of
athletits and basketball cu.1c h at Syracuse University.
( 1ting the won-lost record of T. C C.., Andreas said.
'There is one chanckrrslK of the Amerir.m spons
public \1 h1ch could stand rc:vision more tol er.ince
for ,1 te.11n th.it loses. There 1s a \·uy narrO\' m.1rg111
oftenrimc::s bct\1 een a 11 in .ind .1 loss."

112

�FmsT RO\X': Owen Cru mh, Dick l\(cCtllum, Bi ll Barto\\, Sid Smith, Art Manso, Georgc Mcrcer, Joe J\Lln

ning, Russ Lisson.
SFCOND Rmx·: John Fo remen, W ally 0 ,lles. J im Carey, CJ Essuman, Bob lsb.in, 'tc' e Zurn, I Iylc Rid1mond,
Burt Lauder, Bob Clark.

INTRAMURAL SOFTBALL
Fl

pring ome..rnd '' ith 1t the .1ddiuon of intr.1mur.il softbal l to the: evcr-incrca,ing sporb program
at T riple Cities College. In .di, there were cleven
tc.lms vicing for the title and trophies in g&lt;unes played at outh Field (down by the watcr"orks. ) Al l
i.;amc:s were \C:\'C: ll inning contests "ith special ground
rules ,1Jhcred to.

AL STANDI NGS

At-I El\ICAN L EAGUE

\X'on

Baccacia
Goliard " A"

2

Goliard " B' '
Gamecocks

2

3

Wolveri nes

2

3

1 wo lcagu&lt;:s were formc:d. the Ame:rican and the
N.ltional. Since such ,1 large number of men turned
out for the sport, team rosters were limited to no
more th&lt;tn fi fteen rnw per tc,irn.

Copp House

Afte:r some: \\'&lt;:Cb of sp1ritc:d compc:tilton during
''h1ch c:ach team played Ii\'(: g.1mes (c:xcept those tliat
''c:re r.1ined out). the !31ccauans of th&lt;: Arneric,tn
Le,tguc and the Ramrods of the: N.1tional League:,
eac h l.tking individual league honor\ ;tnd sporting
1 l rtlords, md in a playoff lo dee ide lhL champion
slup. A dose game s.iw the ·Sons of lhcd1us" come
out on top &lt;111d be crowned as intramural softball
ch,1mpions for 1Y 18.

NATlO 'A L l l'AGL'E

Won

Lost

Saiens

3

2

Married Vcb

2

2

Ramrods

Adelphi

3

Facu lty ... ...

3

lb

�I N T R A i\ I U R 1\ L
FOOT BALL

INT R 1\ i\ I U R i\ L
BASK ETB 1\LL

Intramural l·ootb.d l contrnU&lt;.:d '" the m.tJOr f.dl
sport at Triple: Cit 1c:s Colkge. An c1ght t&lt;:am lc.1guc
".i., formcd .111d got into action immcdi.itdy .tftcr the
st.trt of the. f.tll s&lt;:rnc,tc:r. Tc:.uns 111 the luguc. 111cludcd. the.: Coli.mis, Baccari.t, AJelpl11, S,tic11s. Hot
Pcppc:rs. llonc:c.rushcr,, Spoilers and N.1mcJc:s, \\ondcr., An int&lt;.:n.:sting Lkt to he. notc:J .ihout the: lc:.1gue
\I .ts that it ope.rated .1nording to int&lt;:rrnllc:giate footlull rc:gul.ttions.

F.ist ;11itl furl(lus co111pei1t1on 11 .1s the keynote of
the third se.i-on of lntramur.tl b.1skc:tb.dl. Two
le.1gucs of six turns Ul'h were formc.d urly in I)(;
t"cmber and pl.iy '&gt;ta rtt.:d soon .iftc.r. These lcaguc..s,
like the tOLl(h footb.111 le.igue, 11crc. unable: to fini sh
their rc.gul.u suson duL to l.ick of pl.tying f.1cilitics.
\\hen the.· se;,bon ".i, c.tmellnl. tlw turns in
I e.tguc. .. A.. fi 1mhed in the follo11 ing order: i\ 1.u
ned \ \,,. B.1n.in.1. D :onysi.t, Adelphi.i, :-..lcclda11~h.
.111d (opp Hous&lt;.. In Le;.tt:ue 13' 1t ".i., A' ons.
Gol1,trcb, ~.iien'&gt;, Namc:less \X1onders. I lo. Peppe rs,
Bu rans .

T he season got ofT to .i Oying st.trt on October 5
•ts l.d bscrman led 13.tccacia to ,i l 2 o 1·Ktory 01 c:r
th(; S.iiens, .111J a p.is., from i\[ikc Bur.m to Drnn&gt;
Bott ino g.ti·e the: Bonec.rushers .l 6 O dcusion 01cr the
Gol1ards. (lose:, Iurd fought g.ime., sut"h as these
we.re: ch.tr.1c.tenst1c of the se.1,on.

A tu.irn.uncnt \1as he.Id to deudc: t'1e d1.1mp1on
ship. In the hrst round, the Goltards clcfe.1tecl Ade:I
phi 56 '&gt;6. B.1c.c..1C1.1 be.it Copp I louse 1) )0. 'I h&lt;.
'-L1mekss \\'ondcrs \\ere: be.iten by th&lt;. i\l.um:d \ 'us
.md till Llmgo Bullc.s won 01 er the. Hot Pcpp&lt;.rs. In
the stlond round the (,ol1.1rds \ltrl triumph.mt mer
the S.ucm -6 '&gt;'&gt;. B,KC.tC1.1 but the D1onys1.1 .tnd the.
Al(ms hc..1' the: i\l.trried Vch.

Le.1guc. pl.ty c:nded with the Hot Peppers, ( 1011.tnb .md Boneuushers tied for first pl.tc.t. lntlunent
11&lt;:.ithcr prc:1entcd .1 pl.troff until well into Dec.emhc.r Thl Bonerrmhers then he.it the. C1oliards but
sno\1 pre1c.nted them from pl.tying the. Hoc Ptppc.rs.
Tcnt.1! 1ve ari.tngemenh were nude for ,t g.tme to be
pl.ired th" 'Pring to dcc.idc the cl1.1111p1onsh1p

The. ,\, ons .ind Bingo Bulleb "ere: c.l1m1 n.ucJ 111
the semi t111.1ls h&gt; Coli.mis .ind B.tlUC1.1. These 11tturs rm. 111 th&lt;. fin 1b 111th the Gol1ards emcrg1n_g
11rtonous, i2 16, to hernme l11t r.11nurnl B.iskctb:1 ll
( h.unp1ons for 19·19.

114

��"Finl

Grt1d11,11i11g

Cft1ss

Organizes ,,, '/ CC"
Colrmi,tl !\e111. Oct. 22. 1949

��118

�����I

_,
,~

���"hmol/111u1/ l"(l(urd1 Hrokeil . 91() 1\l rn-24 1 ll "u111c1t' '

(, ,/ow,tf \ u!J. Oct. 8 . 19-18

��Ahbc·y, Chnrlr

C.

118 N. Se&lt;·on&lt;I St.. Mechn11ir"·ille.
:;12 llinl•nll St.. Endi&lt;o()ll.
!GO Oak St., llinJ'&lt;hamto11,
24 Balltown Rd .. S.-hem·ctacly,
lOH Be"it·r St.. JlinJ.Chnmt.on.

Adnm!S. Harhnru
Ahrlnllnh, Freel
Arl'Urf'.o, ll1lrry .J.
AN•. T.ann111g

;\llio, ltt"•mo A ..

Alli , Ri&lt;·h•ml
Aini. C';irmello
A n!lr1114, Marilyn
fi~dwnrd

Y
Y.
N. Y.

41 Grancl Bhct., Binghamton. N. Y.

:ls Baxkr St .. 13ini.chamton. N. Y.

lGla Rin•rvit.·w Dr ....:ndirott. N. Y.
67 St. John A\·e .. llin1thamton, N Y.

Ht.•zt:k. Frank
Bidl&lt;wk. Earle
Bidwell, \Vaync
Big-ft.... HonH•r
Bil!llt)', .Jam&lt;·

1206 North St.. t•:nrlL•ott. N Y.
10 Gt•n1·•w · St.. Gn·C'nt. N Y
203 N. Nnntkokt.• AH•., Union !':'. Y.

Bihr..lamt.•s E.
Bilos, ,John .Jr.
Hiloz. Mid1acl
lii~hani.

llinJ.!h:tmton, N. Y.

A rm trun~. l•:n_•)yn

..

21 Jlonwr A\'£',, LarC"hrnonl. N.
182 Chapin St.. Binghamton, N.
!\ lli!!hland St.. Bin1thnmlon. N.
R47 f.''ront. St.. Binghamton. N.
3107 J.nundal,_. Rt .. JO:ndwt•ll. N.

Att•n. fr&lt;•O(I'
Aton, t.awrc•nc(• l•.,

:io Risley Pinn'. Ne" Rochelle,
30 Hisl&lt;•y !'la&lt;·&lt;" N1·w Hm·hdlt'.
:!a A1·thur An•.. r-:ndicolt..
R. IJ. I. N1·wark Valky,
430 S. Avt•ry An~ .. Syrat·us&lt;• 4,

Atli:-.ani. Hobert
Atti~nni,

Vin&lt;.'C'lil

Auc&gt;r, C'hni-1&lt;·~
1\ vt•ry. J.on·ttn
A\c•ry, Tt•rry Tl

An•rv. Ulys-.rs S.

R. D. t. 71i Conklin Rd ..

Hut·hmu11. 8tnnll'Y J.
lhHha·r. (!t•nl'J.'!&lt;'
nakt•r. J,n urn .J.
llak&lt;•r, lli&lt;·hard
B1tkt•1-. Homdd 1':.
Bnlc·om. f.,('h .. hton
Bnntn. John J\1.

Bin~hamton.

1'1·1 Pinntu•lt• Rd .. Rorht'stt..•r,
!)fl

llay(.~:\

~t ..

Binghamton.

Gl! Grand St., M«·hnni&lt;·"'·ille.
North Nm·wic-h.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

lb1ran. Mkhnf·I
Bnrh4..•r. l•'rt•d V.
Barl,(&lt;.'lzi. Rnh(•t·t

22 OnornlflS!H ~t. .•Johnson City. N

BanH·~.

\\'illinrn

nnrno. \\'illinm
Bnrro,vs, \Vini(1·C"&lt;I
Budholonww, R ·ynold

1 Bronson St..

Eu~t.·nl'
.lw,l~ph

S
\\'.

il

Hnrri~

ll.&gt;1111. ~:clward C.
lknn ..lamt's M.
Bt.•t·r~.
[J~ll.

Ct orJ.!"t.'

Hnynwnd

Bottino .•Jost•ph R.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Botti no. .Jo.;,(•phin(•
Bottino, ~larion

A\'t.· .. Lowc&gt;lt,

Y
N. Y.

Ch~nnn1to

l~o\·an . .Jo.-.pph
Bovt•t.'. Martin
Bowdh, h. \Vnyn&lt;.'

15 Si ward AH~.. t·;ndit•ott.
210 Rnhhlp ·\vc., l•:ndirott.
293 Clinton St.., Bin•"hamton,
H. 0. !. Walton.
it Edwnrd-; SL.. Binglutmton,

llradlc·y. B&lt;•tly Jean
Brt~ckirnicl~1..\ Philip

N&lt;•wark Vall&lt;'Y. N. Y.
157 Crnry A\'1..' .. Binf!harntc,n . N. Y.

Brown. \t·nold
Hrov.:n, 1It rht.•t'l
Bl'O\\ n. Jlowar&lt;I

3 Elhernw Pl.. Alhany,
Front St.. 0\\C}.!"o,
Se&gt;rninal'y Avt'.. Dinµhamton .
Annette Ave.. llin5thnmton.
2·1 Baker St. . .John"on City.

ti 1 Main ~t .. Pt.•rkvilh•, PPnnn.
212 ,\lain St .•.John-;.on City, N. Y.
1;0; N Stnt1· St .. ~yrac t1S&lt;' ~. N. Y.
7':: Kirkwuocl A\t.'.. Bin).!'hamton. N' Y.
lfiOI Bronrl St.. Endh1tt. N Y.

fha·klt.~·. Jt.•an .J.
Buc klt·y. Tht~mlc1rc.• R.
Buffum, Donalt!

lh-n1it·tt. Kl·lltWth
Bt•n1wtl. L&lt;H-:
BC'nnt"tt. \\.'ilHum

:!'.3 Kil'kwoocl A\"&lt;' .. BinJ,?h11mton.
2 \1t.•1Hh&gt;l-•sohn :-:t.. Bint!hnmlc·n.
a.t Park St .. BinJ!h»nH&lt;Ht.
151 Tht-riul ~t.. Bronx.
506 Ch&lt;'nnni&gt;:o St .. flin.,h11mto11,

Bui un. M kh~1t'I S. L.
Burun . .lo.-..4..•ph J&lt;:.
Buran. l{nht.lrt
Bu ri:-t·. Llt•\\"t•ll~ n Robt.•rt
Bu1 g rs~ . FrNkrick

RPn~hur~.

\Villinm
llenson. Jn 1w

N

Buffum.. ~Ian·
Ru•"tmiam, Mh·hnd C.

Y.

N Y.

' . Y.
X Y

N. Y.

128

St.. Owt·J.{O, N. Y.
llin!!hnmton, N. Y.
Biindiamton. N . Y.
Bi11ghamt1111. N. Y.
Thompson. Penna.

31 Tallman St.. Oswoi:w.
1701 Mnin St., Endi&lt;•ot.l.
77 GIPnwood Ave .• llintrhamton.
R. D. l. Powers Rfl .. Binv.hnmton.

Bud1ins ky, Hobert
Burkley . .Jn1h't 1-:!irnbt•th

B1•ll, Holwrl
BPllinl{• r . .h~anrtt1..•
lll'nt•n.•nto, Philip
llt•njnmin, PHul E.
B~·nnNt. \lark £&lt;~.

N. Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.

N. Y.

N. Y.
N. Y .

21 llakt•r St.. .John,on City. N. Y.
2 A""""" 13. Endwell. N. Y.
27~2 llnll SL. F.ndicoll. N. Y.
112 :\lai-ion St.. Union,N.Y.
14 Full&lt;'r Rd .. Bin,,hamton, N. Y.

Browne. Cliffol'd L.

Bw:hinsky, Charft"'s Jr.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

65 Stat&lt;' SI .. llorncll. N. Y.
30 Eliznb&lt;'lh St., .Joh11,on City, N. Y.
-14·1 Front
R. D. No. !;,
78 Ch&lt;•!ilnut St..
35 North Sl.,

Hm•hanHn. C'ht•skr

N.
N.
N.
N.

f&gt;08 Mt.. Vit.•w Dr., Encli('ott. N. Y.

Brink, .J:u,•k
Brooks, Mdvin
Bross, .J\mnninc
Brc-&gt;ud1ton, Gt.'&lt;lrge J
Bnn\ n. Ann L.

llrun1t1•r. Chnrlcs E.

710 Chl'nnngo S.t .. llinJ.:"hnrnton. N. Y.
l!tG Mnin ~t.. Rinf.!hnmtnn N. Y.
12·1 P"nrl St.. Vt&gt;.tal. N . Y.
!)7 S('minary A\«.' .. Bin:.~hamt.on. N, Y

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

1·1

Brown. Mnrilyn
Brown, Paul
Bro\\ n, Hex
Brown, Ridrnrd

Forb. N. Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Mf'rrill St .. Rin~hamton. N. Y.
15 St~\\an1 An•... En1lwcll. N. Y.
21R Robbi~ Av;'.. ~:n1licott. N. Y.

\V:dtt.·r

Brown . .Jnc- k
Hro\.\ n .•Janw~ L.

Mn~s

Binghamton.
Din!lhamton.
llin1&lt;hnmton.
Av1•.. Union.
!linghnmton.

:i 11 Adam" A ,·o., ~:ndirntt. N. Y.
11 Merrill St.. BinJ&lt;hamton, N. Y.

Btc•&lt;•s, Fram·&lt;.·s

Cnllil'Oot\. N Y.
N. Y.

H. D. l.

1 l•:ast Ave ..
22 Ri,·,·1·vi(•w A\'c.,
17 Tra1·y St..
205 Lih&lt;'rt~·
73 llroom1• St..

Brewer. John D.
lh·iKham, Hn1·ry

ltarpur~willc·.

Ll&lt;&gt;yd F:.

lh•rn,;h. Frank

Y.

1()5 Madon St .. tJniun, !\. Y.
First Sl. ..John,on City. N Y.

Baum. Arnold
Ha~· I~•.

Ht1r~.

Bottino. Dt.•nnis

F:01 MonrC&gt;&lt;" St .. l•:ndic-olt. N. Y

at

;{IG Fir~l ~l.. Nt~whunch. N. Y.

Dimmic·k St .. Nt•wark Vnllt'&gt;'. N. Y.

Y.

N. Y.

N. Y.

~lnin

Bliss. Pntricia

Y.

Y.
Y
Y.
Y

N. Y.

Blinn. llollan•I

Bond. Nd-on r..
Hors, Anthony

Y.
Y.

N. Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.

St .. llin,,hamton. N. Y.
r&gt; Min&lt;"1va A\·c .. Binc-hamton. N. Y,
4R HiV&lt;·r:•id&lt;• Dr., Bin1thamton. N. Y.

\Villiam
Bohunic·ky. Ahysins
Born hard. A !Ian ,J.
Bonnell, Charlotte

E. Main f;t., Whitnvy Point. N Y.
21:) Ford Rel .. V1·&lt;t11I. N. Y.

Hnrion. Ridwrd D.

Jlaxt('r,
Rnxt{'r,

IJin~drnmton.

N.
N.
N.
N

Jlo\\ard An• .. Binfthamt.on,
t6 Hill A\•t• .. r:ndi cotl.
Iii llill A\(•., l•:ndkott,
\Vashini.rton St .. BinJZ'hamton .
·1li .Jnek~on ;\\('.. Jt~nclicott..
:1:1~ 1,

Bogo~tn.

N. Y .
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y
N. Y.

:11 Mdbouriw St.. Vostal.
1•'ro11t St., Bini.:hnmton.
a13 Oak llill A\'V., f:ndi1·ott,
21 J&gt;;ltlr(•&lt;h~·t.• Av1..• .. Johnson City,
2 F't·nton Avt.• .• Bing:hnmton.
26~

1~5

f~UJ(&lt;"llV

IJloom. (~t·raldirw

Star RoUl\'. Gll·n Aubn•y, N. Y.
gq14 Wooclhaven Bh·d. Wooclhnven 21. N. Y.
Arnol&lt;I . .John C.
R. D. 1, Rom(" Pl'nna.
Arnold. Perl'y L.
21fi Mnin St .. Binyh'l.mton. N Y
Arnold, \Valtt•r
11:, Muttht·w" St., Bin!!hamton. N. Y
Anmninn. l~d\\nrd
Arm1'4lron!.! . .Mary

As&lt;·h&lt;.·r. A Inn
A~lt. Ower1 n.. .Jr.
A,h, Richard

Oox Nu. I fil, Blooming-burg, N. Y.

Bitrw1'. .Oonuld
Blau' dt, tl'homas
HI&lt; :--h, Jenn A.

106 Oak St.. Bin)'humtun. N. Y
26'" Cranclall ~l.. Binvh•mlon. N Y

Arla!oi, Harry

Ne,qlrk Vall1•i'. N Y.
29 Sc1uin•s An•.. 1-:ndirot.t. N. Y.
Grc&gt;('ll&lt;'. N. Y.

.Jo~enh

lli:.-ig-nnni.

121'\ llawlt.·y St .. Binvhnmton, N. Y.
Box No. 3'12. M iclrll&lt;•hm n. N Y
•I Nnrwoocl St...Johnson City. N. Y

Appe. Rohert
Arrh..r. Willinm

z;,

DH)"tOTI St. ,luhnson City, N. Y.
1:l All1•11&lt;lalc Rel.. llin1thamton, N. Y.
2 Millard ;\\"(•., BinJrhamt.on, N. Y.

Bt•rlin$.:"hof. Chnrlf•s

1r.2 llek•n St.. Bin!!hamton. N Y.

ft

506 Chenan.,o SL.. llini&gt;:hnmton. N. Y.

Ht•rnsh.-in, lt·\ in~

77~ Ch1..·nani:-o St..

A.

Anthon)·, Th1•rc•:

lknson, Cal'I
fkt·J!, Paul C.
Bt•rJlt•n, .John J .. II

Y.

Y.

114.·nndt A\:c'., Binµhamton N". Y
Nt•\\. Milford. l'l•ntta.
~i5 'fn•mont A vt•., Bimchaml"n. N Y.

Allw&lt;• Clam .Jean
Ahlri&lt;'h. Hnycl1·n B.
Alford. l&gt;onald
Allttnl, .J&lt;N•J&gt;h ~:.
All~n. Stnnl1·y N.

Ant1tl,

N
N
N
N.

N. Y.
N. Y.

N. Y.
N. \'.
40 Orton Ave.. Bin!!hnm1on. N. Y.
12 Oavb AvC'., Bin ..~hamtun. N. Y.

i)

Luthrnp Av&lt;'.. BinR"hnmlon, N . Y.

212 1 "

Liberty Ave·.. Union. N. Y.

2121:! Liht·rt.y A\"c., Union. N. Y.
2713 King St.. Ji~ndi«ott. :-.:. Y.
5 Ro~tlrs A\'c., J&lt;;udic"'l.
2107 \¥Hbon Blvd .. J1~ndi&lt;.·ott.
2107 Wutson Blvd .. F:ndic-ott.
-6!1 RfrtlrsidC' Dr ...Johnson City,

N.Y .
N . Y.

N. Y.
N. Y
11 Nnl'woorl St.. ,Johnson City, N. Y.

�Burghardt, Leaman
Burlingam(' , J ohn
Burn8. l.A'Onn rd

Bu•h. Arnold A.
llu• ino. Orlando
Buller, Edward C.
Butts. Groocc
Byrnt.•z.;, Marion E.
Cabr&lt;"ra, Charles
Cady, Frances

Li• le, N . Y .
696 Ch&lt;•nango St .. Bin1:hamton , N. Y.
I 226 S. Main St.. WiJk.,.-llar re. Pt•nna.
61 Rid1:e St .. Bin1ehamton . N. Y.
18~ Conklin An&gt;.. Binghamto n . N. Y.
158 Park Av&lt;&gt;., Bin1:hnmton .
21 River St.. BinKhamton ,
103 M ur r ay St., Din11hnmton .
Ii Brookdale Pl.. Rye.
88 Main St .. Bin1ehamto n.
121 •:r i&lt;' St.. Owe1&lt;0.
Conklin Rd .. C'onklin,
Ii Garfield Ave.. •: ndicotl,
I Snnd St.. Afton,
324 Robblt• Ave .. ~:ndicoll.

Cain, Marilyn
Calabrisi. Dominick
Caldwell, Jo•eph
Callen, Robert
Call&lt;·o, Alfonso
Calvert, R obert Harv('y
Camp bell, Clar ence E.
Cnmpion. George

Cnml)Os, Robert
Cnpotosto, Mnrio A.

Cnpozzi, John
Caraker, A ndrew

Caraker , Louis
Card, Clan•nce
Cnrl, Betty J&lt;•an

Carpent,•r, Edith M.
Carroll. IrvinJ.r
Cn r11on. Robert
Cary, Leo
Car)', Ri chard James
Ca..~c-llo.

Francis
Cast.or ton. Cliffor d
Celona. Frank
Ccrnnk , Edward S.
CeruJJo, Jo~&lt;.1 ph

N . Y.
N. Y.
N . Y.
N. Y.
N . Y.
N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Cipriano. Ronald
Claff'. B&lt;•atric&lt;'
Clapham, James E.
Clurk, Donald
Clark. Earl S.
Clark,
Clark.
Clark,
Clark.
Clark,

Flort•nce
Harold R.
Robert
Th&lt;&gt;ma' James
William L.

Clark, William W .
Clarke. Edwin
Clarke. G(&gt;(&gt;rge H .
Clay. Geoff're)·
Cleary. J oseph

212 Henry St.. llin1&lt;hamton , N. Y.
122 Main St.. Owe1to. N. Y.
7 ~;. Stcul&gt;&lt; n St .. Bnth, N. Y.

Colb)", Luur('n

Cole. Vincinin

IOG Cleveland Avt•.. •:ndicott,
Coleman , Chnrlt'l! ~:dwnrd
R. 0. 3, Vestnl,
Coleman, Doris
322 R.obin &gt;-0n St .. llinghamton .
Collin,, Elizabt'lh A.
202 R&lt;ibinson SL., llin1:h11mt.on,
Collinli, Grnce Jo:.
l.. ura ~ St., Cr(lt(&gt;nt.&gt;.
Comfort, Willinm

N. Y.
N. Y
N. Y.

N. Y .
N. Y .

Kilhnny Rd .. Unadilla. N. Y .

5 Derhy Ave .. Auburn.
413 ·~ E. llfl\in St .. Endicott.
50 Sch ubert St.. Uinghnmton .
105 Lt•roy St .. Dinp:hnmt.on ,
67 Be&lt;&gt;tho,·en S t .. Bin1:hnmton .

N. Y.
N. Y.
N . Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Cooper. llnr&lt;&gt;lcl
Cooper, JRmt.&gt;s Grorge

27 Allx•rl St .. John &gt;o n C it y,
R. 0. 2. M iddletown .
622 H igh Ave .. •:ndicoLt.
8 F reder ick St.. J ohnKon Cit y,
15 MyKRlt St., Binp:hamton ,

N. Y.
N. Y.
N . Y.

R I). 2, H nwlcyton Hd .. lli nghnmton , N . Y .
Co•las, l't•ter
29• Bnkerdnlc Rd .. Hoche&gt;1t&lt;"r, N. Y
Courtney, Nancy N.
30 1 OwiJ:rht Ave., J+;ndil'otl, N. Y.
Courtrisrht, Edwin Grunt

N. Y.

Com;(', Normnn H

N. Y.

Craft. Ot•l\\'l'r l

60 Front St.. Binghamton , N. Y .
5 Carhar t Ave .. Binp:hnmton . N. Y.
135 Brookdale A" &lt;'.. n 0&lt;·hester, N . Y .
R . D. 1. Endkott, N. Y.
1125 Freas Ave .. B~rwi ck, Penna.

Ma~~.

Cialeo. J oseph F.
Cianciosi. Hume&lt;&gt;
Cianciosi. U$CO
Ciesiels ki, Joseph
Cinotti. l:rnest

I~ Gl'OTl&lt;l' St.. llinghamton , N. Y

Compton. J ohn R.
Conk lin, A rlcne
Conr oe, llymn
Conte. Frfficric.·k
Cook. Vivinn Clnrc.'

8 1 Fresh Pond Parkwn)', Cambrids:t',
Chase, Paul Mann
413 Arthur Aw .. •:ndicott.
Chermak . ~;ugenc
n2 Jo;. Willow St.. Syrncu•e.
Chin rulli. ll iltla
205 Nsnticoke A ve .. ~:ndicott.
Childs. William L .
12 Cleveland Aw., Binghamton ,
Chomyszak. ,John G.

Chrisler, llnrold J.
Chri~ton. llt.•rnice
ChriHlinn, Louis
Chrzan. Vinrent J.
Chwolow, David

3•1 Wny St.. llinghnmUm . N. Y

Clu1.::stont'. J uml'M
Cody. L&lt;&gt;o
Coln vi LO. Be r tha

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y .
N. Y .
N. Y.

N. Y .
N . Y.
N. Y .
N. Y
N. Y.

C hnpmnn, F'rnnciK

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N . Y.
N . Y.

Bin11h11mton.
Binghnmton .
Bin11h11mton.
Binp:hnmton ,
Binghnmum .

I Ayre• St..
Irv ing A v~ ..
26 M unsell St..
38 North St..
222 Mai n St..
J~

126 Bird•nll St.. Endicott,
125 Baker S t .. John•&lt;&gt;n City,
10 Church St.. Binghamton ,
Map le Ave .. Newark Valley.
53 Broad A v'"· ninghnmto n,

Chaff'ce, Raymeta
Chamber lnln, J ohn
Chnmbcrlain . Philip
Champney, Gordon

Clt&gt;ary, Rol&gt;&lt;.'r t
6 1 Onk St .. llinghamton ,
Cleary, nonald
94 Water St.. llinghamt-0n ,
Clt•mentc, Albert S.
329 Odt•ll St .. ~:ndir&lt;&gt; tt,
C'liff'ord, Wn tson 11.
S610 Rath Aq•., Johnson C'it)',
Cline, Richard
..i5-2M-65th Dr .. Middle \ 'illRKt', L. I ..

Corcoran,

Cu~grifT. Fr&lt;-dC'rif.'k W.
Corino, Arthur ll.

Crnpo. Ri&lt;·hard J.
Crn w ford. Claude Jr.
Crnw(or&lt;l. Gl'0'1ft' C.
Crnwford, John II.
C r eveling, Hober t II .

2306 'E. M ain St.. •:ndicott,
11'4 Thoma• St., John•on City,
9 1 Water St, Bin1thnmUin ,
123 Seminary Avt•.. Bin1:humU&gt;n.
208 Wnyne St.. Endwell.

110 Walnut St., Bln1:hnmton , N. Y.
16 Grand Ano .. J ohn.an Cit)', N. Y.
13 Beaco n St .. B ina.:hnmt.on, N. Y.
23•-i~th St .. Ni11gRra FRlla, N. Y

179 Mntlhe''" St..
64 Moell&lt;•r St..
136 Ma ..1achu•ctt..&lt;,
305 K Mnin

llinghumum , N
Bin1&lt;hamton , N.
J nhn•on City, N .
St.. Endicott, N.

14 Virgil St.. l11 n11hamton, N. Y.
38:! S. Lake St .. Guy, Ind.
946 V~Kta l A vt'., Binghamton , N. Y .
Box N o. 132. Chenango Fork•. N. Y .
177 Crary Ave., Uin1:hnmton , N. Y.
P ntt&lt;&gt;nburg, N. J .

101 Mt. Plt&gt;n•nnL St., Derby, Conn
425 E. lllnin St.. •:ndi colt, N. Y.
20 Jock&gt;«m Ave .. f :ndicott. N . Y.
13 Ronan S t.. Hillcrc•t. N. Y.
Chennn1:0 Forks, N. Y.

Crook•. W illiam C., Jr.
Crooks, Williarn Howard
Cro•.&lt;. Donnlcl
Crouns&lt;'. Dona l&lt;I

20 Gr and Blvcl .. Jlin1&lt;hamton ,
35 Avon St., John•on City,
34 W iowvard St .. S id n1'y,
Cumbe r , Dori~
504 Overlook Tcr., Endicott,
Cunninghnm . Jam("ft M , Jr
20i N. Roosevdt A"t'., f:ndirott,
Curatolo, Jo~eph P.

N. Y .
N. Y.

207 N. Roosevelt Aw., •:ndicott,
58 Bt•nnctt A ve .. lli111:hamton,
25 R-Oger• Ave.. ~:ndi &lt;'ott.
309 E. Edward S t. , Endicott,
218 Clc"eland A vc.. •:ndicott,

N. Y.
N. Y.

Rd .. ~;nd i cott,
Poughkeep•i to,
Rd., f:ndwl'll,
Dr .. ~:ndicott,
Htl., Gt..•n(•s.t"t'.&gt;,

N. Y.

St. ('har),.,. St.. JohnMOn City,
55 Hu.Ison St.. J ohn•on C ity.
121 Crary Ave., llinghnmLOn .
30R W. Main St., ~;ndicott ,
Ston1•h&lt;'n1&lt;e St. Albany.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y
N . Y.

84 CrC1&lt;tmonl Hd .. llinghamton ,
It. D. I, •:ndico\t,
304 Muri&gt;hy A ve.. ~:ndirott,
~ Kt•nLu&lt;·ky A'''"• •:ndicott,
2739 Hall St.. Endicott,

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y
N Y

31 Odell Ave.. ~:ndirott,
26 Hill A&lt;'t·., 1'.:ndicott.
87 1, Front St .. RinKhamt.on .
355 V&lt;••l.81 Rel .. Vc•tnl.
11 H elen SL. Binvhamtnn .

N.Y
N. Y
N. Y
N. Y.
N. Y

Crowley, •:ug,•ne F.
Cuff. Gerold

N. Y .
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Curnuilo. Surnh
Danit•I•. Shirl&lt;•Y
J&gt;aniluk, A. Olg11
Dnnn. Rn y G.
Uai&gt;olito, }o;lvira

939 W. L nkt'
14 Gnle St..
2 Hoo1wr
1609 Jtivervi"w

J oanne E.
Davidson. Urure
lln\'il!&gt;&lt;. William
Dnvi~. Pauln
1)1wis. Shirl&lt;•y •:l i:r.ubeth

I)' Aprile.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N . Y.

N. Y.
N. Y .

[)n"~on.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y .
N . Y.
N . Y.

Rhirlt.:Y

Onyton, Clair F.
0(•aron. F . BrU('\'

Dearie. Joseph
Dechene. Rnymond A.

West Winfield,
53 1 Vestal Rd., Vestal,
E. Rivt&gt;r Rd .. W &lt;••t J!enriettn,
Oox No. 94 . Bninbrid!l't',
309 Clara St.. Endicott,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

0(.'ek&lt;•r, Norman K.
Dt·ekt•r, Rnym ond C.

50 West Main St .. llancoek,
519 Wa,·erl)• St.. Waverly,
I Mather St .. Binghamton .
131 W8"hin11ton St., Uinghaml&lt;&gt;n,
9• W ater St . Binghamton ,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N

Y.
Y
Y.
Y.
Y

Dellos. John

Dt•f'cl icc. Hen ry
D&lt;&gt;Grt-gorio, John
O(') C'ano, Henry
Ot.•Lurenz.u. Paul
Ot•mn ree. Gt..•rald J .
D~nni•. Richard
Dt•nnis, Robert K.

129

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

41:l lld lcvuf' Avt•.. Ui nKhnmton. N. Y .

Cripps, J o:--.(•ph

227 Baldwin St.. John.-on City, N . Y .
26 Mnin St.. John•on City, N. Y.
334 Odell Ave .. Endicott, N . Y.
259 Paine St.. Troy, P t•nnn.
22 Garfidd Av&lt;'.. •: ndicoll. N . Y .
106 Clevelnnd Ave .. Endicott.
3123 K Main St.. f:ndicott.
14 1., Jnckson A-c.. Endicott.
110 Dernite S t .. John.o n City,
201 Odt&gt;ll A "'"· •:ndicotl.

Jam~

36 Andrews A vf'., 1HnJ'!'hamton , N. Y .

Onv i ~

2~5

N . Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

N . Y.

N. Y.
N. Y

N. Y.
N . Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

�Y.

Farley, John

Y.
Y.
Y.

Faso, lgnn tiuR

R. D. 1. Waverly.
162 Oak St.. Binghamton.
305 Squir es Ave., ~:ndicott.
20 Miller St.. Binghamton.
12 Avery St., Sidney,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

OcWnn, &lt;.:-0nrad
D&lt;"Wnn, Bnrhnru
D1·w''Y. l'aul
D&lt;•yo, Robc·rl J..
l)irkcr1'0n. Rob,•rt

Whitney Point,
1703 Riverview Or.. Endicott,
255 E. GPnesee St.. Auburn,
18 Allendale ltd .. Binghamton.
406 Ch&lt;••tnut SL. Endicott.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Dic.·kwn, t.;lton Ro1K'rt.
llit·ff&lt;onhnch, Chari&lt;.,. t~.

Riverside Or.. llin1eham ton, N. Y.
Colley, Pennn.
27 Holland St., Binghamton, N. Y.
15 St. Cyril Ave .. Binghamton. N. Y.
310 Adam• Ave .. f:ndicotl, N. Y.

F ..~,·rRri, Mary Ann
Fctcho, J oseph
Field. Barbara
Fi letto. Fm n k J.

I&gt;i·nniH Rodu ey

Derrick. Cyril J.
Dt'Snnrti•. Ftt'd Jr.
Dl'lrick. Berna rd
Dt'ucl, Juck

Dino, M ichnt'I

N. Y.
N. Y.
N . Y.
N . Y.
N . Y.

125 Crestmont Rd .. Bin1ehamt.on,
209 N. McKinley Aw: .. Entlkott.
98 Hill Ave .. J &lt;&gt;hnson Chy,
1603 Rivervi&lt;'w Dr.. F.ndicott.
9 Bedford St.. llin1ehnml0n.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.

f'orbes. Therese

148 Hawl('y S t.,

Ford, Frederic

Box No. 173. Chenan1eo Forks . N. Y.
309 Vnile)' l)r .. Dalt.on. C:e&lt;mda

IJumhlc.•h:rn. H urold
lh1mmi&lt;-k. Nnney

llunkl&lt;·c. K&lt;'ith

43 Pinc St.. Depos it.
104-20 88lh A ve., Richmond H ill,
498 Glenwood Av,·.. Rochester,
45 Mon roe Ave .. Larchmont.
R. D. 1, Ocpo•it.

Early. Rolwrl
r:aMton, Burt

14;&lt;hvur&lt;ls . Glvria
EiKW&lt;"rth, h~n.bc.•llt.'
t;J,l,•rkin. V;•rnon 11 .. J1·.

to;milio, Henry

Route I. Oepo•it.
R. 0. 3. Vcst11l,
2803 Wat•on Blvd., Endicott.
314 Arlhur Ave.. Endirott,
llox No. 282, Endwell.

83 Baker St .. John~on City,
154 Allen St.. John•on City,
9T Front St.. Vc.tnl.
311 S. Franklin St.. Watkin• Glen,
28 Leroy St.. Oin1ehamlon.

D.

r :n.,khnrl. Do1rnld K
¥:nglish. Charle•
1o:rik8on . Lennart
r;s~l1 rmun, Edwnrd
E•ty, Lucille M.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

1

Faistl'nhammer. Ludwir;c

29 Brewster St., Johnson City.
1068 Gnrner Ave .. Schen&lt;•clndy,
421i'~ K Mai n St... Endirott.
42 McKinley Ave .. Endicott,
504 Church Sl.. Unio n .

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Gnnce. Anthony M . ....
Garman, A. David

N. Y.
N . Y.

Ga\lin, Edward

116 Odell Ave .. Endicott,
6 Eaton Pl.. Binghamton.
33 Faye tte St.. Binghamton.
42 Crary Ave .. Bin1&lt;hamt.on ,
42 Crary Ave., Binghamton.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Gaydos. Ge&lt;&gt;rge
Gehrke, Alfred
Gent. Thomas W .. Jr...

2700'/ i F,. Main St.. F:ndicolt,
24 Pearl Ave .. llin1ehamt.on.
103 Dudley Ave .. Endicott,
23 E. Main St... Cunisf.&lt;.'Q,
2707 Williams St.. Endicott.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

30 Avon St.. Johnso n City,
120 Huili;on Ave., Syracuse,
98 Main St... Binghamton.
.. 1·107 Tracy St.. Endicott.
709 Milan Ave .. Endicott,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Garson. Edith .
Gavin, Thomas

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Gc.' nung, Leo

George, Byron

6 t;van St.. Uin1eh11mlon. N . Y.
619 Broad Ave., Susquehanna, Penna.
2 Elm St.. Wind&gt;o r. N. Y.
L107 IJroad St., Endicott. N. Y.
862 K 15th St., Orooklyn, N. Y.

George, Sisto
German, R obert W.
Gialanella. Philip
Ginnfrate, Anna ....

Giarusso. Vincent .

1606 Tracy St.. Endicott. N. Y.

Gibbs. Marjorie S.
83-52 Talbot St., Kew Gardens . L. I..
Gilg, Joseph
4 Clay St.. Vestal,
Gilg, Ruth
Clay St.. Vestal.
Gillespie, Mary M . ..
150 Oak SL. BinKhamton.
Gilfillan, Roberta M.
Maine,

·r.

162 Crnry Ave .. Bin1ehnmton. N. Y.
308 W. Main St.. Endicull. N. Y.
12~ W. Wendell St., Union. N. Y.

E. J ean

202 Lnkcvicw Ave., Wat.kinR Glen, N. Y.
... R. 0. I. Greene. N. Y .
17 Fre&gt;nch St.. . Binghamton, N. Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.

R obert

Fabrizio. U&gt;Co

... ritz, Vernon C.

3313 Lawndale S t.. Jo;ndiro ll, N. Y.
1706 Mo nroe St.. Endicott. N. Y.

N. Y.

~:"a""·

E\'llnti, Thomll8
E\•t•a-~. \\'i11ittm

French, Rober t
Frisch. F:laine Janel
FriKk, Mary E.
Fritt..,, Georire P .. Jr.

106 North St.. ~:ndico tt. N . Y .
llox No. 172. Che&gt;&lt;ter. South Carolina

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

162 Crary Ave .. BinghAmt.on, N.

FnrJtn&lt;•li, Yolanda

Fowkr, John

Frazit r, Durwood
Frederick, Robert.
Freer, Franklin J.
French, Lawrence

Oinghnmt.on. N. Y.

Frytnl. Paul P.
1910 K Main St.. t:ndicolt.
Gados, Nellie
-119 N. McKinley Ave .. F:ndicolt,
GaJ)a~h('r, t.. rancis P.
29 Mu nsd l St.. Binghamton.
1231-74th St. . Brooklyn 28,
Galluccio. Augusto Vincent ..
Ch enango Forks.
Camble, F.:ilcen

Gordon

Falbo. Samuel J .

F'ost.C'r. Win~ton

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

E\·A n J:1:,

~·a1 rb roth &lt;'r,

t'ord. JI. Stee&lt;I
Fores t. Ralph

Y.
Y.

22 lknnett Ave., Binghamton, N. Y.
28 LPwi• SL. Binghamton. N. Y.
3 Hardin1e Ave., Ve.Lal. N. Y.
54 llrighlon St.. Rochestt•r. N. Y.
2nd St.. Wyalus ing, l'enna.

JttmC'~

ll y«r. John

Y.

Flet.cher, J ohn W...
. 6 1 , Evans St.. Binghamton.
Fletcher, Reid
R. D. 4, Upper Front St.. Binghamton.
Foley, Gcrtrmlc P. .
20 Bennett Ave .. Binghamton.
Forbes. Janet
1605 Trncy St., Endicott,
Forbes. Mary J;,
1605 Tracy St .. F,;ndicott.

119 Crcstmonl Rd., Binghamton, N. Y.

r;nrly, Julin

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

325 Riverside' Or .. Binghamton. N. Y.
29 Delmar St.. Binghamton. N. Y.

l&gt;untlf'y, Frank E.
Durham. Chnl'il'• ll.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

29 Whitney Av&lt;· .. llinghamt.on. N. Y .
li4 Waahin1et.un Ave., ~ndicot.t., N. Y.

))uun. Oorothy S.

19 S&lt;1ui r c. Ave .. Endico tt.
8 Jone&gt;1 St., Binl(hamton.
68 Gaylord St., Binghamton,
255 Court St .. Bin1ehamton.
:1643 Rath Ave.. Johnson Cil)',

346 Main St.. Lake Placid,
223 Uermond Ave., Endicott,
10 Garden St.. Walt.on,
98 Cn•stmont Rd., Binghamton.
629 W. Gray St .. Elmira,

Duffy, .John

F.milio, Daniel J .

Finch, Roger

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N.Y.
N. Y.
N. Y •

l&gt;owcllc., Edward Jr.
Downey, Jo!&lt;t.'l&gt;hi11f? C.
Doyle. G«&lt;&gt;r1&lt;e
l)rihnnk, A1Hlrcw
Druk«r. ltob('rl

}o;JliAon, Willinm

Ferranti, John

Fl'nson. Nina

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

600 I rv ing Ave .. Endicott,
17 Chrisf\eld A,e., Johnson City,
1408 1, K Main St .. Endirotl,
106 Wnlnut St.., Bin1ehamlon,
I North Ave., Binghamton.

Donnelly, William E.
Donovan, George W .. Jr.

t;IJ&lt;•1·l. (;e&lt;&gt;rK&lt;'
Elliott. B. Sll•wart
r~ llil'l, D. IJruct.•

Y.

Ave.. New York.
St., Binghamton.
St.. Bin1ehamlon.
St.. Binghamton.
St., llinghumton.

160 Bennet l
38 '':: Moeller
38', , Moeller
!i8 Jarvis
LOI Oak

Fiorelli. Nichohu;
Pisk, William
1-'i!.ch. Robert
Fleming, Catherine
Fleminl{. Mildred

Donnc·lly, RoR"er K.

Duffy.

FefTC'r. Amnon Paul
Feinberg, Phillip
f°(•inJx&gt;rg, Ro~al:rn

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

D&lt;&gt;lnn. Robert
Donn\elli, Nicholas A ...

J&gt;oly. William

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Diul&lt;', Robert
Dixon, Richard
Dod•on, i,;dward

Dvnovun, HohC'rt. J.
Dopp, Ouvid
Doi.&gt;pl·I, IJnrolcl

Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

30 New SL, Binghumt.on.
229 Chenango St.. Uinghamt.on.
9 Carroll St., Bin1ehamton.
503 J"lorenc&lt;' St.. Endicott,
.. Newark Valley,

H.ut.h

DiSt.«..' fnno, Scbast..iun

Donovan. Robl'l"l

Nancy J.
F&lt;·duke. John
Feeler. William

7~1

Dino. Willium
Oi Pic.•t.1'0, A merico
OiHhrow.

Fam~t.

77 Centr e Ave., New Rochelle,
16 Seminary Ave., Binr::hamton.
425 ltobinson St... Binghamton,
386 Clinton St., Uinghamlon,
8 John St., OwCKo.

9 Baylt&gt;ss Av.,., Binghamt.on, N. Y.
104 Grant A,e.. Endicoll, N. Y.
154 Allen St.. John.on City, N. Y.
64 Hospital St... Carbondale, Penna.
R. U. l. Endicott. N. Y.

Gillies, Richard
Gilman, John
Glacken. Haze l

Gleason, Albert C.
Glove r. Oonnld W.

130

273 17th St.. Brookly n,
. I 1 Mc Donald St... Bin1&lt;hamt.on.
307 Garfield Ave .. Endicott,
60 Farr A ve.. J o hnson City.
SS Cre:!lmont ltd .. Binllhamton.

N. Y.
N. Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N . Y.
N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

�Gobcr, Ste1&gt;hen R .
Godwin. Gl&lt;&gt;nn G.
GO&lt;'rlitz, Ro lwrl K
Golclberr.t. ~:rwin
G&lt;lld•n. Stan ley D.
Goldfarb,

llo1&lt;nn, John T.

Harri•.
UinghRmto n,
llinghnmto n,
Binghamto n,
Bin1&lt;h11mton.

N. Y .
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Holme•. Paul &lt;.:.
Homa, Ceorge
Hnm a , Helen
lloo&lt;I. ltobcrt K
Hoover, ltichorrl

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

llnp ler, f;d,:cnr A.
llorkott, George
H orkott, John
Horney, William J .
H ornick, Donald

~6f. Clin t-On St ..
4 Stone St ..
30 Riv&lt;•rview Ave.,
12 Arthur SL,

Gorton. J ohn F. H .

41U A r thur Avt•., •;ndieott.
605 S. Liberty Ave.. ~:ndicott,
47 Adam• St., Binghamto n,
40 Oak St.. llinghnmto n.
37 Cedar SL., Uinghamt.o n.

Go•hnn, Fred
Go-., Willard
Grabowski , Chc•wr
lr\•in~

Grace, William P.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

132 A S. ll roarl St .. N orwich, N. Y.
11 Halford St.. Binghamto n, N. Y.
72 Tompkin• St.. llinghnmt.o n, N. Y.

Hoflt.&gt;r, Hurry A.

Hag&lt;'rt&gt;·. John !'.

244 Seventh St..
14 Clev(')and Ave ..
228 E. Seneca Turn1&gt;ikt:',
525 l'ad&lt;•n St..
203 CJe,·eland Ave.,

Hng1w rt y, Richard F:.
Hall. J ack O.
Hnll, Th&lt;'lmn H.
Hnllirlay, H1•rh&lt;'rt
Jam~
Char)(~

llolm&lt;·•. Dolly
Holme,, Dorothy t::.

4:1 N. Broad SL., J ohnson City, N. Y.

Gullborg, William H.
Gylco. Jam&lt;'• J.
HaekC'lt, Richard S.

HnmiltJ)n,

Hoi:an, Robert
Holleran. Jam&lt;~ F.

48fl Vestal Rd., llini;:hnmto n, N. Y.

Grn1&gt;er. Richard
Cref'n, o~rar J ., Jr.
Gn&gt;gory, Myron K
CruM&gt;, Jncqut•lin('
Guinta. Agatino

Hamlin.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

K&lt;'nn~th

Gon7.. Mi&lt;'hael
Gorman, Walu.•r J .
Gorman. \\'illiam F.

Grace.

N('wllrk Valley,
5 Mildred A,·e .. Binghamto n,
R . D. 6, Bin11hnmto n.
204 1 " Pro,1&gt;ect SL. Union.
1115 Ve•tal A,·e., Binghamto n,

E.

Hannk. WilJinm

Hancock, Carlyle A.
Hanitln, Thoma• Jr.
Hnnitchak , Uernard J.

l&lt;&lt;•novn, Penna.
•:ndicott, N. Y.
SyrBt:'u•e. N. Y.
F.n1licott, N. Y.
F.ndicott, N. Y.

402 S. Liberty Ave .. Union,
Box No. 38. Main&lt;'.
:ll 1 Pnrk Phu:e. Painted Po~t..
R. D. I. Owego,
11~ Mary St.. llin1&lt;h11mton,

N. Y.
N. Y.

36 Grirnd Blvd .. Bingham ton.
3:; C. F . J. Blvd .. Johnson City,
~ Arthur St .. llinghnmto n ,
643 Cht•nango St.. llinghnmto n,
702 Sc1uires Aw .. Endicott.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

N. Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.

Hnrttld:-;on, Gus
Harri--, John
A )('x William
Ha rri~on. John
Harli}.cnn, J ohn

Ha r ri ~on.

Hartman. 11\'lty Jnn &lt;'
Hartung, Carl

Hudy, Margnr&lt;•l

S

llumphrt:'Y•. Frank
Humph rey•, llA&gt;h.&gt;rl
llung!'rfor tl. Clnrk L.
Huntley. Thoma.' G.
ltutchi nKOn, Edward J.

H yn"•· IWbert
Iacov('lli. Guido

N. Y .

lnnnone. Eug ...•nc

N. Y.

lnn none,

Jo~eph

I nduliH, Dorothy
l rvini.c, Willinm

l•lmn. TIA&gt;bert
h •t•s, Sh('rmnn
h ·ory, Thoma!(

Juho, Michad
Jack'\On. Vinct~nt

94 Walnut St.. llinghnmto n. N. Y.

85 l'rospt'&lt;'t SL. Binghamto n. N. Y.
92 Murrny St., llinghamt.on, N. Y
~2 Pnrk St .. Johnson City, N. Y.
32 Chel'ltnut St.. Bin1&lt;hamto n, N. Y.

Jacoh&gt;'. A ndrcw
Jnme•. John
Jnmic·um,

Jofh~ph

Johansen, H owsrrl N.
J o hn oon, Jame•
J ohnson Mary

Helbert. Charles N.
Henry, Thomas
H~reii;:a. William C.
Herie.,n. John J ., Jr.
H ei', Harold J.

154 Allt•n SL. Johnwn City,
12 Uigelow St., Uinghamto n,
120 Roiwr. An•.. t::ndkott,
South SL.. Red Creek,
36 Davi, St., Binghamto n,

N. Y.

Jone~.

?~

Jone§, Richard P.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Jo&gt;&lt;eph, Donald
Jo•e1&gt;h. J ohn
Joyce, c1..mcnt

Hes•. M11rjor!e

36 Dnd• St.. Hin1&lt;hnmlo n.
736 Wal ton A,e., Ne" York,
116 Jeff&lt;•0&lt;on A\'e., ~:ndicott.
30i I...ouhdttntt Avt'., }l;ndicott.
30 Avon St.. John"°n Cit&gt;.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Julian, Jo•eph
J ulian, K&lt;&gt;berl

Sue
Ht•yman, Al vin

H iekt-y, Thomas
Hit•r, t•ritz

Hier, J oan
H inaman. Chester
Hon1&lt;. Lyle
H oa11. William
H ogan, Ann

Jn~ieloni11,

H~dwig

Jt•nningr., Warrt.•n

Jt•wc.•11, Raymond
Jimin('z, Maril\

Johnston, ThomBK

Jones, David

Y.

Dori:s

v.

Jurcna. l.A.&gt;uis

Knlli&lt;he, Arthur A.
J\aminn:ky, Uruno

N. Y.

N. Y.

Knmp, Bernard
Karll-. U. Jus..-i&gt;h

30 Avon St .. J ohn•on City, N. Y.
767 Rin·r~id&lt;· Dr., John,..on Cit)•, N. Y.
6l&gt; Fowler A"e .. J ohn,on City, N. Y.

66

Uit»chnmlo n, N. Y.

5~

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Ht·'i~t·I. M&gt;·ra

Binghamto n, N. Y.

. Silk St.. Newark Vnlley,
MrKinlt•y Ave.. t:ndicotl,
82 PruMl&gt;ttl St.. Binghamto n.
16 Knight A\e., t: ndiro lt,
6 Brady St .. Johnson City,

f&lt;U~SCJI

100 Allen St.. Joh11Kon City,
223 Baldwin St.. Jr&gt;hnson City,
2806 Albnny St.. Schcnt·&lt;t1t dy,
271 Mnin St.. Owell'o.
S2 Medford St.. Binll'hnmto n,

Heffron. Genevieve
HeinJ:.elma nn. Warrt'n

Binghamto n, N. Y.
Binghamto n, N. Y.
HinJ.ChAmtun, N. Y

llubb•. F'redi•rick
Huber, f:Ji7.abeth
Hudak, John
lludcovirh , John
lludda, llt•len

JIOWl',

Jnnn.ak, Hudolph

Hearon, Julia
Heath , Charlt'S David
H t:'hen•trt:'et , Willinm R.

4n3 Ch&lt;'nftngo St ..
36 Gerard AH.'.,
60 Gt'rnrd Ave..
31 M~kalt St..
69 Oak St..

!lowland, Chari&lt;"!

Horowitz, Ucnjamin
H ol"l!ey, William
Hotchki••· William

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

HastinKS. Rnhf'rt
Hawke. FrNlrick
Hnycock. Huth
llaymnn, R&lt;&gt;hert

23 S..hlller St .. tlinghamt.o n, N '"
1113 MatthPw• St., llinghumto n. N. Y
327 Ru1&lt;rn1 A-.., t:ndiroll. N. Y.
32i N.ogeN A,..,.. , fo:ndir(1ll, N. Y
Mildn•d. PC'nnn.
Ncw&amp;rk Vall(')'. N ,,

60 Lincoln St.. Bin1&lt;hnmto n,
82 Murr1&lt;&gt;' St.. Binghamto n.
56 Penn•ylva nin Ave.. llin1&lt;hnmt.on,
72 Albcrt St., John.on City,
I Fr1tnk !'lac&lt;', Port Chester,

Hast'nprJur:r, Nanry

~ Jefft•r'l'&lt;.ln A '·t•., llin1thamt&lt; m. N Y.
lO '.' MnUht.'Wl' St., BinKhnmto n. N. Y.

36 Orton A"c.. Uin1&lt;hamto n, l-1. Y.
1242 Lak,..,hore Or.. Chirngo. Ill.
South Ot.-.•lic, N. Y.
37 Juliand SL.. llninh r idgt'. N. Y.
100 Murray St.. l.linghnmtu n. N. Y.

R . 0. l , Brnckn t_iy, P&lt;•nna.
~05 Che•tnut A't'., M&lt;'turhen , N. J.
1~4 t'ront St.. Oweii:o. N. Y.
105 CYW•&gt;• St., Wt•st"ood, N. J.
II Columhus St., llini;:h11mt.on. N. Y.

Hnnil&lt;'hak . John J.
Han•&lt;•n, Allt·n C.
Hnrt'. Jam•·• F.

309 North St., l!nrri•un, N. Y
761 Ch~nan110 St.. l'&lt;1rt Dick. N. '"

Kant&gt;, John R.
Kanku~. Rolwrt
Kapral. Jo•ePh

Dr .. Uingh11mto n. N. Y.
222 H oward St .. \\'a"~rly, N. Y.

Terrnc~

131

A\•('., Bin~hnmton.
101 S. Pl\J.t(' A\'t'., Union,
101 S. '"'"" Aw .. Union.
W~t End Ave.. BinKhAmto n,
307 Liberty Ave .. Endirolt.
S&lt;~)'mour

N.
N
N.
N.
N.

Y.
\'
Y.
Y.
Y.

N. Y.
N. )'.

N \'.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Clu-nnn)t'o Hri chc~'.
106 •"ront St., Vt:'"tal,
113 Nantiroh Avr., t;ndi1•ott,
216 Odt'll Ave., t;ndicutt,
505 Floren~e St.. •;ndirott,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.

2 Milford St.. llin1&lt;hamto n,
R. D. I. t:n&lt;lkult.
2102 Hi\'l'rvi&lt;'" Dr.. t:ndirnlt,
7 !1A1h,•rts St., J ohn•&lt;m C'il&gt;.
4!1 llt'll'n St., Binghamto n.

N.
N.
N
N.
N

Y.
Y
Y
Y.
Y

t 1 :.: Uiul{'r St .. HinKhtlmton,
23 Grsnrl 111\'d., llin1&lt;hnmt..m.
30 Tht• An•nn. 1Jin1iehumton.
509 Liberty Av,.,, Enclirolt,
·13 llnhr St., J nhn•on City,

N Y
N. Y.
N Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

7'11 ltiv&lt;•r• icl&lt;' Dr., John"°n City, N. Y.
6 Down!'l A\•t•., BinJ.!hRmto n, N. Y.
ii2~t Ch.-.1uuHtO St.. Jlinschnmt&lt; m. N. Y.

1029 Chcn11ngo St., llinl{hnmto n, N. Y.
4005 lthRCR St.. t:lmhur•t. N. Y
301 Glen Av~ .. Port Cht•Klt'r. N. Y.
149 Hud•on St .. J ohn•un City, N. \'.
22 Utira Avt• .. lli nghamton, N Y.
7 L&lt;•wis St., V&lt;·•tal. N. Y.
8632 Birnl•Y Avt• .. SC'ranton, Penna.

N Y.
N. Y.

5 llcverlt'Y Pint&lt;'. John•on City,
750 C ht•nan1&lt;0 St.. Blnghaml.&lt;&gt;n,
11.t Tillot.t-on Sl.. CanandniJ&lt;UR,
9 Pork Ave., lhnghnmto n,
12 Bigelow ~l., Uin)(h1:tn1t.on,

N. \'.

312 Qdt'll Aw .. t:nclirnlt.
312 Odell Av•• .. ~:ndicott,
14 Virgina Aw .. Johf\Kon City.
007 Main St.. Poughkt·&lt;•t&gt; ;,.,
It. D. 2 , Marnthun,

N. Y.
N. Y.
N Y
N. Y
N. Y.

U Seminary AH·., BinJ.Chamt.on.
305 McKinley A""· ~:ndicott,
10~ Park !'lace, Wavt'rly,
259 l.lrand St., Elmirn.
32 Lydia SI, Uinghamlo n,

N Y.

N. Y

N. Y.

N.
N
N
N

'"
Y
'r.
Y.

�Kn r•, Chnr1&lt;'8 J.
Ktu1mcr. Julian
Kn•pt•r, Anthony
Kazlnuska., Jo•cPh
K&lt;&gt;nl, William

322 Pro•pect St.. Ringhamton.
181 Stella Ireland Rd., Binghamton,
R. D. l. Newn1·k Valley.
81 Glc•nwood Ave•., Binghamton,
240 Whit&lt;· Hnll Rd., Albany.

K1•llcy, James ,J,
Kemp. Eugene

K&lt;&gt;nnedy, Frederick L.
Ke&lt;&gt;ugh, Francis
KeRRl&lt;·r, Darhnra A.

26 Cedar St.. Binghamton. N. Y.
577 1':. Main St., Owego, N. Y.
Wnymart, Penna.
59 Lincoln Av&lt;&gt; .. Binghamton, N. Y.
316 Robin•on St., Hin!!"hnmton. N. Y.

Le'•ine, Carl S.
Lewis, Helen
Lewis, John
Lewis, Lloyd
l..A?wkovich. "
M ichael

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

27 Linden St .. Bin1&lt;hamton.
Mnin St.. N ewark Valley,
58 I,ake Ave.. Ilinghnmton.
405 Front St., Owego,
Newark Valley.

N. Y.

Seymour Ave., Binithnmton,
R. D. 3, B i nghnmton,
819 Glendale Dr .. Endicott.
406 Exchnn1&lt;c Ave., Endicott.
1008 Monroe St.. Endicott.

N. Y.

39 Bloomingdal&lt;' Ave .. Gloversville,
Konik, John
153 St&gt;minnry Avr.. Binghnrnl(ln,
Kopolow, Leo
113 W1••t End Ave.• Binghamton.
Ko&lt;tyun, J ohn
107 Hill A ve.. Endicott.
Knkhick, John I,., Jr.
141 Mntthew• Sl., Binghamton.
Koury, Gt&gt;e&gt;rge

N. Y.

Klink o, Robert F;.
Kn11;pp, Hiram
Knizc. John
Kn&lt;&gt;X, Jnne

Kobylarz,

Gent'

Kohnstnm, Robt'rt J.
Kolo-ki, Robert.
Komnr. GN"&gt;1·ge
Komnr, John
Komino~. Paul

141 Mntthcws SL.
1123 Front St..
781 Conklin Ave.,
1!14 Clinton St..
14 Kn••• Sl..

Koury, Richnrd
Kozlowski, Jo;uJ.r('ne
Km:.low&gt;.ki. Franci!'I
K rntoch\1 il. l..ouiKe

Krnu•e. Otto
Kril'~Kml\nn,

Wo1($t'nng J.

Kri•kn, Michn&lt;·I
Krot.•..:t•r. lknry
K r&lt;X·g~r. Ow('n

Kubler. Wnllucc G.

Din1&lt;hamton,
ninghnmton.
Binghamton.
Binghamton,
Binghamton.

74 Walnut St.. Binghamton.
62 Thorpe St.. Binghnmton.
405 F:. 237 St.. New York 66.
405 E. 237 Sl.. N ew York 66,
16 Bailey SL. West Coxsackie.
66 Carlton St., Johnson City,
35 Houiihton St., Worc&lt;"!ter.
:104 Clinton St., Din1&lt;hamton.
26 Grant Ave., Endicott.
142 Mnn,ion St., Pou1&lt;hkcepsie,

Ku chorek, William W.
Kuohin•kn•, William W.
Kulik. Nicholas
Kurntnick. Stt•phen
Ku!'lm~. Nfrholus J....

Ll'moniade~, Gregory
L"ney, John .Jr.
L eonard, Mary E.

Levene, Victorin E.

764 Ri vcr•ide Dr., J ohnson City,
Whitn,y Point,
82 West St.. J ohnson Cit)'.
490 Chenango St., Binghamton.
34 Ilinithnm St.. Binithamton.

Kinch, Willinm H.
Kintn er. Arthur E.
Kintn er . Kt•nncth W.
Kl&lt;&gt;in, Elton
K l••ke, John

Lawrence, Norman A.
Lawoon, 'Thomas
Lederfeind, C. R obert
Le&lt;•t, William B. .•Jr.
Lcfehcck. Alexanclcr

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. J.
N. Y.

854 Oct•an Pkwy., Brooklyn,
U Bridge St., Sidney.
37 Shepard St .. Walton.
15 Longview Rd .. Livingston.
806 Glondnle Dr., Endicott.

KPe, l'hiliv
K&lt;'&lt;?l&lt;·r, Mary
Keery, Hilda
Kl'igher. John
KeiJ){'r. Jun(·

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Lt•vene, Suzanne

Licht, Frcdl'ric
Lindsft_)y, Darwin

Lindslt•y, Robert D.
Little, Richard
Livins:ntton. Raymond

N. Y.

84 P rntt Ave., Johnson City, N. Y.
S. Chennn!!"O St.. Gr&lt;.'&lt;'ne. N. Y.
237 W. Wnlnut St.. Loni!" Bench. N. Y.
42 Benn&lt;•tt A\'e.. JJino:hamton. N. Y.
Box 11, Gilberton, Penna.
Stuart St.. Uinghnmton, N. Y.
21i N. R0&lt;»ewlt Ave .. ~~ndicott. N. Y.
PJ(·a~nnt Mount. Penna.
10 Crestmont Rel .. tl in1&lt;hamton, N. Y.
10 Campbell Rd. Ct., Binghamton, N. Y.
1803 Tracy SL, Endicott.
24 Park St., Johnoon City,
223 Horncc Ave., Palmy1·n,
36 Carrnll St., Bin1&lt;haml.on,
208 Lestt•r Ave.. Johnson City,
32 R ush A'•e..
8 Bevier St..
102 Court St.,
473 Vcstnl Rd.,
17 Gaylord St.,

Binghamton.
Binghamton,
Binghamton.
Binghamton,
Binghnmt.on,

24 Madison A''&lt;',, Endicott.
49 Mnin St.. Sprinf'"ville.
58 Academy St.. Johnson City.
34 Brookfield Rn., llin1&lt;hamton,
86 Mitchell A\'C,, Bin1&lt;hamton,

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

126 June St.. Endicott.
Lusht. Steve
Lynrh. Thomas V.
Trailc1· Villugc. Johnson Cily,
31 ~prin1&lt; Fo1-est Ave.. Bin1&lt;hamton.
Ma.can, Peter
366 Turrel Ave., South Orange,
MacDoug1dJ, Jenn
Macintyre, J oseph C. 26 Franklin Ave .. H . C . . Bin1&lt;hnmton.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. J.
N. Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Mack, J ohn
32 New York Ave.. Johnson City,
MacKerchar, James R.
216 Jefferson A\'e.. En&lt;licott.
Mackin, Francis C.
5;; Oak St.. llin1&lt;hamton,
23 Way St., Uin1&lt;hamton.
Madden, John E.
512 Davis St.. Endicott.
MnJrgiore, Marie

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

82 Chestnut St., Bin1thomt.on.
Mahnr. R r,bert
Mahc1·, William I'.
85 S. Washin1&lt;ton Sl .. Uin:;chamlon.
20G Hawley St., Binghamton.
Makre~, Thoma.s
Mnlik, John C., Jr.
151 Matthew::- St., Ringhnmton.
Mnloney, James F'.. Jr.
5 Fair Ave.. Johnson City,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Mangus. Floyd
Mapes. Gordon
Maple. Louis A.
Marano. Anthony P.

ll05 Monroe St.. Endicott,
160 Prospect St.. Binghamton.
6R Ackl&lt;'Y Ave .. Johnson City,
80 Pinc St., Bin1&lt;hamton.
2200 North St., ~:ndicott,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

70 Colfax Ave .. Binghamton,
184 Corlis• A'"'·· .JohnR&lt;&gt;n City,
18•1 Corliss Ave .. Johnson City.
IR4 Corliss Ave., Johnson City.
184 Corliss Ave., Johnson City.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

I 240 Front St .. Binghamton,
119 Seminary AvC'., Bint.:hamton,
5 1 ., Mygott St., Oi111&lt;hamton,
421 E. Main St.. J•;ncJicott.
501 Martin St .. R. D. I. ~:ndicott.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Luscomb, Maud

N. Y.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N. Y.
Mass.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Marcon&lt;-. Sam

144 Ma tthew" St., flin1&lt;hnmton. N . Y.
1307 Rivt•rvicw Dr.. Endicott. N . Y.

Lan(lis. Mnrdn D.

769 State St.. Binghamton.
1022 Center St.. Binghamton,
121 West St .. Johnson Cit y.
G42 Chcnnn1to St.. Bin1&lt;hamt.on,
10 Marlin Ave ...Johnson City,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Markham. Miles
Ma•ks, Josef
Mar•h. Char le.Martin, Harry
Martynck, Thelma C.

Landon. A. Howard
Landow. Joan
Lnn1&lt;e. l.udlle M.
Lans.!elnnd, Richard
Larham. James E.

&amp;72 C lwnanito St.. Dino:hamton.
23 Crary Ave., Bin1&lt;hamton.
10 Torren&lt;"c Rd .. Vestal,
104 Garfield Ave .. Endicott.
92 Carrollton Avt• .. ~;Jmirn.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Mnru~ich, William
16 Wilson St.. 1Ji11i:chamton.
134 Beethoven St., Binghamton.
Masterson. Chnrle•
27 Mc Kin l«y Ave., Encli1·ott.
MastroJ:inc:omo, Pauline
99 Hcl~n St.. Binghamton.
Matteson. June
18 Downs A\•e .. Bin~hamton.
Mattht•ws, Gror1&lt;e

Lnrkin, John
Larko. Jo~u.&gt;ph

2 Trc•mont Ave., llinghamton. N.
1 i6 Lnurt.'1 Ave. , Binghamton. N.
44 Viqdnn Av&lt;•., Johnson City. N.
I E&lt;l1&lt;cwood Rd., Binghamton. N.
12 1" Madi&gt;!On Ave .. Endicott. N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Matthews. John H.
Mayes. Flora K
Mayes, Harold H., Jr.

Lakin. Ro1ter
Lnllt'Y. Ern,..,.t J.
Lumh, PntriciR
Lnmr1man. RoliCl'r M.

Latta, An1w

LuudPr. David
t...aud~r.

Lambt.lrt

N. Y.

Lovitch, Norman
Lowe, William JI.
Ludka. Jose1&gt;h
Ludwig, Richard E.

N. Y .
N. Y.
N. Y.

Smith St., Poughkeel)sie. N. Y.
16 Montclair Ave., 13atnvia, N . Y.
CoopC'r~tO\\.'ll,

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

310 f:. Main St.. Endicoll.
38 Arthur Avt' .. Endicott,
Hillcrest Ave., Binghamton.
308 W, Main St., Apt. D, Endicott.
4 Mery St., V&lt;&gt;Stnl.

~i

R.

N. Y.
N. Y.

Loeffler, Frank H.
Loftus, Walter
Loitcrman. Leo
Love. Harry J.
Loveland. Lawrcnc&lt;'

N. Y.

M areehek, R obert
Ma rkarian, Anthony
Markarian. ArmC'n
Mnrknrian, MarJ{uCrite
Markarian. Samu&lt;.'I

}\u... tns. William G.
Ku~tnK. Willinm J.
Kwiatk owski. Edward
Kwitkow~ki. Flur&lt;?ncc
Lachman. F;linor

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. J.
N. Y.
N. Y.

N. Y.

Maz7.t.'i,

Mi cha~ !

M1·Caffrey. Alfred

132

406 McKinley Ave.. Endicott.
81 Tubby St .. Kin1&lt;ston.
264 Clinton Ave.. Kin1&lt;ston.
18'" Stuy,·esant St.. Binghamton.
1801'" Rivt•n•icwDr .. ~~ndicott.

N. Y.
N. Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.

N. Y.

�~6 Moor" Ave .. llinghnm lon, N. Y.

Mc.·Cnffn•&gt;'· \Villinm

soo

llrnad St., f:ndicott.
5 S. Cnnnl St., Gr&lt;'t.'nto,
578 Ri""'"'id&lt;' Dr .. Johnson City,
145 Floral Ave .. J ohnson Cit&gt;'.

l'&gt;k(;ullum , Rirhnrd
McCarthy , llub.:rt
McCarthy , Holwrt
McCormn&lt; :k. \\'illi:i.m

McDc,itt , A. Aclelc
Jam1.·~

McDonuJd ,

McDonald . Joye" M.
lllcCladt&gt;, William 1'.
Mc-Glynn ,

..:d\' ard

:lt Nash St .. Uinl{ham ton,
8 Lincoln Ave .. Bingham ton,
10 Main St .. Terrace. John.on City,
Box No. 689, Gret&gt;n&lt;',
R. D. I, v,..tal,

r.1&lt;-Gly nn. John
.McGownn. John
McGrath. Lawn·nce
M&lt;·Grego r. Donnld
McC:uinnes~. Ann G.
M t·Guinn &lt;~s. Dorothy

Menclow Urook Lnne,Yt•• t.al.
I Wal{n&lt;•r Sl.. llinl{hnml -0n.
115 Henry St.. Binghamt on.
15 State Rd .. Binghamt on,
305 1, K Main St .. Endicott,

N. Y
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

1506 Monroe St., Endkott. N. Y.

201 S. Washini(l on St .. Binghnmt on. N. Y.
McGuire. Bnrbarn
34 Clnrl'nclo n St., Johnson City, N. Y.
Mdfugh. P. J-:ug4;1ne
McNnir, Robert A.
McOmb&lt;'r . Ann
M&lt;&gt;ad, Hulw r t
Mt'uclt•. Anne F.

MN•kcr, Ila rba ru
Meukt'r. Gt'Orgt•

Warren M.

~fouktor.

M&lt;"&lt;ldaugh, Frank
M~lin.ky. William
Mc.~rct•r.

Gt:i.or$.:t•
Merrium. John

Ml'rrile("N, Dnvid
Menu.·n·a u, Rt&gt;rtram
Mfr•n, Jos(•ph

111 icaj, Sylvia
Michnlys hin, C:t'Orge
M id.,l&lt;•y,

I•'ranc;-1.·~

MidJClcy, Kcnn«th
Mikulski. Edward
Mikulski. Robert
Mil&lt;••. Gillicrl
Millt'r. El1Cin
Miller.
Mill&lt;•r
Millt•r.
Millt•r,
Miller.

G&lt;&gt;orl{c
Lt'O
Rob&lt;:rl
\\'nltt'r
William J .. Jr.

Mill•. Raymond
Mill•tont• , Donnld M .
Mincklt'r. Flm&lt;'r
Minturn, Donald
M inturn, Mary C.

Mi••a,•ag e, Edith
Mi~~avni:r&lt;'. Jol"t'Ph

M islrctto. Manrnrct
M itch.-11. Bruce K
Mof.!'R.nnam, Emile

~ J. ind&lt;'n St .. Binghnm ton, N. Y.
111 Clinton St.. Gouwrno r , N. Y.

1405 Main St.. r;ndicolt, N. Y.
21-t \\'t•ston St.. llro('kton, Mass.
1g Cirt·uit Dr., Binghamt on. N. Y.
\\'hitncy Point, N. Y.
Hyde St., Whitney Point, N. Y.
9 Circuit Dr.. Bingham ton, N. Y.
25 Narwood St.. Johnson City. N. Y.
2H K 32 St., I ndian1wo lis, Ind.
7 Garfield A,e., llinghum ton, N. Y.
Apalnchin , N. Y.
106 Vestal Rd., Vt-stal. N. Y.
7 Wilson St.. llini;chum ton, N. Y .

232 Clinton St., Bin1&lt;h11mton, N. Y.
48 Schilll'r St.. llin1&lt;hnm ton, N. Y.
308 Hadm•r Ave., Endicott. N. Y.
5 11 f;xchnngc Av!'., Endkott,
94 Mur ray St., Binghamt on,
94 Munay St.. llinghnmt on.
26 Diekinson St .. Binghnm ton.
Barton.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y
N. Y.
N. Y.

2·15 W. 75 St.. New York,
5·1 W a•hington A ve., Endicott,
303 W. Wendl'll St.. Endicott,
320 Mc Kinll'y Ave .. Endieolt.
1ao T.nurcl Ave .. llinghnmt on,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Mullnne, Danie)

Mullnn&lt;'. Julia
Mulh•n, Shirley A.
Muneh, Ellen

Donald S.
Joan
Mn ry K
Raymond
Rita

Orszewt;ld, Mccislaus
Otis. J ohn
Packnrd, Donithy
Paglia, PnM1unle
Pa1Pnenr. H.olx·rt, Jr.

l'alnwr. Jo•&lt;'1&gt;h D.
Pandirh. Andrt.•w
Pankovii:. h, Michnt~J
Pari•h. Ri&lt;hanl H .

Gilda ...

Pa!oi1:mgno. MauriC'e
Paul, Cent.·vif;lvc W.

P&gt;&lt;vlik, M yron John

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

641 W. Main St.. Endicott,
10 Sul&lt;'r Terrace. Roch&lt;'•ter ,
203 Vt.,.lal Rd .. Vestal.
ISO Wat.. r St.. Binghamt on,
130 Waler St.. 1Jin1&lt;hnmton.

N . Y.

1'&lt;-&gt;el, C-eor~!"e
Perham, Robcrl

164 B road St., Johnson City,
164 llroacl St., J ohnson Cit&gt;•.
115 Jefferson A''&lt;' .. Endicott,
12 Shaver St., Sodus,
~I Onk SL. Bingham ton,

N. Y.
N. Y .
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

rcrking, Jo""ranCiR
P erl, ltobt•rl M .
Perrieone . t'rank
Perry, Jack
Petro. Carl C.

1863 Davi• St.. r:lmira,
:101 V;.,.t.al A\e., Yt.,.tal,
120·1 Chennniw St.. Bin1&lt;hnmt&lt;m.
R. D. I, Endicott,
2 T...aGrnngt_• RL, Binghnmt .on.

Muhlik, Arlen"

w.

Ohanian. r:l•a
Olver, Donul&lt;I
O'Mnllcy. Haymond F .
O'Neill. Edward
O'Neill. William R .. Jr.

J'ari~io.

J&gt;nync, M&lt;&gt;rritt.
Pcursun. Hurold

Pettyjohn , DuWayn&lt;l'hi llipK, William
Picciano, l ..ouis
Piccirilli. Loui~ ..:.
Picplow. 'F 'ranklin D.

N. Y.
N. Y
N. Y.
N. Y
N. Y.

Pipn.rato. CarmC'lo M.
Pizur. Anthony
Pizzillo, Mario

5·1 Union St.. John-;on City, N. Y.
North Hcl .. ll!'acon. N. Y.
26 Jtoo"'evc•Jt A vt•., Ji; n&lt;licolt. N. Y.
368 Conklin Ave .. llin1&lt;ham ton, N. Y
i87';.: Cht.innnJ.CO St., JlhlKhnm ton. N.Y.

Pomt.•ro)', J.:JNlnor M .

Plahan,k i, R. John
l'lntt. Dadd
Poukish, Philip J.
l'ovhx•k, Mary J &lt;'nn
l'owdl. RobNt
Prekopn, Robt-rt J.

133

l't•nnu.

Cypra~"'

St..

Y~ndon,

l'l•nnR.

N Y•
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Norton AvL, f;n&lt;hn•ll,
19 Front St... O w't'l{u.
67 C leveland A\ c., Bin1Ch11mton.
Cha1i,•I St., Wi nd-.ir.
2700 llnll St., f:ndirott.
10~

Norton, 1-;mma
Not&lt;'wnrl"". I lnrolcl

Y.
Y

Mon.can, Fred&lt;•rick
Morgnn. Lt·•lie P.
Morrison . H. M&lt;'lvillc
William

67

Park.or. H it-hard
Par.ons, Harold M
Parvin, Norman

304 North St.. Endicott. N. Y.
22 Murr ay St.. llinll'hnm ton, N . Y.
43 Olive St .. Johnson City, N. Y.
2Hi Willow Avt•.. Sm•quehn nno. l'enna.
R. D. I. Arton. N Y.

