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1 11~~,]~~111r1mJ~~11 1 1

��HARPUR COLLEGE

&gt;

�FOREWORD
Another school year has passed us by, encouragement and discouragement. Many times when the town was dark and slumbering, the proverbial midnight oil was burning in the rooms of our students as they
study for a key exam. Other times during these hours a sad adieu was
being bid to the end of a successful college dance and another memory
was added to an already rich storehouse.
At times the work part of college life has become heavy and discouragement reigned supreme, but always, when all was said and done,
there was a kind of satisfaction, a sense of accomplishment which made
it all seem worthwhile.
During this period of scholastic, there was a parallel form of education available which appears in no college catalog. There was working
together, and playing together, friendships and associations which will
be cherished forever. Our Alma Mater gives us the key, "friendships
made and victories won." The experience "of being part of our college
society prepared us for the important job of living in a bigge r a nd bette r
society.
Thus, another year of study and inva luable experience has passed
and we are al l one year nearer to the rea li zation of o ur a mbit ions.

2

�TABLE OF
CONTENTS
and STAFF
CONTENTS
7

ADMINISTRATION
ACTIVIJIES

ll

SOCIAL CLUBS

31

SPORTS

47

FACULTY

57

SENIORS

63

UNDERCLASSMEN

79
87

ADS

STAFF
Associate Ed it ors
Advertising Manager

Richard Brown
Robert Shannahan
Elwyn Mann

Copy Editor

Marlene Gray

Photo Editor

Albina Gallagher

Art Editor
Circulation Manager
Staff
Advisor

Mary Matias
Clifford Whitman
Janet Greenwood
Fred Goundry
Dolora G. Cunningham

3

�DEDICATION
This graduating class and the ones which have preceded it are in a
unique position as compared with the graduating classes of other schools.
The college is moving on to newer and better quarters. There will be
no alma mater as we knew it to come back to, no familiar ivy covered
walls to help relive happy memories.
Every Harpur graduate in the present us in the past is ready to admit
that our present quarters, temporary though they may be are as important to us as any ivy covered walls. Our halls represent memories of
events and people we have known and worked with. They wrap up
in one symbol the total experience of our four years of college life.
In light of what it has meant to us, this yearbook is dedicated to the
campus we have known with the hope that the memories it has given us
will in some measure be kept alive by the 1956 Colonist and to the Harpur Spirit which will remain alive regardless.of its new physical surroundings.

THE FIRST BUILDING ON OUR NEW CAMPUS

4

�COLO NIAL BUILDING

PARK HOUSE

5

�\l\ l\ l\l\llN1'
OI '\I\\

' OHi\

llARPLR
(QlllGI

\
ADMINSTRATION BUILDING

WEST HALL

6

�I

t

yrll~

'

�I

.~

PRESIDENT OF S.U.N.Y., DR. WILLIAMS. CARLSON

OUR PRESIDENT, DR. GLENN G. BARTLE

8

�MR. RISHELL, Dir. of Admissions

MR. SCELSI, Asst. to President

MR . SEARLES, Admissions Counselor

MRS. CONEY, Recorder

MISS THURSTON, Student Counselor

MRS. ROGERS, Bookstore Manager

9

�Josiah T. Newcomb
Librarian

0

Library Staff
Business Office Staff

Jack F. Kimball
Director of Evening Division

10

�ACTIVITIES

�First row D. Mason, B. Bla tter, R. Gallagher, H. Abe les, S. My d anick, D. Aswad . Second
row : B. Rafuse , J . Greenwood, J . Higg ins, L. Gree n, E. Do nnalle n, B. Shanaha n

U.S.G.

ACTIVITIES
The scope of a true education lies beyond the classroom. It takes more
than facts and academic ideas to shape a personality. There is a need
for an entire field of activities to develop the student's diversified talents
and outside interests. Harpur College has well recognized this fact. It
has provided through co-operation between students and administration
a wide array of extracurricular activities. Harpur students play together
through their social clubs; they work together on their publications and
Student Government; they develop their interests together through
such clubs as debate, relig ious organizations etc.
The student upon entering Harpur is thus presented with the opportunity to either continue the pursuit of his natural talents in ways not
available in the academic curriculum or to develop new interests. There
exists in the college a concentration of interest fields which are often far
more dispersed in the community as a who le. It is through this dual
system of education and extracurricular activities that the student attains
wisdom , personality and civic responsibility.
12

�DRAGON
SOCIETY

Firs I row Janet Greenwood, John Zwierzynski. Second row: Earle Whi te,
Charlie Lesko.

WHO'S
WHO

First row· Robert Shannahan, Janet Greenwood, Elwyn Mann
row: Earle White, Charles Lesko, Robert Gallagher.

Second

13

�R. Steinberg , M . Gray , J . Brunner, B. Glasser.

CLARENDON
COLONIST

First row : I. Fetchenko, K. Allen, E. Mann, A. Gallagher, M. Gray, J
1ow: B. Fone, C. Leonard, D. Brown , C Whitman, B. Shanahan.

14

Burlingame. Second

�First row· D Cohen, B. Heyson, G Flood, C. Goodman. Second row
M Dekar, B Shanahan, V. Risk, N. Messina.

E. MaPn,

COL ONIA L PLAYERS
COL ONIA L NEW S

First row· I Fetchenko P Alden, C Lesko, C Grover, B Holtz, R Holtl, R Ste nbcrg
Second row: V. Risk, A Popeck, M Gr,1y, J Greenwood M Crul, M. Lafferre, T. Agan,
E McHale Third row· C. Whitman 1 Sommer, M Schwart;, D Henderson, D Aswad,
A Gallagher, B Fone.

15

�Rev.

Ellwood Hannum, Chaplain of the

Episcopal Students

CANTERBURY CLUB

First row: M. Grey, R. Quackenbush l. Parison, C. Grover, S. Cowan. Second row: M.
Lafferre, Bob Sutherland. C. Camp, J . Sale, V. Johnson, H Fiacco, B. Fone, Dr. Pitcher.

16

�RABBI SCHAPIRO
Counselo r of Jewish Students

JEWISH FELLOWSHIP

um Second row J Ruben,
F rsl row· E Marks. H Abeles, B. Dabrus n, B Ho.lz R Lindenba
CLymet, S Mydan ck,
L. Greene, C Goodman , D Cohen, A. Kande 1b1rd row M Storch,
R Gla1er.

17

�FATHER McNAMARA
Counse lor of Catholic Students

NEWMAN CLUB

18

first row· Ted Czupryna, Russ Reed, Steve Davis, Bob Shanahan, Adria Popeck.
Second
row: Larry Wasko, John H1gg1ns Shirley Brutvan, Ruth Paridise, Ele Donnelan,
J ohn
Zw1erzynsk L Third row: Robert Walsh, Vince Piccano, Mary Crull, Jack Mott, Dave Garrick,
Gene Flood.

�REVEREND BRANDT
Counselor of Protestant Students

PROTEST ANT FELLOWSHIP

R.
First row· Dr. Leamer, J Greenwood , G. Martin, S Carey, J. Montalbano . Second row·
Quackenbu sh, P. Cannaday B. Knickerbock er, M. Skleaka. Third row: W. Bassage,
R Sutherland, D. Tucker, D Ward P Demarest.

19

�First row: G. Johnson, S. Brutvan, G. Schuler, M. Wyzalek, S. Williams. Second row: C.
Mitlehner, Dr. Weigand, W . O'Brien, R. Shannahan, E. Sochor, J. Patan1an, N. Messina,
S. Kinney, A. Goldberg, Dr. Steer, R. Boez1.

GERMAN CLUB
FRENCH CLUB

First row: A. L1ciandrello M Laffere, V. Risk. Second row: S. Pierce, W. Dabrusin, R.
Lindenbaum, J. Bruner L. Kent, B Sanders. Third row: Dr. Ketcham, C. Goodman, S.
Cowan, G. Johnson, N. Rifkin, S. Williams. Fourth row: R. Aswad, W. Chaney, N. Kanaan,
C. Camp, Materese.

�row: R. M1g nani, l.
First row. R. Serino, M. Melesk i, S. Giovan azzo. Second
ray, H. Mingar elli,
McMur
H.
row:
Third
lan.
Donnel
E.
,
Panette , M. LaSorfe
F. Melia.

ITA LIA N CLUB
SLAVIC CLUB

o, S. Mydani ck. Second row: R. Logan,
First row: R. Jenson , V Muhars ky, S. Davis, I. Fetcenk
Stefans ki.
W.
C. Lesko, Mr. Bochna k, R. Steinbe rg, M Morava nsky,

21

�First row: J. Beck, C. Grover, L. Lent, L. Phillips, R. Hardy. Second row: H. Abeles, M.
Battaglini, S. Carey, L. Allan. Third row: A. Kauder, J. Ruben, R. L. Williams, G. Parker.

SPANISH CLUB
BOOK AND KEY

First row: Dr. Blake, F. Knowlton, J. Meyrick, B. Holtz. Second row: D. Moskowitz, S.
Brutvan, J. Sahe, E. Donnellan, B. Blatter Third row: J. Mott, R. McVannan, E. Mann, D.
Garrick.

22

�----- ----- ~ -

- - - - - - - - - - - - L. - - - - -

, N.
Gehm , S. Carey. Second row: M. A. Dekar
First row: I. Nitka, S. Pierce , L. Hatz, S.
V.
nd
Okerla
D.
row·
Third
h, A. Popeci&lt;.
Hende rson, B. Knicherbocker, R. Quack enbus
rest, D. Messina,
Dema
P.
row:
Fourth
.
Kaleka
K.
n,
Kuharsky, J Green wood S. Roloso
N. Clark R Letavish, D. Tucker, S. Adolp h.

CHORUS
or the lilting melo dies of
The polyp honi c soun ds of a Mach aut Mass
the Harp ur Colle ge Chor us,
" Briga doon " are equa lly well- perfo rmed by
unde r the able direc tion of Dr. Harr y Linco ln.
r musi cal show -piec es of
This fine orga nizat ion is one of the majo
perfo rms at conc erts at the
Harp ur. With profe ssion al skill the choru s
ert tours in the surro undi ng
colle ge, and they have taken several conc
d in a musi cal aggr egat ion
area. Their lyrica l exce llenc e is seldo m foun
of comp arab le size.
cians hip of the mem bers
The direc torsh ip of Dr. Linco ln and the musi
of the choru s make an unbe atab le team .

23

�First row: W Dabrusin, D. Okerlund, J. Weiss. Second row: H. Carroll, C. M1tlehner.

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB
DEBATE CLUB

First row: R. Rafuse, R Aswad, R. Shannahan, M. Gray, Dr. Marsh. Second row N Messina,
J Higgins, N. Rifkin, D. Moskowitz S Moldovan, C Brown.

24

�R. Krivit, R. Dundon
First row: C. Walther , S. Roloson , G. Watrous . Second row:

GO UR ME T SOCIETY
INTER-SOCIAL CLUB CO UN CIL

A. Popeck. Second row: W.
First row: W. Dabrusi n, D Navle, A Lic1andr ello, M. Laffere,
Grover, J. H ggins.
C
an,
Donnell
E.
,
Blatter, R. McVann on, S. Dav s R Paradise

25

�J

26

I

�S. Adolf,
First row: C. Camp, B. Sanders, A. Parker. Second row: G Parker. S. Brutvan,
Lincoln.
G Watrous, Dr.

PEP BAND
INTRAMURAL COUNCIL

First row: J. Beck, B. Portmore, M. Fille. Second row: W. Homa, V. Picciano,
M. Celeste.

27

�First row. N Barnes, S. Rogan, R. Hardy, R. Reed, J Zwierznski, S. Reed . Second row:
J Meynck, G. Johnson, J Mott, B. Portmore, M. Materese, S. Bennett, B. Sanders, C.
Grover, M Battaglini. Third row. T. Agar, M. Filler, L Nordino, F. Gennarelli, J. Mccambridge, S. Mingus. Fourth row: Dr. Kent, C. Mittelhomer, D. Navle, A. Coe, C. Lezio,
L. Phillips.

PINTOPPLERS

GEOLOGY CLUB

28

First row: P. Alden, A Kleske, J. Kleske, D. Slabodin, S. Kinney. Second row: D. Becker,
C. Egan, F Angelotti, B. Ballan, D. Freibourg. Third row: P. Robinson, D. Twigg, A.
Coen, T Cochrane, A . Parker, Dr Coates.

�BIOLOGY
CLUB

First row: Dr. F1schthal, R Corast, P. Hoffman, C. Zymet, Dr Schumacher Second row :
F. Reingold, J. Montalboa1, G Schuler, C Goodman, M. Wood, E. Elkowitz. Th'rd row:
M. Storch, C. Whitman, A. Goldberg, K. Williams, W. Jcnsson .

MATH
CLUB

First row· F. Waite, W. Baker, T. C1upryna, B. Shannahan, J Zwierzynski . Second row :
Miss Wright, G. Johnson, B. Brutvan, M. Wyzalek C Camp, G Schuler Third row: Dr
Kent, S. Kinney, A. Parker, Dr. Emerson.

29

�First row: Mary Matias, Byrne Fone, Jakie Bruner, Mel Stratton. Second row:
Bob
Shannahan, Bina Gallagher, Shirley Weber, Dave Moskowitz, Marlene Gray, Monica
Wyzalek

PHILOSOPHY CLUB
BOOTS &amp; SADDLE CLUB

First row Elynar Rose Mark, Neil Clark, Regina Hardy, Marie Chirco. Second row : John
Mccambrid ge, Sharlyne Roloson Mel Schwartz, Dave Moskowitz, Ginger Johnson.

30

�- -

x

-"""""-

&gt;

�/.

SOCIAL CLUBS
The bulwark of Harpur College's informal life is its social clubs. Adelphi with its Fall and Spring Mixes, Baccacia with its famous Clambake,
Dionysians and their " Twilight Time," Pandorans with the "Carniva l of
Hearts," Goliards' "Mard i Gras," Thalians, ITK, and SOS with their parties
all serve to en liven the social ca lenda r.
The social clubs form the machinery which enables the students to
have fun together. In addition, they bring opportuniti es for lasting
friendships . The activities of these organizatio ns in various charitable
endeavors, such as Campus Chest, are well known and greatly appreciated. In short, the socia l clubs play an important part in Harpur's task
of developing individuals who will be well-integr ated members of society.

32

�33

�First row: Kay Moran, M. Gray Second row: B. Heyson, K. Hanson, E Heiyen, D Marozas.
M Laffere, A. L1cc1andrello. Third row: A. Gallagher, M. Mazzocch1, J. Bruner, J. Jackson,
M. Crull, G. Gnneff, M. Battaglini. Fourth row: C. Camp, S. Borelli, V. Kuharsky, D.
O'Kerlund , D Davison, L lent, I Portmo1

PAND ORAN SOCIETY
CASS ANDR AN

F rst row : E. Mendoza R. Hardy S. Milgrom, D. Mason. Second row: B. Platt, E. Donnellan,
R. Paradise , M. Kahan1c

34

�t;$J

v

'

I

'

Second row: Mrs
First row· G. Schuler, C. Grover, B. L. L1dd1c, I. Fetcenko , A. Popeck.
B. Sanders,
Wood
M.
row:
Third
od.
Greenwo
J.
Carey,
S
Alexande r, K. Kaleka, S. Brutvan
S. Benner.