Mo"'"'· Stanl&lt;'y G.

Curti~

Nolnnd, Roberta
Norri~. Jnm('s

O'Connor .
O'Connor .
O'Connor .
O'Connor .
O'Donm•l l.

su~HIUC'hnnnn.

81 Statt• St..

60 Way ne Avc., White !'lain&gt;, N. Y.
R. U. 2, Binl{ham tun,
10 Lu•k St., J ohn•on City,
105 Ch&lt;'l&lt;tnut St .. llinghamt on,
2 Bell"""" Ave .. llinicham tun,
Hawth,1riw Rd .. R. 0. 2, Binghamt on,

Nevel. Eva
Nichols, Dnrwin

Nusom. Richard
Nye, W. Stuart
O' Conndl. Leland

N Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

107 Oak Hill Avl', Endicott. N. Y.
66 G&lt;'On,:(' St .. 0Wl'ICO. N. Y.

Mu,a, Robert A.
MyerM, Donn Id
Nnu-orny, Mary Ann
NeumRnn , Arthur
Neumnnn . C:&lt;'ors;ct.•

Ni('kt•nw&gt;n,

P c.•nnn.

19 Ll'wis St .. John•on ('it)'.
R D. 2. Wn"•r))-,
13 S&lt;•minar) ' Av('., 1Jinich11mton.
535-ith St .. Ni11ic11ra f'nll,,

Y.
Y.
Y.

Mohnt•y, Hobert
Molynl'nu x, Silns, Jr.
M oore, J ohn
Morano, Jos&lt;•ph
Morell, Frank

M orri~on.

Wyulu~insc.

Muri&gt;hy, lWen
Mur1&gt;hy, J ohn F.
Murphy, John 1'.
Murphy, Jo...(•11h \\'.
Mur rny, Barbarn

17

Hasting~

N.
N.
N.
N.
N

Y.

Y.
Y.

Y.
Y.

St .. UinJ.:"hllmton. N. Y.

17 Schubert St .. ll111srhomton,
17 H11•tings St.. IJingham ton,
32 N. Baldwin SL, John•on C ity,
1 1 M un't•ll St., lli nll'h&amp;mtu n,

N.
N.
N.
N.

21 Clarkl' St.. llins&lt;hnm ton,
314 f'rn.nci~ An.'., l!:ndiC"ott.
65 F:ndwell St.. Johnson City,
117 Onk St.. llin1Ch11mtcrn,

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.

Plt•nsnnt Mount, Pennn.

20 Downs A\e., tlinl{hanl lon.
Candor,
2706 Fo•l&lt;'r St.. Endit-ott,
116 Odt•ll A'"" Enclieoll.
lGS L l'"lt'r Avt'., Johnson City.

N Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

59 Murray St.. llinithnm ton, N. Y.
107 Cr..,.tmon t Hd .. lll nghan1t.on . N. Y.
i Hn.7.t."1 ~t.. Jl ing-hamto n. N. Y.
32 Jt"rome Av&lt;) .. BinJ.thnm ton, N. Y.

127 Su,qucha nna St .. lli 1111hnmton, N. Y.
Smithvill e Flnt.,
12 Juliand St.. lloinbricll{&lt;'.
H. D. 2, Endic·olt.
126 Crury Ave .. Bins&lt;hnm ton.
415 June St .. F:mlieotl.

N. Y.
N Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

494 Grand AYl• .. John•on City,
511 Front St., Bingham ton,
205 ll&lt;'vi&lt;&gt;r St., llinl{ham ton.
33 Macon St .. Bingham ton.
9 Snow A v,.,, llinschnmt .on,

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N Y.
N. Y.

400 Franklin St.. Great ll&lt;'nd. l'&lt;"nna.
299 St. Charles Sl.. JohnHOn City, N. Y.
502 Grcrndvi&lt;'w Ave .. Brooklyn, N. Y.
129 Chenan1&lt;0 St., llinicham ton, N. Y.
146'~ 11"nry St., Uin1Chnm ton. N. Y.
190 Frunt St.. Bingham ton. N. Y.
38 Lydia St.. llingh11mto11. N. Y.
I Ill Od•ll Avt'., F.ndirott, N. Y.
820 B"rmond Av" .. Endirolt, N. Y.
101 N. Jo;lmer A ve.. Sayre. P"nna.
125 Chur ch St .. En•ton, l'l'nnn.
126 S&lt;1uir&lt;.,. Av&lt;' .. Endicott.. N. Y.
76 ll~als St .. CrtnnndRi icua, N. Y.
16 J!nrry L. Dr .. JohnHOn City, N. Y.
33 Rh·en·it-w Ave.. Bingham ton, N. Y.
Star R.1utl' No. 3. Maine,
215'; MRdi•on AV&lt;·.. Endirott,
35K Broad St.. Salamanc a,
SH Ackl&lt;'Y Av&lt;'.. JohnROn Cily,
11 S&lt;hubert St., Bingham ton,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y

Y.
Y.
Y.

�2 Orton A\•e.. Dinghamton.
70 Thorp&lt;&gt; St.. Bin11homton.
15 Jefferson Av&lt;'., ~~ndicutt,
117 Sunri•e Dr.. Bin11hamwn,
2b Pine St.. Binghamton,

Riveniide Or.. Nichol•,
24 &amp;lir.,wood Rd., llin11hamt&lt;&gt;n,
H Ro.ielawn Ave .. ~·airport.
112 Madison Ave.. Endicott.
Ill Lydia St., llin11hamton,

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N.IY.

ltyan, William
HyhRk, Arthur
Ryder, Eih...,n B.
l(ydcr, George
Sacco. Anthony

106 Nanlicokc St., Union.
43 Hooper ltd., t;ndwell,
1202 Wataon Ulvd., t;ndicott,
10 St. John A\e.. llin11hnmt.on,
86 Washin11ton SL, Uin1Chnmton,

N. Y.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Sadowit~. Pct.er, Jr.
Salcmme, John J.
Snlisbury, Richard
Salisbury, St..anley W.
Salh-.~r~on. Sanford

R. O. 6. llin11hamwn.
54 Baldwin St .. John"°n City,
225 r..croy St.. llinghamt.un,
13 Cleveland Avt'., ~:n1l icotl,
24 West St.. John•on City,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Solvature. Jnmc.1:1
Sumnums, Richard
Snmp..on, Hobert.
Sundt'll, Jnm~
S1111g{"~. Alfrt·d

JOI) R;v(•r St., Towundu, Prnnn.
14 PRrk St., Uin11humton. N. Y.
19 St.. J&lt;•hn Ave.. llin11hnmton, N. Y.
H. 0. I, Union Sprin1&lt;"· N. Y.
214 Washington Ave .. Endicott. N. Y.

S».ntn.luciu., Jo:-eph
Snntofionat.o. Loui~
SanH't.•no, tl.{na1.io
Sarnceno. John J.

Ricciardi, St&lt;•vt•

144 Park Ave .. Bin11hamton.
104 Mary St.. llin11hamton,
72 Arch St.. John&gt;;-0n City,
72 Arch St., John•on City,
310 W. Franklin St.. Endicott,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Savidge, Ru1&lt;er 0.
Scales. F;dythe M.
~cnrinzi. Theodor(•
Scdsi, Jumt·s E:.

Hirkard, Julia
Hidl!'y, ~:arlt· l&gt;.
ftidlt·y, Virs.cini•l
lti11n&lt;•y, Willium
Ri11•y, ~;melir\C'

176 Conklin Ave.. Binghamton.
128 Chapin St.. Uinirhamton.
128 Chapin St., Uin11hamwn.
126 Ackley Ave .. John•on City,
14 1" S. Loder Ave., Endicott..

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Scelsi, Michael N.
11 Hhchland Ave., ~;nclicott.
Schaefer. Stephen, Jr.
Maine,
Schnffer, Rhoda
1576 E. 9th St .. Unw1klyn,
Schild, Harold
R. 0. 2. Barton Ave., Johnson City,
Schumnchr, Edwin C.
292 Main St.. Bin..:hnmton,

ltilt•Y, Hol&gt;&lt;.'rl D.
llin11, John W.

11 Duane Ave., Bin11humton.
405 t;, Main St.. Endicott.
25 Arthur Ave .. Endicott.
119 LRrk St... Altamont,
41 Ackley Ave., .Tohn•on City.

P1PKhur, Onvid
l'n:ug&amp;, J-'lt-tA•ht·r It

Prudom, Allin G.
Pru'4eh. Marthn
l'udioc:k, N1·11it.•
l'uSth. Yt.~rnon
l'ur&lt;-&lt;•11, JoM·ph
f'utrino. Churl&lt;·• n.
Quill&lt;'r, ~;llr.ab~th V.
(~ui11nnn.

ThomAM

Hnndnll, WnllH
Rnndnll, Willinm
ll1111kin, Jnrk
Runo, Mlt·hnd J .. Jr.
llnlh, Hirhurd G.
Hnthbun, Jun(•
n.,•cl. Willinrn C.
Jtt..,·d1•r, H.odt·rk
Jtt.·if, Gt•rulcl

It"''· ltol&gt;t'rt
Ht•jebiun. Gt,,.&gt;nce

ltt•{st•Kuie. f'ranklin
J(pynold•. Ellznl&gt;&lt;:th
lt1•ynohht, (;re('(•

HioJo,

Au~uKti11t·

Ritrhit•. Rolwrt K
l(ltt&lt;•r. u.~10
H.mlch. Hr0th!rick

&lt;h·nnct•

ltouc•li. C11millt· M.
rt.ohbin•. Hulph I. .. Jr.
lt&lt;1ll&lt;'rl•. A II&gt;&lt;· rt
lt&lt;1lwrt•. Willinm I ..
ltoht\rtson, ·rail
Huhirumn, Chnrloltt•
ltobinK(rn, Maryann~
1-tobinKUn, Maurin•

Hohimmn, Warr&lt;&gt;n
Hod111•"', Hobt•rt
Kodman, Stu1trt
Hoff. Willanl
ltuti:t.•rK, 1-;dwanl
HoJ.f(•f'N, Jo:u.:l'11a
Hog11e. John ~·.
ltt•f.t'K\'. Stan lt•y
Jtood, Borhn.rn
Hool, ltolwrt

R. 0. l. Fnlconer,
905 Brou.d St.. ~;ndicoLL,
205 E. Valley St .. Union,
3a09 Pearl St., ~:ndw.,!I,
36 Belden St., Binghamton,

N. Y.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

~.

24 Pt•llrint• St.. llin11hnmton, N. Y.
HaJlgtNuJ, P(·nnn.
192 S. Main Sl.. Glov&lt;•r&lt;villt'. N. Y.

A.

Mary

Sernt•cky,

Jo~rne~l

W.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

309 W. 65th St.. N.:w York.
53 Holland St.. Hin11hamton.
14 Cen""ee Av~.. llin11hamton.
71 Bigelow St.. Uinl(hamton,
1515 Newell ltd .. ~:ndicott,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.

Y.
Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Shaver, Howard
Shear, Ralph E.
Shean•r, Dorothea
Sheely, Paul M.
Sheffield. Donald

8 Cherry St.. Johnson Cit.y,
Donald St.. John•&lt;HI City,
Glendale Dr.. Endicott,
Dex No. 725. llath.
29 Arthur St .. Dinghamt.on,

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Sheffield, Robert
Sh&lt;·ridan, John
Shi.. lds, Grorite J.
Shields. John
Shin(', James

29 Arthur St., llin11hamton,
1209 V&lt;'SlKI Ave.. Oin11humton,
R. 0. I, Chenango Fork•.
Glen Ca•tle St., lli111.•&gt;lrnml&lt;&gt;11,
27 Schubert St.. llinghamton,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

67 Jarvis St., Binl(humt.on,
111 Cleveland Av&lt;•., Endicott.
... 206 L11ke St .. Hambur1C,
Apalachin,
1la1·1rnr"ville.

N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

ltrntP, NiH~t.·1 A.
Ho:-\•Ub(•rw-. Cernhl
no,•. Floyd
Roulr. Gilb~rt

16 Adams Av~ .• Endicott.
IG Adams Ave., Endicott,
2S W&lt;•sl 73 St.. Nt•w York,
61 Cleveland Ave., Binghuml&lt;&gt;n,
1007 Monroe St.. Endicott.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Shi1&gt;ko. Frederirk
Shoop, Welland T.
Short, David R.
Shults. Gilbert

Hountl°'· MnrKll('rite
ltuun,lt'. Richard C.
Hulwnr.ahl, Stnnlt•y
Hutlik, Mkhael
Hutru. SnlvRturt'

108 Front St.. v..,.tal.
18 Evans St.. Din1&lt;hamu&gt;n,
Nev,•r.ink,
98 Main St.. Binghamton,
10 Highland Ave.. Oinghamlon,

N. Y.

Simmons, William
Sin1Cel, John R.
Siri1111. Robert
Sk~irik, Norman
Skinner, Charle1

Hu1111. William
ltumnwr. John
Rur&gt;" ~·ranklin
Hyan l'ftlht•1·in&lt;•
H"nn, Mtu•l

N. Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

M.

J,t,"()

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

107 llird•all SL.. Union,
71 '(: Davis St.. UinKhnmt.on,
200 Corli•• Ave.. John•on City,
463 Ve•tal Rd., BinKhnmton.
16 Miles St., Bi1111hnrnton,

N.
N.
N.
N.

no~w.

110 Henry St.. Bin11hamton.
43 Milford St.. Binghamton,
i N. Clt·velnnd l'I .. ~;ndiroll.
76 Pine St., llin..rhnmlon.
II Hi11hhrnd A,.,... f:ndicoll.

N
N.
N.
N.

S&lt;·ullcy, Cc&gt;orlCc A .. Jr.
!kully Helene
Scarles, Ayscl. Jr.

65 Chestnut St.. Binghamton .
65 Ch.,.t.nut St.. Oinghomton,
83 Fairview Ave.. llin1&lt;hamton,
75 Matthews St.. 8in1&lt;httmton,
476 Main St.. Apt.. 12, Johnson City,

Rot4t', Gl~rtrud&lt;•

10 ~·ny&lt;•tte St.. llin••homton.
408 N. N1111licokt• Avt• .. ~:ndieoll.
l3 Grant Av\•., ..:ndit•ott.
14 Grunt Ave., Encticoll,
7 Grunt Avt.· .. 1-:ndicou.

19 Arthur St., Binghamton. N. Y.
218 Pint• St.., T1tnuu1ua. Pt.&gt;nntl.
198-17 119 Av&lt;'.. St. Albans. N. Y.
Trailer Villa11e. John•o11 City, N. Y.
109 Thcrin St .. Johngun City, N. Y.

Sevnk, Charles, Jr.
Shachman, Amelia
Shadduck, Etlward, Jr.
Shamulka. G&lt;'&lt;&gt;rite

48 Rotary Avt.•., BinKhamton, N. Y.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Schustt•r, Richard
Schwartz. AbrahRm
Schucr, Robert
Scott.. ltichard
Scott., Trucy R.

s,-e~.

Castl&lt;• Cn'&lt;Ok Rd .. Ca,tlt.• Crttk. N. Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

67 Grnnt Ave.. Auburn. N. Y.

SeJnn. Michael

82 Main St.. Binghamton, N. Y.
291 Robinson St... Binghamton, N. Y.
48 Rotary Ave., llin11hamton. N. Y.

23'' Grant Ave.. Endicott,
6 Allendale ltd.. Binghamton.
859 1 0 E. Church St., Elmira,
70 Fruehauf Av.: .. Snyd..,r,
221, McKinley Ave., Endicott,

Nicholn~

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

206 ..~. Pint.• St .. AtlwnK, l't..·nnu.

Saraceno. Gr&lt;•J.Cory

~H~t'llni,

.127 Virgina Ave .. Juhn0&lt;&gt;n City,
:102 S&lt;1uirc• Ave.. ~:ncticotl,
42 Broom&lt;• St.. llin1&lt;hamton.
22 Ui11clow St.. llin11hamt.on,
311 Oelnwan· A,~ .. Enrlicutt.

N. Y.

N. Y.

N. Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.

Sil\·t.~rMt('in,

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

402 Main St .. Hallstead, Penna.
215 CJe,eland Ave.. Endicott. N. Y.
HG Hawley St., Binghamton, N Y.
22 Vine St.. Binghamton. N. Y.
546 S. Main St .. Elmira. N. Y.

Lawrence

Skinner. Robert
Sloat. Lewis
$mt."tana, Michael

Smith. Ira
Smith, Lowell, Jr.

134

N. Y.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

N. Y.

116 Thomns St., John ..on City, N. Y.
19 Ansco Rd .. Johnson City, N. Y.
3717 Midland Av.:.. $yrncu•c. N. Y.
8 Highland Ave .. llin11hamton. N. Y.
742 S. Main St.. Athe'18, Penns.

R. D. I. llin11hamt&lt;&gt;n.
463 Main St., Johnson City,
60 7,oa Av.: .. Johnson City,
4~ Front St., Ve:otal.
Glt•n Aub..,y,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

�14 Wht&gt;&lt;&gt;lt•r St.. Oep0•il. N . Y.
H . 0 . I, !Jin1&lt;hnm1&lt;111. N . Y.
!i2 Cle nwoorl Av&lt;o., Bin1&lt;hamt .on. N. Y .
317 Moin Sl.. Dur&gt;•c&gt;a , Pen nu.
304 Bt1d•t&lt;•r A'"'·• ~:ndicott. N . Y.

Smith. Robert A.
Smith, ltob&lt;!rt M.
Smyk, Peter
Snopkow ski. John H .

Snow. Albert G.
Snyder , Mary
Sojtnolian . Vir~inia

Sovolhcu. Churh."8
Sorber. Ralph
St&gt;&lt;nrb&lt;!ck. Richard !,,

Spcmcer, Benjamin P.
S&lt;tuicr. Sura
Suthl&lt;.'S, Paul

St&lt;•(an,ki , Walter
S t,·iJ,{(;rwn ld, Jam cg

408 Grand Ave., J ohn-on City,
10 Park St.. Bin1&lt;ham h&gt;n.
27 Julian St .. Bin1&lt;hnm tun.
7 ~;"elyn SL. Jt•hnsun City,
97 S. Wa~hin11tun St.., llin1&lt;hnm ton ,

R. 0. 2. Wawrly,
11 2 Grund Blvd., Bin1&lt;hnm tun,
H. 0., lluto n,
35 Ro ta ry Avt•., Uin11ham tun.
56 Albert St., John..on City,

Sli&lt;·kle•. Donald
S tone. Oa"id A.
Stone, lt&lt;1b&lt;!rt

N. Y.

Tucker, Alan J ., Jr.
Tu t•kl' r. Sh•phl•n
Turnn, Sn ll y

N , Y.
N . Y.

Tu rc-otl('. Chu rleit
Turk, Murh.•1

N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N. Y.

Turnbull, Norma
Turnt•r, H.khnnl H.
Turner, ll.a bt.•rt
Tut.hill. Huth
T uth ill. William II.
Tuttle. Jo:rviu

Tybrinl&lt;', Hobel't C.
Ty ler, Chari&lt;"' 0 ., Jr.
Ul nwr. Richard

Unold. lluward J ,

521 lti"er Terrae&lt;o, ~; ndicott.
15 Benn&lt;'lt Av"., Uin1&lt;ham tun.
321 1 Stack Ave .. ~:nrhvt•ll.
:\05 Bad1&lt;er Ave.. ~;ndicott.
2000 Wat.son Blvd., ~:ndicott.

N. Y.
N . Y.
N . Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

VunC'o, William

71-02 Ke• sl'I St., F o rest H ills.
6 12 C ht•nnn110 St.. llin1&lt;hamt .on.
7 Ut•verly Pl., Johnson City,
490 Grand Av.,., Johnson City,
239 Hudso n S t .. Johns on City,

N. Y .
N Y.
N . Y.
N . Y.
N. Y.

Vt•itch , Jani~
Vt.•llc.·tin. lAlui s

17 Unio'I SL. We'tu"er . J o hn•on Cit),
R. D. I. ~:ndicoll
3101 Kt•n• in11t.on ltd., End" ""·
807 ' • W . Chu!'ch St.., ~; lmi rn.
R. 0. I , J ohn11&lt;&gt;n City,

N . Y.

Vivian. Viol&lt;~t
Von Pec.·hman n. Ht\i n 1.

S t rn u:;s. \\lilliam

S treb, Richard W.

S trickland , Vir).dniu
St.rond, J nmes B.. Jr.
Strusz, William

S tryk.,r, Robert
St.ulir, Jose1&gt;h
S udbrink. Charles W .
Sullivan. Bernul'd
Sullivan, Thomas J .
S urinc, David
Surplu-;, Arthur

Swirt. Do nald A.
Swirt, Wanda

TruMl &lt;·r, H.ic.· hnrd W.

Vail, llruct•

S t.o ut, Donald R.

R , ...-uin. M ary

Tripp, William ~·.
TrUt'. J erum(• H .
Tru•lcr, J o hn

N. Y.
N . Y.
N. Y.
N . Y.
N . \' .

Story. Jt..•unnt•

Swagl&lt;.•r. Norman

L&lt;&gt;wi~

310 Chnumon t. Dr.. ~:nthwll,
1603 Ri"er view Or.. ~;n dicott.
181 Jliidsall St... ~:ndi cott.
74 Car lton St. .. J oh n•o n City,
24 Barohard St., Rochesll'r ,

Wayn(•

Sut.Jitr. Willinm

Jame:.

N . Y.
N . Y.

1708 K Mai n SL, Endicott.. N. \' .
18 Knt'&lt;•lanrl Ave .. llin1&lt;hnm ton, N. Y.
Box No. 175, Chennn1&lt;0 Forks, N . Y.

Stolfi. Gt•ru.ld

Trn~.

Trivi,,

T•hulos. J nm es

5 6 Wt•Ktfall A ve., Su!i(IUt..•hnnnn, Pt•nnn.
1R S('minary Aw.• .. BinKhamt.on. N . Y .

Stt.•wnrt, Wiltiu.m J.

Truhucco . J&lt;Js( 1ph
T rubuccu. Ray

N. Y.

73 Penns&gt;•1\' aniu A,·,).. Uimcham to n.
Steirwr, Sidnt•y
129 Schulx•rt St., Uiru(ham ton,
Stt·nzhur n, Edytha
2S2 Ma in St.. BinKhnmt on ,
StPpha('h , Ko bt.•rt F .. Jr.
Country Club Rd .. Johnson City,
Sternik, Michael
Box N o . 20U, Intt."rlukt•n.
St&lt;.·wart, J o hn P .

Stonestrt."t•t.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

N.
N.
N.
N.

Torm ,•y. llt•th

Sykes. Maril yn C.
Sykes. Mary
Symon•. Calvin R.
Symon•. Ruth
Takenaka , T &lt;'"hio
Tarsche&gt;i, Shdla
Tuylor, Azzie
Taylor. Franc&lt;'M
Tt•1&lt;cler. Cyril
T"rbos•. Robt•rt
T(•rry. E . Thoma'i
Thullin),Ct•r, Mt•rrell

N.
N.
N.
N.

Richard C.
V1rnGe ldt•r. Donald C .
V nnGor(lon , John
Van~:tkn.

Veit, fr('np

Vitale, 1-'rederick
Vitnle. Sam
Vitkm~. foMmuncl J.

V rn l)("I. A ndrt•\\
Wioco nc r, Ellwood
Wahl. Jo yce
Wnlker.
Wal ker,
Wnlkel',
Walke r.
Walke r,

24 L&lt;mJ&lt;view A ve .. Whitt.• PlainM, N. Y .
I&gt; L1rndon Rd .. v.,,,t.nl, N . Y
355 N~w Grant S l .. Wilke•-lla rr&lt;'. Penna.
355 N e w Grant 5l., Wiikc~· Uarre. Penna.
16 Oakdale Ave .. New Hochl'llt'. N. Y

3 Davis St., Bini:cham tun,
8 };xchan1&lt;e St., l.lin11hnmto n,
45 S t.ark S t .. Waterloo .
134 Matth""" St. .. llin1&lt;hnmt.&lt;&gt;n,
311 '~ Grant. Ave.. };ndicott,

Walsh, Richard

5 T erry Ave., Bingham to n. N. Y
R . D. I,

Fricnd~v i1lt•,

Wn1l-lh, lto1w MariP

Pennn.

'l'hornt..• , Ro l)(•rt T.

I 143 V&lt;.,,tnl Av&lt;• .. llin11hnm tun .
JOG Main SL, Joh n&gt;1&lt;1n City,
23 Franklin A"'"· Uin1&lt;ham ton.
37 Crary A v('., llinghnm ton.
9 Oak St... Bin1tham to n .

Curl A.
Dorothy
J oel JI
K&lt;•nneth
Loui8t:'

Wall. H . Rob&lt;•rt. Jr.
Wallace, l)onald S.
Wnllnce, Mnr11nr~t. J .
Wsllinl&lt;'. William F.
Walsh, l'nul

N. Y.
N. Y.
N . Y.
N . Y.
N . Y.

52 llarri•on S t .. J o hnso n C ity, N. Y.
408 Marion St.. };n~i coll , N . Y.
99 Front. St.. V""tnl, N. Y .

T o man, Gerald
To mpkin•, Ha rold F.
Tompkins , Ida
To ner, Frank
Toomey, Jami.,. R.

Valk. G,•ne
Valk:;. John
VanAttn, Go rdon

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Thomas, H . James
Tho mM, Jeanne
Thomp!;()n, Roberta
Thorson. Healr1cc
Throup, Edward S.
TilloL.,&gt;n . David R .
Titu~. Lucilt..•

Vnil. Willinm

Wnlkr. Blanch&lt;'
W ard. Donald
Wnru t~ r. Jam tl!4
Wu. r ncr, Willitt

N . Y.
N. Y.
N . Y.

\Vn~t:Wn.

C ra ven

N. Y.

Wntk inM, Gordon W.
W11tkln•. S tunl't W.

N. Y.

Wetl4-0n. J ohn

W11t.t.lt•s, ltob&lt;'rt
W t·ber, William, Jr.
Wt•btitcr. Walkr
w ,~'"'" J&lt;1hn K
Wt•ild. llAl1&gt;h

•IGO Ha rry L . Drive, Johmw n City. N. Y.
Church St.. Hall•tead , Penna
lln hhire, N. Y.
129 St.. Mark• Pl .. Urooklyn, N. Y.
Ci9 E. Catherine St .. llin!'ham ton, N Y.

135

36 Antlrt·\\.!"1 An•., Oin1idmmt nn , N Y
26 Ch\I))) Avt•., Wappm..rt..·r~ FallH, N. Y
25 ('Japp Avt\.. \\'ap1dn)(t..•nc Fn ll", N. Y

2713 llt'lcn St., ~:ndicott. N. Y
!!19 Hn rrihon ~t... John •on Cit)', N. Y.
21 Corbt•lt Avt.'., Hin).{hnm to 11 , N. Y
1015 Harri~on St. .. S&gt;•rnt'Ul'l-t'. N \
t 71 Cht•nanKu St .. BinKhan1 ton. N. Y

35 Morgan Rd .. BinJ,Chnmton. N . Y.
5 Ho llin• St .. llin1rh11mt on, N. \ .

28~

ltH) Main St., Owt•J.Co, N. Y
F ront St.. Bin.-hnm ton, N. Y

143 Glenwood AVt.' ., B in&gt;-dutmto n, N. Y.
H Curran An•., Uin1thnm ton. N Y
100 11 1'ond An~ .. Hin)!hnm ton. N. Y

27t H.ohin!Wn St .. B i nv-hamton . N. Y
R. D. :!. V,•stnl ( '&lt; nlt•r, N . Y
110 Conklin A v ...... Uin J.C hnmton, N. Y

11,•lt•n St .. llin1&lt;hnm ton. N. Y.
IMO Hdt•n S t ., HinJ.Chnmton. N. \' .

1~0

39 Elm St.. Dt•11t1•il, N. Y
67 North St.. lli1111h11mlo 11, N. Y.
16 Bu rr Ave. , Binl-:'humto n , N. '\
G:t Mltdwll Ave .. llin1&lt;h11m ton, N. Y.
561-.:. Crockt•r Avt• .. J uhnMt&gt;n City, N. \'

23 C!evt•land A v~.. Uinschnm ton.
60 Floral Aw .. llin1&lt;h11mtm1.
402 N. Main St .. (;lon•rs"il l&lt;.,
33 C. F . J. Ul"d .. John•on City,
S4 St. Chari&lt;"' St., J ohn"'"' City,
11 Stanley St., llin1&lt;hamt .011,
20 Cnmt&gt;bt•ll Rd .. llin1&lt;hHnt on,
20 Front. SL. V&lt;'stnl.
R. !) 2. Johnson City,
28 J,oui• St.. llin1&lt;h11mton,

N Y

N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
'"
Y.
'"

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y
N Y

74 N . Wuhinjlt on St , Plamvi11t•, Conn
llo rnlwr k HithCt', Pouj.t:hk t'\"l&gt;lih'. N. Y.
1
829 Jo:. Prit•t..• S t .. Gt•rmJt.nt.0\11,•o , } (•1\nu
hO I 1., Oak Hill Ano,, ~:n.tl,·&lt;&gt;Lt. N. Y
3 1G Oak H ill AH•.. ~;ndi colt, N. Y.

F ri(•nchwiil&lt;' Sh\J?t'. Bin Khumton, N Y
f&gt;3 Crt..•tllmont H&lt;l .. BinKhnm ton. N. Y.
4 Edwa r d St.. Johnson Cit&gt;" N. Y

Jlri1h?t' S t ., S. lkthlt•hem , N. Y .
34 Grund Ul\'d .. Bintiehum ton . N. Y.

•Iii Vcst.111 Rd .. Bi111&lt;hum t.011, N. Y.
132 llirrh St.. Vt'Mtnl. N. Y.
120 Lt&lt;Ur.•I Ave .. fl in1ehamto n. N Y
6 Dickin•o11 Ave.. Jl in1&lt;hnmto n, N . Y.
471 Ve,;t11l Rd .. llin1&lt;hu111ton, N. Y .

ThompMon, l't• nnn
Main St .. Fort• tviJI,., N. Y
114 JHck1wn Ave•., f :ndicotl, N. Y
11 Bunk!'\ Aq•.. John~o n Cit)', N. Y.
12 Lyon St.. Jlinvh nm ton, N. Y.

IL 0 . I, Ch1·111rn1&lt;0 Forks,
20 FowJt..•r Ano.. John ..un City,
Mnin&lt;'.
605 June St... End1cott.
• G Jo:vnnH St., llinKhum ton .
R. D. I. v ...u.J.
3 12 v,.,.ud Rd .. Vt· .tnl.
42r. F ront St.. ()"'•'!&lt;&lt;&gt;.
1405 Hivt•n-1&lt;•w llr. Endicott.
109 M:;1&lt;ntl St., B ini&lt; hnm lon.

N. Y
N. Y
N. Y.
N. Y
N. Y .

N
N.
N.
N
N.

y
Y
Y.
Y
Y

Mcn1ln)(U( ', MnK~

95 M n 11l ~ St.. Ru t lw1·rortl,
,j2 Vt•rmont A 'H• .. Binghemt on,
3 We l erly Way, llinghnm tm 1.
606 Uroad ~t .. ~;ndkott,

N
N.
N.
N.

Y
Y
Y
Y

�Weintraub, Robert I.

162 Park Avt•.. llin1&lt;hamton. N. Y.
51 Davis St.. Din1&lt;hamton, N. Y.
Maine. N. Y.
Maine. N. Y.
609 Jennin1Cs St.. Endicott. N. Y.
139 Pearl Ave.. Johnson City, N. Y.

Wei~Hmnn.

Irwin
W elborn , Gene
W t• ltx1rn, Suznn nc•

W elch, Lois
W cnicer, Th('()dore
W clthcimcr, Bernard

20 Albe rt St.. J ohnwn City,
209 Front St .. Vestal,
85 Vine St.. Binghamton.
8 L&lt;-wi• St.. V&lt;"Stnl,
545 Front St.. Oin1ehamton.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y

Wickham, Lela M.
Widmer, Herman
Wilcox, Harmon T.

2106 Richmon1l Rd .. Endicott.
207 Lee A ve., R. D. 2,
Johnson City,
106 Walnut St.. Bi nghamton.
140-30 Bt..,ch Ave .. Flushin1C.
.. 26 N orth S t .. Binghamton,

Wilklow. George C.
Wi llets, John
Wi lliam•, Donald D.
Wi lliams, Donald
W illiam•. James T .

W hite St .. Highland,
R. 0. Chenango Forks.
8 Hillside Av&lt;•., B inghamton,
315 Floral A v&lt;• .. Johnson City,
42 Le land Ave .. Vestal,

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

William•. Kenneth

R. D. I, Binghamton.
57 Mur ray St .. Binghamton.
8 Hillsi&lt;lc Av'"· Bing ham ton,
526 Davi' Ave .. Endicott.
3 Pleasant Ave .. Bin1&lt;hamton,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

2 Lincoln Avt•., Endicott.
70 Cook St.. Johnson City
107 Jefferoon A ve., Endicott.
i 9 Chestnut St.. Bing ham ton,
21 &lt;:ommo nwealth Av&lt;'., Middletown,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Weil«Y. Marian

We;t, Charlt's P.
w e.trail , James
Whitm•y, Eugene
Whitn ey. Vir{Cinia

Whittemort', R alph W.

Williams . Mary E.

Williams, Warren R .. Jr.
Willson. Haro ld 0.
Wilmot, IA.'O n D.
Wil ~n. Norman
Wilson, R ober t
Windisch. F rank

Wintc-rstci n, Samuel

Wo lfRO n , Harold
Wood, A. Calvin
Wood. ll. Harold
Wood. Norma
Wood, Richard
Wooclman•ee, Lee
Wo rKlc•". Geraldine
Worster, L t·Roy E.
Wright , Sandra
Wych ul&lt;·s, Bernard
Wych ules. Paul
Wyke, B1•tty
Yudin, J oseph
Zades, Co•tas J.
Zampi, Beatrice
Zampi, Dorothy
Zednowicz, R aymond

N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

40 Dt•Vi&lt;•r St.. Binghamton.
&amp;09 Exchanice A ve .. Endicott.
40 Bevie r St.. Binghamton,
7 Cleveland A ve.. Endicott,
22 Park Pl., Joh nson City.

N. Y.
N . Y.
N . Y.
N . Y.
N. Y.

861 1 Wa tson Blvd .. J oh nson City.
1614 Wa tson Blvd., Johnson City.
216 S. Duane Ave&gt;., Endicott.
341 Clinton St.. Bin1&lt;hnmton,
43 Gerard A ve., Binghamton,

N. Y .
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

200 Mc Kinl&lt;•y Ave.. Endicott,
36 Windin1C Way. Bin1Chamton,
302 De lawart• A ve., Endicott,
205 Squires A"'"· Endicott.
205 Squires Ave .. Endicott.

N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.

Zicari, John
Zimbar&lt;&gt;. J o h r
Zis ka, Ed w a r d M.
Zi&lt;ka. Lronard P.

41 Circ le Dr.. Vestal,
203 Be rna rd Ave., Endicoh.
2719 Watson Blvd.. Endicott,
11 Mason A ve .. llinghamton .
25 Mo1.arl SL.. Binghamton,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

Zonio. Carl
Zowine, Thomas
Zuidema. J ohn
Zwick, Ruth

17 Cypru, SL.
21 Lake Avt'..
16 Emerson Pl ..
3 Garfield A ve ..

N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

136

Din1&lt;hamton.
Middletown,
Binghamton,
Binghamton.

�137

�"J 4 Exlii/n/ors Gritre Bizad Show"
Colonial N ell's, Feh. lJ , 1949

��OPP ORT UNIT IES
are the raw n1ateria ls from
vvhich achieve ments are made.
Materi als are everyw here:
the real challen ge is to take
advanta ge of them, to build and
sl1ape the1n into achieve ments.
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION

ENDICOTT , NEW YORK

irBM
I

�VAU GHN 'S
Hart Schaffne r &amp; Marx
Botany " 500" Clothes
Jantzen
Union Di st rict

Phone 5-2 131
End icott

TUTHILL'S
166 Was hington Street
Binghamt on, N. Y.

RESNICKS
SMARTLY STYLED CLOTHES
for th e smart ly dressed lady

He,1drf'hlrler.r for be1Jlh111g Photogr,1ph1(

WELLS-MESSEMER,

INC.

Binghamt on

87 Court Street

(0\IPl.l\1 1 \ ! )

1302 E. Main Street
End icott, N ew York

0 1 I II/ '

Hote l Frede rick
It' s SMART to step out in a

and rhc

NEW 1949 Outfit from

PENNY'S
YOUR STYLE HEA DQU ARTERS
For Fine Plaid and Sha rkskin
Furnish ings
Topcoats Su it s -

DuB onne t Loun ge

�1111 (.(),\[PLl ~ ll
DI PAR I \JU\ I
"!IORI ·

FOU'\ DI D I "1 1111
l ~ R L~ I 01 , ')I R \' ICI
PAR i IC LAR ')I lOPt&gt;I R~
IN I

I0

HOBBY SHOP

kh~·~:~a:
~
II COURT STRllT

Binghamton

98 I ront ~r.
Bi 11µ. h.111iton

212 \Va.,hinµ.ton J\, c.
I nd icorc

WHAT'S IN A NAME?
In HATS It's DOBBS
In SHIRTS 11·s WINGS
In TIES It's McCURRACH
In HOSE lt"s WESTMINSTER
IN A STORE IT IS-

_

ENDICOTT'S HABERDASHER

Fine China - Glassware and Gifts
For All Occasions
Over l 00 Open Stock Patterns on Dinnerware

�Co111pli111e11/J of

KER N'S HO BBI ES

Co111plim&lt;11/1 of

Com pli111e11ts of

I

m-eYeRS
~
COLLETl'S DINER

C. L. CARD

KE AT 'S
B 0 0 K S and R E C 0 R D S

A GOOD PLACE TO EAT

10 Court Street
BINGH AMTON
1304 E. Ma in St .

Endicot t

4-516 5

NEWING MOTOR CO.

Co111pli111111/J of

FORD CARS AND TRUCK S

HILK INS JEWELERS

Since I 920 in
Endicot t, New York

�C0111pli111e11/s of

HAMMOND'S
IDEAL FLORIST
ENDICOTT
122 Washing ton Avenue

SCHAPIRO )S

STORE

P. J. Hammond

Tel. 5- 133 1

MORTON COY
Proves That Good Taste

In COATS - SUITS - DRESSES
Need Not Be Expensive

THE BEST KNOWN NAMES
ARE SEEN AT

McLEAN'S

BINGHAMTON

END ICOTT

�ENDICOTT JOHNSON STORES
OFFE R
NEWE ST STYL ES; EXCE PTION AL VALU ES
AT MODE RATE PRICE S

SHOP OUR STOR ES THUR SDAY S AND
SAVE 10 %

STOR ES OPEN THUR SDAY EVEN INGS

FULL STOCKS OF DRESS AND WORK FOOTWEAR
HOSIERY -

RUBBERS -

CASUALS -

SADDLES

EVENING SLIPPERS -

4 LOCAL STORES IN GREATER ENDICOTT
22 Washing ton Avenue, Endicott

108 East Main Street, Uni on

107 Odell Avenue, Endicott

Main Street, Vestal

�FI LM S

DESKS

CAY'S
EVERYTHING for SCHOOL and OFFICE

Phone 5-272 l
1218 North Street
ENDICOTT, N Y
A DDING M ACHI NES

TYPEWRITERS

l·

111

78 Court St.

Z11 ; I l l' ciJ'l'tl'r:e/
I I
Binghamton

7 - 9 Court St. -

Binghamton

Co111plimc11ts of

ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY
OFFICES IN END ICOTT AND VESTAL

ENDICOTT NATIONAL BANK
UNION-ENDICOTT OFFICE
MARINE MIDLAND TRUST COMPANY

�ECONOMY DRUG STORE

COMPLIMENTS OF

(The Rexall Store)

60 Was hington Avenue
Corner of Woshongton ond Monroe

FOWLER, DICK &amp; WALKER

,\1.iie U.r )'011r lle.11lq11.11'/er.r
GOLF SWIMMING
SOFTBA LL BASEBALL

TENNIS
BADMINTO N

THE HOUSE OF SPORTS
HUNTING

FISHING

In Fact - - "Eve rything"

7 Mai n St.

2-0046

Bingha mton

SOCH OR
TRAVEL SERV ICE
Authorized Bonded Agency for all Air Lones,
Steamship Lines, Buses and Resorts. Out oftown buses and airline limousine stop o t our
office-

l 408 No rth Street

19 COURT ST REET
BINGHAMTON

Dial 5-4 38 l

Com plmh 11/ I of

HA ML IN'S
RED CROSS DRUG STORES

BINGHAMT ON

JOHNSON CITY

ENDICOTT

�take better pictures ... even
when it's cloudy or raining!
ask for

the all-weather film
ANSCO, Binghamton, N. Y. A Division of General Aniline &amp; Film Corporation

WALTER R. MILLER CO., Inc.

ALL T H E SHARP SQUIRES

STATIONERY

SHOP THE ESKUIRE

GIFTS

" DOWN IN Ui'llON "

SPORTING GOODS
T UX REN TALS
170 W ashingto n St. and 121 State St.
Bingha m to n, New Yo rk

Al Alexander

Bucky Barney

Wes Harvey

In t he Service of Greater End icott

ENDICOTT DAILY BULLETIN
Complete AP, Local News

RADIO STATION WENE
ABC N etwor k Affilia t e
14 50 on your radio

Read!

Li sten'

�Comp/1111&lt;11/r of

FAIR PLAY CARAMELS, Inc.
Manufactureres of KITS ond B. B BARS

BRING YOUR PHOTO PROBLEMS
TO

ENDICO TT
CAMERA
SHOP
For Reliable and Frie ndly Assistance

Meeting the Challeng e of A Changing
Through EDUCAT ION
World
he Complexities of the world about us demand that our you th be
given every opportunity to attain their full educational goal W e
hove learned that only through education con youth hope to toke its
proper place in the world, and fu l fi ll the obligations and respons1btl1ties
of democratic ci t izenship in a free notion.

T

onscious o f its glorious heritage, and with firm adherence t o the
pri nciples that hove mode this notion great, American youth will
meet the chal lenge of o changing world with resolute confidence-advancing to new heights in fulfillmen t t o t he Ame r ican way of l ife,
liberty a nd happiness.
C

"Ete rnal vigilance is th e price of Libe rty,"
and the free, unfettered press of America 1s the
watchdog guarding the rights and interests of the
people.

THE BINGH AMTON PRESS
Southern Neu· Y m f' r Gre.itu/ \, wsp,1per

�The irresisLiblc /)(1111er of pictures is fe lt in
class record books just as su rely as in
magazines and other publications. Pictures .

. interesting, life-like and well-

reproduced ... vitalize the yearbook and
serve as visual reminders of student life
-as it was lived! Faithfully reproducing
these pictures Lhrough the process of
photo-cngra ving is the job of the Basil
Smith System

spec111ll\h in publication

engraving. Pictorial power lo the maximum is assured by our modern facilities,
years of experience and well - earned
reputation.

A GUIDE TO OUTSTANDING CLASS RECORD BOOKS
Eve1 \ 'ear book s1atf should have
this valuable cn:ativc aid. A co111inui11!( catalogue full of sparkling
lavouts and helpful infonna11011
Reserve

-

�CREATORS OF FINE PRIN TING
•

• WEDDING ANNOUNC EMENTS

LETTERPRESS

• PHOTO OFFSET LITHOGRA PHY

• STATIONE RY

• COLOR PROCESS

• BUSINESS FORMS

• OZALID REPRODUCTIONS

•

BOOKLETS AND CIRCULARS

• CATALOGS AND PUBLICATI ONS

•
PHOTOGRA PHY AND ARTWORK

•
PHONE 4-3225
SO COMMERCIAL AVENUE

BINGHAMTON , NEW YORK

1'1111hrJ of tht: ..( n/011i1t''

I

���...

..

... .
•t
I

•

••

'

·:

,

'.

:Ji ,

~

.·

.;

-. .

"

•'

:.

f

.

.

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="27">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28047">
                  <text>1948 - </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28048">
                  <text>Binghamton University Yearbooks </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28049">
                  <text>Harpur College -- Students; State University of New York at Binghamton -- Students; Harpur College; State University of New York at Binghamton; Students; Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="37">
              <name>Contributor</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39021">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;Blythe E. Roveland-Brenton, Director of Special Collections &amp;amp; Library Preservation&lt;br /&gt;Caitlin Holton, Digital Initiatives Assistant&lt;br /&gt;Maggie McNeely, University Archivist&lt;br /&gt;Erin Rushton, Head of Digital Initiatives&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39022">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;Binghamton University’s yearbook was published under several different titles. It was first called &lt;em&gt;The Colonist&lt;/em&gt; in 1948, then became &lt;em&gt;The Yearer&lt;/em&gt; in 1970, &lt;em&gt;Pegasus&lt;/em&gt; in 1973 and finally &lt;em&gt;Binghamton University&lt;/em&gt; in 2004. Yearbooks are a popular resource for alumni and can be used for primary source research. Each book typically contains class lists, class photos, candid photos, faculty and academic department information, campus and institutional facts, illustrations and ads, and editorials. They document student organizations, campus events, athletic teams as well as local and global events. Yearbooks offer a window into the traditions and culture of a time and place from the point of view of a select group of students on behalf of the student body. They are among the richest sources of student-driven content for an academic institution. For more information regarding yearbooks and the history of the University, please contact &lt;a href="https://www.binghamton.edu/libraries/about/special-collections/"&gt;Special Collections&lt;/a&gt; at 607-777-4844 or speccoll@binghamton.edu.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;We welcome your comments about &lt;span&gt;&lt;span&gt;our collection of digitized yearbooks.&amp;nbsp; &lt;a href="https://binghamton.libwizard.com/id/c6121588e483da04f66dba76f0460bb5"&gt;Please share comments via our feedback form&lt;/a&gt;.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Acknowledgment of sensitive content&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Binghamton University Libraries provide digital access to select materials held within the Special Collections department. &lt;span&gt;Historical yearbooks provide a vibrant window into life at the University.&lt;/span&gt; However, they also expose insensitive, and at times offensive, racial and gender stereotypes that, though once commonplace, are now acknowledged to cause harm. The Libraries have chosen to make these volumes available as part of the historical record but the Libraries do not support or agree with the harmful narratives that can be found in these volumes. &lt;a href="https://www.binghamton.edu/libraries/about/collections/digital/"&gt;Digital Collections&lt;/a&gt; are created for educational and historical purposes only. It is our intention to present the content as it originally appeared.&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39023">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;The yearbooks in this collection are copyrighted. If you want to reuse any material in this collection you must seek permission, or decide if your purpose can qualify as fair use under the U.S. Copyright Law Section 107. If you think copyright or privacy has been violated, the University Libraries will investigate the issue. Please see our take down request policy.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;If using any materials in this online digital collection for educational or research purposes, please cite accordingly. When citing documents, researchers / educators should credit Special Collections as the custodian of the collection.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The following is a suggested citation: Binghamton University Yearbooks Digital Collection, [yearbook title and year], Special Collections, Binghamton University Libraries.”&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39024">
                  <text>1948-1972</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="117">
              <name>Is Part Of</name>
              <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50596">
                  <text>&lt;a href="https://archivesspace.binghamton.edu/public/repositories/2/archival_objects/38366" target="_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;Binghamton University Student Publications: Yearbook, 1948- present&lt;/a&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="32">
      <name>Template: PDF</name>
      <description>Choose this for any item where the file type is PDF. This template and others do not support mixed file types (PDF and image attached to same item). If you have mixed file types, you can either create another Omeka item or contact Digital Initiatives for assistance converting from pdf to image or vice versa.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="81">
          <name>Accessibility</name>
          <description>Copy/Paste below: &#13;
Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45638">
              <text>Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="58">
          <name>Collection</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52319">
              <text>Binghamton University Yearbooks</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Digital Format</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52320">
              <text>PDF</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="54">
          <name>Identifier</name>
          <description>dc:identifier</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52321">
              <text>THE COLONIST_1949.pdf</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="139">
          <name>PDF Layout</name>
          <description>This field specifies how the pages of the PDF will be laid out. Enter only the CASE SENSITIVE keyword without quotation marks. [default: 'FacingContinuous']&#13;
Options:&#13;
'Single' - Only the entire current page will be visible and Zoom will be set to page width.&#13;
'Continuous' - All pages are visible in one scrollable column and Zoom will be set to page width.&#13;
'Facing' - Up to two full pages will be visible and Zoom will be set to page height.&#13;
'FacingContinuous' - All pages visible in two scrollable columns and Zoom will be set to page height.&#13;
'FacingCover' - All pages visible as whole pages, with an even numbered page rendered first. (i.e. The first page of the document is rendered by itself on the right side of the viewer to simulate a book cover.)&#13;
'FacingCoverContinuous' - All pages visible in two scrollable columns, with an even numbered page rendered first. (i.e. The first page of the document is rendered by itself on the right side of the viewer to simulate a book cover.)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52487">
              <text>FacingCoverContinuous</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38758">
                <text>Colonist 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38759">
                <text>State University of New York at Binghamton -- Students&#13;
school yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38764">
                <text>Endicott, N.Y. : Triple Cities College ; Binghamton, N.Y. : State University of New York at Binghamton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38766">
                <text>State University of New York at Binghamton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38767">
                <text>1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38768">
                <text>In Copyright</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45993">
                <text>Student yearbook of Triple Cities College (1948- 1950), Harpur College (1951- 1965), and the State University of New York at Binghamton (1966- present).</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2480" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="13694">
        <src>https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/files/original/be4915ea85c374ec8714143fe07ed97f.pdf</src>
        <authentication>00527d1d62695911ab5906e928e6a7ac</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="68">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="52313">
                    <text>�EAST HALL

�WEST HA LL

�R

I

c

p
(

12

H
A
N-

c

,.
I

I

f

s
c

N

0

E
L

L.

t..
f
G
~

/g"l8

I

Richard J. Crapo, Editor-in-chief
Ernest W . Sernecky, Business Manager

2

�Edition Number One
the 1948 Colonist
Edition Number Two
the 1949 Colonist
Edition Number Three

THE 1950 COLONIST
Trip le Cities College
of Syracuse University
Endicott, New York
3

�We dedicate this book ..... .

the third edition of the Colon ist, to the community of the Triple
Cities whi ch, we hope, in the future will be both mother and patron to a great and lasting college home. This future institution, we
believe, will have the potential power to become one of the notable colleges of the country because of the community of which
it will be part.

4

�Nearby Landmarks
5

�����c
H
A
N
N

E
L
2

10

�The files of

IBM

punched cards mean

only the work

of the ....

AD MIN IST RA TIO N
1t

�William P. Tolley

Finla G . Crawford

Chancellor

Vice - Chancellor

Syracuse University

Syracuse University

Dr. Tolley, a nati\'C of Binghan1lon,
York, re..:eiYed his Bachelor of Arts
degree in 1922 and i\bster of J\rts in 1924
from yracuse U niversit). ] le became a
Doc tor of Ph ilosophy in 19 .rn at Columbia
Unive rsity.
l n l 9 .3 I Dr. Tolley \\'as appointed tO the
presidency of Allegheny College, where
he rapidly gained fame .1~ the ) oungest
college president in the United States.
After becoming the sc\'enth chancellor
of Syracuse University in 1942, Dr. Tolley
has ser\'cd in executive position in many
ci\'ic and educational org;1ni1.1tions.

Dr. Crawford, a graduate of Alfred
Uni,crsity, joined the Syracuse University
Faculty in 1919. } le became a professor
in the School of C iti/cnship and Publi c
Affa irs in 1924 and Dean of t he College
of Liberal Arts in 19.38 . Ile also heads
the Political Science Department of the
.\bxwcll School of CitiLenship.
In 19.+6 Dr. Cr.1wford became the chief
connecting link between Triple Cities College and Syracuse University. As an advisor to Dea n R1rtle, he is a frequent
,·isitor to the TCC campus.

~cw

12

�D
E

A
N
0
F
T
H
E

c
0
L

L
E
G
E

Glenn G. Bartle
Dean Bartle graduated from high school
at Salem, I nd. in J 916. He attended Ind iana University, obtaining his A.B. in
1921, A.M. in 1923 , and Ph.D. in 1932.
After se rving as an instructor at the
Junior Coll ege of Kansas City from 1933
to 1938, t he Dean became Dean of LiblJ

era! Ans and Professor of Geology at the
University of Kansas Cit).
Durin g \'V'orld \\'.' ar ll he w.1s :1 Lieutenant Commander in the United States
Nava l Reserve, commanding V-12 units
at Swarthmore Coll ege.
The Dean came to Triple C ities College
111 1946.

�Elizabeth S. Plankinton

B. Hopki ns Moses

Director of Student Personnel

Director of Admis sions, Registrar

Miss Plankin ton obtaine d her B.A. in
English at t he University of Oregon and
her M.A. in personn el at Syracu se. She
was a Spar officer in W'ashin gron, D. C.
during \'V'orld \\far II. From 1946 tO
1948, before taking over the post vacated
by Jack F. Kimbal l, Miss Plankin ton was
Counse lor of \\'ome n.

:V1r. Moses studied at Lackaw.111na Bu~i­
ness College , \'\f yoming Semina ry, Pen n
State rngine er- E&gt;.rcnsion, Syracu se and
Harvar d gradua te schools. J\1r. \1oses was
Assista nt Dean of J\len at Syracu se and
residen t directo r of the Syracu se Univer sity Extensi on School at Endico tt before
coming to TCC in 1946.

Gene S . Welbo rn

Herbert

Director of Athlet ics
Mr. \Velbo rn gradua ted from Anders on
(Ind.) I Iigh School and Indiana Univer sity, where he obtaine d his B.S. in P h ysical
Fducat ion. Ile served three )Cars in the
U niece.I States avy, reachin g the rank of
Chief Pharma cist. I le receive d hi s TCC
appoin tment in May, 1947 and assume d
his duties the follo,v ing July .

14

L. Leet

Librarian
Mr. Leet receive d hi s A.B. and B.S. de-

grees from Syracu se Univer sity . l lc served
on t he library staffs of ~cvcral upstate
~cw York public schools , includi ng Ovid
Centra l School, before becomi ng TCC Li brarian in 1947. The Library has increas ed
from 2400 to 15000 volume s under hi\
directio n.

�Mar ion A . Nelson

Michael N. Scelsi

Business Manager

Director of Public Relations

J\lr. Nelson rccci\'ed his B.S. and M.A.
the University of South Dakota with
Business J\dministrario n an&lt;l Economics
as his major fields. I l e taught at
orthwcHcrn Univenity before coming to
Triple Cities College in 1948. ?\tr. "Nelson
also serves as a p&lt;lrt-timc instructor in
first-year accounting at TCC.

Mr. Scelsi, a nati' c of Endicott, gr.1&lt;luated from Union-1' ndicott l figh chool
anc.I Louisiana State Universit)', whe re he
obtained his A .R. degree in 1939. l le
worked in [uropc \\' tth the Internati onal
Ref ugec Organi/ation of the United Nations before coming lo TCC in 1948.

John W. Addley

John M . Mallory, M . D.

Counselor of Men

Physician

i\1r. Addlcy graduated from Hudson
( . Y.) J !igh School in 1937. During
\Vorl&lt;l \'&lt;' ar Tl be was a control cower
operator in the 1\rm y Air Corps. In 1948
,\;Ir. Addlcy obtained his B.S. in education
from Syracuse and in 1949 h is M.S. in
guidance and personnel. I le joined the
TCC staff in the summer of 1949.

Dr. ;\bllory, a Syracuse graduate, secs
patients { rom 1 to 2 P.M. in the college
dispensaq. I Jc is assisted by vl iss Virginia
Johnson who serves as full time college
nurse. ;\,fos .Johnso n received her R.l . at
\Vilson i\ lcmorial I lospital, Johnson Cit),
and practiced in S} racuse before coming
LO TCC.

.lt

15

�-

The
Faculty - -

Sidney P. Albert

Ethan 0. Allen

B. A., Ph.D.

B. A., M. A .

P~dosophy

Mathematics

Mary E. Atchley

Helmut Aulbach

B. A., M.A .

B. S., M. S., Ph. D.

English

Mathematics

John P. Belniak

Aldo S. Bernardo

B. A., M . S.

B. S., M . S., Ph. D.

Pul1t1cal Science

Foreign 1...anguage

Cleme nt G. Bowers

Michael Bochnak

B. S., M . S., Ph. D.

B. A.

Botany

Foreign Language

Eric Brunger

Hilda Chiarulli

B. Ed., M. S.

B. S., M.A.

H istory

Econom ics

16

�William L. Claff

Arthur Claydon

B. A., M. B. A.

Ph. B.

Bu~.

Id n.

Bu~

Adm

William B. Coate

Irving Crespi

B. A .

B. S. S., M. A.

Psychology

Sociology

Samuel P. Douglass

Jacob Ed elh eit

B. S., M. B. A .

B. A., L. L. B., M. B. A.

Bus. Adm.

Bus. Adm.

Wayne S. Farrow

Jac ob Fischthal

B. A., M. S.

B. S., M. S.

Speech

Biology

H. E. Friedlaender

J. Alex Gilfillan

Ph.D.

B. Mus., M. Mus.

Economics

Music

==The ====
= = Faculty

17

�=

The ====
Faculty

Margaret Hasenpflug

Clarke F. Hess

B. S., M. A., Ph. D.

B. S., M.A.

English

Geography

Albert V. House

Robert E. Huke

B. A., M. A., Ph. D.

B. A.

Political Science

Geography

Jean Ivory

Mildred Kellogg

B. A.

B. A., M.A.

Pol1t1cal Science

English

James R. F. Kent

Henry C. Ketcham
B. Chem., Ph. D.

B. A., M. A., Ph. D.

Mathematics

Physics

Rodney K. Ketcham

Richard Z. Kl ett
B. S.

B. A., M. A., Ph. D.

Eng. Drawing

Foreign Language

18

�Rolland R. Lutz

Seymour Z . Mann

B. A., M . A.

B. E., M . A .

History

Political Science

David Molyneaux

John M. O'Brie n

B. A. , B. S.

B. A. , M. A. , Ph . D.

Psychology

Bus. Adm.

Jacob Ose r

Martin Paul

B. S., M . A .

B. A ., M. A ., Ph. D.

Enonom1cs

Chemistry

Marjorie Perry

Lawre nce F. Pisani
B. A ., M . A .

B. S.

Bus. Adm.

Sociology

M artha Pite l

Ed ward R. Pome ro y

R. N ., B. S., M . S.

B. S., M. F. A .

Zoology

Art

The
Facuity

19

�The
Faculty

Charles Reitemeyer

Constance P . Reps

B. S., M . A.

B. A., M A.

Bus. Adm.

Fure1gn Language

Harold Rockwell

Marcelle Schubert

B. A.

B. A. , M. A ., Ph . D.

Foreign Language

Chemistry

Douglas S ilverton

Gladys A. Seda

English

B. A., M.A.

B. A., B. Litt.

Fo reign Language

W. Porter Swift
G. Ralph Smith

B. A., M. A., Ph. D.

B. S., M. S.

Psychology

Economics

Ken neth T. Waldock

Joseph VanRiper
B. A., M. A., Ph.

B. A ., Ph.D.

D.

Chem istry

Geography

20

�Pau l W eigand
B. A., M. S., Ph. D.

The

Foreign Language

Faculty

Jame s H . Wilmoth
B. S., M. S., Ph. D.

81

Lgy

Frances M . Wright
B. A.,M. A.

Mathematics

Faculty and administration entertain
United States Senator Wayne Morse.

21

�llJ 11 '\;: Kl I 11 R.
"'l't I \ I \

I I HI
\\II

t

r

\101\Kl"\\ I 't

l1 \\I\

I \ '\t &lt;.l ,,\I

\I Tl If \

r

\1111 I U.

Cafeteria Staff

-

I
'

1
Custodial Staff

I I I

Ill ( t\I R

\11&lt;11\11
In~

llOUO~l

\Hll HU' r

22

the y have

�lht.-k

ro\\.
1101 \(I\

J)OROl 11\

hi'\:'\: \KU

\1 \K JOKIT
\t \Kll

&lt; O="I \

\tllHRIU tROOf\.\
I I I \'\OR. l't)\t l IHH

hi If

111 I I\'\:

\fiddle re"' .
hR\I:'\:

\t\1111

J0\1 1•111:'\:I

llO\\ , , \

I 01111

I \\II'

'\I I I&gt;\

C.l)l 111 '\
BO\IH\RU

\I \kll \ '\

rronl row:
J ·\'I

It\

\f\l-'.10:'\

Jhlll \'\U

RL! 111 &lt;HI R\\\ ...
J&gt;OKh \l\hl Jc.

Sec retarial Staff

parti e s too

&lt;\I

lU ~

l \RRC.ll
Ill

1~111

&lt;.I '\I

.,.

-&gt;

\

II

II. I

\\I K

l'
ll&lt;Ot I\

l

I

���c
H
A
N

N
E
L
3

26

�Books mean reading

Reading means studying

Studying means ....

STUDENTS
27

�'ii 1\ I I I) :
1'1\11 ( , \ \ I \ ' '
(,01\lll"
11110/
I \\I II

s·l 1\ '\DI'\(,:
(,\lf-..:1\
lll'O
1&gt;0 ' '\;I I I \

(I 1\ 1\h
~lll'\11\

\IOl I
\ \ I I\\

UNITED STUDENT
OFFICERS
President

Michael Biloz

Vice-President

John Gorton

Secretary

Patricia Lamb

Treasurer

Wolfgang Kriegsmann

Otncen and members-at-large of the
Ln1ted Student Go' crnment, the reprc"ent&lt;ui,·e go\'erning body of the srud~nt~,
were elected at the annua l election in October. During die Spring term B.irbara
Rood and Charles J\swad were appointed
to fill member-a t - large posts vacated by the
elected represc ntati' cs.
Social activities sponsored by th e L1SG
during the year included the Student-I·aculcy Reception, the Tu rkey H o p, t he ::-..1istlecoe Ba ll, and Sp r ing \'V'cekend, featuring

Pat keeps the USG
Book Exchange reco rds straight.

�GOVERNMENT
the college re\'ues, the Spring Soiree, and
the da)'- lo ng outing.
O t her th ings were accompl ished by the
USG besides soc ial activi ties. 1949-50 saw
the fi rst ful l yea r of operation of t he hono r
point p la n . By t h is system the USG maintains a record of the extra-cu rr icu lar activities of each studen c. T hese actiYities arc
valued o n an established point basis and
awa rds are made to those reach ing a required total.
A lso operated by the USG were the Book
Exchange, the st udent loan fund, a grievance committee, and suggestion boxes.

Ralph gives the USG a
problem to solve via the
Suggestion Box.

MEMBERS-AT-LARGE
Donald Stout

Class of 1950

William Donnelly

Class of 1950

George Doyle

Class of 1951

Donald Clark

Class of 1951

Sidney Steiner

Class of 1952

William Dino

Class of 1952

Loretta A very

Class of 1953

Patricia Gaffney

Class of 1 953

�Fall 1949
SI /\Tf D:
P\ul

\Tl\\ \RT

\I&lt; 1-PRI &gt;ID!' I

·'· \ R r \ .) I\! I ~
\ICRIT·\RY
ID\\ \RD
1'1\1

rI

\ll "- ul '&gt;"-1

~IDI

YI

ST 1\ NDING:
I 10 C•\RY
I RIJ\\ul\IR
Ir\ RO IO \\'OOD

\IR(,J \'T-.\l-\R\I\

Class of 1950 Officers

Spring 19)0
) I \TfD:
,10111'

\1\11"-.

\I( I - PRI '&gt;Jill.'- I
\I \RIA Jl\11 ' I /
\ICIUT\R\
ll\ROLD \\OOD
l' IU \IDI

'I

S fi\ "\ Dl.'\G:
11 \1~0 1 ll \\II I \O'

\!RC.I \'l-\T-\ll'\I'&gt;
llOC\R\
I JU \ \ l RI R

30

�l"h1.: llUOt .H iOO\ printed in it.1lil· t rpc .tf tcr 4.:.tch '\cnlor•s
n1mr .in: t.1kcn from tla• work .. uf .1n 1 n~li'h .1uthur ;and
pl.t~ '' r1.du of \omc repute. n.1mcJ \\ illi.1m Sh.ikc,pclrc.

====The Class of 1950
c 11,\R I I .,
\II

&lt; 1t \ ' t&lt;

l

\\ti 1 I

.\11111,)

11.\RRY J,\\IT) \Cllll.,O
"ii&lt; II '.'\: &lt; l

"iilll I \ L

"I ho/•• I ,f,J// h.11t /,m111• lo 111.1';.r
~()"''·

..

11.\)Jll'
:-..: I \\

\111 I OIU&gt;.

\llllU&lt;ll

P \•

\( c Ot

.IU.,JPlll'\I l·llllll.\
llHtl 11,,

"Tlii re\

/.z11~11ai.:1

'. "'' ftp."
Ph

\ii.;,lll.l

lnLl -'

3I

'"

/, r

c T\UY

J ,C.l IHI

J•l~J

»

th. thm~ "
( 11lon1.1 '\c"' I, 2:. h.•.Hurr Id, 3. 4·
I rcnd1 (!uh 2, I: (,&gt;lllni 11 l'l.n r" l .
1. \, Pn•,, 4, H.•u lic&gt; C. lub, Pn:s. ;;
II\( I, 2: J'i,tol Uuh l, -1: '&gt;pring
l~n uc I, 'cwm.111 ( !uh -1.
"'I /J,

10.,1 I'll :.t I ,\RI&gt;
'11:\:t~

., \/•tit/ l of l1j.. "

I 'tll&lt;.Ul I

"ii&lt; HI :'\:"l

\t \I I II \1 \I I t \

"II.1th Jim """'t .1// th1• 1&gt;.td/1~1·11r .. i-"
Plu lht1 "'Pl"' 4 .

\1110
l \...,(,L

, \t,

I IJ\\',\RD ,\ ,\,I \I

\(~J\

h&lt; r

., / l"shrJ of mrrr11m 111 thrl u 1 re u 1111/
lo
I II
/.1/1/t· '" ..1 ro.ir ''
\ddplu, ~n: ;. Prc.·s 4; lntrJmurJI
'ioh h•ll 2, &gt;. l"ou, h I oot h•ll 3, USG
I; lhh. Ad. &lt;.luh 1, 4,

�==~=========The
0\\ I'\ II.

\\I I. JR.

1\1,&lt;,lf\\llO'

\CCOl..'IJ'\,(,

"""Jo \ctk thur Jml1111t' fur/h,-r tli.m
,,,

Class of 1950

\I'\( I '\ I
'J\t' HOC.HlllJ

\.

\I l l'i .\:'\ I
I \,&lt;,lHJ

IOKJI&lt;,:'\.:

/1rr1/011.~f,/."

'" Hl 111,Jtc"11tt /1fr 111.t} /1,

/1111111."

( "''""

&lt; irdc

llu&lt;.

l:

\d. C lub 4 , ( .oldrn

4.

IOI I:\ II \ '\ I \
l'Ul(l)ff

H(O\J,ll'\;C,

··-, .ilkt rs ar

no J!..oo,/ ,/,,,rs "

ROlllR'I
J P ll :'\.\O'\, ( 11'1

'"/

'",~

urmll

11\IU, l l / I
I \lRI
111)

Jc'

on}(

I '''·L"\(

r

urllmu/

.i

l•11rJr11 ••

\R '\ 0 11 &gt; R. II \U\I ·

R ,\ Y\10'\ I&gt; Ill I I
P'\C Hot O&lt;.Y

'',\'1111 "h1J\ Jhr l111u11n.1?"'

S1gnu lkt.1 ( '&gt;l;) I, 1, }; lntcrirJtcr
ntl\ ( ou1u.: il llc.:pr. (~U) L

JI \'\I I 11 Ill 111'.:(,I R

ROlll RI 11111

JOlt,,U,

Pl&lt; f\\ 1111 • P\.
0

"/h" uo,~hll

/11111111'''

utll no/ /1rtmk

''"''''·''

(I I \

1,t,11'11

..,.,,, ,,,// '"" "'' '""' ,,,,, '" 11..tl

In r. ''

dr/n1./

( o lrnmt 4; I ngl1,h Club l: ll.ldui
Cluh ~: Colo111JI Pl."c" I, 2, ~cc. 4;
( u cd Cl uh "&gt;t..·c. Trc·J,. I ; P.tnd o r.ul\
..!. '· ....

JOI I'\ 1111

O~.

\IJ( I 1.\1 I. 1111 0/

JR .

c.t,IK\I

HL'\ l'.\. I ' '

"(), /111/ oj t ' " ' J11/ b11w11" &lt;Ir•
lou/.:1,"
(.ol1.1nh 2. I, 4: l\u,. 1\d . Club 4.

/111

'0( 1 \ 1

.. J 11&lt;111gh. u ith nt 1 r

( h oru'

I:

( olol\1.11

'i(

II'&lt; r

ml'tl\ttr1·. ''

'\cw'

4;

I n•nd1

( luh I. 4. \'.P. 2, Pn·'· I: ( ,ol1.1rd'
'· 4, lrc.1,, ~; \1.1roo11 f\l.'\ 2, l ntr.1.
11.1,kctlull 2. hK1tl&gt;.11l I. '. l, ·\, \ oft
h.dl I. 2 . .l. 4: l'in Toppl,·r, '. 1. 4;
l''-1, :. \ ' P. l. Prl·'· 1. "'&gt;prrn~ RL·\uc

.;

JO'il 1'11 I'. 111\ 1 1 \R \
Ul , &lt;.11\\l l n '
H

\

"'''"t'
/,,·, &lt;&gt;111111~

\ dclpl11 2,

t, J , l t t \ l
111.111

111lh111

the

1 uc,1 "

111\J&lt;,' \ "

B\..'":il'\: I ' \
/1

ti of

IC 0'.'00\t I&lt;')

··1,1

tltT\ man b~

maJ/ r oi Im /11111.

1111rlh."
I

( '"

~,.,

4;

Bu,. ,\d.

Club 4: l ntrJ ~ !tl&gt;.ill ', I , hx&gt;tb.lll
I; ( ulon1.1l l'l.11·,·r, I, ~proni: Rc\'uc l

32

0
'

"I

"')

,,.,, c·,

/,11/,; /,111 u /.n1 /1111,
I hoc \h11/ b, 11111'n.''

,J,.,I/

�The Class of

1950 ===~---=======

JI \'\ Ill l

~I

l

)( l~I 1'11 R

tluwgh/,·

"/,111

w· \)

P111
I: P.111dor.1n' ~.

\, 4.

:\!

l

I . 110\\

Ill~ !

\0\ 1 \I

#"Ile

\OC I \I

··11, "

1111d li11/1/1) !&gt;0111\ Jl/111d

)Oii."

( o 1.·d ( hih

c/111 ·! !ht 11

ilJ

' ' II

'&lt;

111/\

\(II:'.'\( I

p,·,/.1/rr."

lupplcn l, 4: lt.tli.111 &lt;lub 4.

11.\RRY \\. 131UC.JI ,\\I
I

mt II 1/ 011/d /,, •.,

( ulu1mt 4: l n;;l"h club 4:

110·1 11 :\0

o._..)

l'\'C. JIOI

\~·'l'"·'"'

1011,,u, &lt;1n
&lt;"''"'1 llL''''1''
··11, llJ\ 11Hhof,1r1111./ .1 np,· ,111d good

,.

"""·.\d.

C luh ~, .1, 4: lntal.uth
C1roup ..?; .. \~1pc.111'
!'re•. 4; ,\lph.t
1'111 Omc~J 4: llrnd .1.

l.

l\u,.

&lt; 1111 ORD

\R :\01 D llll\l\\ :\
\IHo\'\

\lH

\

\tl['X&lt;I

Ji.I 11 1utl ,, &gt;trw111 \1111./."
l: C.JH·I ( luh \: ll.1.-.1&lt;uJ I,
~. Prl'\. \. 4: lntc.rfru1...·rn1l\ ( •&gt;llrKil
\: \1 u,u.: tor \L,ll&lt;:rn' \: J uninr Ro
t.Hi.ln ; ~ US(, '·
"/Ir

llRO\\ :\I

hl,C.,11 \\110,

"I h re'• !he humor of 11."

IR&lt;

C 111 "Tl R l\l'( 11 \:\ .\:-\

J\l\l 1'11 llL'R \;\

I 'lHC.tll 1

··1

,1m

I '\,;l&gt;HOl 1

tr,·r

uh,11 I h or

mtrr)

"/ I /11111

Utt/

/&gt;I) /11;

11.11m."

1'11/\/C.

ln·11d1 Cluh

I,~.

'lrc.1,, 1.

\11( 1 1.\1 1 lll'R\:\

\I( :\OI 1&gt; Ill '&gt;I I
111:'\C,H \.\l 10:'\

I 'Ol&lt;OI I

" ll )
\OU

'''""'' """""' ..i11,

Ill(

'(II 'CI

"'/ 11' 110 111111·

}11.111

lo I

/k."

l/IJ" •"

c 11

\RI Is I'. c \llR I !\.\

R\I

\1\IUl ):\ C \I'\

J l 0 ' &gt;MfC'\

"[ti's ,f,,,,1.:_ fo~&lt;llcr."
\p.tm ... h &lt;.Juli
l11tr.i. I ootb.111

33

l

;.

n.h.'-oh.lt.l

~. l, 4.

P\\1(0
" ) (Utr

'·

4:

HJl~IJ&lt;,.....:

jrl

l \'.'.:&lt;.lA&lt; I

,,1/S ilTf 111/1111/ .''

'&gt;J'ln1&lt;h C lub 2, \ .l'
\.I'. 'I,

4·

I hJl1ins ),

�The Class of 1950
&lt;l.\IU

,\I I O'\~O C \I LIO

'\CI

&lt; \\ll'BI

1 ORJ I(,' l \ :"\.C. U \C.I

I '1&gt;1(011

.. /Jr/It r Jinn· fiourt /no
m11111h loo illlt•."

th.111

HWll

d

l 1

\()( I \I

"\lrn r1 111 /1n

\( 11 "'C I

1111/r u or/ I of mu11."

l\.111J 2; ltJIJJn &lt;.lub 2, \, Pre,, 4;
I rcmh ( lub l, I, 4.

IA \II S &lt; A/\NY
rn"
found 111 ma11)
n
''(,rn1/11n
\Jclpht I, &lt;;cc, 4 .

\/\lllU \\ C AR ,\KI R

Hl,&lt;.tl \ \ t

\I.

I Ol I\,

mn1.' 1
''/

1111/

"/Ir

UU\

P\.

(,1,IK\l

I I0

uonl lo '/'t'Llk Jdain un./ to

flu,. 1\d. ( luh 4; (,oliJrd' 2,
Alph.1 l'h1 Omci;J I, 4.

10'&gt;1 Pl I ( I R LI IO
C,l,Jll\1

n(),

"hul

.iulhortl)

i111J

JOI I/\ C 11 \\1111 RI Al'\
JH;\l'I''

fOll,\O'

(II\

oj

··1 th.111k

\Oii

,fun,

Im/Ii."

\tk:tolo&gt;:~

C luh

c,OR DO'\

&lt;. &lt;I I A \I Pi\ I Y

\Cll'\Cl

.,0(1:\I

)rmr \f&gt;ctd).' 1

loo Jm

( luh \, 4. Pre,, 4. 'cwman
lmr.unur.11 h&gt;otbJll ;, 4 .

I, 4;

I U(,f "11 &lt;Ill R\!1\K.

I '\C.I l'i.11

"rou un· ,, mn, \ 1111.111, .~ir.''
( l.trrndon C'luh I, 4, Trc&gt;'. 4.

\\'II 111\ \I I.
&lt;ti\\

&lt;1111.DS

&lt;.l'\;114\l

lH..' ' f ' I "

•'I ii th, um/./ ,/,Jc: ·
lh" · \d . (!uh 4; (&gt;11ldrn ( 1rd,· ;

~~,

,find Iha

mo~/

for /111,/11rH.'

{11

1

flu,, Ad. C'luh I, 2, .1, 4.

I IC\ I '&gt;T \

C f'\()'J fl

I 'l&gt;f&lt;Ol I

''//,-tc· 1~ .v.oo,/ /1roko1 1111uic. 11
U.11.1.-.h.:i.t 2. \, 4,
pli..·r~ .! , \, -4.

").1i1..•11,

';

34

P111 'fop ·

f.

\It)

Hl\l'-J\\

th.· Jwr/m\f·.''

1'1&gt;1&lt;011

P\"li ( HOI Ot.\

/,q '""' 11/•rm lh&lt;'r."

P1t1 'l'uppll·I", .::!, \

ROI\! R J' R C \R50/\
JIJlll \UIJPtll\,

\IJ\\Ol.i N I

I,

4;

l\(

''/ tlunk
/111n r.''

)r&gt;ll

h.u, ,,,,

&lt; Ul :....11,C

motif)

flu, , \d ( luh : • ..,,.,
(,oJ..ir,h I, 4; Jl.i,,•b.111 2,
h,fl, J11111or ( l.1" \ . I'.,
'f'n·.1,.: '''" n&gt;.111 (!uh l,

111

) ""'

\, Pre,, 4;
Intra. )ofc
'&gt;cnior Cb"
4.

�The Class of 1950
Rlll\I R I \ I \ R K
K,(l( 111\11 k
H

"

&lt;l'\:IJ(\I

1111 ,-, )

"'

flit

J.1)

I~

llll)\J\\ ( I \R"
IH'l'l''

'"'''S·"

t uloni.tl Pl.t) c.·r\ \: 1\.1\1..:.ln.1 ~. L 4.
\cc l; lntr.1. 1\,1,cJull I, 2, l. B,l,kct

lull I. 2. l. I "ith1ll \, l&gt;ir&lt;c!or 4:
\ ,lr'll\ il.Hk&lt;·th.111 \l.~I. 2.

•• 11 ) "" look / m
lntnn.uiorul

···1 ruth

h.1//, J

Rd:it 11m'

•/11/f/ b11.1~1."

u•

( luh

'·

4.

&lt; O\l l'TO:'\

JOI I'\ R.

.\( &lt; OL ' 1 1 ' '

l/f.J

Prl''. 4..

ID\\I'\ (,. ( l ,\RK I
\\ \\IK.I \

.v,mJil '/•1 1c h

,1

1111./o 1111."

)Oil

l '\1111 I \

H&lt;Ul

'"/ \t1c.l111:;l)

11&lt;//

'll~C.

r •.1d.''

l\u,, \,I. ( luh I, 4: l ntr.1. Jl.i,kctlull
1, ;, \.1tth.1ll I. 2

&lt;.I~\"\

I COUR'J RI&lt;.! II

I 'PH 011

··.\11,/

it

1111rr)

/,,..,,, l1ttS

/011\.'