THALIANS

GO LI ARDS

n, S. Rogan, C. Morgan.
First row: E. Sochor, W. O'Brien, V. Picciano, R. Thomas, R McVanno
Grogan, R. Otero, R.
Second row: J. Loposky, W Simmons , F. Gennarel li, J Orsley, W.
J Hertel, M.
Dunham,
F.
eld,
Maxf
E
Melia,
F
Welsn,
J.
Dedek,
E.
Serino. Third row:
~~
R._ic~ciard M. Burtch.
~~~~~~~~
----~

35

�First row: J Mott, B Fone, B. Dabru
sin, B Blatte r, J. Meyr ick, A Ske1r ik,
L. Ostre 1cher .
Secon d row: B Shan nahan , H. Abele
s, G Smith , R. Jenso n, D. Qu ck, J. Beck,
F. Know lton.
Third row: S. Malin ovich , B. Galla gher,
C. Leon ard, D DePu gh, D. Ward
Dr Grub er.
Fourt h row: C. Whit man, E. Mann , T.
Flagg , R. Reed , B. Holtz M. Celes te,
R Brow n.

DIONYSIANS
KEG

First row: B. Kr•vit, B Glass er, Dr
Linds ay, J. Kasse l, G. Over baug h. Secon
d row: S.
Dahle , A. Bus1no, C. Have s, P Harr,
G. Watr ous Third row: D. McDe rmott
, P. Hill, B.
Hean ey, J. Taske r.

36

�First row: E. McHale, B. Gruzltewski, D. Lindsley, D. Haul ton, B. Rafuse Second row: D.
Reynolds, L. Phillips, S. Mingus, B. Galvin D. Aswad, W Jonsson, D. Henderson , M.
Swartwood. Third row: W. Homa, C. Lesko, F. Mokrohisky S. Cadden , J. Zwierzynski,
K. Allen. Fourth row: J . Higgins, H. Brewster, Dr. Alexander, N. Messina.

ADELPHI

s.o.s.

First row: Dr. Schumacher, L. Silver, J. Weiss, P Berkman, K. Goldberg. Second row : C.
M1tlehner, T. Agan, R. Jost, R. Lager, S. Mydan ick, F. DiGraci. Third row : W . DeCan io,
R. Howe, C. Broere, S. Davis, M. Fleisker, L Konkowsk1.

37

�First row: J. Youngs , H. Hoffma n, J. Zicari, B. Shamul
ka, J. Grouns e Second row: M.
Stratton , D. Underw ood, Z Melkon ian, D Navle,
R. Hubbar d, D Cox, M. LaSorte , F.
Murphy . Third row: J. Meade, S. Gramer , W. Han~on,
J. Regan, C. Lelio Henry Mingar elli.

BA CC A CIA

A.P .O.

38

First row: Dr. Schuma cher, Dr. Leamer , D. Ward,
B. Holtz, R. Steinbe rg, Dr. Fischth al.
Second row: C. Whitma n, A. Goldbe rg, G O'Conn
ell, R. Reed, B Blatter Third row: T.
Katoak a, J. Charles , P. Hobler, G William s, P. Demare
st, F. Reingo ld, B. Fone. Fourth row:
R Altschu l, D Garrick , N . Rifkin R Boez1, T. Czupry
na, J. Rubin

�39

�40

��Dick Ward and friend try out formal manners in
yearly workout of Social Etiquette.

RECOLLECTIONS OF COLL EGE YEAR
Student-Faculty Reception
and
Registration
both are
"ASSIMI LATIO N PROJ ECTS"

Smiles during registration fail to
indicate that money is changing
hands.
THEIRS ! ! !

�Campus Beauties
on display

"Which knob turns it off?"

l

HOLIDAY
HANGOVER

�LEARNED DORM

44

�LINCOLN DORM
MADISON DORM
/
(

v

I

--

45

�JAMES DORM

46

��CHEERLEADERS

SPORTS
Now that the new plant in Vestal is
ing rn the athletic program at Harpur.
sports activities have been offered, the
the foundation that has been built in
will blossom.

becoming a reality, new interest is growThough in the past many and diversified
new facilities will expand their scope. On
these few years, an expanded program

The coaches and organizations who have worked so well in spite of existing
handicaps will be better able to achieve the heights of their ability.
We look forward with assurance to a continued good job and a bright future
for sports at Harpur College.

48

�-

�H
A
R
p

u
R

'

s

CARL ZYMET
SK IP REYNO LDS

ROLA N D THOMAS
BOB THOMPSON

c
0

u
R

T
M
E
N

�GOLF TEAM
TENNIS TEAM

51

�52

��HARPUR Harriers aim high

Swartwood shows Snead strategy

What's missing in this picture? (the

ball) .
Too Bad
You can't win 'em all.

�First row: M. Gumaer, J. Doran, M Ruminski, C. Macek, M. Seal, M. Bennett. Second row:
A. Coughlin, H. Campman M. Lesko, R. Phinney, L Zelinski, M. Jones, K. Scr•bner, W
Sanford.

ST ATE HOSPITAL NURSES
These are familiar faces around Harpur's halls. They represent a group whose
attendance at Harpur College is on a part time basis. However, thei r cooperation
with the Harpur spirit is on a full time basis. They are counted among the close
personal friends of Harpur students. They have a fine record of participalion in
social events.
From Harpur it is hoped that they will take away with them valuahle academic
experience and other more intangible items such as good memories of people,
places and events.

�First row: B. Janicki, E Pomeroy, S Clark, M. Heatherman, M. Novak, J. Angevine, A
Boyajian, P Wanstall, N. Hill Second row B. Nirschl, G. Wells, C. Hust, J. Darling, J.
Krna, M. Schuts, N. Burke, J. Fowler, W. Patton, H Trommetter, C. Klinger, N. Clark, A.
Badger, B. Ripic. Third row: G. Gwara, J, Murphy, D. Pavelski, R. Clendenning, L. Rogers,
M. Deyo, M . Lopatofsky, A Welk.

CITY HOS PIT AL NURSES
"I solemnly pledge myself before God . . . to pass my life in purity and to
practice my profession faithfully . . . " It is indeed a long, arduous road to the
day when the young women of Binghamton City Hospital may finally take that
famous pledge. One of the many obstacles that must be surmounted before their
Capping is a "stretch" at Harpur. During that time they often become an intregal
part of the college community. Cheerful and smiling they remain a welcome addition to our dances and parties.
Our story would not be comolele, however, unless we said something of the
fine and difficult job these young women have tackled, preparing themselves
for a worthy and beneficial career. We at Harpur are proud to be a part of that
training which teaches these student nurses to " . . . loyally devote themselves
lo the welfare of those committed to their cause ... "

��S. STEWART GORDON
Dean

SEYMOUR M. PITCHER
Division of Human1t1es

ROBERT W RAFUSE
Chairman
Division of Social Science

JAMES H. WILMOTH
Chairman
Division of Science

FACULTY
It is with justifiable pride that Harpur points to its faculty, for in its
ranks are found men of stature in every area of academic endeavor . Too
often, in the course of our day-to-da y studies, we tend to forget that we
are being educated by men and women of outstand ing qualificat ion.
The essence of a college is, undeniab ly, its faculty, and in this respect,
Harpur College can hold its head high among schools of higher education.

58

To Dean Gordon we extend a sincere welcome and our best wishes
for a speedy and complete recovery from the illness which has forced
him to relinquish his duties temporar ily.

�l. ALEXANDER

D. R. COATES

J. FISCHTHAL

J . W. BEALL

I. R CRESPI

V. FREIMARCK

J. HOPKIRK

M. L BOCHNAK

W. L. CLAFF

M . EMERSON

H . T. FAGIN

C. P. GRUBER

S S. HARCAVE

C. M. HULL

59

�J R. F. KENT

R. MIGNANI

P. ROBINSO N

R. K KETCHAM

E. F. MURPHY

G. SCHUMACHER

R. WILLIAMS

60

L. E. LEAMER

J. OSER

A. G. STEER

M. METLAY

M.A. PAUL

P. WEIGAND

F. M. WRIGHT

�FACULTY DIRECTORY
Alexande r, Lewis M.
Beall, John W.
Belniak, John P.

Asst. Prof. Geog.

Bochnak, Michael

Kaminsky, Jack

Asst. Prof. Phil.

Asst. Prof. Pol. Sci.

Kent, James R.

Asst. Prof. Math.

Ketcham, Rodney

Prof. Rom. Long.

Inst. Russian
Asst. Prof. English

Bowers, Edgar
Brohm, John F.

Inst. Anthro

Chalmers , John

Prof. Econ.

Claff, William L.

Prof. Econ.

Coates, Donald R.

Inst. Geo/.

Conhaim , Louis E.

Inst. History

Kinsolving, May

Inst. Math.

Leamer, Laurence

Prof. Econ.

Lincoln, Harry
Lindsay, Kenneth
Machotka, Otakar
Mann, Seymour

Inst. Soc.

Marsh, Robert

Inst. Eng.

Metlay, Max

Inst. Eng.

Murphy, Earl F.

Dean, Charles R.

Inst, Econ.

Natale, John M.

Emerson, Marian

Asst. Prof. Math.

Crespi, Irving
Cunningh am,

~olora

Damon, Ph illip W.

Emley, Edward
Fagin, Harold T.
Fischtal, Jacob
Freimarck, Vincent
Gilbert, Amy M.

Assoc. Prof. Psyc.

Asst. Prof.
Art History
Prof. Soc.
Asst. Prof.
Pol. Sci.
Inst . Eng.
Asst. Prof. Chem.
Asst. Prof. Law
Asst. Inst, Phy. Ed.
Assoc. Prof.
Ind. Relations
Asst. Prof. Econ.

Paul, Martin A.

Prof. Chemistr y

Asst. Prof. Eng.

Penfield, Robt.

Asst. Prof. Phys.

Prof. History

Perry, Orval L.

Asst. Prof. Phil.

Gruber, Christian

Asst. Prof. Eng.

Heyman, William

Oser, Jacob

Asst. Prof Music

Assoc. Prof. Bio.

Assoc. Prof. Music

Henderso n, David C.

O'Brien, John

Inst. For. Lang.

Gilfillian, J. Alex
Harcave, Sidney S.

Prof. Chem.

Asst. Prof. Econ.

Asst. Prof. Acct.

Blake, Arthur

Hull, Max C.

Assoc. Prof. Hist.
Dir. Prys. Ed.
Asst. Prof. Psy.

Hopkirk, John

Inst. Pol. Sci.

House, Albert

Prof. History

Piaker, Phillip

Asst. Prof. Acc.

Pitcher, Seymour

Prof. Genl. Lit.

Rafuse, Robt.
Randall , Dorus
Richardson, Jack
Robinson, Peter

Prof. Pol. Sci.
Prof. Physics
Asst. Prof. Psyc.
Inst. Geology

6

�FACULTY DIRECTORY (CONTIN UED)
Rosenberg, Bernard
Schellig-Hackett, Mildred
Schumacher, Gearge J.
Steer, Alfred G.
Van Riper, Joseph

Ass't.
Leet. Bio.
Ass't.
Ass't.

Prof. Soc.
and Nurs.
Prof. Bio.
Prof. Ger.
Prof. Geo.

Weigand, Paul
Weld, John S.
Williams, Roger
Wilmoth, James
Wright, Frances M.

THE FACULTY AT ITS BEST

62

Assoc. Prof. Ger.
Assoc. Prof. Eng.
Inst. Lang.
Prof. Bio.
Ass't. Prof. Math

��SENIORS
Our four years at Harpur seem but a fleeting moment in retrospect. A kaleidoscope of memories whirls through our heads, memories of people and buildings, good times and hard study, from th e bright leaves of fall, th rough the
snow of winter, to the sunny days of spring . In looking back over our days at
Harpur, we find these diverse memories converging suddenly into a sort of
oneness, a feeling of nostalgia over leaving ou r college life behind.
Th is is not the only feeling we experience. There is an eagerness to get to
the task ahead, mixed wjth an awesome respect for its magnitude.
And so we go forward to meet I fe's challenge, leaving behind the physical
reality and everyday life of Harpur, but taking with us the things of greater
value . . . social and intellectual sophistication.

64

�KINGSLEY ALLEN

RICHARD BATTISTA

PHILIP AUDINO

WILLIAM BAKER

PAUL BENJAMIN

65

�HELEN BETZ

66

WILLIAM BLATTER

RICHARD BROWN

MICHAEL CELESTE

JOHN CHARLES

�SARAH

cURA TO LO

DoRLENE D ODD

RICHARD

DOWNS

HENRY F1ACO

67

�I

JOSEPH FORD

68

ROBERT GALLAGHER

JOHN GIBLIN

KENNETH GOLDBERG

JANET GREENWOOD

�/

J
ROBERT GOTTSFELD

BE RNARD GRUZLEWSKI

JAMES GROGAN

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69

�KATHERINE KALEKA

SHELDON KINNEY

ANNE KLETT

70

ALDA KLESKE

GERTRUDE KREISEL

�ROBERT KRIVIT

ROBERT MAAS

(HARLES LESKO

ELWYN MANN

DARWIN LINDSLEY

�DENISE MAROZAS

72

JAMES MEYRICK

JOHN MOTT

BARBARA NEALON

JOHN NEMIRE

�JOSEPH NESTOR

ADRIA PoPECK

BARBARA PARCIAK

0

MAIN STREET
MILK SHOPPE

!RENE PoRTNOI

FLOYD RAMAGE

73

�RUSSELL REED

THOMAS REYN~LDS

WALTER RYAN

74

PAULETTE ROSSELET

JOSEPH SCHULTZ

�ROBERT SHANNAHAN

STANLEY WILSON

MELVILLE STRATTON

EARLE WHITE

THEODORE SWARTWOOD

�CLIFFORD WHITMAN

MONICA WYZALEK

JOHN ZWIERZYNSKI

SENIORS NOT SHOWN
Ferris Akel
David Allen
Daniel Bartek
Howard Brewster
Urania Courlas
John Fletcher
John Gasparovic
Fred Gunn
Frederick Guth
William MacDowall
Donald Mil ls
Peter Oppmann
Gerfried Seebohm
William Shamulka
Charles Walther
George Sarkisian

76

�SENIOR DIRECTORY
ALLEN, KINGSLEY Bus. Ad; Track and CrossCoyntry; lntramura ls; CN; Adelphi (treas.);
Bowling.

RICHAR D-Germa n

Club;

Newman

BETZ, HELEN Pandoran ; Choir; Chorus; Pintop·
piers.

BLATTER, WILLIAM CN (ad. mgr., bus. mgr.);
APO (sec., treas.); Dionysian s (sec ., treas.,
v-pres., pres.); Bus. Ad.; lntramura ls.

BROWN, RICHARD Amer. Chem. Soc.; Newman
Club; Dionysia ns (alumni sec.); Colonist (asst.
ed., assoc. ed.); SRO (stage mgr.)

CELESTE, MICHAEL Dionysian s ( v-pres. ); Italian
Club; lntramura ls.

GOLDBERG, KENNETH Basketba ll (capt.); SOS
(pres., treas.); Hillel; Biology Club; lntramura ls;
Jewish Fellowsh ip; Frenc::h Club; Spring Weekend Comm.

GREENWOOD, JANET Thalian (historia n, treas.
pres.); CN; USG; (sec.); NSA; Protestan t Fellowship (pres.); Chorus; Spanish Club: Intramurals.

GROGAN , JAMES CN (sports ed., man. ed.);
USG; Goliards (v-pres,) ; Colonial Players (vpres., pres.); Clarendo n (ed.) lntramura ls;
SRO; Convo . Comm.; Stu. Org. Comm.; "Time
of Your Life;'' "Taming of the Shrew;" "Antigone."

GRUZLEWSKI, BERNAR D-Newm an Club; Track;
Cross-Co untry; Adelphi (v-pres., treas.); Spiked Shoe (sec.); Rifle and Pistol Club; SRO;
lntramura ls.

CHARLES, JOHN APO.

COURLAS, URANIA -French Club; Pandoran .

JOHNSO N, VIRGINIA German Club; (sec.);
French Club (sec.); Pintopple rs (treas., sec.);
Colonial Players; SRO (sec.); Boots and Saddle;
Canterbu ry Club; Math Club.

CURATOLO, SARAH- Glee Club; Italian Club.

DE PUGH, DONALD -Dionysia ns (v-pres., pres.);
lntramura ls; Agapean s; SRO; Gavel Club; InterSocial Club Council.

DODD, DORLENE-F rench
dorans.

(sgt.-arm s, treas.);

GALLAGHER, ROBERT Frosh. Pres.; Dionysia ns
(sec., pres.); APO (v-pres.) ; CN; USG (advocate, pres.); Debate (pres.); Colonist (ad,
mgr.); SRO; Gavel Club (v-chmn , chmn.);
Convo. Comm.; French Club.

AUDINO , PHILIP Italian Club; lntramura ls.

BATTISTA,
Club.

FIACCO, HENRY Adloyho
Bus. Ad.

Club

(treas.)

Pan-

KALEKA , KATHER INE-Thal ian (sec.) Colonial
Players; Cheerlea der; SRO; Slavic Club.

lntramura ls;
Dionysian s;
SHELDON
KINNEY,
Track; Rifle and Pistol Club; Canterbu ry Club.

77

�SENIOR DIRECTORY (CONT )
KLESKE, ALDA McCUNN Debate (sec.); Radio;
IRC, Soph. Treas.; "Time of Your Life;'' Jul"lior
Treas.; Chorus.

LINDSLEY, DARWIN Colonial Players (v-pres.);
German Club; Adelphi (treas., pres.); Baseball, lntramurals; USG; NSA (dist. chmn. ); Ed.
Handbook.

LESKO, CHARLES CN (ed., ed .-chief.) USG;
Adelphi; NSA (NYS pres.); Clarendon (man.
ed.); SRO; Slavis Club; lntramurals; Rifle and
Pistol Club; Gavel Club (v-pres.); Canadian
Exchange; NSA.
Natnl. Exec. Comm.; Dragon Society.

MAAS, ROBERT Colonial
(chmn.); SRO; Debate.

players;

CN;

Radio

MANN, ELWYN Bus. Ad.; Agapeans; Dionysians
(treas., pres .); SRO; Colonist (comptroller);
Colonial Players.

MAROZAS, DENISE Chorus;
Sec.; Cheerleader.

Pandoran;

Junior

MEYRICK, JAMES Dionysians; APO; CN.

MOTT, JOHN CN (bus. mgr.); Dionysians; Newman Club; Bus. Ad.

POPECK, ADRIA-Thalian (v-pres., pres.); Chorus;
Bus. Ad.; Slavic Club; Colonial Players.

ROSSELET, PAULETTE-Colonial Players (treas.);
"Antigone;" "Lady's Not for Burning."

SHANNAHAN, ROBERT Ge1 man Club; Newman
Club (sgt.-arms, v-pres.); USG; D1onysians;
Colonist (asst. ed., assoc. ed.), CN; Colonial
Players·" Arms and the Man;'' "Lady's not for
Burning," Debate (sec. and varsity); SRO;
Publ. Comm.

STRATTON, MEL VILLE- Clarendon; "Time of Your
t.ife;" Baccacia (sec.); Philosophy Club ( founder, pres.); SRO.

SWARTWOOD, T. MARSHALL-Adelphi; (pres.);
Golf; lntramurals; Economics Club.

WHITE, EARLE-SOS (pres., equ.); Golf; Basketball; lntramurals Chorus; CN; Dorm (treas.,
pres.) Slavic Club; Junior Pres.; Biology Club
(treas.); USG (v-pres.); "Taming of the
Shrew;" Inter-Social Club Council (sec.); Sgt.Arms Frosh; Clarendon; Rifle and Pistol Club;
Fac.-Stu. Assn.; Dragon Society.

WYZALEK, MON ICA French Club (pres., v-f'res.,
sec., treas.); Newman Club; German Club;
Math Club (pres.)

NESTOR, JOSEPH Golf.

PARCIAK, BARBARA - Cheerleader; Pandoran;
Newman Club (treas.) Chorus; Sgt.-Arms.
Soph.

78

ZWIERZYNSKI, JOHN-Colonist (photog.); Frosh
v-pres.; soph pres.; Adelphi (gen. off.); CN
(photo ed.); Pintopplers; Pistol Team; German
Club; lntramurals; Rifle and Pistol Club; Newman Club; "Antigone;" Fae-Stu-Assn.; Dragon
Society .

��UNDERCLASSMEN
From the beanied Freshman to the "sophisticated" Junior, the underclassmen
form the majority of the student body at Harpur College. Theirs is the spirit of
tomorrow in college life. The Senior is facing new challenges in the world outside
the academic community. The Freshman, Sophomore, and Junior is facing the
continuing challenge of his college career.
The underclassman accepts his heritage from the Senior, nurtures it, and tries
his best to leave the college a better place than he found it. Equally important,
he tries to leave a better person than he was when he entered.
This is the responsibility of the Harpur underclassmen. On the basis of their
progress thus far, the departing class may well entrust its heritage to their able
hands.

80

�FRESHMEN

First row: Bruce Portmore, Gary Parker, Mimi Borodovko, Barbara Vosburgh,
Barbara Alper, Grace Hawley, Jerry Rubin, Neil Clark. Second row: Joanne Kaminsky, Rita Lesko, Marie Chirco, Janet Salie, Sherry Pierce, Shirley Williams, Lucinda
Haty, Barbara Hallowell. Third row: John McCarthy, Ray Cornelius, Robert Wooding, David Moskowitz, Mel Schwartz, Norman Rifkin. Fourth row: Myron Storch,
Thomas McMahon, Arthur Goldberg, Gene Knapp, Francis A. Bills, Ronald Bullock,
Chris Egan, Dave Fribourg, Phillip Budine.

81

�FRESHMEN

Firs! row: Elynor Marks, Grace Hawley, Linda Greene, Laurie Parison, Gail Martin,
Betsy Knickerbocker. Second row: Patricia Cannaday, Barbara Hollowell, Shirleyanne Roloson, Janel Salie, Janice Kellner, Rhoda Quackenbush, Mickey Sklenka,
Roberta Lindenbaum. Third row. Robert Thompson, Todd Bayer, John Potanian,
Carl Zymet, John Montalbano, Carl Goodman, Dave Cohen, A l Karder. Fourth
row: James Warner, Myron Storch, Jerry Rubin, Ronald Glazer, Roy L. Costley.

82

�SOPHOMORES

First row: Helen Schmukler, Dorothy Mason, Bronda Platt, Regina Hardy, Shelly
Milgrom, Sue Cowan. Second row: Connie Grover, Nancy Barnes, Gail Grineff,
Marie Mazzocchi, Jaki Bruner, Jt.dy Fackson, Barbara Sanders, Sandy Benner.
Third row: Byrne Fone, Irene Fetcenko, Billie Lu Liddie, Gertrude Schuler, Mary
Wood, Sue Gehm, Caralyn Camp, Shirley Brutvan, Ron Jensen, Dick Henderson,
Michael Materese. Fourth row: Martin Fleisher, Lloyd Oestreicher, Garry O'Connell,
Steve Mydanick, Steve Davis, Walt Jonsson, Ralph Steinberg, Ted Czupryna, Stan
Mingas. Fifth row: Stuart Rogan, Lenny Konkowski, Rick Jost, Paul Alden, Fran
Melia, Philip Demarest, Reynold Boezi, Dick Aswad.

83

�JUNIORS

First row: Marion Battaglini, Vera Kuharsky, Evelyn Heiyen. Second row: Marlene
Gray, Shirley Carey, Angie Liciandrello, Albina Gallagher, Donna Okerlund, Kay
Moran. Third row: Dick Ward, Dean Haulton, Leigh Allard, Bill Dabrusin, Frank
Waite, Marilyn Laffere, James Tasker, Jerry Weiss, Gene Flood, Floyd Knowlton,
Robert Altschul. Fourth row: Herb Abeles, Jerry Beck, John Higgins, Dave Tucker,
Wirt Chaney.

84

�85

��--

DOES -H/3
Sf/OfPING !JTTH£

HllRPtlR Cot.J..£G£ f300KJTP!i'E/

a

a

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in Your Later Business and Professional Career

Bank at FIRST-C ITY
Listed Here Are Some of the Services Which Are
Available at First-City National Bank
CHECKING ACCOUNTS

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NIGHT DEPOSITORY

CHRISTMAS CLUBS

You can expect competent prompt, friendly service a t First-City, in all of the many ways
which "this bank serves the financial needs of the community.

Free Parking at All 5 OfficP.s
•

First Office: Court and Chenango Streets

•

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•

Installment Loan Office: 18 Chenango Street
Member

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in

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~h:i:~~G:s

JAMES I. GILL
Insurance
LIFE -

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FIRE -

BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

Fine China - Glassware and Gifts
For All Occasions

ANNUITIES
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AUTOMOBILE - CASUALTY
ACCIDENT -

Binghamton Savings Bank Building
Johnson City 7-2919

Binghamton 3-5612

Over I00 Open Stock Patterns in Dinnerware
Congratulations and Best Wishes

to Our Future Leaders
"The Class of 1956"

Compliments and

From

Best Wishes of

SALL - STEARNS

HILL'S BAKERY

Smart Young Men's Wear
138 Washington Street
BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

THE ENDICOTT PRINTING

co.

ALL COMMERCIAL PRINTING

The Perfect Combination
for Your Reading and
Listening Pleasure!

Letterpress and Photo Offset
Wedding Invitations - Announcements

124 Nanticoke Avenue
ENDICOTI, N. Y.
Phone 5-9441

Compliments of

ROBERT H. LARAWA Y

THE
DAILY BULLETIN
and
RADIO STATION
WENE

JEWELER
Successor to Ralph J. Rogers

Greater Endicott's Own!

30 Court Street

Make Them a Regular Habit

BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
Phone 4-3148

�J. F. RICE

WALTER R. MILLER CO., INC.
Stationery - Gi~s
Sporting Goods

J. FRANK HOLMES, Lie. Mgr. and O wner

170 Washington Street

Homelike Funeral Home

121 State Street

150 Main Street

BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

Phone 7-5514

FUNERAL HOME

Compliments of

ENDICOTT FLORIST
I 16 Washington Avenue
ENDICOTT, N. Y.
Phone 5-0221

FEMININE WEARABLES

Congratulations to the
GRADUATES OF HARPUR

ENDICOTT JOHNSON
RETAl L STORES
Binghamton - Johnson City Owego - Vestal

Endicott

�MARINE MIDLAND
TRUST COMPANY
of
SOUTHERN NEW YORK
Binghamt on Office:

84 COURT STREET, BINGHA MTON, N. Y.
Midland Time Plan Department:
99 COLLIER ST., BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

South Side Office:
53 S. WASHINGTON ST., BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

West Side Office:
156 MAIN ST., BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

Union-Endicott Office:
100 E. MAIN ST., UNION, N. Y.

Workers Trust Office:
243 MAIN STREET, JOHNSON CITY, N. Y.
Cortland Office:
36 MAIN STREET, CORTLAND, N. Y.
Elmira Office:
150 LAKE STREET. ELMIRA. N. Y.

Marine Time Plan Office:
125 LAKE ST., ELMIRA, N. Y.

Merchants Office:
109 W. WATER ST., ELMIRA. N. Y.

South Side Office:
418 S. MAIN ST., ELMIRA, N. Y.

Elmira Heights Office:
156 E. 14th ST., ELMIRA. HEIGHTS

Horseheads Office:
HORSEHEADS, N. Y.

Watkins Glen Office:
WATKINS GLEN, N. Y.

Drive-In Office:
420 CARROLL ST., ELMIRA. N. Y.

�Compliments of

THE BINGHAMTON
SAVINGS BANK

62-68 Exchange Street

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

Member of
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

�Best Wishes

J. H. WESTFALL, Inc.
"WESTFALL '$ OF VESTAL"

Hardware -

Dress Shop

CLEARVIEW
MOTOR COURT

Down the Highway from the Campus
I 12 - I 16 Parkway
VESTAL, N. Y.

VESTAL PARKWAY
l/4 Mile West of Campus

Your Music Center Since 1865

WEEKS &amp; DICKINS ON
"The Name That Means Music to
the Southern Tier"

Each Unit Equipped With
Modern Bath
FAMILY UNITS - SINGLE UNITS
REASONABLE RATES

34 Chenango Street

Phone 7-7146

Dial 4-2481

CONGRA TULATIO NS
Class of '56

FRANKIE AND JOHNNIE'S
SNACK BAR

Just Down the Road from the New Campus

�Compliments of

ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY
Three Offices for Your Convenience

VESTAL - ENDICOTT - ENDWELL

Marine Midland Trust Company
Endicott National Bank
Endicott Trust Company

Members -

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

�ANGELINE'S
FLOWER
SHOP
The most fragile of Arts
1306 MONROE ST.

Mc LEANS

McLEANS DEP'T STORES
INC.
Stores in

5-2551

BINGHAM TON, N. Y.
and
Complimen ts of

ENDICOTT, N. Y.

ALEXANDER HARVEY
Clothing

Mcleans Store for Men
BINGHAMT ON, N. Y.

DOWN IN UNION

Binghamton's Finest
Approved by Duncan Hines

COLONIAL MOTEL
MR. AND MRS. W. J. RAIF
3 Miles West on Highway 17

Phone 9-151 I

GOOD RESTAURAN TS NEARBY

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Smartly Styled
SPORTSWEAR

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MEN'S STORE

42 Court Street

Binghamton

Phon e 4- 1I 34

NEW YORK

�LIBERTY
Liberty is somethin g we give too little thought to. We are apt to take
liberty for granted. We often forget that the privilege of reading and
writing and saying and thinking and doing as we please is a God-give n
right - one that is of inestimab le value - one that we should love and
be always ready to guard and defend.
Standing as a stalwart guardian of the rights of the people is the free
press of America - defender of our liberty, and enemy of tyrants and
insidious forces that attempt to undermin e our way of life.
As long as America' s newspape rs print the words and thoughts of our
people, just so long will America remain free. So let us more than ever
cling to that heritage that is one of the cornersto nes of our American
Democra cy - a FREE PRESS, and we shall go a long way toward preserving those other things which we hold essential as a free people.

THE BINGHAMTON PRESS
EVENING

SUNDAY

and

Dedicate d to the Service of the People

COMPTON DUMM

CLOVERDALE
FARM CO., I NC.
The Best in Dairy Foods for Over 50 Years

Home of

NEW
UNDERGRAD

TOWN TALK ICE CREAM

SHOP
Exclusive Things for Students
25 CHEMAMGO STREET

Complim ents of

BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

VAUGHN'S CLOTHING, INC.
HART - SHAFNER - MARX
EAGLE CLOTHES

Formal

Phone

107-109 E. Main Street

Rentals

2-2346

Endicott (Union District) N. Y.

Phone 5-213 I

�Compliments of

CORNELL
DAIRY PRODUCTS, INC.

Endicott
New York

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

WE SALUTE
the June Graduates of Harpur College

MAY SUCCESS
Always Be Yours!

�Complim en ts
of

LUC AS
DISTRIBUTING COMPANY

JOHNSO N CITY, NEW YORK

�GROWTH
The United States of tomorrow belongs to
the children of today and the adults are the
trustees for them. It is O\lr duty to safeguard the principles that have made our
country great and to encourage all with
whom we come in contact to take an ever
increasing interest in the family and the
home; thereby contributing to the betterment of our communities, the growth of
our country, and the improvement of our
relations throughout the world.

J;\;TER0: . \TI O~A L

13\JSli\ESS

1::&gt;:D1COT"r,

l\ L\ C Hl~ES

:-:i:w ) ORK

1,...~,tlu&lt;bo\•h/vt TA\l('l~\l,t,('(

IA.'I~ f'UIUSHI'~ CC'\lrA'l OAttM

H\AS

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                  <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>
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                  <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>
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                  <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>
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                    <text>•

•

co on1s 1957

��the . ..

��harpur college

1957 colonist
3

�dedicated.

4

·t~ the future

�spring 1956
5

��before

during

after

7

�hands-el and guess who

8

�7 veils

% time

9

��it's a seven

/

it's a giraffe

it's a · · ·

11

�harpur's
bridge quartet

brubeck's jazz quartet
12

�s.s. harpur

april in endicotl

13

�presenting pickles

ebb tide
14

�debating for dragons
15

��administration and buildings
17

�dr. willia1n s. carlson
president of the state university of new york

�dr. glcnn g. hartle
president of harpur college

19

�progress

�toward •••

21

�the new

•
on
gymnasium
22

�the new campus

23

�dr. s. stewart gordon
dean

24

�michael

assistant t

5

l .

.

scels1

o tie presU:lent

jack w. roll

ass'is t ant lo tiie dOW
ean

25

�john p. beln1ak
director of student activities

ralph g. rishel
director of admissions

26

�J.ames e · }Jarsons
I
o
director
.
admissions

. ta111
ass1s

Hen thurston

e
oI students
coimselor

----e rnest J·· washburn
. / secretary
fina ncw

27

�. · h
JOSJa

t • newcomb
.
/ibranan

and staff

�colonial building

johnson house

29

�park house

park
•
carriage
house

�frank t. polJard
coach

david c. henderson
director of athletics

�belly hitchings
secretary lo the office of
student personnel

donna burgess
secretary to the assistant
UJ the president

janet wittmeyer
secretary lo the office of
admi-ssions

betty mcelligott
secretary to the office of
admi,ssions

�edith james

mabel brain

faculty secretary

secretary to dean

jo downey
faculty secretary

ann stanko

faculty secretary

chris fickett

switchboard operator

33

�busines office staff

cleanor huffman

secretary to the president

harbara winters
secretary to the president

clcanor krati-.c and connie hughes
secretaries to the assistant to
the clean

..
34

�lincoln dormitory

learned dormitory

�•
1ames
... dormitory

madison dormitory

36

�maric d. con&lt;')
registrar

v 1v1an mu:-.so

assistant to the registrar

elleen ketchum
assistant to the registrar

�bookstore

38

�mrs. cross
book.\tore manager

39

�murphy dorm

maintenance
staff

�•
seniors

~

41

�herbert a. abelr:-.
social science

business

centcreach. new ~ ork
dion)siarn; registrar. recording secretary,
"ice presidcnl
spring re' uc o rganization
sophomore dass ,•frc president
united student gO\rrnmcn t member-at·
large
span ish duh
intramural softball and football
colonial news circulation

leigh w. allard
humanities

la11{.(1u1~e

end icotl. nc'' ) ork
spnni~h

duh treasurer
french duh
colonial news e"Xchange editor

42

�d. robert allsrhul
social science- geography
massapequa. new ) ork
lincoln dorm- fl oor chairman
learned dorm- treasurer. president
alpha phi omega treasurer
protestant fellowship

Jerome beck
social science- history
endicolt. new york
dionysians- president, vice president, recording sec retary, corresponding secretary
spanish club vice president
colonist spo rts ed itor
,:ar!&lt;ily tenni"
\ar.,ity basketball
intramural basketball. \Olleyball, football

43

�jack f. carcleJlo
.wrirt! srience

arcounting

hingharnton. new york
italian rluh

haccacia

shirlcy ann carey
humanities

literature

'&lt;'~tal. nc&gt;11 'ork

thalians Yicc&gt; president
protestant fellowship--secretary
spani$h duh secretary
choru"'
··old maid and the thief"' opera

�wirt m. charn'\
social , cience· economics
johnson cit\. new )Ork
adelph i- \·irr presiclrnt, corresponding
sec re ta ry
junior class' ice president
economics cluh
ski club
intramural football. basketball
intersorial club council

john consey
social science- business
binghamton. new ) ork

45

�leo corcoran
science- chemistry
cortland, new york

robert corwm
science- chemistry
endicott, new york
goliards

�margaret crnig
lwmanities- literatu re
endicolt. new ) ork
thalians

mary elizabeth cru 11
l11una11ities
hinghamton. new york
nationa l &lt;:Ludenl a"~ocialion academic
freedom chairman
ncwman club n·corcling secretary
pandorans historian
colonial new&lt;:

47

�william dabrusin
social science--political science
peekskill. new york
international relations club
&lt;li onysians-corresponding secretary, vice
president
french club
jewish fellowship- president

clarence darrah
social science- history
bingham ton. new york

48

�john m. daughLon
social science- accounting
endwell. ne w yo rk

dorothy t. davison
science-psychology
binghamton, new york
french club- ioecretary
pandorans historian
newman club

�raymond de) o
social science· accounting
bingharnton.

Ill'\\'

~ ork

~cralcl c. donahue
social science-economics
wstal. nc" ) ork
acldphi
international relations rluh

50

�robert m. eclwards
social science-(lccounting
hinghamton. new ) ork
newman club

thomas e. flagg
humanities- literature
lewis. new york
dionysians

51

�eu~ene

d. flood

social science-business
binghamton. new york
colonial players- president, vice president.
treasurer. business manager
" lad y's not for burning"
'"the gamblers"
"the queens of france"
spring revue organization- business
manager
newman club president
german club

sam g 1ovrnazzo
humanities
binghamlon. new york

�william gla ser
humanities
endicot l. ne1\ ) ork
clarcnclon ed itor
i. l. k. treasurer. pres iden t. co rresponding
secretary
colonial n~ws
french club
intramural foo tbal l. hasehall

ann loui se hanson
social srienre- history
man lius. nrw 1 ork

.

panclorans ~ecretary
colonial nrws circulation edi tor
spring rrvuc organ ization

�clran hau Iton
scienrr psyr/w/o/!)
john..,on ('ii\. nr1' 1 ork

grrma11 cl11h trea ... 11n'r
intramural football. ha--kt•thall
j11nior elm•« pre-.id&lt;'nl
adt·lohi prl'sid1•11l. grn&lt;'ra l officl'I'
un it&lt;'d ,.clu&lt;knt gmt•rnrnt·nl nwmlwr-atlarg&lt;'
intl'r;ocial duh co111wil
('op1 t'ditnr
coloni~t

evelyn heiyen
humanities
hingharnton.

IH'I' 1

ork

pandorans prcsidl'n l. trrasurrr
"rnior elm•!' ~rcrctan
united studrnt gO\ rrnmrn l mrmhcr-a lla rgr
rolonia l pla)ers
''time of 1 our lifr··
::laming of the :;hre_1~ .,
inms and the rnan
chorus
cherrleacling
ph ilo..;oph) cluh
spring re1 ur organ izal ion
intramural 1 olle1 hall. haskethall
"ho·._ ''ho amc;ng -.tudrnt&lt;: in anH.'rican
rollrges and un i1ersiliC's

�john p. hil!~ins
snria/ .ffi'"llf"&lt;'

rf"n110111irs

hin«ha111lo11 nt'\\ \ nrk
•t'nior cla"'- pr&lt;'sidcnt
foll'll'-i&lt;" '-o&lt;"it'l \ \ice pn•..,irlenl
adelphi drnplain
unil&lt;•d ;;turl&lt;·nt gm&lt;'rnnwnl nwmhrr-allargl'
intrrsocial &lt;"luh council
ne1' man duh
inlt'l'nalional r&lt;' lation!' r lu h
i11tra111ural ,ofthall. football. ha!&lt;kethall
"ho"s "ho a111m1g :-tndent... in amrrican
colleg:1•-. and uni\ e1"•itirs

paul hill
social srie11cc business
,;~ rac11s1'. 1ww york

�wi lliam j. ho llz
social sl'ienre arcounling
onronta. nr'' ) ork

alpha phi omega prr!iiclent. treasurer
jrwi"h frll&lt;rn shi p president
('olon ial 1wws bui;i negs manager. adver·
tisi111Z manager
di on\ sians treasurn

earl w. inman, jr.
scfrnre

ph 1 sics

john&lt;.;011 cit).

n&lt;'\\ ~

ork

diorn ~ian"
germ an rlu h
int ramu ml "ofthall. football. basketball.
'olle\ hall

56

�flo,d h. kn&lt;m Iton. Jr.
social science ·socio/of!)
'e:-tal. 11r11 '01 k

frr"'hman class srrgeanl-al-anns
junior cla:-s lrrnsun't

cl ion\ sia11s-

srC'rrlan
inlramurnl haskrthall. ha.,d1all. football
pin topple ..,.,
hook and ke\ cluh \ ic&lt;' prr"iclrnl

marlene ~ray kucera
social science sociolo;o
.
cndicoll. tH'\1 \ ork
forensic !&lt;ociel) prr!&gt;idrnl. !-.&lt;'C'l'Claq
rnrsit) dehalP ll'alll
pandorans
german duh
inlcrnalional relaliono; cluh
dar!'nclon ecli1orial hoard
colonial 1H·11·o; reporl&lt;'r
coloni"t cditor-in-c·hid. cop\ editor
sophomore cla-.s secrctan
clragon -..ociet 1
11 hr)s "ho arnon!-{ -.turlcnh 111 amrri&lt;'all
n1llege-.. anrl uni\l'r-.itir"

57

�jul&lt;'" kurlz
.Hwio/ s1·ir'llr'&lt;'
11&lt;'11

hurgh.

!WI\

/1/1,illl'SS

\ ork

m;tri I~ n J· lafferre
.w,.ia/ ".;,.,,,.,, politiral sriencc
hin:diamtnn. ne11 ~ ork
pandoran-. trea ... urer
united -.tudent go\ &lt;'lllllH'lll lllC'mher-atlargt'
inlt•r-.ocial duh counC'il
inlt•rnational n•lation ... duh publicity
nrnnager
C'&lt;&gt;lonial nt'''"' rqwrler. &lt;·op\ editor. :Jl'''"
editor
pinloppl&lt;'r,,
C'anlerhun club

58

�herbcrt landow
h11111anities philosophy
hi nghamton. nc\\ 1 ork

geralcl lansing
social science acrounting
dt•lmar. new ) ork
~.o.s.

59

�rona ld letaYish
humanities
endicotl. ne\' ) ork
colonial nrws
chorus
madrigal group
adlmho
men~!'; gll'C' dub

alhcrt lock jr.
:-orial -.cil•ncc

arcounting
ork

hin~hamton. llC'\\ )

60

�ru pert c. loucks
social science-history
jamcsto" n. nc\\' ) ork
international relations clu b

~ccrctary

edwin lyons
social science-economirs
hinghamton, new york
baccacia
intramural basketball

61

�waller mandeYillc
social science -arcou nt in g
liarlon. nr" ) o rk

jeannette e. mansour
social scie11ce-sociology
hing hamton.

rH' " ~ ork

gcrman cluh
international relation-; cluh
th alians
pintopplers

�rop:c&gt;r me Yannon
social science histoq
rncl ieolt. ne" 'ork
goliar&lt;l&lt;: treasurer
intrrsocial eluh cotmeil
hook and kev eluh
prolr-.tant frllow .. hip

kath leen moran
social science accounting
qucpns. new york
f rc~hman class Yiec president
senior class vice president
united student goYcrnment- member-atlarge
pandorans- prcsident. 'ice presic1ent
queen of hearts
imow queen
pistol club- secretary
intramural ha&lt;:kcthall. 'ollevball
ncwman cluh secretary ·
jarnes dorm. fosler IHJUS&lt;' president
james dorm. macli&lt;;on dorm. floor
chairman
"ho'.; who among -.tudrnls 111 american
eollegc" and uni,cr-;itiec;

�dennis william navle
social science geography
W) al using. penn'&lt;) lvania
baccacia president. vice president
intramural basketball. foothalL Yollcyball
µinlopplers
inlersocial club cou ncil
internal ion al relations duh

william o'brien
science-chemistry
binghamton. new york
goliards-sergeant-at-arms, vice president,
corresponding secretary. prei:;ident
gcrman club vice president
biolog) club
intramural basketball. :;ofthall

�frank williarn page
social science business
C'Orl land. nc" 'ork

alfrecl parker
science

p;eology
ne\\ ) ork

jamc~lo11 n.

�vincent mi chae1 p1ccrnno
social science

sociology

end icott. new york
choi r
italian club- president. vice president
goliards- secretary
spring revue organization
newman club
dragon society
spiked shoe club- president
cross country- letter- captain
track letter
most improved athlete of the year
athlete of the year
t rophy time trial winner
who's who among students m american
colleges and universities

robert c. randall
social science- business
homer, new york
adelphi
french club

�david reynolds
social science- economics
binghamton. new york
adelphi
freshman class treasurer
sophomore class president
va rsi tr haskethall
inlrar~ural football

matthew ricciardi jr.
social science- economics
endicott. new york
colonial news- sports editor
newman club
cla rendon
goliards treasurer
italian club

�VJrgma risk
social science-economics
binghamton, new york
pandorans
colonial news
col onial players
"time of your life"
"arms and the man"
"antigone"
spring revue organization

jonathan rossie
social science-history
hinghamton, new york
ad el phi

�donald c. seaman
science

chemistry

endi colt, new york

arthur h. skeirik
social science-political science
bingham ton. new york
debate
colonial players
dion)sians- !\ecretary
spring revue organization
spani!\h clu b
international relations club
ugly man

�barbara louise smigala
humanities-literature
danbury, connecticut

david g. thomas jr.
social science-accounting
candor, new york

�roland thomas
social science-business
bingham lon. new york
goliards
c ross country
basketball

david 1. tucker
social science-history
marathon, new york
chorus
protestant fellowship
"old maid and the thief" opera

�gerald m. tynan
sorial science- economics
cndicolt. new york
ncwman club

frank h. waite
mathematics
dewilt\•ille, new york
math club
chorus

72

�richard a. ward
social science

business

hinghamton, new york
alpha phi omega prrsident, vice president
protestant fellows hip
di on ysians

w. david webster
social science-business
binghamton, new york

73

�Jerry we1ss
social science-political science
rochester, new york
international relations club
s.o.s.- equerry
pintopplers
intramurals

mary e. wilson
humanities-literature
endicott, new york

�pasquale z1can
social science
cndicoll. new yo rk
baccacia-secrelary
colon ial players
iLa li an club

semor class officers
president
vice president
secretary _
treasurer
sergeant-at-arms

john higgins
kathleen moran
evelyn heiyen
francis gennarelli
____ jonathan rossie

75

�seniors not shown
charles broere

themas lawsen

wesl scyvi Ile. new york

greenc, new york

social science-business

Jerry brown

david lazar

binghamton, new ) ork

oceanside. new york

social science-history

social science-business

harry carroll

hehdan letyczewski

grarwillc. new york

warsaw. poland

social science-political science

social science-economics

robert ellis
cndicolt, new york

humanities

· denald mattis
lowville, new york

science-geology

kenneth geldherg

john meade

hrooklyn, new york

johnson city, new york

social science-accounting

harold heffman
IO\\

ville, new york

social science-business

social science-sociology

themas palmer
binghamton, new york

social science-business

william jacksen

geerge russell

endicoll. new york

bellerose, new york

social science-accounting

humanities-language

hedwig jasielonis

pmes tasker

bingharnlon. new york

syracuse, new york

social science-geography

science-psychology

robert lager

roger welcott

brookl) n. new york

binghamlon, new york

social science-business

76

social science-history

science

psychology

�faculty

"

77

�cir. s idney :;. harcave
chairman of the dfoision of the
social sciences

dr. c. max hull
chairman of the division of science
and mathematics

dr. eymour

111.

pitcher

chairman of the division of the
humanities

78

�dr. lewis alexand cr

mr. joseph berm an

dr. john hc&gt;a 11

dr. a ldo be rna rdo

79

�mr. micha&lt;•l hochnak

dr. dolora cunningham

80

dr. donald coates

dr. jacob fischthal

�mr. kenneth franklin

dr. christian gruber

dr. amy gilbert

dr. di ck wick ha 11

81

�dr. james kenl

dr. marvin kristein

82

dr. rodney ketcham

dr. otakar machotk a

�dr. rigo mignani

dr. earl murphy

mr. norman miller

mr. philip piaker

83

�mr. peter robinso n

dr. george schuma cher

84

mr. robert rudin

dr. kurt shell

�dr. joseph van riper

mr. paul wolotkin

dr. jamC's wilmoth

miss frances wright

85

�faculty directory
cir. lei\ i-, alexanrlrr

asst. prof. geography

cir. laurence learner

dr. john hcall

asst. prof. economics

cir. harry lincoln

cir. joscph hcrman
cir. aldo brrnardo
mr. michael bochnak

inst. chemist!")
assoc. prof. romance lang.
inst. russian

prof. economics
asst. prof. music
asst. prof. art hist.

cir. kenneth lindsay

prof. sociology

cl r. otakar machotka

asst. prof. pol. sci.

dr. seymour mann

cir. eel gar bowers

asst. prof. english

dr. robert marsh

mr. john broh m

inst. anthropology

cir. robert me !arty

.. -

cir. max metlay

-----

......

asst. proI. english
asst. prof. history
asst. prof. chemistry

dr. john chalmers

prof. economics

cir. clonald coates

asst. prof. geolog}

cir. rigo mignani

clr. dolora cunningham

asst. prof. english

mr. norman miller

cir. phillip damon

asst. prof. english

dr. earl murphy

asst. prof. law. jur.

inst. art

dr. ·martin paul

prof. chem istf)

miss maq clemeter
mr. rohc•rt do\,cJ

inst. mathematics

richard facr

inst. history

cir. harold fagin

assoc. prof. psych ology

Ill r.

cir. jacoh fischtha l
mr. kcnneth franklin
d r. vincrnt f reima rrk
dr. am) gilbert

assoc. prof. biology
inst. bus. ad min istralion
asst. prof. english
prof. history

cir. robert penfield

asst. prof. rom. lang.
asst. prof. sociology

assoc. prof. ph) sics

mr. orval perr)

asst. prof. philosophy

mr. philip piaker

asst. prof. accounting

cir. seymour pitcher

prof. gen. lit.

dr. robert rafuse

prof. pol. sci.

dr. jack richardson

asst. prof. psychology

mr. peter robinson

inst. geology
inst. zoology

rm. j. a lex gilfillan

assoc. prof. music

mr. robert rudin

clr. christian gruber

asst. prof. english

d r. m. schellig-hackett

lect. bio.. nurs.

dr. cli('k wick hall

prof. mathematics

cir. george schumacher

asst. prof. biology

dr. s.iclncy harcavc

assoc. prof. history

dr. kurt shell

asst. prof. pol. sci.

cir. rohcrt hart

assoc. prof. physics

dr. alfred steer

asst. prof. german

dr. william heyman
dr. albert house
cir. c. max hull
dr. bcrnard huppe
dr. jack

kanun~k,

asst. prof. psycholog)
prof. history
prof. chemistry
prof. eng. lang .. gen. lit.

dr. joseph van riper
dr. paul weigand
dr. john weld
mr. roger williams

asst. prof. philosoph)
dr. james wilmoth

cir. jamcs kenl
&lt;lr. rodncy ketcham
86 dr. marvin kristein

prof. geography
assoc. prof. german
assoc. prof. english
inst. rom. lang.
prof. biology

prof. mathematics
mr. paul wolotkin _

inst. accounting

miss frances wright

asst. prof. math.

prof. romance lang.
asst. prof. economics

�underclassmen
97

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r. m ar io n ba
.
rl mitlt'h ne
ea
l!t'rt •('huler
d,
oo
&gt;.
w
ki
ll
ko
bi
po ,k y. clave
Ir an m el ia ,
o phillip,,.
la
,
lt&gt;
P
.
ko
jo
oe
t'n
C'
h.
tr
'l•
ur
fe
en e
-o n. ar th
'· jo hn "'
first row: ir
di ck be nd er
&gt;t•ph ,o un l!
h 'lt'inbt•rj!.
-a lh n·&lt;·d. jo
lp
":
ra
ro
''·
nd
he
ro
•r
·, "i ll ia m
•t an minl!m
th ir d ro ":

•
ss
1
1un or c l a
•

88

�officers
president
!'ice president
secretary
I reasu rer
sergea n I-al-a rm;,

"''' "" • ""'rt

dick ,;lank

d(• clonndlan
jm er zack
,;lan mi ngu"

hill

gro~an

kmm•. ""'" "'""'· """' '"""""'"· •""' "" '''"'"· •"" ,. "" i-. iW' """

inl!l' nitka.
m&gt;' di•k "'"'· '"' _.hm. """" '""'" m\wrt lliil-. '"" ""'"· '""' "'"''· h&gt; '"' '""'"
""'""
n•ynold
"" j ' " '''" loi• le•1, 'i&lt;k j " " d OI
d "wcbor1i.
lh ;,

""'°"' "'""" llei&gt;h", .oooId ''"", phiiip d"""""

�h.
ackenbu~
ia ca nn a&lt; h
el , rhoda qu
ba um . pa tr ic
. li nd a 'ta ck
be rt a li nd en
tin
ro
.
ar
r.
er
m
rk
pe
il
al
pa
ga
bi
foley,
st er . gary
fif"t row: bo
am ,, m ar th a
u•. la rr y w rb
ob od in .
•h irlf'y w il li
. ray co rm· Ji
ng
di
en, da vi d •l
oo
co
"'
'e co nd ro "' :
al
b
n.
bo
.
ma
in
od
te
~o
nQ
'!•
rl
n ro
hen , ea
th ir d row: ro
ko bb , da vr co
bob bl um. al
fourth row:

ass
l
c
e
r
o
m
o
h
sop
90

�officers
john mlcuch

president
vice president
secretary
lreasu rer
serf{eant-at-arms

~econd row: me\ ~chwar\7., !!ail iz,rineH,

ron rosenstein

harbara 'osburgh
sla~le) moldo\ an
ierry reardon

bl'b)

knickt•rbock&lt;'r. 1,!.UY garret\.

&gt;hi&lt;d "'" joho mko&lt;h, g&lt;o&lt; ko•P'· oohod ' " " ' ·

,,.1 hollm.,, ror ,,_.1.,.

91

�fir"t row: !ranee• kralL juclith han~en, ellen halclimand, ratherine •haler.
•t•&lt;·ond row: robt•rta warner. renet&gt; ba•h. judi1h ro~off, jucli1h bleser, ii~ solomon, rosemary
pari•ella.
third row: j. ~- min, ralph litu•. ron montaperlo, richarcl kroiss, jim •abraw, clennis kop•, tom
1.ayac.

four1h row: eel ward de persis, jack bregman, morty fishman, howard cohen, steve odden.

freshman

92

�first row: arlrne smith, patricia bracco. marl ha anderson.
'econd ro": sue potoker. marit' ronclC'pierrt'. ro't' !(iamhalvo, lucillr marlin. phyllis samuels,
"anclra tucker. alice werthrimer.
third ro'': "hi rley ~hot w rll, fr,•cla {ox. 'idrwy !(rt•rnhlall. l'U!(t'nt' lovelaC't'. t·arol klimow, linda
purtell.
fourth row: ant hon) ,cJral!l!iO, ma rl) n hu,h. janw~ bn·akey, rid18rd krajrski. col in me kirdy.

class
93

�m•~ ,,;,,.,...

H&lt;&gt;&lt; '""' ,omill• "'" kod. '""';' "'""- \,;,h &lt;hod•;,k • .,;, ,,;.,,,,

i""

jon&lt;

P'"'"""·

m;,h•'"· m";..,;,
-'"''· i""ld b&lt;"""" ""'

n"""'.
h&lt;' ''""''. '"' y , ....... juw
h&lt;••"·
,,.,ood '""'
•h; ,d "'" • '"" guld,obel. md '"'· md &gt;"""· i""" &lt;""""'kl· d••de • ;\w•. ,;,k de ,,.,; •.
'"""" " " ' " ' ' old&gt;. juh"

k&lt;um••"'"· ..,.,,;\\ •"'""·

hoh

kurt•rl\.

officers
president
tiice president
secretary
treasurer
ser{!ean t-at-a rm s

94

bob olson
jim sabraw
pat roberts
.
Jane pendergast
margaret williams

�•
•
organ1zat1ons

95

�united student government

~"""

"m '""' '"" h,wl&lt;Y· bob "'""·
&lt;•"'"".,.,,,Hni.
"" ""'"'""
""' m••'"· deo• ''""""· ,.!ly h.ndmOO. &lt;0b"'

'"" ""' ''" !&lt;l\o, m"'°"
" " m•rilyo
ll'

1~ rl'ine-.

rohert {ratarcang,l'\o.

b&lt;&gt;lk&lt;.

�president
vice president
treasurer
recording secretary
corresponding secr&lt;'tary
advocate
senior members al large
junior members

al

larf!e

sophomore members al large
/reshman members al large

richard as\\ ad
thomas agan
chester lelio
grace ha\\ ley
marion hattaglini
robert rafusc
dean haulton
n1aril) n lafferre
theoclore sommer
cloroth) mason
salh henclerson
~ohcrt bolke
a' is reines
rohert fratarcangelo

�dragon

society
honorary for evtracurricular

actil'ities

rnarlenc kucera
vincent picciano

who's who

first row: eH•lyn lwi y1·n. kathlt·1'n moran.
'reond row: vinc1·nt picriano. 111arl1•1w kuct·rn. john hil!:?in•.

98

�intramural council

fir,! r&lt;l\\: j~rri "&lt;'i". nuhacl kanaan. "illiam ""'"I. 'le'"' nndanick
't'&lt;'Ond rn" : john ' hamulka. arr &lt;'Uelin ~. fran µ1·11 11an·lli, rnn j1•11,t'n.

inter-social club council

fir81 row: elf' donndlan. rulh paradi,t•. harh ,o, buqi:h. gail grinPff, gertrude 'chuler, o,ur gehm.
•cconcl row: al kobb. floyd knowhon. wait jon•-nn. fran !!&lt;·nnarPlli. &gt;tan moldovan.
rhircl row: -r&lt;'H' mydani!'k. hill o'bri&lt;'ll, da·r lelio, arr t·lwl ing.

99

�s
colonial n e w

tz, ir en e
, mel ~chwar
nn ie gr o, er
co
.
ck
za
&gt;
d a' i' . jo)·ct
n,
ff rr re . 'l e\ e
cl au de wiJ,o
l sommt·r,
. m ar ih n la
tec
hz
.
ho
•e
ll
fu
hi
ra
fi r'l TO \\:
kr al l. hob
ra lp h
. !r an ee s
ft·lct'nko.
rb rn~buqd1 JO l' pt'lront·.
hn m lc uc h,
ha
•.
nt
fo
w
r,
rr
n th om as , jo
t&gt;
by
ro
ul
.
:
'l'h
w
an
ro
m
rt
ge
od
go
,o n.
,t· ru nd
i~h. ea rl
di ck lw nd cr
a" . ro n ktav
pa t roht&gt;rl~.
n. ji m -a br
.,o
njo
t
ai
w
th ir d ro\\ :
litu~.

100

�editor-in-chief
managing editor
business manager
news editor
feature edit or
advertising manager
sports editor
copy editor
exclurnge editor

connii&gt; grover

ste\e dads
hill h oltz

marilyn lafferre
joyce zack

irene fetccnko
wait jonsson

F-hirle1 brutrnn
leigh a llard

�co\onist
102

��conterbury club

fir~t row: fiskC' St'Wees, (•lien haldimand, C'aralyn ('amp, barbara hcyson , judith hansen.
"'&lt;'ond row: ('olin me kirdy, connit· i:ro\l'r. byrn&lt;· fon1·, rnarilyn lafft:rre, rolwrt adams.
third row: ralph 'pine Iii, la" rt&gt;nce old~. Jarry webst('r.

jewish fellowship

first row: lucille marlin, stanley moldovan, phyllis samuels.
second row: david ~lobodin. al coen, &lt;"arl ii:oodman, clave C'ohen, bob bl um.
third row: ila solomon. a' i• reines, ,ue potoker. ,idney £elder. judith rosoff, renee bash, leah
lip~hitz.

fourth r ow: al kobb, bill dabru.,in, henry kaplan, jerrold benowitz, ted sommer.

ICM

�newm an

club

first row: j?race frumento. catherinf' shaft•r, linda purtell. patricia bracco. maril' rondf'pif'rre,
jC'annell&lt;' man•our.
•t•cond row: &gt;nra sd1m iedlin. martha loiPy. man null. dot cla,i-nn. joy&lt;'t' 1.ack, dr. aldo bt•rnardo.
third row: p:t•ne flood, fran 1rn•lia. 11·0 Corcoran. )po phillip-. -am adolf.

prote stan t fello wshi p

carey,
first row: betsy knicke rbol'ker. pat cannaday. rhoda quackenbu•h . da"id tucker, shirley
sue gehm.
robert
8econcl row: bob wooding, chuck currey, philip demarrst, dick ward, win field ba•SBl?e,
ah&gt;chul.

105

�chorus

1l a' i~.
't' ) ho lt. ja ne
, hy rn r fone.
w el L -h irl t')
ot
•h
' W l'r th ci m er
irl
al
.
l,
t·n
al
n•
kr
ha
an
th
Ir
di
nh la tt.
a,
ju
,
~e ni tk
•U C l{t•hm
. si&lt;lnt gr t•e
fir •t ro w : in
,Jiirlt•y ca rt• '"
&lt;la,i&lt;l tuckl-r
r.
h.
de
,i•
ta
fd
1"
t')
ltl
dn
-1
t·'-t. ro na
•l't"on&lt;l ro w :
ph ili p d1•mar
ll(·k t•urrt'y.
th ird ro ": ch
ln
hn rr y h. lin co
rr &lt;' lo r: dr .
~hirlt&gt;)

0

di

106

)

�colonial players

&gt;h•~""·

'"" ""' ""' nood. ' " ' "''"· '" '"'"'"" ''"'" ,.,....... ,oodm••·
ro• ' jo&lt; ''"""'. mi«&lt;&gt; .kk•k" "''"" '""''""""· ,hi&lt;I• , """. '"" '"'"'"
'""' '""" Mko&lt;. "'"''' ""· """"" iio.l"b'""" i""""
&gt;Mnl ""' mi"

"'°"'

"""'k. 1"'

1.icari.

107

�spanish

club

first row: loi' lent, linda •tackcl, •tan mingu•. gary parker.
&lt;econd row: lt&gt;i11;h allarcl. shirlcy carey. lucinda hatz. morion hattaglini. IN" phillip&gt;. joe petrone.

first ro": morion battaglini. 'incent pi&lt;'ciano, marie ft&gt;rrante. joe petrone, patricia bracco.
second row: ~am giovinauo, jot&gt; laposky. reynold boezi, david garrick, waiter han~on, dr. aldo
bernardo.

italian

club

108

�slavic
club

first row: sherry pierce, matt hew moravansky. vt&gt;ra kuhar,ky, ralph 'teinberic. irent· f&lt;'l cenko, Jillian
hriciga.
st'rond row: hob kronw, clave cohen. mirha!'I mal('rt'-P, guy µarrt&gt;tl, ''ahc·r han,on, mr. michael
boc·hnak.
third row: sidney greenhlatt, frc•d gult'). 'lt'H' mydanick, ron jen-.•n.

first row: mary gil morr, gary parhr. m&lt;&gt;l srhwurlz. earl mitlchnrr. clavid kokii;, marion battaglini.
second row: cir. weigand. ron ro&gt;&lt;'nstein, hill wood, bill o'brien, john "t'l~h. john patanian, joe
laposky, dr. steer.

germ an

club

109

�french
club

-~ t)
fir•I roy, · harlmra ""burf!h, rolwrta lindi·nhaum, dr. k1•1d1am. &lt;'arnilla mat kod, •lwrry pit'r&lt;'('. linda
'la&lt;'kl'I.
·•·1·111111 '"": palri&lt;'ia rolwt1•. 11111rµot fi•h. Joi• l&lt;'nl. •Int· tJa, i-. rnaric rondl'pit·rr1·. walt('r han~on.
third ro": doroth\ cJa,i•on. maril)n laffi·rn. ronald µ.la1t'r. jnH't' 1aC"k. midwal rnalt'rt'•t'.

math club
fir' t row: bobi al per, cara lyn cam p.
't'cond row: bill thornp,on, hal cohen, fran
bilk

gallery committee
fir-1 ro" : mi-. d1•metcr. charlt•, eldrcd,
judith 11illt•t11·.
-•·rnnd nm: klau&lt;:. bohlman. hyrnc Cone.

II 0

�biolog y

club

fir' t ro\\: earl 'l nu·t. rnr. rudin. cloroil1) da\ i•on, c-arl J!Oodman. dr. ,chumaclu·r.
•&lt;'Cond row: wait jon&lt;,on. will he". al knhh. !!knn william&gt;. art goldllt'rg.

fir't row: chri' t•gan. jot' warinj!. dani1•l 1wigg. 'anrlra j!iragn,inn.
-.·c1md rO\\: mr. rohin"'"· al parker. davc h&lt;'&lt;"kn, lurr) rurti•. 1ho111u• rochrarw. dr. coa!t''.
th i rd row: drnrl1•s pett&gt;rson. fran angcllott r, da,id slohodin. rol!l"rt adams

., _ _

J..

'
geolog y

club

11 1

�pin toppler s

first row: paul hoffman, connie grover, joyce 1.ack, earl mitlelmt'r, dorothy davison, marilyn lafferre.
s(·roncl row: roherta lindrnbaum, sally rt'ecl, jim kassel, gail martin, Jarry wasko, marion battaglini,
carol klimow.
third ro~: dr. •chumacher. bill kress, arthu r coe. joe young&gt;, gcorge symula, joe garbarino, jeannette
mansour. fran gennarl'lli, james regan, barbara sanders, donald clow, don cox, bill smith.
fourth row: milt bu rt ch, bob kromt•, floyd knowlton, ron j&lt;'nsen, chet Jelio, bill hohz, joe ne jamc,
stan mingus, cir. weigand.

first row: dr. fischthal, ray cornelius, reynold boezi, art gold lwrg, cir. schumacher.
't•cond row: eugene lovt•lart', win field bassagt'. sidn('y gre&lt;·nblall, tetsuya kataoka, bob wooding,
bob altsd1u I, b) rne fo nt'.
third row: rnartyn bush, dick ward, glrnn williams, bill thornpson, ralph steinberg, philip dernarest.

II 2

a. p. o.

�social clubs
113

�pando rans

first row: barb vo~ h u rgh , dot d avison, kay moran. joyce za&lt;'k, vera k u hargk y, marion battagl ini .
second row : inJ!'.C' nitka, judy byron, &lt;ally reed, mar i&lt;' ma1.1.0C'chi. lo is lent , marilyn laffrrre, 'irgin ia
risk, ~all y hcndel"'on, b nrha ra hey•on, marlen&lt;• k ucera.
third r ow : mar y crull, gail grineff, grace hawlcy, caralyn camp, verna ~ tc ward, ma rgot fish.

presicl&lt;'/I I
rice preside111
recordinp: secretary
corresponding secretary
treasurer
historia11

114

ka) mora n
jo) ce zack
vera kuha rsky
d or) stola rcyk
marion battaglini
doro th} davison

annual e\ t&gt;nts
fall sadic ha wk ins party
winter party and dance
carniva l of hearts
spring sadi e hawkins party
spring di nner da nce

�president
n'ce president
secretary
treasurer

irene felccnko
gertrude srhuler

shirlc} hrutvan
ha rbara !ianders

fi r&lt;l row: barbara sandrrf, joannc

kamin~k}.

annua l C\t'nb
c;t. patrirk'::; cla\ part\
ann ual werkeml
chr ic;tmas parl )

irrnr fotcenko. gertrudt• &lt;chulrr.

~econ cl row: 'ivian tarrant , shirlry ca1 ey, rorinnt· john&lt;, sue g1•l1111.

thalians

11 5

�cassa ndran s

\

first row : ele donnellan, j eannr hardy, ~hirlry williams, ruth parad ise, martha fol y, marie chirco.
second row: grace frum ent o, patricia tully, laur ie g lasser, gail ma rtin, dot ma son, robc·rta lincl&lt;'r·
ha um.

preside111
vice presule11t
Ireasu 1 &lt;'r
secrelar)

11 6

rulh paradise
marie chirco
laurie glasser
r ob erta lindenbaum

annual eYents
st. patrick's day party

�J&gt;re.&gt;ide11/
rice /&gt;re.1itlent
\C'Cr&lt;'/Or_}

/rea.111r1•r
hi.1toria11

zo melkonian
larn wasko
james regan
joe garbarino
bob hills

annual

('\('Ill~

padd) 's '' akr
clambake
fall dinner dance
spring dinner dance

first row: robert bills. dave underwood. lnrf) wa~ko. jo!' young&gt;. raymond hubbard, william dank,
joseph f!arbarino.
second ro" : francis bills. waiter han~on. f!l'rald n·ardon, john shamulka, david garrick. zo melkonian. robert krome, stanley moldo,an.
third row: donald noakes, joe gabor, ron leta,i&gt;h. jamc• regan. cht&gt;t l!'lio, manurl de di&lt;'go, joseph
finn, pat zicari.

baccacia

II 7

�adelph i

first row: trd sommcr, dick stank. wait jon•son, john mlcuch, click hrndt'rson.
second row: leo phillips, bob rafusl', john hi!(1dns. dick wt'rnrr. joe p!'lrOn&lt;»
third row: dean haulton. william wood. jonathan rossie, ~tan mingus, dick aswad.

president
l'iC&lt;' president
recording secrelary
corresponding secretary
treasurer
sergeant-at-arms
chaplain

118

waiter jonsson
dick stank
stan mingus
click henderson
led sommer
jon rossie
joe petrone

annual even ts
fall mix
spring mix
thanksgiving party
initiation parties
founders day banquet

�president
1•ice president
corresponding secretary
recording secretary
treasurer
sergeant-at-arms
historian
registrar

floycl knowlton
h) rnr fonc
hob hlum
da' id slobodin
harold cohen
richard corash
nuhad kanaan
gene knapp

annual e,·ents
twilight time
initiation banquets
student-facu lty director)

fir•t row: william dabrusin. david slobodin, byrn&lt;' font•, floyd knowlton, bob blum, hal cohC'n.
~econd row: henry kaplan, sidney ft' Ider, dick ward , earl konard. nuhad kanaan, jl'rry bC'ck, •am
aclolf.
th ird row: al coen, dick cora~h, dave cohen. gene knapp, ron jen~en, al kobb, bill holtz.

dionysians

119

�goliard s

I

,.

f

..
'

1

'

first row: ralph walker, bill gutgesell, ron rosenstein, fran gennarelli, ' tu rogan, milton burtch.
sec·on&lt;l row: joc laposky, &lt;law moskowitz. click C\'an~. larry wrbster, henry hammer. bill o'brien,
bill simmons, don stropr .
third row: mall ricciardi, al pellicciotti, ro1?:er me vannan. john welsh, ron otero, ron thomas. earl
zymet, gary parker.

president
secretary
treasurer

120

robert ellis
don strope
milt burtch

annual even ts
mardi g ras
b lood drive
alumni football game
alumni basketball game

�president
vice president
secretary
treasurer
sergearzt-at-arms

jim kassel
bi ll glasser
frank tynan
art ebeling
bill lee

annual events
hafloween party
orphans' christmas party
dair}man's tea
art exhibit or concert

fir~L row: arthur eheling, jim kassel, bill gla"&lt;'r. frank tynan.
second row: georgc symula, norm rifkin, william macko. ~Lan dahh:.
thir d row: william lee, jay gershberg, norm rO~l'nbaum, robert kalmorc.

i. t. k.

121

�s. o. s.

row: waltn silver, dr. sdrnmadwr, bteve mvdanick. sta.c• davis, martin fl eisher, Jenny
·
konkow,ki.
second row: p:\•ra ld wciss, 10111 ap:an. rick jo•t. me) schwar11.. earl 1111tlchner, richard howe, paul
aIden.
third row: j\·r11 wei••. paul hoffman. ~n·orp:e koi,tenbader. ronnil' glazer. roy costley, guy garret!.
fir~t

chancellor
vice chancellor
chancellor of the exchequer
scribe
equery

122

sleYe davis
leonard konkowski
sleve mydanick
wally silver
marty fleisher

annua l even ts
cr ysta l ball
initiation parties

�sports
123

�~

&amp;tN6HAMTON

.f

---

--

0'4T

ooo•

ltANOIAU
Cou.AT.t

Hm8

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COV.aTJ

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8AJ£BAL.l.

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Fl£LD

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u

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RoCA.T£ I')

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MEN'S
---.......- CO'AaT

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�the beginning

125

�varsity basketball

f

I

JrM ro11 : C'arl ZYmet b b I
d
' o t io1npso 11 &lt;l 11111•
~on row: coach
II
· c ' ·~P&lt;'tz david
)&lt;'Tl) ITlarti11, mike P,,.,~oJ~~~· fre&lt;l maqwlus, roy 'costle re,y11old~. jim higgi11s.
n.
y, icnry hammer . h

'&lt;'

.

' JO 11 Judge, steve kucera,

126

�garbarino

up we go

127

�alum ni team

coloni al statist ics '56-'5 7
opponent

we

they

gencseo c:.t.c.

53

77

nlhan)

66

91

onconta ". t.c.

61

78

hami lton rollt'gr

H

66

67

98

hartwi&lt;'k co llege

56

93

utira co llrgl'

53

82

maritime college

66

60

gcneso s.t.c .

72

83

utica C'ollegc

65

80

plattshu rgh s.t.c.

55

79

oneontn

76

97

66

35

I0

70

\\ ilke~ college

40

70

r.p.i.

63

70

l'\.l.('.

O'-" ego

s. t.c.

~.t.c.

alumni
man&lt;:fit'ld

128

~.t.c.

�cheerleader

,
n ho ag la nd
cleny, ca ro ly
rly
ve
be
,
ie he iyen
rboc kt&gt;r, PV
be tsy lmic ke ac e fru ml'nlo.
,
hi
cc
zo
az
gr
m ar ie m
ke llner ,
h. ja nice
ba rb vo• bur~

s

y,
gr ace hawle

129

�varsity cross country

r

l .;.1

'k
vine(' Picciano
.
coac h henderso'n.m1 e Carbone, terry he1gel
I
milt b
urtc i , bill gutgesell. gary
'
parker, Jen penneJJ,

harpur
harpur
h arpur
ha rpur

130

46
15
44
50

oswego
ulica
cortland
ha mi lton

15
42

-

· ·-·~ - -

-·

15
15

�varsity tennis

first row: milt burtch, mike cele~te.
second row: jerry beck, hob bl um, coach natak, jerry reardon.

statistics
harpur
harpur
harpur
harpur
harpur

6

0
]

0
7

utica
hart wick
corlland
hart wick
ithaca

7

6
7
0

131

�vars ity golf

first row: jake meadr, earle white, clave stevens, wait homa.
manager.
second row: john budd, joe garbarino, frank di graci, rnar~h swart wood, bill crull,

statis tics
lost dual meets to
le moyne
hart wick
hamilton
oswego
ithaca
hobart

132

�advertisements
133

�Compliments of

THE
BINGHAMTON SAVINGS BANK

62-68 Exchange Street
BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

Membe r of
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPO RATION

�Congratulations
to
the
GRADUATES OF HARPUR COLLEGE

ENDICOTT JOHNSON RETAIL STORES
Home of GUIDE STEP Footwear

FOUR LOCAL STORES
I0 I Main St., Vestal
I 07 Odell Ave., Endicott

22 Washington Ave., Endicott
I06 West Main St., Union

CLOVERDALE FARMS
The Best in Dairy Foods
for Over 50 Years
Home of
TOWN TALK ICE CREAM

Compliments
of

LYRIC THEATRE
Washington Ave.

Endicott

Your Music Centre Since
1865

WEEKS &amp; DICKINSON
"The name that means music
to the southern tier"
34 Chenango St.

DIAL 4-2481

�UNITED NATIONS
One of the greate st expressions of the will of men and women for
greate st peace and securit y is the United Nation s. This organiz ation
provide s an opport unity for every nation, howeve r small, to set forth
its views and provide s a forum for interna tional though t, discussion and
solution of modern problem s.

INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES

TUTHILLS PHOT O CENTER
Binghamton, N. Y.

166 Washington St.
33591

BROWNIE~
~ CAMERA KIT, f /2.7
A genuine Kodak movie
. . . . ki1at1his low, low price!
Creor team for indoor·ouldoo r

movie moking. Thh handsome
lcit includei the Brownie Movie

(omero, 1/2.7 - world's mo st
popular movie maker - and 1he

Brownie 2-lomp Movie l ioht
And talk about values - it' s
yours ot the lowest price ever
for a Kodok·mode movie outflt l

Comp limen ts of

BENNER WHOLESALE
COMPANY
Endico tt, New York

MEYERS FURRIERS
INC.
16 Court Street

Binghamton, New York

�SEETOO'S LAUNDRY

Complim ents

I 309 Monroe St.

of

ENDICOTT, N. Y.

P &amp; C FOOD MARKET

"Keeps the College Clean"

Endicott, N. Y.

Compliments
of

J. J. NEWBERRY CO.
Endicott, N. Y.

Ea+ With Your Friends at

THE CORNER GRILL
Open 7 A.M. to 12 P.M.
Mon. Thru Fri.
Sat., 7 A.M. Sun., 10 A.M. -

9 P.M.
8 PM.

ANDY AND JOHN, Proprietors

ROBERT J. HANAFIN
INC.
Insurance for Every Need
204 Washington Avenue
ENDICOTT, N. Y.

Phone 81527

JOHNSONS
11 Court St.

AVENUE RESTAURANT

BINGHAMT ON, N. Y.

I 0 I Washington Ave.

For China, Glassware, Gifts
for All Occasions

Endicott, N. Y.

�MARINE MIDLAND
TRUST COMPANY

of
SOUTHERN NEW YORK
Binghamton Office:
84 COURT STREET, BINGHAMTON , N. Y.

Midland Time Plan Department:
99 COLLIER ST., BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

South Side Office:
53 S. WASHINGTON ST., BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

West Side Office:
156 MAIN ST., BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

Union.Endicott Office:
100 E. MAIN ST., UNION, N. Y.

Workers Trust Office:
243 MAIN STREET, JOHNSON CITY, N. Y.
Cortland Office:
36 MAIN STREET, CORTLAND, N. Y.
Elmira Office:
150 LAKE STREET, ELMIRA, N. Y.

Marine Time Plan Office:
125 LAKE ST., ELMIRA, N. Y.

Merchants Office:
109 W. WATER ST., ELMIRA, N. Y.

South Side Office:
418 S. MAIN ST., ELMIRA, N. Y.

Elmira Heights Office:
156 E. 14th ST., ELMIRA HEIGHTS

Horseheads Office:
HORSEHEADS, N. Y.

Watkins Glen Office:
WATKINS GLEN, N. Y.

Drive-In Office:
420 CARROLL ST., ELMIRA, N. Y.
Member of
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

�"All who have meditated on the art of governing mankind have been
convinced that the fate of empires depends on the education of youth."
-ARISTOTLE

ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY
Vestal- Endicott - Endwell

*

ENDICOTT NATIONAL BANK
48 Washington Avenue
ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

*

MARINE MIDLAND TRUST COMPANY
Union-Endico tt Office for
Southern New York

MEMBERS -

*

FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATIO N

�RUSSEL CAB COMPANY

LUIZZl'S LUNCHEONETTE
"Don't Be Misled . . .

Extends

Get Well-Fed

Congratulations

''

Student Discount Cards
Honored

to the
CLASS OF '57

STEVE RAPP
Prop.

THE BURT COMPANY

ROUFF FURNITURE
COMPANY

Endicott's Family Store

*

for

"Dedicated to Better Homes"

Thirty-seven Years

ENDICOTT

•••

OWEGO

Congratulations:
Compliments of

ALEXANDER HARVEY
Clothing

Senior Class of 1957

GORDON STUDIO
MARSHALL BROWN, Prop.

DOWN IN UNION

23 Washington Ave.
Endicott, N. Y.

5-8411

THE GEORGIA-HANKS ENDICOTT
CORPORATION
Stationery and Office
Supplies, Drafting Equipment
and School Supplies
Typewriters and Typewriter
Repairs
59 Washington Ave.
8-1746

Endicott

Congratulations to the
Class of 1957

ENDICOTT LEGION POST
No. 82

�For All Your Financial Needs . . . Now, and
in Your Later Business and Professional Career

Bank at FIRST-CITY
Listed here are some of the services which are
available at First City National Bank
CHECKING ACCOUNTS
• SAVINGS
• BANKING ACCOUNTS
BY MAIL
• MONEY ORDERS
• TRAVELLERS CHECKS
• SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES
• NIGHT DEPOSITORY
•

PERSONAL LOANS
• HOME
IMPROVEMENT LOANS
• AUTO LOANS
• APPLIANCE LOANS
• MORTGAGE LOANS
• TRUST SERVICES
• CHRISTMAS CLUBS
•

You can expect competent, prompt, friendly service at FirstCity, in all of the many ways in which this bank serves the
financial needs of the community.

FREE PARKING AT ALL OFFICES
•
•

First Office: Court and Chenango Streets
City Office: Court and Washington Streets
e First Ward Office: 181 Clinton Street
e Westover Office: Westover Plaza
e East Side Office: 149 Robinson Street

e Instalment Loan Office: 18 Chenango Street

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

�CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR
FUTURE LEADERS

"The Class of 1957"
From

SALL-STEARNS

Compliments of

VAUGHNS CLOTHING , INC.
Hart Schaffner &amp; Marx
Eagle Clothes
107-109 E. Main St.

Smart Young Men's Wear

ENDICOTT (UNION), N. Y.

138 Washington St.

5-2131

BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

HILKINS JEWELERS
Our 41st Year
46 Washington Ave.
ENDICOTT
N. Y.

ENDICOTI FLORIST
116 Washington Ave.
ENDICOTT, N. Y.

5-0221

LUIZZI PHARMAC Y
Prescription Service
111 Washington Avenue
ENDICOTT, N. Y.

5-5451

THE ENDICOTI PRINTING CO.
Compliments and
Best Wishes of

HILL'S BAKERY

ALL COMMERCIAL PRINTING
Letterpress and Photo Offset
Wedding Invitations - Announcements

124 Nanticoke Avenue
ENDICOTT, N. Y.
Phone 5-9441

�Congratulations
Class of 1957

Mc LEANS
McLEAN 'S DEP'T STORES
INC.
Stores in

BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
and

ENDICOTT, N. Y.

Binghamton, New York

WE SALUTE
the June Graduates of Harpur College

MAY SUCCESS
Always Be You rs!

�A FREE PRES S
Is Necessary to the Democratic S ys tem
It is the fac tual reporting an d interpreting of all the news which is the essence
of resp onsible journalism . Today as never before it is needed if America is lo
remain strong abroad and frre at home.
A virile. inde pend ent news paper lends ~r re n g th Lo the community and the nat ion's
11clfare. and serves a s a bulwark of might against would-be aggressors. Fo r the o nl y
chance a free people has to ma inta in itself is throug h the medium of a free press.
The Binghamton Press, with other' ne11spapers of the na tion, dedica tes itself to
free d iscussion and critic ism, predi cated on th e people's right lo kn ow. This newspaper wi ll inc reasingly be spokesman and champi on for the citizen wh o has a stake
in the preservation of the fa ith and instituti o ns that make America.

The Bingh amton Press
EVE NING

*

SUNDAY

Dedicated to the Ser!'ice of the Peo ple

With Great New High-Speed

ANSCOCHROME Color Film
for all popular can1eras

• 35 MM
• 120, 620 AND 828 ROLLS
• SHEETS

Ansco
BINGH AMTON, NEW YORK

�The Perfect Combination

Binghamton's Finest

for Your Reading and

Approved by Duncan Hines

Listening Pleasure!

THE
DAILY BULLETIN

COLONIAL MOTEL
MR. AND MRS. W. J. RAIF

and

3 Miles West on H ighway 17

RADIO STATION
WENE
Greater Endicott's Own!
Make Them a Regular Habit

Good Restaurants
Nearby
9-151 I

Flowers for All Occasions
From

DILLEN BECKS

BEN'S CLOTHES SHOP
Clothes of Distinction and
Quality
for
Dad and Lad
TUXES FOR RENT
229 Main St.

Johnson City

HOTEL FREDERiCK
and
THE DUBONNET LOUNGE
Washington Ave.

Endicott

�THE
PANDORANS
Compliments to the
Class of '57

CLUNES COFFEE
SHOP
Best Sandwiches in Town
Ice Cream, Malteds

ELKS BAKE SHOP
"Best Baked Goods in Town"
110 Washington Ave.

ENDICOTI, N. Y.
-

RIGHT NEAR THE CAMPUS

5-2051 -

Mimmie Gennarelli

GENNARELLI FLOWER SHOP

Complimen ts

Flowers for All Occasions
-

of

2-7766 -

110 Court St.

HA RPO

Binghamton, N. Y.

JOE GENNARELLI

HARRIS
ARMY &amp; NAVY STORE
167 Washington St.

BINGHAMTON , N. Y.

Sporting Goods -

Sportswear

Distributors:

REACH

WILSON

SPAULDING

IRVING RAPPAPORT
RAPPAPORT JEWELERS
20 Chemango St.
BINGHAMTON , N. Y.

-

27873 -

�THE
DIONYSIAN
SOCIETY

Congratulations to the
Class of '57

FRANKIE AND JOHNNIE'S
Snack Bar
"Just down the road from the new campus"

HUB DELICATESSEN
and RESTAU RANT

PAT PATTERSON

137 Washington St.

Jeweler

BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

17 Washington Ave.

"The place to get your corned beef and pastrami sandwiches, also Jewish style cooking"

ENDICOTT, N. Y.

Compliments of
John W. Chipper

ENDICOTI SHOE COMPANY
23-25 Washington Ave.

ENDICOTT, NEW YORK
"Home of quality footwear for the entire
family."

Tt&lt;w If-fl! ~....._, h ~' IAHOI \U,Of
NlltjH1 ..V ((l~"A ..'I ['lo\U"~ H\M

l~HC'«

�the staff
editor-in-chief
business manager
copy editor
sports editor
photography editor
subscription editors
secretaries

148

marlene kucera
byrne fone
dean haulton
jerry beck
doug hateman
sue gehm,
mary wood
gertrude schuler
sally henderson

�..

\

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                  <text>1948 - </text>
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                  <text>Binghamton University Yearbooks </text>
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                  <text>Harpur College -- Students; State University of New York at Binghamton -- Students; Harpur College; State University of New York at Binghamton; Students; Yearbooks</text>
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                  <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>
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                  <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>
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                    <text>��.-

••

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T

NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIFTY-EIGHT

��THE EDITORIAL STAFF
ED ITOH-I '-ClII EF
Byrne R. Fone

ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Susan Gehm
Gertrude Schuler

AS l~T \ '\T TO Tll£
EDITOH-1:\-CH IEF
Constance G'rcn·er

B"LSJ\ESS '\1 \ \ \GEH
Al Coen
ADVEHT ISI !'&lt;G
\IA\ \ GEH

Al f...obb

PHOTOGRAPll ) EDITOR
Douglas Bateman

COP't EDITOR
fo}Ce Zack

SLBSCIUPTJOI\
MA\ \GEH
Pet&lt;'r Josephs
OHGA~ I ZATIO\.S

EDITOR
Ecl1rnrd Taub

SOC IAL CLLB

l~ DITOH

Richard Corash
SPORTS ED ITOH
Robert Blum

STAFF

Joan Gluckauf
Barhara Dobnner
Wary /,au Formichelli
llarriet Weingarten
PIIOTOGRAPl lY ST·\ff
Robar Gosline
Jules Kurtz
ADV£HTJSI:\G STAFF

Jerrold Benortitz
Davit! Slobodin
Sidney Felder

SECHET \HY TO THb
EDI TOH
Dyanne Florence

�The nineteen forty-eight Colonist was dedicated Lo those ''whosC' quiet
im,piration caused a college Lo he built. who captured a Yision! \lay their
spirib light the patl1 ahead."'
A deC'ade ha passed since then, a time in which tJ1e light of their :-pirit
has shone on the near fulfillment of their 'is ion. Tl arpur College&gt; ha:- lwcome
an

in~titution

of high acadcm ic merit, the cultural and intellectual C'enter of

the commt111ity. The college ha::. prcser\'ed the tradition of the liberal arts,
encouragi ng her students to pursut• a cour:&gt;e, not always smooth, which leads,
not necessarily Lo a set of ah;..olutc answers, lrnt rather to the difficult ta sk
of asking a meaningful que-..tion. This. the sf'holar·.., rigl1t and dut; lo inquire.
i-.. the cornerstone of academic freedom .
uch has been Ilarpur'::, ach ie\ crncnt in the pa::.l years. Now, as a member
of the Stale l ni\ersily of \ cw York. also celebrating its tenth a nniversary,
Harpur College stands on the path, lit now not only by the spirit of the past,
but by the hope of the future.
We. in nineteen fift)-f'ight, present this tenth Colonist as a record of the
decade of the Colonists publication, as a commentary on twelve years of
Harpur\ life, and we hope, as a promise for the path ahead .

The Editor
Endicott.

.Vew

York

lVineteen Hundred
Fifty-eight.

�THE
A
N
N
I

v
E

R

s

A
R

y
I

s
s
u
E

Ten Years of The Colonist at Harpur

�Be/ore the Coloni..,t in 1916 ...
Here's u:here it all began .. .

In the beginnin g .. .

First Conrocation ... 1916

�194 8
194 9
the fountainhead of teaming .. . The Colonist captllres the academic spirit

and the hallo1ced traditions of llarpur's pa.\l.

'

..

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~·

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.. .. 1'

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these ha l'e ~one be/ ore . . .

...

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,...

'~

�1950
1951
Harpur in 1950 was able to boast of a cafeteria

experienced biologists

and

courses in Italian opera

�1952
1953

1952 and 19.53 found the Colonist recordin{! the increa,,ing interest in all fields of the lrts

�195 4

The Class of Nineteen Fifty-eight

You are cordially inrited lo tea al the home . . .

Remember th is?

�1955

No comment!

Sports in';).)

Ja zz goes to college

�The Class of Nineteen Fifty-eight

In 1956

The Colonist recorded an increase
one of flarpur' s traditional
Ill
sports
(see page 11)

�The Class of Nineteen
Fifty-eight

1957

�More seriously though, llarpur has com&lt;' a long way in ten years. In the
last few pages we luwe tried to reconstruct some of the incidents which malie
those years memorable ... The Colonist has recorded the sights of tlw last
decade, it has grown with Harpur. let us take stock here of our accomplishment, and let us also look to times ahead . ..

Harpur

College
1958

��STATE UN1VtRs1tv OF
SITE OF

.

t •

STATE OF

Ntw YoRK
--

THOM~ E.DEWEY

GOVERNOR ~---

NEW YORK

-

�Much has been done . .. much is left for the f ulllre

Here was the beginning

the Gym

the Dorms

�And What of Tomorrow?

Our Hopes for

�-•
the Future ...

�Ten years have passed,
years in which Harpur
and the Colonist have
~-rown

in statiire arid in,

quality, to the ten years
of the Colonists' existence
this book is offered, to ·
the twelve years of Harpur life this book is
B·iven, to the times which
lie ahead this book is
dedicated . . .

�A
D
M
I
N
I

s

T
R

A
T
I

0
N

�DR. WILLIA\I S. C·\HLSON
President of the State [.,'ni!'ersity of Yew York

�\1H. '\llCITAEL ·. SCELS I
As!:'istant lo the President

DR. JACK W. ROLLOW
Assistant to the Dean

�DR. JOH

BEL IAK

Director of Student Acti\ities

MR. RALPH G. RISHEL
Director of Admissions

�;\fl

VJRGINL\

Kl'~LOCH

i\s!'is lanl Dean of ~ tudenls

Financial SCX'rela r)

MR. JOI!

lIICGI S

Ad mi~sions Cou n«elor

�The
Library
Staff

i\IR. JOSlt\11 T.

1

EWCOMB

Ubraria n

GREGORY BGLLARD
} unzor Libraria n

LUCENA KIBBE
Assistan t Ubraria n

JA~ET

BROWN

Assistant Librari-011

�JA \ET wrrnJEY EI{
Seerctaq to the Office of
Admissio ns

BETTY HITCHl \GS
Secretar} to the Office of
Student Personnel

VIRS. \1'\RGARET WEEl\S
Secrelar} to the &gt;\ssi!';tanl to
the President

�ED ITH .I\ \H.~
Farn It\ Sl'erl'la q

JO DOW'\EY
Fam It) Srcrela r~

\:\ \ ~T \\1\.0
Facult~ :3ecrclar:

�/

/

,

-.-"
\.

:.\
,, \ 1· .

�ELU~E\

!-. l·:TCI IL \I
i\ssi:.lanl Lo the l{('g i!:-lrar

\1ARIF: CO'\EY
Registrar

\'IV!\\ \ILSSO
\--~i--lanl to tlw Rr~i--1ra r

�ELl~O\OH l1l FF\!\\
:::i1·crctan lo the P1e,.,idl'11I

BAHIMH \ W l '\TEHS
Srnclan lo lh&lt;' l'r!'~idP nl

\JABEL BH '\!\
·ecrelar) to the l)pa11

�&lt;llHIS FICl'..FIT
"11

il&lt;'hhoard Operator

"lllHLF) T l \"LEP\LGII
~t'('rt'lar) lo

\dmi«:-ions

Rusine"" Offirr S taff

ELl\OHE 1'.R \l SE
CO\\IE lll GTIE~
~t·nl'laries lo

th(• Dt•an

the \s,-i~tant to

�s
E
N
I
0
R

s

�GEORGE H. AHLGRJ:\1
Gary, Indiana

Social Science -

ff istory

PAUL ALDEN
Great Neck, L. J., N. Y.
Social Science -

General Business.

sos

CSG

SRO
Student Fac ull) Com111illees

RICHARD ALLEN
Binghamton. l\e\\ York
Social Science - Accounting

�FHA \'CL A:\GELOTTJ
Oneonta. \c1' York
Ceolog;
, cience
Geolog} Cluh

Vice President

IUCHARD AS\\1 AD
Binghamton. :\ew York
ocial Science - Polit ical Science
Freshman Class President
Advocate. President
L G
New York 'ational Stuclcnt Association
President
Presiden t. SCNY Confederation of Students
Debate Varsity
JV Basketball
Treasurer
1\delphi
Vice Chairman
Ga1·el Cluh
Secretary
Facult) . tudent Association
Bachman Famil) cholarship
Colonial ~ews
Casting Director
SRO
Dragon ociet). Dean's List \ 2. 3 J
Who's Who in American Colleges and Uni1ersities

MARIO

LEO A BATTAGLINI

Encl icoll, :\Tew York
Social Sci.ence - Sociology
Pandorans - President. Treasurer
Pandoran-of-the-Year 1956
panish Club
, ewman Cluh
Italian Club
President
Pintopplers
C G - Corresponding ccretaq
cnior Class President
~ tudent-Facult) Reception 1956
Chairman
Freshman Orientation 1957
Winter Weekend 1956
Spring Weekend 1957
tudent- F acult} Association
Who's Who in American Colleges and l nivcrsit ies

�\101{LA \'D BEHK\L\'\
\'l'atcrl &lt;mn. \ el\ 't ork

ocial Science

Acco11 nting

OS
PinlopplPr;.

RO HERT A. BJ LLS
Bing hamt on. ~ew York

Social Science
Bo \\ ling

Baccacia

8usiness

l\ ational lntercollegiates
Histori an

JA\lE ' BUS
End iC'oll. \ cw Yo rk

Science

Psychology

Goliards

Cross Count q
P!:&gt;ycholog~ Club

�REY\OLD .\. BOELI
Binghamton. '\e\\ York
Political cienc&lt;'
ocia/ Science
Vice President. P re:;idcnt
APO
Italian Club - Treasurer. Prc&lt;:ident
Internationa l Hclat ions Club
Clarendon - Business \ tanager. Editor
Jl arpur Outing Cluh

HUDO LF BODE
DcpMit. ·cw York
II istor)
Soria/ Science
P intopplers
Canlerbun Cl ub
Colonial \ews
Int ramural ,' ports

, BIR LEY BRUTVA
J ohnson City. ;\cw York
'v!athematics
cience
Secretaq. Treasurer
Thalian Soc:iet:
Secretan
:\e'' man Club
Pre;..idcnt. Treasurer
\l athematics Club
Serrelar)
German Club
Book and Ke, Club
Inter-Social Club Council
' ecrctar)
Radio Worhhop Club
Big :-;ister
tudenl Leadership Conference
L ' G Course Evaluation Sune\ Committee
Colonial :\e\\S - Copy Edito1'
Chorus, Pep Band
Campus Carnival Committrc

�\TILTO\ 0. Bl HTCH
Black Hiwr, .\ew York

ocia/ Science

Accounting

Trea~urer

Golia rel"
Ba~krtball
Tenni~

Cross Country
1ntramural Foot hall
L tica Invitational Ta hlc Tennis Tourney -

1955

CAHAL Y:'\ CA \1P
J ohnson Cit). \ e11 York

Psychology

Srience

Pandorans - llii;Lorian. Secretaq
Secretary
Ca nlcrbuq Clu b
Deco ration Chairman
Spring Soiree
Hefr cshmcnt Chairm an
Winter Weekend - Refreshment Co-Chairman
Student Facu lt y Reception - Refreshment Chairman
Band
Colon isl
Senior \1cmber-a t-La rge, Publicity
CSC
Spring Hc\ iC\\
Course E\•aluation urvey
Archery
0

JOHN E. CflANTRY
Binghamton. '°'ew York

Science

Biology

President, Vice President. Secretary
Biolog) Club
German Cluh
Biolog) Lah Assistant
Intramural Ba:;ketball. Softball. Football

�TH0\1A ~ E. COCIIHA 'm
Greene. \ el\ York
Science
Geolog_l
Geolog) Cluh

- President

ROBERT CONANT
Binghamton, ew York
Science - Biolog)
German Club
President
Biolog) Club
President
APO
Treasurer
French Club
Biology Lab Assistant

DANE J. COX
Greene. '\e" 't ork
Social Science
Econc&gt;m ics

�TIJ \DD El S CZLPRY:\A
Binghamton. \ e" York

Science

Hath

l{rrnrd i ng Srcreta r~
Clu h
:vfa lh Clu b
\PO

\t'\\ ma 11

STEPJJE\ C. D \YI

JR.

Alban\ . \t' \\ 1 o rk
Unguistics
f I 11111a~1it ie.1
Equrrr y, Vice Chancellor, Chancellor
SOS
President
Sia' ic Club
F ea ture Writer, .Feature Editor
Colo nial \lrws
\1 anaging Edit o r
IRC \l ock Sreurit \ Counci l
Colonial Pla\ers ·
Secrcla r)
l larpu r Coil~gc Veterans Association
President. Treasu rer
\ e\\lllan Club
Dorm Chairman
Crrman Club
l ntramural Football

\1 \~l EL DE DIEGO
Binghamton. \ ew York
, o&lt;·ial , 'cil'nce
Baecac ia
Cluh

~pani,..h

JH .

llusiness Administration

�PHILIP DE\IAREST
v;·an\ ick. \ew York
, ocial Science - Acco1111ling
President. Treasurer. Corresponcling
\PO
re re tan·
Chorus

.

Madrigal Group
Lincoln Dormitory President
Protestant Fello"·ship - Vice President

WILLIAM DENK
Binghamton. New York
Social Science - Sociology
Baccacia

FRA~K DiGRACl
\ e1\ ), ork. \ t&gt;" ) ork

Social Science

Ceograpln

�HALPTT Dl~THUFF
Walworth. "\/el\ York
ociology
Social Science

ELEO\lOR DON1 ELLAN
'anuet, l ew York
Social Science - Business Administration
Italian Club
Newman Club
Cassandran Society
USG Recording Secretary, Corresponding Secretary
tudent Organizations Commillee
Inter-Sor ia! Club Council
Inter-Dorm Council
Dorm President
Dragon Societ)
Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities

JOll'\ DIUSCOLL
Binghamton. \'ew York
• ocial cience - Accounting

�1

E~ FELDER
'.\'e\' hurgh. \ cw York
ocial Science
Accounting

' ID

Oionysians - Recording Secretary. Parliamentarian
Choru!'
pring Jle, iew Organization
"Thr Devi l's Disci ple"
Italian Club
Jewish Fellowship

\llARJE FERRA TE
Endicoll, 'ew York
Humanities - Foreign Languages
French Club
Italian Club
College Chorus
Community Ambassador to France -

1957

1HE1\1E FETCENKO
'.\1aine. \ ew York
Social cience - Sociology
Thalians
President. Treasure•
. la,·ic Club
Vice President. Secretar)
Colonial \ ews
Circulati on Editor.
\d, ertising \lanager
:\'.ational tudent Association
Inter-Social Club Council

'.
~

..
"

I,,,:·

... l

�BE:\ R1 E:. FLE\Tl"\G
Endicoll. \cw York
,\1at hem a tics
Science
\Jathematics Clu b

BYR\JE REGi\ALD FONE
End,,cll. \c,, \ ork
English Literature
flumanities
Diony:;ian ocict) - President, Vice President
Editor-in-Chief. Business Manager
Colonist
Chairman, Producer, Art Director
SRO
Canterbur) Club - President
Chairman
Callery Committee
Leadership Retreat
Philosophy Club
Chairman
Student Directory
Convocations Committee
Publication$ Committee
Colonial \cws
Winter He' ur
Cho rm.
Dean's Li$l l. 2. 3. 4
Who\; Who in American Colleges and Universities

JO EPTI GABOR
Hochc;;tcr. \e,, York
J&gt;olitical Science
Social Science
Barcacia
Colonial \t·w~
L:-'C Gril' nuu·e Comm i llee
Philosoph~ Club
Outing Club

�Jo:-;EPll F. G \Hn \Hl\O
Binf(harn lon. \e\\ 1 ork
/Jusine.1.1
.'lorial Science
Trea:,urcr. \'ice l're,.idrnt
Bac&lt;'acia
Captain. Lt•lterman
\'ar-.ih Ba:-kr thall
19.16-57
l'IU\ rr-of-Ycar
Ba-.keihall
\1hldt•-of-1hc-'t r~r
L&lt;'llet man
Coif
1ntramural Football
l'inl oppi&lt;'r~

l niled S1udcnl GO\ernmcnt

~l

\lemhrr-at-Large

E GET!'d

Center Li~lc. \ e\' York
Social Science - II istory
Thalian;;
Ch oru~

'·Old \laid and the Thier'
~rc retan
Colonial l'la\ er&gt;&lt;
Subscription Editor
Coloni!'t

l

\ -.~ociate l~ditor
~C Coun•r Ernluation

un C)

..

Prote-.tant Fellowship
Pinlopplci·,.

I

FHA "\CIS H. GE\'\, \H ELU
Binghamton. \ c,, 1 ork
Accounting
Social Science
Intramural Sport"
l'intoppkr~

Prc... ident
Golia rel"
Chairman ~pring Weekend Picnic T rca-.u 1 er Cla ... ,, of l &lt;J57
Inlt'r-Social Cluh Council
Inl raniural Council

!&lt;J:)7

�CAR\IEL \I. GIARUSSO
Endicott. New York
Social Science - History

ROBERT GRAY
Binghamton, ew York
Social Science - Accounting

WILLIA'.\1 GROGAN
Binghamton, New York
Social Science - Accounting
Goliards - Corresponding Secretary
Sergeant-at-Arms

�CONSTANCE GROVER
Binghamton,
Humanities -

1ew

York
English Literature

Colonial ews - Editor-in-Chief
\Ianaging Editor
l'\ews Editor
Copy Editor
ews Staff
Spanish Club - Treasurer
Canterbury Club - Vice President
Spring Revue Organization
Colonist
Thalians - Treasurer
Pin top piers - Dean's List ( 1, 2, 3, 4)
ational Student Association
Publications Committee
Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities

WILLIAYI H. GUTGESELL
End well, ew York
Social Science - Geography
Goliards
Chairman of Maroon Key
Spike Shoe Club
Cross Country Varsity Letter
Track Team Letter
Spring Review Organization
Winter Review
Chess Club

DAVID D. GARRICK
Pine Plains, l\ew York
Social Science - Accounting
Baccacia
Newman Club
APO
Italian Cl ub

�HEGJ\ \ 11 \HD)
l~ndiC'oll. \el\ )

llumanities

ork

f,a11g1iat!t'

Cl I \HLES J. TT\) ES
Poughkeepsie. \&lt;'I\ York
Business
Social Sl'ienl'e
Studrnt-Facult) Re&lt;'eption
Com 111 i llrr
J\lpw llHlll Cluh

Biolog) Club
Pin topple rs
IT"Cro::-::- Counln

Rcfreshnwnl!'

S&lt;&gt;nrlaq

IUCIHHD IlE. DER 'ON
Ve~taL

\cw York
Uterature
llumanities
Colonial

Cl\;;

\ delphi
Intramural Sport!'

�WILLIA \1 HESS
Middletown, 'ew York
cience - Biology
Biolog) Club
Pinlopplers
Goliards

BARBARA HEYSON
~1as;.apequa.

llumanities -

:\ew York
English Literature

Colonial Players
"Queens of France"
"Antigonae"
"The Lady of Larkspur Lotion"
"King Henry IV, Part I"
Colonial Players - President. Vice President
Board of Directors
Pando rans
Canterbury Club
Colonial News
SRO
Dorm Proctor

RICHARD HOWE
Woodmere. New York
Social Science - General Business

so
Pintopplers
Outing Club
'e" man Club
Intramural Sports

�LILLIA. M. IIRICIGA
Endicott. ew York
Social Science - Sociology
Pandorans - Treasurer
ecretary
Slavic Club I nlramural Volley ball. Basketball
Chorus

RAYMOND HUBBARD
Oswego, New York
Social Science - Business

WILLIAM JACKSON
Endicott, New York
Social Science - Accounting

�RONALD E. JENSEN
Vestal. New York
Social Science - ·Economics
Dionysians - Treasurer. Vice President
pring Review Organization - Business Manager
Inter- ocial Club Council
Intramural Council
Cross Country - Captain
I nlramural Football, Basketball, Softball
Pintopplers
Slavic Club
Student-Facull) Directory - Advertising 'Vlanager

THO 1AS E. JOHNS
Binghamton, ew York
Social Science - Economics
Dionysian Society
Book and Key Club
Intramural Sports
Pintopplers
SRO
Colonist Staff - Administrative Assistant lo the
Editor-in-Chief
Veterans Organization

CORINNE E. JOHNS
Bipghamton. ew York
Social Science - History
Thalians
Inter-Social Club Council

�\\' ,\LTER JO.\S O\'
Binghamton. \c11 York
Science - Geography

t:SG
\clelphi
Colonial '\e11;i
Intramural Sports
Inter-Social Club Council

JOilN Jl'DGF:
J ohnson City, ew York
Chemistry
Science

JAME

KA SEL

Ilancock. ~cw York
Business
ocial cience
Prc$idcnt, Vice President. Secretary
JTK
Sergeant-al-Arms
Chairman. Fall 1957
I CC
Spring Picnic Committee, 1956
Winter Weekend - Co-Chairman, 1956
Intramural Football. Basketball. Softball
Volleyball
Pintopplers

�R. JOII\ K'\.\PP
Valle) Stream. '.\c\1 York
Social Science - Business
llarpur Veterans' Organization

YOlJNG KUK KO
Seoul. Korea
Social cience -

Political Science

Phalanx

DAVID LOUI , KOKI.
Rochester, :\ew York
Science - Biology
Vice President
Alpha Phi Omega
Biolog) Club - Vire Prc;;.iclcnl. Treac;urer
Philosoph) Club - Secretar)
German Club
Jc\1 i~h Fcllo\1'-hip

�LEONARD KONKOWSKI
Perth Amboy, New Jersey
Humanities - General literature

sos

ewman Club
Intramural Sports
ISCC
French Club

RUTH PARADISE KONKOWSKI
Endicott, ew York
Humanities - French
Cassandrans - President, Vice P resident
Sergeant-at-Arms
ISCC - Secretary
Sophomore Vice President
Newman Club

GEORGE KOSTENBADER
Endwell, New York
Social Science - History

�JULES KURTZ
ewburgh, New York
Social Science - Business

EDWARD McHALE
Endwell, ew York
Humanities - General Literallue

:MICHAEL A. LA SORTE
Endicott, ew York
Social Science - Sociology
Baccacia

Italian Club

�CIIESTEH

u:uo

John,.on Cit). \c11 \ ork

.'Jocial Scil'llC&lt;!

Business

l SG Trea~urer
Trea::.urer
BaC'&lt;"acia
Prc~ident
PinlopplC'r-.
I ntcr-Social Club Council
l nt rarnural Baseball and Basketball
I ntcrcollegiatc B&lt;J\\ ling Chairman
'."\panish Club

JOSEPll LOPOSK )
End i('Oll, \e11 York

Social S&lt;·ience

General !311si11ess

DOHOTI n

\ 1 1\SO~
Bingharnton. \1•11 York

Scie11a

/Jiolop.)

Corrbponding Scnetar~
l;rc,,hman \lt'mhcr-at-Largc
Junior \ lcmher-at-LargC'
I )ragon Sot'il'l~
Cas;.andran :--ot'iet'
\\ho's\\ ho in \111~·rican CollC'ges and l -niH•rsitic&gt;-

l:--G

�\IICH.\EL \IATERESE
Binghamton, \ ew ) ork

llumanities - Language
French Club
Spani!:'h Club
Sla,ic Club
Pintopp lers

DAVID \lcDER\lOTr
Roc hester. 'ew York

ocial Science -

Business Ar/ministration

lTK
Inter-Social Club Council
Chairman Spring Picn ic
ltitramural Football
In tramural Softbal l
S tudent Court Justice

PHILIP \1EDDLETO'\
Johnson City

S cience

Biolog)

\e" man Club
Golf

1956

�FRA 'CL P. \lELIA
Endicott, \r" York
Social Science - Histor'j

sos
Italian Club

I\e" man Club
Pintopplers
Chorus

ZOIIRAB VIELKONIAN
Binghamton,
Humanities

ew York
English

Baccacia - President, Vice President, Treasurer
Spring Weekend Chairman
Editorial Board
Clarendon
Spanish Club

NICI IOLAS \1ESSINA
Chenango Forks. ~ew York
Social Science - Political Science
Adelphi
Biolog) Cluh
Gt&gt;rman Club
Colonial "\e" s
l'~G

Chorus
Comocat inns Committee
Colonial Pia) ers
De hate
Retreat Committre

�STANLEY L. \1INGU , JR .
.\1iddletown. ew York
Social Science - Political Science
Adelphi - Recording Secretaq. Vice President
Juni or Class Treasurer
Spanish Club - President
Intramural Basketball. Softball. Vollevball
Big Brother
·
Student Court Justice
Pintopplers
Spring Review Organization
Colonial Players

CARL H. MITLEHNER
Mamaroneck, ~ew York
Social Science - Economics
Student Court Justice
SOS - Chancellor
International Relations Club - Vice President
Pintopplers - Vice President. Secretary
Lincoln Dorm - Proctor
Phala nx - Vice President
German Club - Treasu rer
Senior Class Treasurer
Intramurals
Intramu ral Council
Inter-Social Club Council

KARIMA E. :YIOGAN. A\1
Binghamton. New York
Social Science - History

�STEPIIE'l

\1)

DANICK

Brook I) n. \ C\\ York
II istory
Social , cience

so

Intramural , port!&gt;

LG
Spring Ile' icw

\ SA

Stud ent Facull\ Committees

IRC

.

lavic Club
Colonial cws
Clarendon
Campus Chest
ISCC

CI J TON J. PEAKE
Long Eddy, New York
Chemistry
Science
ewman Club
'\1ath Club
German Club
Chemistry Club
Research Assistant
tudent Affiliate ACS

CHAHLES A. PETERSO
] amestown. ~ew York
Science - Geology
Adelphi
Geology Club

�LEO PIJIIJJPS
Binghamton. Ne\\ York
Science - Geograph y
Adelpbi
SRO
Spanish Club

ROBERT

RAFUS~ JR.
Binghamton, ew York
Social Science - Economics

Student Court - Chief JU!'Licc
L'SG - Mcmher-at-Large. Advocate
Colonia l \ews - :\ews Staff
Recording Sccrelaq. Treasurer
Adelphi
Intramural Football. Basketball. Volleyball
and Softball
Vice President
Debate Clu b
Dean's List ( L 2. 3. 4)
H onor Roll ( 1, 2, 3, 4 )
Va rs it y Drhate Team
Chairman Student Leadership Conference
Co-Chairman F rcshman Orientation
. Lage \Ianager
Spring Re' ic" Organ ization
pring W&lt;'Ckend Committee
"There's Something I Got Lo Tell You" - Play
NYSNSA - Central District Chairman
Educational Affairs Vice President
Who's Wh o in American Colleges and Universities

JAMES REGAN
Bing hamton. ;\ew York
Social cience - Business Administration
ecretar}
Baccacia Va rs ity Baskethall
Intra mural Basketball , Football
Pintopplers - Treasu rer, Vice Pre!&lt;ident
Italian Club - Vice President
Senior Class - Vice President

�FRA~K

D. ROLLO

Johnson Cit}, i\ew York
Science

Physics and Chemistry

f ntramural Football
\Tathemalics Club
German Club
Cl\ man Club
Chem istry Club
ofthall

LOUL ROSS
Westfield,
llu111a11ities

ew York

.

f,anguages

Colonial Players
panish Club

BARBAHA 'A DERS
Binghamton. \•" York
Social Science -

Sociology

Thalian!'
Pre!'ident. Secretary. Treasurer
Colonial \pws
Frt&gt;nch Club
Chorus and Rand
Tt&gt;nni~

Intramural Basketball and Volle"yball
Pintoppler«
Pcretar)
Inter· ocial Club Council
Studenl·f'acult) Reception - Refreshment Committee
Spring Weekend Canoe Race - 1955, 1956, 19:57

�GERTRUDE LOCISE
Binghamton. ;\'ew York
Science and ifathematics

CHL LEH
C/1emistr)

President. Vice President. Secretan
Thalians
.
ecretary-Treasurer
Chemistq Club Secretar)
Biology Club
Vice Pre:;idenl. 'ecrelar~
:\lathemalics Club
German Club - Secretan
Big ister ·
Chorus
l'\ews Staff, Cop) Editor
Colonial News
Associate Edi tor
Colonist
National tudent Association
l nter-Social Club Council
H onor Roll. Dean's List
Leadership Conference

JJ OWA HD R. SCOTT
Binghamton. ew York
Business Administration -

DAWN

Acco11111i11g

EDOR

Binghamton. , e"" York
Humanities - English Literature

�R \ LPTI SEHINO
E ndicott. \ ew York

Business

Social Science
Ita li an Cluh
Goliards

JO H ~

A. SERAFINI

Bing hamton. New York

.

Accounting

Social Science

Intramural S po rts

STEPHE

SKCH KI

Bingham ton. :\rw York

ocial Science

Accounting

Baccac ia
French Club
lntramu ra l F ootball

�EDWAHD G. SOCIIOH
Endicoll. \ ew York

Social, cience

Econom ics

C oli ar&lt;ls
T rea,;urer
Ge rman Club
Va rsit) £3asketba ll

TH EODORE N. OvJ\TER
Bing hamton . .:\e" Yo rk

ocial . cience -

Economics

·c

U President, \Iember-at -Large
Colonial News - Feature
Dehate Club - Presiden t
Adelph i
So phomore Class President
Cha irm an
F'reshma n Orientation
Je" ish Fello ws hip
Dragon oc iet)
Who·s Who in American Colleges and lJ ni ,·ers ities

RlCHARD T. STANK
Johnson Cit)'.

Social Science -

cw York

History

P res iden t. Vice President
Adelphi
Corresponding Secreta ry. Chaplain
Rig Rroth&lt;'•
~1 e111 ber-at - La rge
L C
President Ju nior Class
F'ac ull \ -Student Association
Far ult)-Student Organ izations Committee
Ed itor
LSC Hand book Committee
L. C Pu hlicil \ Committee Chai rman
ludcnl Courl Ju~Lice
l SC Cou r~ Ernluali on u rn ') Commi ttee
Cha irma n p ring oiree
( SG Lcadn.,hip Ret reat
Int ramural Sports
Who'$ \\'ho in American Colleges and U ni \'ersi tic-.

�DOl\

TROPE

Endicott. 'e" York
Chemistry
Science
Vice President, Secretary
Goliards
Vice President
Chemistq Club
Pintopplers
Intramural Football. Basketball
Varsity Coif

WALTER

ULLIVAN

Bingnamton, ew York
Social Science - Business·
Baccacia
Pintopplers
Intramural Sports

GEORGE SYYTULA
Auburn. "\rw York
Economics
ocial cience

ITK
I.

cc

e\\man Club
Pintopplers
Intramural Football, Basketball. Volleyball
Baseball

�VIVIA

TARRANT

Binghamton, 1 ew York
Social Science - Sociology
Thalians
I CC
Christian Fellowship
Modern Dance
Basketball
Colonial ews
Colonist

DA YID UNDERWOOD
Oriskany, New York
Social Science - Geography
Intramural Football, Basketball, Softball
Baccacia - Vice President, Secretary

LAWRENCE D. WASKO
Clinton Corners. New York
Social Science - Accounting
President, Vice President. ~retaq
Baccacia
Pintopplers - President, Vice President
ewman Club
Intramural Football

�GEHAl .D \\ El ' S
Brook lyn. \ cw York
Business
Social Science

. OS

TIIEODOHE WENGE.R
Vestal, 1cw York
Business
Social Science

AL.\:-\ \\ llfTE
0 11 rgo. \ c11 York
Chem isl ry
'cience
Clwrni... tn Cluh
Pintopplers

�WILLIA VI F. WOOD
Johnso n City. I\ew York
Social cience - Economics
Germa n Club
Intram ural Council
Intram ural Athletics
Adelphi

JOSEPH H. YO NG
Watert own, New York
Social Science - Business Administration
Baccac ia
Pintop plers
Lincoln Dormi tory Counse lor

SALLY REED YOUNGS
Bingha mton, ew York
Science - Psychology
Chorus
Colonial News
Pando rans
Pintop plers - Treasu rer, Secreta ry
Inter-D ormito ry Council Repres entativ e
Dean's List

�JOYCE MARIE ZACK
Syracuse, ew York
Humanities - English Literature
e\\man Club
French Club
Vice President. ecretary
P a ndorans
Pintopplcrs
Typist, Reporter. Featu re Editor
Colonial 'ews
Secretary
Ju nior Class
Senior Class - Secretary
Publicity Committee
Spring Rev ue Organization
Student Court Recorder
Dean's List 1-4
Copy Editor
Co lonist Staff
USC Course Evaluation Survey

�Officers of the Senior Class
President . ....... ...... ... . Marion Battaglin i
Vice President . ........ ........ . fames Regan
Secretary . ........ ........ ....... Joyce Zack
Treasurer. . . . . . . . . ... . .... .. .. Carl Mithlener
Sergeant-at-Arms . ........ ..... . .. Bill Grogan
Members-at-Large . .. Caralyn Camp, foe Garbarino

�Seniors IVot Sh&lt;nvn
anrl Senior Me111 bers of the Evening Division

Akel, Ferris

Lent, Lois

Ba Id win, Frank

J.etavish, Honald

Bassage, Winfield

Loomis, Eunice

Brown. J erry

\1acdowel1, William

Cartmell, Hheta \l rs.

:Vla tti:;, Donald

Christina. Louise

v1cGivne). Howard

Coe. i\ rth u r

Vlorgan, Bernard

Cosgrove, Gloria

\1orrissey, Roger

Edwards. Robert

Newnham. Robert

Finn, Joseph

Santora, Joseph

Flcmi n(!;, H emy

Silver, Walter

Grey, Donald

Stanton, William

Hoffman. Jl arold

Stew a rt, Rohe rt

Hounslow, J ohn

Van \1echllen, Jacklin

Johns, \farie

Waite, Frank

Kahanic, \1agaret

Walsh, John

Kozak, Arlene

Williams, Glenn

Kuharsky. Yera

Zicari, Pat

Landow. L1 r-.ula

�F

A

c

u
L
T

y

�Faculty Directory

Dr. Lewi;; Alexander

A ssoc. Prof. Geography

Asst. Prof. Music

Dr. Harry Lincoln

Asst. Prof. Economics

Dr. Kenneth Lindsay

Assoc. Prof. A rt

Dr. J O$eph Brrman

Inst. Chemistry

Dr. Otakar Machotka

Professor Sociology

Dr. Aldo Bernardo

Assoc. Prof. Rom. Lang.

Dr. John Beall

Inst. Russian

\Jr. Michral Bochnak

Dr. Edgar Bowers
Dr. John Brohm
Dr. Richard Burgener
Dr. Gilbert Cahill

Asst. Prof. English
Asst Prof. Anthropology
Asst. Prof. Philosophy
Asst. Prof. History

Assoc. Prof. Pol. Sci.

Dr. Seymour Mann

Asst. Prof. English

Dr. Robert Marsh
Dr. Max Metlay

Assoc. Prof. Chemistry

Dr. Rigo Mignani

Asst. Prof. Rom. Lang.

Mr.

Asst. Prof. Sociology

'orman Miller

Inst. Chemistry

Dr. Dorothea Mueller

Inst. Spanish

Dr. John Chalmers

Professor Economics

Dr. Donald Coates

Asst. Prof. Geology

Dr. Robert Penfield

Dr. Dolora Cunningham

Asst. Prof. English

Dr: Philip Piaker

Assoc. Prof. Acctg.

Dr. Seymour Pitcher

Professor Gen. Lit.

Inst. Art

\li"l' Mar) Demeter
Mr. Richard Face

•

Inst. History

Mr. i\1ichio Oka

Mr. Frank Pollard

Assoc. Prof. Physics

------------------

Inst. Phys. Ed.
Inst. Sociology

Dr. Harold Fagin

Assoc. Prof. Psychology

Dr. Jacob Fischtal

Assoc. Prof. Biology

Dr. Jack Richardson

Asst. Prof. Psych.

Asst. Prof. English

Miss Nancy Rippon

--------------- __ Inst. Phys. Ed.

Dr. Vincent Freimarck
Dr. Am) Gilbert

Professor History

Mr. Enrico Quarentelli

----------------------- --· Inst. Geology
_ __ _ Inst. Zoology
Mr. Robert Rudin . .

Vfr. Charles Rockwell

Mr. ]. Alex Gilfillan

Assoc. Professor Music

Dr. Chri!ltian Gruber

Asst. Prof. lit. and Theatre

\Ir. Ronald Hadlock

Inst. Physics

Dr. Dick Wick Hall

Prof. Mathematics

Dr. Richard Schwartz

i&lt;lney ITarcavr

Professor History

Dr. Kurt Shell ...

Dr.

Dr. Robert Hart
Mr. Dacid I lenderson

Assoc. Prof. Physics
Dir. Phys. Ed.

Dr. Mi ldred Schellig . ·---- _
Dr. George Schumacher . __

Mr. Jerome Snyder

lee. Anatomy, Physio.
__ Asst. Prof. Bio.
Asst. Prof. law
Asst. Prof. Pol. Sci.
Assoc. Prof. Bus. Ad.

Dr. A lfred Steer __ ---------------- _ Asst. Prof. German

Dr. William lleyman

Asst. Prof. Psych.

Dr. Joseph VanRiper

Dr. Albrrt llouse

Professor History

Dr. Peter Vukasin

Assoc. Prof. Econ.

Dr. Luitpold Wallach

Asst. Prof. Classics

Dr. \1ax Hull

Professor Chemistry

Professor Geography

Dr. Bernard Huppe

Professor English

Dr. Paul Weigand

Assoc. Prof. German

Dr. Jack Kaminsk)

Assoc. Prof. Philosophy

Dr. John Weld .. .

Assoc. Prof. English

Dr. Louis Kattsoff

Professor Mathematics

Mr. Roger Williams

Inst. Rom. Lang.

Dr. Jame« Krnt

Professor A1athematics

Dr. James Wilmoth

Professor Biology

Dr. Rodney Ketchum

Professor Rom. Lang.

Mr. Paul Wolotkin

Dr. \1an in Kristein

Asst. Prof. Economics

Miss Frances Wright

Dr. Laurence Leamer

Professor, Economics

Inst. Acctg.
Assoc. Prof. Math

�DH. SE1 \IO"CR \J. PITCHER
Chairman of the Division of the
1lumanities

DH. SIDNEY S. IIARCAVE
Chairman of the Division of the Social
Sciences

DH. \1 '\ \. C. IICLL
Chairman of the I)j,i-;ion of Science and
\lathematic'l

�DR. ALDO

. BER\ARDO

DR. VI:\CENT C. FREIMARCK

The Humanities

!Ht CllRISTI.\\" P. GRUBER

MR. J. ALE'&lt; GILFILLAN

�DR. BEHNARD F. HUPPE

DR. ROONEY K. KETCHAM

The Hu man itie s

DH. II \HHY B. Ll\COL'.\

DH. KE;\:\ETll C. LI 1'DSA Y

�DH. HIGO \I IC\\ \I

DR. ROBERT \I \R::,11

The Humanities

\Ill. \llCIIIO 01'. \

DR . \. G. STE!:] {

�DH. LllTPOLJ l \\ ALL ·\ Cll

DH. PALL \VEIC\\D

The Hu man itie s

DR. JOll\ S. WELD

DH. HOGLH L. \\ILL!\ \1:-;

�The
Social
Sciences
DR. GILBERT A. CAHILL

DR . JOI!\ W. BEALL

DR. JOll:\' CITAL:\1 ERS

�~IH.

\OH.\1\\ \llLLl::R

The
Social
Sciences
~lit

:\1R. PIIILIP M. PIAKER

DR. HIOI \HD

. SCJl\\' AHTZ

I:\H ICO QUAH \ \TELLJ

�DR. ALBERT V. IIOL. E

The
Social
Sciences
DH. \I \ RVI \

KHI STEI ~

DH. LALREJ\CE LEAMER

DH. OTAKAR \1ACIIOTKA

�DH. KLRT SHELL

The
Social
Sciences
DH. J OSEPII E. VA:\RI PER

\1H . P \ l L \\'O LOTk. I\

�~m.

JO, EPII

BER:vtA~

DH. IHIWLf) T. F \ GI \

Science and Mathematics

DH. HO\ \ LD "-.. 11 ,\ DLOCK

DR. DICK WICK HALL

�DH. LOl IS 0. K \ TTSOFF

DH.

J \\I E~ H. F. l\.E\T

Science and Mathematics

DH. \I\"\ \IETLAY

DH. H0B1-:1{'1 II. l'I·: \I· 11-:I , I)

�\JR. ROBEHT .\. RUH\

MH. CllARLES ROCKWELL

Science

Mathematics

DH. CF.ORCE J.
SCHLMAC ll ER

DR.

JM,IE~

H. WILMOTH

\JIS ~

FRA\TCES M. WRIGHT

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�Th1• ~car ope11t'd au,piciou~I~ ''ith
a ma" drmon"t ration on I ht• IH'\\
1'3lllJ&gt;ll!'.

\~I.B.M.

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Thr ap;r of th(' machine finalh

carnr lo ll arpur

"hile peoplr "ate heel br!'athle""" . . .

Cltf:&gt;

�The !&lt;hock of thC' horck~
of new frc ..limen "a~ loo
great. and rioting: "a"
rampant . . .

a special L.S.C. trouhil'-~hooter
1H1s called in lo C'\'Ulua te the ~itu­
ation and offer somr con&gt;-t rucl i1e
cri ticism and reF-pon!"ihle comment

on the

IH'"

aspect of co-curricular

acti1il}.

ho11c1er. despite the~e effort~­
another dcrnonF-tral ion 1\ as lwld ...

\\ III CII c•nded . . .

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�with dire

con~eq1H'ncc~.

II
II
II
II
II
a

1w\\

la11 11 a~ C'$tahli!'hrcl. ho"·

t'1 er.

and the insurgent fre,.hmen 11ere
brought to a s11 ift and terrible
justice.

�Peace w a~ res Iorrd .111d l he
ich Ilic days of fall ::-cttlc'd on
lJarpur. ·

The daily packet hoal from ri' ilizal ion brought nrws of an unhappy
'' orld. hut

I larpuritrs sa1' thrir domain
through e~ c-. lilindrd hy l1'ar'
of happinc-.-. and so all 11 a"
&lt;·aim.

�\C'\\ leaders "('rC' drn~(·11

nnd om· of tlw t110 o r th1(T fol1(1\\ 1·1:- di..,1·m ni•d that l la1 pur had
h&lt;'t'll im adt&gt;d . . .

elaborate precautions and clrfen,_i, r
were crrctrcl to repcll thr
imadcr. but alas. lo no arn il . . .

S} stems

�The ::;now Queen :11ri\(•d hut
didn't.

S llO\\

ome "ere nol loo '' orried abou t
thi;-. hut the sno\1 queen commi ttee stood around and wondered
'' hal Lo do.

Final!)
"ail.

th1•1

1kl'id1•d lo

�. l r r de·
I I of
" i n
Sucldenh · Iw "r'I c r. liul
~.c·r111lecl upon l lC I dc '' or &lt;

I la rpur i1ith a

.
anc I l lw g lorrou&lt;;
sports brgan.

"ea~on

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of "inter

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the one

: l·t·r 'JlOll. I
.\\ 111

Oil

Ille ri co-ht

�Thu~

liegan that ga). mad rnund of !'Ocial
adi' it\
\\ hi~h
ha~ made Ilarpur t lw H&gt;cial cc11tl'r of thl' 'l 1ipl1•
Citie~.

Dance~

''en

danced.

Dragon:=- were
ercalccl.

a11d . . . a . . . .,tudP11l-facull\
rt'lali o11" were at thei1 \\anrw:-1 ...

�Our glorious leader was .;o
imprrssed h) thi" attitude
of social acti1itr and
mirth. that he called in a
"elI-known imprcssioni,.t
painter to capture the in1n101lal momenb on can1as .. . and lwrc is thr
rrsult.

\'\'hile this 1H1s going on the facull\ got c1 en 11 arnwr

and people hacl parties rn blurr)
barns and mu;.l) cellars.

�But il all had lo rncl. nnd dtl1111ing their lcidrrlwr~rn. all of l larpur galhcn•d logt'llwr
amid expre~&lt;;io11s of 111i\cd ('Jllotion and joinl'd i11 a coll&lt;'('rl and offerPd thcm~('ll(·~
fort'\ &lt;-r lo the ~en ice of Bacchus to r pcrhap~ Jllon• apprnprialt&gt;h. Dioll\ ~iu:-1.

\\ 'hiJe tJH',&lt;'S cl('\ otion~ \\('fl' i.:oin~ on. the IH'\\ C~ Jll!Hl,jlllll ro'('
lool..irtg Iii..(' an IB\I plant fr11m out of lilt' golden 'lllll"i~&lt;'.

�The new semester arri\ eel and some
11erc gone. General mourning 11as
cledarecl a nd si lence 11as heard in
the land . ..

11 ith a great ~tamping of feet
and 11 ilcl cheer ing the ne11
f re~hnwn can t(' to Harpur.

Soon. l'\ eryone had ~ettled down
for a long 11 inter's nap

�and Hl thing,. went on at I larpur.
people did things

and more thing".

It qi II

~no wed

�but

C\

t•n one kept on dancing

and 1·101' n111g qur\•ns

and more q urcn~.

�Dr. G1 uhrr finally
maclr ii

11 hilc he did. the dorm maicl111a inlainrd their usual ordrrh
.
and ~tudiou5 lifr

and
rn~

�The girl,, hef{an the
allaek

and the Arah ~i Luati on got
progn"·~i\'C·I~ wor&lt;;&lt;'

hu t mo~t people ignored ii .

�P(•oplc kC'pl right on
clant'ing

and observing the u:-;ual ;,oC'ial amcnitic~

and dn•aming fond drPams
and hoping fond hope,, "ith
head-. held high.

�The Jllll'l ~aid thal "hen ~he come::.
he\! kno'' hut mo~l of the other
people clicln"t knell\
or
care
and so the )Ca r went on with the
end coming into 'icw.

Tlw future was as )el a hunch of
balloon!\ Lo be burst.

People got together lo talk about
it and things remained. as IN TilE
BEGii~NI 1G,

much the same until

Tll F. El\ D

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�THE FRESHMAN CLASS ...
OF NINETEEN SIXTY
CLASS OFFICERS
President . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Ed Herbert

Vice President . . ............ . ... Forrest Wood
Secretary . . . .......... . ........ Helene Shaw
Treasurer . .. . ................... John Beaton

Sergeant-at-Anns . .............. Jeffry Schiller

Members-at-Large . . ............. Nadya Aswad
Joyce Lynch
these, who first upon the paths do tread ... "

·r

�Beverly Sim, Marilou F'orrnichelli. !\ad) a Aswao. Sami Weingarten. Connie
\1cCormick, Willa Prince&gt;, :\orma Plson. Joye&lt;' Fischbein, Leona Kalmanowitz,
Priscilla tokes. Frances Parker. Howard Belasco. Tom Brown. Peter Habeiman, lephan Baker. Frank \la)er. Dave Weber. Aulden Fowler, Alforn;e
Emrnoto, ~1icheal Buckel. Dave Meeks, Jeff Schiller.

Hunny Rio&gt;-. Barbara Dobrincr. Joan Gluckauf. \;Jq Ann Gibson. Sarni
Weingarten. Joyce L) nch, Gail Bonem. Doroth) Sd1rnilt, Pauline Tolrico,
Ruth Leach, \1aga ret Ferrante. \laurcPn \'\' ilc·ox. Irwin Silver. llerh Tinow,
\ rnie LeYinr. Duane Benjamin. John L&gt;on. G. James Purd).

�THE SOPHOI\10RE CLASS

Hick drPctris. J ohn Krum anoC"kcr. llan'C) Goldstein. lla Solomon. Steve
Ny;;rhot. Ed Taub. J erq Beno\~itz. Jud y Hosoff, Shirley Shotwell.

CLASS OFFICERS
President ..... . ............. J an1es Higgins
Vice President ............... Edward Taub
Secretary .................. Phyllis San1uels
Treasurer .............. . Margaret Willia1ns
lVIen1bers at Large ......... Jane Pendergast
Robe1t Fratarcangelo

"do then continue upon tlu)ir tcay to other cli1nes .. "

�Carol ~hrauger, Audrey Kennedy. Mel chawartz. Fran Hanks. Bobi Alp&lt;·r.
\uhad Kanaan. William Kress. Carl Z) nwl. Bets) Knickerhucker. Sandra
Lander. Pat Cannada\. Fiskt' De11 ees. Hon Rosenstein. Dirk Corash. Hal
Cohen. Sam Adolf. At' Kohh. Hoh Gionnuzzi. Carl Goodman. Stan Muld(l\ an.

THE JUNIOR CLASS
"The successors to the seats of power, hrirs
to in1n1i11e11t 111ajesty

. th e journey lon g, but t11e

goal is theirs now but Lo grasp."

�THE OFFICERS OF THE CLASS
OF 'FIFTY-NINE
President . .. ... .. . .......... .... Simon Adolf
Vice President . .......... ..... Gerald McLain
Secretary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Sherry Pierce
Treasurer . ......... . ..... . .... . .. Carl Zymel
Sergeant-al-Arms . ........ . ...... . . Art Ebeling
Members-at -Large . ....... . . Betsy Knickerbock er
Gene Knapp

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�Who's lVho zn American Universities and Colleges

Marion nattaglini. Dick \ $wad. Ted Sommer. Byrne Fone. Connie Gro\'er. Bob Hafusc.
Doroth) Mason, Dick Stank. Ele Donnellan.

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Dick \ :;\\ad. te\ e \hdanic-k. Bune Fone. Bob l~afusc. \Iarion Bauaglini. Stan
'.\lingus. Ted Sommer. Joy&lt;'e Zack. t:lc Do nnell an. Dick Stank.

�The Uni ted Stud erit Gov ernment

U.S.G. Officers
!'resident
Vice President
Rernrding Secretar)
Correspondinl{ Secretary
Treas11rer
Adl'OCate

'.'\. Theodore Sommer
Walter Jonsson
Barbara Vo!'bur1d1
Eleanor Donn&lt;'llan
G&lt;'rald \ 1cLain
Ronald \ lonl&lt;'p&lt;'rlo

\ IE\ IIlERS- \T-L \RGE

Freshman

Soplwmore

f 11nior

Senior

Nadya Aswad
Joyce Lynch

Jane Pendergast
Robert F ratarcangelo

Betsy Knickerbocker
G&lt;•ne Knapp

Cara!) n Camp
Joe Garbarino

�STUDENT
COURT

Roy Costle), Dave '\.1cDermott, Fran Hanks, Joyce Zack, Stan
Mi ngus, Al Coen, Dick Stank, Carl Mitlehner, Bob Rafuse. ·

INTERSOCIAL
CLUB
COUNCIL

Rick de Petris. '\uhad Kanaan. StC'n&gt; '\1) danick. Fran l\lel ia. Hon Rosenstein.
:Shirh Brut,an. Corinm• Johns. Bt•l;;) Knickerbocker. ancly Lander.

�COLONIST
Byrne Fone. fditor

fh rnl' Fone

S~mi \\'eingarten

~ue Gehm
Gerl Schuler

\Ian Lou Form ichelli
Fredda Lerner
Joyce Zack
Eel Taub
Bob Blum
Al Kohb
Jerry Benowitz

COLONIAL NEWS
Do11 \\'('stlakr. F:ditor
Mel Fox
Jeannette Schcair
Marcia Texler
Bill Coons
William Randolph Hearst
Ken Browne
Dick Henderson
Bill McConnon

CLARENDON
Paul Hoffman. Editor
Judy Gillette
JU&lt;l) Hanson
Ila Solomon
Paul I !offman
J{e) nold Boezi
Bill Thompson

�INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS

CLUB

Dave Cohen, Sarni Weingarten, Steve Mydanick, Joyce Fischbein, Dick
Corash, Ralph Spinelli, uhad Kanaan.

OUTING

CLUB

Paul Hoffman. J ucly Gillette. ] udy Bleser, Joan Gluckauf, Ila Solomon, Judy
llan!:'ull, Sam Ad olf. Bill Thompson. Pete Van Der Linde. Reynold Boezi.

�The
Gallery
Co1nniittee

Jud ) Gillclle. Mel Schwa rl i. Ila Solom on. B) m e Fnne.

The Colonial f)layers

] aki \ ' an Mec helrn. Cine!~ ll at.l. ~I an \l ingw·.
Leigh Chad" iC'k. Carl Goodm an. Henrc Ba!-h.
~J ickcy Sklcnka. J)a, e Cohen .

.\!embers not slwun : J oe Pcrnt'ii. \eclra \\ c~t ­
lake . .\fa n .\ nn Dekar. Joe Petrone. Joann e
Va la bck. Ca mmilla \lcLco d.

�llarpu r Colleg·e Chorus

'\onna \el~on. John L) on. Inge \ itka. Hon Lela\ i;.h. Sur G1•hm, Duane Benjamin.
l\.c•\ in l\.elh . Dr. LinC'oln. Ellen Ventra. J uclilh Il an,,on. Fran Parker.

Student
Revue

Org·anization

-;tan \1ingu .... Cimh llat1. Leigh Cha&lt;h' id•. Henee
Dick Cura"'li. Dail" Cohen.

~klenka.

Ba~h .

\li!'kr\

�Slavic

Club

&lt;'C L)nch. Irene
SidnC'\ Grrcnb la tt. ~hern Pir rcr. Ralph Steinbe rg. Jo)
.
danick
)
\I
Ste\'e
ko.
Felcr1;

Italian

Club

Ft·lt r r. \\'a lt
Ele Donnel lan. Huth 1-.onko \\'-hi. Torn Pellrg1 ino. ~idnt•\
do.
Bt'rnar
Dr.
'.
Pdmrn
llan-.011. Joe

�Spanish

Club

Car~ Par kc·1. ~Ian \l ingus. Loi!&gt; Lent. Cincl~ lla tz. \I ikc \l alcn·~c.

German

Club

�Biolop;y

Club

Dr. Schumacher. Torn Brown. Ed Taub. Dot Ma»on. Carl Good111an. Dr.
Fischlal. Al Kohh.

Geolof3·y

Club

Robert .\cl ams. Fran \ng1•llotti. Thoma~ Cochran&lt;'. Dpn DonnC'llan.
\l arl in Dougla». Chri..,Loplwr l·:gan. Ja\ Gershh&lt;'rg, Sandra Cirago~ia11,
Judie Ci&lt;·nn. Angela Grieco. Genr h. napp. John Krumanack&lt;'r. Carl
Leonard. Larr~ \1 iddaugh. Charle·.., i'l'Ler,.;on. \ orman Ho,..enbaum. l{ich·
arrl ~chwarlz. Da\e ~lohodrn. Halph ~LC'inhcrg. Verna le\q1rd. LM
Phillip:-;. Hichard Ulmer.

�Canterbury Association

Ed Taub. Larn Old~. Boh Lon . .Vian Ann Cib;.on. Sam i Berr) . Fredda
Lcr nrr. B) rnt• Font'. Bobi Doh.ringer." Cara!~ n Camp.

Neivman Club

Henee Ba;.h. Ilt'nd) Chorc~h. Sa111i Weingarten. Fredda Lerner. Bohi Dobriner. Joan Clurkauf. \1aq 1\1111 Gibson. Al
1'ohh. \I Colwn. l't&gt;d Sommer. Carl Good111an. krr' Beno" itz. Ed Taub. Hoh Blurn. Joe Alaimo. l)a,c Slobodi~1. Davr
Cohen. \I Coen. Halph Goldhcrg. ~ll'\ e Davis.

\II tht' \lt'mhl'r::o

Jewish
Fellowship

�Alpha
Phi
Omega

Ha) Corneliu~. Sid Greenblatt. Claude Wil;;on. Winfield Bassage. Gary
Cohen. Lio~ d Dent. Sid Epstei n. Other member;; in picture unknown .

Phalanx

\Valh \tikul~ki. \orm baac-.on. Bob Lon. W all Mc\lanus. Larr) Old~,
Art f' reije. kn) llclle\. Jack \l orris"c~ . Joe Lamphrrc. Duane Zimmer,
Ja) Le\, is. Joe \ !uirno. \ick BuC'l'a'-io. Jim Dun.

�......

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�Adelphi

OFF ICEHS

FALL

President
I ice /&gt;resident
Recorrlin[!. Secn•tar_)
Correspo/l(linr. Se('/ etary
'l reasurer
General O//ice1
Chaplain

El\IE 'TER
Dick Stank
Stan \lingu"
l&gt;ick Jl cnderson
S tc'e k.uecra
Bob Rafuse
l&gt;cnnis Spetz
Mike Wolfson

�Adelphi

OFFI CE HS

~ l'HI\ C

/&gt;resident
I ice P1 esidenl

SE\IESTEH
~ I an

:\lingu5

Ilon 'Ton leperto

R&lt;'cord111[!. Secr&lt;'lan

Corr&lt;'spondin[!. S&lt;'cr&lt;'fnn
Trenrnrrr
Ceneral Of/ic&lt;'r
Chapin in

l krrni~ ~op~

Boh Hafu&gt;&lt;('
Denni~

Spetz

�Baccacia

OFFICEHS
President
Vice President
Secretary
Treasurer
llistorian

FALL SE\I ESTEH
La rr)

\\ a~ko

Jor Garbarino
Da, id l ndcrn ood
Art Coe
Stan \l uldovan

�Baccacia

OFFJCEllS
1'11&gt;side111
I ice /'l(•.1itlent
Sec11'f(t1)

Treasurer
llistOI ian

SPlll\G

D1ESTEH
Chc,,trr Ldio
James Heµ;a11

FranC'iR Bills
St('phe11 SkurRki
Hic·hard Emmons

�Cassandrans

OFFICER.

F1\ LL

/&gt;resident
I ice President
Retordi11t; Secretary
CorN•spondinµ Src1 l'/a ry
Treas11re1
Serµean/-a/- I nns

£MESTER
Jrannr llarch~andra

Lander

1 ' onnr B roe re
J ud) G ill r lte
•\ rlene Smith
J ane Penderga&gt;'l

�Cassandrans

OFFICEHS

SPH I\(, '."iE\l l·:s·1El{

Presidenl
f' ice Presidr111
Recording Src1 eta1)
Co1 res1101111i11p. Secrc/111 .I
Treasurer
Sergea111-at · ,/rm .~

Juch

Cillt&gt;llt'

.l anl' Prnclrrgn-t

Judith H&lt;J~!-nff
I lorotll\ \la"-Oll
Pll\ Iii-

~amut·l­

"andra Lauder

�The Dionysian/ Society

OFFICEHS

F \LL SE\1 ESTEH

President
T ice Preside;1t
Recording S1•cretar)
Corresponding . 'ecr&lt;'lary
Treasurer
5f'rgeant-at-A1 ms

B~

rne Fone
Hon Jensen
Sidne) Felder
Dick Corash
Sam Adolf
Da\'e Slobodi n

�The Dionysian Society

OffICER '

Sl'l{l\C

I' resident
I ice JJresir/1•11/
Correspo11di11~

Recordir1~

Secretar;
SC'Crc&gt;/ary

Treasura
Sa~eant-at-

·Irms

S l ~\IESTEll

Hon J cn;;en
Gene Knapp
\I Kobh
J('I 1 I

B('IHI\\ ill

l·:cl Taub
Il a! Cohen

�Goliards

OFFICEHS

F \LL SE:V1ESTER

1'1esid1•111

I ice J&gt;reside111
S1'c r1•/ar\

Treas11rt'f

Holier! Ellis

Donald Strope

La 11 rrnce \X1ebster
Crrr~

o·nonnell

Correspn1U!i11p. .' wul'/a r.i

J o~eph Soposk~

Ser{!.ea11t-at-A r111s

Hon Rm:.enstein

�Goliards

I&gt;id a Coliarcl make this ? ? '1

OFFICEHS

SPHl\G SE\tESTFH

Presidenl
/'ice Presiden/
. ecre/ar;
Treasurer
Correspo11di11!! Secrelnr)
Sergeant-al- ·f rms

Hol wrl EJlj,
Donald Strope

Joh11

\\' el"'h

Gerald O'l&gt;o1111ell

Cla11ck \\ ibon
Hon Ho::-cn.,tein

There\. hound lo be a Goliarrl here

!'Oil!&lt;'

place

�I. T ./(.

OFFICEHS
President
Treasurf'r
Secrctar)

F \LL SE\IESTEH
\rthur Ebeling

Stan Dahle
\orm Rifkin

�I.T.l( .

OFFICERS
JJresidenl
Treasurer
Sccretar)

SPIU\C SE\IESTF:R
Frank T) nan
Stan Dahle
George S) mu la

�Pandorans

OFF ICERS

F \LL SE\IESTEH.

!'resident
I ice President
Recorrlinr. . eC1e/ary
Corresponding Secretar;
Treasurer
llistorian

~Iarion

Ballaglini
Hcnderso11
Caralyn Camp

~all)

Avis Reines
Do rothy \IcOermott

Lucy Marlin

�Pandorans

orF ICERS

PHI \G . E\I ESTER

President
I ice P resulent
Recording Secretary
Corresponding ecretary
T reasurer
Sergeant-at-Arms

hmicdlin
all)
Dorolh) ~lc Oermoll
Shet f) P ierce
Lois Lent
Cannada)
Pat
\1 ickc~ Sklenka

�S.O.S.

OFFICERS F \ LL
Chancellor
l'ice Chancellor
'cribe
Exchequer
Equerry

E:\IESTER
Carl :\Jitlehner
Tom Agan
Richard Jost
Gera ld Weiss

\lelvin Schwartz

�s.o.s.

OFFICER.
Chanri•llor
I 'ice Chancellor
Seri hi'
F:xchequer
Equc1 r\

SPR l\ C

~E'\ I ESTE H

Carl \ litlehner
Colin \kKirch
Richard Jo~l
Gerald Wei~!'
\lel\in Sd111arlz

�Thalian

OFF!Clm
Preside111
l'ice President
Secretar)
Treasu rer

FALL

E\IJ.:S1TH
J ean Ru ssel

Gertrude

~chuler

• andra Gi ragosian
Fiske Dewees

�Thalian

OITJCl-:l{S

/&gt;resident
J'ice /&gt;resident

Secretar;
Treasurer
llistorian

SPRI\G SE\1ESTER
.'hirle) Brul\'an
Jran Hussell
Fi!'ke De" ·ees
~ur

'andra

Gehm

Girago~ian

��The COLOJ\TIST 'lvoiLld like to take this
opportunity to thank those people 'Who
have helped us in putting out this book.
We 'Would like to thank especially i\1iss
Joan Gluckauf for taking over the job
of Subscription Nlanager in 1nicl-year and
Mr. Gordon Scfrwartz ancl Nlr. Willicun
Warriner rnho have been of i1111neasurable aid in the photography deparl1nent.

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�The Raskethall Team

Thr Chrrrleaders

Th&lt;' Pintopplers

�Ilarpur's
Tennis
1

1 ea11i
\\ illiam Vodkle
\l dt Bu rtch
Jen\ Heanlon
Coai·h l'ullard
\ rt Crn·
Din id Parkrr

Cross
Country
Loui!' Ile Villt'r~
lbne Bli-.-.
' I 011\ ~amar lino
Coa;·h I IP11deN&gt;11
l&gt;:ne \ leek-.
l&gt;,I\ l' Parker
Hon Jt•11-.e11

�The
Golf

Team
Tom \ c-.lo r
J oc Lapo~ k~
Dou ~trope

\\ all :-.ulli1 an
Tom Sm ii h
~ahina T amhoia

�lla ri&gt; ur ' s haskelball
team in action

�Sport-. a l I larpur

\ "t rike ...

llarpur·..,

.

S\\

imming tram?

�The Cheerleader;. t110, at least and the pep hand.

�Sports Scenes

�Congrat ulations
Class of 1958

McLEAN'S
McLEAN 'S DEP'T STORES
INC.

Stores in

BINGHAM TON , N. Y.
ENDICOTT , N. Y.
a nd

OWEGO, N . Y.

Binghamton' s Finest
Recomme nded by the AAA

COLONIAL
MOTOR INN
AND
DINING ROOM
MR. AN D MRS. W. J . RAIF
3 Miles West on Highway 17
For Reservatio ns

DIAL 9-1511

�PRESTIGE

•

•

•

il must be earned
A ncwspapt•r cannot inh..rit prf'-.lig&lt;' . . it mu-.l 1·arn 11. \ nd ii is not ju~l a mallrr of t ime.
I t is a mall er of policy and purpos&lt;'. \ pubh-h&lt;'r mu-.1 know the reader' ht' ~e1 Vt'S . . . and
gi,·e th&lt;'lll 1•vt•ry1hing he ha&lt;; got.
F or .')4 )'•'ars the publ if'lwr' of T he Binghamton Pn•-.• havt· held &lt;;lea&lt;lfa•l to this &lt;;launch
principlC'. Rc,u lt? A rcadc·r-failh, a rradt'r·h&lt;'lid, unma1c-lu•d hy few other newspapers. And t his
confidcnC'l', rt'sprcl, prcsli{!c. has giH·n T lw Pri''' a d1·gn·1· of inlluence outstandin !!; among
newspaper ~ of thl' nation. P .. rhaJ1' 1ha1 i• why Tinw \ l aga1ine, in a recent i..,uc, ~aid tha t
the Binghamton Pr&lt;''-• was t lw •·ilt'-1 small city new-.pap1•r in 1111' llnit e&lt;l Stale•."

THE

BINGHA~ITON

PRESS
Sunday

EYcning
Owner and 01wra1or of

Station WINR-TV-

HF Channel 40

Bingharnlon"s Powerfu l. \ l illion-W a11 Stat ion
~,.nint: thr U1nJ:hamton arra ~Hh 1hr
trac111w11 of a ftrrat nt&gt;...,""tpapu.

£.nf'"'I in 1;,parl..lin~ rntt&lt;rtainml"nt. infnrnlatiun, antl

rr.·\lurf's in tht'

SERVING BUSINESS
IS OUR BUSINESS
For more than forty years , a parade of constantly improved business
machines has spread from the Southern Tier to every corner of the earth.
More than a thousand different models, from time stamps to the newest
electronic data processing machines, are produced here. Development
and application of these products have paced business growth and met
the increasing need for handling the vast amount of information required
by modern management. All our developments are in the interests of
better service, for service is itself an IBM product.

IBM
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES

�Congratulat ions
Class of 1958

THE
INDUSTRIAL BANK
OF BINGHAMTON
181-183 Washington St.

Member of

FEDERAL DEPOSIT
INSURANCE ORGANIZATION

Congratulat ions
to the
Graduates of Harpur College

ENDICOTT JOHNSON RETAIL STORES
Home of GUIDE STEP Footwear
FOUR LOCAL STORES
I0 I Main St., Vestal
I 07 Odell Ave., Endicott
22 Washington Ave., Endicott
I06 West Main St., Union

�Compliments
of

Compliments
of

GAULT CHEVROLET
3 Grant Ave.
ENDICOTT, N. Y.

THE
STATE AND LYRIC
THEATRES
ENDI COTT, NEW YORK

VESTAL MOTEL
MICHEAL and LOUISE KUTZ
Owners

Binghamton, New York

WE SALUTE
the June Graduates of
Harpur College
MAY SUCCESS
Always Be Yours!
8-3338

Vestal Pkwy. E.

Vestal, N. Y.

�Compliments of

THE
BINGHAMTON SAVINGS BANK

62-68 Exchange Street

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

Member of
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPOR ATION

�Compliments
Congratulations

of

on a

CENTRAL RESTAU RANT

Fine Yearbook

AND

-.ADELPHI

STEAK HOUSE
6 Garfield Ave.
ENDICOTT

Compliments of

COLLIES

the

RICHFIELD SERVICE
1300 Main St.

HI-LITE
30 Washington Ave.

5-9681

ENDICOTT

Battery and Tire Service

Good Food!

Low Prices!

BABCOCKS SPORT SHOP
Sporting Goods Headquarters

Compliments

Babcock

of

Hinds and Underwood

COMMUNITY MOTEL

BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
Hardware Since 1874

KENT DRUG STORES
NOW - FOUR STORES
to Serve You Better
Court and Chenango
Front and Main

Binghamton

3105 Watson Blvd.
133 Front St.

Binghamton

Vestal

Endwell

NOVELLOS
DRY CLEANING
AND
SHIRT LAUNDRY

�THE
PANDORANS

PAT PATTERSON
Jeweler
17 Washington Ave.

Compliments to the

ENDICOTT, N. Y.

Class of '58

Endicott's Leading Diamond Setter

ENDICOTT FLORIST

THE
DIONYSIAN
SOCIETY

116 Washington Ave.
ENDICOTT, N. Y.
5-0221

ELKS BAKE SHOP

JOHNSONS

"Best Baked Goods in Town"

11 Court St.

110 Washington Ave.

BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

ENDICOTT, N. Y.

For China, Glassware, Gifts

-5-2051-

for All Occasions

THE GEORGIA-HANKS

RUSSEL CAB COMPANY
Extends
Congratulations
to the
Class of '58

ENDICOTT CORPORATION
Stationery and Office Supplies
Dra~ing

Equ ipment and School Supplies

Typewriters and Typewriter Repairs
59 Washington Ave.
8-1746

Endicott

�MARINE MIDLAND
TRUST COMPANY
of
SOUTHERN NEW YORK
Binghamton Office:
84 COURT STREET, BINGH AMTON , N. Y.
Midland Time Plan Department:
99 COLLIER ST., BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

South Side Office:
53 S. WASHINGTON ST., BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
Union-Endicott Office:
100 E. MAIN ST., UNION, N. Y.

West Side Office:
156 MAIN ST., BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

Workers Trust Office:
243 MAIN STREET, JOHNSO N CITY, N. Y.
Cortland Office:
36 MAIN STREET, CORTLAND, N. Y.
Elmira Office:
STREET, ELMIRA, N. Y.
LAKE
150
Marine Time Plan Office:
125 LAKE ST., ELMIRA, N. Y.

Merchants Office:
109 W. WATER ST., ELMIRA, N. Y.

South Side Office:
418 S. MAIN ST., ELMIRA, N. Y.

Elmira Heights Office:
156 E. 14th ST., ELMIRA HEIGHTS
Watkins Glen Office:
WATKINS GLEN, N. Y.

Horseheads Office:
HORSEHEADS, N. Y.

Drive-In Office:

420 CARROLL ST., ELMIRA, N. Y.
Member of
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

�GOODMAN'S

SEETOO'S LAUNDRY

"For Fashion Firsts"

1309 Monroe St.

32 Court St.

ENDICOTT, N. Y.

BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

"Keeps the College Clean"

Complim ents of

ROBERT H. LARAWAY
Jeweler

ENDICOTT SHOE COMPA NY
Home of High Quality Footwear
JOHN W. CHIPPER, Mgr.

Phone 4-3 148

PHONE 5-9191

30 COURT STREET

23-25 Washington Avenue
ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

BINGHAMTON , N. Y.

5-4711

"SANDY SALLERSON"

SANFO RD SALLERSON
Men's Wear
Clothes That Fit - the Man - the Occasion
Endicott, N. Y.
103 Washington Ave.

HARRIS
ARMY &amp; NAVY STORE
167 Washington St.
BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

Sporting Goods -

Sportswe ar

Distributors:
REACH

WILSON

SPALDING

Men's Nationally Advertis ed Shoes
at Cut Prices

DAVE LEWIS
SHOE MARKET
"The Only All Men's Shoe Store
in the Triple Cities Area"
162 Washington Street, Binghamton, N. Y.
(Only 60 Seconds North of Court
on Washington)

�IRVING RAPPAPORT
RAPPAPORT JEWELERS
20 Chemango St.

TUTHILLS
PHOTO CENTER

BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
-27873-

166 Washington St.

Binghamton, N. Y.

Your Music Centre Since
1865

WEEKS &amp; DICKINSON
"The Name That Means Music
to the Southern Tier''
34 Chenango St.

Flowers for
All Occasions
From

DILLEN BECKS

DIAL 4-2481

HUB DELICATESSEN
AND RESTAU RANT
137 Washington St.
BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
"The place to get your cor~ed beef and pa~;
trami sandwiches, also Jewish style cooking

Congratulations to Our
Future Leaders
"The Class of 1958"
From

SALL-STEARNS
SMART YOUNG MEN'S WEAR
138 Washington St.
BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

LUIZZI PHARMACY
Prescription Service
111 Washington Avenue
ENDICOTT, N. Y.
5-5451

�"All who have meditated on the art of
governing mankind have been convinced that
the fate of empires depends on the education
of youth."

-ARISTOTLE

ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY
VESTAL- ENDICOTT- EN DWELL

*

ENDICOTT NATIONAL BANK
48 Washington Avenue
ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

*

MARINE MIDLAND TRUST
COMPANY
Union-Endicott Office for
Southern New York

*

Me mbe rs

FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

�For All Your Financial Needs . . . Now, and
in Your Later Business and Professional Career

Bank at FIRST-C ITY
Listed here are some of the services which are
available at First City National Bank
CHECKING ACCOUNTS
• SAVINGS
• BANKING ACCOUNTS
BY MAIL
• MONEY ORDERS
• TRAVELLERS CHECKS
• SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES
•e NIGHT DEPOSITORY

LOANS
• PERSONAL
IMPROVEMENT LOANS
• HOME
AUTO LOANS
• APPLIANCE
•e MORTGAGE LOANS
LOANS
SERVICES
• TRUST
CHRISTMAS CLUBS

•

You can expect competent, prompt, friendly service at FirstCity, in all of the many ways in which this bank serves the
financial needs of the community.

FREE PARKING AT ALL OFFICES
e First dffice: Court and Chenango Streets
City Office: Court and Wash ington Streets
First Ward Office: 181 Clinton Street
e Westover Office: Westover Plaxa
e East Side Office: 149 Robinson Street

•
•

e Instalment Loan Office: 18 Chenango Street

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

�2 GREAT

NOW!

ANSCOCHROME

® COLOR FILMS

NEW SUPER ANSCOCHRO ME
Film Speed I00
• World 's fastest color film for adjustable came ras.
• Takes action slopping color pictures in poorest daylight.
• Indoor pict ures with exist ing light ... even instantaneous
exposures with ca ndle light.

REGULAR ANSCOCHRO ME
Film Speed 32
• The sta nda rd color f il m for any popular camera when
the exceptio nal spee d of Su per A nscochrome is not
required.
• Ideal for s na pshot c ameras.
• Re nders unmatche d color, even in the shad ows.

ANSCO

e

BINGHAMTON , NEW YORK

Compliments of

VAUGHNS CLOTHING, INC.
Hart, Schaffner &amp; Marx
Eagle Clothes
107-109 E. Main St.
ENDICOTT (UNION), N. Y.
Ivy League Suits

$59.50

Compliments

of

Compliments

EDDIES MOTORS

of

Your Friendly Ford Dealer
Johnson City
179 Main St.
NEW YORK

BENS CLOTHES
JOHNSON CITY, NEW YORK

�19 48

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STATE VNJVERSITY
OF NEW. YORK

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                  <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>
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&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>
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                    <text>��Colonist
'59

�TO THE SENIORS . ..
The 1959 COLONIST is dedicated to those
whose future will determine the future of
H arpur Callege ...

2

�\TE , AGE FR0\1 THE PRESIDENT:
The year 1959-60 at llarpur i.., the year of the '·big change.'' For the fir,.,1 Lime
plans for the future of Ilarpur College actually began Lo influence the lives
of our students and faculty.
This year we have 300. then 450 students living in the residence halls in
\'estal. in Lh&lt;' heauliful rooms cornplelel~ surrnunded h) the i11&lt;'onvenic11ccs of
continued construction. This yl'ar we have a wonderful gymnasium as large
as the Lota] of all thC' classrooms and lahoralorie::. on the Endicoll campus. This
\'C'ar we haw four hu-.es making ;30 round

trip~

per day for the seven mile

distance, with all nwals, even including , unday morning hrt&gt;akfast for the
en&lt;"rgetic. ;.;erved in the old cafrtC'ria in Ea,.;t Hall in Endicott.
In all thi,.; apparent confusion

rs

il po,.,sihlc lo clo a ... good a joh

Ill

llw basic

prC'paration of TTarpur students as we haw clone in the past and as WC' expect
Lo do in the future? The answer is "YK ." There is no confu-.ion in the minds
of Lhr faculty about the quality of work required. There is no confusion in the
minds of the ,.,Ludents. In facl academic work is ,.,uperior to any other Lime in
our

hi s lO L').

:-Lucien! acti,ity in clubs and sports is

arc being made -

011

a good basis. frirnd..,hips

personal and professional growth are all about us.

The Class of 1959 has experienced three years of the old, and one year of
the Lran ·ition. Next year there will be morr in Vestal and less in Endicott. The
yrar after

\\C

should all he in \'e:-LaJ. But il will ,.till lie the Harpur you know

when you seek oul the kernel inside the imposing new shell.

Glenn G. Bartle, President

3

�COLONIST STAFF

__ _ Al Coen

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Richard Corash

MANAGING EDITOR

Al Kobb

BUSINESS MANAGER

Joe Alaimo

LAYOUT EDITOR

Anne Cibula
Jean Robinson

LAYOUT STAFF __
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

__ _ Dave Cohen

__

PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF _

Bob Olson
Gordon Schwartz
Don Goldstein

ORGANIZATIONS EDITOR _______ ·- _ _____

Nancy Lowkrantz

ART CO-EDITORS _ _

Lonny Maletta
Cathy Codispoti

PORT CO-EDITORS

Bob Blum
Al Schneider

UBSCRIPTIO~

Jerry Benowitz

MANAGER ___

Bob Wooding

ADVERTISING MANAGER ___ _
ASSOCIATE EDITORS _ _ _ ___________ _

Vlary Alff
Carolee Purdy

Thanks for the memories,

Al Coen, Editor-in-Chief

4

�ADMINISTRATION

FACULTY
5

�GLENN G. BARTLE
President

6

�S. STEWART GORDON
Dean

______

1

�JOIE\ P. BEL:\ I \K
Dean of S 1mJ.&gt;n1 ~

--

VIRG lf\lA :'\. Kl:\LOCll
A--ociale Oran of Students

�\lICI! \EL '\. SCELSI
A"i;.tant ro the

Pre~ident

AYSEL SEARLES, JH.
Din•ctor of Studt'nt \ ctivitks

H \I.I'll (,,

Hl~JIEL

Din•rtor of \dmi--.ion-

9

�.\!ARIE D. CON E\
Re!!:i'llar

Cll\RL ES K. COOPER
Financial St·cretary

JO I!'.\ lllC G!:\S
i\ ~,i,tun t

Dirt'ctor of i\drni~&gt; ions

ELY ,\ IEYERSON
Director of :'lien\ l! ou~ing

10

�Library Staff

GHECOR \ !\. BULLARD

JANET E. BROW"i

J .ihraria n

A"i'tant Librarian

JOSIAll T.

l\EWC0~1B

Librarian

If

�"'E'r \IOl R l'ITl ll ER
Chairman. ()hi.ion of tilt' llumaniti('s
l'rof1·--nr of F.nj!fi•h and
G1·m·ral Litl'ratun'

ALDO BER:\AHDO

\ll CH\EI BOCll\ \K
A&lt;&lt;r•tant Prnf...-or of Ru--ian

A"'ocialt' Prof&lt;.--or of
Homa rl!'t' l.angunj!«-

RICll\HD Hl Jl(;F \FR
\ ,,j,1anl l'rnft.--nr &lt;&gt;f Philn•nphy

\ L\ CE\T FREl\L\HCK
A--i-tant Prnfc·.-or of Enl!li•h

J. \IF.\C:ll.FllL\'J
\ .-ociat•' l'rnf.....or of \ ]u,ir

Clllll'iTI \ \ I' C.Rl llFR
\ ,,j,1an1 l'ruf1·--&lt;ir of Fnl!li'h

12

ED \\'ARD TIO\IEWOOO
,\ ,,j,tanl Proff's-or of Enj!'lish

�BER\/ \HD lllil'PE
P rofc•"&lt;&gt;r of En!!li'h and Litcraturt'

J \ CK K \ \11\SKY
A"'ociat!' Prof,..-or of Philc"ophy

K \HL K \ SBERG
In-trurlor in Enirli'h

ROD:\ E\ KETCI I A~l
P rofe&gt;&gt;&lt;ir of RomanC(' Lan!!Ua!!Ci'

II \HH\ Ll'\COL\
A.-i.. tanl Proft.-,or of \luoic

Kl:.\\ FTll Ll\lb.\\
l'rofr•..-or of Art .Jli,tory

A~•ocial"

HOHEHT \l ·\HSll
A-si,tanl l'roft"'&lt;lr of En1-1li'h

CH \HI ES \l \l '"KOl'F
ln-lnKtor in En!!li-h

CI&lt; EHO \lrl\" J\HE
ln-.tructor in Hon1urw1· l.angua!!"'

13

�RIGO MIGNANI

ALFRED STEER

A•si•tant Professor of Romance

A"sociate Profe,,-or of German

PAl'L WEIGA'iD
A"•ociate Profe••or of Grrman

Language~

WILLI l 'SCll \LD
A•si,tant Profes&gt;or of Frcnch
and German

JOHN WELD•

\IICIIIO OKA

As•ociatt· Profc••or of English

Tn-irut tnr in Spani•h

IR\'I:-\G ZCPNICK
A--i•tanl Profe.-or nf '\ rt

14

JOH:'\ PFIHn

I l 'l rl'OLD \' \l L \ Cl!

A·•i•tant l'rofe--or of En1di•h

A·,-i•tant l'rof&lt;'"or uf Cla••ical
Lanl!llR!(&lt;''

�SlD:\'EY IIAHC.\\'E
Chairman Divi,ion Sodal Scien('('&lt;
Prok"or of II i-tory

LI'{ Clll.\O

JOSEPll FEKETE

Assistant Proft•"or of Anthropology

Assistant P rnfe"or of Accounting

Jn,tructor in G1•01traphy

JOHN CHAL\1ER
Professor of Economics

PET Eil DODGE
Instuctor in Soriolo!!}'

Associate Professor of l'olitical Science

JOHN 13E \LL

WALTER Fil.LE'\

15

�KENNETH LEWAN
Instructor of Law and Jurisprudence

MARVIN K RTSTEIN
A~si st a nt Profes&gt;Or of Eco n omi c~

Associate

SEn10UR MAl\N
Profes~or of Political Science

CHRIST IA.:'&lt; LIE\'E THO
ln-tructor in IJi, tory

l \l HE\"CE LEA\IER
l'rnft»-or of Economi1•,

16

As&lt;.istanr Professor of Ifor or&gt;

�J ERO\IE S:\) DER

\!ARK ;\'ElJ\\ELD
Visiting Profr,•or of Political

Associatt' Prol&lt;•,•rn of Business
\ dministratinn

cience

PHILIP PIAKER
Asrnciatt• Proft·•,.or of Accounting

JOSEPH \'A:\ RIPER
Prolt•-.cir of Gt•ol(raphy

PETER \ l K \:-,I\
.\ ••ociat• Prol1·"or of L('(momi&lt;»

JOH\ BROil\!
Assfatant Profe,.,or of Anthropology

£:\RICO Ql \R.\.\TELLI
ln•trurtor in Sol'iolo~y

17

�C. \!AX IICU.
Chain11an Divi,ion of Scirnce
and \fath
Profr,,or of Chemi,try

JOSEPH BER\fAN
A&amp;si~tanl

P roft'"or of Chemi,try

HAROLD FAGli\
As-ociatr Profr~·or of P,ychology

JACOB FJS\.llTl/AL
A~sorintt•

Profi-•-or of Biolol!)'

RO.\' \LD 11.\DIOCK
fn•tru('for in Phy,i6

DICK \~!CK HALL
Proft•"or of :\latlwmatics

�ROBERT HART

BRl'CE \lcDUFFIE

Assoriatr P rof•·-•nr of Phy&lt;i&lt;''&lt;

As&lt;:(lciatt· Profr«or of Clwmi-try

WILU \ \£ HEY:\L\ '
Assistant Prnfe,•or of P•ycholop:y

LOUIS KATTSOFF
Profe•rnr of \fathrmatics

DOROTIIE \ \ll ELLER
In•trurtor in Clwmi'll)'

J A\IF.S KE;\T
Profp,,or of \fathrmatic-

JOH\

rm Z:\L\:\

A~i•tan t Profc,•or of \Tathematic•

'1 \RT!\ I' \l' L
Profe-.nr of Clwmi,lr}

19

�GEORGE

ROBERT Pf.:-\F'IELD

~&lt; Ill

\£,\CHER

A•-i•tant Profc·•-.or of Biology

Assotiatc P rofr•5or of Phy&lt;ics

JACK RICH\RD-0:\'
\ ,-.i-.tanl P rnft·--or of J',ycholoµy

ROBERT

RUDI~

In&lt;tructor in Zooloizy

JA\fF$ WII\JOTH
P rofc'-or of Biology

Lectun·r in Bioloµy and X ur•ing

OL\RLF.:' HOCKWELL
ln-trnclor in c;,.n]o:,.')

20

FRANCES WRIGHT
A&lt;•ociatc Profe~•or of \£athematics

�DAVID IIE\ DER:,Q~
A"ociatr Profr~'-Or of Phy~ical
Edu('ation
Director of Physical Education
:md \ thlt•t ic-

FR \i\K POLLAHD

JESSIE GODFRE'l

h-i-.1ant Profrssor of Phrical
Education

•\ssi,tant Prnft·-.sor of Physical
Education

NANCY RIPPON
In"tructor in Ph)'• ical Education

Cll \RLES STEPIIAi\OS
Instructor in Phy-ical Education

21

�Office
Staff

ELEANOR

H PFF~I A

S&lt;·cn·1ary to the President

\f \Bl E E. RR \I\
lo tlw Ikan

~&lt;'rrt·tan

\l \RC l'ER !TE \ . WEEKS
S1•crt'll1ry to \ "i'tant

IP

the Prc,ident

BARBARA WJ'iTER.

Prc~ idcnt'•

Offict• St•cn·1ary

ELEA OR KRAUSE
S1•cre1ary 10 Dean of Studen ts

�J \ \'E \I. CARD
A--i-tnnt. Jlu,int""' Offict'

KE'\\!ETII CAHONER
Prin. \ccount Cirri..

JOI!\' E. P.\L:\IER
\rrount Clerk

JA \1ES \L CARL

A$•i$lanl, Bu•inP•~ Orfice

·o

LE'.\/ i\ SELLA
Sr. Arri. Clt•rk, Bu,int-•s Office

JOI!'\/ CULLE '
\fail and Supply Clerk

�SIIIRLE"l \I. \IORRTSO'.'&lt;
A••i,tant. Bu•ine•s Office

ELI.EE~ L. KETCl!U\l
ih oi,tant to tlw R1•1d,trar

J \\ET \VIllT\IE)ER
C'C'rt·taf). \dmi"ion' Office

:\ITSS FI HER
• ecrNa ry. Admi ~s ion s Office

CATHERINE A. BEARD. LEY
Typist

�LI\ DA SCRA:\TO:'\
St&gt;crt"tar). Rafu•t' !!all

DARRAGH L. BENNETT

BEVERLY A. COWAN

St eno~rapher

College Nur~e

JOSEPl!ll\E &lt;.:. DOWNEY
Faculty Sern·tal)'

25

�VERONICA ST&gt;\CKO:\'.I
Faculty St•cr1·1ary

VIVIAN .\IUSSO
As•i,tan1 to Registrar

EDITH C. JAMES
Facuhy Sccrclary
~IA R JOJUE

CROSS

\Ianap;er, Book•1ore

�Facu lty
at Work

At Play

27

��Senior Class Officers

Ldt lo ri1d1t: Uob Blum, Serl!eant-at-Arm'; Barbara Vo,burl!h, Sccretar}: Grace Hawley, Trca'urcr; Bob Elli,, Prc1&gt;ident ; Ua'e Cohen, Vire Pn•,idenl; Hon Ro,enstein. 'lemba-a t-Largc .
.\li-.,ing : Al Kobb, .\!cm bcr-at-Laq!l'.

29

�Inter Social Club Council

D. Cohen, A. Coen, J. Welsh, B. Ellis, R. Titus, M. Wolf&lt;;()n. L. Wcb•ter, J. Lynch, J. Pen&lt;lerga•t,
D. Kl'lly
D. Cohen, A. Coen, J. Welsh, B. Ellis, R. Titus, M. Wolf•on, L. Web,tcr. J. L)nch.
J. Pl'n&lt;l&lt;•q!ast,
D. Kelly.

I. S. C. C. is the second largest organizat ion on Harpur's Campus and i!' composed
of two represent a tives from each $OCial club. The aim of this group is lo
promote
cooperati on among the social clubs through yearl y sponsored eYents. These include
the
Campus Chest Carnival. the proceeds of which go to charity. Other events it sponsors
are a blood drive and Harpur's Winter and Spring Weekend jazz concerts. I. S.
C. C.
is the coordinat ing group of Harpur's Social Life.

PRESIDENT
SECRETARY-TREASURER

30

_ Laurence Webster
Ralph Goldberg

�SOCIAL CLUBS
31

�Adelphi

R0\1;' l: Jim lliggin•. Jim llt·fft·rn. Stew K ucera. Ron \lnnt aperto. Dt'nni~ ~pctz, W in.,ton Orcutt. ]o!'eph Petrone.
ROW 2: Tom I.f rown . .\l ikt• \Volf•on. Clark Jone~. Ron H uln ick, :-cth Koch, Ed Brigham. Bob Fratarcangclo, Cary Cohen.
ROW 3: Boh Criff i~. Ralph Ti tus. tcve Bak1•r , J ohn Small. D uan&lt;.: B.. njam in. Bob Thompson . .:\like Bo relli.

Ronald :'vlontaperto _
PRESIDE~T
Dennis pelz
VICE PRESIDE'\T
Dennis Kops
TREA UREH
Winston Orcutt
HECORDI 1G SECRETARY
Gary Cohen
CORRESPO DING SECRETARY
Ste,·e Kucera
CIIAPLAI T
J ames Heffern
GE~ERAL OFFJCEH

32

��Baccacia

HO\\ 1: Tom Curl) , Walt \ld,ar thy. Dick
Emmon•, Rogn Wirk. Daw Ei&lt;cnberl!.
HOW 2: Ralph Goldb(·rl!. &lt;\rt York, Hon
Wolk. Jl'rl)· Ht&gt;ardon. Dirk Schwartz, Fran
ROW 3: Don Clim, ~lat \fora,an~k).
Dill5, Tom Hull, Frank Panet ti, William Opals
Bill Smith . L(·w Criffi s. W('' Shanl !raw,
ki.
Ed Rol!&lt;' r•. Tom Carrij!g.

Walt \IcCa rthy
Dick Emm ons.

Oa\e

Ei~enberg

Tom Curr )
Roge r Wick

34

PRE IDE'.\'T
VICE PRE IDE \T
TRF.A URER
.ECHETARY
llL TORIA?\

�35

�Cassandrans

ROW 1: J\laryi\nn Cooley, Judy Gillette, Judy Glenn, Judy RosoU, Sandy LandC'r, Sue La Paugh, Rhoda
Quackenbush.

36

�37

�Dion ysian Socie ty

RO\\ 1: Dr. ]o,eph Van Riper (advi-.or), Bill Hyman, ~l&lt;''&lt;' Happel, Dave Cohen, Alex Kobb,
Dr. C. P. Gruber (ad,isor).
RO\\ 2: Bun Blu&gt;tl!in, Al Emmolo, Ilal Cohen. Jim l!l'ar. Al Co,·n, Jeff Schiller, Dick Corash,
Bob Blum, Gene Knapp.
HO\V 3: Jc·rry Bc·nowill., Da,id Slobodin, Irwin Zuckc•r, :\uhad Kanaan, Ed Taub, Chuck
Ford, Henry Kaplan.

Al Coen
Da\C' Cohen
Leve Rappel

Chuck Ford
Bill Hyman
Al Kobb

38

PHESIDE T
VfCE PRE lDE:\T

TREA URER

CORRE PONDING SECRETARY
RECORDI~G SECRETARY
SERCEA:\T- \T-AIU1S

�39

�Goliards

ROW 1: Gary Park&lt;'r, Jcrry O'Donnell, Henry llammrr, Claudt• Wil 'on.
ROW 2: Ron Otero, Ron Ro,cmtein, Pete Dimitri, John Kamin-ky, Carl Zymct, John Welsh, Herbert Parker, Hal Gumaer.

Jcrr) O'Donnell
I lenf) Hammer
Claude Wil~on
Gary Parker

40

PRE. ll)E~T
VICE PRE, IDE:\T
TREASURER
SERGEA T-AT-ARMS

�41

�IT/(

ROW 1: Frank Tynan. Stan Dahle, Bob Kalmort&gt;, Don Crritt'r, John Beaton, Bob French, Norm Rifkin, Bernie Heany.

ROW 2: Dean l'ortcr, Art Ebclinl!.

Don Greiler
John Beaton
Boh French
Uob Kalmorc

42

PHESIDEi\T
VICE PRESIDE:\ T
SECRETARY
TREASt:HER

�43

�Pandorans

ROW l : Joan BrU'-h, Judy H ansen, J ackie Ward, ~ ally llcnd1•r•o
n, J oycc \Iicfialek , Catherin e S hafer, Betty Cowan.
ROW' 2: ;\ad)·a A&gt;wad, J oyce Sander~, Nancy Lo11kran11, J\,j,
Rrines, Dorothy MacDerm oll, Leigh Chadwick, Joyce Lynch, Pat
Cannada y,
~lnr)' Alff. \larilou Formich dli.

Salh Henden•on
Jackie Ward
Joy re :\ licha lck
C~therinc hafcr
Judy Hansen
Joan Brush

PRE IDE:XT
VICE PRESIDENT
RECORDI~G SECRETARY
CORRESPO TDJ G SECRETARY
HI TORlA
SERGEA T-AT-ARMS

�45

�sos

ROW 1: Ronald Glazer, Al Schneider, Roy Co~tlcy, .\Iel C. Schwart1:,
Colin .\kKirdy.
ROW 2: Al Young, Tony Pellegrino, Ralph Spinelli, Don Burt, Denni~
Kelly, Steve Brieger, Jim Carlson, Dr. George Schumacher (advisor).

Roy L. Costley

CHANCELLOR
VICE CHANCELLOH
Ronald Glazer
._
. SCRIBE
Al Schneider
CHANCELLOR OF THE EXCHEQUER
Colin \1cKirdy
. _ EQUERRY
Mel C.

46

chwartz

�47

�Thalians

ROW 1: Ro&lt;cmary Parisella, Joann&lt;' Kaminsky, Jt•an Ru,•l'll.
ROW 2: flev Cowan, Sandra Cirap:osian, \llit· Wt·rtl1t·i111t•r. Fi,l..1· IJt&gt;w1·1·--

Joanne Kamin:•k)
Fiske Dewees
Allie Werthc-im er
Roberta Warn('r
Roseman Pari~ella

48

PRE JDENT
VICE PRE IDE~T
SECRETAlff

TREASURER

PUBLICITY CHA lR\ 1A'.\l

�49

�50

�51

�52

�UNDERCLASSMEN

53

�Freshman Class Officers

BOTTO:\[ ROW: Al Smith, President; Ellen Fun•di, Sccrrtary; Les .\lattis, Vice President.
TO I' ROW: "\ nnc) Schiele. Treasurer; .\lik e Barth, Sergeant.at-A rm«; Linda Pizer, Mcmberat-Largc.

54

�Sophomore Class Officers

Left to right: Tom Brown, Treasurer; Helene Shaw, Member-at-Large; \1a1·cia Smith, Mcmbcrat-Largc; Bob Lory, President; Bunny Rios, Secretary; Arnold Levine, Sergeant-at-Arms.

55

�Junior Class Officers

Left to right: Dennis Kops, Treasurer; Avis Reines, President; Gene Loveless, Vice President;
Claude Wilson, Sergeant-at-Arms.

56

�ORGANIZ ATIONS

57

�United Student Government

HO\\' 1: Jim Higµin,-,

]o)t'C' L)nd1, Ralph pinelli, Gene Knapp, Nad)a \•\\acl. Jud) Gillette&gt;.
HOW 2: lknny \c"nlium, Hon \lontaperto. \lr. Starle'. \Tiss Kinloch. 111·1,•nc ~ha\\, \I Kohb. \larcia Smith, Ron Ro0 en•tl'i11, Jane
l\•nd1•rµa-.t. Linda Pizer.

PHES]()E\T
VICE PRESIDE;\T
HECOlWE\G SECHETAH'i
COHRESPO:\DI'\G SECHETJ\H.Y
TfH~ASU{ER

\DVOCATE

\IE\IBER ~ -AT-L1\RGE

58

Gene Knapp
Ralph pinclli
1
adya \ swad
Judy Gillette
Jim Tl iggin~
Joyce Lynch
Senior:
Ron Hosenstein. \ I l\.ohh
Junior:
Hon ~lontapcrto. Jane Penderga~t
Sophomore:
\Iarcia Smith. Helene Sha11
Freshman:
Denny Nc11nham. Linda Pizer

�Dra[!,·on Society

:::1an]e, \lnldman. llurhara \'11'lrnqd1. \I Co1•n.

Publications Committee

\farcia "milh. Jm• \lainw. \larcia T••xl .. r.

59

�RO\\ l : Jnry l3l'11&lt;H,ilL. Jot' \lai1110. \l nrcia T t•xlt•r.
\l arcia Smit h. Bunny Hios.
HO\\ 2: \ladya \ -wad. \ ann· Fawn. Bill li)man.
Joan (~lurl..auf. Spear, Loui•c Latiner. Jal·k Rose,
1h is Reines, Penny Popkin.
L:tll\ huhauf . Cail Carnt'\. Kan·n Grn,•tm , \laril.vu
Fo1111idwlli.
RO\\; 3: ~ami \Vt'inµarlt'n. Dnmlh\ \\ m1·iJ..;1. Fn·dtla I .1•riw1

El&gt; ITOR-1 \ -CI I IEF
Iii\\ \Gl\G EDITOR
\ EWS F:D ITOH
F EATLR E EDITOH
PHODl CTIO\ t-:f) ITOH
SPORTS l·:DJTOH
£ \ Cl I \ :\CE EDJTOR
BC~ I\ESS

11 \'\ .\ GER
PllOTOC H\PI IF:H

CIRCl L\TlO \ II\'\ \ GEH

60

Ralph tcinlwrg
Joe Alaimo
llarcia · Tcxler
Bill Coons

M.arcia ' mith
• pear
Bunny Hios
Jerry Beno\\ itz
Gordon ~ch" artz

John Olclick

�Colonist

ROW 1: Jim Shl'ar, :\ann I.owkrantz. Da' e Cohen. ,\I Coen. Di1·k Cora-h. \!Jn \ !ff. \larilou Formidwlli.
RO\~' 2: Cat hy Codi•poti, J~dy Palmrr. Boh Blum . •\I Schrider. \I Kohh, Lonm \lalf'lta. Jl'an Robin-on. \ nrw Cihula, &lt;.arol1•1• P urdv.
RO\r .3: Jrrr~ Tlennwitz. Jc· ff Schill&lt;'r. Joe• \laimo.

EDITOR-1\-Cfl!EF
~1A \'ACP\G

EDITOH
Rl ·sJ\E-:~ \1 \\\GER
L.\ YOl T l~ D !TOI{
PllOTOCR \PJIY EDITOI{
ORG \"\IZ.\TlO\ EDITOB
\RT CO-EDITOR"
\~~OC J ,\TE ED I TOR~

\llVEHTl...;I \ C \I\\ \ CFH
~ POHT:-'

CO·EDITOH"'

Al Coen
Dick Cora~h
,\I Kohh

JOC

\la j lllO
Da\r Cohrn
\ ann Loi' krantz
L o1111\

~1aletta

Cat J, ~ ·cocli&lt;•poti
\I an \ !ff
Carolee i&gt;urch
Roh \X'oodin~
Roh Blum
\I Schneider

61

�Clarendon

HOW 1: Ila Snlomon. Dru•illa D1·Groa1.
HOW 2: Juclr ll an•l'n. \.arnlt·I' Punl). Cheryl . t1•rnli1·
b. Jo&lt;' \laimo .

Glee Club

RO\' J · \I Kuhh. Jl'n&gt; Bcnuw it1. Ed Tuub,
Boh Blum. \.harlc s Soodak .
1{0\\ 2: "fl"t' Rapp&lt;•!. Jt&gt;rr) ~ir•namnn. '\uhad
Kanaa n. Dr. Cilfillan. Juq:en K. Hau&gt;m ann.
Joseph Alaimo,
llaw Cohrn, Hoh Dalyrm11lr. Bill I lymnn.
Frank ~ l nv1·r.

62

�Choir

ROW 1: lngc&gt; ;&gt;litka, Evelyn Reinheimer, Judy Friedlander, Joy Wilcox, \large Ta} lor, I') nthin &gt;\nclrca•on, Jen') Rubin, Anrw Cibula, Brl'Y
Ro". Barb Ru~5ell.

- - -. Sm.an Pavne.

R~W 2: Dr. Linccoln. Sul' 'Wray. Carolyn \l arg~li&lt;. All it&gt; WPrtheimcr. Shirley Lewi,, Bt'll) Frank. &lt;;kip Greenblatt, Ceorgt' Buck. Bob
hirlong. ~ue Daglion&lt;'. - - , . hirlt&gt;) ~hotwcll, Barb Goodwin.
, ]l'an Vi,it•r.
ROW 3: Judy Ilan&lt;t'n, llt•idi Zollinger. Chri~tel ~chrumpf, Ron Leta' i•h. Sid F1•ldt'r, Junl!cn Hau•man. Leonard I lt•llt·nhrand. Jami•,
Condon. Donald \lan•,ca. Louise Gro,,man. :\anq Hurd.

63

�Ne wman Clu b

HOW l: Gail Carne•\, Ruth l.rach. \ lario Pauag
lini, Bunny Rio&gt;. \!arilou Formic helli . .\fa!')'
Alff.
llO\\ 2: .\l argare r Fnran ri, Suzann e La Paugh
, Ca1J1 )' Cocli,poti, PNc \fazocca, Bob Griffis
, Al Ernrnelo,
\ Jar} \nn Curle'), Virgin ia Clt•mc·nt,. J am•
P1·nd1·nw-1. P1·~ :\onni lc.
ROW 3: \. B('fnar do, Salva lon• S pano. Frank
O'Corm or. Paul Wt·inm an, Joe \laimo.

Pr ote sta nt Fe llo ivs hip

n

RO\\ l: :-andra Carl1·y . France s Parkt•r. \Iary
Ann Coolr) . Kt•n Witmr r, Cynrhi a Andrea 8en.
HO\\ 2: \ nna Griffin , \ laf)' H afnt•r, \nn Griffe
n. Bill !"mi th. Cathy Fruhauf.

�I. V.C.F.

RO\'I' I: Da' id Currie. Ed Griffith, Rifhard Zhc, C) nthia ,\ ndn·a,t•n. \ la!) \ nn Cool&lt;'). Ro"'lllUI) Pari~rlla,
fr an H u&lt;,rl 1.

Jewish Fellowship

HO\\ I: Hal Cohen. "'""' Happt'I. \I Kuhh. \I Coen. C.harl•·- 1-'ord. l&gt;a11· ( 11htn.
2: T olw Coopt'r, Bill ll)nian. Elkn \\ ar,11a1H'r. 1'1 nn~ l'opkin. \fil..i Wolf-on, \farcia "mith, Jt·rr)
B1·1111\\it1. \,j, Rt•irl\'•. Karen Cra)•On, \larcia Tnln. \rkru• l'ta•1t·k. Joi~&lt;· Fi-hlwrn, \anc\' Lmn·n·
kr"nl1..
RO\\ 3: Joan Clurkauf. "amli &lt;.h11n·-h. "ami \\ &lt;'inf!;1r1t n. Fr ..11.Ia l.1 rnn. flank Kaplan.

RO\\

65

�(;olonial Pla yers

l{O\X' I: \.uthy Fruhauf . Chari&lt;'' Ford, \larilnu Formil'h
elll. \anry l.owkra nt;, Da"' Colwn, Leigh Chad·
\\id&lt;.
HO\\ 2: Dwk Cora-Ii. Ed l uub. Jo(• \lainw, Carl Goodma
n.

S.R.O.

RO\\

I: L&lt;'i1d1 &lt; had" irk. :\ancy Lowkran t1, \larilnu For midwlli
.
!{()\\ 2 · Di1·k Cnra•h. Ed T aub. Daw Cohen . .l ot'
\laimo.

66

�Italian Club

ROW l: Ron Ct·ccarelli, JudiLh Han ~en . .\larilou Fon111chelli. John Spadaro.
RO\\ 2: Limn} \ lalctta, Sandy Chorc,h, Ron R o~en-t,.in. \Tik" llon:lli. \I Pcllicrio1ti, Ellen Wnrohaurr,
Avi, H1•inrs. Handy Frick, Dr. ,\Jdo Bernardo.

German Club

RO\\ 1: ]Clhn WeJ,h, ,\nnt&gt; Cibula, Gabe Sochor.
RO\\ 2: Hirhard Hane}, J em Huhin, Claude W il•on. Boh Elli&gt;.

67

�Slavic Club

ROW l: Joann ~ ! orri s, Betty Frank, Nancy Faxon, Ellen Furt·di, ~l ary
Alff.
ROW 2: ='al Spano, :\Ir. :.\lichael Bochnak, Robert Cha•ano\ , Jerry
Sinnamon , Joseph \'ella, Jurgen ll au~­
mann, .\lanin Schad, Don :,\1cBride, Dennis Kops, Jim Carl-on. Jugo
~!in.

I.R.C.

ROW 1: \like Wolf-on, Sarni \\ eingarten , 1'a&lt;l)a .\ :.wad. :\ancy I
.o"krantz , :\Iarty Filler.
R O \\ 2: Hon \Iontapert o, Dick Corash, Dave Cohen, :\uhaad Kanaan,
Dt•nnis Kops.

68

�Debate Club

HO\\' l · Dick K roi''· J ohn . pakaro, \likt' Gordon. Caroll'(' Purdv. \Tortin Fillrr. Ji nn&lt;'\ ~rhec ht&lt;'I'.
HO\\ 2: Howard Fox. S tanlry \loldovan.

Chess Club

HO\\ I: Ka rt'n Grnv,on. Shirln ShotwPll. llt'idi 7ollinµcr. llPJ..n1· '&gt;haw. Tom Clari"&lt;'.
HO\\' 2: Carl SH•rnh~'ri!. Phil ip 'r.&lt;' \la•urit'r. Bt'hrno1 \ loh it. \\ "' ~hanitraw. \ll'in Cu mrnin~.

69

�BioloB·Y Club

HO\\' 1: Or. Hohert Hudin. ll1•idi Zollinµ;1·r, Elli&lt;" \ ltman,
Tom Brown, Judy Rosoff. Joyce Sander, , Dr. J. H.
Fi,d11ha l.
HO\\ 2: Carl /,mf'I. F:d\\in ~Pp;al. \ . \l irhal'l Kaplan,
Jim ~hear, Al Kobh, Charle~ F ord, Eel Taub, Carl
Coodnia n, RCJlll'rt Ciannu11.i, I f1•rlwrt F. Shapiro .
HO\\ :l: J im llridirt'r. John Kohut. H ank llamnw r.
Tom Clari--e .

Geolog·y Club

HO\\ l: \lr. ( H.rwk'"·ll. Jot' \\ arinµ. \ '..rna ~11·\\,tnl
. l'enn1 Popkin. \[r. Oonalrl Coal!·,..
HOW 2: \lart' llouµJa,.. Ila' id ~lohncli n , Larr) \(icld&lt;1n
µh. !lam'\ Golcf5t1·i n. ll&lt;ibert !\da m&lt;.. William Opal·
-k i. ( .arl I rnnard. Cerw K napp.
HO\\ .l: lht"' h1-n. llarold \lar-IJon ald. IJnnald J&gt;,1µ1·,
ll il'k l lmn, ~onn) Tamhoi a, Richa rd Schwart z. 1\1
Clo""· C:hri- Fµ~n.

�Ch emis. try Club

I

HO\\" l · J oan llru•h. Clauck \\'jl,ori. Paulin .. Tnlrrirn .
HO\\ 2: l'l"lt· llnlwnmrn. John \\el-h. &lt;:arl Gonclman.

Brid~·e

Club

t \"T: \lar11n \1. Filln. "O l "11! : \ann C. f.cmkran11
\\ F ...;T: f J..nn '-' Hammer \ OHl II: Da, id \ "lnliodin KllllTZl•.I{: Ho' Co,11"'·
K llllTi'I· R · 1'1·1t· lloh.. rman.

71

�Young· Repu blica ns

HOW I : '\ anq Faxon. his Ht'im•,, Hnlph Spindli, Gail Crini·ff. 1\ancr Lowkrant1..
HO\\' 2: " ink Orrutt. '-am , pano, J ac-k '-mall. Ron \l unlaperto. Jot· P etront', Skip Greenblatt,
P &lt;'J?: Normile,
Bob Fia1ar«tllll!•'lo, \Ir. \Jid1;1el ;-;ct•l,i.

Youn g Democrats

HO\\ I· l.oui-&lt;' Cro--man. !{on Ho-en-tt·in. Joan Gluckauf. iloh Blum. Dl'nnis Kop&lt;, Sami
\l:'t·inp:artl'n, \lary
\nn &lt;.ih-on.
HO\\ 2: \ I ~duwidt• r. Lt"orµt• Ctl\WI, S tl've llrit•ger. 1'1·nn) Popk in, Dave P opper, H a
l Cohen, Da,c Coht•n.
HO\\ ·~: Fn·d "haw. Jim "lwa1. ll t'nn Kaplan, J &lt;'rq llt•nn\\ill.

72

�OutinF,· Club

RO\\ l: Judy l'r"in. l.oi• Pompa .
Tliomp"&gt;n · Cordon P nrk1·1.

~andra

Carl••). \l id.1·) '-ld,·nk.i. Sthtn \\ ra). i'&lt;'l&lt;'r

\Ull

dt·r Lindt'. Bill

Pintopplers

RO\\ I: Bob Blum. Burt Bhi-tt•in. \lartltl Fillt'r. Jo) ce \lichah·k.
Da\I' Colwn. Bn Cowan, Lois Lt·nt.
RO\\ 2: \lary \lff. 1\anq l.owkran ll. \I Kohb. llal Colwn, Jerry
BenowitL, IIank Kaplan, Dan• S lobodin.
Ill'!•} ll r--. Bill Ht·••, Ralph Ti tu&gt;. Joann W t''ko.
RO\\" 3: \I Co1·n. \lac \lrK ird). Roi Co-.tl1·y, Fran Bill-. Don
Clow.

73

�Alpha Phi

Ome~·a

HO\\ 1: Rolwrt Woodin!(. Daw "(•Xl(•r, Skip Gre(•rd1
lat1, Dan' Popper . \ r ni(• !.e, in('. Dr. Jacob Fi-rhth
HOW 2: Bo!. Blum. Hay Corm·l iu,. G(•np Lo\(·lac
al.
t'. Tom Clari-.,&lt;•. Daq• \lt'&lt;.·k-. Lloyd Deni. • tan \'olin,
Jerr)·
Rubin.

Phalanx

HO\~

74

l: Larry Old,, krn lfraly, Bob Lory, Jo,• Alaimu,
Jim Dorey, Arn i&lt;• Shu lman.

��V. THOV!A

AGAN

Elmirn
Economics
SOS ... Virc-Cha11cellor,
Colonial \ews ... Copy Editor. News Editor
L .S.G .... Vire Pre:,iclcnt

GEORGE AHLGRIM
Gary. Indiana
/J istory
Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship

JOSEPll P. ALAI\10
o~~ining

En~lish

Col. \ c\\s . . . Ed.-in-ChieL 1\1anaging Editor.
Feature . ta ff, \ rl Staff
Coloni"t ... La, oul Editor
Clarcnclon ... Editorial Board
Phalan\ ... ~cc·rctar)
Daffaria
~.H.O .... Lead
Col. Plawr~
Gallen (:ommittee
\c1' man Club
Spani~h C luh ... Puhliri!\ Chairman
Pintnppl&lt;'f.;
tuclent \ch isor
Puhliniti on~ CommillPc

1sr.c

�DARA LEE ANDERSON
Falconer
Psychology
Philosophy Club

WINFIELD J. BASSAGE
Vestal
Sociology
Choir
Protestant Fellowship
A lpha Phi Omega

TODD BAYER
Wc5 lO\ er
Economics
Goliards
Intramural F ootball
Turke, Trot
Canle;bur) Club

�FRA CIS A. BILLS
Bing hamton
Physics
l\lath Club
Baccacia ... Secretar y. Hi torian
Pintopplers

ROBERT C. BLUM
Brooklyn
Sociology
Dionysians ... Corres. Secretary
Je11ish Fellowship ... Presiden t
Alpha Phi Omega
tudent AdYisor
Young Democrats Club . .. President
Colonist. . . ports Editor
French Club
'
Varsil\ Tennis
Mens' .Glee Club
Pintopplers
enior Class ... Sgt-at-Arms
lntramurals

S.R.0.
l:tica College Table Tennis
Jm itational Tourney, 1956

ROBERT A. BOLKE
Yonkers
English Literature
L.S.G .... 'ophomore Member at Large
] nternational Relations Club
Intramural Softball

�CLIFFOHD \I. BROW
B ronx
Art

Clarendon
Colonial Pia, er"
Colonial \ c·".,
Gallrr) Comm itlcc

JOil1 Bu A
Auburn
Ph ilosoph) ancl Enf{lish literature

) oung Democrats Club

Philosophy Club

PATRICIA CANNADAY
ton) P oi nt
Sociology

Protestant Fellowship
P a ndora n

�ALVI"i v1.

COE~

Binghamton
F,conom ics
Coloni:,L ... Bu-.im•,,.. \lanager. Editor-in-Chief
Dimn -ians . .. Hee. S1·c .. President
Je\1i•h Fc·llm1•hip ... Trea»urer. Vice Pre-ident.
Presicll'nl
Cl'olog) Club
German Club
Studrnt \ch i.. or
Studt'nl Court . . . \:,;:.nciate J u~t ice. Chief Ju•Lice
,'tuclent \ch i"un C:nmm .... Chairman
I ntrarnurnl Sports
Pintopplc1;;

rscc

Student 1'11hl iC'a linn" Board
Dragon ~ociet)
\Vho"s \\ ho in Ameri can College" and

Di\\ JD '\.

GniH~r,,itir~

COHE~

Tr°'
Polit ical Science
SIW
Di om ~ i an;; ... Vice Pre;.iclent
I11ler;1ational Relation" Club . . . Pre:,idcnt
Pi ntopplers ... Trea:,,urer
l11tran1ural , ports
Sr. Cla,:s ... Vice President
Coloni!-t ... Photo. Editor
k1\ i-h Fello11 ;;hip ... Trca!'urer

ISCC
StudC"nl ,\chi:,.or
Colonial Pia\ ers ...
'·The Lad) "10 \ot For Burning'"
'"The Gambler:,··

IlAHO l,D COHEN
Long 13&lt;'a&lt;'h
Economics

Diony;.ians ... I li;.torian. Parliamentarian.
Hee. Sec., Trea-.urer. 'oc. Chrmn.
\lath Cluh . . . Trca.,urer. President
Cer111a11 Cluh
lntramural Spoth
Je\1 i-h Fell1n1,..hip
C.S.G.... l·:lt'&lt; 'lions Commillee
lgh \Jan
Pinlop pll'rs
'·Too \lan} Thumb~"'

�RICHARD

. CORASH

:\ew York
Business Administration
Colonist ... \ Janaging Editor
ConYocalion~ Commillee
Dionvsian ~flciel\ ... Corres .. cc.
l nler;1alional Rel~Lion&gt;- Club
Election" Commillee
lnter :;ocial Club Council
Spring Re\ ie11 ... Executi'c Board
Colonial Pia' ers
Pintopplers ·

RA't v10""\D E. CORNELIUS
Pal rm ra
Political 'cic11ce
Alpha Phi Omega ... President
Vice Pres.
Secretary
In tramura l Basketball
I nt'ram ural Soft ball
\ ou11g Republican Cl ub
Prolc:-tant Fcll&lt;l\\&gt;1hip

ROY L. COSTLEY
'.\cw York

Business Admini.\tration

S.O..... Chancellor
Vars.it\ 13a~kcthall
lntran;ural Basketball.
Football
~oft hall
pring Re\ ic''
Colonial Pla,er"'
~ Lu den l Cou rl J u:-Licc
Social Acli\ it ice; Comm .... Chrmn.

�SHE RH i JO \ \ DAHLE
Chcnan~o

Bridge

l .itnat11r&lt;'

Choir
Fr Pnch Club
Hw.-.ian Club
Pandoran-.

STA0;LEY J. DAHLE
Srar:-clale
General Bllsiness

lTK
Van;iL) Golf
Jnler- ocial Club Crew Racing Team
. panish Club
ISCC
lutramural Sports
Fall Election Commillec ... Chairman (2)

\L\HY \ \ '\ DEKAR
Binghamton
llu111a11ities
Colonial Pia\ er~
Choir
Colonial \c"-.

�A. L. FISKE DEWEES
Binghamton

Forei[!.n Literature
Choir
Geolog) Club
French Club
Canterbun _\ ssociation . . . ecretary
Thalians . . . Treasurer. ecretary. Vice President
Dean ·s List ... 2 and 3

FRANKLY\ E. DUNHAM
Endicoll

History
] ntramural

ports

CHRISTOPHER P. EGAN
Owego

Geophysics
Geolog~ Cluh

�D,\ \ID EISE\ HERC
Bingh:imton
A n ·o11111 inf!
Bal'1'a&lt;'ia ... Trl'a-.urer

ROBERT J. ELLIS
Endicoll
Economics

German Cluh
Goliarcl" ... Vice Prc~i clenl. Prcsiclcn l.
l~CC Hepre~cntalivc

Clarendon
] nlrnmurnl Ba~kctball
Senior Cla,.,- Presiclcnl

HICll \HD \. E\1\lONS
Bi11µforn1lon
/Ju,;//('\'
Bal'C'al'ia . .. 1li-.torian. \'in· Pre,.iclcnl.

�\L\RTL\' \I. FILLEH
Hrookh n
Political cience
Forrn~i&lt;' ~orit'l\ ... Prc~idt•nt
Var.,il\ Dchal!' Tl'alll ... Captain
)l{C ... \'ier Pre,idt·nt
Spani'h Club
P inl opplcr~

Intramural Council
Bri dge Club
Je" ir:-h Felio\\ ship
L.S.C.... \!ember at Large· I l )

\TARGOT J. FISH
Binghamton
French
Pa ndo rans

SA \'DR.\ CIR \ GO,' I \ \
Binghamton
C&lt;'olog;

Thalian" ... :-'ccretan. I fo.iorian
Geolog) Club ... St·rrrlar ~ -Tr&lt;'a'Ul n

�CARL H. GOODYIA
::\e11 ) ork Cit,
Rio/op.)
Biolog) Club . . . President
Jc11 i"h Fellows hi p .. . President
Colonial Pla1ers .. . Sec reta n
.
.
Goliarcb
Chem i~tn

Club

. tuclcn l Ach i~or
Intramural S ports
Colonial \ c11s

RICHARD GOODRICH
Tioga Center

!Vlath
Bridge Club
\la th Clu b

DO:\TALD J. GREITER
Bron'\

Rusi11ess Admi11istration
l ntram ura l Sporb
lTI\. ... Pm-idcn l

�GAIL YALERIE GRL EFF
\' e-.tal
'ocwlogy
Pando ran-.
Queen of Hearts I 2)
\Iardi Gra~ Queen I 2)

SHO
L CC Representati' c
) oung Hepublicans Cluh
' pring and Winter Weekend Committees

JOAN SlfERvIAN GROVER
Binghamton
Fri&gt;nf'h

HENRY S. JIA\f\1ER
Joh n:-on Ci l\
Bio/og_r
Goliards ... \'ice Pre~iclenl
\'ar ... il\ Ba~kethall
Var~1t~ Cross Counln
Germ;n Club ... S/?1:-at-1\rm"
Biolol?' Club
l~CC Hepr~enlaliH~

Chemisln Cluh
Intramur.al :porh

�FRA CE

JIANKS

Binghamton
Ent:dish Uterature
Panclornn"
Colonial \ ('\\"Student Court ... i\~ ... ociatc J usticc
Student \ch i"on Committee
Student \ ch iso;
Spring He\ ie11

WALTER HANSON
l tica
Uterat.ure
French Club
Italian Club
Sla\'iC' Club

GRACE HAWLEY
) onkcrs
Literal u re
Proctor

lS.C .... C&lt;:retan
Fre-hman Cla"" ... :-:;gt.-at-Arms
Pintopplt&gt;r:Ra-.kethalL Intramural
Pandonin:Scnior Cla~"' ... Tn·a::-urcr
l ntcr Donn Council
ISCC
\\ho·~ \\ho in American Colleges and Universities
Dragon ::-locicl\

�SALLY J. HE DERSON
Vestal

English Literature
I ntramural ports
P andorans ... Vice Pre:-ident. President
C ... G.... \Iember al Large ( 2)
Student-Facult) Commi ttee
Colonist
Studen t Leadersh ip Conference
l\ A ... Co-ordinator
Dragon 'ociet)

BETSY K ICKERBOCKER HESS
Endicott
Hall1c•11wtics
Choi r
Chccrlcad ing
Pandorans
L.S.C, . . . Member a t Large (3)
l SCC . .. Representati ve
Prote,.Lanl Fell owshi p
Pinloppl er~

AUSTI

W. HOGAN

Fultom illc

Physics
Baccacia
Outing Club

�RAYMOND T. HUBBARD
Owego
Business Administration

WILLIAM E. JACKSON
Endicott
Accounting

RICHARD JOST
Lindenhurst, Long Island
ociolo~y

S.O.S. . . . ecretaq
lntramurals

�ROBERT KAL\10RE
Brookl) n

Sociology
ITK ... Treasurer

rscc

Intramural port~
Jewish Fellowship
Inter- ocial Club Crew Racing Team

JOA

E \1ARIE KAl\ilINSKY

Binghamton

.Wathematics
Thalians . . . ecretary, Treasurer,
President
Choir
Intramural ports
Colonial ews
\ewman Club
I
ec retary
German Club
\lath Club

·cc . . .

HEJ. RY 13. KAPLAN
Brool-.l)n

History
Diony::,ian oc1et\
]e" i;h Fcllo11~hip
Pintopplc b

me

Intramural Sport::;

�ACDREY.G. KE NEDY
Binghamton
French

WILLIAM M. KERR
Binghamton
Business Administration
Pintopplers

GENE L. KNAPP
Elmira
Geolo~)

Biolop:) Club ... l're;.iclenl
Pintoppler-., ... \ 'ice Pre;;io&lt;&gt;nl. Pre5iden l
Ceolog\ Club
Diam ,.ian&lt;; ... Vice Pre.;;ident
L.S.C .... President
lutramural 'por t ~
' tudcnl Facull\ \ c:«ociation
'tudcnt Facuh) Comm .... Coordinator

�ALEX KOBB
e\\ York Cit\
·
Biology
Dionysia ns ... Corres. ecretar~. ocial
•
Chai rman
Je\\ ish Fellowship ... Vice Pre~idcnl
Pinlopplers
Colonist .. . Bus. \lanager, \ ch er. Vlanager
U.S.G .... J\'1e111ber al Large ( I )
Intramural Sports
Biolog~ Club
German Club
Glee Club
Dean's List ... 1
l1gly \1a n '56
Dionysian Directory Chairman

ARLENE A. KOZAK
Binghamton
Sociolog\'

·\ LFRED J. K07J :\RZ
Amsterdam
Economics
Pinlopplers

�ROBERT KROME, JR.
End well

History
Baccari a
Pinlopplcrs

SANDRA LANDER
Caribou. Maine

History
Cassand ran Society ... Vice President
Sgt.-at-Arms, Treasurer
Colonial Players
Jewish Fellowship
Gallery Committee

WILUA\1 LEE
Ban, all

Eco;1om ics

TTK
Pintopplen•

�LE~T
Binghamton
panish

LOIS A.

panish Club . . . rrrelan -Trra;.u rrr
French Club . . . rcrrtan.·Trea,,ure r
Pandorans ... Sccretan .
·
Pintopplers

CARL LEONARD
Johnson Cit\
·
Ceolo~y
Dionysians
Intramural Sports
Pinlopplers

JOSEPH V. LOPOSKY
Endicott
Business Admi11islralio11
Goliards ... Corres. ecretary
German Club ... President. Vice President
Varsity Golf

�NANCY COOPER LOWKRANTZ
Bingham ton
Political . cience
Pando ran;,
Colonial Pia) ers ... Chm. Executfre Board ( l )
RO ... ~ecrctan I 2. 3)
Italian Club
Philosophy Club ... President ( 3)
Colonist ... Organizations Editor ( -1)
Clarendon
Colonial New!&gt; . . . ccretary ( 3)

IRC
Pintopplcrs
Young Republi can~ Club
Student Adviso r
Canterbur) Association
Winter Weekend Publicit; Chm. 1958
Freshman Womens' Tea Chm. 1957

DOROTHY MacDER"\IIOIT
Brook!) n
Political Science
Pandorans . . . Treas urer, Vice President
Dean 's List
French Club

me

Pintopplers
Young Republican s Clu b
Inte r-Dormito ry Counril ... Pres ident

GERALD D. McLAIN
Endicott
Literature
Junior Cb;;~ ... Vice President
L. C ... Trea~urer f 3)
Fre-.hrnan Orientation Chairman 1958
Intramural Foothall
Intram ura l Softhall

�STANLEY E.

~10LDOVA

Brookhn

Psycholo[{y

r $.C.... \!ember at Large 1 l I
Student Court Justice
~ophomore Clas.-; TrC'asurer
Bacra&lt;' ia ... 11 i"torian
ISCC
, tudent-Facultv Committee
Colonial :\ews ,
Who's Who in American Colleges and Unil'ersities
Dragon Societ'
Va rs it' Debate Team
Foren;ic Societ\ ... Pres ident
Dean's List . . .' l. 2
S t udC'nt Organizations Commi tt ee

Jewish

Fcllow~hip

Student Organizations CommilleC'

r E
Enclicotl
Ute rat 11 re

JOA

VALABEK NELSON

Colonial Players ... Secretary, President
Colonial News
Spring Re, icw . . . Director. Costumer,

Props

INGE

ITKA

Binghamton
General Uterature
Pancl orans

Choir

�NICHOLAS OCCHINO
Johnson Cit\
'
Biology
Biolog) Club
Italian Club

RONALD OTERO
P o1t Crane

A ccounting
Goliards
Intramural Sports

HARRY PAL\1ER
John:-on Cit'
·
Pin sics

�FRANCIS J. PANETII
O"c:w

Acco1111ti11~

Baccacia

GARY J. PARKER
Bala\ ia
Lin[!uistics
Coliards
Cro s Country
Track
Spanish Club ... Vice President
Bras$ Quintel
la\ ic Club

Outing Club

ALBERT R. PELLICCIOTII
Binghamton
ociolo[!y

Goliards
Italian Club
I ntramu ralb

�JO EPII PETRONE
Binghamton

French
,\d dph i
Colonial Pia, er~
Spring H.c, iC\\
'\ewman Club
French Club

Italian Club
Young Hcpublican;, Cl uh ... Treasurer

RHODA QUACKENBUSH
Co~hcn

Cener'll Literature
Canlcrbttr) A!'sociat ion
Prolc!'tant Fellowship
1ntramural Spor ts
Learned Dorm ... President
Cas~andrans ... 'gt.-at-Arms
Young Republican Club

GERALD REARDON
Binghamton
.ld111i11istration
Barracia ... Prc;.iclcnt
~ophomorc Cla-.~ ... Sgt-al-Arms

811si11&lt;'~.\

Yan.it\ Tenni:I ntran;ural Sports

�NOR\1A . RIFKIN
1'\cw York Cih
ll11111anitics ·

ITK ... Secretary
Frenrh Club
Debate Club
Biolog~

Club

Ban cl

EDWARD ROGERS
Binghamton
Accounting
Baccacia

WALTER R. ROSE
Afton

Enr.dish UtNaturc

�RONALD ROSENSTEIN
Bronx
Political ciencc
Dorm President
ophomore Class ... Vice President
U.S.G .... Senior Class Representative
ISCC
Intramural Council
Goliards . . . gt-at-Arms
Student Advisor

JEROME H. RUBIN
Flushing
Music
Alpha Phi Omega
J ewish Fellowship
Spanish Club
German Club ... Rec. Sec.
Choir

MELVIN SCHWARTZ
· e" ark
Humanities
• O. . . . Equerq. Vice Chancellor
Colonial \cw::
Gallen Committee

�TERRY SIEGEL
Brookh n
Eng/isl;

MILDRED SKLENKA
Huntington, L.T.
Philosophy
Pandorans ... Sgt.-at-Arms, Treasurer
RO ... Secretary (1 )
"All That Harpur Allows"
"Prams Arc Tender"
" Isn't the Countrv"
Colonial Players ... l\ifembership Chairman
"The ilver Cord"
"The Vise"
Outing Club

DAVID SLOBODIN
Brooklyn
Geology
Dionysians . . . ecretary
Int ramural ports
JCl\ ish Fellow;;hi p
Geology Cl ub
French Club
Chess Club
Pinlopplers

�WILLIAM G. S:vIITH
Dchli
Zoolo{{y
Pintopplcrs
Protestant Fellowship
Baccacia
Cross Country
Proctor

GABRIEL J. SOCHOR
Endicott
f ,anf{LWf!.es

Coliards
Intramural Sports
German Club ... President
Student Faculty Athletic Comm.
panish Club

DENNIS SPETZ
Jamc;;town
Geof!.raphy
Adelphi . . . gt.-at-Arn1s, Vice President
pring Weekend '58 ... Co-Chairman
Winter \Veckcnd ':)8 . .. Co-Chairman
'\lurphY Dorm ... President
Var...it' Basketball
Int ran;ural . ports .
SC\'f \laritime College Cruise
Dragon ociet\

�WILLIAM H. STANTON. III
Binghamton

Sociology
IVCF ... President
Pin topplers

RALPH J. STEINBERG
New York City

History
C .. . Feature Ed., Ed.-in-Chief
APO ... Historian , Vice President
President
lavic Club ... Treasurer, Vice President
President
Dor mitor) Proctor
Play. "Lady of Larkspur Lotion"
Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities

VERNA STEWARD
Mayville

Geology
P andorans
Geology Oub ... Sec.-Treas.. President
College Group of h t '.Vlethodist Church
~Iodern Dance
Dorm Proctor

�HAROLD STRANG
Poughkeepsie
Biology

NORMAN R. STRITE
Albany
English Literature
Clarendon

ROBERT THOMPSON
:\Iount :\forris
Geography
Adelphi
Varsity Basketball
Intra murals

�WILLIAM B. THOMPSON
Binghamton
Philosophy
APO ... Corresponding Secretary, President
French Club
Philosophy Club
:\1ath Club
Clarendon ... Associate Editor
SU Y Press Association Committee for
SUNY Literary :Magazine
Outing Club ... President

DANIEL B. TWIGG
Sayre, Pennsylvania
Geology
Geology Club
Pintopplers

FRANCIS W. TYNAN
Schuyler\'ille
Political Science
ITK ... Secretarr, Vice President, President
Intramural Sports

�BARBARA VOSBURGH
Hancock

Political Science
Dragon Society
t;.S.G .... Recording Secretary
Dormitory Proctor
Cheerleader
Pando rans
IRC ... Treasurer
French Club
Sophomore and enior Class Secretary
ISCC ... Treasurer
Convocations Committee
Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities
Pintopplcrs
Intramural Sports
Colonial 1ews

JACQUELINE WARD
Binghamton

Sociology
Pandorans ... Vice President

C. JOSEPH WARING
Saratoga

prings

Geology
Geology Club ... Vice President
Dormitory President
Assistantship ... Geology Department

�JOHN WELSH
Bingham Lon

Chemistry
Goliarcls. . . gt.-al-Arrm, ecrelar}
Inlramural porls
Chemistrr Club . .. President
I CC ... Rep resentati\'e

ED WENNING
Long Reach. L.l.

Accounting
Alpha Phi Omega . .. Treasurer

:MARTHA GRAHAM WESTON
Ellem ille

Hislory

�ROGER WICK
Binghamton
Business Administration
Baccacia

ROGER WINTERS
Port J ervis
History

ROBERT W. WOODING
Hoche!'Ler
Accounting
Alpha Phi Omega ... Rec. Sec., Treas.,
Vice Pre~.
Intramural ports
Coloni~t ... \ ch erlising ~lanager

�CARL ZYMET
Bronx
Zoology
Freshman Class ... President
Junior Clasg ... Treasurer
Lincoln Dorm President
pring \'\'eeken&lt;l '57 ... Publicity Chamnan
Biology Club .. . Vice President
Varsity Basketball
German Club
Biology Club
Goliards
Student Faculty Committee
Dragon Society

Seniors not shown
Michael A. Berardino
William A. Bradford
Rheta H. Cartmell
Marie Downey Coney
Gloria M. Cosgrove
Wilber R. Dodge
ArtJmr H. Ebeling
Richard I. Evans
Roger W. Ferris
Morton A. Frieje
Karl Gottesman
Bernard A. Heaney
William J. Hess
James Larrabee
Barbara J. Lynch
Edward T. McGlynn
Joseph F. Milern•ky
Valekle Misher
Edgar H. Sulphen
Richard P. Ulmer
Peter VanderLinde
Laurence Webster
Silvio Zenone

111

�A liberal education is achieved by a guided study of man's entire gamut of
knowledge, as contrasted with the pursuit of a single branch of knowledge
which has a specific application.
Today, through the influence of the age in which we live, specialized bodies
of knowledge expand and cleave, in a process not unlike the fission of microscopic organisms, into the new and even more specialized fields, which again
expand , tlnough research, and again split. Thus, in this type of inteUectual
climate, the only method of acquiring profici~ncy and the only method of increasing still further our knowledge, is through specialization.
A specialized education, however, does not necessarily include the fundamentals required for an increased sensitivity, a broadened understanding of
the factors underlyi ng human experience, a spiritual and moral sense -

the

elements which, in the f inal analysis, are the essence of the knowledge needed
for preserving the human pattern. Specialized education may produce nothing
more than an individual highly skilled in his chosen field, but one perhaps
unaware of the role of man.
We believe that in order to develop one's full potential one must have a
broad eclucational background before proceeding into a specific field of
specialization ...

RICHARD D. ROBBINS

112

�SPORTS

113

�Harpur Gymnasium

Designed for a program of instruc6on classc::;. intramural and intercollcf!ialc !iports. thC' I larpu r

µ~

mna-.ium

building combine~ facilities for men anrl ''omen. Re:w n in th&lt;' ,.,prinµ: o f l&lt;J56 and romplt·t&lt;·d in tlw -.umnwr of
1&lt;&gt;58 at a co:-l of $231J5.000. in addition to clas:-rooms and ;.p&lt;'cialized an.&gt;a::. it inrludcs a g) mna&gt;- iurn '' ith 111('11·~
and wonwn ':-. ha!-.kethall C'ourl;. anrl blrachcn;; for 1500
to the latP;.l inLC'rcollc·g iale ;.tandards.

spcrlator~.

IL also include:- a :-11 imming pool whi ch &lt;'on form&gt;

Outdoor a reas includ&lt;" a so&lt;Ter field 11 ith runnin g trark. basebal l fiel&lt;k

tcnn is court s and pr act ice field s.

Hain Gymnasium: 100' x 110' wi th a folding door dividin g the area into two 1111its. onr for 11 omc'n. 60' x JOO'
uch C\'Cnts as int&lt;'rcollegiat&lt;' basketball. college rom oca tions. clanc&lt;';.. elr .. 11ill
a ncl th&lt;" othe r for mPn. go· x 100'.
lw lwld in this arC'a. \\ ith the d oor cl osed carh unit ran h&lt;' us1•d for basketball. badminton. 1ollc) ball. or other ph) Si·
C'al act i1 it1.
/Jan et' .r...1111/w and COi re1·tio11 C1 m: ·\ $pare of Hl" x 100' 11 ith a folding d oor ma) be operatc•d a,. a !&gt;inµ: le unit or
a-. t11 0 unit-.. Tlw danct&gt; area i$ eq uipped 1dth a full 11 all mirror and e\.crc- i~c· bar. The correrti1c µ'.) mn a!'ium i,
1·0111plclt' 11 ilh indi1 iclual 1..1.ncisinµ: equipment and can al$o lw US('d for 11 re~Lling.
llandhall ('our/,; Tlwn· a r(' t11 0 hanclhall rnurts 2:r \. 16' 1d1id1 hill also he used for &gt;-qua;.h.

R.i/le

/~1111r,&lt;': Thi~

area i-.

g()'

x 21' 11ith four

r.las.\rno111.1 and I i.111al ./ids Rooms: T11 o
11101 ic,... fi lm "trip:-. etc.

firin~

room~

po"it iom. and i;, eq uipped 11ith 11ir&lt;' ca rric·rs for ta rget rrmornl.

arcommocla ti ng a total of 66 stud enL$ that ma) he

u ~rd

for

lec ture~.

S111111111111p. f'ool: 75· \. ;~.)· in ,.ize. it ha• fi1 &lt;' ::-e1rn· foot rac in g- lane!-&gt;: 1111111mum depth o f four fcrl. maximum 11
f1·1·t. T he pool 1·o nt ain~ l(i0.000 ;.rallons o f 11at&lt;'r. There i" orw-nwter aluminum di,ing hoa rd and one Lhree-meter
aluminum di1 ing- hoard. P&lt;' rmanen t ro ncn·t&lt;' hlcachc•r,., prm icle :'l'aling for :Bo ::-peclators.

indudP the foll o11 in~: men's lorker
loc·kt•r,... 1a rsi t1 l('afll lorker room. 100 lockN-. : 1 i-.itinµ. lt•am locker room. 10 lockers: facu ll) lock rr
111om. 2&lt;1 lotkt'r-.: 11 01111·11 ·-. lock&lt;'r room. 280 lock!'r,.,.
f.ocke1 R.00111.1. Lorker roo ms are a ll 1•q uippt&gt;cl 11 ith indi 1 idual locker,., and

111om. ;);~]

Trai11i11r, 1111&lt;/ First » l ul /foo111.\: F.ach locker area is eq ui ppt'd 11 ith a tra ininp. room with 11hirlpool bath. lamp:;. r tr.

114

�Basketball 1957-1958
Coach Fra nk Pollard',, Colonials too k one ,·iC'lO!' )

111

fourtern ga me,.. in the 1957-58 sca&gt;'on.

I n addi tion lo an

abundance of good opposition. the Green- ancl-Whitl' facrcl tlw u,,ual prohlcms o f academic probation and injur).

of g rea t promise. Thrn. 11hen finals 11 ere over a nd
lost to th e club.

~rad&lt;',..

11t•rc tunwd in. Tom

Also lost 11rrr sparkplugs Bob Thomp, on and Hon \e11land.

\ ~h.

hi gh ;.corn to tha t point. \1as

To add insult to

injur~.

'"Zip ..

Z) met hurt hi s leg while pla) ing agai nst Hamilton. Bob Griffi s· trick kn&lt;'&lt;' acl&lt;'d up. and hiµ, h scorer J im Tl iµ,gin::,uffercd a :-rrious shouldN injur~ against Oneonta . tatr. II!' mis:-t'd tlw final four µ,:amc:-. Onh
Bob Ro,,cncrancc managed lo pla~ in

C\

ten' Kuce ra and

er~ ga me.

Starting five (1957-58) opened
season again~t Utica.
FRONT:
Higgins.

Steve Kucera. Jim

BACK: Bob Thomp,on.
Rosencrancc. Tom \,11.

Bo Ii

115

�F IRST ROW. left to right: Tony Cera:,aro. Carl Zyrnct. J ames Higgin~. Rohert Thornp,.,.,n. ~fol
Matza, Steve Kucera.
SECOND ROW , left to right: Coach Pollard. Dick Ram~c)' . .lames Oa' i•. Tom Kirk, Rohl'rt
Griffis, Steve Baker. !\fanager \l ike Wolfson.

Harpur College
Basketball Roster 1958-1959
l\'ame
Baker. Steve*
Cerasaro. Ton)
Cherronc. Demetrious
Clarisse. Tom
Da1is. Jim
Griffis. Bob*
Hi ggins. Jim *
Kirk. Tom
Kucera. lei c*
:\l atza. \lei •
Ramse). Dick*
Sexton. ;\rt
Thompson. Bob*
Z) met. Carl*

116

Hometown
J ohnson City
Endicott
Binghamton
Centerporl
H ewlett
Binghamton
Binghamton
Hewlett
Binghamton
Elmont
Schenectady
Binghamton
Mount Morris
ew York City

Ht.
6' 2''
5'1 O"
5' 9"
6' .3"
6' 3"
6' 2"
6' l"
6' I"
5' 8"
5' 9"
5'10"
6' 2"
6' ] ,.
S' 6"

Wt.
185
165
160
175
165
170
170
175
160
180
175
196
175
155

Age
19
18
18
19

l8
21
2]
18
20
18

18
2.1
22
21

Year
Sophomore
Freshman
Freshman
Sophomore
Freshman
Sophomore
Sophomore
Freshman
Junior
Freshman
Freshman
Freshman
Senior
Senior

�First Semester 1958
more
CoaC'h Frank Pollard opened the 1958-59 season with a squad bolstcrC'd h) six lcllNmen and s1-x
1eq enterprising fru:-h.

With the season about to open. Jim Iliggins. last season's lop point maker suffered

deep charlc) hor e in his leg and missed the fir::.t foe games.
Bas·
To open and dt,dicalc our g) mnasiurn to intercollegia te competition. four teams engaged in a two-night
krthall \\"eekend.

Dr. Bartle a11arded the \fot-L Valuable Pla)cr Cup Lo Dave Bourns of Wooster.

lo
llarpur lost hoth ib games that oprning wet&gt;kcnd. llcl\\eH'r. lhe Colonia ls pul three fro!&lt;h on "bow. all
1er) good ach anlagc.

\s the first semester ended. sevt'n games had been pla) e&lt;:l.

Re1·ie1c of action:
The opening game of the hig weekt'nd :-a11 Wooster of Ohio put on a tremendous exhibition of race horse
basketball. ""amping ll amilton. Vin Coyle hit for 26 that night for Hamilton.

The second game saw the

Ton)
Hobart ~ tate:-nwn take the mea~ure of ll arpus. For Harpur. 6-:~ Jim D~n is. 6-1 Tom Kirk and 5-10
and
Cera"aro all made !heir first collegiale appearance . \1carll\hile Ste1·e Kucera. Steve Baker. Bob Griffo,
Bob Thomp:-011 11ere plugging for their position:; in the absence of Higgins.
lo~t.

Lc1e Baker had 15 as Harpu1

5g. I I. W oo:&gt;Ler 11 on 78- 18.

The next night Hobart won again. this time over Hamilton. 68-57.
Scotti &lt;';, of \\ oo:;tcr. 95-53. S te1 c Kucera leading with 10 points.

ll arpur "a

soundlj trounced b)

the

Wooster was the outstanding Learn. usually

emplo) ing t11 o fi1 e man uni ts to outrun their opponent. It worked.
g)m
On&lt;' week later as part o f Ilarpur's Winter Weekend. the :\laritime College Privateers traveled to our
with
from Fort Sd1t1) ler for an exciting 01e rti me battle. the ll arpur team 11 inning. 63-60. Jim Dai is sparkled
l S and S te1 &lt;' l\.uccra ron l inucd hi s improvemen t with a dozen plus one markers.
The

H'f)

next ''eek. H arpur left home soil for two ballles U!blate. Thc·1 faced the Oneonta

late Reel Dra-

proved
/!Olls. Coach llal Chase's outfit a l the lime 11a!' the highest scori ng snrn ll college in the coun try and th e)
lead·
it 11 ilh a 99-S&lt;J 11 in mer the 1 isitors. Pert-onal fouls cau::-ed Lh&lt;' earl) lo&lt;.&gt;- of Dai is and !\irk. Carl Z) mc·t
ing lh&lt;' scoring 11ilh 12 and Baker 11ith 11.
ltica·,_ Pioneers. uni) L110 da)S later look the Coloniaf's measure. 6l-50. although Ste1e Kucera once again
led the scoring 11 ith I ;~. And again it was personal fouls tha t made !he lo!:-S a tough one.
art\fter near!) a month la} -off for tlw Chrislma;. holicla)'-· the l larpur quintet returnee! lo action against H
then
wick. in Oneonta. The Warriors prol'ecl efferli l'C~ in the ea rl ) minutes. rolling out lo an l8-l lead. From
he hit
on it 11as e1c·n. the ll art11ick unit 11inning. 87-60. Jim lliggin::.· return Lu action \\as dear!) noticeable as

21 points. and Jim Da1is los;.ed in 17 for his personal high.
the
The -.eme;.t&lt;'I ended happil) for the Green-and-\\ .hite a-. the\ upped Llwir home mark Lo 2 ancl 2 against
Genesco

Lale Teacher:-. 65-62. Jliggins leading the wa) 11ith 16. Jim Da1i!: la!:-l minute pictun• jump ~hot

ired Lht' clec-i ... ion for Lht' Colonial-..

117

�GA '.\IES

lforpur

Score

Opponen t
H oba rt
Wooste r
\ Iarit ime
On eo nta
C ti ca
ll a i;t" ick
Geneseo

11
s:~

6:3
5'J
50
60

65

55
95
60

99
61
87
62

First Sem ester R esults
W on 2 ( \J ar iti me. Cene!;.Co I
Lost 5 ( H o b art. W ooste r. Ct ica. ll a rt'' ick. Oneon ta I

SCORl'\'C

FT

FG

Points

Da\ i$. J irn
Ku('era. Ste\e
Ba ker. Stt•\ t'
Cera!'aro. Ton)
Z) met. Ca r l
Ilil![! i ns. Ji l1l
Kirk T om

7

28

16

7

27
21

11

10

72
65
52

9
ll
16

2.1
16

11
38
37

:' I

-1.9

C ri ffi~.

7
6

5
8
3

10.3
9.3
7.-1
5.9
5.1
18.5

18
18

Bob

Clari,-,;P. T om
T hompso n. Bob
Ram-.e). Dirk
T OT \l .S

118

A1•erage

Camps

N ame

7

7
7
2
7

I :3

12

7

3
7

~

1

0

17
2

2.6
3.0
2.J
0.7

l ·l l

112

39 1

56.3

7

5

3

�Dave Bourns (45), :MVP in Week
end of Basketball, taps in mi~sed
shot for Wooster against llam·
ilton.

Zip Zymcl (11), pract ices jump shot while Steve
Kucera (10), defends.

119

�Splish Splash -I Was T akin' A Bath.

Sa turd

ay

aftern

oon

Rec siv·

m1 at the

O•• "'

•«"'" "'""m'

Jim D"''

a11ua\un~. instead o{ basketball.

120

P"'"'&lt;'

wi&lt;b

Pool.

�TOP: Allen Rodgers, Dean Phipps, Dave Parker.
BOTTOM: Coach Henderson, Paul Weinman, Jerry Sinnamon.

Allen Rodgers fini~hes fir,1 a~ainst N.P.S.T.C.

121

�Now Try it With a Ball

fntcrco/J .

eg,llte SJ&gt;o

'

rts

Two hands for beginner'

122

�lntramurals 1958-59
ne\\ in no\ at ion. a six\ len·;. I ntramura l,. hep:an \\ ith basketbal l clurinp: the fir"I ;.t•me$tt•1 \1 ith a
dubs.
social
in
!'l
~
not
ere
\1
\\ho
leam dorrnitor~ league. composed of the frc,.hmen
i\dt&gt;lphi. Raccacia.
iarch.
Gul
S.O.S..
..
l.T.K
club,:
The Pnior Circuit. composed of the social
The aC'tion \\as
lt&gt;ap:ut'.
the
rnmposcd
nt,..
Dionysian s. and St'n ice rluh A.P.0. and tht• Jncleprnclc
d teams in
undefeate
as
haltlr
to
hectic ancl e"Xcitin~ and the &gt;-ehedulc brought I.T.". and Goliarcls
ed.
deadlock
\1as
score
the
mertime.
the final week of play. t\ftcr re!!:ulati on pla) and t110 periods of
a
them
give
lo
$hot
jump
a
In a sudd&lt;&gt;n deat h O\'C'rtirne. Al Pelliciotti of the Col ia rd,.. ::cored on
'12-10 \1in and the first-half crown. Second half pla~ \1&lt;1;. &lt;.till to remain.
R a fuse H all ti tle w ith
\1ea rrn hile. ou th Corridor Two and West Corridor Thrcr hattlrd for the
clur lo the Frosh heav)
W est prevailin g. The anticipate d dorm-soc ial clu h p:anw \\a;. ne\ er pla) Pel
academic schedule. The Goliarcls won by a forfei t.

123

�The Col1rnist Slaff \1 ould Iikc lo thank its advisor, Dr. Rodney
Ketcham. for his help in makin~ Lhis book a reality.

124

��Wake up! Sandy

Happy birthday

Hen

party~

Judy Gillette Cleft), President; Judie Gienn. Mcmhcr,hip Chairman. Cassandran, Invitation Dinner,
No,t•mbrr 16. 1958.

126

�Dr. Burgener "refle cts"-i\Irs. Bob Lury dance~

.\Ir. Lury is also
talente d
Our reps. to American B a n d s t a n d
Marci a Smit h and
Joe Alaim o

Schnei der

increa sing intl'r·, ocial club relatio n'

\laimo

127

��Frosh -

-Soph

Struggle

�Alaimo's in everything

Between classes

mile of victory SOS

What are you up
to now, Alex'?

130

�Herr Cunductor

OK, you c hipmunk'

What'~

tht•

word from

Ilol&gt;, till'

Bi11: Bopper?

131

�Dr", . Gru I)er and Bcrman and fans

Winte r W t•ckcnd 1958

,\nothrr Pandoran Part)

�Heavenly
Shades

of Night
Are Falling

It's
Twilight
Time

�Ba.,,.,,...,,. College of St
at e University of N
ew Yo rk at Endieo
tt N . Y.

Fr id ay , Jan1J&amp;17 16
,

Colonial Players Present I
b
s
e
n
Pia
''Hedda Gabler'' As Seaso
n's Fir
st

K. G.Kaabea1r

As th ei r fin t pl ay
n, the H ar pa r CoJleof. the
ft Co
Pl ay er s will
I
Hid.do Ga bl n tin ig
ht , Sa
an d Su nd ay at 8
ns
college th ea te r at p.Ll., ill
. the E

p....._

�Yes!

Harpur IS a

Co-Ed School

135

�Dedication

of
Harpur's
New
Gym

by
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141

�WHAT AHE YOUR PLA\S AFTER GRl\DUATTON?
\VhateYer ) ou do ... \d1err' er you go ... rrmember that in ) 011r pnsonal and business
financial affairs. ) our bank is rour best friend. Man) young people like yourself
turn to First-City ational Bank because it's a one-stop bank . . . a bank where }OU
can find the right kind of !:'crv ice for e\'rr~ one of your financial nrecl~. from opening a ~aving~ aC'count to making a will.

~

BANI(
FIR_ST--CITY. N@ONAL
N.Y.
OF B I NGll \M'l'ON.

~

Sc\'en Office:; in the Southern Tier
\IE\113FR FEDFR \L DEPOSIT l\SLR.\ \CE CORPOR \TIO:'\

�HERITAGE
ration and ever y field of endeavor
The re is no end to pioneering. Every gene
pioneers. The re coul d he no mor e
have had and will continue to ha, e their
rtunities this age offe rs to you thglorious heritage than the wealth of oppo
the pioneers of tomorrow.

IBM
INTERNATIONAL

BUSINESS

El\D ICO Tr, :\. Y.

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MACHINES

�CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES
TO THE CLASS OF 1959

* *

*

15 Convenient Neighborhood Office:; in the
Southern Tier Offering Every Bank erv1ce

* *

*

MARINE MIDLAND TRUST COMPANY
OF SOUTHERN NEW YORK

ARIN E MID LAN D
TRUS T COMP ANY
of Southern New York
£F7

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�HELP YOUR HEART FUND

HE LP YOUR HEART

This Message Cont ribut ed
by Your Official Phot ogra pher

JEAN SARDOU STUDIO
i\1cLEANS

�"All who have meditate d on the art of governing mankind have been
convince d that the fate of empires depends on the education of youth."
-ARISTOT LE

ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY
Vesta l- Endicott - Endwell

*
ENDICOTT NATIONAL BANK
48 Washing ton Avenue
ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

*
MEMBERS -

FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORA TION

�Compli ments of

VAUGHl\ 'S CLOTHI:'-IG, INC.
\ilen's and Boys' Clothing
Hait

chaffner &amp; ~1arx
Eagle Clothes

107-109 E. \ l ain St.

E'\D ICOTT 1L\ IO\ L ~. Y.

HOTEL FREDERIC!(
and

THE
DUBONNET LOUNGE

WASHJNGTO\I A VE.

ENDICOTI

Congra tu lations
Class of 1959

MrLEANS
DEP'T STORES, INC.
Stores in

BINGHA:.vITON, N. Y.
ENDICOTT, N. Y.

THE E~DICOTT
PRINTING CO.

and

All Commercial Printing
Letterpress ancl Photo

OWEGO, N. Y.

W cclcling Imitations
Announcem ents
121 "\anlicoke '\\C•nue
E\DICOTf, . Y.
Phone ;).CJ I 11

�Compliments of

THE
BINGHAMTON SAVINGS BANK

62-68 Exchange Street

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

Me mbe r of
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

TAYLOR PUBLISHING COM PANY
T"°' V.

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��</text>
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                  <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>
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                  <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;
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&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>
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                    <text>���•

co onist
HARP UR
Liberal Arts College
State Universi'ty of New York

�Message
from the
President

Glenn G. Bartle
President

This year is Lhe second, and we hope, Llw la ·L year of lransilio11, in which we use
bolh Lhe Vestal and lhe Endicoll campus, and split our lives inlo two parts, sevcn
miles separated. This year W{' had 450 studcnts, then 600 living in Lhc rcsidcne{' halls
in Vestal, using the gymnasium and Lhc incomplcted college center. Unlike lasl year,
lhe meals arc served in the new cafeteria, cxccpl for lunch, so Lhal oul-of-town students have a little more feeling lhal Lhcy really live on the Vestal campus instead of
just sleeping there. In lh&lt;' lalc spring Lhc classes, excepl for science, will be meC'Ling
in Vestal, and the Class of 1960 can always say that they ended their college career
in the new quarters.
As our reputation for good aC'adcmic work and for adequate new buildings spreads
across the state and the nation, the competition for entrance into Ilarpur has become almost embarrassing. 'Ye only know that in the next few years it will h&lt;' worse.
Acceptance at Harpur is a prize which is being widely sought. Graduation from
llarpur is more and more recognized as a signal and praiseworthy atlainmenl.
In these years of the physical change and more and more serious intellectual C'hallcngc we are very proud Lhal the happiness and good feeling of the stu&lt;lcnl body has
been maintained. The student inlcresl groups are healthy, the sporls program is
rapidly improving and the altitude of th&lt;' students toward each other and toward
the faculty and college appears to be a sound one.

���LETTER F R0~1 TUE EDITOR:
Thi year's Colonist is the product of much thought,
many sacrifieC'd hours, hilarit,\', and exa peration. To lhC'
edilors and their staffs who have gi,·en so much to the
labor of C'diling a yearbook, I want to express my sinCC'rC'sl thank .
Together we have suffered Lhrough red tape, lost
material, late and hopcles. ly confu ed hours, a crowded
offiC'e, and impossible deadlines. Somehow we did gel
our new office, thosC' picture did come in, the number of
urvivors on the ·taff was just enough, and in the midst
of a wa Leland of crumpled paper and cigarette butls we
produC'ed a yearbook reprC'scnlalive of our hopes and
ev&lt;'n our inspirations.
I think that this year's book is a great step forward
for the Colonist. I hope that the college will continue to
incrca ·e its upport of the yearbook, so that in future
year. the Colonist, as a product of the ideas and efforts
of many rather than few, will be a commen uratcly imporlanl tradition at Ilarpur.

COLONIST )60 Staff
Jerry Benowitz, Editor-in-Chief
:v.Iary Alff, Managing Editor
COPY
Ellie Freed, Editor
Paulette Camhi

ART AND LAYOUT
Cathy Codispoti, Edilor
Steve Levy, Editor
Arthur Cooper
~like Bernsohn
Larry Kearney
Anne :VfacF arlane
Judy Fenster
Janel Fraser
Andrea Karpas
Marianne Lesko

PHOTOGRAPIIY
Gordon chwartz, Eddor
Peggy Weissman
Marilyn Kuker
PHOTO SCHEDULING
Ilarvey Paige, Editor
Marilyn Smith, Editor
Chris Schrumph
Ellen Warshauer

BUSIXESS
John Iannilti, Editor
.James Lundgren
James :McMahon

SECRETARIAL
Alma Cook
Louise Grossman
Vicki Newman

SPORTS
heldon Edi on, Editor

4

�Table of Contents

2

Message from the President
Dedication

3

21

Faculty and Adn11nistrat1on
Social Clubs

45

Literary

62
67
89
101
129

Organizations
Sports
Seniors
Advertisements

5

�This is the ('olonial Building where the Colonist
reigned for ten

~·cars

in the altic along with the' ('laren-

don, the ('olonial .\'cuw, {'SG, and several inconvenient
C'lergyrncn. This building housed more than sccretaric•.s'
d&lt;'sks, grand fa llH'r cloeks, and even Lhc adminislrati \'e
offices.

\

T o an incoming frc•shrnan of years past, thC' Colonial
Building symholi zc•d the culturc, grac&lt;' and refinement
attributed to cduC'at ion. To today's freshman il is a
fast-fading reality, only ha lf-cherished. To lomomrn 's
freshman, iL will onl.'· be somrlhing the upperclassmen
nwnt1011 now and then. In ten year::., Lhe freshman will
probably hear glorious spce&lt;"hcs about IIarpur's humble

\

origins in c·onn·rtcd n•sidcnlial mansions.
But the nicaning of the Colonial Building has nothing
to do" ith C'ulture, grace, rdinement, or humblc origin:-.

I low c·an thi .s graduating &lt;'lass preserve the memories

c

'' hil'h makP t IH· ( 'olonial Building so clear lo t hem? 11 ow
wi II a 11yo1w ever renwrn bcr t lw dcdica Lions w ri llen on
c·eili11g of the('.\" offi&lt;"e? Ilow &lt;'an we immortalize Serg&lt;·
Hosenblaum, ,Jo&lt;' \laimo, and all lhe creations and &lt;'l'ealors who worked and pla~·ed under these cn•s? " 'ill the
c·laustrophobic· olllces he c·ompletely forgotten?
Shall we· lc·ar out and ..,a,·c• \\ilh our other lrcasur s
the doorpost with its pri&lt;·&lt;•k•ss inscriptions:

Ortob1 r .!I. W.59
.rnrrcs.~J11lly

shall retum.

This marks the day irhcn ['.')(:

inl'Clcled the ( 'olonial .\'e1cs office ... and

ll'l:

(·so

Ila ! ('.\'
"Spear" a1mils this outrageous challenge.

('.\'

We hm•c rel 11med. /Jc1care· this is u•here your complacenry will lca&lt;l yo11 lo ultimate death, destruction, and
.fined obliteration. The day of 1crath is upon you.

Hut bnrare- the C'oloni.9t will lake oi-cr all.

I

l'SG
./ lJ

Yet all this 1s ('('rtain lo hl' lost , for we cannot tak(•
t lw:-.l' pr('('ious lllC'lllOri('s \\it h us lo be .sa ,·eel for l hose

who follow. The inC'oming fn·shman will hear jokes
aboul the old campus and laugh, not al the jokes but
al the thought that suC'h things as d('diC'alions on ceilings and feuds on doorpost C'ou ld e,·cr havc existed at

1Iarpur. \\'hen we give vo ice lo our reminisC'Cll&lt;'('S, \\'e ma~·
6

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be regarded as scnlinwntal fools. But rat her sentimental fools lhan the porcelain products of a :\Ioorc and
Hutchins s hdl, u·e shall cherish our memories. And
lhis picture, the Colonial Building, will be our key lo a
wonderful, significant past.
7

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Slighll.'· l11di('l'ot1s, definitd~· passc&lt;. TlH' t,q&gt;e of building lhat revels in its dubious
pro11111wn('(', sitting determin(•dl,Y 011 its allotted pat('h . l 'gly in an (',\'l'&lt;'flt&lt;'hing, affedion-galheri11g way, perhaps with a ('C'rtai11 hC'aul,Y, the product of assoeiations in
the ol&gt;-.t'l'\'t'r's rnind. People, in&lt;"idt•nls, hle11&lt;led thoroughly with peeling \\'hite\\'ash,
la11ghabk ard1itt'clt1rc and all-p('l"Vading infirmity. ( 'an this have 11}('a11i11g?
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11

�In Sprz.ng a young mans fancy turns to ..

Student Riots
Liberti:-, f:galilc, Fralcrnite! In lhc sti ll
of the night, a bdl clanged. Cnforlunalely, it was mistaken for the long
awaited signal triggering the storming of
lhe "Bastille" known lo the general population as O'Connor llall. .\las, the efforts
of our valiant lwro&lt;·s were thwarted by
th&lt;' onrush of a ll tll&lt;' king's mC'n . . . no
horse'&gt;, just men.

�and

Spring
Weekend

Liquid, music, wornen, C'anoes, formal
gowns, sunny skies! A general free-Cor-all
as all the inldlects forgot about books a11d
fillC'd their mugs with foamy brew. Shirl·
eame off for the sunny p i(')Jit· w hik lh&lt;'
air was filled with wild musi&lt;'. Th&lt;' Jlarp urit&lt;·s sl rdcllC'd their weary souls on the
C'rowd&lt;•d ri\'(' r bank, drank, sang, slC'pl
and made merQ·. ParliC's Friday, the
yearly fC\'ll(' o( the students' \'iews and
then the great dan&lt;'&lt;' thal pleased all the
clamsC'ls and sliffrollarecl all tlw mules.
ila&lt;'chus rcignC'd supreme as llw weck(•nd
reamC'd to i ls end ...

�Frosh Arrive

�Freshman Orientation
Gelling stuck in a fantastic traffic jam
al the residence hall entrances ... lugging

heavy suitcaS('S, trunks and cartons up
three flights of stairs . . . shooing your
parents home after they've done the dirty
work .. . you're a freshman in collt&gt;ge.
The next day you meet your sludenl advisor. Ile or she will guide you through
your first hectic bul unforgettable days
of college life. There are the endless convocations, the exhausting tours of the
campi and othrr interesting spots around
town. You receive the traditional mark of
your "low" status your beanie, and your
ability to out-maneuver th(' sophs is tested. You are introduced to all the facets of
college life life, liberty and the pursuit
0£ knowledge. This is freshman orientation.

�Life al llarpur is exhaust i11g ... rH'v&lt;•r
for rN·realio n or the bet krmenl
moment
a
of your soul. llC're you sec students following various intdlcctu al pursuits with the
wholchca rlc&lt;l de,·otion and &lt;'11th usiasm
whiC'h typifies the llarpuri k. The llarpur
student is almost c-omplelr ly wrapped up
in his work, yd he &lt;'Xhibits a lo,·ing spirit
and an ov&lt;·rwhd ming dri\'c to &lt;'x&lt;·&lt;'l in all
mck•avors, be it in td led ual ...

16

��Riot in Cell 13lock 11

Dorm Life

"~ l irror

for .Jane"

18

\\'t•ll, I did haw plans for tonii:ht, but ...

�\\'hcrc'dya sny t hat

100 p roof

Christ.mas

mou~c

wns?

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�Faculty
AdmintStrattOn

�President Hartle and sC'ulp lor :'\alhanial Kaz

/Jul .vlill he .f/111/1·wl pul.•e., whe11 hi' .•aid,
'Good-morni11g,' and hr glillerrd when he zmlked.
Edwin .\ rlinglon llohinson

�S. Stewart Gordon
Dean

" \\"1•11, if yo11 f1·(') you C'an't adjust h&lt;&gt;re • . ."

.John P. Bdniak
Dean of Students

-- •

\'irginia X. KinloC'h
. lswciate Dean of Students

" \Yhy don't ,\OU p11t ll11• pap&lt;'nH•i1.tht do\\11 and
"'•'II clis&lt;'ll'' this n•a,onably!'"

"This hurt., Ill&lt;' more tl1a11 il h11rls yo11."

�Charles D. Bonsted
• lssistanl to the Pre,~ident

... mu/ yn I .•aid ye.• I 1Cil1 re.•.
Janw., ,Joy&lt;·••

Aysel Searles, .Tr.
Director of Stu(/ent . lctivities
".\ rt' you

11 .,

10,000 n year ma n in a $5,000 job?"

�Halph G. Rishrl
Director of .1 dmission.~

Carl II. "'.\Iitld111cr
.1ssistanf Director of, Id missions

"For every student ndmitted to llurpur this year there were three
who &lt;lid not wnnt to romt• here."

"But I don't wnnt to go lo 8111llllll'r

c·a111p."

�Ely ::\Ie?crson
Director of JI en's llou.9ing

"Thi;, will ht· a rich and nwnningful t•,pt•rit•11&lt;·1•."

Idamae L!.'wis
Director of W omen'.9 Ilousing
""J'h1· rult·s suy no soliciting of any kind!"

Charlotte E. Harris
llrad Rr.~idrnf
"Pll'aS&lt;' r&lt;•movt• your watc-h&lt;'s, rings, belts, and sh&lt;&gt;t•lnrcs."

�''You n·al i1.t• this hook is two hours on·rdu&lt;'. That \\ill hl·

:o; (

1,50."

LTBH.\HY ST .\FF GrC'gory ~ - llulla rd,
librarian; .Tatwl E . Brown, aR.vi.vtanl librarian; .Josiah T . :'\C'wco111b, librarian.

xrnsm; ::\liss .Joan Pc tC'rson ,
Giarusso, l\lrs. Quain, '.\Irs. Tl'al,

~lrs.
~!rs.

DonnC'llan.

"Exal'lly "hat do

~-ou

w:111t this 1wnicill in for?''

�HESIDE\C'E tr \LL SECHET\HIES
:\frs. :\'orthrop, 'Trs. \l ill(•r

Bl'SJ'iESS OFFICE STAFF
C'hnrl&lt;&gt;s K. Coop&lt;'r, P inanc-ial Scc-relctry

HEWSTH.\ll OPFICE S EC'HET,\llIES
'l uric D . Corn~y. llcgistrnr

AD~ll:\'ISTH . \TIVE

SEC llETAIUES

�"l.t•t\ slenm this ldkr npt'll also, Chnrlit'."

John Cullen
Mail and supply clerk

Marjorie Cross
Jfanager, book store

"Pshu" ! 1'11 bet you sny that lo t'\'l'ryo11e."

�'11C'll \EL BOC'll::"\.\I\
. l.•sl l'mf. of llu.~.,111 n

~IH. I'.\ l L \\EiC \:'\I&gt;
• L•.'l&lt;X'. Prrf of (:rrma11

&lt; \HLOS 11. \10::\S.\'\'J'O
I 11.,/nll'lor 111 81•&lt;1111-'h

DH. h.E'\:\ETll C. Ll\,l&gt;S.\Y
. 1.&lt;.vnc. l'rrif. of . Ir/ //i.v/ory

:,\!H

.\IH

l&gt;H

Ll ITl'OI I&gt; \\\LI \(II

bs/, f'ruj. &lt;f ( '/11ss1l'11/ I 1111y1w:11.&lt;
a11d l .1/1 ra/urrs

l&gt;H. tll&lt;.O \IH;:--.\ \,I
. Is.,/. l 'rrf. •if R11nw1w1 J.u11g1111gr.,

DH. IHYJ'\(; L. Zl l':\I C'K
• Lv.v/. l'riif. &lt;if • Irl

�DH. HOD'\EY K . ld·:TCll.\\I
l'rof of U1111111111·c /,cwguagc.•

DB . ALf)O S. llEBX.\HDO
• l.Y.YO&lt;'. Prof. of Uomanrr /,a11guages
. lcting Clwir111a11 of ll uma11ilie.•
Div.

Humanities

DH. SEY \!Ol ' H \I. PITCIIEH
Prof. of /~11g. am/ Gen. Utrralurl'
Clwimwu Dir. of l/ umanilies
011 Lean, Spring l'llilJ

\IH::;. ~ll'&gt;'\;lE L. O'DE LL
/ 11.•lrw·lor of Grrman

�DH. C'llHISTL\ :-, I'. C Hl' BEH
• J.v.vl. l'rof. rif R11g/ i.•/i

I&gt; H .1011' 0 . PE HIll
• I.v.vl l'rrif. of /•:11g/i.v/i

DH. \IEL\

I'

SEJl&gt;E:&gt;.

1.v.w&gt;&lt;' P rof 1~( F ng/isli

Dll . .1011:'\ S. \\'ELD
. 1.•soc P rof. of fa1gil.v/i

\JR. CH' EHO D . .\ld:'\TYH E
/ 11.vtnwlllr in l/ommu·I' l.c111g11ag1-.v

\Ill .•I. ,\LEX c; fJ, FlLL.\:'\
. 1.v.wJr. l'rof. 1if .II usir

DH. \' l:'\CE:\T fHEl.\l.\H CK
. I .v.•or. l'rof. of 1&lt;:11gli.vlt

�•

-(
I
Dll. BEH~.\HJ) F . ]fl PPE
Prof of Eng/i.~h Lang1wge and
Ocncral Literature

DH. J.\CK h.\:\11 '\Sl-. Y
. ls.WK'. Prof. of l'h ilosoph!/

DR. \YILL l.Ul \\'.\BE R
lnslrurlor in Phi/o.•ophy

:mt

l"HSl'I ,,\ TYUS!-. L.\\'DO W
/n.1tr11rtor in English

~ms .

K \RL (;. 1-..\SBE RG
ill F:11g/i.vh

/n.~truc/or

33

DH. Jl.\RH Y B I.l'\CO I.:'\
. l.•snr. l'rof. nf .If 11.vir

\IH. C \\ .\DE S\\'\( ; 1.;

/11Rtruclor in l'hilu.1nph11

�I) H

P.\ l

r.

" .\Tll IESO:\

I n.vtrurlllr r 11 l .'119/1.•li

\lit \JOHTO~ C. SCll\\ \HTZ
Lecl11rrr in .llatltcma/11:.•

l&gt;ll. .J.L\IES H. F. l\E:\T
Prof. of .II alltematirs

DR. JERO:\m POLL.\('K

l&gt;H " .\HT I::\ .\ . P.\l L
Prof. of Cltcmi.vtry

. I.vs/. Prof. of Geology

r

34

DH ..J \('I.; HI Cll.\HDSO:\
.l.vs11c. ! 'Tl!( of l'.vyt'ht1loy!I

�\

DH . .JOS EPH I&gt;. BEIC\L\.\'
A .•..t. P rof. of Cltrmi~lry

Dll.

WILLT.\~I

BA'rrIN

A.Ml. P rof of IJiology

Math
and
Science

D ll . JOH.\' lJJLZ~I AX
A sst. Prof. of .llailtrmalic.•

DR. C. ~[AX H ULL
Prof. of C'ltrmi.•lry
Cltairma11, Diri.vion of Scienre
and Jf atlttmatics

nn. wn,u .u r

111-:Y\t \'I

As.vi. Prof. of Psyrlwlogy

DR. DICK WICK JIAU,
P rof. of ,\/a thematic.~

35

�DH .

MII.nmm

SCJ IJ&lt;:LLJC; -J L\ C KE'Yf
Lcctunr in /J wlogy

DH. TIEIUL\X HOBE llSOX

A sst. Prof . in Geology

DH. HO BE HT .J. HART

.ls.•or. l'rof of Ph y.•1N

;\1H . ROXALD K. JIADLOC'K

Jn.ilruclor irt Physics

DH. HAHOLD T . J&lt;\ \ G J:'\
A .isor. Prof. of P.'11Jrlwlogy

})IL .JACOB ll. FJSCHTIIA L
A.t.toc. Prof. of /Jiology

Dll. BllCCE ;\fcDl'FFIE
A ssoc. Prof . of ('hemi.•lry

�DR. JAM ES H . VilDIOTIT
Prof. of B iology

Dr. ROBERT PE ' FJELD
A ssoc. Prof. of Physics

:\USS FRA:\'CES J\1 . WHirnrT
As.•()(' Prof. of .Ifalh!'mali&lt;'.•

DR. DOROTHEA MUELLER
ln.dru!'llYr in Chemistay

DR. DO:'.\ALJ) R. CO.\TES
Asst. Prof. of Geology

Gl~ORGI·: J . SC llmlAC'llE ll
A sso!'. Prof. of Biology

DH..

37

�DH . JOH:\ C l! \DIEH S
Prof. of Ermwm1r3
Clwirman Din•wn of the
Soria/ Scienrt'.v

Mil. PETEil DOD(;!&lt;:
I rMtru.ctor 111 8o&lt;"io/ogy

DR. Kl llT L. SllELL
Prof. of l'olitieal 8cie11ce

, t.•.•I.

\Ill . PHIUP \I. PL\h.Ell
A s.vi)('. Prof. of .1rrountinp

DH . LT:\ S. CHIAO
A.•.•I Prof. of . t ffmml ilig

SS

�DH . SEY\IOl ' H Z. '.I.\:\\

DH . \\ .u : n :H 0. F I Ll.EY

. l.•HOI'. P rof. of P o/i/1c11/ 8rir11rr

. l.•.wc. Prof. of l'o/itical 81·ic11l'r

Social Sciences

\Ill. DO:\ ALI&gt; Sil EH fl Y

DH. LE \\'I S ,\I. .\.LEXAX DE ll

f 11.vl nir/or

A .•.•oc. Prnf. of Geography

.\Ill..JEHO,\lE S.\'Yl&gt;EH
A ssoc. Pruf uf /Ju .•inn• E11/l'T/'risr

S9

IP!

r:1•111111m 1r·.v

�nn. PETER x.

DH. JOll:\' \\ BE.\LL

\TKAST:\'
A.•.•&lt;X' Prof. of Economics

A.•.•/. Prof of Ermwmir.•

DH. OT.\KAH ~1ACHOTKA
Prof. of Sociology

DB .

LAUIU:~CE

Prof. of

40

l~'co11omic.•

K LEA:\lER

�,

DH . .\LBEHT \ ·. JIOl'SE
Prof. of fl i.Ylory

DH . SID:\EY S. IL\R C.\\' E

DR. CllHISTI AAX LIT-:YESTBO

P rof. of lfi.•lor-y

l nslrurlor

DR. D . CHESAP \IOOHE
Asst. P rof. of /li ..tory

Dll. AMY l\L GILBEH T
Prof. of 11i,,tory

:\Jn. KE:\NET H ~1. LE\\"A:\
ln.firuclor in Law a11d
./ 11ri.Yprude11ce

i11 /11.•lory

DH..JOSEPH

~;.

Prof. of Geof!Taphy

\ .\'\ RIPEH

~Ill

HJ('llAlU &gt; llA\llLT O'\'

1 nslrnckJr i11 Sociofogy

�&gt;W.

FHAI\'K T . POLLAl! D
. 1.v.vl. P rof i11 Phy.•iral /•;durulio11

MH . CHARLE S G. STEPHA :'.\OS
Jn .•lructor in Physical Educal11m

Physical Education

.JESSIE C:ODFH EY
. l.•.•1. Prof of Ph y.•ical Ed1u·ation

) 1 ISS

I

\
)ITSS GLADYS W.\LIJ :'.\C
A.v.•I. Prof. of Plty.&lt;iral Ed11eatio11

'1 LL DA \ 'II) C. II E:'.\DlmS ON'
• l.•.'11&gt;&lt;' Prof. of Phy.•iral f.'ducalion

Director of Phy.•ica/
and Alhlctics

l~diu-ation

Faculty Not Shown
l\IR. PAllLTS ANSTllA TS
I n.v/ructor in Orr man
l\tfl. PIJILII' Al:'Dl:'.\O
I nslr-1u-lar in E11g/i.•h
MIL llAHOLD 13THC1') 1.\YEH
hi.•lruclor i11 ll11.vine1t.• /~11/er pri.•c
;\lHS. Rl! ET.\ CAll'DfE LL
A s.vl. I n.vtrucfor iu Chemistry
:\llL :\1ARIO Di CESA IU:
/n.vtruclor in l~11gli.&lt;h
:\1H. LEO:'.\ .\IW KASDEN '
hMln1clor i11 .l 11thro11&lt;Jlogy
;\IH. DONALD O'B ll!EN
I 11.vlruclor in Physical Edtu-alion
Dfl. WILLI A. l 'SC IIALD
.t...•t. Prof. of French, German

�-,

2

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Jui .._.._..,_ - -

~VtA&lt;~lil ~
1.A-1 'v' JA

l

�.Jim Iliggins, Bob Dnlryrnplc, Arnie Levin&lt;', D cnny Bell, Dick R ogers, S&lt;'th Koch, Dick R arn811y, .Tark
Werthrnnn, Denny ~&lt;'wnhnm, Dick IJolowski, Pat ~! orga n, .Jim lhvis, D r. llohcrson.

President
Vice-PrcsidC'11 t
Treasurer
Corr. Secretary
H.ee. Secretary
Chaplain
Advisor

Jim Higgins
B.obcrt Furlong
H.on Ilulnick
Pat :\forgan
llon ~Ionteperto
Dick Ramsay
Ir. Alexander

President Jim Higgins

Adelphi
46

W hat would mother say?

�Dr. Alexander, Steve Baker, Hob Furlonl(, Bob Grillis, Fred Shaw, Wink Orcutt, Ken 1Uwp11port, Lnrry
K lein, Gnry Cohen, Les Mattis, Ron Jlulni&lt;'k, Lonny Malletu1, Sal Spano.

Bdon• tlw srason????

I 'm just your type, hig boy!

47

\l:iin Street, C. S . .\ .

�Ralph Col&lt;lberg, Wall :\lcCar lhy. RO\\" 'l: Don
ROW 1: Tom !lull, Don Clow, Bob Lory, Lew Criflis,
n, :\I ikc :\1arshall, Frank S111ith, George
Shulma
.\rnic
,
ruburu
'
l
Lou
(;oJdslcin, :\l11ll \foravo nsky,
Knapp , To111 :\lrDon ough, \\"t•s Slrnngn rn, ,Jim
George, .Joe Lnmphl'r&lt;', Bob Connolly. RO\\" :3: Boh
Crosset, Pd&lt;•r Iloberm an. ROW 5: Dcmrtr is
Tom
o,
Spodar
.John
Rynn, Joe O'Slwa. ROW 4: Eel Putnam ,
Chcrronc, Dit'k Sinicki, Dick Schwar tz, 'frd G11y.

Ralph Goldb erg
Wal l&lt;'r :\IcCa rlhy
Don Clow
Bob Lory
Larry Olds
Mr. Newc omb
:\Ir. T:schald

Presid ent
\'ice-Presi&lt;len t
Treas urer
Secre tary
Histo rian
Advis ors

Preside nt Ralph Goldberg

48

�Baccacia

Churchill rides again!

Togethl'rncSll !

Orgy at large!

But I am 18!
In high spirits.

49

�Cassandrans

ROW l: Ronnie Boolh, Frnn Parker, June Pendergast, C'harloltc Getz. ROW :l: Judy Gillette, Meg Henningson, :\'oel Wisc, Susan La Paugh, Delly Frank, Edie Eli, Susan Dnglionr, :\lnry Ann Cerubal,ki.

Jane Pendergast
President
:\Iargarct Henningson
\'ice-President
Ilonnie Booth
Corr. Secretary
Julie Ann Travis
Hee. Sccrcuu~'
Edie Eli
Sergeant at Arms
~Irs. Berman, :\Irs. Gruber
Ach·isors

Jane Penderl(ast, President

50

�A couple of C'Ool chicks .. .

Lowrly ...

•\ II l he,;c ,·it;unins!

�Chuck Ford
Preside nt
.\I Emmolo
\'ice-Prc&gt;sidcn t
bridge
'.\lc('am
.John
Treasurc&gt;r
on
.\Idlah
.Jim
C'orr. Sccr&lt;'lary
.\lycrs
lkrnic
Rec. &amp;crc&gt;lary
Drs. Van Riper, Gruber
Advisor s

Al Emmolo, Charlt•s .Ford,
ROW 1: lkn St•lig, .forry Ill'nowitz. RO\\' 2: :\{nr&lt;' Ungar, Jim Mc Mahon,
Dr. \ '11 11 llipcr, .Jim Shear.
:\Iartin,
Edward
l'pbin,
arry
H
ROWS:
.
.\ndcr,on
\Yilliam
ridgc,
.John :\lcCumh

�Dionysian
Society

.\ h,

11111

dwric!

llup, two, thn·1., four!

Pr&lt;'sidcnt Chuck Ford

Staff of lifc.

58

Oionysi11ns, nil lo thc1· ...

�ROW 1: Robert K ostelnick, P aul ~opchak, .\I Smith. ROW ~: J ohn Kamunsk~', Hcrh Park&lt;'r, Claude
\Yilson, T om Xestor, For&lt;'st Grccnslnde. HOW 3: Dr. Chalmers, Russ Broci, D on Cox, .John Smith, Don
Hus~ell, Pt•ter Printz, Dc1111 Porter. Dkk F&lt;&gt;rris, .Jim Condon, D:ffid Currie.

Pr('stdt•nt C'lnude Wilson

President
Claude Wilson
\'icc-Presiden t
Herb Parker
Treasurer
Tom Nestor
Forest Grecnslade
Secretary
John .Kaminsky
Sergeant al .\rms
Dr. Chalmers, :\Ir. Hadlock
.\dvisors

�Golittrds

Goliards' hideaway.

Oamn ticks!

'ext . .. ?

Tho 'l'hweet.

... old gang of ours ...

55

�ITK

Burp!

1 lo\"C my c-ou!(h lll&lt;"dicine.

:\fount Olympus.

56
A tonsl lo Ill'rl and I larry.

�IR II
In -I
In -I
111 -I

.~ .I
,Q II

PrcsidcnL
YiC"c-Prcsidcn t
Secrc tary-Trcasu rcr

Robcrl Olson
Richard Trow
II..\.dclslein

Pr('sid('nl Boh Olson
TOP ROW: Rill Sw&lt;'cny, Doug Wic·ks, Frank \'iuC'i, Bob Olson. !WW i: lla rn•y \ddlcslic11, Norm
Rosl'nhnum, Ri&lt;'k Trow. ncrrro~l RO\\': ,Jerry Sinnamon, Phil \\'nslihurn, Dit·k Wilkt'-

57

�HOW 1: D11n· St•gnl, :\like Gordon, Boh Dikeman , :\Tikc Kaplan, .Joel Brdan, .\ I \\'olkow,ki, Larry
ltuslH'r, .\l vin C'ununins. ROW 'l: (;t•orge Dt•lnrnar, Sonny Glrn~on, Lurry Bl'all, Don lfosnic-k.

~li ke

Kaplan
.Joel Brctan
Bob Dikeman
Larry Rusher
~like Gordon
Joel Lutwin

President
Vice-Preside nt
Rec. Sccrcl:try
Corr. Sccrelar~·
Treasurer
ScrgMnt At Arms

Prt•,idt·nl 'l ik&lt;• Kaplan

Odeans
58

�.Vol in publi(•!

WOMEN

Kitchy, kikhy, koo n la Dnrhndos

OOPS!

\ lilt It· inor&lt;' nitrn .. poof, :-;111t 1·r!
'\ot now, hom',V ...

.59

�,,

Slwila \\'agmnn. "\1111cy l.c Yine,
Xaclyn A"1•11cl, .Joann&lt;• Stoll &lt;&gt;r, Br!'ndn .\ C'kcrman, .To~·ce SanclN,,

, .Joan Brush, Lois l'umpn
El&lt;•nnor Dorkin. Linda Lind, .fo,\'&lt;'l' Lyn&lt;'h, .fudy P&lt;•s-in, Chri, 'chrumph

Pandorans

Look who' lndh•d!

Sl11111111i11g ...

60

�Ellen Furl'&lt;li, Sally Kincaide, \l aun•en \Yikox, \forianrw J,(•,ko, Cathy Fruhnuf, Duron)• Hios, Dorothy
.\ lff.
Danforth, \lnry Ellt'n \Yasham'r, Ellie .\ltmun, \larcia 'l\•xlt•r, llohlnt• Dr~···r, Patrit·i11 Bihr, \l ary

Presidl'nl

,\ {nr,Y

.\l ff
~l11t&lt;'r,

~lary .\lff
.Jo,n·t• Sanders
Elli&lt;.&gt; .\ltman
Pal Ilihr
Chris SC'hmmph
Joan Bru;;h
'\Tarcia T cxlcr

Prcsiclcn L
Yice-Prcsicll'n t
Hee. Sccrelar,\·
Corr. Seerdar~·
Trcasur&lt;.&gt;r
Historian
Scrg('ant al .\rms

Lean· off till' Lowc11lmi11.

61

Oh, Really?

go homt•!

�sos

\l ..rry

111:111

nud !ri(•ml

11 ' umhn•lln.
Chipmunk w·' 111 l -' I.

Chance?llor
\'ice-Chanedlo
Chanedlor of t~

lC

Scribe
Equerry

Re turn

or the Nat in•.

SteYcn Brieger
.\I Schneider
l'
&lt;..xchequer
Jim Carlson
SLevc YanDusen
Dennis Kelly

�C'han&lt;·l·llor Stl'Vl' Bricgt&gt;r

-

-..

ROW 1: .\I S(')11l('idN, StL•vl' Bm•l(t•r, S t1•n• \ ·111 l&gt;1M·11, .Jun Carlson. HO\\ t: .\I Yo111111, l'nul Kir11t111s1'.
:.fcl Schw:1rlz, lhrley E'". Jl()\\ :$: Hon (:lu z(•r, Lou lknllt•rs, Kt·n \lhitulrr, \11•1 '1 11 l za llO\\ ~·
Dave :\fcConndl. llul Escl1wc·g&lt;» Tom Ki rk.

63

�ThaliCtns

Pn.•sidenl Shirlt•y ::&gt;hot well

FnOVI' llO\\' · Shirl1·y Sholwt·ll, .knn llussl•ll, \l nry l.011 .\ clams, .Judy Gratton, ::\1ary .\nn Lesko.
n .\ C K HOW: Jktsy Hoss, \n ndtc \'oclkil'. 11uherla \\'11r1wr, Shirl,·y D,•,lt&gt;r, Dt·vcrly Hickey.

�Pn·sidc·nt
Yi&lt;"e-Pr&lt;':-;id&lt;'n t
Treasu n·r
S&lt;'crdar,\'
S&lt;'rgeanl at .\rms
.\ dvisor

Thnlian \fosquera d&lt;', 195!1

65

Shirlc·y Shol wdl
lkvc·rl~· ll ick&lt;'y
Hobert a \\ arn&lt;'r
.Judy Grat Lon
Shirley lkxlc·r
:\lrs..\lcxand t•r

��Organizations

�llO\Y 1: .\'adyu Aswud, t'ice-1,re.~idnit; Halph Spirwlli, president; \Yt&gt;s Shanwnw, rice-president pro temp; .\ I Schrwickr,
lrea.mrt'r. HO\\'~ : .\rnit• l.&lt;·,·in&lt;'. Jr. member at large; Hon Go lclild1, f'r. member al large; .\ I l;milh, 8oph. member al large;
Judy Gilll'lll', ucrl'lary. HO\\' 3: Pal \l orgnn, Soph. member at large; Denny :\ewnham, adt'Q{'ale; Gent• [,o,•elace, Sr. member al large.

USG

The C n ited Student 0o1'enunml of Jlarpur Collegc
p rovidcs Lhc ma.chin&lt;'l',Y for responsible and cffcdive organi:t.ation and control of student affairs. Togelh('r wilh
JS('(' and lhe Director of S t udent Aclivilies, CSG
serves as lhc ncn·c ccnll'r and &lt;·oordinator of all on
earnpus and off c-ampus a&lt;'li\·itie;, such as com·ocations,
beer blasls and olhN .similar (•n·nts.
T he 1959-60 school year found
l'SG involved in key issues which
rC'Acc:Lcd lhc lransi Lion fro m Endicot l lo \'cslal and the admin isstralive p roblems and cleci.sions
which arc allachE'cl lh&lt;'r&lt;'l&lt;&gt;..\ cling lo their fullcsl capa&lt;·ity with
President Spinelli at the helm,
l'SG's rolc was dcarly dcfincd
and su bsNJ UE'nl action b_v l -SG
slrcnglhcned its position as a decision making and st udenl inlercsl oricnlalcd group.

�Class Officers
Few sludenls can deny that the 1959 class cl(•Ction!oo \\er&lt;' among the mosl exciting al Ilarpur Colkge. Th&lt;' results were announced by Denn,\· ~ewn­
ham, l'SG .\ clvocate at the Studenl-Facult~·
Dance. Al the right Denny is shown introducing
lh&lt;' four presidents: left Lo right, Denny, Steve
Baker, junior c:lass; .Jackie Werthman, sop homor&lt;'
class, Bob Friedman, freshman class and Gerry
O'Doonncll, S&lt;'nior class.
L&lt;'ading their four levels of high echelon positions, th&lt;'y attempt to establish and maintain class
identities. Annually, the Senior Class Dinner
Dance and W&lt;'ckend just before commencemenl
highlight a ll class activity.

ROW 1: George Delamar, Soph. trea.turer; Patrick Morgnn, Soph. rc1rre.t1mlatire; Arnie U\'inr, Jr. re1rr1.,m1tatirr. RO\\'
2: Ellen Furedi, Soph .•m-retary; ,Jack Wl•rthemnn, 1rre8'1dmt of Soph.; Peter Printz, So11h. l'ice-pre.•idmt; Strw Haker, wesident of Jr.; Uoh Griffis, Jr. t•eep.; ~lary Alff, Jr ..tgl.-al-arms. HOW 8: Bob Friedman, Frosh. pre.•illmt; Hon Golditch,
Frosh. represmtatire; ~Iichacl Coffin, Fro.th. sgl.-al-arm.t; Stew I ..•,·y, Fro.•h. rire-7rresidrnt; lnta \ '11nng1•li.-,, Fro.•h. Ul'relary;
Pclrr Lawncr, Frosh. re7rresentati1•e.

�Inter Social Club Council

ISCC Suzanm• La Paugh, lrea.wrer; .Jos&lt;&gt;ph O'Sh('ll, :'llnry Lou .\dnms, Judith Gratlon, Hoh('rl Connolly,
chmrma11; Carl Ernstrom, Colin :'Ile Kirdy, Jerry Beno" itz.

~lnrc

Inter-Social C'lub Counl'il has annua lly bc•en the provider of Ilarpur traditions
such as the Jazz ConC'crl, the social C'alendar and the newly-revived Dinner-Dance.
Xow, in the lighl of a growi ng student body and the implications of social dub expansion, l.S.C.C. has a new concern. They have propos&lt;'d a re-evaluation of social
club mC'mbcrship policies including the admillance of new socia l clubs lo the fo ld .
.\II of tlH'sc concerns have multiplied the importance of I.S.C.C. as a co-ordinating
body which must reconcile the ever-prC'senl problems involved in rnC'n's and women's
club exislC'nce .
.\n J.S.C.('. Forum has been proposed lo acquaint new and unaffiliated students
with the l.S.C.C. and with social dubs themselves. In this manner, I.S.C'.C. itself
gains ncc·ess to the student body for more than their C'Ustomar.v representative mc·ctings. In turn, the strength of this body can be C'nhanced by an informed student
bo&lt;ly and an experienced co-ordinating group of soeinl club workNs.

70

Ungar,

�Dragon Society
The Dragon Society of Ilarpur
College is established on the idea
of recognizing outstanding extracurricula r participation. Its membership requires a minimum average of 1.25 and accumulation of
credits under a special point system. Al the end of the fall 1959
semester the Dragons included
Jerry l3enowitz, Bill Coons, Jim
Higgin s, Steve Kuccra,Ron
Montaperto, Al Schneider and
Dennis Kops.

Whos Who

Each year Ilarpur College elects a number of ils lop seniors for
election lo Who's Who .\mong Students in .\merican l'nivC'rsilies and
Colleges. These students have maintain&lt;'d an average of al IC&gt;asl 1.5
and ha\'e made intensi\'c academic and extracurricular contributions
lo the college. Ilarpur's candidates for Who's \\'ho arc selected for
this honor by a student-faculty committee acting on behalf of Who's
Who.

WHO'S WHO- ROW 1: Fran lla nks, J an&lt;&gt; Pcnd!'rl(ast, Drusilla DcGroal, Ila Solomon. HOW !l: Skvc Kucera, l)('nnis Kops, Ronald l\fontaperto, Skip (;rccnblnt, Claud&lt;' Wilson, Al Schneider.

�clarendon

CL.\HE:\DO:'\ Louis(• Lnt(•incr, J. ,). Frcl'mnn, Knrl'll \rosscn,
.\l ikt&gt; Blini&lt;'k, .\Llrilyn Kuker, Baron .\. Plotnik, Nlilor-in-chicf.

�qtt, N. Y.
Y o rk a t Endic
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Harpur College

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as;;i st ed pa rt no qn of S tu de nt s' a ne w na ti on fo r
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COLONIAL N
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ROW

'°;""""'

K ;: :

�PRI LI Ml'.\r '\RY
I.\ 't Ol T HI:I f
CHOOL

,

..

DF"C RIPTJO\;

'::oloni.

lf 4'

COl.0:-\JST llO\\' 1: .\ ncly J...nr pas, .J..rry l11&gt;nowitz. :\la ry Al ff.
.Jam• Furi&lt;'. :\larilyn Kuk1•r, .Judy F1·nsl!-r, f,n n·n Crossen. llOW ~:
lla rv&lt;'y Paig&lt;', St!'\'&lt;' f.('''Y• Sh!'ldu11 Edison, .Jatwl Frns!'r, Jim :\lc:\laho11.

c.

L"

vy

• elrio:ri

K:li..~o

�Harpur
jazz

Society

.JAZZ SOCIETY HO\\' I: .\111 11 Tnrl\·nhaum ..Jod :\lofsenson, ll11 ro11 Plotn ik , (; c•orgc• J),•la111ar. HO\\'
2: L&lt;&gt;s ::\l altis, trcc1.,1acr; Li 11d11 Pi;wr, 1..:a rl'11 Crossen, srrre/a ry; ll oberl Olso11, Dt•nny ll&lt;-11 , Boh Vri,•dmnn, K . G. Ka~bt•rg, a1h&gt;isor; J lowi&lt;• F ox, Arnit· L&lt;·,·i11c, ,}. J . Frt'&lt;'ll1111l, Stt•v•· Brit•gt•r, J1""'ido1 /; Ellt•n
Decker , da11cc coordi11alor.

COLO:\ I.\ I. PL.\ YEH S HO\\" 1: Stcplmnit• .\ ll&lt;'n ., Ca milla :\l nc· LA'&lt;&gt;&lt;I, prt·s1dml . HO\\" ~: ll &lt;'llC&lt;' Bnsh,
Ed \l art i11, Hic·hard Krois.,, treasurer: Cha rlt•• Ford , .&lt;t"crdary; Calht•rin&lt;' Fruhnuf*. *appre11life,,.

Colonial
Players

�STPDE.'.\ T ('(}l T'.\"SE LOl! S llO\\' l : llid1i(• Sd1wnr lz, .\ I Schnr iclcr. HO\\' 't: Claude \\'ilson, \\'('s Shangraw, ,Judy
c: ratton. :\l arcia Sm it h. 11 0 \\' 3: .J o~·&lt;·(' Ly11d1, Hon ~l ontapcrlo, ( ;c·m· Lon•lac-t', .Jt-rry Hcnowit1, l k nny Kops.

Student Counselors
STPD E.'.\T J UJ)l('L\L HE \'IE\\' BO.\ HD
l.'ngur, ~ l arcio Sm ith.

Student ]ud1c1al
Review Board

Hon :\lonta pcrto, J oan Glukau r, J)(•1111y Kops, l\lar&lt;'

�Gallery Committee
J) E lt \ TE C'TX B

(;.\ L LERY CO:'IL\ Tl'ivl'EE Jin Solomon, rhairma11; l\ln us llohln111n, C'lmrb Eldred,
trrmmrcr; Linda D unning, 8uz:111nc Ln Paugh, ~rcrdar11.

Ed Saslow, Ronald Golditrh, Pnt M orgnn, Dit·k Kroiss, \'icki ::\'ewruan.

Debate Club

�H IDI :-&lt;C; (' Ll ' B HOW l: 11on Hulnick and Louist• Grossman, Rid1ard Trow and Sue Friedland. ROW 'i!: :\kt.a VonBorsll'i, Jmly Pt"s~in, Sut' Kornblum, Berl Bluslcin, Dick \\'ilkt' RO W ~: Sl&lt;'VC Rappel, Cathy Codispoti, Karen Crnyson,
Andy Kar pns.
YOU:\G DE.MOCRAT A~D YOU. (~ llEPUBLI CA ):
Kops, Ralph Spinelli.

Riding Club
Young Democrat and
Young Republican
78

Dennis

�German

Club

MR.
, Cl

HU

GERMA~ CLVll- ROW 1: C'atherin&lt;' Shnft•r, C'olin ~l cKirdy, presidn1/; R uth Leach, Lisa PoliS&lt;·huk,
Lor('ll.n Tallman. ROW 2: Dr. Paul Weigand, adrisor; .J nru('S W11rnl'r, Pell'r Ilohl'rman, William \ 'oclklc.

Spanish

Club

SPA XISII CLuil F llO:"\T ROW: ll cnry Stnrk, J('ancttr Lee Allen, Su(' Fril'dlancl, ~l nrinm Hauer,
Pat Tnr.&lt;a. RO\\" 2: llid111rd William \\"all11cc, J ose L. Gutinrcz, I~~rry SnmuC'k

JH C

!RC

.Jon l annitti, l•'n•d Shaw, Dt•nuy Bdl, Joe O'Shc·a, Bob l&lt;'ralarc·ungdo, Les :\1at ti•.

�Jewish Fellowship

Newman Club

llOW 1: Erwin Elkin, ::\'ormnn Stnrlcr. ROW~: .frrrold Bt•nowitz, Sheldon Edison, ::'llnrilyn Kukl'r, .~erre­
tciry; Louis(• Grossman, :\nncy Sax, E&lt;l SasJO\,, Skw Hnppl'l, president; ~fikc Blinick. HOW 3: Hen
S&lt;·lig, Sue Friedland, Mike Knplnn, Jo,,) Bretnn.

HOW 1: Bunny llios, Jim Mc~ lnhon, Bob H olsapple, Kart'n ~k Cnulcy, .John Spndnro, lluth Lcn&lt;'h,
Don Sievert. HOW ~: Lee Jo1w~, Kathy ITickcy, Jose L. Guli&lt;'rrt'z, Pat T11rz11, Ellen Eppolito, Pat 1\1 organ, ~fury Jo llitting&lt;•r, Boh (;riflis, Jim Rynn.

�Protestant Fellowship
K 11!'('11

·
· '-:',...""'.) \\"t\l'.'.suian.
Ferri ~. Dll\I(
.· I II ultlt•son, pre.¥idcnt·' }-...,.,.,.

IVCF

,
!\'CF C'indy .\ ndreast&gt;n, presid;-nt· J)• _.cl
mnr~· P11rist&gt;lln, ·'ecrelary-treas1trer,. -•~lnrgaret
a\ I :\l eeks, b l Griffith, Jlos(•Lann.

PHOT "'
..'S'I' .\:ST
• .FELLO\YSIII
Caroline Pilc her, Larry
P- Gay,
) Jary
t:eCJ&gt;.Ellen

Burm,

&amp;e&lt;"retary-

lrea.nirer;

81

�Pzntopplers

P l ~TOP PL E HS HOW I: Dou Clow. Judy F&lt;'nsler. HO\\' 2: Erwin Et kin, .foseph Lamphere. RO\'\' 3: Robert Connolly,
Joel Kellman, .\ ndrea Karpas. ROW 4: Jim Frandsen, David \ xelrod. ROW 5: David ITuttleston, Dean Porter.

MATH CLCB

Norma Konon, Lee J oni's.

Math
Club

.

]

�Ddnmnr, rcr .••er.;
ALPHA PHI O:\lEGA HO\\' I : Jack Connors, Hcccc l'cn&lt;·e, hi.•11.rian; Norman S pt'clor, Ccorg&lt;'
Tino\\, D n\'id S..·gnl,
.\lien Sehwnrlzhaum, .lllmcs Gct'r, Prl'deri«k Kundt'll. HO\\' ~: Lt'&lt;.' Jom•s, .•gl.-al-arm.•; llt·rhert
8: Dr. Fisd1thal,
treasurer; Alvin Cummings, James Lundgrt•n, Paul Jones,.) .•J. Fret'mnn, Dr. Sdmmnc·ht•r, adri.•nr. RO\\'
E dwin &amp;•gal, Kenadvisor; Dn\'i&lt;l l\Tl'\'ks, (;enc Lovt'lacc, /&gt;resident; ll oherl Jl olsapplt', JoM• Gutit•rn•z, Hola·rl Hopkins,
neth BC'rnslcin, llan·ey Paige, \\'nyne Strong.

A. P. 0. is our serviC'c orguni za.lion.
Th rough conlesls as the l "gly :\Ian a nd
the Snow Queen money is raised for charuly. The.'' also provicic continua l services
for the school by acling as hosts al all the
college funclions.

A Sen·icc Club !!!!!

Alpha Phi
Omega

Penny will bring sonworn· happirwss.

88

�Jazz

Music at Harpur

�85

�Dr. Harry Lincoln conducts the Harpur Madrigal Singers and the Community Symphony Society.

The IIarpur College Chorus and Madrigal Singers in conjunction with members of the Binghamton Symphony Orchestra under the leadership of Dr. Harry Lincoln of the Music Department
reviewed the works of Henry Purcell in a Tercentenary Concert presented in De&lt;'ember as the
first musical event of the year.
The program included the "Overture lo Cioclesian" performed by the string ensemble, excerpts
from "The Tempest or the Enchanted Island" by chorus and soloists and "Pavonne and ChaC'onnc" for three violins and bass. The afternoon's highlight, "The Coronation Anthem," was presente&lt;I by the entire company of choru , organ and strings.
:\fore than 55 students participated in the concert as members of chorus and string ensemble.
:\{embers of the community symphony orchestra performed with the strings. The entire program
was accompanied by piano and organ.
Soloists for the afternoon were sopranos, Jane Davis, and Ida Shute; tenors, James Sullivan,
Leonard Hellenbrand, and Robert Furlong and faculty members ~fr. Wade Savage and Dr.
Kurt Shell, basses. Gerald Benjamin performed on the organ.

86

�Dr. Lincoln, the Harpur College Chorus 11nd the Community Symphony Socirty.

Purcell Tercentenary Concert

87

�\

\

I

I

\l

\~

~

_)

I

I

I

----=-

\

Sports

\

r
'

��Warming Up.

All Set?

They're Off ...

90

�... And Bunning!

.

..

.

._

\Yell Done, 01' Boy ...

Cross-Country
Coach O'Brien has brought our cross-countr y leam
a long way. Through practice and briefing sessions, he
has succeedl•d in dcvelopinK and conditioning lheir
bodies for lhe endurance of such compdilion and bringing lo their attention lhe pride and beauty in good running style.
Whereas our basketball squad has the notorious
repulalion being abk lo pull "lost" games oul of the
bag in the lasl four minutes, the Harriers are known lo
be lhe first ones off al lhe slarl and sometimes even for
the firsl quarter-mil&lt;'; but aft(•r that ...

This year's mud-splatte red cross-countr y team has
what could well develop into a major breakthroug h in
ycl another intercollegial&lt;' field. Cnder the able tutelage
of newcomer Coach Donald O'Brien, lhe Harriers
closed their season with a tally of 3 for 6.
Results could have been even more impressive if
more interest was displayed by the students. Out of the
original twelve l hal came to practice the first week,
only seven remained lo lake full advantage of Ilarpur's
excellent landscaping . The guiding factor was there
all that was needed was the raw talent and desire.
llarpur 28
Ilarpur 17
llarpur 23
Ilarpur 27
llarpur 40
Ilarpur 50

Sellman look first honors
.. . Oswego 27
Sellman a1Hl Hodgcrs finished: dead heal
... l'lica :38
Holmes held seC'ond
... ?\cw Paltz. 32
!lodgers and Scltman lied for third
... Ithaca 28
:\leeks look fifth
.. . Corlland 17
no comment
... Ilamiltou 15

91

�~;:::rds of '59: Left to Righ t: Steve Kucera . . . Athlete of the Year; Bill Voelkle . ..
(
~l ;mprnved Athlete; J;m Dav;, ... Mo't valuable l'laycc; Coad• llen&lt;lmon.

�Basketball
1·c111ld \\1·11
(;ucss \\'lw? \\•,, it's Buh Loomi': Tl1&lt;• "llllt' Boh IA10111is \\hos(' 0111·-handt•r l i11d1t'&lt;I wl111t
nf tlw st•nson.
have lur1wd into a hittl·r ddt•a t ... Vi-Ill, m·..r H. l'.I. Thi,""' our M'&lt;·ond strnight "in
thr hull lo
\\'ith fi\'t' M'&lt;:onds tn go, and I l igi:ins ( 18 points tot.al l IH:ini: i:uur1kd !'lowly, Si111ancllc flippt•d
do" n \!-l-l:J at
lloh "ho &lt;'OnllCC'lt•d from LIU' c·or1wr This ~hot &lt;·limawd a rail,\ by tlw Colonials" ho \\t•rc•
th1• half. Thi· now-ru inous z1&gt;11r-pn·ss i:nve tlwm lh&lt;• dian&lt;'&lt;'.
0

�Is This the Year Harpur Basketball
Ileadli nC's such as this have bC'en following close on thC' ll arpur Colonial's heels
throughou t Lhcir en lire basketball sh'd. flare dimensions, streak, and depth, arc just
a few of the epithets used lo dC'scribe the "new" Colonial learn.
1 used the term neu', because it is a new lC'Clm; it's not a mirage, and it is not a
hand-me-d own pielure from Lhc· past. The term "mirage" was used by .t few "ldtfield" pessimists , when we chalked up our first two wins of the ('urrenl season, lo
slarl off our tall.\' '2-0. As for the hand-me-d own picture, all lhal cxi.sls is a hardluck story of lhc pasl lcn ~·ears. "Sure," someone "ill offer, " Whal about Higgins,
Davi , K ooch, and Kirk? Th&lt;'.v're last year's slock."
Okay, I'll go a long with lhat, bu t llw.v s till an· ncu•. Last year lh&lt;'y we're slars ..\ t
that lime, a star was dC'fincd as anyone capable of generating a minute spark of
spirit in the hearts of lht• spectators ... even for a seeond. This :·car lhe:· ar&lt;' a learn.
Th&lt;' "old timers" work as a learn and win as a team; llH'r&lt;''s your difference!
Then llwre ar&lt;' lhe ''fledgling s" of the .squad. Without a doubt llw.Y must be dassific·d as new. But wail, looking at them in action now, I ean't lell llw diffen·nc·c· between lh&lt;' "old timers" and the "fledglings ". By thc· way, I must mention their
name::.; not that there is anyom• who doC'::.n ' t know them (even th&lt;' pre~s ) . They arc:
Simn n&lt;lle, 8opchak, Gr&lt;'&lt;'nbcrg, Loomis, a nd D olph.

Tom
St1•w h11e1•r11. Tony ])',\ristoth". .Jim lliggi11,, Boh Griffis. Stev.. Baker, Bob l "lric-h, lwn Iloffma11,
hirk •. Jim ])u,i•, Denny llt·lf:rntl, Paul Sopd111k, Bob Loomi.,, '.\lic·ky (;rt•1·nlx•rg, Paul Sirna11dl1-.

�Comes of Age?

:\ow that wc'vc run the learn Lhrough the mill, whal
abo11l the olhcr contributing faC'lors? Take C'oaC'h
Pollard; lic•&lt;·k, I rcall,,· frd ha pp~· for lhc "old tinwr."
;\ow he can grin and not feel sdf-&lt;·01H;C"ious ahoul it.
:'\ow, what about lhc slucl&lt;•nl body? Last yt•a r, I
didn't think we had an,\', judging from th&lt;' turnout al
gamcs and the latcnt spirit absent!~· smolhen•d und er
books. This year, 1"111 happy to c han ge my mind. \\'h at
J haY&lt;' disC'overed, is that there is a .~tude11/ body, a nd it
do&lt;'s l'Xpress its fccling» al tlw ganws.
Jlarpur is definitely going pla&lt;'&lt;'s in the athletic and
sC' holast ic fiC'lds, £or both are neC'd&lt;·d in or&lt;kr to develop
a Lop-notch c·ollcgc.
I am .surc th at our Colonial~ will ne,·C'r again h&lt;•
c·alled ''pushov('rs." \Ye have the ess&lt;•ntial.s for a \\ 111ning lC'am ... and we 1cill hal'e one.
\\·on
69 rtica ... 65
W on
47 RP.I .... 46
Losl
60 Albany ... 65
Losl
52 lJ obarl ... 67
Lost
.59 lI arl wick ... 6!l
V\'on
78 Wilkes ... 69
Losl
66 H a m ii lon ... 91
Lost
73 Gene.sl'O ... 8!l
\Yon
66 Dn·" ... 59
Lost
6.5 :\Iari lime ... 66
Won
68 Alfred ... 65
Losl
62 l ·nion ... 68
Lost
75 rtiC'a ... 77

96

�Golf Team

TOP HOW: Iloh Olsen, T"'n ~estor. SECO XD
HOW: Bill Swc\"ney, 1111d \Yull :\IC'Curthy.

Swimming
is what ( 'oarh St«phano~ hnd lo say about X1•il C11rl1·r
·•i-:xc&lt;'ll«nt ... the l&gt;t'sl l 'w· st•e11 iu lh1• an·n ... This
95 form points nhow I h&lt;' 11&lt;·11n•sl oppo rwnt .
artn l larpur \ me&lt;•l with St. Ilona. I I i~ s('ort• w11s

�Bot luwr, Co:u·h St1•TOP HOW: \like L&lt;.'ichtli111-(, Pnul Klnnwr, Boh llcnn•ti1-t. \lurly Throm', \'\'ally
Saul. K\ EEi.I:\(;·
\like
\lutlt•ll,
fiob
Sdshy,
Ron
Buhll'r,
phnnos. )IlDDLE ROW: Carl lfecht, .\I
Brown.
Bruce
)1ncEwa11,
fiarry
A11ronso11,
.Jon

The swimmin g team might well lw call &lt;•d thC' "baby" of Ilarpur's
sports departme nt. This is the first year which WC' have participa ted
in intercoll&lt;•giate meC'ls, and the learn has eomC' a long long way. \Ye
slartC'd with nothing: no expcriene (', no tradition . :\ow we have a predominan tly Frosh team which is as dosC'-knit a group as one can find.
ation,
The~· have spirit ... this is an understa tement: lhe dekrmin
us.
tremendo
just
is
group
this
by
exhibit&lt;.'d
stamina
and
,
potential
.'
c·onfidcnc&lt;
the
all
has
s
St&lt;.'phano
Coach
beat.
be
can't
The coaching
thrm
devdop
and
train
lo
duties
his
beyond
far
g&lt;&gt;e!:&gt;
in his boys and
lo th&lt;.' utmost. Ik ean rasily be called a model coaeh without e"\aggeration. Still more members arc n&lt;.'eded. Exp&lt;•rience is an ess&lt;.'nlial.
The majority an' noL Cami liar with C"ollegiate compel i lion, and some
hav&lt;.' ne,·er competed hefor&lt;.'. :\ext year w&lt;.' ar&lt;.' looking forward lo a
bigger, not better, just morr expNi(•n ccd tram.
97

�Th&lt;' Clwerleadin g Squad is eompri s&lt;'d of &lt;'ighl hard working c·o-eds
whose' prime rl'spon:-.ibility is lo instill spirit and enthusia,,m al Lhe
ga11w:, .. \ !t hough th&lt;' spedalor parlieipalion c·ould lw grackd a jmt
about par, ll1&lt;'rl' is a grl'al d!'a l of room for imprOV&lt;'llH'lll. Pep rallies
displaying mueh mon' l'nlhu-,i&lt;hliC' ,\·c•lling C'ould bl' a possible· ans\\('r
t o this problem n&lt;'xl year. ,\ !though \\l' did 11ol gel lo any away games
thi s yC'ar, WC' look forward lo a lime when this will he possible. If suffi&lt;'ienl spirit is shown, a spedalor bus to away game's might also tum
into a n·ality. l 'nder llH' supervision of :\l iss Godfrt',\', and ,Joyee
Sandc·rs, our head dwerleackr, we practice wc·ekl,\·, hoping for crowd
support. \ Ye hope' for a more' spiril&lt;'cl aucliC'llC'e nC'xl ~·car lo help us
spur our boy.s on lo an C'V&lt;'ll hC'ller season. "('rnne 011 l l arpur," let's
giv&lt;' thC' learn lhe support Llwy descrvC'.
The Cheerleader.~

LET'S GO, I larpur . .

\\1•11, BPI ?

Cheering

ST,\:\'l)J:\G : :\larilyn ,\ k lwr, Shl'ila Wa l-(111:111, .Jun Fras1•r, Kulhy Fruhauf. K:-\EEJ,I:\'(; : Limla Pi ~1·r, :\'orma Ko11011, .Joy&lt;'&lt;' Snncl1•rs, \l nr~· Lou Formit'dli.

98

�Again this year liH'r&lt;' was a livel,v battle• among lhC' i-oC'ial dubs in
lhcir firsl semester or basket hall pla~-. .\Cler four \\el'h it appean·d as
iC ther&lt;' was lo he a hard fight for lhc #1 position. Those involn~d \l'c•rc
Goliards, Indies, .\delphi , and, of course, SOS. The Indies lefl the
part~ C'arly and, for somC' strange· reason, with no regrets. Due lo the
usual glaring la&lt;'k of IC'am spirit , their l'hances al lh&lt;' till&lt;' amounl&lt;'d
lo nil. Goliards \l'&lt;'rc eliminated afl('r lro111wing Dions. Tlwy sti ll had
a eharlC'e for seC'ond slot but C'mildn'l seem lo cliC'k . . \delphi, lhC' surprise l c·am of tlw season, had a bad start but improved with evC'r~·
game played. This was I h&lt;' team with spirit! Their suC'cess story was a
combi11ation of picks, sc•rec•ns, and height. SOS, however, was ,-i&lt;'lor,v
bound from I he slarl, having both players and skill. llaC'accia, IT K,
APO, and Dions play&lt;'d their usual style of ball. The Dions found the
going a lit tle too rough and f&lt;'ll h,,. the way. The',\' still k&lt;'pl their undisputed titlf' of "hasemrnt kcq&gt;cr ·" wilhoul having lo fight for it.

sos . . .......... ... 7-0
Adelphi . .... . .. ...... 5 -2
Indies ....... .. .... . . . 5-2
Goliards . . . . . . . . . . . 4-3
ITK ...... . ...... .. . 3-4
3-4
Bacaccia . . . . . . . . .
APO . . . ......... . 1-6
Dions .. ......... . . . . 0-7

Intramurals
99

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-,

u.{
~

. Sen tors

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ROBE llT W..\D.\ :\lS
Endicoll, X. Y.

Geology
Dean's List: GeolO!(Y Cluh.

llE:\' EE BASii
Rocky Point, L. I.

llttma11ities -So&lt;"wlogy
Dean's List I, ':l, S, i; Clarendon; Colonial
Players: Deril'., D1."«'iple, I/ edda Cabler,
Poetry Proscenium; ChortL\; P hil. Club .

.JE lllWLD BE'\OWITZ
Franklin Squurc, '\. Y.

·-

S11(·iology

lh-1111 "s J.i,l ~: l&gt;rn!(&lt;lll ScX'idy: Dionysian, n•&lt;·. se(·.; Colonml '\(''"• hus. 111~r.;
Colonist. ed .. Sturlcnl .\ ch·.: .Jr. Cln"
Pn•s.

STEYE'\ \l. Bill E&lt; a :n
ll ollis, '\. Y.
l'olitii-11/ Srimcr
SOS &lt;"hnn.: ll nrpur .Jazz So&lt;"i&lt;'ly: .)('wish
F&lt;·llow~hip; S il(); l nl rn111urnls; ltcsiclence
ll nll ,Jucli&lt;'iary: Or!(nnizations Cornmiltee.

�JOAX 0 . BRL'Sll
Sidney, :'\ . Y.

Chemistry
Pirndoran, vie&lt;' pr&lt;'s., hist.; Ch&lt;'m. Club;
Dean's List.

DONALD CLO\\'
Binithamlon, X. Y.
Arro1mling

Pinlopplers ; Bac-C'acia.

WILLl.UI IUCII \BD COO:\'S
l'~nd i rolt, :'\. Y.
JI 11ma111tie., Jf i.~tory
D !'a11's List; Colonial Xt'"s; ed . C'h1n•11do11; Yar~i l y Tt•1111is; Dragon Society;
Plmlnnx, puh. rel. c-omrn ; llacenrin.

BEITY LOU COWAN
llinghamlo n, . Y .
.If athematics
Pandorans ; Math Club ; Pinloppler s, sec.