P.1ndnr.1n. Pn..·5. 4! J n:ndt ( lub '·

1

" \/11/,/)

'"

n:r1111S

,111.!

1lm1('1

of

/r1111J\ ...

Cl\~!JJ

RI&lt; II \RIJ ,I . &lt; R \I'(}
t,\RL l ' I H \ ' \ \

"J,,

,.1tl)

',,,

\

&lt;Ol~ll''•

1111k11oun, au~I

/:1101111

Ul't 11 \\t IO'
1

II ul

'\o , "

\R\\\JORll
Ut'l'I ''&gt;

&lt;.J ' I t\J\I

111

u I

u11.I

111/

so rH111~ ...

lo !11/f"

( olu11i.1l
Of\1\l

4·

4. nu, . .\lgr. \ ( ul
Bu'. \1,~r. \,I ditor 111 ( hu:f
,\d ( luh I. ·1: \lph.l J'hi

"l'\\' ' ·

' · 4,

l\u,,

(.)nw~.1

r rl'.\ \,

' '

Ill\ U&lt; I

·I.

'&gt;llllU I)

I J,\ \ II l\O:'\

IUll,\o"'\

l'&lt;&gt;L·c,11 t...1 I 1''11

umr \c't m
Hon/.''

"/&gt;1H/ i111d lo
/n·f(t'Jlf,

f

lntr.1. S&lt;1ftlull I, l\11,

/,c\I,

'/'/1111s~

\,I. &lt; luh I

;, 'l'n.·.1,. 4.

I

i,

35

om

'111 1111

s."

l'\\tllOIO&lt;.\

p,.,

~'

P.andnr n

R \) \10"\I&gt;

1&gt;1&lt;1\1 R

l&gt;I 011

J/

l, 4, 'tl·c..

&lt; J. ' .,,.,.

'\OR\\\:'\ Jil&lt;"IR

··1 h.u r

~O:'\

''\\ "''h /111) no J, bis."
11 n1.1I ~,.,,, I, 2. ;, ( 1)u11i\l 2:
(01011111 Pl \l:f'&gt; I,~.' (o&lt;.·~I ( lub
I. l, V.

Ll'\;lti.\L Ul\l'\;I'\

ll \\\

&lt;It\

I

I CU'O&lt;l\11
'11

lo

l

111

II

1

u's

/11,

~

s."

�~"-=-~======-==The
l'\l I

or//

If

&lt;I ' L i&lt;

/111

tJ/lr){ ,,

")Oil

'"

5 ,.

I

C )Rll

Pl I I R !kl ORI '\/O

I 'J&gt;I( Ufl

&lt; luh

'" .1k

Class of 1950
l&gt;I R RIC I\
\ C ttH 'll'.'\:f"i

Ul:'l'I ' '

,-:111/

11fJ/

;,,,

"'(

llu&lt;.

k.1101(

Ill)

b11fi II&lt;{

\d. ( luh ). l'rc,. 4.

l\u,. \,I. (!uh 4;
l'oppkn '
:\c,.•\\ nun C luh ;, 4; P;n
J, \. Pre&gt;. 4

'\p.1111,h

I:

ROii! I{ I
I \f\ I

Pl

g,11l1.d

/fJ)

tJj lht
ll'tr.1.

\( ( Ol
0

I

l inti('

b.l

H '

''\J1/JJ1111g 1/1, .11r 111/h 11w1 ,"

\ddph1 4: ."\l'\\ 1n.1n Club \, 4, l"rc.:.1,,
\d, ( luh l. '&gt;e,·, -! . P re\. 4:
t_; ~~' 4.

; : l\11,.

0

'\l&lt; I \I

\11//J~r

rh}lllt"

Pa\t I &lt; uh \,

llor T

K l l l l l l&gt;L'\ 1\ 1 1 1

"\( IJ ' ( I

\1i'

\I L,1,(,,

"I'll

1l1tJt/

I'!\
/1 II

4.

( 11 ,\ IU I '&gt; Jl. ll l]R I 1.\\1
HO&lt;l l l , l lH.

//,

.~O

ft}

/fl\

\1

Ul

llu' \.I &lt; luh l. 4: 1'111
'· \. Pr\,. ~. ~ ......

fllll:\

,,,IJ"

11

I r\:H. ~: (,ol1.ird, ~. '\, ..;

IR\'\I\ I . lll:\11 1)
0

the

( '"'"" I: t.ln· ( luh I: \l.t.lripl
~llll!c..r' J. ~. \, 4; l rcn .. h (_ luh "

1.

/iint..''

lopplcn I.

\'\ 11 10:-.:) llY I R

"HI\!

~&lt;11'- CI

" \~ good luck u 011/d h.111 11."
(,oldc..•n ( 1n.:lt: ~. 4. \~. Pr''· 3; l rc1Kh
( lub ~; l nll· .1, )ol t h .111 2, I.

Rlllll R I \I \l l 0 1 \I I .\R I Y
~&lt;II

"(),

numc11

/\om

0

ub.rcfor•

"/ ' " 11

J,

( ,Jon1,t

tl 011. Romeo?''
( 1olnn.'\ ;.

4:

1·

;:\~\\nl.ln (

' " •l; IRl

\

h

\IJrom t\'-''
\,

liln/&gt; 1/.all com/&gt;1111,
/troll 1 rlmod.''

'"'

4; ( 1•l&lt;&gt;nul Pl.n-

~ .\l(.' 11'

\.

\1
4.

4:

lo ~11

i

1111./

'l

I,(.

lo r1 -

\,(. C lul&gt; I. -!.

I \\II '&gt; l &gt;l I I )
UI'-&lt; llJ\\tJO'.\

11 \ 1{011 &gt; l&gt;U\11111 10:-\

1111/1

~

\\II 11 \\I I JJ\\ \RI&gt; l&gt;O'\'\l LI)

\ I \ I \I

l l0 '\ '\11 1)

(tit'.''

1, .:.. \, \'. P res. 4:

B.u.;-.:.11.1.t,

ltl)C, 1 ll I\

)' \ '(_ IH&gt;I oc,)

··1 dr111k /11 llu
ulwlt• l1d1/, .''
I 1uHlull

\ 1. llO I \ '\

\ (II)

I n.·n\;h

C !uh

-· '&gt;p.umh ( luh ~. ;.

36

~.

't l
J 11 .!

);

\tH 1\1

\C ll ' ( I

�The Class of 1950 =====-=====---==
1)0'\ \I l&gt; llRlJ&lt;T 11 l I)
\0( f \1

\I \l \I

' \Ltkt

u1/h

)11«''1.f\

jt·u. au,/

1111fr

~fitrJ.

\\ 111 l.\\I I 1 1 ISO'.

\( 11 ' ( I

11c1er

\\ \ lt..I'' C.l I '

\ll( I \t

\&lt; II ' &lt; I

10

\d mort• 11t•t-f."

,\lph.1 l'lu Omq;.1 4, '&gt;c&lt;·. .;.

I I.I/ \Ill 111

J1

\ '\

\llUIRO 1111 R

I(,~

·\ TIL') \\ ll 1 I A\I I \SO

I 'l&gt;J&lt;&lt;.&gt;11

C.I ' I N. \I

ji/ ·,n,111/: 11011t

H I " r,·d111g

d

,fr,111gn·

thnc.''
C...olon1.1l '1,'w' I. ~. \; ColoniH 4:
( o-t.·...I &lt;!uh ~. Pn·'· I; P.111Jor.1n' .,

11

UL \l SI \\

Dn1 1 1 rs I h) I rtn I."

).1mr"on ( oJll'.~t." i\rro\\ hc.1J, \
I t.·11L1n.~ l 1:.1m, ~tudcnt ( ou1u.:il.

:tr\H

~

0

;. 4. \..:)(, 2.

JOSI Pl I I I I C 110
Hl,(,11\\IJO:'\

,., uoul./

)OU

I R \ '\ K

.J.

I IL I ITO

\Cll '&lt;I
11111k,· "'''

of

that ,s:ood

t1Hdo111.''
!&gt;JICll\,

·1 f(.',l\,

j.

Prt•\. 4.

\I R '\O'\ I IU r/

JOI I'\ I 0\\ l I R
1 :'\'llf((lll

"To

fl\

l C O:'\O\ll{'

th\ .-!01//1111c1 1101t

'/11 /11111."

H\ 111

·· l

I'\)(

lir

1111111

\01.:inlo~\

( 1ub

(,uli.1r~h

1. \, 4.

I'.\ L'I IR l' Y.\l
\( &lt; Ol '.'." 11,&lt;

l 'Ill&lt; 011

of ho11&lt; 1/\

i1

\; Gt.·r111.1n ( lub 3;

'\11111 (,.\1&gt;0'&gt;
1'7'.IJIC&lt;lll

··n,·

\0( I \I

u ,,,

,111.I

'&lt;II'&lt; I

chc11m\/1r11."

lll\\I:'\ t,\\'J:\

D\\11&gt; (,\R\I\'\
I 'IJIC &lt;&gt;IT

\C

"\\rm/./ I kw11 /,;, 111111.f.'•

lh&gt;I (,)(,\'

.111./ /ru1/."

"II 1th /ir111111

//,,,,,.,J•ts

/&gt;

COl' 11,C.

/m11./1"

mucb''
llu,. Ad. ( luh I. '&gt; •&lt;iJI ( lu1r '. I,
l'ublKll~ l&gt;1rc.tor 4, ,\d..lph 2. ( lupl.1111 \, C.orrc,. 'fr&lt;. 4; lntrJ '&gt; &gt;ftblll
\.

37

�The Class of 1950
llO' \I I&gt; (,I O\'I R
Ul,C,lt\\flO'0
\

f.J'.\lk\1

"''H1

&gt;

1

JOI I:\ I. 11.

(,(lJl

I (l'
J ,&lt;,11\ll

,\/1 //it 1tor/d\

0

cl

\/11gi.''

l'h1 '"~m.1 1.. 11 i. 4: lni;l"h Cluh 1,
Prn. 4: I h~ ( brcrhlnn ., ( l.in·rH.lun
( nib 4: I )1un \ ''·"l' \, 4 ~ ( oloni.11
Pl.nt•r, \, 4: -..pr11t~ H.l·\uL• \; LJ';(, V.

Pn·'·

c.u1

I l\(lR(1
\( &lt;Ol ' I I '\&lt;•

.. , \

"rum~

'"l,1:,1

llrnd I. :; l\u,,

//,,

111/c11c

//cu""

In /,;,

1111.''

C, l , 1 H.\J

''111HI

HL'\f'\I"

m} 1mll,mc1tl."

.JOi i'\ 11\\:ll"CllM;.
111,t.ll\\llU'

\I

I'~'(

.,c/11111

uj m)

lh.lln&lt;,,

lh1m~ht"'

Cl,lf&lt;

I

Hl''l'I"

Ii"' m.1/t r1.d 111,1/.lt".I htrun."
llu,. ,\d. ( lub \, 4: 11.ll"c.IU.1 I, Z. l,
,. , If

4. I h'tnn.tll \; Int 1.1. hmtb.dl. .,
ll."h&lt;tb.111 l. 'iolth.111 l; l'in Toppk"
4.

111 I
1011,,0,

"lluJ ,/

.11,.

I)

I \'\I I I \ R I \I \ '~

( "'

/ntl , u 1b11 '' t

1\0111 RI 11 \\I I'\(,'&gt;

J'\\l lh)J()(,\

I

ull thmk

( o l'd &lt; lub I, P.uh.IPt.an' \. 4.

''//1

look•

( l.1n·nd1•n ( lub
do11 l, ·L

&gt;11&lt;1111/111/)."
l.

rt.ii."

\d ( luh I. 2. I, 4.

lllRl\IRI 11.\llllM)
l)\\J&lt;,n

•~l'ro1101111"

...

\\Ill\

R

t.l'.\.IR.\I

h, r, I

\1) Rll'\ I . &lt;.IU
'OK\\l&lt;IJ

Hl'l'I''

,,/, m11/1 ./cfi ••

.OR)
IH'l"-1''

C,l,IR\l

H ilt' /1

//Ji

H/ltf

Jim. \.I ( luh :, I, 4
f (th.r 11\t" \, -4.

111'111.

U1111nl \\ urlJ

4.

\\II I I \\I

RI( II \IUl 11 ,\(,(, f i( I)

'-1\\\

" 11/ !11./1,

I l ·1'1tlll,''

Ul\;&lt;,H \\t IO'

c.0111

\ 11 1'111 '
Ht\l\;I''

4, '""· 4. C l.11T11-

II \RRY

I I \I I I I\

I '\Ill&lt; UI I
•• ) " "

l'\'i\ 1101
/,,,, t

,,

'""'""

oc'

111/ ...

C1ul1.1hl, ~. \, 4: C1tr111.111 (
\1,u )(11) f\l•\ -f

luh

i, 4~

�The Class of 1950 ===-.=c=======
( 11 \IU I \ ll. Ill Hll
"\1!~ "' t'

•'

"

\\lliL\\11111\l'\\lRll I
\{II'&lt; I

1011'\(J' &lt;II\

,/,1.1k /or l1u

thou.'&gt;;,f,h .,

' ' 111 :"I. I&lt; 1 \I)'

.. [)l\cPlllJg 1~J

ir1.:I~.

( 1oldcn (

).11L·n, 4.

11.h~t·th.iJI

(,J OR&lt;.t
\\ 001&gt; II \\'I:'\, I,

111 l'\\011:\

Pre.·,, \.
1, Jl.1,ch.111 I.

\ I . \ ' ( I l l ' 11

M.

'(If'&lt; 1

I \,,(,L \C,1

Jo

"\\' h.1!

''In

\Ucci

"111\Jc

"

'''" ,111./ }!.tic/ of

Hffh

.irl

ktllurg

1(0,0\tlC."t

u '"' b."
l\,tlT,H:i.1

,c·i1d?"

,\1\1'\ 111\\1\'\

\\II I L\\I t 111\IU I'&gt; 111 RC IG \

m.d;n

)Oii

h11nf,"

I '\IJICOl I

''1\mb1/11J11

Int r.1.

1110\1 1\'&gt; \, 111 ;\RY

I.
I CHU I , ,

/uni .111./ /o)u//\"

1. \'

111111

,,

mun

lo

&lt;,J ' I K \I

I .,01&lt; 011

''J'/w)

u

11/

lH,.\l ' J ' '

he·/" r 1 tbi\ u 1/h

H·i.1n r·/)

nut hia/,"

4,

\\ II I J,\\1 I!\),\(,

..,,

UJ,c,lt \\110'

"'"'"'"

th.11

t.t ORt.J

&lt;.J ' l R. \I

111111

l11k1 ~ ...

Jiu,, Ad. Club

I

'''"'

Ut..'l'I"

~/j ( .\

1111.I

/nm

~.

"\h,// I

110/

(.1'-IK\l

/,1k,,

UIUlt

UL,1'-l\\

"ll&gt;Ulll

r.nc·~"

(0!0111.11 '\c"' I; IRC I; 11.accJuJ I.
!, \, 4. \'. P. 1, ,\lumna Sec. 4, 11"·
tori.111 4; llll\. Ad. Club !, \, 4:
I r.1ek I ; l''&gt;&lt;• I.

1111 l '\ Ill Dll \

HI

.i l.ilr· 1111/o[J ''

)pJ1mh ( lub 2, '-"'"l"'J'Cr I J. "
( oloni.tl l'iJHn I. 2, I, 4; I n.:f"h
c.lub I, 4. Phifo,opll\ Club!; RJdw
( luh \; 'cwnun ( lub ;.: P.indorJn'
2. I: lntr.11.uth
\\'~)!
I, Pr&lt;" 4
{,ruup 2; Culonill ;'\c\\\ I. 2, \h;r. l.d
1, I ditnr an·( h1cf 4. C ol11ni&gt;t. Sport&lt;
Id. 2, ,\,11. I J. I.

39

t

a1\'tl llOI

I&lt;

0(,,

hen/),"

c.crm.111 ( lub !. \, 4; J&gt;lulmophy
I.:!.: ( oloni.tl P l.1yt•r, I • .2. ,, 4;
'&gt;ottbl ll I. !. I, 1\,1,kt·tbJ!i 2,
h&gt;&lt;nb.111 2, I: I rack I, !. Pin

Club
Irnr.t.

3, 4.
Top-

l, 4.

,\'\'llRJ \\
Hl'-&lt;.Jl\\tlO'-

(JI)

c ou/./

&lt;ll'J

''ISt• uol w

plt:n .:? ,

1011 .......0 ,

lo.''

Pre.·,., c·t.1rcndun &lt; luh 4;
\dclph1 I, 4: ' J'r.ick I. 2: lntr•. Softhlll, I (H&gt;th.ill.

&lt; l.1"

\\ II I I ,\ \I I 110 It 111'1'&gt;'&gt;

\\lllJA.\1 llUR'&gt;I\
llllt\t,(), Ill.

1''·1 f')J(

"\1111/1 \ J,,. 11 011/,/ •"/'"'
l u11l 1r

4: Tr.Kk

I IOR 1'0'1 I

01,c.11 \\110'

"J /11111!,/1/J
)ltl'll\ \, 4.

f,\(

01\Y
\(It :'\:( J

u/ '"' 11 /,,- , um/tic\"

�=== === === ==The Class of 1950
JO'&gt;I Pl I J \\I II \0:\

\I \RI\ Jl\11 '\I'/

I&lt; 0'0\11('

''\/•••I· Jr.1111.:/i

,11

th,

11

11 \illl.lt\1

.11.I."

.. J&gt;l,11 \

w.111)

p,, /, •·

(o.l'.f ( luh I; 1'.rn.l &gt;r.in' I, 4; SpJornh
Club \, '\l·,.- ;: {olonul ' \ l ' \ \
I;
( 0111111.1) Pl.l\l'r' I .:!, \, 4: \lu,11.. lor
\1m.lcrn' \, "lee.:. 4: ( horu' 2, 4;

'c'' n.tn ( lub

110\\ \RI&gt; Jl&gt;ll\'\\l '\
POKI

C 111 \II H.

.../Im

(, I :'\I

\l

HL'\l,L\\

(,J,ltc.\I

,\R'IllL'R 1-.\111&lt;111
P(llC.ltt\111 1 '11
H/Jul

,,,,·,.

h1

lf/

IUll\'\ Ki\'i\trR

\((01..:'ll'C '
11111)

t/q

In

\J11dm11'

I Rll&gt;IRICK l-.l'\'\11))
\\\'t\l\IU, I'\.

f') 11un

IR&lt;

.! 1

lj ,/).II/

\fHl\1

.'!II c

11

1011

"illl,&lt;l

'tJ1t1h1L"

4: Phi)o,up}n ( luh 1, ;;
~unulo,i.;\ ( luh 2. \
\,

ROii! R'I 1\01 O\hl

Hf'\(,11\\t10 '\:

C.J 7',;J R \1

Ul \J,I \\

"1\/1/&gt;!111111• ,,,,,/ a/1/iroba/io11."

II \IUl,\RA 1\1 '&gt;'I I R
HI"\&lt; 11\\110'

.. /.u,,/.: rnrrl, •P .1k i~1,."
I rrnd1 ( luh ~. 4; l'l\tol (hob

4:

rl1.1li.111' ;,

IOll;'\; 1-.0'-IK
c.I 0\ I K'\JI 11

(d,ltt\1

" I If .1 l:.uo.lh t 1c·.lil Jor \ rJ 1 ' 1
( ,,10111.11 '.\:t·"' I: 'tpJnt,h Cluh "
'"""· ;, lr.t&lt;k I; ~'"'m.111lhob 1.4;
P1 I\ I opph;r,.

40

HU\l'\ 1 \"i

( l,1,, ~l'(

4.

flttft/),"

IUL l'&gt;J LIU:'\,\

Hl\l;\,J\'

a c om11l1'111;."
'ip.11rnh ( lub I, 2; llu,. \d.' ( luh 2,
I, (;olden ( ordc ~. 4. Pre" I, \lplu
Pho Omci.:l \, 4; Pi-iol Club I, \'.
Pr.:,. 4; lnlr .1. '&gt;uitb.&gt;11 2, 3, 4.
''1\rt•

..f.

&lt;II\

"\moolh

1110\1 \'&gt; JOI I;'\;'&gt; Io;-..
\I\ I \l

;.

l\\11\ 1011'\'&gt;0'\
JOll:'\\O'

mm/ cc·1/,1111,''

H

~-

\t

··,\

cnm111011

1111,/

llll

&lt;Ol

011/11.1r.I

'11,c,
1t1J11.''

lhl\. \d. ( lub 2. \, 4; (,olden ( ordt·
2, '· 4.

�The Class of

1950 ====~-========

1011'\ l\O'&gt;

n

L;'\

\\ 1111 \\I l\l'C Ill:\'-!\\'&gt;
I '.'l\fllc.llll

.. //, /&gt;,11/. 1fo11r 11df m /&gt;t"f'lr'&gt;

'\IC I IOI \'&gt; l\L Ill\
Hl'.\f,11\\110'."\

"/11

&lt;.J, l k \ I

'\IC 1101.

JIU\. i\d. ( luh 2, \, 4: lntr.&gt;. I'nmli.&gt;11 '·

f~

Ul\l:O..I\\

,/,,11 . ..

l'.\J'JUCI.\ 1.\\111
.fOll , , O ,

h/)/1,."

\f,,,,, ,./)

I rcnd1 Club 2; llll\. ,\d. ( luh ~.

\\lllJ.\\J l\l)'ol"\'i
l'Ol &lt;1111\.J l P\11

l\l'&gt;I \'&gt;

l, J "\Jl~\I

1111.&lt; /111/ of 7,1/1''

.. ,.,,11 "' """"'"''"

\'&gt;

1\l,,\l"\I\\

in.''

( 11'

.. llou 1/0lC SUt"tl ''"""· ..
( ,lon"t 2; l·rc..•m:h ( luh ~. ~~ ... \:
'\.l'\\ 'Jl·'l"i..-r Co-c..•d. J•;
P1nt.lor.\lh 1, '·
4; ( h&lt;•crk.&gt;da 2. 1: 1'111 "J oppkn 4;
l .,(, 2. '&gt;cc 4; 'iprin~ llc\11&lt;" \,

.JO'&gt;ll'll J ,\llKO
hl"\'&lt;.11\\110'

I \\Jill ll I' I \l'J&gt;J ll

\C(O\''\;ll"\(,

lll'\,C.,11\'tl&lt;l"\

''l\rrnu

,,,,,,,,,

1011

not

th

'tu

•.Jll'•

\."

Jim .•\d. ( lub \, 4; ll.icc.1(1.1 I, '
4, ln-.1'. 2: l ntr.I. Snftlull J, 4.

l'I 11 I{ \1 \( \ '\
HJ'...:(,11 \\1 Jt&gt;"\

J()J I'\ I'\ I IU&lt; I\ \I \( I\
JCO,O\tl&lt;'

"/ 11rr.I '"' /,,I /1."
lh,eb.dl I. 2.

ltlfl\,\(l'

,/,(,/(

bi· u1lnrn

t

\I

of

''I

1. ~.

I rend&gt; ( lub

111'\&lt;,ll \\l TO'

m1

\(II'.\;( f

1/i,111 //mu ,,,/
I

I I 10\1 \'&gt; \I \l\RI
'&lt;II

1111

\&lt;)(

U 1\1'1

fJj•••

u ·"'

JOI I'\ \I \Dlll '\

u orth. 1 '

&lt;II\

.. J llflu ''"''"~ 1/

ll{C

''l.d

),

~

I'\'( 1(01 U&lt;,r

"/ ftkr th) 111/ 11df."
\lu'h. ior \1d..:r11' '·Pr~. 4; Cohm-

1.11

( lub •.

41

2: D101\\'\IJl1~ \, -i; ( olonill
I. .!, '· 4, \'. P. \: Radav

:'\l·\\o;

Ph)cr~

�The Class of 1950
\\·11 I 11\ .\1 \lt\1 11 R
Ul,&lt;.tl \ \ I IO'

IOI I '\ \1 \I I K

\(.&lt;.0Lt' 11'&lt;·

.. //1 /i.Jkn ~1 .r.oocl

10111&lt;c"

(,le&lt; ( luh I. "· '&gt;p.in"h ( luh I, "'
lh". \d ( luh I; '\cl\ 111.111 ( luh.
Pn:

i,

1•r..,_.,, 4

,\'\ TllO '\ )

I'

111,(.ll\\ 110'.. \\" 11/J

IU'

\1t\ R t\'\O

LI ' I ' \I

,,//

JO )

llu,. \d ( luh
li.1'1.lll ( lub 4.

J;

illlil

l\l \ l , I \\

lw11ru11 : ·

'\c\\m.111 ( lul&gt; 4:

\I IC II \I L \ I \/ I.I I
\t \ I I fl \ I \ 11&lt; \

.. ,h """""'" "' 11/

,/.- J1ul .~r.ir,:·

Ii.d un ( lub I, l; '&gt;.u cn' ( luh 2; lntr&gt;.
'&gt;utdnll I. l m11h.1ll 2. J\.i,k,·du ll I.

~:
\\'II I I \ \1 \1d ,\ I I IU Y
'0&lt; l\I

''1"

;;:,tt1

11

k1111:.dm11 jm

1 I Ulll R'I

'&lt;II'-&lt; I

11

m1r//1."

Culun1.d ''"'"'P h.no Id.

4: lrcn"h
\ dclph1 ~. l, 4; \01111~
l&gt;cmo,r. llh. ( luh .:!. \; l11ttrfr.tt rmt\

&lt; l11h

I.~.

( uu111..1l

lu ll

~.

\,

I

I;

·~. lntr.I. I ootlull \,
l''&gt;(, ', I

P" ) Oii

&lt;11\

.. .,.",,. \

\OCl\I
,,

11/1 ' ' )

I)

&lt;.I'' 1: \l

""'

b1•

II ..

1, tJlllC

/c /11gmc
1111,, 1\d ( lub I. !, I,

Hl'\l,I \\

IC,,,, '"'' "'

~nh

\\11 11 \\1 \J,&lt;&lt;)R \i\CI\
1011''0 '

\k( 1\R T l

&lt;.KJ I '1

I \\\ RI'\( I

\ k C.Jl \Il l

\tll'&lt;l

/ti.tr/ ..

1 ..... &lt;.11, 11

"'/ f ,ll 1

c m1u,frr1.'./ of
( ulun1.1I '\cw4i I. 2. \;
) ""

111)

sp1 n

't.'W\

hl'5 ;."

Id. 1.

I nsl"h ( lub I, \', I'. 4, ( brcnd on
( lub 4; Cl.1rcndo n 1, 4; ( 1.1li.1r&lt;h !,

;_ -1: I rc.:ni.:h ( luh ~. \, 4: (,crm.1n
( l uh \,·I: ColoniJI Pl.1n.·r ~ I, 1., \, 4;
'lprin~ R.,., u1.· ;

ROUI I{ l

\I,'\ \Ill

\\ \ RR I '\ \ l l .\ 1\ 1 R

Ul:"\(, I l \\t l\l'\
00

l\111J

\\ 1111 \il 'I

,,,,,{ Cf·1tr/4 OllJ."

II.ind 2; llr.1" ( ho11 4: l\11,
l, 4 .

110 1'\ I

··He b11g/i/ ,,,,J '"' 1ul."

\d, Cl uh

42

''/

/,ft

"'" f

)tJll

0.'11J111lll ils."

( I n1.1l ''."' !; ~prn1 h ( luh I.
l 1 .....1,. ) , Pl11lu,nplH- ( luh : \o....tolo~~
( luh ; ( 111.n,h 1. ·1 Jl'l'. \ Pre.•, 4,
l11tr.1, I nuth.111 1, 4,

l l.\RR \. \l,\R I I'\
l'lt i...\1111.

f'\,

•• I//

(,1 ' ' K \I
11

tf/ /.,

U\ '1' 1 \\

11 ,//."

,\1 1 RI I&gt; \lcC Al I R I Y

�The Class of 1950
l&gt;.\\'ID \II RRll 11
\I'\ I H II I:\;

··I ht

bttHllt H

~

1011'- \II Rill \\I

\ I \ 111 l \I \I It'&gt;

of th,

ll

or/./

IS

mz

hH

JIJu11/J4 rs.''

Uf,&lt;.tl\\110'

''/ntd/1~111u

&lt;.1 "\IR\I

Hl\l'l''

ub11c

J:ll ''

H

)ti/I

urr

/.1/"

( ulom't I d1t11r a ( lut:r ;, I .\\~Hit I d.
-1: ( ulonul 'C.'\\' ' , :\c''' I J. \:
\l.l11.1;:111g I d. 1; "ip..t111,h ( 1uh I: (,i.:r111.111 ( luh i.. \
P \: '&gt;.uc.·n, 4, '&gt;c'-.
'
I; ( lwnlc.1dcr l; lnirJ \"!tbJll
2. l, ll .1,~clh.111 I. 1&lt;x&gt;tb.tll l; \lphJ
1'111 Omc);.I ;, 4; ( o loni.d J&gt; l.ncn I. 4.

l"rc.t,,

~.

\; l'i.. lc,t.:opc ( luh :.

I I&gt;\\ \RI&gt; \111'Ll.\1' 1
Uf,(,JI \\110'

!"'I\( 1101(.)(,\

",\ i.:.ood ht .11 / \ u or//, go/.f."
\p.11mh ( luh 2. \; I rrnch ( lub I. !.
I
1'r.1 d '
Pi,tul ( luh \; S1.•nior

I R \ '- C I &lt;; \I II&gt;&lt;.! I )
p,,(. ltOl U(, \

I ' Ill&lt; Ul 1

.. /,111• '"""

(" c.I ( lnh

JO\

/I)

ftfc,"

//,\

I; P1ndor.tn .:?,

\, -4.

C f.l,, Pn· ...

1101\1 RI
I "\Ill&lt; 01 f

\l(ll 1:\ 1 Y. IR.
HC«.H 'Jl"\c,

.. /Jin~ ,,,,,/ grm,/nf'' mz

)fJll ...

,\1klph1 4: Jiu-. ,\d, (lab l.
4:
P1n loppll·r, ~. \, -t; rr.tck I. 2;
111&lt;1.1. l ow•th.111 \, 4, J\.t,kctlull l. &gt;.

I IU Ill RI&lt; I\ \IOJ{l, \ 'I I \I IH. \

··111•

'lH I \I

hJ~

J

'

'&lt; I

I

m;rr) bc.u/."

'°'11(10!0).:~

( luh 4: I n:nc.:h ( luh -· \;
l mtl·d \\ orld l ·nil·r.tll\h, \c.·~ "t \ ,

&lt;h.ur. 4• lntc.·rnnum.tl Rc.·1.Hu1n' ( luh.
Puhl1ut\· l&gt;irt:ctor .!, )n:. \, \. Prt·'·
4; \lpl;., Ph i Om,·~.1 4; l111r.1. l·•"•t
h.111

J) \'\II I

\ll ' l 1 .\:\I

l\,\IUI \R \ \ll' IUl \)

I 'IJh 011
0

l\11,.

"-I \l, \M. \

/f1

h

/111/ of

( lub 4, ll.1.:,•\'1.1

\d

fm

P.1ndor.1n' 1
2, 1, '&gt;&lt;·&lt;

&lt; luh

'c.'\\l1L1n

(

/111.

o,I

I rt.\\.

\,

uc.\

/1111,i:,h/, r • •,

4.

'• -4; P.11u.lor.1n' \, 4 .

\\II I I \\I ()''-!II I

P''&lt; 1101

t/J •

"\ 'linlu~\ ( luh

t, .J.

'-()J \'-I&gt;

ROll l ll I \
111,&lt;.tl \\110,

" c),

I \I I '

••t !01 • /,,,,~ life 1111/, r .'/1.111 J1.~'·"

om1d) ."

1'11\\\'I

"\\ '1

u

I'\

\l&lt;ll'I

t/I ''·"

11fm11

\OCl\1

)our

\(11'.'.(I

/,·,\un· ••

(J&lt;.'rnun

I: '&gt;r.11rnh ( lub I. l;
luh ". ')e,.·( \, -I

I' \\(.)l'.\11

I' \t,J I\

ROlll RI I' \I I '\( \ll

\ t IJ

'"I h1l

1

!.

'&lt;I

m') humor.·

( horu'
C.Ice ( luh &gt;. 4. I n·nch
C luh 1, I
lt.1 11.111 ( lub I; 'lr.1&lt; k ;,
~: l'i&lt;tul ( luh. \c..·c..
l r'--'J'. 4: \prin~

43

,,,,,,,(), '''

l'\\( llOfO&lt;.\

(

--,

k111111

111}

&lt; luh \.
ii 1,k,·tlull ••
(,(·rm.111

ftfc

fi

\~.tpc.·.t1a

cI

II ,

1:

I nl r .i.

�========~==The
ROHi RI Pl RI I\\!
Ul'&lt;,ll\\t JO:'\

\OCl\1.

Class of 1950

1 R \'\"II' \ I'll Pl 0\\
\lll~&lt;l

HSm.tll t/1111}!.' ,,,,,k_,. ha\t' u:c11 /1ro111/.''

f '-Ill&lt; 01 ~

f,l'\;Jl\\I

r•(}ur ho/1t'\ ,1r1

Hl'tl,1\~

t1'1dt t'Yl'd ••

1\m. \J. &lt;!uh I. 2, \, -I, I. \.

lull 2, I,

\I \RIO

&lt;11.\RI I'&gt;

&lt; \ ' ''0\J&lt;,t.. \

&lt;.I

l'li'i' ll It&gt;

'-1 t\I

ll.1'~&lt;1

\\ 11 I L\\ I R I I ll

1 l'\l:'\1"

.. r h, 1 J,, ""' ,,,,_ ..
l\u,. ,\J. ( lub
(,oJ1.1rJ,
( .1p1. l.

i,

I; '\cw nun (

l'rn

-I.

&lt;.! R
L:'\10'

IHlllllU RI I&lt; 1111
\l I \10' t

(,f ' ' K \I

··r,,,.,

m"" o/ Jhrm.''

Jim . •\cl. ( lub !, I. 4;

~. Trc.1\. '· 4.

1'111

1011'\\0 '

&lt;II\

" // ,- lr111k&lt; cf/It/,

Tupplcr '

RROI )J RI( " (,I OR&lt;,J. R(),\( 11
.H(O\.J, 11 '-&lt;•

•· /''1,· u ~1' of our l1jr n of

''""·

.\Oll"fh..tn \'c.·1cr~n\

.1

111

')OCl\l

m ngli ,/

( omr·nittc..·c..·. 1

l, 4.

Pub. llir

USG !.

ROl\I RI RODC,J RS
I '\;J)l(t.&gt;11

P"i\(lhUO C,\

.. r1'.11 n, r /11111g 1111111 of mrmor). "

nu,,

-1.

I l OY D R(l'&gt;'&gt;
Hl:\(,11\ \lH.&gt;'

.. \l.i//1 n

t.l,lk\l

of

!ht\

\II&lt; II \IL RL'OIK
Hl"il,1'1 )

('llH '/11&lt;"'1&lt;, "

of

1111·11."

.\d, ( luh I, i. I, 4: lkt.1 (&gt;.1mm.1 °''·~
nu

r,.11011."

\lll '\CJ

tbr1111gh //,,• dN.f,

'\c" m.111 Club 1, 4:

I \l&lt;O, J R

C,l,IR\( 'UL\l'I ''

uobfr

\\ 11 l L\ \1 RIG'\ I Y
HL\l,I \\

111,(,ll \\l TO.,

.. rr.~J.t ·11/ ff,,. fail

I,

\I D RI II

\f'K f '\(,\

"/11111

lub I. 4:

) ; (, &gt;If

!&gt;C IL'( l

.~asp."

l '-..:Ult 011

A&lt; lOL'' II'&lt;•

·

�The Class of 1950
,\Rrlll'R Jt)fl\K
Hl,C.11 \ \ t I•''
r•

\f )

1lf1/

111/11.f'

,\:-\1110'\)

l'\'I

/11\

111

.. /1.1

11:·

Iii\

&lt; 11&lt;.ll

/till'

tl&lt;.'1

11.lfur,·. •

Hlll:V"ill'

l''\ C 11&lt; &gt;I

11/1

IR.
'&lt;II' &lt; J

&lt; 11'

..( ), "h.11 /, .1r11111.;\',1nil\ l\.1,h1h.1ll I. 2. ).

101 I'\ '&gt;\I I \1\11

.. ,,,,,k,

.11/ nprr-1111g."

I

Pl I 1 R \ \ llO\\ I I /,

\\(Cl)

Bl 't.I I \ \I I 0 :-..;

"1hr ,u/mn

'Ill

\ I \'\I I )

/\,

\ \I 1\1\l R)

oc.)

\( &lt; Ol 'tJ,c,

111.rt1ll1."

..,
llu&gt;.
.'.?.

1111/

1,I/ """

\ d. Club .:!. l,

\ ,,,,,./,"
,

'""'''h ( lub

'·

IC,'\ \ZIO \ \ I{ \l I '\l)

\I I Ill ll \ \ '\C I &lt;;
C)O\J

'\1111

&lt;l'.'.lt{

J

Hl,f'\l"I'

"\11111 u/ ;.:11tr 1/1 dn I lrar11111g."'

Jiu,, ,\.1. ( luh. ~. '· 4: .'-&lt;"m.111 ( lub
" ;, 4; C1olf l l'lm 1," \, 4, { tpt
2: li11rt. \otth.tll I, 2. l.

I I )) I I 11

\ 1\ RII

I '\:l&gt;l&lt;Ol 1
'\/11 \

~c

,\ I I \

P"l'IC 1101 O( 'i

l t I)

1'/1 I I"\

/,11/

II

H

/10/,nf)

U fl1l/1J1I.

R Jc 11 \ R ll "l 0 I I
\C&lt; Ol :-.;Jf'\,(

I \kl\ 1111

'"It 1&lt; "

r_re,1'

mo 11111g:·

&lt;..J,,Jc.len &lt; •r1.. IL· 1. \, ..i. l"rcas. .:!.

45

c.I ' I H. \I

'"//,; /J.H

Hl''f' l "

1'11'1/.''

Hw,. \d, t lub !, I 1..:.1,, ... ; ~C,\JlUrl
( Ii.ah \, 4; Prn I oppll'r'i \, 4.

1 111 &lt;ll lOlll

\C \I\ l'\/I
'Of.. I \I

HI' ,11\\llU'

'&lt;II'\\ I

.../he /1 ''"' 1111./ 1flfm11111' 11/ of /11ue."
l1Jli.1 1 ( luh 2, I, ·•, II •chJll ~. \, 4.

111 I I

~I

\( l I I )

l J:-.;c II \M 10'
"1\.110

I

i;li Ii C luh '. '&gt;.

r
}.

,1

11 ,.

�------ -=:=- ==== ==== ==The Class of 1950
IR '\I '&gt;T \\ 11 1 l.\\t )IR '\I l K)
:".I

\Ot0~.&lt;11'

"/ 11111

c/t11d1/i1

\tCOL,11'&lt;

R,\f Pl I I
Jtlll''",:'I.:

/be• ~/11111~ -.111,/ f1rr oj

J

1/,"

( nlon1. I '\cY. "'· (op\ I ,I I, "C\\ J J.
( oloni'l, l\u, \tf:r. 4. llu' .\J.
&lt; luh I, 2. \, )l'L 4: (,0J1.1rd 4:
'\t'\\ lll.lll ( hrl·
I ·t·.1.... 4

.. !fr "·"
\.11&amp;.'ll' ~.

'&gt;111 \R

t 11 'I

·1\1111 \t \JI&lt;'
d1\/1011d

;, 4:

mH/h.''
U.1,kl·th.111 \.

lo

lntr.l.

4.

!'\UL \1. '&gt;111111)
B\ 111

(,J :'\I fl \I

ROii! R I' I' '&gt;I II 11 II I
Hl-'J' I ' '

J)
I ,c,11-,11

,,,, iii.ti /111/,
'.111.lfr '""""
/)'s /,, "''' "
lni;lrh &lt;luh I, I, &lt;l.t•cmlon &lt;lub,

""llri11

\ . Pr 1..·\. 4 , L' \\ I

JOll' K. '&gt;1111 I ll\
CI I '

I Ill !&gt;IRICK \I lll'K&lt;&gt;

C \'I I I

··rt'"

u ,,,

) ottr

mol11

\C
1'. . .

''\o ,/1111J/rf1,/ '111 '11)
~.lll'O'

1\1,(,lf \\110'

•t.\hdl ,, f

,/,1111 I"

11

l1~h1

1111 d\lltt

?''

'\C 11 '&lt;I

''I 11k, f 1111t' lo /•1111,,·. 1'

( olonul '"'" 4; lhh. \d. ( luh I

(,t:rm.111

I,\". l'rn. 4
lr«r"h &lt;luh
nun ( 1uh \, 4: (,ol1.1rd, l 1 4; (nlo111,1I
PLlH:r' I, -4. \t.·c:. ~. Pre.... \, Srr111r;

I ootb.111 2: ,\lph.1 1'!11 Omcp 4; Ai:.1
l'l'.lll' 4.

I,'""

H.t.•\

UC

&lt;lub

1. ").ucn,

.z.

3. 4. lntrJ.

\,

1011 '\ 11

'&gt; '\tWKO\\ '&gt;KI

ll \l 1'1 1 R \) '&gt;Olll\I R

\&lt;.( OL' II"\&lt;.

''II u '" ) m11

\.I. ( Juh

lhl'.

/d'"'"' ,., .''

I.

Rll II \RI&gt; l

WI \Riii &lt; K
'\}( I ' l

"I ti /hem /1,nt

U ind
( of(llHJI

\

\I ''" f(11 \I )Jl·rn'
'\l""' 4. \ 1.._11&gt;10_~, ( luh

Pr\'' 4

ll''l HH

l l :i...t I

\C

/••I) .Jt1,/ /11111."

\lpJ1.1 Phi

l JCUUJl

.. •

()1111.·,;1

\,.;.ll'l' \11'•

',

\,

&lt; 11 \

.. Rf'/w/1/um
4 •

~:

JOIJ''O'

4.

Pru

~

&lt;.J '1 fl\I
n11111&lt;JI

mdk.t"

l\L\l:'\1 ' '
11

/,

~\."

1\1 '· \d. ( !uh ~, I, 4: Pin "l uppl&lt;·"
4, \lpl1.1 l'hi Omc);.1 \, 4; f'i,tol ( luh
·l.

4

46

~,

l,

4, ')ci.. \, 4.

II

COUllC'if.''

'&lt; I

�The Class of 1950 ===========
JOll'\ I'.

~II\\

l&gt;O:\ \I

\RI"

(J"\tf\\I

1 ' 11 RI \ k . I '

Hli'l'I''

lo •"1' c oursr of /w/1&lt; \ '
lh1'. ,\d. ( luh 4. (n1lurd' l. 4: lntr3.
'wf tl&gt;Jll I. 4. '&gt;mmr ( IJ" \'. Pre,.

.,.turn

I)

)TOL l
I '\:C,J hll

I "\Uh 01 I

'"/ 111uk.e

111111

~on.I 1111

/i/Ja."

\, 4. &lt;. l.irm,lun ( lub

I n~J.,Ji ( lub

4: .\~.lpl·.H\' \, 4,

Pn·'· '·

4: l1ucdr.Hl·rmt v ( ouni.:il 4

Ill R '\/\RI&gt; 'JUI l IV'\:\
&lt;.I ' I I\ \I

Hf:\(,11\\t10'

ui,dom I ,honld .Hk. //&gt;)
1111' \d ( luh I, ~. I.

"'/11

\\' 1111\\I I&gt;. 'iUlllll

IH.•'l ' f \ \
0

llil1Ut'.

'

\RlllLR \\. \llRl'IL'i

111

1'11

111r. .,

( ollq.!L" ( h 11r I. 2. \, 4. Pn·... 1.:
\lc n·, c,b· C luh I. ~. l. 4, l'r&lt;''· 4;
\1.tdn.~.1J .,111i;.-r• I. I. 4; l11~Ji,h (J.ib

; . 4.

"\\' t

ulwl

k.11ou

tt1

hut knnn nnl

1111

uh.ti Ut' llli.I\ bt•"
I rl'lh.:h ( luh I, ~. \: 'I dt.•,\.upL' ( luh :!.

l&gt;O "'\ \I ll .\ \ I I\) '-\\ 11 I'
\tHl\I

11 \tlK.\

C.Ol I l&gt;\IH.HHl, I'\,

.. \1 "'''

\ {11 ' t i

Hl,(,Jl\\llll'

"T/,J u

/\

\~.1J'\'.lll\

11

ll

\.

4.

\(Jl,(J

/\./om born of u/, lier.••

I re.I'. 4; R.1d10 ( luh 4 ; Spnni;

RL'\la· '·

\\ \'\I)\ I'&gt; I \llROOI\ )\\II

"[ .lo ,,,,,;," lo b.
f

·r

J :'\{,(hit

1 I \tUt \
1n1

more

ih.111

\l'Clll"

( l.ircndon C lub \ 4, ~n· \: ( !Jr,·11
don \, 4. \l~r. I d 4; ( olonl.,t \, 4.
\J..k,·-u p I d. 1, 'irnior I d. 4: I n):h'h
( luh 4, '&gt;c, 4: hcnd1 ( luh 2. 1. 4.
( u. J ditur ' ( "" i.·r ni Jhhd 4 ~ \~.1rt·
.tn., \, 4. rluli.Hh 4.

&lt;YRll

111()\I\~

' ' \JO"'\'\

l Al\ I'\ Rl''i'il 11
\\ 11 Ito.I\ 1, \KKI

I ' \ ' ( 1101 O•'

P\

do."
I rl"IH.. h ( luh I. 2. '· I rt'.t.,, .:!; (,oh
k1wu

H)'ou

ub.11

11&lt;1/

)OU

.ird., 1. z. \, 4, ln:\"i, •; l111r.1 lont
lull I, 4, l\.1,kctlull I. I 'iolth.111 I.
4. \ ~.tpc1n\ \, 4: \t.uoon Kt·\' \

·1 1Rtn

1110\l\'i I

11&lt;.l llR

Ul'\1'1''

&lt;.1,IK\I

I 'DH 011

''[ ''"' ''J\/11/ lo br11r o/ //J) rt11d111n, ."
l\ u,. \ d. ( luh ! . I, •: Pin Tol'plcr•

uould llrtuk /,,. '"'' "k111x."
\.ldpl11 :. 1, 4; 11.N·iull I. 1. L'&gt;&lt;• I.

")011

I, 4 .

I I \\I'&gt; I I I

f(l\I J&gt;l I \\II I 1.\\1 I R \Ill:(( 0
\,)( 1\1

"//,- 1,J/, \IOI jl.11/) uJ..t/ "" 11ti11.J I I "
It.dun ( 1uh 1. 2. IR&lt; .:: (,uh.tr,h 1.
I, ·I.

'1 7

IR 11'1'

\C I I ' ' J

,,,,,,/m1"

.,\\ l

t/

Uo/

,,,

fflllJ:

I

tll

('fltl

�The Class of 1950
1011' II. I RU51 IR
Hl,l l(J\\llO'

ROii! Rf'

&lt;.

T) !\R I \:(,

'\(COL' II'&lt;•

··\our fttr1/~ i/.1J1c tbrouf!,b \Oil
Jiu,. \d. ( lub 2, I, 4.

\\ II l I \\I II. I U 11111 !.

'"/ JP .ik.

llti 11lfJTt

u

Jh111

1.11 • ..

b.r/

m)

11\)\\ \IUJ 11
111111./

\... '01 IJ

"f I 11S t.i/k 111 goo.I
( luh \, 4,

1rnr I."

( JCflll.111

\ddpl11 2 • .. 4.

Rllll\RI&gt;

&lt; \ \'

l'I f'J:'\

(.l,IR.Al

···11,, co11i 'n11liu'1 oj
\dclph1

~\\I

\fl( II \I I

I 'U It 1.l l I

hul

1•111,

... \\ 1'

\I J.\I f'
'&lt;

\Ot I \I

j1i.h/

l1111n

\;

l'in

ml

I upplc1' -t.

I ! I\\ 001&gt; \\'\GO" R
II '.\: &lt; I

htrr i1ml

g.u11c .·'
lt1 l1•11 &lt; lub I. 2. I, l'rc,, '· ( luh
'\1,,•\\•pJpcr \ "o". Id \: I rcn1.:h Cluh
I.-· ;, Pn·o;. I; Ph1 'i1~nu lot.1 '• 4:
'&gt;p.1•11,h Club 2, I; L'\\I : IRC_I,
J1f1u»111J

l&gt;ORO J'I IY \\Al KJ.R

( 01 '\1 , , ,

~· 1

"i0( l.\I

'f'c"k 1n

111)

\( ll '.'\(I

1111cltnl.111d111g

i11·

\lruch mr"

'&gt; ,..,.,1"f:) ( luh
'&gt;p ni'h ( luh 2, 3;
l&gt;1 m \1.111' \. ·1 n•.t, 4; Pin T opplc.·r,
I. 2 . l: l ntr.1. )u thall 2, I.

\\ 11 l l,\\I 111 IC Ill R \\' ,\ 11 1:\(,

\ I \ I \I

1011"\\0'°

u, \ J/11Y of ki11./111·l~ /111/ l/lltt1.:.11rH
.\utiln h·r ''
( nlo111. 1 '\c.
4; ( .oloru'l 4: ( Lln·n
dun
I d 4: I n,:li•h ( !uh \: (,er
nun ( luh I, 4; :'\n,nun ( lub \, 4:
&lt;l1n:ndup. &lt;luh '· 4; P.tn.hrtn" 2. \,
\. Prl·'· 4: ( ol11ni.1l Plnl°f' .!. ), 4:

,. I l e• '' ,, l/torl."
,\ddphi \, 4; It.iii.in &lt; luh ;: \'.ir,it,.

0

\\'

\OC I \I

CIT\

'- J l 1&gt;11 \

l\.1H•h.1ll I , ~. \, 4. ( tpt. I; \".tr\it}
11.nk"tbJll 2, I, 4; U\l, !'r~J" 1.

\lu''" f11r \lodc.·rn .. \, 4.

\\ II I l'&gt; I . \\ \R '1 R

\\1111\\1
~&lt;.II

''I

" / i1m 11111ch l&lt;Vi 1 rt1!11rous. 11
\11\l.'

-·

f ( huru ..

\

~. tl. '

l

ill

C ,Jo111,t

pl

\l:

l•

.!, ;, ; :\h-'1°.s

4:

4;

lub
luh :?.

(,) l.·c..· (

\, A, (1l'lfl .1n (

\\;JPl.'H15 \: (

"iJ'~rm~

Ri;,ui:

olon

Hl 1 111 RIOKD,

\\'I Ill R, .IR.

'·

J,

&lt;.J "\I lt\l

/m

lll"\l'\:1"

1J,;, ,, 11bl11rg.''
\,uli1rJ, I, 4: '&gt;p.111"h ( luh I. 2; flu,.
\d. ( luh I, 2. '· 4: I .1,k 1, 4;
\lph.1 Pin Om~p '· 4.
"/

tll/I

110/

\.

48

RL'l'l''

//unt1!/•li:'

IPl I\; 11
)011,,0,

&gt;#\L11n

\ \.'\ (,()IU&gt;I :-\

&lt;IT\

1b111x,

I&lt; O'\'.\l\fl( \

of umtlJ'

( o loni.11 .'\c\\ \ 4.

mrmrn) ''

�The Class of 1950 == == == == == =
IC\I Pl! \\ I! I I rl \IOR I

JOI!'\ \\I lX.1
\ J \ t \I

C.RI I ' '

" \// 1&lt;1111111• 1 .1p...1k of /&gt; 111."
\.c\\~ ~.

( olo111al

\:

,\dclphi Pre.·,, 2,

ln1r.1 'i&lt;&gt;ftb.111 1. h&gt; 1thJll
\\ ' inter Spnrt' ( lub \,
1. 4:

! I \R \10~

I. \\ ll ( 0\
f 1 'IJ\\I

Hl\l,I\\

/•,tr I tu fort 1111, 's

ft11-

l'oppl&lt;·r , ~. \, Pr&lt;·'· 4: llm.
1'111
( luh \ 1 4.

\d.

'' 1 o

\I \R \

I I I!'\ \\II I! \\I'&gt;

.. \I,

ti"""' ,,,

C. \\!I Kl()\\'

(,I OR&lt;,J
Ille.Ill \ '\D

1/ uJ•I ,,,,

··1 "'"

111'\&lt;,ll \\\ O'\

m)

/1{,q

.~n111/. •'

I/, 1/

(I. rc.:nJon ( lub l, ~i:1.: 4:
( l.tn:ndon 4; 'tJ'.ll11'h ( luh 2 • .;, 4;

( '1ort1' ~;

;a/I be w."

11 \ROI I&gt; 0. \\ 111 '&gt;0'\
\( &lt; (ll

1 '\C.l l\ll

.111g. I •f•.tk~ ...

1

. A.111./,,1

f\

an.I

JIHl11 t

(,11IJrn ( irdc 4;

b

l&gt;.1

Ill/

'\ 11'\t,

b ,,, ..

\lph.1 1'111 Orne)!.• ·I:

llu,. \d ( lub 4.

4: ( 1-cd ( luh I. \'.
Pre,. I; R.id1&gt;1 ( luh ). 4; Coloni1 l
Pl.tn.·r, J. 2 4. '-;prin..: Rt.·vuc.· \.

[ 11£11,J. ( luh '

.. .
~
J

'&gt;\\IL: ll

IR\'\K IRIDIR l&lt;K \\1:-\D l'ICll
&lt;,1,lh\ J

1\\t\1( \

Hl\f'l "

-·\I 1ghf) ' ' " n:.:,//, , .1•1 /.q '" u ''' 1/\ ...
\lplu l'hi ()nwi:.1 4; l\m. ,\d. ( luh
'· 4.

\\l'\llR '.&gt;111 '\
\1\1111 \1 \ I I&lt;\

Bl:'\t.11 \\t10'\

'°l

/lfJlf

l/j

ht•

Hrfll

j

II

\: I n·111.. h ( luh I. 2; C.c.·r
\, 4; 'lclnl'oJ '&lt;' ( luh 2;
( luh
Ill.Ill
\.w:n' 1. 4; lntr.1 l\.l,ki..•th1ll 4: l&gt;1cH1\•

( oloni't

'I 1 l l\, '. Pr"''· 4:
I. ~. '· ·l ..,l\fllli.:

'1.111,,
ff\

(

11,\ ROI I&gt; II. \\ 001&gt;
I 'llltOl I

O~

(

uloniJJ

RC\'\ll'

I \ ~ J. I \DI

~

&lt;l'l~\I

HL'l'l ''

.. /l11/ "'" '''" 11dl "'" g,, ...

t.oldcn C irdc .?, \, Pn.·,, 4; (J«1li.1rJs
4: \lph.1 J'h1 Omci:.l I, 4: Jiu,. \,I
t luh 2, \, 4: l..1nH·r.i ( luh :; ; In a.
.:\rm,, '-lcni •r
.ll
l\.bkcth.111 \; &lt;;~t

Cl.1".

49

Pl.n ..

' ·

�Junior Class Officers

President

Donald Clark

Vice-President

Ann Brown

Secretary

Edith Garson

Treasurer

Edward Ziska

Sergeant-at-arms

John Kane

50

�Sop hom ore Class Of fice rs

Presid ent

Wolfg ang Kriegs mann

Vice-P reside nt

Vincen t Jackso n

Secret ary

Barba ra Me ake r

Treasu rer

Thom as Zowin e

5I

�Freshman Class Officers

T11&gt;1

~C111, Th11

\t.\'-, P1111 R,

President

Cor ""'

'11011

.nr

Lawrence Pitier

Vice-President

Helen Moffatt

Secretary

Nardino Tedeschi

Treasurer

Patricia Colvin

Sergeant-at-arms

Harold Bateman

52

�The Colonial
Night Scene at Christmas

���c
H
A
N
N

JE
L
4

56

�The bulletin board outside

the student lounge is a

daily record of activities

of all college .. . .

ORGANIZATIO NS

�AGAPEANS

ROW 1
G. GEDNEY
W . SWIFT
MR. LUTZ
H. BRIGHAM
B. FIELD
G. BADGER

ROW 2
D STOUT
J. BREWER
F. FREER
T. TAKENAK A
R. SPEARBE CK
H PEARSON

The Agapea n Club, formed in the
spring of 1949, chose "Our Protest ant
J listory " as their theme for the I 94950 college year. In the fall, Dean Bartle
spoke to the group on "The Origin of
Protest antism " and Mr. Luu talked
on "Origin s and Ins ti tu t ions of Early
Protest antism ." Dr. Brown of the
English Depart ment was guest speake r
at the club's Christm as party.
Spring :ictivi tics include a square
dance, spaghe tti supper , and picnic.
George Badge r
Preside nt
Barbar a Field
surer
ry-Trea
Secreta
an
Chairm
m
Progra
Mary Ann Nagorn y
Shirley Davis
an
Chairm
tion
Recrea
an
Donald Stout
Chairm
ty
Publici
rs
Adviso
Faculty
Mr. Lutz, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
58

�JEWISH FELLOWSHIP
President
Vice-Presiden t
Treasurer
Recording Secretary
Correspondin g Secretary
Sergeant-at-A rms
Parliamentar ian

Ben Horowitch
Bill Kriegsmann
David Stone
Rhoda Becke r
Jane Forest
Bob W e intraub
Joe Marks

The J ewish Fellowship first made its appeara nce
on the campus of Triple Cities College in the
spring of 1949 ,vhen a steering committee of stude n ts met with Rabbi Jacob J f urwiu in Miss
P lankinton's office. Tt was decided to form a Jewish student organization at TCC in order to foster
social and cultural needs of the Jnvish student\

and to initiate and promote berter relationships
:111d understand ing with the other religious organi/at1ons.
The spring term ended before the group was
able co do more than hold an org:111i:tational meeting of students and make a start towards ca r ryi ng
out it!&gt; proposed functions.
In the fall of 1949, Rosalyn Feinberg was elected ro the presidency of the orga ni:z.ation and a
committee was appointed for t he pu rpose of
drawing up a constitution to form the backbone
of the club. The last meeting of that semester was
highlighted by :111 informal discussion led by Rabbi
Hurwiti', spir itual head of the Temp le Israel in
Binghannon, and a discussion of proposed activities for the spring term. One of the main tasks
undertaken by the group was to be the wholehearted cooperation with the other religious and
social clubs in order Lo successfully further the
\\' . . S. F. drive.

ROW 1

I. VEIT
C TERRIS
R FEINBERG
D STONE
G ROSENBERG

ROW 2
W KRIEGSMANN
MR . MANN
B. HOROWITCH
A. WEISS

ROW 3
R PERL
L. PITLER
P FEFFER
J MARKS

59

�NEWMAN CLUB
ROW 1
J MALIK
V.. DINO
M BILOZ
ROW 2
D. LEONARD
E SERNECKY
R NOLAND
W MAHER
C DEWAN
T BEBEL
ROW 3
J 0 CONNOR
P GAFFNEY
M FERRARI
J LYONS
J THOMAS
D WALKER
J BOTTINO
J GRUSE
K HALEY
J KONIK
ROW 4
M PIZZILLO
C GRABOWS KI
J SILOS
R SINGEL
R DENNIS
E ARMSTRON G
W DONNELLY
J D. APRILE
R KANE
B ZAMPI
J DYER
MR SILVERTON
G. DOYLE

The Newma n C lu b of TC ( W~l\ formed in October of 1948 w promote ( atholic Culture and
Catholic I cllowshi p among stude1w , of the C .ttholic f.1ith.
The purpose of the club is to deepen the spiritu.11 and enrich the tempor.11 li,·es of its membe n
Presiden t

William Mahar

Vice-President

Conrad Dewan

Recording Secreta ry
Corresp onding Secreta ry
Treasur er
Faculty Advisor s

Roberta Noland
Theresa Bebel
Ernest Serneck y
Mrs. Perry, Mr. Silverto n

through a balanced program of religiom , intellec tu.11, :rnd social ac ti vities. The club :tl~o attempt s
to assi'&gt;t the college and the students in ma111rain1 ng a common u 111011.
Chaplai n of the Club is I ather Charles Aylesworth, P:tstor of C h ri'&gt;t the King Church , who
wa'&gt; appoint ed by the ;\fo.,t R.eYerend \Xf;dtcr J\.
Forey, Bishop of the Diocese of Syracui&gt;e.
During the F:tll term the l\'ewm:t n Club sponsored 3 Commu nion Bre:tkfo st :tt the Amer ican
Legion clubhou se at which Endicot t l\l:tyor Raymond Lee and Endicot t Daily Bulletin Genera l
Manage r Byron French spoke.
Among the other activitie s sponsor ed by the
club during the year were retreats, picnics, dances,
and musicals .
60

�GOLDEN CIRCLE
Harold Wood

Pres:dent

William Hebenstree t

Vice-Presid ent

Elaine Johnston

Secretary
Correspond ing Secretary
Treasurer
Faculty Advisors

Lois Wood
Charles Auer

Dr . VanRiFer, Dr. Friedla ender

The Golden Circle Club, now in its third ) ear
as social club for the married students of TCC,
started the \'car off with its annual f Iallowe'en
party at Ba,rrlc J Iall. J\t subsequent meetings,
there were card tournamen ts, co,·ered dish sup-

pers, .rnd squ.1rc dancing. In the ~pnng months,
the club had its .111nu.1I picnic.
At Christnus, the club had a party for the
children of the couple\ who belong tO the club.
',1nt:i Claus, with an .1c,sist.111t from Dr. l ricdlaender, was welcomed by all the children.
Various members of the club also don.Hcd J
great deal of their time to help out the children
of the Susquehann :i \'.1lley J Jome. The men spent
man) hours painting the inside of one of the cottage~ while .1 group of the wives de\ oted much
of their time to making slip co,·er'&gt; to brighten
the in tcrior of the rooms.
At I a'&gt;ter time, the club also prepared I aster
b.1skets to uke to the children at the Home.

BACK ROW
MRS CHILDS
Mfi CHILDS
MRS. HALL
MR DICKERSON
MR HALL
MR DUNHAM
DR FRIEDLAENDE R
MRS. DURHAM
MR KRIEGSMANN
MR PETTYJOHN
DR VAN RIPER
MR SCOTT
MR. BOHUNICKY
MRS BOHUNICKY
MRS. AUER
MRS MCCAFFREY
MRS. ROBOCONTI
MR. WOOD
MR. ROBOCONTI
MRS FILETTO
MR . FILETTO
MRS. WOOD
FRONT ROW
MRS. DICKERSON
MR3. PETTYJOHN
MRS. KRIEGSMANN
MRS FRI EDLAEN DER
MRS VAN RIPER
MRS. SCOTT
ON FLOOR·
MR . WILLSON
MRS WILLSON
MRS . SEARLES

61

�PANDORANS
ROW 1
MISS PITEL
J GRUSE
N MOTTRA M
J THOMA S
ROW 2
M . ROUNDS
R NOLAND
V. COOK
S MULLEN
D WALKER
C BYERS
MRS . PERRY
ROW 3

I. CROSS
F KOZLOW SKI
J LYONS
J O'CONN OR
J BLESH
M . JIMENE Z
M BROWN
K HALEY
J D AP RILE
ROW 4
B MEAKER
MISS PLANKI NTON
H HUDDA
S DAVl .3
B FIELD
J RICKAR D
P BLISS
B. CARL
J BELLIN GER
P LAMB
N. COURTN EY

Presid ent
Vice-P reside nt

Dorot hy Walk er
Maril yn Brow n

Secre tary

Peggy Rounds

Treas urer

Rober ta Nolan d

Facul ty Advis ors
Mrs. Perry , M iss Pitel, Miss Plank inton

The P;1nd oran societ y was the fir t wome n's
5ocial club at TCC. l t was forme d from the original Coed Club of 1947. The first semes ter ~aw
the club partic ipatin g in a numb er of partie s and
dance s and a servic e proje ct which contr ibuted to
the chool 's Silver Servic e Fund.
In the secon d year of their existe nce, along

with many socia l activi ties, they spons ored a number of servic e projec ts, one of which netted a contribut ion of over three hundr ed dollar s to the loo!
Cance r Fund .
Activ ities in the social vein includ ed the maintena nce of their tradit ional line of partie s and
dance s such as the Carni val of I karts , the Sadie
Hawk ins parry , and the Sprin g Dinne r Dance .
This vear the Pando rans shove d off with a
dance at .the Bingh amton Coun try Club, servic e
projec ts, and anoth er Sadie Hawk ins dance . At
the third annua l Carni val of J !cart&lt;: on Febru ary
17, Maria Ji mcnc' I and Don Glove r were electe d
King and Queen . Maste r of Cerem onies Clark
Hung erford and Ruth Tuthi ll, who reigne d in
1949, were prese nt to crown the royalt y.
Also partic ipated in by the societ y durin g the
spring term were the \X/orld Stude nt Servic e Fund
Carni val Danc e and other coll ege functi ons.
64

�THALIA NS
T he 1949-50 Th al ian year bega n with a buffet supper for new
coeds . .. ru shing followed ... then the p icnic a t I-C Camp . . . "footba ll", square-d ancing, hot dogs a nd marshma llows. Soon there were
p ledge ribbo ns seen alt around . . . and i n October seven teen pledges
were received in a ca nd lel igh t initiation ceremony .
The first Annivers ary Dinner at Delano's was next . . . reunion
with charter members . Sa iens were guests at the C h ri'&gt; t mas party which
featured "atmosph ere" .. . mistletoe , ca ndlelight , soft music .. . and
"serenad ing".
After January finals came the supper-sk ating p~1rry at SI&lt;) Lake
. . . canasu, checkers, ping-pon g, dancing ... even skating.
A new semester began . . . rushing again . . . success . . . new
pledges . The March of Dimes dr i\·e started immediat ely. Plans for the
St. Pat's dance, Ki ll arney Kapers, jo int!) sponsored with President
Saiens, got underway ... committe es meeting e\·erywhc re Vice-President
discussed music, ti.cl_&lt;e ts, decor ations .. . and managed a Secretary
Treasurer
very successfu l ;1A:11r.
May was the occasion fo r the Tea for Senior \\!omen. Publicity
And finally the dinner-da nce ... a perfect way to comFaculty Advisors
plete a Sp r ing \\' eeke nd an d finish a year.

Ann Brown
Marilyn Cain
Norma Wood
Adele McDevitt
Carol Armstron g
Nardino Tedeschi
Miss Atchley, Mrs. Reps

ROW 1
P. GAFFNEY

T BEBEL
D. LEONARD
ROW 2
MISS ATCHLEY
A. McDEVITT
M CAIN
A BROWN
N WOOD
MRS REPS
ROW 3
E. CORWIN
C ARMSTRONG
N TEDESCHI
M FERRARI
M BRIGIOTTA
ROW 4
H. MOFFATT
E MISSAVAGE
W SWIFT
B JONES
L. AVERY
E. KNAUF
M PULS
B. HURLBUT
P. COLVIN
B ROOD
M BREWER

65

�ADELPHI
WO/NO

J Sl#f'HAI&lt;.

S S!fl/Vfl(

CHUM'.INF~'/J

1Y /}(}llN/ II )'

IV fU!!llll

ECAWN

HnOR.~l

0 LA///)/ R

RA.W

.! BURAN

H f!Oll!V' Y

RROOT

N Db.\ 'Wl

T TEKl(Y

flCASELLE

E ANTAL

-;§f'·
tr:l't•
l'lcCAFFllFT
AN/)

/)IN()

C CflAltfuXO

J W!Xl

tion awarded the largest sing le tu1t1011
schola rship offered b y a socia l c lub at
the coll ege. The awa rd was made to
.l anet Conklin of Bingham ton Centra l
I Iigh School.
To start: off their spr in g ;1cti\ itics
the club sponsored the Spri ng mix
held at the Casin o.

Adelphi societr opened the semester\ acti' itil's at Triple Cities Col lege
with ire; annu;1l rail mix. The dance
wa&lt;; .1 c;oci:d '&gt;ucce~s and accompli shed
the organi/at ion 's purpose of a reunion
of o ld st ude nt s and meeting of the
Ill'\\'.

I rcshmcn "ere entertain ed at an
open house at the J louse of Mills in
Occober, .111d Lner in the month, after
in iti.it ion ne" members were tre.ncd
to .1 'paghetti dinn~r.
In addition to these :•athcring s the
so('iCt) held 1 barn p.trt~ at the form
of .Jim '\orris, ne.tr Binglum ton, and
.1 cockuil p;trt) preceding the \listlctol' B.111.
\lemlx•rs u-,hcred .H the T V . Smith
lcctun:, and also the other cam pu s or~ani/,Hions in their Yarious ouses.
Adelphi w.1s active in intramur al
sports play ing football, basketba ll and
softba ll. In D ecember, the orga ni/a -

Presiden t
Vice-President

R. Kohnstam
W . Dino

Secretary

J. Canny

Treasurer

T. Bla uvelt

Corresponding Secretary

E. G avi n

Cha pla in

B. Mahar

General Officer

S. Steiner

Faculty Advisors
66

Mr. Swift, Mr. Pomeroy

�ADLOYHO
President

Richard Maples

Vice-Presiden t

Donald Seaman

Secretary

Clarence Ee ls

Treasurer

Michael Kearsy
Daniel O 'Conne ll

Sergeant-at-a rms
Faculty Advisors

Adloyho Men's C lub was formed in t he fall
term of 1949 for the purpose of furtheri ng fellowship, advancement and chool spirit among students. The originators of this club were :\1ike
Kearsy, Larry Pitier and Ben Eels.
The group now has forty members, is a member of the college Inter Fraternity Cou nci l and actively participates in sc hool .lffa irs. J\dloyho rook
part in the \\' .S.S.F. drive held this spring, be~idcs

Mr. Huke, Mr. Douglass

formulating plans for other college e,·cnts. The
group also attended a party with t he Dion) sian
society this term.
The club w.is represented b ran a\'er;1gc basketball te;1111 consisting of Capta in Mike Ke.usy, D:n e
Brown, John D.n i , John Kelly, 1\ng fcnclli, L1rry
Pitier, 1 lal J Icuog, an&lt;l l\'orm Sinander. 1\dlo) ho also entered a te:im in the in tr.1mural softb:ill
league this spring .

ROW I

D
D
R
G.
N

0 CONNELL
BROWN
BLAZSO
GEDNEY
SINANDER

ROW 2
C
R.
M
F
H

EELS
BOLLES
SEMANEK
GUTH
HERZOG

ROW 3
MR. HUKE
B. HOROWITCH
R. MAPLES
J . DAVIS
J KELLY
P. BARNES
M. KEARSY
B. NEWMAN
J . STRATES
C. RENDA
L PITLER
A FENELLI

67

�ALPHA PHI OMEGA

ROW 1
R.
R
R
R
W.
R.

CA RSO N
CRAPO
ROUNDS
RATH
FOSTER
ANDERSON

ROW 2
D LYLES
O KROEGER
H WOOD
MR 0 BRIEN
MR SILVERTON
MR HESS
MR PISANI
L LOVELAND
D MERRILEES
F MORGAN
ROW 3
H WILLSON
T JOHNSON
R CALVERT
M THALLINGER
J . CLUGSTONE
W WARNER
R. SPEARBECK

President Dick Rounds accepts the APO
charter from National Representative Dr. Ray
Y . Wyland at the induction services.
Preside nt
Richard Rounds
Vice-President
Richard Rath
Secretary
D. Bruce Ellis
Treasurer
Richard J. Crapo
Faculty Advisors
Dr. O' Brien, Mr. Hess,
Mr. Oser, Mr. Pisani, Mr. Silverton

Alpha Phi Omega bcc,1mc the firq chapter of
a national fraternil) organi1ed at TC.C when it
was forma lly inducted as Theta Kappa Chapter
on December 11, 1949.
Primarily :i senicc fraternity, Alpha Phi
Omega operates a travel bureau at vacation times,
conducts the lost and found service, with auctions
at interva ls, and aids the community in its Boy
Scout activities.
68

�BACCACIA
The first men's social group on the campus
organized in November 1946, Biccacia began
its third year of existence in September 1949.
This year they have carried on tradition by
sponsoring their fourth annual Gloom Ball
which comes the week before exams. This
event is the oldest socia l club sponsored affair
on the campus.
The Baccacians were also the first social
club to award a cash schoLirsh ip. The first
of these went to Gerry Gibbs of Kew Gardens, Long Island and thi~ ye,1r's award was
presented LO Barbara Kessler of Binghamton.
The proceeds from anothl'r d.rncl' ca lled the
Schol::trship Stomp arc used to c.1rry on this
scholarship.

Jn addition to these acti\ itic\ the club al~o
participates in college intramural ]e;1gues,
campus social drives and the usual club actiY1t1es.
Baccac ia men do their bit for the
Red Feather drive.

ROW 1
J
F
C.
W
A.
W
G
H.
H
H

BIGNEY
PERRICONE
CABRERA
HERCIGA
BROWN
BARNO
GIANAKOURAS
EMILIO
JOHANSON
WOLFSON

ROW 2
M. BURAN
C ABBEY
P FEFFER
E. CI NOTT I
R SCHWER
W . HORSEY
G. DOYLE
W KUCHINSKAS
ROW 3
R DOLAN
R CAREY
L. LAUDER
W . HOWARD
E KEAL
G ROUFF
R CLARK

69

�DIONYSIA
ROW 1
S

IVES

J. MADDEN
C ENGLISH
E. WAGONER
P. CHAMBERLAIN
S. WINTERSTEIN
J GORTON
R DICKSON
G BADGER
ROW

2

J. FINN
G. GEDNEY
W ARCHER
0 . KROEGER
T. TAKENAKA
V. CHRZAN
W. HARRISON
R. CALVERT
ROW 3
T. MAKRES
C . DEXTER
K. GIANAKOURAS
W. KRIEGSMANN
ROW 4
W

D
R

MFLIN~KY

PLATT
PE"RHAM

President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Sgt.-at-Arms
Advisors

S. Winterstein
P. Chamberlain
R. Dickson
E. Wagoner
C. English
J. Wilmoth and I. Crespi

Organized in December 1949 Dionysia has grown to
take its place on a par with the other social clubs at T.C.C.
The c lub participated in the social drives of the school
:rnd ;"llso made a worthy contribution to the success of the
\\f.S .S.F. dance held in March.
J\ fi rsL for Del ta Sigma is the large colored reproduction of their crest which hangs in the chool lounge.
The original plaque was on display the nights the bors
ushered for T.C.C. 's plays.
I n addition to the regular social functions of the
group, the boys have another segment of their organization known as "The Mad Hatters." \X' earing black derbys
as a hallmark the function of the Hatters is to stimu late
group singing and they are making a collection of favorite college songs.
In the short space of one year Dionysia has become
an integra l part of T.C.C.'s social activity.
70

�SA IENS
ROW 1
E.
R
R
J
J
F.
R.
P
H.
J.

GOLDBERG
SORBER
KANE
MURPHY
STEIGERWALD
FREER
SHEAR
DEWEY
BIGGS
FETCHO

ROW 2
R. McCORMACK
G. SMITH
W WILLIAM !'
G. REJEBIAN
S. WINTERSTEIN
M THALLINGER
R EARLY
A. BU SH
C DEWAN
W. WARNER
ROW 3
E. GLYNN
D. SHORT
C. HEATH
S FALBO
D. MERRILEES
F SHIPKO

President
Vice-President

C. Dewan

Treasurer

R. Kane

Secretary

W. Nelson

Sergeant-at-Arms

term, the Saiens were ill\ itcd to attend a C hristmas
party as guests of the Thalians.
On St. Patrick's D ay, ,\ farch 17, this organization, in conjunction with the Thalians, sponsored
a dance, the Kill.uncy Kapers. This all-school
affair was held at the Casino in J·.ndicott, and
proved co be a big surccss.
[ntra-club activities included se\'era l outings,
parties and dinners, highlig hted b}' the b:111quet
held in John son City immed iately after finals
ended the fall term.
The Saiens club also actively participated in
the intra- mural softball, football and basketball
leagues formed by the school. Although the boys
did not capture any trophies this year, thC) committed themselves commendably on the ,1th let ic
field.
T he organization also took an acti\•e part in
the \V/. S.S. F. drive which took place in March.

A . Pandisch

H. Biggs

The Saicns Club of Triple Cities College was
formed primari ly as a social group. lts members
arc made up chicflr of science and mathematics
students. The name "Saiens" comes from rhc
Greek word meaning sc ience.
The club took a big step forward toward promoting better inter-organization relationsh ips during the fall term , when it invited the Tha lian and
Pandoran societies to a joint meeting. Later in the
7L

�GOLi ARDS
~...

....

1950

,...
::&gt;c

0.
President
Vice-President

The Goliards show the people their private brand of .... basketball(?).

R. Single
K. Dunklee

Secretary

B. Mercereau

Treasurer

J. Fowler

Advisors

S. Douglass and M. Nelson

The hrgest men's ~ocia l group on campus,
the Goliards arc in their third year of existence. Taking the name from a group of
Medieval schola rs who travelled Europe making merry and doing good, the c lub has contributed greatly to fraternal and social work
at the college.
This year they ~ponsored their annual blood
drive making a much needed contribution
ro t he Red Cross.
On ~larch 10 the)' staged the annual M.1rdi
Gras at the American Legion which was one
of the m ost successful socia l events of the
season.
72

�MAROON KEY
Chairman

Tony Dyer

Jim Tras
Harry Hofler
Bill Weber
Don Glover
Charles Putrino

The Maroon Key is Jn honorary society that
operates under the guidJncc of the college athletic
department. It was formed in the spring semester
of 1948 by the Goliards. The membership of the
Key rotates among the Goliard members.
The function of rh is organizJtion is to entertain Jnd assist the members of all visiting athletic
te:tms. The Key meets the visitors and directs

them to college playing areas and makes arrangements for local transportation and meals.
The primary purpose of the Key is to maintain
friendship with other colleges and to maintain the
standards of goodwill and sportsmanship.
TCC students can be proud of the Key as jr
st;rnds as evidence o{ our hosp itality.

ROW 1
H

HAFLER

J . DYER
D. GLOVER
ROW 2

J . TRAS
W . WEBER
C. PUTRINO

73

�CLARENDON CLUB

ROW 1
MR SILVERTON
M WILLIAMS
R HASTINGS
MISS ATCHLEY
ROW 2
J. ARNOLD
M R.5. KELL OGG
MRS BROWN
MR . ROBERTS
J HAGGERTY
ROW 3
W. SWIFT
J . GORTON
D. WALKER
L. McGRATH
D. STOUT

The Clarendon Club, organi1ed in 1948 is an
honorary soc iety for [nglish i\bjors. This year
~aw the publication of two i~mcc; of TC.C's literary maguine, the first under the edit0rship of
Dotty \Xlalker and the second under the guidance
of Larq' McGrath. Made up of contributions from
the student body as a whole, the magazine proved
to be ,·cry successful.