DO'\ALD WILJ.JA~f COX
Endicott, X. Y.
Phyrics
Goliards.

103

�TIJO:\l.\S :'IL &lt;THHY
Johnson City, ~ . Y.
Busine,,,, •ldmini,,tration
HaC'carin. sec., hist.

.JOIJ!\'. T. D .\LY
Port Jcn·is, X. Y.
.lfathematic.,
D('1111's List 8; Muth Club; l\'('wman Club.

DRCSILLA A. J&gt;t-(;llOAT
Tomkins C'o,·e, :\. Y.

/Jiology
Dean's L1sl 1, 2, 8, 1: Honor Roll 1, 2, 8,
4: Clarl'ndon, ed.; Coloni11J :\cws; Who's
\\'ho.

,JOSEPTITNE C. DOWNEY
Endwell, N. Y.
Soriolngy
Denn's List; Honor Roll; divisionnl seC'.,
Science and :\-lathcmatics.

104

�-CITARLES J. ELDHED
Bi11ghnmlon , X . Y.
Art
D enn 'o List; Clarendon; Colonial Players;
Cnllery Committee.

IHAXE D .\XH:LS E\'.\ XS
Bi nghamton, X. '\ .
llumanitir.~

l n l ram ura I Sports

l\.L\JUA '\'\ FISCJJL EH
(;arclinl'r, '\ Y.
(;maal /,ilaat11rt
Coloninl Players; Phil.
P1 ogram.

IWBEHT 1\1. FHATARCA XGELO
Big Flats, N . Y .

Political Science
l 'SG, mcmhcr-at-l arge; ISCC' !l, 4; Adelphi, rec" SN'., vie&lt;.' pres.; Debate Club;

JHC.

JAY L.\llllY GEllSJll3EH G
Nl.'w York, X Y.
Ge.ology
JTK, vic-e pres ; Ccology Club; .J&lt;•wish
FC'llowship; Tntramura ls; Foolbn ll , Softball, llnskl.'tbnll.

Club; H onors

�....
,-.

•

LOIS C:ERSll:\L\ X
Vestal, N. Y.
C'hemi.,lry

Dean's List; Chem Club.

HOBEHT (;. GIAXXL'Z Zl
\'est.al, ~. Y.
Biology

Biology Club

.g
•

~

,.....

.

...

JrDITll :\1. GTLLE'IT E
Endi&lt;:'ott, :\. Y .
• Ir/
l'SC;, corr. &gt;&lt;'c., rec. se&lt;·.; ISCC; Clarendon, art ed.; Cassan&lt;lrnns, corr. sec., pres.;
Gallery Corum., sec., treas .

•i

llO:\'.\LD STA:'\LEY GL.\ ZER
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Sociology

lSCC; SOS, scribe; Fl'('nch Club; JC'wish

"

0

.

0

"..

,...

.
c

106

Fellowship ; Intt•rmurals: lfasketball, Sort.ball, 'F ootball; Varsity Basketball .

�ALLmwr DOUGLAS GLOVER
Star rucca, Pa.

Geology
Geology Club, vic·c prrs.; Tnlrnmurals:
Softball, Pinlopplers.

IL\LPII COLD BEll(;
::\\'\\ York, '\. Y.

F:eo11nmics
ISCC, S&lt;'&lt;'.-lrcas.; B11cca&lt;"i11, pres., vice
pr\'s.: Colo11i11l X\•ws; l 'gl~ \ Inn C'ont\•,tanl; IRC; Jl'wish l·'pllow:;hip.

.Jl'J)JTll E. CH.\ 'J"l'O".'\
\uburn, '\ Y.
ll11.•mc.•.• At/111mi.,/r(l/w11
Thulian: JS('C, st'&lt;'.; ('oloninl '\c•ws, hus.
man ; Chorus; Stud1·nt CoutM·lor: \ldhodist Stud1•11t F&lt;'llcl\\ship.
SIDXEY L. GHEE:'\B L.\1vl'
Ogdl'nsburg, i\. Y.

Political 8rie11ce
Stud\'nl Court Chief .Ju&gt;li&lt;-&lt;'; Studl'nt \dvisor; Colonial ~l·ws; Sil (); IR(', pres.;
Slil\·ic Club, S('('.; .\PO, \'ic&lt;' pres., pr&lt;'s.

ITOW.\lm B. (.HEE:\" \LI)
Xc•w York,\ . Y.

Eco1wmic.•
lh·an 's List

107

�......
..
I

LE WI!'&gt; G IUF J&lt;'I S
Bingh11111ton, ~. Y .

4cco1111li11g
Haccnrin, treas.: Dean\ J,i,t 1: P inlopp lers.

Fll.\XC'ES F E IUllEll I L\ ;\ KS
Bi ngham ton, X. Y .

ll11ma11ilie.•
Dean'~ Lilil I , ~. 8, ~ : \\"ho's \\ ho; S HO;
Col&lt;wial 1'&lt;'" s; Debate: P:inclon111,; ~ lu­
!knl Court: ll umanil il•s H onor' Canel.

LCT TXDA L. l!ATZ
J ohnson Cit y, "\ . Y .
Sodofogy
Pnnclorans: Colonial P layl't.'i; ~pa n ish
(')uh.

hAHJ. IIEL:\r
Nine,·ah, :-\. Y .
Clirmi.~l ry

D ean's J,isl

108

�JA:\rnS \:\llmOSE TIIGGI:\'S
Binghamton, K. Y .

.Vathrmat fr,,

l 'SG, lr&lt;•as.; Soph. pres.; .\d(')phi, pres.,
rec. M'C'.; Dragon Societ~·; Bashtball
Plnyer of Year; King of Hcnrls.

SOLO:\' BEHXA IW llOLSTEli\
:-.&lt;cw York, :\.

-

-,-

Y.

P.•ychology
lkan's Li,l 8, I; llonor Holl S, I ;. tudenl
Counselor, ,)!'wi~h F1·llowship; Phil. Cluh.

Tl!0:\1 \ S \HTlll.H HULL
llinglunnlon, '\. '\ .

fl11.•i11e.Y,•
l&gt;&lt;•nn's I .isl 'l; l"SG, Sr. rnc111.-&gt;1t-larg&lt;•:
BaceaC'in; IHC; So&lt;·l&lt;'ty for th( .\d\':tll&lt;"&lt;'·
rn&lt;•nl of :\l nru1ge111&lt;·nt.

NC ll..\ O ,J. KA:\AA:\'
llt•irut, Lebanon

Geography
Pinlopplers.

ROBERT LA Wlff'\C'E K'\.\PP
Plcasant,·illc, :\'. Y.

Soriolog.11
BaccaC'ia; ProlrstJ1nt Ft'llow,hip; Intramurals; :\Jt&gt;thoclist Student .\d\'isor.

109

�...
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II

WILLI \\I K0:\1.\XEC' h:Y
.\uhurn, '\. Y.
('hem 1.•lr11
Varsity Baskdball.

DE:\:\IS 11n;11 KOPS
Brooklyn. '\. Y.
l'olilical .'k1mce
.J r .• Sr. C'lass lrt•ns.; Ad(•lphi, cor. St'C'.,
(r('as.; Dragon Sot•.; Who's \\'ho; Stud,•nt

Counselor; I HC; 1ntramurnb.

HlCll.\l!D JI. KHO!SS
Binghamton , :\. Y .
.If allu·nwlic.t
Colonial Playns; Dcbnll' Cl ub ; Ccrman
(']uh; Outing Club.

110

STEPJIE:\ Fll.\:\CIS Kl TEHA
llinghamton, ~- Y.
/'rr-mcdiral
Fr., Soph., Sr. sgl.-nl-arrns; .\ dc lphi, ('Or.
S&lt;'('., C'lrnplain; D rugon Sod&lt;·ly; \\'ho's
\\'ho; ".\thlt'lc of the Y&lt;·ar," '58-'5!J.

�THmL\S n . L.\XXO: \
llinghnml on, ~. Y .

/Ju.•i11es.•
Ilacc·aein.

PlllLJP LE .'.\IASU HJEll
llinghaml on, X. Y.

El'C;E:\'1·: \. LO\' EL.\ CE
Trum:1ns hurg, X. 'i·.
l'.~!lrholog!I

J&gt;c•nn's List I, \I, ~I; Honor Holl I, 'l, ~l; .Jr.
dass \'C'C'p; l 'S(; Sr. 'lc-111.-at-Lar!(l'; ,\PO
pres., \'c~p., '&lt;'l'
C.\~rILL\ ~l ac·CU:O D

Bi11gh11111lon, X. Y.

Drama
l&gt;t.&gt;un's List 1, Q, ~. I; H onor Holl \l; \\'ho's
\\'ho; Colonial Pl:tyl'rs, pres.; SHO; Poetry ProscC"niu m .

11.\HOLD \lad&gt;O\" \LD
EndiC"otl, '\;. Y.
GeofoGy
(;colo!(y Club, 'I'&lt;'. and !rt•as.

Ill

�..
..
I

\\ \ LTE H 'I rC \!lT ll Y
Endi&lt;'oll, :\. I .
Soria/ Srfrncc
B111·&lt;·ncia, pre,., wep . \ a rsity Baskd h11ll;
G&lt;•r111a11 Club.

l~cmwm 1c.Y-

.JOYCE LEE 'I H'll.\LEh.
Bingham ton, :\ Y
.II uthemal1c.•
Pundornns, &gt;t't'.; P in lopp)(•rs, SN', lrl'as.;
Frl'nd1 Club; '1 nlh Cluh; Spring \Y('(•kend.

R OXAI.D ::\l CIIOL,\ S
l\l0.NTA PF.11TO
Syossct, '\/. Y.
P olitical Science
D t•un's L ist; Who's \\'ho; Drai:on Soc·iely;
Student Couns&lt;'lor ; l'SG, A&lt;l,•ocalc , P r .,
J r. mcm.-al-l arge; A&lt;lt'lphi, pres.

CIIAHLO 'rfE T llEHESA
.M OKTALB A:\'0
Su1 ten Island, N. Y .
llumamt1 u
Student Counselor ; Cassnndrn n.

112

�MATHEW F. MOH.\ \ 'ANSKY
Johnson City, N. Y.
!Ju.vine.vs Admini.vtration
ll11C'Ct1C'ia; Sla\'i&lt;' Club, lrl'n:..; )lath Club.

RICllARD B. MOSES
Binghamton, N . Y.
Sociology

MARGAHET A~N :\OH\IILE
Dinghamton, :-\. Y.
SO&lt;'iology
D&lt;'11n's List . Newman Club; Young Hepublican Cluh.

STEPHEN NYSCllOT
Dinghamton, . Y.
Socio/,ogy
Dean's List; Honor Holl.

GEHALD O'DONNELL
.John•on Cily, N . Y.
Phynca
Pres. Sr. Class, Goliards, pres.; Pinlopplcrs; chair. or Spring Week-end.

118

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LA \\'HENCE ])A vm OLDS
Pitchar, X. Y.
Philosophy
Baccacia, hi,t.; Canlcrhury C'luh, pr('s.

WINSTON GAGE 0ll('(T1vf
Chenango Bridge, . Y.
l/i,,tory
Adelphi. rec. :;ec., ('Orr. M'&lt;'.; Student Ad visor; Dcnn's List 1, ~. 3, l.

~

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I

HO 'E:\f.\HY MILDHED
PA!USELLA
Vestal, X. Y.
Chemistry
Dt•an's List; Thalinns; (;erman Club;
J nter-\'arsity Christian 1"C'llowship, prC'S.,
St'c .-treas.

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114

JANE PENDERGAST
Leicester, X . Y.
Social S&lt;:ienre-Engltsh fat.
USG, Soph. and Jr. dnss rep.; Cnssandran
Society, pres., veep. S!(l.-al-arms; Colonial News, reporter; Who's Who .

�DONAL D .JO EPH PREYOST
Hochcs lcr, X. Y.
/Jivlcgy
Dt·an 's Lisl ; Phalanx ; Intramu ral Basketball.

.\llTIIl 'R BAHOX PLOT'\ !:".
White Plains, :\. Y.
T,iteral11re--, ldva11('cd Writing
Clarendon, ed.-in-d1il'f; Harpur ,Juzz Society; l ntramu ral Softhnll.

srs,\'N T. l'OTOK EH
Brooklyn, N . Y.
Bwlogy
Pn·s. Lt•nriwd Dorm.: St udent Counsd or ;
Student .\ d\'isor; Biolo~y Cluh; .r.•" 1sh
F1•llow~h i p ; Dt•an's List 1. I!, 3.

AVIS ,J. REINE S
Endwell, N. Y.
l/11man ities-Lileralure
Dean's List I, S; Fr. mem.-at-lnrge; Jr.
prt•s.; Sr. Sec.; Colonia l Xcws; Pondora ns,
rec'. sc&lt;'.; Who's \\'ho; .Jewish Fellowship,
pres.

LE\c\ IS HOSE:'\ B.\l ' '\[
E ndicott, :\. Y .
(;rolog!f
ITJ... ; GC'olo~y Club; l ntrnmur als
~OH\l.\:\

115

�..
r

•

JE .\~ :\l. Hl'SSELL
J ohnson City, '\ Y.
Sociology
Thalian, pres.; I nkr-\"arsity Christian
Fellowship; Dean\ Li.,t.

.\LL.\:\' S(' J!:\'E)l) EH
Elmont, ~ . Y.
A rro1mti11g

Dean's List ; \\'ho\ Who; Drn11on Soc·it'ly;
Colonial :\,•ws, t•d.; SOS, trcns., veep,;
l"SG, trt•:ts.; \ 'nr, ity haskt•thnll; Student
Counselor.

HICllAHD :\I. SC' llWAHTZ
Y.
Geology
Baccaeia, pr&lt;•s.; Sr. elass vt•cp; Geolo11y
Club; German ('lub; l'intoppll•rs; .Jewish
Fellowshi1&gt;; Student Counselor.

H empstead,~.

116

C'ATllEIU1':E SIL\FEll
Bin11ha111to11, :\'. Y .
.\! athematrc.v
Dwrn's List; ll onrJr Holl ; l'andornns, cor.
M!('.; :-..rewmnn Cluh ; SHO; Stuclc·nt Advisor.

�\\ ESLEY (' Sii \:'\(, ll.\ \\"
\Yakrlown, ~. Y.
Eronomtr."'
l&gt;t·an's J.i,t; l·sc., n'l'p; SHO. Geoloµy
Cluh. Fn•n&lt;'h ('!uh; l&gt;&lt;'hall' Societ~·; Studt&gt;nl Couns(•lor; Stud(•nt \ d\'isor.

C.\HOL A:\:\ SI I HAl 'C:EH
Owt'go, N. \'.
l111ma111lir.v
Dean's List.

.Jl"IHTll HOSOl"F SJ L\'EIDI.\'\
Endil·otl, '\ Y
JJiology
C'nssundran ,

T('(" Sl'l'., ,m•rnl du1ir.; Biology (')uh,'«'&lt;'., tm"; IS('C.

lLA JOYCE SOL0:\10:\
;\('" York,:'\. Y.
Art
Clnr&lt;·ndon, &lt;'O-&lt;'d.; Dean's List 1, 'l, S, 1;
Honor Holl, 1, ~. S; \\ho's \\"ho; Pub.
Bonrd; Gnlll•ry C'omm.

HALI'll FHA:\' CI:-. SPI:'\ ELLI
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Rro11omirs
l'SG. pn•s., \'l'l'Jl; JS('('; JI!(', pres.;
SOS; Young HC'publicon Club, prl',,; I nlrumural&gt;~.

�.•
••

..
I

..
....
0
0

~

,.

~

..~
..'
;r.

JA:'\rns A. \\'All:\Ell
Endicolt, :\. Y .
1Jiolog11
Frcnd1 Club; G(•rmnn Cluh: Bioloi:y Cluh

I

HOBEllTA A. \\'.\HXEll
Windsor, X. Y.
A ccounting
Dean's List ~; Thalian~. treas.; ISCC',
Frc·n&lt;'h Club; Assoc. m('mll('r or .\ m ..\ ccounting ,\ ssoC'.

.\LICE WEHTIIED !Ell
Point Lookout,:\ . Y.
Ph11s1rs
Chorus; Thnlinn Soci&lt;'ly: :\filth Club; Dchak nub; German C'luh; :'\lodc•rn Dance
Club.

118

CLAUDE E. \\'I LSOX
Elmira, X . Y.
Cllm1i,,tr11
Dean's List: Who's \\"ho; Goliards. pres.,
treas., corr. S&lt;'&lt;:.; Class sgt.-n L-11rn1s; A PO,
corr. SC&lt;'.; Chem. Club; German Club.

�:\IH' II.\EL .\ . \\OLFSO :\
:\c•" York, :\. Y.
Political 8&lt;ie11rr
F r. c·la" Vl't' p ; .\dclphi, H'&lt;'Jl• cha plain ;
JSCC; \'1m.i t~· ll11sk&lt;'tb1tll, mgr.; l ntrn murals ; l A.'ader,hip Hl'lrcnt; S tud&lt;·nt .\dvisor.

SILVIO ZE\'O\'E
\'('.stnl, '\. Y.

Ph.11sic.•

Seniors Not Shown
Bruce .\lkins
Ed lkall
Donald Bitner
Klaus Bohlma n
William Bradfor d
David BrownYillc
.Jay E. Campbe ll
:\Taun'c n P. Cannad ay
.Joseph P. Capozzi
Alexand er Chervio
Wilbur Dodge
Christo pher Egan
:\L Erford Freelov e
Hobrrl J. French
Hobcrl F. Gormlr y
Donald J. Greilrr
Honalcl :\1. Hurban
Walter Jeschke

David Kokis
.\lfrecl J . Koziar
Fred. S. :\largoli s
Donald H. :\Iallis
\'aleric ::\1isner
Patricia E. Phillips
•James Rauch
Evelyn ::\1. Reinhei mer
:\Iuriel C. Schad
l\Ielvin C. Schwar tz
:\lil&lt;lred Sweet
Savino C. Tamboi a
Hicharcl rimer
Peter Vanderl inde
In'ing \Ycinsoff
Allan Weise
:\lyrna Zczza

119

l'Al'L GOll,f.\ \'
Brookly n, '\ . Y .
Socioltigy
Coloninl Players; Clan•mlon ; Coloniul
:-\ ews; Outing Cluh .

�Jfu,9/ springtime fade?

Then cry all bird.9 ... and fi,9/ie,9'
Cold pale eyes pour tears
lla~ho

Each man heliei•e.9 in hi,9 heart he will die

l\lacLcish

Confronting all creation, we behold
reflected vi,9ions of the free.
Rilke

l~O

�Who ha.~ not sat before hi.~

0101

heart'.~

rurtainP
Hilke

0 let us talk of quiet that ire knoll'
That u-c ea11 knoU', the deep and lovely qwet
of a .~trony heart al peaet'.
Lawrence

Spring 1$ like a perhaps hand
(which conies carefully
out of Xowhere) arranging
a window.
Cummings

, lfter all, they knew that to be real each had
To find for himself hi~ earth, hi..~ sky, his .9ea.
Slcvcn~

��Snow Quren, Sheila " 'agman, rccei\'CS congrnlulation&lt;.

Winter

Weekend

�L /

What to do

Between Classes

:-./·•1l urc 's laycrcak&lt;' .
Exploring ~lotht&gt;r •

I

To slef.'p' IX'rchan&lt;'e to urC'am
'

�Rare s1)('('i11wn found nl ~t11&lt;ly ...

�The Colonial Players present

The Immortal Husband

Camilla :\1acClcod, Bruce J3rown, Bnrburu lluSSt'll, :\Iarion Leonard, Donnn Jlownrd, Ed :\fartin.

The Cast
Camilla :\IacCleod
Bruce Brown
Barbara Russell
Marion Leonard
Donna Howard
Ed ~Iartin

Ht6

Aurora
Titlwnus
.Jeanie, Vanya, Enid
.John, Kon.slant ine, ]fark
.J frs. Mal.low, Olga The iYurse
Laomedon, JI em.nan

�Twicc a y&lt;&gt;ar the Colonia l Pla,vcrs present n theater w(•&lt;&gt;kencl for the studen ts
and faculty of lhc Colk•ge. Throug h this
medium , studen ts are able lo sec and participate in fine dramat ic produc tions.
Thesc arc scenes from the fall produc t ion

of James :\[errill 's The Immortal

127

llu.~band.

�SO\IETIII;\G LII~E .\ ST.\ H
Something like a star is horn;
.\ C'hance collision of lhe infinite dust.
But not so nebulous, "c thought.
~omclhing like a mclc•or flashing,
E,,·e in lhc nighl, hul not so qui&lt;'k as lhal \lore like l\Yin orbils near c·olli .~ion;
Suspense, and thC"n division,
Reneging cosmic trusl.
In the flux of things, things go awry,
.\ nd something like' a star is born
And soinC"thing like a .s lar musl die

Jl'. H. Coons

��Congratulations and Best Wifhes
to the Class of 1960
15 Conv enien t Neigh borho od Offices in the
South ern Tier Offer ing Every Bank ing Service

AR IN E MI DL AN D
TR US T CO MP AN Y
ef Soatla er11 Ne• York

.. -- - = ,_ - = - --

- -

=

BIN GHA MTO N

\VAT KIN S GLE N

END ICO TT

COR TLA ND

\VAV ERL Y

ELM IRA

JOH NSO N CITY

ELi\ fIRA HEI GHT S
f IORS EHE ADS

Memb er Federa l nepos1 t lnsurr mcr Corpo ration

180

�Vi

i~~

MAKE YOUR OFFICIA L PHOTOG RAPHER
YOUR MASTE R OF CEREM ONIES
Let us be the official photographer of your life's importonl
events ... for the really good picture you need to lend thot
first big job . .. your engagement ond wedding photographs ...
those priceless portraits of your first child (end the others
thot follow. ) Only truly professional studio portraits con
give on individual ond distinctive dignity to the visual record
of your life ... ond our ortist-photogro pher is o lrue profP.ssion11I.

o/\\
. X.S'1
0

0

•

''"'

l.1-.l.:

· .:,.
'

\,)
0

We are proud to be the ollie111I
8
•
photographer of your graduating
class, and we hope that this is the
beginning of a lifelong relationship. ~

~-~

YOUR OFFICIAL PHOTOGR APHER

Jean Sardou Studio

McLEANS
ISI

�TION?
WHAT ARE YOUR PLA NS AFTER GRADUA
and b usiness
. .. remembe r that in yo ur perso nal
Wh ateve r you do . . . wher ever you go
yourself
like
le
best friend. Man y youn g peop
fina ncial a ffa irs, you r bank is your
e you
wher
bank
a
.
.
.
bank
use it's a one-stop
turn to F irst-C ity ation a l Ba nk beca
openfrom
s,
need
l
ancia
fin
your
of
one
ever &gt;
can fi nd the right kind o f servi ce for
ing a !:'avings acco unt to making a will.

FIR_ST--C

a
A
I TY.~AT I ONAL BANI(
O F BIN G HA M TON. N.Y.

~

Seve n Offi ces in the outh ern Tier
NCE CORPORATIO:\
'.\fE\lnER FEDEHAL DEPO IT I SURA

I 3!t

�CONGRATULATIONS
TO THE CLASS OF 196 0

ENDICOTT~ JO HN SO N
TH E
FA MO US
FA MIL Y
NA ME
IN
SH OE S

188

�What's
•

1n
Y-DUr .

future?
Whatever your goal in life, it's wise to
back up your future plans with a steadily increasing savings account. Money in the bank is one of
the surest roads to security we know . . . it will
help you achieve what you want for your future.

THE
BINGHAM TON

~
BANK

62-68 Exchange Street

Binghamton

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

134

�Best Wishe s From Your New Neigh bor

AN SC O
DIVISION OF ANILINE AND
FILM CORPORATION

135

�"OLD RELIABLE"
Everything from Hat to Hose
at prices you can afford LO pay.
COMPAR E

UNITED ARM Y STORE
12 10 North St., Opposite Factory

Endicott

FRANKIE AND JOHN NIE
SNACK BAR
Down the Road from the New Campus

186

�MI D- WA Y RECREATION INC .
The South ern Tier's most l'ltra
;\lode rn Bowl ing Alley
21 3 Jense n Road
Vesta l. N. Y.
,\ II Lega l Bever ages

Bowl ing with Autom atic
A.M.F. Pin poucr s

Nurse1y f\ ,·ailab k

;\fo&lt;lern Resta urant

Su nda} D in ncrs

l lornc '.\1ade Pastri es

Con grat ulat ions to the Class of 196 0

- -

-

- - ---

----.

ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY
Encli cou
43-45 \ Vas hi ngton .\vc.

V cstal
148 Ve tal ParkH·ay

En dwell
3225 E. \fain SL

Mem ber Feder a l D eposi t Insur ance Corpo ration

137

�®
ENDICOTT, NEW YOR K

INTERNAT IONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORA TION

COLONIAL MOTO R INN
· DINING ROOM

RA 9-4901
TWX-291
BINGHAMT ON'S FINEST ACCOMMO DATIONS

PRIVATE TILE BATHS - STEAM HEAT
ROOM PHONES
150 ROOMS - BATHS
SWIMMING POOL

AIR CONDITIO NING

3 Miles V\7cst of Binghamton On Highway 17
Member of American Express &amp; Diner's Club
.\.\.\

Hilton Carte Blanche

188

AMHA

�CHARTER A TCTC BUS
FOR ANY OCCASION
As new as tomorr ow's news
• Air Condit ioned
• Lavato ry
• Reclin ing Seats
• Card Tables
• Radio -P.A. System

TRIPLE CITIES TRACTION CORP.
RA 2-2391
BING HAMT ON, N. Y.

375 STAT E ST.

Dedicated to the public

since 1904
Two \Vorld \Van and more than
half a &lt;entury have lefL unchanged the origina l purpo'c ol
the Bingha nnon Press .. . keen,
accurate , tn tthlul news coveiag e,
marked wit h a u ue journali stic
approac h to reporti ng. An ap
proach that has as ked for and
received the confide nce and re
spect of its reader ...

Evening • THE BINGHAMTON PRESS • Sunday
Also serving the Bingham ton
area with the finest in spa1 kling
entertai nment, inf ormatio n, and
special features p1ese111ed in the
traditio n of a great 11cwspape1.

WIN R-R ADI O and TV ... Channel 4.0

189

�"Learnin g witho11t thinl&lt;ing is labor lost,
Thinl&lt;in g without learning is perilous. "
Confuciu s

ENDICOTT NAT IONA L BANK
ENDICO TT, NEW YORK
Endwell oflice:
Country Club Road
at Hooper Road
Endwell, New York

Main office:
\Vashing ton Avenue
Endicott , New York
PI 8-3315

A/ember-F ederal Deposit h1s11ra11re Corporat1011

Good Luck_, Harpur College Class of 1960!
Slater is proud to serve
The Colonials .
Our objective at Harpur and
127 other leading colleges is
to provide nutritious, tasty
meals like Mother cooks.

--- SL AT ER -FOOD SERVICE MANA GEMENT

Buffalo
Chicago

Philaclel phia
Atlanta

140

New York
Baltimor e

�COM PLI 1ENT S OF

JOY VENDING
COMPANY
Congr atulat ions
Class of 1960

"'

5

Ct1ll

"'HO T DRINKS

OG:D.•f(

-

Mc LEANS
DEP'T STORES, INC.
Stores in

BING HAM TON, N. Y.
ENDI COTT, N. Y.
and

O\VE GO, N. Y.

Comp lete home furnis hings

ST 5-3311

OLUM'S
FURNITURE

AAA Appro ved

PARKWAY MOTEL
VEST AL PARK WAY EAST
VEST AL, N. Y.

] 14 Clinto n Street
Bingh amton
Locate d on Route 17
222 Main Street

Centra lly Located for Triple Cities

Johns on City

141

�Congra lulation s
Class of 1960
Complim ents of

THE
INDUSTRIAL BANK
OF BINGHAMTON

HOTEL FREDERICK

181-183 Washin gton St.

Dubonn et Lounge

Membe r of

FEDER AL DEPOS IT
INSUR ANCE CORPO RATIO N

CONG RATUL ATION S

FOWLER,
DICK &amp; WALKER

TO THE CLASS OF 1960

Bingha1 mon, New York

FEDERAL
ELECTRONICS INC.

We salme
the June Gradua tes of

WHOL ESALE DISTR II3UTO RS

HARPU R COLLE GE

Vestal Parkwa y

May Success
Always Be Yours

Vestal, N. Y.

14~

�HARRIS ARMY &amp; NAVY STORE
Sporting Goods - Sportswea r

GIORD ANO'S

Distributo r of Wilson and Spaulding
Sports Equipmen t

For Service &amp; Style,

167 '"' ashington Street

See Giordano Smile

Binghamt on, N. Y.

Portraits - \Veddings
Candids Commerci al
Parties

LUIZZI PHARM ACY
Prescriptio n Service
111 \Vashingto n Avenue

HARRIN GTON STUDIO

Endicott, N. Y.

Daily Bulletin Building
Pl 8-2451

ST 5-5451

Complime nts of
CONGRA TULATIO NS

ENDICOTT FLORIST
116 Washingto n Avenue

VALLEY MOTOR S
OLDSMOBILE

Emlicou, ' cw York
Phone: ST 5-0221

Complime nts of

ENDICOTT SHOE COMPA NY

SUPPORT

Home of High Quality Footwear

THE

John \V. Chipper, :\lgr.

ADVERTISERS

Phone 5-919 I
23-25 \Vashingto n Avenue, Endicott, New York

148

�COR-DEL'S
Hid-a -Way

Complim ents of

(Formerl y Bob \Varner's )

SHORT LINE BUS COMP ANY

Catering to College
"Parties"
I talian and A meriran Foods

BEN'S CLOTHES SHOP

ELK'S BAKE SHOP

~ l ai n

"Best Baked Goods in Town"

and Willow St.

Johnson City, New York
110 Washing ton Avenue
Endicott ,

. Y.

"Clothes of d1sti11rtion for
dad and lad."

- ST 5-2051 -

RUSSELL CAB COMP ANY

THE

Extends

DIONY SIAN SOCIETY

Congratu lations
LO the
CLASS OF 1960

Walla ce Drug Co., Inc.

J. J. MARKET
900 Broad St.

Phone 5-3651
GROCE RIES FROZE

~I EATS

12 Wash ing to n Ave.

- VEGETA BLES

Economy Drug Store
Corner vVash ington &amp; Monroe

FOOD &amp; BEVERA GES

TWO STORES FOR YOUR CONVE N I E CE

Endicott , N. Y.

144

�CongralU laLions
to

The Class of 1960

BACCACIA
MEN 'S SOCIAL CLUB
FORD'S BARBER SHOP

Angel ine's
Flower and Gif l Shop

The l\IosL Fragile of A1 Ls
1306

Dial ST 5-2551

~lonroc

SL

E;\'DICO TT, N. Y.

BERNIE 'S ARMY AND NAVY
225 Main SnceL

Johnson City, 'ew York
SW 7-6955

GOOD Ll1CK
TO THE

Comp limen ts

1960 GRADU ATES

of
CAMPUS CLEANERS

a

Campus Rcp1csentaLivcs

FRIEND

Ed \lartin
Ward Tice

145

Carol Bryan
l\fiui Gropper

�.,

~-

m ~ m m ~ g)
m_ t1l m s

~Gil

�•

• •
.--

...,

•
..

-

~

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~·

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I

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'i(.__

�---

����</text>
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                  <text>1948 - </text>
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                  <text>Binghamton University Yearbooks </text>
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                  <text>Harpur College -- Students; State University of New York at Binghamton -- Students; Harpur College; State University of New York at Binghamton; Students; Yearbooks</text>
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                  <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>
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                  <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>
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                  <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>
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                  <text>1948-1972</text>
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                    <text>���HARPUR COLLEGE
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
1961

�M e ssage from
th e
Presid e nt

Colonist - 1961

Message from r:he President:
The Class of 1961 has seen the complete physical development or r:hc
Vestal campus. When they entered In September, 1957, all classes and living
arrangements were In Endlcon. Little by llnlc our acdvlnes were transferred to r:hc
new campus - rtrst, we began to use r:he gym - dlCn two dormltortes

r:hen r:hrec - then

the cafeteria without r:he rest or r:he Student Center building - then r:he Student Center
building and r:he fourth dormitory - the Classroom Admimstrauon building - then r:he
Llbrary, and last of a.U, the Science buLlding.
The Class or 1961 1s r:he one which has learned the sk.llls of bus catclnng
and puddle jumping.
But now these unique and memorable e.xpcnences arc over and nt-w

lacUltles are available !or the students of llarpur College, which arc the envy of the
educational world. But the chief assets of thts college are still, as r:hey always have
been, r:he competence of the faculty, r:he dlhgcnce

or the &amp;tudents,

the spine or tolerance

and freedom, and r:he frlendhness and good feeling which permeate the college.

M_l}~
Glenn G. Bartle
President

�TABLE OF CONTENTS

Message from the President 2

Campus Life 4

Faculty and Administration 21

Social Clubs 33

Organizations 55

Dedication 78

Literary 81

Sports 97

Seniors 113

Advertising 141

3

�CAMPU S LIFE

"Well, it's early in the morning Baby,
when I rise, a well-a . . . "

"The droghtc or March hath pcrccd to the rootc . .."

4

�Some early-morning studying in
the library ...

And then a look in the mailroom: Did
my check come? Have they forgotten
me? ...

An eleven o'clock breakfast in the snack
bar, and we're ready to face the day.

5

�Jn the beginning was the idea; the architects drew up the plans, and then came
the workmen, with their tractors and
bu lldo1ers, boards and beams, to put up
the build ings ...

1111
6

�Progress ...

•

I{ EE P

NO

OFF
(illl\SS

PARKING
ANYTIME
•

And with them came the sign-painters ..

And when they were finished. it looked like thic;.

7

�.

The freshmen a rri ve. Cars clog the driveways, and parents arc everywhere .. .

The trunks arc waiting in the hallways ...

-

An o ri entati on lecture.

8

�Freshman Daze ...

A dramatic moment occurs at the convocation as
a sharpshooter picks ofT the president and the
dean at the same time.

In the evening, a folk-sing in the rec. room.

A tug-of-wa r at the frosh-soph struggle . . .

leaves the poor gi rl wo rn out by the end
of the day.

9

�Nou rish men t ...

t\)•r•
I

10

�The Snack Bar. Almost always a busy
place. You want ice water with a slice of
lemon and suga r?

Remember how great a cigarette used to
taste?

Phosphate! English muffin! H ambu rg!
Who's confused?

11

�Dorm life: a scenic view of Digman Hall
from the outside ...

. .. and a scenic view of Digman H all
from the inside.

"Come into my parlor," said the spider
to the fly.

''Thanks . Don't mind if I do."

12

�Living in the Halls ...

A come-as-you-arc party ...

Tempers often rage during an intellectual argument.

. . . and a tree-trimming party ("What
do you mean, they should have a menorah?") ...

. .. and a quiet evening with a friend.

13

�--

Academic
Life

A class at eight in the morning: the room seems to be floating in
a gray fog, and many of the scats are empty.

"Frankly, sir, your child is quite stupid.
He seems to take after you."

14

• • •

�Study· · ·

... study. · ·

... study.

�1961 UNIVERS ITY of HAW.AD
Summer Seaaion Program
Combine • aun, aurf and atudy,

While other schools may be encased in an atmosphe re
of fun and frolic, the air at Harpur is somewha t thicker.
Harpur students arc noted for their hard work, their
serious outloof... on life, and their mature respect for
education and knowledg e, which arises from the fact
that they know they will have to be the leaders of
our country in the years to come.

16

�Deviations ...

17

�WI T ER WEE K END . Sure ly we
can
take a few ho urs fro m stud y. A snow
q uee n cont est, a dance, parti es,
beer
blas ts, and after wa rds .. ? . .

• 1&lt;o1ua

18

�A jazz concert ...
Elections for class officers ...

A talk by Senator Javits
(Nixon lost anyway) ...

A dart game in the art studio ...

6239 seconds to graduation!

�College is so broadening.

Rehe arsal for a play . ..

Be prepared!

~
\
r

\

But in the end, back to the books.

20

�aCu ty

&amp;

a~m. Nis TRaltOn

�11 ~I rO Rl(1HI · 1)1. (.Gru ber, A.1.wc. Dean;
M r. R .
Ri~hcl. Dirnto r of Ad111i.11io11.1: Mr. A. Scarles
.

Directo r of
S111cft•111 Acri1·irie.1; D r. J. Bl!lniak, Dea11 of S111de11
t1; Mr. L.
Ccntora ni. Dirffro r of 1'11hl1t· Rclario l/\; Dr. S. Gordon
, Dean.
Pl-R( HI I): Mr. J. Sha}. A.1.11. J)irecto r of Sr11de11t
Actfriti e.1.

22

�C halm ers. Dr. Rohen.on.
LEI· I ·10 RIC! 11 : Mr. Newcom b. Dr. Battin. D r.

Dr. Mueller . Pres·
Dean Bclniak . Dr. Richan. hon. Dr. Coates. Dr. Madan.
!lull.
Dr.
idcnt Uartlc. Dr. Weiga nd, D1 . h schthal,

23

�I EFT TO RIGH f : Or. W . Wabe r. In
str. in Philo sop/y ; Mr. C. Savag e, Instr.
i11 Philo soply ;
Miss H Wcrn crs. lmtr. i11 Germ an; M r.
P. Anstrat~. ln.11r. in Germ an.

l EFT TO RIGH T: Mi ss V . Kinlo ch,
Assoc .
Dea11 of St11de111.1: Mr. A. Marshall, Direc
tor
of Men' s llo11si111:; Miss I. Lewis , Direc
tor of
Wo111e11's Ho11si11g.

�of
LI 'FT TO RIGH T: Dr. R. Ketch am, Prof.
A.1.H.
eal,
Rourg
M.
Roma ncl' La11g11ar:t•.1·: Miss
A.w. Prof.
Prof. of Spa11i1h: Mr. M. Bock nak.
111 Rnof R11uia11: Mr. C'. Mcin tyre, Instr
a11,
Chairm
rdo.
Berna
A.
Dr.
.
111c111Cl' La11111w11rs
and. As.1oc.
Dil'i1 ion of l/111111111itin: Dr. P. Weig
Asst. Prof.
Prof. of Ger1111111: Dr. W. Uscha ld.
ew, A.1st.
of f'rl'ltc h a11d Ge11 wn. Dr. E. Vasil
Prof.
Asst
ani.
Mign
R.
Prof. of Spl'ec h: Or.
ch.
Walla
L.
Dr.
wges:
.w1g1
l
11ce
Ro111a
of
A.w. Prof. of Clas.1ical I.itern tllrl'.

Prof. of Grnl' ral
Prof. of Acco1111ti11g: Dr. Locke .
Lt-F r TO RCGHT: Mr. Piakc r. As.it.
h.· Dr. Lindsay,
Spl'e~'
of
Prof.
A.w.
sh: Dr. Vasilew.
Li1erat11r1•; Mr. Wren . /11.11r. in Engli
Assoc . Prof. of Music :
ln.
Linco
Dr.
c:
M111i
in
/11.1tr.
.
Crane
Assoc . Prof. of Art H istory : Dr.
rdo, C'lwir1111111
Prof. of Politi cal Sc'it&gt;11ce: Dr. Berna
Dr. Weld , Prof. of Engli. \lt: Dr. Shell. A.11t.
Di1•isio11 of li11m a11ities.

�LEFT TO RIG HI : Dr. J. Perry. Asst. Prof. of
E11gli.1h; Dr. L. Ka\dan , /J1 srr. i11
A 11thropolor.:y: Dr. B. Huppe . Prof. of English
: Dr. V. Freima rck, Assoc. Prof. of
£11gli.\h: Dr. M. Di Cesare. In str. i11 E11gli.1h.

ROW I: Dr. A. G ilbert. Prof. of llis1or y: D r. K.
Clayto n. Acti1111 Prof. of Geogra phy:
Dr. R. Lonsda le. Asst. Prof. of Geo11raphy. Row 2:
Dr. 0. Macho tka, Prof. of Sociolo py;
Dr. M. Seiden , A.1.11. Prof. of En1tlish: Dr. A. Carlip.
Assoc. Prof. of Bus. Enterp rise;
Dr. S. Pitcher . Prof of F,11glish; Dr. J. Beall. Asst.
Prof. of Economic.~; Dr. R. Mar7.
A\.\/. Pm/. of Politic al '&gt;cience; Dr. S Fi~hma
n. Asst. Prof. of H i.1tory.

26

�l EFT TO RJ G HT: Dr. W . Battin ,
Asst. Prof. of Biolo gy: Dr. Schumach er, A~.\OC. Prof. of Biolo gy; Dr.
J. Richa rdson . Assoc . Prof. of Psycholo gy; Dr . W. H eyma n. A sst. Prof.
of Psych ology ; Dr. J . Fisch thal,
Assoc . Prof. of Biolo gy; D r. J. Wil moth, Prof. of Riolo gy: Dr. H. Fagin ,
Assoc . Prof. of P.1ychology; Mr. D.
Zelln er, Inst. in P.1yc/10/of?)'.

A1wc
LEF f TO RTG I! r· Dr. B. McDu ffie,
Prof.
Asst.
adan,
M
S.
Dr.
1i.1try:
Ch1'11
of
Prof.
Math of Che111i.1trv; Dr. (". ll ull , Chair man of
. Asst.
emati cs and Scien ce Di1'.; Dr. J . Pol lack
Instr. in
Prof. of Geolo gy; Dr. [). Muel ler,
of
Chem istn; Dr. 0. Coate s. Aut. Prof.
of
Gcolo.1?1·; Dr. H . Robe rson. Asst. Prof.
Gl'olo gy.

, Assoc .
LEFT TO RfGH T: Dr. R. Penfi eld
. Prof.
Prof. of Ph ysics: Miss F. Wrig ht , A.uoc
of
Prof.
Asst.
.
Seshu
L.
of Math emati cs; Dr.
em atics:
Math
of
Prof.
.
ll
a
H
Dr.
cs;
emati
Math
emati cs;
Dr. K. Ande rson, A .;st. Prof. of Math
Ziebu r,
Dr.
c.1:
enzati
Math
of
l'rof.
Kent,
J.
Dr.
atics.
Assoc . Prof. of M ath1•m

�B USIJ\ESS O f f / CE: Charle s Coope r. Jo\eph ine
Dwyer , 1.cna

Sella no.

MANA GER. CAMP US STOR E· Mrs.

BOOK KEcPE R : M r. James Carl.

INFIR MARY : J oan Pc1crson, l ucille Brown ,
Marion Teal, Ruth Dieter, Helen Quain, H ead
/\ llrfl'.

Augu\ ta

Giaru~,o .

28

Cro~s.

�Oster hout.
MAIL : John Culle n and Franc es

a.:. - ~
_.._ - -

'

AHis tSLAT ER'S BEST : Mary Pr1cstawsl..a.

1:cr.
anl Ma11a1:er. M r. Aitl..cn hcad. Mmra

LIBR ARY: Josia h T. Newc omb.

Lib. and

Elliot, Toni
A.ISi. to Pres.: Stella Gazd a, Mr.
Began , Janet Brow n, Greg ory Bulla rd.

�SLCR ETA IUES: Cathri ne Beard'&gt;ley. Leatha
Houch .
Vivian Mu.,.,o, Emily Sacco. Flizab eth Hughe
s, Nancy
Angel lotti.

BUSl NESS STAH

PRES I DENT 'S SECR ETAR IES:
man. Mrs. Winte rs.

Mrs.

H uff-

OLI/\ 'S SECR F7 ARll 'i: l\1rs. Fi-,her. Mrs.
Singer .

STUD ENT CENT ER SECR ETAR IES: Linda
Scrant on. Mary lou Pedley .

30

�In fo rm al Sh ot s

"one brief point"' ...

. . . one short breal.. ...

"hcrc" s a tough one"

�AYSE L SEARLFS, Bus. Adm.; Colonial N ews '46, '47,
Bus. Mg r. '46, '47; Spanis h Club '47; Baccacia
'48; Radio Club '47; Golden Ci rcle '48, '19, President '49; Bus. Adm. Club '48, '49.

MY POSTGRADUATE PLANS ARE

" If you wo uld like help in completing yo ur plans
in jo b placement, or counsel in any way, please
feel free to make an appo intment to sec me at
your convenie nce .. "

John P. Belniak, M.A.
Instructor in Citizenship and Political Science

When We Were Very Young ...

32

�.

.
WE DO No1'
.

$~P.,\T£

'IO

MlNOR~

•

•

�"'

a

ROW I : Annett e Yoell,.le. Betsy Ross. Mar y Lou Adams. Cynthia Orr. Shirley D exter. ROW
2: Madeline Kay. Arlene M arkel. Stephanie Allen. Beverly Hid ey. Mary Anne Le~J,.o.

THALi ANS

�"One of 1he"c morni n\
Hrighl and fai1
(lonna spread m~ wing'
And take to the arr .

"Sta r light. ~ta r bright ,
I rN \tar I sec to night .. .''

35

�s.o.s .

... --- ...

'There is a time for pla~ and a
time for pla}."
-Sam.1011 0. S111i1/i

3fi

�SEATED: James Carlson. ROW I: fohn Baron. Jul ius Schlo~bcrg. Paul (1ol&lt;l. M 1chacl Halperin. Allan Young, Richard Kaufman . ROW 2· Harley Fs~. Dave Macconnell. Denni~ Kelly.

"Smi le when you say 1ha1.

mi~ler!"

37

�ROW I: Cathy l·ruhauf, frea111rn: M arian I c,J..o. l' rt'.1td1•111: C~ nthia Blal..e. /?toe. Sn r1 ·1an:
Fllic Dorkin, Corr. s·ecr£'/ary. ROW 2: I- vie W1c~en, l\l a ril y n Kell). D ec Kobc1. Leona Kai
manowit1. Bunny Rio-,. Bobbie Dreyer. J ane Adchon. ROW I· l\lary AllT. Bel'&gt;) \tcCarthy.
Anne M acrarlam:, Barbara Goodwin,
ad ya A'&gt;wad, Brenda Acl..c1 man, Helene ')haw. 1rene
ll azilla, I inda Con!(er. l·vcl}n Jan~en, Beth Summer. Ca1o l)ll Demo. Dana Kaufman. l\ l argaret Kuc hni a, Barbara Rei.,i n!(c r. ROW 4: Fllen War-.hauc.:r. C. arol ( lanq. r.. aren (,ray'&gt;on.
Linda I ind. Jan ha-.er. M ar} J ane Z&gt;lin~l..i. I oi-. Pompa. lnt a \'a11,1~cli-.. I-lien hin:d1. Jud)
P e.,-,in, M aun:e n Wilcox, M argal l· rench. Peg!() Cooper, Fnid Bani\. Barbara Ander,on.

PANDORANS

��ROW I: Al Lyon ~. PreJident: Mil..c Kaplan. David Russell . Vice President.
ROW 2: Mil..c
Gordon, Joel Bretan, Alvin Cummins. Mil..c Wiplich, Bruce L. Brown. ROW 3:
frank Gluck,
Mike Leichtling , Shep Lane, Martin Goldman, Martin Throne, Treasurer;
Barry Carson.
ROW 4: Mike Goffin, Bruce Pritikin, Ira Newm'li'n. Mike Saul, Secretary: Robert
Dikeman.

40

�..Thi\ place 'md ls like a barn."

"Sec'! We h a\C over twelve minute' to get back to
campus."

OD EAN S
41

�TOP ROW: 13ill Sweeney, Rid. I row. Dick 1-cltlman . Bob Pierce. I ran!- Vinci, Charle\ Ross,
Xavier Pinc!, C harles Greene. ON STFPS: I la rvcy Adebtcin. J oh n Beaton. John O'Meara.

I.T.K.

�"O, S.0.S. wa' S.O.S.
When I.T.K. was a pup'"

"Salut! ''

�GO LI ARDS

l

William Hesse, Al Baker, Bob MacLeMale. Mike Harter, Bob Perry, Al Waldman, John Burn\.
Herbert Parker, Roland Campbell, Raymond Flanigan, Barry MacEwan, Bob Loomis. David
Currie, Bill Fetsko, Ken Hoffman.

�n. Dic k Kl!llc}. Did. l Ind. Bob
H ugh Spangen berg, Wall y 13othnc r, Hob l uca,, Jim Frand~t.:
om 'e&gt;tor. Pl'&lt;'.11t!t•111: Paul Sopchak .
Ko\tcl nik , Vire Prt•.1icle111: Paul Simandl c. Sar~.-a1-Ar111.1: I
Larry lkall, Peter D1111etri.
Stroble.
y
Wood
ky,
amim
K
S£•crelllry; Al S mith, Trea.wrer: John
Ron f....ri&gt;inohk1
Blum.
Mike
Porter.
ean
D
Banh.
Mike
ager.
M
George
,
r
Jim Wilde

,.

�DIONYSIAN SOCIETY

ROW I: Dr. Gruber. A tfri.w r: I lo\\ ie Dannger. Mel 1\ovegrod. Corr. Secretary: Ward ·1 ice,
Denn} llclfand. J 1m Shear. I ice l're111fr11t. Paul I\. lamer. Ben '-&gt;chg. Steve l cvy. Peter Orn\tcin. Rec Secretary. ROW :!: Dick Strack,. "itc\e Opochin\l..y. Burt RluMein. Steve R appel.
( oordon '-&gt;ch\\anz. Barr} /irk in. Jim \le Mahon. l're.1iclc11t, Bill I !}'man. bl Sa'&gt;IO\\. 1 r&lt;'ll\llrcr.

LG

�47

�ROW I: Bell} Frank, Mary Anne Cembalski, Karen McCauley. Nancy Sax, Carol-Ann Walker. ROW 2: Joyce Dascher, Ronnie Booth, Linda Sundquist. Kathy McGinnis, Mary Fritz,
Pat Tar1.a. MISSING: Ann Devillers, Gretchen VanKuren. Yvonne Yancey.

CASSAND RANS

18

�"Whal es' tail-,, prince of whales .
Prince and four and .

49

�BACCACIA

ABOVE: Joe Lamphere. 7 rt•a.111ra: Peter Hoberman.
Jay Lewis. ·orman Starler. Charlie Butler. Hesh rederman. Jerry Ccrwonaka. lliHorian.

I EFT: Art York. Bob Connolly, J oel Kellman, Tom

McDonough, Vice Pre.1itfr111; Jim Lorrclli, Don Donnellan , Pre.11de111.

�With this we will heat the Ru\stan
jets!

51

�.. Peter Orlousky'? Never heard of him."

52

�ADELP HI

ROW I: Uob Griffo. Stephan Bal.er, Vice President; Richard Rogers, I .arry Klein, Peter
P ri ntz. Roger Kramer, Dennis Newnham. I loward Fox. l&lt;ec. SccrNarv; David Popper. Jim
Heffern, Sal Spano. (art l· nstrom. Pr&lt;'1ide11t: Marc Pessin. ROW 2: Ralph Titus, I onnie
M alletta, H acl. Seymour, I arry Plotkin. 1 om Brown. Arnie l.evine. Reece Pence. M 1cl.1.:y
Greenberg. Ron H ulnicl.. I ri•1w1rer: Jerry 1'..1laYJian. David Sapadin. ROW 3 Micl-.1.:y W1.:in,
Diel-. I lohlowsl-.i. Bob rurlong. Patricl. Morgan. Diel-. Ramsl:}. Bob Dair} mple. Bob Friedman,
Fr1.:d Balling. Steve Mirin. Kenneth Rappaport. Dennis Rell.

53

�Gung ho!

Jt all begins in Room 4 ...

Dancing···

Drinking···

AFTER···

effects!

��United Student Government

ROW I: Judy 0\terhoudt. Freshman Memh er-ar-Larg&lt;': Barbara Gagliardi, Junior Memher-arLarge; Ellen Furedi. l?ec. Secrerary; Patrick Morga n, Pre.1iden1: Yvonne Yancy. Corr. S£•crelilry: Joyce Dascher, Sophomore Memh er-ar-Large; Joy Chu, Fre~hman M emher-at- Large.
ROW 2: David Ru\sell, Sophomore M emher-ar-Large: Jim Walker, Junior Member-at-Large;
Henry Stark. Treasurer; Peter Printz, Vice Pre.1iden1; Ray J-l anigan, Advocate: Ron Bayer ,
Freshman l\4ember-ar-Large.

The United Student Government of Harpur College is the coordinating body
for all campus student organizations and as such provides the machinery for responsible and efficient student participation in the organization and control of student affairs. U.S.G. receives and acts on student's complaints, investigates student problems, is the voice through wh ich student opinion may be carried to the
administration of the college, and participates in decisions affecting students. Student government gives students the opportunity to guide and influence their lives
at college in keeping with the best traditions of the democratic creed.
During the year U.S.G. carried out the electi on of class officers and the election
of the new U.S.G., effected a change to improve the check cashing service of the
business office, carried on, with the aid of Slater, a food preference su rvey to make
the food in the cafeteria a little more bearable, arranged fo r special rates for students in Binghamton, in addition to organizing the Soph-Frosh Struggle, the Student-Faculty Reception, and Winter and Spring Weekends.

56

�Class Office rs

Mr. John Shay. Jon Iannelli. Dave Segal, Sue hiedland. Seth Koch. !-'lien

War~haucr.

C'orl..; Kester, C'ath; Codispoti

Weekends, with the Presidents of the Sophomore and
Junior classes each in charge of a major event. The Senior class wound up a very successful year climaxed by
the Senior Picnic, the annual Senior Dinner-Dance and
the donation of the class gift at Graduation Exercises.

·1 he unity, cooperation and spirit of each class is decided by the vigor with which the class officers tackle
their jobs. The Freshman C lass started off the yea r with
a dance, the "Odd Ball," as part of Winter Weekend. A ll
class officers were active in both Winter and Spring

Stude nt Cente r Board

ROW I: 111111or 0/TiCl'n· Bell&gt; 1-ranl... Bill Sweene}. Paul Simandlc, Louise Gros\man. ROW
2: /- re.1/111w11 Officcr.1. Oicl.. Orman. Richard Carbon. Carol&gt; n Pope, Bob Poczic, Barbara Mctsl..y. S1•11ior Offiars: I I ugh Heffc1 n. Barbara Goodwin. Bob Grilli~. Bob Connolly. Sophomore
Officer.1: Mickey Greenberg, Fred Balling. Ken Hoffman.

cider party, a very successful bridge tournament, the
F riday evening llids, and the intellectual Captain Marvel "shazam" serials. The S.C.B. this year also reestablished Ye Olde Colonial Lounge in the basement of
our new Student Center.

As any college student knows, it takes more than
classes to make a college. The St udent Center Board
runs the activities in the building where the core of the
campus social life is located. This year the S.C.B. swung
into high gea r sponso ring speakers, dance~, an apple

57

�I.S.C.C.

!:&gt;I A.I I I): Annette Voclkk, 1\rn1c l cvine, Ben Selig, Jo}cc Daschcr. Roland ( ampbcll, Mary
I ou A&lt;la1m. Sl A 'D I (,. Shirlq Dc\tt:r, Cad I rn\trom. Charles Butler. J lcrbert Parker,
Michael Barth, Maril}n 1-..cll~.

f"hc Inter-Social Club Council performs the important function on campus of
integrating the various councils of the social clubs, and making sure that the social
councib o f the clubs inter a nd between each other arc fully counselled, and informed of this. Without this important organi/ation, the social clubs would hardly
be able to intermix their councils, thus defeating the entire purpose of the group,
which has as its aim the total inter-campus assimilation of social council clubs. To
simplify the running of the organi/ation, two cou ncil members from each cou ncil
of the inter-social clubs arc elected to a larger council, composed in addition of a
chairman elected by the representatives of th e various smaller counci ls. representing each club. A secretary-t reasu rer is also elected by this large r, super-in ter-cou ncil, and it is his responsibility to coordinate the activities of the smaller, local-i ntercouncils. and their respective secretary-treasurers. Imagi ne how confused life would
be v.ithout this organin1tion!
ISCC. with the help of the Director of student activities. is responsible for the
social calendar. the Red Cross blood drive and an insurance fund for all clubs.
It cooperates with USG on planning of Winter and Spring weekends, in ad&lt;lition
to rnnning the Open-Events Regulatory Committee.

�-Wh o's -Wh o
!\tar&gt; AllT. I homa\ B1o"n.
Marcia I t:\lc1. Arnold I cvin.:.

Marcia &lt;.,mith. Joan (1l11cJ..a11f

Annually Harpur College nominates candidates for Who\ Who
in American Colleges on bases of
service lo the school, and high
scholastic stand ing.
Drago n Society is established
on the idea of recognizin g outstanding extra-curri cular participation. Its membersh ip requires
a minimum average of 1.25 and
a n accumulat ion of credi ts under
a special point system.

Dra gon Soc iety
Marcia Tcxlcr. Arnold I .:'in.:. Mar} Alff. I horna~ Brown. J oan Cil11cJ..auf.

59

�U.S. G.

Standing
committees

LEfT TO RI G HT: Joyce Sanders. Mike Banh. Bob Dikeman, Larry Klein,
Gordon Schwartz. H elene Shaw, M ary AllT.

Judicial
Review
Board

ClllEF JUSTICF.S: Joan Gluci-auf and Bill H yman.

Student
Publications
Board

L EFr rO RIGH r : M arilyn Kelly, M ary Alff, Mr. Louis Centorani . advisor:
and Bob Poczik.

�l EFT TO RIGHT: Alan Smith. Marilyn Wineburg. Mary Alff. Stephen Self. Reece Pence.
Irene Franck, Jim Geer, Albert Wolkoff, Jim Lorelli , Bobbie Dryer. Bob Friedman. Barbara
Gagl iardi . Bobbie Dobriner. Helene Shaw.

Student
Counselor s

lN ACTION . . . These trustworthy,
loyal, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient,
cheerful, thrifty, brave, etc. people arc
in charge of keeping "dorm life" liveable.
As we sec this includes indoctrination,
selling cookbooks and investigating the
situation.

61

�Colonia l N e ws

B. Dohriner. h.. Gray,on. I.. I ppilito. F. ')a,low. 5. ~elf. D. Segal. J . Berger. R. Kobrin. M.
Tcxlcr. \fwwg111.11 Ed.; J. PC\\in. M. Smith. l:.d.-in-C/111•/: P. T rembath. A. Suchiml..y. S. 1-cliRosenhecl..1, G.
son. \1. Oolie. M. Blinicl... S. Lewis. (1. "C." Kester. R. Booth. M. Kuker.
Schwaru. J . P. Zenger.

Vol. XII, No. 21

Harpur College of Stal&lt; Univtraitv of New York at Endirott, N. Y.

Friday, May 20, 1960

The Harpur Herald
Harpur Collrgt -

Vol. XIII. No. 1

Statt Um'vt.rtritv of Neu· Fork

Thuuday, September 29, 1960

*Wt ha\·t: ltft thll tp&amp;C't for fOU
to tdl •1th 1our aupuuon for
our namt Plu.M rttum our nar
a!onr w1t..h a bnef paragraph
l(lv1nc

your

rta.on• for your

thu1« Lo the •nvelo~ on the
new•p•pu off1ct door br Mon·
day &amp;ftemoon

Friday, Oc«&gt;ber 7, 1960

\"ol. XIII, No. I

THE COLONIAL NEWS
Vol. XIII. No. 3

Harp&amp;1.r Colfrgt of Statr l'nn·rr81t~ of Stu.• fork at 81n111tanaton, /Ir" _ Y.

62

Friday, Ocober 14. 1960

�J im ll clfcrn, Pre1itlc111; Jcrr) Kala)jian. I lite ~recd, Irwin Ell.in, Michael Blinict., Al ~uch·
in~k).

Young Democrats
(i3

�Young Republicans

ROW I: Carol Demo. Shirley De.'\tcr, Manic} F. I uttle, Jr., Pre1ide111: l inda Conger. ROW 2:
Larr) Plotl..in, Jud) O~tcrhoudt, Diel.. Hohlo~~l..i. fd Putnam. Secretary; I inda Lundquist,
Bob ll olsapplc. Vice Pre.1ide111: Ken HofTm;111, Wally Bothner, Gordon Schwartz.

64

�ROW I: Joel "Yiani'' Mohen'&gt;on. ( ath~ ( ocfr.. poti. Neil ~talin. 5am1. Ro.,e Baral, Ellen
Sontag. Sue Oliver, I oui'c I atcincr. Jake Weiman. ROW 2: l inc.la Dunning. R1 prc.1&lt;•11w11n'
from Frew.1berg; Plato. Jud\ Donner. 1-..arcn Crossen, Rita Boxer ROW 3 Jon aaronson. Bob
Price. Bob Matlcll. 1 awrence 1-. h earm:y. hq.; Herb Philbrick, Sue Daglionc.

65

�German
Club

K FF l INC,: Maureen Wilcox. Helen Bohmer. Kath~ Mc(J1nni•-. Mary Alff. STA D I G·
Annelle Vocll..c, Dr. Weigand. Phillip Jone~. Dick Sinidi, lr1't1s11rl!r· Carole Lighthill. Ruth
l each ~ecrt• tan: Bill Voclklc. Hab Church-Smnh Pre11cle111: Marian Lc~l..o, Karen McCauley,
I 111da Sundqui't.

Spanish Club

l cona f... almanowitz. President Bunn} Rio,.

66

�Gallery Committee

SPRAWLED: I Oi\ Pompa. Jo Damon. Secretary: eil Bellen. Andrea J:..arpa\. Jud&gt;
Fcn,tcr. Sue Dogbonc. STA DI G: Joan Chee\ Cr\. Peter I loberman. l onny M alc!la.
I- ran Parl..cr,
oel Wise, I inda Dunning. Trea.111rer: ammi. l're.\idrnt; J:..aren
Cro~~cn.

In keepi ng with the Yea r of
Big Culture, the Gallery Committee has offered to the college
and the community ex h i b i t s
owned by Nelson R ockefeller and
the Ga lloway paintings. They also sponsor part of the Fine Arts
Festival and offered shows of Dr.
Zupnick's paintings and African
Sculpture.

67

�Bill I lessc. Paul Viani. Arnie Levine. John Heaton. Bob 1-ric&lt;lman. George Delamar. Joel
" I ingcrs" Mofscnson. l'rl'.1icle111; Jake Weiman. Karen C rosscn. Sl'crl'tary; Denny "Later"
Bell. Danny Deighan, Howie I-ox. Treasurer: Al Tanenbaum. Ju&lt;ly 1-emtcr.

The Jau Society, popularly known as the "Young Socialists," can be found at
any given time in Mee ting Room 3, wondering wh1.:ther the Paramount Lounge
contract will be renewed. The active members of the society enjoyed a prosperous
year, marred only by the unexpected passing away of The az and the disappearance of Boss 13assplayer Viani's beard. However. Denny Bell learned to play 37
new instruments, and the Society received a contract to play at Coletti's in Endicott.
so the Ja11 Society blows on.

Harpur Jazz Society

�Colonia l Pl a y ers

ROW 4: Nancy V ogclfanger•, Betty Cologg1, Roger Ray. hcd·
ericl.. J . Shaw. J oyce Suarney•, Kcnm.:th Ungar . I inda
Rhodes. Alan M. T anenb:1um. ROW 5· Mil..c Blinicl.. . Annette
Vocll..le , Ed Subitzl..y . Chucl.. Rev1lh. Jeff Czebler , J oan
Missa ll . Sylvia Storms . ROW 6: l ann~ raub. J ane I .ag0t1&lt;lis.
Will iam S. I lyma n. Cathie Henridson .
" Apprentices.

ROW I: Steph anie Allen, Secretary: Rita Boxer, Vice President; Barbara Russell, Prc•sident; Paulette Camhi. Trea.wru.
ROW 2: Irene 1-ranck. Linda Dunning. Sue F-riedland. J oel
Mofsenson, Mary E lle n Burns"', Betty Colelli. Shirley Dexter,
Betsy Ross. Pat Woyten. Marion Leonard. ROW 3: Arthur
Umlas, Tony Mainionis, cd Weisman* . Richard Noble*, David Herschfield •. Alice Silverman*. Carolyn Pope. Dolores
cidlinger , Laurence Olivier.. Joan Cheevers . C harlie Soodal...

Spring R e vu e
Organi za tion

Barbara Rus\ell, Denny Bell, C harlie Soo&lt;lal... Joel Mofsenson. Jal..e Wei
man, Rita Boxer, ~uc Friedland. Stephanie Allen. Sue Daghone. I ind;1
Dunning.

69

�S l.AT l::.D: Vicl. i Newma n. li er bcrt Cohen . Ro b ert '&gt;tucl.art. A lfred Le htonen. Richard Sat kin ,
R ichard Carlton . Barbara Me t\l.y. S I A N O ! G: Dr. Va\ilew. Ed Sudan. Stu L C\\ i \. l cddy
H och~ t adt. I larvcy Boller. Bob 1-.. a~c h al..

Deba te Club

T he Deba te Society this yea r has made a n a ttem pt to revive inte rest in the field of fo rem.ics.
It has do ne this by n ot me rely conce rning itself
with fo rm al debating, but by wo rking in the fields
of public speak ing a nd di e ussio n as we ll. A long
these lines, the gro up tried O x fo rd Unio n style
debati ng; the heck lers won. The Society a lso deba ted on the subject 'The pen is mightier th a n
the sword" with the F e ncing C lu b, a nd lost.
Unde r the g uida nce of Dr. E uge ne Va),ilcw, a
recent additi o n to the facu lt y, a nati o nal discussion
cont est was e nte red and novice teams we re se nt
to several tou rn amen ts. Both resulted in a fair
a mo u nt o f success.

70

�Richard 1 row. Ron Hulnick. I lelen Bohmer. C hark~ Soodak, a tree, Joan ( hccvcr~. Robert
Hcr\ch.

Nobody knows exactly what the Outing Cl ub docs, but one has only to l ook at
the ecstatic grins on the faces of the members as they return from a j aunt in th e
woods to tell that they truly have been
ature. Activities in
enjoying Mother
which they actively participate in, as well
as hold informative discussions, include
skiing-, horseback riding and hiking.

Outing Club
Ron H ulnid. anJ friend.

71

�J e wish Fello wship

ROW I: Loi\ Weinstein. Nancy Sax, Joan Amdur. Arline Markel, Madeline Kay, Nancy Vogclfangcr. Ruth Mallybcrg. Susan
Scher. Marilyn Kuker. Amy Nelzbcrg. ROW 2: Jim Shear,
5teve OpchimJ..y, Dave Axelrod. Jane Wisc. Ed ~aslow, Pr1•.\id1'111; Myra I cv1ne, Ed Weisman, Tri•a.\/irer; Fnid Barax, Sec-

re/ary; Mike Blinick, Gary Cohen. David Weiner, Richard Obie. ROW 3: Judy Nixon. Stefanie Singer, Ro,alyn Kober.
Jeanne 'Berger, Leona Kalmanowttz. (1ordon Schv.artz, Steve
Rappel, Alice Silverman. Oa\ id Hcrschfeld. Marc . (ocl. Eugene Kline, Daniel H. Kaplan, Stuart A. Lewis.

Newm an Club

ROW I: (arol&gt;n Demo. Sue C~taldo. Belly Cologgi. Bonnie
Mamlina. I inda l eVasseur. Jo) Ann Nocito. ROW 2: Barbara
Cebula. Carol Albrecht. rileen Bodie. 1-rancinc Cabora o. Ann
l ehrer. Barbara Gagli:ird1, Diana Heath. Marsha Scialdo. Aud-

re)' Hall . Kathy Hidey, Carmen Maniaci. ROW 3: Fnid Seeger, Mary Anne CembabJ..i. Annelle Voellde, Marion Leonard.
Pat Tarn, Art Terzi. Dick Hohlowski, Bob Holsapple, Preside111 ; John O'Meara. John Phillips. DicJ.. Jablon~ki.

�Pintoppler s

2: Joseph Lamphere, John Goddard, Art Terzi, Je rr y C'erwo nka, Jo\eph Palant , Dean Porter. ROW 3: Paul Sopchal.. . Robert
A Con nolly. President; Joseph O'Shea, William Myers.

ROW I: David Herschfeld, Michael Stratford, Joy Ann Nocito,
Angela Senio, Jnt a Vanagelis. Joyce Dascher, Cath y Fruhauf,
Carol Anderson, Win De Ma ttos. Louise Grossman. Sue Laird ,
Mary Anne Cembalsl..i. Bob Holsapple, Shirley Dexter. ROW

\Vomen's Recreation al Associatio n

Icy Dexter, Karen Fems. Karen Grayson. Jud y Pessin. F.llen
Fured1, Jud} Brandeis.

Miss Godfrey. Marily n Kuker, Loretta Tallman, Caro lyn Pitcher, Karen McCally, Joan Honeyman. Linda Sundquist, Shir-

73

�M ike Blinick. rd Weisman, J ane W ise, Richard Carlton, Mr.
Cento rani . Albert Wolkoff. Jo L yn Abbott . George Delam ar,
M arily n Kuker. Joan Chccv.::rs, Alan M. Tanenbaum, Dr. Vasilew.

Radio -Workshop

T he fact th at the R ad io Wo rkshop docs no t have a
radio station docs not di scourage th ese hap py souls,
who feel th at " pretending" to broadcast is al most as exciting as the rea l thi ng. Many enjoyable hours have
been spent in the control room of the student cente r
playing with microphones, tape recorders, and colo red
lights and buttons. It is hoped that in the fu ture the
Wor kshi p will have an F M stati o n of its own, so that
th e entire student body ca n share in the fun. P rese ntly,
they a rc preparing the script fo r " Happenings at Harpur" heard locally every Sund ay on W EN E .

74

�Chemistry Club

Charle\ ~oodal-., Mel\'in Weiss,
Dr. McDuOie, Bill Lewb, Bonita Mollicone, lkuy Colelli,
Peter
J loberman,
l'rcderick
Kundall, Pre.1ide111; William
Myers.

Biology Club

"\~.
. -- ._,,,,..

•

•
•
75

Carol l 1ghthill. Arlene Mar1-.cl, M11-.c "-.aplan, Madeline
Kay. Don Wagner, Ron Kri1111of\I-.i, Marian Lesk.o .

�Society for the Advancement
of Management

COU l rR-CLOCKWJSE rROM BOTJ'OM : Joe Lamphere, Bob Connol ly, Harold William\,
Jo,eph K. O'Shea, Don Donnellan. Carl Ernstrom, Tom Mc Donough, IJen Raphael, Dave
Golds1cin. Herb Parker. Dick Kropp, Bob Griffis.

apple, Ken Bernstein. TAB!X 3: Gerry Stern. Garrie Stevens,
Wayne Strong. James Lundgren , Norman Spector.

f \Bl I I: Dave '&gt;cgal. Jim Geer. Herb linow, Prcside11t;
C1corgc Ddamar J AB LE 2: l-d Segal. l cc Jones. Bob Hol s-

Alpha Phi Omega
76

�Chamber Group

ROW
Jo} cc
ROW
J.,,lara

Jim Com.Ion, 1'.ath) lfidcy. Manha Hcs~er. Barbara lfolbcrt.
ROW ~· Douglas Hull. Dennis O'Connor. I ony Marnornis.
I om Calistn. \.leh rn Rho. Jerry Blair. Donald "1cl'l'n

I: Victoria Burrington. Barbara Howe, Janet Stuhlmillcr,
S•arncy. Cind7 Orr. Beverly Hickey. Barbara Goodwin.
'.!: Sally M ilchcll. Karen Korhummcl, ( la1rc Hester.
Schmidt. Jane Wi,c, Bob Dalrymple. Jo l }n Abbott.

Chorus

The chorus is presen tl y under the nC\\ direction of Dr. Frcdcnd. 13. Crane. an
instructor in Music. They present annuall) a Chri-.tmas Concert. Spnng Concert
wh ic h is pa rt of the Fine Arts Festival. and arc part of the Graduation Program.
Me m be rs of the Chorus arc given college credit after three !-.crnl!stcrs.

77

�Dedication
The third governor to dedicate Harpur
College, Nelson Rockefeller, arrived on
the morning of September 29, 1960 just
in time (the plane was late) to take part
in the cap and gowned processional preceeding the formal dedication of the new
campus in the gym. following the elaborate bu!Tet, the participants (except the
Governor, who was on his way to Nigeria)
attended a symposium in the new theatre
and an architectural display in the librar;.
The dedication was a topic of conversation and written commentary for weeks
to come. The Co/011i1t would like to join
with Go\crnor Rod.cfeller in the dedication of the new campus.

78

�\
Hail. the Chief! Hail, tht: Chief! Hail.
the Chief! Hail, the Chit:f! Hail. thi: Chief!

"My frientl~. it gives me g-r-e-a-t pleasure on this historic occasion to appear before you. humble and yet proutl. proud that the
citizens of the g-r-e-a-t State of New York see fh, anti I repeat.
sec fit ... "

79

�Colonist Staff
SEC Rl-:;TARTAL
Louise Grossman
Marilyn Smith
Stuwart Lewis
l'HOTOGRAP!lY
Gordon Schwartz, Editor
Marilyn Kuker
Edward Saslow
Richard Sherman
Nancy LcVine
SPORTS
Sheldon Edison, Editor
Janet Fraser
ART AND LAYOUT
Karen Crossen Editor
Cathy Codispoti, Editor
Andy Karpas
J udy Fenster
Ellie Freed
Mike Bcrnsohn
La rry K earney
SENIORS AND SOCIAL CLUBS
Steve Levy, Editor
Cindy Blake
Leona Kalmanowitz
Sheryl Sternlieb
BUSINESS
Jon Iannitti, Business F,ditor
Jim McMahon
MANAGING EDITOR
Arth ur Cooper

Mary A lff, Editor-in-Chief

80

ADVISOR
Dr. Kenneth C. Lindsay

�LITERARY AND ART SECTION

�POETRY by Ellen Sontag
WHEN
Little room at the foo t of the stairs
Scarcely bearable.
And an orange fire always fed,
By my little brother
(now he's dead)
The room had roses in greypaper on the wall.
&amp; smooth yellow tapers;
Down the hall.
r hardly liked it then.
And now it's all
l used to pray in when.

A WORLD SEE

FROM A GRASS MEADOW

Sky, candy striped in purple, pi nk, and
twilight haze.
[ gaze, ou t toward, boating docks and
geranium window boxes.
Green, a nursery, and spotted cows and cherry
boughs hardly blossoming.
Wind is turning brown and dust has blown up ...
Like a child growing, aimlessly, to life.
And strife; as flowers flow
In lonely pathways by the road.

DFATH
It which touches us,
almost devout with gentleness;
Nudging practically the all inside.
We sec the dead, loving breath.
And then a cry, a whimper
I am less.

82

�ELEGY
Open windows leave me in dispair
That old dry wind has dusted them with soot.
And if no one cares, I'll look.
Small round faces know that I am here
While playing marbles on the floor.
For having never vanqu ished fear
It comforts me to lock the door.
Smells have mildewed in the hall
And closets, splinters now are left.
Tho.c foot tcps gliding off the floor
Arc marching up and down with death.
Some grassy carpets fallen through
And polished hallways scuffed;
He was a man that no one knew,
And no one knows his dust.
STRA GER

Blue sentime11t over a flower
Webhed, trembling and slight.
Ila{/ faUen in the autumn
Wavering in the night.
Flower buds. ye{{ow-tipped
A re .Hi{{ enclosed, and gloved
In the monochrmnatic lip
Of 1um111er love.
Butterflies have not been seen,
Nor dandelions s/Opped
From pushing up the lifeless green
And, now, mouldering stuff.
But, wandering behind the hiUs,
And listening to the church bell tone
Or children's laughter all too shrillThe one who walks alone.

IGHT
Moon, three quarters
Dressed in a yellow cross.
About its borders
Wind moves, in a silent song
He sings. visitor unborn.

83

�LULLABYE
Someday will come with draped wings,
Across the hills arc mingling sounds.
And lift the rainbows up and sing,
Across the hills arc mingling sounds.
Yesterday walked with very small feet,
Oh one, by two, by three.
The future is silence, the future is sleep
One, two, three arc we;
Dancing horsemen, prancing horsemen
Guiding your way through night.
One has gone, one just came
Another will bring the light;
Rut, this third cannot remember your name,
And ha!&gt; galloped out of sight.
To me, all dreams, all love the same.
Goodnight, goodnight, goodnight.

84

�THE TRANSITION by Susan Esther Warren

call the
Within ten years, "The Avenue ," as the neighbo rhood people came to
e surgery.
centrally located shoppin g area, had undergo ne some pretty extensiv
spotless
ly
noticeab
and
s
nameles
the
now
was
"Harry and Irvi ng's Lunche onette"
e
resembl
to
thin
too
y
assuredl
and
,
efficient
enterpri se of a gentlem an too silent,
which
shop
beauty
icuous
inconsp
either of the former owners. The small and
many yea rs
Mildred Kramer and her two sisters had owned and operate d for so
sers
hairdres
fifty
roughly
of
had made room for "Don" and his resplend ent crew
and
high
a
in
ble
discerni
and manicu rists. The result of this change was easily
women.
rhood
neighbo
rising rate of glamo rous platinum blondes among the
hems
Mr. Kapash , the tailor, had become far too old and nearsigh ted to take-up
T
"X-LE
and let-out seams, and gratefully he had signed his shop over to
KLEEN ERS" whose tailoring was even Jess proficie nt than their spelling.
The
Of course, these were o nly a few manifes tations of the changin g scene.
I
War
rld
post-Wo
of
rows
ded
surroun
had
time,
tree-spo tted lots which, at one
houses
nt
apartme
many
the
for
tion
prepara
in
homes, had been clean shaven
newwhich now oblitera ted all recollec tion of them. In keeping with the exterior
g
changin
nts,
apartme
the
into
moved
ness of the area, a different group of people
were,
families
These
ity.
commun
the intrinsic as well as the visual aspects of the
lived there
on the average , you nger by at least a generation than those who had
life, in
ul;
successf
before. Wives were more fashiona ble; husbands were more
diffor
basis
general, was much more 'A merican ized'. Perhaps the primary
the
and
ferentia tion was religion for, along with Modern ization came R eform,
label,
a
once Orthodo x com munity modern ized to the point where Judaism was
a category , and an aftertho ught.
and after
Frcilach , the neighbo rhood butcher , sufTered in several ways during
for that
or,
great
any
reaping
not
was
he
the transition . Financia lly of course,
Fowl,
and
Meats
"Finest
His
.
changed
had
matte r, small fortune since things
Grand
the
because
ves
housewi
young
the
Strictly Kosher" sign did not attract
many of
Union was new, within walking di stance, and inexpen sive. Moreover,
"Why
disease;
pping
y-of-sho
his old and true custome rs had caught the new-wa
ng?"
everythi
get
sh/ep from store to store when in the Superm arket, you can
when
" Why?'', he often muttere d to himself, "Why eat a nice piece of sirloin
you can get a tough chunk of tenderloin?"
neighbo rFor another reason also, Freilach was unhappy of late. The tone of his
men like
hood had become less clannish , less harmon io us. Several of his cronies,
ago, were
himself who had opened shops on "The Avenue " twenty- five years
d in
forced to give up their businesses. It seemed that people weren't intereste
le
vegetab
and
fruit
the
in,
Goldste
As
nger.
lo
any
ts
chatting with their merchan
!"
business
a
run
can't
you
wishes
good
on
h,
man, had said before he left, "Freilac

85

�With all his troubles, Freila&lt;.:h never forgot his few, but good, customers. [t
was Friday, soon it would be sundown, and Mrs. Hoffman had not come in to
pick up her two chickens. Every Friday for eighteen years, he had saved two
of his finest and cleanest pullets for Mrs. Hoffman; it would be a shame if
she were, perhaps, too sick to keep the Shabborh even this once. Years ago, she
used to be the first one in the store on Fridays, because her preparations for
the Sabbath meal were so extensive that the whole day was utilized in cooking
and cleaning. Lately, of course, Mrs. Hoffman did not always get her chickens
before noon. Her son's marriage to a Christian girl, along with a crippling case
of Arthritis, were tsuru.1 enough to sadden the heart and feet of any woman.
He was just about to close up when Mrs. Hoffman's face appeared at the
door. Greeting her in his best holiday manner, he shouted, "Hello Mrs. Hoffman.
Gutt Shabboth! I thought maybe you had Koshered your own chickens today!"
"A cook I am; but a rabbi I'm not, Freilach. You have my chickens?" She
didn't seem at all anxious to partake in their traditionally friendly teasing.
"Chickens?", Freilach playfully asserted, "These arc far from just chi&lt;.:kens;
they shine like diamonds, they're soft like butter!"
He detected an almost reproachful look on her face as she said, ''That\ just
what I wanted to tell you. Frcilach. l am no longer in the market for butter
and diamonds."
"Mrs. Hoffman, there's maybe something wrong with my meat? Tell me,
why do you joke with me like that?"
And even in his fingers, which he wiped on his apron habitually when he
was nervous, he sensed what was coming.
"Frei lach, r don't have to tell you this; who else would come in and tell you?
My husband thinks I'm crazy for explaining to you. 'Do you tell Mr. Macy when
you buy a hat from Mr. Gimbel?' That's what my husband says, but I know
better."
"Listen Mrs. Hoffman, if, for some reason you had to buy once or twice
from another butcher, you don't have to tell me. Who am I?"
Nervously, he tried to detract her from her purpose with silly chatter. He
knew that she hadn't bought meat from anyone else because her order had been
as large as usual during the past week.
"l just want to tell you," she began sadly, "that in my house the meat doesn't
have to be Kosher. Was I ever strictly Kosher anyhow? Did my husband ever
sec the inside of a synagogue? I always kept the Shabboth for my boys. Now,
Jerold is in out-of-town-college and my older son and his wife arc living with
us. A nice girl she is, but a Christian girl ... "
"Please, Mrs. Hoffman, you don't have to explain. If you would rather take
your business to the Grand Union ... "
"Freilaeh," she continued towards the words which would be as a death
sentence to him, "we're more like friends than customer and butcher; let me
explain what should be explained. Kosher meat is too expensive; you know that.
For me, a piece of non-Kosher meat is leather, but my family is happier with
a piece of steak from the Grand Union on Friday night than with chicken soup,
roast chicken, and noodle pudding. So, I should care? Shabboth never rubbed
off on my family, so I should care? Less trouble for me.··

86

�She tried to disguise the sorrow which struggled within her for recognition .
Anyone with half a brain could sec that she cared very much.
"So," she finished, "from now on you should cancel my regular order.
What more can I say, Freilach?"
There was, of course, nothing more to be said.
"Mrs. Hoffman," the butcher began innocuousl y, "I appreciate your honesty.
Believe me, a lot of my customers have stopped coming in without saying a
word. You're right and in your rights, I don't have to tell you that. It only seems
a shame that from now on, you won't be coming by me to talk anymore."
"Of course I'll come in! What makes you think I'll forget you?"
She began to feel badly not only for herself, or for him, but for the friendship they had maintained .
"You 'II forgct, you 'II forget. Mrs. Hoffman, why shouldn't you forget? Everybody is forgetting. They're forgetting to light the Shabboth candles, they're forgetting to pray the prayers; people forget everything . But remember, that they
can do. They remember that Shabboth costs a few pennies to keep. They remember that to keep Kosher takes time: it takes care. But all good things take
time and care, Mrs. Hoffman. The Grand Union meat in cellophane packages
is easier. And that a Jewish woman should shut Sliabhoth out from her house,
that too is easier. You think maybe I can't sec what's happening ?"
It was clear to the troubled little woman that this butcher could sec it all.
Empty handed, she started to the door in an effort to get outside before his
sentiments might touch her any further. But Freilach's last, plaintively posed
question transforme d him from an enemy to a kindred soul.
"Nu, Mrs. Hoffman, am I so wrong? 13cforc you go, just tell me; am I so
very wrong?"
And she knew that he was not wrong at :ill.

87

�POETRY by Lawrence Kearney
Would you care for a confession
gentle reader?
sensual ravings
a vicarious spot of blood
on the freshly starched linen of your mind?
Perhaps l will oblige
but be cautious
ravings can be dangerous
and demons infectious
your customary disinfectant might not prove
adequate

l will wait till the birds clamor at the
windows
before I go insane
the birds will clamor to get in because
the winter has turned carnivore
and plucks a t their feathers
and they have suspicions
about what he has done with spring
then 1 will open the window and let the m all in
and with delirious twitterings
of gratitude they will impart their
traditional wisdom to me
and, feeling like Siegfried
I shall discover the tremendous similarity
between wisdom and insanity

88

The night is like a cold blue rose with
dark green thorns and
you can't sec them because they
always seem to be waiting on the other
:.ide of the stem
and they don't hear or feel anything
when you scream, ripped down
a nerve called the heart;
you tried to grasp
and the night which is loneliness
or love cannot be held
try as you may your blood
will run across the stars
along the deep g reen sky
and soon the moon is stained
and not even warm tears will
make it white again
The rose which is the night may
tremble in the bloodied moonlight
but not a healing drop of dew will
trickle from its shaking blue petals
A rose is a painful thing with no one
to breathe it with you and no
deep eyes to see it softly
reflected in
and no o ne to even wipe the
thorn stinging blood from
your fingers.

�by Robert Cross
there are many things which I intend to laugh at
one is myself, the other is you and on and on
The sea
I would like to lie on the beach on a warm summer
night and light a cigarette next to a fire and
listen listen to the water or waves break on the
\'and which is the shore and I would just lie there
listening and looking up at the sky at the stars in
the night for eternity and the wai·es would break on
the beach and it would be night in the summer
and maybe I .,vould like your tender eyes next to mine
and we could together lie there listening forever to
the sound of waves in the night on a warm sandy beach
do you think there will be a soft fire by us with which
we can see each other if we turn our heads from the
vertical path of the stars on a summer night which is
warm and two of us I maybe you together listening
.1ilently for the break of the waves in which there is
the silence of the world when love and the aloneness
where we are the heach at night together in each other's
arms would we sleep on the sand and find in the morning
embers of the fire and a cool blue sea ebbing into waves
and would we live for the beach nights when the sea
would rub itself into our souls and we could laugh at
ourselves ever so slightly as we lie there together on
the summer beach at night listening
and we would be young forever just young that is
all for no one grows old when he listens to the waves
flowing on over the sand into our hearts and we would
love the sand the sky all blue with clouds a little
warmth of the sun on a summer day .,.,•hich night we would
lie also again and again on the beach shore sand smell
of the water sea and waves forever as the 101•e grows
large into each other we see our eyes blended and still
listening for that is all we hear the sea is enough to
live on for eternity when the heart and mind remembers
that the warm summer beach migh t turn us inwards and
laughter soft and warm like the sea at summertime
we would meet no one ever again anywhere but just lie
there and we would never die for death does not trek
the warm sandy beaches where we lie in the night and
listen the waves on the shore so soft and real
and we would be one with the silence.

89

I

I

I

I

I

�THE WAY HOME by

Paul Viani

1f only we had worn shoes. perhaps this feeling of being alone would not be

so strong. We might feel the comfort of something which had been provided fo r
us at home; a protective clement. Where, before, our bare feet let us feel at
case and rather informal, we now felt naked and without protection; prey, specifically. to sto nes and heat, insects and snakes; generally, to those nameless
clements which all fear adjunct'&gt;.
My brother Alan and I, while roami ng in the general vicinity of our parents'
summer home had, casually but peremptorily, decided to wa lk the five or six
miles of back-road which separated us from the highway to meet our father.
H e was expected to drive up from the city to spend a weekend with us and he
was due to arrive sometime that afternoon. Our plan was to wa lk until we met
him coming from the opposite direction or, if we did not meet him on the road.
to wait at the junction of the highway where (we had little doubt) he would
have to pass.
We were equ ipped with a pair of sho rts each and a dog whose afTcctions we
had, by CU'&gt;tOm, shared equally-and that was all. lt was late afte rnoon before
we left and, in spite of our mother's voice calling to us from a long way off. we
decided not to delay ou r trip and co ntinued on our way.
The first mile and a half went quickly (or so it seemed) in spite of the
really painful heat of the tar road. For we were familia r with this part of the
road due to many long even ing walks which we had taken with our parents,
a nd we thus felt secure. Our d og c hased rabbits a nd we, in turn, chased the
dog. Few areas of c hildish inte rest were left unexplored by us; old foot paths,
deserted farm houses, an outlying chicken coop, a n old well, a strange stone
structure which we imagined to be the remains of some pioneer's fort (probably
th e foundations of some o ld shack, fallen into ruin), and every culvert which
ran beneath the road.
When we reached the portion where the paving ended, as did our familiarity
with our su rroundings, the su n was much lower and it was with a certain, as
yet unspoken, trepidation th at we continued. The pleasant cool ness of the moist
dirt road. however, tended to compensate for our vague fear, as did our expectation of new explorations.
Yet our progress became, rat her, more direct. We no longer made the frequent
side trips that had characteri1ed the earlier part of the tri p. In fac t, we hurried.
We also began to make certain that our dog kept ab reast of us. We did this
by shouti ng and whistling after him, but soon the hollowness of our voices in
that stillness prompted us to fashion him a rough ha rness so that we need no
longer disturb the quiet with ou r ca lls.
We continued on through tunnel-like passages made by the heavy growth o f
trees and bushes. It grew darker by almost perceptible degrees a nd we had still
o ne q uarter of our trip ahead of us. Infreq ue ntly we came to open places which
commanded view'&gt; of slowly undulating farm country. On these occasions we
wou ld stop and conjectu re on whether o r not a particular farm-house with a
familiar outli ne was, in fact, o urs and whether or not it cou ld be reached sooner
by cutting cross-country. These short stops always resu lted in the same conclusion: The houses were too far off to identify with certainty enough to warrant
leaving the road.
Thus we continued, ever more fearful, our feet no longe r cooled but rather

90

�EDWJ

VAR EY

bruised and chilled by the road. The
darkness was almost complete now, and
any stray light became a hope of auto
headlights signalling our father's arrival.
Soon the subject of turning back, until
now tacitly avoided, was broached. It
was our first open admission of fear.
Our problem was whether we should
start back now, in the face of almost
complete blackness, or continue to the
highway where we could be comforted
by the sight of autos; autos containing
human beings whose company we desperately had started to crave. If we continued, however, we would put off our
return by wasting time in a futile effort to
reach a place which was merely comforting and not our ultimate goal, which
was home.
Yet we did decide to continue. The
blackness at our backs seemed too deep
to attempt passage through and we felt
the darkness ahead to be much shorter.
So we went on, both hoping and fearing;
but we had misjudged the distance to the
highway.
We walked for half an hour, hoping
that the next turn would be the last, that
the next black tunnel of trees would issue
out on some sign of life. But it was all in
vain and we finaUy gave up hope. We
decided to turn back.
Now thoughts of home tortured us;
warmth, protection, and light. Alan became more frightened. Almost crying, he reviled me for not having turned back
sooner. 1, in my own fear, hated the dog who, in the presence of his masters,
showed no fear. I tried to comfort Alan with the thought that we would be
missed and that we would be searched for. I kept secret my realization that no
one knew where we were. Wasted hours might be spent searching the barns of
neighboring farms, favorite blackberry patches or even the road in the direction
opposite from the one we had taken.
Then we saw a light-two lights- headlights. lt was our mother come to get
us in a neighbor's ancient sedan. We climbed in, silently grateful for the cold
smooth running board and for all the sensations that one gets while climbing
barefoot into the cluttered back scat of an old car. We were even grateful for
the expected tongue lashing which we received from our recently frantic mother.
We were driven home, both of us with our faces pressed to the windows of the
car, morbidly reviewing the scenes of our fear in reverse. It was a very enlightening trip.
Our father showed up at midnight, having been detained by mechanical troubles,
to find on the next day his sons rather more grave than he had remembered them.
The change, however, displeased no one.

91

�POETRY by Dale Ketcham
With a harp made of drainpipe
And sidewalk grating bars
J'll serenade my loved one
As she fills the pickle jars
With gherkins g rown in graveyards,
Then screws the cap on tight,
And last of all she licks the label
In a pagan rite

MANDOLIN LANE
Twilight grips the town with a fuzzy hand
Xylophone Street where lonely little bells
Tremble on a seesaw, sl ide into the sand
Robins in the bushes, purple is the land
You and I take a walk around the block
Mandolin Lane where cJ:iilly little bells
Trickle down an eavestrough, chiming with the clock
Velvet sparrows drift, a silent south-bound flock
The ni ght is as dark as a blueberry pie
Marimba Toad where throbbing li ttle bells
Shimmer in the empty street, listen to them cry
1n the inkblot stillness, steeple pricks the sky
Near the coruscati ng shadows l see an o ld man
Point into the distance at the swarming night
Stilling twilig ht's sleepy bells, tiny eyes that scan
The dark once more and then wink shut, whisper of a fan
Iron ra iling twists down through the moonlight
The ivy is as dark as footsteps fading far
Across a trestle, silver lake, running in their fright
Dancing like chimes, like bells, tinkling in their flight.

THE OCTOPUS
The octopus is as gentle as can be.
He encircles you very tenderly,
And wheth~r you're thin or whether you're stout,
H e'll squeeze your g-u-t-s out.

92

�KNIT CATHEDRALS
The moon
ls a moth,
Adrift in a vast velvet evening;
And hides behind the leaves
While flutes weave a lonely cobweb
Of white wisp clouds.
An old old woman
Pulls her shawl tight against the night
Coming
Coming.
Cathedrals tower in the sky
Still warm from sunfire,
And candles flicker in a corner
Of the gloom-grey nave ...
Joey dreams
ln wind and flame;
He is candlelight
And he is molten wax
Running swiftly
Down a brass stairway
To the dark
Wet blotter of night
Which soaks away the day.
Joey dreams
In storm and an ancient song.
Choirs dream,
And the moon drifts out upon the nightAt piano keys turned pale
By the limpid white moonlight.
Joey dreams
Jn a bubbling glass of gi ngerale.
A hand, trembled with age,
ls pressed to eyes
C losed in fear, sorrow, or aching.
While Joey dreams,
A madman with a fragile smile
Walks in crystal blue wind
Where a tall cathed ra l
Is a tall mountain
ls orange hills
Is very lumpy blanket,
And the sun shines
On Joey's morning face.

93

�PIT fSBURGH MEMORIES
Night spattered on my fingers
And the choir of factories
Took up it evening hymn again
As Pittsburgh smoke arched
Dark and soft in the setting sun
Summer streets and porches
Rustic with T-shirt kids
And slammed screen doors
And TV sets inside
car-distant laughs, a car
Hums on the steep brick street
Dusky pigeons in the park, wings
The nocturne of industry
Filling the twilight, then the night
June Pittsburgh twil ight smoke
Cork and steel whine
Along the Monogahela
And I remember
The shacks, steep streets
And pall of soft grey smoke.

--

-=---~
KLARA SCHMIDT

CITY

IGHT

Feeble Luna,
A balloon above the city night.
The eye is
One tear
Falling in the evening
Stillness
And ribbons arc bright yellow
Above the scream of a cracked cello
In the midst of eating Jcll-0
And ever since the cat was jammed in the oven
It has sincerely enjoyed Beethoven
So I would fain lie doon, mithe r,
So make my bed for me to wither
In.

LAMENT
Face, the phony full moon, floats
The surface blank. with smile fixed
Eyes, the window shade rolh&gt; up
T he lamps off, dark light pours nowhere
Floating dreaming, act one, act two, act three, act four ...
Clouds drift all da) long
The moon-change swiftly; cloud hair down
Fog hair back, river mist dies
Drifting down 1hrL· country road
Moon sighs but \'Oid space stops the Voice
The voice of fog which sun light dries
The long day long night drift along
Black night trees brush Sandy moon
Dark., transformed. the phony words
f"og hair crying strands of rain
In black. stockings moonlight falls
A brok.en piano '&gt;tring twangs in fog
Slips through the window to die.

94

�CRUTCHES
by

Arthur Cooper
Almost silently, with only the metronomic click of his heels and her to remind
them of the passing of time, they walked along and on the outside of the boardwalk, toward Coney Island. It was summer, yet the boardwalk was almost
deserted; it had rained earlier in the evening, and even now thick drifts of
smoke moving out from the city lo sea obscured the moon and the stars and
Venus, which would have been visible. Tuesday night, and the fireworks of
course had been cancelled; he had come anyway, because he did not care about
the fireworks or the planet or the moon and certainly not the lack of people.
He had taken her here often because the boardwalk was a beautiful dark and
lonely place to walk on and think on and about; and sometimes not to think,
to free his mind and concentrate on nothing. It helped to be able to do that,
to eliminate every thought, idea, problem; and he came closer to doing it here
than anywhere else under any conditions, even drunkenness. For drinking did
not help him the way it helped others; he had friends who could become very
content and even happy when they were drunk, but he could not. He envied
them, although in an argument he would call them cowards and mental cripples.
And so they wa lked together down the dark side of the boardwalk, the side
that faced the beach and the ocean; and it did not matter whether they were
holding hands or his arm was around her or they were not touching at all;
he had a feeling of being part of something besides himself when he was with
her, and it did not matter if there was no physical contact. It had occurred to
him that they had gone for a long time, perhaps half an hour, without talking:
they had started walking in Brighton and were now passing the Atlantis Bar.
This did not disturb him, though, and he let his mind wander again, in a completely undisciplined way, to those thoughts, mostly abstractions, which made
him feel happiest. They pa sed a side street, and as he looked down it, at the
magnetic-warm neon lights flicking on and off and in circles and arrows, and
at the people who existed in matter but not in spirit for he knew none of them
and would probably never speak to them and would never be affected by them,
he felt himself different from everything; not superior to but somehow apart
from the world and the people and garbage and dogs and neon signs that composed it. The wa lk was having its effect on him; he felt hypnotically glad now,
almost drugged; he would have liked to continue his state of contentment and
deliberation, to walk in the warm breeLe without touching yet fusing with someone else, forever. And he knew then that no matter what he said to his
friends in the daytime, he had never been as happy as he was at that moment.
He looked at her and felt that she was uneasy, and he asked her softly
what the matter was, realizing as he spoke that the long silence and evening
wind had parched and glued his lips together, so that he had to break the seal
in order to speak. And she did not answer for a long time, for it was their habit
not to chatter but to speak thoughtfully and even then slowly and softly. When
she replied she said simply, " I am not going to see you any more," softly and
quietly as if she were giving the time of d·ay or weather forecast, her voice not
quavering, even her step not quickening. It was so sudden and he felt like
stopping and screaming, "Why?" or throwing something or just yelling, for he
had never been this frightened and he had never heard his heart beat so loud:
but he did not; he kept walking slowly, not even shaking, and then when he
95

�thought he could control his voice, all he asked was, "Arc you sure?" and she
said, "Yes," perfectly calmly.
And then he could not stand it and he yelled, "Why, for God's sake?" and
he stood there and shook her but it was already too late, he had lost, he had
hesitated, it was over, and he knew it and so did she.
"f can't tell you why," she said softly, when he stopped shaking her, calm
now, "but I am never going to see you again."
.. Why?" he screamed. "For God's sake, why? We go well together. We have
fun. You like me. You can't just leave me like that. You don't want to. There
must be a reason!"
"There is no God," she said calmly.
And suddenly he could not stand it any longer, he could not stand being
near her any longer. he could not stand the world or the people in it or the
calmness around him any longer; and he started running and he ran and she
shouted but he did not understand what she said, and he ran down the steps
to the sand and across the beach to the water where it was darkest and roaringwaves noisy and along the shore, waves coming in covering his ankles, sinking
in wet sand, running; and screaming, screaming loudly against the roar, and
crying, running and crying, screaming then sobbing falling down on his knees
in the wet sand, water all around and seeping under, pounding his head against
the rocks, mouthfuls of sand spitting crying water Joshing over crying and
pounding, sobbing

96

��Ed Putnam. Mllnllger: 1 ony D'Ari'&gt;totle. Al Yarnell. Richard Horowit1., Al Israel ,
Tom Kirk , Jim Davis. Bill Moynih an. Bob l oomis. Mid..cy Greenberg. Paul Simandle.
Barry Schneider, Coach Pollard.

I F

The realization of a winning ~eason is somewhat of a novelty for the
Harpur Colonials. With our win over Geneseo. we copped a three-game win
skein-the first ince our 1949-50 season when the ''Triple Cities" quintet
went 14-9
but that was I I years ago! This year\ Colonial edition
sports the best balance since that 1949-50 season and there is a good
chance that Jim Davis will share second slot in cumulative (4 year) poinh
earned. At Utica the team rang up an 87 point total . . . the largest in
Coach Pollard's four-year tutelage. Mick Greenberg cut the net with 27
points (almost half of his total 1-rosh effort of 60). Hartwicl.. brought
defeat but Davis was able to boost his two-game average to 28-per. I oomis,
in his own right, pumped in 26. After three straight defeats at the hands
of Hamilton, Susquehanna. and Albany. the Colonials rebounded by drubbing
Drew. Once again Davis sang with 29; Loomis and Simandle assisted with
19 and 14 respectively. It was aho at thb game that Coach Pollard instituted
the "shuffie-offcns c" and the "box-and-one" defense which proved their worth.
Another record brol..cn at this time was the return of the starting five after
the barrage of mid-year exams. Davis returned with a 24.6 per; Loomis-15.2;
Grecnberg-14. 1; and Kirk and Simandle with 8.8 each. Wilkes brought defeat,
but witnessed Davis' second 29 point game with Greenberg accounting for
23. As Hobart fell. Greenberg held 25-per scoring ace Upper to 0 E goal.
and offered 17 to the Colonial's winning cause. lhh was the first defeat of
Hobart in six attempts. Herc again Simandle played another great ga me by
sinl..ing 6-7. rhe Colonial\ Y.in at RPI was a nail-biter as was Oneonta
(remember Loomis' bucl..et last sea'&gt;on with five seconds to go?). I lobart
came late and left w11h one more in their loss column . . . courtesy of
the Colonials, and lengthened our second winning-streal.. of the season to
four. Davis' 21-point first-half effort 1..ept the crowd buaing about records
(The court marl.. for a 'ingle game i\ held by the Colonial\ Joe Garbarino
and Oswego State'~ Ron Davis; both with 39). Loomis went on to sink
5-5 and Simandle wound up with 16 (hi\ two year high). Alfred spiked our
winning streak but Simandle popped for a career high of 18. A\ we roll to
press, the Coloniah JU\l guaranteed themselves a winning ~caso n by defeating
their arch-rival Oneonta. Greenberg excelled by l..eeping ace Battaglini (63
points in last two) to five hoops and led the team in ~coring ( 17).

Coach: Mr. Pollard

98

�BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Harpur Opp.
Utica
Hartwick
Fairleigh-Dickenson
Hamilton
Susquehanna
Albany
Drew
Wilkes
Hobart
RPI
Plattsburgh
Genesco
Alfred
Maritime
Oneonta

89
75
62
66
77

56
81
78
83
49
73
80
54
65
57
76
83

79
96
50
81
87
69
46
81
73
47
61
64
63
44
54
64
73

•

�'"Mick ; fireball floor general.··

~/

ti

1Y
"Paul: deadly barrage. "

Name

Davis
Loomis
Greenberg
Simandle
Team Totals

"TQm"s palm."

100

TP

FT

390
207
248
184
1204

104
43
66
48
3 10

'59-'60

16.l
4.0
5.5
6.8

(193)
(56)
(60)
(95)

AVE.

22.9
12.1
15.5
10.8
90.8

�"Jim's (soft) touch for two."

Top Quintet

" Loomis low-ping."

101

�Janel Stuhlmiller. Mary l ou Adams. Joyce Sander\, Capwi11; Bonnie Brodi. l ois Trezi,e.
Cathy Fruhauf, David Herschfeld. George Delamar.

Che erer s

I he head Coach!

102

�Varsity Golf

1961 SCHEDULE
H.
Utica
Apr. 29
May 1
May 5
May 13
May 17
May 20

H.
Oswego
Hartwick A.
Harpur
Invitational H .
H.
Hobart
Cortland
H.

Barry MacEwan. Bill Sweeney. Paul Sopehak. I arry Beall. Tom Nc&gt;tor.

Tennis 1960

Harpur
1

0
2
4

6
99- 146

Union
Hamilton
Hartwick
Ithaca
Utica

Opponent
8
9
7
5

Jim Gce1, Bob Dalrymple, Bill Voclklc, Jim
Lyon~. Coach Pollard.

�Ned Varney, Carl Hecht , Joe Angeline. Dick SatJ..in, Charles Lytle. Douglas McHale.

Cross
Country

Harpur 45
Harpur 22
Harpur 16

Oswego
20
Utica
37
New Paltz 39

Harpur 45
Harpur 24

Cortland
Ithaca

18
31

Harpur 81, Hamilton 32, Colgate 26

104

Lytle took first
Lytle took fi rst again
Lytle, Varney, Falla and Lchtencn took
first, second, third and fourth
Lytle took thi rd
Lytle, Varney and McHale took second,
third and fourth
Triangle NYSCT&amp;F Freshman CrossCountry Championsh ip-Harpur took
fou rth

�Harpur

Hartwick
Genesco
Ithaca JY's
Oneo nta JV's
Cortland Frosh

I
I

2
0

Opp.
6
2
3
2
3

ROW I: Al W all..off. Jim Carlson. Dick 1-o\ter, Joe Wolfer. Bill Wal lace ROW 2:
John Harrison, Al Waldman. Al Gold~mith. ·1crry Foran . ROW 1: Coach o·Brien,
Ralph Davie, William Hackman. Ke n W altzer, Mike Gapin, Al Levy.

Our First
Soccer Club

�Fn·11t

400 Medley
220 r rec st) le
50 r rccst &gt;le
200 Intl Medley
Diving

200 y&lt;l. Ruttcrn&gt;
I 00 rrccst 1 le
200 Back\trokc
440 rrccst \le
200 Brcast\lrol-.c
400 Free\!) le Rel.

Hamilton
&lt; olgatc I ro\h
Will-.cs
( olgatc I ro~h
I lamilton
'-t Honavcnturl'

Dec 9
Dec. 14
Jan. 14
h:b. 8
h:b. 18
fcb. 22

l/arpur
34
18
61

16
2J
JI

Opp
61
76
33
78
65

64

Be.11 I imr
:n" Hecht, l cicht ling,
131um, 13uhlcr
2:32
Madel I
:25.1 '&gt;chh\
2:44.1 Bothner
45.50 po:nis. Caner

Pool Record
4. 13 ' Hamilton

2:'i 1.2
:"'6.7
2:45.8
5 41
2. '6.6
4 02

2:37.7
;55.3
2:23.4
5: 14 6
2:44.7
1:59.9

4

Sl•bh)
Scbb}
Bothner
l',,ladcll
·1 hronc
Bothner. Orcutt.
I rn\trom, Scbh&gt;

2.26.7
·2&gt;
2:28.4
70.62

Ham1lton
I la1111lton
Colgate
poinh
Colgate
Hamilton
l lamilton
( olgatc
Hamilton
limn . an&lt;l Col.
Hamilton

�ROW I. Co11c/i Dennis. Carl Ermtrom. Stephen l\lorri,. l\.cnncth Wci'&gt;field. Gary J)ou pe.
C'arl Hecht. J on Aaron ...on. Neil Carter. ROW 2: ('hark' Orcutt. Mike Blum. Did. ll lrich.
Ron Sclsby. Mi ke Leichtling. Al Buhler. Wally Bothner. Boh Madell. Dick Feldman. Ba rry
Buhler, Stu Lewis, Dave H uttlcson.

Varsity Swimming Team

H arpur's vars ity swimming team, " the
M ermen," have shown an outstanding
improvement over last year. M any of
the "cha rter members" arc back and they
have been supported by a freshman group
that show a great deal of potential. Although they won o n.I) one game (Wilkes:
61-33). the prospects for a more successful season nc\t year appear to be almost
a certainty.

�Boys' Intramurals

A11cie111

w

Adelphi
Goliarcls
D ionysian\

4
4

1. l. K.

3
I

5. 0. s.
Baccacia

3

0

BAS KFTBA ! I STA D INGS
L l ncomparables w L Dormies
I ndcpendents
5 0 R a fuse S. ( I)
A. P. 0.
3
2 R af u~e S. (3)
2 Bo ngs
3
2 Digman F. (3)
2 Bandih
2 3 R afuse W (3)
4 Big Five
2 3 D igman N . (2)
5 Odea ns
0 5 Digman N. (3)
Clw111pi1111.1hip Ganw:
I ndcpc ndcnts 50. Adelphi 43

w
5
4

2
2

L
0
I
3
3
4
4

108

�Dance Group

SF ATED: Sharon Rosenberg. Laurie ( orwin, Cynthia Rosenhloom . SI A Dezclcl.. Sonya Brockst~in. Mlln (,ropper.
I G: Alice Silverman. l&lt;.aren
Susan Scher. Helen Drivas. Ellen Sontag. Jean Cancro. Helen Bohmer, Rill
Bo&gt;.er, Rochelle Rafi.in.

also Girls' Intramurals

109

�. . . And so the Progress mechnni~m becomes manifest at Harpur. We now hnve
attained a lmost every kind of team (except
football) and have almost attained an audience for each. How can we wish to hold
back the growth of an institution whose
collegiate enthusiasm bursts forth in an
autumn bonfire at which the Hamilton
despised most by each student was burned
in effigy ...

110

�. .. .. . . . . ... . .... . . . .. . .
Correction:
Please cur OU/ the following and paste it over
the name BARBARA DOBRINER in the Senior
section:
MRS. BAR BARA H ADLOCK

111

�Physical Education Departme nt

SI A l FD: Jessie (1odfrcy. Asst. Prof. of Phy. Ed.; Gladys T.
Walling . ...J ~.11. Prof. of Phy. Ed.; David C Henderson. Dir. of
Pin-. £d., Glad" Warren, A.ut. Prof. of Phy. Ed. STAND! G:

hank T. Pollard. Asst. Prof. of Phy.

l~d.;

Charles Dennis. Inst.

111 Phy. Ed.; Donald O'Brien. /11.11. in Phy. E:.d.

and ...
Announcers.

Mart in G. Weinstein, A111101111cl'r for Swimand Edward Putnam. A 111101111cer for
Basketball.

ming

11 2

�eNiBrS

�MARY K. ALl-r
Buffalo, N. Y .
La111:1wg&lt;&gt;.1

£:d-in-Ch ief Colonist: Who\ Who;
Dragon Society: Pandorans. Pre!'..,
Sec.: Cheerleader: Student Cou n
&gt;elor; ISCC: f&gt;intopplcrs; Jr. Class
Sarg.-at-Arms.

l~ LINO lfr

Bronx.

R. Al ·1 MAN
. Y.

Bio/or.:\'

Dean\° List: Honor Roll; Pandorans. Sec.: Jr. Uass Sec.; Residence
Hall Pres.: Biology Club.

A D YA ASWAD
Binghamton. l\. Y.
Politirnl .\cicnce
USG. F-r. M cm. al- Large, Vice
Pres .. Rec. Sec.: Pandorans. Queen
of Heam. 1RC : l \C &lt;: Colonial
'e11s. Ass.
ews I d.; Campu..,
Ches I, ( h : Student Alh.

114

ST l Pill
R. BAKl- R
Binghamton. . Y.
Chc111t.11ry
Jr. Class Pres.: Adelphi. Vice
Pres.: Varsity Bash.e1ball: Student
Advisor: Chem. Club: lntram urals.

�JOll
Glen~

II . BFA I 0
I- alb. . Y

l:.co110111in

h . C lass I reas.: 11 K . Pres .. Sec.:
lntramurab: Varsit) Soccer: Jazz
Society: IS&lt; C

BfTSY BFCKFR
Binghamton. . Y .
Ge11eral l.1tera111n•
Dean's I b t : Coloni a l
P /10e11i1 I o&lt;J I rt•q11i•111.

Players.

ROB I RT I . Bl NDI R
Y
Bingh amton,
I I 111111111 i /It'.\

NEIL. 13 . BFl "fF N
Bronx. . Y.
111.Hory

Dea n's List; Jcwbh Fellowship:
Progressive Socialist Society. Ch.:
Art Gallery Comm .; Civi l R ighb
Comm.

BJllR
Bmgh amton. 'N Y

P/\ f RI C I A I
\ la t l1t•mat1c

1

Pa ndora ns. ( oir Sec .. ll istorian :
M ath Club. Pres .: German Club.

1 15

�BUR r J . Bl US'TF I
Brooklyn, . Y .
fl l .\IO/'V
Oiony;ian, Treas. ;. German Cl~b;
I ntramurals; JcWl'&gt;h rcllowsh1p;
Riding Club; Cheerleader; Colon
i~t.

JAMFS F . BOYDrN
Johnson City. . Y .
!;11.1.1 /ish Ut erature
Dean's Li'&gt;t; Intramural\;
Sec.

VIRGI IA B. BRILL
Laceyville. Penn.
Socio/oJ!y

YVONNF C. BROERE
rndicou. N . Y.
Sociolo·1y

116

Cassandrans, Sec.

APO,

�I llOMAS C. BROWN
F- ndicott. . ) .
JJwloKy

ews. Bus.
Dean\ I isl; Colonial
Mgr., Who's Who; Dragon Societ) ; Adelphi; APO; lntramurals;
Bio. Club. Pres.; German Club: Jr.
Soph. Class Treas.

I

RON Al D W. BUI I OCK
Oxford. N. Y.
Sociology

ROI A I) (, CAMPBl-11
Fndicott, N Y.
I 11ter-IJ11·11i&lt;111a/. Plti lo.wplt y

Goltards, Pres.; ISCC

JAM ES E. CA RLSON
New York City, N. Y.
Economics

SOS, Chancellor, Treas.: ISCC
Varsity Soccer; lntramurals; Slavic
Club; Dean's Li~t I.

J UDITH H . CFCCARfl LI
Johnson City. N. Y.
Li11gui.11ic.1·

Dean\ List, I, 2. 3, 4; Who's Who ;
Honor Roll; Ed-in-Chief Claren
don; Chorus, Canterbury Club.
Pres.; Italian Club, Pres.; Pandorans, Historian

117

Ch.

�ROMO! 0 J . CECCA RELLI
( 11y, .Y.
lrnlic111 Lit('ra/urc
Dean\ Li\t; Clarendon; Ital ia n
Club.
John~on

T HO MAS P. CLAR ISSF
Cente rport, N. Y.
Bioloxy

Dean\ List, I, 2. 3; Varhity Ba'&gt;ketball ; APO. Cor. Sec.

GARY I . COHF
Hushing. . Y.
l1iolor:1·

·-·

Adelphi, Cor. Sec.; SRO ; APO.
Social Ch.; Debate Team; B1ology
Club; Winter a nd Spring Weekend Comm. ; Student Advi~or.

LILIA ' P. COLE LLA
Fndicott, N. Y.
Jli.11ory

118

�ROBE RT A. CON
Fndico11. N Y.

0 1 LY

!lll.\111('.\.\

Pres. Sr. Cla,s: ISCC. Pres.: Baccacia. Pre\., Vice Pres.; Intramural\ council, Sec.; SAM Pres.; Pintopplcrs. Pres.: l ntramurals.

DAV ID G. CU RRll-:.
Amsterdam. N. Y.
Polirirnl Sci1•11a
D ea n's List; Goliards.

VIRGl"'IA C. CUR RY
John\on ( 1t}. . Y.
L1111g11ag&lt;'.1

Newman ( lub.

J O ll N R. l)AL/lFI.
Auburn, . Y.
Polirical Science

DORO fll Y D DA!'. I-OR rH
M a-,scna. . Y.
E11gli.1h Liraarurc
Dean\ I ist J· Dorm Pre\.: Pandorans: Student Atlvi-,or.

11 9

�DORIS L. DE T
Binghamton . N. Y.
La11g11a1w1

Dean\

I ist; Methodist
Pres.

Fcllow~hip.

Student

llOYD A. DF T
Binghamton . . Y.
Eco110111ic.1·

Dea n\ l i\t; APO; Methodist Stu
dent Fellowship, Pub. Ch.

A

NA DMITRENK O

Binghamton , N. Y.
Chemi.11n•

Dean\ 1·ist; Honor Roll ; German
C lub; Young Democrats.

BARBARA E. OOBRINER

120

cw York City, . Y.
English J, itera111re
Colonial News; Dean's List I:
Chess Club; Student Counselor:
Jewish Fellowship.

�1:-L LA
DONALD M . D O
Binghamton, N. Y .
Ecvnomicl
Baccacia, Pres.. V ice Pre,.; Pi ntopplers; SAM.

CA ROLYN M . H 3Fl ING
Binghamton, N . Y .
General Literature
Dean's I i ~t '.!, 3; rreneh C lub; Pandorans; Queen of Hearts: Cheerleaders; &lt;;cc. I 1ca~. of Re,idcncc
Hall.

CAR I I IR STROM
John,on ( ll~. !'\ . Y.
/.co110111ic 1

Adelphi. P1 e\. Sec: IS(C: Yar\ll) ~\~imm i ng; ln t1a111u1ab. Sl\M.

STrYFN II . rAIGFl.MA
rrccpo ll . . Y.
/~11gli.1lt Litl'ralllrl'
Dean\ List 3: Progres,ivc Socialist: Convocations C'omm. : Coloni al
CW\, Feature Fd.: llonor Roll I:
C hairman "·rund for Integration ...

MARGAlff 'J A . I I RR ·\ fl
Binghamton. N Y.
Em.1/islt l.1tt'rat11n
c·~man Cluh. Dean·, I i\t I. '.!. 3.
4; Band

121

�--

DA ' II I DORR rt IE
Hrcwstcr, . Y.
l'olitirnl Scie11n
APO. \ice Pres .. Sec .. Corr. Sec.:
J r .. Sr. \1t:m-a1-Lg .. USG: Stutknt
Counselor: Retreat Comm .. Ch.

C ll ARl ES N. I ORD
New York. . Y.
llw/ogy

.

Dean\ Lbt;
Dragon Society:
ISCC; Dionysian, Pres .. Sec.: Col.
News; Col. Players. Vice Pres ..
Sec.; Coloni~t; lnt ramurab: Phil.,
Biol.. rrench Clubs.

JI.I\ 'N I Gil.I I SP I F
(,m,hcn. . Y.
H 1111"111i1in
(,c1111an Club.

122

JOA S. ( i LUCKAUr
New York. N. Y.
f,11Rli.1h U1era111re
.
Dean\ l .ist: I lonor Ro ll : Colonist :
Who\ Who: Col. cw~. Copy Ftl.:
Spring Review; Dragon Socicl} :
Jc\~. I cl.: Gallery Comm.: Young
Dem.; Student Adv.

�OORO lllY l . GOfl I.
rnd1cott, . Y.
Socioloi:v

DAVID GOLDS'l l · IN
Binghamton. N. Y.
Acco11111i11g

Societ~

fo r the Advancement of
Management.

BARBARA I C100D\\ 11'.
Johnson Cit~. N. )
I/ 11111111111w1 II 1.11on
Dean\ I j,t: Sr. Chi\\ Sec; Pan

doran. 11 1.,torian. (or. Scc.: ISCC:
Int ramur:11,. Pr ntopplcr,; Canter
bury ( lub: ( horu': I eadershrp Re
treat Comm.

ROBFRT J . GR l l+' IS
Binghamton. . Y.
1~co110111 ics

Jr.. Sr. (la,., Vice Pre ~.: Adelphi:
Var.,ity B&lt;hl..etball; l ntramurab:
l'.e\\ man Club; Socicl~ for Advan. of M'anagcmcnt. [)ragon Socict)-.

GORDO A. GR IND! R
. Y.
Port J erv IS.
Phi/01ophy-Utern111rc

Dean\ I

1\l.

123

�HU(,11 J Hf'Fl-FR
Binghamton.
Y.
Political Scie11ce
Sr. Sg1.-a1-Arrm: Adelphi, General
Officer. Vice Pre\: Young Dem.
Pre~ .: lntramurah

BEVER I Y A. llICKrY
Binghamton. . Y.
La11g11age1

ISCC: Thalian\. Vice Pres. ChorBand: I 1gh1 C horus.

u~:

GFRA LD M. HI L L.S
1--ndicou. N. Y.
A cco11111111g
Dean\ L i\t; Goliards: Intramural.
Oaskctball; Soc. for Ad'. of
Mang .. I rca~.

124

RO ALD II . H U I ICK
Brooklyn. . Y.
P.1yclw/ogy
Dean\ LiM , I; Adelphi. Tica~.;
lntramurab: Varsity, Di,ing: Riding Club, Vice Pres. Outing Club.

�WILL JAM S. HYM A

Rego Park.

. Y.

£111tli.1h Litl'rature

Dean·, l.ist: D1on}sian, Sec.: Colonial CW\, Sec.; Clarendon. Sec.:
Colonial Pl ayers.

u~ o A KALMANOWil L
Brook lyn. . Y.
L a11g11agn
Pandoram.; Coloni\I: Jcwbh 1-ellowship: Spani'h Club

DE
IS I 1-.. U I Y
Mal,erne. N Y.
Politirnl .\c,,•11n
1-rc\h Cla'' Pre,.; Stud. fa c.
A\'&gt;O .. IS( (. Pre,.: SOS, Equcry:
Intramural\

DAU· A. KI T C ll AM
Vestal, N. Y.
Geography
Colonial cws; Clarendon.

SF'I H A. KOC H
Brooklyn, . Y .
Rw/ogy
Dean's I.isl; Stud. Fae. Athletic
Comm.; Stud. Advisor: Adelphi,
Sec.; lntramurals; Bio. C lub ; Jewish 1-cllowship; Riding C lub .

125

�JOH J. KOHUT
Binghamton. . Y.
/Jiolm:\'
Dean'~· I 1~1:

Bacaccia;
Club; German Club.

Biology

RICHARD E. KROPP
I ndicott , N. Y.
//11 .1·i11l'.1.1

Soc. for Advancement of Mang ..
Vice Pres.

JOSrPH A. LAMPHFRl·
Binghamton. N. Y.
/J111i11&lt;'.11

Dean\ I 1\t, I; Bacaccia. Trca~.:
Pintopplcr': Soc. for Advan. of
Mang.

rDWARD J. LA
Schenectady, N. Y.

FRT

I I 1srorv

126

Dean's Li,1: USG, Sr. Member at
Large: Prog. Socialbt ~oc.: Civi l
Right\ Comm.; Dorm. J udiciar}
Bel.: Gallery Comm.

�Sul.A
I atham.

I La PAU(,IJ
. Y.

Eco110111in

Dean·, I i-.1: ISCC. Scc.-Trea-,.:
( a'&gt;'&gt;antlran, Sec., Vice Pre~.: Gallery Comm .. &lt;;cc.

RUTll C. I FAC H
Binghamton. . Y.
Lt111~1111gc.1

Dean's I ist. I: Intramural. German Club. Sec.. Newman Club.
I reas.: I rc'&gt;h. Orientation Ad' isor.

MARION A. I I 0
Rochcstn. N Y

ARD

\!a1hu11u1ic .1

Dean\ I i'&gt;t. I : /11111H11·1a/ ll 11shwul.
\ ft&gt;dco; /-. n1111•urd 1/0.1; German
( lub: Nev.man Club.

A RNOLD J. I r v 1 F
Brookl yn. N. Y.
Bioloi:v
Fr. I rca.,.: Soph., Vice Pres.: Jr.
Mcm. at I argc; ISCC; Adelphi.
cws. Adv. Mgr.;
Sec.: Colpnial
Dragon Socict}; lntramurals; Jazz
Socict}; Who\ Who.

J AY F. I FW IS
Y.
Binghamton.
lJ 11.1i11c.1.1

127

�JAMrS T. LORELLI
S}racu\e. . Y.
(; l'&lt;Jgraph v
Dean\ I i\t; 13acaccia; Span. Club;
Geo!. Club; Stud. Coun~elor; Newman Club.

W ILLI AM P. LOVF l L
Auburn. N. Y.
811.\illC'.\\

Intramural Basketball; Span. Club;
Soc. for Adv. of Mgmt.

G LOR IA C. LOWr
Brooklyn. N. Y.
£11g/J.1h l 1rcrar11re
Dean\ Li\t; Basketball; Volleyball; Outing Club; Vest. Bridge
Soc.. Pres.

JOYCF M . LY CH
L evi11own, . Y.
1I111111111 i (ii'.\

128

USG, Member at Large. Advocate,
Sec.: Pandoran; Col. News, Stud.
Counselor; I RC; Poet. Proscenium.

�THOMAS A. McDO OUGH
Albany, . Y.
Socivlogy

Baccacia. Vice Pres.; ISCC; SAM;
Pintopplers; Ch. of Red Cross
Bl oodmobi le Visit; Newman C lu b.

MYRON H . MARSHALL
Niagara rails. N. Y.
Biology

Dean\ l is1: Baccacia: ISCC; I ennis; l ntramurals.

PFTFR M A RZOCC A
Fndicoll, . Y.
II 1111Ill/Ii1 ic.1
Coloni al Players. Spri ng Review
'59. Scene designer: e""man CJub.

CARL.A K . MAZ/0

Fndicon,

E

. Y.

La11f:!tm/.!&lt;'~

German C lub.

RI C HARD E. MA/./ON£:.
Endico11. N. Y.
Biology

Dean's l isl 3, 4.

129

�JAMFS McMAHON
Middletown . N. Y.
Engli.lh Literature
Dean\ I i~t; lSCC': Diony~i.m,
Pres.; Sec.; Colonb t ; Intramurals ;
German Club: Newman Club; Student Manager.

•

EDWIN R. M ICA LI Z.l l
Apalachin. N. Y.
Biology
Dean's List 3.

RICHARD D. MOO EY
Corning, N. Y.
Politirnl Science
Colonial News; Spring Review:
Band.

130

ROBf-Rl J. MORGAN
Fndicott. . Y.
Poliricaf \eie11ce
Dean's List 3.

�Tl I OMAS L.

l·S I OR

Fndicott, N. Y.
L:co110111ic.1

Dean·., l bl 3: ISCC; Goliard~.
I reas.. Vice Pres., Pres.; Golf.

FDMUNO S. OPDl· N
Mora1ia. N. Y.
English Uteraturt•
Dean's Li" I.

DO Al D F. Pt\(,L
Binghamlon, N. Y.
(;1•oloi:1•

Gcolog) ( lub.

l·RA C'F.S M. PARKFR
Bingham1on. N. Y.
Li I &lt;~rtl 111re•
Cassandran. Treas.. Vice Pres.:
lSCC: Chorus: Studenl Counselor.

DAVID A. POPPrR
l ong Beach. 1'.. Y.
111.1wry

Dean\ I i'&gt; I: Adelphi; Soph. Sgt. -atVar'&gt;ily Soccer: ln1 ramurals; Jewi\h fellowship; Young
Democrah; Student Judiciary; S1ud.:nt Advisor: APO.

Arm~;

131

�H ERBFRT E. PARKFR
Painted Post, . Y.
A CCOl/11/lllK

Golian.ls. Vice Pre\., ISCC; Varsity B a~k etball; Intramural; Soc.
for Adv. of Mgmt., Treas.

MARIO P . PAZLAG LJN l
l:.ndicott, . Y.
B iol&lt;&gt;f.tY

Dean's List 2; Spring Review '59;
Newman Club, Treas., Vice Pres.

DEAN A. PORTER
Gouverneur, N. Y.
Ari

Dean's l ist 1; lTK ; Gol i a rd ~;
ISCC; Pintoppler\; Gallery Comm .;
lntramurah.

ARLENF L. PTASZER
Brookl yn, N. Y.
Sociology

132

Dean's List; Pandorans, Sgt.-atArms; De1•i/'s Di.fciple; H edda
Gabler; Jewish Fellowship.

�Kl-.1'. rl H D. RA PPAPORT
Binghamton.
. Y.
ll11ma11iti1•.1
Adelphi; lnt ramurals; Stud. Ad\ isor; Dcdicat ion.

STFPllFN RAPPr l
Long Beach, N. Y.
Chemistry
Dean's I bt; Diony.,ian. Treas.:
Co Ion is t: lntramurals; Math,
('hem .. Bio. Clubs: Jew. Fellow·
ship, Pres .. ·rrea!&gt;.; Choir.

BRUr-.lltl D I D . RIOS
New Yori... N. Y.
l .1111g11ag1'.1

Soph. Cl;iss Sec.; Pandorans: Colonial
cws, L xchangc r.d.:
ew.
man Club.

JOSEP H C. ROSE
Fndicott. N. Y.
Jlu111a11ities
[)ean·s List 2. 3.

JOYCI- A . SA D l"RS
Uinghamton. N Y.
/'.1 \'c/10/0R}'
Dean'!&gt; l bt: I lonor Roll: Cheerleader. Capt.; WRA; Pintopplers:
Pandorans. Vice Pres .. llistorian.

133

�GORDON SCHWAR'I /
Bronx. . Y.
Political Scie11c1•
USG. Fae. Stud.-Community Rel..
ISCC: Dionysians, Sec.; Colonial
ews. Colonist, Photo. Fd.: Y.
Republicans:
Intrarnurals;
kw.
Fellow., Vice Pres.; Debate Club.

111· 1 ENb R. SHAW
Massapequa, N. Y.
I li.11on

1-resh. Class Sec.: USG, Mem.at-l.arge: Stud. Advisor: Orient..
Con•oca1ion Comm.; Pandoran;
ISCC; Tllrtuff(•; Intramural; Pintopplers; Ci,il Righ1s Club.

JAf\trS M. S H fA R
Forest Jl ilb. N. Y.
Biolog_v
Dion)sian. Vice Pres.: ISCC: Colonist, Adv. Mgr.: Bowling; Young
Democrats; J ewish Fellowship.

FDWA R D T. S ILVA
Middletown. N. Y.
Socwlogy-A 111hropology
Dean's I isl 3. 4.

134

�RIC H ARD C. ~ I ICKI
City. ?'-&lt;. Y.

John~on
(j l'rlll&lt;lll

Dean\ l 1~t: Baccacia, Sec.: Intramural Ba~kctball: (icrman Club.
Treas.

JFROMI· SK L UT!-'
Binghamton. N. Y.
Chemfarry

MARCIA S. S\111 H
L.ong Beach.
Y.
.\ocia/ .~ch•11c &lt;'-L ircra111re
l)ean\ L j,1: I lonor Roll: U')(,
Mem.-at- l argc: St11d Jud. Rev.
Bd ... Dragon Soci.::t~: Col. !'&lt;cw,.
l·d.-in-Chicf; Clarendon: German
Club; kw. 1-el low,hip: Who'~
Who
M ARY SAROKA
Auburn. . Y.
Sociolo/.IY

Student Coun,elor.

JOHN J. SPADARO
orwich, N. Y.
Jltllll&lt;lllilH'.\

Baccacia; Debate Club;
Club; Newman Club.

135

Italian

�WALTER STEl·ANSKI
Binghamton, . Y.
811si11e.1s

CllFRYL M. STFR
Yonkers, N. Y.

l IF13

IJio/ogy

Dean's List; USG Survey Comm.;
Colonist; C larandon, Copy Ed.,
Bus. Mgr.; Debate Society; Modern Dance; Jewbh Fellowship;
German, Bio. Clubs; Dorm Floor
Chairman.

GFRAl D M. SURETIE
Fndicott, . Y.
Eco11&lt;1111ics

Dean\ List; Goliards; Colonial
Players; hcnch Club; Prog. Socialist Societ}.

LORFTIA M. TALLMAN
Putnam Valley, N. Y.
La11i(11t1~es

136

Dean\ List; WRA, Pres.; Synchronized Swim., Pres.; German
Club. Sec.

�MARCI A D. TEXLE R
Far Rod,aw ay. . Y.
Svciolo1 :y

Dean\ 1.1,t: Honor Roll; Colonia l
cws. News, !-- cat. Mgr. Ed.; Pandoran~. Sgt.-at-A rnl'.; Dragon Soc.;
Who's Who; Phil. Club.

WALTE R M . Tl l l 0\.\New York, N. Y.
Eco11vm ic.1·

Dean's

Li~t.

ll ERBFR T M . 1 JNOW
Brookly n, N. Y.
Accm111ti11J:

lntramu rals: APO.
Judiciar y.

R IC HA R D J. TROW
Brool...lyn, . Y.
Englfah Literat11 re

IT K. Vice Pres.; SRO, Director ;
l ntramur als; Riding Club, Pres.

Wll l IAM M . VOI L Kl r
Fnd1col l, . Y.
fl,/ at hemaric.1

Dean's l 1st; (1crman Club. Pres.
Vi&lt;"c P re~ .; Varsity fcnnis.

137

Pres.:

Dorm

�MARY E. WARSHAUER
I-lushing. N. Y.
Sociology

Dean 's List; USG, Ch. Elections
Comm.; Stud. Leadership Comm.;
Pandora n: !SCC: Colonist; Jewish Fellowship; 1ntramurals; Stud.
Advisor; S.A.B.

HARRIET WEINGARTEN
Jack son H eights, N. Y.
Li1era111re

Dea n's List; USG; Colonist; Progressive Socialist Soc.; Gallery
Comm. Pres.; Jewish Fellowship ;
Pintopplers; In ternational
Rel.
Club, 1 reas.

DA YID WEXLER
Monticello, N. Y.
Sociulo1u

MAUREEN J . WILCOX
Elmira, N. Y .
U111111is1ic.1

138

Pandorans

�H ARO I D R. WILL IAMS
Arcad e. . Y.
BU.\llll '.\.\

Dean \ List I; Societ y for Adv. of
Mgmt .. Pres.

RONA LD M. WOLK
Bingh amton , . Y.
Sociol m:v

Baccac ia. Sec.; lnt ramur als; German Club.

ALB l· RT WOL KOH
ewbur gh. . Y
( hcmi.1 tn
Dean's I bt: Odean ; Colon ial ews.
Photo. : Varsit y Soccer ; Radio
Club: Judo Club, Ins.; Stud Coun'&gt;Clor.

I'". YOU G
Al LA
Far Rocka way, N. Y.

A c&lt;·o1111/i11J:

Dean' s List; ISCC: SOS. Fquer r};
J nl ramur ab.

MAR GA RI- r C. WILL IAMS
\.\h ite Plains . N. Y.
Socio/o.i:v

Class Sec .. Soph., J r.; Cassa ndran;
Colon ial Player s Metho dist l'cllowshi p.

139

�MARY LOU ADAMS
Binghamton. . Y.
Sociolo1ty
Thalians, Pres.; ISCC. Sec.-Trcas.:
Colonial
cw~:
Geology Club;
Cheerleader; Jntramurals.

HARVFY 0. ADl ESTE IN
Valley Stream, N. Y.
Jlistorv
ITK, Treas.: lntramurals: Pintopplers; APO, Alumni Sec.

Senior Photos Not Available
Gerald R. Benjamin
Donald Bitner
Thomas J . Blazey
Roger C. Bouvia
J erry R. Brown
icholas Buccasio
George M. Buck
Thomas L. Carrigg
Robert 0. Constable
Richard T. Cooper
Roberta J. Davis
Edwin B. Drake
Robert B. Furlong

Dorothy E. Garsson
Morton H. Gilinsky
Mary Lou Gilmore
Harlan W. Gumaer
Jeremiah H. Healy
Karl R. Helm
Jane A. Husvar
Jon E. lannitti
atalie J efferson
Richard C. Kraph
James Larrabee
Robert E. Lory
Ruth S. Mace
Albert]. Mariani
140

Fred L. Mott
Ju rgen R. Ncrger
H arry R. Palmer
David C. Parker
Rita E. Parrotte
Merritt D. Payne
Susan M. Peters
Robert Skinner
Edward J. Stanko
Boyd H. Summers
Sabino C. Tarnboia
Anthony D. Vanatta
William E. Warriner

��CONGRA TULATI ONS
TO THE CLASS OF 1961

ENDICOTT

JOHN SON
THE
FAMOUS
FAMILY
NAME
IN
SHOES

MID- WAY RECREATION INC.
1'hc SoULhcrn Tier's rnost Ultra
:\fodcrn Bowling Alley

2 13 Jenscn Road
Vestal. N. Y.
Bowling \\'ith Automatic
.\.M.F. Pinspouer
~lodcrn

.\ II Legal Beverages

Restaura111

Nursery A\·ailablc

I Iorne '.\1 adc Pastries

Sunday Dinners

142

�MAKE YOUR OFFICIA L PHOTOG RAPHER
YOUR MASTE R OF CEREM ONIES
Let us be the official photographer of your life's importanl
events ... for the really good picture you need to land that
first big job ... your engagement and wedding photographs ...
those priceless portraits of your first child (and the others
that follow. ) Only truly professional studio portraits can
give an individual and distinctive dignity to the visual record

0 ./'""'\\

: ~S\
o ' ~·,.

F · I
h ·
. h
d
·f
o f your l1 e ... an our art1st-p otograp er 1s a true pro ess1ona.

v

::111.

0

'l
1 -~
0

We are proud to be t~e official
8
'
photographer of your graduating
class, and we hope that this is the
beginning of a Melong relationship. ~

~-7~

YOUR

OFFICIA L PHOTOG RAP HE R

] Nin Sardou Studio

143

4th Floor

�CONG RATUL ATION S

FOWLER,
DICK &amp; WALKER

TO THE CLASS OF 1960

Bingham ton, New York

FEDERAL
ELECTRONICS INC.

We salute
the June Gradua tes of

\VHOL ESALE DISTR IBUTO RS

HARPU R COLLE GE
May Success
Always Be Yours

Vestal, N. Y.

Vestal Parkwa y

CO GRATU LATlON S

TO THE CLASS OF l961

LOU RAPPAPOR T,
INC.
House of a Thousan d I terns
New York's newest hotel designed with
every up-to-the-minute convenience, including drive-in parking. All modem guest rooms boast air-conditioning, TV and an
outside view. Cocktail Lounge, and fine dining.

RA 3-5463

I i 49 Front St.

Banquet Facilities 6-600
Mark Flaherty, Gen'! Manager

Bingham ton
New York

RA 3-8341

SH ER AT ON INN

Bing ham ton, New Yor k

144

�Comp liments to Class of '61

ELK' S BAKE SHO P

MAG IC CITY
MILK COM PAN Y

"Best Baked Goods m Town "

607 North Street

Endico tt, N . Y.

110 Washi ngton Avenu e

- ST 5-2051 -

New York

Endico tt

Compliment s of

New Yo rk

Endico tt

ST 5-3311

AAA Appro ved

PAR KWA Y MOTEL
Fashio ns for College Wome n
of Distinction

Vesta l Parkw ay East
New York

Vesta l

Located on R o ute 17
Centra lly located for the Triple C ities

Extend s Congr atulati ons
T o Gradu ates of 196 1

Pool, Kitchenettes, Coffee Shop

Delica tessen
and
R estaur ant
Special izing in

HILK INS JEWELERS

• KOSllF R DLI ICA I ESSF
ALL Kl OS 0 1-- SA

Our 45th Year

• ALSO J EWISH STY LI·. COOK ! ( ,
Open 7 A :\It 7 P.M.
·rhu rs. - T ill 9 P.M.
Closed S1111day.1·

46 Washingto n Avenue
Endico tt

A D

DWIC II fS

New York

RA 4-977 1
137 WASH INGIO ST .
111.11 South of Court

145

�Howard Johnson's Restaurant and Motor Lodge
"Landmark For Hungry And Sleepy Americans"

VESTAL PARKWAY-NEAR HARPUR CAMPUS

Compliments of

VAUGHN'S CLOTHING INC.
FOR
MEN AND BOYS
107-109 East Main Street
Union Shopping Center
"Formals Rented For
A II Occasions"

146

�In your room and on your "dorm-step"

7 days•a•week

The Press
Evening

Sunday

and the area's #1 stations . ..

WINR-TV &amp; WINR Radio

147

�DUTCHESS LOUNGE

A. L. GEORGE

Cor. Harry L Drive &amp; Lester Ave.

Food Distributors

Famous for Pizza

Wise Potaro Chips

We Cater To Parties and Banquets
Vestal Road, Vestal, N. Y.

Phones
SW 7-9939

RA 9-9414

Compliments of

Build Better With What You Save At

WHIPPLES LUMBER YARD

Endicott Lincoln Mercury Inc.

Whipple Bros., Inc.

Exclusive Linc Mercury Comet

Ph.one Pl 8-1591
3400 E. Main St.
Endicott, N. Y.

3310 E. Main St.
Endwcll,

. Y.

289-295 Court St.
490 Court Street, Binghamton, N. Y.

Binghamton, N. Y.

RA 2-5353

Louis N. Picciano &amp; Son

THE GOLIARDS

pl u mbing and h ea t ing
1204 WITHERILL STREET· ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

Congratulations

COST AS FLOWERS
1200 Vestal Ave., Binghamton,

. Y.

Phone RA 4-4374

148

�What's
•

1n
Y-OUr

future?
Whatever your goal in life, it's wise to
back up your future plans with a steadily increasing savings account. Money in the bank is one of
the surest roads to security we know . . . it will
help you achieve what you want for your future.

THE
BINGH AMTO N

~
BANK

62- 68 Exchange Street

Binghamton

Mem ber F ederal Deposit Insurance Corporatio n

149

�We in this country arc inte rested in
educatio n because effecti ve leadershi p
a nd traini ng comes only fro m learning.

FRANKIE AND JOHNNIE

International
Business Machines Corp.

SNACK BAR

End icott, New Yo rk

Down the Road from the
New Campus

Congratulati ons
C lass of 1961
Pho ne Mo nticello 13 17 - I 06 1

THE
INDUSTRIAL BANK
OF BINGHAMTON

KAPLAN'S
Hebrew Natio nal

DELICATESSEN and
RESTAURANT

18 1-183 Washington St.

Opposite Post Office
3 19 BROADWAY

Member of

MONTICELLO, N. Y.

FEDERAL DEPOSIT
I NSU RANCE CO RPOR ATI ON
A II Banking Services

150

�The Georgia-Hanks Endicott
Corporation

COMPLIMENTS OF

Stationery and Office
Supplies, Drafting Equipment
and School Supplies

THE VILLAGE INN
Vestal Parkway East

Typewriters and Typewriter Repairs

59 Washington Ave.
8-1746

Vestal, N. Y.

Endicott

Compliments of

Griswold Bar and Grill
4 Griswold St.
Binghamton
New York

GOODMAN 'S

Compliments of

Binghamton, Inc.

BENNER WHOLESALE
COMPANY

"For Fashion Firsts"

Endicott, New York

78 Court St.

Weeks'
Dickinson
~
34 Chenango St.
Binghamton, N. Y.

151

Binghamton, N. Y.

�Best Wishes
from

Compliments of

PAUL A. LUCHINI
THOMA S
TRUCK PARTS, INC.

Distributor
BALLANTINE

ST 5-3393

206 North St.
BEER

ALE

Endicott
New York

Tel. RAymond 2-6476

Congratulation s to the
Class of 1961

THE ENDICOTT
NATION AL BANK
Endicott, N. Y.
Main Office:
18 Washington Ave.
Pl 8-3315

llagget'o/
Oothiers sine~ 1909

&amp;

· • •

RA 2-0327
Endwell Office:
Country Club Road
at Hooper Road

Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation

152

f~~
~t 96

Front St.

�''\.

~~~

~--'

~

Can ny Trucking Co.
Inc.

6-18 SPRING FOREST AVENUE, BINGHAMTO N, N EW YORK
PHONE RAymond .4-1357

TERMINALS:

New York City

Clifton, New Jersey

Elmira, New York

Scranton, Penn.

99-109 Jane Street
CHelsea 3-1360

310 Coifax Avenue
GRegory 1-1696

53-55 Sheridan Avenue

1708 Nay-Aug Avenue
Diamond 6-3854

REgent 2-5027

COLONIAL MOT OR INN
&amp; DIN ING ROOM

RA 9-4901
TWX-291
B INGHAM TON'S FINEST ACCOMM ODATION S

PRI VATE TILE BATHS - STEAM HEAT
R OOM PHONES
150 R OOMS- BATHS
SWIMMI NG POOL

AIR CONDIT IONING

3 Miles West of Bingham ton On Highway 17
Member of American Express &amp; Diner's .Club

AAA

H ilton Carte Blanche

153

AMHA

�Congratulations

GENNARELLl'S

Class of 196 1

For
F lowers
Properly

Mc LEANS

Delivered

Selected

C lustered- Presented

Binghamton
Endicott

1 I I Court Street

Owego

RA 3 3658

RA 2-7666

No
a rt if icia I bub b Ies !
GOOD LUCK

It's real foam in

TO TH E
1961 GRADUATES

CAMPUS CLEANERS
Campus Representatives
Ward Tice
Larry Gay
Linda Brockington
Carol Bryan

THE WEST END BREWING Co.
UTICA, N. Y.

154

�The Endicott Printi ng Co.

Complim ents of

A fl Commer cial Printing
Programs and Brochures
Wedding I nviwtion s-An11o unCC'm ents

LITTLE VENICE
RESTAURANT

124 Nanticoi-e Avenue
ENDJC OIT, . Y.
Phone ST 5-944 1

242 Court Street
Carrulli Brother s

BABCOCK'S SPORT SHOP

Congratulations ('Jass 196 l

Y our Sporting H eadquarters
in Bingham ton

YELLOW CAB

J 23 State Street

RA 22-3-2 2

Connected with
BABCO CK, HI DS &amp; U DERWO OD

184 State Street

Congr atulations
Compli ments of the

.. china · 9las.s

OD EANS

_,_. . ___ hn s o n s

MEN' S SOCIAL CLUB

II COURT STR.f.ET

PARA MOUN T LOUN GE
For an Evening of Dining and Dancing

Congra tulation s to the
Class of 1961

ever a Cover Charge
Top

GRUB E-SM ITH

ames in Entertai nment

Catering to
Parties, Wedding Recepti ons &amp;
Croups, Small or Large

For Traditional " l vy Clothes "

Open Daily 8 A.M. to l A.M.
RA 4-9608
Upper Court at City Line

Shop Our College Shop

155

�KAIER'S BEER

Angelin e's

1900 Watson Blvd.
Endicott, cw York
ST 5-2061

Flower and Gifl Shop

The l\losL Fragile of Arts

Kegs, Cans, &amp; Bottles

I 306 Monroe St.

Dial ST 5-2551
£ 'DICOTT,

Pickup and Delivery Service

. Y.

Compliment s of

AVENUE RESTAURANT
Washington Avenue

JOE'S INN

rndicott,

CW

York

136 Lester Avenue
cw York

Johnson City

Frank Ferris, Proprietor

Welcome to the

ARLINGT ON HOTEL

RUSSELL

rca1uring Smorgru.bonJ
(Pennsylvania Dutch Style)

CAB

~aturday

&lt;)unda)

COMPAN Y

5 to 9 p.m.

12 noon to 8 p.m.

ST 5-3335

138 Chenango Street
Binghamton , cw York

Compliment s of
FRED ZAPPIA, PROPRIET OR

TRIPLE CITIES
SPORTIN G GOODS CO.

Furs and Feminine Fashions

7 Washington Avenue
16 C'OUR T STREET

Endicott

Bl GHAMTO , ' EW YORK

156

New York

�CONGRATULATIONS, CLASS OF 1961

FROM GUY F. JOHNSON
YOUR CADILLAC-PONTIAC DEALER
FOR CENTRAL NEW YORK AREA

~

PONTI /If'..

104-122 HAWLEY STREET
BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

157

�FOOD

THOUGHT?

for

Your studies at Harpur Col lege provided
you with plenty of that.
For Slater, however, the emphasis was
o n Thought for Food. Planning .. . purchasing
. .. preparation ... presentation. Striving to
take the place of Mother's delicious home-cook ing.
Slater is proud to serve you and
your fellow Colonials, as well as stud en ts at
141 othe r colleges in 30 states.

~SLATER
-

--

FOOD SERVICE MANAGEMENT

New York
Philadelphia
Baltimore
Los Angeles
Danville, Va.

Chicago

Atlanta

CONGRATULATIONS to the CLASS of 1961

ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY
Endicott

Vestal

En dwell

43-45 Washington Ave.

148 Vestal Parkway

3225 E. Main St.

Member Federal Deposit In surance Corpora tion

158

�FAIR STORE
Good furniture

7-9 Court Street
Bingham ton , N. Y.
5 Broad A ve.

Binghamton, N. Y.

Complete Art Service

BEN'S CLOTHES SHOP

BELL SPECIALTIES

~Iain

and Willow St.

1302 E. Mai n St.
1-. ndicott, 1 cw York

Johnson City, Ne'' York

011 \et-Lerterpress
and Silk Screen Priming

"Clothes of distinrtion for

ST 5-2590

dad and lad."

GUARANTEED

J~llUjU;tfi

WOODY'S RECORD SHOP
127 Washington Ave.
Endicott, N. Y.

MAC'S
MUFFLER SERVICE

ext to H am lin's

Geo. F. Highway, Endwell

Binghamton, N. Y

Pl 8-6619

Spiedies [Jot Pies

VEST Al STEAK HOUSE

AMP BAR &amp; GRILL

Open 7 Days A Weck

348 Clinton St.
Binghamton, . Y.

Featuring:
Family Dinners, Banquet Facilities,
Luncheons, and Separate Cocktail Lounge
Vestal P arkway
Vesta l, N. Y.

Phone: SW 7-9968

SW 7-6554

Chicken in the Basket

159

Clams

�CONGRATULATIONS from the following
friends of the class of '61:
BELMA R RESTA URANT
CORTE SE RESTA URANT
FUSCO'S BEER BUFFE T
HESSE'S HORN SHOP
KOCIK 'S RED &amp; WHITE GROCE RY
LUCAS' DISTRI BUTIN G CO.
LU &amp; JOHN'S (Soup-to-Nuts)
OASIS T EA ROOM
RED'S KETTL E INN
SPIRIT SHOPP E
WAPLE'S RESTA URANT

Binghamton
Binghamton
Union
Johnson City
Johnson C ity
Binghamton
Vestal
E ndicott
Johnson City
Vestal
Union

160

This book printed by VE L VATONE, o special process or litho·
grophic print1n111. Sole producer s Wm.]. K eller I nc., B uffalo, N . Y.
N o other p r in tJ·ng fi rrn is authorized to use the V clvntone method

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                  <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;
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61938499 3

��THE COLONIST
HARPUR COLLEGE
ST ATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK

1962

�Messag e from the preside nt

STATS UNIVUll•1n OF Nrw TOfllll

HAl,U•

Menage trom the

COLLEGE

Pr~ldeat:

Th• Clue ol 1962, which entered HarpJr rwo week.I late to 1959, bocau.e die
dormltort• we-re

DOt

completed, l• dle tint JrOUP ol

cbe Ve11W campu• tbetr entlre tour yeau In college

•tudeat• who have lDowa about
Oorlag dlelr Prellhman aod

Sopbomote yean, their llle ••• ceote'rod to Bodlcott. •Pd they had the crciet joy oJ
rldiaa tho 00. 7 mUe. MCh way to aaead cl&amp;Hai, aad ncm at nnt. to ,et. tbetr
mee!a . to Pe.btuary 1981 we were ttoally able to ilh&amp;ke the duet ol. &amp;ndlcoct otl our

feet and WAI thereoa the mud ol dle

mlt

to

oew campu1, It ta 1tW eomethtng ol a •hock to

fr•hmea who entered Hacpur lo the Pall ol 1961, who have oe¥er

~

10

Bodlco&lt;t.
All Clusea a.re ucweua.I, b.Jt t:he ClaH of 1962 cao o;OCM1lder that It goea down
la. H&amp;.t'pW' bllt«y •• die ooe wbtch really made the

mou from Che old campu1 to the

oew. It ..i.o made the mon from a amall lutttudoa to ooe whlch I• already medium
• LU: aod dHtlaed to become much

l&amp;rse:r.

Thi.• Pall, for l:be flrlt time, we have a

amal.1 nu.en.her o/. pan-time. sr.o..a.te atudoam. Tht. number wW tacreue. But the

wtU

DOC

-.

be depnc:Lated by aumber1, or lacreuo ol complerlly ot otpoiuttoa. or by

... ...- ....
2

P'reeldeat

�TABLE of CONTENTS
Faculty and Administration 6
Campus Life 17
Social Clubs 34
Organizations 59
Sports 105
Seniors 118
Advertising 148

3

�Robert Harpur
Founder of Our Noble Institution
S. Stewart Gordon, Dean of the College

......

Christian P. Gruber, Associate Dean

4

�John P. Bclniak
Dt'a11 of Students

Ayscl Scarles, Jr.
Director of Student Acth·itie.1·

Virgi nia N. Kinlock
Associate Dean of Students

Ralph G. Rishel
Director of A dmi.1.mm1 and R ecord.1

• • •

fuitly ltintlyusiasm."
5

�Faculty

•

A. J. Groth, Po/11ical Scie11ce: Saul Le\i n. ClllHin; Lawrence Learner. £co110111ics: Bernard
Levy, £ 1111/i.\h; Gennaro Santangelo. E11g/i.1h: Peter Dodge. Sociology; Robert Kraetsch. £11g/i.1h.

1larold Bircl..rni1yer. 1111.\ine.\.1 Enterprise; Roger
M au:. l'olitirnl Sctt•nce; H ans Hoffman, A 11thropolo.l!r: I toward h harn. llistory.

6

�Neville Linton. Political Science; Bernard Mason Hi.\tory; J ames Young, Political Sdenn•;
C. Wade Savage. Philosophy; J ames R. r . Kent. Mathematics; Paul Weigand. Gu1111111.

Richard Lonsdale. Geo;:raphv; J ohn
0. Perry, £11;:/i\h; Leonard Moss.
E11;:li.1h; (' C. Bachcller. Spanish;
Richard Sawyer, H 1.1tory

7

�Rigo Mignani. Romance Languages; John E. LaTourcttc, F..conomin; George
Hein,ohn. Fn•ncli: &amp;hon Chick. German; Kai Neilsen. Pliilo.wpliy.
Martin A. Paul, Clte1111.11n. Kenneth C. I ind-.ay. Art; Rodney Ketcham, Romanc-e l.&lt;111g11ag1•s:
Allen N. Marshall. Jr.. l'l'an' Corp.1 Repre.1en1111i1,.e, D1reC1or of \frn\ Hot1.\ing: John Sha~.
Assis1ant Direuor of \111de111 Act11·itie.1.

8

�Christian P. Gruber. A.1socia1e D1•a11: Philip PiaJ...cr, Acco11111i11g; Janet Brown. Uhrn rit111 t111d
the 011/y 11·0 111a11 who /..110\\'s wlllli'1 going 011 at Ht1rp11r College: W alter 1-illcy. Po/it1rnl Sl'icnc·c'·
Helen Beard. Ma1h e11u11i&lt; s.

William F. Wabcr, Philo.wphy; DicJ.. WicJ... Hall. l\fa1hematic.1.

9

�C. Max Hull. Chemistry: William Hey ma n. P.1yd10lo&gt;f_\'. George Deane, Psychology: Herma n
Ro berson. Geology: Hugh E. Hunter. Geol ogy.

James Go\selinck. B io logy; George Schumacher. B iolo11y; llarold T . F agin ,
Psychology; J ames Wilmoth, Bio logy.

IO

�Melvin Seiden, English; Ruth Spa' l ihrari&lt;111;
Kenneth Ander~on. Marhemario; Keith M.
Clayton. GeoKraflhy.

George Craft, M&lt;11he111&lt;1tic.1; John W. Beall. Eco110111ics; Bernard Chasan. Physics; Robert Hart,
Physics; David Mcloughlin. Physics: Robert Penfield, Phvsin.

11

�France\ M. Wright, Ma1'1e111a1ics; Otakar Machotka, Sociolo1u: Hcrnard Gall in. A 111/iropology; Nathan I lakman, Politirn/ Science; Peter Yukasin, t:co110111ics; Fugcnc Va\ilcw, Speech.

12

�Sidney Harcavc, lfotory; Bernard F. Huppe, £:.11gli.1/1; Richard clliott. Librarian; Paul Eberts, Sociology: Donald B. Trow. Sociology; Gregory Bullard,
Librarian; M1cahcl Horowitz. Anthropology .

Leonard Duroche, German, Robert Meriweather Wren. Tht&gt;atcr, Vincent I reimarci... £:.ngli.1/i; Walter ~· ysselinci... Theatre ; rrcderic!.. W. Locke. General
Literature.

13

�Behind every great man

Fleanor Huffman, Secretary to the President.

Barbara Winters, President's office secretary.

Mable Brain, Secretary to the Dean.

14

�Carol DuBrava, S&lt;!cretary to the Associate D&lt;!an.

Miss Mint horn . .'i&lt;!crl'tary to the D1•a11 of Students.

Elma Fisher, S&lt;!cretary to the Associate Dean of
St1ul&lt;!11ts.

Linda Scranton, Secrelllry to the Director of Student
A ctfrities.

15

�1

\

\"'
"And furthermore. don't ever come into this oOice again without your pants on!"

16

�CAMPUS LIFE

17

�The Colonist proudly presents

ALICE

1n

HARPURLAND

~•••i
This is Alice. One day Alice, a senior in a high
school in Upstate, New York, came upon a catalogue
from a small liberal arts college. "Harvard?" said her
mother. '"I've heard of it, it's one of them teachers
colleges,'' said her girl friend Mary. "Humbug," said
her fat her. " It's full of commies and atheists."
But Alice decided lo apply to this strange school.
On Tuesday afternoon she mailed off her application.
That evening Alice found by her bedside a cookie
on which was written, CO GRATULATIONS. YOU
ARE ACCEPTED. EAT ME. So Alice ate the cookie,
and became very big and very small, and found herself falling down, down a deep hole which she guessed
to be a sewer because of the strange smell and the
things she discovered floating down with her. Finally,
after many hours of falling, she came to rest in a
pile of mud and garbage. Alice picked herself up and
looked arou nd .
"This must be H arpur," she said, assuming a reverent pose.

"This must be Harpur," she said, assuming a reverent pose.

18

�Suddenly her pose was interrupted by a white rabbit who ran by shouting, 'Tm late, J'm late for curfew."' Before Alice could stop the rabbit to find out
why it was running so, a mean-looking queen appeared, grabbed the rabbit, and shouted, "Off with
its head!"
Alice started to run, and she soon came across
several men who were painting a footpath white.
"Why arc you painting this footpath white?" asked
Alice. "We arc painting it white because we covered
it with blacktop by mistake and we don't want the
cheshirc cat to find out."

'Tm late! I'm late!"

Alice did not know quite what to make of this, but
before she could say anything the men dropped their
brushes anc.I ran. Alice turned, but all she could sec
was a huge grin. It spoke.
'Tm the cheshire cat," it said. Anc.I suddenly, before her eyes, the grin began to take the shape of a
head, and then a cat. "And how arc you today?" said
the head. "We're so glad you could visit with us at
Harpurland." Then, quick as it came, the head and
cat disappeared, and only the grin remained.

"OIT with her head!''

19
p/eaie 111rn par./e

�Alice's attention was caught by a large number of
peopk who were making a great deal of noise. Upon
coming closer she discovered it was a tea party. To
get to the tea, however, one had to pass by a long reception line. "Move down, move down. no room, no
room," said the people on the line. Alice thought
their manners extremely rude, and decided it was not
worth the trouble just to get a cup of tea.

reception Ii nc

'Tm Twcedlcclee!"
''And I'm Tweedledum!"
Alice turned and saw two fat men who looked alike
standing together.
"We're here to help you out!"
"To help you adjust!"
"To make you think like us!"
"Look like us!"
"Just like us!"
"Getting along with each other is very important!"
"Very important is getting along with each other!"

Alice did not want to be like these men. She turned
and ran. She ran fast, crying loudl y, down the whitewashed road to the highway. From there she hitchhiked home, and in time forgot what had happened,
and was happy.
hitch-hiking home

20

The end.

�Essences ...

21

�Mom Hardy leads a freshman folksing in Whitney Hall.

"You in there, Herman? Y'all right?
Look, I'm sending you in three egg rolls for lunch."

22

�0
'"Well. back to the drawing board."

23

�A sertous side ...

WASHING TON , D .C .

24

�A SNOW l ADY

/\ND A HAY I.ADY

Sta te Sew age Pla nt

THF FVl·NING PRESS

_..,,...

~

new 500-student
HARPUR DINING HALL RISES- Work is reoching odv onced stage on Harpur College's
also contains hea•;~~
donong hall, involving obout S844,000 on construct ion contra cts. The structure
·1on, 40-foat Ir&gt;~
machinery for new JOO-student dormitory nearby. In foreground are pair of 12

25

�Relaxation

�/ 11 the nell' coffee house

,,
27

�And study.

28

�29

�l wanted to Sa}
that love has reasons;
rivers.float green hands
dreamlike - plucking water reeds
to comb the ocean's hair;
A reason as good as any
philosophy
As if l had to justify the wind turning breeze and
climbing in the boughs
I don't justify - l chronicle
And end up writing poems
approaching love as a limit;
When I sec you again it may have been said:
The river wilJ go its way
The wind will hang from the branches
and silence - as a limit
Sit down on the grass in the silence and kiss me.

L awrence K ear n ey

�I sat and waited for you to return.
The room turned dark within the night.
I knew where you were.
The moon came through the window.
It was very quiet while I sat.
Even the rain made no sound.
I waited for your footstep.
There were shadows to be watched.
I was a lo ne.
Why didn't you send me roses?
The sun was hot on my neck
And I hadn't seen your sm ile
Things drifted past my eyes
A sunset with reflection
There arc no trees in forests
My fingers stained with blood.
Perishable sensations
Like sudden pains
Deadly hands made of silver
There the rolling plain
Here the snow white grave
Since leaving this state of mind I have
returned to another.

Anonymo us

3

�PHOTO GRAPH Of ' I HE MOON TAKE
FROM THE FAMED HARPU R OBSERV ATORY WITH ITS NEW TELESC OPE USING A TWO LNCH LENS MADE FROM
THE BOTTOM OF A COCA-C OLA BO fTLE?
o, this is a giant pot of chow mein , photographed in the famed kitchens of Slater.

32

�Danc e Work shop

Rita U lanova, Karen Nczclck,
Sharon Ro~cnbcrg. Sue Scher,
Judy Donner, Helen Bohmer,
Jenn Checscburg.

33

�Carol von Gildern, Shirley Dexter, Martha Viii, Mary Ann Ru.,hworth. pres.;
Arline Marl-cl, Laurie Corwin, Carol Wcinwurm. Stephanie Allen.

Noted primarily for selling
pina at basketball games,
the Thalians arc one of the
most closely knit women's
social clubs.

THALIANS

34

�These photographs
have nothing whatsoever to do with
the Thalians.

35

�CASS AND RANS

Dolores Neidlinger
Carol Walker
Betty Frank
Pat Tarza
Ronnie Booth
I in&lt;la Sundqui\t
Nancy Sax
Karen McCauley

36

�37

�ROW !: 0. Goldberg. P. Hazen, J. Gallant, B. Summer. C. Demo, M .
Kuchnia , N. Anderson, M. Wandel l. ROW 2: G. Unger, J. Korniak, J. Pe~sin,
E. Barax, C. Fruhauf. pres.: M . J. Zylinsky, E. J ansen, J. Zaplawa, J. Lynch.
ROW 3: E. DorJ..in, N. Sze id, A. Scnio. D. Coon, E. Furedi, B. Yerby, J.
Krebs, K. Gray,on. C. Bl ake. L. Conger, V. Hammcrheck.

PANDORANS
38

�39

�GOLIARDS

ROW I: R. Hanigan. pre.\.; R. Ulrich. R. Orman, W. Bothner.
ROW 2: L. Snyder, R. Perry, M. Harter, A. Waldman. ROW
1: D. o·conncr. r. Yaw. A. Sm ith, C. Stcmplcs. ROW 4: K.
Simomon. W. ll c~\C. R. Nahodyl, I. Light. RO W 5: H . Spaw~nbcrg. J. Ccn,on!..a, R. H ol~applc, R. Loomi!&gt;. ROW 6: P.
Sopcha!... E. Vandcrbcc!.., J . Kamin~!..y. B. Brown. ROW 7: W .
Orcutt. W. l ·cts!..o. B Mitchell, R. Lord, R. Davie.

40

�41

�ADELPHI

KNrEl.ING: H. Seymour, I . Malclla. M. Gouleib, M. Greenberg, hoy wondc•r; S, Mirin,
P. Fi~hman. R Pence. 0. Newnham. B. Schneider, S. Spano. STANDING B. Dalrymple, D.
Ell\worth. R. Rogers. B. Moynahan. l· rederick J. Balling, Norton A ~w111e, Ni111111011.1herg.
N. Y.: R. Freidman, ~1. Coppola, I.. Plotkin. B. 0 Hahns, Barry Shaiman. R. Bohlowski.
R. Tumpowsk;. J. Kala~jian. M. Gapin. R. Ramsey. R. Golditch. P. Morgan.

42

�43

�BACCA CIA

C. Boller, R. Kaschak, R. Kauffinger, K. Failing, G. Bcckhorn, P. Hoberman,
T. Hochstadt, S. Morris, C. Alber, J. Paiant.

44

�45

�UNTHINKABLES

Har ry Horrible. Steph an Smelly. Peter Pigpen. Alfred Ugly. Melvin Mai nl iner, Sylvia Stench,
Father Coughli n. James Yechhh. H arvey T hu nder bird, Lemuel Pitkin, Christopher H alitosis,
Lawrence Sam uels. pres. and treas.

T H E UNTHI NKA BLES, a new and as yet uncharte red social club, is composed of the most horrible
students a t H ar pur, who have ba nded together fo r their
protection. Each year they plan to hold a " pretty man"
contest.
Advisor

46

�Intelligence is a criterion for admission to this
exclusive society.

Lawrence Samuels, president and treasurer of
the club. relaxes at home after a hard day a5
his wife prepares to do some ironing.

47

�OD EANS

ROW I: II. Ruhenstean. R. Hunt. A. Levy. A. Cummins. F. Kaplan. S. Spirn. F. Gluck, M.
Saul. ROW 2: M. Kaplan. A. C1oltbml!h. B. Kahn. K. Waltzer. A. Hertzberg. S. Lane, J.
Lutwin, J. Adelman, M. l eichtl ing, R. Satkan, M. Throne. B. Karson.

48

�CONTRASTS

49

�Mr. Rauchbcrg. Mr. llalpcrin, Mr. llorowitz, Mr. Schlossberg, Mr. Dcvillcrs,
Mr. Kaufman, Mr Reifer. Mr. Tanzer, Mr. ' I annenbaum, Mr. Czci~ler.

s0 s
50

�TAU

ROW I: C. Van Ro'&gt;s. P. Jones. A. Schwazbe, C. Maniaci. J. Simonds. ROW 2: J. L.
Phillips. E. Taylor. A. Bcllm.h. R. RO'&gt;'&gt;i. F. ('ain, D. ~later ROW 3: S. Goad. L. Woods,
S. Ostrander. P. Weisberg. R. Jablonski. "- · I ibbey. A. Rogers.

51

�ITK

TOP ARC: F. Vinci, J. Bral.aney. D. Feldman. J. Zsemlye, J. Frankie, S. Ruben. P. Lawner.
INNER ARC: B. Hacl.man, C Greene, T. Meehan, B. Buhler, H. Pierce, B. Sweeney, pres.;
R. Foster, J. Fennessey. J . Pine!. H UB: J. O'Mcara, J. Wolfer.

52

��COUN l ER-CLOCKWISE AROUND THE DEAN: M. Attie, P. OrnMein, S. Brooks, S.
Courageou~. Hesh Ncchcm ias. J . Hcd.cr. E. Saslow, J . Shear, D. Axelrod, C. Deyermond, J .
Harrison, A. Kosloff, A. Lupi. M. Kalter, M. Well ikoff, H. Cohen, G. Gould, P. Krieger. D.
Kiesler, L. Mikl os.

DIONYSIANS

also known as Jewish Fellowship

54

�55

�ENDYMIONS

R. oble. M . Wol fT. K. Perkins. S. Berg, M . M ill et, J. P iwin~l..i, D . W einer.
Marc Coe l. E. l evin, R. G arl and, K . U nger, S. Crane , I. Cohe n, 0 . Yo ung.

56

���0 0

ORGANIZATIO NS

�.. Wow. that\ a hig rock there ..

•

• •

There appeared o ne day in the land of thc southern tier, two men. And o ne of these
men was Dr. Wolfgang Stctch. the bearer of th e leash. And his companion, the
wearer of the leash, was Gulliclmo Crobnotzioni. It came to pass that they happened upon Harpur College.
"Great fortune has been bestowed upon us, good Gullielmo," said Stetch .
.. For here I can continue my studies o n the effect of mass sensitivity in creating
a unive rsal value exhibiting the recognition of bureaucratic administrations as a
pan of the deity and the causal relations thereof."
"Golly, yes. It is," said Gulliclmo.
Stctch was inspired. ··Ga1c on the symbolism my faithful companion. Gaze on
this monument a nd underc;tand its sign ifica nce. H erc is a reverent people."
"Wow that's a big rock there,"' said h is faithful compa nio n.
"Ycs. and it is this o f which we must be observa nt. For to truly understand a people we must understand the institutions they esteem."
And the) continued on their sojourn up Center Drive until they gai ned the Student Cemcr Building. There they rested a nd Dr. Stctch outlined his plan of study
to Gulliclmo Crobnotzioni.
" Interview and observation; these arc !..cys to understanding. We will go our sepa rate ways now, each with his duty."
'"Oh boy." said Gullielmo am.I he began jumping up a nd down for this was the
first time in twenty seven months that Dr. Stetch had taken ofT th e leash. And he
took his half of the list of orga nizat io ns which Dr. Stetch had acquired from the
Director of Student Activities and began his work.

60

�ROW I: Jim Gear. Dave Segal. Sue Friedland. Bctt} Frank.
ROW 2: Jon l anelli, Richard Roger~.

~itzi

(,roper. Patrick Morgan

WHO 'S WHO IN AME RICA N COLLEGES
DRA GON
SOC IETY

Patrick Morain, Dave Seaal, Jon Ianctti.

61

�ROW I; l·ilcen Ohcl..er. Susanne F ricdland. Bobbie Dreyer. l\,1arilyn Smith. Al Smith. Barbara Mebl..v, Marilyn Kelly. Phil Borden. ROW 2: Peter Pnnt1, Richard Rogers. Pat Mor
gan, Hien Furcdi. Aaaron f·uchs. John P. Bclnial... Diana C.oldhcrg. Betty I- ran!... Harry
Meyers, Michael Hollander.

UNITE D STUDE NT GOVE RNME NT
Dr. Stetch interviewed:
"Morga n':; my name, Pat Morgan. But make it fast I'm on my way to Dr. Bartie's
office."
"Oh. then you have close tics with the administration? ''
"Absolutely. \Ve have to ma ke a conflict schedule for the corning semester.
" Just what is a confl ict schedule?"
" Y ou know, we have to keep the students interested in the work of the U.S.G.,
a fter all it is thei r government. So what we do is schedule so many conflicts per semester, and of course, the U.S.G . resolves them .
" lt g ives us a purpose.''
"Well, just how many conflicts do you pla n to schedule this -.emester?"
" I his should be a ve ry rewa rdi ng yea r. Dr. Bart le says that if we're really lucky
we may be able to plan o n as ma ny as fou r."

62

�U .S.G. St eer ing
C o mm itt ee
Patrick Morgan, Preside/IT
Richard Rogers, Treasurer
Al Smith. Acfrocate
Marilyn Kelly
Correspo11di111! Secretary

N .S .A . C o mmitt ee

Ronald Bayer, Barbara Boch novich, Judy Potusky, William H ynes, Robert Pozcik.

U .S.G . Standing
Committee

63

�Bobbie Dreyer, U.S.G. rep.; Louise Grossman, treas.: Sue Friedland, U.S.G. rep.: Bill
Sweeney, pres.; Fran Cohen, vice pre.1.

Senior Officers

CLASS OFFICERS

Junior Officers
ROW I· Pat Moore, 1·ice pres.; Mike Harter, pres. ROW 2: Henry Stark,
trem.: Sue Ca~ta ldo, .1ec.; Tony Cilluffo, serg. at arms.

64

�Bonnie Mandina. ser1:. at arms; Fdith Carlisi. sec.; Bob Hahn, pre.1-.; Lowell Tan1.cr. 1•ice
pres.

Sopho more Office rs

CLASS OFFICERS

"Mister, I'm a Freshman and a social science major.

r

have heard

about your study here on campus and I would like to ask you a
question. I voted in the class elect ions and all that-I even remember who I voted fo r-but I don't understand why I voted . lt's not that

J don't appreciate expressi ng my rights in the democrati c process, I
reali1e my responsibilities in maintainin g the form and that dcmocracy doesn't work unless I do participate . But tell me, Mr. Crobnot1ioni, just why did I vote-w hat do the class officers do? Why
do people become class officers?"
"To collect brownie points."

65

�Jane Weyl, Mary White, ( 1ad Hrabbard, 1-'udora Gonhey, Bobbie 1-'rpelding, Kathy Kew,
Charlotte Abbey, Stephen Goren\tein, I ugene Kline, George Delamar, chairman: Fd Weisman, student ad1•isor; Mike Hollander.

DORM COUNCIL
''Hi there," said Gulliclmo, "you're George Delamar
aren't you? Tell me sir, as president of the Dorm
Council, just what is the purpose of your o rganization?"
"Well, since the formation of the Dorm Council, our
primary concern has been with detecting the similarities and d ifferences in attitudes of students toward
better understanding of that portion of their social
relationships between and/ or among institutional deficiencies evident throughou t their daily encounters with
o thers whose socio-economic, and co nsequentl y, status
values, may lead them to presenting, objectively of
course, dissimilar reactions to these things a nd the
institutions they represent, thereby enabli ng us to catcgori1c these results for p resentation at o ur annu al
meeting."
"Oh," said Gulliclmo Crobnotzioni.

Gullielmo and interviewee

66

�"We of the Judicial Board feel that we play one of
the most importa nt parts in the College Commu nity.
We arc, as most people probabl y knO\\, a mildly autonomo us group that meets when duty calls in the
small broom closet next to the laundry room in the
Residen ce Halls. We meet to pass judgeme nt and
hand out sentence s to those people who have violated
one or more of the necessar y rules which make group
living work so smoothl y. We feel that by sitting on
this board, and having a chance to release dangero us
bottled up hostilities on helpless fcllo\.\ students , a
member saves himself and the school from a variety
of unpleas ant incident s. Perhaps someda y scats on the
board will rotate so that all students get a chance and
there will no longer be any disciplin e problem at Harpur College ."

Ginit Nevin, Harriet Schiffma n, Joan
Packles, social chairman; Stewart
Rubin. ~·ice chairman: Lolita Gra}.
Sally Barstow, Marilyn Smith. Nancy
Sax. John Phillips, Teddy Dach. Brian
Eden.

JUD ICIA L BO ARD

Linda Ford. ROW
ROW I: Bonnie Brodt. Kathie Mandry. Dara l cc Vickary Anne Schmidt.
Jansen ROW
Evelyn
Rose,
Marilyn
.
Richman
Terr}
2: Michelle Bloomfield, Janet Schult1,
chief j1m1cc: Lawrence
Golditch.
Ron
.
Sternberg
Carl
andau,
I
William
Dikman,
3: Bob
Woods. Barry Shapiro. Bill Zipcrman .

67

�ROW I: Paul Reese, Ellen h1redi. Marilyn Groth, Jenn Hamberg. Cindy Blake, Mary Ann
Cubito. Pat Fortunato, Sylvia Sto rm ~. Belly Cologgi, Judy Pessin. Bell} Frank. Karen Grayson.
Fran Cohen. Bobbie Dreyer. Linda Lind. Barbara Gagliardi. ROW 2· Jim Gear. Bob Madel! .
Walt Bajan. Richard Ulrich. Lar ry Klein. George Brun. Phil Jones. 1 err} Foran. Bob Friedman.
Reese Pence, Bob Dalrym ple, E-d We isma n, Lonny Molett a, Jerry Stern, eil I riedberg. M 1kc
Kaplan.

PROCTORS

During a qui'ck lunch of peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for Gulliclmo and eggplant for Stetch, the good
Doctor described the work of the H arpur Proctors to
his inattentive companion.
" By George!" exclaimed Stetch, "these Proctors are
the earthly incarnation of fully integrated group living. Ea rnest, cager, intensely aware of the world
around them , with its twelve double rooms and a vending machine, they strive to bring the life of the residence hall dweller a little closer to· the idea l which
hangs shining in the distance, occasionally to be seen
gleaming in a baby's eye. Courteous, swift to act,
strong, with multitudes of smiles in reserve, they quietly go about their business. Can all of us say as much,
my friend? I think not."
"Gee, proctors arc swell," said Gullielmo.

"All right, what's your name?"

68

�CLA REN DO N
r red Price. Carl Sternberg, Louise Lateiner, editor;
Jo Damon.
Gullielm o Crobnot zioni asked, "But what docs the
Clarend on do?"
"Creativ ity is our very blood. Artists arc the backbon e
of the Americ an Way of Life and we feel that by
helping promote an artist we are develop ing our country's tomorro w. But that's not all there is to it. Ours is
a g reat responsibility, for we have in our hands the
cultural destiny of mankind We must be sure in selecting works for publicat ion, that we take only what is
availabl e."
"Oh," said Gulliclm o Crobnot zioni.

PUB LIC ATI ON S BO ARD
Ed Segal, Ron Golditch. Dr. Seiden, Mr.

69

cwcomb, Dr. Yasilew, Bob Poczik. Dr L indsa}.

�THE COLONIAL IEWS
EDITORIAL STAFF
N o•n Editor
Manasing Editor
Chl•t Editor
Pat Trembath
J. J. Freeman
Sttven Hofl'man
Bwiln ..a Ma naan
Sporta Editor
Featur.. Editor
Clem VanRosa
Al Suchinaky
Al Goldsmith
A.uiatant t"'ea turtt Editor
Auiatant Newa Editor
1!1chard Noble
Ted Hoclatadt

STAFF
l'hoto1ra ph•
Ed Saalow

Aluanl It E.nha nre
Dotty Snycr
Nell Gardner
NEWS REPORTERS : Am)I Bookah1n, Stephan1t Bruno, Jtiry Gould,
Marilyn Jcnaen, Barbara Mer..ky, Ginit Navin, Eileen Olicker, Georl'i•
Palmer, Natalie Ro1enheck, Barry Shapiro, Bille Shuria, John
Slocum, Carla Surarman.
FEATURE WRITERS: Andrew Bergman, Joy Chu, Dave Laur,
Dawn Moore, Steve Palincaar, Michael Prcaa, Charlea Revelll, Morrla
Schorr, Richard Walt.er, Bobbi PreSBer, Ed Sub1t.aky, Mike l'p1erman
SPORTS WRITERS: Ira Bernstein, Mike Glaaaman, Stu Lew11,
Jeannette Mehrer, Henry Rubenstein.
ADVERTISIN G STA FF: Eleanor Leine, Ladd Mikloe.
Typiata: Claudia Wilton, Manlyn Roae. Photography Aaa11tanta: Bob
Culder, Mike Wolfe. Copy Counter: Enid Lisa.
Adnrtialnr
Pat Curran

"So what do you want? I'm onl y editor."

�THE COL ONI ST

Arthur Cooper, editor
John Blcidenbu rgh, humor?
Bonnie Brodt, husi11c.1s.
Jo) Chu. mi.lcella11eous.
Karen Crossen. chic~c•11ed 0111
Sheldon Edison. spor/J.
Linda Ford. frt•shma11.
Lawrence Kearney. literaf\' (1·rrvJ.
Leslie Krauss. ha11ger-011.
Robert Poczik, asst. 10 misc.
Pred Price, h1111g-011.
Lawrence E. Samuels. Esq., insanity.
Suzanne Shapiro, a.w. sports.
Richard Sherman, photograp hy.

&lt;Bur ,lqoblc '!.ender
Kenneth C. Lindsay, adl'lsor.

71

�ON rLOOR: J. Merker. C'. HyJ...in, P. Klamcr. ON BFNCH: H. Ro~e nberg, M. Karpas,
L. Lind, 1. Maletta. rrecu. STA D I G: L. Pompa, N. Wbe, J. Damon. sec.

GALLERY COMMIT TEE
Anc.l Dr. Steteh went on observing and interviewi ng:
"Felicitations my good friends of the Gallery Committee. How arc you?"
"Sensitive, man, Sensitive."

STUDEN T CENTER
BOARD
Observing,
"The Student Center Board sponsors
innumerable movies and stimulating
coffee hours during which the conflicts
created by the U.S.G. and the administration are discussed."

Dave Gottlieb, Jon Ianetti, Linda Conger,
Dick Sherman, George Kester, Dave Segal.

72

�HARPUR JAZZ SOCIETY

73

�Barry Levine, Peter Victzc. I &lt;l Subit1.ky, I &lt;l Wei~man (with hca&lt;l~cl),
Alice Silverman, Mike Blinick. Ira Bour,tein.

trt' IH.:

Jun Boland.

RADIO WORKSHOP
CHEMISTRY CLUB

Mary Ann Conl-.lin
Bonita Mollicone
Charles Soo&lt;lak

�DEBATE
CLUB

Patricia Bur y. ROW
ROW I: Al Frant..cl. Carol Connolly . ( ynth ia Ka\huck, Judy H) mowit1.
arry Barnes.
I
h.
Smit
Louis
.
Goldstein
Andy
2: Teddy I lochsiadt . Stu Lewis, Sam Casella.

MATHEMATICS SOCIETY
2: William I less. Frank
ROW I: Bill l andcau. parliame11ruria11; Billie Shcrris. pres. ROW
Siegclma n, MorRichard
Lewis,
Stuart
Seeger.
Fnid
beck.
Hammcr
Yi
Anton.
H ahn. William
ton Goldberg .

75

�ROW I: Bart Cebula. Bonnie Molliwnc. Mary Ann Cubito. Bonnie Mandina, Sandra Serafin.
Carolyn Wendell. rranci Otruba. Pat ·1arza. ROW 2: John Fcnnissey. Richard Jahlonski,
Carmen Maniaci, John Phillips. Judy Potusky. fk11e1•/111g) Mar} Ann M1ruski. Judy 7aplawa.
Carol Albrecht, Bett; Cologgi, Fnid Seeger, Carol Reese. ROW 3 Richard Hohlowski,
Robert llolsapple. Anthony Brankman. Frank Cerra, Dennis McCudcn. Fred Kundell. William Morgan, Richard Marchcsiello. Gerald Cerwonka, l inda Lind.

NEWMAN CLUB
JEWISH FELLOWSHIP
ROW I: Gail Bradbar&lt;l. Fd Weisman, prt•s.; Ellen Super. sec.; Eugene Kline. trea.1.; Ruth
Malzberg. 1·ice pres. ROW 2: Alice Silverman, Amy Malzberg, Terry Richman, Stuart Lewis,
Mike Hlinick, Karen Perlman. Madeline Suddele. Steven Smith, Hattie F.ngel Jud; Lipton,
Fnid Barax. Ruth Goldberg. Richard Moses.

76

�Chaplain Klindt.
ROW I: Jim Lee. pres.; Marilyn Jensen. Judy Weidman . Judy Munro,
Davenpo rt. Dave
Judy
er,
Argersing
Bob
th,
Wadswor
John
Hicks.
ROW 2: Dr. Wilmoth , Dave
Coate~.
Dr.
n,
Bazzeghi
Paul
ll uttleson.

PROTEST ANT FELLOWSHIP
"Dr. Steteh told me to intervie w and observe ,'' said Gullielmo. "So

I was smart and I wrote down all the answers to all the question s
l asked."

'Yes.'
'No.'

' ever!'
' It depends .'
'Spaghe tti. creamed chicken , and bagels.'
"Gee, I wish I could rememb er the question s I asked."

77

�ROW I; Ron Ba) er. Did. Sherman. Art ( ooper, Rita Boxer. Herb Rosenberg, John Dehn.
RO'W 2· Tom Weiss. Vicl.1c Mofscnson. Judy Donner. Noel Wise. Bob Price, Rose Baral.
I Ol11se Latemer, Chuck Revelli.

PROGRESSIVE SOCIALIST SOCIETY
"Just \\ hat arc the aims of the Prog ressive Socialist Society?''
''\\'ell , I wou ld like to set about this task of defining our aims wi th a great deal
of cautio n. l wouldn't want to give the impressio n that we arc as far left as, say,
the Bingham ton Rotary Club, but o n the other hand, it is necessary to quell the
notion that we arc merely "po1'csmcn for the management of Gentleman Joe\.
Between these tv,:o extremes of Right a nd Left there arc many ma ny shades o f
political thought and let it never be said that we failed to take a ll of them into
consideration. We have striven mighuly to bring some unity to these disparate
v1e.,.,.s: \\e have striven lo a\\aken the apathetic students of H arpur to the political
issues around them; we have st ri ven to set a good example in our daily li ves, in
our dress, eati ng habits, drinking habits, and last but not least in our patterns of
group living. We feel the Socialist Society to be a r ich and rewarding expe rience."

78

�Weekly meeting of the Progressiv e

oeialist

~ociet}

J. Passive Enigma

Comb ined Cons ervat ive
Club and the Socie ty
for the Aboli tion
of
Arthu r Coop er
'Tm sorry to wake you, sir," said Gulliclmo, " But I was wonderin g if you could
tell me a little about your group?"
" It's all right. I'm not sleeping. What
was that you asked?"
" About your group: could you tell me
some of your activities ... sir?

... SIR? ... "

79

�ROW I: Jenn Hamburg. Bonnie Brodt. Barbara Cebula, Jennene Korniak. Eileen Bodie,
Margarct Kuchnia. Pal Curran. Jeannette Mehrer, Mary Ann Boburka.

OUTING CLUB
"But what arc you fo r?" asked Gulliclmo.
"Outdoor activities ."
"Oh," said Gulliclmo.

"From breadth through
depth to per~pective ... "

80

�WOMEN'S RECREATION
ASSOCIATION
"What have you unearthed?" asked Dr. Stetch.
"Well," said Gullielmo, "some organi7ations arc really
different. Like the Women's Recreation Association.
It's got all gi rls. And the Pintopplcrs were created because there are four bowling alleys on the bottom
floor of the Student Center."

ROW 2: Miss Godfrey, Joanna Damon, Eli.i;abeth Roberts, Arline Markel, Mary Ann Conklin.

PINTOPPLERS

ROW I: Pat Tarza. Mar} Jane /} lin\l..i. Angela Senio. Y1 Hammerbcck. Cathy l· ruhauf. Carol
Anderson. Jane Wcyl, Joy Kreb~. ROW '.!: J. R. F. Kent, Richie f-cldman, Alan H artman,
Chuck Stemples. Jerry Cerwonka. Paul Sopchal... Doug Patchen, Mickc} Ba~scll, Bob Holsapple. Jim Frandsen. ROW 3: John P. Bclnial.., Arnie Bcllush. George Brun, Diel.. Hohlowski. John Coddard. Steve Klimow. John Frankie. Jun Boland.

81

�ALPHA PHI OMEGA

ROW I: F. Segal. W. 7iperman. D. Segal. C. SLernbcrg. G. Stern. P. Jone~. G. Delamar. N.
Spector, W. Falla. ROW 2: Mr. Shay, J Starley. G. H arvey. M. Ba~sell, H. Meyers. D. Swn1-.in. D. Sievert. G. Stevens. J. Lundgren, S. F&lt;lison.

I.S .C.C.

Sax. L. Conger, C. Yon Gel&lt;lon. C. Yon Ross.
ROW l · M. Wiphch. B. Booth. M. Kuchnil-..
ROW 2. I I. Rubin\tcin. D. Elbworth, . Starlcr. J. Palant. B. He%e, I. Light.

82

�INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB

ROW I: B. Muller. 1-. Price. 1rca1.: L. k.rau\\, .ice.; R. Ba}er, pro~ram clwir111a11; S. Wile. M.
l iebow1tz, pres.: D. Hiel..s. R. PoC71I... 1·ice pres. ROW 2: M. Bisenstadt. C. Shorbleeves,
R. Gruen. P. Clancy. B. Brodt. M. Trapani. H. Rosenberg. G. Harvey, L. l owenstein, J.
l\lexander. J. Allen. S. Scher. C. Hyl..in. R. Schultz. L. Rabinowitz. M. Millett. P. Yietz.e.
T. Weiss.

how often do you meet?"
"Frequently."
"Do you find that the function and policy of the International Relations Club in any way contributes to
the attitudes of your members towards the administration as such since you arc concerned with a topic
which is outside the realm of the campus and the
cfTcctual area of the administration policies?"
"No."
" l s there any other subject which you strive to teach
your members?"
"Public Speaking."

"A nd what is your function,''
"International Relations"
"Do you study international relations?"
"Yes."
"You must have a particular methodology to your
studies. Just how do you go about accomplishi ng this?"
"Fervently."
"And when you study international relations fervently, you probably find that one of the necessities of a
comprehensive study is an adequate schedule of diversified study groups out of which the greatest amount
of understanding can be passed to the club overall. Just

Ron Bayer and Lesley Krauss escort Mrs. Fleanor
Roosevelt upon her arrival in Binghamton to address
the student body concerning the United Nations.

At an informal coffee hour with students. Dr Homer
Jack. F.xccutivc Director of Sane, discusses the problems of disarmament.

83

�c}, Hoh (1arland. Mar} Jo DulT;. Alan Dubehk;. John
Mclellan. Roger Nanes, Allan Bern'&gt;tein, o rm a Lemberger,
Mark Wasserman, Ira Ucrnstein . C laire Hester. Peter Davis,
Robert Weiner. Dan Kaplan, Bob Grant. Doug I lull. Tom
Ca l i~tri, Jean Willenbrock. Fred Niditch, Charles Dayton.
John Freeman. L. C lifford Edwards. Peter Vietze.

Par Hal'cn [ d Cain. Don Ame~. Caroline Pilcher. Dolores
Neidlinger. Abigail Mohn, Alan H ardy, Steven Leider. Karhy
Kew. Virginia Kelsey. hanl. Kierly, Mary Mollaban, Carol
Keck. Jo.,cph Webster, Bill Hesse, Judy Petty, Jane Wisc,
Fmd Seeger. Don Chattaway, Al Tannenbaum. Robert Whitney, Mil..c Spicrman. ABSF T: Carol Wcinwuum, Carolyn
Margoli'&gt;. J o~eph Lurie. Sherr)' Anne I lammond, Severi} Hick-

BAND
"Another indicatio n of the societal structure of an
educational institution upon which the relationships of
mass to administration is dependent, a rc the cultural
sub-groups in which that society participates or respects in varying degrees according to the activi ti es of
th e sub-group to which the mass can attach themselves
for the elevatio n of the status o f the group in a larger
sense. Harpur College has a band and a chorus."

84

�dia T)ICr. Joy Ccjl..a. l inda Peterman. Cynthia Andreason,
Ton&gt; Main i o n i~. Dennh O'Connor, Vic K lima;h, Mel Aho,
Jen) Gould. Jane Wisc. Jo Lyn Abbot, Marlene Goodwin,
Anne Carlson

ROW 1: Bobbie Frpclding, Carolyn Wendell, Ute Hanisch,
1 auric Corwin. Karen NcLclek, Amy Mal1bcrg. Mary Ann
Boburka. Jacquelyn Clari... Flcanor Smith, Ruth Malzberg,
'&gt;tcphanie Allen, Martha Davis. ROW '.!: Hattie Engel. Clau-

CHORUS
Jo Lyn Abbot, Sandra Serafin. Karen Korhummel, Mar~ha Scialdo. Janet Stuh lmillcr. Joseph
Barberi. Audre) Hall. Sall) Mitchell, Vicky Burrington. Barbara Howe.

GIRLS'
LIGHT
CHORUS

85

�COLO NIAL

Rurh MalLberg. Swart Leeder. GeofTre} Slavin. Herb Rosenberg, Srcphie Allen, Gabey M ayonnaise, Sprint: R&lt;••·it'11 Chairnu111: Barry Le&gt;inc. Lois Weinstein. Connie Lucci.

Dolores Neidlinger. Jeff Czcislcr. Amy Mall'.berg. Bell y Cologgi, Barbara Russell, Alan
Tannenbaum. Cynthia Andreasen. Pat Woytev. 1·1ct' prt'.1.;
Jad. Stanley. ABSF T: h y
Rosenberg, sec.: Diane Burh ytc,
Jane Lagoudis, Kathleen Mandry, Marilyn Hersey. Walter
1-ysselinck.

Sprin g R ev ie w
The Mofsensons

86

�PLAYERS
Dance Workshop
The Pied Piper of Hamlin
An Evening of Dance

Productions
L eonce and Lena
Picnic on a Battlefield
The Queen and the R ebels

Student Produced
Dark Lady of the Sonnets
In This Hung Up Age
The Still Arm
Spring R eview

"They're sort of an •off-Broadway' type group. I 95 mile$."

87

�YOU NG REPUBLICANS
CLUB
"Tell me, my man, why arc you no
longer at Harpur? " queried Steich.
"Well," said the mild mannere d young
man, puffing on a Havana cigar, "the
new headquar ters of the Young Republicans is the result of years of dedicatio n.
At last we have a meeting hall worthy
of our aims, a place echoing the friendly
camarad erie necessary if an organization is to be a force for good. As the gavel
opens our first meeting it will be difficult indeed to quell the feeling of pride in
this truly significan t step forward.
Harpur will weep for her lost heroes."

YOU NG DEMOCRATS CLUB
"Why aren't you at Harpur any more?" asked Gulliclm o.
Leaning back in the rocking chair, and propping his feet against the oil can, the
man said, "Never let it be said that the Young Democra ts failed to keep its finger
o n the pulse of the times. The cw Frontier bcd,ons a nd we have met the chalry
lenge; march ing forth into a new world, we have abandon ed the ease and luxu
become
has
which
area
eloped
underdev
of college life for the raw realities of the
our headquar ters. Herc we wait ; cager, alert, dedicated , awaiting the clarion
call of duty. Soon it will be election year again."
"Oh," said Gullielm o Crobnotzioni.

88

�.........
Their tas!.. complete, the two gathe red their material and Stetch
with leash in hand a nd Gullielmo in leash began the descent to the
other world; the land of stores and billboards a nd four lane highways and Republica ns: to Binghamto n. Down Center Drive to
sta nd once more before the symbol of H a rpur's social solidari ty
~here Stecch paid homage co that institution.
"Tis better, good Gullielmo ," said Dr. Wolfgang Stetch, "that these
few hours ~pent in deliberatio n be accou nted for by paying tribute
to this socie ty wit h that which we have taken from them. So I
offer you, 0 g reat idol, you r people."
And with that Dr. Stetch a nd Gullielmo Crobnotzi oni stac!..ed their
material beneath the pylon, in view of all the passing motorists.
Stctch struck fi re to their ~acriflc i a l offeri ng, followed by a look of
awe and a n exuberant sho ut of 'Wow' from Gullielmo Crobnotzi oni
a nd the two once more continued their sojou rn ...

··certainly is a lovely sacrifice."

.

~

....

. ·~

,-

,•

. ..

;-

.

..~.,-; -r.·

89

··.

�A light breeze filters through the half-opened windows
and scatters in slivers of air upon my arm which lies
bare against the armchair, lying limp and deathlike.
The voices of those brittle birds arc nagging the trees
strangling the voices that come from that mouth over there.
Why do you speak softly as if your words were made of glass?
Trembling hands that hold a cigarette for comfort: that these
hands may not deceive what's held within a seething brain.
Fingers that are old with young skin: fingers that have
held your hair at one time; that smoothed your lips when
something almost screamed from them.
The sun is up: a simple thing in a complicated atmosphere.
I can even hear the ticking of a clock; endless mark of
change to the external world.
Perhaps if I threatened to go outside where l can touch
the trees and try to catch the birds; perhaps my hands
will become real once more. The cigarette always goes out
after a while. One always has to light another or stare at his
empty hands.
From branch to branch they turn themselves: back and forth
trying to find a tree which is warm enough to hold them.
Their feathers must keep them warm even when they cannot find
places to put their feet.
Reflected sunlight streams like crepe paper at someone's
lonely birthday party. When the murderous eyes again
beckon me to become a part of their horizon
I must be determined to stop the flow of blood from my skin
to theirs. There arc wrinkles in my flesh: wrinkles of
tiredness that come and go and always remind me of the
bed in the morning before it becomes a thing of the day.
Hard inflexible fingernails that could
tear this mind out of its hiding place arc worthless on the
ends of forgotten strength. The matches that I light cigarettes
with arc tipped with yellow which turns into golden blue and
orange when I strike them against their black suicide mate.
I am growing tired from the wasted grass that lies just
outside this window. Nothing is on it except the light
from that golden idol.
I can only remember the midnight sounds of careless wind
running through the crack in the door. A hush of memory
stifles the joy that could have been anyone's if they had
only known the moon longer. Sadness when the
circle that surrounds the moon at night glows.
If someone looked closely enough he would see that circle
as a universal noose. A trick in which lovers entangle
themselves when they walk slowly through a garden of dark
roses. The sun lies sterile on my check.

Anonym ous,..

90

�Beetled machin ery baking on sun-bla ck tar
Oaken bridge of crucific tion mound ing dirt
And the sewn and patched dirt blades
Green against the stench of yellow
Twitter ing tweakin g starved bills
Two simple on the striving stupid green
And think they sing their hearts
Know not
Crush green to yellow brown baked sun.
Two married giggling on the feeler whites of tar
And back and forth to nowher e
Gigglin g happy in the dirt.
Death everyw here
And noone seeing Christ
Toiling naked in the sun
The whirrin g grindin g roar of protest of
Machin ery
Grunti ng Christ up the spotted hill and
Over
Into woods where crosses lie
And death everyw here
Inside.

Ann e Mac Farl ane

�Sce ne from
a nov el tn

d along
There I was, a new born babe, strapped to my mother' s leg. She struggle
As she
city.
the
of
center
a side street to the bottom of a steep hill that led to the
mongrel
white
a
paused to regain a little strength before attempt ing the ascent,
by the foot
came up to us. But l fixed him. Just as he lifted his leg, 1 caught him
exchang ed
We
and flipped him on his back. Mother looked down lovingly at me.
smiles. She had the strength to go on.
why.
Crossin g the street was much easier than 1 expecte d. Suddenl y I realized
ahead.
There was a parade being put on in my honor! How nice to have sent word
cheering
of
s
hundred
were
hill
the
up
going
street
Lined along the side of the
backs were
people. What jubilation! How unexpected! For me! Funny that their
ment, I'm
manage
Shoddy
them!
of
front
toward me. And that was the band in
Besides,
ments.
arrange
moment
the
of
spur
sure. But what can one expect from
evil
some
alas,
then,
But
trifles.
I was too pleased to have been annoyed by such
y
necessar
the
for
weight
her
always accomp anies fame. She didn't equalize
they
but
,
situation
ssing
strength to lift her leg over the curb. It was an embarra
know that
cheered us on. There wasn't the slightest pause. How wonderf ul it is to
got up
we
,
manage
one has such loyal fans. Looking as unabash ed as we could
by a
greeted
and continu ed walking. About a third of the way up the hill we were
high ranking dignitary. He smiled and extende d his hand.
"Buy a balloon! "
"No, thank you. "
"Buy a balloon! "
" I 'm sorry, I don't want any."
with you.
"Do you want your kid to grow up without a balloon? What's the matter
ain't you got no feeling for him?"
"Please let me by."
balloons ? I
"What, do you hate kids? Wanna deprive them of happine ss and
suppose you'd have them all grow up in a refonna tory."
"l 'm so tired, will you let me alone."
"Child hater! Child hater!"
"I don't believe it," said a little old lady, ''such a cute baby."
"She won't even buy it a balloon. How mean can you get?"
"Oh, look at the wart on his nose!"
l chalked up another victim with my fang.
"Well, l was never so shocked !" "Help, help, help, Rape!"

92

�progr ess
Paul Weinm an
"Rape? Where?" cried an excited young man, drooling while he talked. ··where's
the victim? I 'II cover her up with my shirt?"
"'There she is, the one without the balloon."
"Arc you all right? Hurt?" He found no broken bones after an extended search .
.. Please leave me alone."
"Ow, my knee, my knee!"
'"You, too! It's disgracefu l!"
"A kid without a balloon-w hy l bet he's got rabies!"
'·Rabies!" was screamed in a high C and a middle D flat. After this cacophono us
chord, there assembled a huge crowd of people anxious to throw stones, swing
sticks and pull triggers. With an extraordin ary presence of mind, Mom got on
her hands and knees and crawled through the crowd as a snake docs through
grass. And don·t you think I didn"t set my fang deep at every opportunit y.
Suddenly with a violent jerk she yanked me from her leg and curled up over me.
The parade was over. My glory and fame were short lived. The people burst over
us like an avalanche. Each footstep was a rock falling on us. She groaned and drew
me into her stomach.
"Mommy, " said a little girl, "look at the dead lady."
"Don't bother me dear, we have to hurry."
"Please look at her, Mommy."
"Yes, she's nice, now come along."
"She's probably all nasty and dirty."
"But Auntie Ruth, don"t you think she's awful silly lying there like that?"
"Yes, dear, but mind your mother, things in the street arc nasty and dirty."
"I just wanted to kick her."
'·Come back here!"
"That daughter of yours, just like her father."
"Look how she is beating the carcass; George would be proud."
"Full of life, the little dear."
"Come on now, that's enough."
"Can't we take her home?"
"No! You have enough pets now!"
"But she's dead."
"Oh, don't let her Harriet; I'm sure it has germs."
"Waah! Waah!"
"Stop crying, everyone is looking."

93

�··well, no wonder that sweet little girl is crying. Look at that woman in the street."
'Tm telling you Mabel, this city has gone to the dogs. In my time they would never
allow a thing like that."
"Young man, come here!"
"Yes, what can I do for you?''
"Get that thing out of the street! It's a disgrace. ''
"I'm a doctor, not a strectclca ncr!"
"All right smart alee, move on," came the voice of authority .
"I was just staring at the dead lady."
"l don't want any of your lip! Move on!"
.. Allright, don't push."
'·Wait a minute, what dead lady?"
"That one."
"All right!! Everyone stay where they are! You, come back here."
·'What did I do officer?"
"You killed that woman."
" I did not. Honest."
"How do J know?"
"I guess you don't, sir..,
"Then stand there. No one moves from here! Hands up!"
"No one killed her, she's just dead."
"How do you know?"
"No knives, no rope marks, no bullet holes. Just dead."
"Turn her over."
"No, let me! Let me! l want to turn her over!"
"Alright, but quickly!"
"Oh, can I really! I never touthcd a dead pethon."
'·Hurry it up, I ain't got all day."
'Tho much fun! Ow, thce's heavy. Can one of you thrrong fcllowth help me?"
"Yeh, move over."
"Tho many muthles; let'th puth together. "
"Heave, ho!"
"Officer, sir. ls that a young baby in her arms?"
"If I ask for your opinion, give it; until then, shut up!"
"Excuse me, sir."
"Wait a minute! What baby?"
"That one there. The one biting the man who turned her over."
"l s that baby biting you?"
"Oh, 1 don't mind offither. It feel th good."
"If you want to file a warrant or complain t, now is the time."
"Oh, no, l wouldn't think of it!"
" If you don't mind my butting in, I think you ought to do somethin g about it. That
brat will only be a public nuisance ."
"Who asked you?"
" o one, but speaking for myself and my friends, I think it ought to be stamped

94

�on o r put in the sewer. Just listen to it sna rl! "
"Stop this insult, this degradatio n of mankind! Beho ld ye b rethren, the lost lamb
of God, the little sheep, strayed from the flock."
'' H ey buddy, clam it! Move on 1"
"Look ashamed! You, an officer of the law, permitting this outrage! Have vou no
pity for the less fortunate! Think ye of the wrath of Jehovah, God of Vengeance .
When you arc called to the great beyond a nd stand before the eternal judge, how
will you account for this transgressi on? Will you be able to hold your head high
and say, 1 had pity on the children of God? I sa} unto you here that you must o n
the other hand say unto Him on high, · 1 have not had pity on the children of
God'. Repeat ye sinners! The time draweth near!"
"Gee, I never thought of it that way."
'·H eh, we haven' t been nice."
"We've done an unC hristian-lik e thing.'·
" What must we do to repent?"
"Y c sinners, reach into your pockets and take out a one dollar bill. Only a one
dollar bill fo r eternal life in Paradise. One dollar for forgiveness. That's the way,
brethren. the way to repentance . H old your key to the Golden Gate high over your
head. C lose your eyes and ask for mercy. Sing out your praises to God! If you
feel the hand o f God taking your offering, don't be alarmed. It is his heavenly
way of showing th at you are heard. Repent ye sinners! Your nitch in Heaven is
assured. You're in the ledger. At the count of ten, you may open your eyes."
" Where did he go?"
" I don't know."
" He certainly mad e me feel better."
" What arc you goi ng to do with her officer?"
" l don't know. I feel like a heel leaving her in the crosswalk .''
" We could put her in a pa rking place."
" Good idea, there's one right he re."
''Yeh, but who's got a nickel for the meter?"
"So long, l gotta be going."
"Wait a minute, buddy, don't move."
"UnChristian! "
·'Did you forget Heaven as quickly?"
''l paid my buck, I just ain't got a nickel!, that's all."
"Come to think of it, I don't either. What about you, officer?"
"D o n't look at me. Y ou know we're underpaid ."
" We can't leave her there."
" Wait a minute fcllowth. I have a nickel. The babyth tho cute, he chewed me.
can't leave him on the crothwalk !"
" All right, put the nickel in. l'll help you drag her into the parking space."
"You 're the thtrong one, arcn 't cho?"
''Yeh, come on, pull!"
''There we go, ithn't the little thing thweet?"
" Yeh, so long."