FALL
President

R. Hastings

Vice-President

R. Sheffield

Secretary

W. Swift

Treasurer

G . Champney

SPRING
President
Vice-President

Other activities of the club inc luded a tea,
informal parties at the home of Doctor Brown
and a trip to
ew York.
This club, the first honorary society at T.C.C.
has fulfilled its purpose as a social and intellectual
outlet for English Majors.

D. Stout
J. Haggerty

Secretary

J. Gorton

Treasurer

J. Arnold
74

�ENGLISH CLUB
The l:nglisb club is composed of those students
with an interest in literature a lthough they :ire not
necess:iri ly English Majors. This group work'&gt; in
close coopcr:ition w ith the Cbrcndon and was \c r y
hel p ful in promoting t he success of the "CL1rendon" m;1g;lline.
In the fo ll scmc~tcr the club had :i tea at which
i\lr. Don Ro\chcr of I lamilton College ga\ c .1
group of poetry readings.
Jn the "Ocial 'lot the\' held a Chrimnas Twelfth
'\ight party at the ho1;1e of Do ·tor Brown. The
group p1nicip:itcd in lntl?rn&lt;Hional night ,111d
aided in the \ucccss pf t 11e \, '.S.S.J. carni,al-d1nce
when the) pre&lt;ented ~omc scenes from Slukcspcan&gt;.

FALL
J. Gorton

President
Vice-President

L. McGrath

Secretary

W . Swift

Treasurer

A. Surplus

SPRING

J. Moore

President
Vice-President

H. Hudda

Treasurer

R. Calvert

Secretary

W. Swift

ROW I
R. HOOD
L McGRATH
A SURPLUS
J GORTON
W SWIFT
J BELLINGER
T TAKENAKA
ROW 2
G HOMA
MISS ATCHLEY
MRS BROWN
MRS K ELLOGG
MRS. HASEN PFLUG
MR. SILVERTON
H. HUDDA
ROW

3

C. ALOI
J HAGGERTY
W KRIEGSMANN
D STOUT
R CALVERT
R DICKSON
D SHEFFIELD

75

�SPANISH CLUB

ROW 1
HOOD
MELINSKY
CAIN
ALFORD
GIANAKOURAS

R
W
M
D.
K

ROW 2
E BOTTINO
J SANTALUCIA
J BOTTINO
S MARCONE
MISS SEDA
MR. ROCKWELL
ROW 3
FABRIZIO
VITALE
MOORE
JIMENEZ
ARNOLD
SMITH
DOYLE

U
3
J
M.
J
R
C.

President

Dona Id Alford

Vice-Presid ent

Marilyn Cain

Secretary

Kim Gianakour as

Treasurer

William Melinsky

Faculty Advisor

Mr. Rockwell

The Spani-.h Club is composed of those student
with an interest in the cultural backgroun d of
l .nin America. The meetings usually consist of
ulks, mo,·ies, .\nd description s of li fe in South
America.
In the fall semester, the club had a Christmas
party and contribute d materi.11 to the In ternational newc;paper in addition to regular meetings.

The most important affair of the year for "El
Circulo I Iispano" was Internation al Iight when
the club pn.'c;ented a program of Spanish and
native Mexican dances. Another annual feature
was the performan ce of Sam Vitale and his gu itar.
The group also rook part in the \\/.S.S.F. Carnival Dance in March .
76

�FRENCH CLUB
The French C lub is and has
been a very active organization of
Tri pie C i tics College. l'vleetings
arc held once each month with intcresting progran1s planned for
each session. At past meetings
moving p ictures of France have
been shown in order to acquaint
students with the custom and
culture of hance. Colored slides
which were taken by stu dent ~
who lud been to h·ance \Vere also
shown to the club members.
In the I all semester, the club
spomored the rcte des Fous (Feast

R. Ives

President
Vice-President

R. Powell
M . A . Ferrari

Secretary
Treasurer
Advisors

A. Brown
R. Ketcham, C. Reps

of the I ools) which was open to
the student body as a whole.
The l rcnch Club has pre\ 1ousl) contributed skits to the Intcrnatio1ul :\'ight program and
this year they followed suit.

ROW 1
V COOK
M FERRARI
R I VES
R POWELL
A. BROWN
M MARKHARIAN
ROW Z
W SWIFT
J BOTTINO
G. HEINSOHN
MRS REPS
MR KETCHAM
J GRUSE
B KESSLER
ROW 3
R
V.
W
T
B
B
P
K
L

DICKSON
GIARUSSO
KRIEGSMANN
TAKENAKA
CARL
ZAMPI
LAMB
DUNKLEE
McGRATH

ROW 4
A CALLEO
C ALOI
L WORSTER
R BARGETZI
M. BILOZ
J. GORTON

77

�GERMAN CLUB
ROW 1
R NOLAND
W KRIEGSMAN N
D WALKER
ROW 2
C
J

B
I

J
S.
G
P

GRABOWSKI
MURPHY
CA RL
VEIT
MATTESON
M ULLEN
BADGER
FEFFER

ROW 3
N PANKO
G HEINSOHN
W. WILLIAMS
R PALENCAR
D SHORT
MR WEIGAND
H. U NOLD
L. SILVERSTEIN
F HARTMANN
F GUTH
T SCOTT
A PANDISH

President

J. Ludka

Vice-Pres ident

D. Walker

Secretary

R. Noland

Treasure r

W. Kriegsma nn

Sgt.-at-A rms

W. Harrison

The fall semester saw Die Deutsche Verein getting
off to a start wirh an election of officers and still beaming
over their p.lrt in the Spring Re,·ue in which they presented "Spike Weigand and Jlis G r a\'cl Goethes," a skit
called the "Student in Paradise, " and a German classroom scene.
Soon after the election the club had a party &lt;H
Schniuel bank at which skits were once Jgain the order of
the day. Irene Veit as Lorelei, J ohn Gorton as the un~uspecting sailor along with George 1Ieimohn, Duke
Pettyjohn and Bill and I Icdr Krcigsma nn contribu ted a
lot of mirth to the affair.
The German Club also added to the color of Tmern,uional "-:ight with a quartet, the Oom-pah -pah Band
.lnd so •11c skits. The members , under the lcadershio of
George t lcimohn presented songs from popular oper~ttas
~ uch as .Johann Strauss' "Die I·lcderma m," R. Strauss'
"Der Rmenka\ 'alier," and selections from the work of
Fr.mi I char.
This group contribut es to the Internati onal newsp.1pcr, "The Tower of Babel," and the meetings usually
fc.1wre a series of speakers, group singing and the present.ttion of short plays.
78

�ITALIAN CLUB
The Italian C lub was organized with t he pur pose of promoting the Italian lang uage and to
orient peop le with the cultures and cu stoms of
the countr)'.

President

One of the main functions of the club is the
raising of n10ney for a scholar ship fund for worth
students of the Italian langu age. The club presented an Ita li an play entitled "La V edova Sca ltra" this spring in ord er ro aid this cause. This
comedy, directed by Dr. A. Bernardo, thorough ly
del io-hted a large audience, as members of the cast
cav~rted over the U .E. stage in the 18th century
costumes. During the en ti re performance, the
la ug hter never subsided in the auditorium. Al
Ca lleo's fine performance brought down the house
time after time in the course of the evening's entertainment.
Miss Yolanda Fargnoli and

A . Calleo

Vice-President

R. Bargetzi

Secretary

M . Bottino

Treasurer

M . Brigiotta

Advisor

Mr. Bernardo

Bottino also rated bouquets as they drew plaudits
for their captivating performances.
Another outsta ndin g function of the club i~
its participation at " International Nigh~" with its
annual resume of some well -known Tra l1an Opera.
This year, the group did an outstanding job in its
precentation of a portion of the famou s opera,
"R igolctto."
The club holds an annual part y to c limax the
year's activities for the member'&gt;.

:-.tiss Josephine

ROW l
S. VITALE
M. BRIGIOTTA
A CAL LEO
R. BARGETZI
M BOTTINO
A. GIU NTA
ROW 2
J . SA LEMME
C. ALOI
N. TEDESCHI
E. BOTTINO
J SANTALUCIA
J BOTTINO
A SOCHAR
MR. BERNARDO
ROW 3
F.
J.
S
G.
V.
S.
R
T
R.
R.
G.
D.

79

MAN GUS
JULIAN
FALBO
HEINSOHN
COOK
MARCONE
TRABUCCO
SCARI NZ I
DIUTE
IVES
DOYLE
SHEFFIELD

�Business Administration Club
ROW 1

J. FINN
W DONNELLY
W. GULLBORG
J BURAN
ROW 2
W DINO
E SERNECKY
C. DERRICK
0. KROEGER
R. WHITTEMORE
ROW 3
H. MOHNEY
L CARY
W. ARCHER
R. FLETCHER
R DONNELLY
ROW 4
R M S MITH
H BRIGHAM
B. ROACH
R CRA PO
J TRAS
P FILETTO
P STEWART
H McCARTHY
R. SAVAGE
H WOOD
H WILLSON
R CARSON
B DAVIDSON
F. WINDISCH
R RI TCHIE
R DENNIS
S SALISBURY
B SULLIVAN
F. DUNTLEY
R. ROUNDS
M GREGORY

The " reception committee' at

Preside nt
Vice-Presiden t

the Bizad dance. 60c please .

W . Donne lly
Harold Wood

Secretary

M. A . Nagorny

Treasurer

R. Ritchie

The Biz Ad Club is compmcd of studcnh in
che Business J\dministr;nion course. Each se mester, a Bi/ Ad dance is sponsored by this organintion for the raising of funds lO support the
various activities performed by the club.
A "Bi1.: Ad Day" is held e\'ery Spring term 1n
which numerous firms display their products.
The organi/ation is inaugurating ,1 polic:~ to
haYe leading businesses in the area discms their
bu siness problems w ith the club .
Tutoring lessons in accounting arc sponsored
by the organi7:Hion, and the lesson s are g iven by
senior students who arc accounting majors. T his
is a great aid to first year students who might h ave
difficulty with this subject.
80

�SOCIOLOGY CLUB
Preside nt
Vice-President
Secreta ry-Treas urer
Advisor s

J. Chambe rlain
R. Spearbe ck

I. Veit

l . Pisani and I. Crespi

The member ship of this org&lt;rn intion is compme d
of thme persons who wic;h to le,1rn more .1bout and
to di~cuss the problem s which confron t our society
toda).
The club has had v.1riom spe.1kers at tlwir meetings. One particul ar question about this area has
aroused much speculat ion, and die group is intereste d
in finding the answer to the question of why there
is a lack of ncgroe in this sect ion .
The member ship is noc restricte d to majors but
1s open to any student with an intcrc~L in an) ph.1sc
of Sociolo g).

ROW 1
F. MORGAN
I VEIT
J CHAMBER LAIN
R SPEARBEC K
MR. PISANI
ROW 2
W. 0 NE I LL
R DICKSON
S VITALE
B. MURRAY
W . FOSTER

SI

�PIN TOPPLERS

ROW 1
P. LAMB
R RITCHIE
P. DELORENZ O
F. DUNTLEY
L. AVERY
ROW 2
G.
C
J
L.
W
S.
0.

MILLER
BUCHANAN
SALEMME
WOOD
HOTCHKIS S
GOBER
KROEGER

ROW 3
T.
R
M
R
A.
W.

ZOWINE
DENNIS
BILOZ
BELL
CARAKER
LOWE

Preside nt

R. Whittem ore

Vice-President

P. Deloren zo

Secretary

F. Duntley

Treasurer

R. Ritchie

Advisor

Miss H. Chiarul li

The Pin Topplcr s bowl al the Knights ' of
( olumbu s in Lndicot t e\ery Sund .t) af ternoon.
The bowlers contribu te 2 5c per week to a trophy
fund, \\'hich is partiall y rnbsidi/ ed by the College. Every spring, the c lub has a Bowling Ban q uet in order to award pri/ es and trophies to the
top bowlers. The c lub also awards cash pri?Cs
each week:

1 Iigh Trip le and High Single-~ 1.00 to Bor
. 50 to Gi rl
On Februar y 25, The Pin Toppler s sc hedu led
an inter-co llegiate bowling ma tc h with Albany
State Teachers' College, at Albany. I Iowcvcr it
was p ostponed . On March 2, Albany Stare will
come here to Endicot t to play the Endicot t Bowl ing Team.
82

�MUSIC FOR MODERNS
Tom Makres

President

In the Spring of '49 the club held four l lot
J am Sessiom. On Open House \V eeke nd a special
g roup of boys played a selec t ion of orchestr,ncd
numbers for the gencr.il public, an arrangement
of the "\lan I Love" by Bob Stcpbach, a member
of the club, and Stan Kenton's "Opus In Pastel."
For the Spring ReYiew, the J a// Club pla~·ed
a cries of th ree pieces which included an original
piece w ritten by T.C.C. 's Bob Stepbach and orchestrated by him. The song w.1s sung by a T.C.C.
co-ed .
The I all Semester, the c lub sponsored a concert which was financed by the 380 American
Federation of Musicians. Concert was called "The
.J .117 S.:ene." Performers were \\:';titer Brown and
his eighteen piece orchestra, Jimmy E\Cr) and
Patti Long, \'O::alists, Don H ickey's Dixiela nd Jat /
Group, and Be-Bop Soloists. Tom \fakres, i&gt;res.
of J an Club, was ~bster of Ceremonies. The

Vice-President

Bob Stepbach

Secretary

Mar ie Jimenez

Treasurer

Bob Frederick
Dave Platt

Program Chairman
Faculty Advisors

Mr. Lutz and Mr. Gilfillan

concert was held in the U-1 · audi torium. The concert was a \'Cry successful .iffair- l ,000 students
from this area attended the program.
The club has held two j.1m sessiom in the Fall
Semester-one in October, "hich w:ts ;dso their
first bminess meet ing, :tnd one in December ju~t
before Christmas ,·,1cation.

ROW 1
R FREDERIC K
T MAKRES
M J I MENEZ
R STEPBACH
MR LUTZ
ROW 2
H
M
D.
E.

HUDDA
B OVE E
WALKER
CINOTTI

ROW 3
M LAFRANCE
D PLATT
R DIXON

83

�BRASS CHOIR

HOWARD EVANS
BASS
DAVID SHORT
TROMBONE
RAYMOND BALLARD
TROMBONE
OWEN KROEGER
SAXOPHONE
RICHARD SPEARBECK
FRENCH HORN
CHARL ES ENGLISH
TRUMPET
JACK RANKIN
TRUMPET

MEN'S GLEE CLUB

The M e n's Glee Club sang "Down
by the Old Mill Stre am " , Gaudamus' " lgitur" , and their own arrange me nt of " Co ol Water" at the music
asse mbly.

84

�MADRIGAL SINGERS

ARTHUR SURPLUS
KEITH DUNKLEE
JOHN MOORE
BARBARA ROOD
NANCY COURTNE Y
MRS. CONSTAN CE
REPS
DELORES LEONARD

CAROLING

Informa l group singing, especi ally at
Christm as, is always
an enjoyab le activity.
H e re, carol singing
is le d by Howard
Evans.

85

�COLONIAL PLAYERS
ROW I
V. COOK
0 WALKE R
E GOLDB ERG
J BELLIN GER
MR- HASEN PFLUG
J BLESH
ROW 2
T MAKRE S
J MADDE N
D MERRIL EES
H. HUDDA
R. CALVE RT
H . PEARS ON
ROW 3
M
H

BREWE R
MOFFA TT
L McGRA TH
N. MOTfR AM
N GRUSE
J . D"APRI LE
D. NICHO LS
S IVES
J . GORTO N
ROW 4
B. JONES
Ml\ R:&gt;BER TS
S. WINTE RSTEIN
F. 5HEELY
D . GARMA N

Presi dent
Vice- Presi dent

Harry Accurso
Erwin Gold berg

Secre tary

Jean ette Bellin ger

Treas urer

Jean Blesh

Facu lty Advisors

Mr. Farro w, Mrs. Hase npfl ug

·1( C\ boJrJ -trom pers st.ute d off the ~eJs.rn
with ,1 sm.1sh hie, "The Serge ant \\:'as a I ady" by
\\',1lt er Robe rts. This highl ) amus ing Revo lutio n,1n \\',u· come dy intro duced two new stars
to
st~1dent audic1Kes: Shirl e\ \lulle n as Debo
rah
Sams on, the 'ergea nc, and ~lary Ellen \\'illi,1111~
as
Prude nce Br.Hl ford, her aunt. Tl.11-r\ ,\ccu rso,
~Llri;1 Jime no, ,ind Doro tl1) \\',1lk cr :111 contr ibu ted outst&lt;tndin~ supp ort .
.i\ fine job of set-w ork by Phi l Cham berla in
86

and h is crew coup led with per iod costu m ing made
for effec t. \ \/he n the c urtai n ra ng dow n o n rhe
"Serg eant, " anoth er hit was chalk ed up fo r the
Colon ia l P layers .
Fo llowi ng c lose ly on t he heels of the first producti on came E lmer Rice' s "D ream Girl. " R iu
..\Iast rangc lo, Clark I Iungc rford , Harr y Accu rso,
and a fine supp ortin g cast wrne d out a fine show
unde r t he d irecti on of Mr. Farro w.
The fdes of iYLtrch saw the Plave rs back on
the board s, this time with anoth er mode rn corne d\·.
\.fr. Farro w once again direc ted the group in·
a
perfo rman ce of Moss J !art's "Lii.: ht Up the Skv."
Ben l lorow itch, Shirl ey :\1ull en, \'ivia n Cook
,
Da,·e Platt, Maria Jimcn c7, J•1ck Gilm an, and
Larry McG rath all turne d in fine portr aya ls.
Besides these ve nt ures int0 the theat er , t he
Colon ia l Pia\ crs also had an annu al p1cn1c ;ind
~evera l parti~s d uring tl1e yea r .

�Maria makes a

play for "Sergeant"

Shirley, who is not a Sergeant, but a
lady.

"D actor" Harry discovers the "Sergeant's'' secret

reports to "General"

Bruno.

Fellow soldiers carry "Sergeant" Shi rley into the barracks after she is wounded.

Rita, Roz and Bill
dinner scene.

in

a "Dream Girl"

�THE COLONIAL NEWS
ROW 1
W. DINO
J GRUSE
0 MERRILE ES
H. HUDDA
MR. SCELSI
J. THOMAS
ROW 2
R SPEARBECK
M. BI LOZ
E. SERNECKY
R. HOOD
D. WALKER
W. MCCAFFREY
ROW 3
GORTON
T. BEBEL
P. GAFFNEY
C. DEXTER
R CRAPO
E GOLDBERG
0 BUSINO

J

Fall 1949
Editor-in-c hief
Helen Hudda
Managing Editor
Dave Merrilees
Business Manager
Don Joseph
News Editor
Ernie Sernecky
Sports Editor
Bob E. Hood
CoFeature Editors Erv Goldberg and Bob K. Hood
Exchange Editor
Jeanne Thomas
Art Editor
Orlando Busino
Adve rtising Manager
Webb Mott
Fran Kozlowski
Pat Gaffney
Jack Gilman
Ben Horowitch
John Moore
Joe Cunningha m
Mike Bilos

J im Holleran
Dick Spearbeck
Don Stout
Dick Crapo
Jackie Gruse
Dorothy Walker

Spring 1950
Editor-in-c hief
Managing Editor
Business Manager
News Editor
Sports Editor
Feature Editor
Exchange Editor
Art Editor
Advertisin g Manager
Charles Aswad
Connie Bartlett
Janet Conklin
Coe Dexter
Rhoda Becker
Pat Gaffney
Ben Horowitch
Bill Lowe
Stan Moses
John Valky
Terry Bebel
Don Lyles

Bob E. Hood
John Moore
Don Joseph
Frank Toner
Larry Pitier
Dorothy Walker
Jeanne Thomas
Orlando Busino
Bob Dennis

Bob Bolles
Dick Crapo
Don Stout
Fra nz Hartman
Erv Goldberg
Mike Biloz
Ken Franklin
Fred Guth
Floyd Mangus
Don Hornick
Kim Gianakour ous
Ginny Langeland

�Helen and Dave watch the linotype operator set their copy
and read the proof sheets at the Vestal News print shop .

•

Spring editor Bob Hood oversees writer Ben Horowitch as
he types the lead of a news
story.

89

�THE COLONIST
ROW 1
E. GOLDBERG
R CRAPO
B ROOD
MR . SILVERTON
E SERNECKY
ROW 2
M FERRARI
J. BELLINGER
N TEDESCHI
I CROSS
J. LYONS
A. BROWN
0 BUSINO
ROW 3
D WALKER
T BEBEL
P GAFFNEY
P COLVIN
L LOVELAND
P DEWEY
F WESCOTT
ROW 4
W
C.
M.
W
D.

SWIFT
DEXTER
THALLINGER
WARNER
M ERRILEES

Orlando Busino
Art Editor
Dorothy Walker
Club Editor
Wanda Swift
Senior Editor
Sports Editor
Paul Dewey
Rood
Barbara
Sales Manager
Advertising Manager
Howard Johansen

Editor-in-chief Dick Crapo

W illiam Barno
Theresa Behel
Jeanette Bellinger
Wayne Bowd ish
Ann Brown
Patricia Colvin
Imogene Cross
Coe Dexter
Robert Early
Mary Ann Ferrari
Patricia Gaffney
90

Margaret Hudy
Barbara Hur lbut
Phi lip Kee
June Ann Lyons
Barbara Meaker
Helen Moffatt
Gilbert Rouff
Nardino Tedeschi
Merrell Thallinger
Willis Warner
Frederick Wescott

�Business Manager Ernie Sernecky

Managing Editor Erv Goldberg

Photography Editor Larry Loveland

Faculty Advisor Douglas Silverton

91

���c

February

H

II

A
N
N

E
L
5

94

I

�Shiny new balls and the
schedule of games mark
the beginning of basketball season, number one
in

ATHLETICS
95

TCC . .. .

�Head Coach Gene Welborn

Gene \VI cl born -

Anderson 11 igh School -

ana Uni,·er ity -

head trainl'r of I ndiana ho-:kc}

tc.1111 -

ao;sistant trainer of football and tcKk

squads -

B. S. -

College -

Allen Lown 1 li gh School at hletc-

-

pLiyer-coach of baseball,

teams -

\loraYia College -

b.1skctba ll coach foorb.111 coach -

four years

basketball scr\'ice
assista nt bascbal I,

Newark Valle) Central School

T.C.C. junior 'arsity basketball

coach.

96

C hicf Plur-

- Triple C 1tics

head bao;eball coach -

J. V. Coach Dick Hoover
M.1rine Corps -

0Ja,) -

Director of 1\thletics -

ball coach -

semi-pro footb,lll -

?\L S. -

1942 to 1945

maci'&gt;t \bte -

Dick ! loo' er -

Indi-

head ba..,ketinstructor.

�The backbone of all sports events . . . .

The Crowd

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Full house expected for State Tech game

97

�VARSITY BASKETBALL

STANDfNG: Capt. R. Powell, F. Guth, I« Bizousky, M. Rano, G. Evans, R. Baker.
KNEEL£ G: F. I lubbs, G. Kobylar'l, Coach \'V'elborn , l L Bateman, .J. Leney.

\\' ith four returning lettermen acting
.1s a nucleus, the T.C.C Varsity started
its fourth year in intercollegiate competition. The four veterans include John
Leney, Vince Jack so n and Gene Kobylan· from last year and Dick Powell
from the 1947-48 seaso n. Powel I was
elected captain of the team.
\\'hat Coach \'\felborn called "t he best
starting team " in T.C.C. history opened
its season against J Lobart College at Geneva . J lobart took the honors.
In the home opener agaimt Genesee
Jr., T.C.C. began to roll after a slow
98

�start, with Powell tossing in 20 points for
t he high score.
In a real thriller, I louse of Mills edged
the T.C.C. quintet by two points.
The State Tech Hornets stung the
Colonia ls in one of their traditional
games. The ] Iornets' rampage al the
start of the seco nd half was enough to
ensure them of the win.
In the second annual invitational tourney, held at St ate Tech, T.C.C. came out
victorious although rated the underdogs.
In the opening round of the tournament,
T.C.C. downed \Xfilkes in an overume
after Kobylar;r tied the game 50- 50 at
the 29 second mark.

99

�following ni g ht
T.C.C. staged a nip and tuck
finish in a nother overtime.
Powell and Baker sparked the
team in a successful fourth
quarter. Each member of
the champion team received
a trophy. Len La s k o w &lt;&gt;ki,
brilliant State Tech forward,
was named the most valu.1blc
pl ayer. Dick Powell , Green
a nd White captain, was
named on the A ll -Star Team .
The skilled and colorful
playing of the Colonials
throughout th e seaso n has
give n thousands of spectato rs
innumerable thrills and genuine pl easure. \"Xfith s uch
technique and good sportsThe

manship,

the Green and

White has continu ously attracted larger and larger
crowds.
The COLON IST congratulates both the team and
Coach \'(l'elborn for a fine
season of basketba 11.

I(

&lt;

42
66
60
66
62
65
58
83
48
43

rn
57
61

74
8 .l

62
67
68
91

77
80

s-

OPl'Ol'. I .l'. l

Hob:irt
Genesee
I louse of :-.1ilh
St ate Tech
Wilkes
State Tech
State T ech
Robert~ \X' c,lc\ .111
Lycoming
;..,tansfiel&lt;l
Utica
\X' ilkcs
Lycom ing
St:itc Tech
M.msficld
Utic:i
Albany St.ttc T e.1cher'&gt;
Roberts \X'c,lcyan
Alb.my St:itc Tc.1dwr\
Utica
Ucio Tech
\X'ilkc.,

50

)8
62
75
53
63
68

59
45
48

5I
54
60

82
61

52
SI

70
58
75
63
82

9

�J. V. BASKETBALL

FRO l T
BACK:
Ra no.

\V/. Dino, \VI. \V/alling, Coach Hoover, L. Picciano, C. Grabowski,]. Julian.
.J. Bilo , L. Silverstein, F. Guth, G. Matthews, F. Bizousky, I I. Baternan, M.

:

Mr. Richard Hoover, hca&lt;l football
coach of Newark Central School and a
hig hly competent basketball coach, took
over the reins as T.C.C. J.V. mentor, relieving Coach Welborn of the burden
so that he migh t devote full time to the
Varsity team. The improved record of
the J.V. basketball was evident.
Ar press time, the record w~1'&gt; 4 games
won, 8 lost, with the squad showing
rapid improvement and great promise
for viccorics in the remaining games.
Bill Dino and Hal B&lt;Heman consistently lead the J.V.'s in scoring. Bateman
was moYed to the Varsity squ.1&lt;l late in
the season.

LO I

�CHEERLEADERS

F. Kozlowski , Captain
N. Tedeschi, 8. Rood
H. Moffatt,

L. Avery

I. Cross, 8. Meaker

T.C.C.'s attractive cheerleaders endured man}' hardsh ips such as being
forced to practice their "rah-rahs" in
the corridor between the chem lab and
the cafeteria, in order to endow the
crowds at the basketba ll games with
the proper sp irit. And they did an outsta nding job.
The girls showed excellent precision
and timing in leading the cheers; acquired only after long hours of arduous
training and as necessa ry as the practice
sessions held by the baske tball team they
supported . It is no wonder that T.C.C.
had a winning ball club, with the fine
spirit displayed by these g irls.
102

�BASEBALL

FIRST ROW: H . \V'illiams, Do1l.lld Olver, J ohn ~lack, Denni Bottino, \\filliam Simmons, Peter Smyk, Gene KobybrL.
SECO D RO\'&lt;!: Coach \\''elborn, \\'' illi.1111 \\'ailing, Frc&lt;l Hubb'.),
Tom Terry, Ted Scare11'1i, Robert Root, Robert 1 lood, Curt Rodgers,
Louis Picciano, mgr.

Rain and muddy ball p;1rks played
ha voc with an eight game baseball schedule, al lowing the Green and \\/hire only
three contests during rhe entire sea,on.
The season's opener found the TCC
men handicapped, colliding with \l&lt;lte
tech who had alrcad)' settled their early
season jitters with rwo previou s victorie!i.
The Colonials bowed by a score of 1 5 -8 .
Both remaining games were also gi' en
up by Colonial men, the first tO Utica
College 6-4, the second to \'&lt;lilkes College 8-0.

I((

-t

)()\

\( 111l&gt;IJI11&gt; (.\\I I · 0 11'0'1 1 '&lt;I

Utic.1 College

R.1incd Out

St.Ile f c&lt;.:h

\Vet I 1cld

I I.in" id, College

R.tin

Uti&lt;.:.t ( ollegc

6

\\'dkc' Coll cg&lt;'

\luddy lk1mond

l l.irtw1&lt;..k Colle.t:c•

lndcmcnt W' c.nhcr

u

\\ d kc' Collc~c

8

'&gt;t.llc I cd1

8

I5

�TENNIS

Sid Steiner, .J:tmes Norris, Phil Breckenridge, George Kouq Richard
Koury, Jack Lewis, Co:tch Al Hou.
1

,

TCC's hard playing tennis squad won
five of six games under the leadership of
captain Jack Lewis, their only loss b\.!ing
,1 one point dec ision to T loban in the
season's opener.
Jim To rris and Sid Steiner finished the
&lt;ea&lt;;on undefeated in doubles competition
as did .Jack Lewis in singles.
The first of two encounters with
Hartwick in which the losers were held
to one victory in singles and one in doubles, is representative of the play in the
last fi"e g:uncs. Each of the Colonial's
five victories w:ts impressive :t nd contributed to a tot a I score of 3 8 points for
the season as com pared to l 4 for their
opponents.
Coach Al I !ou and the te:tm can
t.1ke :t well deserved bow for :t very successful season.
104

�GOLF

J\l. Rudik, W. Dino, F. S:rngc\, M. Piui llo
Coach John Budd 's golfers had .tn
almost perfect season . Lo~ing only to
powerfu l St. BonaYe nture while down ing six opponen ts, the team showed its
strength by defeatin g the Bonnys in ;1
return maLch .
By playing near par golf, the Green
and \Xt'hite had little trouble in more
than doublin g their opponen t!&gt;' cumulative score. One sided victories U\ er
Albany State Teachers and CortLtn d
State Teacher s more tlun compen sated
for several close wins.
Fred Sanges LOok honors for the
Colonia ls in three games. L:ich member
of the team, howe' er, deser\'CS credit
for playing outstan ding golf.

Oppone nt

TCC

6 1 i.

Hobart

2 1-l

7

l.Jrica

2

9

Alb,111y State

0

SL. Bonave nture

8

Cort bn&lt;l

0

5t. Rona\en turc

4

5)'racusc Frosh

4

9

'i

( won 6, lost I )

I05

�TRACK

FIRST ROW: Terry Avery, \X'illiam D.l\'ies, George Doyle, Ben
Mersereau, Pat Paglia, \V'illiam ::VlcGbde.
SEC01 D ROW': Arthur R)'b.1k, .Joseph Ludb, Robert )mi th.

TCC inro the loss column. They bowed
to the men from Oneonta 7 l - 5 l.
The fifth meet was the most spectacu br of the season. TCC edged past a
stubborn Ithaca Col lege Frosh team
63 5 6 - 62 l 6 in a contes t which saw
a dispute over the running of the 380
relay. TCC's Terry Avery won the
.
.
event 111 question.
The Coloniab took 10 firsts as they
trounced the Cortland Frosh. Vince
Jackson starred, winning the l 00, the
220 and the broad jump. The fin:il score
was TCC 67, Corrbnd rrosh 5 5.
Ln the final contcst, the yracuse frosh
subdued TCC 80-41 .

Our track team finished the season
with :t .571 average. Spud Forbe's squad
won their second, third, fifth and sixth
contests, dropping only three decisions.
The season's opener saw R.P. 1. on top
by a score of 73-3 5. However, the Renssel:termcn had been running on an indoor
track all year and were in top condition.
The Green and \V'hite next journeyed
to Scranton for the Scr.111ton relays,
where thev humbled their hems bv the
score 13- l l, thus garnering their. first
victory of the season. Keystone pro' ic.kd
the second straight win as the) fell victim to the Forbesmen 61-29.
A decision to Hartwick College mo\ed
I 06

�INTRAMURAL SPORTS

FIRST RO\\' : John Kotc hik , Robert Attisani, Mike Bilo:t , Richard
Denn is, \Xlilliam O'Neill.
SECOND ROW: Al I l ey man , Robert Bargctz i, Cal Symons, Pau l
Stewart, J oseph Cripps, J ohn Bil os.
The i ntramura l Sports of T.C. C. played
an important part in extracurric ular activities as indicated by the many teams
which took part in each sport. Final
standings are as follows:
SOFTBAL L - The Goliards whipped
Ba ccacia 10-8 in the playoffs of an
cigh t tea 111 league.
fOOTBAL L- The H ot Peppers took t0p
honors in some rough and tumble football of an eight team leag ue.
BASKETB ALL-At press time the Goli arc.ls and F.S.\XI . were tied with a .83 3
percen ta ge

in

a

nine

tcan1

leag ue.

Neither ream ~howed indication of
wc.tkening with ~evcra l ga mes sti ll to
be pl ayed.
107

���c
H
A

N
N

E
l
6

11 0

�Financially, the following

section is the most

important of the book.

Here are our .. . .

ADVERTISERS
1I I

�ENDICOTT JOHNSON STORES
OFFER
NEWEST STYLES; EXCEPTIONAL VALUES
AT MODEHATE PRICES

SHOP OUR STORES TIIUHSDA YS AND
SAVE 10%

STORES OPEN THURSDAY EVENINGS

FULL STOCKS OF DRESS AND WORK FOOTWEAR
RUBBERS -

HOSIERY -

CASUALS -

SADDLES

EVENING SLIPPERS -

4 LOCAL STORES IN GREATER ENDICOTT
22 Washington Avenue, Endi cott

l 08 East Main Street, Union

107 Odell Avenue, Endicott

Main Street, Vestal

J 12

�ioneering is never done. 'lt.. 'lt~
Challenges of the times are
forests to be clearedJ· daily
needs are structures to be raisedJ·
plans for the future
are roads to be built. Every day
is pioneering

day.~~

INTERNAT JONAL DUSINESS MACHINE S CORPORAT ION

ENDI C OT T,

N EW

I I3

YORK

,

IBM I

�Compl iments of

DON'T JUST SAY MILK

SAY

KEYSTONE TOBACCO CO., INC.

CROWLEY'S

Wholesale Tobacco and Confectione ry

SERVING THE TRIPLE CITIES

90 State St.

CROWLEY'S MILK CO., Inc.

BINGHAMTON

l

Very

Compliments of

Obviously ...

ENDICOTT TIRE &amp; SUPPLY

Unique
me rcha nd ise from

113 Wash ington Ave.

-

ENDICOTT

ED MOSS ENDICOTT' S- HABERDASHER

Compliment s of

ENDICOTT FORCING &amp; MANUFACTURING CO.
190 l North Street
END ICOTT

*

lH

�1Complime nts of

CONGRAT ULATIONS
to the

LEE WHOLESALE CO.

CLASS OF 1950

c

1414 North St.

0

ENDICOTT

R

N

E

Compl i men ts

l .1

of

Ben Hansen Chevrolet

s

Inc.
DAIRY

EN DICOTT, NEW YORK

PRODU CTS

The Best Known Names

ARE SEEN AT

Mc Lea n's

Binghamto n

Endicott

Th is is how it's done

I I5

�CONGRATULA TI ONS AND BEST WISH ES
TO OUR FUTURE LEADERS
" THE CLASS OF 1950"

BUICK'S

FROM

• • •

The fashion for

Sall -Stearns

1950

SMART YO UNG MEN'S WEAR

l

138 Washington Street

Schumann Buick Inc.

BINGHAMTON , N . Y.

32 State St .. Binghamton, N. Y.

Compliments

Compliments of

of

Triple Cities Traction Corp.

I

375 State St.
Endicott, New York

BINGHAMTON , N. Y.

Fin e clothes si nce 1913

Compliments of

SEETOO'S HAND LAUNDRY

Proves that Good Taste
IN COATS- SUITS- DRESSES-

1309 Monroe Street

SPORTSWEAR

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

Need not be expensive

The Place Whe re the Co lleg e Students
Have Their Fun

SHOP

THE CASINO

59 Washington Ave.

I:
I

q

l

ENDICOTT, N . Y.

Tlw Sig11at11re
of C:11ara11/l'ed
Sa1tsf11ctio11

22 13 North Street
ENDICOTT

Phone

5-9791

5 -7 1 11

116

l

�Gardner Motors, Inc.

Valley Motors, Inc.

OLDSMOBILE "ROC KETS," Ph.D.,

OLDSMO BILE " ROCKETS," Ph.D.,

CONG RA TULA TIONS A N D SUCCESS

CONG RA TULA TIONS AND SUCCESS

TO TH E

TO THE

" CLASS OF 1 9 50"

"CLASS OF 1950"

BINGHAMTO N, NEW YORK

EN DICOTT, NEW YORK

I_

Compliment s

RESNICKS

of

SMARTLY STYLED CLOTHES

Doy le's Inc.

for the sma rtly d resse d lady

feminine wear

I

Bingham ton

87 Court Street

Bi nghamton

24 Court

Jj

Complim ents

-~

You can't Know What's Going On . . .
un less you READ the

ENDICOTT DAILY BULLETIN
of

LI STEN TO

RADIO STATION WENE

THE

Greeter Endicott's Great Team Dedicated
To o Greeter Endicctt

BING HAM TON

MacCLARY -STABLER
AGENCY, Inc.

SUN

105 E. Main St.

"First in the Homes of Southern New York ond

ENDICOTT, N. Y.

Phone 5-3646

Northern Pennsylvonio for more thon o Century"

INSURANCE SINCE 1853

117

I
j

�H. G. GOLLIER &amp; SONS

Compliment s of

INCORPORATED
E S T A BLI S H ED

HAZARD LEWIS FARMS

1880

PAINTS- WALLPAPERS
INDUSTRIAL CHEMICALS

R. D. =2

129-135 Conk l in Ave
BING HAMTON , N. Y.

BINGHAMTON

WALTER R. MILLER CO.

MEN'S QUALITY

INC.

SHOP

STATIONERY
GIFTS

246 Main Street

SPORTING GOODS

Johnson City
170 Washington St. and 12 1 State St.
Binghamton, New York

New York

Flo1n ·rs for 1·n •ry ocrnsion

Loans up $ 500.00

Public Loon Company

ENDICOTT FLORIST

Inc.

116 Wa shington Ave.

7 Washington Avenue

Endicott

END ICOTT, NEW YORK
Phone 5-022 1- Flowero by wire

Phone 5 -9929

Your Host for

ECONOMY DRUG STORE

19 50

(The Rex all Store)

~'USC O'S

60 Wa shington Avenue
Corner of Washington a nd Monroe

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

L
11 8

8 1'2 Page Ave .
ENDICOTT, N. Y.

�THE TRIPLE CITIES

Most Favore d Specia lty Shop
Compl iments of

f 1.Yl~i~ .

V!1JmJ/7~

THE BURT
CO M PA NY

115-11 7 Washi ngton Ave.
ENDICOTT, N. Y.

38--"-" Washi ngton Avenu e
ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

Endicott American Legion
1920-1 950

POST 82

30 Years
Endico tt's
Family Store

KEAT'S

Compl iments of

I 0 0 K S and l E C 0 l D S
10 Court Street
BINGH AMTO N

UNION FORGING CO.

4-51 65

THE

•

ESKUIRE MEN'S SHOP
" Down in Union "

500 North St.

Endico tt

TUX

11 9

RENT ALS

�F

Hill~ins Jewelers
Our 34th Year

46 Washington Ave.
ENDICOTT
78 Court St.

5-0 121

Binghamton

_.I
r.-1

-,

J. RENNIE ALLEN

HAMM 0NO'S

AND

Ideal Florist

SONS

Endicott
122 Washington Avenue

511-13 E. Main St.

Endicott

P. J. Hammond

Tel. 5-1331

L

rS~~~,~~d ~~~~~~."~YE'~~~~~,

ENDICOTT SALES
SERVICE, Inc.
1900 North St.

lines, s.teomship lines, buses and resorts.
Out-of-town buses and air line limousine stop at our office.

END ICOTT, N. Y.
Buick Sal es &amp; Service

L

125 Washington Ave .
Dial 5-4381

Endicott, New York

Phone 5-0111

-:-i

AUGIE'S

HOT PIES - SPIEOI

RESTAURANT and BAR

r 1st

----

I

" Your After·Meeting Heodquorlers"

in

SERVING MEALS DAILY

Sports
Equipment

5 P. M. CLOSING

Just o few
SPAGHETTI
CHICKEN
ROAST BEEF

CUTLETS
STEAKS
CHOPS

BABCOCK'S SPORT SHOP

1.13 Nanticoke Ave.
Endicott (Union District), N . Y.

Binghamton, N. Y.
120

�~
@J

DAVID'S

1111 1

For Young Ideas in Fashion

69

~-

TUTHILL'S

Street

Court

166 Wa sh i ngto n St reet
Binghamton, N . Y .

BINGHAMTON

Headqu arters for Everything Phot og raphic

r
READ
Compliments of

THE VEST AL NEWS

BEN'S

FOR

- SHARPEST COMMENT
ON THE LOCAL SCENE-

CLOTHES SHOP

•

M A IN a n d WILLOW STREETS JOHNSON CITY, N . Y.

CO MMERCIAL PRINTING

L~--

-1

take better pictures . . . eYen
when it's cloudy or raining!
ask /or

the all-weather film
ANSCO,

BINGHAMTON, N. Y. A DIVISION OF GENERAL ANILINE &amp; FILM CORPORATION

121

�-,

VA UG HN 'S

VISIT THE

Hart Schaffn er &amp; Marx
Bot an y " 500" Clothes
Jantze n

HOTEL FREDERICK

Union District

Phone 5-21 31

i·

ENDICOTT
and the

j!
Dubon net Lounge

WELLS-MESSEMER, ING.

•

1302 E. Main Street

Washin gton Avenue

Endicot t, New York

ENDICOTT

--Compli ments of

'I

_J

-,

THE PERFECT GIFT ANYTIM E · · ·

H. W. Som ers

NEWELL

Dev eloper and Builder of Homes
408 Merser eau Ave.
Endicot t

F

JOHNSON
L0wER SJ INC.

1306 Monroe St.

5- 1132

5-2551

ELMER ANGEVINE

Avenue Confectionery

AGENCY INC.
145 Washin gton A ve.
ENDICOTT, N. Y.

101 Washin gton Avenue
Endicot t, New York

ALL FORMS OF INSURA NCE
COMPLETE
REAL ESTA TE SERVIC E

FRANK FERRIS, Prop.

_J

~--==-i

122

�,

r
FILES

DESKS

ROUFF FURNITURE CO.

CAY'S

105 Washington A ve.

L~ 1nythi111f.

for School a11&lt;l Office

ENDICOTT, N. Y.
9 Washington Ave.
'' Dedicated to Better Homes''

Ph. 5-2721

ENDICOTT, N. Y.

Phone 5-3379

ADDING MACHINES

TYPEWRITERS

Compliments of

~

M·EfYER~c.-r
'-' ~1( v.i-

HAMLIN'S

f ""'""'

RED CROSS DRUG STORES

BINGHAMTON

JOHNSON CITY

16 COURT ST.

ENDICOTT

BINGHAMTON

-·

..,

Our Eternal Resource Is YOUTH
If a notion is to prosper and endure, it must look to its youth.
is its rich reservoir, the dynamic of growth.

This

Without youth, the land with-

ers and dies.
We realize more than ever that our great material assets con serve
the advancement of the nation and the world, only to the extent that we
our youth.

develop our more valuable asset

As the youth of yesterday contributed to the America that is today;
all that is to come will be influenced
now graduating from our colleges

by the exuberant, the confident youth
the strength, the vitality, the hope

of the nation.

THE BINGHAMTON PRESS
A Great Newspaper

SUNDAY

DAILY

-11
123

�1

'~h~-~~~·:
JJ.--0

NEWING MOTOR CO.
INC.

II

COU RT STR EET

Binghamton

Fine China- Glassware and G ifts
For All Occasions

FORD CARS and TRUCKS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Over 100 Open Stock Patterns in Dinnerware

r

Student Supplies

DILLENBEGK'S

TYPEWRITERS
Portable or Stondord
New ond Use d For Sole or Rent

SHOP

FLOWER

Dio l 4-9687 Oillenbeck's Flower Shop

C.L.CARD

6 Court St.

180 Washington St.
BINGHAMTON, N . Y.

Binghamton, N. Y .
Riverside Greenhouse
Whitney Point, N. Y.

Dillenbeck"s Greenhouse
740 Riverside Drive

4

7-2036

Coll 2-6806

Compliments

'vl1at icing
does for cake

of

The

PA R A DISE~

_ . . a swe et blouse
109 Nanticoke Ave.

will do for last

Endicott

season's suit and
skirts!
Compliments

sportswear,
se cond floor

of on

Fowler's

Anonymous Friend

J
124

�135 Washington Ave.
ENDICOTT, N. Y.
5-2s11

HARTQUIST
&amp; MYERS

BRING YOUR PHOTO PROBLEMS
TO

ENDICOTT
CAMERA

SHOP
For Reliable and Friendly Assistance

Co1npJi1nents of

ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY
O FFICES IN END COTT ANG VESTAL
1

ENDICOTT NATIONAL BANK
UNION- ENDICOTT OFFICE
MARINE MIDLAND TRUST .... OMPANY

J
12 5

�- - - ..,

F0STER DIS INCE R

If

Mel Branning's Photo Studio
11

PHOTO GRAPH ER

119 Washing ton Avenue
Endicott, New York

BINGHAM TON

126 FRONT ST.

Phone 5- 1071

2-0475

These firms
prod uced the 1950 C~lonist.

l

•'I

Creative Printing ...
Through 51 years of continuou s printing progress, the Johnson
City Publishing Company can offer the latest in modern, dependable letterpress and offset lithograph y printing, including photography and art work . Whether your requireme nts are major
or minor, they will receive careful, exacting attention at all tim es.

THE JOHNSON CITY PUBLISHING COMPANY
PH 0 NE S: 7-463 2 0 R 7-628 0
90-100

ARCH

JOHNS ON

STREET

CITY , N . Y.

Printers of the " Colonist"

I
I

--=-=--====-1

126

�ods in its eostern and mid-western plants, assures you of fine craftsmanship and personalized service at a price? your school con afford .

BJS/t t. Siii/fi/ SfSfB/11

- - - - - S e r v i c e as near as your post office - - - - - - - - 4 ' : i l i m m K - - ,.HllADELl'HIA-BOX 1169

CHICAGO-BOX 1 169

�EAST HALL

�WEST HALL

l

�.,

..

. l

.

'

'

..
.,

1

:.

.

JI •

r
....

.'

""'

'!

I"

..

·.

I

l

"'

r

t

--

·.
.,

..

•,i

'

I

... ...

I

•f

.,
p

.a

-.

,\

..

l

~-

...
..

I•

' .

""

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="27">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28047">
                  <text>1948 - </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28048">
                  <text>Binghamton University Yearbooks </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28049">
                  <text>Harpur College -- Students; State University of New York at Binghamton -- Students; Harpur College; State University of New York at Binghamton; Students; Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="37">
              <name>Contributor</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39021">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;Blythe E. Roveland-Brenton, Director of Special Collections &amp;amp; Library Preservation&lt;br /&gt;Caitlin Holton, Digital Initiatives Assistant&lt;br /&gt;Maggie McNeely, University Archivist&lt;br /&gt;Erin Rushton, Head of Digital Initiatives&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39022">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;Binghamton University’s yearbook was published under several different titles. It was first called &lt;em&gt;The Colonist&lt;/em&gt; in 1948, then became &lt;em&gt;The Yearer&lt;/em&gt; in 1970, &lt;em&gt;Pegasus&lt;/em&gt; in 1973 and finally &lt;em&gt;Binghamton University&lt;/em&gt; in 2004. Yearbooks are a popular resource for alumni and can be used for primary source research. Each book typically contains class lists, class photos, candid photos, faculty and academic department information, campus and institutional facts, illustrations and ads, and editorials. They document student organizations, campus events, athletic teams as well as local and global events. Yearbooks offer a window into the traditions and culture of a time and place from the point of view of a select group of students on behalf of the student body. They are among the richest sources of student-driven content for an academic institution. For more information regarding yearbooks and the history of the University, please contact &lt;a href="https://www.binghamton.edu/libraries/about/special-collections/"&gt;Special Collections&lt;/a&gt; at 607-777-4844 or speccoll@binghamton.edu.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;We welcome your comments about &lt;span&gt;&lt;span&gt;our collection of digitized yearbooks.&amp;nbsp; &lt;a href="https://binghamton.libwizard.com/id/c6121588e483da04f66dba76f0460bb5"&gt;Please share comments via our feedback form&lt;/a&gt;.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Acknowledgment of sensitive content&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Binghamton University Libraries provide digital access to select materials held within the Special Collections department. &lt;span&gt;Historical yearbooks provide a vibrant window into life at the University.&lt;/span&gt; However, they also expose insensitive, and at times offensive, racial and gender stereotypes that, though once commonplace, are now acknowledged to cause harm. The Libraries have chosen to make these volumes available as part of the historical record but the Libraries do not support or agree with the harmful narratives that can be found in these volumes. &lt;a href="https://www.binghamton.edu/libraries/about/collections/digital/"&gt;Digital Collections&lt;/a&gt; are created for educational and historical purposes only. It is our intention to present the content as it originally appeared.&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39023">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;The yearbooks in this collection are copyrighted. If you want to reuse any material in this collection you must seek permission, or decide if your purpose can qualify as fair use under the U.S. Copyright Law Section 107. If you think copyright or privacy has been violated, the University Libraries will investigate the issue. Please see our take down request policy.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;If using any materials in this online digital collection for educational or research purposes, please cite accordingly. When citing documents, researchers / educators should credit Special Collections as the custodian of the collection.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The following is a suggested citation: Binghamton University Yearbooks Digital Collection, [yearbook title and year], Special Collections, Binghamton University Libraries.”&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39024">
                  <text>1948-1972</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="117">
              <name>Is Part Of</name>
              <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50596">
                  <text>&lt;a href="https://archivesspace.binghamton.edu/public/repositories/2/archival_objects/38366" target="_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;Binghamton University Student Publications: Yearbook, 1948- present&lt;/a&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="32">
      <name>Template: PDF</name>
      <description>Choose this for any item where the file type is PDF. This template and others do not support mixed file types (PDF and image attached to same item). If you have mixed file types, you can either create another Omeka item or contact Digital Initiatives for assistance converting from pdf to image or vice versa.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="81">
          <name>Accessibility</name>
          <description>Copy/Paste below: &#13;
Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45639">
              <text>Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="58">
          <name>Collection</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52314">
              <text>Binghamton University Yearbooks</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Digital Format</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52315">
              <text>PDF</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="54">
          <name>Identifier</name>
          <description>dc:identifier</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52316">
              <text>THE COLONIST_1950.pdf</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="139">
          <name>PDF Layout</name>
          <description>This field specifies how the pages of the PDF will be laid out. Enter only the CASE SENSITIVE keyword without quotation marks. [default: 'FacingContinuous']&#13;
Options:&#13;
'Single' - Only the entire current page will be visible and Zoom will be set to page width.&#13;
'Continuous' - All pages are visible in one scrollable column and Zoom will be set to page width.&#13;
'Facing' - Up to two full pages will be visible and Zoom will be set to page height.&#13;
'FacingContinuous' - All pages visible in two scrollable columns and Zoom will be set to page height.&#13;
'FacingCover' - All pages visible as whole pages, with an even numbered page rendered first. (i.e. The first page of the document is rendered by itself on the right side of the viewer to simulate a book cover.)&#13;
'FacingCoverContinuous' - All pages visible in two scrollable columns, with an even numbered page rendered first. (i.e. The first page of the document is rendered by itself on the right side of the viewer to simulate a book cover.)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52317">
              <text>FacingCoverContinuous</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38770">
                <text>Colonist 1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38771">
                <text>State University of New York at Binghamton -- Students&#13;
school yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38776">
                <text>Endicott, N.Y. : Triple Cities College ; Binghamton, N.Y. : State University of New York at Binghamton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38778">
                <text>State University of New York at Binghamton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38779">
                <text>1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38780">
                <text>In Copyright</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45994">
                <text>Student yearbook of Triple Cities College (1948- 1950), Harpur College (1951- 1965), and the State University of New York at Binghamton (1966- present).</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2481" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="13693">
        <src>https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/files/original/bea0dc5af4d52e9dfece9b7fe6f38cfa.pdf</src>
        <authentication>33954806a3574ec9f5c84dc8cc08436b</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="68">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="52308">
                    <text>�•

~,

f

·orcorr

~N

.

':11

.

"'

..

·• ...,.,

I"

t

...

~

��Thr dn:twin gs drinc tt'd o n th u e
:\nd thr fo llo wm~ divider po•gcs
arr mC"rrly figm t'nl5 of thC" im·
HRinatio n of tht" c:dito rs and nrti'il
o( the C o lo ni,t
ond Rre 10 n o
wny similar t o any offic ial o r
propo9ed hlutprinu of the: StRt c
Univtrsity of N t"W Yo rk .

Erwin Goldberg, Editor-in Chief
Ann L. Brown, Managing Editor
William F. Barno, Business Manager

2

�7'-e/951 ~t
~~~~

State ~itlf ol ~ *~
3

�STATE UNIVERSITY

OF NEW YORK

HARPUR
COLLEGE
~

0 ..,,, ,..,,,

4.,,

I

I
f

)I
' 'LE.':F'
I'
.:7/Ll7.j.lLL
7. loL
o flu

,~
...:::.JfolE.

11 { nilre uit~j oI- :::::. 1\ IE.

\l/oif~ i:: -:ciih fo,fay mainf':J L~c:c1.LW.e
E.1

laL~£i1f;a/ [:!) t/;i:.

1

'
1...1/ _ l'l.i/1 £'E lilio
'_((_'(_7 oiiL;inati::) a.i

/01

tf;e. /ini:: 1e.co7.c..f

foLfEnh, /~i~uft-:; LU!c../ admill ii ha ti on

l'() L'f'Li::JE

1-

of

(LT

/- .::::.JJ7.LLCll
,,
ie (lf.. llilTE.7.iit_Lja li::m./207.a 7.y i1Htifotion , ctrit/z a f;oj.it:0

j2nm&lt;.UlE.nC_lj in tf;e {tthni::. 17/;at ho/2i:: J;ai now l~ull

uaLizeLf - an) in

L1iL:uh., ctr.::,

t/;e El/itou, lfi:.c.licah tf;e.

1951 CoL~lli1t to tf;.:. ij.ii&lt;.it of

w/;icJ; collhiL~uti:.,f
.::}.fa 7.f2 u 7. c0 a~':} E..

1

77.ij.iL~ Citii:.1 CoL'L~9i:.

..s.o m tw.h to the HE.ctr, j2i:.7.mw2i:.llt

�. . ..

"

t
/7£ onia {I"
bool?..itou:
1

Lo

�\ \ I

\~ \

\' \"'

"\.\\

"

A SORT OF A SAGA

On the night of Ocwbcr 6, 1950, Thom.1\ E. Dewey,

c'il:ibli\hcd Triple Citic\ College, which opened its doors

go,ernor of the St.Ile of New York, £.iced ;1 c.1p.1ciry crowd

tO

of Hudents, te.tchcn, Jigniuries and .1rea cit11en\ in the

Glenn G. B.1rrk now PrO\"OSt of Harpur College, .rnd .1

I· ndicon-Johnson Recrc.nion Center in Endicott :ind for-

full-time faculty of fifty-five. directed .t program of

.in inv:lJing :irmy of 957 \tudent\ in October. Dr.

m.1lh dedic.itcd I hrpur College of the St.1tc University

fre,hm:in .ind sophomore work in libcr:il Art&gt; .rnd Busi-

of :-\cw York. \\'.'it h thi' dedication Governor Dewey began

ness Adminisrr.1tion. Cl.1\\es were held in the Bowes m:in-

.t nc" chapter in the growth of .t college whose roots were

\ion, now the college Administration Building, .rnd the

tir\t pl.mtcd in 1932, when S~·r:icu;e Univcr\itv imrirurcd

E-.J clubhouses. Vacant lot s near the main bui lding were
procured and the pre-fob classrooms were erected: E:1st

1n fxtcnsion Di,ision progr.1111 for :m:,1 \tudcrHs here in
l ndicon.

I Lill in 1946, W CH 1 Lill in 1947.

ln rcsponst· to the community's ob,·iou\ need for a

The second year of TCC's exiHencc bore :ill the ;igm

full - cune collcgc- whrch w.is :icccncu.1ted by rhc large

of growing p:iins which :iccompany the proce% of m:itur:i t ion. ~l ore Gis returned from the :irmed forces, swarmed

number of returning 1 cter.1m -

the univcrsit1· in 1946
6

�thick ly popu lated ;
inco colle ge; cla\s room ; bcom c more
for a jun1o r-\em or
there w.1s dema nd for more cour se\ and
lO rema in here .ind
curri culu m. The desire of \tudent~
in Janu. 1ry of 1948
acqu ire .1 degre e prom pted SyrJ cuse
es in nine majo r
co appro ve a sylla bus of \tudy for degre
field,,
college clear ly
The r:ipid progr ess of the "tem pora ry"
anen t insti tutio n of
dcmo nstr.1 tcd the need for a perm
r the creat ion of a
high er k':lrning in this v.illcy. Afte
1 ew York in M.irc h 1948 by :icl of
Sc.nc Univ ersit y of
rs form ed a Citiz en's
the St:itc Legi slatu re, com mun ity leade
the chair mans hip of
Com mitte e of 175 mem bers, unde r
the univer~ity). Thi\
Edg: ir W. Coup er (now a trust ee of
aign to secure the
comm ittee began an imm ediat e camp

unive rsity in Broo me
C\t.1blishment of a unit of the 11.:\\
fying . In Dece mCoun ty. Com mun it) re;pons.: w.h grati
.1re.1 in the \Ute to
ber, Broo me Cou nty bec.1mc the flr\C
when thc Board of
bid activ ely for .1 com mun ity college
on dolla r, lOward the
Supe rviso rs voted to offer one milli
the same time , .in adcons truct ion of a college here. At
n in capit al assets
ditio nal cont ribut ion of one milli on dolla
ding the facil ities
was prom ised by ch.: Com mitte e, inclu
utilit ies by the Tow n
of TCC , the in~tallation of all publ ic
ted by Thom~\ J.
of Unio n, and a site of 2 3 8 acres dona
Wars on of IBM.
Board of Trus tees
In Febr uary of 1950 , the umv cnity
a \talc gran t of two
.1cc.:ptcd these offers and appr oved
ity's cont ribu tion milli on dolla rs- matc hing the com mun

�for the e'r.1bl 1 ~ hment of .1 four year libcr.11 .1rts college of

th1~

t he stJtc un1\'l'l'\1l) in the Town of Union.

the college will be no more. In its stc.1d. new buildings will

On )cptembrr 1. Triple Ci t1l'\ College b:c.1me a unit
of che uni,·er\ll} "\tem, .ind :i , hon time l.ncr irs n,1mc
w .1, olfin.111)

d1.1nged

to

I larpur College 111 hono:· of

Robert I l.trpur- .1n l'.trh seeder of Brco111e (ounry :ind

to

ri.,e on chc hil1' o, erlooking chis '.1llc); .1 rockbound b.1sc
of determination .rnd hard work mJkes 1ts succe\\ inc\ 1-

ubl:.

Re~

urccful pl.111n111g .rnd concrncd community

cnrrg}' \\'Cre urili1cd

.1 lc.1d111g educ.Hor of the Post -C..010111.11 period.

I he h r\t st udcn ts

:irc.t. Soon thl· physic.ii pbnc which now conHitutcs

rccei' c degree., from the St.Ile

111.1 ncn t col lcge l1.1s

to

nuke this drc.1111 .1 rr.1lit). , \ pcr-

nO\\

been secured for the Trip le C i tics;

Urn,·ersit ) of ;\;c\\ 'I ork \\'ill bl' gr.1du.!ll'd from 11.irpur

ns I II\ ~101 pl.rnr \\ill s:;on be .1s wcll-e,ubli,hcd .1, its

Colkge in June .

.1c.1de111ic and culrur.d influence~ .ire

I he) h.1,·e brcn onh p.1rt of " che gre.lt

C'\pl'nmen t .. in h1ghrr l·duc.nion \\ h1.h j, l·cginning

111

110\\".

The tin.ii ch.1pter j, being \\'ritten . .

�fhe future becomes fhe pd~f ...•...
Pic+ured here IS the wowfh of d dream.
That dredm hds becorrc a real 1tyand now ..
a new dream ha been bom . when that
dream will be fulf 1llcd we do not know ..
but we can be sure tl1dt 1t will someday

be p1c.tured here .....

~J

�I0

��.\1

u:--. J \LRSll't

Sl.\ 11

111 1

OI

l UR IC! I

\I.,\., Ph.D., ILD., Liff./).

1\.13.,
J&gt;RL'&gt;ID l'.I

vr:-.. (.

Of

'\ I \\

BOARD OF

'\ORK

TRUSTEl~S

c AR \1 IU I Af: L, . 1./3., .\l.1\., 13.~ c.. [ l .D., I. ll .D., Lill .D., D.C.L.

OL I \' l R C .

.New York

( llAIR\I \N

Oyster Bay

.\.13.,U. 8.

II. D I A;.. ,

ARIJIUR

\IC l -C 11 \IK\t.'\'

' l R ~.

I . (,RI I '-\IA'-,

I D\I v

GCORGL
P \ Cl

1' I APP i R ,

J.

I .\R I I

IR\'- h.

I ()\\ \RD

\IOO IU ,

J.

;'\cw York

l.H .. U .. 13.

New York

l.H., \I. \.,Ph.D.

\./J., \f. ,\ .. Ph.D., /,. fl.{)., l.11!.D.

\I 't I IR,

Troy

1./3., 1\. \I., /.f .. ll., I ill./).
/, / .13., I I

Kenmore

.D .

, \.H., \I. \.

'-. '&gt;&lt; 11 l !Bl RI I'-&lt;,,

Alban)

II .fl.

\\' hitc PL1 ins

1&gt;. 'i 111 R \\ 001&gt;

1\111'1

'&gt;\11111

f\ l'W York
Syr.1cusc

l.f..13.

\JJ\( 1101 D,

&lt;.

JOS I P l I

11 l '-I{)

11 \ Y '.l '&gt;.

\I \R \I'-,

D\\ I(, 11 f

\!R'&gt;.

'- D

New York

l.H., 11..IJ.

GO I I I,

I RI DI RIC I\.

cw York

13.S., l 1../3.

(HARL [ S C,AR~ llH ,

'\'OR \IA i'.

New York

DO '. '.\." ll L Y

H 1\ \\" L I 't

BI I I 't

'\c\\ York

\\\R'.i'~

I~

�(, I LN i

(, . 13AR1LE

13.Ji., ,\ I. A., Ph.D.
PRO\ 05

r 0 1 l I ARPL.dl COi I Ha:

1\ \ti.:dcnt . 11nu:1l 1&lt;, .1 lw.1'·' .i record
of rhe p.i\t but thi~ one i, .ih~ .1 forcost
of th~ future. 1\s .1 rccor&lt;l 1t will .1lw.1n
\enc rn bring b:1ck fond memorie., of
'tudcnt d .1\ s. The out'&gt;t.ind1ng ch.1r.icter1'&gt;tic oi tl11s 111'&gt;lltution 111 the ti,·e years
of it'&gt; cx1\tcnce h.i., been the w.irm ~p1rit
of fe llowship and good-will with which
Jt h:ts been perme.ned. Those of m who h.i, e li,·ed together
.is students, faculty member- .ind .idministr.1ti,· e '&gt;C.lff do not
need t h, ., printed word to tell us of the hi~h mor.1lc of th"
college. Bm a' t ime PH'&gt;C'&gt; .i nd .i\ dcuils Lide from our
memon, this book will h.1,e incrc.i.,111g YJ!ue .is .t reminder
not only of the e,·erns chronicled herein but of other more
numerou\ .ind more perso11.1I episode' which .ire now .1 p:trt
of the b.1ckground of eac h of m.
The year 19 5 0 brought .1bo11t .1 ch:inge of our .1uspicc'
.rnd .111 c'\tcnsion of our hon/On&gt; of f und.1mcnul signrfiCJncc.
In Febru ary of t h:tt ye.1 r we were .1cccpted by the Bo.1rd of
Trustees .1\ one of only two 1.iber.11 1\ rts colleges in the Sute
Uni,ersin of !'\cw York. In cptembcr we st:trtcd opauron
.1s a p.irt of the State Uni\ cnrt) .ind rccci,·cd our new n.1mc.
In October we were dcdic.n cd .1\ .1 new unit of the Sr.1 tc
Uni,cnny by Go,crnor ThonlJs I . Dcwc). It i., the lot of
'cry few students in ;111} college to particip.ne in rnch import:tnt cd uc:1tion:1 I .1c hic,·cmcnts of their aln1.1 mater.
Under the .iu'&gt;pices of the gre.n t.Hc of i'\cw 1 o rk '''e
h.Hc some immedi.ue .iml 111.in) long-time .1J, ant.lgl'', heretofore denied us by circum\t3ncc \. Although the cost of
opcr.nion is incre.ised, the tuition fee to students is reduced.
The f.icult)-Stude nt ratio is droppe&lt;l, m;ik111g poss1b.e c' en
more indi' idual .ltten tion .111d 3 hi/.!her st.111d.1rd of tc.1ching
compctl•nce. Additiona l cquipmem c.tn be purchased .111d .iddition.11 sp:tce acquired.

Unfonun.11ch 19Hl .il.,o brought the thn:.ll of w.1r .ind
o( the milrt.u\ or~.iniz.nion, "ith its &lt;.Tll\l'
rcbuildrng
the
quern dcletcr'rous effect upon colicge enroll men ts .ind upon
the con~truction of college budding'&gt;. J\s tlm 1\ written 1t
;., not possible to predict the d.ne of construction of the Ill'\\
burldrngs which Wl' rn '&gt;enomh need. \\le uke comfort in
t he cer,t.iint\ th.ll tl1c\e buildir;g s "ill be built JU'&gt;t .i., s.;on
.is pl.ins c.1n be completed .ind bui lding m.llcr t.tls .ire ;l\ ,11l.1blc. In th&lt;.· meJntrme we ctn conunu&lt;. to run ,\11 C'\cclil·nt
collt•.gc in om prcsen t temporir) buildrng\ .
Under the St.ttc our c.1rl1er emph.1'i' on l 1ber.i l 1\rt.,
tr.tining is rl'tH!\\ed .ind intemrfied. Other imtrtutions w1tl11n
the 5t.He lJni,cnin will t.1ke c.1rc of the ,·oc.n1or1.1I cmph.i.,,.,:
our )Ob i .. the b.1,1c one. ,\, (,o,·ernor Dewe\ \,lid 111 o~to­
ber "J !en: ts a school o f good citi/emhip; here is :i st.hool
of idc.1s; hl're " .i s&lt;.hool b\ "hich \\l' u.111\mrt the grc.n
fund.11ncnuf., by whrc..h men h,i\e lived .ind \\onh1pcd .ind
grown free .rnd -rrong. thL truths \\ h1ch h.ne gl\ en them the
cour.1gc ro fight and to &lt;lie for their f.1ith4 111 God ;111d tl1l'1r
f.iith 111 freedom . . .
" ! dedicate I Lirpur Collcgc. tlm solemn night, pledged
lO the truth. l ded1c.ire it pll·dged to thl' 1de.i th.H frl'edom
sh.di never &lt;l1&lt;.' on thi, cJrth, pledged to the concept th:tt the
d11-:111t\ of 111.inkind I\ more 1mpon.1nt tllJn .111y other c.:.1usc,
pledged to fatth in thl' right .ind rn the sure knowlc:dge tl1.1t
f.iith in the right "ill .1lw.1ys t riumph 111 the end."
Pro\·ost (, lenn G. B.1rtle

13

�Elizab eth S. Plank inton
DI R E C TOR OF
ST U DENT PER SONNE L

If thi, auburn haired young lady
never \teered you 111to the ri ght
line of work, or found you .1 job.
or .1 p!Jcc to live-i f \he never
\mooth ed out an\ schoJ.1,tic or financia l rough sp~ts for you-th en
you juH never '' ent to H .upur.
\1i'' P lankint on came here in 1946
.1s \'\!ome n\ Counse lor, .ind became
Directo r of Studen t Pcr,onn el in
1948. Before that \he had been .1
co-ed .ll the Uni,·er \il) of Oregon ,
1
and .1 SPA R ensign in \'1 .1,hing ton.
She receive d her m.1He r\ degree in
h a i J,
pcr\on ncl from Svracm e from Oregon-\p~rk, our campu \
.1ctiYitit•\ and social life with their
fabled inform alin.

Jack F. Kimb all
DI R E CTO R O F THE
EVE NIN G DIVI S I O N

.1,
grow th wor ker,, .1, ciu/cm , ,1\ people enjonng life '' l'eing gi vcn to the
men ,ind \\'Omen of the Triple ('iric\
by the college \ e'enmg progr.1111
oflL·red 1n I nd1nHl .111d .H State
Tech. ,\nd the progra m 1t,clf i'
gro" 1ng. under the h.rnd of ir' .11111
Jble ch id . .f.1ck K1111b.ill. B.1ck with
U' .1g.1in Jfrcr .1 'ear .H Columb i.1
w1ndin,i.: up ht~ \tud~ for .1 doctor .He, \1r. Kimb.tl l i' known lO o ld timer' ·'' the ,oft 'poken :\l issouri.111
who \\.l' our fir,t directo r of ~tu­
dcnt Pcr,onn el. I our 'c.:.1r' a ;-\a, y
lieutcn.111t, he had 'cn~d .1, .1\\1't.ln.t
to the de.in .1l h" .1lm.1 m.ncr. the
Unt\l'r 'll\ of K.1ns.1' &lt;. tl\, before
coming here in 1946.

1\ ch,11H.:e for ne"

John W . Add ley
COU N S ELOR OF S TUDEN T S

The,c days t he college boy no longer
refcn to a c.1lc nd.ir in nuking hi,
future plan\; he uses .1 wHch with
.1 \wcep- ,ccond lund. Seldom before ha'e studen ts h.1d \uch .1n
urgent need for good ad,ice, 'ound
inform ation. and someon e to - rootfor - the home- t c.11n. 1 his i'&gt; where
John Addlcy come&lt;, in. \'\' .ilk into
his oflice, 111.1kc younel f comfo rtable under one of t ho\c gorgeOU\ oil
painti ngs, .ind give him the stOr) .
You soon find out wlut can be
done. If )OU .1skL·d, you'd get t hi s
dat.1: n.llt\C I l o&lt;hon. 0:cw York;
Air Corps rower oper.1to r , \X'orld
\'l'.1r 11; B.S. and :'11.S., "&gt;yr.1cme;
\CCond 'e.tr here.
The pat~tings arc ;\fn. Addlcy \.

14

Micha el N. Scelsi
DIREC TOR OF
PUBLI C RELAT I ONS

When 11.irpu r hi t &gt; t he headlin cschis i' the man behind it. The Jff.ible \1r. Scchi rel ltrncd to Im
nati'c I ndicott in 1949 to ,cc t0
it that the world hear\ from us in
pri nt .i nd on the .1ir w,1\e\. Before
that, he more or le\\ nlJdc the
gra nd tour, global \ty le-gct ti ng
his A.B. :it l oui\l.1n.1 State Uni\ er&gt;it\ . . . 'pend ing four years in che
Pacific ,1\ .1 \brine Capt,1in . . .
workin g three yean a\ .1 UN official in 'inuall ) cn·n countr y in
Luropc . I le cut h1., journ:i li,tic
teeth on the LSU Pel \fr//, .ind it
nO\\ deYOIYcs upon l11m to guide
the assorted 'ooch &gt;.1rcr,, or.1cle\ .111d
b.1ctoc um\ wh(l made up the ,t.1ff
of r hc Col11111t1/ 1\ 1·11 '-

�Gene S. Welborn

Benjamin Hopkins Moses

DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS

REGISTRAR AND
DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS

The Coloniab \\ cnr forth to do
b.1ttk in sil\ \ ars1n arcn.1s chi., year.
I hey carried rhc Green and \X1 hirc
ont~ the hardwood, across the hillocks, out on rhc diamond, down the
cmder \craightawar, onro the b.1selincd .1spl1Jlt .111d O\·er rhc fairways.
The W'elborn warriors hear their
'ignal for Huck in rhe dr.rn I of
the I loosicr '&gt;tatc-rhe coach is a
n.1ti\\.' lndiani.1n. I le got his M.S.
in cduc.Hion .H tliJt state's Univer,ity .1frer .1 sojourn among the Illini
for rhc bacrnla11ri•11, and a rhrec
yc.u tour of ;-\.1\) duty as a c hief
plurm.1cist\ m.Hc. He ca me here
in 1947.

:--ow marking his tenth year .l\ .1
l11gher educator in the Triple ( iric\,
\fr. Moses might be called ad\ .rnci:
gu.1rdian for the college. l le .1rrived in Endicott in 1941 ro din~cr
the Srracusc Extension School, has
been here since. A Scr.rnroni.111, he
rook his A.B. at Syracmc in 1934,
stared on H " Pict\' I Jill" as a\\i\t.1n ( dean of men '.ind received hi s
.\.I. A. there in 1939. As for his
dutie\- well, college means lots of
things. but more than anything cJ,e
it mcJns st udies, courses, cu rriculum. Getting the Hudcnt in, keeping him in and getting him o ut on
sc hedule is Mr. Moses' job-when
the chips arc down, he's your nun.

Herbert L. Leet
LIBRARIAN

l .nt fall .1 co11\'0\

of true k,

rumbled nonhw.1rd.' c.1rrying back
to 5yracmc .111 the books from our
libr.1ry. Herbert Leet surveyed tlw
emp ty &lt;,ucb. drew .1 quick mcnt.11
picture of the lot of us slowly dis
.1ppeari11g in the .1by'' of ill1ter.1c\,
.111d went to work. The libran· nO\\
h.1s nearlr 20,000 volumes. This
gentlcm•ln who ha, staved olT the
e:--tincrion of 1ntcl1igencc in our
1111/11·11 came LO U\ in 1947 with .111
1\.B ..rnd B.f .S. from s, racmc .1frcr
\en ice in rhc libraric' ~£ a number
of public school\ 1n lhc state. I Tc
now operate\ from higher-ceilinged
headquarters in I Lupur's ncwcH
c.1111pus acqut'&gt;tllon-lhe e:---public
libr.1r).
15

Samuel P. Douglass
BUSINESS MANAGER

Those of rou who do not p.1}
tuition, .1ttend l l.1rpur'5 brightc\t
soci.il function\, h.1vc .t l.l\LC for
the .. h.1rpcsl in I\')' I e.1gUl' cogs, or
know .rnnhing of life.Hour colle.~c
m.1\ not be f.1111i li.1r \\1th the keeper
of the college rrca,un. 5.1111 Doug 1.1,,. OtherwtSc, you know him .1,
the young man who rum our ph\·\tc.tl plant and complex monct.uy
m.1ch111er\'. Tfl took O\Cr l.l\t sum
mer .1ft~r a Ye.tr\ good 'en 11.. e
rc.1ching finance to I Lirpur\ fut urc
capt;11m of indmtry. f fc got h1,
BS .rnd ~LB.A. from Syr&lt;ICU\l~
n.n1g.ncd a B-17 during the w.1r
. admit~ to hJving been .1 \Ccond
licutcn.rnr.

�Sidney P. Albert, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Philosophy

Aldo S. Bernardo, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of French and Italian

Michael Bochnak, M.A.
Instructor in Russian and the Classics

Beatrice D. Brown, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of English

Wayne S. Farrow, M.S.
Instructor in Speech

Stephen C. Hambalek
Instructor in Journalism

Margaret R. Hasenpflug, Ph.D.
Instructor in English ond Speech

Bernard F. Huppe, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of English
Chairman, English Department

Mildred M. Kel logg, M.A.
Instructor in English

Orval Perry, M.A.
Instructor in Philosophy

Jack W. Rollow, Ph.D.
Instructor in Eng li~h

ALBERT
BOCHNAK
FARROW
HASEN PFLUG
PERRY

BERNARDO
BR:lWN
HAMBALEK
KELLOGG
SEDA

G ladys A. Seda, M.A.
Instructor in Spanish

16

�Rodney K. Ketcham, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Foreign Languages
Chairman, Division of the Humanities

Douglas Silverton, B.Litt.
Assistant Professor of English

Frederic C. St. Aubyn, M.A.
Instructor in French

Paul Weigand, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of German

John S. Weld, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of English

John De Vere Williamson, M.A.
Instructor in German and Spanish

SILVERTON
WEIGAND

17

ST. AUBYN
WELD

�Lewis M. Alexand er, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Geograp hy

John P. Beln iak, M.A.
Instructor in Citizensh ip and Political Science

Eric Brunger , M.S.
Instructor in History

Hilda Chiarul li, M.A.
Instructor in Business Administr ation and Economics

Arthur Claydon , Ph.B.
Instructor in Business Administr ation and Econom ics

Irving Crespi, M.A.
Instructor in Sociology

Ralph E. Digman , Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Geology

Heinrich E. Friedlae nder, Ph.D.
Acting Professor of Economics

Albert V. House, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of History
Chairman , History Departme nt

Jean Ivory, M.A.
Instructor in Citizenshi p and Political Science

ALEXANDE R
BRUNGER
CLAY DON
FRIEOLAEN DER
IVORY

BELNIAK
CHIARULL I
CRESPI
HOUSE
LUTZ

Rolland R. Lutz, M.A.
Instructor in History

18

�Joseph E. VanRiper, Ph.D.
Professor of Geography
Chairman, Division of Social Sciences

Otakar Machotka, Ph .D.
Acting Professo r of Sociology

Seymour Z. Mann, M.A.
Instructor in Political Science

Jacob Oser, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Economics

Lawrence F. Pi sani, M.A.
Instructor in Sociology
Chairman, Sociology Deportmen t

Robert W. Rafuse , Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Political S::ience
Chairman, Political Science Department

G. Ralph Smith, M.S.
Instructor in Economics
Chairman, Economics Deportment

19

MACHOTKA
OSER
RAFUSE

MANN
PISANI
SMITH

�Ethan 0. Allen, M.A.
Instr uctor in Mathematics

Helmut Aulbach, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Mathematics

Clement G. Bowers, Ph.D.
Lecturer in Botany

Jacob H. Fischthal , Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Biology

James R. F. Kent, Ph.D .
Associate Professor of Mathematics
Chairman, Mathematics Department

Henry

c.

Ketcham, Ph.D.

Lecturer in Physics

ALL EN
BOWERS
KENT
PENFIELD

AULBACH
FISCHTHA L
KETCHAM

Robert H. Penfield, Ph.D.

PITEL

Assistant Professor of Physics

Martha Pitel , R.N. , M.S.
Instructor in Nursing and Zoology

20

�Marti n A. Pa ul , Ph. D.
Professor of Chemistry
Chairman, Division of Science and Mathematics

Marce lle Sch ubert, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Chemistry

George Swanson, B.A.
Instructor in Botany

Ke nne th T. Wa ldock, Ph.D .
Assistan t Professor of Chemistry

James H. Wilmoth , Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Zoology and Biology
Chairman, Biology Deportment

Frances M. Wright, M.A.
Assistant Professor of Mathematics
SCHUBERT
WILMOTH

21

WALDOCK
WRIGHT

�John M. O ' Brien , Ph .D.
Associate Professor of Business Administrotion
Chairman, Division of Business Administration

William L. Claff, M.B.A.
Instructor in Business Administration

Jacob Eidelheit, M.B.A., L.L.B.
Instructor in Busi ness Administration

Joseph V. McKenna, M.M.E.
Assistant Professo r of Business Administration

Marjorie Perry, B.S.
Instructor in Business Administration

Charles J. Reitemeyer, M.B.A.
Instructor in Accounting

Robert H. Tucker, M.B .A.
CLAFF
MCKENNA
REITEMEYER

EIDELHEIT
PERRY

Assistant Professor of Accounting

TUCKER

22

�J. Alex Gi lfillan, Mus .M.
Associate Professor of Music

Atwell M. Bookmiller, B.S.
Assistant Instructor in Music

Edward R. Pomeroy, B.S.E.
Instructor in Art

Robert N. Berryman, M.A.
Instructor in Psychology

GILFILLAN

William Coate, Ph.D.

BOOKMILLER

Assistant Professor of Psychology

POMEROY

W. Porter Swift, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Chairman, Psychology Department

BERRYMAN
COATE
SWIFT

�ROW I

N GOLDEN

T fORBES
R CHERWAK
M. MISTRETTA
I GUNSET
J ELY
ROW Z

£ POMlROY

D HOLMES
J

BOTTINO

E BROWN
E JAYES
P WATERMAN
D SI 'IStR
L BELL
J DOI'. NEY
M CONEY
( MOYER
M CROOKS
M BRAIN

CAFETERIA STAFF

CUSTODIANS
Lewis Bryan

Helen Rutter, Director

Head Custodian
Ethel Lewis
Elma Crooks
Althea Miller

Housekeeper

Sylvia Morrissey

Lee Deck er

Michael Pipik

Anthony Demelros
Michael Dobosz
William Gunsel
John Lovelace
Ethel Sykes
... always a cheery smile.

�John M. Mallor y, M.D.

. .. hours one to two . . .

Anne L. Meade , R.N.

. . anybod y need on aspirin ?

Ursula Hombo lek, Public Relatio ns Assista nt
"U rch " tells all .

L BRARIAN S
D PURCE LL

C LYON
"1

"1ERCllR

II

MISTRlT TA
KIBB!

Y

25

���28

�29

�)
)
DONALD ALFORD
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

CARMELLO ALOI

OWEGO, NEW YORK
"01u u /)() nn er u11clc-rlllkn
""lllm1~ 1111'ffc-rl11"Ul."

JOHN C. ARNOLD

LANGUAGES

ENGL!SH

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK
"'1\11

01111&lt;1

"'"'" "

/1•/.{t' .• ,

()j

tllftl/&gt;rHt

/'&lt;11111.I "'

/\

f'rt1t•

Sponiih Club V. Pre&gt;. 2, Pres. 3.

FRANK BEACH
PSYCHOLOGY

SOCIAL SCIENCE

WOODHAVEN, NEW YORK

"·\11d lho11.~h h,

loH, /,,•
.e.ond.''

/1r111111"

111.ikl'i

hu

/u h1&gt;

Clarendon Clu b 3 , Clarendon
Editor-in-Chief 4, Agopeons 3;
Sponish
Club 3;
Pentongle
Club 4.

JAMES M. BEAN

HOMER GATES OIGGS

SOCIAL SCIENCE
ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

SCIENCE

.1

/1

u/, mo.I

~1

Jdlou."

Track 1, 2, 3, 4 ; Cross Country
4; International Relations Club
3, 4

DONALD BITNER

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK
"I Jo

c rou 11.

Goliords 3, 4.

• \

GENERAL BUSINESS
GREENE, NEW YORK

··1 ht c11111 I mind '' ric1&gt;rr 1'1..u1
Choir 2; Jazz Club 2

SYRACUSt NEW YORK

p1·om1h·

Italian Club 1, 2, 3, Pres. 4;
French Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Spanish
Club 2; Newmon Club 4; Out·
ing Club 4; Spring Weekend
Committee 3 .

JOHNSON CITY, NEW YORK

BENJAMIN AVERY

Germon Club 1; Soiens 2 , 3 , 4;
Intramural Softball 2 , 3.

/011

lo 1111/,

,,,,J olnt rr 1."

�PATRI C I A BLISS

MART IN BOVEE

PSYCHOLOGY
NEWARK VALLEY, NEW YORK
" /frr br1:.;,hl

PHILIP BRECK ENRID GE

PSYCHO LOGY

\'111/,

b.u111/\

1111·

i t 11/."

Pondoro n Sec. 2, 3, Pres. 4;
USG Sec. 2; Closs Sec. 2 , 3, 4;
Winter Sports Club 2; Spanish
Club.

SPANISH

WALTON , NEW YORK

...th, r,

n

surr

h un111 11

uwl but

jot)J

mll\ic.''

Ill

!h t
fi nd\ tis

110 f&gt;J u1011 i11

French Club; Soiens 2; Music for
Moderns 3, 4.

ANN BROW N
SOCIAL SCIENCE

BINGHA MTON, NEW YORK
"/11 sflm l \ ,111d 1011 r11r ) i mr 11 "''

lwuu 11."

THOMPS ON, PENNA.
u

\m ln/ 1011, !hr u 111,t:,.( of .i:,rr11f
ac·/1011. ''

Adelphi l, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Ten·
nis 1, 2, 3;: Intramu ral Sports

2, 3; lnternot ionol Relation s
Club 1; Spanish Club 4 ; Colo·
niol News 2.

French Club 1, 2, Treas . 3 , 4;
Thalions 2, Pres. 3, 4; Colonist
2, 3 , Managin g Ed . 4; lnternofo nal Relation s Club 4; Spring
Revue 3 ; Campus Chest Steer·
ing Commit tee 4; USG Vice ·

Pre ~.

4.

051951
MARIL YN H. BROW N
SOCIAL SCIENCE

JOHN CALLA NAN

JOHNSO N CITY, NEW YORK
'' ) 011

h.n1·

/111/l'\ I,

lu l1rl1nr
(JI'

BETTY JEAN CARL

GENERAL BUSINESS

111

bli /J / 11'1f\\

h"p
llt'l I I

COU/C'\ . ' 1

Pondoro ns l , 2, V. Pres. 3, 4;
USG 2; Spanish Club 2 ; New·
men Club 2; Colonia l News Ad ·
vertising Mgr. 2.

SUSQUE HANNA , PENNA.

..Q1111 I

11rr

/1rno1H

t'ltr\ U iJ(ff

ROBER T H. CALVE RT

FOREIGN LANGUA GES

u d comc

11

'' [ or

HJ/fllf\\

Jri.1rfu,

Business Ad m inistratio n Club 3,
4; lntromu rol Sports 2.

.l l

SO CIAL SCIENCE

BINGHA MTON , NEW YORK
,\/,c

dlti/

\ ll 11/

ti/

grtlc't' . ..

Coed Club l ; Pondoro ns 2, 3 ,
4; French Club 2, 3, 4; Germon
Club 3, 4, Sec. 4 ; Colonia l
News 4.

BINGHA MTON, NEW YORK
··,\ o

hg11c)
is
ho11nl). "

10

r te

b

,, ,

Alpha Phi O mega 2, 3, 4; Eng ·
lish Club 2, Treas 3; Pentong le
4; Dionysia n Sec. 3, Member ot· IN ge 4; Colon ial Pla ye rs 2,
Treas. 3 ; Agc peo ns 2 ; Inte r- f ro·
ternity Cou ncil Pres. 3

�" ) 'on

h111 t

11

m111d

tilrfjrd

111

.. I I '' u ork u b;,·h g11 n

/ JJHllJI'\ , , ''

fit11

m

'' \\ ./,J/r-',,.

fd/f lo

' " /1j1 ."

Pin Topplors 1, 2; Business Ad·
ministration Club 4.

JAMES COUPER
GENERAL BUSINESS

"r/-, '&lt; I IUI f.tf/ r /,J/ld •/ Jm
k1t'ft1ng //,, 111111d 1fr11,/) o n
a

//t.111 fntH11t ''·"

Ill)

l.i/1

11

r1/, "

/\,

'/1

Ill )

Goliards 2, 3 , 4.

lntromurol Football 2 , Softball
USG Member·at· Lorge 3;
Class Pres. 3; Dionysians 3.
Sec. 4.

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

" If ,·

k11ot1&gt; II

/nc ft

IC.I \

//J,·

II

111J

h/rw1,"
Germon C lub 2.

3;

WILLIAM DAVIES

UGO CIANCIOSI

GENERAL BUSINESS

GENERAL BUSINESS

ENDWELL, NEW YORK

ENDI COTT, NEW YORK

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

1/\ k_,, / ••

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

PSYCHOLOGY

ENGLISH

ECONOMICS

GENERAL BUSINESS

BYRON CONROE

JAM ES CLUGSTON E

DONALD V. CLARK

CLIFFORD CASTERTON

.. , '""

~.."'",,

dr!lti) J-.1/•/•1

II'

Intra mural Baske tba ll 1, 2, 3;
Softball 1, 2, 3; Business Ad·
minis tration Club 3, 4; Spanish
Club 1; Goliords 3 , Pres. 4;
Co'anist Advertising Mgr. 4.

Business Adminis tration Club 1,
4; Pin Topplers 1, 3 ; Newmon
Club 4.

• ?

&gt;-

CONRAD A. DEWAN
MATHEMATICS
ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

( .tlm 111 '111 r nin.
,J/m u1tluu his , l "

,,,,J

Germa n C lub 1, 2; Newmon
Club 2, 3 , 4; WSSF 2 , 3; Saiens
3 , 4; Intramural Sports : Softball
3 , Basketball 3 , Fo~tball 4 .

�BERNARD T . DETRICK

CHARLES DIEFFENBACH

PAUL H. DEWEY

ENGLISH

SCIENCE

SCIENCE

SCIENCE

AUBURN, NEW YORK
BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK
'"It

11ul

/I

ilf

,,,..

1111/n.1

)011

•IYI'

hn tt'rttltb."

t'1Hf."

Intramural Football 3; Soiens 4.

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

··ror ti Ha m1111's m1/urc· uhu-b
mdkf.tt b1111 lrinl u o r!h), 110/

", \

m1ucl t·onfrnl holh ,·rou"

,,m/ kiuxdom

.

AMERICO DI PIETRO

1L"

Germon Club 2; Soiens 2, 3,
Pres. 4; Colonist Sports Ed. 3,
Soles Mgr. 4; Pistol Club 2;
Jazz Club 2; Classical Music
Club 2; Intramural Softball 3,
4; Football 4 .

French Club l , 2, 3; eowling 2,
3, 4; Soiens 3, 4 ; Pentongle 4.

RICHARD DIXON

W I LLIAM ELLISON

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK
"I lltJU/d

xoud

)OU

ti

1111/kl'

lt\1'

of tbuJ

i\dom."

Germon Club 2.

°' 1951
W I LL I AM D I NO
GENERAL BUSINESS
BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

"'/ rd1

011

lmn as

011 111).«·lf."

Colonial News 2; USG 2; Adelphi 2, 3, Pres. 4; Business Administration Club 2, 3, Pres. 4;
Newmon Club 2, 3, 4; Spanish
Club 2; J.V. Basketball 2.

SOCIAL SCIENCE

PSYCHOLOGY

WATKINS GLEN, NEW YORK

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK
"'/ l&gt;l'rc· /.\ mustc

111

SAMUEL J. FALBO
SCIENCE
CARBONDA LE, PENNA.

,,I/ tlnugc"

Music for Moderns 2, 3 .

Goliords 3 , 4 .

33

Soiens l ,
1, 2, 3,
Boccocio
bal l l, 2,

2,
4;
4;
3,

3, 4; Italian Club
Newmon Club 4;
Intramural Basket4; Softball I, 2, 3.

�JOHN FERRANTI

MARY ANN FERRARI

PSYCHOLOGY
BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK
" II

11

Jh,

.. / ,111.1!,UaM,r

.-..:omf.''

lhr·

of

"'//, '' a X&lt;'lllnn.111,

ERWIN GO LDBER G

l{t''1HJll

am/ ra/m

J,,,
Germon Club 2, 3; Pistol Club
3, Treo•. 4

ROBERT E. HOOD

CHARLES HEATH

ENGLISH

SCIENCE
MILDRED, PENNA.

thr
bclo11g

111dxmr 11I.

1111alrl1n
tPeciJ/I\
111,s: Jo " lcad,. r.''

VESTAL, NEW YORK

.1ff11ble

In "' rn , ri11lu11 ...

SCIENCE
ENDICOTT, NEW YORK
0

hc·t111J\t

11al111r /\ k.111,/ .111,/

Fronch Club 1, 2, Sec. 3, Pres.
4; Newmo n Club 2, 3, 4; Tholions 2, 3, 4; Italian Club 3, 4;
Spanish Club 4.

RICHARD GILLIES

International Relofons Club 1,
2, 3; World Federalists 2, 3 ;
Philosophy Club 2, 3.

Irr"'

SOCIAL SCIENCE

JOHNSON CITY, NEW YORK

1ho11xhl."

Germon Club 2; Soiens 4.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK

tt

JOSEPH GILG

GENERAL BUSINESS

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

111i11./ 1h,1/ 111Jkdh

SOCIAL SCIENCE

ROBERT FRENCH

FOREIGN LANGUAGES

0

Germon Club, Pres 2; Saiens 2,
3, 4; Jewish Fellowship 2; Colonist Sports Ed. 2, Managing Ed.
3, Editor- in-Chief 4; Colonial
News 4 , Feature Ed . 3; Colonial
Players 1, V. Pres. 3, Pre1. 4;
Intramural Softball 2, 3, 4.

T/Jc /11n11lf\\ of //Ir
on bn lhould.-n "

ll

nrftf

JOHNSON C ITY, NEW YORK
H

Colonial News Sports Ed. 2,
Editor-in-Chief 3; Co!onist Copy
Ed. 4; Spanish Club 2, 3; Colonial Players 3; English Club 3;
Pentangle Pres. 4; Varsi ty Bose·
boll 1, 2, 3, 4 ; Varsity " H '
Sec. 4 .

H

" . . . ll"f Jll~I

lhr• c/lllfi ku1J.''

Germon Club 3, 4; Saiens 3 , 4.

�JOSEPH V. IANNONE
SO C IAL SCIENCE

DA VID JONES

EN DICOTT, NEW YORK
"( l111r

~lul1mt11/ n 4tr.t.:,11m111t."

Italian Clu b 1, 4; International
Relations Club 4.

JOHN R. KANE

SCIENCE

MATHEMATICS
S C RANTON , PENNA.

'"/'rnc'rtf

1111.

()

m~

WAVERLY, NEW YORK

111tcxr1 / _) .

BINGHAMTON , NEW YORK
.

1111 n- I hd t " .li/1g111fl1 Jn1H'rt

GEORGE KOURY
ACCOUNTING

nl thl'c. 0

Soiens 1 , 4; Track 1; Germon
Club 1, 2; Protestant Group 1
2; Co' o,ist 2, 3, Intramural
Softball 2.

A.1·n1-,;ght1·d 111

m11/ln.s

oj /Ju,1111·0 ."

Saiens. 2, Trea s. 3, 4 ; Newmon
Club 2 , 3, 4 : Closs Sgt.-of
Arms 3 ; Intramural Softball 1,
2, 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3.

Varsity Tennis 2 , 3; Colonial
News Business Mgr. 4.

JOHN C. KOTCH ICK

WOLFGANG KRI EGSMAN

°' 1951
WILLIAM J . KEA L
GENERAL BUSINESS
ALBANY, NEW YORK

''/ com mit /bf rn / l o /or /11 111 ,''
Baccocia l, 2, 3, 4; Business
Administration Club 2 , 3 .

ROBERT KOHNSTAM
GE NERAL BUSINESS

·· \\ /\Jom . .. '' buuxht

p,, iou·c"

FOREIGN LA NGUAGES

SCIENCE
ENDICOTT, N EW YORK

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK
n () u r

/r') , \-

1111/urt

"' r1· /\

our u "" ."

Adelphi 2, Pres. 3 , 4; Bond 4;
Intramural Softball 2, 3.

35

,,,,, uultl~,

BINGHAMTON , N EW YORK
'/hr 11 hol1
1i..1/1t 1·

u orld "

m)

lu11d.''

Closs Pres. 1; USG Treas. 3,
Pres. 4; French Club 1, 2, 3, 4;
Gorman Clu b Treas. 3 , 4; Span
ish Club 4, Slavic Club Pres. 4,
Dionysian 2, 3, 4; English Club
2, 3; Pin Topplers 2, 3 , 4;
Chairman WSSF 2, 3.

�WALLACE KUBLER
SOCIAL SC IENCE

HOWARD LANDON
GENERAL BUSINESS

ELMIRA, NEW YORK
·~11,

Ufl1JIJ 110/ //i111k .1 ./111)

•lllJll...
Span'. sh Club 1, 2; lt~lian Club
2, 4 ; International Relation s
::lu b 2 , 4 ; Sociology Club 2;
Golicrds 4, Intramural fo&gt;tboll
1, 2 , 4; Basketball 1, 2 , 4 , Soft.
b o ll 1, 2, 4.

HARRY LIEBSTER
SOCIAL SCIENCE

ENGLISH

BINGHAMTON NEW YORK

··I/,

rule uj
btBOlf1\

11

Ill)

lrit

/11

m.1k1

.. ., /.,

ENGLISH

of

/1jc· 1° 111 Jlf ••

·· 1-1111\b tlun-rJ1t,'.t,lrll.
)&lt;111

hf

/,,,,,.

\('/

"·/ f."
Bu sine u Administration Club 2.

36

/.,
/p,
m•i·d ·•

.I

1111

•f

SAMUEL MARKARIAN

u·l1n."

Bond 1, 2; Colonist 3; Colonial
News 4; Alpha Phi Omega 3 ,
4; Pentongle 4 .

o/

THOMAS V. LYNCH

.. \l rm· /r/\h tha11 thr Irnb thn11

)our·

/•1111/i

Slavic C lu b 4; Philosophy Club.

JOHNSON CITY, NEW YORK

\at. I. !hf

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK
Oft /,,

Pondorons 3 ; Colonial News 3 ;
Colonial Players Sec. 4 .

GENERAL BUSINESS
V EST AL, NEW YORK

u ork

'"' Y&lt;f

f1k1l\Jlff, ••

LAWRENCE LOVELAND

ALEXANDER LEFCHECK
SOCIAL SC IENCE

OWEGO, NEW YORK

Business Administration Club 3;
Goliords 4 .

BINGHAMTON , NEW YORK

International Relations Club 3 ,
Pres. 4; Adelphi 4 .

VIRGINIA LANGELAND

SCIENCE
JOHNSON CITY, NEW YORK

"'J / ,· .~Of'\ for
In t II\ , "

lb.JI

'""'

uncr

French Club 1, 2; Soiens 2, 3 ,
4; Germo n Club 4; Moth Club 4.

�ROBERT MARECH E K

SAMUEL MARCONE

ENGLISH

FOREIGN LANG UAGES
ENDICO TT, N EW
H

\

YO~K

.:,rm.I mu11 I .11~/') • .i. ·• ' "
lllf/11

/1

ltolicn Club 3, Spc nish Club 3·
Newma n Club 4, Ba ccocia 4.

b~,1 · /

" \\' J,, u the
If "'

Varsi ty

3,

GENERAL BU SINESS

GENERAL BUSINESS

/,1 c\ lo , 1 ~,.1k,

d ,,,, I'' /1•
'H

,,,

JI/ ..

Pres. 4; Golf 2,

ROCHESTER, NEW YO RK

CANISTEO, NEW YORK

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

,'1\00·'"

JAMES MACKERCHAR

JACK H. MC CALLUM

'"R,,1,/) c/,

.,t/

1

Ile'

tb111g\

'·'\

b1

\ o/ '· ng I\ rllfl c • ·' .1/t/1
lo .t 111 .111 tfh1'1 Cot/Tit f) ,1nJ

&lt;1l.1cflmc

dcl1rm111.;1

""'''"' ,,. ..

'""'·"

Business Administrot"on Club 4;
Soiens 4

4.

o519SI
GEORGE MEAKER
GENERAL BUSIN ESS
WHITNEY POINT, NEW YORK

FRANK D . MEDDAUGH
PSYCHOLOGY
BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

.. , ltk. th \ "'' "di...

KENNETH

D. MIDGLEY

ROBERT J. MIKULSKI
GENERAL BUSINESS

PSYCHOLOGY

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK
.. ( c / J 111 f) .

hr " ,,,

.1

.:.ooil jd

.

0
/

knou

Ill\

l11n 111t " · ·•

lo u .··
Golden Circle 1, 2, 3.

Intramur al Football 4, Bosket·
bal l 4.

Gol iards 3, Treas. 4, Pistol Club
4, V. Pres. 2, Pres. 3; Intra mural Softball 2; Closs Pres. 4.

Business Administration Club 4;
Alpha Phi Omega 4 ; International Relations Club 4.

�GEORG E MILLE R

RAYM OND E. MILLS

GENERAL BUSINESS
NEW YORK, NEW YORK
"/Ji

1/101/1 /1kr thr11· '"'
//,c·1r c '"' \ /Jt'.'!,11,/, d .

SOCIAL SCIENCE

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

&lt;11/

. ..

Pin Topplers 1, 2, 3, 4 ; Int ramural Softball 1, 2, 3; Football
1, 2, 3, 4.

EDWA RD O ' NEILL
ECO NOMI CS

Goliords 2, 3,
Bosketbo ll 2.

1111,\ .

Glee Club 3; Madriga l 3; Di
onysions 4.

4;

Intramu ral

JOHNSO N CITY, N EW YORK

"\/oth m•k· 1 •Ii th111x• .l1ffi1 ult
but 111,/111111 wll ••'1 '"
Tholions 2, 3, 4; Colonial Play2; Internat ional Relation s
Club 4.

ers

HARO LD M. PARSO NS

LOUIS PICC IR ILLI

SOCIAL SCIENCE

BINGHA MTON, NEW YORK

· / .lo /111/

EDITH M I SSAVA GE

PSYCHO LOGY

CHEMISTRY

BAINBRIDGE, NEW YORK
''\/1

J./i

of I•

"""·' ..

wrf

a11J

1fo11/ ol

11111r1 /,, .irf

JOHNSO N CITY, NEW YORK
"If /\ \f/ t.1 ,,f1f)l•I , Jh.111 tthic/

kutd of

1111111 //,,

lllX,

1111

\ti

P ,

-c

HI

H

110//1-

Ill&lt; t

English Club 2, Pres. 3; Pent·
angle 4; Chorus 1, 2 ; Glee Club
V. Pres. 3; Adel phi 2 , 3, 4 ;
Colonial N ews Managin g Ed.
3 ; Editor-in -Chief 4; Colonial
Players 1, 2, 3; Spring Revue
1, 2, 3; Madriga l 2, 3; Clarendon 3; Colonist 4.

CHAR LES R. PUTRI NO
ECO NOMICS

END ICOTT, NEW YORK

·· I

JOHN MOOR E
ENGLISH

ENDI COTT, NEW YORK

./01 lh good l1k1

,1 m1·,/1,111 c''

Germon Club 1, 2, 4; Boccocio
2, 4· Intramu ral Football .

Soiens 1, 2, 3; Pin Topplcrs 2,
3, 4; Germon Club 2, 3; Italian
Club 3, 4· Boccocio Pres. 4,
Newmon Club 4.

38

Goliords 2, 3, 4; USG Trecs. 4 ·
Closs Sgt.·ot-o rms 4; N ewmon
Club Pres. 4; Varsity
H 4
Varsity Track 1, 2, 3; Italian
Club 3, 4; Intramu ral Bosket
boll 1, Softball 1, 2, 3.

�GEORGE REJEBIAN
SCIEN CE

MAURICE ROBINSON
ECONOMI CS

BINGHAMTON , NEW YORK

io/.:111g ,,,,,,,.,. Id

"/)11/

011,.

BARBARA ROOD
PSYC HOLOGY

11lfr11/w11

lo

11&lt;

g11 &lt;'

··,1
" P frc11 a11t

GENERAL BUSINESS

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK
fr/10 11 ."

wr10 1n

RICHARD SAMMONS

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

a/har /11 ,· k111 d of
,'{rtJ Cf, " f ull tl fS U YlJllCI' /!,ll ('II
b i look &lt;."
m a /

mulfrn."

Saiens

2,

3,

4;

Colonial News Circulation Mgr.
1, Business Mgr. 2; Ca!onist
Sales Mgr. 3, Senior Ed . 4; USG
2, 3, 4; Pandorans 1; Thalians
3, Pres. 2, 4; Cheerleader 1, 2,
3, Captain 4; Madrigal 1, 2, 3;
French Club I ; Chorus 1.

lntromural

Basketball 2, 3, Football 2;
Colonial News 4; Alpha Phi
Omega 4.

~1951
MICHAEL SEJAN

ROGER SAVIDGE
ACCOUNTING

SOCIAL SCIENCE

SOCIAL SCIENCE

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK
,. /. d him u ho knn ll'!J l h t 11H l r t1 mt• 11 f p/11 \ 11/1011 11. "

EDWIN SCHUMACHER

"'''" u-ho~r·
/m u o .''

..focfllflffc'

GENERAL BUSINESS

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK
., t\

hn

' '/ 11

c1 111flm·~,

,J,,,// b,·
Adelphi 4.

Business Administration Club 2,
3, 4; Music for Moderns Club
4, V. Pres. 3.

39

1111tl

ROBERT A. SCHWER

co11ji,/01n

ST. ALBANS, NEW YORK

''/k t1fUll}~

"1t'I Y \

tH

) ()JI 1"1111

u

.l 0 11 r _\I rr11gl h. •·

Business Admini stration Club 3;
Boccacia 2, 3, 4; Mu sic for
Mo~erns 2, 3; Colonial Play·
ers 4.

�GEOR GE SCUL LY
MATHEMATI CS

NORM AN SKEIR IK

ENDI COTT, NEW YO RK
lflclJ.

..

GEOR GE R. SMITH

SCIENC E

SC IEN CE

BINGHA MTON, NEW YORK
"J ;,,. 11rul.I mnf, 110/H11/i half

BINGHA MTON , NEW YO RK
.. (}111c"/ jnn1 n

Ull).''

wli

Saiens 1, 4; Sgt.-ot- Arms 2, 3,
German Club 1, 3, 4 ; Alpha
Phi Omega 3, Treas. 4; Intramural Footbal l l , 2; Agapea n •

PAUL STAB LES
ENGLIS H

I

di OJlll p/J1/,1' U /J.1/
J111u, 1

11.111 110/

•

OWEGO
"fir

11l1r1

"

ti11,/1 1/

NEW YO RK

"11,,,, '"

bard

fo

11 .Jlk

"J1/"

Saien• 1, 2, 3. 4; French Club
2; G e rma n Club 3 ; Intramu ra l
Footba ll 4.

3

MERR ELL THAL LINGE R

FRIENDSVILLE, PENNA .
'~1 11,· quid m111d '' ru hl'r !h.111

u c ro u

JEAN NE THOM AS

GERA LD TOMA N

ENGLISH

SCIENC E

11.

Pin Toppler s l ; German Club 1;
Colonis t 3 ; Saiens 3, 4; Alpha
Phi Omega Sec. 3 , 4 .

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK
u \u fc' / H ! ht \( 011'

ll ht&gt;rt' ,'-:Olht{

/11c'll.I /•1/1 p/a\•."

ECONO MICS

Colonia l News Feature Staff 1,
2, 3, 4; Ca onial Players 2, 3 ,
4; Pandor an• l , 2, 3, Historia n
4; English Club 1, 2, 3, Sec. 4;
French Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Claren d "n Manusc ript Ed. 4; Newma n
Club 2, 3, 4, Sec. l.

40

GENERAL BUSINESS

JOHNS ON CITY, NEW YORK
' ' ) fl ll

hnr

11

ROBE RT J, TURN ER

111111/,/,

BINGHA MTON, NEW YORK

u 11.·•

Varsity Basebal l 1, 2; Intramural Footbal l 2, 3, 4, Basketball 2, 3, 4; Varsity " H
4;
Spanish Club 4 .

Alpha Phi Omega 3, 4; Adel phi 4.

�RICHARD H. TURNER
GENERAL BUSINESS

'" /\ 111.! uu.I 'rmr l ··mn."

d trS

BUSINESS

GENE &lt;AL BUSINESS

OWEGO, NEW YORK
" ( )/J,

1111hf&gt;.''

Jul

.1r1

Of
'J\

'"

ool·

c/u/

WILLIAM A. WARNER

/rt\Olcn

JOHNSON CITY, NEW YORK

·· 111

t\

J

I

/II/)

1 ••

Business Administrotio n Club 1,
3 , 4; Intramural Softball 2, 3 .

11,/ u h11 111 ,/ Lh
.fp h /.,·/,,"

Coloniol Ployers 2, 3, 4 ; G lee
Club 2, 3; Spring Revue 3;
Adelphi Pres. 4.

1951

KENNETH WILLIAMS
SOC IAL SCIENCE

m ) dn·,/s /,,.

HAROLD WOLFSON

LE ROY E. WORSTER

SCIENCE

BINGHAMTO N, NEW YORK
UJ )'

GE:-IE~AL

BINGHAMTO N, NEW YORK

., II If/, /&gt;• 111il, ll11mgJ.1, /,, /•on

Alpha Phi Omega 3, 4; Business
Administratio n Club 3, 4; Glee
Club 3.

~ ·1. ,-1

STUART W. WATKINS

ECONOMICS

CASTLE CREEK , NEW YORK

°'

PAUL WALSH

uiluns

&lt;&gt;/

FOREIGN LANGUAGES

MIDDLETOWN, NEW YORK

"Ill' /Jal""

111fi11J/1

d, .d of u11.· •

u·ork."

Adelphi Chaplain 3, 4; V. Pres.
USG 4; lnternot:onol Relations
Club 3 , V. Pres. 4; N ewmon
Club 3 ; Germon Club 3; Alpha
Phi Omega 3, Pres. Pro· Tem 4.

Boccocio 1, 2, 3 , 4· Vorsity
Track l, 2, 3; USG 2; Intro·
mural Basketball l, 2, 3, 4,
Softball l , 2, 3, Football 1, 3 ,
4; Colonial Players 4.

41

MATHEMATICS

JOHNSON CITY, NEW YORK

"\

l1·a,.11rd
It .. ~11/.

man
. . :·

ha\

EDWARD M . ZISKA

alua p

French Club 2, 3 , Trea s. 4;
Spanish Club 3, 4 ; Glee Club 2;
Chorus 2.

BINGHAMTO N, NEW YORK
" \\db mmln l

cl1,t.;,1t1/ )

,111d

1t1lm

1· 011/t 11/ ..

Closs Pres. 4; Closs Trecs. 3;
lntromurol Football 4, Bosket
boll 4.

�Richard Carey, Binghamton, New York

Mathematics

Jose ph Cle a ry, Binghamton, New York

Social Science

Thomas Evans, Endicott, New York

Science

John Gilman, Endicott, New York

English

Mimi Goudey, Binghamton, New York

English

George Homa, Endicott, New Yo rk

English

Thomas Ivory, Binghamton, New York

Social Science

Albert Mariani, Binghamton, New York

General Business

Donald Olver, Endicott, New York

General Business

Samuel Resnick, Binghamton, New York

Science

John Valky, Johnson City, New York

General Business

42

��C PUTRINO K

MIDGLEY P BLISS E ZISKA J

'w11ior OffiC&lt;'rs,

Secrc•l11r_)
Trc11wrcr
Srr g1•11111 -11 I - J\ r111.~

K

MIO&lt;.LtY C PUTRINO. V LANGELAND H

C'a.1.1

/1111111:r)

J&gt; ll'SIC/c 11 f
Via Prnidmt

KOTCHICK

Sl'l1im Officl'ls,
p ,. ('.~ icl(' II I

I [)\\ ,\RD /.IS"- \

"' '

\I ice Prniclc11t

':\'l 111 -.11oc,1 1 '

PAlR ICIA
JOH,,

Sl'crclar)

B l IS!&gt;

T rc•11.111 rer

KOTCl l KK

Scrgc1111 l-t1! -Ar 111.1

( ll ARI I S PUlR l :-..0

P.1rti.1llr obscured by our best \Uits, thJt was 111 you
ju\t looked .1t-thc first Harpur •eniors. W'c few, we happy
fc", ;1re the intrepid b:1nd who came three or four yeJrs .1go
to young TCC. And here we st.1ycd. I !ere it is that we chose
to llkc our L iber.il .irt,, our Bu~inC\\ Administr:1cion and
our :'\0Do1.
\\'hilc here. we ,,tt in cl.1" 1800 hour-. c.ich, lc,s cuts.
In the wildc'l 1m.1gi111n~\ of our imtructon. we 'rndicd .\600
hour' out side of d.t\S.
\X'c rcJd. J\I C.1pp-ye\. And l~llcry Queen ..ind Kime\'.
Rut .tl\o Sophocles ..ind C h.lllcer. Om.tr, Tobto1 .ind 11.iubat. 1\nd Sh.1" .tnd \lark T" a1n .md Poe . . .
\\ c Ji,tcned. C.olc• Porter, yes. Bob I lope, sure. Bm
Br thms coo. I vcn Shosc:1ko11lh. ,\nd be,idcs dw,c, .ill tlw
book writer,, song '1ngas. wn.llors. 'ciencist\, .rnd seer' . . .
"c 11\tt•ncd to chem .ill-.rnd to l':tch other.
\\ h1.:h bring'&gt; m to the people-the unbclil'l .1blc people.
In JC.Ills or dinner pckt·t'&gt;, behind horn-rimmed gl.t\SCS or the

WOLFSON

J KOTCHICK

f 11111 Clt1.11
Kl ;-.: :-.. I I 11

\I JD(, I I )

l l AROI D \\OllSO'
V IRG I N I A I A;\.C.llA'D
JOH'
CHARI IS

KOIC Ill( K
PUllU;\.O

eight ounce varict}', blc.1ry-cycd at morning or ossified .ll
night, the wonderful people lu,·c been our good comr:idc\
and true. ~nd they will not be forgotten .
Nor will the night life. \\'ell do we remember thmc
nights of the \01rces, the rc1e1', and the baccanales! \\''hen
the mead did !low, .ind the he.11th\ were drunk, .ind some of
the student'&gt;. 0 fc111/wr11, () 111on"'
But our time h,i, com('.
And so, ,t, the Hin \Cl\ 01cr the prcf.1b\, we pick up our
b.lllcrcd little 1. C. Smiths. \lllOoth the wrinkle\ 111 our gre1
tl.11111e1', .111d ,,11 f.1rcwcll to 111 of it-to Alnl.1 \Liter .111d
it\ qu.11nt inh.1bitant'&gt;. Turning lnck .It the g.lll' for .t l.t\l
lcok. c!-c:·c " a cHch in our throes ..111d we t.1kc .1 tighter
gnp en chc porLcl.1in Slllll\ th.ll we L.trr~ .1w.11 wllh u,, for
the nni1C\-th1&gt; friendly, .. imple people we h.nc li1cd .imon!.(
dunn~ the four Yl'.tn of our e'\pcditwn-. trc \mg111g to u,.
"So long, 1/\ been .~om! lo knou )a . . . "
44

�/1111.o r Clt11.1 Of}in·1.1
Prc.11d('lt/
\'/Cl'

RlCli\RD

l' l'l'\ltl C'JJ/

ROHi RI

Sccn•lt1r)

.I Li' I

T n·c1.11tr1T

l 1 IOR ' I

\''

( IJ\ IU I ~

Scrg1·c111t -c1t-1\ rm.~

1\\1\ I R

I \

0' \

~LDBIU'K

R\Y'..IO'D

Jl\\1 11

Soj1ho111or1• Class Offerers
Pn•sidc11/

G il 131·. R"l

V iC&lt;' P rcsid&lt;' 11 ts

HAROI 0

,\,IJ C llAI I

Sccrl'lttr)

RO U I I
111 Ri'OG

Kl \R!&gt; I \

ll\IOG I ' I

Tn·lls11rc•r

I\.' 1\ lJ I

1 U ' I( I

Serg&lt;'ll 11l -t1!- !I r111s

C' RO'&gt;\

FRL D I RKK

GL f l l

Frcsh1111111 Class Officers
ROHIR I

V icr PresidI'll I
)c•c rrl &lt;Ir)

T n•as 11 re r
Serge a 11 l-t1l-1\ r111s

PICCl\'0

IR\'\K

JO\'
ROBI R"I

'l:\11 1\

l'l.JR ll 11

llU,/11\I R

ROll l R l

DO\\ ()

45

�ROW

I

F ABDALL AH A ANGlcO FOLOS C ARMST
RONv

C ASWAD R AUDINO

ROW 2

L AU[RY J BAB81 '? R THORN E R BAk[R
G BAKOSH

ROW""

R

BALLAR D

M

BARAN

R

EARBER ~

OA~~O

C

BARLET T

ROW d
H BAlEMA N, A BlBEL l

BEBfL B BE NJAMIN , W BENNE Tl

ROW 5
BIGNEY , F Bl2GUS KY T BLAUVE LT R
BLA2SO . A BOHUN ICKY

ROIV 6
E BOTTIN O M BOTTIN O , E BOWEN J

BREWE R, M BREWE R

ROW 7
14

BRIGIO TTA D 6ROWN , H BROW N L
BUCCI C BUCHI NSKY

ROW 8
W

BUCKM AN, J

~UHAY,

D BURCH

W BURDIC K A BUSSA

ROW 9
14 BUTLIE N I'.

BUTlS R CAMP, T CASSIN E CHAH
H

ROW 10

P

CHASf V CHRZAN

l

CLUM

J COHOO N L COLBY

ROI', 11
(

COLfMA i'I P COLVIN , W COMBS J

CONKL IN

J

CONQRAN ~---

�ROI', I

J CONSEY U CO!JRLAS H C01ERT

~

CROOKS D CRJSS

ROI\ 2
I CRC.S~

M CUNl'dNuHA"

D D~NIELS

0£.LKER

DELMMl

ROI', 1
W DENK

R DENN S [

DEWAN

M DE'llEY R DICKSON

ROI'. 4
R D PIETRO H DOPPEL J

DEZZUTI, R EATON E EASTON

ROW 5

B EELLS C ENGLISH, D LINDSLEY G EVANS R EVANS

ROW 6
R EVERETT J

FINN. G FITCH

R FLETCHER, J

FOODY

ROW 7
J

fOREST W fOSTER

G FOX. R. fREUlHICK

P

uAfFNEY

ROW 8
A GANCE

ROW

P GIAL ~NELLA

0

.\ GIUNTA J

GOii

'&lt; GIANAKOUROS C GIARUSSO R GILG

GOODISON D GOOD NOUGH

L GOOD\\IN A GOOLEY

•O

Ii t&gt;RAHA M J GREENE C GREEN&gt;.iUN H GRoSllO.O F

LTH

ROW 1 l
C GYID '

E t•hABR I' ~

'&lt;ALEY C HAMILTO ... R H.0.1'.D

�ROW I

J HARTIGAN A

hARTMAN 0

HEAPPS

H

HERZOG, L

HESS

ROii 2

L

HOLTOr.

ROii

IV

H HOMYAK E HOPLER F

HOOVER J

HOUNSLOW

3

HO\\ARO, I'.

HOWVfR

f

H~MPltREYS 8 HURLBUT E IANNONE

ROW 4

I'.

IRVI N G Z JAr&lt;OWSKI

B JOr.ES

R JONES H

KACHADOURIAN

ROWS

KAIM

C ~EA N E

M KEARSEY, J

KELLEY

I KEPNER

RO W 6

J KILEY J

KING

L

KtNLE\

E KNAUF W KOCHER

ROI'. 7

A

KOCIK, R KOENIG R KOURY, M LAFRA N CE. P LAGRANGE

RO W 8

H . LA N DOW C LA NDRE D LAUDER G LE MON IADES, J LEN EY. JR.

ROW 9

M LEVANT

E LE\\'1~

P LEWIS. W

LINDERMANN

B

LINES

ROW ID

D LYLES. J

LYONS B

·~AAS IV

MACDOWELL J

RO.V I I
R ~:ANNl1'G •

~ARKS

C MARSH

\I,

MARlJSIC

MA'DOUGALL

�RO.', I

C \l.\TTHCIVS R 1"CCAR1HY R

L

"C:.HERHR

H

\!EAKER

MtCOR,,.IC~

I\

\ICGLADE, E

R MEYER A \'ICHLIK

•lcGLYN~

D VILLS

RO'.\ l

J ''ISSAVAGE B

~OCH

UL SKI

H MOFFATT R

\\ORRIS

H 'IORSE

RO',', .l

H "o.1u; s

'IJILEN

(;

'~llLLIN

J 'IURRAY

I'.

'IUSKA

RO:. S
f

NE'lll. R NEV.MAN 1

NORTON

0 0 COl\NELL J 0 CONN OR

RON &amp;

J Sl llTH J OPPENHEI\\ T PALMER A PA NOICH N PA NKO

ROI'. 7
,

PARSONS f

PUlRONE

R PICCIANO. A

PLATT J

POLITICAN

ROW 8

\\

PRATT J

PURTELL

\\

qANO

R

RATH

R REEDER

RO.'. 9
T REY/\OLDS

ROii
\'

1

E RHOOlS P R1GAN

\I

ROBIN~Or.

G ROUFF

0

ROU NCS

R~TAN

J SALWI ,

SALVA

F

S~NZO

RO.". 11
sc~rr

0

SEAWAI\

'I SEA\IA

"'

SENIO ,,

SERKO

�ROW I

\\

SHAMULKA 0

SHHFIELO 0

SHORT

P SIMMONS

C SIBLEY

POI\ 2

N SI NAN OER ,

T 51• TH

SLOCUM

P 50MM Eil 8 STANAV AGE

RO\\ 3

J

'HEIGEPW~LO

,

~TRATfS

,,

S.IAGLER

R Sl[NTO R STOUI

T STRAHS

ROI\ 4

C SUOBRINK

RO','.

M SULICH

R

•E~HK

TA,ENA·.~

•

~

T TAKENAKA rt lERBOSS ,

THO\IAS E THJR5

N

', T ~FA',Y

ROW 6

R TOEnE F TO,,.K O. T TOTOLIS L TUR NE R J

VAUONE

ROW 7

J

VANDERVORT P VA\fTTEN G VINCE N r

A

\\~ LOE/'.

B WA LLER

ROW 8

W WEBSTER . L WELCH, J

WE LSH

r

WES COTT J

WH ITE

ROW 9

W WILLIAMS C WILLIAMS G W ILLIAMSON 0

\\ ILS0 1' S WILSON

ROW 10

R WOODWARD R WOOLB OUGH J YOU NG, P ZAYAC JR

T ZOIV1 NE

�Robert 1\ ndcrson
Richard t\~h
Richard lhk er
Phillip B;irnes
John B.irno
Robert B.irno
Carl Bcmon
Loui~ Bertoni
Robert Buchinskv
l' lhs in Buckingh.1111
Donald C hiosh
(),1, 1d Ch\\'alow
Ron;ild Uc.tr)
l d\\'.ud Cook
JO) cc D.1nicls
Bc\'crh D.1' is
Rodnc' Denni\
P.wl Dcr1:1no' l l h
I r.111 k DiStcLino
Robert J)ill[c

Robert Do'' d
John Dunb.1r
"\chem I )unlum
Don 1ld ld w .ll"ds
Joseph l'lnicskv

Eugene Kolwl.ir1
Carl Kolo"1.1
;\Jich.1cl Km.:I
Thom.1s 1 a\nOn
( h.1 rlcs l Cl'
J ohn l inderm.1n
R.1ymond l i\ ingsrnn
.f.1mcs l ott
John 1 uc.1s
Joseph \!Jdntyrc
( h.trlcs \LH:ko
\\:'dl1.1m \l.ig1mk r
( hestcr \l.1jk.1
, \mhon) .\l.rncri
Peter .\l.111yon
1\rmcn \l.1rk.iri.in
C l1.1rlc, \l.1stcr,&lt;&gt;n
Thu111.1' \l.H1.1'
.J .uncs \ I c( orm ic k
I l.1 rold \ lcCormicJ,
,\dek \lcJ)e, 1tt
Don.lid .\I c '\ ll t
Don.1ld \loon:
~t.1nlc\ \lo'l'\
J.uncs .\ lu rr;t\

D.111icl N cpcl.1
Rode :'\eum.111n
R1ch.ird 1\cwton
.f.1mcs '\'orris
l.dw.1rd O'Brien
R.1 y mond O'Connor
Thomas ()'( onnor
Thom.1' .J. O'Connor
R.1\ mond O'\l.1llcv
l r.1nk Orris
Rohen Owen
( l1.1rlcs Pendleton
Pll\ llis Ped
D.1' id l'l.n t
J ohn R.1\ mond
Alfomo Rob1conti
Rid1.1rd Rommd
)t.inlc) Rubu1nhl
I elio Rmn.1k Jr.
C1corgc \trkis1.1n
'\ 1chol.is Sb.1rr.1
\\'illi.1m S1mn1ons
lohn 'lind1.1k
( h.trll'\ '&gt;k111ncr
,\lh:rt 'int&gt;\\

I .dn.1 Son:mcn
l~cnj.1min Spencer

Ugo I .1brizio
Richard hirer
Kenneth l·r.inklin
Vincent Gia rmso
G reg Gi.1nakouros
W'altcr Gbll\ illc
G lenn Godwin
C hester Gr.1bowski
Richard Graper
Donald I laman
rrank 1 lcller
Vern I lockenbcrr)
Frank I lo rkott
Benjamin Horowirch
Andre\\ H udani c h
\'(' illiam I l un1iker

rhom.I\ Su~cn
l· dccn Stl·phen
I Jelene Stephen
l hnd Stone
John Sul!" .111
.J .1me~ T .if t
\l.1 uricc Thor\On
~1ilron ri .. chlcr
R.1ymond Trabucco
Donald V.1111\mburgh
Don.1ld \ 1 .111Geldcr
J ohn Walsh
1\rnold \'\'cis\
Don.ild \'\' 1!11 .1111\
l cs! ic \XI ood
] lcrbcrt Young
J ohn Zic.ir1

James Kelley
\'\' illiam Kinch
Ri c h.ml Klinko

Some people had their pictures taken
5I

�52

��un ite d stu de nt go ver nm en t

RO,'. I
C PuTRI NO
K

Wl~~IA M S

J LYO N.o
W K RlfGS " A N

B

ROOD

ROW 2

1" SERKO
W BARN O
F Nl M A
W D A V I ES
Y. ROU N DS
C AS \\ AD

J&gt;rl'sulc11!

Vrn· Prn1d1·11/

Bil I

KR IL (,SMA N

t-.1 ' ' \ I T H

A:\;-.;

Sccr1'111r)

JU:\!

The 1950-5 1 United Studen t Go1·er nmcnt had their
dee
tion in Ocrob er. It was notew orth y this year that
the electio n
was one of the mo\t comp~ti ti ve in the history
of I Iarpur :

W ILLIAM S
HRO\\' 1'

four parties each with a fu ll sLne r.111 for office
s-let's hope
the beH ones won.

A:&gt;::--: LYO:\ S

T rc11.111 rt'r

( HARi. i S PUTR 11'0

Ad 1 11or

'.llSS PL.AN Kl:\TO ;&gt;,

In their first se mester of office the USG spo nsored
the
Stude nt-Fac ulty Recep tion, the Turke y Hop and
t he Mistlc tOc Ball. It superv ised all cl.m electio ns. An initi.1t
ion system

Mr 111 b1·rs-11 /-L11 rgc
Sr11iors

\\' I LL1 1\M DAV ILS

was also establi shed for enterin g J· reshme n , includ
ing their
wearin g green and white beanies. Made our Harpu
r lulls
r.1ther colorf ul rhe firsr few weeks of sc hool, didn't
it?

BARBA RA ROOO
K I ' :\ I TH

] 1111 ion

M JOG L I )

\VlLl JAM BAR 'O

\IARG Ul RITL ROU:\ O'i

Now as a follow -up to a succes s ful but rushed
firH
semest er, the USG .1rrang ed the Spring Soiree
and Spring
Weeke nd. It also revised the J lonor Poi nt Sys tem
, operat ed

CH \RI ES ASWA O
\.llCH AEL Sl:..R KO

Frl'.1h111c11

IR\'K

ROB! R l

the Stude nt Book Excha nge rnd di rec ted the Camp
us C hest
drive. No wonde r their weekly meeting'&gt; ;l\'eragcd
more than
rwo hours!

:":LMI A

PICC IANO

RUTM CAM P

54

�- -- - - - - - - - ----------~P~l~a.tfo,-111

libernl
Kriegsrnan-Led USG Starts
t'"!' ~
\~ ('&lt;)k ·' -~~~:
Next
Wheels Rollin&lt;Y
:c
.
0
rf urkey Hop 1-Jeads Agenda ce-·" ~

'Urag~

0

ir,

alf

Cl,)&lt;:)

1111'

·n•a

~~

Ha rpur Collej:!c wound up ils election \\'l'l'k l&gt;y sPll'd (§&gt;"''
ing" Bill Kreigs man as l hc new president n ! th•· l"1il ·.~ ~
Student Governme nt. The popular head of th1• J,ib1·1· ti
Party was chosen ov1•r thret· ollwr condidatp , - B II ~
in C&gt;llP of the lar
Dino, Tom Zowine and Paul Dc&gt;wev
'~
esl and most spirited campaign s· in the histor y of lhl

1 ·
a" • ~\.·

Prog r.es~"

s.:hool.
•

l'/(l/jonn

P /a/foo

Student 's

Repres entativ e

~~

~

~

'-'-&lt;4!&gt;
Ao.~

~

»
·~~

,f

~

~ ~"

.on of
3 11 h"a 1
.he Stu·
.;.,.,
~
. -,CJ
A plan b1
1. Senio1 Da y
E· J,
ii,·nt of the In 19·
1
...
~
.nd.
.
.
.
.
,
•\
~CY-;--._.1 ~/
~~&gt;}''~
l\?d \\hich senior stodenb will fo1 l-ll1t•·n1\.
Pa tt~·
7,o Jfrptc c·:llat;'. l'
expanded in·
inc dav each •chool year 11n··
i·;-;1;
intram ural
d
•
°tht• administrau ve o (i1ct·
in
1de
Ca.
~
l·:ndo rirc1•nwnt of th~ nn·:;cnt_ -=&gt;
.!
, includinit foot,..,,,,_•
~~..J
.jCJ'\
.
Oth1•r winnl'l's a1c \'ic&lt;' I»•,.
i ·sc; h "
1
a&lt;"IJ\'l'IY enlist the
~
•"-~
Ken \\'ilham&lt;: Sccie- tin off1 c~s at th1• · , •
c-•nt
co111111un1'l)' IO\\'ards
~~ ~ I
~
~·'"
St·1
b)'
1···1&gt;lnt"d
n
T
~
I
J
...
•!
...
.nwsu.::i·
rea:-.urer
.~·ons;
un(&gt;
t3ry
a t.'!Jdr
01
ct.
~
~
~
Chuck Putnno: ~l~mb,,rs-a'.- nJl•nt officer:;
hunk '01 c '
,. p1oro, 1• an all-rmbrac....,
~
CJ
Rill Davies anJ Barba- duties of the
L~rgc
,tudl·nt loan ,.•n·lce. T he
Ci...~
I. ~
~v
:~~
P.•-c&lt;&gt;lll r~ Rood (S1•niorl. Bill B.t n~ &gt;~ taught by
..
es.·nt s y•tt•m is discriminat or)
,V
'-"~
h
/
,ruol."'
__
This_will
s.
),
(Junio1
Rounds
en•·~ ma.'•• and Peggy
n that t pra&lt;'ticalh t·\cludes
b; A wad l\'e s~n 10 r N-"'
•
~l''?I « · n II )!ike Serko and Cha1
C &gt;itUlltllJ,
~
d d t 0 r S\
f&gt; ·
and wonwn .tudcn ts
011 .c , I
1,
I
It
/
~
'\J
) ,. Bob . •..:.1c1·1ano. an '
,1\!
(5ophomore
cont l ions
~QJ
I. T '•' '"~ni
•
'" "'
and
IC\'1~1011
a
'""'""''
\\',·
'"
to l
.. athlete n•1d ho'
\.&lt;:Y
· t
l
f I
l d,·nt con r1 Frank Nem1.1 ( F H . hmanl.
'?
1acu1&lt;&gt;.
·a' 1on u t w \Onor pom
~
q,
Earh
pnCl'S m 1.he sl·hool':; non~p1of1t
ular accxl1acurr1c
fo1
-V."
.
CJ
rnfoli·n1&lt;
hi. tcachmv 0~
·'
~
;,, l&lt;t.•cummcnd 1&gt;cution to th+' d\.·nt gov• ~
,_.. at&lt;· P~bhc St'r\'\Cl' Commission he pro' ~\.~

l

:'J

I

§

I

#

/'A •"·

(•'C

§

l .

! d.r
n•duc tlw student hu3 fare.
incoming
the
·('.imm~nd
i!
ti
f1!'.&lt;hnwn b~ proper ly orientated
·" 1lw p1adical 111 ~aning oi a1·
• "' "ho••I" ac:J\•Jti es and

•u

'' un 'H p i):Ot S}"Stem.

1
1

7.

7

~lit t c~ a

.,o

st

•

8

"

(\l!

~j
fto r
Ja l

the

Rlh·

Ol' W

"J
:1;.:•

intra·

. ablishcd by Har- a t
.:tivittes com m itt~f'. tioi

.hall &gt;Jpport any pro- s. t
foo&lt;ball to II t1r- of t
fo n
teJ{t..'.
- •~ i ng

~

111..._~
~

ho

0

11tknowl~JK-

~:V

V

pur "ai.1ty "II" lett .
nnd fo··malion of

~~

'V
,
ft_

~A:,

Endorsemen t of

91.;: ~ ot•iatio n .

((f:

~
~
~

, rud" .o'-"
esent
~
9 -..
oy the
financ
/ arbook.
Coll~ice •
/ otball team
10. Supp~
at llarpur in
11. Endorsemen t of the present pre-registra tion s ystem.
12. Endorsemen t of the Campus Chest system of lump sum
donation~ to worthwhile chari·
ties. R"&lt;'ommend that some o f the
funds be raised by the annual
Carn ival-Dance sponsored by the
l\SG.

Honor Roll - a fo1mal
r
,Jication to tlw studen t• o
.' larpur College who are now
•en•ing in the armed force..
I. Career Day - Community
leaders will be a sked to s peak to
students about vocational opportunities.
5. Proportiona l representat ion
A plan by which one representative from each of the school
organizatio ns will be sealed in
the student governmen t. They
shall assist by suggestions in
molding school policies.
6. Student Book Exchange
A plan by which books can be
bought and sold at convenience
o f the student body.

as
i::; i
slut
toon

de~·

7.
g1 e!

and

s.
pos•
coni
tati•
Stat
imp·
poin
to i
that
fut ~

in

55

•

�agapeans
ROW

I

N TIFFANY
A LFf CHECK
B LINES
0 M ILLS
J BREV.ER
MR LUTZ

2

ROW

REV KERR J ARNOLD
P ROUNDS
J CONKLI N
P SI MM O NS
F ABDALLA H
MR PAUL
ROW

l

R CALVERT

J SAL M I
P LAGRANG E
W COCHER
W KUBLER
~ STRATES

Chair "'"'' /no-lc111
Co1111,tfor to l'rolt'slct11t
C:.t 11d{'J1h

G I OR&lt;.1

RIV.

BADGI R

\\ IJ BUR

.\i;.1pc.im " the Protc:\t .lnt organ1 nllon

.H H.irpu r and
".i, formed to cncour.1~c: ProteH .rnt fcllow, hip .imong
.ill dtno111111.1uon\. It\ n.imc m&lt;.'.111\ "brothe r!} lo, c."

Kl RR

The coume lor of the group i, Re,·. \\' ilbur K&lt;.'rr, who
l'
Pre,idc tl[ of the l ndicot t \l im,te:-1.11 ;\,,ociH ion. He''
gencr.il
.ich1\or .1r .111 meetin gs. where he often lecture \ or
proudt •'
orhcn to lecture for g roup .ipprcc i.ttion .
1\ g.1pc.1m

He

al'o .1 membe r of the CJmpm ( he\l Steer-

ing C..ommn tcc which fo,ter' the .rnnu.il C.1mpm Chest
DriH
.ind C...1rni ,·al. It " throug h the effort\ of thi, commn
tce that
.innu.il chant) contnb ur1om .ire made from I larpur
\tuclcn t\.
The Protest.int~ usu.illy

ll"} to &lt;.:ombinc rcligiou , with
-.oc1al KliYllie~ . Thi\ ye.tr they planne d .i Christm .ts
P.1rt\,
wh ich, l l i-. hoped, will become an .rnnu.il C\'ent.

~6

�newman club
RO\•, I
JANOWS KI
BEBEL
SULLIVA N
PUTRI NO

Z
A
J
C
L

BUCCI
TOMKO
SEAMAN

ROW
V GALLUC CIO
C GRABOW SKI
T ZOWINE
'1 FERRARI
J KING
C BARTLE lT
IHOMAS

J

T BEBlL
A GIUNTA
R AUOINO

B

MOCHULS~I

MR SILVERT O N
C DlWAN
ROW 3

S
R
S
L
'1

FALBO
KANE
MARCON E
PICCIRIL LI

SENIO
LINDERM AN
E McGlYNN

rhc :\cwm .m Club

"J.,

formed in

I 94S w promor c

f.1mom
h.1s fo.,rerec.l se,er.1 1 commu nion bre.1kf a,r,, the mo.,t

hou\e.
coll.

rhe hono red
R.1 ~ mond

E.

~UC,tS

.1l

the 1\meric an I cgion Club-

were the former :,\1.i,·or of }· ndi-

I ct· .ind

the F ndicot t 1hih

Gener.i i \Lrn.1g er B~ ron L. I rcnch.
.1l

\\ IL I l /\t-·I HAR 'O

ln .,o doin~ the org.1ni1.1tion

( .Hholic culture on c.impm .

of which w.1, the one held

Prnirl l' 11 I

Bullcri n

this .dbir will long be remem bered by the membe r\.
The Ch.1pi.li11 of the club is I .itlwr ( h.1rlc\ 1\\lcsw orrh.

:dw.1n
P.1stor of Christ the Kin~ Church in I ndwell . ) le is
ne't
present on Thursd a\' .1frern oon' in the comult ation room
,111,·

prob-

lems th.ll nlJy confro nt the studen ts. l k 1s also present

.ll

ts .is
.111 :\ewm Jn Club functio ns .l s the friend of the studen
well a' .1 religiom reprcsc ntlti,·c .

Trt11s11rcr

)'. l t\R IO HU((f
FRID 10\fl'h . 0

Ch11in111111 J1ro-fr111
Co1111sclr11 lo Calho lir St11rl1'11/s

l t\ lll l R ( ll ARllS
\) I I " ' OR I I I

Person.ii .1nt•cdotc' nl.lde

to t he Personnel Office for confen ·nccs concer ning

Sffn·/1 1n

�acle/phi
ROW I

T BL A UVELT
J SI N CH AK
R B LA ZSO
C A SWAD
W DI N O
W WAR NER
R BUC HI NS K Y
R OW l

H L I EBSH R
f RUS N A K
N DU NHAM
D CH IOSK Y
N O RRIS
C KOLOS N A
R lV ERHT
R K OH N ST.A M
F N EM I A
R TUR N ER
R. A SH

J

RO W 3
B ATE M A N

H

T I V ORY
D LA UDER
P BRECKI N RIDGE
T SCOTT
J CON SE Y
T 0 CO NNOR
C GRAB OW SK I
D W EBS TER

J LEN£Y
f
H

H ORK OTT
MO RSE

Prnid I'll I
Vice Prl'sidl'lll

'iOC JAi

\Vil LIAM DI NO

DA YID LA UOI R
THOMAS BLAUVLLT

ccrl'lan

Trc11s11rcr

;\ d 1 isors

.\I Tl R- 11'\.\l 5 RU\tl'U'i
~PRl:\C.

T CC Tl 5'&gt;11

\ l 1111 ( \Rl\l\' .\I

ROBl:RT BUCMINSKY

PHILIP

CO\\

June

LINOSLLY

\!IX

DA:\( I

..,OIRI I

\h)

DARW!

S1·rg1•1111l -11/-Ar111 s

D ecember
lcbruJry

April

RICHARD ASH

\llX

\t O ISTF l\ I R

\I l'&gt;Tl 11 01

\1Jrch

I !ARTWI LL MORSL

Correspo11di11g

I ALI

O c to ber

W ILLIAM \\'ARl\ l·. R

S1·crcl 11 r)

&lt; .\I I '\D \R

PRE-I'

P.\~TURI S &lt; API

R..,

'&gt;( 1101 \R'&gt;ll!P PRl51:\1Afl0:\'

BRECK I NRIOGl
MR. POMLROY
MR. SWil-T

/11 brothcrboocl

11

r'rr / 01111clrd,

I or /rtn1d1hif&gt;1 rlrr/• a11J /rlt(· -

t\dd/1'J1 , /rt

)Our \ OllJ&lt; r111x out

Auel hat/ !ht· .~o /J u11d hf1,..."

Adelphi ha\ been on campu\ three ye.Ir\ . . . Jnd where
we come from, suh, th.u period i\ like three-fifths of the
world's recorded history. In th.it time the boy\ h:ive establi shed themselves .1s schol:irs, daunt!.!\\ contenders on the
mtr:imur:il barkcd-\hin. split-finger circuit\, aml gentlemen
who show an inbred t.1src for the good life. L1H spring, the
club pl.iced top on the men\ club roster for \chol:isric
Handing. This \'c,1r, they copped intr.1mur:il championship'
in touch foolb.111 Jnd b:iskcrball ( .ilmo;t.)
Thcr .irrribute their succe\\ to rigorou; training. (Sec
liH abo,·c) .

58

�aclloyho

RO\', l

J Kf &lt;.LEY
R BALtARO
R

N EW M A N

0 0

CO NN ELL

R &gt;&lt;OEN G

ROI\ Z
DOUGLASS
EELLS
D S[A o,t A N
MR

8

R D PIETRO
~·

'(EARSEY

H HERZOG
D HA M AN
D BROii N
J \HLSH

H COVERT

Presicfi.11!

Adloyho . . . advancement , loy:ilt y .ind honesty 1s their

:&gt;. [\\MAN

ROl3l.R I

JA/o.11 &lt;; \\' l l SH

motto ....

V icl' Presiclr 11 I

RAYMOND llALLARO

Srcrdan
Treasurer

DA:-.t1L o'cONNJJJ

And have you ever seen :i more honest looking foursom('

RAY -.10,0 KOI"NIG

than Ke.1rsey, Kelley, H:iman and Newman g:ithcrcd around
a cafcteri.1 table? Word also is :ibroad that the members h.1d
quite a full spores schedule . . . b:1skctb.1li, football and

fl istoria11

JOH"i'

KrLl. FY

DO,AI 0

HAMAN

R'\ \\!ONO KOl::-..tG
"11( l!AL:L KEARSEY

baseball. We hc:ir they didn't have much luck this year but

Ad 1 isors

the word h:is gone out to the opposition to "watch ouc next

"1R. A Ll l'.:'-J

!1-IR. DOUGl.A S

yeJr," and that may be good :idvice.
Remember that Alb:iny Teachers' g.1me? . . . Adloyho
was the home c heering section at that one and introduced
our Pep Band . . . and those same men h.1 ve been seen again
and again as Harpur's most faithful fans ... lopl, aren't they?
And :idv:incement . . . let's give them time for chat .
because right now they are Harpur's youngest social club .
but their progress h.1s been terrific to d.1tc.

59

�ROW I
D BEN'AM'N

W BARNO

W HOWARD
P PICCIRILLI
R M ORRIS
T ZOV.INE
ROW Z
"1R SMITH
H WOLrSON
G ROUFF
S MARCONE
C GIARUSSO
f COLEMAN
D STONE
B BENJAWIN
J BIGNEY
BUCCI
KlAL
A V.EISS
MR BflNIAK

L
R

I' n·sid c11 /
Vin• Prl'.lidi'lll
ccrclt1r)

T l'l'llSll /'I'/

I OUl5
\\ J\

ROBI RI

l)nL·mbc.·r

DO"AI 0

Bl

'-J

MR.

\l.1\

\\ll'-

\!ORR IS

IAl (Al I:\ D.'dl
~1111'\\R I CK

l &gt;t\:\( I
11.\l I P\RI)
&lt; \\!PUS ( Ill ~, DR I\ I
~PR I'\(, \\llKl'I&gt; I' \RI)

PRI \11'&gt;111 IOI

I 'II I

formed 1n 1946 rnd \\'.1' the fi r5t \OC1.1I
Since rhcn J3,1ccaci.1 men ha, c been
prominem figure\ in I Lirpur Ide wirh picnics. p.uric' .ind
d.1nccs. rhe 1110\t famom uf "hich i\ rhc Shipwreck D.1ncc.
Thi' year the d.111ccr\ wen: greeted b~ .1 full .,i;e me rm.ml
. . . bur don't get e1'citcd ..... he w.1s onl) .1 m.1nncquin.
1\ ca'h ,chol.Hship of .,e,cnt\'-fi,·c doll.1r\ 1s .1lso giYcn
.11111u.1ll) ar th1., d.incc ro \Ome Hudcnt outs1.rnd111g in .. chool
.1c11' it1c\, both ,chola\ticall) .111d in extra-curricular aff.11r'
C huch .\s\\ .id "·" this year\ luck) winner.
The B.1ccaci.1ns .He .1ho active in intr.irnural Hhlctio ...
.ind haYc gi,·cn champion candid.lte\ some worried moment\
111 b.1 .. kctball. football and softball.
These som of Bac chu,
.1ppear ro be succc%ful C\'crywhc rc .
. on rhc mound or
O\ .11 . . . in rhc Campus Chest dn,·c
. . .1t the Mistletoe
B.111 party or Spring Weekend party . . Ah yes . . pJrt)
. . . party . . . pany.
l3.1ccaci.1

Bl I '-IAK

\lR.

19111

lk..:embc.·r 1910
\pr ii 1911

B.\R '-0

ROBI RI

Ad 1 isors

~(.)(

J'I (( !JUI 11

I I I R 11 0\\ 1\ Rll

\\' ,l\

oq~.111i1ation on campu\.

5\11 fH

611

�clionysia

RO\\ 1
IV

KRIEGSMA N

I&lt; GIANAKOU ROS
R DICKSON

C ENGLISH
R CALVERT
J MCCOR\llC K
A BEHEL
ROW l
A GIUNTA
T TAl&lt;ENAKA
v CHRZAN
SUDBRINK

c

H YOUr.G

0 PLATT

..

D

J

Pi.A Tl
BURCH
THOMAS
S'l ITH

G BADGER

)0( IAI

&lt; \I I

\I \J)J&gt;t '\ I AR \I PAR I) CH LI
I' \RT)
Pl I J)(,I

"&gt;c:ptcmhc:r
l)c wl&gt;cr

\pnl

Once upon

J

rime,

.i f.ir.1w.1)

Corr-..·,pond1n.i.:

DO'\ \L D (I \Rt-..
J)\\JJ&gt;P l\11
Kl\I (,l'\:-.1\1\0 URO'&gt;
1\1 '\ I \Kl '\,\t-.. \

.tt

:\rm'

hJ11-11111 11/.\

ROii! RT DI&lt; f\'&gt;0'\
\l'\Cl'\ l CllR/\'\
I J)\\ ARl&gt; O''\J 111.
1011~

Lind, there li,eJ .1
\,\l,Llnt

people who worshipp ed .i god c.1lled Diony,u ;. F vcr~ \O often.
rher c.1111e from far :ind ne:ir Lo throw .1 p.irt~ for him. Thing'
ll\Cd LO get pretty inrerc;ti ng. These people went do" n in
lmt0r)'. in f.1ct, .1\ the highc\t-l iYing

I '\{,11'&gt;1 l

Cll\R.llS IV, l l'ill
ROlll RI DI&lt; K'&gt;0.'\

U.:l'

Si:q.;c..·.1nr
111

&lt;Jj,\R.11 '&gt;

Prc,i&lt;lcnt

\

R,\1111
I t'RKI )
rou:-.1&gt;1 R''&gt; DA) DJ'\:-.1 R
\ll'il'l.l·T O I COCKl\ ll P\RTY
\I \I&gt; 11 \ rl I R '&gt; 'iO'\C, l\OOK

',,ember
I &gt;..·I.'. ember

I \{ K I I'\'\

Prc .. idcnt

'\D,\R

l"rca\un.·r

\h·mbl.'r-.ll I .tr.~c..·

of .ill .rn-

Liquit)'.
Never LO be ourJonc, the prcsent- dJy Dionni. im .in:
untl.iggi ng in their punuit of good time\ :ind gooJ id lo" ,hip.
Their joic de 1 ii rt' cxprc~~c' it,df in rhc he.Ht\ h.irmoni c, of
the bc-dcrbic d l\ I.id I-I :1 t tcr\.
The) also gi'c .1 ye.irh .1w.1rd t0 .111 out,t.1nd ing ~cnior.
..H
\lone~ for this i' r;1i,cd with their :innu.1! Turkey r.1flle
Lhe hop of the s.11111: n.imc.

61

1110\1\'&gt;

I\ \II'&gt; \Id OR \I\( I\

r ( \[VI R r
Hll I l\Rll c,S\t \ '\
\IR. l&gt;I(, \J ,\:'\
\IR I \RRO\\

KOii! R

�goliarcls
RO '.\'

I

~R

SILVERTO N
K M 1DGLE:Y
IV DAVl f S
\\ CROOK S
J K ILEY
M R DOUGLAS S
HOW 2

J BARNO
C PUTR 1 NO
, SUL L ! VAN
I' DENNIS

J SIRAT(S
W KU BLER
TOBIAS

~

f' L•GRA N GL
R SVENTEK

,\ MEYER
J KOTCH•CK

RC:"'
J
\\
Ii

MARKS
LR', ING
LANIJON

~

1'. 00D

R TOE H.E
I)

~YLES

11\LL, 1950

Prc1id {'//I
\lice Pre'1ide11t
S1·crd&lt;1r_)
Trc11.111n·r
P11/Jlicil) Chair1111111
l l i.1/oria11s

&lt;iPR/J\'G, 1951
\Xllll\ \I

\\ ll J IA\il
KI '-'-I I I I

'viii l S

(ROOK S
XI IDGI I Y

\X'ILL I AM

Cll\RJ IS PUTRl" -0

S1·crclar1

HO\\' \RO

I A"-DO"-

T l'l'll .W

\\ lll 11\'vl

I l L ISO'=

Kl"-~ITJI

MIDGLl 'Y

rl'I'

;\JR.

Puhlic il) Chair111a11

IRVl~G

Ad1isor.1

I l LISO.N

J\ I R.

DOUG ! .ASS

\-11t. Sil VI RlO:'\

DOUGLA~

\IR. Sil \'l

JOH'- KOi( HIC.K

ViCI' Prcsidc11/

JOH'- KOTCll lK

\\I I LI J\ \1

1\c/1 ison

~

I ()\\' !

Prniclc 11!

DAVll S

RTO~

The Golia rd,, who n:imed t hcm~dYe\ for a group of
medico ! ~ cholars who crawlle d through out Europe making
merry Jnd doing good, .1rc now one of rhe "oldeH " established
org.rni ntion\ here. In their four yean of existenc e ther ha,·e
contrib uted greatly to fraterna l and socia l life at the college.
This year the club continu ed it s service projects , sponsoring a drive for the Red Cross blood bank, and a clothing
drive for CARE . . . no student with blood or cloches w:is
safe from the clutche s of c:igcr Goliard s.
On ,\ .larch 30 came the Mardi Gras with its crndition:il
fonforc . . . the reigning King and Queen of Hearts . .
.
noi ~c m:ikcr~ and confett i . . . and those heads!
62

�•
sa1ens

RO\\ I
V, LllA '~S

-1.

J
G
H
P
T
0

STEIGERY.ALD
SMITH

BIGGS
DEIHY
DEWAN
SHORT

ROI\ 2

(,, LEMONIADES
E DEWAN
COCHlH

II

I\ M GLADE
l llCGLY/loN
PANOISH

A

R KANE
C HEAI!1
(,, RUEBIAN

r ABOALcA H
FERRAN! I
R GRAPER
\\ THALLINGfR
ROii 1
F 1\E.SCOTT
B DETRICK
N SKEIRIK

SA IE
\0( I \l

tktnbcr

&lt;i\11

'\ll \R

Pl I [)(, l
l'\TR\\ILR\l

~o\·cmbt:r

Apnl
\IH

I\ \I I

l&gt;l\\J)

J&gt; rcsuln1!

l'\U l

\'ice l'r!'11cle11/

li0\-11 R
.f\\11

~

BIG(, ~

S il IC.I R\\' \lD

Trc11s11fl'r

I' \RT)

Kil I \R:-..J) KAP! R!&gt;
l'-.TRA\IURAI

Scrg,ca 11 /-11I-Ar111 .1

OAVID

') ll ORl

(, IORG I

S\il. ll H

so1 ·1 1HI l

I I isluria11

WRJ;-..(, \\' llK l :\D l'\RIY

&lt;..RAllL \ 11 5'
0

lune

l',\R ·1)

IOlYl ll.\11

t :-..lllAl l O" n1;-..:-..1R
l'\ '1 RA\1VR \l 11.\~K I 111 .\I L

PIU \llSTLI IOI
\IJ rch

MACKERCHEH
R SAMMONS
R f LlTCH[q
L M 11 HERTER

~\IOKI

R

Adi iwr

The S.1iem h:I\ e joined oLhcr cam pm org.1nintiom .is
leaders in I larpur 's \OciJ l life ... \\ ith he:idqu.irten, political
and otherwise, at 705} ,\lonroc Stree t . . . D ewey, Biggs and
Dc\'&lt;fan t hat i\ . .. Don 't forget George Smit h and hi\ truHy
c.1mera to record for "posterity" the antic\ of club members
and the impressive plaque hanging in the Colonia l lounge
aho must be cred ited LO the orga niza t ion . . . Aeedle\s to
SJ)', rhe members enjoy the pla nni ng, preparations and rnch,
needed ro co-sponsor the Ki ll arney Kaper\ . . and no explanation i'&gt; necessary.
T hose grey sweH en. with the maroon insignia have
reall y gotten around t hi s year!
6l

~IR.

\ U ll3A(H

�panclorans
ROW I

J

BABBI' T
P VANETTEN
R CAMP
B CHAHEE
K HALEY
E THURSTO N

ROI'/ 2
ROUNDS
A \I ICHI IK
p BLISS
J LYONS
J THO "I AS
M

ROW 3
M BOTTI NO
C B~ RTL~
S MULLEN
0 CON NOR
DA N IELS
CONKLIN
J K I NG
I CROSS
D DA N IELS
J YOUNG
DECKER
CONORAN
ROW 4

B

CARL

£ BOTTINO