95

�"Wait for me muthleth, I'm going your way."
"Get away from me, creep!"
"You don't have to thovc! I have fricndth, you know."
So there 1 was, with an hour on the meter. Not a bad start. True, I was alone. But
did that necessarily mean I was at a disadvantage? Certainly not! l felt that I
could raise myself out of the gutter and work my way into a palace of gold, even
to the position of the very governor who had announced my nativity. ln fact, I
was on my way; wasn't I already in the gutter? A few steps and J would be out of
here and on the social ladder. But as it was, I couldn't walk yet. So, for the moment l had to be content lying there. After being content a while, I began being
discontent. I was hungry. Mother did not react to my coo, chirps, and screams.
She was dead. We lay face to face. l tried, in my ignorance, sucking on her nose,
but with no success. Very much frustrated, even· more hungry, I broke into a
barrage of crying and screaming. Jt was met with a barrage of another kind. Running out of missiles, they shut their windows and left me alone. 1 felt myself to
be in a predicament. And worse, along came that white dog. If he had tried it
a_gain I would have really unleashed my wrath. He didn't though. In fact, he
stood a short distance away, respecting my fang. He circled me cauticusly, careful
not to get too close. When he could have attacked me (I was doubled up with hunger
pains) he sat and studied me. I gave up all concern about him, directing all my
attention to my stomach. The pains stopped for a moment. I looked up. He was
gone. Had he killed me? Of course not. He soon returned, but with another dog.
The white dog sat at a distance. The monster swayed calmly to my side. It lay
next to me. l bit it. It ran away, came back and lay next to me. I bit it again. It
ran away, came back again. I bit it. It ran away. A car swung into the parking
space and stopped abruptly, the brakes screaming loudly. The car backed up
angrily and disappeared. The dogs were frightened, but they stayed. J suddenly
realized what they wanted to do for me. Would you have picked me up and
taken me home? Given me the warmth of your hearth? Held me lovingly to your
chest? Let me share the bowl with your cat? No! You would have stepped over
me while l lay in the gutter. That is, if your gait permitted you to step over me.
If you were obliged to alter your step, you would have walked right on me.
Maybe I do you an injustice, though. Suppose you were playing 'Don't step on
the crack in the sidewalk,' you would shift your feet then. In my case, the game
would be, 'Don't step on the babies in the street.'
After l was fed, the white dog picked me up by the neck, (time was running
out on the park.ing meter), and we trotted off, the three of us, a family scene. l
had found a home.

96

�Richard Sherman, photographer. Plus-X, ASA 200,
f 5.6, 1/ 50 sec .. Hasselblad 120; dcv. 11 min. D-7 6
a t 71.5 F.
B. Brodt, model

97

��R eg eneration

An ne Macfarla n e

l walk along the pavement beneath the elms and my mind is flying, loitering
with me. l believe in God. The breeze and the sun through the elms and above
thrill me. ] smile. People smile back. J t is a wonderful thing and l 'm in awe of
the warmth that seeps from somewhere very deep inside me.
I cross the intersection and the fairy quality of the cars amazes me. I smile and
1 am laughing; its infectious and I know that this is good for me and them.

Now I am inspecting the street ahead for boys. J meet them and I stand up
straight. I want to look good, desirable. l foci good and desirable on the inside.
I am thinking tbat 1 have a good figure, that my hair is long and pretty-blonde
and straight. J am unreasonably happy and l sing right out loud as I'm walking.
1 am constantly looking for people to pop out of houses so that l may stop my
shower-stall giddiness undetected. I do not have a great voice.
1 smile at everybody. They smile back surprised. I say hi to women 1 do not
know. l feel the warmth of white sand on a beach I've never seen. J walk alone
and am surrounded by friends.
I see a boy l know come towards me and l clear my throat quietly so that if
he does speak to me my voice will not grumble and the Hi Bill will come out.
It docs not come out. Excuse me, Hi. Smile. Nervous laugh. Darn it. And I'm
smiling again. That was pretty funny, wasn't it, God? I'm smiling inside and
happy to be sharing this. I walk straight.
I nto myself l walked and am cornered. l am crawling on my hands in the abyss
of all hells, stealing away in to the nothingness of my soul, groaning at the clouded
expectation of a somewhere, something, gnawing at the vile chains, the blood
spewing from my wrists. The vaulted window stands above, where I threw a
stone and couldn't see, there my Jove, who beckons smirking, fading on the
murk in the splitting cacophony of my duing, crumbling nowhere into outreached
magnitude of arms; who did not fa ll yet could not reach to catch me as I fell;
who fell and could not dare to cushion on the rocks toppling in the stormu nrestcd seas below; who falling with me could not clench my hand toward the
death, not grasp my th robbing hysteria of mass. not tend my soul to reassure me
only: God does not exist. With little grace l clambered from my height . . . unpurged. I came to drift and jerk, hunching my back unto the cold, behind and
fo re.

99

�We are in front of the school and it passes through my mind that I shall be late
again, reported again. I do not care. Steve is admitting it, saying in words that
he has gone out with other girls. He cannot help laughing and T do not understand that he can hurt me in this way and still love me.
And then again, T can not really care; for I know that I am thinking only how
my hurt shall act. I cry and shout. Then Steve has to shout.
I am thinking how people wiJI look at me and feel superior. I have to prove
I
can get Steve back. I make him cry.
I am thinking how the girls he went out -with know me and how they will talk.
I get very mad. I say I am very hurt. The hurt is really anger. I am angry with myself for feeling anger and not only hurt. I make myself hurt more.
Most of all , Steve has gone out on me ... after ... after ... after ... Steve has gone
out on me after we have gone all the way. I know no feeling fo r this. I have known
nothing. I think that I should feel somethin g and therefore do. It is very confusing inside. I do feel hurt after all. But I am mad. I have to get Steve back.
Hurt ego.
We must go into school. I know that 1 can get him back. l do not really want
to.
l want to break up with him. But no one else will know or believe this.
I have
to show everyone else. It docs not matter what I feel or what l think. It matters
what I do so that it shows to people.
Crowds converge upon a central point that is me. l scream to their soundles
s
ears, clawing at their numb nude bodies, fight above them, searching for the
me
that I lost in their massive edge, frightene d that I can't see that which looms
gigantic in their midst or on the other side, or further. The mass is ebbing, flowing; I'm growing nauseous with the movemen t, with the sickness seeping in my
brain, the floating, roaring music, and the drums that beat incessant ly on the
very pores of my skin where lies lonely my release ecstatic with the pulsating
rhythm of the shifting throng. I'm crying, screamin g, and my teeth are chewing
on a smile-th e smile l drink my beer with, the smile, the smile which knows
no inner laughter, that whistles when my lips run dry and cracked. J doff my
jaunty shield and sword, surge up at those who would sneer my wedding and my

100

�death, fly above them. And they aren't there, they who left without the rich
green of a barren tree, the sun-dew-mist of a parched brown blustery path
which leads-I don't know-perhaps to the summit of a worn and wintered hill,
where grass grows yellow, changeless to the sense of godless seasons: the perfect
soft and shapeless mound of thought where dwelled the gods.
I am happy and I am singing inside. The voice is great on the inside. rm going
to Fellowship and am secretary of the District. This last year is a big climax.
I belong to things and am something and maybe l mean something to people.
I mean I'm enough for everybody to know my name and who I am and how
great 1 am on the inside maybe from what I'm doing.
l'm thi nking all this and am happy to be with Steve, who loves me and makes me
somebody. I am going to church. Thank you, God, for all of this. I love you, God.
I love you immensely and all the world. It is a cold and beautiful day. I'm glad
you're with me God, I'm bursting. It's like walking under the elms and lying on
a white sand beach. Just you and me-we're sharing this world, God.
Steve and I are parked in front of the church. We arc just sitting there and I
know that he loves me. 1 cannot help but feel some power, yet this makes me·
love him more. I tell him with my eyes and maybe he sees. We sit there and it
is winter and getting dark. l say I have to go, but 1 really want to stay with him.
l want to go inside too. I am late. l think Steve has seen because l know he loves
me now, right at this minute, in this hour of dusk. He doesn't want me to leave.
I'm very still : my eyes move slowly. He wants me to stay, to go parking. At the
drive-in last night, he says. He says he will respect me less if l don't. l didn't
know. I cannot say it. He can't see it in my eyes. He loves me in his eyes. 1 didn't
know, I did not know. Steve, listen to my eyes. God, where did you go? God.
God! God ...
l whimper. Steve does not sec it in my eyes. He loves me in his eyes.
His blue eyes are pleading. I don't want to hurt anyone. It is the same as when
l didn't want to go steady. l don't want to hurt you.
I say it in my eyes. Steve can't sec. J steel myself to the hurt and l don't want to
hurt anyone. God? We drive away from the church in his car. We turn down
the aven ue. God ... I can't hurt him. Steve docs not want me to leave.

101

�Force kan~s me and I am numb into nothingne&lt;;s, close to h)stcria on m} "hell
of frosted roses, scentless and sedhing with a shame that docs not know remorse,
ashamed al this. I krss cold damp kisses on those cager lips of death that wait
me al the bolted gale in a soul or blackened sun, involuntar }. sensing, playing,
teasing with the dagger that has alrcad) crushed my ht•art. I kiss again, a kiss
on the metal plate, a \..iss wlm:h thrashes nowhere on a rc!&gt;tlc!&gt;s wind, a kiss that
\Hilhcs in sensual agony. I trample lilies and princess pine which do not die; the
life that threads its wa) beneath m) groping fee,, cripples under the groaning
pre ...sure of my clutches. I am hardened, crass \Vith death, m) lover: he docs
not sense my willful self bound in rags of passing gulls on some steamer passing
in the night. I don't know thr.., sea, haven't passed· this marked bdorc, hall m)
being has fallen away. Who knocks, who clambers at thi., door'! There is no God
leave me. I am left.
We arc sitting and waiting to be told that it is time to leave We is Paul for now.
Paul is buying me a coke and loving me somehow. We arc sitting near the wall
and the table is round with three chairs. I am thinking that Bill is across the
room. Barbara is with him and he is happy. I wonder if he is remember ing two
ni.ghts ago when he talked to me and kt me er) . There was bourbon, wine I
wonder if he knows how quietly I smiled when I let him talk. I wonder if he
knows ho\\ old I was then, how I was his grandmoth er when he loved me. It
was an incest after all, after he had told me anJ we had talked so dccpl). \ve
were close bec:wse I let him tl'll me everything . I wonder if he will tell me an)more. I think so. Y ..:s. He n..:eds a friend to listen and one who knows. I am
glad that I look so good and that I am sitting with Paul across the room. I am
glad that Bill is \\ ith Barbara. I am . glad I talked to Bill about last weekend with
Larry.
Paul is far awa) from me but 1t rs nice that he is feeling close to me. It is very cold
tonight. It is likL' snow. I think of last winter and Dick who knew Jazz. I remember walking in a soft snow long ago and teaching Steve to love 1t and to love me
more. I passed out last night and tonight is for rememberi ng. We arc leaving
and Paul is vcr} soft beside me. I am almost twenty and maybe I could die to-

102

�night. He 1s very big ...
There sits before me, ever-present in m) steeple, a large and leering god, an idol
which docs not conjure or reckon worship, offerings, and I do not propose to
sacrifice.:: that same god \\ hich upon eve of Ill) baptism promised all that it was
capable of, and 1n doing so gave me its soul. I sought to build a temple and it
crumbled with a pa-,s111g breeze, sagged again upon a blade of \\heat, was once
again erected, jested with a cloud, and melted in a misted spring, toppling on the
pollen of a full-bloomed rose. I placed the rose ''here now it sits on ID) mantle,
tearing in a shattered \ase, I flew myself upon a bluebird's back and nested in
a cloud until it ran dry: whereupon I rested wallowing in red-clay mud and
cleansed the rain from off my hide. He visited that summer, crying, and I laughed
so long and loud that my steeple rang with lamentation. He courted me that
spring and through that summer I raced a white sand bc.:ach and waited for the
golden fall, which came whence I fled to burial within the coarse baked ground.
And then, he sadly left and I arose to follow where he leJ, and he was gone. It
was thus I chased him wildly in a masquerade of flighted demons that were his
party . .
J'hcre arc many parties. I am at Paul's and there 1s a case of beer. It's ironic that
there is another Paul at the party who 1s there to knO\\ me. I have talked \\ith him.
rm thinking that I c.les1re his talking now.
That is how the part) enc.ls. I am thinking I am a bastard again. I accept that it is
me. I am remembering how Tom talks to me and w1.: lie in a bed of roses rising in a
brook. I think of the third part) in our love and I wonder if it is love or death. We
gaze into the nothingness where it has vanished.
Amidst the wi ld nes:. of the moaning at my funera l, there beckoned hands and
l a rose as o ne in following.
I am one. I a m a mind.
I am one. I a m a heart and flooded soul.

103

�Diana W ei nman

Listen
There arc sounds other than clocks
The grass has a cry like
wou nd ed birds
bleed ing into the da rk earth
beneath the season's weight
And there arc songs in
the gold of an arm
re ting supple spru ng against
the sun.
Spring has its consolations.

Lawrence Kearney

104

��Conch Pollard. Koy I umpow~"&gt;· \ttlllaf.i t'r. Barry Schneider, Fthan hshman, M1dcy (,recnberg, Barry Winkler. Jim Davis. Dick Chiacchicrini. Paul Simandle. Mike heedu\. Tom Kirk.
Mike l3ra1icr. Bob Loomis. Al Israel. Bill Mo~nihan

/\ A \,f 1:;
GRF l«NBF RG
DAV IS
LOOM IS
SIM ANDL F
K IRK
MOYN IH AN
SCll N!: I DFR
I I FDUS
W INK LER

(,AMES

17
17
17
17
17
17
11
10
9

257
265
174
136
134
24
10
11
14

ScASON

GAMES

F GA

TFAM TOTA LS
FG "f. FTA

FT

%

15
14
17
17
17
17

1015
874
1095
1070
1037
984

339
145
447
439
428
376

227
196
310
254
317
224

56.3
46.0
71.5
60.5
70.4
59.2

1958-59
1959-60
1960-61

H

0

1961 -62

H

0

FGA

rG

"f-

17A

FT

%

11 4
105
78

44
40
45
40
35
54

101
129
90
42
44
19
7
6

76
83
63
39
29
10

75
64
70
93

5

2

55

47
13
5
5

4

50

45
28

33.4
39.0
40.8
41.0
41.3
38.2

T iff STARTING FIVE

106

403
3 18
448
420
450
378

5
5

65

53
71
83
40

RB
56
212
137
53
141
39
I

6
0
RB

Pr
41
68
47
31
62
14
7
5
3
PF
3 10

286
304
647 289
599 331

TP
304
293
219
159
123
36
15
15
10

AVG

17.9
17.2
12.9
9.4
7.2
2.1
1.4
l.5
I. I

TP AVG
902
60.I
49.0
886
1204 70.8
1132
66.6
11 83
69.6
989
57. 1

�BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Opp.
Harpur
Utica
Hobart

RPI
Susquehanna
Albany
Union
Plattsburgh
Wilkes
Drew
Maritime
Oneonta
Alfred
Hamilton
Genesco
Hartwick
Fairleigh-Dickenson
Utica

78
49
61
50
62
61
102
68
78

62
61
71
77

81
58
75
78

60
47
. 41
55
58
70
61
59
57
55
50
51
76
63
60
56
60

�I t'.~

all his fault.

Where'd he go?

Don't Kt'I fresh.

Fire!?

Oh hi ..

Who said thl' Ref's blind?

Now what?

Score two.

Easy does it.

�SIMANDLE:

FG-% FT-%
'58-'59
'59-'60
'60-'61
'6 I-'62

25.0
36.0
44.7
40.0

80.0
64.0
77.4
93.0

TP AVG
12
95
184
159

l.2
6.8
10.8
9.4

GREENBERG :

'59-'60
'60-'61
'61-'62

FG-% FT-%

TP

AVG

70.0
70.9
75.0

60
248
304

5.5
15.5
17.9

43.0
37.8
44.0

The
Win ning
Com bina tion

KIRK:

FG-% FT-%
'58-'59
'59-'60
'60-'6I
'61-'62

19.7
37.0
31.6
35.0

47.6
42.0
56.7
65.0

TP AVG
40
67
IOI
123

2.9
4.8
6.7
7.2

LOOMIS:
rG-r'r&gt;

'59-'60
'60-'6 1
'61-'62

DAVIS:

FG-% FT-%
'58-'59
'59-'60
'60-'61
'61-'62

44.7
43.0
44.5
40.0

60.9
59.0
70.7
64.0

TP AVG
217
193
390
293

109

14.5
16.I
22.9
17.2

30.0
43.9
45.0

Ff.r'r&gt;

TP

AVG

51.0
69.4
70.0

56
207
219

4.0
12.l
12.9

�TEAM TOTALS
Harpur
St. Bonaventure
52
RPI
29
BulTalo State
48
32
Union
30
Hamilton
70
Wilkes
56
Oswego State
28
Hamilton
Season Record: 4-4

Opp.

42
66
44
63
65
24
39
67

l EFT TO RIGHT: Dave Huuleston, Greg Abbey, Ron Selsby, Wally
Bothner. Chuck Orcutt, Carl Hect, Chuck Dayton, Steve Morris, Bob
Madcll, Dick 1-eldman, Ronald Jarmouth, Manager Coach Dennis, George
Brun, J\1 wwger.

CAPTAIN: Bob Madell

llO

�- 4Mermen
on the
threshold

..

.
-

.

-·

~

..---·-- ,=..-;....,,.,,,,,,,,,.. - --- :-::--- :::;.a.;.
.....:

_.

111

,..
-J'

--

-

-

--

�FRONT Al Waldman, Ron Burnett, Dwane E'&lt;ldy. Berl Nussbaum. Larry Rabinowitz, Mike
WcllikofT. MIDDI F.: Warren Rottmann, Dick Foster. Joe Wolfer, lvy Light. Ken WaltL.cr.
TOP: Coach O'Brien, Mike Gapin, Jerry Wager, Al Frank, Terry Foran.

0
0
2
I
I

0
0

Roberts Wesleyan
Genesco
Buffalo State
Le Moyne
Cortland JV's
Oneonta
Hartwick
Hamilton

·~

r;

s

~

'

3
3
2
2
6
2
4
5

,,

0

c
c
E
R
112

.... '.'ti'•
I

�What do you mean we're 1:oin1:

thl' 11•ron1: way ?

Al
BOlTOM TO TOP: Stu Schreiber. Al Schwart,.ba um. Bob Gelerter. JdT Augenlicht,
Fllman. Andy GoldMein. Mark Kaartincn. Bob Weiner. Morty Goldberg. Karl I lill ic, Ron
Jarmuth, Ira Goldhir~ch. Al H ardy. Bill f alla. Capwin Al Rogers, Dick Siegclman. Garry
Starley, Coach Lyons. NOT PRESE'NT: Bill Kwalwasse r.

CROSS
COU NTR Y

Sparrirns anyone?

Oswego
New Paltz
Hamilton
Ithaca
Triangular Meet
Cortland
Hartwick
Harpur

H
46
36
50
32

Opp.

17
20
15
25
25
39
56

NYSCT &amp; FA Meet:
Frosh ... 8th
Varsity ... 12th
LeMoyne Run:
Frosh ... 3rd
Varsity ... 4th

It wasn't the mr/1•
the lunch .

113

it

wa~

�GOLF
H

Utica
Oswego
Hartwick
Ithaca
Hobart
Cortland

Coach O'Brien, l arry Beall, Barry Macewan, Ken Waltzer.

SYNCHRONIZED
SWIMMING

BOT TOM 1 0 TOP: Jean Cancro, Lois Trezise, Trina Wolin\k). Judy Potusky. Linda Ford. Gail Paterson, Gail U ngar.
Mi~\ Walling. l11.1tmctor.

114

6
2
I 1/2

2

Opp.

Rain
12
7
Rain
7
16

�T

R

A

c
K

t. John
BOn OM -T 0 TOP: Roy ~undid.. Ron Faigin. Flkind. Bob Gdcrter. Jeff Augenhch
. Andv
Spiegel, Fd Fedcrman . Al Hartm an. Mo rt y Goldberg. Karl Hillie. Gcrr&gt; Hatha\\dl}
Lyon.,.
Coach
Brun.
George
Falla.
Bill
.
Gold~tein. Al ll ard). 0-,1cbo. Steve 0-,1rander

TENNIS
Opp.

JI

Union
H obart
H artwick
Oneonta
H amilton
Cortland
Utica
Ithaca

2
7*
6*
7*

7
2
3
2

4
4

5

9*
3

'~ W on

Bob Dalrymple , Bert Kahn,
Gene Kline, Al Lyons, Dave
Weiner, Jim Friend, Coach
Pollard.

115

5
0
2

�EPILOGUE
To the many who are unfamiliar with the role that Harpur plays in other th an the scholastic field, the sudden explosion in Athletics in both width and depth probably came as
somewhat of a rude shock . But for those who have been intimately attached to Harpur over
the last four years, namel y the student body a nd the faculty, the term explosion is a misnomer; progress, they would agree, is much more appropriate.
When work bega n on the new campus some five years ago, the first structure to be completed was the gym. Harpur (the hum a n side), at that time, had little to offer it in the way of
intercollegiate competition. Our basketball sq uad was a hasty combinatio n of "old-timers"
and "upstarts" who just didn't mesh on many a n occasion. C ross-country, the only other
effort. had stagefright. And that was it !
In 1962, "old-timers" would be amazed with the fine array of competiti ve sports now being
offered by Harpur. These include: Swimming, Track, T ennis, Baseb all, and Soccer. Already, there is serious talk of incorpo rati ng Hockey and Wrestling into next yea r's curriculum.
The Coaching staff had abo burst its &lt;.earns. To thi s group of mentors a large amount of
credit and gratitude is clue. for it is they who are primarily responsible for the addition o f
this new, vigorous. enthusiastic, a nd talented facet of Harpur College. It is they who have
given new meaning to our motto. Let Each Become A II He Is Capable Of Becoming.
One must also not forget (if it is possible) our precious chee rleaders who represent the most
fru strated and yet the most satisfied group associated with the Athletic Department. Incidentally they seem to grow more talented and vivacious (the female members, that is) with
each new season.

COACHING SQ.U AD

LFFf TO RlGHT: Donald O'Brien, Soccer. Golf: Frank Pollard , Basketball, Te1111is; Charles
Dennis. Sll'i111111i111t: Da\'id Henderson. Direcwr of A thlerics, Baseball; Stanley Lyons, CrossCo1111rl)'. Trac/...

�As the stat1st1cs on the preceding pages attest to, intercollegiate sports have come a long way since 1958. Basketball, by far, has captured most of the limelight, for obvious
reasons. But basketball is not a new sport at Harpur. Tennis
has also fared well on the new campus, although few arc
intercMed. Cross-country is a new effort but suffers mainly
from lack of potential and spectator support. The two areas
which show much promise in the near future are swimming
and soccer.
Swimming was inaugurated two sea~ons ago and has shown
a determined upward climb from a 1-5 total in 1960-61 season to a 4-4 record this year. Next year the Mermen offer
the strong hope of a winning season. As a team, they will
suffer the least from Senior graduation, for only one letterman wi ll be lost.
Soccer is the latest addition to Harpur sports and has optimistically taf..en over from the landscapers its arena facing
Route 17. This year, the Booters did not get the opportunity
10 show their winning side, but again, the future holds much
in store. As is not the case with basketball, the chance of
finding an experienced player is slim. It is Coach O'Brien's
difficult job to recognize latent talent and encourage its
development.
Ba~f..etball, however, remains the sport at Harpur. On December !st, the Colonials began where they left off last year
by defeating Utica with ease; 78-60. Davis and Greenberg.
the 011e-r11·0-combination. hit for 26 and 22 respectively.
(With 5:36 left, and the score 72-49, the reserves came in.)
T he next to fall prey to the Colonials was Hobart and the
team upped their winning streak to seven. RPI was next to
leave the Harpur gym with another figure in the loss column.

Mick was the high scorer with 21, followed by Simandle with
I 0. Susquehanna snapped the win-skein with the aid of poor
shooting on the part of the Colonials (we missed our first
I I shots of the game) Incidentally, this was the second loss
for Harpur in the previous twelve starts. being defeated by
Alfred on February 18th of last year. Albany Marted us off
on a new winning streak and allowed l oomis to pour in 23
points. Greenberg followed with 17 well-earned floor-burn
points. Union cramped Harpur's ~tyle with the aid of Santos
who hit 11-12 for a total of 32. Vi~iting Plattsburgh State
proved 100 tempting and Harpur finished them off in grand
style by hreaking the I00-point mark for a new school record. Da vb contrihuted by c1111ing the net for 39- also a new
school record. (In the last game of the l 9'18-59 season, Jim
scored 38 vs Utica.) Wilf..es fell victim ne&gt;.t. wilting under
the deadly shooting of Loomis and Simandle. Drew capitulated in the same manner Again it was a shooting barrage
at the start of the second half that did the trick with the
Colonials hitting for 6Q l'( in the IO-minute span. Maritime
and Oneonta fell in st} le with Kirk taking advantage by setting a new personal high of 20 against Maritime. Hamilton
offered us a sweet victory as did Geneseo the following night.
Hartwicf.. 's tight defense and outside height proved too much
for Harpur. Farlcigh- Dicf..rnson and Utica offered a perfect
conclusion to a near-perfect season.
The team's superb performance was complemented by two
impressive records. Jim Davis shattered the individual scoring
record of 1.079 held by Gene Kobylarz by offering a fourycar total of 1,092. Paul Simandlc. also a senior. who hit an
impre~ive 93"f for the year from the foul line. Mick Greenberg h.:d the team in scoring wi1h 304 points.

CHEER ING

FRONT TO BACK: Cathy Fruhauf, Bonnie Brodt, Janet Stuhmillcr. I-Ilic Levine, Lois
Trezise. Shelly Kromberg. George Delamar, Carl Sternberg, Ronnie Faigin, J udy Potusky.

�BRI DA AC KFRMA
B1ngham1on. . Y
Cic11era/ J.iter11111n
Pandorans. S1udcnt Center Board:
Advisor) Board

ORMAN J BAl\.l R
Vestal, N . Y.
/Jiu/of.:)'

JA CQU I'! YN ANDl· RSO
Jamestown, N. Y.
Rioloity

Ja1111:'10\\ n,
Soc ioloi:v
Dean\ l 1,1.

) .
I ht•

/'ice/ 1'1per of

ll11mc/i11. Women·, Recreation As
'nc.: l'intoppkr' l n:as : Che''
&lt; lub

t.11 ( 11\fl (\RI BARTi!
Bellerose.
Y.
Ec·o1101111c.\
Dean's [ ist: I rcshman Sgt.-atArm\; Student-I acull) Al hlct ic
Comm.: (,oliards Soc. Chman.:
Intramu ral Basketball

118

�R01' If· II . BOOTH
Brookl} n. . Y.
/,m11:11&lt;1i:e1

ISC C:

Ca,,andran\ Cor. Sec ..
Rec. Sec.. Sgt -at-Arms; Colonial
1'.cws-l xchangc Fd.: Jewish FelIO\\ship ; Chonh
A l A S. HUJIL LR
New York. N. Y.
llio/ogy
Dean's l.i;.t; l·rc\hma n S1tu.lent
Judiciary: Intramu ral Swimming:
Swimming I cam Capt.
DfNNIS Al AN BROWN
Fndicott, N. Y.
Clre111i.11ry
Dean's l l\t: Goli ards

JAMFS KAY BRA HAN EY
Olean. N. Y.
Biology

Dean's List: ITK-Vicc-Pres.; Intramural Ra\ketball

\1\R YA
I CFMBAISK I
Witherbee. N Y
Clrcm1srry

Dean's

I l\t: C a\sandram

(or. Sec.; C olon1al

man Club: Chc1111str} Club

119

Pres.:

C\"-''; l'&lt;cw-

�lll·RBl Rf WJL l IAM
C'HURCH-SMITH
Greene, . Y.
Li111:1m1ic1
Colonial Players; German ClubPres.

JAM[ S BLNTON CO DON .
Canisteo, N. Y.
Chemistry
Dean's List; Goliard~; Chorus:
Light Chorus

MARY ANN ROSF CUBITO
Auburn. N. Y.
1-renclt
Dean's I isl; fntramural Volleyball; Newman Club; Student
Counselor

f·RAN(IS E. COH \N
Brookl}n. . Y.
Socwlogy
Senior Cla's Vice-Pres.; Spring
Review; Student Counselor: Student Ad~isor

1 HOM AS FREDFRICK
CROSSETT
Binghamton. N. Y.
Political Science
Dean's L1s1; Baccac1a; Colonial
News- Cop} rd .; Colonial Play-

ers

120

�JOI\
J\ I Fl DAMON
Syracuse. . Y.
Ir/ Hi1torv
JOA
V. CUS IM A 0
Jamc&gt;town.
Y.
Engli.llz Li1rrw11re
Dean\ I isl

\I VI (01 1 WOOD
( L l\.1MI NS
St. James. Barbados. W. Indies
/Jwlo11y

Odcans Chaplain;
Intramural
Swimmi ng. Haskctball; AP O; Biology Club; Pintopplcrs; Broadcasting Worbhop
ROHi RT S. DAlRYMl'LE
Painted Po~!. . Y.
H111/ic11111tics

JAMI S ( YRll DAVIS
Woodmere. '\. Y
L-.11g/i,1z L.i1crat11rt
Student ( ounselor: Basketball

121

�ROBFR I DI 1&lt;.F MA.
DunJ..rrJ.., ~ Y.
Chcmi.\I r_1·
l')SC. Odeans Rec Sec.. (or
Sec .. lntrumural Swimming; \.arslt} rcnni\; C henmtr} Club; Student Advisor

ANNA KING DFV ILI FRS
Johnson City. N. Y.
English U1era1111·e
Ca\sandrans

Gf'ORGF W ll ! JAM
DFLAMAR
New Yori... . Y.
Polirirn/ Scii•nce
Soph. ('Jass I rea~.; Checrlcading;
Int rnrnural Basl..et ball: Broadcasting Worl..,hop. APO Pres .. Rec.
Sec.

PETER DlMLTR I
Binghamton. N. Y.
Physics
Goliards;
Basketball

LOUIS ALLEN DEVILLERS
Johnson City. N. Y.
A cco11111i11g
ISSC: SOS-Chancellor; Intramural BasJ..etball, Football, Softball

122

Intramural

Football,

�BARBARA LFF DREYFR
Long Beach. . Y.
English Literat11rt•
Dean's List; Senior Class Member-at-Large;
Judicial
Board;
Dorm Council C'hman.; Pandorans: Student Counselor

FLEANOR DORKIN
Albany, N. Y.
Mathematic.1

FRANCIS FARREN

EDWI
B. DRAKE
Binghamton, N. Y.
History
Dean's l ist; On the Town; German Club; Colonial PlayersTreas.

123

Wll UAM JO~! PH HTSKO
Fndicott, N. Y.
llistory
Gohards Pres .. Historian; lntram11ral l·ootball. Softball. Basket
ball

�JAMfS FIORE
'icafonl, . Y.
11io/ogy

TFRRY G. FORAN
Bay Shore, N. Y.
Economics

Dean's List; Varsity Soccer- CoCapt.; Int ramural Football, Basketball; Student Counselor

JOHN FRANKLE
West Shokan, . Y.

RA'r MO D l l!OMAS
f-l AN IGA

Vestal, N. Y.
Eco11omics

USG -A&lt;l\Ocatc; ISSC: Goliards
Pres .. Sec.;
ewman Club; Intramural 1-ootball ; Student Advisor

GRACE El IZAl3ETH !-'RANK
Central Square, N. Y.
H istory
Dean's List; J unior Class Treas.;
USG- Cor.
Sec..
Rec.
Sec.;
lSCC;
Ca\sandrans
Vice-Pres.;
Who's Who; Coun,elor

124

�NEAL MAURY FR IEDBER G
ew York, N. Y.
Biology
Dean's l is1 ; Convoca tions Comm.;
Student Counselo r

C. FRFEMA
Watkins G len, N. Y.
Hisrory
Student Pu blications Board; Colonial News- Managing Fd.; Clarendon-F ict ion Fd.; Band ; On
the Town; APO-Cor. Sec.

('Al HI RIM fRUllA Ur
Argyle, N. Y.
A CCOllllfill, t:

SUSANN E RUTH FR IEDLAN D
Staten Island, . Y.
General Litemtur e-llisrory
Dean's List; Senior Class Member-at-lg.; Student Ce nter Bd.;
Colonial Players; Spr. Revue;
Who's Who; Dragon Society

El l EN OLGA FUREDI
Wantagh , N. Y.
Ge11 . Lireratur r-Adv. Writing
Fr Class Sec.; Soph. Class Sec:
USG- Rec. Sec.; Pa ndorans; SynClub--Pr es.;
Swim
chronized
Student Adv.; Student Cou nselor

125

�ROB£ RT B. FURLONG
Jlio n , N. Y.
Geo/of.IV

Dean's List; ISSC; AdelphiPres., Vice-Pres.: Geolog} Club
-Vice-Pres.

C H ARLO rTF F. c.01 r /
Binghamton, N. Y.

JAM F.S FRA C !S GfFR
Pulaski, N. Y.
M arhematics
Dean's l isl; Who's Who; Math .
Club: Methodbt Student Fellowship; APO-Pres.. Vice-Pres.; Varsity Tennis: Basketball

BARBARA ANN GAGLIARDI
Ossining, N. Y.
Languaf.!eS
Dean\
List;
USG-Vice-Pres.;
Who's Who; Newman C lu b-Pres., ·1 rcas.; Spanish C lub ; Student Counselor; Dorm Judicial
Bd.
ROBERT S. GOSLINE
Ves tal, N . Y .
Enf.1/ish Literature

126

�KARF SUZANNE GRA YSO
Halesite. N. Y.
German L1terat11rc

Pandorans: Colonial News ; WRA
-Treru..; Volleyhall.
Bowling:
Jewish Fellowship: Student Advbor: Student Counselor
MAR ll Y WINrBURG
GROTH
Cortland. N Y.
Acco11111111g

LOU ISF PHYLLIS GROSSMAN
New H yde Park. N . Y.

Colonial News Business Manager; Jcwi~h I ellowship; Student
Counselor; the first l·cmalc in Ra
fuse Hall

Chemistry

Dean's
Senior

List: Junior Class Sec.:
Class Treas: Colonist:
Pied Pip&lt;'r of Hamelin : Pintopplcrs; Riding Club Treru..

MITZI SUSAN GROPPER
Brooklyn. N. Y.
Li11g 11 i.\f ics-Lit e rt1t11 re
Dean's List; Jl onor Roll; Who's
Who: Modern Dance; Judicial Bd.:
Student Advisor; Student Counselor
FRANK l-. ll AHN
Vestal. N Y.
l\4 athem11tic.1

127

�CARI HOWARD HFCHT
l aurclton, !'.. Y.
Fre11c11 Lttuature
Dean's List; Varsity Swimming;
Intramural
Swimming;
French
Club

lFONARD HELLFNBRAND
Brooklyn. N. Y.
!!1.1tory
Dean's List; C horus

PFTER IAN HOBERMAN
Yonkers, N. Y.
Chemistry
Baccacia: Broadcasting Workshop
-Pres.;
Varsity
Swimming;
Chemistry Club-Pres.; Jewish
Fellowship; German Club

ROBFRT CO RAD HERSCH
New York. N. Y.
History
Dean's List; !RC; Outing Club;
Young Democrats
RICHARD A. HFFFT

Binghamton, N. Y.
l c111i:1111gc.1

128

�WAND A R . JAGOC. KI
Brookly n. N. Y.
P~yclivlugv

ROBFR T MI C ll AFL
HOl.SA PPLE
Plea'&gt;ant Valle}. N . Y.

Dean's l i'&gt;t

Mar liemar ics

Goliard s, Intramu ral Basketb all ,
football , Softball ; Newma n Club
Republ icansYoung
- Pres.:
Yice- Pres.; Pintoppl ers

RICHA RD ROBER T
HOHLO WSK I
Poughke epsie, N. Y.
/lfarhem arics

Int ramural
Adelph i-Chap lain;
Baseball ;
Football ,
Basketb all ,
Young Republi cans; Pintopp lers;
Newma n C lub

F. IANN I nJ
. Y.
H istory
Senior Class I reas.; Colonist
Soc iety;
Dragon
Mgr.:
Bus.
Who\ i~ /10: I RC; Student Center
Boa rd; Young Democr ats

JO

~tanfordville,

PAUL ( ,JI BI· In JONl ~

Brookly n N. Y.
Biology

Dean\ I ist: A PO

129

�A. MICHAEL KAPLAN

Brooklyn,

. Y.

llio/01.:y

Dean's Lbt: ISCC: OdeansPres. Vice-Pres.: Int ramural Basketball: Biology Club; Student
Counselor

Crl RALD MICHAEL
KALAYJIAN
Binghamton, N. Y.
History

Adelphi-Treas.; Intramural Football; Young Democrats· Treas.:
Stevenson for President-Treas.;
Ugly Man

PlllLI IP ANDRFW JONI'S
l'ndico11. N. Y.
,j C'COlllltill!.:

r AU

Chaplain:

I n I ram u r a I

I ootball; Var\ity rrack: German

RICHARD KAUFMAN
Brooklyn, N. Y.

Club

JOHN F. KAMINSKY
Binghamton, N. Y.

130

�....,.,

-

RI C HA RD C'. KR APF
Peck ville, Pa.
A cco1111ti11g

'I HOMAS H ULL KIRK
Woodm ere, N. Y.
H istory
Junio r Class, Senior Class Sgt.-atSec.;
SOS-Vice- Pres.,
Arms;
Basketb a ll , Intramu ral
Varsity
Softball ; Dragon Soc.

MARI AN L ESKO
KRI Z INOF SKI
Jo hnson Ci ty, N. Y.
8 10/of?y

LA WR ENCE D. KLE IN
Brookly n, N . Y.
English Literatu re
Adelphi; Riding Club; Convocations Comm .; Student Advisor ;
Student Counselor

131

FRI:' DE RI C K AUS I IN
KUN DELL
Pulru.ki. N Y.
Chemist ry
Dean\ l ist; Chemist ry Club
Pres.; Newma n Club; A PO Y1cePres., Trca\., Sgt.-at Arms

�IOUISl M. l ATHNER
Bayside. N. Y.
1::111:/ish I 11eratt1rl'
Dean\ l iM: Honor Roll: Clarendon Bu' Mgr.. Fditor-in-Chief:
Poetry
Proscnium;
Progressive
Socialist Society

NANCY LO IS LEVINE
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Political Sci1'11ce
Pandoran~; Colonial News; Colonist; Intramural Volleyball; Jewish
rellowship-Pres.;
Young
Democrats: Pintopplers

KENNFIH RICHARD LIBBEY
Arkport, N. Y.
History
Dean's List; ISCC; TAU: Intramural Basketball, Football, Softball; Geology Club

MARY ANNr MARGARFT
11--SKO
Binghamton. N. Y.
I l i.\tory
Dean\ Lbt; Thal1ans- Vice Pres.

MICHFAL FNF LEWIS
Scotia. . Y.

132

�J FAN-A NN LOGG IA
Northp ort. . Y.
La11f.lllt1g(•.1·

Dean\ List; Senior Class
Studen t Couns elor

Sec.;

F MARi i· LYNC H
A
Bingha mton. N. Y.

CARO i F V. LIGHT HILL
Brookl yn, N. Y.
Biolog v
Dean\ I ist: Biolog y Club: German Club; Synchr onized Swimming; Judicia l Board

La11g11agt .1

Dean's I .isl; Newm an Club: Ger
man Club

JOFl MYRO N LUTW IN
Long Beach. N. Y.
ff istorv
Odcan s: Coloni al Player s; Intramural rootba ll, Basket ball

BARR Y Wll I IAM MacEW A
South Glens ralls. N. Y
811.1·i11('.l.I

Golian h; Vars1t&gt; fcnn1s . Swim
ming. (,olf: Intram ura l Ba~ket­
bal I. Bask.et ball

133

�ORI ANDO A. MALEIT A
East Patchogue , N. Y.
/Jiolo~y

Dean\ List; Adelphi; Colonist Art Editor; Gallery Comm.Treas.; Italian Club

MARTA KARF.
Endicott, N. Y.

McCAt...l 1-Y

Lw1g11&lt;1~es

Dean's List; Cassandra ns; Intramural
Badminton ,
Volleyball ;
Newman Club; German Club;
Student Advisor
DONALD G. McBR IDF
Binghamto n, . Y.

('AROl Y A. MARGOL US
Carmel. . Y
Ch1•1111Hry

WILUAM ROBERT
McCONN ON
Fndicott, N. Y.
Business
Baccacia: Colonial News-Ca rtoonist; Intramura l Football; German Club

134

�"-A f!IU

~-]'.

JA r Mc(il?\ NIS

llambur g, N. Y.
La11g11age.1

Dean\ I ist: ISSC: Cassand rans:
Intramu ral Badmin ton. BO\\ ling.
&lt;)wimrning: German Club

H DAV ID Ml)fR S
Brookl)n .J'., Y.
l'oliri('(I/ Scit·11Cc

Dean\ I ist. Outing ( lub. ) oung
Dt:mocr ab; P1ntopp krs: Jewish
l·cllowsh ip; IRC
DAVID w. MrrKS
Rochest er. N. Y.
l.i1era111r1'-A ,/l'l/llC"&lt;' Wri1i11g

Colonia l News; Clarend on: Track
and Field; Intramu ral Basketb all:
APO; Student Chrbtia n Assoc.:
IVCr

C ll ARLES J. McGUI NESS
Corning . N. Y.

ROBf'R r r. Mil LFR
I rcsh Meadow s. N Y.

135

�BRUCr RI CHARD MITCHFLL
Johnson City, ...._. Y.
Ch1'111i.11n
(1oliard~

rWNHA:-.1
DF. !\IS MERI [F lmirn. N. Y.
Socw/ogy
USG Rep.. Advocate; Adelphi
Pres., Vice-Pres.

RrECr c. PE CF
Jlion, N Y.
Hi.I/On'

Adelphi

JUDITH I . PAI.MFR
C1reat 'eek. N Y.

P\lRl(k &gt;..ll C Hl\FL
MOR &lt;~\
(,lcnfo~ld.

Y.
Dean\ I ist. USG Pre~.: Adelphi: I~ lw .1 Who, Dragon Society,
Int ramural Basketball. Softball;
Debatc ( lub

136

Sec.: Student Counselor

�LOIS ADRIA NN POMPA
New York, N. Y.
Sociolo1-1y
Pamlora ns: Riding C lub, Gallery
Comm.: Judicial Board

RICHA RD C. RAMSf Y
Schcncc1atl7. . Y.
lli.Hory
Adelph i-Chapl ain; lntramu rall'ootball . Ba,kctha ll: Pintopp lcr'

JUDITH LE ORF PESSIN
Kauneo nga L ake, N. Y.
\1arhrma tics
Dea n's list; Pandora ns: Colonial
ews; Dragon Society: WRA ;
Jewish Fellows hip: Swdcnt Counselor
PETER FARL PRINTZ
ew York. . Y.
Eco110111ic.v
USG Vice-Pre s.; Soph. Cl. ViccPres.; Adelphi : Colonia l Players;
Athletic
Football ;
Intramu ral
Club-P res.; Dean's Commis sion
MARY A
RAN DAR
Oingham ton,

. Y.

Sociolo1:y

Dean\ List; College Chorus

137

�RICHARD V. RUSSFLL
Pittsburgh. Pa.
Gcolo1u
Dean's List; C horus

RIC HARD C. ROGERS
Far Rockaway. N. Y.
Poli1ical Science
Wh o's
Adelphi ;
USG T reas.;
Who; Dragon Society; Debate
C lub; Young Republicans; JRC;
Dean's List

ALAN ROY ROGFRS
Pe nn Yan, N. Y.
M ath1•m&lt;11ics
TAU; Cross Count ry; Track; Intramural Basketball

IR ENE SA MUELS
Binghamton, N. Y.
English Literature
Dean's List; Colo nial
C horus; Madrigal Si ngers

BARBARA EVELYN
RUSS!:- LL
Saugerties, N. Y.
English Li1erat11re-Tlreater
Dean's List; Thalians; Colonial
Synchronized
P I a y e r s Pres.;
Swimming; Spanish C lub

138

Players;

�DA YID R. SEC.AL
Brooklyn , N. Y.
Sociolo11y
1 ist: Odcans; Colonial
Dean·~
News; Who's Who; Dragon Society; Intramur al rootball; APO,
Student Center Hoard

ALLAN MURRA Y
SCHWA RTZBAU M
Brooklyn , N. Y.
Sociolog y
Dean's List; TAU; Varsity Track
Team; Intramur al Football, Basketball; APO

rDWIN STA I EY Sf'GA I
Troy, N. Y.
Sociolog y-A 11thropolo11y
C'larcncl on-Mana ging rditor; Editor-in-Ch ief; APO-Tr eas.: Student Publicati ons Board

JOHN C. SCHWIN DT
Massape qua. N. Y.
English Literatur e

139

l·RFDFR IC'K JOllN SllAW. JR
Massapeq ua, N. Y.
History
Dean\ l.ist; Adelphi; Colonial
Players

�AR!'.OL D v. Sll Ul MA
Spring Valley, N. Y.
1!1.1tory
Dean's I ist; ISCC'; Baccacia;
Soccer

ALAN JAMES SMITH
Ogdensb urg, N. Y.
H istory
Freshma n Cl. Pres.; USG-A dvocate; Goliards- Treas.; Intramural Basketball, Football. S1uden1 Counselo r

SALVAT ORE A. SPA 0
Ithaca, N. Y.
Physics
Dean's List; Adelphi; Newman
Club

LAUR IF I LLF Sll'GEL
Owego. N. Y.
£ng/i.1h Litaatur e
Dean's I.bt: Spring Review; Colo111al Players; Riding Club; Judicial Board

C HARLFS SOODA K
Brooklyn , N. Y.
Chemistr y
Dean's List; SRO; Colonial Players; Dragon Society; Outi ng Club
- Pres.; C hcmiM ry C lub-ViccPres.

140

�WALT ER STEFA NSKI
Bingha mton. N. Y.
Bmi11e.1s Ad111i11istratio11
Slavic Club; cwman Club

NORM AN MARK SPECT OR
Rosl}n Fstatcs . N. Y.
Econo mics
APO Cross- Countr y; Track;
Vicc-P res., Treas.

GFRA l D G. STf·R
cw ) or!... . Y.
Lco11omic.1
Coloni al News CarLOonist; Clarrndon -Art Staff; \PO Pres.

CHAR US JOSrP H
'ffEM Pl FS
Fndico tt. N. Y.
\f athema tics
Dean's I ist; Goliar ds;
plers Vice-P res.

Pintop -

SYl VIA GA' SI ORMS
Union City, Pa
Ln~/1.1/1

L11aa111re

Thalian &gt;. C1ym Club; Choni '

141

�MICllAFL C 'iTRATJ-ORD
'ltaten islantl. N. Y.
Po/irical k1e11et•

Wit L JAM

JOSHI-I SWFFNFY
Flmont, N. Y.
Po/1tical Science
Junior Cl. Vice-Pres.; Senior Cl.
Pres.; ISCC; !TK-Pres.; Spigot;
Cerca; Intramura l Golf; Newman Club; I-SA

RUOOl PH B. SUTH E RLAND
Fntlwell. N. Y.
Sociology

I INDA RA l· SUNDQUIST
Kenmore. N. Y.
(; cr111a11 Utcrmure
Dean's L.i~t: ISCC: CassandransPrc~ .. Vice· Pres: Intramural Badminton, German Club: WRA;
Methotli~t Student Fellowship
ALAN M. TANf BAUM
Rockaway Park, N. Y.
Public A dm111i.11ratio11
Colonial Player~; Jazz Society;
BroadciL~t Workshop; Band; Election Comm.

142

�RICH ARD CHAR I
Johns on City, N. Y.

rs

TUC-K l R

Cl rME"N r VAN ROSS
Putnam \ allc&gt;, 1' Y

SU7A NNE LOIS VANP Fl.T
Oneid a, 1' Y.
Socivl ogv
Dean's l ist

LOUI S VfNC FNT URUB URU
Fdwar ds, N. Y.
'iocio/ ogy
Dean' s l ist; lSC'C; Bacca cia; Colonial cws featur e Ed.

Ffl I I lli' ABI 111
A
VOFL Kl I
l ndicot t, N. Y.
\.fathc111atic1

IS('(; Thalia ns;
I ist;
Dean \
Germ an Club;
Club~
1\-ewrnan
I ntram urals

143

�DO"'AI D Bl J\iJA\1 JN
\V \(ii R

Bint•hamton. N. Y.
II io/oi:y

SuSAN I S l H I R WARR !
Brool..l}n. N. Y.
Ge11 l.11.-Creatin Writill!i
Dean\ Li~t; Colonial Player~:
Tartu/Je: 011 the To1111: Studt.:nl
Advbor
JOYC l· AR I r F WALKFR
Owego. . Y.
Spanish
Dean\ I i\t: Pandoran\; Spani~h
Cluh: German Club: Snow Queen

J A MI S D. W Al KE R
Cuddebackvillc. N. Y.
F11gli.1h l 1/aa111re

NOH M. WISE
Croton-on- H udson. N. Y.
1\.1at ht•nwt ic.1

144

�SENIORS NOT
l'llOTOGRAPllED

MARY LOU A D A M S
RICH ARD BACH
I H OMA S J. BI AZl-'Y
DAVI D BRAD T
W. BURN S
JOI I
ROBF RT 0. CONS I ABLF
PATR fCIA FORT UNAT O
MARY I. G ILM OR F
RIC'll ARD L. ll A rY
H . H OVEY
MILi 0
rR ANK R . ll UMP HR fYS

ANT I IONY R. JACO BI I l I
B. JOll1 'S01'
S H ARO
l' ·\UI RO A l D K IRMM SF
MAR l ll A K KL IO SKY
RICH ARD 1-. KROP P
fR I· Sl J . KUKU S
A LLAN R. I YONS
RuTI I S. r-t\('I
A l BfR l J. MARI ANI
l ll OMAS Mc DO OUC1H JR .
JOEi MOI sr J\.SO'.'.
HI·. RY NFUG I BAUF R

145

I . 01-..0 NII WSKI
J... '\l llR't
111-'R BrRI I . Pl\RK I R
KFNN r .111 J RADF I I
ROBT RI Sl\.1"-J\.I R
JACK H S I AN ll Y
ROBI RI H 11 rr Kr
R1\I PH JAMF S W'\L J...I R
PAL!! WI I MAN
DOUG L l\S W I ( KS
MAl R I l"' \&gt;\II COX
AR I HUR l YORK

�Grad uatio n day ... ·

.i ' ' ill ,

later that day ...

146

�And the next day ...

seNIORS

�To the casual reader a yearbook is often simply an
"album" of pictures with accompanying identifications and enough written text to fill up the remaining holes on the pages. Merely ink on paper
... though nice to own and enjoy.
But to the staff and the adviser the yearbook
means much more. For yearbook work comprises
a multitude of details: Layout, Art, Photography,
Copy, Typography, Covers and Binding (not to
mention

the

small

detail

of

money-raising).

Highly technical and often confusing, these details
are at the very least time-consuming and a source
of anxiety to a staff unless the publisher's repre-

idea man .. .
the Keller yearbook
representative

sentative is company-trained to give needed help
and suggestions.
All representatives for Wm. J. Keller Inc. are
skilled in the many facets of yearbook work, having at their finger-tips the answers to yearbook
problems as well as a multitude of ideas for new
graphic arts special effects, to enable the staff to
produce a yearbook that is dilTercnt and attractive.
Your Keller salesman is more than a technical adviser, he is a "clearing-house" of yearbook ideas.

EDWARD

L. Ht

NGF.RI R

Wm . J. Kell er Inc.
Publishers of Finer Yearbooks
Buffalo 15, New York

�CON GRA TUL ATIO NS, CLASS OF 1962

FROM GUY F. JOHNSON
YOU R CADILLAC-PONTIAC-TEMPEST DEALER
FOR CENTRAL NEW YOR K AREA

~

Pf)i'T l-lf' .

104- 122 HAW LEY STREET
BING HAM TON , NEW YOR K

149

�What's
•
In
Y-OUr

future?
Whatever your goal in life, it's wise to
back up your future plans with a steadily increasing savings account. Money in the bank is one of
the surest roads to security we know .. . it will
help you achieve what you want for your future.

THE
BINGHAMTON

~
BANK

62-68 Exchange Street

Binghamton

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

150

�MAK E YOUR OFFI CIAL PHOT OGR APHE R
YOUR MAS TER OF CERE MON IES
Let us be the official photogn1pher oF your life's importonl
events ... For the reolly good picture you need to lond thot
First big job ... your engagem ent and wedding photogra phs ...
those priceless portraits of your First child (and the others
thot Follow.) Only truly professional studio portraits con
give on individual and distinctive dignity to the visual record

We are proud to be the official
photographer of your graduating
class, and we hope that this is the
beginning of a lifelong relationship. ~~~-..:.-;_.-

YOUR OFFI CIAL PHOT OGRA PHER

Jean Sardou Studio

151

4th Floor

�Bo om da n sez :
AH~T AL'WA'(~ 8A~EP O~
W~AT Ht STANDS FOR - - :BUT Of TE~
SUCCESS

o~ WHAT NE

J)OeSW'-r rAl.l FO~-

keep well-informed and
enjoy the convenience of
"DORM-STEP" delivery of
EVENING

The Pres s

tune timelg , acc11, rate news

SUNDAY

011

WINR radio and WINB televi sion

152

�COLONIAL M O TO R INN
&amp; DIN ING ROO M

RA 9-49 01
TWX -291
S
BIN GHA MTO N'S FINE ST ACC OMM ODA TION

Priv ate Tile Bath s - Stea m Hea t
Roo m Pho nes
210 Roo ms - Bath s
SWI MMI NG POO L