J

PURTELL

H

MAA S

f&gt;rn11fr11t

I'.\ rlOC I\

\1.\IUI ' '

\ ' il'c' /&gt; rt'sid c·11/

.JU~l

J

Sc·c f f I cir)

1.A&gt;.

A='-' I

I I 1sluri1111

\l,\R(,UI RI I I

JI ' ' ' I
II I I '

Ail 1 i.rnrs

I \I ( \I I ' I&gt; \ It
f'\;JTf 1\ 110'

YO~'&gt;

'&gt;\Dlf 11\\\Kl'\S J'\l{f'Y

.\lt\C DOVGf\I I

\Rll ' I

JOA'

Trc·11s11/'i'r

~0(

BU~)

BRO\\'

1101 l Y llOP

\llCHl II\.

l '-"bru.1n

PL' In I l I

\1.ird1

).\Dll

\1.11·

WRI;&gt;.:(, lll\,'\I R

ROU'\D~

(, \R " ' \I

or

I ti .AR

r)

11 1\\\ lo.I:-;&lt;, I' \ll"1'
I&gt;\\,( I

1110\J ,\)

I Ill.JR ·10'
\11)) "I TJ 1
\CR~.

P.111dor.&gt;m . . . fud):c . . . nut\ .111d bolt\. \\'ho cou ld
e'er ion~et d1o&lt;e l'lle-inch-,qu.1rc p1:cc\ of fudge thH were
\old t\\'O-for-.1-nic kcl out,1dc the ufct~ ril?
. chcr~ were
c1en oh, .md ah.1 by th e faculty . . . t\nd th.n "the ""11 10

Pl RR)

.1 m.111\ he.Ht " bu~ines~ mmc ring true, e'pcci.tll) '111cc 'C\crJI
P.indorans .ire now wc:iring those third-finger, left hlml rin )!'·
The nuts and bolts s.1lc w.1s .1 m oney r.1i sing project . . .
I lc.1rd down the hall
. . J c.111nie Thomas jmt walked up
to me, g.11·e me th.H green-eyed, it\-a-lo"eh d:11 look .md
d.111glcd .1 nuts rnd bolt, p.11.: k:ige in fronc of nw f.ice. l lo"
cculd 1 refuse! \'\' hn .ire they for . . . who know') Bclic1c
U\,

64

It

WJ5

.i good c.iusc.

�thalians
RO W I

J

MURR~Y

c

J \\ SS
A l!RO l~N
P u•IFFNEY

r

LE I". 15

'.I
v

ROBI NSO N
FE;lllAR

RO W Z

P COLI N
A MCDEVITl

B ROOD
K N AU~

l

H '-' O•f,\ TT

BEBEL

T

llC\I 3

'.' SS CHI A R~LLI
'-' BU TL E N
M PRATT
K l f'l dY

~

" \ ,\ l t O NE
li BA KOSH
E HALABR N
f lllSSl&lt;~AC.t
~

'I

''~LL ~

RlWf R

R C.. LG
~'RS PC. MEROY

~cptcmbc.:r

Octobor

BUI 11 T '&gt;UPPI R

1-C J&gt;ICP. IC

I"\ !Tl ATIO;&gt;,
A. :\IVI RSAR Y DI ' NF R

\llSTI I TOI
I cbruJn

These arc the Th~lirns .
them . . . they're everywh ere.

Corn·.1po11di11g SC'Crl'ltn)

131:. BH

I U:". I( L

KNAUF

PA IRIC IA ( OLV I:'\

Rc·cordi 11 g St'crel 11 r)

r\Dl l I

HJ\ YR IJ)J

T l"l'•/Sll rn

111 I l '\,

;\IAY \X' lll Rl \X' J I KF"\D

\l.lr

Via Pri·.\/d£'11/

and you know all about

Last spnng they were the first winners of the B:irtle Cup
ho lastic average . . .
.I\ the soci.il club with rhc highest sc
about . . . but '&gt;uch
all
is
college
proof thar they know wh.n
their "social obresrr.1in
to
.1llowed
serioU\n cs' h Js not 1:-een
chJract erist ic
with
fulfilled
have
d1ey
ligation " . . . which
Thalian spirit.
a gre.H
Thi~ ye.tr found rhcm partyin g as usual . . . at

..
':iriety of pl.ices . . . wirh a great varict}' of pcopk .
else).
dy
e,·erybo
(and
them
for
which made life interest ing
Highlig hts of the year . . . new advisors . . . rhat haythe
ride . . . the A nn ivers.1rr dinner . . . KillJrne ) K,1pcrs in
the
:111d
.
.
.
contc\t
art
Sweethe
the
.
.
.
bcst Irish rr.1ditio n
fi11a/1•.
.\\.1y Whirl . . . a grand

Pllhlici t1

Ch11tr1111111

ROOD

l"I II RI.SA

\IAD:-:1 SS

ldl.L t\Ri\I \' 1-1.APl-. RS

\!Jrch

13\RB\R A

Pr1·.11d1'11I

'&gt;0( I AL C t\l.I "\ (),\R

\IC Ol Vi l

r

\IOH· ATf

"I I JI JU SA 131.lll L
P 11 YI I IS S0\11"\.! I R

Ad I

IS()/".\

'&gt;ll!&gt;S C HIARU I 11
\I RS.

f&gt;OM !'ROY

�cJ/pha phi omega

ROW I
G BADGER
~

THALLl~Gfq

J SULLIVAN
N SKEIRll(
, SAL ~ I

ROI\ 2
P
R
C
f
(,

LAGRANGE
CALVlRf
EN GLISH
ABDALLAH
REJEBIAN

Prcsitlr11t
Vier l'rcsiclt-11!
St'crl'l 11 r)

ROBI R·1

MFRRI 11

Trl'aSllrt'r

Corrcs/Hmili11g
11isl ori1111
Atli'iwrs

I UR '\ IR

RK H ARO

TCR~ I

CALI '\J)\R

R

"'t'ptc:mhl'r

I HAI I 1:-.:GI R

I os·1 ;\'\)) I OUND AUCI JO'\

RIC HARO RA fH

Sccrl'lar )'

ROB I RT AN0ERS0 1'

lll'ccmbt•r

RI· JI BIA"

G l:ORGI

MR.

JOll!\\O;-.; ,\ll..\I ORIAL l'Ul\1&gt; DR!\ I

TRA

vn

BUR I AU

UG I Y \IAN tON"l I SI

O'BRll N
MR.OS IR

MR.

PISANI

Harpur\ Theta Kappa ch.1pter of Alpha Phi Omcg.1
received its c harter from rhc n:nional ~crvicc fraternit)' in

"1R. SllVJ. RlO;\"
MR.

MC KEN NA

1949. Since then the orgrniz.at ion has :ictivcl) tried to fulfill
n s 'crvicc re,ponsibi litics by providing 1•acarion travel bureaus
u,hering at :ill \C hoo! affairs . . . entertaini ng 2,000 area
Boy Scouts ac the b.1skcrb:ill games .

It .1 lso sponsor' the lo~r and foun d auctions
what
am I bid for one Roger's Thrsaurus . . . .md che annual Ugh·
Man Contest
w hich 1s alwa ys won by the Mr. A m erica
''ho ha s been paid for mo'l often with blue tags a nickel ...
green tags a dime . .. :ind red tags a quarter.
66

�international relations club

RO I\ 1
'4 ISS IVORY
H

LIEBSTER

K W ILLI AM S
L

KA M I N SKY

A

BRO WN

ROW 2
P CHASE

2 JA N OW SK I
C JON ES
K

GIA N A K OLI ROUS

'I

BUTLIE N

E M SSA VAGE
l '4 1SSAVAGE

T

IVORY

l

TUR N ER

T A V ERY

P rr•sidl'll I

IRC meetings provide the tr:iining gro und s for H:irpur\
aspiring diplom:irs.

They feature gt:cst spc:ikers-and th e

II A RR\

LI E BSTl R

V iff Pres id('// I

Kl N

S1•crcl 11 ry-T rrn s11 rl'I'

'11' 1 KAMI NS KY

WJI l JAM S

debates go on from there. Delegates from the club abo attended the rwo :innu:il sessions of the Model Security Cou nci l
sponsored by upper Ne"'' York St:ite colleges.

JOS I P H

MISSAVAG I

This year the club cstabbhed :i special library of reference m:iterial s obtained from cmbas!&gt;y and United

A &lt;frisors

:ition&gt;

M ISS I VORY
~ 1R .

information services on pclitical, socia l .rnd economic developments throughout the world.
Our internationalists have been bu sy !

67

RA FUSE

�business ·adm inist ratio n

club

ROI\ I
T

BLAUVELT

J KELLEY
R SAM Y ONS
W IRVING
P

CHASE

V

CHRZAr&gt;

W MCGLADE
ROW 2

R TUR N ER
J "l lSSAYAGE
ll FRE N CH

W
R
R
M
C

DAVIES

BA K lR
KOE N IG
KtARSEY

SUOBRINK

B GRAHA M
M CU NNIN GHA"l
S WA lKINS
ROI\ 3

R

TURNER

U

CIA N CIOSI

C CASHRTON
A GIUNlA

R

'~lTCHER

J

'H cKERCHER

J&gt; rt'.\/ll 1· /1 /
\ ' in' Prc.1idc11/
'/ rctt.111 ri•r

P\LI

&lt;HA~!

lllll

IR V I '-&lt;•

The Bi1 Ad Club w.1; organ11ed co b.rnd togcchcr tho,c
scudencs enrolled in the D1\ ision of Bu,iness Administra cion.

'T0'-1

The club rnpport; \ ariou' acci\·1ti.:; which aid the

Bl \ U\'l I I'

During each ;pring ccrm a "Bi1

Ad I OCttlt•

studcnc~

in bettering themselves and the community in which they li\e.

J\d D .w'' "

held.

:-\ umcrous firms in the .1rea parcic1p.l[c .111d arr.1 ngc di,pl.1y~
RICllARO

$ \M\-10'.'

of their products.

The organi1..1tio11 .1ho sponson talks by

leading businessme n on the problems encountere d in bmincss.

Social Chair1111111

Ac the :innu;il Open H ouse which chc college &gt;ponsor\ each

P11blinlJ

JOH'-

spring spcci.1 1 dispbys of office equipment .ire exhibited under

\'ALK Y

direccion of the organi7JttO n.
Other activ ities of chc club arc cutoring lessons for rhc
.:id of fi rst yc.:r a ccou ncing sct.:dc1H\ who arc hJving schobstic
difficu lt y, an annu.11 Bi" Ad B:mqucc for rclax:nion and busi·
ness and a Bi7 Ad d.mcc held primarily for raisin g fund s to
support the organi7Jtic n.

68

�French club

ROW I

A B'lO WN
T BEBEL
P SO MM ER
~

Fl RRARI

B CA:ll
,

THO\!AS

ROW 2

•

WORSTER

C ALOI
·\ G u"ITA
D S•IHflELD
BOTTI NO
ROUN.JS
K HAL[Y
P p,\(;,IA
"1

\\

G ARUSSO
\'.

KRl[GS).IAN

Vil KHCHA\'

Sincc it\ formation

:t\

one of the earli er languJge club'

P n·sid ('//I

\:--'-

llRRARI

PllU I h

SOMMI R

'\l\R\

on campus chc I rench Club lus sought to cncouragc an inrercH in l· rcnch t· ulturc. .\lo' ics, cra\'elogucs. skie s .ind folk
.,inging

Jl

Vin· Prcrnfr11t

the meeting~ ha\e stimulated rhi~ inccrc!&gt;L

The club was influential in establi shing the new lnter-

S1·crcl11r)

IHIRl ')A

B IBl f

n;uional L;inguagc Society this re.1r and has parcicip;ited in
all it s affairs.

Weeki)' luncheons -

:it

whic h onl\' " pure

French" was spoken, of coursc--were also held by a &lt;,mall

Trc11s11rrr

Ad 1 irnrs

I I

RO\ \\'ORS.I I R

MR. K1·1( llAM

group of the better linguists this year.
MIC

~ ·1.

AUB\:--

�german club

ROW 1

W. KRlfGSMAN
0 SIO NE
R BUCHI N SKY
B CARL
f WE SCOTT
ROW 2 .
M R WILLIAM50N
B B&lt;NJAMIN
C ASWAO
R DIPIETRO
R RATH
R NlY..MAN
P COLVll&gt;

H HrnZOG
D SHE ff IELD

D SHORT
H OOPPEL
MR WEIGAND

Prnidl'11I

Interes t in rhc Gcrm .111 C lub 11H.:rc.1'&gt;cJ chi'&gt; ycJr ... there

ROB! RT UU&lt; Hl'-'')K \

w.1'&gt; a new f.1culcy ad,·isor, .\Ir. Willi.11mon . . . .\Ir. W'eig.111d\

Vin· J&gt;ri·sid1•11I

walCI. became even mo re legen&lt;.hry . . . there wa~ a post-war

DA YID 51 O;\; I

German movie version of Die H cdama111 . . . :rnd anyone
BJ 'TlY

CAIU

he.ud s.1yin g ")a" bcc.ime a member in good standing, which
1~

Trl't1.r nrtr

HILi

about as good .1 selective m crhod as .111 y force C\'Cr devi ~ed .

KRIFGSMAN

Bur the German C lub made these "d r :1ft cc~" li ke ir

Sagl'1111 I -al -A n11 s

LARRY

for where .ire rhere more spirited ~ingcr; :ind d.rnce rs :ind

~ 1 1.VERSTF I ;-;

c.ners :ind commercial rrio'&gt;?
pl.1ced, si nce pl ans co in trod ucc

They may, of course, be re-

/111 f1111•11 1 /iirl (pending :icq uisi -

t ion of the puppets ) .ire now being considered .. . P:iulchen
rhinks they may be more m.1n:igc.1ble thJn hi s live Krrlc ""''
Madchcn.

70

�italian clul&gt;

RO W I
C PU TR I NO
V GIARUSSO
C ALOI
A GIU N TA
R N El\TO N
S M ARCO NE
ROW 2
L BUCCI
'I R BER N ARDO
D SHEFFIELD
R DIUTE
E BOTTI NO
'I BOTll NO
'I FERllARI
W KUBLtR
N S ASSA N I
V GALLUCCIO
ROW l

R PICCIA NO
G IA NN ON E
F

N f "l IA

D HEAPPS

\0( I AI. &lt;A l.I

n ccobcr
1&gt;1..·ccmbcr
J.i.nu:iq

Prt•sid c· 11 I

~DAR

&lt;ARJl.1110 A I OI

I IAl l 0\X' I 'I:\ PARTY

Viet' J&gt;rcsidc11/

'&gt;(II:\ ITZI· LB.\:'\K PAR 1)

TWL I.I rJ l .'dGllT 1
I:\ rJ R:-:ATIO:'\ \l
1\:-\:\ U .\l

~· I RI

Stcrl'lar)'

'I J(,111
Pl( :\I&lt;.

Rl(, H \ llll ' I

\~ '10='&lt;

AGA f'l ,, O G IUN 'I J\

T r£' 1/Sll Y('(

The Italian C lub has been primarily concerned with
promoting Italian cu lture at Harpur. Presenc.nion of an
luli.111 pl.iy has become an :rnnual event. This ycJr it wJ~
"L.1 Locondura ," a corned}• in t hree .1cts with ~1.iry Ann
hrr.1ri playing the lead, .ind l.1H vcu we l.rnghed .It " La

Ad 1•i.wr

\'c&lt;lov .1 Scaltra."
1\n&lt;l who could put aw.1y the memories of the Schniuel
'' Bunk" Party, fir~t of the lntern:it ion.il Language So.:iety\
.1ff.1in ... or ma ybe some of you can' t remember . . . report&lt;,
h.1,·c hinted this w .H a very succe:.5fu( meeting of "the m ind .,''
ight furni:.hcd the usu.ti srimulu:. to the
. . . International
.1ch.1nccment of community culture . . . the C huck Aloi
hoc pie legend is still g rowing . . . .rnd compliments :ire still
111 order o n Don Shctlicld's am31i ng " Tower of P1n.1. "
71

Mil .

lll R'\IARl&gt;O

�,pentang/e
~ow

club

1

\' LANGlLOo ~
P Wl£RSC•i 1 1'G
'.I BRllHR
R GILG
R KEYIAN

ROW 2
MRS KELLO•
H

M()ffA•

J lHC'IAS

R HOOD
R DIXON
·~Rs HASf' P&gt; .UG

ROW
fl

j

~'.ORR S

0 GOOD'•OuGH
£ BC\\ (I,
Mil ~llH'.lTO'•
•·R~ BR)'.\ ~I
C \'. ILL1A"1

J .\Rl•OLD
J HARi (,~'I
Mil llvP
Ii

REEJER

ROW .1
W DENK
f' G

A~AN[Ll.A

f

M G1 YNN

f!

CAl\lRI

I' /'l'SUl 1· /1 I

ROIH R r

'&gt; tK I \I

1 IOOD
Oetobcr

Viff Prnidl'lil

ROHi RI 1)1(

SC'crr/111 )

JI A:".';!

T l'&lt;'US/11' 1'1'

111 I I '\

K~O'

'\o,·emb1.•. r
De'-~mbt.:r

'11101\I A~

Janu&gt;r)
\I 0 I I !\ I I

MRS.

&lt;Al I

''1&gt;

\R

I l uJ&gt;l'I

PAR\ '\0\IA ~ I ;\

BRO\\ \. 0:-X I I I ZABl1 I

I A'\~

PL' lll I( ATI O:\ O I Cl AR f' :". DO'\.
I\\ I I I Iii ;-; JC,llT PART )

I cbruaq

Til l

BO\\ l;\;\'J\11

1:-.:TI R NA llONAL ;-;l(,, Jl'l

April

BRO\X' 'I

O '\

OPI N I IOUSF SIIAKl'.SPr AR f

E I'\' GUSJJ Ol· PAR I M I N T

Publ is he r~ of

Clar/'l/Jo11, produ cers of Sbakcs/H'flrl'

0 11

t lx

La1t 11 , sponsors of talks on everything from Beow ulf to Benc h-

lcr-ye Pentangle mLml:crs ha1•c di srini::ui'&gt;hed thcmsel\'es a\
H arpur's foremost l:elicvers in bcl/1" lctt rn.
Their parties, mo reover, ha ve rrovcd them wassaillers of
the first rank , second to none in t he gi1 ing-o f-rhe c heer.
Pentangle is new to the college rhis

ye~ r

in name only.

It was formed early in the fall by the merger of the longf amiliar English and C larendon clubs.

lt is open to all students on the campus-/itrrat eurs :ind
ill iteratcurs.

72

�slavic club

ROW I
\\

LEVA N ]

A LEFCHlCK
II

UElRS
MARUSICH

,',

KR EGS\\AN

,

C~

H
·.1

URA
HOMYAK
STRU BL(

v.

CHA MUl KA
f E TR SM

~

"ACKO
N PAl\KO
HOM;\

'' LEl'.COl'ICH
D Pc.T 1¥ J OHN
l:R

The fall

cmc\ter of 19 50 1:-rougln

.111

BOCHNAK

(,I ORGI

.1dd1uon to the

an

RS

se veral bnguagc dubs now in c:--i,tcncc .tt I brpur College.

\I ill' /&gt; u ·sid c11 I

The Sla\·ic Club i' composed chiefly of those srt:dcnt\ \tudy-

\\1111'\\1

\1AR US ICH

ing the Ru'&gt;'&gt;ian language at H.1rpur; however, any per'&gt;On

S1·crcla1 l

intcrc\tcd 111 gcncr.tl Sl.t\ 1c culture i'&gt; .1lso encouraged to
Lcc_me a member.

Trc11~11rt

RA)'\11 TA

r

( llAFJ· l l

.)OHi\

LF:O-.L)

Ir is the primary function of rhe club to culti\·,ite an
interest in Slavic culrurc among the students of rhe college

Ad 1 isor

and the residen ts of the Triple Cities.
Mr. Bochnak, Russian instructor and adYi&lt;;()r to rhc club
made special arrangemen ts to engage speakers for the discussion of Slavic culture, :ind als:i brought to lntern.ttion al Night
excellent performt•rs from the community .

7l

\IR. BOCHNAK

�spanish club

RO Y. I

BE BEL
U FABRl 7 10

C W ILLIA'I SON
S 'IARCO N F
'I FERRA RI
RO W 2

C l N GLIS H
K GJA NAKOU ROS
P

BRlCK I N 'llDGE

E 'l lSSA V A G£
MISS SED A
L

f

R

WORSTER
AllDA LLAH
NE WTO N

The Spani\h Club held to it\ g:t) L.nin rr.1dirion rhi,

GRITC.HI "- \\llll\\.l!&gt;O:-.

ye.tr by dancing rhe rhumb.1 and singing Sourh American
S \ \.f

\f\RC0"-1

songs ( Jnd some of irs member\ h.l\c .il,o unoflici:1llr encouraged rhc sicHa cu Hom ) . G ue\t '&gt;pc.1ken h.1ve discussed

'iagc1111l-11/-Ar111.1

UGO I ABRIZIO

\':trious inrercsting facers of Spani\h cu lture.
Gretchen Willi.1m.,on, club president, lus served as cl1.1ir-

1\ ti 1 isor:i

M l 5'&gt; S I DA
MR .

m.rn of rhe new lntern:ition.11 L:mguagc Society which 1s

WI I UAM50-..;

J

combin ation of :ill l.1ngu.1ge clubs, org.1nifcd ro develop cosmopolir:in ism .1mong HJrpur\ numerous "quarters." Also on
the mcicty's coum:i l .1rc rwo ofliccrs from c:ich of the other
clubs.

This

~c ic ty

ha., sponsored \ever.ii club mixers, rhe

Twelfth l\ight Twirl .tnd lntcrn.1tion.1l Night.

74

�math club

RO \\

I

MR AULBICH
R CLE~R&gt;
T DEW~'

MR KENT

ROW Z

R

CARY

J SCULLEY
f

ZlSK,\

R KA.NE

Cbt1ir111an

RO:-.ALD

Prt'sid I'll I

C'LlARY

JO'&gt;I Pit

Vice J&gt;n·.1idl'11I
Ad 1·isors

MR.

\II'&gt;'&gt;\\ .\ (,I

(, IR\ 11)

10:-VIA='-

A U i ttAC H

Corrl'~po11di11g
MR.

$l'Crclttr)

HARB\R\

ROOD

K FNT

Secrl'lt1r)-Trl'lls11ri·r

MAR'"''

llRRARI

The Bouny Club wa\ org.1ni;ed in h:bru.1q of 1951.
Its member5hip i5 composed of student' interested in g.irdening, land\c.1ping .111d home pbnning.
Gue\t '&gt;pcaker\ h.1ve been prominent people 1n the '.1nou\
field, of g:irdcnmg. The Club's interest'&gt; were not .ill .1c.1 demic; member5 le.1rned to make corsages .ind \tudieJ garden
problem' on sever.ii fielJ tnp\.
Tc.1\ were given in honor of the 'pe.1ker\. The club
finished off its firH yea r v. ith .1 picni c ac Mr. Bower\ home.
75

�outing cluh

RO W 1
D L YL ES
P

L EW IS

J M UR RA Y
M

PH ATT

A

M CD E VI TT

£
C
I

BRE \\ ER

K NAU F
M ULLI N

RO A Z

,.

~ BI NSO I'&lt;
J \ ALLO /\ ~

1..A K 05H

LYO NS

&gt;i ~rn z oc;
J PU RH LL
p COLVI N
6 Hl.. RLBlJ T
L A\ER•

r

GUTH

rROSS
r '.) ' E. LL
SS
£ H~LA6R ',

Pu·mlc11t

c.1111pus. An in,·itJtion to

\11 n· /&gt; ri•sicl c 11 I

C 01 I I I '

BARBARA

'f

The Outing Club is om· o f the nc\\CSt intcrc\t club' on

11 1\RO! D HI RZOG

\.IULU.:-:

:i

joint Outing Club mcctin~ held

in S)'l"acusc with v.1riom ~ew York St.1le college'

""1'

the

begin ning . Students :itccnding chis meeting formed the nu-

H URi.BUT

cleus of our present I I:irpur Outing Club which h.1\ sponsorl'd

/"I'll .I II f f r

\\ Al "I I R

(.0~1

BS
\C\

')1·1g1•t111I - at-Ar111 .1

HARO![)

er:i.I hi kes and picnics as well as a vcr\' succc\sf ul \qu:irc

dlncc :i.t the IBM Rod and Gun C lub. Dropping in o n \Ome

HAl L,\IA;-..

of their recent meetings you m:iy h:i.\'C hcJrd of a \pccial

A cl 1 iwrs

MR. ( OATI

winter o utin g planned with skiing, square d.rncing .111d good
\IR.

ll UPPl

food.

J~/(,

Besr of luck, you heart)' Outing Club members!

�pin topplers
RO W I
~ WOOD
E D£1F fEN BAC H
KR I EGS"1AN

I\

'~A R K S

J

B EELLS
G I ANN O Nf
L PICCIR ILLI
ROii 2
C MOORE
1\ISS C H I A RU L L I

C "1 ULLI N
l WELC H
P GAFF N EY
A

M DE VI TT

tJ HU RLBUT
CO NORAN
GREE N

.\ v. EISS
ROI\ 3

R TR ABUCCO
C.. ROUFf
'.' R l \ EIG AN D
P L • GR Al'. Gf
0 HAMAN
v, K U!JLER
R KOE N IG
M K(,\RSEY
T ZO ll •N E
C P UTR I NO
~ GA LLUCCIO
ROI'. 4
l&lt;R BERNAR DO
"1R POM ERO Y
II ~ LUTZ
\' R AUXAN DER
~ R

Boy'&gt; :ind girl,, prof., .rnd protcgc'&gt;- 1t\ .ill

C\'Cm

on I rid.1~

/&gt;rcsidc11/

.1 ftcrnoom when chc\e H:irpuritc\ get together on the K. of C.
.die~., to bowl. 1\ll distincriom , c'cept for pin h.mdic.tp\, arc

\I ire J&gt; rcsicl 1• /1 /

111bolic.1 ll y bru,hcd :iw:iy at the st:trt, through a \trangc
ritu.d in which cJch of the de1 otccs co1 er~ hi\ finger\ with
They then begin hurtling rhc mincr.ditc\ down the
.1llc1 '· Jt rhe same time gyr:tting through .1 'cric\ of mo1·emrnt'&gt; c.1llcd Bod y English, .ind i.,,uing forth with lusty ,hours

ch.ilk.

.lt

'f

the

The 11.trpur ten pin c1rcun h.1s some -10 afio1111ado~ of
rhc .ll't wirh average'&gt; ranging from I 5 5 (good. thcv tdl m.)
to --1 (Jnyw:t), you meet .1 lor of nice people ) .

.

(()

rhe pin topplcr' for 1ncn's

Jnd women'&gt; high single .ind triple; .111 :innu.d rroph~
categoric, H the end of the yc.ll'.
~·'en 1n c:ich of these

\,ll(l l AF.I

ADI I I

p111 boy.

\X/ eekly prizes :ire Jw.1rded

Tl SI II

\\ 000

LI) 011: 1 ! I :-, BAC l t

'&gt;I

oi .. iore." or "cr:tck," or wh.1tl'1cr ir 1\ you holler

KUH

I\

Sc.1son\ end i, also nurkcd by the yearly kcglcrs' b:tnquct. Ar chi, .1ffair, the .1foremcnti oned trophic, :ire p.1ssed
out. to chc .1ccomp.tni mcnt of much welkin-ring ing ..l\'Cr.1gecomp.1ring .ind food-caring .
77

/'C'rlS II /'1'1'

Kl ARSI \

MC DI'\ I T I

C llARI l.S

l'UTRr:-.o

�pistol ancl rifle

club

i
RO W I

R Y CC0R " ICK
ROB,NSON
B JO NE S
C HAM LTO N
"

ROV. 2

T STEE N
"

Y OGLEY

,

~fR N O

.,, ,._ILG

J&gt;ll'.\Jd111/

Vin· Pn·.1idl'11/

JAMI S \IC&lt; OR\111(.K

The ColoniJI Pmol Club "JI or~pn1/ed rn 19-l9 .rnd chc
fir1r bu1ine\1 meclings were held infornully in lhc cJ fcteria.
\Xlho know1? ! :-.faybe rho1e inform:il rrench cl.Hs meeting'

ROB! RT \H CORMIC K

al10 will de' clop inro 1omcrhing . . . .
Sl'crl'i1n1

TYl'fl.Wrl'r

ROB I RT DOWD

JOSrPH

The memben han now widened their hori .. o ns somewhat.
A new firc.irm ha s come ro their inrerc1r , rhe rifle, :ind lhc
originJI Pi1lol Club has taken the name. the Pi1lol and Rifle

C I LG

C lub.
Shooting t c:am s were formed, bolh for men and rhe
g irl s, Jnd numerous matches occ urred outdoors in the fall
and spring and indoon in the winter. Frequent trips were
m.1de to the SquJre Deal Rod and Gun C lub RJnge for pi1col
pr.1ctice for rhese marches. \Vic wonder who won? . . . the
boy1 or th e girls?
Ocher :1criviric1 aho included a tJlk by Endicott Pol ice
C hief Lero&gt;' Wike .ind formal instruction by Bingh.1mto n
Police Range offic ers.

78

�radio workshop

F ABDALLAH

The Radio Work,hop was orga nind
md

di scus~

.1

N

TIFFA N Y J

THO MA S. J

Pr1•.1 id1·11t

year ago to \tudy

the tec hniques of writing :ind directing for radio.

The club al so conduct\ pr:ictice

sc~sio n s

effects co ntrol :ind r.1dio acting.

C ASWAD

C HARI l S

JA'I

S1·cr&lt;'l11r1

A ~\\

AO

J O N.I SI

in .1nnou nci ng, sound

In the fall,

:1

Adi isor

spec ial half-

hour program-writrc n and produced by club mcmbcr&lt;,wa~

THOMAS

carried over one of the loc:il sta tions.

79

'vlR!&gt;.

llASI :-.l'F I UC,

�J

jazz band

womens

D NILSON

J CAPOZZI
'IR BOOKM LLER

C

LA ~DR E

T NORTON
0

PLATT

R SAVIDGE
C ENcL SH
D SHORT

/11:;; Band

'X1 0 1111•11 's Choir

Prrsi1fr 11 /
Vice PrtsidI'll I

Prnid£'111

DAVID Pl AlT

ROGlR

Si'rgc1111/-al-/\r111 s

1 \' UY:--.

Ad 1 isor

\IR.

~A V IDC

131 \ IRl(I

Vil'l' Prnidl'lll

I

7A~ll'I

II RR Y Bl·. HT I

l'I GG'

BO I 11:--.0

J\d I iS~Jr

ROU;-..'DS

MR. BOOK ,'-111 LI R

BOOK vlll 11 R

Ml'll's Glee Club
President
Vice PrcsidC'11!

SecrdarJ
Treas11rer
Ad 1 isor
80

JOSI l'H MARK S

MICHA FL KL\ RSI'

CARLL \X"JLL!AMS

BLR '\/ARD GRAHAM

MR. G ILFILLA ;-..

�,

choir

mens

glee club

R011 I
L

KINLt Y

E

HA~ABRIN

p ROU,,,:lS
B ZAYPI
r BEBll
8 H~RLBUT
RO\', "
p SO'l•'f;R

J V.1-ilH
G BOHUSH
BllEWf R
~
p COL\'IN
J LYONS
B MAAS
G'lErtl
p GAH Nl:Y
E THYRSlON

ROI\ l
BUCCI
CHASE
8 GRAHA M
M KFARSlY

L

J

'IA~KS

R NEWMAN
H COVlRl
ROY. Z

c

EliGLISH

8 TOEPKE
H 1-i ERZOG
c LA NORl
p L&lt;GRA NGE
R KO('llG
f NE'llA
D SEAMA N
lj ,\:OCH UL SKI
M LEVA NT
ROW 3
RHODlS
TMT

81

B

L 1 N(S

L

'' CWHERTfR

�the colonial players

RO \', I

C 11. ILLI AM S
F Nf M IA
Z J AN OWSK I
£ GOL DBERG
G ROUF F

D LI NOSLE 'I'
ROIV 2
A PLATT
MULLE N
p VAN ETT EN
E THU RSTON
BUIL1E N
&gt;I II A RNE R
l'R Al Bf RT

s

"

I It\\ I '
DAR\X' I '

(,Ol Olli R(,
I 10:0511 )

The COl O~JAL Pl A Yl: RS prc~cnc . . . .ind chcy did1n .i bii; \\'ay, ,1., is illustr;Hcd on che

oppo~itc

page. The 1950

by Sidne) P. Albert, .i smashing

St'crl'lar)

Spring Rc\'ue, dir\'cted

T rt'tH 11 rt' r

. . . then, during the fa ll of 1950-\\r. Albert again directing-Th" \\'' imlou Boi . . . with a ca1t almost compll'tl'h'

AJ 1 iwrs

G i l Bl RI

\IR.

ROUI I
1 ARRO\\

\11\ . A I HI I\ I

~uCCl\\

new to I larpur College chc.Hric:il circlc1 . . . another hie
.ind promise of greater thing~ from :ictor1 in embryo . . In
the 1pring .
\Xf.iync brrow directing Goodb)t' i\f) I 11111)

.•111d grc.H pl:ins for J bigger rnd better ... i'&gt; it

pos~iblr?

Spring Rei uc.
Don 'c forget . . . bouquct1 w chc .. u gc ere\\ 1-c.irpcntcr1, clcctric1an'&gt;, 1ot111d men, p.11nter1 and gl'neral handvmcn
. . . rnd ticket 1cllcrs, publicit) chairmen . . . and prop co m
micrcc\ ... co n.1me a few.
Thi: COLON IAL PL t\ Y l·. R
ordi nJ red cffo n
theatre . . . .

co rrl''&gt;Cn t to

.1 fine l'Xamplc of co1011

. . che be1t in the

�It\ Off llJI' lfrnml, hit do

T/w \\'1 111.1/011 Boi . .. dr.1111acically prc\cntcd to vou ..
.1 \terling performance by "old reliable" Jack Gilm:in . .
Im c intcreH rcalisticall)

provided

by Ziggy

\\'olf~on

.111d

(,inn)' Lan,r:el.111d . . . who m:idc an impre5\ive debut .
J\

did .J.1mcs Kelle). Ellen Thunton, Phyllis Simmom, Al

Bebe!. Frank :'\emi.1 rnd Gene Cro.,s .

. and don't forget

thn "debauched athkte" in the person of Lee Kamimk:i.,
. It :ill provided an entcrt:iining

C\

cning.

\OU

rc1111.:ml·cr . . . John

l ency elegantly g.ubcd in th.a 'iYid ch.1nrcmc tO\\ cl . . .
Sam Dougl:i,s "Plunger" yelling I IL I ! . . . the 'ophistic.ircd
trio of Aswad. Cook :ind CoYcrt iod1'l111g, . . . •1nd l\l.m.1
Jimenc1 blowing her lines and m.1king the ,how . . . . Or did
you

\Cl'

yoursdf in the "8 O'Clock Ch"" lecture on the

effects of ;ilcohol on men .111d other .rn1mak .

. And wcrcn 't

you proud of "our own" origin.ti mmic

orche.,crJtiom

. . . \cripts . . . .111d production?
scout\ missed such

:1

It\ too b.1d the tJlcnt

great pcrform.1ncc .

�colonial news

ROI'/ '

Ii OOWE N

T BEHL
J

MOOR£

E T'IURS10 1&lt;
F .'. ESCOT1
N PA NKO
ROW l
HA .,, ~/,

°" RS

°"

K

BlJTLll N

R C.'&gt;1 P
[

CHAFFH
LYONS
U CARL
J TltO ... AS
P

C. A FF N EY

G FITCH
E M GLY NN
MR SCELSI
RO~.

1

H DIUT::
u HO MA
R t.' ORR S
~ LO V ELA N D

C RfH6 AN

Fa l l 1950

l:ditor -111 Chi!'/
Ldtlor
Nt'u .1 Lditor
Sjwrls b litor
h •t1/11rt' I ditor
1311si11t'.1.1 i\C1111t1gcr
Ad 11·rti.1i11g Mt111t1gl'r

Spring 195 1
JO H '

M1111t1g111 .~

\100RI

I RI D \\ I
l

D\~

~C.O 'J

I

.\RD BO\\ £ ;-..

J:cl it or-i 11-Chief

TJIURSTO'

G I ORG I

KOUR \

I H I R I S t\

6U3l.l

I)

\&gt;; I

~COf'I

S/1orls Editor
Ft't1f11rc J:dilor

:-. JCJ IOLAS PA:-. K O
l·I I I '

I JU

Ari Editor
B11si11cn 1Ht111agcr
Ac/ 11•r/isi11g M111111gcr

!· I I I ;-.. T l I URSTO'"\,
\1.\ U RIC I

T H OR~O '

C.. I ORGI

K OURY

\\ \ Y:-.;1

jO'\E'i

Charle s Aswad

Janet Conklin

John Gilman

Edward M cG ly nn

Ann Brown

Joyce Daniel s

Erwin Goldberg

Robert Morris

Mildred Butlien

Robert Diute

David Goodnoug h

Phy llis Perl

Ruth Camp

G erald Fitch

George Homa

George Rejebian

Betty Carl

Patricia Gaffney

Barbara Hurlbut

Barbara Rood

Betty Chaffee

Ruth Gilg

La rry Loveland

Jea nne Thoma s

Ad v isors

... Mr. Scel si
Mrs. Hambalek

��the colonist

ROV. I

J LYONS
C MULLUI
A BROWN
F. KNAUF
B CHArHE
J WEISS

ROW 2

G ROUf F

r BEUH
J

DECKER

R DIUTE
P COLVIN

E GOLDBERG
W BARNO
B HURLBUT
C ARMSTRONG

N PANKO
M'! Sil VlRTON

ROW

i

F V. ESCOTT
\\ MAYER
W RVING
P DEi\ £ Y

R HOOD
R N!UMANN

I Jere i, tlw 191 I ( 0 1 O:'\ IST. I ll·rc in p1nurc&gt; .ind
prme i' t he \ton of o u r college . . . h o11 it grc11 from T C (
to I l.1rpu r . . how it i, gro" 1ng out of pn.:- f.tll', in to perm.inence . . . ol 11 h.1t i' bc111g done ,l\ 1c grow,.

STA FF

"J lwrc\ .1 lot th .it 1, n' t h1.:rc, coo. \\'c like .1 book with
p.1dded co1 l'r\, four Lolor UI\ 1der,, &gt;Cinllll.iring copy .ind
d 1H111ct i1·c hnntt' JU'&gt;t ,1, m uch .1 .. you reJd cr' do. But like
t he co llege. the (() LO:"\ IST i~ \ti ll yo un g. I t ' ' ha1 ing .1
dtflic uh Jdok,c.:ence, wo . .rnd it has h.1d to ,cruggle .1 lo ng
"tth inexperience, J l11rntcd .1l low.rnce .111d gen er.11 grow111g
p11m .. . '&gt;0 life h.1, no t h en .,11nplc. 1\ fter .di, do 11111 knJ11
whed ll'I co w.c .1 100 or 1)3 \creen for better engrJ1 ing' . . .
w hich type Lice\ .ire ,,1m-'&gt;cni . .. how co order rc1·e r ~c )lllecuc' . . . ho11 t o fig u re copy per squ.1rc inch (wit ho u t .1
c.1lc ul.itor ) . . . or Cll'll hu11 to type on worn-out 1 . C.
Sm1 tl1.,?

Blll the C 0 1 O "\ I) T, we chink you 'II agree, is no longer
.111 ini.1nc.
It l1.1d .1 profc,,1on.1I photogr.1phcr th" yc.ir . ..
good cngrJ vcr1 .i nd p r11iters . . ..111 ad 11 1or wi th conncctiom
.111d a \t.1ff tlu c '' orkcd h.1ru co nuke it grow .

\ 11\ WJ)'. hen: tt " . . . the COL O:--: IST ;, vour book

Caro l A r m st rong

Greg Lemoniad es

Lo re tta Ave ry

W ill iam M eyer

Theresa Bebe l

He le n M offatt

Mil d red But lien

Joh n M oore

Pa tr icia Co lv in

Col leen Mu ll in

W i lli a m Davies

Roy le N eumann

Jo hn Deck er

Ni cho las Pa nko

Maurice Dewey

G ilbert Ro uff

Mary Ann Ferrar i

Charles Sudbrink

Bar ba ra Hurlbut

Joan W e iss

no w .
The Editors
86

�Er v Goldberg
1 dii or-i 11-Chit'f

Douglas Silverton
Fc1rnfl) t\d1isor

A nn Brown
,\(c111c1gi11g hlilor

Bill Barno
/311si11ns ,\ft111&lt;1gn

Sccllccl:
C/11/J Fd1to1
. \ 1/ 1 cir/or

.JU'-l

\ ' - ' - I )0'-\

I\... '-l&lt; I

I\'-\\...!

P\ul

Ill\\!)

)fclllcli11,1!,:

Sc1/n \ lc11111gi r
)/mrh J:clil&lt;n

Co/I)

l ~ditor

I KI D \\ I \C 0 I I
1{0111 R I

11001)

B.\RB\R\

ROOD

1\ lis1·11/:

Sc111or hi ilor
Co/I) 1-.ditor
Ad 1 ati.1i11g M&lt;111ager
87

JO I! '- \IOORI
\ \ l l l l \\1

IRVl'-C,

���90

�91

�coaches

Gene Welborn

Ambrose ''Andy" Cook

Director of Athletics

Cross-Country,

Ba seball, Basketball

Junior Varsity Basketball
Intramural Sports Program

John Budd

George "Spud" Forbes

Golf

Track

Ted Griffin
Tennis

92

�cheerleaclers
GENE CROSS
PHYLL SPERL
TEDDY STRAHS
LOREfl A Al'ERY
PAT COLVIN
lUNlt KNAUF

BARBARA ROOD
CAPTAIN

HARPUR VICTORY SONG
FIGHT ON FOR HARPUR
YE MEN OF M IGIH
FIGHT O N TO VICTORY
ALWAYS REMEM6ER
THE GREE N ANO WHITE.
IT WILL 'IAKE HISTORY
WAVE OUR BA NN ERS
SHOUT OUR NAME ,
HARPUR VICTORIOUS
WE LL REMAIN
FIGHT O N TO GLORY
WITH MIGHT AND MAIN
FIGHT ON TO VICTORY,
FIGHT

9..1

�maroon key

C P UT RI N O

D LY.l S
II

KU HLfR

\II \llll ll\

The high \l.indarch of i.:ood "ill. clc.in sporrnn.insh1p
.ind

\I ,1/11u1 /\ 11M1·r

friend!~·

competi~1 :i n

\\ h1ch

11.upur\

inter-collci.:iHc

squads arc .1ble to point to arc grc.Hly impro\'cd b~

Dolllild I l /n

Maroon Key, an honorar~

Clunln 1'11/111111

\Ch.H.'l)

the

f1;n;;t1oning in co-oper.lt10n

with the college athletic dcp.utmcnt.
The organintion wa\ formed in the spring of 1948 b~

T nlw \\" mul

the Gol iards.

Under a pcrnunent committee, membership

in

the Key rotates within this soc1.1l group.

Key member\ act .1\ ho\l'&gt; at .111 Colonial home event\.
Their purpose i\ to entertain and .1\'&gt;i\l visiting teams. The\
meet the ri-.11 squ.1d\, direct them to the college pla~ ing
.He.I'&gt; .ind help chem '' ich their equipment ;ind uniforms.
The fine hosp1c.1liq of the \l.iroon Key makes the nsic
of 1m .1ding .1thletC'&gt; co the Triple ( 1t1es more Pleasant and
1\ doing a great job in popul.1r11ing H .1rpur among other
CC' lleges.

94

�""h",,

varsity
ROW I

'I BARA N
H BATEMAN
R MARECHEK
E KOBYLARZ
R HOOD
G lOMAN
ROW 2
T

0 CO NNOR

H OWE N
W DAVIES
BRECKINRIDGE
H HI RZOG

r

G KOURY
C GRABO\\ SKI
H WOLFSON
ROW

3

DU Nij AR
M RANO
C PUTRINO

J

f

GUTH

W M CGLADE

J llNEY
T ZOWINf

l'R 1\ELBORN

S/1ri11,~,

h1/I, / 9 50

Pn·.1id1·11t
Via Presid('// I
Secr1'/a I')

T rt 'll .111 rt' r
Sc•rg1·1111l-11!-Ar111 s
Ad 1 isors

Pr1·.11rl1•11t

ROB I RT ,\!ARI CHI K
G l' ;\; I

I RI

I)

GUTH

KOBYLARZ

MICllAll

Vin f'l"l'Jidcul

HOOD

ROHi Rl

BAKA'

H t\KOLD IJATL \1 1\
\11{.

\Ht.

1951

5l'Cl'l'fclr)

°"

Trl'11.111r1 •r

( OOK

\\ I l IJOR :-:

llAROI 0 Ill RZOG
1 I AROl D flAl I MA:".

\llC ll A I I

B,\R 1\ '

)1 r".t,1•111ll-11t-Ar11is

Adi 1rnrs

Varsity "H'', the newly organi;rcd lettermen\ club.
came in to ex istence as a re..,ulr of ideas germ in ated almost
'imultancou~ly in the mine!\ o f Athletics Director Gene \X'elborn and C~ spore' writer I-red Guth. The org.111iz.ation of
.1 lettermen's club w:is fir..,t 1uggc\tcd during the 1950 spring
1emestcr, but no ac t ion "a1 t.1ken to establish the club until
the fall term.
On Ocwber 1~. 1950 .1cting prc...1dent Tom Zo\\inc
c.1llcd rhc fir..,t meeting to order. \ ' arsit) " I I" then elected
olliccr1 .md drew up a ch.in er for their organintion.
The m,1in project of t he Vanity " IT" this yc.ir ha1 been
the handling of concessiom .lt h &gt;me ba1ketb;1ll game1. This
proved ro be a succcs1 for both rhe c lub .rnd the spcct;nors
.ntcnding these contests.
One of the ba1ic purpo1e1 of \'usit~ "I I " i1 the promotion of clean \pOrtsmamhip at Harpur. All athletes 11 ho
ha1c earned a 1·arsity letter for participation 111 all\ m.1jor
1port Jre eligible to join .1 ui1cly in the orga1111.1t1on.

\IR. &lt;.OOK

\JR . \\ 11 HOR'

91

�EVANS

KOB YL ARZ

LE NEY

FELlER

B ATE MA N

I' ICC I A N O

VA•, A M BUR G H

BURDIC K

HUOAN ICH

ROM M EL

basketball
1950- 1951 BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
DATE
November
December
December
December
December
December

HARPUR
22
6
9
13
19
26

December 29-30

OPPONENT

80
59
70
76
67

Genesee
Oneonta State Te ocht&gt;rs
Po\Jerts Wesleyan
Albany State Teachers
Utica
Taylor University (Ind .)

56

6
9

53

State Tech
Utica

70
73

Wilkes

January 10

Lycoming

POLIO

51
62
88
101

BE~EFIT

79
January 12
January 13
January 17
January 20
February 6
February 10
February 14
February 17
February 28
March 3
March 7
March 10

63
82

INVITATIONAL TOURNEY

54
January
January

53

58
60
67

State Tech
Oswego State Tea chers
Utica
Bloomsburg
Mansfield
King s College
Champlain
Bloomsburg
Lycoming
Albany State Teachers •..
Mens field
Wilkes
Oneonta State Teachers

49

68
2

76
.45
70
55
49

54
62

79

96

62
41
cancelled
75
0

79
64
72
90
53

59
50
81

�j-v

basketball

ROW I
I! OIUll
J SLOCUM

J HROll'N
I KEPNCR

ROii Z
,', HAU'.ER VGR
D VANAMBURGH
R EVANS

S RLUE NlAtil
" MAllllEWS
t KIANL
,\ COOK

Kepner lays one up and in for the
Joyvees against KEYSTONE' S varsity. Rubenzohl awaits possible rebound.

COACH

Cooch Gene Welborn discusses strategy with varsity co-captains Gene
Kobylarz and Gordy Evans dur ing a practice session.

91

�Felter hook s one in again st GENESEE JR. COLLEGE in
the season 's opener which began a five game Colonial
winning streak.

Forward Bob Picciano sends uo a free throw in the
ROBERTS WESLEY AN game. M~rgin of victory for the
Colonials was 10 points.

Will it or won' t it? It d id as Harpur d owned the A LBANY
TEACHERS at home in an early season thriller.

Eva ns a nd Bateman get set for a rebound in the LYCOMING g ame. The visi to rs' Brod rner kle (32 ) loo ks on in
owe.

98

�Playing rhc toughen ;chedule in
the

hi;tory

rhc

of

collq;c,

\\ hy b.1,ketball

c.1ger; pnl\ cd

the
''

I farpur\ mo\t popular \port.
The Coloni.11\ downed Sure Tech\
I lorncr\ twice and by
'urcd
\C.1;on

\O

doing in-

thcm\elvc\ of .1 \UCCC\\ful
:1\

far

J!&gt;

their f.111, were

concerned.
cas:&gt;n highlight\ included the annual Ill\ it.nion.11 Tourn.1ment, the
IB:\f Polio Benefit g.imc .ind .111
overtime thriller :igain&gt;t

Bloom;-

burg Sute Te.1chcrs. The ~l.111s fidd
game. which I l.1rpur won b1 forfeit
in rhe \econd half. w:i, prob.it-I~
thL· str.1nge\t ever pl.1 yed in

the

&lt;)outhern T ier.
It \\ ·"

.i

\CHon of thrill,, chill- .rnd

'Pill\, \tlldded

1\

irh the unprcdict-

.1blc and unbeliC\ .1blc.

Action is thick and fast as the HARPUR Colonials beat out STATE TECH' S
Hornets in the annual Polio Benefit game to gain possession of the trophy
awarded by IBM.

At left, Evans scores against arch-rival STATE TECH in the semi-finals of the College Invitational Tournament. Center,
Kobylarz tokes a top in the some game. Right, Koby and UTICA' S Luebbert ore temporarily out of ploy in the stormy
final game.

99

�cross-country

ROI'. I
A C:OO K COACH

J B AR N O
J
IV

J

C.OO OI SO N
..i c1..L AOf
l ' N Dl RMAN

ROW 2

D

HA MAN
R fV AN S

T Al'ERV

HARPUR

OPPO NENT

27

Champlain

28

39

Hartwick

16

46

Scranton

15

Cross Country m.1clc its initi:il .1ppe.1r:incc
H.irpur

111

.ll

the fall of 19 50.

The re:im, coached by And} Cook, did well in
winning its first meet ag;iimr .in experienced Champlain '&gt;quad , but was un:ible co regain the winning
side of che ledger for the rest of the ~e.1'&gt;on.
I l.1rpur's I l.1r rien :ilso particip:ited in the fint
.1nnu.1l :--:cw York Sr.He Collcgi.nc Tr.1ck and Field
t\ssoc1Jtion meet .ll Cortland in i\:ovembcr. The hill
:ind d .1lc men all fini,hcd, led by Bob E' .ins, with
Tern A' Cf), Don JI.mun and Lee T urncr fo lio" ing.
l 00

�track

RO \', I
C PUT RI NO
R LI VI NGSTON
D CROSS
H HER7 0G
F H UM PH RE Y S
R O WEN
ROI'• 2
MCGLADE
G fEL AH I
f GU TH
R S\llTH

11

RO I'. 3
G &gt;ORBES COACH
T A VERY
V ,ACK SO N
G DOYLE
C G RABOll S K I
J GILG
f HU B BS
HUDCOVICt&lt;

OPPONENT
33
68
Oswego
TRIANGULAR MEET
45
TCC
861· 2
Loyolo of Baltimore
3212
Scranto n
K of C RELAYS
32
TCC
48
Scranton
30
LeMoyne
28
Keystone

TCC
72
54

Key~one

The 1-.1r\ity track tc,1m . co.1chcd bv
George (Spud- I orbcs. and the List to com·pcte under the T riple Cities College n:imc,
did well, considering the cibber of competition.
The I orbernicn won the du:il meet
.1g.1inH Ke1 stone College. Then, journcvin)(
t0 Oswego mmu~ the senice~ of crack ·H O
vard d.1,hm.111 I red C·uth, they were defeated b) the St.He Te.1chers College.
T hc.:ir nell.t meetm;; w .is the tri.111gul.ir
.1t Scr.1nron, where thcv no~cd out Scranron
U ..111d c,1me m second behind Lovol.i of B.11timore. TCC entered eight men m the
I'\. Y. S. Collcgia tc T r.1c k .ind I 1cld meet .n
R. P. l. On ly Tcrrr J\vcry, star miler, w.1s
;iblc to pl.ice, t.1king three points.
101

�baseball
~

b.I 11• .J

8.1

EJ

u.. "1

e" s,--···

EJ

EJ

T..

oz: ....

11., ..,,.., I'{• . ,,.

0

G

G-.- /"'.. ,1.,.

/'f 1. (J. •• "

G

Wd t ('.~b

K t. , C'"'vl!:.S:

I
I

0Frco

.

l·d

0
3

2
3
7

15
6

8

W ilkes College
Al bany Sta te Teach ers
Sta te Tech
Keys'. one Junio r Colle ge
State Tr&gt;ch
O neon ta State Teache rs
O neo nta State Teachers
Hartw ick Coll ege
Utica Coll ege

c ••. ~

s . . . "'"'

(., • • ti-It•- -

GJ

TC( \ b.1,cball u:.1111

Baseball Schedule, Spring 1950
TRIPLE CITIES COLLEGE

w. r,~

D

Jo ~ ..:.J-~ i:. \,I ._
n/d•,

.D,, L

GJ

8.11 P..!s

\CL

'omc

\Ort

ot record l.1\l '&gt;C.l\On

by JLlt1.1ll) pb~ mg 111nc g.1me\. COJl.h \ '\'clbo
rn hJd jmt

OPPO NENT

.1bout &lt;lcudc&lt;l th.u r.1111 w.l'&gt; h" b1ggc&gt;t
oppo nent, ,incc mo't
o f t he '&gt;dll'dul.: h.1d lwcn ".1shc d ,t\\ :I\
for 'ever. ii prc1 iou'

6

10
4
10
8
14
2
12
14

But 1f t he 'un ~mi led on the \'\'clb ornm
cn the Luc' d id
not. T he ( oloni.1!- dropp ed \Cl en of their
nine g .11111:\: onh
Om:o nt.1 St.Ht~ TcJLher~ Colle ge fell
1 ictim rn the Green
Jntl \'\'h1t c.

102

�golf
OPPONENT

TCC

9

Wilkes

0

9

Bl oomsburg

0

Invitational Tourney

214

Cortland

220

Utica

226

Ithaca

231

Un,con:d on in du.ti compet ition .111d '1ctor\

111

t h e l miuuorl.11 Tourn.1men t, the gol icr,, under coach
J c h n Budd. h.1d .1 brief bm \U&lt;.:O.:e\,iul \e.1,011.
Bill \ l.ll'u,10.:h, w11h -3, led the Coloni.d, ro .t

9-0 'icron

O\

er \\" il kl'' C ollege. T hl te.1111

I\

cr.1~e

-6.).

\\.I \

11.trpur '' .t\ ' 1non ou' 111 the 111\ 11.n1011.1I Tou r n.1
m cn t

.11

b 1-.J o1e \\'1 tl1

.1

t e.1111 \core of 2 14. (uni.ind

State fin i,hcd "1t h 220, Uu..:.1 226 .tml l t h.1.:.1 2.\ I.

llob .\ Lt rcchcck \\ ·" low 111.111 for 11.trpur wnh 7 4.
\!.trcd1cck, wit h 7 l, .1g.1in p.1ced the ll'.tm .1g.1in't
n loom\burg in the l.1\t m.nd1 of the \C.l\On. The
\Chcdule l'IHkd ,J\ 1l beg.tn-\\ it h .1 9-0 \ ICCOI'\.

ROW I

M RUDIK, M P17ZILLO W LOWE

now

c

2

CRAWFORD

f

SANGES

R

'1 ARECHEK

w

MARUSICH

Pizzillo gets 1et for a long d rive • • . •

103

�tennis

S STEINER
"

NORR IS

P

BR~CKENR

IDGE

G KOURY
R KOURY

The Harpur r.1cquct w ielder-. fini~hed

the season undefeated.

TCC

OPPONENT

6

Ithaca

four of six si ngles :i nd two of three

7

Hartwick

doubles against Ithaca Coll ege at

5

Utica

Stewart P ark, Ithaca, in their first

8

Hartwick

Coach T ed G ritlin \

charges took

o uting.
J\g.1inst H .1rtwick .it Onco n t.1, they
loH on ly two sets.
The closest m.1tch of the seJson w.1s
pl.iycd

.lt

home .1g.1inst UtiCJ Col -

lcge. The netmcn gaincd a bH m in ute

one

po111c

,·ictory

on

che

strength of three double~ w111s.
I n the final con tes t of the seJSOn,
a rernrn match with H .1rrwick, the
squ.1d swept the -.ingles and dropped
but one double'&gt; tn for '.111 O\Cr" helming n ctory.
104

3

4

�intramural sports

The "war" between Adelphi and Saiens goes on . . .

Adelphi champs agoin . . .

terest

The intr.1mural sports program ha., de' eloped

111

the '.inous '&gt;pores Ju, incre.l\ed until no"

e;ich one is imp.nicntly .rn aired.

greatly during the past few years to provide the
batcleground for "w.1n" between the v.iriou' social

The progr:tm is

especi:tlly impon.int .u ~ l.trpur \ince inter-collcgi.ite
athletic,, "ilh the c-.ceprion of basketb.ill, 1s necc\-

club\ on I 1.irpur's c.unpus . . . friendly .,kirmishes
lhese .ire, of course. A hc.ilthy .ntitudc lO\\ .11d intcr-

'uilr !united.

club competition h as been developed on t he .ithlctic
field' and h.l\ resulted in .1 spirit of good will between

ln foorb:ill, Adelphi .rnd Saicm b.llllcd it out
for top honors. ).11em led for mo\t of the seHOn , but

the \'.lriou' organiz.lliom.

were defeated bY Adelphi .ind fi111\hed die sc.Hon

Action took place bst spr111g on the softball
di;imonds of ~lcrserc;iu P.1rk, the .1rc.1 football field,

111 .1 second pl.tee tic with the Goliank

during the Lill and the local ba,ketb.1ll coun' this

Action w,1, thick .111d f.l\t .111d somcumes bcwild aing .It ~1crscre.1u P.1rk. Occ.1sionally, the b.111 c.1r-

winter. 1\ record number of 5t udenl' p.1rticip.ned in

rier scored unnoticed .t'&gt; some g.1111cs were finished in

these sports.

\Crn1-d.1rkness.
l n 1ntr.11nur.tl ,oftball the J\delph1 no,ed out rhe

There w,t\ .1lso. thi; winter, .1 girls' b.1,kctb.dl
te.1111.

l·cncing w.t\ .1dded

t0

\l.irned Vets by .1 score of 11 - 8 111 the pl.l\'offs.

the li'&gt;t of t''tr.1-cur-

ncul.1r sport\ .1cci,•it} dm spring.
lntr:tmur.tl spons were in sti tuted

.\delph1 be.ll off the (,ol1.1n1' to\\ .1rd the end
.It

o f the b:t\kcrb.111 schedule but lost to B.1cc.:.1cu, the
intr.111rnr.1l ba,kctb.111 ch.1111pion\h1p of the 19 50-5 I

wh.n was

then Triple Cities College in the f.dl of 1947 b)
director of .ahlctics Gene \'\' el born.

Each n:.1r, 111105

�T

LOc: IS Cl .

I

1

�Pt!' IULl.l!:'.l, Pl:P llA!DS, 011tn'.LtAllDiS
,\l:l&gt; A'illLJ:l'ICS co:o-:I':'TEt Cl?AD\ :,ur
CW.~1&gt;0H

A1.l. 'l.lJ' TC l',,\Jlt

l!ASJ:El'~..U.:..

T!!l: IW'OR 6l'CRT AT l.A.'U'Ul!.

�I0 8

�109

�l
ENDICOTT JOHNSON STORES
Offer
NEWEST STYLES; EXCEPTIONAL VALUES
AT MODERATE PRICES

SHOP OUR STORES THURSDAYS AND
SAVE 10%

STORES OPEN THURSDAY EVENINGS

FULL STOCKS OF DRESS AND WORK FOOTWEAR
RUBBERS

HOSIERY

-

CASUALS -

SADDLES

EVENING SLIPPERS

FOUR LOCAL STORES IN GREATER ENDICOTT
22 Washington Avenue, Endicott

l 08 East Main Street, Union

l 07 Odell Avenue, Endicott

Main Street, Vestal

110

I

�II WALTER R. MILLER CO.
The best Known Names

INC.

11

STATIONERY
ARE SEEN AT

GIFTS
SPORTING GOODS
170 Washingt on St. and 121 State St.
Binghamt on, New York

Mc Lea n's

Loans up $500.00

PUBLIC LOAN COMPANY
INC.
7 Washingt on Avenue
ENDICOTT, NEW YORK
Phone 5-9929

Endicott

Binghamton

rr

Hilk ins Jew eler s

11

CONGRA TUATION S AND BEST WISHES
TO OUR FUTURE LEADERS
" THE CLASS OF 1951"
FROM

Our 35th Year

Sall -Ste arns

46 Washingt on Avenue

SMART YOUNG MEN'S WEAR

ENDICOTT

138 Washingt on Street
BIN3HAM TON, N. Y.

5-0121

rr
J~

--~-

REN NIE ALLEN

-

Complime nts of

AND

:1

SON S

Ben Hansen Chevrolet
INC.

I
5 11 -13 E. M ain St.

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

End icott, N. Y.

I

_ _ _ _ ___;;__
11 I

____:=-- - -

-

I

I

�Elmer Angevine Agency
IN C.

In

Sports
Equipme nt

~~

Complete Real Estate
And Insurance Service

BABCOCK'S SPORT SHOP

1

45 Washingto n Ave.

Binghamton , N. Y.

Endicott, N. Y.

For BETTER photo prints . . .

DA VID S
For Young Ideas in Fashion
69

Court

Street

B IN GHAMT ON

Co1nplin1ents of

ENDICOTT FORGING &amp;
MANUFACTURING CO.
1901 NORTH STREET
END ICOTT

I 12

�MacCLARY- STABLER
AGENCY, Inc.
105 E. Main St.,

ENDICOTT, N. Y.

Phone 5-3646

r

INSURANCE SINCE 1853

Binghamt on

78 Court Street

Jl -..

chin~· ~'=- -1

- hn son s

ESTAB L I SHED

II COU RT ST R E£T

1880

PAINTS - WALLPAPERS
INDUSTRIAL CHEMICALS

Binghamt on

Fine China - Glassw a re and Gifts
For All Occasio ns

100 Washingt on Street
City

Over 100 Open Stock Patterns in Dinnerwa re

Comp linzen ts of

ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY
OFFICES IN ENDICOTT AND VESTAL

ENDICOTT NATIONAL BANK
MARINE MIDLAND TRUST COMPANY
UNION-E NDICOTT OFFICE

Members -

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporati on

--I l.l

�ENDICOTT WINE and
LIQUOR STORE

ENDICOTT NASH CORP.
NASH A IRFLYTE the
W orld's Most Modern Car

J. WALTER BROWN
120 Washing ton Avenue

Endicott, N. Y.

230 1 E. Main Street

VAUGHN'S

Endicott, N . Y.

Compliments of

Hart, Schaffner, and Marx
Botany "500" Clothes

ENDICOTT OPTICAL CO.

Jan tzen
Phone 5-2131

· 120 Washington Avenue

Union District

ENDICOTT, N. Y.

ENDICOTT, N. Y.

J

Compliments of
Compliments of

MAGIC CITY ICE
and MILK CO.

Ken Colelllan
a nd

I

•

I

Glenn Daniels
607 North Street

•

Endicott, N. Y.

lH

�Complime nts of
Complime nts of

Triple Cities Truction Corp.

1

THE
BINGHAMTON
SUN

375 State St.,
BINGHAM TON, N . Y.

NEWING MOTOR CO.
INC.

FORD CARS and TRUCKS

" First in the Homes of Southern New York ond
Northern Pennsylvan ia for more than o Century"

SALES and SERVICE
J

Complime nts of

UNION FORGING
COMPANY
DON'T JUST SAY MILK
SAY

•

SERVING THE TRIPLE CITIES

,_

500 North St.

CROWLEY'S MILK CO., Inc.

Endicott

115

�__

ECONOMY DRUG STORE
(The Rexall Store)

WELLS-MESSEMER, ING.

60 Washington Avenue

1302 E. Main Street

C o rn er of W a sh i ng to n a n d Monroe

Endicott, New York

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

v ·e r y

Endicott
American Legion

Obvious ly ...
U nique
merchandise from

I

l

_,

ED MOSS
ENDICOTT' S -

POST 82

HABERDASHER

Rain or Shine - Only ANSCO
Guarantees Perfect Snapshots!
D on't trust to luck w ith ordinary fi lm. A nsco All W eather
Film .;ivcs the resu lts y ou want. or return the n egativ es and
~uarantee bond and receive a new roll o f film free.

/(s A lwan SUNNY u•ith Ansco A ll - WP ath er Film
AN SCO. BIN GHAMTON . N Y. A DIVISION OF GENERAL ANILINE Ile FI LM CO RPORATION .

11 6

-

�TRIPLE CITIES
SPO RTIN G GOO DS CO.

DILLEN BECK 'S
FLOW ERS

Everything in

DILLENBECK'S FLOWER SHOP
Endicott 5-2114

SPORTING GOODS

1416 North Street

Dillenbeck ' Greenhou •e
7 40 Riverside Drive
7·2036
Johnson City

Endicott, N. Y.

113 Washing ton Avenue

Dillenbeck • Flower Shop
6 Court Street
4 9687
Binghomto n

GARDNER MOTORS, Inc.

Visit the

HOTEL FREDERICK

35.37 Collier Street

Binghomlo n, N Y.

Congrat ulations and Success
to the
Closs of 1951

ond the

Dubon net Lounge

OLDSM OBILE

Woshing ton Avenue
ENDICOTT

SALES and SERVICE

Complim ents of

Complim ents of

HAZARD LEWIS FARMS
Femini ne Weara bles
24 Court Street

Binghamton, N. Y.

M. R. 98

BEST WISHES TO THE

Binghamton, N. Y.

ROUFF FURNITURE CO.

CLASS OF 1951

105 Washing ton Ave.

MILLER MOTORS

ENDICOTT, N. Y.

" Dedica ted to Better Homes "

DODGE - PLYMOUTH
235-241 Court Street

Phone 5-3379

Binghamton, N. Y.

11 7

�-1

,,

READ

Salutations

THE VEST AL NEWS

and

FOR

- SHARPEST
COMMENT
ON THE LOCAL SCENE

best wishes

COMMERCIAL PRINTING

to

I
the

Class o~ 19 51

I

r1

VALLEY MOTORS, Inc.
2011 E. Main Street

Endicott, N. Y.

Congratulotions and Success to the Class of 1951

II

Fowler's

OLDSMOBILE

Binghamton's Larges! Department Store

Sales and Service

Ii

f'

SEB~STIAN'S

I

MEN'S SHOP
Proves that Good Taste

Washington Avenue
ENDICOTT, N. Y.

IN COATS - SUITS - DRESSES SPORTSWEAR

Buss Coniglios

Phone
5-7111

Manager and Owner

Need not be expensive

I

Jj

SMART

CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES
TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
OF 1951

BUYS

BUICK
II

SCHUMANN BUICK INC.
32 State Street

FROM YOUR HOME-OWNED
FRIENDLY ENDICOTT
THEATRES

Binghamton, N. Y.
...i

lL ___
118

**

LYRIC
STATE

�Myers Paint and
Wallpaper Store

Compliments of

(i

lpxan~cr al'\Tf
lothin~

135 Washington Avenue

Endicott, N. Y.

5-8520

1

Everything in

~m.mi.n. Q]lll011
•

A1tt S«ftldiea
Grumbacher O ILS and BRU SHES

Formerly " The ESKUIRE

BRING YOUR PHOTO PROBLEMS

Comp liments of

TO

ENDICOTT
LINCOLN-MERCURY, Inc.

Endicott
Camera

3400 E. Main Street

ENDI COTT, N. Y.

Foe

Roi~~~d~cieodly

A";"°""

Congratulations
TO THE MEMBERS
OF

HARPUR COLLEGE'S

First

GRADUATING cLAss
FROM THE

SOUTHERN TIER'S

First

NEWSPAPERS:
Thf&gt; Bi11glu1111tfJ11 l"1•f&gt;1u1

' - - - - - - - -- - -T/11&gt; S111ult1f11•rt•sN

119

J

�Mel Branning 's

Photo Stud io

Foster Disinger
126 Front Street

119 Washington Avenue
Endicott, New York

Binghamton's Finest Studio

Phone 5- 107 1

IT PAYS!
Planning with your printer pays off in lower printing costs, improved
efficiency, and better results. For expert guidance in solving your
printing problems, rely on the Johnson City Publishing Company.
fifty-three years of continuous printing progress, plus the latest in
modern letterpress and offset lit hography equipment will insure
your printing is the best available.

THE JOHNSON CITY PUBLISHING COMPANY
PHONES: 7-4632 or 7-6280
90 - 100 ARCH STREET

JOHNSON CITY, N. Y.

Printers of " The Colonist"

120

�ods in its eastern and mid-western plants, assures you of fine craftsmanship and personolio:ed service or o price your school con afford .

BJ/S ill. SJ/ITH SfSfB;f/
PHILADELPHIA -BOX 1169

CHICAGO-BO X 8169

121

�Compliments of

LUDLOW MOTOR CO. Inc.

THE BURT

60 Howley Street
BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

COMPANY

Dealers in PLYMOUTH and CHRYSLER

You can't Know What's Going On . . .
unless you READ the

ENDICOTT DAILY BULLETIN
LISTEN TO

38-44 Washington Avenue

RADIO STATION WENE

E;NDICOTT, NEW YORK

Greater Endicott's Great Team Dedicated
To a Greater Endicott

7~ 1951 ~

122

StaJI

�Harpur College
State University of New York
Endicott, New Yark

12 3

�Oh , hail to Harpur - Hail to thee!
May honor crown thy heritage;
Endow us with a noble spirit
!n heart and mind and deed.
Chorus
Oh, Hail thee Harpur, A lma Mater,
The hills re-echo thy dear name;
With pride we pledge ourselves to thee
For all eternity.
In years to come we' ll honor thee
For all they golden memories,
For friendship made and victories won;
Oh , Harpur, Hail to thee!

124

����</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="27">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28047">
                  <text>1948 - </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28048">
                  <text>Binghamton University Yearbooks </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28049">
                  <text>Harpur College -- Students; State University of New York at Binghamton -- Students; Harpur College; State University of New York at Binghamton; Students; Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="37">
              <name>Contributor</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39021">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;Blythe E. Roveland-Brenton, Director of Special Collections &amp;amp; Library Preservation&lt;br /&gt;Caitlin Holton, Digital Initiatives Assistant&lt;br /&gt;Maggie McNeely, University Archivist&lt;br /&gt;Erin Rushton, Head of Digital Initiatives&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39022">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;Binghamton University’s yearbook was published under several different titles. It was first called &lt;em&gt;The Colonist&lt;/em&gt; in 1948, then became &lt;em&gt;The Yearer&lt;/em&gt; in 1970, &lt;em&gt;Pegasus&lt;/em&gt; in 1973 and finally &lt;em&gt;Binghamton University&lt;/em&gt; in 2004. Yearbooks are a popular resource for alumni and can be used for primary source research. Each book typically contains class lists, class photos, candid photos, faculty and academic department information, campus and institutional facts, illustrations and ads, and editorials. They document student organizations, campus events, athletic teams as well as local and global events. Yearbooks offer a window into the traditions and culture of a time and place from the point of view of a select group of students on behalf of the student body. They are among the richest sources of student-driven content for an academic institution. For more information regarding yearbooks and the history of the University, please contact &lt;a href="https://www.binghamton.edu/libraries/about/special-collections/"&gt;Special Collections&lt;/a&gt; at 607-777-4844 or speccoll@binghamton.edu.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;We welcome your comments about &lt;span&gt;&lt;span&gt;our collection of digitized yearbooks.&amp;nbsp; &lt;a href="https://binghamton.libwizard.com/id/c6121588e483da04f66dba76f0460bb5"&gt;Please share comments via our feedback form&lt;/a&gt;.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Acknowledgment of sensitive content&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Binghamton University Libraries provide digital access to select materials held within the Special Collections department. &lt;span&gt;Historical yearbooks provide a vibrant window into life at the University.&lt;/span&gt; However, they also expose insensitive, and at times offensive, racial and gender stereotypes that, though once commonplace, are now acknowledged to cause harm. The Libraries have chosen to make these volumes available as part of the historical record but the Libraries do not support or agree with the harmful narratives that can be found in these volumes. &lt;a href="https://www.binghamton.edu/libraries/about/collections/digital/"&gt;Digital Collections&lt;/a&gt; are created for educational and historical purposes only. It is our intention to present the content as it originally appeared.&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39023">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;The yearbooks in this collection are copyrighted. If you want to reuse any material in this collection you must seek permission, or decide if your purpose can qualify as fair use under the U.S. Copyright Law Section 107. If you think copyright or privacy has been violated, the University Libraries will investigate the issue. Please see our take down request policy.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;If using any materials in this online digital collection for educational or research purposes, please cite accordingly. When citing documents, researchers / educators should credit Special Collections as the custodian of the collection.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The following is a suggested citation: Binghamton University Yearbooks Digital Collection, [yearbook title and year], Special Collections, Binghamton University Libraries.”&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39024">
                  <text>1948-1972</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="117">
              <name>Is Part Of</name>
              <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50596">
                  <text>&lt;a href="https://archivesspace.binghamton.edu/public/repositories/2/archival_objects/38366" target="_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;Binghamton University Student Publications: Yearbook, 1948- present&lt;/a&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="32">
      <name>Template: PDF</name>
      <description>Choose this for any item where the file type is PDF. This template and others do not support mixed file types (PDF and image attached to same item). If you have mixed file types, you can either create another Omeka item or contact Digital Initiatives for assistance converting from pdf to image or vice versa.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="81">
          <name>Accessibility</name>
          <description>Copy/Paste below: &#13;
Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45640">
              <text>Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="58">
          <name>Collection</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52309">
              <text>Binghamton University Yearbooks</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Digital Format</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52310">
              <text>PDF</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="54">
          <name>Identifier</name>
          <description>dc:identifier</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52311">
              <text>THE COLONIST_1951.pdf</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="139">
          <name>PDF Layout</name>
          <description>This field specifies how the pages of the PDF will be laid out. Enter only the CASE SENSITIVE keyword without quotation marks. [default: 'FacingContinuous']&#13;
Options:&#13;
'Single' - Only the entire current page will be visible and Zoom will be set to page width.&#13;
'Continuous' - All pages are visible in one scrollable column and Zoom will be set to page width.&#13;
'Facing' - Up to two full pages will be visible and Zoom will be set to page height.&#13;
'FacingContinuous' - All pages visible in two scrollable columns and Zoom will be set to page height.&#13;
'FacingCover' - All pages visible as whole pages, with an even numbered page rendered first. (i.e. The first page of the document is rendered by itself on the right side of the viewer to simulate a book cover.)&#13;
'FacingCoverContinuous' - All pages visible in two scrollable columns, with an even numbered page rendered first. (i.e. The first page of the document is rendered by itself on the right side of the viewer to simulate a book cover.)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52312">
              <text>FacingCoverContinuous</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38782">
                <text>Colonist 1951</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38783">
                <text>State University of New York at Binghamton -- Students&#13;
school yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38788">
                <text>Binghamton, N.Y. : Harpur College ; Binghamton, N.Y. : State University of New York at Binghamton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38790">
                <text>State University of New York at Binghamton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38791">
                <text>1951</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38792">
                <text>In Copyright</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45995">
                <text>Student yearbook of Triple Cities College (1948- 1950), Harpur College (1951- 1965), and the State University of New York at Binghamton (1966- present).</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2482" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="13692">
        <src>https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/files/original/5d321bb1a88dd7a286f5e01d9e36f96b.pdf</src>
        <authentication>9dde60efd1635ac5dbaa50faa2a42ea6</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="68">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="52303">
                    <text>t

I
,

I

'

•}

..

t

.I

��Published by the students of Harpur College
of State University of New York at Endicott.

·---------------------

�WE PROUDLY PRESENT
I

I

�•.

Edward Coleman, Editor-in-Chief
David Stone, Managing Editor
Joanne Foody, Business Manager

�DEDICATION
We, the class of 1952, dedicate this issue of the
Colonist to our friend, the former director of admissions
and registrar of Harpur College, Mr. B. Hopkins Moses.
Mr. Moses will long be remembere d for his cheerful
manner and for the sound advice which he offered to
all students.
It is with deep feelings of pride and gratitude that
we dedicate this Colonist to you, Mr. B. Hopkins Moses.

�PROLOG UE
Slowly, surely, the stream of life wears away the sands of
time with a rhythm that produces the music and harmony of
the universe. Whether the notes have been written in threef our time or to the anxious insistency of jazz, each individual
must move to the cadence that fulfills his necessity for living.
Every rush of the wave portends a life and and each ebbing
sand completes a cycle of success or failure. If the sand is torn
away loosely or remains too long the rhythm is disrupted. Each
one must flow with the current that carries life to its logica l
conclusion.
The liberal arts college prepares us and aids us in acknowledging the part we are to play. In learning we find a note; in
knowledge lies a melody, and in wisdom we are made to hear
the symphony of the living .
The tide rushes on, tearing and soothing, fighting and
loving, producing the all-embracing harmony t hat is life.

PROGRAMME
Act I
Scene
Scene
Scene
Scene

Act Ill
I
II
Ill
IV

The Senior Class
The Junior Class
The Sophomore Class
The Freshman Class

Act II
Scene I
Scene II

Sororities
Fraternities

Scene I

Activities

Act IV
Scene I
Scene II

Varsi t y Sports
Intramural Sports

5

�The Boord of Trustees - Producers of our four-year
drama. The Boord accepted Horpur as one of only two
liberal arts colleges of State University of New York
in 1950.

'2Jirecfor
Dr. Glenn G. Bortle, B.A ., M.A., Ph.D. Provost of Horpur College. The director at Horpur hos seen the college
grow from "curtain classrooms" to the present prospects
for a modern , new school. Dr. Bortle is greatly re sponsible
for this cholleng ing and successful growth at Horpur.

Closely connected with the director and the major
physical processes of the college is the Administration.
The ir primary problems consist of forming policies and
putting in working form the various deportments necessary
at Horpur.

�Aaaociale :J)ireclor6

To the faculty of Horpur College falls the
most important and rewording of jobs. They teach
the novice to perform and to oct successfully on
the stage of life. They con drow out ond direct
those qualities with which the student, if he hos
truly learned, may turn in a stellar performance.

Behind the scenes of every production ore those persons who don ' t
always shore the spotlight but without whose ta lent ond hord work no
production would be possible - The Administrative Assistants.

�G. Haynes
0 . Carmichael
C. Garside
F. Moore
J. Myler
E. Scheiberling
E. Warner
E. Machold
B. Donnelly
D. Marvin
F. Greenman
N. Goetz
P. Klapper
H. Sherwood
A. Dean

8

BOARD OF TRUSTEES
State University of New York
Oliver C. Carmichael
Chairman
Arthur H. Dean
Vice-Chairman
Mrs. Betty Hawley Donnelly
Charles Garside
Norman S. Goetz
Frederick F. Greenman
George Edmund Haynes

Earle J. Machold
Dwight Marvin
Frank C. Moore
Joseph J. Myler
Edward N. Scheiberling
Henry D. Sherwood
Mrs. Emily Smith Warner
Paul Klapper

�©

Fobion Bochr,,ch

Provost Bartle
9

�THE ADMINISTRATION
Left to Right: SAMUEL P. DOUGLASS-Business Manager. Former instructor
in our Business Administration course. Business Manager since 1950. Sam leaves
Harpur this spring to go into his own business.
PATRICK J. CAROLAN-Athletic Director. Graduate of the University of
Maryland and Columbia. The Navy knew him os a rehabilitation specialist.
Coach Carolan has seen the Colonials across the boards, around the d iamond
and over the fields.
WALTER J. MEHL-Dean of Students. Dr. Mehl d irects the guidance and
welfare of the student. Former trod star. He has defeate d G lenn Cunningham
and still holds the American citizens record for the 1,500 meter.
JACK F. KIMBALL-Director of the Evening Division and Acting Reg istrar.
Interested in developing a community program of education for the college.
Mr. Kimball is a graduate of Kansas City College, Syracuse , Columbia and
has had four years in the Navy.

�)
Left to Right: MICHAEL N. SCELSI-D irector of Public
Relotions. In charge of Publ ic Relations, Mike has been
lent to Albany but expects to return to the "green
and white" this spring.
HERBERT L. LEET - Librarian. Horpur's enterprisi ng
librarian, Mr. Leet hos accumula ted a store of books,
referentia l, rare and educatio nal. Since 1947 Mr. Leet
hos helped to open the curtains in our personal dens
of illiteracy.

MARY R. MOORE -Counselo r of Students. Affable Mory
Moore hos aided students with all kinds of problems.
Drives the "Green." Worked on target mops during
the war. Miss Moore is a g raduate of Western Michigan
College and Indiana University and has studied at
Ashridge College abroad.
AYSEL SEARLES, JR.-Admi ssions Counselor . Mr. Searles
is responsibl e for job placemen t of Horpur graduates
in addition to his duties of counseling incoming Horpurites. "Ace" is a graduate of Triple C ities College of
Syracuse University .

II

�Division of the Humanities

Bernard F. Huppe, Ph.D.
Ass ciote Professor of English
Cno,rmon, Div1s,;in of the Humoni:ies
Choirmon. En91ish Deportment

Edword R. Pomeroy, M.F.A.
lnslr,1clor ·n Art

Beolrice D. Brown, Ph.D.
Ass• 10 to Pr h•ss r I Eng sh

Mildred M. Kellogg. M.A.
Instr tor n Eng 1sh

Aldo S. Bernardo, Ph.D.
Assislonl Professor of
Foreign Long uoges

Kenneth C. Lindsay, Ph.D.
Assislont Professor 1n Art
ond H umonities

Jad W. Rollow, Ph.D.
Ass an· Pr f, or f Enci 1sh

Michae l Bochnak, M.A.
Instr t 1r '" F ''e &lt;Jn Long 1oge&gt;

�Division of the Humanities

Frederic C. St. Aubyn, M.A.
Instr ,.,r n F e1Qn Longcoges

Gladys A. Seda, M.A.
Instr· ct " n F ro19n Languages

John DoVere Williamson, M.A.
F r 1gn long 1ages
lnslr I "

1

Stephen C. Hambalek
lnsir I " n Jo rna1'sm

J. Alex Gilfillan, Mus.M .
1alo Pr 1rssor 1 M sic
As

Sidney P. Albert, Ph .D.
Ass tanl P•o•essor t Phi osophy

Orval Perry, M.A .
•r n Ph .0phy
Ins 'r

Horry B. Lincoln , M.A.
j., M s1
f1
n t

Wayne S. Farrow, M.S.
n~ ~r

• ,

n $pee1

h

�Division of Science and Mathematics

Mortin A. Poul , Ph.D.
Profe»or of Chom1 .try
Cho rmon, Division of Sc"ence
ond Mothemoltcs
Choirmon, Chemistry Deportment

Jocob H. Fischthol, Ph.D.
Assis to nt Pr· fess r ,f Bin •g y

Clement G. Bowers, Ph.D.
Le• t rer 1n Botany

I

George Swonson, B.S.
Instructor in Botany

Fronces M. Wright, Ph.D.
s•ant p, .f, or f M,,1 '&lt;'mo•;cs

A

Jomes R. F. Kent, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Mothemotin
Choirmon, Mothemotics Deportment

Helmut Aulboch, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Mothomotics

Morcello Schubert. Ph.D.
Chern is try

Kenneth T. Woldock, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Chemistry

Mildred Schellig-Hockett, M.D.
Lecturer in Biology ond Nursing

�Division of Science and Mathematics

Richard J. Powell, M.A.
Athletic Cooch

Ralph E. Digman, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Geology

Robert H. Penfield, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Phys cs

Robert N. Berryman , M.A.
Instr• ctor n Psychology

William Coote, Ph.D.
Ass1slon! Professor c-1 Psychology

Harold D Fagin, Ph.D.
As slant P tossN f Psy,hology

Jomes H . Wilmoth, Ph.D.
A soc1ote Professor f Bic &lt;&gt;gy
Cho,rmon, Biology Deportment

Lewi, M. Alexander, Ph.D.
Assistant Pr lessor of Ge ¥ophy

Patrick J. Carolan, Ph.D.
Ath elic Coo h

Henry C. Ketc ham , Ph.D.
le I •rer n Phy• cs

�Division of Business Administration
and Division of Social Sciences
John M. O ' Brien , Ph.D.
Associo te Professor of
Business Administration
Chairman, Division of

William L. Claff, M.B.A.
Assistant Professor of
Business Administration

Reitemeyer, M.B.A.
Instructor in Business Administration

Heinrich E. Friedlaender, Ph.D.
Acti ng Professor of Economics

Jacob Eidelheit, M.B.A., L.L.B.
Assistant Professor of
Business Administration

Hilda Smith, M.A.
Instructor in Business Admini stratio n
and Economics

Laurence E. Leamer, Ph .D.
Associate Professor in Economics
and Social Sciences

Joseph V. McKen na , M.M.E.
Assistant Professor of
Business Adm inistration

G. Ralph Smith , M.S.
Instructor in Economics
C hairman, Economics Deportme nt

Jacob Oser, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Economics

�Division of Business Administration
and Division of Social Sciences

Albert V. House, Ph .D.
l'.ss ate Pr lessor f H story
Chairman. History Department

Joseph E. Von Riper, Ph.D.
Prc 1e· s· 1r I &lt;:? "' &lt;1 ~~ v
Cha rmon, Dov soon &lt;)' Soc a S iencf'S

Eric Brunger, M.S.
Instr t " n H • ·r~

r

Robert W. Rafuse, Ph.D.
Assoc•oto Professor of
Polit co' Science
Chairman , Political Science
Deportment

Lawrence F. Pisan i, M.A.
I nst,.,clor n Sociology
Chairman, So o ogy Deportment

Seymour Z. Mo nn, Ph.D.

John P. Belniok, M.A.
Insrru •or ·" Cit rnnsh p
and Pa11t.co S oencc

Otokor Mo cholko, Ph .D.
A t ng Pr fess " A So c

n~

&gt;gy

tr

f

:i

S {n

e

Poul We igand Ph.D.
A&lt;sostan• P f, s r
of Fore or ~ongvO(l"S
Chairman Fo•oign Lonf!uogns
Deportment

�BACK ROW: J. Manyon, B. Castle, T. Crooks, N. Golden,
R. Bigney, E. Moyer, C. Fickett.

FRONT ROW: M. Brain, P. Boyles, E. Darwin, D. Holmes,
J Learned, D. Travis.

PUBLIC RELATIONS OFFICE: Ursula Hambalek and
Kay Langey, Assistant Directors of Public Relations.

SCHOOL LIBRARY: George Edmund Haynes, member
of the Board of Trustees and noted lecturer, chats with
Herbert Leet, Head Librarian.

�They've got the spirit. Jone and Lillian.

Pleasant and pleasing. The ever smilin' Tess and Dot.

ABOVE: John M. Mallory, M.D., Anne L. Meade, R.N .
c~d Jim McCormack. Hours one to two-painted
throats end shattered nerves. BELOW: Nelda Goldendispenser of books, smiles end advice.

-

AdAinicstro..tive
I.___

s~1st&lt;Ants
J

19

�g\1
LI TT LE

�Act I
Scene I

The

Senior

Clo..ss

�Front Row : June Ann Lyons, Secretory ; William Barno,
President; Maryanne Robinson, Recording Secretary.

Second Row : Charles Eng lish, Assistant Treasurer; William Baker, Vice-Presid e nt; Ro bert Owens, Treasure r.

SENIOR CLASS
The Closs of '52 hos hod o long and exciting life. Most of us who ore graduating in June
began our college career when the school was
connected with Syracuse and was known as
Triple Cities College. In February of 1950 the
school was accepted as one of the t wo liberal
a rts colleges in State University of New York
and the name was soon changed to H orpur
College.
Many of our original class members transferred to Syracuse, others hove been recalled
to the service; yet others of us hove transferred
to Horpur from other schools. But it is Horpur
we ore groduoting from, and it is Horpur and
the Green and White we will remember.
The first organized Senior Closs was formed
in 1948 and included Edmund Vitkus, president;
Robert Appe, vice-president; Jerome True, treas-

22

urer, and Secretory Doris Jones. The Closs of
'52 is the second class to graduate from Horpur
College.
Socially the Senior Closs hos organized annual
hayrides, picnics in the spring and the g raduating parties and d inner dances. In Ja nuary of
'52 the graduat ing Seniors hod o d inner da nce
at Augie's Venus Room t o which a ll Seniors
were invited. The June graduates hove their
annual dinner dance near the end of the term
and at this time they present t heir gift to
the school.
Then the moment we ho ve studied a nd
worked for will be o reoli.t y. Four challenging
years at Horpur will lay behind us and the
more challenging years ahead will be met with
the fond memory of our A lma Mat er to remind
us of the days of Green and White.

�B.A.
Carol Armstrong
"Life Is So Peculoor'
Tholions 1,2· Colonist 3

Richard Ash
B.S.
" Theres A Mogic Lond Ail
Our Very O wn"
Biz.Ad Club 1.2 3: Adelphi

2.3 ,4.

r

Loretto Avery
B.A.
" My Heorl Songs'
Pintopp ers I· U S.G I Thal·
ions I 2: Cheerleaders 2 3 4
(Capt)
Ou•,ng Cl b 2 3
Colonist 3 4: Chor s 4 Pon·
dorons 4

\

Richord Boker
B.S.
"To ke It Easy"
B z·Ad Cub 3 4 : Jr. Closs
Pres.: Sr. Closs Vice President,
Go11ords 4.

Cfa66 o/ 1952
B.S.
Ronald Boker
"Toke Me Out To The
Boll Gome "
Varsity Boskelboll 2,4 ; Pistol
Club 2 : Varsity " H " 3,4.

B.S.
Mic hael Baran
"This Is Heaven To Me"
Biz-Ad Club 1,2,3,4 ; Varsity
"H" 3: lnlromurol Football,
Softboll and Baseball: Vorsity
Bose boll 2.3; Adelphi 4.

William Barno
B.S.
"I've Got The World
On A String"
Boccocio
I 2,3,4 (Secretory
ond
President 2); U.S.G.
Member 3 · Colonist Business
Manager 3 · Closs President
4 Newmon Club 4.

Thereso Be bel
B.A .
"You Don't Hove To Know
The language'
Tho lions I 2.3 (President) 4;
Newmon Club I (Secretory)
3,4 ; Outing Club I; Pistol
Club I; Goris' Choir I; Colon·
isl 1,2,3,4, Co1oniol News 2:
Glee Club 3; French Club 3;
Spanish Club 3,4; Drogon So
ciety 4.

23

�....,,
,,_.

-

John Brewer
B.A.
A Good Mon Is Hord
To Find'
Chorus 1.4: Agopeons 1,2.3,4 :
Glee C1vb 1,2,3, Spring Re·
viev. 1,2 3.4; Botany Cub 3,4;
Germon Club 3,4: Soions 4.

Herbert Brown
B.A.
They Asked Me How I Knew '
Adloyho 3,4; lntromurol Soft·
boll 3: 1.R.C. 3,4.

Jock Brown
B.S.
"There Goes My Heart"
Varsity Bosebo I 3,4 ; Va rsity
H 3,4: Varsity Bosket boll
3.4; Biz.Ad Club 1,2,4.

Michael Bugonion
8.A.
"Gotto G e t To G ettin"

Franklin Bizousky
B.A.
' It's The Dreamer In Me"
Germon C •b 2,3· Soiens 4·
lntromurol Football 4

Thomas Blauvelt
B.S.
'Wrap Yo1 r Troubles
In Dreams"
Ade1ph1 I 2,3,4 (President);
Biz.Ad Club 1,2,3,4.

Evelyn Bottino
B.A.
"Everything Happens To Me"
ltol1on Club 2.3: Newmor
Club 2 3 Spring Review 2,4 :
Rod10 Workshop 3 · Pondorons
2.3.4: Co1on1ol Players 4:
Colonist 4 {Executive Assist
ont to the Editor).

Morion Bottino
B.A.
'Por;s In Now York"
lto1 on Clu b 1.2,3; French
C: b 1,2 3; Pondorons 2.3,4.

�B.S.
Llwewllyn Burge
"I Get o Kid out o f You"

B.A.
Mildred Butlien
"Sweet and lovely"
l.R.C. 3 4 · Tholion 3· Botany
Club 3.

\_

\
B.A.
Richard Cory
"Bashful Rascal''
Moth Club 3,4; French Clu b
3; Alexander's Forecasters 4.

B.S.
Vincent Chrion
"Blue Skies. Smi ing at Me"
Newmon Club I; Bowling 1,2,
3 4; Biz.Ad C.ub I -4 { Presiden'}; Dionysio 1-4 ; Colonial
Players I 2; Glee Club 1,2;
Spring Review 2.

the main St.
B.A.
David Chwolo w
"H'gh on the List
{not pictured}

B.A.
Lauren C olby
"Happy Tok Keep Talking"

B.A.
Ugo C ioncosi
'I I Get By
{not pictured)

B.A.
Edward C olemon
Cocl;IQ s r r Tw
Boccocio 3 4 • Ed •or-in -Chief
of the Colonist 4 A exonder's
Forecasters 4.

25

�B.A.
Martha Connell
"5'2"', Eyes of Bl ue "
Pondoron 4.

8.S.
Peter Dennis
Daddy's Little Girl"
Goliords 3 4 ( Presideo l); Bookstore super so1esmon.

8.A.
Robert Diute
"I'm Just a Shy Guy"
Italian Club 2,3,4; Vorsilv
Ba sketball 4: Intramural Foot
boll, Basketball. Baseball I 2:
Varsity Baseball 3,4 · Colonist
3; Varsity " H " 4 ; Dionysian
1,2; Spring Review I.

B.S.
William Crooks
"Jvst Our Bill"
Goliords 1-4 ; Golf loom 3.

B.A.
Robert Dickson
"Is It True What They Soy
Abeu• Dixie?'
(President);
I 4
Dionysions
?entangle 2.3,4 (President):
(Editor );
2,3,4
Clarendon
Colonist 4; Spring Review 4;
Colonial Players 4 ; Radio
Workshop 3; Dramatic C lu b I.

8.S.
Robert Donovan
" The Beer I Loft at tho Bar"
Adelphi 2,3:4; Intramural Foo l·
boll. Soft ball, Basketball 2 3 ·
Biz-Ad Club 2.

I

'
8.A.
Charles English
"I Remember the Corn Fields"
Glee Cub 1-4; Bond 1-4 : Dia
nysions I 4 ; Spanish Club
2,3,4: Dragon Society 3,4;
U S.G. 4; Alpha Phi Omogo
3 4.

8.S.
Robert Evans
"So Toil a Trec, So Strong
o Mon"
Cross Cou nlry 3: J. V. Boske I
boll 3; Intramural Football 2.

/

21&gt;

�Ugo Frobrizio
B.A.
''I'll Keep Smiling"
Spanish Club 1,2,3; Philosophy
Club I; Newmon Club 1,2.

Reid Fletcher
B.S.
"How Deep Is the Ocean?"
Biz-Ad Club 1-4; Soiens 2.3,4.

Shirley Mullin Frederick
B.A.
"Our Little Penthouse"
Pondorons
1,2 ,3;
Coloni.:il
Players 1,2,3; Germon Club
2; Spring Review 2 ,3.

Robert Frederick
B.S.
"We II Build a Bungalow"
Colonist I; Dramatic Club 1,2;
Colonial Players 2; Soi ens I,
2,3; Spring Review 1,2,4; Bo nd
3,4; Biz-Ad Club I.

Gregory Gionokouros
B.A.
" W ith a Song in My Hea rl'
Boccocio 2,3:4; French Club
2; Penlongle 3,4 ; Clarendon 4.

Anthony Gonce
B.S. .
"Time Wails for No One"
G oliords 4 ; Biz Ad Club 3,4.

Vincent Giarusso
B.A.
Daddy's Little Girl''
French Club 1-4; Italian Club
1-4; Varsity "H" 3.

27

�B.A.
Ruth G ilg
N Sod S n&lt;JS lor Me"'
Spanish C 1.b I · Tho lions , .•:
Colo0·a Players I 4 ; Eng ish
Cl b 2 3,4· Clarendon 3,•:
Colon10 News 3,4 Spr"ng Re
v'cw 3 4· Co ~nist 4; French

c, b

I

B.A.
Glenn Godwin
lost T me I Saw Paris
French Clv b 2 3 4 · Pen•ang'o
2.3,4; Agopeans I; Dramo•'c
Club I.

.....

B.A.
Richard Groper
Smoke Dreams"
Soiens 3.4 (President)· IntraBasketball
Football,
mural
Softball 3,4 · Germon C11.b
3 4 ; Slavic Club 3.4.

28

4.

'/

he

B.S.
Corl Gyidid
S•oy " th the Hopp~ Pe p e"
J V. Boskc•boll 2. Go iords
4 B z Ad C 1.b 4,

B.S.
Agotino Giunta
Sm C Awh •(
l•a ·an C:"b I 4 {Pres dent)
Newmn~
French Cl b I 4
Cl b 2.3 4; D.onysian 3,4;
Coon's• 4; Co oniol Players
4; Biz.Ad Clvb 3.4.

B.S.
Donald Homan
'Whist.e a Happy Tune
Ad oyho 3,4 (President); Pin·
topplers 3,4 (President); Cross
Couniry 3· Track 3,4 ; B1z·Ad
Club 3.4.

B.A.
Chester Grabowski
R g:ied B • R1qh1
Nc .. mon C b 4 Presidcn•)
Ge•mon C l., b I 2 3; Vors\•y
Track 2,3; Ade phi 3,4; Vo•
sity "H' 3,4; Vors'ty Golf 3.4:
Varsity Bosketba 4

�Edgar Hopler

B.A.
Robert Hyn es
I Love Those Dear Hearts
and Gcn·le People"

B.A.

' I Don't Care If the S 1n
Don t Shine"

B.A.
Eugen e Ianno ne
"Young Mon Wit h a Horn
Italian C1ub 1.4 Band 1,2:
Newmon C: b I 4, Go11ords
3,4. P ntopp ers 3,4, lntromura
Footbal, Softbo

B.S.
William Irving
Con She Bake o Cherry Pie?"
Golords 234 ; B11Ad Cl1b

2 3 4 · Co1onist 3.

3,4.

8.A.
C ha rle s Jones
Fa.th and De 1 e rm1not1on '
I 2 3· Botany Cl b
Adloyh

3: 1.R C 2.

B.A.
Eugene Koby la rz
I Never Hod a W 1rry
in the W orld'
Varsity Baskotbol 2 3,4; Var
sity

-

,.,

H

3 4.

B.S.
Rich a rd Ko ury
'Why F1gh• the Fee 1n ?
Adl' phi 3 4; Varsity 'H' 3.4:
lntromura Saitba I, Football

B.S.
Dav id Louder
M1 ion Do11or Baby
Ade phi I 4 U.S.G. I; Int.a.
m ra Faatba , Basketball and

I 4· Vars ty Tennis 1.4.

Sottba

I 4,

29

�B.A.
Grego ry Lemoniodes
S d os o Rock·
Colonist 3; Sci once Club 3 4 ;
n•romuro' Sof•bo I. Footboll,
3 4; So1ons 4
Bosle+bo

B.A.
John Leney
'Be o Clown Be o Clown
Adelphi 3,4· Vorsi ty Bosketb::ll
3.4 ; Vorsity H' 3,4.

B.A.
Raymond Livingston
Asl Me No Q esli ns
Vorsity Trock 2: Belony Club
3; Vorsdy "H" 3; lnlromurol
Bos&lt;etboll 1,2.

B.A.
June Ann Lyons
Tho Swe
Pondorons 2,3,4; Outing Club
2; U.S.G. 3,4· Girls' Choir 2;
Closs Sec. 3,4; Colonist 3
Dragon Society
Choir 4

Cafeteria 101 - ffl-5.
8 .A.
Jeon Moc Dougoll
"Stoy as Swee t as You Are
(President);
1-4
Pondoro ns
Clarendon 3; Colonist Ari
Editor 4 ; l.R.C. 4; Spring

Chesler Majka
"Look for the Silve r Lining"

Review 3.

Yov

Poler Monyo n
Never Wo l A one"

Jose f Mork.
··11 Tl,,y A"k M" C o d
I Wr le o Book"
Men's Glee Club 2,3; Pin

"'PP ers 1.3.4· Goliords 13,4;
Vorsi•y Tennis 3

9-4.

3 4;

Mrxed

�B.S.
Charle s Mo"h
·Use Yo&lt; r lmo91notion'

B.A.
A nthony Marka rian
S oy W ith the Hoppy
Pe~p e"
Frcnc.h C!u b I 2 · Soicns 3:
Al1,.onder's Forecasters 4.
(not pie lured I

B.S.
Wi lliam McG lode
· My Time is You r Time·
Colonial N ews 4 ; So1ens 2 3.4 ·
Trod 1,2.3: Vors ty " H" 3;
Pintopplors 3 4 ; Biz.Ad Club
I 4 ; Outing Clu b 2 .3. 4 ; ln tromurol Fo tbo1 Bosketboll 3.4.

B.A.
Elmer Minckle r
·It's o Lovely Doy Todoy"

l

&amp;

J

- Sat., 11-3
B.A .
Joseph Missovoge
"You ore My Sunshine"
Bi1·Ad Club 3: Bo tany C.ub
3 4 (Presid ent). l.R.C. 3 4,

B.A.
W illiam Mo ore
Deep os the Rover

Germo n Club 4.

Robert Morris

B.A.

"
L so
Boccocio 3 4; Pentongle 3,'1

,

(Presden• 4); Co1011'0 Nows
C o·.,ndon 4; Colol' st
(E•eculove Ass°stJ~t le the
E:d'tor) 4.

3;

B.A .
Jomes N o rris
1"
g v. o Hopp,
Ado1phi I 4; Vorsi•y Tennis
1-4; Presodonl o f tho Scpho·
more Closs.

31

�B.S.
Robert Owen
G· ng My Woy
Vo•srty Trod 2,3,4; Treasurer
of Senior Closs: Varsity " H'"
3 4 ; Goliords 4; B,z.Ad Club
2,3,4,

\

/

B.A.
Ferdinond Perrone
Persona Ii ty
Baccac1u 1,2; french C.ub 2;
Pcntong.c 3.

32

B.S.
Harold Pea rson
For Away Places"

B.A.
Ric hard Roth
S •h of e B rder
Down Me'•'O Wo·, '
Spo~·,h C Jb I 4 ; Goliords
I 2; Aloha Phi Omoqo 3 4 •
3 4• Glee
Cl b
Ger!"lon
Ck·b 3 4

B.S.
John Raymond
rhe End f T' """
Newmo n Club 3 4; Goliords
3,4.

B.A.
Roderick Reeder
Be Sr e1ng Y

B.A.
Mory Ann e Robi nson
Yo1 nger thon Sprnqt mo
Pistol CIJb 2· Newmon C b
2: Tho ans 3.4; Pir·opplors
3 4 · Gerrron C'~b 3· Sec'&lt;•
lory oi the Sen or C:oss.

-

Orlando Pessogno
'Tr' M'-' W
(rot p"ct rod)

B.A.

�B.A.
Morgue rite Rounds
N!'ver be
The•P
Ano•~er You'
Pondorons I 4 • M •ed Cnor s
1,4; Sprong Rev c... I 4; A&lt;:J~ ·
peon I 3 4; U S.G 3 4 O•a
gon Soc"e•y 3 4.

B.A.
Stanley Ruben1ahl
Monhotton To wers"
Baske •boll I 3; Vorsity
JV
Bosebo 3: Vors•ry Bosket boll
4; Varsi ty "H" 3 '4.

Edwin Schumacher
B.A.
D n t Knc w En gh
Abo~t Yo.,'
(not pictured I

B.A.
Donold Sheffield
' D1te Mei, Po, rqvoi
l!olian Club I ·4; Germon
Club 2 3 '4 ; French Club '4
(President I.

B.S.
William Simmons
A L.tt e B1! Independent
I; Varsity
Varsity Boske!bo
Bosebo1 I 2: Varsity 'H 3,4;
Adelphi 3 4 · Biz-Ad Cl b 1,2,

B.A.
Charles Skinner
'As Time Goes By'

B.S.
Ben jamin Spenc er
' A Little Bit of Heaven'
Adloyho 2,3 4· Outing Club
2: Biz-Ad Club 3 4.

33

�B.S.
Sidney Steiner
'The Rov;n\J Kind
Varsity Tennis I 4· U.S.G. 2;
Adelph" 3.4; Treas. rer of
Soohomore C1ass- B'.z Ad C· b
3 4 · Introm~rof Spar's I 4

\

\

B.S.
David Surine
T., Me Why
(no• pi ct red)

Robert Terboss B.S.
~ fhp M &gt;od

B.A.
David Stone
' Con t G"' ..,, t f Th M "d
GNmon Club 1,2 (V"cc-Presi
den•) 3; Boccacia 3 4 (Pre•i·
dont: · Colo~ st Monog'ng Edi
tor 4 lntramuro Sports 3 4.

B.S.
Rudolph Sventek
G Pa' +· be A, ve
Ad·oyho 2; Goliords 3 4· Bi:
Ad Clc-b 2 3,4· Newmon Cub
3 · Int ram rol Sports 3.

B.S.
Robe rt Thorne
C me On-a My Ho1•se

\
B.A.
Millon Tischler
Can vet I r r Yo1
Wholesale
J.V. Boslctbotl 2; Boccacia 4 ;
lntrom rat Spor•s 2,3,4.

B.A.
Raymond Trabucco
Farge' Y01 r T" b.es
Pintoppers 34; Go1ords 1-4;
Italion Cl Lb f .4 • Newmon
C.ub 3 4; l.R.C. 3.4; Intra·
mLrol Sports f .4,

L

�Warren Williams
B.A.
"I'm Always Chasing
Rainbows'
Soiens 2,3,4; Germon Club
2,3,4; lnlromurol Sports 3,4.

John Zicari
B.S.
"Over These Prison Walls
I W ould Fly"
Biz-Ad Club 1-4.

��Act I
Scenes

rr m

Th e underclnss
· ' TIL·
tt\en

=-------------

�FRONT ROW: Joan Williams, Nancy Shorter, Marlene
Brewer, Adel e McDevitl, Therese Wood , Jeanelle King,
Janet Conklin, Helen Moffatt, Eunice Knauf, Marjorie
Mann, Joan Mitchell. BACK ROW: Carl Williams, Harold
Herzog, Robert McCarthy, Kirnon Gionakouros, Charles

Keane , Gilbert Rouff, Charles Lee , N icholas Sb a rra , Lee
Turner, Norman Tiffany, Charles Hamilton, David Short,
Richard Stout, James W e lsh, Harold Bateman, Michael
Thomas Smith , Daniel
Newmon,
Robert
Kearsey,
O ' Conner, Chorles Aswad.

CORNER

38

�0($)2

First Row : Carle W illiams, President; Imogene Cross,
Se cretary ; James Drysdale, Vic e-President. Se cond Row:
Michael Kearsey, Sergeant-at-Arms; Norman Tiffany,
Treasurer.

Annually at Open Ho use the J unior
class members donat e th eir time a nd
energy and serve a s g uide s fo r visitors
who wish to see H a r pur in ope ration.
Here interested sp ectat ors a re shown
the Harpur College Library. Art work
by MacDougall.

One or two of this shifty-eyed group will
event ual ly become next year's Seniors and thus
we of the class of '53 share with the class of
'52 a bond of common lament a~ the dearth of
fine pinochle players coming up from the lower
classes.

�Ellen
Left to Right: Pattie Lewis, Secretary; Joan Purtell , Vice-Preside nt; Frank Nemia, President;
Thurston, Vice-Presiden t; Alfred Bebel, Treasurer (absent when picture was taken) .

A torchlight parade down
Main Street, the lost basketball game and Green Beanies
flying are all a part of
Freshman decopping ceremonies. Traditionally the Sophhomores are in charge of
beanie adjustment and replacement on the heads of
oil "green" Freshmen.

40

�fR O " ' RO
W• PoHi•
L o •i " Ello•
Jov•• C o
o
"
'" '' lo
S ed \o l,
Jo •• Po•••'
}o y ce M • ' G '° '" ' f&lt; • '°
"
" S
vrro
El«obolh
M •• " ,, ., y , C ol le en Mullino&lt;h•" &lt; o lh " '' •
, Ruth
ROW• f&lt;oo
;, V o ll °' •'
CornP·
phvll» S o m
G er a ld in 1 " 'm io , E il •' "
•" · MIDDL
e S o lo sh
E
, }e on n in Holob&lt;i• , E i\ " '
e Sross.
S l• P '' '"
Alice

1&gt;•"''"·

Slo~el, }oonn•

foodv . W
Mio&gt;•• Sil li •• &gt;'•'"'"
oliol. z ,. o
M •" " " l •
8 'C &lt; ' RO
•"
W • Rob•• o
L
\ D .- d ,
Lood•V · A
Jo&gt;• S•ol"li" M o W 1 " '" "
Wi\\io• Mlf "d W o ld '" · M
••
O
. C lo •• •"
,. D. .o\\, W o " 'i " D •" V
• ;,;ool
il li • • &lt; -•
" '" . ..,M
Louis Succ
., d M,. ;,S1ooi•.
i. '\"homo•
,1 ;,
~orion

Jo1&gt;ol••o~••li.

'"''°"'

.

GOT

Act I
S c e n e 1II

he Sophomo
re Cl11
41

�FIRST ROW: M. Homo, C. Leskovich, Sec.; C. Craig.
A. Roberts, V. Pres.; W. Menodonno, Pres.: W. Smith, T.
Johns, J. Witters. SECOND ROW: G. Wormuth. A. Ven able, P. Loufersweiler, J. Rubner, M. Greene, I. Berg·
monn , B. Mehger. J. Lobb, E. Mcleary, D. Robinson , I.
Gill, A. Finch. THIRD ROW: E. Knock, D. Worburlon,
M. Murphy, F. Goodspeed , V. Mose , M. Scouten, A.

Riley, E. Price, G. Glover , A. Von Gorden J. Stevens.
FOURTH ROW: D. Hollenbeck, K. Whitehead, J. Beadle.
A. Wolff, E. Frey, R. Houshulh, G. Rokauskos, T. Stankus,
W . Dence , M. Allen, J. Bi1io, B. Westfall. FIFTH ROW:
E. Rakouskos, C . Schmidt, H. Cadden, M. Beitzel, J.
Williams, R. Topp.

RA\NBOw

OVER

�FIRST ROW: A. Vetrano, C. Millen , R. Beam, V. Polvino. SECOND ROW: R. Church, P. Mokrohisky, J. Kirkland, J. Novello, D. Nichols. J. Linderman. THIRD ROW: D. Juriga, M. Reynolds, N.
Randall, R. Reynolds,

The class of '55 wisely chose these five
to start their number on the four year
adventure through Harpur's hollowed
halls. Good Luck! Freshman class officers: A. Roberts, V. Pres.; C. Leskovich, Sec.; W. Meuadonna, Pres.; E.
Frey, Sgt. at Arms; D. Juriga, Treas.

43

��.

'

.I

�First Row: C. Keane, Sports Ed.; J. Harrison, Copy Ed.;
T. Wood, L. Avery, Soles Mgr.; E. Colemon, Ed.; J.
Foody, Bus. Mgr.; D. Stone, Mng. Ed.; A. Blazek, J.

Decker, Ads. ; J. Giunta, Sen. Ed. Second Row: R. Morris,
Ex. Ass't. ; H. Moffatt, R. Dickson , Sen. Ed.; R. Gilg, T.
Smith, Club Ed.; J. MocDougoll, Art Ed.

Here is your 1952 Colonist! Here is the
history of o year at Horpur. A year of hard
work, study and o lot of fun . Here in picture
and prose is the Horpur story. It is, above all,

Crooks for identifying the rogues' gallery and
we must thank those students, though not on
the Colonist, who pi"ched in and lent o hand.
Most of all we give o whole book of thonb to
Koy Longey, whose t ireless assistance and aid
on technical matters was well beyond the coll
of duty.
We must also give o bouquet of appreciation to the Sophomore Closs for their subscription drive in the spring. It was o great idea and
o great job.
In its fifth year of publication, Horpur's
Colonist is well estoblished. Professional photog
rophers and printers handle the mo"or work.
We hove tried to put out o good yearbook
but the verdict is up to you. The Colonist is
in your hands now.

your story too.
The Colonist, and members of the Colonist
staff. hove not hod on easy year. Lock of
funds, lock of space, lock of interested people
and three changes in editor hove caused o
great deal of work and confusion. Time was
short and so were tempers. Typewriters wouldn't
type, copy writers wou dn't copy and pictures
wouldn 't pie. But all concerned hod o good
time and though, for the most port, we were
inexperienced, ;t was fun learning the problems
co'lnected with what seemed o herculean effort.
We must thank Dotty Holmes and Tess

�...~.:
...
Afternoons in the COLONIST office
were long ond tedious but cooperolion
ond o lood of chudles eosed the working hours. Left lo Rig hi : Jocqueli ne
Horrison, Joon Oeder, Chorles Keone.

....._

-.,
I&amp;

The COLONIST staff. ofter many long
hours of skull drudgery and much wearing away
of shoe leath er finally felt they hod a yearbook
that was typical of life at Horpur.
If it is not typical it may be because we
were not able to cover all the facets of school
life whi ch held a meaning for each student. We
ore hoping that in the fu t ure each student will
be adequately and sincerely represented. A
good yea rbook, however, needs the cooperation
of every group and every student. It can
be neither typical or representohve if left to

EDWARD COLEMAN
Editor-in-Chief

one sma ll group.
JOANNE FOODY
Business Monager

DAVID STONE
Managing Editor

4-7

�FIRST ROW : F. Ne mia, G . Kobylarz, J. Le ne y, W. McGlade, Bus. Mgr. SECOND ROW: E. Thursto n, Features
Ed .; P. Place , C . Craig , C . Lescovitch, M. All e n, M.
Robinson. THI RD ROW : R. G ilg, B. Westfall, J. G ruse,

C. Ke ane, Sports Ed .; G . Rouff, Mgn . Ed.; F. Wescott,
Editor ; N. Shorter, Exch. Mgr.; M. Senio , R. Bowe r, J.
Conklin, C irc. Mgr.

COLONIAL NEWS
A year filled with joy and pain ore the
memories that the staff of the 1951-52 college
weekly will carry into the world of workaday
tedium. They were called "rabble rousers,"
"glory hounds" and just plain "stupid.' In some
coses they will readily admit that what was said
about them was irue, but we all must admit
that the Colonial News hos kept o student
happy though well informed.

ABOVE: Fred Wescott, Editor, fall semester.
BELOW: Gilly Rouff, Managi ng Editor, fall semester; Editor, spring semester.

48

�FRONT ROW : Mr. Rollow, Advisor ; H. Moffatt, R. Dickson , C. Sudbri nk, Mrs. Brown, Advisor.
BACK ROW: N. Shorter, M. Brewer, E. Thurston, F. Wescott, C . Kea ne, R. Gilg, M. LoFronce,
R. Morris.

The Clarendon is Horpur's first literary
magazine. Organized as on honorary society
in Moy 1948, the former Clarendon Club hos
since been merged with Pentongle and the
magazine constitutes the Engl'sh Clubs literary
effort.
Appearing once each spring and foll, the
magazine contains short stories, poems, and
articles submitted by the entire student bocy.
Its contributions ore not limited to English

Special mention should be mode of the
untiring efforts of Doctor Beatrice D. Brown of
the English Deportment of Horpur College.
Her scholarship, sympathetic understanding
and advice hove been a constant source of
i nspiration and encouragement to the students
associated with this literary endeavor.
We of the Clarendon staff wish to extend
our thanks to you, Dr. Brown, for your loyalty
and tireless devotion .

majors.

CLARENDON
CLARENDON OFFICERS
FRONT ROW: H. Moffatt, Managing Editor; R.
Dickson, Editor; R. Gilg, Manuscripts. BACK
ROW: Mr. Rollow, Advisor; F. Wescott, Make-up;
M. LoFronce, Mr&lt;. Brown, Advisor. N Shorter
and R. Morris, Soles and Circulation, were absent
when picture wos token.

49

��FR\ END

or

~

Act[
Socia.I Clubs
Scene I - '' S he "
Sce.,e II - ''He"

�FRONT ROW : A . Blazek, R. Camp, J . Decker, P. Place , M. Allen, J. Ma ~ Dougoll , M. Bottino, G.
Menadonna, M. Homa . MIDDLE ROW: C . Craig, J. Gruse , J. Reubner, Mrs. J. Kimball, J. Conklin ,
M. Rounds, J. Lyons, E. Thurston, Miu M. Moore, J. Foody, M. Mann , J. Williams. BACK ROW:
J. Purtell, M. G ibson, J. Bron, C . Lukovitch, J. Conoron, J . Stephens, B. Mou, P. Mo krohisky. M.
Scouten , B. Westfall, K. Gray, J. Bisio, M. Connell, D. Robinson, L. Welc h, A. VanGordon, E.
Roma, J. Cron, N. Shorter, E. Bottino.

PANDDRAN SOCIETY
In November, 1951, our annual Sadie Howkins Porty was held at the Shongri-Lo-whot a
time! Then come Christmas and to odd to the
general good will of the season, we all asked our
favorite guy to the Holly Hop at Augie 's
Venus room. The chaperones, too, hod a joyous
pre-Christmas celebration. Morch and rain and
our annual Sadie Howkins Porty again-two
tries a year, you know. This is leap year!
All 1n all we ore o happy bunch, fifty little
cherubs with our charity projects each term ond
o ittle social life thrown in for variety.
1952. Our fifth yeor ond our fifth Cornivol
of Heorts. Woy bock in 1948 when our Alma
Moter wos o mere babe in arms, we hod our

52

first do nce and in the Februory. 1947 Coloniol
News, Miss M uriel Lomb ond Mr. William Curtis
so id it should be troditionol sooo--in 1948 you
oil chose Pot Lomb ond M ike Biloz. In 1949 it
was C lork Hungerford with Sis Tuthill winning
by a landslide. Morie Jimenez ond Don Glover
copped the royol honor in 1950, ond June Ann
Lyons ond Chuck Putrino took their thrones
in 1951.
This yeor the students nominated during
registration week ond voted at the door the
night of the donce. Peggy Rounds ond Tom
Smith were brought forth os our favorite guy
ond doll.

�THALIAN S0CIETY
through the hollowed halls of Horpur. A month
of preparation culminates on on innocent Friday night with "Kilorney Kopers" and on assist

We like to cheer at basketball games. toke
long hikes a nd hove fabulous parties at Pot
Colvin's and Juanita Novello s gracious homes.
And in our more serious moments we hove
projects each term in which we support Polio
Drives and many other beneficial act1v1ties. To
raise money lost foll we sold homemade
delicacies; everyone in school grumbled about
the extra poundage but bought and ate heartily.
In M orch St. Patrick 's Doy rolls around and
we spread orange and green and Irish smiles

from the Soi ens, our partners in fun. Everyone
turns out en mosse with the traditional green
hots, shillolohs and shamrock. We sing the old
standbys loud and long.
We took in a wonderful group of energetic
freshmen this year who hove been tireless in
their efforts scholastically and socially to hold
up our tradition.

President . . . . . .. .. .
Helen Moffatt
Vice-President . .
Marlene Brewer
Recording Secretory
.. Joyce M urroy
Corresponding Secretory .
Mory Jone Pratt
Treosurer . . . . . . . . . ....... . .. Eunice Kna uf

FI RST RO W :
T. Bebel
Mrs. Smith
P. Lewi s
J. Murray
M. Brewer
H. Moffatt
E. Knauf
J. Mitchell
M. Robinson
Mrs. Pomeroy
P. Sommers
SECOND ROW:
R. G ilg
A. Venable
B. Mcleary
R. Houschuln
E. Holobrin
J. Novello
J. Greene
G. Wormuth
F. Sochor
C. Mullin
M. Topp
Y. West
A. McOevitt
K. Sedlak
L. Morgolio
J. Bokosh
J. Vallone

53

�FIRST ROW: R. Booth, T. Polmer, R. Koury, Chaplain ; H. Bate ma n, Sec.; T. Blauve lt, Pres. ; C.
Grabowski, Gen. Off.; C. Aswad , Vice-Pres.; F. Nemia, Treas.; W. Simmons. SECOND ROW: Mr.
Pomeroy, J. leney, M. Baran, J. Drysdale, R. Donavan , R. Ash, M. Reynolds, R. Reynolds, S. Steiner,
D. lauder, R. Reeder, R. Dundon, A. Vallone, T. Reynolds, J. Parsons. TH IRD ROW : W. Benn ett,
C. Rideout.

ADELPHI
The Foll Mix held in October at the Endicott American Legion opened the social year
of Adelphi and Horpur College. A crowd of
approximately two hundred and fifty people
helped to make the "mix" one of the most
successful affairs of the school year. November
come and o party at the Concordia Holl in
Endicott produced motion pictures which will
be remembered for years to come. A capacity
crowd of Adelphions and friends sipped cocktails at a party in Binghamton which preceeded
the annual Mistletoe Boll. A good time was hod
by all who attended o party at the Horris
Drive-In between semesters.
Activities for the spring semester include
on alumni dinner, the traditional spring banquet,
a dance to be held in April and a cocktail
party on the night of the Spring Soiree.

54

A scholarship drive which started in
December culminated in the presentation of the
annual Adelphi scholarship award to Miss Rina
Lisi of Binghamton.
Intramural sports were again in the spotlight as Adelphi won the soft ball championship
in the spring of '51 . The football season, cul
short by inclement weather, sow Adelphi and the
Goliords emerge in a tie for first place . The
basketball team hos given a fine account of
themselves and all ore looking forward to another year of active intramural competition.
"In brotherhood we're founded,
For friendships deep and trueAdelphi, let your song ring out
And hail the gold and blue."
- The Anthem, Wolter Stonzel

�BACK ROW :
M. Kearsey
R. Neu man
H. Brown
J. Sa lvo
H. Herxog
D. Brown
J. Welsh
l. Turn er
H. Homyak
FRONT ROW :
Dr. Fisc hthol
D. O' Connell
R. Bollard
D. Homan
R. Koenig
B. Eells
Dr. Aul bach

ADLDYHD
Adloyho, the newest of the soc.al clubs at
Horpur, come into being durirg the lotter
months of the Autumn of 1949. It was chartered by TCC under Syracuse University when
a group of eager freshmen decided to group
together in a new social organization. Spa rked
b y Lorry Pitier, Ben Eells, M ike Keorsey, Don
O'Connell, and others who become the first
officers, t he club rapidly come into its own by
pa rticipating in many activities. They ore now
a prominent, but still growing organization open
to all mole full time students. Among their activities ore the annual Adloyho Raffle, numerous
small parties. the onnuo Christmas and Spring
parties, and starting in February of this year,
their first annual dance-Round and Square.
The name Adloyho was derived from the words
advancement, loyalty and honor and the motto
Vito; Aspero; Animo wh"ch meors life,
1s
hope and spid, which the club tries to uphold.

•

President .............. .
Vice-President

Donald Homan
Raymond Bollard

T reosurer

Benjamin Eells

Secretory

Raymond Koenig

Corresponding Secretory

Doniel 0 Connell

Sergeant-at-Arms

Benjamin Spencer

55

�BACCACIA

President
Vice-Pre· ident

Richard Newton

Secretory

Nick Sbarra

T reo surer

Edward Colemon

BACK ROW :
N. Sbarra
J. Leonard
B. Benjamin
F. Perricone
E. Colemon
G. Rouff
R. Barno
M. Senio
M. Tischler
R. Morris
MI DDLE ROW :
Mr. Belniok
C. Lee
R. Bower
D. Stone
Mr. Smith
FRONT ROW:
R. Yonuni
R. Cocci
D. Ni chols
L. Bucci
D. Newlon

Sb

... David Stone

The monih of November brought with it
the first signs of winter, mid-term exams and
the fifth annual Sh"pwreck Dance. The American
Le gion echoeci with the sounds of Dick Noylor's
bond, strains of 'Hey good lookin'.' and the
hellos of many alumni who returned for the
dance. The Shipwreck Dance aids Baccacia's
annual contribution to the student body of
Horpur in the form of a seventy-five dollar
scholarship donated by the club. Peggy Rounds
was th·s years lucky winner.
The highlight of Boccacio s Sor::"lg ac;ivities
is the Scholarship Stomp, opons.)reci by the
club to raise !unds for the annual award. Boccacia was the first stude:it oroanizo•ion to
sponsor a cash scholar h"p. In betv.een preporin·g for the Fol' and So' ng Dances, Boccacia
members keep busy at Tea Par 1 ies and intramural sports.
M r. Belniak and Mr. Smith, capable advisors, hove guided the oldest club since its
beginning .

�FRO NT ROW: G. Badger, J. Giunta, T. Johns, C. W illiams, C. Eng lish. SECO N D ROW : B. M ochul.
ski, Rec. Sec.; A. Be be l, Cor. Sec.; R. Dickson, Pres.; J . M cCormick, V. Pres.; T. Smith, Sgt.-ot -Arms;
D. Burch, Treas. (not in picture) . TH IRD ROW: W. Smith, N. Tiffany, C. Anderson , C . Hamilton,
V. C hrxo n, N . Randoll, W, Hawver, A. Sullivan , V. Polvino, (not in picture: W, Edgar, K. Gionokouros,
C. Sud brink).

IJIONYSIAN SOCIETY
Once upon a time in a faraway land, there
lived a people who worshipped a god ca lled
Dionysius. Every so often, they would come from
for and near to hold a feast for him. These
people hove lived throughout history, as the
gayest bon -vivonts of oil antiquity.
The Dionysian Societ y was organized in
December, 1948 , with the motto of 'In Mediis
Rebus, into the midst of a ll things. Since its
organ ization in 1948, Dionysio hos grown to
toke a place of honor on a par with the other
social clubs of first Triple C ities College and
now Horpur College.
The Dionysian Soci ety hos succeeded in its
efforts to serve th e college, the studen t body
and the community a s a whole. It hos a lso
strived to produce a nd maintain leadership in
college activities and good citizenship upon the
college campus.

Tom Smith won the "Ugly Mon" conte~t
and was crowned " King ' at the Carnival of
Hearts. In competition with other soc.al clubs.
the group won first prize for the best script for
the Spring Revue of 1951.
An other functi on of the group, in odd lion
1s
to its regular soc1 ol f unction
the
Mod
~otters. Wearing block derbys os a bJlmo'~.
•he Hatters stimulate group singing and they
ho ve mode a fabulous collection of ccl'ecw
songs. The Dionys1ons hove adopted as their
housemother Dr. Beatrice Brow;i of the Enol1&lt;h
Deportment who hos graciously ooened her
home to the grouo wi;h a standing invitotiori.
Each individual in the group ho a very tender
place in his heart for "Our Dr. Brown.'
The group hos maintained ·is mo!to by
being ' in the midst of a th ngs. '

57

�Menadonna . SECOND
FIRST ROW : E. Iannone, C . Morgan, M. Sedlack, A. Pratt, R. C hurch, W.
S. Doug lass, Advisor;
Sec.;
,
Sullivan
J.
;
Vice-Pres.
Sventek,
R.
.;
Pres
is,
Denn
P.
nte,
ROW: S. Cleme
Sgt.-at-A rms; J. O rsley,
R. Owe ns. THIRD ROW : J . Robilotto, A. Vetrano, J. Ma rks, N. Buccasio,
R. Russell, R. Bishop ,
A. Gonce, D. Juriga, C . Gyid ik, R. Trabucco, F. Cook. FO U RTH ROW:
Hayes.
T. Mathias, D.

GOLIARIJS
This, then, is the spirit underlyin g the
actions of the Goliords re-born.
In England, Fronce and Germany during
the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, wanderin g
students, disciples of the mythical Golias, came
to be known as Goliords. Nothing is definitely
known about Golias. Some of the poems bearing his name, however, hove been att ributed
to Walter Mopes, but there is no possibility
that the songs of the Goliords ore the creation
of any one man or even of a few men. They
ore the products of numerous improvisa tions
and revisions having been passed on in the
some manner as the traditiona l traveling
minstrel did.

58

With the impertine nce and enthusia sm of
youth, these students attacked the abuses and
vices of all classes except their own and at the
so me time, g lorified their themes - na t ure,
women and wine - all of which they loved
a rdently.
The re-birth of the Goliards was effected
at Horpur Coll ege when the charter was approved by the administr ation the 28th day of
October, 1947. The original founders of the
organizat ion were George Heinsohn, John J.
Ka r, Charles Speich, Jomes McHo le, and
W illiams Jones.

�FRONT ROW: F. Wes,ott, A. Markarian , J. Witters, L. McWhe rter, G. Lemonoides, Corr. Sec.;
C. Londre. SECOND ROW: E. DeWon , W. McGlod e, M. Dewey, Sec.; D. Short, Sgt.-ot-Arms;
R. Groper, Pres.; J. Steigerwald, V.-Pres.; R. Fletcher, Treas. ; W. Williams. BACK ROW : R. Easton,
P. Weigand, Foe. Advisor; A. Waldon, A. Hortman.

SAIENS
Originated shortly after the beginning of
Triple Cities College, the Soiens has been a
unique social organization in many way~. Originally the charter stated the club was open for
those students majoring in science and mathematics; wl.ence the name "Saiens ." But soon it
was evident that this was not proper si nce many
students from the business and language departments requested membership. So the club was
opened to all students.
The Saiens and Thalians were the first
organizations to co-sponsor a social event. This
policy has since been taken up by other clubs.
The purpose of the club is the same now
as it has been in the past : first, to provide a

supplement to the members' social life, a nd
secondly. to provide a scholarly supplement in
the form of lectures by members of the faculty
and guests.
The charter members did not feel a need
for a large treasury and the result was as low
a cost as for any other club on the campus.
The Saiens social activities include on
annual dance, or similar event, sports of all
kinds and several parties and dinners.
The Saiens are proudest of their scholastic
achievements in which they have a leg or two
on the Bartle Cup and have four members out
of the sixteen people on the high honor list.

59

�L. McWherter, R.
STANDING: Mr. Pisa ni, C. English, N. Randoll, G. Badger, Mr. O'Prien. SEATED:
Meaker.
H.
,
Roth, C. Hamilton, J. Sullivan

THEIR DEEDS ARE MANY
Alpha Phi Omega, which appeared on
ca mpus in 1949 ofter receiving its charter from
the notional service fraternity , hos certainly
lived up to its name as a service fraternity .
Such things ore undertake n as ushering at
dramatic productio ns, setting up a travel bureau
during holidays and midsemesters for the benefit of students seeking rides for vocation, and
sponsoring on auction in the foll of various
and sundry things dragged from the lost and
found deportme nt. This is on hilarious event,
for anything from old lunches to one dirty sock
may suddenly be held up.
Each spring, A .P.O. sponsors the Ugly Mon

bO

Cont est, t he winner being chosen by the most
money received in his jug, at a penny a vote.
Lost springs contest was a colorful event, with
a very spectacu lar ca mpaign.

President . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Richard Rath
I st Vice-Pres ident ........ .... G eorge Bad g er
2nd Vice-Presid ent ..... . ..... Ha rold Meeker
Secretory ........ ... . ........ John Sullivan
Treosurer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Luther McWher ter
Advisors ........ ..... Dr. Pisan i, Dr. O 'Brien

���-

-

Actl[

�C.
STANDING: T. Vetrano C. Craig, E. Thurston, M. Kea rsey, J. Conklin, B. Mochulski. SEATED:
Rounds.
M.
Sudbrink,
C.
Bateman,
H.
English, J. Lyons, C. Aswod,

OUR CHOSEN FEW
The 1951-1952 elections of the United Student Government were indeed colorful and
exciting, featuring monstrous posters and noisy
parades. Three parties were in the running, with
an equal representation of the two major

U.S.G. OFFIC ERS
Charles Aswod ......... ......... . President
Harold Botemon . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President
Charles Sudbrink . . . . . . . . . . . . .... Treasurer
June Ann Lyons ......... ......... Secretory

parties elected.
As in post years, during the Foll semester
the U.S.G. sponsored the Student-Faculty Reception, the Turkey Hop ond the Mistletoe Boll.
The initiation system, inouguroted in the foll
term of 1950, wos continued, os wos the supervision of doss elections. The most important
effort by this U.S.G . in its first term of office
wos an attempt towards the lowering of tuition.
During the Spring semester, the U.S.G . sponsors
the Annua l Spring Weekend.
Weekly meetings ore long ond tedious,
there is very little glory ond a great deo l of
work, yet the U.S.G. continues to turn out o
program every semester which reflects the
desires of the student body they represent.

�FRONT ROW : D. Hamon , President. MIDDLE ROW :
F. Kelley, A. McDevitt, H . Moffatt, Vice-Preside nt ; M.
Robinson, K. Sedlak, J. Petrovsky, J. Gre ene, Secretory;
l. Welch, Treasur er. BACK ROW : E. Murra y, Mr. Aul·

boch, Mr. Kent, A. Blo1ek, C. Anderson, G. Lemoniodes,

L. Turner, W . Morusi ch, G . Rouff, J. Raymond , R. Bollard ,
J. Welsh, R. Trabucco, D. Burch, M. Kearsey, V. Chrion,
A. Weiss.

PIN TDPPLERS
The Pin Topplers was once again one o f
the most active groups on campus this past
year. Every Friday afternoon during bowling
season thirty staunch enthusiosrs trekked over
to the K. of C. alleys to vie for top honors
and the coveted trophies that were awarded
at the annual bowling banquet held in April.
The bowling league was a little foster than
last year with averages ranging from I 70 to a
lowly 88 rolled by John "It was great fun any·
way
Raymond. "Cripes Crespi's' low 74
overage of two years stond.ng sfll claims the
distinction of being the lowest ever.
Each week prizes were awarded to the man
or woman with the high single and the high
triple for that week. Teom trophies were
awarded the men and women with the high
overage, h·gh single, and h·gh triple for the
year.

Everyone heartily thanked Jean Greene, the
Toppler's secretory, with o large round of applause at the annual banquet for so capably
undertaking the arduous task of compiling the
individual overages, team standings, and the
much-prized handicaps.
The Harpur keglers will never forget the
tie game between Mike Keorsey's and Don
Haman's t eams. "Old folks" Weiss broke all
records for the hundred-yard dash trying to
catch Kathy Sedlak before she deported for
Binghamton and safety. Haman's team finally
won, amid much cheering from both sides, by
three pins.
The ''I'm a little stiff from bowling" boys
and girls from Harpur hod another swell season
at the K of C. No 300 games were h·t, but
who wants thar ~ igh o triple anyway? Right,
Raymond?

bS

�FRONT ROW : C. Gyid ik. P. Dennis, W. Smith , V.
Chrzan , Presid ent· A. lllg T. Reynolds. T. Po lmer, SECOND ROW: V. Polvino W. Irving , R. Owen, W. Simmons,
R. Ash, V. Pres.; T. Blauvelt, Treasurer; J, Giunta, R.
Koenig. R. Booth, B. Mochulski, R. Fl etcher, Sec. BACK

ROW: R. Ballard , W. Rideout, W. Bennet, D. Homan,
D. O 'Connell, R. Sventek, H. Bateman, H. Homyak, M.
Keorsy, J. Raymond, R. Boker, W. McG lode , C. Landro ,
A Vallone, C. Sudbrink.

Bll Sl NE SS AIJ MIN I STR AT I 0 N CLUE
The Bi..~ ross Adm1n1srro 1 ion Cluo, or the
B'z·Ao C i..b, i&lt; prcboo v ihP orgest cluo ot
Ho•OJ'. Dl r ''J •he =o ·erm ·here "ere s»ty~ou• ....,e...,oe• . He Bi: Ao C uo 1.n"e ·ho&lt;e
·c1.:ie"'· w'l '10-e o COMm " ,ro&lt;:..o''ono 'r•e•e ·
., o "f&gt;. ff.e ,o i..pptr' \.Oro.is a~·1v'.es

f1'J ''1emr.e ve~
h •hey Ive. M-:;mtY'"I t ' o ou res O(Jm·r,.stro' on
001 ,hil'
nt"g t,rie"I· ... h ore 1eqt.'red only
O"'O o
O tor01 In
lO OOy 0 no-n "O fee 0: :"•y ren·
due •.
r"e ·o M
Ao-n - •ro• ens c 1..0 ooeroThe B 're
:'o"'&lt; :or ·"i· yeor ·•ca o vo · orroy -::i• oc•iviT1;.., cub, princiool socio
t es ona pr ·ec•
fu"lct'c., 1&lt; •he 'roo'"ono B'z Ao bo"'qJet. The
bo·iciL.e· i, uSt:o &gt; he a once eoch 'erm. The
o,· ore ""OS ~e ~ on J:J;iuo•y 9 ora wos follov. ea oy severa ree s o: s:)orts mo" ie.. The
orgor';:o'o'i por ors ;o ,s oy eaa·"'g businessmeri O"'O 1nau.••o leooers who discuss and
11

0

wr"

''N

explain the problems encountered 1n the
business world.
In the post, rhe clJb hos sponsored several
activities for •he ro1si"3 of funds so •he bene·
f'ciol work of the c uo mo~ oe co•r'eo on. The
Biz-Ad Dance he10 eoch ;erm soo•lighted the
SO( io odiviry. On the more edi..cotiono leve 1,
gave local bus'nessmen on
" Biz-Ad Doy'
opportunity to display their products to the
school and the commuriity.
Eoch spri"lg the col1ege sponsors ihe onnuol
Open House 01d the Biz.Ad Club oss'sts by
contr'outing soeciol a &lt;ploys ci busne~s equipment. Wi~h·n the club, the occounti'lg majors
tutor the first-yeor o::count ng students in
special learning classes . The club to~es on
active interest ·n the problems of the Business
Ad m'n' lrc'ion D'visior and serves a s a link
b etween foc1.. 1ty, odministrofion ond b Lisness
stude n~s .

�FRONT ROW: M. Brr.w..r, H.
Moffott T ·eos. ; R. Die hon
Pres : R. Gilq, Sec.; E. Thurs·
+on. BACK ROW: Mrs. Kel1099 Foe. Advisor; G. Gionokouros. F. Nemio. F. Pcrrono,
C Willioms. F. Wescott, V.·
Pres.; R. Morris. Dr. Brown,
Foe. Advisor.

Pentangle Club

Italian Chapter

Open to oil students, Pentongle publishes
Horpur's literary magazine, Clarendon, and
sponsors informal talks on all matters literary.
We recoil gatherings at Dr. Brown's, parties
at Dickson s. Twelfth Night and Sha! es pea re
on the Lawn.
Pentangle is o merger of the English and
Clarendon clubs.

The main purpose of the Italian Chapter
1s to further the interest of students in the
culture of Italy.
Scholarships are awarded every year by
the Chapter to outstanding students of lta'1an;
funds are raised through presentation of Ito ion
plays and movies.

FRONT ROW : Dr. Be rnordo,
Fo e. Advisor; J. Gi unlo, Pre s.:
R. Ne wlo n, V.-Pres.; R. Tro·
buc co, D. Sheffield. BAC K
ROW: N. Sborro. L. Bucci,
E. lo nnone, M. Senio, R. Di.
Pietro. NO T JN PIC TU RE: A.
Ve t rono, Treos.; M. Brigiotlo ,
Sec.

�ROW : J. G iunta, J.
Lyons, G . Wormuth, C . Sedlak, J. King, Sec.; A . Bl01ek,
Treas. ; H . Cadde n, C . Cra ig ,
P. Colvin, K. Longey , M.
Sonio. BACK ROW: Z. Janowski, V. Pres.; H. Witters, T.
Reynolds, J . Raymond , R. Koenig, C . Keane, V. Chrzan , R.
Trabucco, B. Moc hulski, Sgt..
at-Arms; A. Vetrano, G. Iannone , L. Bucci, Dr. Carolan,
C. Grabowski, Pres., not pres-

Newman Club

Agape ans

Organized in 1948, the Newmon Club, with
the a id of Father Aylesworth, hos done much
t owards promot ing Catholic companionship and

Agopeons, Brorherly Love,' is the Prote•
t an t O rganization at Horpur. The Club's main
purpose is to encourage fellowshi p among all

culture o n campus.
Besides holding several Communion breakfasts during the term, the Newmon Club presents guest speakers at their meetings, open
forum discussions and movie series as port of

denominations .
Ago peons participate in directing charity
d ona tions mode b y the Horpur st udents. A
combina tion of soci al activities a nd religious
service is shown at t he annual C hrislmos Service
and Porty. The Rev. E. Stanley C hed ister is

t heir social slate.

Agopeons Advisor.

FRONT ROW: B. Moos, Prag.
Comm. Chairman; W .· Stohl,
Treas.; R. Comp, Soc. Comm.
Chairman ; N. Tiffany , Pres. ;
M. Monn, Sec.; R. Stout, V.
Pres. BACK ROW : P. Lewis,
C . English, M. Rounds, E.
Thurston, J . C onklin, L. McWherter.

b8

�FRONT ROW · F. Sochor J.
Giunto
R. Dickson, Treos. ·
J. Foody, Sec.; E. Thurston ,
Pres.; N. Tiffany V. Pres.·
W. Farrow, Fa e. Advisor; W.
Smith, C. leskovich, A. Bla1~k.
BACK ROW: J. Witters. M.
Brewer, H . Moffatt, R. Gilg
P. Zayac . G. Rouff, T. Smith.
C . Ham il ton, J. King. F.
N emia, C. Williams, W Bennett.

Colonial Players
The COLON 1AL PLAYERS present--!
Fa I, 1951 and 'The Amazon. fol.owed by 'The
R"vols in the sp rinq. Be th capably direc'ed by
Wayne Farro w. New face• were seen in Horpur
dromot"c c.irc. es Corl, Fron. John and Albie.
Pot, Bob [lier ord He len added to their laurel~.
The ploy 5 the thing-

German Club
Tiv Go rno'1 Cnonte• hn

bee ome r,.,mo.is
ior i1~ "r'"'. err o Schr&gt;i'z• ban: rort es al
which ir&gt;q" g, oee• a,.,d g lOd tune, ore few
lured. 0·1 tho ll"'re ~e· io.i~ .de, its t reos.iry
hos re&lt; ently bee•1 L. ed for the purcho~e of
Germon o d · ioo the librory. The b0o•s will
be of u c to Ge•f'l'lon s1 .id1&gt;n ts for r os room
o.,d recreational reao ng.

FRO NT ROW: D. Sheffield,
A. H artmon, V. Pres.; D.
Short, TrPas.; D. 81010. SECOND ROW. P Colvin, Sec.;
E. St evens.
E
Knauff, F.
Sochor. THIRD ROW· Dr.
Weigand, Advisor· B. Benjamin, H. Heriog, R. Easton,
D. Rath, D. Juriga P. Zayac,
F. Wescott. N ot in picture B.
DiPietro Pres., Dr, Williamson,
Advisor.

69

�LEFT TO RIG HT: Alberta Venable , Ellen Thurston, Dauna Robinson, Charles Hamiltan , Charles
English, Charles Aswad.

SPRING REVUE ORGANIZATION
SPRING REVUE OFFICERS
Corl W illiams
PRESIDENT
Frederick
Robert
VICE-PRES IDENT
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Pattie Lewis
SECRET ARY
. . . . W i•liom Hawver
TREASURER
Two hours of sheer madness form· ng the
musi-comedy high-soot of Sor"rg Weekend the
Revue is really the product of the whole darn
co ece, w th s1 .. dent-wri+ten songs and sk'ts
wh'ooed ·'1+o 0 ~how oy 0 toJen 1 ed O'TIOitious
0'10 ~any gong co ing trem;e ves oporooriotely,
the Soring Rev"e Orgonizo'ion.
Dreamy mu ,ic-lots of yoh-ond o'woys
a gerit e. revere1t nudge at the old o'mo mater.
Who con !orger Joanne Foody s (but tigh~)

70

fe.,c'ng cosh.rne . . . Horour in search of a
boo~ . . . G ' Rouff s sarong ono sandals ...
Bedlam in the C. N. off'ce ... Joof'ne Foody's
fencing costume . . . Chuck Aswod with pipes
and blackboard . . . the ock around Ellen
Thurston ... Mos•er of Ceremonies Dove ( My
g'rl works at the Pig Stano; shes the sign )
PloH . . . Toft s heart-stopping melodies sung
by Nemio-Drs. Weigand and Schubert and their
own 'n'mitoble dance style . .. Joanne Foody's
fenc---A great time.
Following the tradition set n 1947, the
Revue people, now formo y organized, show
promise of shows and shows and shows-alwa ys
b"gger, bette; nuttier already a real college
landmark.

�FRONT ROW: M. Senio, K.
Gionokouros, Pres.: M. Homo.
Miss Sedo, Advisor; Mr. Williomson, Advisor. SECOND
ROW: C. English, R. Roth,
R. Bower, R. Newton, Sec.Treos.

Spanish Chapter

Slavic Chapter

Tolks, movies and International Night
highlight the Spanish Clubs year.
M iss Seda spent the summer 1n Mexico
and Kim vacationed in Colombia so the rest
of us who hod a siesta at home heard first-hand
reports on the more tong'ble aspects of our
particular interest in Spanish.

The Slavic Chapter of the Foreign Language Society is composed chiefly of students
studying the Russian language and those interested in general Slavic culture.
The club was formed for the first time lost
year and under the direction of Mr. Bochnok
hos heard many discussions on Slavic culture.

FRONT ROW: W. Shomulko ,
Y. Pres.; R. Choffee, Treos.;
W. Morusich, Pres. SECOND
ROW: G. Beers, Mr. Bochnok,
Advisor ; H. Homyak, R. Newton.

�FRONT ROW : F. Sochor, J.
Kirkland, H . Moffatt , A. Pa ndich, Chairman; J. Missavage.
BACK ROW : E. Mindler, P.
Zayac, J. Steigerwald, F. W escott, J. Witters ; Mrs. B. Schlegel, Sec.-Treas., not in picture.

Botany Club

Radio Workshop

Orgon1zed in Februory of 1951, the Botony
Club is composed of studerts interested in
gorden1ng, londscoping ond general plant study.
Gorden problems of all varieties hod been
studied on several field trips.
The club is under the d1rechon· of Dr.
Bowers, o noted botonisL

On campus for two years, the Radio Workshop hos provided o very procticol program for
its members. They experimenied with the techniques ond problems of writing, directing, oct
ing and announcing. In the post, they hove
presented short programs over o local stotion.
Frequently, field trips ore mode to one of
the stations.

FRONT : W. Menodonna, P.
Lewis, C. Aswad , Pros.; E.
Thurston, V. Pres.; Z. Jankowski. SECOND ROW: F. Nemia,
N. Tiffany, A. Robe rts, W.
Smith.

12

�FIRST ROW : J. Kirkl and, A.
Venable, G. Rakauskas. B
Westfall, J. Lyons, F. Sochor,
V. Mose, A. W olff M. Beitzel ,
E. Frey T. Stankus J Greene,
R. H ous hultz, E. Rakauskos.
SECOND ROW : A. Bergman ,
R. Camp, K. Sedla k, P. Place,
B. Moos. Sec.-Treos.; B Mochulski Pres. J. Mitchell, V. Pres. ,
M. Monn, P Rounds . E. Thurston, M
Robinson. THIRD
ROW: L. McWhcrter, J. Witters, F. Ncm io , N. Tiffany, M.
Ke a rsey, Z. Janowski, D. Mill s,
D. Short Librarian· M. Brewer
F Kimba ll J. Marks, H. Herzog, W. Smith, C . Londre, A.
Ilg, C. English, Mr. Lincoln .

Mixed Chorus
The first Mixed Chorus wm orgon zed 111
September under the copoble honds of Mr.
Lincoln. Before the Chrislmos hol1doys, they
mode their debut over Station WINR ond they
hove mode plons for other brood costs.
Moking records, singing ot school functions
ond noteworthy parties odded to o melodic
ond harmonious yeor .

International Relations Club
The lnter"ot1ono Re10:1on Cluo, ·ormed in
the foll of 1946 ho~ succeeded 1n presentinri ,1
program of speakers ond forum discu&lt;sions .
Ddegofes from the club oltend the onnuul
sessions of the Mode1 Security Counc1 sponsored
by upper New York Stote Colleges.

FRONT ROW
M. Butlien.
Pres.· J. MocDougall SecTreas. ; R. Trabucco E. Iannone. BACK ROW· M. Tischler, R. Bower, M. Senio.

73

�WH\TE

•

�FIGHT!!

f \G\-\.\

Act Ji'
Seen Isports

e -Sh
c ool
ceneITS

Club l(i

a.ms

ea.ms

�IJICil POWELL ,
CAPTAIN AND COACH

As Record Setter in 1949

It 1s seldom that on athlete ever gets the
opportunity to return to f he school where he
achieved fame and coach the some men he
ployed with. But Dick Powell, d "rector of the
Colonials court fortunes in 1951 -52, is on except' '1n to the rule .
Urider Gene Welborn, Did set the highscoring record of 33 points in one game and
this record stil slonds. Also, he captained the
1949-50 squad or.d was tne big cog in its 14-8
record, the bes; o::hieved iri Colonial history.
This year, Dick returned to his alma mater
as o rep1oceme•1t for his old coach, Welb rn.
The team boos·eo such vetera~, as Gene Koby,orz, Garay Evans, Johri Leney ono Chet Grabowski. A 1 but Graoows~; ployed with Powell
o;-- that win'linq •earn of 3 years ago.
As :he 5eoson \&lt;.Ore on ona D c~ ' s problems
76

As Cooch in 1951

increased with mid-term ~cholastic cuts and
graduation losses, there must have been times
when he wished h-:! might put on h's old Green
and White jer.cy and help ot..t h"s faltering boll
club. But he hu'lg on and the season finally
ended. He tock c greot burden on his shoulders
and at fmes it seerneJ slightly mirocu'ous that
Horpur even had a boske+ball ream, let alone
o winning one. Bd he •ef1..sed to give in and he
kept his team in there f gh•ing no matter what
tlie opposition. He ToU'ld rimself in a pos"tion
that would d"shea•ten •he sagest of coaches but
he refused to qu;t. Hots off +o Dick Powell, who
won oil kinds of honors on the smooth hard wood as a player and who won the hearts of
many in his first try at coaching. He embodies
rhe spirit of determination tha t each student at
H a rpur should try to achieve. _

�I

~RPV'4&gt;

.

~11/!:J j .

~ ~\
{RPU&gt;
f
~

~

t14

f~

•

FRONT ROW: Jim Linderman, Fron Frisk, Gone Kobylon, Jock Brown, Chet Grabowski. BACK ROW:
Richard Powell, Cooch; Gordy Evans, Stan Rubeniehl, Ronny Ba ker, Mike Wesko, Ken Conant,

\
The f'nol record for Horpur's 1951 52
basketball team was a disoppoinfng 5-1 B.
However this was hardly indicot ive of the
season.
The po5t year for Dick Powell and his
Colonial cooers was one that was like o rollercooster. It was h!I of rise&lt; o:id falls, discourogemert ord heart-break . Odd y erio1,;gh to soy, the
Green and Whi1e hoopsrers ployed the'r best
boll in losing co .. ses and their wins on the whole
were rather loc~-11,;ster affairs.
Cooch Powell opened his pre-season wormups with 9 veterori boll players but th:s dwindled
to 7 when the ~eoson opened, which could hove
been a hint of things to come.
The whole season con be summed up by
one game: Horpur versus K'ng, College at
Union-Endicott H'gh Schoo . Present at the
game were on estimated I00 peop1e, who were
to get their money's worth.
Kings come into the game with o highscoring team that hod rocked 1,;p w ns over
Wilkes (who beat rhe Colcn:ols by 62-47 o:id
77-75 margins) o•d Scranton Un'vers1~y !scored
a 86-68 dec·s;on over Horpur). They beat
W:lkes 83 60 and Scranton by o 90-69 count
and Scronron hod a sharp bol club. Naturally,
the Powell-men with a I 7 record, appeared
little more than o ready-mode victim for the
Pennsylvania powerhouse. But the Colonials

..

apparently hod their hearts set on this one.
For three pulse-pounding periods, the Green
and White's v dory-starved quintet roared, and
snarled. Their eyes, wh'ch for the first port of
the year hod seemed dull, cleared and Kings
was driven against the ropes. Jo~ e Felter,
master of the hook-shot, was in top form as he
tossed in soft-hooks and top-ins for 22 big
markers. Horpi..r s boordwork was greatly
improved and el\cept for the departure of
several key players, they might hove come
through with o startling upset. The game, besides being close, was also very Cl\Cd ing as beth
teams cut loose with fost-breok attacks t hot
provided split-second chills and spills. And for
one night, Andy Hudonick showed his scoring
punch as he chucked in 14 points, including a
perfect 6 for 6 from the charity-stripe.
The f nol tol y on the big scoreboard read:
Kings-BO, Horpur-73, but this was one loss
thm Dick Powell and company could toke pride
in, if there 's any pride in defeat. They ployed
their best and they never achieved such a peak
again. It was easily the number one game from
all stand-points. The season, bofh before and
ofter this game is o fog. This game stands out
as the one game when Horpur was represented
to the best of everyone's ability on the basketball floor.
77

�Oneonto Stole, dork jersies,
snores the boll but lost a
2-point decision to the Coloniols, 50·48. It wos the first
win of the seoson for the
Green and White. Joke Felter,
No. 10, waits for the ball lo
come his way. Gordy Evons,
No. 12, races to join the
scra mble. Gordy proved the
hero of the night as he sunk
a twisting loy·up in the closing seconds. The gome was
ployed at Vestol High.

VARSITY ACTIO N

Joke Felter, N o. I 0, does a
split os he clutches for the
ball in Horpur's fifth and finol
victory, a 62·61 ve rdict over
Albany State. Gene Kobylorx
is the playe r on the sit-down
strike and Walt Burdick adds
his frantic expression to the
action. Felter hooked in 17
points to poce the Colonial
cause and Koby added 15.

�Captain Ray Church and
Cooch Pot Carolan congrolulote each other ofter finishing
1951 with 2-2 record, best in
Horpur history.

CROSSCOUNTRY

W ithout o vetero11 on the squad, Cooch
Pot Carolan piloted his all-frosh hil and dolers
to o 2-2 season, the best compiled in Horpur s
brief cross-country history.
The Colonial harriers got off on the right
foot by downing Champlain, 25-30 in their first
start. Hartwick proved o big stumbl"rg-block as
the Warriors outclassed Horpur, 17-38. Middletown was the come-bock victim for the Carolan·
men by o 26-29 count and the Green and
White wound up the season by dropping o 24-31
decision to Oswego.
Roy Church was tre captain and sporkplug for the Colonials as he scooted home first
3 out of 4 t•me~. For his efforts he was re elected
captain for 1952. He finished 26th in the State
Conference meet at Hornell as Alfred breezed
to the title.

79

�SPRING SPORTS
BASEBALL
Harpur's rew baseball coach Dick Hoover, took aver
a thankle&lt;s task this year when he tried ta mold his 12 man
squad into some kind of shape for their 8 game schedule.
W ith only one pitcher on top (Andy Hudonic~) Cooch
Hoover hod worries galore. Up to dote, the Colonial
diamond squad lost 5 games in o row . Unless Hoover gets
aid from ou+side, the Harpur cause seems ta hove o block
baseball future .

TENNIS
The winninges' team at horpur s1 ill cort'nues to oe Ted Griffin's te'lnis crew.
W ith 3 lettermen in Sid Steiner Ken Franklin. and Jim Norr's Cooch Gr"ffin had
o capable nucleus to build around. Jim Par sons and Chorley Keane were the new
additions to the squad this year to make JP the 1oss of George and Rio Koury
and Joe M arks from the team that piled up o 4 2 record in 1951 .
N ew schools on the Colonial net schedule this year were St . Bonaventure,
Lycom ing and Hoborl . To dote, the tennis team had o 2-2 record ond were the
only Spring Sports squad lo win . In !he post four years, Horpur hos ployed 23 tennis
matches and hos posted a senso •io'lol 19-4 record. Each loss hos been by ju• I one
point. Sid Steiner, :iumber one man on the squad was elected captain of the team
prior to the Champlain match.

INTRAMURAL ATHLETICS
Harry Me aker, No. 9, scores with o one-hander as
Joe Loposky, No. 10, watches. Aclion look place
in the Second Round play-off game between the
Saints and Saiens. The Saints won cosily, bb-37
as Loposky netted 22.

The big lntroMurol sport 1 h1s year was boske•boll and both !ournomei"t~
hod to be decided in ploy off oome . The ··r~t round wo token by the
Soiens when they ed~ed rhe Go 1o•d,. 45 4G ju,t llefore the ~·or ' of !he
second semester. The secono rourci v.o s even cfo,er ord wo ~ ;eolured by
many upset s. After dropp'ng o 5 47 occisicw •o f~'e So1cns i· •heir f rs~
game, the So n•s lore "ndeoenoen• ·eom ir the eo1ve ran 1.p a &lt;~ei'l of
five stroiqht. "C 1.c'ng o 72 34 blos+'no of Adelon O' ;:Jo 36 35 upset o! ·he
prev1ou&lt; v ~"beater Gol'oco~. lro 'fie oloy oU •he So•~ts C'L. ned 'he So.ers
66-37 to w•:· the f'COrd rl)Jnd r·· e. '" 1he co h oe•ween •he c.homps of eoch
roul"d, the Soiers nipped t~P Soinis in overtime oy a 44 41 count to win
lhe oil-College crown.

80

�Visit the

Mac-C LARY - STABLER
AGEN CY, Inc.

HOTEL FREDERICK

105 E. Main Street

and the

ENDICO 'IT. NEW YORK

DUBONNF.T LOUNGE

INSURANCE FOR 100 YEARS

Washin gton Avenue
ENDICO 'IT. NEW YORK

Phone 5-3646

Loans uo $500.00

NEW ING MOT OR CO.

PUBLIC LOAN COM PANY

INC.

INC.

FORD CARS and TRUCKS
SALES and SERVICE

7 Washin gton Avenue
ENDICO TT, NEW YORK

Phone 5-9929

I
I•

Rain or Shin e - Only ANS CO
Gua rant ees Perf ect Snap shot s!
Don't trust to luck with ordinar y him Ansco All-Wea ther
Film gives the results you want, or return the neqaflv es
and guaran tee bond and receive a new roll of film free.

It's Alway s SUNN Y with Ansco All-W e ather Film
Film Corporat ion.
ANSCO . BINGHA MTON. N. Y.• A Division of General Aniline &amp;

�HILKINS JEWELERS
Complim ents of

OUR 35th YEAR
46 Washingt on Avenue

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

UNION FORG ING

Phone 5-0 I 21

COMP ANY
ROUFF FURNITURE CO.

*

105-107 Washingt on Avenue

ENDICOT I. NEW YORK

500 North Street

"DEDICATED TO BETTER HOMES '

·ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

Phone 5-3379

Complime nts of

ENDIC OTI OPTICAL CO.

THE BURT

~

120 Washingt on Avenue

COM PAN Y

ENDICOT I, NEW YORK

•
BRING YOUR PHOTO PROBLEMS

38-44 Washin gton A venue

to

ENDICO TI, NEW YORK

ENDICOTT CAMERA SHOP
For Reliable and Friendly Assistanc e

82

�VAUGH N'S

Bes1 Wishes to the Class of '52

HART, SCHAFFNER &amp; M ARX
STETSON ARROW
NUNN BUSH SHOES

SALL - STEARNS
TRIPLE CITIES MOST POPULAR
STORE FOR MEN

Union District
ENDICOTT. NEW YORK

138 Washington Street
BINGHAMTON. NEW YORK

Phone 5·2131

MORTON COY

Compliments of

Fashions From

TRIPLE cmES

"HEAD TO TOE"

TRACTION CORP.

At Prices lo Suit Every Budget

375 State Street

Court Street

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

Cong ratul ation s
TO HARPUR COLLEGE CLASS OF '52
go through life. &lt;· he ri ,..h a lway" tlw \\ o nd c rful
freedorm; "It i&lt;'lr ar(. ours It e re in tltc l n ited S tate~.
11 iglr alllong wlri&lt;'li i,; Frc&lt;'d o rn of the Pre,;;-;.
In \our \ e'' " JHt p er you \\ill find all ,; id&lt;':- of &lt;·ont ro·
' e r ,;ial i:'51H'", "o that ) Oil ma) decid e for ) OUr,..e h c,..
tlte &lt;'our,;c you \\ill foli o'' ·
Thi:: fn•1• a&lt;'&lt;'b::- lo tlt e trutlt j,.. a fund am e nta l o f o ur
d c mon a c~·· It 11111 ,;t he zealou,; I) ~ u arcl ed. t hat \H' nta)

\ ,; ) OU

co11ti1111e to hr free.

The

Bin~ha111ton

Press

1111d

The

BJ

S111ula~·

Press

�Sure 1s True for '52

W ells-MESSEMER, Inc.

When Better Automobiles Are Built

DODGE - PLYMOUTH

BUICK Will Build Them

1302 E. Main Street

SCHUMANN BUICK, Inc.

ENDICOTI. NEW YORK

32 State Street
Phone 5-3397

BINGHAMTON. NEW YORK

THE PAINT CENTER, INC.

J. RENNIE ALLEN
and SONS

EVERYTHING IN ART SUPPLIES
135 Washington Avenue
(Across from McLe::m's)

511-13 E. Main Street

ENDICOTT. NEW YORK

ENDICOTI. NEW YORK

Phone 5- 8520

Compliments of

Salutations
and

best wishes

THE

to
the

BINGHAMTON

Class of 1952

SUN
"First in the Homes of Southern New York
and Northern Pennsylvania for more than

Binghamton's Largest Department Store

a Century"

84

�L. F. HAMLlN, Inc.

Compliments of

PHARMACIST

DOYLE'S

"The Red Cross Drug Store"

FEMININE WEARABLES

28-30 Washington Avenue
ENDICOTT. NEW YORK

24 Court Street
BINGHAMTON. NEW YORK

Phone 8-1565

CHINA-GLASS

JOHNSONS

1st IN SPORTS EQUIPMENT

11 Court Street
BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

BABCOCK'S SPORT SHOP

Fine China
Glassware and Gifts
For All Occasions

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

Over l 00 Open Stock Patterns in
Dinnerware

Compliments of

Armed for Success

MEN'S QUALITY SHOP
Style Center for

A man has no greater strength , no

MEN and YOUNG MEN

greater weapon for success, than

246 Main Street

knowledge. You who graduate

JOHNSON CITY. NEW YORK

today are armed with that greatest
of all assets. With knowledge, we
know success will be yours. And
we wish it for you, earnestly.

Compliments of

Congratulations]

HAZARD LEWIS FARMS

McLEAN'S

BINGHAMTON. NEW YORK

BINGHAMTON - ENDICOTT

M. R. 98

85

�SUCC ESS
There is no mystery about success in
life, and no great

geniu~

is necessary to

accomplis h things. If you think properly,
work, and apply the rules of common
sense with a firm belief in your own
ability and the opportunit ies which the
world offers you, you can attain success.

INTERNATI ONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORAT ION
ENDICOTI, NEW YORK

86

�You can'1 Know Whal s Going On .
unless you READ

ELMER ANGEVINE
AGENCY, INC.

THE DAILY BULLETIN

COMPLETE REAL ESTATE
AND INSURANCE SERVICE

LISTEN TO

RADIO STATION WENE
G reater Endicott s Great Team Dedicated
To a Greater Endicott

145 Washington Avenue
ENDICOTT, N. Y.

READ

ECONOMY DRUG STORE

THE VESTAL NEWS

(THE REXALL STORE)
FOR
60 Washington Avenue
Comer of Washing ton and Monroe
ENDICOTT. NEW YORK

- SHARPEST COMMENT
ON THE LOCAL SCENE -

COMMERCIAL PRl!\'TING

COMPLIMENTS OF

MARINE MIDLAND TRUST COMPANY
UNION-ENDICOTI OFF1CE

ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY
3 OFFICES FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

ENDICOTT NATIONAL BANK
Members-F ederal Deposit Insurance Corporation

87

�DON'T JUST SAY MILK
For BETTER photo prints . . .
SAY

STICKLEY

CROWLEY'S

MODERN PHOTO FINISHING
SERVING THE TRIPLE CITIES
"There's a Stickley Dealer in your

Crowley's Milk Co., Inc.

neighborhood"

COMPLIMENTS OF

WALTER R. MILLER CO.
INC.

ENDICOTT
LINCOLN-MERCURY, Inc.

STA TIO NERY - GIFTS

3400 E. Main Street

i70 Washington St. and 121 State St.

ENDICOTT. N. Y.

BINGHAMTON. NEW YORK

COMPLIMENTS

THE COLONIST STAFF

OF

OFFERS CONGRATULATIONS

SPORTING GOODS

AND CONTINUED

MAGIC CITY ICE

SUCCESS TO

and

THE GRADUATING

MILK CO.

SENIORS
607 North Street

ENDICOTI, N. Y.

M4 S TERT O , •:

88

C A M'US ' UILISH IHG
100 WA LN UT snur. M-tllAO[l ,H IA

��</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="27">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28047">
                  <text>1948 - </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28048">
                  <text>Binghamton University Yearbooks </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28049">
                  <text>Harpur College -- Students; State University of New York at Binghamton -- Students; Harpur College; State University of New York at Binghamton; Students; Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="37">
              <name>Contributor</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39021">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;Blythe E. Roveland-Brenton, Director of Special Collections &amp;amp; Library Preservation&lt;br /&gt;Caitlin Holton, Digital Initiatives Assistant&lt;br /&gt;Maggie McNeely, University Archivist&lt;br /&gt;Erin Rushton, Head of Digital Initiatives&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39022">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;Binghamton University’s yearbook was published under several different titles. It was first called &lt;em&gt;The Colonist&lt;/em&gt; in 1948, then became &lt;em&gt;The Yearer&lt;/em&gt; in 1970, &lt;em&gt;Pegasus&lt;/em&gt; in 1973 and finally &lt;em&gt;Binghamton University&lt;/em&gt; in 2004. Yearbooks are a popular resource for alumni and can be used for primary source research. Each book typically contains class lists, class photos, candid photos, faculty and academic department information, campus and institutional facts, illustrations and ads, and editorials. They document student organizations, campus events, athletic teams as well as local and global events. Yearbooks offer a window into the traditions and culture of a time and place from the point of view of a select group of students on behalf of the student body. They are among the richest sources of student-driven content for an academic institution. For more information regarding yearbooks and the history of the University, please contact &lt;a href="https://www.binghamton.edu/libraries/about/special-collections/"&gt;Special Collections&lt;/a&gt; at 607-777-4844 or speccoll@binghamton.edu.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;We welcome your comments about &lt;span&gt;&lt;span&gt;our collection of digitized yearbooks.&amp;nbsp; &lt;a href="https://binghamton.libwizard.com/id/c6121588e483da04f66dba76f0460bb5"&gt;Please share comments via our feedback form&lt;/a&gt;.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Acknowledgment of sensitive content&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Binghamton University Libraries provide digital access to select materials held within the Special Collections department. &lt;span&gt;Historical yearbooks provide a vibrant window into life at the University.&lt;/span&gt; However, they also expose insensitive, and at times offensive, racial and gender stereotypes that, though once commonplace, are now acknowledged to cause harm. The Libraries have chosen to make these volumes available as part of the historical record but the Libraries do not support or agree with the harmful narratives that can be found in these volumes. &lt;a href="https://www.binghamton.edu/libraries/about/collections/digital/"&gt;Digital Collections&lt;/a&gt; are created for educational and historical purposes only. It is our intention to present the content as it originally appeared.&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39023">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;The yearbooks in this collection are copyrighted. If you want to reuse any material in this collection you must seek permission, or decide if your purpose can qualify as fair use under the U.S. Copyright Law Section 107. If you think copyright or privacy has been violated, the University Libraries will investigate the issue. Please see our take down request policy.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;If using any materials in this online digital collection for educational or research purposes, please cite accordingly. When citing documents, researchers / educators should credit Special Collections as the custodian of the collection.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The following is a suggested citation: Binghamton University Yearbooks Digital Collection, [yearbook title and year], Special Collections, Binghamton University Libraries.”&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39024">
                  <text>1948-1972</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="117">
              <name>Is Part Of</name>
              <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50596">
                  <text>&lt;a href="https://archivesspace.binghamton.edu/public/repositories/2/archival_objects/38366" target="_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;Binghamton University Student Publications: Yearbook, 1948- present&lt;/a&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="32">
      <name>Template: PDF</name>