AIR CON DITI ONI NG

3 Miles West of Bing hamt on On High way 17
Mem ber of Ame rican Express &amp; Dine r's Club
AMH A

Hilto n Carte Blan che

AAA

CON GRA TUL ATIO NS
TO THE CLASS OF 1962

JO HN SO N

ENDICOTT
THE
FAMOUS
FAM ILY
NAM E
IN
SHOES

153

�,,

~~~

~-;'
~

Canny Trucking Co.
Inc.

6-18 SPRING FOREST AVENUE, BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK
PHONE RAymond 4-1357

TERMINALS:

New York City

Clifton, New Jersey

Elmira, New York

Scranton, Penn.

99-109 Jane Street
CHelsea 3-1360

310 Coifax Avenue
GRegory 1-1696

53-55 Sheridan Avenue
REgent 2-5027

1708 Nay-Aug Avenue
Diamond 6-3854

Howard Johnson's Restaurant and Motor Lodge
"Landmark For Hungry And Sleepy Americans"

VESTAL PARKWAY-NEAR HARPUR CAMPUS

154

�FOOD for THOUGHT?
Your studies at Harpur College provided
you with plenty of that.
For Slater, however, the emphasis was
on Thought for Food. Planning ... purchasing
... preparation ... presentation . Striving to
take the place of Mother's delicious home-cooking.
Slater is proud to serve you and
your fellow Colonials, as well as students at
141 other colleges in 30 states.

~SLATER --

Chicago

FOOD SERVICE MANAGEMENT

Philadelphia
New York
Los Angeles
Baltimore
Danville, Va.

Atlanta

CONGRATU LATIONS to the CLASS of 1962

ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY
.I

Endicott

Vestal

En dwell

West Corners

43-45 Washington Ave.

148 Vestal Parkway

3225 E. Main St.

Shopping Plaza

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

155

�GOOD LUCK

Congratulations
Class of 1962

TO THE
1962 GRADUAT ES

THE
INDUS TRIAL BANK
OF BINGH AMTO N

CAMPU S CLEANERS
Campus Representatives

181-183 Washingto n St.

Member of
FEDERAL DEPOSIT
INSURAN CE CORPOR ATION

Julian Schlossberg
Paul Gold
Debbie Pisetzner
Gerry Dramis

All Banking Services

Compliments

PIERSON'S

of

Headquarter s for Harpur Students:
College Ring Binders

HENRY'S

Note Books-The me Covers

HAMBURGERS

Drafting Supplies-S lide Rules
Brief and Attache Cases

Stationery

Office Supplies

163 Main St.
Binghamton
George F. H'way
Endwell

State St., across from Post Office

156

�CONGRATULATIONS

Best Wishes

from

TO THE CLASS OF 1962

PAUL A. LUCHINI
Distributor

FEDERAL
ELECTRONICS INC.

BALLANTINE

WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS
BEER

ALE

Vestal Parkway

Vestal, N. Y.

Tel. RAymond 2-6476

Congratulations

.I~

Class of 1962

Mc LEANS
Binghamton
Endicott

FRANKIE AND JOHNNIE

Owego

SNACK BAR
Down the Road from the
New Campus

157

�We in this country arc interested in
education because effective leadership
and training comes only from learning.

MID-W AY
RECREATION INC.

Internatio nal
Busine ss Mach ines Corp.

The Southern Tier's most Ultra
Modern Bowling Alley

Endicott, New York

213 Jenscn Road
Vestal, N. Y.

GEN NARELLl 'S

FOWLER,
DICK &amp; WALKER

For
Flowers

Binghamton, New York
Properly
Deli vered---Sclected

We salute
the June Graduates of

Clustered-Pre sented

HARPUR COLLEGE
111 Court Street

May Success
Always Be Yours

RA 2-7666

158

RA 3-3658

�Best wishes to the class of 1962
from your campus insurance agency.

THE GOLIARDS

COUPER-ACKERMAN-SAMPSON,
INC.

MEN'S SOCIAL CLUB
63 Carol Street
Binghamton, N. Y.

Phone: RA 4-4351

CAMILLO'S
SUPPER CLUB
Famous Italian Food
Live Entertainment
Parties &amp; Social Affairs
George F. Highway,
Endwell, N. Y.
Phone: Pl 8-4248

159

�Congratulations
to the
Class of 1962

~

ELEt:TllO#lt:S

Binghamton, N. Y.

45-49 Washington St.

RA 3-6326

Congratulation s to the
Class of 1962

THE ENDICOTT
NATION AL BANK
E ndicott, N. Y.
Main Office:
18 Washington Ave.
PI 8-33 15
New York's newest hotel designed with
every up-to-the-minute convenience, including drive-in parking. All modem guest rooms boast air-conditioning, TV and an
outside view. Cocktail Lounge, and fine dining.

E ndwell Office:
Country Club Road
at Hooper Road

Banquet Facil ities From 10 to 600
H a rry E. Fear, General Manager
RA 3-834 1

M ember Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation

SHER ATO N INN

Bingha mton, New York

160

�Compliments of

Griswold Bar and Grill
4 Griswold St.
Binghamton
New York

Welcome to the

VAUGHN'S CLOTHING INC.

ARLINGTON HOTEL

for
Men and Boys

Fca1uring Smorgasbord
(Pennsylvania Dutch Style)

107-109 East Main Street

Saturday-5 to 9 p.m.
Sunday- 12 noon to 8 p.m.

Union Shopping Center
138 Chenango Street
Binghamton, New York

"Formals Rented For All Occasions"

Charter a

TRIPLE CITIES TRACTION
CO. BUS

The Endicott Printing Co.
All Commercial Printing
Programs and Brochures
Wedding Invitations-Announ cements

Super deluxe coach
Air conditioned
Reclining seats
Lavatories
R adio and PA system
Card tables

124 Nanticoke Avenue
ENDlCOTT, N. Y.
Phone ST 5-9441

RA 2-2391
St., Binghamton
State
375

COMPLIMENTS OF

HILKINS JEWELERS

THE VILLAGE INN

Our 46th Year

and

VESTAL MOTEL

46 Washington Avenue
Endicott

Vestal Parkway East
Vestal, N. Y.

161

New York

�Compliments to Class of '62

BEN'S CLOTHES SHOP

MAGIC CITY
MILK COMPANY

Main and Willow St.
Johnson City, New York

607 North Street

"Clothes of distinction for
dad and lad."

Endicott

New York

Harmony in the home can't be
found in family jars-

Compliments of

Weeks~

LITTLE VENICE
RESTAURANT

Dickinson

22 Chenango St.

~

Carrulli Brothers
Binghamton, N. Y.

34 Chenango St.

BABCOCK'S SPORT SHOP

OLUM'S

Your Sporting Headquarters
in Binghamton

Complete Home Furnishings
114 Clinton St.
Binghamton, N. Y.

123 State Street
Connected with
BABCOCK, HINDS &amp; UNDERWOOD

222 Main Street
Johnson City, N. Y.

Dial SW 7-7146

Mac 1.ennan's Flowers, Inc.

CLEARVIEW MOTO COURT

499 Court Street

OPEN ALL YEAR

Binghamton, New York

Route 17-Vcstal Parkway East
3 Miles from Binghamton, N. Y.
Showers-Free TV

RA 2-6484

Mrs. R. H. Isabell

162

Vestal, N. Y.

�Thank You-Class of '62

Compliments
of

COME BACK and SEE US AGA IN

Frederick Hotel and
Executive House

HYKURS

Endicott, New York
Binghamton

ST 5-9936

The fine Store for men

ENDICOTT FLORIST

and young men

RL 4-2424

SALL STEARNS
116 Washington Ave., Endicott

forty-one Court Street

DUTCHESS LOUNGE

Compliments

Cor. H arry L Drive &amp; Lester Ave.

of

Famous for Pizza

THE SHORT LINE BUS CO.

We Cate r To Parties and Banquets
Phones

Austin R obbins, owner
RA 9-94 14

SW 7-9939

Compliments
of

Congratulations

SCHNITZEL BANK
RESTAURANT

SEARS, ROEBUCK &amp; CO., INC.

528 Court St.
Binghamton

174 Court Street

Lowenbrau on tap

163

�Congratulations to the
Class of 1962

A. L. GEORGE
Food Distributors
Wise Potato Chips
Bachman Pretzels
Vestal Road, Vestal, N. Y.
SOCIETY

PANDORAN

Compliments of

New York State's
Happiest Distributor

THE FOUNTAINS

KAIER'S BEER

just across the highway from

1900 Watson Blvd.

H arpur College

Endicott, New York

Pickup and Delivery Service
Outstanding Cuisine

ST 5-2061

In memory of many happy days
at Harpur
Best wishes in the future,
Class of 1962

1Cht 1thalian ~ocittH

SPIRIT SHOPPE

CONGRATULATI ONS SENIORS

"THE HOUSE OF FINE WINES"
Wines and Liquors
"We keep U in Good Spirits"

THE CASSANDRAN S

RA 9-2091
Vestal Parkway East

164

�THOMAS
TRUCK PARTS, INC.

GOODMAN'S
Binghamton, Inc.

78 Court St.

ST 5-3393

206 North St.

"For Fashion Firsts"
Binghamton, N. Y.

Endicott
New York

Compliments of

FAIR STORE

FRED ZAPPIA, PROPRIETOR

Good Furniture

TRIPLE CITIES
SPORTING GOODS CO.

7-9 Court Street

7 Washington Avenue

Binghamton, N. Y.

New York

Endicott

Spiedies Hot Pies

AMP BAR &amp; GRILL

RUSSELL

348 Clinton St.
Binghamton, N. Y.

CAB
COMPANY
ST 5-3335

Phone: SW 7-9968

Chicken in the Basket-Clams

Build Better With What You Save At

Angeline's

WHIPPLES LUMBER YARD

Flown and G1f t Shop

Whipple Bros., Inc.
Phone PI 8- 159 l

3310 E. Main St.
Endwell, N. Y.

The Most Fragile of Arts
1306 Monroe St.
Dial ST 5-255 1
ENDICOTT, N. Y.

490 Court Street, Binghamton, N. Y.
RA 2-5353

165

�Compli ments of

New York

Endicot t

145 Conkli n Ave ., Bingha mton, N.Y.
Phone : 2-6441

The Geor gia-H anks Endic ott
Corpo ration

ELK'S BAKE SHOP
"Best Baked Goods in Town"

Statione ry and Office
Supplies, Drafting Equipm ent
and School Supplies

110 Washin gton Avenue
End icott, N. Y.

Typewriters and Typewriter Repairs

- ST 5-205 1 -

Endicot t

55 Washing ton Ave.
Phone 748-174 6

LOU RAPPAPORT
INC.

I

House of a Thousa nd Items

Uaggero/ forte&amp;
&amp;

Oothiers sine~ 1 '09

RA 3-5463

I 149 Front St.

Bingham ton
New York

Compli ments of the

OD EANS
MEN' S SOCIAL CLUB

166

• • •

.it j6 Front St.

�Congratulations to the
Class of 1962

GRUBE &amp; SMITH
MEN'S STORE
For Traditional "Ivy Clothes"

.

Shop Our College Shop
242 Court Street

Binghamton, N. Y .

RA. 4-4374

Congratulations

COSTAS FLOWERS

··china· 9lass

Gifts and Hallmark Cards

--~hnsons

Coe. Vestal &amp; Mitchell Aves.
Binghamton, N. Y.
LOUIS COSTAS

II COURT STA.UT

Compliments of

BENNER WHOLESALE
COMPANY

Fashions for College Women
of Distinction

Endicott, New York

Extends Congratulations
To Graduates of 1962

HIKE'S AISLE OF STYLE

Compliments of

The home of natural shoulder clothing

ORDER PLEASE
Formal Rentals
291 Conklin Ave.

249 Main St., Johnson City

RA 4-6100

RA 9-1231

167

�BEST WISHES FROM THE FRIENDS
OF THE CLASS OF '62:
KOCIK'S RED AND WHITE GROCERY
LU AND JOHN'S "SOUP-TO-NUTS"
WALTER'S DINER

JOHNSON CITY
VESTAL
JOHNSON CITY

GATEWAY VAN AND STORAGE

VESTAL

VESTAL STEAK HOUSE

VESTAL

PARAMOUNT LOUNGE

BINGHAMTON

HARRIS ARMY AND NAVY

BINGHAMTON

MEN'S QUALITY SHOP

JOHNSON CITY

168

��-

ll~l11! ~11h {

)

11\

kr ,,\

l ~IV( , t

I ·~~fo•?X

q•h \.,: '"

-fb 1.,lxk,11 . '~t.1: . . w··

'h~ t(' ~tll•}d "~ fltl'~"'t '"°'(

1h·~ c"ni"1 &lt;~rwit t. l*~

•:di

��</text>
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                  <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;
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&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>
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                    <text>����THE
COLONIST

1963
HARPUR COLLEGE
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
BINGHAMTON , NEW YORK

�Glenn G. Bartle B.A., M.A., Ph.D.
STA'f"&amp; U H IV1Ut811"'f' OP' N•W YO"IC

HARPUR COL.L.101

To the Clue ,i 19G3:
The yea re In college arc t :m]y VClrl ol gTO'A th aad accompltsbmcnt.
but lD 1.&lt;lter hfc they become ycan OC plc:.uant rncmor•C!I Tbi• appl1C3 not ocly
to the ~risoaal a.t1l•fac11oct ol frtcidlihtpa made. kit M the lmtltutJoa.tl chaJ\t--.e•
which have t.i.kea pt.cc during lht11 period.

Message from

Graduates of 1963 can aJv.:ay1 uy

I remember th.tt v.hcn I C111ercd H.arp..ir Callegie- there were only
32S freshm.ln, 11nd claucs were .lll being held to Bndt~&lt;Jll
1 remember thal ln April ol my frt:tihman ye.it wo u.artcd "*"Ing
the classroom bo1ldlng, tho library and the &amp;tudenr.~t."flt&lt;.·r. iinJ m1JVt.'d from
Hndtcott to our nt.-w campu!i 111 Ve~tal , ••

the President.

I remember 1~1 111 September or Ol)' 11op4wnwrc )'ol r there w.u1
a big dcdlcattoo for the whole c.-1mp1.1'

I ren1emher th.it tn fho Olld"'t of 111v ,unior yen thl, State Un~vcra1ry
began o) M.aincr Plan whtc.h l'hcxli.cJ WI llll into the re 11tL.uton di*I 11.irp..ir w.l:., DOI
going 10 be~ small llbcrat .1rl'I c llcjl'c only, Wt a l.lrge llbcr;il .lrl" college.
Wtlh lrnport.int gr•du~ue "'")rk
1 remember tMI tn 111y •en1ar ye.tr fin.al rlJfVI were eH..ablished for
the trlme$lcr llyr.tcm ot yeat·round operation. to hqrin 1mn1Clh&lt;11tely after l
graduaccd. and ttw.t 1Tl the ume fall ol my ecntor )'1!4r. rherewu the ded11::.1Hon
(Jf .a Qe'-... dining Mlt .lnd rwo new dorm1torte1.

I remember that W.rtng all ol Che time I w.as 1n cOUC$tC tf".ere 'AU
coana11t use tJf dormuoriet: .lnd cl.uarooms
were quite fm1shcd. Che fc-cllng ot a
t"' •t'd chJll~-e. • serious
.amtude t""'11rd college worl .. and tbc kna.N1c.
ti .at we v.c:.
01hl 1~ t~ r t lC
hature, not onlv al lndtv1du;,;b bit~• an It t1t11tt•
ccn..stant cOC13trucUoo on tbe c.ampus.
before~·

YzL E ~
Pr

2

tdc!nl

�TABLE OF CONTENTS

FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION ............ 4
CAMPUS LIFE ........................... IS
SOCIAL CLUBS ......................... 40
ORGANIZATIONS ........................ 68
SPORTS ................................ 92
SENIORS .............................. I 04
ADVERTISING .......................... 136

3

���Dean Cordon

Dean Bc·lniak, Dea11 of Studentr

Dc•an Chatl'rdon. A 11nc Denrr of St11dent&lt;.

ADM INIST RATI ON

\fiss
;&gt;. ti Sl'arlt•,, Dir of St11rle11t Act.

Mr. Volkwcin, A uoc. Dir. of Student Act

Wil~on.

dencc&lt;.

Dir

of Women·_. Rf1i-

�Dr. Dykstra. A isoc. Dean.

r-.rr. Rishel
Upper ri!!hl:
Counselor.

Mrs. Ames,
Seri·icn.

D1r. of AdmiHions.

Mr.

Mv.

Poncr.

of

Admi1.1ion&lt;

Reridence

/la/11

Lou· er right: }.fr lkrl). A "t to the Pres.
for Planning &amp; De1 elopmerit.
Mr. }.farshall, Dir. of M en's Res. and
Peace Corp.1 Liaison.

Mr. Centorani. Dzr. of Public Relations.

�MATllEMATICS: Standing: Mr. Lcrcher, Mr. Zicbur, Mr. Hall, Miss Wright, Miss Beard,
Mr. Kent ; Seated: Mr. Anderson.

LA 1\"Gl'AG/~S: :\Ir. l.Jsrhald, Mr. Haumont, Mr.
Kctd1am, '.\tr. Ba1·hdor, Mr. Heinsohn.

8

�SOCIOLOGY, A NT!lROPOLOCY: Mr. H offm ann, :-.fr. Machotka, M r. Dodge, !\Ir. Trow.
Mr. Eberts.

!\[r. \\'ilson. !I.Ir. Kamimky.

9

�GEOJ,OGr. M r. Coates . .\Ir. Rnb&lt;'rscn. :'\fr
Sorauf. .\fr. Hunter.

B!OLOG L Mr. \\'ilmoth, Mr. Mueller, Mr. Schumacher, l\frs. Schellig-Hackett, :'\Ir. Fisrhthal, Mr. Batt in, Mr. Gosselink.

JO

�CHEMISTRY : Mr. Hull, Mrs. Mueller. l\fr. l\fadan, l\fr. Paul, l\fr. '\orrross.

Pl-ll"SICS: l\fr. Penfield. ;\fr. ;\le-Loughlin, l\!r. l\kGar, l\!r. Hart, ;\Ir. Kalvan -l\las1h.

11

�FINE ARTS: Mr. Eldred, Mr. Lincoln, Mr. Friedheim, Mr. Watters, Mr.
Crant', Mr. Eyssclinck.

~Ir.

Zupnick.

LAXGl.:AGES: ~fiss Padovskis,
Orlof!', ~fr. Pl'llcgrini, }.Ir. hes,
Weigand .

~1iss

Mr.

�PHYSICAL EDUCATION : Mr. O'Brien, l\liss Walling, Mr. Pollard. l\1iss Warren. l\lr Ill'nderson, Miss Godfrey, }.fiss Chandler, l\!r. Lyons.

lfUMANITJES : Mr. Birckmaycr, Mr. Bernardo. l\1r.
Ne" man. ;\Ir. Santangelo,
:\fr. D ic-esarc. l\lr Kroctsch.

13

�\fr K aplan. and \fr

\b ~on.

If/S T O RY : Miss Gil bert, Mr. O ggins, Mr. Shcfft7, ~f r. \1ason, \Ir. Van Riper, \fr. l!.1upt'rl,
Mr. J louse, M r. H a rcavc.

14

�POLITICAL SCIEf\'CE: Seated: Mr. H akman, Mr. Farganis, :\1rs. Willrll'r, :\.tr Young. :\fr
Ewing, Mr. Filley. Standing: Mr. Powers, :\fr. Gubll'r

:\fr. S.l\·al.(t' and Pa111 :\lohr

Mr. Huppe

15

�Public R C'lations Sec.:

~[ rs.

Weeks.
Registrar's Office: M iss Beardslcr, ~11ss H artz, ~trs. ?\fusso.

--Planning and Drvelopment SC'c.:
:O.liss l obst.

President's Sec :

~1rs.

Wi nters.

Records Office

P resident's Sec.: }.!rs. Hu ffman.

�Secs. to Director of Admissions: Mrs
Miss Petrush.

Sec. to Director of Women ·s Residences: Miss Lavassar.

Angellotti, ~frs. Farkosh.

Dean's Sec.: Mrs. Brain

Miss Harvey: Sec. to Assoc Dean, ~frs. Fisher:
Sec. to Dean of Students, :\liss Minthorn
Aswc.

Registrar: Mrs. Coney

17

D(·an 's S1·c .
1\.1 is; l)ub1 ,l\',1,

���E\'tT\ bod\·

nighi.

lovl's

~aturda~

Look, he's tcrthing.

•

20

Think
fold?

I'll make the center

�·It's not rurk\\' _rl'I? !

And a :\&lt;!err: Christmas to you.

;\o srotrh
walls.

Yes.
must

tape on

dear. all guests
tlw S 1.00 lin-

pa~

en fee.

the

\\'hat a party!

Yaah ! ~fan on the floor!

H arpt'r gi1 ls ran do a11ytl1111g.

�Jn Spring, a young man's fancy ...

X o. we don't give grC'cn stamps.

\\'hC'n I finish this mil,
1'11 h;l\r to go to the
bath room for rnor('.

Bet he docsn" t get past thr door.

..

Which one has the T oni?

22

�Who gave you your last haircut?

I never get any "male."

Just think

in thr('C yr a rs our hous&lt;' will look like this.

23

�T.G.I.F.

Coupla minish we'll ge t anothuh li'l drink.

Did the \\'hite Rabbit pass this way?

I figure if we can get thr ladder up to the second floor
windows ...

\\'(''re going to live in them next weC'k?

24

�Jlurr. !
comi~g!
I'm telling you, we need trees!

My, your trees arc \'Cry nice, Dr. Bartlett.

Rockrfcllcr is

�. . SLEEP NO MORE"

if r pull
real high ...

~ow.

111\

skirt

Oh. Oh. See Spot run.

So
rr.

rm looking for

Lady Chattrrlcy's L ou-

Tomorrow and tomor-·
rm~ and tomorrow ...

" In the ninth inning. M anti!' ... ··

26

�The Bobbsey Twins where?

All of these are o\·erdue?

This one doesn't haw 360 degrees.

27

�. uEAT DRINK AND BE

28

�MERRY.

29

�l

.. . FOR TOMORROW YOU

30

�MAY DIE"

�STUDENT
CENTER
MANAGERS
Seatrd: C' Stnnbrrg. Mr. Volkwcin,
R. Cold it&lt; h Standrn~ · K . Simonson.
J Blydl'nb&lt;·rg, S Edison.

GAMES
ROOM
MANAGERS
!.cft to n~ht · f Light, \[ Kalter, D.
O'Conno1, R. Or man, ~fr Volkwcin.

Yes, ma. I'm working hard.

---

I wish he'd get here. I'm sick of studying.

3'2

�FRESHMAN
WEEK
It doesn' t quitr look like the
catalogu&lt;'.

The doctor will be with you soon.

Take it over. I blinked.

33

There will be a genera l swim at 11 :30.

�But I am eighteen.
\'\'hat are we waiting for anyway?

Mrs. Coney went WHERE?

Yeah. I bounced two last week.

�I

I
J knC\\ we were proc;ressin'. but a lecturt• hnc?

Stop? Rut it's only 4 A.M.

Not e,·en a mouse ...

�COLLEG~

THE

51UDENT:S

COLOR1NG 500K
c.onceL~cl ahd. capt\Oned b11 -&amp;le seml.-twi.st.e.d
minds ':1~ rness~~t rrnchael kolter d~

-tredert&amp; ba ULYl~ . d.rdwn bL\ t:he
~S twlS'tQd rlB nd.

I At1 1-l.ARPlJR

of ed.

~liq~

C6LY\ ·

COLlJ~GE.

COLOR ME IN" 5PLEN"DOR.
NOT REALLY. BVT '.lOU CAN'&gt;t
COLO~ ME WORK.-COLORED,
CAtr VOlJ ~

M\1 NAt1E
\~

S1EPHEN DEDA\.VS.
COl...O~ ME IN' SEARCH
OP A FATHER. t1AKE
IT A NICE PORTRAlT.)

M. ART FATKE.R %
PARl~

I~

h9

~IKE

Of: A t/OlJNG
ARTIST MAC/BE.
36

�CALL ME ISHMAEL .
COLOR Ml/ Ell£BAL~~ WH1TE.

1,M M.R'5. F\LVlNG.
COlDR M.E Sl/PH.lLlTIC..
DON1 M.tND TI-\E. GHOSTS.
THE\',RE ~OT REALLV

0

0
~

THERE. 1tJST C.O~OR,

IHE M WH rrE .

I'M KURTZ OF TH£
INNER STATlON. COLOR,
MY NO$E 1\JO&amp;C"/ W1HTE.

COLOR T~E R,EST OF ME
IN" DARKN'BSS .

�ALL l/OU J D. t=AN"'3
K NOw wHO 1 At'\.
COLOR ME M~ED-UP
1

REAlLV MEAN rr,

GODDAMMlT ~

I'M MADAME DE FARGE: .
COlO?., Mll KNI11lN'G
B~ACK.

COLOR

ME EVfL.
VERY E'JlL r ~ ~

ONE OF ME 1$ LtGGATrr
COLOR ME N"IC:E.

l)LE7 $WEAT$0CK
BO}(O'E D

PLJfl..E.

~~£. OTH~R l.~

% ~OOF

Ry£

W3T Mlt

DOUBLE.
c.o~o~ 81M lN" SECRET.

W~\SKE'?

38

�LLKE Ht, CLOD.

Ml/ NAME 1~ LtK6, DIN'O.
COLOR ME LlKE VER,-Cl
SC RU FTC/.
THEN WE 'LL Lll&lt;E HIT L.A .
OOH.-\JEE:, JACK r

WELL, HELLO TH~R,E .
Mll N"AME. rs HESTER

PR-YNNE.
COL.OR, M\l" BOW tfELlD\J.
COLOR, M.E ADULTEROUS.
CDLORt M.l[ Lf:TTER ~R.tEt.

LEOPOLD BLOOM tl~RE~

COLOR ME

SM6L~OW-l/E.L'LOW.

COLO~ t1Y EQES B~OODSHO~
ITS BEE~ A tON0 NlGHi-: MOLL'l.

All the c haracters mentioned 1n this rolonn l( book are
taken from well known novels. They &lt;ll'C fi ctic1ous and haw
no reference to any person livin~ or dead

39

�-

��Row I: J. Simonds, C. Dayton, C. Maniaci. Rou 2: E. Valenta ,

D. Eddy Row 3: P. Zajaceskowski, R . Rossi. R nw 4: F. Carrano,

R . Burnett. Row 5: D. McCuddcn, A. Cilluffo. R ou· 6: H. Abra-

hamsen, L. Woods, R. Jablonski , W. Broskett, J. ~dard, R.
Williams, R. Brown, R. ZolC?er. Bae/.. R ou· · J . Wager, J Phill ips,
E. Cain, E. Goldberg, S. Goad, Pres.; P. Weisberg, S. Ostrander.

TAU

42

�43

�Knuling: B. Eden , B. Shimkin, T . Rosenblatt. Standing: J. Czeisler, R . Rauchbcrg,
G Fricke, M. Hal perin - Chancellor, Dante, P. Gold, R . Nanes, G. Scheiber, L. Sherman.

S. 0. S.

44

�45

�Kneeling : C. Drmo, S. Laird, M. Jacobs, T. Beemer, B.
~!. Wandclt, P. IIazt'n , Seated: D . Gortht'y, S.
Tcwl·s, K. :\kQurrn, ] . Gallant. C. Blak(•. :\1. Kudrnia,

Dubin ,

E. Barax, President; :'\'. Sujd. A. Srmo, D. Goldberg,
M. Boburka, R. Ampula, J. ~clson, A. Erhard.

PANDORANS

46

�47

�OD EANS

ling, S. Spirn, R. Walter, Row 4: J. Spiegel, A. Goldsmith,
H . Rubinstein, A. Levy, Row 5: j. Adelman, B. Kahn, R.
Satkin, R . Ungerleider, A. Hertzberg.

Row I : B. Karson, F. Gluck, M . Throne, S. Lane, M. Saul,
K . Waltzer, Row 2: D. Chattaway, B. Pritikin, R . Hunt, J.
Augenlirht , E. Kaplan, Pres. Row 3: T. Carles, M. Leicht-

48

�49

�-

I

T
K

\
Front R ow: J. O'Meara,
R. Foster, J. Fennessey, J.
Pinc!, E. Burke, Pres.; R. Pierce,
J. Zsemlye, B. Buhler. Back Row:
C. Green, W. Moynihan, ]. Wolfer, T.
Meehan, R . Feldman. S. Rubin, M. Schwartz.

50

��Left to right: A. Waldman, L. Snyder, B. Perry, G. Mager, D.
O'Connor, M. Haner, E . Yaw, C. Funk , J. Cerwonka, R. Friedman , C. Putman, C. Haas, D. Patchen, ] . P. Wojcio, ]. Boland, :M. Matthews, J. Spring, I. Light, R. Davie, C. Orcutt,

J. Iak , 0. Ostebo, M.
Brazier, W. Bothner, J. Wilder, K. Simonson, R . Ulrich, H.
Morten, W. Hesse, R. Lord .

L. Beall, H. Spangenberg, B. McCulloch,

GOLIARDS

52

�53

�ENDYMIONS

Roit· I : ~r. ~!illet, K . Unger, A. Lippe!, M . Coe!. R ow 2: r.
Cohen, K . Pl•rkins, S. Berg. R ow 3: S. Leeder, R . Garland, S.

Crane. R ow 4: E. Fcdcrman, C. Schloop, R. Noble. R ow 5:
D . Young, E. Levin , D . Weiner.

54

�)_

55

,)

'

�R ow I: M . Attic, R . Rubenstein , A. Fuchs, C. DcyC'rmond . Row 2: J. l!crkcr, S. Br&lt;X&gt;ks, Prrs.:
K . Wcisfi cld . R ow 3: H . Ncrhcmias, M . Wcllikoff. R ow 4: P. Feuerstein , M. K alter, D. K eisler .

DIONYSIANS

56

��Srtlznf? on floor: R. Faigin. Seated: B. Schapiro, Pres., R. Siegclman, R. Gruen, M. Goldberg, P. Schechter, R. \Veiner.

Standing: A. Goldstein, H. Zala7nick,

blum, E. Kinbert. H. Bromberg.

DEMETREANS

58

J Warshaw, J. Rosen-

��Sitting on floor: M. DeGillio.

Seated:~-

Sax, Pres. ,

J. Milly, D. Neidlinger, K.

CASSANDRANS

Dr. and Mrs. Gruber, advisors.

Burdick.

�61

�BACCACIA

L . Frankel, R. Sealy. R ow 4: C. Butler, Pres.; R.
Kaschak, B. Ginsburg, Row 5: N . Starlcr, ]. Palant.

Row I : H . Boller, M. Weiss, R. Stoler, H. Burnham.
R ow 2: T . Hochstadt, D. Nielsen, C. Alber. Row 3:

62

��Kneeling: C. Sternberg, G. Dunbar, R. Marchesiello, M. Schorr. Sta11ding:
Dagastino, D. Sievert, President; D. White, G. Harvey, D. Barek, S. Edison.

APO

64

~!.

\'olkwein, R

�65

�~.

l.

f

f

S. Miri n, R . Printz, L. Plo tkin . R ou• .7: II. Seymour, Pres., R .
Golditch, M . Gapin, I\1. Coppola, L. Clirkman. ~1. Wein, ;\f
Greenberg, R . Tumpowsky, I~. Balli ng.

!?m t· I· 11. L evinton, B. Srhncidcr, M . GottliC'b, B. Shainman,
S. Strobcr, D . Ells\\orth, R . Fri&lt;'dm&lt;111, S. lkr~rnan . Uow 2: R
Ross M Sw1\1(•r. E. F ish man, J. Seymour, B \\ inklt•r, B I lahn,

ADELPHI

66

����Seated: J. Potusky, D. Goldberg, L . Marmorek, D. Kaelin , B. Mctsky, S. Weiser, F. M ellick.
Standing: E. Yaw, Pres., J. Spiegel, H . Cohen, S. Krebs, R. Madcll, A Bender;on. B Forrest,
S. Schreiber.

USG
In the past year, USG has initiatrd a Fall Weekend
and because oi its success, will continue t0 sponsor the
Weekend. Library and cafeteria problems hm·c been
handled by appropriatr t.:SG committees, and miscellaneous grie\'ances ha\'e been discussed and renwdied b)
the Suggestion and Grie,·ance Committee. L'SG has continued to work with the Dean's Commission for Reorganizing Student Government Structure. Most of USG's attention has been givr n to planning for the Trimester
system. Besides instructing the Dean's Commission reprcscntati\'es, it set up a USG Committee on Trimester to
discuss the many problems of adjustment t.hat L'SG will
face in the coming year and to offer concrete program
suggestions to USG and the Dean's Commission.

C nitcd Student Go\'emment is the n·presentati' e organ of the student body. It is a member of the .0.'ational
Student Association and of the ::\cw York State Confederation of Student Governments. USG coord inates allcampus acti\ ities and campus student organizations. Traditionally, its officers ha\e been elected by the student
body in the spring. and its members-at-large have been
elected by the four classes in the fall. The reprcscntati,·cs
and officers meet r&lt;'gularly to discuss student affairs and
arrange for im·estigation of student problems. They also
sponsor \\'inter \\'eekcnd, Spring Weekend. and the
Soph-Frosh Stn1ggle. Finally, they act as the rnice of the
student bod) and communicate to th&lt;' Faculty, Administration, and Public, student opinions, suggestions, and
grievances.

70

�J. :&gt;/ichols, Fr. Ser.; .\. \\'1·instein, Soph. Sec.; :\L Brazier,
Soph. Sgt-at-am1s.

Seated: K . Waltzer, Jr. Pres.: S. Spear. Jr. Sc('.: R. Printz.

Soph. Pres.; J. Damin. Soph. Treas.: J. W inrhcll, Soph. V.P.
Standing: S. Sch lam, Fr. Treas.: D. K aminsky, Fr. Sgt-at-arms:

CLASS OFFICERS

H . Seymour. Pres.; P. Simandlc, \ '.P.; I l!azilla. Sc&lt;'..

71

~[.

Smith, Treas.

�DRAGON

SOCIETY
Seated: .J . Chc-c\'ers, J H amburg, A.
K arpas, M . Kuker, C. Blake. Standmg: E. Saslo", E. W eisman, R.
Frkd rnan, D. l luttll'SOn. P Simandlr , E. Kime, W Lewis, S. H offma n.

WHO'S WHO
Seated: J. H amburg, C. Blake, A.
K a rpas, M. Kelly, J. Cheevers.
Standing: S. H offmann , E. Weisman,
I I Seymour, ;-.[ Greenberg.

72

�STUDENT

COUNSELORS

I

J. Lagoudis, L. Lind ,
~lakr, B., ~.o­
M. Con klin , C. Hcstl'r, C. Pnc c, J. Cz(lsloggi, L. Gra ). Ro1C· 2: F. Fuc hs, J . Korlcr K . Kor hum mcl , ::\!.
lips. Rmt• .1:. R
nii~k R. H alder. J. RPhil
ner. . l:lri rh. W . BaJan,
Loo~is, W . BothBru
n, C. Dcy cnn ond .
E. Weisman, G.

Seat ed: E. J ansen,

JUDICIAL
REVIEW BOARD
'rg, J. ~lydcnLeft to Rig ht: J. Hirschbl
le.DCha 'f JusDoy
R
\\'.
l
l')'Cr'
burgl1, G
. - !ofm
J . onner,
tire, J ::\frhrcr, .\1. ::\follick,
Orm an.

73

�Row I: M . Davis, :'\. Lcmbcrger, ;'\[. Karpas, B. Wittenberg, .J.
Wellman. Roa• 2: E. WC'isman. E. R ubens. :\. Thompson. R.
Chalfy. F. ~folliC'k, ,\. Sihc11nan, S. Funnan. E. Buxhill, C.
lkckcr, B. Cologgi, \f. FuC'hs. Ro11· 3: R. fddman, ]. Fey, V.

Spako\'sky, T. Syvertsen. D. \'oorhccs, ]. Tomaski, B. Blitstcin,
L. Adlowitz, R . I ntn&lt;'I, F. Erkhausl'r. S. C11ldbcrg. R. Fai'(in.
R . Bro"n, G. Gold, S. Rubin.

DORM COUNCIL
JUDICIAL BOARD

E. Super. L. Weinstein, C. Farr,

J. Soffin, A. Hcrt7berg, R. Perry, L. Woods. T . \Volinsky.

74

�P. Whi te
M. Volkwein , D . Gottlieb, Chainna n; E. Weisman , R . SC'heer, C. Kester,

STUDENT CENTER BOARD
ISCC
7

I

]. Boland, M. Weiss, D. Neidlinger, C Demo, Chairman
R . Friedman .

75

B. Dubin, Sec-Trea s., K . Unger,

�T.rft to ri!!ltl: R :-:obll'. T. H ochstadt. Editor
Coldsmi1h. Ab1r11t. P. Curran,:\. Starll'r.

;-:

Ro,t•nhf.'ck B. Shapiro. D. \\'einf.'r. :\.

COLONIAL NEWS
Potuskr. J. Sharpe. B. ShC'rris, R. Prt'ss1·r, J Could. P Curran,
.\!. Liebo\\il7, E. Lowenkrnn. Uo11 ·I: \\'. Suhit1b·, ,\ . Bonkshin,
.J. ll irsrhberg. E. Liss, D \'oorkt•es. \'. Spakon.k)·. S. S\hlam.
E. Fcdt·rman. \\'. H ynes, C. Stf.'rnbcrg.

I \I ~ll'plwnson, :'\. Goldwasser . .\I. K 1rpas, E Schuslt'I son. (' C.in,i&gt;l'rl{. J. .\ll'hrn Roa 2: S. \\ eiss. B. Shapiro. R .
'\11hlr. I I lo&lt; h"ach. () \\ &lt;'inl'r ..\ (;ofd•m1ith. ;\ lkr~man, :'\
Rosl•nlwrk. Ro1&lt; 3· R . Berniko'" \' . Splain, S Sc·hlrnr)'f.'r, j.
R(ll1

76

�H \braGE.VER AL STAFF Stattd.· K . Manin, B. Travis. 0. Ostebo,
' Crane,
hamsen, R. Chien, J. Zapla,va , M . Le,,·. Stand.tnf! Y Rogers, \

,
.\ . Nichols. M . Albert, S Conner, E Jansen, ;\I .\ltruski, .J Onorato
Ca111
;\1 Friedma nn, J ~tuhlmillcr. 13 1-..arson, S. Louer 1b;mt. E.

COLONIST '63
EDITOR IAi. STAFF· C. Hester, Layout Editor;J Srntt, Ort:anizations and Clubs, D P1se1znor, Campu~ Life; K Curtis, ,\n
Ednor, C. Blake. Editor-in -Chief. R. ;\1arches illc. R Scheer,

77

&amp;·n1ors. E•. Rosthold er. Photof{rapll\ (;(Knd1na1or. B Brndt. Bm1
ncss ;\lanai;:t·r. :1bm1t. ;\1. Kalter, L11c1ary Ednor

�Seated: C. Blake, Mr. Frcimarck, Mr. Newcomb, Mr. Vasilew, Mr. Kroetsch, S. Wile.
Standing: A. Bergman, T. Hochstadt, E. Weisman , R Ponik, K. Crossen, E. Schustcrson.

STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BOARD

CLARENDON
J. Block, S. Wile, J. Gould.

78

�GALLERY
COMMITTEE

Ilykin , C. Eldred, Ad,·isor: P . Kl anwr Back. L. R nh1nsnn,
P. \'icvc . .\1. K arpas, ]. Cold&gt;holl.

Frorit: L . Lind . C

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB

S. Lane, A. Ra1hba11m, ] . Potusky, L. M enner,]. Alexander, S. Calkins, ] :\fongi.

79

�CIVIL RIGHTS CLUB

Sinovor
enstein, M : Bloomfield, J. ncsa
r, P.
Seat ed; Le/t to righ t: L . Low
Pali
S.
n,
dma
Frie
.
T
f,
, S.
ictze
'
\
A. Falkin. M. Kar pas, A. is,Wol
P.
ohn,
~I
A.
n,
Brow
B.
Clancy. Stan dmg : P. Dav

Mollick
k R . Mar tin, T. Weiss. F.
Koser, D . Swarzman, C. Kec
Calkins. C. l !ykin, I
S.
gcr,
Sc·c
E.
it7,
inow
Rah
S. Srh n·ib rr, L.
Zim mer man .

YOUNG AMERICANS
FOR FREEDOM
I.eft to righ t: B.
R. ,\ rgrrsingcr.

~[ctsky,

S Hay war d,

80

�YOUNG
REPUBLICANS

J. Tomaski, G.

Ha rvey, R. Cristal, Pres. ; L. Nestle, D. Barck, M . Schorr.

PROGRESSIVE
SOCIALIST
SOCIETY
I.eft to right: D. Kimmag&lt;', R. Baral,

Jacobs. D Swar11nan, S Dot(lionc,
R. Pric·t•, R. Slwrman .. \ C:oopt·r, R.
Dnll&lt;'rm ann.

J.

81

�COLONIAL
Scene from Dourgeosie Gentilhomme

Shrew
rehearsal

82

�Scene from Bourgeosie Gentilhomme

PLAYERS

O n floor : R . Boxer. R ow I : S. Newman, C. Capossela, K . Unger, C. Andreas&lt;&gt;n, r-.1. Srhoor.
Row 2: J. Hamburg, N. Nielson , D . K olatr h. D Landcau, B. \&gt;\'ills. R o11· 3 : G. Loudon, J.
T eevan, E. Silverman, S. Allen, M . Rappcport.

�Row I: J. Petty, J. Poris, L. Koenig, R. Stcinglass,
A. Mohn, D. Kaplan, K. Grant, G. Doripc, T.
Calistri. Row 2: J. McClellan, V. Kelsey, K .
M cClellan, R . Kuzma, J. Willenbrock, E. Brock, A.
H ardy, C. Pitcher, M. George, A. Sturdt•vant, J.

Webster, F. Kearly. Row .~: M. Davis, L. Orloff,
D . Williams, C. Sandike, B. Ti'ttlc-r, R. Wein&lt;'r, C.
Edwards, S. Leiden, B. Forest, R. Whitney, M.
Spearman , M. Burnett, P. Starr. Mr. Lincoln, director.

BAND

LIGHT CHORUS

On floor: V. Burrington, S. Schr&lt;'iber. On bench: J. Stuhlmillcr, J.
McLellan. Standirig: P. BC'll, P.
Starr, M. Burnrtt, M. Aho, K. Kosinski, J. Hun tley, S. Ross, J. Foster, S. Smith, C. Akland.

84

�Top to bottom: B. Gordon, /\. Goldsmith, P. Nc"man , T. Woucl, J. o·Ml'ara, B.
Kurz, B. l!arvry, /\ . Bookshin, M. H ackman , J. Adelman, R. Foster,/\. Bergman

85

OUTING CLUB

�w.
R.
A.

Kneeling: C. Farr, M. Hackman, S. Laird , C. Fletcher. Standing, R ow 1: Miss Godfrey, ad'isnr: E. Super, L. Brockington, Miss Chandler, advisor; J. Munro, C. Oestrich. l'.[iss Wallmg, advisor. R ow 2: J. Hambun;, M Conklin, M . Dietrirh, E. Liss.

PINTOPPLERS

T . V iii, J. Simonds, J. Goddard. President ; A. Genco, S. Goad , S. Klimow, G. CerwonKa.
Bowlers: E. DeMattos, D. Caplan, .M. Sanders, J. McLellan.

86

�Da ncers in Le 8 011 rgeo1Se Cent1llwmme.

DANCE
WORKSH OP

Seated: ~f. .-\ lexander. B. Brodt Kneeling· () Laodcau. S. R osenhcn:. Standing. J. Jlamburl(, ,\ SihTrman, M . Feldman.

87

�JEWISH FELLOWSHIP

R.
Front: }.f. Furhs, Prcsidc·nt; C Kashuk, R . Karp. On couch· A. Mal1hrrg, K Perlman, apK
\falll&gt;t'rl(, L. \\'einstrin, F.. Supc·r Standing: D. Crauhard. ).1 Bhnick. R Ja1111uth, D
1.111, E. W1•1srnan, \\'. CoopC'm1an, .J . Soffin, R . Ehrl'J1bcrg.

CANTURBURY CLUB

On finor: J Cejka. ~I Sh.tiler Seated S ,\ IJl'n. S. l.0111~111uir. B Tra\is. G. Dunbar, Prrsidt•nt, Standin1c ).I. Burke, R Scaly, S (.o.1d. ]. Palmer. R \ 'an ln\\1·g1•n

88

�METHODIST FELLOWSHIP
R ogc-rs. .-\ .
Row I: Y
i\foore , P. I [az&lt;'n , G. Sattc-rlc-t'. \f. \layn&lt;'. ]. Canc-ro. Row :!: P. \\'c-lsh . S.
I [ayward , E G ot thq•, S. ,\dlcr. C. :\'ichols. R ow 'J: R .
Cancro. R. .-\rg&lt;•r-ingc r. S
Tyndale, P. Reese-, J. C om·link ( advisor). E. Cain, N.
Car!(•r.

STUDENT CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION

Seatul: R r\. J. K lindt . .1dvi sor ; J. L&lt;'&lt;'. Pres.. .). Well\f unro. S. Le·&lt;·
man. J
\\ .11lac&lt;'. f)
Sta11di11~: R.
Hicks. G. Droup&lt;', R. Blauvelt. S Lonctmuir. D. I futtfcston

NEWMAN CLUB

Rou I. E. lk\lattos. C .. \1hrc&lt;'h t, S S1•rafin. R ou 2 ·
J D.lrt''"· 1'1 1·s . B. Cofo1:i:1.
K . \I.min. P I !all. E St•t•i:t·r-. /?i.11 :I .\. B1 ankrn.111.
R .Jahlomki. J. Cntt&lt;'&lt;'llt. D.
Sil'\l'rt, ]. Phillip'. R Rossi.
C. \l aniaci.

89

�R

A
D W
I
0

0
R
K

s

H
0

p
Kneeling: T . R affaele. Sitting: M. D cGillio, A. Wolfson, L. Dennis, E . Weisman, D.
Kaplan. Standing: G . K&lt;'stcr, W. Cooperman, J. Press, R . J armuth, N. J\ielson, W.
K walwasser, M . Kuker, D. Stell. In back: i\L Levine, W. Anderson.

D
E
B
A
T
E

c
L

u
B
Left to rr(!ht: L. Smith. R . Stuckart, C Shoolman, C Connolly, L. Barnes, .\ . \\'cinstcin. C.
K ashuk, :\! :\libtl'in , D . Lorton, R . Baker.

90

�s
,,.

K

c

A
T

L

u

I

B

N
E-..,...

,

~

G

I

M
A

T
H

c
L

u
B
M. Goldberg,
ray.

J. Poris, B. Shcrris, R Blitzrr. President· R. Bro"n. J. Soffin. R Karp. R \l ur-

91

���A Y car Of :\1ixcd Reactions
It was a year of rnixed reactions for the sports-mi nded I IarpuriH'.
Emotions ran the gamut from surprise to jo) to disappointme nt. and tlw
spelled POTE:'\sections for the sports year, prm ided a ray of hope
TIAL - for next year.
The Cross Country team opened the year for the fan and set the stage
for the ensuing action. The harriers compiled a 3-5 record and were
most impressive in a triangular meet, defeating both "Cnion and 0:-\eonta.
As the harriers opened their season. the soccer team prepared to take
the field. and before they left it. they had lcft rays of hope all O\ er the
campus. In their third .game ther defeated Hobart 3 l for their first
an d promptly followed it up with a ,·icvictory - first victory cva
tory O\·er a strong Grneseo squad. Playing inspired soccer. and showing
promise for the future. the hooters came on strong to wind up with a
3 3 2 mark, and junior Ron Burnett made history with an Honorable
Mention on the All-State team.
December marked the lid-lifters for both the mermen and the cagers.
The swimmers were dunked by R.P. I.. but the basketball squad edged
Hobart in a squeaker. The loss seemed to stifle the swimmers, as they
lost their next four in a ro". H owever, and happily. the mixed atmosphere took o\·er here too. and the mermen rerlcd off four straight wins
to post a 4 5 season record. The last meet markc•d the departure of cocaptains Madel! and Selsby from the Harpur swimming scene. and both
left "·ith a poolful of records to their credit.
l\1eanwhile. the cagers were following in the swimmers' wake. The
scoring power of Mickcr Greenberg and th e sha rp rebounding of Bobby
Loomis could not make up for a constant cold eye from the floor for the
team as a whole. :'\car the rnd of the campaign. the lx1ys found themselves. much to the fam' delight, and finished with a string of wins and
a 6 l 0 record. High lighting the mixed season were Greenberg's scoring
and playmaking. Loomis' rebounding and offensive work. Schneider's
\'ast impro,·emcn t, and steady clutch work by Frc-c•dus and Mornihan.
Co-captains Greenberg and Loomis will be missed sorely. Both closed
out their illustrious varsity careers with flourishes. Mickey became IIarpur's third cager to hit l ,000 points in a \ arsity career. and also the first
to hit 400 points in one season. Aclcling to his scoring laurels was a 4.5
point performance . (breaking the one game high of 39). in a contest
that \\'ill not be an ea.w one to forget. Rob finished with his highrst yearly total. constantly out-reboundi ng taller men, and was a delight to
watch on the hardwood.
The teams all showed promising und&lt;'r-classm cn, and the mixed seasons of all four of them left high hopes in the minds of Jiarpw 's rabid
fans. along with hints of better things to come in the not-too-dista nt future.

94

�-

SWl:\1~11;\'G

H a rpur

SCORES
Oppositio n

R.P.I.
H amilton ........ . ...... .
Union .... . ........ .... .
Hamilton ..... . ...... . . .
St. Bona\·cnt urc . . . . . . . . .
O swego ........ ...... . .
Buffa lo ........ . ........ .
Genesco ... . ........ ... .
Wilkes . ........ ........ .

28
28
21
%
27

63
57
69
58
68

72

10
47
23
32 ...

.rn
62
63

SWIMMING

l .eft to m:ht · Sratrd ·
P Obrn. L. Fuchs. R
K C"c·nt·v, R. St•lshy, roI lorT
captain
D Graubard
Wlll.
E . Ca1roll.
Sta11r/111.~:
(' Dayton. R '.\!ad•·ll,
cn-captam R \\"altn .
('&lt;&gt;&lt;H h
Ft'itlman.
R.
DC"nnis.

95

...

�SOCCER
1962 SEASO:'\
H a1pur .... 0 \\'i Ikl's . . . . . . . . . . . . I
H arpu1 ... 0 Robe1 ts \\'rsll'yan . . . . . +
Harpur. . . 3 l loba1t . . . . . . . . . . . • I
H arpur .... 2 Genes&lt;'O ......... .... I
B arpu1 .... 2 l~ ~f0\11C . . . . . • . . . . . 2
3
H arpur ... 2 Ithaca '. . . . . . . . . . .
Harpur .... 3 "Ctica ......... ....... 2
H arpur .... 2 H amilton . . . . . . . . . . 2

96

�Light , J. \\'olfc r. C.
Standi ng: Coarh O'Brie n, T . Sr \crtsc n, I.Waltze
r. N . Abrah amK.
,
·r-.rcara
o
].
,
Gapin
:-.1.
Dc)'crmond,
aum. Seated :
Nussb
B.
,
Lc\'inr
:--1.
ann.
Roum
\\'.
,
sen, S. Ostcbo

1a. B Zolr1(· r .. \
R . Burnr tt. :\ . Pirrcr . :".: '.\'idson . J Costan
Goldsm ith. D. Foster , W . (,olr, \ . Spak onh

SOCCER

5
97

�W inkler. J \-\'ojc-io, R. Pncc L. K rrs~el R ~kCulloch, P. Wc1sbrrg, R. Cohen, P. R ichman, ~I Tillcs. C. (;Jass. \'. Pasquale,
S. Da\'is, C. Putman. I. Simon

l .e/t to nght K nuling Coach Pollard. '.\f FrC'cdus. B Schneid1·r ~l (;rt•(•nlwn:. f'o-raptain: R. Loomis, co-captain. W ~l oy­
R Bcrn ikow. B.
nihan. R Tump'"''kh manager Stnntling.

BASKETBALL

98

��./ -=2--

100

��GOLF
Coach O'Brien. A. Spross, C. Dcycrnwnd.

CHEERLEADERS
n;
P . N&lt;'wman , J. Winchl'll, D. Kal'lin, E. Box hill, R. Krombcr g, co-captai
raptain; P. Ferrara, M. Onelck, B. Kurz, N. Caplan.

102

J. Stuhlmil kr.

�P. Scht'cht rr. R. Ehrenbcr(\'. Coach
Left to Right: R ow I: R. Sundi&lt;-k. S. Sc-hrC'ibl'r. W. Falla,
:\f Coldberll". :\f Lc,mt.
Lyons. Row 2: F. T erracina, A. Hardy. :\. Lchtonrn . F. Bangert,
H.o;c· 3: S. Ostcbo, E. Yaw, R. Faigin.

J. H artman.

CROSS COUNTRY AND TRACK
CROSS COUN TRY
Opposi tion
H arpur
25
H artwick . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
30
25
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
a
Union- Oneont
27
~cw Paltz .... . ...... ...... . .... 28
25
H amilton ...... ...... ..... ..... 31
21
Ithaca . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
29
Cortlan d . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
26
Oswego . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
10th
...
......
.
......
......
C:onf.
:\YSCT &amp;FA

BASEBALL
rl(. B. Schncidt&gt; r. E. Kaplan .
l .rft to R1 ~ht: Seated· E. Tarlo1 , D . Patcht'n. M Grr&lt;'nbc
in, J. Spring, R. Colditch ,
Coad1 ll cndt'rson . Standin g: R. :\lcCull och, A . lsrat'l, P. Feuerste
S. Ruben.

103

���3

C H ARLES JL' Lll'S ALBER
Free port . ,\· l'

MEL\'I :\' ROY M IO

Van Etten ..\' r.

STEPHi\:' -llE CLAIRE ALLE.\'

CAROL A.\':'\ ALBREC H T

A storia, N.Y.

E a&lt; / A u ro ra ..\'. Y.

RI C HARD L. A.\'EC ITf:\RfCO
E11 d11 ell . .\I. F .

C' Y.\'TJII \ FLORE:'\C E
\:&gt;\DR E.\SE.\.
Srnt a . .\'}

106

�MUR RAY SAM UEL ATTIE
L ong Beach , N.Y.

DAV ID Z. AXEL ROD
Brook ly n, N Y.

ROSE I. BAR '\L
Bro11x, .\ '. l' .

FRED ERJC K JOH: \ BALL J:\'G
Nimm on iburg, N .Y .

ENID JANE BARA X
White sto11e, N .Y.

L W \LTE R B.\ T \:"\
Bloom111d1111 f!. x .r

LARR Y DANA B:\R.:'\ES
Jame1to1t·n , S .Y .

107

B:\RB.\R.\ T BA UE R
W olcott, .\ ' r

�LARRY G. BEALL
Johnson Cit)', X. }'.

:-.tIRTA:'-.1 C.\R:'\fE:\' R..\l'l~R
/l ato Rey, Puerto Rico

:--t! C HAEL E. BLl&gt;iTCK
Bellroie, .V r.

CYXTl!IA SL'E BL.\KE
S 11yder, .\'. }'

WALLACE A. ROTJIXER

IIELE&gt;i MARY BOll:-..iER
Pou(!hAapsze, X }'

Fitchbur~.

108

M as&lt;.

�SONYA I.EE BROCK STE IX
Patchog ue. X. r .

RITA DORIS BOXER
New York. N.Y.

LINDA ST. JOHN
BROCK INGTO '\'
F reeville, N. l '.

BR UCE LESLIE

P!\TRIC I.\ A:\'N BRL'CH ER
lliglilaru l, N .Y .

BRO\'\' ~

W hltesto11e, .I\ '. Y.

KATHR YN BCRDI CK
Brockpor t . .\ ' }'.

ED\\ ' \RO CrCO'\: \ EI .I.

RONAL D \\'.\ Y:\'E BL'LLO CK
Oxford, N.l'.

IlL'RKE
Spacu•r . X Y

109

�63
C HARLES S. BUTLER
Binghamt on, N.Y.

MARY ELLEN BUR:'\S
A lexan d ria Bay, N .Y

SUE ANN CASTAL DO
M echanicii l/e, N. Y.

IRENE D. CARRAN O
B rooklyn. N.Y.

J OA:'\ E.i, \l:'\'E C HEEVER S
llrngham/011, N.Y.

C ERALD FR \:'\C IS
CE R \\'O:'\K \
llm.f!/•amtorz. ,\". }'.

110

�DE~IETRfS

\"T:\'CE:\'T

CITER RO:\'E
Bin ghamt on. S. }'.

A:\'TI 10:\Y FR.\:\ 'K
C I LLl' FFO
B roohl; n, .\' r

B COOK
S ew rorl...\ ' r

\\'ILL!\~!

JOI IN ANTI fO:\'Y C:O:\':'\f.R~
fordan . SS.

.\RTl !l"R Bf.R:\ ' \RD
COOP ER
Brool./\ 11, \ )

BFTI Y \'\'\(' OJO (;( ,!
S, 111c11 Fa , \ }

K \RE'\ CROS SE'°
,\'r:I"

r orl..

111

\ }

P.\ f'R I CI \ CTRR \ \
1/ 1111,. \'. )

�bJ

JOHN STE\\'.\RT DACEY
j oh1uo11 Cit&gt;. X Y.

A:\'TTTO:\'Y JOSEPH
D'.'\RlSTOTLE
Btn (! hamton. X .Y.

Jl.JDITH ROSED.\ \ ' EXPORT
Syrac1He, .\' l'.

EDW I:\'A KATHLEEN
DE:'-L\TTOS
Sa ra 11 ac l,a/.. e, X Y.

LOl' IS fi DE\'OE

A:\'DRE,\ IIOPE DlCK'.\fi\N
Malierne, S .Y.

llt1111b1n (!, .\ '. }'.

11 2

�\'\'ALTE R FDWAR D DOY LE

JUD ITH B. DO:'\:'\ER

We 1ttou n . 1\'.Y

X eU' }'o rk , N.Y.

SHELDO '.\' S. EDIS0:-.1
M o nticello, N .Y.

?. !:\RY RE:'\.\ FIELD
li 'r1t Hn11 /1&lt;/ead . •\'. }'

ELLEX

~ !.

EPPOLI TO

M onroe, N.Y .

WI LLI.\ \ ! FO X
Brook / 11 .Y l' .

113

K.\RE:\' JE.\:\' FERRI S
S)'Ta CU IC, N .Y .

FREDER I C K '\El.SO' \

!!Um

8 tni:l·ai t '" \ ' l

�ROBERT D. FRIED:\1.AN
L oni[ l slarid Crly, N. l'.

SYIXL\ FL R~fA:'\
H ampton BayJ, ,\'.l'.

JOYCE .\D.\ C.\LL.\:'\T
TicorideMga . .\'. r.

FRA:'\K BER:'\.\RD GL'CCK
Far Hockau.·a&gt;, .\'. L

~fICHAEL

\L.\:'\ C:.\Pf:'\
BrooJ./yri. ,\ ' J'.

PAt;L H. GOLD
Yonl.en, ,\' l'

114

�D IANA GOLDBE RG
H empstead, S.Y.

MICHAE L NOR~IAN
GORDO:' \

RONALD

J. GOLD ITCH

New Y ork, N.Y.

Brookl;n, J\-.Y.

MICHAE L LA WRE'.'!CE
GREENBE RG
Brookl;n, N.Y.

Brookly11, N.Y.

CHARLES WITTER GREENE
Adam i Cmtrr. X.l'.

MARTIN EDWARD
GOLOM.-\ ).'

FORREST CHARLES
GREE:\S L\DE
Ve ital, .\'.l'.

115

11.-\LPER I:\
Brooklyn ..\' r

~1l C Tl.t\ El.

�.TE:\':\ \f.\Xf'\E 11.\\IBl"RC:
Se« }',,,f.. .\' l'.

VI 11.\\.!\fERRF.C K
n rn~ham/011 .\' }'

.\I..\:\ ROCER II \RT\1.\:'\

Joh111on City . .\ '

TRC\L\:\' ,\ S \ 11.\RTSll OR:'\

r.

l.eb tlllOll .\'. }"

.JOEL HECKER
RrooJ..I; II .

.\' .

\1ARTll \ ELlZ.\llETII
HESSE R

r.

L o11do111'1ile, .\'. l'.

116

�CR \CE F I tOn!EYER

CLATRE A:\':\'E HESTER
Bayport.,\' l'.

X ew l'orl.. .\'. Y.

STE\'E:\' AXDREW
IIOFF:--.fA:'\
New Y ork . .V.Y.

D \\'ID .\I.DO:'\

ROBERT \\'.\RD HOPPS

Ill ..fTl.ESTOX

/:'11d1cotl. .\' l'.

(. r//a11d . .\ }'

CY:'\TIIT \ \:'\\" JOll:'\'iO:\'
Porll·i/lr, S . l'.

\ 11&lt; 11 \ F. I .I \\ K \ 1.T FR

E\'ELY'-: \L\I \ j.\:'\SEX

/l10"1./

Se/kill•. ,\' l'

11 7

I

\

)

�ANDREA

BARRY !v!TCJIAEL KARSON

J. KARPAS

Baldu•in, N.Y.

Brooklyn, N. Y .

THOMAS EUGENE KASMER
Bin![hamton, N.Y.

KAREN KA UFF:\1Ai'\
M 1dd/etou11, .\'.Y.

MARILYN A. KELLY
Jl'anlaf:h, ,\'.Y.

JOEL D KELD1':\:\'
BrooU) n . .\' } .

118

�GEORGE :-.I. KESTER
Binghamton, N.Y.

SHELDOX I. KREBS
I.aurelton , J\'.Y.

FELYCI.\
KCCil:'\I.\

~L\RGARET

EUGENE DA \'JD KLI:\E
Jlud son, N r.

PAUL RICHARD KLA:-.fER
R oslyn, N.Y.

XALLIPALA\'A~f

KRTSHXAX

Siianmalai. South India

~L\Rll.Y:\

KL'KER

Ma1rnpeq11a, ,\' Y

II emp1trad . .\' }'

119

SHF.PIL-\RD L.\'-."E
.\'rpon&lt;it. \' l'.

�MARGARET LOlJ ISE LANN
Se/kiri., N.Y.

PETER LA WNER
Neu· Y o ri•. N .Y.

l~b3
MICHAEL ALFRED
LEICllTLIA"(;
1Yew r orJ. ..\ ' l '.

CAROL .TEA:\\' LEFSON
l\'wf!nra Fallr, N . Y .

WILLTA).! CAREY LEWIS
Ogdenjburg . .\ ' l'.

A:\':'\E E LEW IS
Cornmiz, X }'

120

�JA\lE S F.

I l:'\D:\ \:\:'\ LI:\D
R ork Ta 1111 .\ r .

u:--ro

Jamestown, N.Y.

SUSA :'\:\E D. LIND
N eu R ochell e, ,\'. l'.

JA\1E S ED\\' .\RD
LlJX D\.RE X

Saral of!.a Spnn( !1. X

ROBE RT P:\L' L LOO \flS
Cortla 11d, .\' l'

D \:\TE LL \f.\C IOL

U trca . .\' }.

r.
12 1

ROB F R I J .\\IF S I.ORD
f:'rzd1c ol/ .\'

r

RO BLR I l.Ol I'-&gt; \I \DI I I
.\"1 r I. \' )

�ROSWITIIA :\fARSHALL
Oneonta, N Y .

GEORGE A. MAGER
Brantingham, .\'.L

COLD: :\lrKIRDY
End1Cott. N.Y.

RI CIL\RD EVA.'\S
:\kLAUGHLTN
M ontrose, Penna.

JERRY LOUT SE :\ff LL ER
] ames tou·n. N.Y.

BER:'\:\RD L. :\lEYERS
Bi11glramto11. X. Y.

122

�STEV EN M. MIR IN
North W oodme r e, N.Y.

PAME LA A:\'N i\fOH R
North port, N .Y .

JUDl TH LOUI SE
:\fOX KOYI C
Bingh amton . N. Y .

MARY ANN MIRU SKI
Auburn, S .Y.

JOAN E. :\!TSS .\LL
lrar:l'ick. ,\' Y

BO:\J TA LEE :MOL LICON E
Schen ectady , /\'.l'.

PATR ICIA ].\:&gt;;I CE ;\fOO RE
Canto n. N .Y.

123

,J O HX R \ Y\10' \'D \fl SHOC K
!Jin~lwmt on \'.} .

�:.\!EL VY:\' .\"O\'EGROD
Brooklyn, .\'.J'.

lRA Sl!ELDO:\ :\E\·\':-- IAN
Rockz-11/e Centre, N. r.

JOI!.\" FR:\:\C IS o·:-.rn.\ R:\

THERESA J.\'.'&lt;E O:\OR.\TO
Schenectady, i\'. Y.

Delmar . .\'. r.

PE1 ER .\ OR:\'STEf.\"

EO\\',\RD L. PEl.LI CC fOTTr
ll111f,!haml o11, .V. Y.

F/111ht1.f!.. ,\',}',

124

�JA\ ' IER I Pl'\LL

JA:\IES ED\\'.\R D PERELL .\
Bingham ton.

11 mul1m

s.r.

( .I

ROBERT PERRY
Brooklyn , N.Y.

L.\l.JRE '\ H PI.ff! Kl'\
BrooAI, n . .\'. L

C.\ROl.I :'\F. I.Ol.'ISE
PITCIIE R
8111 ~/iamlon

.\'

r

BRCC E PRI rIKI'\
Br ooU;n. ,. }

\RLl'\F \f R \Pl I.\~ 1.50:\
llw ·hnt· 1 11 ,, . r

ROBERT PRICE
Brool.l) n . .\" Y.

125

�NATALIE ROSE~HECK
1\"eu Y ork, N.Y .

LI:\'DA SUE ROSEFSKY
Binghamton , N .Y.

CIIARLES WlLLIAM ROSS
Hopeu·ell Junction, N.Y .

MARK J OSEPH ROTH
Teaneck, N.].

l~
STEPHE'.\" BARRY SALTZ
Binghamto11. S.l'.

C.\ROLE J.\:\'E ROC'.\"DS
R in.~hamton . .\" r

126

�SA:\'DER S
Brooklyn, ;\'. F.

~1URIEL

EDWARD SASLOW
Bright1rnte rs, X . Y .

RI C HARD STL' ART
SCI!E I:\"GOLD
8 rookly11 . .\'.1'.

NANCY B. SAX
/\'ew l'ork, X .J' .

HASKELL J .\Y SEYMOt: R
Bi11J! hamton, /I.'. Y .

MICHAE L BARRY S.\L'I.
l'o11ken . .\ ' }'

oo:--;AI.D ED\\'ARD S IEYERT
Broo!. IJ n . .\' }'

127

P\l' L RICIJ\RD SJ~l\'\'DLE
Brn /:an ton ,\'. }'

�MARII.Y:-1 L.

JOI!:\' C. SLOCC\1

~-L\RJORlE

\\'

S~1ITll

lla1t M oriclies, N Y

Bin?.ham/011, N.Y.

LEO;\ARD ALA:\' S::\YDER

S~llTH

Ballston Spa, N.Y.

Endicott.,\'. Y.

l
ELTZ.'\BETH COLELLI
STAXLEY

lll"C:ll \\' \ Y'\"E
·p \:\'GE:\'BF.RI.
1'011 ferl'is . .\" r.

Vestal,/\'. Y.

128

�HENR Y ]. STARK
Yonkers, N.Y.

JACK HOWA RD STAN LEY
Vestal, N.Y.

NORM AN H . STARLE R
Ossininl{, N.Y.

SHIRL EY DEXT ER STEV ENS
Mexico, N.Y.

MARI E STEPH ENSO N
A von, N .Y .

ALLAN E. SUCH INSKY
Kenmore, N.Y.

129

GARR IE FLOY D STEVE NS
Orwell, N.Y .

BETH A. SUMM ER
L ong !Jlarid City, N.Y.

�ROBERT A. THOMPSON
Mt. M orris, N.Y.

EDWARD C. TAYLOR
M attituck, N.Y.

MARTI:-\ LEWIS THRONE
New R ochelle, N.Y.

]

PATRICIA ANN TREMBATH
Syracuse, N.Y.

EDWARD JOSEPH
VANDERBECK
Binl{hamton, N.Y.

RICHARD E. ULRICH
H olbrook, N.Y.

130

�GRETCHE N A!\N
VAN KUREN
Binghamton , N.Y.

THO:'v!AS FRA..'\CIS VILL
Binghamton , N. Y.

RICHARD WILLIAM
WALLACE
S carsdale. N.Y.

ALLE:\l WALD::\!AN
New Y ork, N.Y.

CAROL A.."iN WALKER
West Hempstead, N.Y.

RUBIN WALD
New Y ork, N.Y.

l\!ARl0:-.1 G WA::-;DELT
Hudso11, .\'.Y .

131

EDWARD HE:-\RY WEISMAN
East R ocka1rny, N.Y.

�LAURA WEISSENBERG

MELFORD STEPHEN WEISS

Bmghamton, N.Y.

Brooklyn, N.Y.

LAURITA EVELYN
WHITFORD

PAUL C. WHITE
Greene, N.Y.

Friendship, N.Y.

YVONNE C. YANCY
New York , N.Y.

PATRICIA OLGA WOYTEW
Binghamton, N.Y.

132

�L.\RRY (; BE.\L I f. •nt·mtC.I
Golr Team, Captain Goliards, \ 1&lt;T-Prc·,icl&lt;·nt.
\/athr111ntu1
CY~Tlll \ SL'E BL.\Kl·.
De-an\ List, ll'ho\ ri·;,,.. DraiionScK itt\, Dt•.u1\
Commissio n, Frest1man Onentauon Ch.1irma11,
Colonist. Editor-in C'h1cf, St·111or Sc·cuon Lditor:
S1udt·n1 Puhltcauo n' Board ln tr.11nural "'"1mm1nll . \ "ollcyball. Spnni: Re\'lt'\\, "\t·\\ 111.tn
Club. Stuclt•11t Cou11,t'lo1
"1110\I \ S Bl.\ZE)
\I !Cl I \EL E Bl.I 'i! C K l'oht1wl .~m1111
Stuclt"lll \ ch·isor. Colonial "'"'"· C'la1t·1Hlon.
Radio \\'orkshop . Y oun~ Dt•111011ats . .) &lt;"""h
Fellowship .

BARRY R . ZIRKIN
Bayside, N .Y .
:-..IEL\"1:\ ROY \110 \fothr111at1c.1
Dt·.rn ·s Ltst Lr lla11rero11 Gmt1/110111111r: Liiiht

ChOJUS.

HELL.:\ \I \RY BOll\ILR l's1tl1olol(.1
Dean 's List, '.\1 oclc·rn D a n ('~ Group: (;,·rman
Cluh: Outinii Club.
\\' \LL.\CE .\ . BOTH:\l. R C:rol9~&gt;
D&lt;'an \ L1s1: \ arsll1 S" immm!{, I'&lt;•110is. lmramural Foothall. Basketball , Softball Goltards.
P resid ent. Srnrlent Counselor
RIT \ DORIS BO"\.ER Ornmn
Dean\ List, Clarendon . Colonial Pla\'crs \ "ice·
President: Sprinii Rt·vut. Di rectot. \l ockrn
Dance Group; Pro!{rcssi\'t" Sot'ialist Sor1et\'.
Ci,·il Ri iih ts Club.
LJ;\I),\ s r. JOI!:\ BROCK(: \ (; ro:-..
So(lolo~1

C H \RLES .JCl.IL"S \I.BER
Grnrrnl I 1tn11t1111
Baccana
C:\ROL \:\:'\ \LBRH' HT Socwloi:1
Ot•an\ List, :"e" man Cluh.
STI Pll:\ 'ilE CL. \JRE \LU"\
Crratu·r 11"111111~
Colonial Plave rs: Canterhur v Club: Thalians:
.
l. S.C.C.

Dean's List. Coloni.tl :\t•ws, \\ R.\. Stuclc·nt
Counsc·lor , Dorm Judit'ial Board . Chairman.
Donn Council: Senior K c1 Commit!&lt;'&lt;'. C hair-

CY:'\THIA FLORE:\C E \:\DRE.\ S E:\
Gmrrnl Lllan/1111
Colonial Pia ,·crs. 011 lh' 7 ou·n; l ,,,,11(( 111111 I.ma.
f .r Ro11r11ro11 Gr11/1/lw111111r; Choru,. \lad rili(al
Siniicrs.
R IC'll \RD L. \:'\EClll \RICO

BRl'CE LESLIE BRO\\':\ 1'11rltnlog.1
H ono1 Roll. Dean's List , USG C:onsti1tn1onal
Comm11lc c. Chairman , \ .1rs1l\ Swimmrnii .
Colonial Plavcrs, Odean Soci&lt;"t'· Prc,iclmt;
Ci,il Riiiht' C:luh.

f~11el1&gt;h f .1tnat111r

).lL' RR.\ Y S.\\-1L EL \TTI E /11•,/o~1
Hrd(ll, Dion"sian Soc1&lt;'l': l SC C: . Dorm
.Judicia rv
DA\ 10 Z. \XELROD B10loi:1
Dean 's List : l n1r.1mural Basketball . Foot ball.
Softball : .Jewish Fellowship : Oionvs1an Society;
Dorm Governme nt
L. WALTER BAJ AN Soc1olog)'
Dean's List : Studt'nt Counselor
ALAN BAKER
FREDERI CK JOHN BALLING
Gtnanl L1laalurt
Sophomore Class President ; Intramural Basket·
ball ; Mtdra. Adelphi.
ROSE I. BA RA L En1?.f1.1h L11nnt11rr
Dean's List, Convocatio ns Committee : Proiir&lt;'ssi"e Socialist Socict,, C i"il Riiihts Club
E'.'llD J..\N E B.\R .\X l'.11cholog1
Student Ad,·1sor, J ewish Fdlowship . \ "ic&lt;'-President. Pandorans. Prcs1dt•n1.

LARRY DA:\A BAR:'\ES P.1rrholol(.1
Dean\ Lisi : Debate Socict y
BARBAR, \ J. H.. \ UE R German
Dean 's Li&lt;1 ; German Club.
).1JRIA\1 C.\R\-I E.:\ 13·\l"ER
En!!,llJh f.11rrat11rr
Dean's List; Modern Dance Group: German
Club, Spa nish C'lub: Dorm Council. Senior
Ke) Commlltcc .

rnan

SO:\Y.\ LEE BROCKST EI:'\
t·n~l11h I 1/o&lt;Jl11rr
Dean\ List. f:o lon1al :'\t'"'· Rnnll&lt;' Ldnor:
Clart'ndon . I larpoon: \1 o d&lt;•rn Dann· (,roup:
Donn C:ounc·il

tc'ou11tmi:
PATRIC!. \ .\NN BRUCllE R
RO"I \LD \II A Y'\J S BL' LLOCK 'inc111loi:r
K.\THRY :\ BURDI C K .1ccou11111111
Ca."andran s, l.S.C.C.
ED\\' \RD O"CO'l:\'E LL BURKF.
Pohtu11I SC1ma
Varsrtv Cross Countrv: Newman C lub. lTK,
President : 1.S C.C
MARY ELLF.N BU R2'.'S 810/ot:r
Chemistn Club. Outrnii Club: Protestant h:llowship
C llARLES S. BUTLER B zoloi:1
Intramura l Footba ll. Basketba ll, Softball.
Spanish Club: Baccacia, President. I.S.C:.C:.
IRENE D CARRA:' \0 Frmrh f .11m11111r
Harpoon; "\ewman Club, Pandorans . I S.C.C.
ROBERT CARTE R
'UE ANN CAST \LDO 'iocwloi:r
Jumor Class Secrctarv, :\'t'wman Club; Choru5.
GER,\LD FRANCIS CERWON KA
Crrm11n l.1lrrn/11rr
Dean's List , Pintopplcrs, President. :\c"man
Club : c:oliards.
JO.\.:\ EL \l:'\E C HEE\'ERS ,l rl H11ton
Dean's List ; Who".1 Who. Dra'l'on Society, Harpoon, Colonial Pla vers, Rad io Wo rkshop.
Founder, President, Ouun~ Club. :\ewman
Club , Chorus; Gallen Comrrntte&lt;'
DE\-1ETR IS \ 'J NCf. NT C HERRO:"i f.
'io(la/ Scuna

133

\"aNt' Bask.. 1hall B.H'cad.1
\:\111 0 "\) IR\"\K CILL L' FFO
\ /athrm11/1cs

Studc·nt .Jud1cran. Int ramural Ba,kt·tball, Softball. "\c\\man Club. \PO l \l."
BE !TY \ "\ "\ COi OGGI / ,,,, 1111en
Dt·an s L1't, ( oloni.tl PlaH·r-, '\c\\111an Club.
S111ck nt C:oumdor
JOll "\ \ "\ 1110 '\ Y CO:\ "\I RS &lt;:,o/nfil
Dean' I.isl, "\t''' m.rn Club, \PO
\\'ll.11\\1 B. COOi\.

Gmlo~1

\RI ll LR BLR"\ \RD C:OOPLR
F1tel111t l,11, •nt11rr

Drai:nn '\m 1ct 1, C:oloni't. Ed11nr-1n-C:h1er;
Pro.!{rt"Ssi'"" Sonalist Society

.JOll:\ C:O"\.
K \RL;\" CROSS!·.: \ Crrman
Dt•an's List; Draiion Son&lt;'t\: Colomst, \n
Editor Clan·ndon . \rt Editor, Student Pubhcauons Board. J a11 Socrt't\'. Cc•1man Club,
Presid&lt;'nt : l'rnl{rcss1ve Socialist Sont't\: Calkrv
.
Commlltt't '
\\I LL I. \~1 CC:\;\ I '\G 11,\\I

PATR I CJ \ C: LR R \N Grnrrnl l,tttratwr
Colo111.1l "\c''"· Ad\'t"ftismg '.\lanal{&lt;'r; Colon1st,
WR .\

JOii '\ STE\\ \RT DACEY

S"'"'' Sc1r11&lt;r

Colonist. '\t"1vman Club, P rc'1dC"nt. Bact.icia.

.\:'\TllO"\\ Y JOSEPH IY \RlSTOTL I
\lnthmrnlus
D&lt;'an \ List: \' a r~it y Ba~kt·t b&lt;tll, Coh,1rds.
\ltttl1r111nt10
Dt·an 's I.1st, Stucknt .\ thrsor; :\latlwmati c;
Son&lt;•t\, Young Republican s. St u&lt;kn t Chrntian

JL"Dl lH R()SE l l.\\"E:\PO RI

.\ i,;.,&lt;;onat1on.

JA'.\IES D \Y
ED\\I'\".\ K .\ Tl!LEE:\

nr::-..1.\lros

\latltt11111t1r.1

\\'R \ P intopple", :\ewman
Donn Jud icial Board
LOL'IS B DE\"OE
Young Republican s .

Club. Band:

P11lrtual Samu

A'\DRE.\ ll OPE DICK~1..\:'ll Fw1rl1
Pud P1ptr. l/rw/iln Jzir Our \'1dr; \1 ockrn D.1nc&lt;'
Group, Frenr h Club, .Jewish Fd lnwship. l'andorans

JLD ll H H DO"\'\ER F11mi:11I11m1t11rr
Dt&gt;an\ List Colu111.1I Pla \'c·is. \lodt·rn D,tnn·
Group: P1o~n·ssl\·t· Son.dist Sont·t,. Ci,il
Right s Club, Student Jucl it'i.11 Board
\\ \Ll'ER Lil \\ \RD DOYLE
Fr11~!t1h l .1/nalurr

[./ /Jn111ern&lt; Gcn111/w1111nr. 'itudt"nt J udrt·ial Bo.trd.
Ch1t"f Jusucr
LI '\I&gt;.\ Dl ' 'i "\I"\(;
S iii.i.DO"\ S. LDISO'\ 1'11!tl1m1 St1m,
Dt"a n \ List, C:olo111Sl. Sp orts Ecl1101. Colunial
'\e"'· Sporh Editor. l n tr,1mur .d B.tskrtl~11l,
&lt;;oftball, Croloii' Club. \PO. Dor111.J11d1.ial
Board, Ch1d .Justin·
ELLI·.'\ ).1 EPPOl.I l"O l'oltt1MI \ru11&lt;r
Honor Roll, l)('an·s List . Colon1.rl "\c·\\s. """''
Editor, Folkd.tncc ( :l11 b.
K \RI '\ .J E \ '\ 1 LR RI-.; \'owfo1;1
\\"RA . S\'ll&lt;"h ron1;ed S1,11111nmg , \kthodist
Studt·m Ft·llowsh1p Studt"nt Coumt•lor, Dorm
J ud1cral Board

�\1.\R\ RI.'\\ HELD lliolof!.1
De-an' Ll\t Colonist. Colonial Plaver;, Sno"
Quct'n
\\ILL! •\,\1 !'O X //111m1
USG, Public Rclatio"' C:o1t1mlltcc, lmranrnr,il
hxnball, l'intoppkrs, Jewish l·&lt;·llo"ship
I R EDhRIC'K NELSO'.'l I R,\DY
·111tl1T1Jf'o/o~1

Dtan" 1.1\t Colonial Plawr,,
BE:\ I R.\NKLI.'\

ROBJ:RT D FRIEJ)\1,\N //11/ori•
Dral(&lt;lll ~0&lt;·1cl\', Frc·shman Class President. Jn.
tr.un111al Football, Basketball, Ja11. Soc1t·tv,
Rine Club, \ dclph1, \'1n· -Prcs1dent. Studcm
Coun,&lt;:Jor
S YL\ ' I \ FUR:'l.IA:\' /J111lnf?.1
H arpoon; WRA ; Folkdance Club; Donn
Council.
JOYCE \I)\ GAL LA:\' I Gmrrnl I.1trraturr
Pandor,1ns. l.S C.C
\llC:ll \LI. \!..\:\' (:.\Pl:\
\'arslly Son&lt;·r, .\ dtlphi

Gro~rnph1

FR,\;'l;K BER'\ \RD GI.L'CK Rwlo!f.r
Intramural Football, Baskt•tball, lmcrnational
Relations Club, Ocleans.

P \CL II (,()LO ~0&lt;111lof!,1
Studt"nt \ dV1so1. Orient,11ion Commiute. Intramural Fomball. Baskt'tball, 'ioftball, SOS,
Equerry, Dorm Judicial Board.
(; 0 I. I) BERG Socwlot!,r
USC, Src1&lt;·tarv, Rcpn'sc:mati,·c, Pandorans.
RO'\' \l.D .J (;01.DITCI I ll1mnrss-E&lt;onoT111&lt;1
l'SG. Rcprt·"·ntativc, Clarendon. Busint''-S
:-01anal(t'r, I l,1rpoon, Managinl( Editor; Student
Publications Board; \ ';11sil&gt; Baseball; P1 mop
piers; D ehall· Team, ,\ cklphi; Dor m Judicial
Boa1d, Chief Justice
\I \R 11'\' t:D\\.\R[) COl.D:-01 \'\"
DI •\:\ \

\/,1thr1•111t10

ll onm Roll. lkan 's L1s1, Od&lt;·ans
:-OllCllALL '\'OR:-01.\N GORDO:'\
l'u'111m/ Snmrr

Ocle,rns, l.S.C:.C
\ll C ll \I.I. L.\ \\RE:\' C r. CREE:\' BER(;
Rwlol(&gt;

Dean's L"t, Who's Who, Sophomore C:la'-'&gt;
President, \ ',11"t' Basketball, Co-Captain,
\ 'arsll) B.isehall; Spnnii Revue, \dclphi.

:-01 \RTll \ ELIZABL 111 II ESSER Bwlol!,1
Dl"an 's List. Chorus. Li~ht Chorn&gt;
CL\IRL \:\':\' E lltSI FR Spnni&lt;h
Colonist, I.avout r,dllOI. t:hnrw., tS,1nd, Lu~ht
Chorus: Stucl&lt;"lll Coun&gt;t:lm
STE\'E:\ \'\DRE\\ 11 0 1 F\1 \:\'
Pulitual \'oa1t&lt;
Honor R oll, Dean's List 11'/J,,'s ll'ho, De,1n\
Commi,&gt;1011, C:olomal \"t·w&gt;. l·ca1u1e J·:dllor,
Editor-in-Ch id, Chorus, Lii;:ht Chorus, Interna1ional Relauons Club. Dionysians.
CR.\ CE I llOFMEYER
Student Judil·ial Board
ROBER

r

\\',\RD HOPP..,

E11g'1sh L11rmtmr
Ero11om10

DA \'ID .\I.DO:\' 111..iT I L!Sl'C)'\
\fathrmntus

Dragon Soci(·ty: \'ars11y Sw11nming: Pintop·
piers: :-01ath Club Student Christian Associa·
tion, President
E\'LLY'\ \1,:-01 \ J.\ '\SI~;\' ~·o 10/010
Colonist, Pandorans, Dorm .J udicial Board,
Student Coumclor.
J O H:./ JENKl:-IS
ALL E:\' JOI I '\ SO:\'
CY:\'THI \ \:\':'\ JOH:\'SO:\' \fu.11c
DC"an's LISI Chorus. L1gh1 Chorus, :-Olacln!(al
Singers.
MIC H.\EL J \ Y K.\L FER Cmmil L11m1t11rr
1larpoon, Colonist, Literar\ Edito1; Intramural
Football. Basketball, Dionvs1ans, Prc-s1dcnt,
\'ice-President, I.S.C.C., Dorm Co,·ernmcnt
H ELE:\' L KAPL\:\'
A:\'DRE,\ J. KARPAS .lrt lliJtnr;
Dean \ List, Who's Who; Dragon Society; USC.
Apartme nt Commiuci-; Studem Advisor:
Campus Carnival; Colonist, \ ssocia1c Editor;
Colonial Players: Tnn11~lt &lt;nth 11 Tins/: fir/lo
from Brrthn, Riding Club, Ci,il Rights Club,
Callcrv Commiuee, Chairman
BARRY MI C ll.\EL K,\RSO:\'

KAREN KAUFFMAN
JOEL D. KELLMA N Polit1ml S"met
Int ramural Basketball, Soft ball ; Baccacia;
l.S.C.C.

FORRES I C' ll \RLES GREE:\'SL.\DE

MARILY ' ;\ KELLY llHtor)
Dean's List; Who's Who; USG Secretary, Representative, Cafeteria Committee. Student
Publications Board : Pandorans; l. S.C.C.,
Chairman.

Dean's List, l.JSG, \ 'in•- Prcsicknt; Intramural
Basketball. C:oliards.
:O.ll C ll \EL 11.\LPERI'.'\ //111m
Intramural I ootball, Ba~ketball. SOS. Chancellor, Equcrrv
JENN :-01 \XI NE Ht\:O.IB URCGtntra/ L1ttraturt

D ean's List; Whn's Who, Dral(on Society. Thr
Pud P1prr; l hr I nm111g oj thr Shrru·: Sprin~ Re,·1cw. C'horcol(rapher.
\I II \\l\IERBECK \ lntlumntus
Deans l,1st GC"rm;\n Club: \lath Club, Pm
topplcrs. l'andorans.
Rl Cll \RD 11 :\:\'EY
\L.\ '\ RO(;E R HARTM \;\; l&lt;co11nt111~
Frack, Intramural Football, Basketball:
P111topplt•rs. Baccac1a

GEORGE M. KESTER Frrn&lt;h
Dean's List, Student Advisor: Student Center
Board: Radio Workshop.
KE:'llNET ll KINNA
PAUL RIC HARD KI.AMER
En~llsh

L1trrnturr

Clarendon, Gallery Comm iucc.
EliCE'.'\E D \\'ID KLINE 1ccn11ntm11
Dragon Societv, Colonial '\'ews, Sports Editor;
Varsity Tennis, Chorus, J ewish Fellowship,
Baccacia, Prcsicknt: Dorm Government.
MARTHA KLIONSKY

\ 'a~ll\

JOYCE KONECNY

fRl \1 \'\" \ S \ H \R f'SI IO R '\ Cw~rnph1
Dean·, Lm l 'SG, Elecuon., Commiut·e. Band

S HELDO:\' I KREBS Politunl Scima
Dean's List. USC Rcprescma11ve, Executive
CommillCt', Colonial Plavers. Enstwnrd Ho, Ir

IRE:"!E II \ ZILL.\

Hour~to11

JOEL llEC'KER Politual 'ioma
l)e;m ·, L"t · Dion' s1ans.

/fo111r1

Dean's Commission: \\'RA, l'andorans, \ in··
President, I '&gt;.C: C.; Dorm Council.
:-OL\RIL\ '\ Kl KER I.n11~1111~t1
Dean·, L1s1. Draflon Soc1c1'. Colonial :\'cw'
Colonist, Cl.11t·ndon. Student \ ch1sor: \\'R.\,
Radio \\'oi kshop, Jc"ish Fcllow,,hip
S HEPll ARD L1\i\'E Ecom1111ui
International Rt·latwns Club; Odcans, Dorm
Government
:-01.\ RG.\RE I LOU ISE I..\'\\" llumnmtlf&lt;
Dean's List. h1lk Dance Club, Protc&gt;tant Fd·
low hip.
PETER L .\ \\:\' ER .'111thropulof!.1
USC Reprcs!'mati\'c, \'arsitv Tt·nni'; TTK
C. \ROL JL \'\" LEI 50\" ~"c111l"f!.I
Dean's List. Coloni.d Pl&lt;1w". On tlu J ·11..
\llCll.\Ll. \I.I RED LE IClll l.1:'1.G
l/1stuq

USC Public Rt·latwn' Comn111lt'l', Chairman,
Student \ dvi,01; \'arsity '-)\,11111111ns;:; Intramural Football, Odcam. Cl(!\ \fan
\:\':\'E E

LL\\ IS

Frr11&lt;h

\.\'ILLl1\:-01 C.\Rt:Y LE\\ IS Chnmstr1
Dragon !:&gt;oncts, \'arsll' Irack, Student Cemt·1
Hoard, Chenustn Club. i\ PO. Swdent Counsl•lor.
J .\MES I

LI.\' D

Chan1St11

LI :\'DA •\:\'

LIND A rt /11110'1
Dean's List, Nn"man Club: Pandorans. C:alkry Commiut•c; Dorm Counnl, Student
Counselor.
SUSANNE I) LI ND Poht1ml S(lrna
Honor Roll. Dt•an's List; German Club. Youns::
Democrats, Dorm Council.
ROBERT P,\UL LOO MI S Mathtma/10
Dean's List, \'arsit\' Basketball, Jlllramural
Football, Goliards .

Po/1/unl S(lma

Colonist; Intra mural Football, Basketball : Pin·
topplcrs, Riding Club; Jewish Fellowship,
Odeans.
THO:-Olt\S EUCE:'\E K.\ S:-OIER Phrun
Dean's List

C ll \RI.ES \\'ITTER (; REE, E Crolnl!,.1
Intramural Footb,111. Ba•kctball, Softball, Gt·ol01!" Club; ..,k, Club; rt K
810/u/(1

\'arsit\ Sol'Cl'r Debate Club: Student Judicial
Board
:-01.\RG.\R E'l I ELYC! \ KL C:l l:\'l.\ -

Gmtilhommr.

NALLIPALAYAN KRIS HNANPo'111cnl Soma

ROB ERT JAMES LORD
Goliards.

Cht1111strr

EI.N INA l.UIZZ I
JA :-01 ES EDWARD LU.:'&lt;DGRE:-.:
Colonial News, .\PO.
DANIEL I.. MAC IOL
German Cub.

:laount11111

.\1nthrmntu,

ROBERT LEWI S Mt\D b LL \lathrmat1n
I lonor Roll, Dean's List; USG R&lt;'presentall\'C.
\'arsity Sw11nm111g, Captain, Ci"il Right&gt; Club.
GEORGE A Mt\CER
Goliards.

llirtor1

ROS\V ITll:\ MARSHALL
Chorus, Li~hl Chorus.

llumn111tus

COLIN McKIRDY - £n~/1Sh I.1ttrnlurt
Cantcrbun Club, German Club, President,
SOS, \ 'ict·-Cbancellor; l.S.C.C
RI CH ARD EVANS McLAUGllLINAcco11111111g

Dean's List.
BERNARD L MEYERS
Adelphi.

So(lo/oP,1

JERRY LOUISE :-011LLER
C:assandrans.

Gmtrnl L11trnt11rr

ST EVE ' M MI RI N 81oiogy
Colonial ;'\ews, Intramural Basketball, Basb.-.11;
Adelphi, I SC.C., StudentJudicial Board.
MARY A:-\'.'\ :&gt;.tlRt.:SKI £11~/uh Llltrnturr
Colonist. Newman Club, Student Counselor.
JOAN E. M ISSALL /,a11~11n~ts
Dean's List; Spanish Club
P:\:&gt;.IELt\ '\ NN :-01011R

German

�Dean\ List , Synchroni7 ed Swimm1111(: German
Club. Student Coun,clor
BO:'\lTA LEE :'\101.LIC O:'\E Chem11tr1
Dean \ List, Student .\clv1sor: Pinwpplers:
:\'ewman Club. Chcm1s1n Club. Pn-,,idcnl
JUDJ'l ll LO L ISE :&gt;- IONKO'. IC: Sonolof!,)
Dean\ List. Chorm
PATRIC! \ J \:'\ICE :&gt;-.IOORE \/athmwt1&lt;J
Dean's List : Junior Class \ 'iu·-Presick nt, L.:SG
Cafeteria Com mitt&lt;'&lt;': s, nchronm·cl Swimnung.
l«uu11tm£!
JO I! :\ RAY\10:' \D :&gt;-It..:S ll OC:K
Dean's List, Colonial :\'ews. Busint'ss :&gt;-!anal.(t'r
IR.-\ Sl!ELDO: '\ :\E\\';&gt;-1 \:'\ l'obt1&lt;nl fomu
Dean's List , \ 'arsit\ Tennis; Dt'batc Soe1&lt;'l'"
\ 'icc- P1csidc·111. Odeans.
:&gt;-IEL \ ' Y:'\ :'\O\'t(; ROD 8tolol{1
Dean's List . Dion\'sians : Dorm Govcrnnw nl.
President
CONST,\:-I C:E OLDS
JOI I:'\ FR \:-/CIS O':'\ IEAR.\ (du£!raph1
\'arsnv Soccer. Captain, lntram111al football.
Basketball. w1n11ninl.(: Oullnl( Club: Ski C:lub:
:'\e"ma n Club. \'in.•-Presi dent. I rK. \ 1ecP1t's1den1. I S.C ('
THERESA J:\:-IE O:\'ORAT O ltnltar1
Student \dnsor. Colonist. :'\c·wman Club:
Student Counselo1
PETER :\ OR.:"STEI :\' P11cholol{1
Civil R11~h1s Club: D1011vsians. Presicknt; Dom1
Govc·rnme m
ED\\' \RD L. PELLICC IOTTI P&lt;rchnloi:.1
J A~I ES

EDWARD PERELLA

ChemHtry

Coliards.
ROBERT PERRY \/athrm11t1n
Dean's List : \ 'a rsity Track , Goliards: l. S.C:.C:.:
Dorm Judicial Board
J.\\ I ER I. Pl:'\EL Pobtunl Somu
ITK
C.-\ ROLl:'\E LOli lSE PITCHER 810/of!.1
Dean's List, Outin!( Club: Band. Canterbury
Club.
LAURE:'\ H PLOTKI:' \ Econom1cJ
Dean\ List, Sprin~ Revic": Youn~ Rcpubli:ans, Adelphi, PrcsidC"nt.
RIC:II.\RD PR.-\11:'\1
ROBERT PRICE Politual Sc1ma
Dean's List , Progn·ssivc Soc·ialisl Soc-1ctv
BR UCE PRITlKI N-Accountm s:
USC Athletics Committee , Public Relations
Committe e; Intramura l Footba ll , Basketball;
Odeans.

81ology
ARLINE M . RAPllAELSO
Dean's List: WRA; Biology Cl u b: lnt emational Relations Club; Jewish Fellowship:
Thalians, P residen t.
CATHER INE R OBINSON
LINDA SUE ROSE FS KY Soaolo,f!.y
NATALIE ROSENH ECK Em1luh Lzteratuu
H onor R oll; Dean's List; Colonial News. News
E&lt;litor; Harpoon, Feature Editor.
C H ARLES WILLIAM ROSS -A ccountm~
Dean 's List; IT K .
MARK J OSEPH ROTH Gtneral Lt1uaturt
P rogressive Socialist Society.
CA R OLE JANE ROUNDS - History
Dean's List, Pandora ns.
DAV ID R USSELL
STEPHEN BARRY SALTZ - 810/ozy
Dea n's List.
MURIEL SANDERS -Soczo/oy
Stude nt Advisor; Colonist; Harpoon ; Pintop-

piers; Outing Club; Dorm Judicial Board;
Snow Queen.
EDWA RD AS LOW Politual Soma
Dean's List, Dragon Society; Colonial News;
Jewish Fellowship . President, Oionpians . Prn.1dcnt.
MICHAEL BARRY SAUL 81olog~
Dean's List ; Student Advisor ; USG Sugl(estions
and Grievances Committee ; Varsity Swimming,
()deans
NANCY B. S.\ X Grography
Dean 's List; Jewish Fellowship : Cassandran s,
President: l.S.C C., C ha irman: Dorm Council.
Dorm Judicial Board.
RICHARD STUART SC HEINGOL O
Eronormcs
Intramural Basketball , Foot ball, Dorm Government
RO="ALD SELSBY
HASKELL JAY SEYMOU R A crountms:
Dean's List; Who'.r Jl'ho; Senior Class President,
Colonial News. Business Manager ; Adelphi,
Presiden t.
DONALD EDWARD SIEVERT Phl'stcs
Dean's List; Newman Cl ub: Ouung C lub;
,\PO, President; Dorm Judicial Board.
PAU L RIC HARD S IMANDLE Accou11tm11
Dragon Society: Senior C lass Vice-Presidt&gt;nt:
J u n ior Class President; Spring and Winter
Weekend Dance C hairman; Varsitv Basketball :
Intramura l Football , Softball; Goliards, President; I.S.C.C.; King of Heans.
J O H N C. SLOCUM -EcoriomuJ
Dean's List; Colonial News.
MARI LYN L. SMITH - History
USG Treasurer, Representa tive; Student Advisor ; Colon1s1: Dorm Council; Senior Kev
Commiuee .
MARJOR IE W . S MITH Music
LEONARD ALAN SN YD ER-.~fnthrma/lrs
Intra mural footba ll , Basketball ; Goliards:
Dorm Governme nt.
H UG H WAYNE SPANGE NBERGGto.t:rnphy
Varsity Basketball : Intramural Football, Softball; Pintopplers : Coliards; l.S.C.C.
ELI ZABET H COLE LLI STA:'\LE YChmustr;
H onor Roll; Dean's List; Colonial Players:
Chemistrv Club: Pandorans
JACK H OWARD STANLEY Chtm1stry
Colonial Pia ye rs, Presidem , Vice-Presi dent:
Chemistry Club; Baccacia.
HEN RY J. STARK 81olog&gt;
Dean's List ; USC Treasurer; Spamsh Club:
Dorm Governme nt.
NORMAN II STARLER Econnmt&lt;J
Dean 's List; Colonial News, Business Manager,
Intramu r al Football, Basketball : Pintoppler s,
Spanish Club, Baccac1a; l.S .C.C.
MARIE STEPHEN SON- /11stor;
Dean's List
CARR IE FLOYD STEVENS- Phzlosoph )
Dean's List; APO ; Methodist Student hllow
ship, President.
SHIRLEY DEXTER STEVENS Mathmwtus
Dean's List; Colonial Players, WRA , Pintopplers, Methodist Student Fellowship , Thalians.
l.S.C.C.
ELIZABE TH STIEGLIT Z
ALLAN E . SUC H! SKY Polit1cal Scunu
Colonial News, Sports Editor; Radio Workshop; Young Democrats : J ewish Fdlowsh1p.

BETH :\ SUMMER

Hutory·

EDW \RO C. TAYLOR £conom1f\
\'arsitv Baseball, Intramural Football. Baskc-1ball; i nterna11on al Relations Club, Outing
Club, T \ U, President. I S.C.C. Ul'(h \Ian
ROBERT '\ . THOMPS ON
DONALD T ll ORTO'I

Geovnph&gt;'

\ IARTIN LEWIS T IIRONE-8 10/ov•
Dt&gt;an·, List : \ 'arsitv Swimmmg ; Intramura l
Football, Ba•k&lt;'tball, Odeans, '.'ice-Pr(";1dcn1
\\'ILLl\'.\ I TOM LI NSON
P,\ TRICI.·\ .\:'\:\' TREMB.\ TH Somlo111
Dean 's List, Colon ial News, Ne"' Lditor.
:'\1anal'(inl'( Ed11or: Chorus.
RONALD TRIPP
RI C H ARD E. U LRI C H faonom1c1
\'arsity Basketball , Swimmmg , Intramural
Basketball, Football. Goliards. Student Coun.clor
EDWARD J OSEPH \ ANDERB ECK
A«nu11t1ng
Dean\ List: Intramural Football: Uoliards
GRETCH E N :\NN VAN KUREN
General L1trrnlurr
Dean 's List; Newman Club. Cassandran s,
Light Chorus
THOMA FRA:'\C IS '.'ILL Central l.1trrnt11u
Rl.JBIN WALD

llutory•

ALLEN WA LDMAN Economm
Varsity Soccer; Intramural Basketball, Softball.
Goliards.
RICHARD WILLIAM WALLAC E
IA111(110£!ff
Dean 's List : Varsity Soccer. Spamsh Club:
Student Ch ristian Associa11on
CAROL ANN WALKER ,\/athtmntuJ
Dean's List ; Outing Club; Cassandran s.
RALP H WALKER
MARION G WA:'\ DEL f Gamn11
Band; German Club; Pandorans.
CAROL WEINWU RM
EDWARD HENRY WEISMAN GrofiraPh&gt;
Who's Who; Dra~on Society, Studmt Center
Board ; Colonial Players: Radio \\'orkshop; l n1erna1ional Relations Club; Jewish Fc-llowship,
President , Student C:ouns&lt;:'lor. Dorm GoH·rn
rnent.
MELFOR D STEP I I EN \\'EISS lltston
Dean 's List; USG Open Events Rt·gulatory
Cornmiuce ; I ntramural Football, Basketball;
Pmtopplers , Outinl'( Club. Baccacia. Pre;iclent ;
l.S.C.C.
LAURA WEISSEN BERG Pol1tiwl Sm11a
PAT WELSH
PAUL C. WHITE PhrJ1n
Vars11' Track, Student Centrr Board. \PO
LAURITA EVE LY N WlllTFOR D 810/og&gt;
WRA. Light Chorus.
PATRICIA O LGA WOYTEW
Goural l.1tna/1trt
Colonial Players.
YVONNE C YANCY Poltt1cnl Sczmrr
USG Secretary, Represen1a11ve. De,\n 's Corn·
mission, Chairman.
BARRY R. Z IR K ! '\ 81010111
Dean's List , Intramura l Basketball , Softball.
Dionys1ans.
JOH N ZSEMLYE

���COLONIAL MOTOR INN
DINI NG ROOM
&amp; COCKTAIL LOUNGE

RA 9-4901

BINGHAMTON' S FINEST ACCOMMODAT IONS
Private Tile Baths - Steam Heat
Room Phones
21 0 Rooms - Baths

3 SWIMMING

AIR CONDI T I ONING

POOL~

3 M iles West of Binghamton On Highway 17

Nearest to the Harpur Campus
Member of American Express &amp; ·Diner's Club
AAA

H ilton Carte Blanche

Every
Banking

Service
under

ONE ROOF!
MARINE

MIDLAN~

TRUST C OMPANY
of So•l lter• New Yerk

Member Federal Deposit lnsvrance Corporation

AMHA

�Proud to Ser ve Students
at Harpur College and at more than 150
other schools, colleges, and universi ties
across the nation ...

FOOD SERV ICE
~IANAGEMENT

Baltimo re • Atlanta • Chicago • San Francisc o
A Division of Automa tic Retailer s of Americ a, Inc., Phila. 46, Pa.

There is no final stage in educati on; it is an unendi ng search for
knowle dge and the continu ing develop ment of wisdom . Throug h them
we can recogni ze and develop opportu nities to the fullest extent. Together they are the formula for individu al and world progress.

INTER NATIO NAL BUSIN ESS MACH INES CORPO RATIO N

�'s
What
•
ID

iour

future?
Whatever your goal in life, it's wise to
back up your future plans with a steadily increasing savings account. Money in the bank is one of
the surest roads to security we know . .. it will
help you achieve what you want for your future.

THE
BINGHAM TON

~
BANK

62-68 Exchange Street

Binghamton, New York

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

�CONGRATULATIONS
TO THE CLASS

OF " 63"

I

II

ri tt s
DEPARTMENT STORE

VEST AL PLAZA

�Compliments of

RUSSELL

BENNER WHOLESALE
COMPANY

CAB
COMPANY

Endicott, New York

ST 5-3335

Compliments of

FRED ZAPPIA, PROPRIETOR

ELK'S BAKE SHOP
" B est Baked Goods in Town"

TRIPLE CITIES
SPORTING GOODS CO.

110 Washington Avenue

7 Washington Avenue

- ST 5-2051 -

Endicott, N. Y.

New York

Endicott

Welcome to the

ARLINGTON HOTEL

Compliments of

Featuring Smorgasbord
(Pennsylvania Dutch Style)
$2.75

ORDER PLEASE
291 Conklin Ave.

Saturday-5 to 9 p.m.
Sunday- 12 noon to 8 p.m.

RA 4-6100

138 Chen ango Street
Bingha mton, New York

Co1zgratulat10ns, Class

of 1963
Congratulations lo
the Class of 1963

~
FROM GUY F. JOHNSON

FEDERAL ELECTRONICS INC.

Your Cadillac - Pontiac - Tempest Dealer
rea
for Central New York A~

Wholesale Distributors
Vestal Parkway

104- I 22 Hawley Street

Binghamton , New York

POA'fltC.. .

Vestal, N.Y.

�COMP LIMEN TS OF

OLUM 'S

MEYERS

Complete Home Furnishings

COUN TRY SHOP

114 Clinton St.
Binghamton, N. Y.
222 Main Street
Johnson City, N. Y.

Vestal Plaza Shopp ing Center
Bingha mton, N.Y.

COMP LIMEN TS OF

SPIRIT SHOPPE

THE VILLAGE INN

"THE HOUS E OF FINE WINES"
Wines and Liquors

and

"We keep U in Good Spirits"

VEST AL MOTEL

RA 9-2091
Vestal Parkway East

Vestal Parkway East
Vestal, N. Y.

Congratulatwns to the
Class of 1963

HIKE'S AISLE OF STYLE

For Tradit ional C lothing
Shop Our College Shop

The home of natural shoulder clothing
Formal Rentals
249 Main St., Johnso n City

G

RUBE &amp; SM ITH
MEN'S STORE

Bingha mton, N.Y.
42 Court St.
Center
n
Fashio
Men's
Your

RA 9-1231

Mac Lenn on's Flow ers, Inc.
499 Court Street
Binghamton, New York

Uagget'o/ forfe&amp;
&amp;

Oothi~ since

RA 2-6484

1109

· · •

at '6 Front St.

�CONTINENTAL COIFFURES

Compliments of

We Beautifi
... To Satisfi
Vestal Plaza
729-4405

New York

Endicott

HOME DAIRY
Bakery - Delicatessen - Sandwiches (to go)
Vestal Plaza
Cafeteria - Bakery - Delicatessen

~\\~

Compliments of

LITTLE VENICE
RESTAURANT
22 Chenango St.

EMBERS

Carrulli Brothers
SUPPER CLUB
56-58 Court Street

Compl..iments

HILKINS JEWELERS

of

Our 46th Year
46 Washington Avenue
New York

Endicott

THE SHORT LINE BUS CO.
Austin Robbins, owner

Compliments of

A. L. GEORGE

BINGHAMTON KOSHER MARKET

Food Distributors
Wise Potato Chips
Bachman Pretzels
Vestal Road, Vestal, N. Y.

84 Susquehanna St.
Binghamton, N. Y.
Dial RA 3-5331, RA 3-5332
Abe Zendle, Proprietor
Under the supervision of Rabbi].
Bernard Merzel and Rev. Moses Margolis

�~BSO~IBSON

J

"THE ON TIME PRINT ERS"
Inc.

LETT ERPR ESS

DOM INICK 'S PIZZERIA
11 77 Vestal Ave.
25%

~fffor

college sludmtJ

&amp;

and

OFFSE T
Comm ercial - Social
797-59 48

206 Grand Av. J o hnson City
Cor. Baldw in

VAU GHN 'S CLOT HING INC.
Men and Boys

TWO STOR ES
" Vestal Plaza"
&amp;
Dist. ), N.Y.
(Union
tt
Endico

DOM INICK 'S SPA
24 South Washi ngton Street
"Specialu:.es m Italian foods"

Build Better With What Y ou Sa ve At

WHIPPLES LUMBER YARD
Whipple Bros., lnc.
Phone PI 8- 159 1

3310 E. Main St.
Endwc ll , N. Y .

490 Court Street, Bingha mton, N . Y.
RA 2-5353

" Formals Rented For ALI Occasions"

The Endic ott Print ing Co.
All Commercial Printing
Program s and B rochures
Wedding lnv1tat1ons Announ cements

124 Nantic oke Avenu e

ENDI COTT , N. Y.
Phone 785-9441

BEN'S CLOTHES SHOP
Main and Willow St.
Joh nson City, New York
"Cloth es of distinc tion for
dad and lad."

"Where Quality Still Counts"

RA. 4-4374

FLOWERS
Gifts and H allmark Cards

145 Conklin Ave ., Binghamton , N.Y.
Phone: 2-6441

Cor. Vestal &amp; Mitchell Aves.
Bingha mton, N. Y.
LOUIS COSTA S

�WHA T'S INN A NAME
Successful sales meetings
I lospitable service
Elegant banquets
Responsible emplo)•ees
A !tractive buffets
Tempting merws
Overtones qf dignity
No compromise with quali{y
That's the

FRANKIE AND JOHNNIE
SNACK BAR

SHERATON INN

Down the R oad from the
New Campus

Binghamton, New York
723-834 1

Canny Trucking Co.
Inc.

6-18 SPRING FOREST AVENUE, BINGHAMTON , NEW YORK
PHONE RAymond 4-1357

TERMINALS:

New York City

Clifton, New Jersey

Elmira, New York

Scranton, Penn.

99-109 Jane Street
CHelsea 3-1360

310 Coifax Avenue
GRegory 1-1696

53-55 Sheridan Avenue
REgent 2-5027

1708 Nay-Aug Avenue
Diamond 6-3854

�GENNARELLl'S

Best wishes to the class of 1963
from yo ur campus insuran ce agency.

For
Flowers

COUPER-ACKERMAN-SAMPSON,

Properly

INC.

Deliver ed--Sele cted
Cluster ed-Pres ented
63 Carol Street

Binghamton, N. Y.

111 Court Street
RA 3-3658

RA 2-7666

Phone: RA 4-4351

Compl iments
of

BROOME COUNTY WHOLESALE
BEER DISTRIBUTORS
ASSOCIATION
C. P . Campb ell
Kearin g Distrib uting Inc .
Lucas Distrib uting Comp any
Paul A. Luchin i Inc.
M-D Distrib uting Co., Inc.
A. V. Minco lla
West End Brewin g Co.

CO LU:GI: B.\RBER SI JOP
S td)' trim - Be neat

··v o U 'VE TRIED THE REST ,
NOW TRY THE ae:sr·

JOE - TH E BARBER

�CONGRATULATIONS
TO THE CLASS OF 1963

ENDICOTT

JOHNSON

ALL
VvAYS
A

STEP
AHEAD

BEST WISHES TO Tl IE CLASS 0 F 1963

PHOTO &amp; REPRO DIVISION
GENERAL ANILINE &amp; FILM CORPORATIO N

�Charter a

TRIPLE CITIES TRACTION
CO. BUS
Super deluxe coach
A ir conditioned
Reclining seats
Lavatories
Radio and PA system
Card tables

Angeline's
Flower and Gift Shop

The J\lost Fragile of Arcs
1306 Monroe

ST 5-2551

ENDICOTT, N . Y .

RA 2-239 1
375 State St. , B inghamton

Compliments
of

SCHNITZELBANK
RESTAURANT
528 Court St.
Binghamton
Good food -

Congratulations
C lass of l 963

THE INDUSTRIAL BANK OF BINGHAMTON

Lowenbrau on tap

Thank You

Class of ·53

COME BACK and SEE US AGAIN

181-183 W as hington St.

M ember of
FEDERAL DEPOSIT
INSU RAN CE CORPORATION

HYKUR' S
Binghamton

All Banking Services

THE ENDYMION SOCIETY

Congratulations

CORDIALLY EXTENDS ITS

SEARS, ROEBUCK &amp; CO., INC.

BEST WISHES TO THE
CLASS OF '63

174 Court Street

�BEST WISHES
and continued success to

the graduating class
and student bod:)I.

PnEss
=-;=~-:THE -EVENING
_,, "'"'"'u.,

•.:,:.__

•1111tr.1 ......... &amp;

t w• - " " " ' ,., .

......... .....-,.....

· - ..

,,,

,.,_..

":~· ..-.~
~-~~~. . . . . .

. . . and WINR Television and Radio

�HOW BANKS HELP YOU TO

we've enioyed your friendship
To the departing 1963 graduates, the Vestal Parkway Office
of First-City National Bank says '·thank you" for your
friendship and patronage during your stay at Harpur College. We hope your association with us has helped you learn
the value of bank standing.

VESTAL
PARKWAY
OFFICE

FIRST-CITY
NAT IONA L
BANK

MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANC E CORPORA TION

PLI ASf

PATHONl7E

OUH AOVFHT l -1 H,_,

�BABCOCK'S SPORT SHOP
Your Sporting Headquarter s
in Binghamton

COMPLIME NTS OF A

123 State Street

FRIEND
Connected with
BABCOCK, HINDS &amp; UNDERWO OD

Spiedies Hot Pies

AMP BAR &amp; GRILL

COMPLIY IENTS OF

348 Clinton St.
Binghamton , N . Y.

YELLOW CAB

RA 22-

Phone: SW 7-9968

3 -22

Chicken in the Basket- Clams

Harmony in the home can't be
fou nd in family jars -

i
Dickinson

Weeks

.)

DUTCHESS LOUNGE
Cor. Harry L Drive &amp; Lester Ave.
Famous for P1&lt;_&lt;_a and speidus
A LL take out orders
We Cater To Pa rties and Ba nquets

Phones
34 Chenango St.

Binghamton , N. Y.

RA 9-9414

SW 7-9939

BEST WISHES FROM THE FRIENDS
OF THE CLASS OF

1963

FREDERICK HOTEL &amp; EXECUTIVE HOUSE

Endicott, N. Y.

�MID-W AY RECREATION INC.

GOOD LUCK
TO THE
1963 GRADU ATES

213 J ensen Rd., Vestal, N.Y.
48 Lanes
and

THE NEW MID-W AY LANES

CAMP US CLEANERS

at the

BI NGHAM TON PLAZA
STOW FLATS
The Most Ultra Modern Lanes
in the Southern Tier
We Are Now Accepting League
and I ndividual Reservatio ns
for the I 963-64 Season

Campus Reprcsen tati\CS

Paul Gold
Barb Mctsky
Debbie Pisctzne r
Gerri Dramis

Roy Tum powsky
George Fricke
Ron Ranch ber~
B1ian Eden

Call RA 9-3538

Best Wishes

FOWL ER,
DICK &amp; WALK ER

from

PAUL A. LUCH INI
Distributor

Bingham ton, New York

BALLAN TINE

W e salute
the Ju ne Grad uates of
H ARP UR COLLEG E

BEER

ALE

May Success
Always Be Yours
Tel. RAyrnond 2-6476

�Congratulations and Best Wishes
To The Class of 1963
from

Official Photographers to the 1963 ·' COLONIST"
All portraits appearing in this publication
have been placed on file in our _Studio and
can be duplicated at any time.
Write or 'Phone us for Information.

MERIN STUDIOS OF
PHOTOGRAPHY
\ VAlnut 3-0146
0147
0148

1010 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia 7, Pa.

�Tempo rary phone RA 3-790 1

OF AMERICA

MOii THAM 315
COHY!HllHT LOCATIO HS

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Year-r ound Air Conditioning
Swimm ing Pool
Free Advan ce Reserv ations
Teleph one in every room -24 H r. Service
Meetin g Facilit ies for a ll occasio ns
Childr en under 12 admitt ed FREE
(When using same facilities with parent s)
Baby Sitters • Baby Beds
H ouse Physic ians
Appeti zing Food ser ved • Free Ice
Valet and Laund ry Ser vice
All-tile Baths • Televis ion
Free Kenne ls &amp; Ken-L -Ratio n
21/2 Miles West of Bingha mton on Rte. 17

Conve nient to Harpu r Campu s
A.A.A.

l:'\1:-.'
Throw the body in the nearest what? EvGEOSY;.&lt;CLJNI:. or MIQGl-, OSY'.\'CL

�BUILDERS OF

EDWARD l. NEZELEK,
INC.
CONTRACTORS
Buil ders of
Harpur's Dormitories

I, J , K

JOHNSON CITY, N.Y .

�HARPUR COLLEGE
BINGHAMTON SERVICE &amp; PAINT CO., INC.
2 Jackson St.

Binghamton, , .Y.

General Paint Contractors
Wishes Good Luck
to all in the 1963 Colonist rearbool.

Our Services M ay Be Acquired by Calling
RA 3-828 1 or SW 7-4739 After Ho urs

PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS

•

-

,
I

-~

��WINTER
WEEKEND

Quern \l i11 i Saundt·rs and t•srnrt Ron (.olditch.

J. 159

�HARP UR
SPHINX

...

~----------~160

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                  <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>
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                  <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>
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                  <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>
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                    <text>-

-,

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�Il]JJ1flIJjJ~'~ l

THE COLONIST

Harpur College
Binghamton, New York
1964

��'~o/;p,_,
•

b e r

.
.,...,Oot

e'&gt;~,.,,.,.Y

IN

MILWAUKEE . .. .

N~TURALLYt

bi nation of lightness and ·satisfying character

· PROOF
80

1

���BAND

ORCHESTRA

�M USICU M

COLON IAi

PIAYi;R._

�FIGHT ON, MEN OF KALY AN-MASIH
.\1111g IO th&lt;' 111111• 11/ the Lambda Chi FiKlll Song
and or tire u11frcr\(/I St'11ior Girl Campi111: Sont:

G enetic Juniors watch your mo lecules,
Fo r we will ma ke you look like total foo ls,
And if we sho uld chance to collide in space,
Oh every Junio r will have a finely fi ssioned face.
With perspicac ity and tenac ity,
We sure will smash th em beyond gravity.
We're gonna neutral ize and a tom izeBcat'cm guysThc force fie lds a re on o ur si-i-ide.
We're gonna neutra lize a nd atomizeBio dics So let's ta ke them for a ri-i-ide !! !

�ROLL ON, FIGH TING GLYC OGEN S
Sung

10 the 111111• of
"ChC'er, Cheer For
Old Notn• Dame"

Stamp out that old physic s sq uad,
Crush all their femur s into the Quad,
Drain their hormo nes, enzym es too,
Pound their cerebr ums into a glue.
We all are Bio, we all arc fine,
We'll hit them in the back of the spine,
Wrenc h their cocyx out of place,
Make them resem ble a D.N.A . base.
Now is the time for Bi o to win,
Slice'm in sectio ns of parafi n,
Adren al compo unds squirt for us,
And we'll beat them witho ut a fuss!!!

�10

�11

�Whaf s white,
\

and can be ...

sculped,
thrown,
fall en into,
eaten,
dangerous,
slid down upon,
worn,
is impressionable
and cool?

12

�which is a thing of beauty and a joy for
as long as the cold weather lasts.

SNOW-13

�14

�15

�CROSS-COU TRY and TRACK

•

GOLF

BASF BALL

�SYNCHR ON IZED SWIMMI NG

TE

IS

BASKETB A LL

17

���To Ille fditor:

I do not agree with Mr.
SiJnedt that extreme points of
view either of the right or left
lhould be forbidden an open
hearing. 1be danger from extremists is th.t the Wlbalanced may be influenced to
violence.
The remedy is not in forcing crilicism underground, but
in a careful analysia of foolish
arguments. I hope Mr. Simeck
agrees with ~ that there i!
no point in questioniq the
loyalty of college student.s who
want to hear and di8cuas
maoy points of view.
It has been, and remains
our position that Harpur Col·
lege u ID educational inlt.itu·
tion baa ID obligation to create
ID environment in which the
free expre.uion of ideas can
thrive.
The Harpur College Handbook, which ii diltributed to
all faculty, outlinea the ~
cedure !or invitiq visiting
~:er• to the campus. I
the following quotation
from the handbook la germane
to Mr. Simeck's letter:
"It should be emphasized
that the college ia not ~
apomlble for the views of outside apeaken. In IO!De in·
atances, tbe outside apeaker
will have been invited expressly to provide a dUferent point
of view from th.t ordinarily
available.
"This doea aot mean that
IUCh viewa are shared by
thole responaible for invitinc
him. In ~ educat.ion the
very eon!lict between divergent views is ID important
part of learning. Only when
divergent views are freely
available for examination, can
an intelligent choice be made
among them."
In times of tension the immature, which may include
persons of any chronological
age, tend to personalize their
grief and frustration by seeking as a scapegoat some peraon or group whom they do
not know or understand.
It would be lrmic indeed if
the asauslnation. of President
Kennedy becomea the occaaion for the destruction of the
liberties and freedoms which
were ao dear to him.
GLENN G. BARTI.E,
Preaident, Harpur College

20

�21

�Oh administrators if thou couldst

Thy image wouldst thou change?
As individuals thou mayst be good
Bur collccti\'ely thou 'rt strange.

R. BERNSTEIN
D. AMES
C. HARRIS
V. DYKSTRA

M. RICHARDSON
M. WILSON

22

�S. GORDON

J. BERRY

J. BELNIAK

J. VOLKWEIN

E. CASTRO
J . NEWCOMB

A . DEMARCO

F . HARDY
J . BROWN

23

��~lane!

No! It's a Harpur College professor.

�Faster than a speeding

GEOGRAPHY

I . Yan Riper, J . Butler, J. Haupert

26

�ACC OU TI G

IBM machine .

CHEMTSTRY

• •

Left to right : G. Clem ent, C. Hull.
M. Paul.
C. Myer s, B. McDuffie, B. Norc ross,
D. Muel ler, S. Mada n, E. Schr ier

ACC OUN TING

L. Chia o

27

R. Van Hand el

�More powerful than the MLA ...

BIOLOGY
SOCIOLOGY

C. Wheatley. P. Dodge

Left to riRht. J Fi,chthal, W. Batti n, R. Trumbore. A. Mueller.
'&gt;. Landry. J. Grierson. G. Schumacher, T. Murphy

�GERMAN

A\/THRO POLOGY

F. Chick. P. Weigand. E. Schick. G. Schmidt

H. Hoffman, Friends
of the Anthropol ogy Dept.

29

POl 1 rlC'AI \CIE !'&lt;CE

J. Farganis, R. Marz. J. Young, W.
Filley. B. Fwing

�FREN CH

B. Branch , G. Gullac e, J . Lakich , G. Klin

RUSSI A

M USIC

ECO OM ICS

A. Carlip , E. Furubo tn

30

Z. Pavlov sl.i,. I. Orloff

H . Lincol n, P. Friedh eim , R. Schlosser

�Able to lea p tall ma tric es in a sin gle bou nd ...

LITERA TURE

LITERA TURE
LITERA TURE

G. Burne. The Aphtha P. Mockingfish Chair of Eleventh
Century Irish limerick, S. Pitcher, S. Grebste in, G. Adams

31

F. Locke, P. Baumga rtner,
B. Levy

A. Bernard o,
D. Colville, B. Huppe

�It's a Harpur College professor, who,

THEATRE

D. Watters

PHYSICS

THEATRE

J-- . McGar, W. Kalyan-Masih, R. Hart, B. Gossick

A. Brooks

disguised as a mild-mannered
32

�member of th e mi dd le- cla ss,

MAT HEM ATIC S

LITE RATU RE AND
FORE IGN LANG UAG E

Left to right: R. Kroct~ch,
J. Reuter, M. Seide n. V. Freim arck, J. Weld,
C.
Bachellcr, R. Ander son. A. Pellegrini. M. Bourg
eal

B. Cling er. J. Kent, D. Hall, H. Beard , 0. Bell

�P . Brown, 1. Billings. L. Goldstein

PHILO~OPHY

e nse syllable,
J Richardson 's nonsE Peretz.s ca t

.W. H ey man's rat,

.

HISTORY

.1cOll Chair
k En
. h . A · Rollins,
G. Kadis
,...f lrohn
J.fi&lt;tnrv
E . Kaplan, The Sir Cednc
.
• d
· Wyltwyc
tiir R,.n,.i«&lt;&gt;nrP

�Fights a never- ending battle against supers tition,

.
ignora nce,

..-

and the Ameri can cultura l lag.

35

..,s

..

�JLDICfAL RFVIFW BOARD

h~
-. - -

·----- ...

_.. _...___ _

36

�37

�SNICK I

NSM

--~~

HAG

I
,!4'.

1

80(

CIVIL RIGHTS CLUB

ioc
_iL/0(

�Buffalo: THE LAST HURRAH

oughly weake ned and demor alized team that took the field.
Sudde nly, A Cheer
Then sudden ly, Allan Dubet sky, came off the bench with a
brillia nt cheer:
Rain, rain, go away
Take HUAC with you today.
Rain, rain, go away
Take HUAC with you today.
It WaS a miracl e. The team suddenly came to life.
Rain, rain, go away
Take HUAC with you today.
Every one began to sing. The
tempo quicke ned.
Rain, rain, go away
Take HU AC with you today.
And Harpu r began to rally.
Disad vantag es becam e advan tages, just like the cheer. Harpur began to score, began to
sneak up on HUAC . Slowly , the

explod ed. HUAC did not know
what to do-th ey called time
and huddle d, trembl ed, called for
order. but Harpu r could not be
stoppe d, Harpu r was not to be
denied , Harpu r was like a Red
Plagu e s w e e p i n g Buffal o,
isweep ing the entire countr y,
monst rous, terrify ing, horrib le,
fright ening -it won runnin g away with HUAC and the Federal Marsh als chasin g after it.
Trium ph
It was still rainin g five minutes after the final siren had
signal led the end of the game.
The senior s on the Harpu r team
were being carrie d triump hantly off the field on the should ers
of police men, and all amun d
them, there was lots of commotion and excite ment, and the
senior s were being patted on

In late Spring , the studen t
South ern Tier. So it was not by
It rained in Buffa lo that
politic al demon stratio n season
accide nt that soon after this morni
ng and aftern oon; it
draws to a close as picket signs
year's schedu le was annou nced,
rained
harde r than it had in
are folded carefu lly and tucked
pewsp aper article s about HUAC
front of the Lincol n Arms Aaway in trunks , and magic began appea ring in the
team's
partm ent earlie r this seaoon ,
marke rs are left witho ut their locker room, and it was
not for
and it was cold too, colder than
caps to dry up on once clutter ed. purely sentim ental reason
s that it was in Washi ngton two years
table tops. Soon, everyo ne will the coach placed all the senior
s ago. The weath er kept the
be leavin g campu s, and many on the startin g team
and as crowd s away, and the freezi
ng
will head home or down South many as he could in
the very
rain soaked throug h the unito join local protes t league s in key positio ns.
forms and eventu ally, the spirorder to stay in i;hape during
On the bus up to Buffal o, its, and by halftim e, Harpu
r
the long, hot Summ er and early c.very
one was very nervou s, in- had been badly outpla yed by the
Fall in prepa ration for the 64- cludin
g the senior s. Bob Poczik , better -prote cted HUAC team,
65 season . (The manag er has who
in each of his four years and was far behind in points .
told everyo ne to try and do at
at Harpu r, had won letters playIn the locker room, no one said
least four-f ive hours of sit-ins ing
civil rights and politic s, was
anythi ng. No coffee had been
each day.)
nervou s becaus e Buffa lo was
In Novem ber, the trunk s will his home town and his paren
ts
be opened , the picket signs shak- were comin g to watch him picket
en out and staple d onto new for the first time in his colleg
e
sticks, and new forma tions praccareer . And Al Hende rson, a
ticed. Missin g will be almos t
junior , was nervou s becau se
one-fo urth of this year's squad ,
Buffa lo was also his home town,
the gradu ating senior s for
and his paren ts not only refuse d
whom the end of this season
to come watch him picket , but
marks the end of their colleg e
they refuse d to ever see him
career s.
again.
Full Circle
The captai ns tried to calm
It was fitting , in a way, that everyo
ne down by telling storthe last demon stratio n of the
ies about previo us demon strayear was again st HU AC. For it
tions: how in Washi ngton, in
was again st this very same opFebru ary, 1962, in the midst of
positio n that the presen t seniors-- the Sherm an, the Poc.ziks, a genera l team collap se, Dick
the Bayer s, the Aaron sons-- Sherm an saved the day by
how long their names shall live shouti ng "We did not come
in the record books !-beg an here to sights ee!"; how Jon
their varsit y career s as untrie d AaronM&gt;n played again st Park
high school moder ates. Four Diner with the first s~p of cofyears ago, Harpu r was humil i- fee in his mouth throug hout
ated by HUAC at the Ameri can the entire game and its five
Legion gym in Bingh amton , and overti me period s; how Judith
the senior s have never forgot ten Osterh oudt told Ronny Bayer
it. Throu ghout the succes sful to go back to Russia during provid
-Associated Press WIREPHOTOS.
ed for the visitin g team, Colon ials seaped
throug h HU- ' the back with billy clubs ~d
season s of 1962 and 1963, the the 1961 anti-b omb demon stra- and
there was no way to get AC's defens
es, caugh t HUAC 's
contin ued existe nce of HUCA tion. They sang and chante d warm
rifle butts. Oh, it was a fine
or dry off. A few mem- guard s lookin
g the other way,
had been like an open taunt to also, and by the time the bus bers
ending to a good fpur years,
of the tearn could not even and began
to lifiltra te ever so and in the midst of all the
the team, the only thing which entere d Buffal o, the team had contin
rain
ue playin g. All , seeme d steadi ly into
HUAC 's territo ry.
stood betwe en it and. the undis- lost its nervou sness and was lost.
~at fell on mouth s upturn ed in
As Harpu r began to play Then, with
less
than h~lf an
puted champ ionshi p of the anxiou s to start playin g.
joyful laught er, could not a tear
the second half, it was a thor- • hour left
to go, the Colon ials be seen?

�PROCTORS
PROCTORS

MEN'S JUDICIAL BOARD
WOMFN'S DORM COUNCIL (including Whitney Dormitory)

�WOM EN'S CrNT RAL APPF LLATf &lt;. BOAR
D

41

DOR MIT ORY LIFE : a uniq ue form of
cell-l ike exist ence usua lly foun d amo ng
lowe r socia l anim als inha bitin g dam p,
must y regions.
The fema les are char acter ized by brilliant mult i-col ored amo rpho us bodi es and
cylin drica l wire obtru sions arou nd the
head , and are very ugly. The male s, with
less comp lex featu res, are even uglie r however. Alth ough much mixi ng occu rs outside of the cell- struc tures , stric t sepa ratio n
of the sexes is prac ticed with in them and
elabo rate meas ures, like guar ds and frequen t chec ks, are empl oyed to catch
offenders.
Activ ity in the cells is conf ined to long
perio ds of stillness in which the eyeb all is
fixed on some thing held befo re it. This is
usua lly inter spers ed with food -gath ering
dutie s which are cond ucted outsi de of the
cell at regu lar time s durin g the day. In additio n, the male of the spec ies frequ ently
inter rupts his still perio ds with acts of
chew ing wood and stick ing ante nnae
throu gh objec ts in the com mon s area of the
cell- struc ture.
The aver age life-span of both the male
and fema le is only four years . Stran gely
enou gh, most deat hs occu r at the same
time of the year, and most birth s, just four
mon ths later . Equa lly incre dible is the appare nt incre ase in evol ution ary development that char acter izes new mem bers of
the species. Scien tists are at a comp lete loss
to expla in these two amaz ing natu ral phenom ena.

��������It' s true.
Th er e's no de ny in g it.
Deadlines ar e hell an d the ca mp us is busy wi
th hectics ru nn in g ba ck
an d fo rth lik e stu de nt s with th eir Ha rv ar d bags
ch op pe d off. Ev er yt hi ng
is so intense, as if so me on e mi gh t steal yo ur
classroom if you sto pp ed
studying to ge t a dr in k of water, or th e ba
sk etb all tea m mi gh t lose
an ot he r ga me if yo u di dn 't sc re am ha rd enough
, or the vending ma ch in e
ma n mi gh t co me to fill up the ma ch in e while
you were ma ki ng love
be hi nd it . . .
In th e sn ac k ba r, time is wasted frantically
An d life wi th ou t De xe dr in e is impossible.

49

��I

�fRll&gt;A t .,/t
evl~Wllm'l
rush~

5UMd~. nov. 17
11· 3D - 3 oo

...........

_

��..:•::::

•••••
••••••
••••••

:·:·:·
••••••
·:·:··
•.•.•:
··:····:·

stAH UN\VERSllY Of NEW YORK

15800

��"Style is _contemporary.
"Large simple masses arc arranged in a sculptural
manner in harmony with the setting. The structures
have three and four stories and arc placed informally.
The result is pleasant courts, attractive spaces between
buildings, and fine outlooks toward the surrounding
country."
I 964-65 Harpur College Catalogue

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��WRAF

ossiblc for llnrpur to have
but that the President was willi
ittec set up "to tell you why y
n dormitories."
Rafn"" P.&lt;&gt;titi.nn nj,.,.;,.,.,.,d

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���68

������N overn ber 22, 1963

75

���78

����It hap pen s outside faculty offices nea r the sla tted ben che s
on which pap ers are retu rne d, and inside the offices and
classrooms too; in the gymnasium dur ing the win ter
sports season and finals week, and in the ma ilro om especially dur ing finals week; it hap pen s wh en social clubs are
being rushed, and snow queens are being cro wn ed, and
82

�elections are being won. Peo ple lose. For some, it is a
valu able lear ning experience which teaches them something abo ut themselves they never knew before. Others,
never even recognize it, and cont inue to shou t thei r stupidity thro ugh out life.

83

��The Colonial defense wasn'
working and pa.&gt;ses were inter
cepted freque11tly. The only
bright spot was the usuaJ high
perl'.entage on the foul line 8
or 10. for 80% .
'
1'i ~._.,,."_

Colonials Drop Seas'
Opener To Hartwick
Colonials*"°'~
Ithaca Tr
sir JsPlfhMftte
'W

-

:

....

by Jeff Weinberger

~~Ptjp•

_...,,.,,

0

A complete team collapse
early in the first quarter Wednesday night sent the Harpur
five stumbling to their third
loss a.f the year, nt the hands
of Albany State College, by a

~'pnf

score of 78-52.

The Colonials started off well
losing the jumn

II

display of the season, Harpur
as defeated 87-70 by a much
Union team Inst Saturday as the team's record dropped to 2-4. Union's Toby Lostig, their 6-foot, 5-inch senior,
who is the eighth ll'ading rebounder in the country, controlled the Harpur backboard

it:.:~...:.::-----------~larger

., it')

Colonial Cager
Before Winte1

�arpur Swi1n111ers
rop Initial Meet
Harpur's
team
knocked at victory's door but
was ag.ain denied as Hamilto:1
squeaked through for the win,
2-1, in a game played 1as:
Thl•rsday at Hamilton.
nit -lier .Jim &lt;:--~;- ·

We

[IDeD
•., Hie n ·
ta rte
ide shooting by Brown and
ot, 4-inch Clover. And then
overwhelming fast break
hed Harpur's hopes. Union
55% in this half.

63
53

57
71

52
70
55
45
50
71

54
62
48

Opponent
Geneseo
Hobart
Utict
Drew
Albany
Union
Wilkes
RPI
Hartwick
Utica
Maritime
Stony Brook

They
61
69

Gl
67
78
87
60
50
59
75
65
69
72
83

����-

�MATH CLUB

DEBATE SOCIETY

SPANISH CLUB

FRE CH CLUB

�JEWISH FELLOWSHIP

MFTHODIST STUDENT FELLOWSHIP

STUDE T CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATrON

���r

-·

"The purpose of this Society shall be to promote a loyal and steadfast fello~sh1p
with God, Country, and school, to foster the mental, moral, and scholastic wellbeing of its members, and to manifest a high sense of social justice towards one and
all. "
ITK Constitution

��PANDORANS
DIONYSIANS

CASSANDRANS

ODEANS

�APO

TAU

t

GOIIAR OS

DY\.110" -S

�BACCACI A

�~'~

1~"-llEJtl!COJ(11f1.
I! f/

-

R[STAURANT

����RO'-A LD BA\- ER
l'.cw York. N Y .

CO'IST ANCf AKLA ND
"iorwoo d '-' Y
Sl!Ell A BIFL
B1~hamton. !'&gt; ) •

JUmT H BF.( KER
fon.1'-'a nda. N Y

West Oneont a "i. Y.

JON AAR01 '&lt;SON
Brookly n, N. Y

HARR IET Blu\1
nush1n g, N Y

J Ef I RLY ADELM AN
New York, N Y

J UDITH ALEXA "IO f R
Freepo rt. N Y.

Jamesto wn. N. Y.

106

STEVE N BF.RG
Brookly n. N. Y.

�GEORGE BRUN
Merrick. N. Y.

llARVl·Y BOLLER
Bethpa1te. N. Y.

JOH"&lt; BOBL RKA
l'ndicou. N Y

A"1DRfW BR0\.1BLR(,
V.anta11h. N Y

HAROLD BURNHAM
\.1a'5ena. ". Y

MAR"r BOBL.RKA
Endicott, N. Y

Pf.ARI
Bron~. "

BOSCO
Y

s rFv l:N

BROOKS
New York, N. Y

Ell UN BODI!'
Lindcnhuf\t, "

Y

VICKI BURRINGTON
Richfield Springs. '&lt; Y

H)WARO CAIN
Akron, N Y

�JUDITH CASl AGSA
'l.1as\apcqua. "

) .

IRA COl!F'I
Bald"'"·"- Y

MAR\ (0'1'11'
RICHARD (ARI TOI'
Fast ~eadow. "

'

\fonrnc. N Y

fRANK ( ARRA"O
Freehold. ' Y.

JI.A" CANCRO
New Hyde Park, N. Y.

\1AR( COF!.
Bron&gt;. N. \
JOY CHU
New ) ork. 'i 'I'

\1A11HFW (01'1'01 A
Centerport, N . Y.
"II II CARTER
l'ot,d;im. !'-. Y.

108

111· 1~1:ll.oRI

COHLN
flu\hing. &gt;..; Y

�LARRY DEl'N I S
Ncwarl., N. Y.

Al'N OOUBLfDA Y

Binithamtnn, N Y

L\URf N CORWIN
Riverdale. N Y

CHARLES CROl L
Johnson City. !'. Y.

JEFFREY CZrlSL IR
1'.ew Yori. ..., Y

JOHN COVE-LI
Ho"ehead,, N Y.

CAROLY"' DEMO
\1a&gt;,ena, :0.. Y.

STEPHEN CRA1'E
New York, N Y.

CALVl"i OEYfR\10"'0
Oneida. S Y

R'\LPH OA\ I E

Georgetown. "'&lt; Y

109

GARY OOL.Pf·
\ e&gt;tal. "' \

�RICHARD FF.LD.\1A S
BrooJ..lyn. N. Y

GARY DuNBAR
Rochc,lcr "'. Y

RICHARD FOSTER
\tiddlCIO\lo n S Y

PATRICIA ESTADT
Bm11ham1on. 'I \.

ALLEN DUBETSK Y
Sprin1t Valley, N Y.

Nor!h

DEN"' IS ELLSWOR TH
John;on City, N. Y.

S~ ra&lt;ll&gt;C,

N \.

110'" ARO rox
\~ h11c,wne. '- \

WILLIAM FALLA
Massena. N. Y

ROY I ERG USON
EaM Syracu&gt;C, N Y

SI YMOUR l'RFEDMA I'.
Tro}. !"&lt; Y.

110

�RALPH FRIEDMAN
Bronx. N. Y.

CHANN ING FUNK
Pula&gt;ki. N. Y

MICHAEL GLASSMAN
Brooklyn, N. Y.

ROBERT FRIEDMAN
Brooklyn, N . Y.

JAMES FRIEND
Brooklyn, N. Y.
ANN GOLDMAN
Brookl yn. N. Y.

JUDY GOLD
Lynbrook. N. Y.
ROBERT GARLAND
Long Beach. . Y.

STEVEN GOAD
Walton. N. Y .

D IA NE GEERKEN
Newark Valley, N. Y.

MARTIN FUCHS
Oceanside, N. Y.

111

�ROBFRT C1RILBEL
\1iddlcbu rgh. N Y.
NAO,\fl GOL ()\\ ASSER
Staten l&gt;I and. " Y

JOHN C.OTTCE1'1
Brooklyn. "I ) .

\11CHAEl (,OTfLIFB
Bmol.l)n. ?&gt;.. Y
MADC.f H ·\ CKMAN
' onkc". N Y.

Al.AN GOI DS\.11111
Bronx. &gt;-.; Y

CHARI OTfE
C,OLDSTl:l1' '
Binghamton. N. Y.

1 llOMAS GORMAN
Binghamton. N. Y

DAVID C,OTTLIEB
N. Y.

Occan~ide,

GERALD GOULD
Binghamton. N. Y.

ROSS GRIPPl'N
Binghamton, N . Y.

112

�ROBERT HAHN

GERALD HATHAWAY

Long Beach, N. Y.

Johnson City, N. Y.

ALAN HERTZBERG
. Y.

ROBERT HALDER
Wampsville, N. Y.

GRACE HERSCHDORFER
Spring Valley, N. Y.
KATHY HENRICKSON
Albany, N. Y.

PATRICIA HAZEN
Mye,,,, N Y.

LINDA HEROLD
Laurens, N. Y.

JOHN HARRISON
Ottawa, Canada

113

WILi IAM HESSE
Johnson City, N. Y .

�BETSY HOYSRADT
Binghamton, ~ Y

MARGARFT JACOBS
Brooklyn, '-I Y
C..ARY HOFFMAN
Woodbourne. N. Y.

VIRGINIA HOTCHKIN
Fork\, N Y

Chcnan~o

TED HOCHSTADT
Brooklyn, N. Y.

ALL f:.N ISRAEiL
( ambna He1~h"· N. Y.
ROY HUNT
Syracuse, N. Y

RONALD JARMUTll
New York , N Y.
BARBARA HOWE
Delmar, N. Y.

114

R IC II ARD JABLONSKI
Amsterdam, N. Y.

�STEPHEN KAUFMAN
We-.t Hemp~tead, N 't

NLNE KORNIAK
S&lt;:hene&lt;tady. N. Y

J[

ARTHUR KAELIN
litic"· N. Y

ARDEN KANF
Brooklyn, N Y.

DAN I EL KAPLAN
Bronx, N Y

BURT KAHN
Bronx. N. Y

'-11CKEY KARPAS
Brooklyn, . Y.

LAURENCE KA YE
Brnnx, N Y

EDWARD KAPLAN
Dobb' Ferry, N Y.

115

KAREN KORHUM'4EL
Peehkill. " Y

�JAN I:. L.AGOUD IS
:-.Ocw 'ork N. Y

LESLEY KRAUSS
\.1crrie'k. 1' '
SfLART I EFDI R
flu\hini:. 'ol Y

Hempstead . 1'. Y

\I.AS I t\.Y

Brookl)n. N Y

Al.AN KOSLOF-1
Binghamto n, N. Y

PAUL KRIEGER
New Hyde Park. N. Y.

BARBARA KURYLA
Johnson City. N. Y.

116

JAMES LEE
Dexter. N. Y.

�ANTHONY MA I NION IS
Johnson City, N. Y

KENNETH LUCEY
\1ohawk, N. Y.

\IAHll YN l EVY
nush111g. "&lt; Y

JOSl:PH LURIE
"cw ) ork. "&lt; Y

RUTH MAI ZBER(1
Albany.
Y.

A\1Y MAl ZBERG
Albany. N . Y.

SlvAH f !FWIS
Alban)."&lt; Y

Al A'-' LUPl

(kcansode.

'°"

Y

Johnson City. N . Y.

JVAN LIGHT

Far Hod.away, N . Y.

117

�\1ICHAl:L 'l,fll l ET
l on!! Beach, i-; . ' .
Tl\10THY MARTIN
New York \.! tits. N Y .

\fARCIA MAYNE
\la\\ena. N. Y.
HARR\ \.If YI RS
N orih '1,fcrrick, "' '

CA R\1 AN MAN IAC I
I ynbrook, N. Y.

MAX "1011 IC J...
Ocean\odc, N Y

RICHARD
MARCHLS I E! l 0
\fa"apequa Park, N . Y

c.ERA I D M cINTYRE
Brooklyn . N. Y.

SUZANNE MAXAM

Rome, N. Y.

BARBARA MFTSKY
Bron&lt;. N Y.

SARAH M ITCHE Li .
Kin g Ferry, N . Y

118

�FREDFR ICK MOYLE
John\on City, N

Y

DEl'&lt;l'&lt;IS O'CONN OR
Wellb&gt;ille , N. Y.
Wlll.IAM MOYNIH AN
1 tttlc l ·alls. N Y.

RI( HARD 1'-0BLE
KtnitStOn. 'I. Y.
Holme&gt;. N Y.

WILLIAM NEI SON
Vc~tal , N. Y

(,!~ACE NOVAK
"ionhpor t. ?-&lt; Y.

BARBAR A MULLER
Bronx, "i. Y

119

JAMES NOVAK
S&lt;:hoharic. "· Y

�KENNFTH PERKINS
Wanta~h.

N. Y.

DEBORAH PISETZ!'IER

RICHARD ORMA"I

Brooklyn. N Y.

John\On City, N Y

OQCC,LAS PATCllLN
North Ro;e. ". Y

CHARLES ORCIJTI
Baldwinsville, N Y

KATHRYN PETROZE 11 0
Endico11, 'i Y

OYSTEIN OSTEBO
Oslo. !'.orway

JLD'r PLAIN
f ndlCllll, '&lt; \

DIA1'A PATTON
Binghamton. N. Y.

JOHN PHIL LIPS
Frew;hurg, . Y.

ROBLRT POCZIK
Wil11am&gt;ville.
Y

120

�JUDITH POITER
Kenmore, N Y

PAUL REESE
Plamburgh. N. Y.

C HARLES REVELLI
New York, N. Y.

JUDITH P01 USKY
Bmghamt&lt;'n. N Y

FREDERICK PRICE
Van Hornc;.villc, r-. Y
ELIZABETH ROBERTS
Red H ook. N. Y.
STANLEY REIFER
Brooklyn, N. Y

THERESA RICHMAN
Bronx, '&lt; Y

WILLIAM REIFF
Binghamton, N. Y

RONALD RA UCHBERG
New York. N Y

121

HERBERT ROSENBERG
Brooklyn, N Y.

�HE1'RY RUBll\Si EI N
Tuc~ahoc.

N Y.

ROBFRT ROSSI
Amsterdam , N. Y.
ROBfRTA SCHl·FR
Fh"hing. N Y

New York, N Y

fl AINF. ROSlllOL DI R
Flushing. N Y

HA RRIE1 SCll ll I MAN
Flu,hinit. N \

V ICTOR ROSENTH AL
Jericho. N Y

C HRI STOPH ER ROSS IL
Binghamto n. N Y.

Bronx. N Y.

122

CA ROL SA LL
Binghamto n, ·. Y.

�SA ORA SERAF I N
Uiica. N. Y.

ELL.EN SCHWARTZ
Brooklyn. N. Y.

CLINTON S&lt;. H l OOP
Wc~t C.irthagt, N Y

ENID SFFGFR

BARRY SHAINMAN
Brooklyn, N Y

BARRY SCHNI IDl.R
Woodmere,
Y

Binghamwn. !'.; Y

RO"'ALD SCOTT
\&lt;&gt;!al, "- Y.

A ·c,r I.A SF.NIO
f:ndicoll, N Y

RICHARD SCHULTZ
New Hyde Park. N Y

123

�KARI SIM01'SON
Hammondspo rt. N. Y

JANET STUHL MILLER
Swormv1llc, N Y

Sll'vL:-. SPIR~
Brookl)n. 1' Y.

ALICF SILVfR\1AN
Loni; Beach. N Y.

Nl"'A S7EJD
Auburn.' Y.

FSTFLLE SIL\.ER\1AN
Jack,on Heights, N. Y

RICHARD SHERMA"&lt;
Flu,h1ng, N. Y.
SALLY SPEAR
Pula,k1. 1'. Y

JAMES SIMONDS
Pattcrsonvillc,
Y

"°'.

124

ROBERT STUCKART
Endwcll, N. Y.

ROBE-RT TABI R
N. Y.

Bin~hamton.

�KE NETH UNGER
Brooklyn, N. Y.

"1a,peth, N Y.

DORIS TEITSWORTH
"11. Morris. N. Y.

FRED TERRACINA
"'lewburgh. "&lt;. Y

LOWELL TANZER
BayMde. N. Y.

ROY TUMPOWSKY
York, ~ Y

"'&lt;cw

JAMES TFEVAN
Lindenhurst. N. Y.

FRA"K VA'iGELI
Ocean\idc. " )

BENNETT TITTLER
Franklin Square. N Y.

125

MAR1 HA VII L
Brn~harnton, N. Y.

�ANTO~

WEISS
Scarsdale, N. Y

PATRICIA WELSH
Schenectady, ...; )

DAVID WEINER
Brooldvn, N Y
PAUi A WEl!'&lt;STE!N
Brooklyn, N Y

MICHAEL WEIN
Port Chester. t-.. Y.

JONA !HAN WELD
\fain,
Y

KENNETH WALTZER
East Meadow, N. Y

WALTER WEINER

r lu;,hrng.

N Y.

CAROLYN WENDELL
K 1ng&gt;1on, N ) .

KENNFTH WEISFELD
Loni: Island City, N. Y

SENIORS NOT PHOTOG RAPHED
ALAN BAKER
BARBARA BURKE
All.AN BURSTEIN
EDITH CA RLIS!
1 HOMAS CARRIGG
MARY D'ANGELO
DAVID DESANTIS
CHESTER DRAKE
BARRY GI 'SBURG
LA WR ENCE GLICKMAN
CAROL HARTER

EDWARD HICKEY
JOANNA HIRSCHBER G
PAUL HO USER
DAVID KIESLER
AN E KUCER
MARTIN LIFBOWITZ
Sl EVEN LIPSCHITZ
ELNINA LUIZZI
I HOMAS McCORD
LADD MIKLOS

MICHAEL WELLIKOFF
Bronx, N Y.

Binghamton. N Y

126

�PAMFLA WILLIAMS
Yonker\, N Y.

Al LEN YARNELL
Brooklyn. N Y.

JUDrtH ZAPIAWA
Tona.,.anda. N. Y

This

Space

'l.1ARY Wll LS
Chateau~ay.

For

N Y

Auto~raph'

ADRIEN E WOLFSON
North Woodmere, N Y
WILLIAM Z IPERMAN

Ma,sapcqua. N. Y.

Al.AN ZUBLATI
Ro,cd;ilc. N. Y.

I OWARD YAW
l'Ol&gt;dam, N. Y.

SENfORS NOT PHOTOGRAPHED
WILi !AM MILLER
ANDRE MORAIL LON
Wll LIAM MYERS
DONALD N!El.Sf'N
JOSEPH O'SHEA
STEPHEN OSTRANDr R
JOSEPH PALANT
STEPHEN PALINCSAR
THOMAS PARKHURST
CATHERINr ROBINSON

MAXINE ZARETZ
cw York, N

Y

DA VIO YOUN&lt;...
Poller llollow, N. Y

LAWRENCE WOODS
Ithaca, N. Y.

127

ROGER ROY
CAROLE SCHWAGFR
RONALD SELSBY
LOIS SUISSA
DAVID VANNORTWICK
MAUREE WEAVER
PHILIP WEISBERG
NELL WHITTAKER
FREDERICK WOLF
DONALD Y ACOPINO

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• • • • • • Cc!,) • • •

~~~~

�GOOD LUCK
TO THE
1964 GRADUATES

Gaudeamus igitur,
J uvenes dum sum us

THE GOLIARDS MEN'S SOCIAL CLUB

�•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

"You've Tried the Rest,
Now Try the Best"

COLLEGE BARBI:R SHOP
Congratulations
Class of 1964

JOE

Year-round Air Conditioning
Swimming Pool
F.:ree Advance Reservations
Telephone in every room-24 Hr. Service
Meeting Facilities for all occasions
Children under 12 admitted FREE
(When using same facilities with parents)
Baby Sitters • Baby Beds
House Physicians
Appetizing Food served • Free Ice
Valet and Laundry Service
All-tile Baths • Television
Free Kennels &amp; Ken-L-Ratio n

Upper Court Street

Vestal Parkway

Binghamton, N. Y.

Binghamton,

Phone RA 3-7091

Phone RA 9-6371

. Y.

�··~ ----

--- ·-

EDWARD L. NEZELEK,
INC.
CONTRACTORS
Builders of
H ar pur 's D ormitories
I, J , K

JOHNSON CITY, N.Y.

�What's
•

10
Y-DUr

future?
Whatever your goal in life, it's wise to
back up your future plans with a steadily increasing savings account Money in the bank is one of
the surest roads to security we know . . . it will
help you achieve what you want for your future.

THE
BINGHAM TON

~
BANK

62-68 Exchange Street

Binghamton, New York

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

�''Bello
There''
"I'm the fellow who tries so hard to keep you
interested in the latest, most vital news . . .
I try to bring a smile into your life with the
cream of the comics ...
I want you to feel that I am the friendliest newspaper you've ever read, 'cause I really am."

"Your Friendly Hometown Newspaper"

EVERYONE READS THE PRESS (almost)

and WI NR TV-RADIO

�HOW BANKS HELP YOU TO

we'ye enioyed your friendship
To the departing 1964 graduates, the Vestal Parkway Office
of First-City National Bank says "thank you" for your friendship and patronage during your stay at Harpur College. We
hope your association with us has helped you learn the value
of bank standing.