      <description>Choose this for any item where the file type is PDF. This template and others do not support mixed file types (PDF and image attached to same item). If you have mixed file types, you can either create another Omeka item or contact Digital Initiatives for assistance converting from pdf to image or vice versa.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="81">
          <name>Accessibility</name>
          <description>Copy/Paste below: &#13;
Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45641">
              <text>Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="58">
          <name>Collection</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52304">
              <text>Binghamton University Yearbooks</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Digital Format</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52305">
              <text>PDF</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="54">
          <name>Identifier</name>
          <description>dc:identifier</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52306">
              <text>THE COLONIST_1952.pdf</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="139">
          <name>PDF Layout</name>
          <description>This field specifies how the pages of the PDF will be laid out. Enter only the CASE SENSITIVE keyword without quotation marks. [default: 'FacingContinuous']&#13;
Options:&#13;
'Single' - Only the entire current page will be visible and Zoom will be set to page width.&#13;
'Continuous' - All pages are visible in one scrollable column and Zoom will be set to page width.&#13;
'Facing' - Up to two full pages will be visible and Zoom will be set to page height.&#13;
'FacingContinuous' - All pages visible in two scrollable columns and Zoom will be set to page height.&#13;
'FacingCover' - All pages visible as whole pages, with an even numbered page rendered first. (i.e. The first page of the document is rendered by itself on the right side of the viewer to simulate a book cover.)&#13;
'FacingCoverContinuous' - All pages visible in two scrollable columns, with an even numbered page rendered first. (i.e. The first page of the document is rendered by itself on the right side of the viewer to simulate a book cover.)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52307">
              <text>FacingCoverContinuous</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38794">
                <text>Colonist 1952</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38795">
                <text>State University of New York at Binghamton -- Students&#13;
school yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38800">
                <text>Binghamton, N.Y. : Harpur College ; Binghamton, N.Y. : State University of New York at Binghamton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38802">
                <text>State University of New York at Binghamton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38803">
                <text>1952</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38804">
                <text>In Copyright</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45996">
                <text>Student yearbook of Triple Cities College (1948- 1950), Harpur College (1951- 1965), and the State University of New York at Binghamton (1966- present).</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2483" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="13691">
        <src>https://omeka.binghamton.edu/omeka/files/original/d87aa02a1b59381b9df7b960ea48f7bf.pdf</src>
        <authentication>929bdf37babded8735ef573c867a167f</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="68">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="52298">
                    <text>���'; J )e J ic a li o n

•

'

Too man y time s, a Yea rboo k was tes
holl ow wor ds in desc ribin g the
qual ifica tion s of the man or wom an
to who m thei r boo k is ded icat ed. We
shal l mak e no effo rt to justify our
choi ce save to say that we feel that
as
pres iden t of the Stat e Univ ersit y of
New York, Will iam Carl son hold s the
succ ess or failu re of our scho ol in his
han d and subs eque ntly hold s the futu
re
of this year boo k. We ded icat e this
boo k to him in the hop e that the plan
s
bein g form ed with in our wall s will one
day beco me real .
Sinc erel y,
THE STAFF OF THE 195 3 COL ONI ST

�5-oreworJ
To capture the spirit of a college is a task that
requires not· a ph rase but a lifetime. The spirit of our
college is a new one, still expanding, still maturing.
It is an intangible feeling of hope and yearning for
prog ress. Just whet her our expectations will be realized or not is a question t hat must be answered by
the futu re. A new campus and new b uildings seem
to be gradually ma terializing, but it is not these two
factors that wil l gua rantee the success of our school.
To become a significant part of our community
we must develop our relations with the people and
industries around us. Today we are an institution

Dedication
Provost's Statem ent
Admin istration
Faculty
Athletics
Student Body
Activities
Social Clubs
Seniors
Advertisements

striving lo make our school a unit within itself with
joint co-operation between students and their teachers. Tom morrow we must cement our relations with
the community and make the whole area realize the
importance of being a college community.
It is the ambition of this book to present to its
reade rs the atmosphere o f common effort and common results that is a feature of our school. Behind
our doors we are a small town, living, working and
enjoying ourselves together in a friendly and informal way. Someday, perhaps there will be no doors.

The Editor

4
6
7
13
19

30
36
56
66
81

�~rorn the

j:}ro vo1l

The Class of 1953 shares with young and vigorous State University of New York the passing of a
five year mileston e.
You are members of Harpur's fifth graduati ng
class, its third as part of State University, while the
University, as an entity, has also achieved five years
of progress since its founding in 1948.
You are leaving the ranks of some 33,000 students which this year placed your State University
seventh among the country' s universities, and you
join, with more than 600 alumni of Harpur, the thousands of State University graduate s gainfully active

in so many producti ve fields of endeavo r.
In spite of our youth, graduate s of Harpur hove
establish ed themselv es well and we hope that you,
as have your predeces sors, look back upon your hard
work with nostalgic pleasure .
We know that a brood and solid foundati on for
on outstand ing college in a great universit y hos been
laid that promises a bright future for your alma
mater.
Our sincere wishes go with you, the Class of '53,
for the very best of individua l and personal futures.
Glenn G. Bartle

�•

tn

e
Faculty and
Administration

er

�Dr. Wolter J. Mehl
Dean of Students

Dr. Jock F. Kimball
Director of Evening Sessions
Acting Registrar

Dr. John M. O' Brien
Business Officer

8

�Miss Mory R. Moore

Counselor of Students

Aysel Searles, Jr.

Admissions Counselor

Michael N. Scelsi

Director of Public Relations

Patrick J. Carolan

Counselor of Athletics

9

�Herbert L. Leet
Librarian

Dr. John M. Mallory, College Ph ysician,
and Mrs. Anne Meade Gormley, College Nurse
10

��The Secretaries

Cafeteria Staff

12

��SIDNEY P. ALBERT
Assisant Professor of Philosophy

ALDO S. BERNARDO
Assistant Professor of Italian

ERIC BRUNGER
Instructor in History

LEWIS M. ALEXANDER
Assistant Professor of Geography

ROBERT N. BERRYMAN
Instructor in Psychology

L. B"ICE BUCKLIN
Professor of
mance Languages

Assista~t

JOSEPH BEAVER
Assistant Professor of English

MICHAEL BOCHNAK
Instructor in Russian

Ro·

WILLIAM L. CLAFF
Assistant Professor of Business Marketing ; Acting Chair·
man, Division of Busine~s Ad·
ministration

14

JOHN P BELNIAK
Assistan Professor of Political
Science

CLEMENT G BOWERS
lecturer, Botany

�WILLIAM B. COATE
Assistant Professor al Psychology

MARION P. EMERSON
Assisant Professor of Mathmotics

RALPH E. DIGMAN
Assistant Professor al Geology

'

HAROLD T. FAGIN
Assistant Professor of Psychology

VINCENT FREIMARCK
Assistant Professor al English

JACOB EDELHEIT
Assistant Professor al Business Law

WAYNE S FARROW
Assistant Professor al Theater

J . ALEX GILFILLAN
Ass'&gt;ciate Professor al Music

15

JACOB FISCHTHAL
Assistant Professor of Biology

ALBERT V. HOUSE
Professor of History; Choir·
man, History Deportment

�BERNARD F. HUPPE
Professor of English

HARRY B. LINCOLN
Assistont Professor of Music

MAX METLAY
Assistant Professor of Chemistry

JAMES R. F. KENT
Associate Professor of Mothmotics; Chairman of Mothmotics Deportment

KENNETfi C. LINDSA'l'
Assistant Professor of Art History

JOSEPH V. MC KENNA
Assistant Professor of Industrial Monagement

16

RODNEY K. KETCHAM
Auociote Professor of French;
Chairman, Division of Humanities

OTAKAR MACHOTKA
Professor of Sociology

JOHN M. NATALE
Athletic Counselor

LAURENCE E. LEAMER
Associate Professor of Econo·

mic.s

SEYMOUR Z. MANN
Assistant Professor of Politi·
col Science

JOHN M. O ' BRIEN
Associate Professor of Ind••·
trial Relations

�JACOB OSER
Assistan t Professo r of Economics

PHILIP M. PIAKER
Assistan t Profess or of Accounting

JACK ROLLOW
Assistan t Professo r of English

MARTIN A. PAUL
Professo r of Chemistr y; Choirman of Chemist ry Department

LAWRENCE F. PISANI
Assistan t Professo r of Sociology; Choirmo n of Sociolog y
Departm ent

FREDERICK C. ST. AUBYN
Assistant Professo r of French

ORVAL L. PERRY
Instructo r in Philosop hy

ROBERT H. PENFIELD
Assistan t Professo r of Physics

EDWARD R. POMERO Y
Instructo r in Art

ROBERT W RAFUSE
Associat e Professo r of Political Science; Chairma n of Div1S1on of Social Sciences ;
Chairma n of Departm ent of
Political Science

MILDRED SCHILLI G-HACKETT
lecturer, Biology and Nursing

17

GLADYS A. SEDA
Instructo r in Spanish

�G. RALPH SMITH
Chairman of Economics Deportment

HILDA C. SMITH

JOHN S. WELD
Assistant Professor of English;
Chairman of English Deport·
ment

JOSEPH E. VAN RIPER
Professor of Geography

Instructor in Economics

JAMES H. WILMOUTH
Associate Professor of Biology; Chairman of Biology
Deportment, Chairman of Division of Sciences

18

PAUL WEIGAND
Assi stant Professor of Germon; Chai rman of Foreign
Language Deportment

FRANCIS M . WRIGHT
Assistant Professor of Moth-

motic.s

�or

Basketball and Tennis
Cross Country and Track
Golf
Intramural Sports

John Natale
P. J. Carolan
John Budd
John Natale

�Clockwise: Bill Hawver, Gene Cross, Patti Lewis, M.
Bernstein, Kitty Koleko , Kathy Hickey.

With the ever increasing dissappoi ntments
suffered by this year's basketbal l squad, the
students were forced to cheer home defeats
and try to give encourag ement to on undermanned and for the most port, outclassed team
whose chances for victory were either slim or
out of the question.
It is the job of cheerlead ers to lead the supporters of a team in the raising of the teams

spirit when the going is rough and to ride the
victory wagon when the school team begins to
roll over its opponent s. Perhaps our basketbal l
team did not live up to expectatio ns, but one
con never soy that their cheerlead ers locked
enthusiast ic support. Every home game was
made a little brighter by the presence of these
hardwork ing students.

20

�Top: Art Pratt, Cooch Carolan, Bernie Gruzlewski; Bottom: Ron Thomos, John Sponoble.

Although Harpur's undermanned Cross-Country
team was unable to wi n any dual meets in 1952, the

of his life, Ron finished second in the LeMoyne Invi tational. Ron defeated Oswego, Hamilton and Scranton and was edged by Dick Gilchrist of Hartwick for
his only loss in dual competition. Captain Art Pratt

season was brightened by the sensational running of
Freshman Ron Thomas, who captured first place in
3 out of the 4 meets. With a team record of no wins

and Thomas were the only ones receiving letters in
Cross-Country

and four losses, Thomas along with his 3 victories, set
-:ine course record and in the first Cross-Country race

21

��- --.....---

I

'ljear
Those were the! " ups and downs". The statistics
show that Joe Robilotto wound up as scoring leader
with 269 points in 18 games for a 14. 9 average . The
jet-haired back court star hos been e lected captain
for the 53-54 season and also received the " Player
of the Year" award for his e fforts. Earle White was
close behind Robilotto with a 12.8 average in one
less game. Mirone Klysh racked up the best all-round
average for the team with leading percentages of
.361 from the field and .708 from the free-throw Ii ne.
Lettermen were Robilotto, White, Klysh, Jim Collins, Fronk Byrne, Bob Dyer, Hal Meaker, Walt
Combs and player-mgr., Tony Vetrano.

Harpur's luck-scorned team finished its worst season in college history with a 1-17 record to show for
its efforts. The hoopsters look their one win in the
sixth game against Geneseo State Teachers College,
66-60.
They lost 'em by a milli on and came as close as
whi skers. Lycoming ro lled the green and while 11249, selling a new record for their college in scoring
and Oneonta's Fran Greene dumped in a couple of
foul shots in the final 30 seconds to beat the Notalemen, 71-69. A single bucket mode the difference
when Mansfield clipped them, 87-85 in overtime.
Harpur led until the final six seconds, when Mountaineer center Steve Jurnack lapped in a rebound to
tie it up and then led his squad on to the win.

23

�Y.ar
In the above picture, Cooch John Natale and
1953-1954 Captain Joe Robillitto pion strategy for
next season. Hoping to better this year's mark of
seventeen losses opposite a single victory, Cooch Natale looks forward to a new group of Freshmen plus
his returning lettermen in order to present a representative team for Horpur.

Robilotto, one of the main cogs in Horpur's inadequate offense, should continue his scoring a nd
driving and perhaps lead on improved Colonial basketball team to more than theil' shore of wins.

24

�Top-L. to R.: Milt Bernstein, Kathy Hickey, Gene Cross
Bottom-L. to R.: Kitty Kaleka, Patti Lewis, Bill Hawver

Stiff CfwerJ
25

��v

....,

Top (l-R) Coach John Natale, George Gifford, Charley Keane, Joe NeJame, Frank Byrne, Dick Fox (Mg r.
Bottom (l·R ) Co-Capt. Jim Parsons, Chick Rideout, Henry Johnson , Co-Capt. Ken Franklin.

The Schedule
C.ote
Apr. 25
M oy 2
M oy 6
Moy 9
Moy 13
Moy 14
Moy 16

O pponent
Champlain

Ploce
Away

Hobo rt
Ut ica
Utica
Hartwick

Away
Away
Home
Away

Hobo rt

Away

Lycoming

Away

Cort land

Home

St. Bonaventure
Hartwick

Home

Hor.

THE 1953 SEASON

Opp.
Rain

The single bright spot in o gloomy Horpur Athletic picture proved to be Cooc~ John Natale' s Varsity Tennis Squad.
After their first 2 matches were rained qui, the

Ro in

5
6

5
4
7

2
1

0

Colonials scored 7 straight victories to become the
first undefeated teom in 3 years of Horpur sports.
Co-Captain Ken Franklin led the Horpur Squad in
'53, followed by Fronk Byrne, Chorley Keane , CoCopt. Jim Parsons ond Frosh sensation, Joe NeJome.
Other Varsity Squad members were: Chick Rideout
Henry Johnson ond George G ifford . Dick Fox carried
out the duties of manager. Jim Parsons wos elected
Captain for 1954.

3

0

(forfeit)
Moy 19
Moy 2 1
Moy 23
June 15:

5
2
4
3
4
Home
3
Eastern lntercollegiotes ot West Point

27

�Top (l ·R) Capt. Joe Delmar, R. Ro mankiewicz, Coach Budd, M. Swartwood. Bottom (l ·R) Medali•t Joe Nes·
to r, Don Strope, Earle White.

THE SEASON

The Schedule
Date
Apr. 25
Apr. 29
May 2
May 6
May 9
May 19
May 23

Opponent
St. Bonaventure
l e Moyne
Hobart
Oswego
Oswego
Cortland
Champlain

Place
Home
Home
Away
Away
Away
Away
Away

Ha r.
5
3%
3
4

51/i
5
2

John Budd a nd Company started off in great
fashion as they defeated St. Bonaventure, 5-4. However, after this, the linksmen began to slip as far as
victories were concerned and wound up the year with
a 3-3-1 record and gave reason for Coach Budd to
look optimistically towards the 1954 season . With
only Captain Joe Delmar and Ben Eels to graduate,
Mr. Budd has Joe Nestor, Marsh Swartwood, Earle
White, Don Strope, and Ray Romankiewicz to build
a strong team around .

Opp.
4

5%
3
5
3%
4

7

28

����Senior Class President,
Bob Gollagher , President of the Freshmen Class gets the word from
e Class President, Tony
Charles Aswad, Junior Class President, Pete Zayoc, and Sophomor
Vetiano.

The Freshma n class far outnumb ers all others on campus. This proved to be extremel y helpful in enabling them
to win the annual Frosh-Soph Rivalry, remove their beanies
and so become people again (rather than remain " greenies" for two more weeks).
They showed the expected Freshma n spirit by turning on the Sophom ores who removed their shoes as a
penalty for doffing their beanies too soon. (Several unprepared Sophom ores soon found themselv es shoeless, too.)
The Freshma n class has, for the first time, sponsore d
a pep rally which was held on the night before the first
basketba ll game. It began at EJ on North Street, paraded
down Washing ton Avenue by torchligh t, and ended with
a bonfire in Harrison Field and refreshm ents in the cafeteria.
The Frosh have all been busy studying , partying , and
deciding which of their superflu ous (more than the limit
of three) activities to drop.

32

�" James Baker and Barbara McMaha n, .incom Ing f reshmen, get acquainted over a Coke."

33

�1955
The Sophomore class is a busy and active one. The
Sophomores were in charge of the Freshman orientation,
and were able to put into effect some suggestions that they
thought of when they went through the mill as Freshmenfor instance, the coke dance was their idea.
Continuing its early-in-the-year activity, it planned
and organized the Student-Faculty Reception, with cookies,
punch, and music.
In charge of the beanie situation, they did the best
job of enforcing that hos yet been done, thinking of novel
and painless methods of doing so- toking shoes away from
oil beonieless Frosh. This climaxed in the Frosh-Soph
Rivalry which determined whether or not the beanies were
to be worn for two weeks longer or not. The Frosh won
by sheer numbers, but a good time was hod by oil.
The Sophomores and Freshmen joined forces in holding a Frosh-Soph party during the lull between Thanksgiving and Christmas.

34

�1954
The Junior Class, for the first time, watched
the beanie activity (which was begun in their
freshman year) from the sidelines. However,
they did participate in the Frosh-Soph Rivalry
in the blow ball contest. They proved to have
the most long -winded officers in the school! The
officers of the Junior Class downed those of the
Senior Class, and also defeated a facul ty b lowing team.
The Juniors sponsored a Jam Session in
November. The music-accordion, piano, drums,
horns, strings was provided by students, while
stu dent actors and singers displayed their
talents.

35

��~!'.Fw~1 ~

LOUNGE

;..:&gt;

37

��J. Parsons, J. Pur·
First row: T. Matias, I. Crass, G. Rouff, J. Drysdale, C. Hickey. J. Sullivan. Second row : J. Salmi, C. Bartlett,
tell, M. Reynalds, P. Place, C. Lesko, J. Grogan.

us g

As Ike and Adlai traded punches in th e na tional
ring , Gil Rouff and Ken Franklin battled f0r the title
of United Student Government president at Harpur.
Election platforms rang in the rafters of the EJAA
Recreation Center. After a heated campaign, Gil " I
shall go to Albany"Rouff was elected.
This year, the USG added two new offices, those
of advocate ond corresponding secretary. The Student-Faculty Reception, sponsored by the USG, was
its usual success; the Mistletoe Ball and the Spring
Week-end, USG projects, were also successes. The
Campus Chest, headed by the vice president, zoomed
to new heights.
The USG started its business year by attending
the National Student Association conference at Skidmore. Charles Aswad, last year's USG president, is
currently president of the New York State R~gional

OFFICERS
Gilbert Rouff
James Drysdale
Gene Cross
Cathleen Hickey
Tom Matias
Jack Sullivan
John Salmi
Connie Bartlett
James Parsons
arge
Members-at-L
Junior
Joan Purtell
arge
Sophomore Members-at-L
Mickey Reynolds
Pat Place
Freshman Members-at-L arge Jomes Grogan
Carol Leskovich

President
Vice-President
Recording Secretary
Correspondin g Secrntary
Treasurer
Advocate
Senior Members-at-L arge

NSA.
The Harpur USG was active in attempting to
promote unification of the teachers' colleges with
Champlain and Harpur. With lengthy arguments over
minor details and complete-well, almost completeaccordance on the major issues, the USG can chalk
up another successful year.

39

�·-: ·.
l'

\

\

/\

8. Cowon, J. Porsons

40

Seated: A. Ellsworth. Standing: P. Place, H. Moffatt, W.
Knop, P. Pendell, L. Fisher.

�C. Keane, J. Par·
First row: P. Place, R. Comp, E. Thur&gt;ton, S. Comp, H. Moffatt, Second row: E. Combs, D. O 'Connell, P Pendell,
sons, A. Ellsworth.

This year ho s been o test year: to see whether
or not the COLONIST could stand on its own feet;
whe:1ther or not it could give the year book to the
students ot o lower cost, without hurting its quality;
whether or not students would put the time ond work
into it necessary for o successful book. We owe
much to the voice of experience that Dr. Digman has

OFFICERS

Editor-in-Chief
Business Manager
Managing Editors
Copy Editor
Layout Editor
Advertising Manager
Sales Manager
Photograph y

Art Editor

Charles Keane
Jomes Parsons
Norman Tiffany
Beverly Cowan
Ruth Camp
Danny O 'Connell
John Pier

provided.
The COLONIST got under woy with experienced
major officers, novice minor officers, and o staff, most
of which wos inexperienced , consisting in large part
of hardworking Freshmen. It is to this staff that the
college owes o vote of appreciation.
For the first time, the COLONIST was able to
hove most of the photographic needs handled by
students on the staff, who worked long and hard.
The COLONIST would like to give special recognition to John Zwierzynski, Don Mattis, ond their staff

Fronk Underwood
John Zwierzynsk i
Don Mattis
Bill Rincker
Eunice Combs

for their loyal effort.
In 1951, the COLONIST wos d~scribed os being
" no longer on 1nfont . . . but, like the college, still
young. It is having a difficult adolescence, too ...".
Perhaps now, in 1953, the COLONIST cou ld be described os emerging from that "difficult adolescence" .
We hope so.
41

�~I

~

1

n

' I 11 ,

·• "'*' L:

'

Seated: Fronk Nemio. Sta n d ing: Coral l eskovich , Mr. Scelsi.

�-----

S. Flynn, J l o Mothe, R. Comp, P. Place, E. Thurston,
First row: M. Senio, S. Abromowitz , B. Gallaghe r, J Grogon. Second row:
F. Nemio, G. Rouff.
C. l e•kovich , J . Greenwood . Third row: C. Whitman , W. Blotter, 0 . O' Connell,

OFFICERS
Despite jokes about " idiot editors" and weekly th reats
of resignatio n, the Colonial News staff managed to
put out the CN every week.

Editor-in-Chief
*Editor- in-Chief
Business Manage r
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Copy Editor
News Editor
Circulation Editor

*Second Semester

Frank ~emia
Carol Leskovich
William Hawver
Ellen Thurston
Stephen Abramo witz
Ruth Camp
Patricia Place
Mike Senio

43

A new policy we nt into effect this year, whereby the
staff elected its own editor, subject to approval of a
faculty committee . The CN staff bestowed the honor
on Frank Nemia and Carol Leskovich.
For th e first time, the CN blossome d into colo r
with its green inked Christmas issue.
Fo llowing the general trend in the coll ege of
wider co-operat ion with other colleges, the paper
sent delegates to the Hera ld Tribune Forum which
was held for college newspape rs in October.
The CN staff has attempted to do its part in keeping the student body aware of the issues and problems that face it, and , at the same time, to fulfill its
other function of keeping them well -informed as to
the variou-s campus doings. The staff hopes that it
has done so, and at the same time, " has not infuriated more than half of the administr ation and faculty
in so doing."

�44

�Fir$I row: W . Knop, l. Fisher, G . Rouff. P. Colvin, S. Flynn . Secondrow : 8. Cowan, J. Grogan, C. Leskovich, E. Thurston, H Mof·
latt, A . Ellsworth. Third row : K. Torrence, C . Homilton, R. Bollard, M. Senio, C. Keane, 8. Goslin, D. Foy, N. Tiffany, V Johnson .

'52-' 53 and the opening of the Harpur College
Theater .. . A place for Colonial Players, the organization and culmination of all dramatic efforts to experiment in lighting, stage craft, sound, make-up,
acting, properties, advertising, costumes, prompting.
Inauguration of the new theater took place in
January with George Batson's " Ramshackle Inn", a
mystery-farce with plenty of gangsters and toting
around of dead bodies . . . directed by Wayne Far·
row of the drama deportment with lee Fisher as
student director.
And in the spring, all efforts bend towards the
production of the all-college Spring Revue . . remember our very own music and choreography, Har·
pur in a tent, the cavorting faculty, Aswad and his
inimitable fashion, Tom Matias as " the man in the
squishy boots", and Harpur in the future . . . And
after it's all over, a banquet for celebrating our
accomplishments and a chance to do it all over again
for those who saw the show from backstage.
We see someday a new theater, different plays,
different CP stars, but still the same spirit, the same
backstage and footlight fun.

OFFICERS
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer

Ellen Thurston
James Grogan
Carol Leskovich
Helen Moffatt

45

�SLAVIC

GERMAN

First row C Aswad, P Zayac, A. Hartman, D. Short, C Sedlok,
R. Merrell. Second row: A. Van Gordon, K. Torreoce, V John·
son, Dr Weigand, M. Topp, Y West, P. Colvin, J. Greene. Third
row H. Heriog, A. Pratt, J . Sklute, C Keane, H. Meaker.

First row: C Lesko, Mr Bochnok, M Klysh, M. Homo Second
row M. Chipak, A Bussa, J Monzyk, C Mossor. l Silverstein,
J loposky, R Newlon, C leskovich.

OFFICERS

The Foreign language Society, established a year
ago, co-ordinates the activities of the various language chapters, which ore mainly conversational

Program Chairman
Secretary-Treasurer

groups. Each chapter has a member on the Society
panel.

David Shqrt
Marlea Homa

They have presented a varied program this year:
a lecture on " The Notional Characteristics of Euro-

Art Hartman

pean Art" by Dr. Lindsay, a recita l of contemporary
European music by Christine Lindsay, a program of
folk music presented by Dr. and Mrs. Lincoln, and a

Board:
German Chapt er
Ita lian Chapt er
Slavic Chapter

Eleanor Roma

French Chapter

laura Marog lio

Spanish Chapter

Cyri l Massar

lecture on " Existensionalism by Dr. Albert.
In March, the high point of their year's activities
is International Night, in which all members of all

Kim Gianakouros

chapters participate in on evening of entertainment.
It's a fun-for-all evening-e.g everything from the
Con-Can to " Faustus", with foreign foods to match.

46

�ITALIAN

FRENCH

Firs/ row: M. Celeste, E. Romo, Dr Bernardo, P. Audino. Second
row: A.

Firs/ row· R. Romonkiewcz. l. Koredes, M. Burnstein, C Hronis,
R. Reynolds Second row. R. Ferris. D. Kosprowitz, M Myzolek,
A. Hills. D. Dodd, l. Moroglio, l. Kochur

VPtrono, R. Newton, R. DiPietro, R. Lisi, M. Iannone,

J . Mortin .

Miss Sedo, A. Vetrano, R. Newlon, B. McMahon Mr Bucklin. Second ro w
DePersis, C. Moher, C. Moore, E. White, J Greenwood, M Homo.

Firs/ row

47

R Lisi, B. Eells, J,

�MEMBERS

Its other aspect, originally Clarendon Club, is
concerned with the writing and publication of " Clarendon", the college literary magazine which is published once or twice a year, and which is student
written. Here, again, although its main contributors
ore among Pentongle members, any ambitious student may submit his work.

Pentangle members shown in the picture
are: He len Moffatt, Joanne Foody, Ellen Thurston, Tom Matias, Charles Keane, Charles
Hamilton, and James Parsons.
All faculty members of the English Department serve as advisors to the group.

Pentongle Club was formed in the 1950-1951
school year when the Clarendon Club, which was
founded in 1948, and the English Club, merged.
Consequently , Pentangle has two different aspects, both of which ore of equal importance.
There is that side of Pentongle which is the
original Engl ish Club which meets to discuss literature
- e.g. that meeting in the Legion on a rainy night
for the discussion of " From Here to Eternity". Although the club is composed mainly of English
majors, all interested students are welcome to join
or to attend meetings.

48

The Mixed Chorus, directed by Dr. Horry Lincoln,
performs a valuable service for both the college and
the community. A Christmas concert was presented
before the student body, and a similar program was
broadcast over Station WENE. Several broadcasts
were also mode during the spring semester.
The Madrigal Group is composed of those students who ore interested in choral literature and who
desire to work more intensively along this line tha n
the y can by participating in Mixed Chorus alone.
Under the direction of Dr. Lincoln, the group studies
secular choral music from all periods and performs
before community and student audiences.

�F1rsl row• W. Knop, A Popeck, S. Galvin, Y West, K. Kolecko, M. Monn, J Gr~ene, 8. Moes, S. Comp, l. Kochur, 8. Porciok.
Second row• Dr. Lincoln, P Lewis. 8. Cowan, 8. McMahon, R Armstrong, 0. Wilson, N. Tiffany, M. 8ernsrein, D. Short, J. Pier,

8. Gosline, l. McWherter, E. White, J. Greenwood, A. Hills, C. Sedlak S. Flynn.

49

�F1rst row· 0 . Burch, N . Tiffany, Rev. Bouton, R. Stout, S. Steve ns, A Hills . Se cond row: E. Mann , G . Boko•h, B. Moos. P. Lewis,
C Prentice, D.

President
Vice- President
Secretory
Chaplain
Publicity Chairman

The name " Agapeans" is derived from a Greek
word that means " brotherly love" . The organization
is the Protestant society on campus which has the
purpose of furthering the understanding of the various Protestant denominations. The President of the
Endicott Ministerial Association automatically becomes adviser to the group. This year, the Reverend
Leon Bouton, pastor of First Methodist Church in Endicott, has played a vital role in the success of the
club' s activities.
Their program has consisted of studying the various protestant denominations, as well as studying
different religions, including Judaism and Catholicism. They have been hosts to Rabbi Hurwitz of
Temple Israel and to Father Dacey of Saint Anthony' s
Church.
The Agapeans sponsored luncheon meetings at
which guest speakers addressed all students interested in attending. They also sponsored their annual
Christmas program for Protestant students on campus.

Richard Stout
Norman Tiffany
Sally Stevens
Alberto Hills
Lorry Bursch

50

�First row· D. Klenovic, C. Fisk, S. Gelvin, 8 . McMahon, S. Flyrn. Second row: A. Ellsworlh, J. King, R. Koenig, D. Carolan. Third
row: E. Moure, K. Torrance, 8. Mochulski, G. leskovich, 8. Murphy, J . Sullivan, C. Keane, 8. Gruzlewski, R. Romankiewcz. 8. Parciak, N. 8ussalini.

President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Chaplain

Lee Turner
Ray Koenig
Jeannette King
Fred Cook
Robert Barno

The Newman Club, which was organized in 1948
for the purpose of promoting Catholic cultu re and
fellowship on campus, does much to achieve th is
goal.
They hold discussions, show films, and listen to
outside speakers at their meetings. Several times a
year, they sponsor Communion breakfasts.
The first of these Communion breakfasts was held
in December this year, with breakfast at the Shangrila at which John O'Loughlin, an Endicott police
judge, was guest speaker.
Together with the Agapeans, they sponsored a
week on compus during which religious discussions
and special meetings were held.
Their chaplain is Father Aylesworth of Christ the
King Church in Endwell, who visits the college on
one afternoon a week to confer with students on their
various problems.

�Dragon Society, which was established in the
spring of 1950, is the honor society on campus. It
consists of juniors and seniors who have maintained a
"C" average while participating in extra curricular
activities.
Certain rules have been set up to help all deserving students to become members-for instance, while
175 points are the basic requirement for membership,
transferred juniors need only 150 , and transferred
sophomores need 125 . The activities, for each of
which a specified number of points is given, must be
distributed between at least two fields, and not more
than 70% of the total number of honor points may
be from a single category, such as athletics.
Members for 1953, who, although now seniors,
were tapped and received their pins at last year's
Spring Soiree, while still juniors, are: Charles Keane,
Harold Bateman, Daniel O'Connell, Charles Aswad,
Michael Kearsey, Gilbert Rouff, Eunice Combs, Janet
Conklin, Joanne Foody and Helen Moffatt.

�This year, Gavel Club hos come into its own. It
is on o rganization composed of the presidents of a ll
other on-campus organizations and meets once each
month.
The organization hos drown up and accepted a
constitution, which mode up a major port of its wor k
this year.
In its main capacity os o coordinating device, it
hos been confronted with the problem of "rushing"
regulations. It hos aimed toward the formation of on
inter-fraterna l council.
Gavel Club, on assistant to the Uni ted Studen t
Government, hos worked long ond hard, and hos
contributed much to the success of the Campus
Carnival.

53

�-.

---

First ro w : K Fronklin , R Wheeler. E. Monn, S. Stevens, B. Hawver, A . Popeck, B. Benjamin, H. Fioceo, M. Serko. Second row:
Dr Claf!, J . Delmor, D. O 'Connell, C. Anderson, J Levitt, K. Kipp, B. Morusich, R. Bollard, R. Gollough, Dr. Picker. Th ird row:
K Allen, B. Bennett, F. Aikel, W . Rideout, J Cohoo~. A Angeloulos, J . Meyrick, D. Booth, B. Moch ulski, R. Maples, B. Gruzlew·
ski, D. DuBrovo, H Homyak

President
Vice-President
Secretory
Treasurer
General Officer

The Business Administration Society, formerly the
Biz Aid Club, is composed of students who are studying all phases of business, and who are therefore
interested in business as a vocation. Full time, part
time, and evening students are included in the group.
Their main social functions are banquets at which
business men are the speakers. Their main purpose,
however, is not social.
On the more serious side, the society does much
to aid its members in learning more about the business world and to learn to use the knowledge that
they have gained.
This year, the organization's main project has
been a publication which was put out early in the
spring. This booklet is student written, a nd includes
articles on the various phases of business and on
current events in those fie lds, such as a new procedures in accou nting, a nd recent deve lopments in
the field of marketing.

William Bennett
William Hawver
Kingsley Allen
Adrea Popeck
James Drysdale

54

-

�mar oon

The Maroon Key is a unique organization on campus. Begun in
1948 by the Goliards, it aids the Athletic Department by acting as
hosts to visiting teams.

Alpha Phi Omega, the only national fraternity on campus,
is a service organization composed of former Boy Scouts.

55

���Firs t row : l. Kochur, C. leskovich, E. Thu rston, M. Homo, P. Ploc~. D. Klenovic, l. Koredes. Second row: S. Comp, J. Decker, Sec .;
J . King, Vice Pres.; J. Co nklin, Pre'-; R. Comp, Treas.; B. Moos, librarian; I. Cross, M. Monn. Third row: W. Knop, C. Bartlett,

H. Betz, J . Food y, Mrs. J . Alex Gilfillan , Adviser; G . Kriese l, B. Pord ok, D. Kosprowitz, D. Robinson, S. Flynn, F. Torrance, Mrs.
Jock Kimbol, A d~i ser; B. W estfall, E. Romo, B. McMahon, D. Vosb••ry, C Hronis, S. Galvin .

President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Librarian

Janet Conklin
Jeannette King
Joan Decker
Ruth Camp

Betty Maas

58

�Prl!s.; G Bakosh, Treas ; Y. We•t,
First row: P. Salvemini, Mrs Smith, Adviser; F. Sochor, Secy.; C. Sedlak, Vici! Pres.; E. Combs,
A. Ellsworth, J.
H. Bruyning. Second row : S. Steven" N. Bussolini, K. Kale ka, B. Cowan, J. Green, L. Maroglio, C. Hollenbeck,
Greenwood, C. Hicke y, P. Davi" A. Popeck, A. Hills, P. l ewis.

President
Vice-President
Correspond ing Secretory
Recording Secretory
Treasurer
Publicity Chairman
Chaplain

Eunice Combs
Cathy Sedlak
Jennie Vallone
Frances Sochor
Geraldine Bakosh
Rina Lisi
Laura Maroglio

�. Second row: R. Hutch ings, R. Reynolds,
First row: J. Buhoy, Corres. Secy.; L. Burnstein, A. Avedesion, C. Aswod, R. Romonkiewcz
F. Underwood, Chaplain; Th ird row: R.
R. Booth, Treas.; H. Bateman, Pres.; J. Drysdale, Vice Pres.; E. Cook, Recording Secy.;
Koloyjion, C. Lesko, R. Everett, W . Rincke r,
Golough, R. Dundon, W. Rideout, M. Reynolds, T. Palmer, T. Totolis, C. Walthers, C.
P Zayac, J . Zwieriynski, M. Swartwood.

Adelphi, ond most of the rest of the college, enjoyed itself of the Fall Mix- troditionoll y the first
social event of the yeor. They co-sponsor ed o party
with the Goliords; they hod their onnuol pre-Mistletoe Boll Cocktail Porty; they danced ot the Spring
Mix.
The Adelphi held their onnuol Founders' Doy Banquet in the spring, ond they held their two membership banquets at the beginnnig of eoch term.
In November, they took odvontoge of Horpur's
endemic pinochle fever, ond held o three-day pinochle tournament .
And who could ever forget those cute littlt&gt; Adelphi cheerleade rs ot the first bosketboll gome?

President
Vice-Pres ident
Recording Secretary
Correspo nding Secretary
Treasurer
General Officer
Chaplain

60

Harold Bateman
James Drysdale
Ed Cook
John Buhay
Richard Booth
Frank Nemia
Frank Underwoo d

�row: B. Eel~ , J. Schultz, D.
R. Koenig, Vice Pre"; H. Homyak, Treas.; Dr. Fischthal, Adviser; R. Ballard, Secy. Second
O' Conne ll, J. Welch, L. Turner, J . Salva.

First row:

Adloyho is the youngest of the social organizations on campus; The fact that those who, as Freshmen, founded the club, ore graduating this year,
brings home the realization of how young the club

Tom Norton
President
Ray Koenig
Vice-Pres ident
Bollard
Ray
Secretary
Correspo nding Secretary and Historian
Richard Maples
Mike Kearsey
Sergeant- at-Arms

61

actually is.
In this short time, they, too, hove some "firsts"
to their tredit- they started the first pep bond to
ploy ot o basketball game.
Although they hod o smaller membershi p than
that of several other clubs, they have token on active
port in school affairs . . . they "fielded " both a
bowling ond o softball team . . . They held their
onnuol pre-Christm as porty in December, ond, in the
spring, held o dance. They hod their annual end-ofthe term banquet in February.

�First row: 8. Benjomin, M. Senio, C. Lee, R. Dolson, A. Lock,
D Havle. Se cond row, Dr. Oser, R. Fox, H. Johnson, S. Abramo·
witz, R. Barno, R. Mee, J . Gabor, 8 . Ernest, D. Wilson, A.
Mandyck, P. Zicori, P. Kimonos.

r/Jacc acia

President
Vice-President
Secretory
Treasurer

Dick Newton
Bob Barno
Mike Senio
Barry Benjamin

62

Baccacia has a number of "flrsts" to its credit.
Founded in 1946, it was the first social organization
to sponsor an annual cash scholarship, which is given
to a deserving upper classman. The money for the
scholars~ip is raised through two dances.
Their first dance for this purpose was the Shipwreck Dance. The second dance, the Scholarship
Stomp,. was held in the spring, and is less informal.
They have two banquets, one in honor of Freshmen, and the other for their officers.
In-between-times, they hold their famous "tea
parties"-elegan t affairs indeed.

�First row: J . Pie.r, J . Jewell, R. Gollogher, J . Meyrick. Second row: J. Levitt, W . Hawver, N. Tiffany, K. Kipp, D. DuBrovo, C.
Whitman. Third row; J . Molt, C. Anderson, D . Bure~ . S. Kinney, C. Hamilton, W . Smith, P. Pendell, W. Blotter, M. Celeste,
B. Mochulski, J. Cocco.

The Dionysions, like their nomesoke, live up to
their motto of "In Mediis Rebus" . Since being chartered in 1948, they hove certoinly lived up to their
motto in serving the college, in producing leadership,
ond in enjoying themselves.
There exists within the Dionysions, o group known
os the Mad Hatters (from "Alice in Wonderland", of
course). These Mod Hatters brought themselves to the
school's attention with the Mad Hatter's Hop. As an
admission requirement, all who attended wore mod
hat creations of their own .. The results were astonishing- everything from lomp shodes that lighted to
crockery to towering gold poper creations.

63

�First row: J. Westfall, W. Gutgesell, J . Sklute, S. Rogan, F. Gifford. Second row: S. Rose, T. Matias. J. Sullivan, F. Cook, l,
Bursch, I. Creror. Th ird row: J. Grogan, M. leo~ e . J. Robillotto, M. Wesko, J. Thorne, J. Sponoble, C. Moore, J. Boker. J. lo·
posky, R. Bishop, F. Thomas, R. Merroll, A. Prall.

The first Goliards began during the twelfth and
thirteenth centuries as bands of wandering students.
The modern and local history of the Goliards begins
at Harpur in the fall of 1947.
These modern Goliards have a much better time
than did their ancestors. Their most famous party is
the Mardi Gras with its noise makers, horns, and hats.
As club activities, they had frosh parties, and a steak
dinner. They have an active alumni association with
which they had their New Year's party.
At the same time, they do more serious work
than did the first Goliards, such as Maroon Key, and
their Red Cross blood drive.

64

�1~

First row: W . Koche r, A. Walden, D. Short, M. Dewey, A. Hartman. Second row: J. De Persis, C. Dewan, W . Combs, W. Butts,
M. Sulich, l. McWherter.

S aieno
The Saiens originated in 1948 as a social organization open to mathematics and science majors, but
changed its policy when students from other departments asked admittance.
Their purpose is two-fold: to supplement members' social life, and on the more serious side, to
have lectures by outside speakers.
While the Saiens did not sponsor any open affairs
this year, they have kept themselves busy with club
social activities. Their program included a spaghetti
dinner in honor of their new membe rs, a clambake,
and a dance.

65

�And

,jo

we come

lo the end o/ the road. . .

�195 3

Some thing lo feme mter . ..

�- 7

I

/
ROBERT W . ANDERSON

ADAM ANGELOPULOS
Genera/ Business
Deposit, New York

Accounting
Vestal, New York
Alpha Phi Omega 1, 2, 3, 4

CHARLES N . ASWAD

Biology
Binghamton, New York
Adelphi 1, 2, 3, 4, Car. Sec. 2, Vice
Pres 3; USG 1, 2, Pres 3; Pres.
Senior Closs; For long Soc. 3, 4;
Germon Club 1, 2, 4; Gavel Club 3,
4; Rodia Work.hop 1, Pres. 2, 3;
Colonial News 1, 2; Colonist Editor·
iol Boord 4 ; Chorus 2; Glee Club
1, 2, 3; lnter·collegiote Mock Sen·
ote 3; Chairmon lower Tuition
Comm. 3; Spring Revue I, 2, 3, 4;
Intramural Football 1, 2; Intramural
Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Dragon Society
3, 4; Sec Faculty Student Assoc. 3;
Symposium 4; USNSA 3, 4; Senior
Delegate 3, Pres. NYS Region 4,
Chairman Not. Executive Comm. 4;
"Who's Who in American Colleges"

4

ROBERT H. BARBER

I
ROBERT BARNO

Physics

Social Sicence

Binghamton, New York

Endicott, New York

Germon Club 4

Boccocio 1, Sec. 2, Vice Pres 3, 4;
Intramural Sports 1, 2, 3, 4; Newmon Club 3, Sgt ot·Arms 4

68

�HAROLD M. BATEMAN
Genera/ Business
Endicott, N ew York

CONSTANCE BARTLETT

Psychology
Owego, New York

Class Sgt -at-Arms 1; Basketball 1,
2; Varsity H 2, 3 , Sgt.-at-Arms Out
ing Club 2; Adelph i 2, Sec. 3, Pres.
4; Vice Pres USG 3; Dragon Society
3, 4; Bus. Ad. Club 2, 3 ; Gavel
Club 4; Daddy 4; " Who's Who in
Amer Colleges" 4

Pandara~s 1, 2, 3, Pres. 4; Cla ss
Sec 4; Colonist 4; Ne wma n Club
1, 2, 3, 4

WILLIAM BENNETT

Ge neral Business
Vestal , N ew York
Alephi 2, 3 , 4, Bus Ad Club 1, 2
3, Pres, 4

MARY BRIGIOTT A

RICHARD BOOTH
Generol Business
Binghamton, N ew York

English
Binghamton, N ew York
Thalions 1, 2, 3

Adelphi 2 , 3, Treas. 4, Bus Ad
Club 2, 3 , 4; Spring Revue 3 ; lntramurol Sports 2, 3, 4

69

�-

J

LLEWELLYN R. BURGE

DONALD BURCH

A ccounting

Enonomics
Endicott, New York

Johnson City, New York

Dionysio 1, 2, Treas. 3, Member-al·
Lorge 4; Pin Topplers 3, 4 ; Spring
Revue 3, 4; Intramural Soft boll 2 , 3,
4, Football 4, Bosketboll 4, Volley·
boll 4

Married Veteran• Club

PATRICIA COLVIN

Psychology
Binghamton, New York
Tholions 1, Co r. Sec. 2; Cheerleod·
ing 2, 3, 4; G ermon Club 2, 4, Sec.
3; International Night 3 ; Colonial
Players 1, 2, 3, 4, "Goodbye My
fancy ", "The Amazons"; Chorus 1,
2; Colonist 1, 2; Spring Revue 1, 2,
4; Newmon Club

WALTER COMBS

EUNICE K. COMBS

Biology

Geology
Endicott, N ew York

Endicott, N ew York

Tholions 1, Vice Pres 2. Treas. 3.
Prl's 4 , Cheerleader 2, 3. 4; Ger·
man Club 1 2 3, Chorus 2, Outing
Club 1, Closs Sec 2 Govel Club 4 ·
Bo•ketboll 1 2

Varsity Boseboll 1, 2, 3 ; Varsity
Basketball 4; Soiens 2, 3, 4; G er·
man Club 2, 3; Varsity H 2, 3, 4;
lntromurol Football 2, 3, 4 ; In tro·
murol Basketball 3; O uting ' Club
Treas. 2, 3

70

�EDWARD COOK
Social Science
Endicott, New York

JANET CONKLIN
Mathematics
Binghamton, New York

Ad..-lphi 3, S..-c 4; N..-wmon Club
3, 4; Spanish Club 1, 2, Intramu ral
Football 3 4 BoskPtboll 3 , 4

USG 3; Dragon Society 3, 4; Pondorons 1, 2 , Treas. 3, Pres. 4;
French Club l , 2, Agopeons 1, 3 ,
Sec. 2; Senior Closs Treas. 4; Colonial News 1, 2, 3; Intercollegiate
Mock Senate 3; Delegate NYSNSA
Conference 3, 4; Gavel Club 4;
Spring Revue 2, 3, 4; Adelphi Scholarship 1;

'Wh o's Who in American

Colleges" 4

IMOGENE CROSS
Social Science
Binghamton, New York
Cheerleoding 1, 2, 3 Captain 4;
R~cording Sec. USG 4; Outing Club
1; French Club 2, Spring Revue l,
2; Sec. SRO 4; Closs Treas 2 ; Closs
Sec. 3; Colonial Players 2; Pondor·
ans 1, 2, 3, Vic" Pres 4

RODNEY DENNIS
Economics
Sayre, Po.

JOSEPH DELMAR
Accounting
Conklin, New York
Varsity Golf 1, Varsity H, Bus Ad.
Club 1, 2, 3, 4

71

�-~·

ROBERT EVERETT
General Business

JAMES A. DRYSDALE
Port Dickinson, New York

Port Crane, New York
Adelphi 2, 3, 4; Bus. Ad. Club 2, 4;
Intramural Football 1, Basketball 1

JOANNE M. FOODY
English
Binghamton, New York
Pandarans 1, 2, 4, Vice Pres 3; Pin
Topplcrs 3; Colonial Players 1, 2, 3 ,
"Goodbye My Fo"y", " The Rivals";
Spring Revue 1, 2, 3, 4; French Club
l; P~ntangle Club 3, 4; Colonial
News 3; Bus. Mgr. Calo~ist 3; Dragon Society 3, 4; Convocations Comm.
4; "Who's Who in American Colleges 4; International Night 4

KENNETH R. FRANKLIN
General Business

JOHN S. FINN
General Business
Binghamton, New York

Binghamton, New York

Bus. Ad. Club 2, 3; Dionysio 2, Pres.
3, Newman Club 2, 3

Tennis l, 2, 3, 4; Colonial News l,
Bus . Ad . Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Ping Pang;
Varsity H 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club;
Spring Revue, Debate Club

72

�..

CHARLES E. HAMILTON

DAVID GOODNOUGH

Socio/ Science

English
Binghamton, New York

Binghamton, New York

Coloniol News 2; Clarendon 1, 2;
Spanish Club 1; Italian Club 3, 4;
Pentangle 2, 3, 4

Pistol Club 1, 2, 4; Dionysia 4, Sgt.·
at-Arms 3; Spring Revue 2, 3, 4;
Alpha Phi Omega 2, 3 , 4 ; Pent·
angle 3, 4; Clarendon 3, 4; Inter·
national Relations Club 2; Colonial
Players 1, 2, 3 , 4; Stage Manager
3, 4

JOHN HARTIGAN

Foreign Language
Binghamton, New York
Foreign Language Club 1, 2, 3, 4;
Pentangle 1, 2, 3, 4

HAROLD HOMEK

HAROLD J. HERZOG

General Business

Geology
Binghamton, New York

Binghamton, New York

Adloyho 1, 2, 3, 4; Outing Club 3,
Pres 2; German Club 1, 2 3, Sgt ..
at·Arms 4; Varsity Track 1, Varsity
H 2 V:ce Pres. 3, Vic• Pres. Class
3 Glee Club 1, 2, 3

Adloyho 2, 3, 4; Bus.
1, 2, 3, 4

73

Ad

Club

�MICHAEL KEARSEY
General Business
Endicott, New York

JEANNETTE KING
Social Science
Binghamton, New York

Adloyho 2, 3, 4, Treos 1; Chorus
2, 3, Vice Pres. 1; Intramural Foot·
boll ond Softball 1, 2, 3; Pin Top·
piers 1, 3, Vice Pres. 2, 4, Bus Ad.
Club 1, 2, 3; Vice Pres Closs 2;
Class Sgt ·at-Arms 3, Spring Revue
2; USG 3; Drogon Society 3, 4

Pondorons 2, 3, Vice Pres. 4; New·
man Club 2, Sec 3, 4; Colonial
Players 2; French Club 3

CHARLES KEANE
English
Binghamton, New York

-.........

Goliards 4; JV Basketball 2, 3;
Varsity Tennis 3, 4; Colonial News
Sports Editor 3; Colonist Sports Edi·
tor 3, Editor-in-Chief 4; Spring Revue 3, 4; Clarendon 3, 4; German
Club 3, 4; Newm~n Club 2, 3, 4 ;
Dragon Society 3, 4 ; Colonial Ploy·
ers 4; " Ramshackle Inn ", Gavel
Club 4

MARSTON LA FRANCE
English
Windsor, New York

RAYMOND KOENIG
Accounting
Binghamton, New York
Adloyho 1, 2, 3,
Treas. Newmo r,
Pres Pres.; Bus
owliog 1 Spring

Clarendon
1, 2, 3, 4

4, Vice Pres Sec.,
Club 3, 4, Vice
Ad Club 2. 3 4;
Revue 1 3

74

1, 2, 3, 4; Pentongle

�ADELE McDEVITT
Mathematics

CHARLES LEE
Economics

Binghamton, New York

Thompson, Pennsylvania

Pin Topplers 3, 4, Sec. 1 2; Thal·

Boccacia 1. Vice Pres. 2, Pres. 3, 4;
Intramural Sports 1, 2, 3, 4 ; Ger·
man Club 3; Varsity Baseball 3;
Spring Revue 3, 4 ; Pin Topplers 3,
4; Vice Pres. Closs 4; Dragon So·
ciety 4.

ions 3, ec

1, Treas

2; Spring Re·

vue 3 4, Colonial Players 2, 3;
Outing Club l.

EDWARD McGLYNN
English
Binghamton, New York
News Editor Colonial News, 3;
Soiens 1, 2, 3. 4, English Club 1,

2, 3,

4.

CHARLES MARSH
Accounting

MARJORIE MANN
Economics

Johnson City, New Yark

Vestal, New York

75

�THOMAS MATIAS

W ILLIAM MARUSICH
General Business
Binghamton, New York

Social Science
Binghamton, New York
Goliords 1, Treos. 2, Sec 3 Pres.
4; Treas USG 4 , Rifle and Pitstol
Club Treas. 4; Spring Revue 3, 4;
Colonial Players 4; Pentogle 3, In·
tromurol Football 4; Intramural
Softboll 3; Summer Social Comm.
1, 3; Gavel Club 4; Moroon Key
1, 4 ; French Club 1.

Golf 1, 2, 3; Boseboll 4; Slavic
Club Vive Pres. 2, Pres. 3, 4; Fore·
ign long. Society 3, 4; Bus. Ad.
Club 3, 4; Adelphi 3, 4; Varsity
H 2, 3; Pin Topplers 3, 4; Govel
Club 3.

HELEN MOFFATT

English
Mattituck, New York
Tholions 1 Treos. 2, Pres 3; Pon·
dorons 4; Chorus 1 Colonial Ploy
ers 1, 2, 3, Treas. 4; Dreom Girl",
"The Amazons", "Goodbye My
Foney", " The Rivols", " Romshockle
Inn", " Animal Kingdom"; SRO 1,
2, 3; Vice Pres. 4; Pentongle 1,
Treas 2, 3, 4; Managing Editor
Clarendon 3; Mock Senate 3, 4 ;
lower Tuition Comm. 3; Scheduling
and Instruction Comm. 4; Pin Top·
piers 1, 2, Vice Pres. 3; Sec. 4 ;
Gavel Club 3, 4; Cheerleoding 1;
Colonist 3; Senior Editor 4 ; Closs
Pres. 1; Dragon Society 3 , 4;
"Who's Who in American Colleges"
11

4.

ROBERT B. NEWMAN

LEROY MORGAN

Biology

Psychology
Binghamton, New York

Binghamton, New York

Golden Circle.

Spring Revue 1, 2, Chorus 1, 2, 3;
lntromurol Softball; Adloyho 1, 3,
4; Pres. 2; German Club 1, 2, 3, 4.

76

�ANDREW M. PANDICH

DANIEL O 'CONNELL

Biology

General Business
Binghamton, New Yark

Binghamton, New York

Adloyho Sec. 1, Sgt.·ot-Arms 2, Historion 3, Pres. 4; Bus. Ad. Club 1,
3, 4; Newmon Club 4; Coloinol
News 3, 4; Sports Editor 3; Colonist 3; Loyout Editor 4; SRO 3 , 4;
ntromurol Footboll, Basketboll Boseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Vorsity Baseball
Mgr. 2, 3; Varsity H 3, 4; Dragon
Society 3, 4; Outing Club 3; Glee
Club 2, 3.

Saiens 1, 2, 3; Pres. 3; Botany Club
Pres. 3, 4, Intramural Footboll,
Basketball; Germon Club 1, 2;
Fre •ch Club 4.

GILBERT S. ROUFF

Social Science
Endicott, New York
Baccacia 1, 2, 3, 4, Sec. F.S.A. 4;
Pres. USG 4; Closs Pres. 2; Rep.
Symposium 4; Colonial News 2, 3 ,
Editor 4; Colonist 2; Colonial Players 3, 4 , Treos. 2; "The Rivals",
" Romshokle Inn"; Pi' Topplers 3;
Gavel Club 4 , Delegate to Mock
Senole 3, 4; Lower Tuition Comm
3; Spring Revue 2, 3, 4 ; Dragon
Society 3, 4; lntromurols 2 , 3, 4

JOHN T. SALVA

JOHN SALMI

Accounting

Chemistry

Johnson City, New York

Port Dickinson, New York

Adloyho 1, 2, 3 , 4; Ne wmon Club
1, 2, 3, 4, Bus Ad. Club 1, 2, 3,
4.

Alpha Phi Omega 1, 2, Sec 3, 4;
USG 4; Germon Club 1, 2, Pistol
Club 1, 4 .

77

�DAVID R. SHORT
Foreign Longuage

MICHAEL SERKO
Accounting
Endicott, New York

Union, New York
Soiens 1, 2, 3. 4; Germon Club 1,
3, Treas 4, Pres 2, French Club 3,
Treas. 4; Chorus 3, 4; Spring Revue
1, 2, 3, 4, lnternatiorol Night 2
3, 4 ; Intramural Baseball, Bowling,
Basketball, Football; Foreign Lon·
guoge Society 4; Dragon Society 4,
Gavel Club 4; Pep Bond 3, 4.

Varsity oseboll; Intramural Softball,
Basketball, Football; Bus. Ad. Club
1, 2, 3, 4, USG 3

WILLIAM ST AHL
English
Endicott, New York
Agnpeons 3

JAMES STEIGERWALD
Geology
Johnson City, New York

RICHARD STOUT
Social Science
Endicott, New York

Soiens 1 4 Sec. 2. Pres 3, Intro·
mural Basketball Softball, Football
2, 3, 4.

Agopeons 1, 2, 3, Pres. 4.

78

�MAURICE THORSON

DAVID E. SURINE

English

General Business
Johnson City, New York

Binghamton, New York

Pin Topplers

Colonial News Cartoonist 2, 3, 4;
Pentongle 1, 2. 3, 4; Clarendon 2,
3, 4.

NORMAN TIFFANY

Social Science
Binghamton, N ew York
Chorus 1, 2, 4, Vice Pres. 3; Madrigal Group 3, 4; Agopeons 1, 2,
4, Pres. 3; Colonial Players 3, 4;
Closs recs. 3; Spring Revue 3, 4;
Managing Editor Colooist 4; Diony·
si~ 2, 3, Pres. 4; Gavel Club 4.

·-

-

JAMES WELSH

LEE H. TURNER

Biology

Social Science
Binghamton, New York

Binghamton, New York

International Relations Club 1; Var·
sity Cross-Country 2; Varsity Track
2; Adloyho 2, 3, 4; Newmon Club
Pres. 3, 4 ; French Club 2; Gavel
Club 2; Gavel Club 4; Intramural
Football, Basketball, Softball 3.

Adloyho 2, 4, Pres. 3; Pin Topplers
3 , 4.

79

�&lt;-

~-

CARLE M. WILLIAMS

JACQUELINE WHITE

English

Foreign Language

Endicott, New York

Endicott, New York

Chorus 1, Pres. 2; Spring Revue 1,
2, 3; Closs Pres 3 ; Perto ngle 1,
2; Dionysio 2, 3, 4.

Glee Club 3; Frerch Club 3, 4;
Spanish Club 4.

JOAN B. WILLIAMS

Psychology
Endicott, N ew York
Pondorons 2, 3, 4; Spring Revue
2, 4.

ROBERT H. WOOLBAU GH

THERESE L. WOOD

Accounting

Social Sicenec

Hallstead, Pennsylvan ia

Binghamton , N ew York

Bus. Ad Club 1 2, 3 , 4; Adloyho.

Summ•H Socio! Committee 3, 4; Pondorons 4

80

�To The

Class of
'53

Congratulations
From
The

Colonist
Compliments of
Salutations and Best W ishes

to the Class o f

THE
BINGHAMTON

1953

SUN

FOWLER'S
" First in the Homes of South ern New
York

Binghamton's Largest Department Store

and

Northe rn

Pennsylvania

more than a Century"

81

for

�BEN'S CLOTHES SHOP

Compliments of

Clothes of Quality
and
Distinction

GUY F. JOHNSON INC .

for

Your Hudson Dealer

Dod and Lod

19 Collie r Stre et

Ma in and Willow Stre ets

BINHAMTON , N. Y.

JOHNSON CITY, N. Y.

BRING YOUR PHOTO PROBLEMS

Loans up $500.00

to

PUBLIC LOAN COMPANY , INC.
7 Washington Ave nue

ENDICOTT CAMERA SHOP

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

For Reliable and Friendly Assistance

Phone 5-9929

Visit the

ROUFF FURNITURE CO.

HOTEL FREDERICK

105-107 Washington Avenu e
and the

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK
DUBONNET LOU NGE
" Dedicated to Better Homes"

Washington Ave nue

Phone 5-3379

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

Have a Coke

L. F. HAMLIN, INC.
PHARMACIST
"The Red Cross Drug Store"

28-30 Washington Ave nue

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK
Drink

Phone 8-1565

COCA -COLA

82

�Compliments of

ALLEN MEMORIAL HOME
FUNERAL SERVICE

BEN HANSEN CHEVROLET, INC.

511 E. Main Street

3 Grant Avenue

ENDICOTT, N. Y.

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

THE ENDICOTT PRINTING CO.

Compliments of

Letterpress and Offset Printing

ALEXANDER HARVEY
Phone 5-9441

CLOTHING
124 Nanticoke Avenue

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

down in Union

Responsibility
Thomas Jefferson, more than any man
of his time, understood that if the young
republic were to succeed it wou ld have to
be carried forward on the shoulders of
en lig htened, informed, e ducate d men. He
understood that the responsibility for such

ideals and institutions as free speech,
trial by jury, free press, freedom of
religion, free choice of work and enterprise and repub lican form of government
lay with the people.

Girded with knowledge, we are confident Harpur graduates of the Class
of 1953 will accept the challenge of responsibility to build a bette r Am e rica
on the same great principles of faith , freedom and equality that inspire d our
forefathers.

TllE

Bl:\'Gll .t\~ITO~
DAILY

AND

I~RESS

SUNDAY

All the news, all the facts fully accurately, impartially

83

�Cong ratula tions
to the
GRADUATES

OF

HARPUR

ENDICOTT JOHNSON RETAIL STORES
Binghamton , Johnson City, Endicott, and Vesta l

Rain or Shin e-On ly ANS CO
Guarantees Perfect Snapshots!
Don't t rust to luck with ordinary film. Ansco All-Wea ther
Film gives th e results you want, or return the negative s
and guarante e bond and receive a new roll of film free .

It's Always SUNNY with Ansco All-Wea ther Film

ANSCO, BINGHAM TON, N . Y., A Division of Gen eral Anilin e &amp; Fi lm Corporatio n .

84

�HER ITA GE
There is no end to pione ering. Every
gener ation and every field of endeavor have had and will contin ue to have
their pioneers. There could he no n1or&lt;'
glorious herita ge than the wealt h of
oppor tuniti es this age offers to youth
-the pione ers of ton1orrow.

I

TEH

ATIONAL 13l 1SINE::O.S MACHIN ES COHPOHA TIO '

ENDI C OTT ,

85

NfW

YORK

�Compliments of

SAWICKl'S BAKE SHOP

MEN 'S QUALITY SHOP

CA KES and SANDWIC HES
For All Occasions

Style Center for
MEN and YOUNG M EN

123 Nanti coke Ave.
UNION , N . Y.

246 Main Street

57 Washington A ve.

JOHNSON CITY, NEW YORK

ENDICOTT, N . Y.

WORK CLOTHES

TOWER ESSO ST ATION

UNION ARMY &amp; NAVY
Cor. Mai n and Nant icoke

SPORTING GOODS

ENDICOTT, N . Y.
119 E. Main Street
Phone 5-9841

UNION, N . Y.

Mac CLARY - ST ABLER
Compliments of

AGENCY, INC.
105 E. Main Street

PHILADELPHIA SALES CO.

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK
88-90 Clinton Street

Serving this area for I 00 years

BINGHAMTON , NEW YORK

Phone 5-3646

ELMER ANGEVINE

ENDICOTT FLORIST

AGENCY, INC .
Soy it with Flowers
COMPLETE REAL EST ATE

116 Wa shi ngton Ave nue

A N D INSURANCE SERVICE

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

145 Washington Avenue

Phone 5-0221

ENDICOTT, N . Y.

86

�WALTER R. MILLER CO .

MORTON COY

INC.
Fashions From
STATION ERY - GI FT S

" HEAD TO TOE"

SPORTING GOODS

At Prices to Suit Every Budget

170 Wa shington St. and 121 State St .

Court Street

BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

READ

Compliments of

THE VESTAL NEWS
ENDICOTT
FOR

LINCOLN - MERCURY, INC.

- SHARPEST COMMENT
3400 E. Main Street

ON THE LOCAL SCENE -

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK
COMMERCIAL PRINTING

WELLS - MESSEMER, INC.

HILKINS JEWELERS

DODGE - Pl YMOUTH

OUR 37th YEAR

1302 E. Main Street

46 Washington A venue

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

Phone 5-3397

Phone 5-0 121

You can't Know What's Going On ...

Compliments of

unless you READ

THE DAILY BULLITEN
ENDICOTT OPTICAL CO.

LISTEN TO

RADIO STATION WENE
120 Washington Avenue

Greater Endicott's Great Team Dedicated

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

To a Greater Endicott

87

�Armed for Success

Compliments of

A man hos no greate r strengt h, no greate r

THE BURT

weapo n for success, than knowle dge. You
who gradua te today ore armed with that

COMPANY

greate st of all assets. W ith knowle dge, we
know success will be you rs. And we wish it

•

for you, earnest ly. Congra tulation s!

33 y rs. - 1920- 1953

McLEAN'S

Endicott's Family Store

BINGH AMTO N - ENDICOTT

Comp limen ts of

ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY
4 O FFICES FOR YOU R CONV ENI ENCE

ENDICOTT NATIONAL BANK
MARINE MIDLAND TRUST COMPANY
UNION -ENDICOTT OFFICE

Members - Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

88

��</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="27">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28047">
                  <text>1948 - </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28048">
                  <text>Binghamton University Yearbooks </text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28049">
                  <text>Harpur College -- Students; State University of New York at Binghamton -- Students; Harpur College; State University of New York at Binghamton; Students; Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="37">
              <name>Contributor</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39021">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;Blythe E. Roveland-Brenton, Director of Special Collections &amp;amp; Library Preservation&lt;br /&gt;Caitlin Holton, Digital Initiatives Assistant&lt;br /&gt;Maggie McNeely, University Archivist&lt;br /&gt;Erin Rushton, Head of Digital Initiatives&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39022">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;Binghamton University’s yearbook was published under several different titles. It was first called &lt;em&gt;The Colonist&lt;/em&gt; in 1948, then became &lt;em&gt;The Yearer&lt;/em&gt; in 1970, &lt;em&gt;Pegasus&lt;/em&gt; in 1973 and finally &lt;em&gt;Binghamton University&lt;/em&gt; in 2004. Yearbooks are a popular resource for alumni and can be used for primary source research. Each book typically contains class lists, class photos, candid photos, faculty and academic department information, campus and institutional facts, illustrations and ads, and editorials. They document student organizations, campus events, athletic teams as well as local and global events. Yearbooks offer a window into the traditions and culture of a time and place from the point of view of a select group of students on behalf of the student body. They are among the richest sources of student-driven content for an academic institution. For more information regarding yearbooks and the history of the University, please contact &lt;a href="https://www.binghamton.edu/libraries/about/special-collections/"&gt;Special Collections&lt;/a&gt; at 607-777-4844 or speccoll@binghamton.edu.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;We welcome your comments about &lt;span&gt;&lt;span&gt;our collection of digitized yearbooks.&amp;nbsp; &lt;a href="https://binghamton.libwizard.com/id/c6121588e483da04f66dba76f0460bb5"&gt;Please share comments via our feedback form&lt;/a&gt;.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Acknowledgment of sensitive content&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Binghamton University Libraries provide digital access to select materials held within the Special Collections department. &lt;span&gt;Historical yearbooks provide a vibrant window into life at the University.&lt;/span&gt; However, they also expose insensitive, and at times offensive, racial and gender stereotypes that, though once commonplace, are now acknowledged to cause harm. The Libraries have chosen to make these volumes available as part of the historical record but the Libraries do not support or agree with the harmful narratives that can be found in these volumes. &lt;a href="https://www.binghamton.edu/libraries/about/collections/digital/"&gt;Digital Collections&lt;/a&gt; are created for educational and historical purposes only. It is our intention to present the content as it originally appeared.&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39023">
                  <text>&lt;p&gt;The yearbooks in this collection are copyrighted. If you want to reuse any material in this collection you must seek permission, or decide if your purpose can qualify as fair use under the U.S. Copyright Law Section 107. If you think copyright or privacy has been violated, the University Libraries will investigate the issue. Please see our take down request policy.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;If using any materials in this online digital collection for educational or research purposes, please cite accordingly. When citing documents, researchers / educators should credit Special Collections as the custodian of the collection.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The following is a suggested citation: Binghamton University Yearbooks Digital Collection, [yearbook title and year], Special Collections, Binghamton University Libraries.”&lt;/p&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39024">
                  <text>1948-1972</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="117">
              <name>Is Part Of</name>
              <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50596">
                  <text>&lt;a href="https://archivesspace.binghamton.edu/public/repositories/2/archival_objects/38366" target="_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;Binghamton University Student Publications: Yearbook, 1948- present&lt;/a&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="32">
      <name>Template: PDF</name>
      <description>Choose this for any item where the file type is PDF. This template and others do not support mixed file types (PDF and image attached to same item). If you have mixed file types, you can either create another Omeka item or contact Digital Initiatives for assistance converting from pdf to image or vice versa.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="81">
          <name>Accessibility</name>
          <description>Copy/Paste below: &#13;
Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45642">
              <text>Binghamton University Libraries is working very hard to create transcriptions of all audio/visual media present on this site. If you require a specific transcription for accessibility purposes, you may contact us at &lt;a href="mailto:orb@binghamton.edu"&gt;orb@binghamton.edu&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="58">
          <name>Collection</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52299">
              <text>Binghamton University Yearbooks</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Digital Format</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52300">
              <text>PDF</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="54">
          <name>Identifier</name>
          <description>dc:identifier</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52301">
              <text>THE COLONIST_1953.pdf</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="139">
          <name>PDF Layout</name>
          <description>This field specifies how the pages of the PDF will be laid out. Enter only the CASE SENSITIVE keyword without quotation marks. [default: 'FacingContinuous']&#13;
Options:&#13;
'Single' - Only the entire current page will be visible and Zoom will be set to page width.&#13;
'Continuous' - All pages are visible in one scrollable column and Zoom will be set to page width.&#13;
'Facing' - Up to two full pages will be visible and Zoom will be set to page height.&#13;
'FacingContinuous' - All pages visible in two scrollable columns and Zoom will be set to page height.&#13;
'FacingCover' - All pages visible as whole pages, with an even numbered page rendered first. (i.e. The first page of the document is rendered by itself on the right side of the viewer to simulate a book cover.)&#13;
'FacingCoverContinuous' - All pages visible in two scrollable columns, with an even numbered page rendered first. (i.e. The first page of the document is rendered by itself on the right side of the viewer to simulate a book cover.)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52302">
              <text>FacingCoverContinuous</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38806">
                <text>Colonist 1953</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38807">
                <text>State University of New York at Binghamton -- Students&#13;
school yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38812">
                <text>Binghamton, N.Y. : Harpur College ; Binghamton, N.Y. : State University of New York at Binghamton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38814">
                <text>State University of New York at Binghamton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38815">
                <text>1953</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="38816">
                <text>In Copyright</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45997">
                <text>Student yearbook of Triple Cities College (1948- 1950), Harpur College (1951- 1965), and the State University of New York at Binghamton (1966- present).</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