VESTAL
PARKWAY
OFFICE

FIRST-CITY
NATIO NAL
BANK

MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATIO N

�Compliments
of

THE SHORT LINE BUS CO.

H armony in the home can't be
fo und in family jars -

WeekS

~

Dickinson
~

Austin Robbins, owner
34 Chenango St.

Compliments
of

SCHNITZELBANK
RESTAURANT
528 Court St.

Binghamton, N. Y.

Mac Lennon's flowers, Inc.
499 Court Street

Binghamton, New York

Binghamton
RA2-6484
Good food -

Lowen brau on tap

BEN'S CLOTHES SHOP
Main and Willo w St.

T hank You-Class of '64
COME BAC K and SEE US AGAIN

J ohnson City, New York

HYKUR'S
"C lothes of distinction for
dad an d lad."

Femini ne Apparel

Binghamton

SPIRIT SHOPPE
"TIIE HOUSE OF FINE WINES"
Wines and Liquors
22 Chenango St.
Carrulli Brothers

Congratulations to
Class of 1964

A &amp; W ROOT BEER
209 Vestal Pkwy.

�HOME DAIRY
Congratulations

Bakery - Delicatessen - Sandwiches (to go)
Vestal Plaza

SEARS, ROEBUCK &amp; CO., INC.

Cafeteria - Bakery - Delicatessen

'\\\~

EMBERS

174 Court Street

SUPPER CLUB
56-58 Court Street

ELK'S BAKE SHOP
"Best Baked Goods in Town"
110 Washington Avenue

Endicott, N. Y.
- ST 5-2051 -

Compliments of

HILKINS JEWELERS
Keepsake Diamonds

53 S. Washington Street
Binghamton

Our 47th Y car

46 Washington A venue
Endicott

HANAGAN'S RESTAURANT

New York

featuring
Pizza

Good Food

all Legal Beverages

Meet Your Friends at

DUNKIN' DONUTS

DILLENBECK'S FLOWERS

On The
Vestal Parkway

Phone RA9-3555

Open 24 hrs.
Coffee, Donuts &amp; Food
At Their Best

"Special Deals To Clubs And Groups"

and also in
Whitney Pt., N. Y.

Phone 692-391 I

�RA. 4-4374

•

COSTAS FLOWERS
Gifts and Hallmark Cards

145 Conklin Ave ., Binghamton, N.Y.
Phone : 2-6441

Cor. Vestal &amp; Mitchell Aves.
LOUIS COSTAS
Binghamton, N . Y .

The Endicott Printing Co.

Build Better With What You Save At

All Commercial Printing
Programs and Brochures
W t:dd1 ng I nuz tations- A nnounet:mt:nts
124 Nanticoke Avenue

ENDICOT T, N Y
P hone 785-9441

WHIPPLES LUMBER YARD
Whipple Bros., Inc.
Phone Pl 8-159 l

3310 E. Main St.
Endwell, N. Y.

490 Court Street, Binghamton, N. Y.
RA 2-5353

" Wht:re Quality Stzll Counts"

DUTCHESS LOUNGE

VAUGHN 'S CLOTHIN G INC.

Cor. Harry L Drive &amp; Lester Ave.

Men and Boys

Famous for Pizza and spe1dus
All takt: out ordt:rs

TWO STORES

We Cater To Parties and Banquets
Phones
SW 7-9939

RA 9-9414

"Vestal Plaza"
&amp;
Endicott (Union Dist. ), N.Y
"Formals Rented For All Occasions"

.

OLUM'S

Congratulations to
the Class of 1964

Complete Home F urnishings

FEDERAL ELECTRONICS IN C.

114 Clinton St.
Binghamton, N. Y.

Wholesale Distributors
222 Main Street
Johnson City, N. Y.

Vestal Parkway

Vestal, N.Y.

�Compliments
of

For Traditional Clothing
Shop Our College Shop

MUSKA'S TA VERN

GRUBE

&amp;

SMITH

MEN'S s.TORE

119 Harry L. Drive

Binghamton, N.Y.
42 Court St.
Your Men's Fashion Center

Johnson City

Compliments of

Compliments of

BENNER WHOLESALE
COMPANY

ORDER PLEASE

Endicott, New York

RA 4-6100

291 Conklin Ave.

BIN GHAMTON SERVICE &amp; PAINT CO., INC.
2 Jackson St.

Binghamton, N.Y.

General Paint Contractors
Wishes Good Luck
to all in the 1964 Colonist Yearbook

Our Services May Be Acquired by Calling
RA 3-8281 or SW 7-4 739 After Hours

Compliments of

LITTLE VEN ICE
RESTAURANT

SCHOOL OF DANCE
Member: Dance Educators of America

34 Broad St.
Johnson Cit)

Phone
RA9-4430

22 Chenango St.
Carrulli Brothers

�GIBSON &amp; GIBSON
'THE ON TIME PRINTERS"
Inc.
LETTERPRE SS
and
OFFSET
Social
Commercial

Binghamton, N. Y.

69 Court St.

797-5948

the young lookthe DAVIDS look

206 G rand Av. Johnson City
Cor. Baldwin

CONTRAC TORS
Supervisor Richard H . Knauf
and his

TRIPLE CITIES OPTICAL

Loui s

N. P1cc 1AN0
HEATING
VENTILATING
AIR CONDITIONING
INDUSTRIAL PIPING
PLUMBING
SPRINKLER
FABRICATING

and SON

80 Court St.
TEL. RL 4-2222

1204 WITHERILL STREET, ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

COMPLIMEN TS

To the Class of '64

A FRIEND

Best Wishes to the Class of '64
Congratulations, Class of 1964
RA 2-2322
RA 3-4140
Guys For Dolls Beauty Salon
196 Harry L. Dr., J .C.
Adam's Cleaners

Yellow Cab

Angeline's Flower &amp; Gift Shop

1306 Monroe St., EDCT.

BACCACIA MEN'S SOCIAL CLUB
THE ODEAN SOCIETY

sos
TAU

�GENNARELLl'S
For
Flowers

Best wishes to the class of 1964
from your campus insurance agency.

COUPER-ACKERMAN-SAMPSON,
INC.

Properly
Delivered-Selected
Clustered-Presented

63 Carol Street
Binghamton, N. Y.
111 Court Street

RA 2-7666

RA 3-3658
Phone: 772- 1444

Compliments
of

BROOME COUNTY WHOLESALE

FRANKIE and JOHNNIE

BEER DISTRIBUTORS

SNACK BAR

ASSOCIATION
Down The Road From T he

Kearing Distributing Inc.
Lucas Distributing Company
Paul A. Luchini Inc.
M-D Distributing Co., Inc.
A. V. Mincolla
West End Brewing Co.

New Campus

�FOR VERY SPECI AL
OCCA SIONS
CONGRA TULATIO NS TO
THE CLASS OF L964
from

the CAMPUS
BOOK
champagne d inner for- hundreds, trust us to do it to
perfection. Let our Banquet Manager ta ke many
of the details off your hands - and
help plan an unforgettab le occasion.

STORE

SHERATON MOTOR INN
BING HAMTO
H arry E. Fear, Gen. Mgr.
Ph. 723-8341

BEST WISH ES

Charter a

TO THE
1964 GRADUA TES

IDEAL LAUNDRY
and

TRIPLE CITIES
TRANSIT CO. BUS
Super deluxe coach

CLEANERS
CAMPUS REPRESE NTATIVE S
Roy Tumpowsk y

Barb Metsky

George F ricke

Debbie Pisctzncr

Brian Eden

Elaine Rostholdcr

Bruce Rogers

J udy Winchell

Air conditioned
Reclining seats
Lavatories
Radio and PA system
Card tables

RA 2-2391
375 State St., Binghamton

�swATS

NRY'S

JACK and BOB

163 Main St., Binghamton
George F. Highway, Endwell

CONG RATULATIONS

Mid-Way Recreation Inc.
" For the Best In Bowling"

TO THE CLASS
OF '64

Britts

VEST AL LAN ES
48 Modern AMF Automatics
213 Jensen Rd. ,
VESTAL, N. Y.
RA 9-3538

MANOR HOUSE LANES
24 New AMF Automatics

DEPARTMENT STORE

VEST AL PLAZA

Binghamton Plaza
West State St..
BING H AMTON, N. Y.
RA 4-1366
Cocktail Lounge-Snack Bar
Catering to our Harpur College Friends
both in Regular Leagues and
Open Bowling

�PIERSON'S
Headqua rters for Harpur Students:
College Ring Binders
Note

Books-Them~ Covers

Drafting Supplies -Slide Rules

arv~

Brief and Attache Cases
Duplicating ~
Photo-Copy

.
Mach mes

othinq

~oun "" ijjnlon

Supplies &amp; Service
Stationery

Office Supplies

State St., across from Post Office

FOWLER,
DICK &amp; WALKER

VESTAL PLAZA

Bingham ton, New York

Minor Repairs

TOM'S TEXACO SERVICE

Mufflers

We salute
the June Gradua tes of
HARPU R COLLE GE
May Success
Always Be Yours

797-5147

•

Lubrication

•

Tailpipes

Lifetime Guarante e
Firestone Tires
Goodyear Tires
Reduced Prices for Students

�OUR SINCERE THANKS
AND
BEST WISHES
TO YOU . . .

COMPLI MENTS OF

MISKE
ELECTRIC , INC.

. UPON YOUR RETIREM ENT.

THE GOLIARDS

Congratu lations and Best Wishes
To The Class of 1964
from

ME RIN STU DIO S OF
PHO TOG RA PHY
Official Photogra phers to the J 964 "COLON IST,.
All portraits appearin g in this publicati on
have been placed on file in our Studio and
can be duplicat ed at any time.
\Vrite or 'Phone us for Informat ion.
WAinut 3-0146
0147
0148

1010 Chestnu t Street
Philadel phia 7, Pa.

�CONGRATU LATIONS
TO THE CLASS OF 1964

ALL
WAYS
A

STEP
AHEAD

There is no final stage in education; it is an unending search for
knowledge and the continuing development of wisdom. Through them
we can recognize and develop opportunitie s to the fullest extent. Together they are the formula for individual and world progress.

INTERNAT IONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORA TION

�,,

~~~

~--'

~

C an ny Trucking C o.
Inc.

YORK
6-18 SPRING FOREST AVENUE, BINGH AMTO N, NEW
PHONE RAymond .4-1357

TERMINALS:

New York City

Clifton, New Jersey

99-109 Jane Street

310 Colfax Avenue
GRegory 1-1696

CHelsea 3-1360

Elmira, New York

Scranton, Penn.

53-55 Sheridan Avenue
REgent 2-5027

Diamond 6-3854

1708 Nay-Aug Aveooe

BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1964

EN D IC O TT TR U ST CO M PA NY
M E M B E R

OF

F E D E R A L

D E P0 S I T

I N S U R A N C E

C0 R P0 R A T I 0 N

4 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
EN DWELL
:
MAIN OFFICE
35-41 WASHINGTON AVENUE

:

VESTAL

:

148 VESTAL PARKWAY EAST

•

•

3225 EAST MAIN STREET

WEST CORNERS

WEST CORNERS PLAZA

�BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1964

PHOT O &amp; REPRO DIVIS ION
GENERAL ANILI NE &amp; FILM CORP ORAT ION

SENTRY
COLONIAL MOT OR INN
DINING ROOM
&amp; COCKTA IL LOUNGE
RA 9-4901
/

BINGHAM TON'S FINEST ACCOMM ODATION S
Private Tile Baths - Steam Heat
Room Phones
210 Rooms - Baths

3 SWIMMI NG POOLS

AIR CONDIT IONING

3 Miles vVest of Binghamto n On Highway 17

Nearest to the Harpur Campus
Member of American Express &amp; Diner's Club
AAA

Hilton Carte Blanche

AMHA

�MA RI NE

MI DL AN D

TRU ST CCJ IVIP ANV
OF SOU THER N NE\N YORK
h1ember Federal Deposit Insura11ce Corporati on

go od lu ck ,
CL AS S OF 19 64 !
•
Slater School and College Services wishes to thonk
the members of the graduating class for their
patronage- to say farewell, good luck, and good health.
Your school's administrat ion realizes that classroom
performanc e often depends on planned nutrition.
Through ARA Slater, they have wisely invested in
quality food, prepared and served in friendly style.
We hope you hove enjoyed Slater meals and servicethat mealtime provided a pleasant social break in
the day's busy routine. From all of us, good luck
and good health in the years ahead!

SLAT ER SCHO OL AND COLL EGE SERV ICES
PHILADELPHIA 46, PA.

•••

Slater Now Serves More Thon 220 Schools In 32 States and Puerto Rico

•••

�OUR BEST WISHES TO
THE CLASS OF '64
Mr. &amp; Mrs. William P. Hesse
Mr. &amp; Mrs Leo Coel
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Morris Goldsmith
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Bernd H. Allen
Mrs. Philip Hertzberg
Mr. &amp; Mrs. William H. Hoysradt
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Emil Korhummcl
Mr &amp; l\1rs. August J. Muller
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Chester H. Lee
Dr. &amp; Mrs. Alexander A. D'Angclo
\1r. &amp; \1rs. Joseph L. Wellikoff
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Joseph F. Rossie
Mr. &amp; Mr'&gt;. Otto F. Neidlinger
Mr. &amp; \1rs. Dwight L. Mayne
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Delbert C. Moyle
\1r. &amp; Mrs. Al Reifer
Mr. &amp; Mrs. William S. Conklin
\1r. &amp; Mrs. W. M. Laird
Mrs. Kenneth Schloop
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Chester E. McCord
Mr. &amp; Mrs. William Schu ltz
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Abraham Kaufman
Mr &amp; Mrs. Malcolm Wein
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Chester B. Ostrander
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Glenn S. Welsh
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Jerome Krieger
\1r &amp; Mrs. Morris Weiss
Ytr. &amp; Mrs. Irving Krauss
Mr. &amp; Mrs. lsodore Mollick
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Sidney Z. Fuchs
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Mac Fox
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Irving S. Waltzer
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Benjamin Selsby
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Gerald R. Gould
Mr. &amp; Mrs. George J. Rossi
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Carl W. F unk
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Samuel J. Garland
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Maurice H. Levy
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Irving Wolf

Mr. &amp; '.vtrs. Herbert L. 'l1perman
\ .fr. &amp; Mrs. Ralph B. Da\ie
\1rs. Ha1el F. Foster
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Louis Bromberg
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Alfred Hochstadt
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Roy E. Hunt, Sr.
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Robert A. Dennis
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Martin Rauchberg
.\fr. &amp; Mrs. Herbert Tittlcr
~fr. &amp; Mrs. Emanuel Lagoudis
Mr. &amp; l\1rs. George A Potter
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Abraham Friedman
Mr. Joseph A. Stuckart
Mrs. Alfreda P. Halder
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Frank '\oble
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Harold Burnham
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Louis Lupi
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Fred A. Rubinstein
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Edmond Roy
Mr. &amp; \1rs. Gerald Lucey
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Chester F. Korniak
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Meyer W. Crane
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Henry Jablonski
Mr. Harold J. Demo
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Jamee; J. Teevan, Sr.
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Frank A. Roberts
Mr. &amp; \.1rs. Alex Kuryla
'.vtr. &amp; Mrs. Juice, Mikloc.,
'.vtr. &amp; Mrs. James B. 'ovak Ill
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Alexander Moracn
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Ben Brooks
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Charles J. Bodie
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Bernard Moynihan
Mr. &amp; Mrs. John R. Terracina
Mrs. William Hackman
Mr. &amp; M rs. Julius Becker
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Jack Harrison
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Harry M. Goldman

Dr. &amp; \11r-.. Benjamin Malzbcrg
Mr. &amp; \1rs Hyman L Boller
Mr. &amp;. \11rs Jack Silverman
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Henry Gottcent
Mr. &amp; Mrs Siegfried Sachs
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Reuben Freedman
Mr. &amp; 'v1rs. Kenneth E. Perkins, Sr.
Mrs. Wendell R. Carta
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Irving S. Aaronson
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Herbert Tumpowsk)
Mr. &amp; Mrs. John J. Mcintyre
\1r. &amp; \II rs Albert ~ einstein
Mr. &amp; \.1rs. \Villiam H. Schwartz
Mr. &amp; \1rs. Sam Friedman
\!Ir. &amp; Mrs. Irving Rostholder
The Pisctwcr Famil)
Mr. &amp; \.1rs. Kenneth L. Anderson
Mr. &amp; \.1rs. Ma:&gt;.. Yarnell
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Hyman Wolfson
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Irving R. Weiner
Mr. &amp; Mr~. Roland A. Young
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Alfred Tannenbaum
Mr. &amp; Mrs. John Laplawa
Mr. &amp; 'v1rs. Harry Light
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Walter Orman
Mr. J. Bernard O'Connor
Mr. &amp; \·1rs. Erik Ostebo
\fr. &amp; Mrs. Ft.:nton Simonson
~r. &amp; 'v1rs. Charles B. Orcutt
Mrs. Robert L. Patchen
Miss Ursula
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Arthur M. Grippen
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Fred J. Stuhlmiller
Mr. &amp; Mrs. John Sherman
M r . &amp; Mrs. Arthur Leeder
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Gino Calistri
Mr. &amp; Mr&lt;;. Abe Schwager
~r. &amp; Mrs. George R. W illiams

�AD DE ND A
bei ng a rec ord of the lives [in pro per alp hab etic al order] of
the Sen ior s of Ha rpu r College, con tain ing facts abo ut the ir
end eav our s and hon our s wo n, and inc lud ing never-beforepub lish ed- or- spo ken sec rets and con fess ion s, in add itio n to
odi ous acc oun ts, this brilliantly dev ised enc ycl ope dia is desig ned to aro use the cur ios ity of eve n the mo st boorish, and
to titillate the Sen sat ion s of all.

Rea der s are cau tion ed not to lick the delicately
scrolled bor der s lest the pages stick together,
and the mo st violent case of epizootic results.

�JFf+RY ADEL!\fAN
History: French. A rt. Literature. Ps~ chology
Dean\ List, Junior Honors; Senior
Committee, Dorm Council. ISCC.
Odeans. Outing Club. Bocci Club.
I was playing cowboys and Indians
with m} friend Alan Levy but was not
caught on the Digman table with a
paper tomahawk-I was on the window-sill hidden by the curtains and
therefore avoided punbhment. But I
was guilty.
As a member of the Outing Club
contributed to the great success of the
photograph of the club in the '63
yearbook-the major impetus for the
formation of the Outing Club was. in
fact, to get a picture in the yearbook.
JUDITH N. Al.EXANOE'.R
Social Science: Psychology
Dean\ List; Civil Rights Club, International Relations Club.

ADE.I.I'll/: Ken Bloom, ( harlrs Bnbis•
Coppola . £than Fishman Bill Glassman, Harry Gellu, I.arn· Glkkman, Mike
Go11/itb , /)me Graubard, Bo Hahn /lm4'1f'
Barry
l.~\ in ton , Ri&lt;'hurd Print::.. Bob Rt1J.J
Sch11eldu, John Se.1 mour, Barry Shauwwn ,
Wike Swir:1•r, Ro1· TumpQk .fkJ· ,\11&lt;·ke1
Wein. Barry Wink/tr, Scott Winokur
.\.1&lt;111

A 1'0: ~fern/1 Basstll ,\fiehad Burke .\'t'il
Ct1rta, Rmmond D'AROHino Car&gt; Dun•
bar, Barry Clnsbn1r. Jame&gt; Harrington,
(;Lenn Hori ry, Ken f_ucey, Riclwrd Mur·
clteriello, llarry Me}'ers. William M&gt;·ns,
,\,ftJrris
Li"''&gt;' Paslk . l.czrry Rahi11otdt:
Schorr, John Tm~ino. Bill Zlperman
1

BACCACIA . Bill Bender, lla"ey Boller,
Ila/ Burnlwm. Ste\ e Din~r. Ro11 Ehrrnl&gt;erx.
.Witrlr Gtrlwrdt, Paul G111.tbnt. 7 etldr
lltx:hstndt, Sit"\ r .\lfen)-uk Don .\'iels&lt;m. Joe
Pa/unr, Richard \"ro/er, Phil Sommtrs

BAS/J •

Clarincc,-Dmid Bom.&lt;reln, John Mclellan,
I.re

Ad/t&gt;'K'ft:_,

OrloO

f.llM-'rentt•

Bennf.'tt

Tiu/er. Arthur Ahrahwns, Bt•lfy F.nor. Jan&lt;•
Sltnir, Sur (.m11lo, Jeff C n, Virginia I el-

JEANETTE ALLEN
General Literature
Spanish Club. International Relations
Club. Civil Rights Club.
WA YNF P. ANDl'RSON
Chemistry
Dean's I ist; WRAF. Methodist Student Fellowship, Light Chorus. Men's
C1lee Club.

se,.; Saxaphonc,-Jeff Titl.llera/d, Wt1)·ne
Oboc, - Sawlru
Wemer;
Hoh
Jf..'ebster.
Ba11m1:urlnt'r

Jt&gt;anne

Bie~:.arJ~

..,1 bb1t

Mohn; flute,-Jwl)' Prlly, Betn· Pollow
Undu Konrig, Put We/Jh : Bas,oons-Dick
Ku~11w , Keith WcCle/land, lrumpc1&gt;-Gar1
Doupe, Alan Gould, Karen Grt1nr, Ja}'
llaro/d.t, Dt1niel K11plan. Warren W1•/&gt;.!ft•r.
French Horns Alan /lardy, Jolin f;"i·unw11,
Carol Martin , Bariconc-Robrrr Wltillle),
Trombones· Frnnk Kear/)', James Baldwin ,
Gt•nt' Godin , Jo.reph Websru; 1 ubaStt••rn l.dden; Sou'-'lphone- C/1/Jord l:d..._."'ds. PcrCU4',iOn-Lann_r l.e\ tne. Fmoke
Berec~

'"mcanwhilc:..-a ~ocial device cm·

ployed w inject a 101:11 irrclcvancv
inlo lht:

convcr~ation.

·

ROLAND BA YER
Poliucal Science
\Voodrow Wilson Fellowship. Dean\
List, Wlto'.1 Wlto, First Largest Health
Folder in Infirmary; International Relations Club. Progressive Socialist Society. Civil Rights Club. USG Academic Affairs Commillee. Academic
Discipline Committee.
Wa\ told to go back tO Russia b}
Judith (DARJ Osterhoudt. Threatened with death by ~fr. Wren (after
sitting on a painting of his dog.)
Called a "Diamond in the rough'' by
Miss Kinloch.
Organized students to "raid" American Legion Hall in 1960 (during
showing of "Operation 1\bolition ...)
Circulated facult}-student pellt1on
against HUAC. Fed The Colonial
N£·1•·~ with hot tips for four years.
Confronted Dean Belniak &lt;luring
Bermuda riot.
JUDITH A. BECKFR
History. Math
Dean's List, Honor Roll, Junior Honors: Humanities Review.

:
~-*"~~-~~~:~~
. . -~ . . . . . ~
~-.
111IIIII11UItItlttIt11 1
BASFBAl.l.: Donald A11dnsm1, Alim Cnhn1, Steir I&gt;avis, Sam Del.orn1:0, Paul
Feuer.t1"irJ, I.than f ishman . .Y'ichael Gr,rn·
her~. A/frn lm1r/ , f.dward Kaplan, Robar
.WcCulloch. Jcimes Reif, Dadd Ron, Christopher Rouie. Ste1..art Rubin. Barr) SchMI·
der, James Sprin1;. Jflilliu1n Tumin~llo
BASKETBAI.I.: Robert Bro11un , Ste1e11
D1ni.1, Bemt1rd Grossbng, Michael McCulloch, Kt•irh MC1r11n. William Matros, Wil/iwn Moy111/u111, Barr)' Sd111e1der, IJarr)'
Sltimkin ...,le/we/ Tll/es, Ro.v Tum1ww.1ky,
R,,hert Vogel, Philip Weisberg, !\'ei/ Wikn &gt;ky, Barr)' Winklt•r. John Woic10
CASSANDRA.VS· 5ul.cinne

Hay ..·ard, Do-

ClfEERLF.ADE.RS · Carol A111s/f't', Nancy
Ca11/&lt;111, Vunc} Ch11rch1ll, Pat Ferruru. Dlaue Kaelzn, Bonnie Kur:, lvfarjorie .Yer..
riam, .~fartl)'fl Orzelek, Jan Stuhlmillrr,
J11dy Winchell
CROSS COUSTRY: I red~rick Ban11rrt,
Robert
frank Calir11do, WI/I/am /'al/a
Ge/trru. Richard GrrenbrrR, Alan lfardy,
Michael Mc.\.lu/len, Stephen \'ewman ,.,.,,.,
Ro..·/unds, Stanlt) !frha111:.

STFVEN D. RERG
Fconomics: Literature, French. Biolog~

Endymions. Coloma( News.
Academic Probation; 15 shoot-downs
in 9 ho•1rs; 17 consecutive cuts in
French 102.
SHEILA A. BLEE
Art
Gallery Committee.
HARRIET R. Bl U~t
Biology-Zoology
Dean's I.i~t; Judicial Roard. Central
Appellate Board
JOHN M
Physics

ROBURKA

EILEEN M. BODIF
Psycholog}: Biology
Dean's List: WRA (President).
HARVFY R. BOl l.FR
Political Science
Debate Societ&gt; (President), Baccacia
(President).
STFVEN J BROOKS
Political Science
USG Representathe, ISCC. Swimming. Tennis.

loreJ Nt"idlinxt-r, \~anq S1nilll, Simi Stt'in·

houer. Putricia El #!rslt&gt;n

152

GFORGF BRUN
Ps}cholog&gt;
Dean's List; Track, Men's
Council. Swimming Manager.

Dorm

HAROLD H . BURNHAM
Medieval Ci' ihzation; Political Science. History. English
Dean's I ist, ?'-.ominat1ons for Woodrow Wilson &amp; Danforth Fellowships;
Debate Club. Baccacia (Vice-President). USG Social Regulations Commctlee, Student Center Hoard.
One of the four people out of twentythree \~ho did not receive Junior
Honors in Englbh Called before Judicial Review Board for fabricating
e\idencc and refusing to coopcrat~
with a inember of the administr:uion.
Dean· Belniak told me that it was atti·
!lldes like mine which threatened the
existence of this fine institution.
I nc,er did apologize to \tr. \Vhittn!.er for m~ conduct as I "a.s instructed to. I helped break into the
mimeograph room in order to mimeo
material to organize and er..:ourage
demonstrations againq dress regulations. I organized a petition lo have
open dorms in Rafuse. knowing it
would fail. merely to agitate again~!
the administration.

EDWARD B. CAIN
Chemistry
TAC (Secrl!tary). Methodbt Student
fellowship. Rand.
JFAN L. CANCRO
Biolog}. Botan): Psycholog)
Deans List; S} nchroni1ed S\\ im Club
(Secretary). \1ethodist Student FelloMhip. WRA. Colonial Pla}er,,
Dance Workshop.
SKIP J. CART ISI
History: Chemistr1. Geography
Sophomore Class Secrctarv, Judicial
Board. Central Appellate Board. Senior Kc} Commitlec.
Petition denied to live off-campus.
Never played pitch. I ~tole the senior
key last year.

�CLUR: Je&lt;111ette A//~11.
Jon Auro1no11, .\.1ar11 Buumstein, Jruly B'·rg,
(/Vil.

RfC,flTS

( hriftint•

.\"or111an

8011nt•},

B't·c&gt;r.

Susan

Culkim, ( hurle&gt; C/&lt;1rk, ,'ia11cy Caplan. Bob
f'tJm Frietlman, John f .\ansoh11,
lree5ton
Ken Hausfaihtr, Carol
8Jrrit• (,,,,,,/man
Urlw1. 11'11/wm lhnes , James Jucobs. Mick er KCJfJW\ \1ikr Kcaper, ,\.furl)' l.i&lt;'bowit:.
lleanor Le\ine. Annettt•
Diane l pson

NEII C. CARTFR
General Literature
Freshman Class Treasurer .
ming. APO.

Sw .m·

JUDITH P. C \ST·\(11'. \
Spanish
Judicial Board

,M&lt;·&lt;1owm1, A1arm")' ;.\°ommick, Pt·1t·r Dal is,

"v1ARC N . COEL
Biology
Dean\ Lisi: Emt~ mions (President) .
WRAF, (Business Manager)_ ISCC.

Stall Reift'r, Marthu Schwurtz. Dolores Sella:;.:o, Joannr Smcnoi Ru.~h Theumun, Ben

Titt/cr, .War&gt; Tra,,ani, Peur Viet:r, Rosa/i~
Wi&lt;'H'n, (laud/a Wilso11, Ired Wolf, Murk
Zlt•kin

Cl J\REN00" Jo&gt;' ( h11, Llirry D1•1111i.1,
I .n'lrt'nc~ KeanW}', l:.l/e11
Jerr)' G. 11i.
St·lunu·rso11 , Su:w11 ~Vl1e

&lt;HOIR:
Sc.1prano-C 011.rttutn

AAiand,

,\llurna

.~illlC'l'nl

Strr1::ahcHc o, 1 cnor-Hune ) Born~
fieitt, Gar&gt;' l&gt;o11pe 8t11 I r/11;. Roy Gordo11
Al&lt;J11 Hard), La11e lfoltrt , '&gt;f;kt' \11lrgeo11,

1 ounR,

\.\C3r'

lec.:tual.'.

corduro)'

turtle-

'uits.

necks, f·red Bcaun shoes. and black leot;ird,,

( onk/in,

Jovce

Dtn id

"Sickie"-a n) girl who wears her hair long
or 'hort and any hoy with or without a
heard; anyone who " "liberal.'' "intel-

Bur~

l/anH'll,
Jaynr
\fuc\e Jlunl/ey. A.a&gt; KounJkl, Bt•,erl&gt; A..'"o·
~ak. Sue H emt·r, l\arhy /.uslo'51o. AttoI wJu
BoburJ,;u
.\.fartf BmunJte1n, \ifllr)
ViA11n
L.anJ:, I 1:: Roherlf, h1n1• Shear
Stnne
{ \ ntlua
Swrr.
l'ame/a
Splain,

nett

B~l~~-J),m1e/

Ronald (JfUflt, John Harfl~OrJ,

JOY Y. CHU
English Literature
Dean·, List. Junior Honor,. ( forendon Poetry Prize ( 1963), Dragon So
ciel\; 1962 Coloni.11 (Managing fd.).
Coln ictl ,\ '1•11 1, Senior Kc: Committee (( hairman ).
I stoic senior ke} lasl year.

l OLJ.f.(,/UM

.\fl/SICUM :

llar"J'

Horn-

Doupl!, .We1c•n!
//1mtle1 l'ame/a Slarr. Cprthia ~1011e, Robrrt U'luln~y. (,dru) 7uckrrman

fit•ld, .\tfordt1 Burnrfl, &lt;ian

On rhe Tm111.
HF.RBFR T C'OHFN
Economic s
Dionysian s
USG,
Club.
Dehatc
(Treasurer ).
It was I who "borrowed " a cushion
from the Digman recreation room to
use on 1hc bad. of m} desk chair for
the lasl two semesters.

KuJttn,

W1chae/ Pa .. t1ck1, A/a11 Stu,fe1tml, Roher/
U /Jitney, (11/rrJJ' /.11e kernwn

COI.0\IAL Pl.AYERS: Site Acfams. f.//en
r,,t Bi-nnu·m \.fu.r1lrn Blumen,
Rak.er
Amr /Jonkthin , Joe 8rt•11, Carnlee Cappo-

Jt'll~

Anna l nrrug1a, Rlake Gordon, .\lari·
t.n II• nr1·. /I.a) Hoban , Dai id Kam1n.&lt;kr.
Georg&lt;'
Om id 1&lt;:0/citd1, De1111a La11dau

RICH,\RD M \1\RI TON
Bio log)
Internatio nal Relations Club (Vice·
President) . Frc,hman Class VicePrc,ident. \i\ ii Righh C tub. APO
FRA;-.;K M. C'ARRA:-- :0. JR.
Ph\,ics
Dc~n\ I is1: TAU. Newman Club.

I oudon, Tonr Wuinionis Kath» ~andr\',
I 111da Wr&lt;rf!hr. \'te..e \'•••u11on, \ orm Slt/'nn. \,furcia l't'rl.t1e1n, \larl&gt; Rappeport,
\1orn&gt; \c/Jorr. ,\f1ke S111rgron, Art Um/111,
f./1:ubnh Van Pt1fl~n. Beth Wills. Kalh.r
/.tu/01 tk ,.
Thrt·e \.it ten. Tiu! l
tlrr f"our Cvloneb Ru1Pu•o and Juliet

Production~: Tiu~

l&gt;A \ ( F

WORKSHO P·

Wan/Jn

O\ ••

o/

~1ARY CONKLIN
Chemislry
Dean\ I.bt: \\IRA (Vice-Pres ident).

\1,\ TTHl ~ W I.. COPPOI ·\
Biolog}
Junior Cl:iss Vice-Presi dent. Baseball.
Co-ordina 1or !'SA regional a! Harpur
10 1962, 1\dclphi.

(irunfield,

bag'&gt;.

cfrr, Boh IVeiner, /lane ..· Zala:.nic'k

Bl11me11.

HtlFhara Hax1//a , \fickei· Kar-

Dn:11u I aruluu, f.kannr I.('' int•, l\.arrn
\'eze/ek Alzce .Sihermun. Suwn Wile. Jan

pat

JOI IN S. CO\ Fl L
U1era1ure:
Cieneral
and
f. nglish
Chemistry
Senior Honors Program. Junior Honors. Dean\ list
\t CRA1'.l
American History
Dean\ list; rndymion s (President) .
Chorus. Colonial .\'e111. Dorm Coun-

STl-'PHI-~

cil.

DEBATE Cl.VB: Emok•· Ber..ez, Jost'/•h
Cul'ullw. ldwurd 1:ck.111•i11, Jam&lt;'&lt; F.//.1worth, Stuart l.l'~U , I&gt;aud I.orton. Richart!
Muuhesie/lo , JoJeph .,..,irab110. '\a11 Ro11,
Do/ore.1 Sellaz:o. Carl Shoo/111w1 Lmm
Smith. J11cf11h S111e/ha111/, Annett~ We/11514.•/n, 5ttphen Wel.J" Suplitrr Ym111g

JrHRFY l. CZFISI ER
Chemistry
Colonial Players. Spring
Chcmi\tr·} Cluh. SOS.

LARRY R . Df:l"NIS
I ilerature-C reallvc
General

S111h/m1/lt'r Donnu Ht'rdrr . Phillis Jaegu.
H.lfu A.arp. Mar1hu KorcH, Lurtla ."1furph\.-'

Review,

Ronald &lt;iruen. Paul Km·h , Erroll Leader
mut1, 'a.fkhael l~bO't\'ll:, \"u1t1rt Lt!rntr.
llarr} .W1·sh, Gaa/d Rosrnhlr&lt;m, Plrlllil'
Sdu·dut•r, Richard SieRlt•1wm, Etlward Sn,\.··

CAI VI"' F. DEYFR~fO D
Hiolog}
Dean\ I ist: Winter Weekend Chairman, Golf, Soccer
Took pipe from Dr A. Mueller in
Genetics. I wa' the v.orsl proctor in
the histor} of 1his school: v.hilc I wa'
in reign we had a distillery on our
floor. and Mike Frecdu~ had a party
every night. I was pinned to three
g1rl~ a1 the same time.
Al'&lt;N I . DOUB! F.Dr\ Y
English I i1erature: Biology
Junior Honors. Dean's I isl.

Al I F"&lt; R.

DUH~TSKY

Historv
Swdent with Most Waking Hours
Spent Asleep. 1963; Iland, Dance
Band &lt;Jumping Frogs), Organizing
Commilte c of Marlha S1. Spaghetti
festhal. Hitch-hiki ng C'lub of Bingham1on and llarpur College (President). Su~quehanna S1eam,hip Socict&gt;. The Commitle c for fransform ing
the Library into a Snack Bar.
PnH ided ~1ck mu,ic for Harpur\ '1ck
hecr-bla\t •

Writ·

in~

Wrtling Prize ( 1963 l:
WRAF (General Manager). Clure11clon,
Colonial Players.

Clare11do11

153

Kt·n -

twlh ( ha.tt•n, Peur Curt'111 Br11t1• Denkt·r.
Umwld Fa11in , Rh-hard fe/dmun, Stut1rt
,Worto11
f'rayman,
R1ehard
f'le1shman,
GoltlbcrK • ..tndrt't\ (1old.ttem, Ro" C1ordtm,

oeeeo••c.M•••~

RAI PH B. DAVIE
i\ccoun1in r
Dean·s I ist: Soccer. Goliards (Vic.:Pres1dent) .

Laurie Cor~ /11, Arlene
( drol Hreabart
Jutly
Anna Farru{!ill, RoJe Fell
I a/kin

Bromht•r11,

DJ,iff.TRIA SS:

TRA A COlffN
Economics
Dean', List: Endymion s (Treasurer ).

DuJ/rmun,

s,·1h

Herhnt

I AL RFl'. \. CORWIN
Anthropol ogy: Biology
Dean's I ist: Colonial Players, Dance
Workshop , Folk Dance group. 'fhalians. Chorus, Light Chorus. ~1adrigal
'&gt;ingers.
Over four years T have stolen I 00 tea

C..1ARY H . DU~BAR
French
Canlerbur } Club CPrc,ident ). t\PO
(President . Trea,urer) . I rack, French
Club. Light Chorus.

�DENNIS R. ELLSWORTH
General Literature
List; USG Representative,
Dean·~
Adelphi (Vice-President). Winter &amp;
Spnng Weekend Committees.
PATRICIA ESTADT
General Literature
Dean's List

DIONYSIANS: Bill A11der&gt;o11. Murra}' At1ie. Terry AuRtmbraun. lrt1 Bourstein, Ste1-e

Brooks. Herb Colie11, Daniel Denato, Cal
Deyermond, Paul Feul'rStein, Barry Forrest,
Aaron Fuchs , Stne Goldberg, Dare Kies/er, Murk Ko11ikoff, Al Kos/off, Paul Krieger, Stei·e Luckok·it::.. Jolin Ma.uey. Gil
Sweet, Ken Weisfeld, Mike Wellikoff

1·id Yo1mg

WILLIAM S. FALLA
Chemistry
Dean's List; Cross Country, Track.
RICHARD P. FOSTER
English Literature
Most Improved Soccer Player, 1962;
ITK (President, Treasurer), Soccer,
Band. Outing Club.

"You're nice!,.-shorl explelive
meanlttg )'our're real/}·

£NDYMIONS: Steien Berg, Mark Coe/.
Ira Cohe11, Man in Colin, Ste•·en Crane,
Feinberg.
Bernard
Federman,
Edwar&lt;I
Frank Fratta/one, Jim Frie11d. Marrin
Fuchs. Robert Garla11d Jay Goldber11.
Mark Goldstein, Richard Krubel. Stuart
Leeder. Allan Lippe/, Marrin Ma11go, Michael Millet, Richard .\'ob/e, Kenneth Perkins. Paul Peyur. Clinton Schloop. Michael
Simon, Kenne1h Unger. Daiid Weiner, Da-

nasl)'~

RALPH Z. FRIEDMAN
Social Science-Philosophy
Associate Director of the First and
Lasl Annual Martha St. Spaghetti
Pestival.
ROBERT H. FRIEDMAN
Economics
Goliards (Secretary), ISCC.
JAMES S. FRIEND
Biology
Dean's List; Tennis, Endymions (President).
MARTI N H. FUCHS
Mathematics; English Literature
Guest lecturer at Mathematics Colloquium; Dorm Council (Treasurer),
Jewish Fellowship (President), Endymions, WRAF.
Resolved the dorm vending crisis.
Helped establish the Interfaith Council. Was the proctor who locked up
Champlain lounge.

ROBERT I. GARLAND
Chemistry
Band, Jewish Fellowship, E ndymions
(Treasurer).
Helped hang the Santa Claus from
Pegasus, Christmas, 1960.
DIANE S. GEERKEN
History
Dean's List; International Relations
Club, French Club.
MICHAEL L. GLASSMAN
History
Dean's List, Senior Honors Program;
Colonial News.
STEVEN W. GOAD
Economics; Accounting
Vice-President),
(President,
TAU
Whitney J udicial Board.
On academic probation for half of my
college career-I have just begun to
fight.
JUDITH GOLD
General Literature

FRENCH CLUB: Marti Baum stein. Nancv
Caplan, Co11nie Dearing. Ann Gaylord,
Rick HoOma11, Dick Le1y. Barbara Shapiro,
Jane Shear, Jim Shear, Mike Sturgeon,
Ellen Sup&lt;'T, Arlene Talankn, Mark Weiristein, Pam Williams, Barbara Wi11enberg
GERMAN CLUB: Ellen Baker, Betti•
Buehl , Dadd Goldman, Jlenr)' Gruen,
Linda Herold, Jutta Heyge/, Paul Hoffman,
Giles Hoyt, Ray Hunt, Ron Jarmuth, Dia11e
Kaelin. l/se Kornprobst, Tony Mainionis,
George Meyn, Christle Nlclio/s, Carol Oesrrich. Marilynn Rose, Paula Saubermtm
Enid Seeger, Sandra Serafin, I/ans Sproghe,
Nina Szeid. Frederick Young, Bob Zolczer

·'Clubbie"-a pen.on. usua.lly male, in a
social clltb, or a girl who da1es social
club boys. Not alt people in clubs are
''clubbies"-some arc "sickies."

GOLF: Arth11r Kaelin, Russell Keeney,
Howard Le1•into11. Peter O/$en, Richard
Sowde11, A/a11 Spross, Robert Taber

"might ever"--an exclamatory
remark meaning never.

154

• •••••••••••••••••
GOLIARDS: James Boland, Michael Bra;:ier, Ralph Dari&lt;', James Fey, M/chtle/ Frudus.

Rober/

Friedman,

ChanninK

Funk.

Charles Haas. William Hesse WI/I/am Iak ,
Vt&gt;rnon Jacobs, h ·an light. Harry Martin
Keith Martin, Michael Matthews, Robert
McC11//ocli, Dennis O'Connor, Charles Orc111I, Richard Orman, Orstein Ostebo,
Douglas Patchen, Chor/es P111man , Karl
Simonson, James Spring Willim11 Stlbel,
Gar.v Taylor, John Wo;cio

ALAN W. GOLDSMITH
English
Who's Who, Dragon Society. Dean's
List; Appointed Bus Captain for four
consecutive vacations, invited to Pandoran Tea, Winner of T1 an~ccmling
Award Prize in 121 Oak Street Open
Sandwich Competition; J 964 Coloni.!I
(Editor), Colonial News (Feature Editor). USG, Students for a Democratic Community. Soccer. Odeans.
Non-Futures of America.
Scored goal for other team in soccer:
was part of only expedition to get
caught pulling prank on Pegasus; lost
room key in ice-cream machine; was
told by Mr. Marshall not to jump out
of lounge window; conducted only
USG election in which cheating occurred; listened in on secret faculty
meeting concerning trimester as CN
reporter.
Brought worst collection of experimental :films to Harpur; made worst
experimental film at Harpur ("LaSalle
de Bain"); originated "conflict of interest" excuse for resigning a USG
position.

CHARLOTIE F. GOLDSTEJN
General Literature
Dean's List
NAOMI R. GOLDWASSFR
English Literature
JOHN H. GOTTCENT
English Literature
Dean's List: Newman Club. Student
Publications Board, Civil Rights Club.
DAYID GOTTLIEB
Biology
Woodrow Wilson Fellowship, Who's
Who, Dean's List, Honor Roll; Student Center Board (Chairman). Party
to Abolish Student Governmen1.
MICHAEL N . GOITLIFB
Chemistry
Dean's list; Adelphi (Secretary),
Tennis. Dorm Council.
GERALD L. GOULD
English Literature
Junior Honors; Manager of Light
Chorus, Colonial Nell"S, Clarendon.
ROBERT J. GRIEBEL
Chemistry
Dean's List; APO. Tennis.
I have been using my slide rule to
four places.
ROSS P. GRIPPEN
French Literature
French Club

JJJ!!IT!!!JJlil..l.l..l..l...U...I..J.J

HUMANITIES REVIEW: Judy Becker,
Joe Lurie, Bob Poczik, Fred Price, Claudia
Wilson
ITK. Richard Feldman, Jolin Fennessey,
Richart! Foster, Gerald Gold, Wi1Tlat11
Hflckman. William Moynihan, Stewart R11.
bin, Joseph Wolfer

�JF.WISH STUDE!V T FELL OWSlllP. Marly B11H Ros 81!njamin , Hannah Bernhardt.
Joel Cohn. Rubert Co/111. Vicki Dauh. Rm1
Fhrenberl, Marcia I /&lt;eh. Aaron Gurwit:.,
Dun K11p/an , /\aomi Kleid. Marc Lt!ilnl!r,
Richard Lei&gt;" SIU l.l!wis, Jackie Lichtman,
Ruth Mal~hl'rg, Fran
.~fullherg.
Am)'
Ma:.u , Clrarnt}' Nemoy, Bruce Ro11ers. Siu
Rawe. JtJe/ So{fin, Al/11n Stone. Ellen Su111•r,
lrn Wo/t
JUDICIAL. RfYIF.W BOARD. illn Boland, Joun110 Hirschberg , Kathy Mandr}'.
lt•annette Mehrrr, l1u11 Light, Dick Orman,
Gl'ralcJ Rme11h/um

MAOC1F R. HACKM A1'
Hi,tor~

I.ow woman m cla.,s (maybe): two
years on GI S without getting caught
for anythin!? illegal. beat Judv (,old n
ping-pon g using my left hand; Senior
Kc} Committ ee. O'Conno r Judicial
Hoard.
ROB!- RT D. HAHN
Biology
Dean·, l isl. Sophomo re ('la's President. Adelphi CSecretar} ). Orchestr a.
Apathy Societv
Wrote "Follow the Green"- the
school march that cver~one refuses to
sing. Spent an hour a da~ helping nn
roommat e with biology (he flunked).
ROBFRT B. HALDE R
Chemistr y
Dean's I ist; Chorus.
JOHS F. HARRI SO'
(ieology : Physics
Choir
I ight Chorus !Presiden t).
(Presiden t). Men's Glee Cluh ( President), Soccer. Cross Country.
GF.RAJ. D HATHA WAY
Fconom1 cs
Track
1.1 l ! t ll.l...: ! t l.1 l J,

PATR ICIA A. HAZEN
General Literatur e
Dean's List; Methodis t Student Fel(Presiden t).
Pandoran~
lowship.
Hand, Synchron i1ed Swimmin g.

t1scu:..:y"- adjt•c1ile meuninK dirt}',
tmshu1 en, puorl,- dres.red. usuall)'
applied to ".&lt;ickies."

LI DA I HEROl D
German
Dean\ List; German Club.

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

GRACE L. HFRSCH DORFFR
Sociolog y
Dean's List. Honor Roll. Senior Honors Program.

THFOD ORF B. HOCHST ADT
Political &lt;;cience: Literatur e. History
Honor Roll. Dean's List, Who's Who,
Dragon Society; Colonial /\ ews (EdiDebate Society (Presiden t),
tor).
Baccacia (Presiden t). Dean's Commission to Study Student Governm ent,
Senior Committ ee.
l was one of the instigator s of the
Colonial .Vt'1n' "unethica l week" in
the Spring of 1962, during wbich time
seven administr ations secretarie s were
bribed. one dozen comprom ising pictures were taken. six telephone s in the
CA building w~rc tapped. and three
faculty meetings and one Sodal Science Div1s1on meeting were \pied
upon. 1 have written for the Cf\ under the nom de plume of Brian Scott.
Louis Kam1en. and Sam Adelman . As
editor. I saw to 1t that the Ci\' Office
Manager did not check to sec whether
those who entered the CN Office had

ALAN H. HERTZB ERG
History
Dean's List. Who's Who; Convoca tions Committ ee. Summer Week-en d
Committ ee, Orleans. ISCC. Chief Justice Dorm Judicial Board. Chairma n
Spring 1964 Freshma n Orientati on
Committ ee. 'ienior Committ ee.

+•---·+·---·-----+·~
.WAT/I SOCIETY : Arthur Abrahwns Bob
Bfitur, Ronald Elrrenherg , Dmnis Geller,
Alfred Gihbs, .Warton (ioldherv Morton
Got.Id, Ste1·e11 Gubt'rman . Ritu Karp , .Wari/p1 Lt1ndar1 , Barham Lu.thn, Steph1•11 Lniltu. Barharu .\le( o_&gt;· Dadd Ptrl1111111er,
Jtwel Pora , l.inda Sa.~er WarPie SearinR,
Barbara Sm11J&gt;on. JMI Sof]in, Richard
Stoler.

WU.I JAM P. H!-SSI:
Ph}sics: Math
Dean's I.i't. Who'.1 Who Band. GoliSecretar; ).
(V1ce-Pr e,ident.
ard'
Spnng Re\'lew. Campus Beast
C in Bio Sci. rejected al Cornell grad
'chool before I sent m; applicati on
in !'vfy check for my senior fee will
bounce.

JtfflUfOltl
I U U lf llAUUUUlllll UlllUllU l f U Ul tO fllUUUUUllllU

proof (of age).
Contribu ted on-the-sp ot action photos
of the l 962 Bermuda shorts riot:
wrote tbe "Yes. but . . ." editorial.

GARY S. HOHMA N
Biology. History
VIRGJN JA K
Art Histor]

HOTCH KIN

BARBAR A N. HOWfFrench
Chorus. Light Choir. Judicial Board.

155

1:H-TSY A. HOYSRA DT
Classical Civili.i:ation
Dean\ List; Chorus. Thalians.
ROYE. HUNT
General Literatur e; Russian
Dean's List; Odeans (Vice-Pre sident,
Recordin g Secretar} ). ColoniH (Business Manager ). Student Center Board
(Treasure r). Onentau on Committ ee,
German C lub.

Mf. V'S GLE/:. Cl VB Wanw Anduscm,
Jack Bt1lk. Ht1fl "&gt;' Bamfield. Jalur 8erlenhack, Cal DtJtrmand , Dan D1uhman, Ro)'
Gordon, Alan Hard)" Johll Harfls&lt;m,
Stephen lli/ler. Ba.iii Jarrett, /11ne Kalter,
Elliot Uehrrmen d John M cLellan , Mic/we/
McMullen Mike Paw/it-kl, Clwrle.v Sadt',
Mike Stur11eon, Rol•ert Whltne)'
Mf..V'S JUDICIAi . BOARD: John Berlt11back, Slit F.isner, Paul GIOord, Cralir llalh·
awa}, Todd Horwitt. Da1e Ltnoro11tz Stu
Rubin

ALLEN C. JSRAEl
Ps}cholo gy
Baseball Manager . Basketba ll.
RICHAR D J. JABLON SKI
Chemistr y
Dean's List; TAU (Presiden t). Newman Club, ISCC.
!'vfARGA RFT A. JACOBS
Philosoph y
Pandoran s
AR1 HUR KAI:: LIN
Economi cs
Golf. Taming of the Shrew.

BURT KAHN
Political Science, Accounti ng, Biology
Dean\ I isl: Tennis. Cross t:ountry.
Hockey
(Vice-Pre sident).
Odeans
Club.

"Pid1ddle "-a car wl1h 0111&gt; ont'
headlixht on

·=·

·:·

·:·

-~

.

·=· ... ,·=·

,.
·:·

·=·

-;· .;. ,·=· ·=· ·=· ·=·
·:·. -:· ·:· ·=·· ·:· ·=

ARDEN M. KANF.
Biology
Dean's LiM; Orchestra . Tennis.
DANIFL H. KAPLA~
History: French. Biology
Band. Pep Band. WRAF New~ Editor,
French Club. Romt•o and Juliet, Jewish Fellowsh ip
EDWAR D A KAPLAN
Biology
Dean's List; Golf, Baseball. Odeans
(Presiden t).
"v1JCKEY W. KARPAS
Art and Color (Hopewe ll Pouery);
Physics. Peruvian Indians
Dragon Society, Dean's I.isl, only
Harpur student doing graduate work
in Archaeol ogy: Dance Worbho p.
Colonial Pla}crs, Civil Rights Club
(Secretar y). Gallery Committ ee. Art
Editor of Harpoon.
Really did deserve trial for ~ocial
probation . instead was removed. Tore
down twenty-five Air Raid Shelter
sign' Stole senior key in 1963.

�J. KAUF~tAN
Biology
D.:an's I.bi: Student Center Board,
Colu11ial NewJ, Orientation Com~it­
lec.
Adelphi reject.
S~Jf·PHF.N

KARl-1' KORHUMMfl
Chemistry
Dean·, u,1: Light Chorus. Chorus.
Chemiwy Club
JENNENF KORNIAK
Biology
Dean'' l ist: WRA. Pandorans.
;\LAN W. KOSLOFf
Hi~iory, Accounting
Diony,1an Societ&gt; (President). ISCC.
Chairman Spring Weekend. Colonial
Nein Bu,iness Agent, Sheraton Inn
reprcsemative at Harpur. founder of
Social Club President:&gt;' Council.

"Wl'llic"-anyo11e 1101 a "Sickie'';
a 'Healrhie."

l.rSI FY M KRAUS
r.nglish Literature
Dean\ List. Junior Honors.
1962 Cu/oniH, International Relations
Club (Secretary).
Stoic Senior Key last year.

Mf.THODIST SH/DEST FELLOWSHIP;
Harold Abrt1humsrn, Susie Adlu, Wa&gt;'nl'
Anderson, Rffhard Ar1teruin11er. Richard
Bmce. J,d Cum, ChriJ Cancro. Jean Cun·
cro, RoherT Cancro, .\'ei/ Cartu, John Cr&lt;'•
&lt;·oni. Clrar/eJ Clark. George l'rl11endt11,
Charles Clark. George Crilftnden, Char/ts
Da)·t(&gt;n, Bill Du1111, Sharon t:armh11w, Je1,·k
El/tr, Carmen Farr. Leon Frank, Ro) I t·rl(llS.On, Anne (ia}·lor, Diane Get-rk~n. Colin
Gershon, Dodie GorTht.&gt;. Ala11 Gould, Kay
Gra\~S, VII' Hanish, Ja)'ne Hunstn, Linda
liar/man, Jack Hartman, Robert Harttna.
Suzanne Ha) k'a1J, Pat Ha:.r11, Ron Ila .......
le)', Ken Jahmon, Gule Kini(, Kathy Kr&lt;'hs
Bon11il" Kur=. L111da Lang, Dai..nn Lombard. Sue Louer, Linda Lyon, Mar.1· Mal/&lt;1bar, Kmt Mar;hal/, Ellie Matkka, Marcia
Mupie, /Jarbara McCoy, Wo11da Mead ,
Andrra Moore, Sally Morehouu, Cllrbtu;
lVrcho/s, Doug O'Donnell, Ste1e O;trander,
Larr.I' Podma, Jo)'u Reaie•. Paul Ruse,
Y\onnt' Rog~rs, JYarren Roflman, Gail
Sattulet', /)1ck Shaeffer. Tim Sm11h. Jan
Stuhlmtll&lt;r, l.mdra)' Turner Sanford Tyndale, Pat Welsh, John Zn:munt

JANE l.AGOUDI::.
English Literature
Woodrow Wibon Fellowship. Dean's
List. Junior Honors. Senior Honors
Program. Who'.1 Who. Orientation
Chairman. Chairman of USG Social
Colonial
Committee,
Regulations
Players.
I stole the Sentor Key last year.
JAMES A LF.E
Chemistry
Student Christian Association (ViccPres1dent). Interfaith Council.

MARILY~

A LE-VY
\1a1hematics
Dean\ Li-.t; Honorar} member of
Dine-Out Club; 1963 Colo11i.H. New
York Cit} Shower Committee.

SEWMA,V Cl.VB: Ht/en Bawan, Donna
Batulis, Anthon) Brankmun, Sandy Donner
Raymond D'A11os11no, Mary Dow/11111. Pat
Ei·ertfen, Gene Gm/in, John Gottant, Wif.
/ram ll}·nes Kathryn Kent, Catheri11e Kosinski, Carme11 Maniaci, l:.tlward McSwunty, Kath)• Martin, RoJemary Migliore.
Stephanie \f,,andtt, Anna Papa, Barbara
Petr.1·sh)n, Johll Plri//1ps, Wary Schutt

STUART LEEDER
Marhematics
USG (Treasurer). Student Center
Board (Trea.!&gt;.urer). Studenh for 11
Democratic Community. Colonial
Players. Originator of the Coffee
House
ALAN I. I .Fv Y
Anthropology
Dean's List; Soccer Manager. Odeans
(Secretary, Treasurer).
l was put on social probation for a
month for playing Cowboys and Indians on the lounge furniture. I dropped
the Odean checkbook in the toilet
bowl. \.fy imaginary sickness forced
Dr. Runde! to prescribe sugar pills for
me. Dr. Hamillon offered me transfer
cards out of hb class.

PAUL D. KREIGER
Biology
Dean's I ist; Dion:rsians.
BARBARA R. KURYLA
rngltsh Literature; Chemistry
Dean's List, Goliard Sweetheart,
1964; Pandorans (President), Newman Club.

"Snackie"-an i11hahitant of
mad hur: i11c/ud&lt;'s both
"Clubbies" and "Sickies."

-

156

th~

STUART A. LFWIS
Literature; Mathematics
Co/011ial Sew.1, Debate Society, Jcv.i'h Fellowship. Sv.imn11ns (Manager).
I o't election for Rafu-.e Dorm Council Treasurer de-.pite the fact that I
ran unopposed . (Election nullified).
Hold pool record of I :40 for lhe 50time ever
hlowcst
yard dash
clocked). '\ever spent more than two
evenings wrtting a term paper.

-

ODf:.'ASS: Jett Atlelmttn, Jeff AaK&lt;'lllicht,

Jt·rry Ca111or. Tom ( ur/rs, l&gt;on Chauawa-''•
frt'tl t:ckhuu.\cr, Carl frlnlmun, Alun GvlJututh , Craii: llt1lhwtn:, f,d /\aplan, Alan
Kohler. Lclfn J\.reurl , /Jurr Kahn AltJn
I'°'&gt;• Ro1111it' Vathan, Jun \o,uk , L"''&gt;
Ra1 el: , Henry Rubi1u1r111, R1clue Satkin,
Ronnie Shcrhofer, Slt'H'n 5pirn, R1chir

Ungtr/e1der,

Richie

Walter

l\tr1

Walua

!VAN I. LIGHT
Political Science; Economic'
Oean's List: Goliard' U&gt;res1dent). Ju.
dicial Renew Board. Soccer, Junior
Class Treasurer. ISC C.

JOSF=PH I.URIE
Englbh Literature
Honor Roll: Self-appointed Civil
Rights Club fund Raising Chairman.
Club to Abolish Snack Bar.
Brought to Mr Relniak for comforting a young lady in the art studio.
AN I HO~Y \fAI!\, JONIS Ill
German Literature B ology
Dean·s Lhl. Dragon Societ}. 1962-63
Harpur College Foundation hne Arts
Award; Colonial Player' (Pre,ident).
011 rite To1i11, Leo11c·1• nnd Lena.
Woyzeck , The Visit, Tltrt'e Si.\fers,
u,,,,l('U and Ju/tel, Producer of 1962
Sp1mg Re\ue. Gc:rman Club.
,\~f\' S. MALZBI·RG
So1.1olog)
St:mor Honors Program, Dean·!&gt; List:
Jev.ish f'cllow~hip (\lice-President),
Chorus. O'Connor Dorm Council, Inlcr-Faith Council.

RUI H F. MAI ZBl-R(,
Sociology
Dean's List: Jewish I ellm1, ,hip (President) Chorus. Inter-Faith Council.
CARME;N MANIACI
Accounting
Dormr1or~ Judicial Board, Newman
Cl uh (Vice ·President. 'I rea,urerJ. T .\ U
(Vice President. Treasurer). Senior
Commiuee.
RIC HARD MARCHESIELLO
Histor): Political Science
1'.ev.m,m C !uh. APO
I never took Soc. Sci I 0 I &amp; I 02.

KENNETH G. LUCEY
Philosophy; Psychology. Mathematics
APO (Vice-President. Treasurer).
Hrs1 semester average was 0.059
ALAN LUPI
General Literature
Originator of Harpur Follies and the
United Social Club Scholarship Fund.

Snickie" an inllnbitant u/
"Wt•t•tmf( Room #4.

�MARCIA A. MAYNE
Mathematics
Dean's List; Methodist Student Fellowship (Secretary).
SUZANNE MAXAM
American History; Literature
BARBARA S. METSKY
American History
Dean's l i~t. Who's Who, Dragon Society; USG (Vice-President. Junior
Representative).
Freshman
Class
Treasurer. 1963 Summer Orientation
Chairman. Campus Chest Co-Chairman, YA F (Secretary).

MICHAEL A. MILLET
Sociology; Biology
Endymions (Vice-President).
SARAH L. MITCHELL
Mathematics
Dean's List: Chorus, Light Chorus.
MAX MOLLICK
Chemistry
Dean·s List: Civil Rights Club. Judicial Review Board.
FREDERICK C. MOYLF
English Literature
Dean's List

HARRY G. MYERS
1:-conomics: Chemistry
USC1 Representative. APO. Co/011ial
News. Colonial Players.
BILL MOYNIHAN
Economics
Dean's List; Basketball (Co-Captain).
ORCllESTRA:
Violin I-Robert Cuki&lt;'r, Roh&lt;•rt Brmstein,

ITK.

Patricia l.'ihum , Judith Wellman. Mariu1111t•
Wa/lenlwr11
\1111cy Rm1ms; Violin llArde11 Kant', SC1ra (,oth&lt;'IJ. Helen l.11ndr&gt;

BARBARA A. MULLER
Physics
Civil Rights Club, Cheering Squad for
the Physics team.
I stole the senior key last year.

Frone&lt;'."i Dudt1, Peter Ledtrmnn, Lucia Liu
Viola-//tJw1ird Isham. [,"""' Howe, Allen
Stone, R11.1.&lt;ell Colwn. \lartlw Colton· Cello
Nansen, 5ue Zimmerman , J.Villiam
Battin, Manorie Smith . Aar Blanton: Bass
-Richard Thoma.t· l'iano--M1cha1•/ Paw/icke: f.1utc- Judr Pell)', Marlene Bm.,:
Oboe- Abi/11ail Mohn . Sandra Baumgartm·r C'lannct-Dal·it/ Bomstein. Jt1hn .WcI.£'1/C1n, Arthur A bralwm.\·, Bassoon- -Do11t1ld Rol&gt;l&gt;ins. Richttrd Kwma: Horn -John
E1·an\&lt;Jn , Esther Bra&lt;.·k ; Trumpet Patrici'1
Smith, Jm• Haro/ti.&gt;. James Hnu~&lt;': Trombone-Frank K1•ar/_,., Jose11h Webs11•r, fa1
11ene Godi11 • Timpani-/.cmny 1 e»ine: Per·
cussion- Robert Whitney. F.malu Berec:
-)cJ}'IH'

1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
PA \DORA.VS: Rosentarie Amp11/a, Triu/i
Bei111er,

Pt.ll

Bernst~in

Brif(ette

Brooks .

Sharon

Earns/raw, Dodie Gorrh&lt;",I", Pttt
l'eggy Jaco/&gt;.&lt;, /he Komprohst.
Bar/Jara Kury/a, Jackie Nt'/son , Mary
/1011en.

.Vorthway, Jorce

Carol Tewes

Ret•\ es.

&gt;'1 Orme

Ro.~er.\

DOLORE-.5 A. NFIDLINGER
Anthropology; Biology
Band. Colonial Players, German
Club. Cassandran Society (President)

PROCTORS· Martha Beemer, Jean Cttncro.
Man Ann Conklin. Anjie Erhard. Karen
Korhummel , Prl.&lt;ci//11 Oio,-ski. Karen Perlman, Bar/Jara Muller. Liz Robert.!, Joan
Sheeks , Beth Wills. Harold Abrahttmsen,
G&lt;'nr11e Brun Edwur1/ Cain , Richard Carlton. Jt-ff Czeisler, Larry De1111is, Richard
f'o.&lt;t&lt;'r. Mart)" f 11clrs, Rabert fla/dtr, Al
Hert:berg, Arden Kane, Ken Lucer. Mik&lt;'
M&lt;llfhews ,

Roger

\'ant's,

Berl

\ 'ur.fbaum,

C W1lliu111 Orcutt. 0.l'stein 011ebo, John
Philltf"" I red Price, Richard Schult:, K{lr/
Simonson. John Spiegel , Tom Sy1·ert.&lt;en .

CHRISTLE NICHOLS
German: Chemistry
Synchronized Swim Club. German
Club, French Club. Senior Key Committee.
RICHARD S. NOBLE
English Literature
Junior Honors; Co/011ial New1&gt; (Managing Editor). Endymions (Vice-President).
I don't read Playboy.

DENNIS P. O'CONNOR
American History
Goliards, Light Chorus. Basketball
announcer.
Had a little trouble with Spanish·
four D's and one F in five courses.
CHARLFS W . ORCUTT
Biology
Swimming. Goliards.
RICHARD G. ORMAN
Geography
Dragon Society; Goliards (President),
Freshman Class President. Judicial
Rev1e\.\· Board (Chairman).

JOHN L. PHILLIPS
Spanish Literature; Chemistry
TAU. Newman Club (President), Inter-faith Council. Dorm Council.
As a freshman I lost the Soph-Frosh
struggle by forgetting that I saw an
upper-class girl come out of the
woods-at the precise spot where the
"H" was found. I've destroyed the
"genius theory."
DEBORAH PISET7NER
History; Mathematics
Dean's List, Dorm Council (Treasurer). 1963 Colo11ist, New York City
Shower Committee.

SOS: Phillip Borden , Jeffre,v C:eiI/er, Bri""
F.den. GMr11e Fricke, Barry Ginsberg,
Geoffrey Grode, Lance Grode, Ro11er
Nanes. Ronald Ra11chber11. Stanley Reifer T&lt;•ddr Ro.1er1b/a11, Peter Saubam, J11.1rin Scoll, G&lt;•or11e Slteiber. Larry Shernum ,
Barry Slrimkrn, Steie SloC1n, Jt1y Strauu.
Paul Tannenbaum , Lowell Tan:er
SPA ,V ISH C.LUB: Ros Best, flerb Cohen.
Moll&gt;· Foran. Barbara Gar/nt1d, Karen
Gelsk1• Ronald Gruen , Jutta ffrygel. Dawna Lo111bard. Margaret Laurie, t\ llarge Merrfrun. Anne Milligan, Italy Newman , Georf!/O

OYSTEIN OSTEBO
Mathematics
Dean's List. Dragon Society: Goliards.
1963 Co/011ist, USG (Treasurer).
Track. Soccer.
DOUGLAS G. PATCHEN
Geology: History
Soccer. Baseball, Goliards.
DIA"-IA J. PATIO
Spanish
French Club
KFNNFTH E. PERKINS. JR.
Biology
Endymions (President). ISCC

Ken Waltzer Da' e H-·eim.'r. Lurry Wood.s,
llt1n e&gt; Zala:mck

l.'i7

mon,

Palmer, Carol Slrurllleeies. Mike SiCar&lt;'ll

Sprankle,

James Terrt1xlia ,
7immermtw

Arlene

Diana

.....

Talankf1r,

Yelmert.

Ken

ROBERT POCZIK
Fnglish Literalure; Political Science
Dean's List. Woodrow Wilson Honorable Mention, Firsl prize in the first
and last annual Martha Street Spaghetti Festival. Second Largest Health
Folder in Infirmary: Student Publications Board. International Relations
Club (Vice-President), Civil Rights
Club. Huma11i1ie.1 Re1•iew (Editor),
Beatie Fan Club.
Have lost appointment privileges with
Dean Belniak because I once missed
one. Mr. Marshall once asked me to
stop making out as it was an embarrassment to the campus. Miss Kinloch
fired and rehired me three times because of negligence in giving out linen
in the dorms. Faced Dean Belniak in
bermudas during protest.
JUDJTH L. POTTER
Fnglish Literature
Dean's List

JUDITH A. POTUSKY
General Literature
Newman Club. USG (Vice-President). Civil Rights Club. 1963 Spring
Re\iew.
FREDERICK W. PRJCE
English Literature
Honor Roll. Dean's List. Junior Honors. Woodrow Wilson Fellowship:
I 962 Colonis/ (Associate Editor).
Clare11do11. Huma11i1ies Re\'iew, Senior Committee. Ci vil Rights Club.

�STUDENT CENTER BOARD: Lenny A11ge111icht. Jo1eplr Bre.u, Roz Benjamin , Bon-

nie Cohen. Eileen Feldman. Bnrry Forrest.
Karen

Fr,,edm~n,

Stel'e

K(lujman,

Stu

Leeder. Bonnie Miller. Jerry Miller, Charney Nemoy, Sui·e Newn1a11, Lt1wrence
Rabi11owit;;, Barbara Shapiro, Lois Shapiro,
Allan Stone, Ben Tiu/er. Larraine Walch,
Jtwet Warner
STUDENT CHRISTIAN ASSOCFATFON:
R111h Blau1·e/t, Toni DeGraO, Do1•e Hicks,
Jim Lee, Sally Lee, Robert Macrery , J11dy
Munro, Kathi· Roekwell, Lore[{a Struinpf,
Judy Wellman

lt•GO -

-· -· - ~- ~- -

- •-r._-t

STUDENTS
FOR
A
DEMOCRATIC
COMMUJ..,.ITY: Mel Appe/ba11m, £feanor
Block. Harold Bumham, Sue Calkins John
lfrtmsolw, Bernard Fine, Bob Free.Hon, Al
Goldsmith, Carol lfykin, Ron lt1rmutft, Bob
Kt1schak, Stu Leeder, Mari· Leil1owit;;, Fe/Ice Mallick, Richard Mermt')', Marcia
Perlstein, £//en Scf11uterson. Terry Shortell,
Jo Ann Sinorni John Spiegel, Ben Ti[{ler,
Richard Wt1/t1•r Sue Weiser, C/a11dia Wil,,.n11, Rick Y ounf?

SWIMM/NC: John Berlenbach, Ira Bernstein, Ed Carrol/, ChMlle Dai•/011. John
Drt/in, Jim Fq. L"rr,• F,,cfis, Da•e Graubard. Dm·e flammack1 Craig Hathaway.
Gary Hinamun , Todd Horwill , Rius Keeney, Mag11us Lako1 ics, Mike Le/1owitz. El/ior Lieberman. Dan Maho11ey. Rich Walter,
Berl Nussbaum. Ken Rich, Jim Sc/11tllz.
Pete Sperling, Dirk Va11fnwege11, Vt.I Spako1·.1ky, Jerry Schwartz
SYNCHRONIZED
SWIMM/NC:
Linda
Forti. Ann Gai•Iord. Marissa Closs, Molly
M cCinnh. Chri.5 Nichol~, Liz Roherts, Joan
Sheeks. Mari•E//e11 Shull, Nanci• Smith,
Ellen Super

RONALD S. RAUCHBERG
Political Science; History. Biology

sos

PAUL A. REESE
Mathematics; Physics
Dean's List; Methodist Student Fellowship (President), Tnterfaith Council.
STANLEY S. REIFER
History; Accounting
SOS (Chancellor)
Semester pro every fall
never in spring semester.

semester,

CHARLES REVELLI
English Literature
TERRY RICHMAN

English Literature
Dean's List. Honor Roll, Junior Honors; Jewish Fellowship. Colonial
Players, Judicial Board.

ELATN F ROSTHOLDER
Mathematics
Dean's List; Senior Key Committee,
Senior Committee. 1963 Colonist
(Photography
Editor),
Dine-Out
Club. New York City Shower Committee.
STEWART M. RUBlN
Biology
Dean's List. Dragon Society; Baseball.
ITK (President). Men's Dom Council (President). Men's Judicial Board
{Chairman). Intramural Council.
HENRY M. RUBENSTEIN
Biology
Dean's List; Odeans (President).
lSCC (President), Co/011ial Nell':..

ELIZABETH F. ROBERTS
Music; Chemistry
Synchronized Swimming Club (President). Band. Chorus. Dorm Council.
Judicial Board. WRA.
HERBERT S. ROSENBERG
An History; Sculpture
4-F. Coffee House. Colonial Players.
CHRISTOPHER G. ROSSIE
Sociology; Accounting
Baseball

LEONARD M. SACHS
Accounting
Soccer
CAROL A. SALL
English Literatw·e
Colonial News (News Editor. Summer 1963).

ROBERT J. ROSSI
Accounting; Mathematics
TAU (President, Vice-President).

TAU· Hara/ti Abrahamsen, Robert Alta' ilia, Rohert Benson, William Broskell.
Robert Brown .. Edward Cain. Frank Carrano. Frank Cerrll, Charles Dayton. Ste&gt;'en
Goad. John Goddard, Richard Jab/011ski,
Ct1n1um Manjaci. Dennis McCudtlen, Sre1 en Ostrander. Jerri· Palmer. John Phll/ips.
Andy Pierce. Rohert R ossi, James Simonds.
Alan S11trde1an1. Fred Terracini, Elia Va/entll. )err) Wager , Ross Willit1ms. Lawrence Wood.&lt;, Po1'1 Zajaceskowski, Robert
Zolrer

ROBERTA P. SCHEER
French Literature; Math, Sociology
Honor Rall. Dean's List. Who's Who.
Dragon Society; Colonist (Fditorial
Board), Dean's Commission for Revision of Student Government, Student
Center Board. Dean's Commission for
Abolition of Student Government.
Only student to ever receive week.end
campus for changing room in dormiLOry. I stole the senior key last year.

HARRIET SCHIFFMAN
Economics
Dean's List. Honor Roll. Woodrow
Wilson Honorable Mention; Senior
Key Committee. Dorm Council.
CLINTON P. SCHLOOP
History
Dean's List; Endymions (President),
Campus Carnival Committee. Newman Club. TSCC.
Put up Santa Clauses with abandon
and without getting caught.
Helped to initiate Social Club Presidents' Council. Wrote superb golf articles for the CN.
BARRY C. SCHNEIDER
Economics
Dean's List, Dragon Society: Basketball (Co-Captain). Baseball.

158

RICHARD M . SCHULTZ
Chemistry; Political Science
Dean's List. Honor Roll; Civil Rights
Club. Student Center Board.
ELLEN N. SCHWARTZ
English Literature
Dorm Council
RONALD S. SCOTI
Business Enterprise
TAU
F.NID D. SEFGER
Mathematics
Band. WRAF (Business Manager).
Newman Club. Math Club. Civil
Rights Club. Dorm Council.

TENVIS: Al Bmder.ron, Charles Dayton,
Jam&lt;'s Friend, Bill Gllssmcm. Joel Golds/roll. Dai id Co/dstel11, Mark Golds1t·l11,
B11r1 Kahn , Gene Kline, Pele Lawner, Me/1111 Mwki11 , Jahn McKee, Mo[{/1ew Price,
D&lt;.rnnh
lVayne.
Da,·e
Weiner,
Wa/1er
Weint•r
TRACK:

Fred

Bang&lt;'ft,

Roy

Brown,

Q(•or1:r Brun, Ron Burnell, Gary Dunbar,

Frt•cl F.c-kha11ser. l&lt;tmald Ehrenberg, Rmtald
Fai)li11, William Falla. Robert Gl!!rter, Morton Goldberg. Alan Hardi·. Jerry Jlcuhawa)"
Ronald Hawley, f'wnk Kt'arl)', Mark Le' Jne, J.Yilliam Lewis , Stt*1·e Ostrander, Pete
Rawlmuh. Roy Su11diek . Don Voorhees.
/'""/ Wlllle

ANGrLA B. SENIO
History
Dean's List; Pandoran Society.
SANDRA S. SERAFIN
German
Dean·s List: Newman Club, German
Club.
JANE B. SHEAR
French Literature
Dean's List; French Club. Chorus.
Band.

�RICHARD I. SHFRMA N
Sncial Sc1cncc- Philosoph y

~~

ALICE Sil VF.RMAN
Sociology
Dean\ List. Dragon Societ&gt;: Dorm
Council (President ), Radio Workshop, Dance Workshop . Colonial
Players. WRA. Jewish I ellowship.

Jt\Ml:-S J. TEFVA'N , JR.
"&gt;ociology: Biology. Chcmi&gt;try
Colonial Players. USG (Treasurer ).
1963 Fall Orientatio n Committe e.
Beatie Fan Club.

KARL D SIMONSO "I
Mathemat ics
Goliards. Senior Committe e.
SAi L't I SPFAR
Fnglish I 1terature; Psycholog y
Chorus
S rFVFN F. SPIRN
Poht1cal Science
Odeans
I ate for a year on the meal plan for
free. I even had the privilege of complaining to Mr. Phillips.

ROBERT \. STLiCKA RT
Physics
Newman Club. D.:bate Club.
JANET I &lt;:&gt;TUIILM ILLER
Fr.:nch
Dean's I ist. Dragon Society; Gol1&lt;ml
Sweethear t. 1963. Cheerlead er. USG
Represent ative. Chorus, Light Chorus.
'&gt;pring Re~iew .
1'11'.A SZFJD
Mathemat ics
Freshman .\f ath A\\ard; Pandorans
Dorm
Club.
Math
(freasurer ),
Council, German Club.

GOVERNM ENT:
STUDENT
Uf\'/TED
Mel Appd/wum, Roumt1r}" Baker, Alber/
Bendt"Tson, Jolin Bl) denflurgh, Jron Fosru,
De11nis Ul&gt;wOrlh, Al Goldsmith, f\eil
Henr.l·, Stu Ludrr. Bar/Jaru M~tsk)', Rich·
urd Wulter, Susan Wei.,rr Ross Wl//iarm,
Edward Yuw, Hanr}' Zalamrck

~

BFNNf-l T I. TITI'l ER
Psycholog y
ROY S. TUMPOW SKY
Accountin g
Basketball . Adelphi (President .
Treasurer) .

\-llCHAF I I. WI JN
Political Science; Fconomics . English
Literature
Adelphi (President . Vice-Presi dent).
Dorm Judicia l Board. Auctionee r for
Campus Carnival.
Social Probation for four and a half
years. three times in one semester.
I ast of the bad guys.
DAVID P WEINFR
Accountin g. Math
Dean's LiM, Dragon Society: Tennis.
Colonial Nt'WS (Sports f-ditor. Business Manager). rndymion s &lt;Treasurer). Jewish Fellowship .
WAI TF.R M. WFINER
General Literature
Honor Roll, Dean's List; Tennis.

"yeah. rif(ht?!"-e xclamarhm of
disht'licf. extreme doubt;
cwwlly fo/lov.-t'd by "you
might en•r!"

wnss

CAROLY N J WFNDFI L
F.nglish Literature
Chorus. Isaac As1mo~ hin Club.
Pa~sed Psych. 11. Caught daydreaming while Miss Walling explained the
rules of field hockey.

"w1 11101hn"-d1:rog111ury expre.1.1ion mr1111i11g anything from
" /don't bt'lien&gt; you" Jo "Go
10 llt'll

•4• I I I 111 111 I I+ fol I fol of I lnlof •I

AJ\.TON M
Political Science
Dean\ List. YAF (Treasurer ).

HARRISO N F. WHITE
History; General Literature
Colonial Players

JONATH AN B. WELD
Theater; Writing, Art, Philosophy .
Physics
Directc.:d several pla}s.

PAMf'LA M. WILLIAM S
French
French Club

Kl"INFl H M. UNGER
Anthropol ogy. (Jerman.
Music
Honor Roll. Dean's List; Endymion s.
ISC'C ( olonial Players.

C hemhlry;

MARTHA VILL
Geograph y; History
Thalians
Kl NNFTH A WAI lZFR
History
Honor Roll. Dean's list. Scmor HonSenior Committe e
Program,
ors
(Chairman ). Junior Class President.
Soccer. Golf. Odcans (Treasurer ).
Digman Dorm Council (President) .
Marian Faytell broke up with me; I
did not break up with her ..
The inherent character of the role of
Junior Class President- -one of complete inactivity -was fulfilled to the
utmost by myself. This quickly led to
the abolition of the office.

MICHAE L B. WFLLIKO FF
Biology
Dion)sians . JSCC. Soccer.

BFTH Wll 1 S
Fnglish I iterature-T heatcr; History.
Chemistr}
(Vice-Pres ident),
Players
Colonial
Club.
Fan
Bealle
Most irresponsib le student proctor
c~er 'elected. I stoic the senior key
last ) ear.
ADRIF!'. Nr Y WOI FSO"i
French literature . Spanish. Sociology,
History
Radio Workshop

··········-····································
APPELL.AT E
CE/\TRAL
U:O.l1ff.'li S
BOAR[): Harri e/ Blum. Vicki Burrington,
Carmen Farr. Addi J.e1·i11e, Doru11 ...ffhs .
l.aurit· Theilhrimtr

159

I AWRENC F A. WOODS
Accountin g
Dean:, l.ist; TAU (Treasurer ). Dorm
Judicial Board. Dorm Council.

WOMF..VS DORAf COU.\'CIL: C onstunct"'
A klmui, Btt.I)' A hrams. Kart11 Gel.&lt;k)', Bar·
bura Gla.\.tt'r. Burbclru Gura, Sherri Lt'itm•r,
Laurir Safar, Enid Suger Kuthlun SJkOru.
Bil/it- Sht&gt;rru, Barbara

AILFN L YAR!\EL. l.
Political Science
Dean's List. Basketball . ITK.
FDWARD J. YAW
Engfoh Literature
Junior Marshall; Choru~. I ight Chorus. Track. Goliards. USG (President.
Treasurer) .
DAVID R. YOUl'G
Music: Math. Accountin g. Physics
Fndymion s, Chorus. Colonial Players.

"111t'"-it-rb meaning tu put .~omt'thitJfl '"~'
u11 someone. to trick ''' olht&gt;rM-·b, lnu '"
up; 10 muke .~umeone sene ,-our oKn

p/anJ unbeknowne u to 1hruueh ts.

JUDITH !\ /.APLAW A
fconomics
Snow Queen 1964. P&lt;mdoran' !SC\.
Judicial Board. 1963 Coloni.11.
WILLIAM J . ZIPFRMA N
Chemistry
Dormitor~ Judicial Board. APO
Al.AN B ZUBl.AT f
f-nglish l.1terah1re
Dean's list

H+ I

I I t I I !I I I I I I I of•

WRAf: I.a Adlmdn.. Wa1ne A11du.w11,
'"" Bress, Vic Bel11k, Barr}' Bliwt:ln, Marc
Ca..t, Bill C oupermun, .'&gt;furyAnne DeCi/110,
l.arry D"1lt1is. Edward Hck.llern, Jim E/fs.
Korth,

''plll dm"n"-/iu mblrd; crmhed;
shut up.

u,·111t11ht!rg, .Vadtnf'

Yetl&gt;·nak

Bf'rnard

finf'.

D~1tms

Ciutuman,

Rot1 Jarmuth, Dan Ka,,lan, Mike Ka•ptr,
Geur11c Kai·e, Kalhryn Kent, Alan Lich
J/e111, Kirk .'&gt;fang/urlf, Juri Millu, Norm
/\"ir/sun, Doc O'Connor, Duu!f O'Donndl,
Roy Olcott. Lugent' Ona, John Park, Da·
'id Russ. l:.11id 5regu, Phil We11herlf

���,
&gt;

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��</text>
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                  <text>1948 - </text>
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                  <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>
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                  <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>
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                  <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>
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                  <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>
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��The 1965 Colonist
Binghamton) New York

Harpur College

�- -

I
L

TAB LE OF CON TEN TS
Administration . ..... ..... ..... ..... .. 4
School llistory . ..... ..... ..... ..... .. 6
Class Hzstor)' ..... ..... ... . ..... ... 11
Fashion . ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .. 17
Pleasure ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... . .33
Instruction ..... . . ..... ..... ..... ... 93
l luman ities
Soo"al Sciences
J\fath and Sciences
Senior Directory ..... ..... ..... .... I 37
Advertisers and Patrons ..... ..... ... /61

�-....-~

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����"11u drnmg joa /1t1es u&lt;re or:crcrocukd and drafly"

"7711nv u•eu s1mplf1 Ihm "

The thaw caused flooding and three feet of
God's own water in the parking lot caused general
distress. Noise continued as high school bands started
practicmg on the football field bordering the E. J.
clubhouse and a new dimension was added as a
family of skunks established residence underneath
the Colonial Building and was never, ever removed.
By the end of the first year it was clear that the prefabs were shoddy and that the dining facilities were
overcrowded and drafty. Some of the faculty ("we
had a real bunch of screw balls") were found to be
wanting and the mortality rate among profs was
staggering. Thirty young profs left en masse and
went to California and formed a Harpur College in
exile. By the end of that first year, many would
echo the sentiments of a veteran teacher who declared "it was a depressing place. I wouldn't go back
for anything in the world."

For the students, it was a rugged life. The students had a rough and ready enthusiasm: they drank
hard, played hard, worked hard and, as far as existing data permits to conjecture, loved hard.

Studmls had a roMgh anti rrat!J mlhwWJm"

The students found that local dives were within walking distance and the Main Street Bar and
Grill, now fabled in song and story, was a second
home to many. If legend is correct, however, nothing
could compare with the Oasis Tea Room, where lilting, inscrutable odors of the East mixed with the
occasional flash of a diamond to create an atmosphere which even in memory paralyzes the senses,
and makes mice out of the strongest men.

''Flooding caused gmaol distress ·

It is thus clear, dear reader, that Triple-Cities
College was, in a physical sense, an academic outhouse. If this is so, what explains the fondness which
many misty-eyed alumni and glassy-eyed faculty memhers look back upon those somewhat tossed-salad
days? Because, things were simpler then. Familiarity
was bred, to a point almost beyond endurance, in
the womb-like environs of T.C.C.

1

�"Thr Oru1s Tea Room''

The vets were tough and town-gown relations
were often strained, but their reputation as guys
who could eat spiked shoes was severely hurt when
a twenty-three year old freshman was stabbed by
some punks from Union-Endicott High. After that,
the college roughs could never gain back the psychological edge they had gained when the punks
knew that these were men who had swallowed shrapnel somewhere in the blue Pacific.

and

if tho

art all dr1!/ltd"

In 1951 , the school was officially dedicated
and Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, former candidate for
President of the United States, came to the Triple
Cities to dedicate the school. The campus police and
all the dig~itaries greeted the governor. People who
had wondered how Mr. Dewey had been able to
capture the hearts of all Americans in 1948 wondered
no more when they heard his extremely moving speech.
I dtdrcalt Harpur College this soltmn night, pledged
lo truth. I drdicalr ii pledgtd lo thr idta of frudom on /hrs tarlh, pledged lo /ht concept that tht
d1gn1ty of mankind is more important than arty olhtr
course, pluiged to faith m lht ri.11ht and tht surt
knowtedgr that .1a1th in tilt right will tn"umph in tht
end

''1'ow11-,11own rtla11onsJups Wtf( often stramed"

About the time of the stabbing, the State University of New York grabbed the foundling from Syracuse and T.C.C. became Harpur College, Queen of
the Liberal Arts. Now that the State ruled over
the Endicott fire trap, the Provost, Glenn Gardner
Bartle, could sec his dreams realized. (It was Dr.
Bartle who coined the phrase "I have a dream." It
\Vas Mr. Belniak, then an Instructor in Citizenship,
who coined the phrase "those who don't know history are doomed to repeat it.")

c.

Bartie's dreams were almost shattered by the
Korean \i\'ar which brought with it the fear that
Harpur's males might be drafted. He said at that
time: "even if mobilization should remove all male
students, we shall carry a full program." However,
the American people placed Dwight Eisenhower s
into the vVhite House, and a just and honorable
peace was made.

These noble words did not alter the life on the dingy
Endicott campus. The overhead pipes were still
gathering rust. The school had a continually large
turnover of faculty, but was becoming less vet-orientated.

�It was at this point, in 1954, that it was announce d that homel y old Harpu r, dovt~Y old Harpu r,
was going to be picked up and brough t to an academ ic
mecca. The studen ts were happy wilb the n~s, and
the townsp eople were happy . (It has been,-sug9ested that
this mutua l happin ess was due to a shared reason : the
Harpu r people wante d to get out of contac t with the
good burghe rs of Endico tt, and the feeling of the
Endico tt people was similar ly incline d toward a
parting .)

Men and materi als began to be moved over to
the new campu s and a gym began to rise. When the
dormit ories were constru cted, studen ts rode back
and forth in the bus - going to classes and having
meals in Endico tt and sleepin g in Vestal , where
there was nough t but a great sea of mud.
The old-tim ers were a little uneasy in the
antisep tic dormit ories having gained an affinity for
the earthy home life in historic old Endico tt, and
the enterin g studen ts were struck by the schizophreni a of a split campu s. The hardes t hit groups ,
accord ing to observers, were the studen ts who had
lived off-campus in Endico tt (where practic ally everything wasoff -campu s)or who had partici pated in good
times at James dormit ory, a sort of latter-d ay House
of the Rising Sun. For them, the sterile quarte rs in
Vestal came as someth ing of a cultura l shock and
the apathy of the period can be traced to the traum a
of those who had known the Endico tt campu s (where
things were simpler).

So a site was picked - an idyllic, rolling area
where the studen t could comm unicat e with nature and the univer sals - the kind of school Henry
Thorea u would have attend ed, or Rousse au, or Joe
Louis. Midst mooin g cows, and cooing doves, where
the grass was tall, and childre n small, a place where
dogs were wont to run in the summ er sun - here the
State Univer sity of New York decide d to dump its
bricks. Here would Bartie' s dream be built, here
would the settler's lives be staked .

brgall

The gym was dedica ted by Harrim an in 1958,
and by the fall of 1960, the move was comple te good-b y to Endico tt, the home of the Square Deal.
Midst the bands playin g and the people lining the
street to wave good-b y to the studen ts and admini strators , faculty and friends, tears could be seen in
the eyes of the crustie st observers.

"Thr vrrdallt pasturrs o/ l',.stal "

Constr uction began and the buildin gs, done
in stately brick, began to rise. The move from the
Coloni al Buildi ng was done with great ceremo ny and
all knew that if an old era were passin g then certainly, inevita bly, logically and irresist ably, a new
era was coming .

9
' ',\,fm a11d

malrrtols . .. "

mrn1111.~"

"Fama// to thr hom' of lht Squart Deal"

�Farewell to the Oasis Tea Room, to the
skunks, to the punks from Union-Endicott, to
the Main Street Bar and Grill, to James
Dormitory and the Colonial Building. All these
had been stitches in the great fabric, nay, the
tapestry of early T.C.C. -- Harpur life.
It is a story then, of humble beginnings,
of defeats and triumphs over adversity - a time
of testing for the embryonic liberal arts center.
The pioneers who went out of this school, the
vets who sought an education might easily feel
out-of-place in the school of today, but can
we condescend to them for that? They endured
years of shadiness and kept a rather grim place
alive.

If there is a moral lesson to be learned
from this history, it is that man cannot only
endure but prevail. over skunks, freezing cold,
banging pipes, blaring bands, and tmvn dwarfs
- not only to get an education but to build
something. Our predecessors gave more than
they took and if Harpur is a school without a
tradition, it is not a school without a past.

The End

��This, however, is all impressionistic. What we certainly need now are the facts - the data.
What actually happened during that year? We can report, without too much fear of contradiction, that a social life did not exist at Harpur College. The weekends were spent
wandering around the student center, the evenings ultimately nesting in the Music Lounge,
that goldfish bowl of dreams and sound where the people twisted until their small intestines
cried for mercy. And while the people danced, others watched, their noses pressed
against the glass, sizing up the same girls over and over, pointing and talking until the
lights were doused at one o'clock and all trudged over the esplanade to Digman and Rafuse
and Johnson and O'Connor to talk into the night: does God exist, can one derive an "is"
from an "ought," who has the best body on campus?
The Coffee House was founded that year - and everybody tried to squeeze into the small
room to talk and sweat. eat knishes, and play with the candles on the table while somebody
folk sang or Al Lupi sang "The Lady is a Tramp." And this is what happened on weekends,
after the movies. But during that winter of 1961-62, there was something which hasn't been
equalled since, and which cast a glow over December, January and Feburary: the basketball team and the Basketball Game as an event. The team won fourteen games that year
- they won big, scoring 100 points against Plattsburgh, or they pulled them out at the
end, but they always won. And basketball games brought out whatever spirit there
existed at the time, and all the frustrations about going to a school nobody ever heard
of were let out and drained because here we all were in the gym with the snow melting
off our boots in the warmth, and we were going to win another one. We roared for Davis
and Greenberg and then we walked up the hill in the snow and went to the Music Lounge.
The sport has never played the same role in the life of the college that it played that
winter, not only because the team has never been the same, but because winning has
never seemed quite as sweet, or as necessary.

12

�Other events livened up the year. When Al Robinson and Barry Levine. both slightly tipsy,
heisted a statue of the Christ Child off the Courthouse manger scene, Binghamtonites were
outraged. In the spring, Harpur had the only first-class panty raid perpetrated in the four
years, since some people actually got into O'Connor, although most of the cowards screaming for entrance fled in the opposite direction when the doors were opened. But it was a
famous victory.
Also, an extraordinary number of very notable people were showing up to speak. Eleanor
Roosevelt, her sympathies won by a heart-rending letter written by Ronnie Bayer on the In·
ternational Relations Club's state of abject poverty, arrived to speak. Harlan Cleveland,
Linus Pauling, Norman Thomas, I. F. Stone, William Rusher and Brand Blanshard found
their way here. The Hungarian String Quartet arrived to play a Bartok quartet which brought
the house down.
These, however, were events which came here. What were the students doing? Well, a group
of students stood on the center mall to protest the resumption of nuclear testing by the
Russians, a demonstration which took perhaps less courage to participate in than any other.
Thirty-seven students took part in a Washington Peace March. Within the school, the key
demonstration was the Bermuda Riot. (not a riot at all, really) in which students, in protest of an inane dress regulation banning bermudas in the dining hall, arrived en masse in
bermudas to confront Dean Belniak and Mr. Marshall at the door. The result was that
the ban was lifted .
The year ended with a few more traumas. Dr. Bartle told us that some people in town thought
that we were unclean, and that we might wash a little. He added that, oh yes. sophomore
boys might live in the Carlton Hotel in 1962-63. We did a collective double-take and then
saw visions of 200 boys hounding room service, climbing down fire escapes and dropping
water balloons on cops - in a yearlong Marx Brothers orgy. The plan fell through and a
chance to irrevocably destroy town-gown relations was lost.
As the days lengthened and minds mischievously idled, some boys began to toy with he
idea of "taking" a final, or two, or three. So the Katzenjammer Kids snuck into offices
and read the exams into a tape recorder. The plan was perfect. except that they were caught
and thrown out of school.
So the first year ended, in relative calm. But there had been a portent: the state had picked
Harpur as a guinea pig for the trimester and the first stirring of outrage began to be heard.

Everything seemed to explode in our sophomore year. The girls were wondering what the new
women's housing head, Miss Patricia Wilson, would be like. She was young, the girls were
glad to see, and this assured at least a compassionate, contemporary ear to problems. This'
notion was quickly disabused by a series of bed checks, flashlight searches, and other bits of
nocturnal razzle-dazzle. Miss Wilson became a veritable lightning rod for invective and a cold
war was started in the girls' dorms.

13

�The Student Center had changed, and in a very important way. The Music Lounge couldn't
be used for dancing because WRAF was next door but a huge, new Snack Bar could, and the
Snack Bar's new location had great significance. The new Snack Bar became the
stream in which all bathed: it was not just a place to drop into, it became a social, cultural and intellectual necessity. Weekends once spent around the Music Lounge were now
spent in the somewhat gloomy recesses of the Snack Bar. It became the womb within a
womb and rock n' roll was a kind of Muzak of the Womb. The Snack Bar made us realize
that sitting and talking, drinking coffee and chewing coffee sticks, were at the very root of
Harpur life. Because if Harpur was not based on sheer verbiage, dll day long, and about
everything, it was based on nothing. The Snack Bar was an open arena, a great stage and
we realized how important it was to know what each and every person was doing.

We were still insecure and the trimester kept us so. All our freshman fears about going to an
anonymity were rekindled by the persistent belief that trimester would mean the plummeting
of standards and the flight of most of the faculty. Bartle told us that it wasn't so bad,
dropped his classic "its as if they were dead" quip and left us more worried than before.
If trimester came, said scores of discordant voices, we will transfer. But it came, and we
stayed, and do did the teachers.

14

�A new group called Students For A Democratic Community was worried about a whole range
of issues and began challenging the Administration on everything from social regulations
to educational policies. S.D.C. added to the excitement of the year by giving us the
feeling that if we worked things out, the students would get everything, but everything,
changed. Delusions of grandeur perhaps, but the election campaign that Spring was the
first one that seemed to count.
The Civil Rights Club, in its first year of operation, was attempting to sweep the cobwebs
out of our consciences and one couldn't open his mailbox without C.R.C. announcement.
The tutoring program they set up was the most constructive thing Harpur students had ever
done, opening a line of communication with Binghamton.
(Beer blasts, however, were closing lines of communication. One after the other, various
legion halls were left in shambles. this reaching an apex with the S.O.S. Pounce, where
an orgy of glass-smashing made the hall look like a bombed-out crystal palace.)
Basketball games began to involve a kind of group monomania, centered on the wiry
figure of Mickey Greenberg, upon whose shoulders fell the burden of carrying the team.
And so we sat and asked, pleaded and implored the team to give the ball to him, the star,
who did not relish the role. But he scored 45 one night, and brought light into a somewhat dim season.
It was a year of chaos. Dr. Freimarck, lecturing on Gulliver's Travels found that the stage
was ascending and descending and waved gamely to a delirious audience. A campus cop,
entrusted with giving out numbered 1.8.M. cards on registration eve, cracked under the
pressure and started giving them in the early evening, to anyone who happened by. Word
began to filter out and by about 10:30 there was a virtual stampede of anguished boys from
the dorms. (At this hour, of course, the girls were utterly trapped.) Scalpers started
selling low numbered cards and Mr. Rishel was almost lynched when he arrived, roused from
an evening of partying. Registration procedure was henceforth changed.
Chaos extended to the great, rich and famous. W. H. Auden, resplendent in orange
hush-puppies, lost his teeth before the unbelieving eyes of a properly reverent audience
and Nelson Rockefeller was happy, very happy in fact, to be at Harpur with his old friend
and trusted colleague, Glenn Bartlett.
As finals approached, the primary uncertainty concerned the effects of the summer semester.
A lot of things were being discussed in grandiose terms for the year 1963-64: curfews and the
grading system must go, everything must be re-evaluated. But the one thing that was
sure midst the flying debris was that the school had acquired an identity, and a certain
air of excitement and spontaneity, and this would not easily be undone.

15

�enti al
, but sum mer was a farce and is only tang
mer
sum
the
in
ly,
nge
stra
n
bega
year
The
the landand the leaves had changed already, so
to our history. We returned in November
er syswere on the verge of collapsing; a new Slat
scape was brown. Bingham and End icott
st to
own
ekn
unb
The Slater people, for reasons
tem of served meals did, in fact, collapse.
bow
ead, he of the corn-fed tones and clip-on
us, had whisked away lovable Wally Aitkenh
d
coul
he
lt
insu
imp ertu rbab le - there was no
ties. Wally's successor was inscrutable and
atio ns
ldn' t coolly with stan d. His lucid ratio naliz
not turn to his advantage, no slur he cou
ire.
adm
with a dexterity stud ents were forced to
for every move Slater made were done
steak
nse he made of "one dessert a meaf, one
(Especially note wor thy was the brill iant defe
s.)
a week," at a time when there were nos teak
was
pus: l'aff aire Hau mon t. The whole business
There was a shadow han ging over the cam
ents
Stud
g.
ythin
y was supposed to know ever
dark and alien to a campus where everybod
:
adm inist rato rs test ifyin g in closed sessions
and
hers
teac
es,
oriti
auth
by
etly
secr
ed
interview
to HarWhen investigators from Montreal came
these were elements of a trou blin g affa ir.
dram a
the world like extras from a French spy
pur to a look around, and looked for all
mat ter seemed more shadowy than ever.
or a very bad Bogart movie, the Hau mon t
hing the
Program which was, in man y ways, pus
ion
ntat
Orie
bral
cere
a
ured
feat
Fall
The
ultim atel y
to lift curfew ceilings, a drive that was
S.D.C. program. Work began on a drive
n dorms:
with a front-page editorial calli ng for ope
successful. The Colonial News came out
about
less
d
care
and suddenly nobody could have
the paper was dated November 22, 1963,
ssination,
was in a state of quie tus afte r the assa
ity
activ
tical
Poli
CN.
the
or
s,
dorm
open
ting
The favo rite intra -mu ral spo rt was lam bas
this last ing unti l H.U.A.C. wen t to Buffalo.
against
along with the now trad ition al vendetta
Bio. Sci., which the CN took for a cause,
Miss Wilson.
freshman
or year is the absence of a mood. In our
But wha t strikes one mos t abo ut the juni
juni or
the
but
sophomore year, change and doubt,
year, there was inse curi ty and doubt; in the
already
were still active but they were inst ituti ons
year was a calm one. C.R.C. and S.D.C.
Servwas
tion
niza
new organizations. The new orga
and inst ituti ons are never as exciting as
s,
S.F.Y. except a kind of genial ambitiousnes
to
tied
d
moo
no
was
e
ther
but
th,
You
ices for
feel
didn 't stir the blood so much as make one
and this kind of crypto-welfare organization
at Har pur
like this happening. Children would froli c
ng
ethi
som
was
e
ther
that
py
hap
ely
vagu
people
oton y of a world with out children or old
on weekends and break some of the mon
or dogs or cats.
ed like
tings in the Coffee House which ofte n seem
Students for Off Campus Housing had mee
lved,
invo
narr ow to excite anyone except the boys
cell meetings, but the purpose was too
for whom it was a holy cause.
, which
ts to breathe some spo ntan eity into a year
The stud ents atte mpt ed to contrive even
sucable
(or unusual). The dawn dance was a pass
was, for the mos t part business as usual
ter
y, held at a more civilized hour, was a grea
cess and the Stepping on the Coat ceremon
success.

16

�Dr. Bartle retired , but this caused no gnashing of teeth, it was
a year without traumas. After two years of turmoil, there was nothing which could shake us up anymore, not even Bill Hynes as
editor of the CN. As we studied through the hot June and played
stickball and sat on the patio watching the passing scene, as sen iors tried to finish theses, there was a kind of peace at last. The
bulldozers were still shaping the physical Harpur, but the essential (that is to say, the metaphysical, intangible and extra-natural)
Harpur had already changed. The inferiority complex was gone,
and with it, the mass apathy. We knew that we were in a kind of
womb, in an unreal world , and we knew that such a life was
ephemeral and we would soon be out in the cold , in the brute
world. So we sat on the patio and read and looked at the people
- and soon we would look no more and fight our battles elsewhere, in a world we were being taught to understand, but didn 't.

fIARPUR

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��ash ion

��. Fashion is change and represents what is happening in a formal sense. There is fad-fashion
and eternal-fashion and sooner or later, everything one can think of gets involved.
Is it done this year, or this month , or day, or instant? This is the key question of fad-fashion. Is what ~one: wearing jockey caps, saying " I might ever," going to Sullivan 's, eating
clams, .taking a shower for 31 hours, going barefoot, wearing no socks, reading Ian Fleming,
not reading J. D. Salinger, wearing round sunglasses or high boots or long scarfs or thin
ties or army-navy raincoats. Are people alienated this year, or 1s it passe? It is all of importance because if one is out of fashion , he is out of his time and the rules of the game
specify that that cannot hai: pen if one is to retain the respect of his fellows. So that a girls
sans textured stockings is a girl sans chic and if a boy has a cap he is one up on most
people. "Right" - an expression which dominated speech patterns for years is finally and
unu(terably Out and nothing is generally In, although in small circles it became In to place
the stress on the active verb of the sentence; e.g. , " I happen to be screwed up. " James
Baldwin, last year's In is this year's Out, and Dr. Kraetsch 1s currently In. The patterns
are relatively unstable and if the cravat seems very, very Out right now, one can never, ever,
tell.
But eternal-fashion is something else. This is re-occuring form , inevitable pattern . The
seasons represent fashion to the nth degree, predictable yet always new, measurable yet
exhilirating. In the fall, which trimester has erased for many (that is , most), there are sweaters
and coats - the leaves bright, the air crisp but not penetrating. The haze softens the out- ·
lines of the buildings. The haze disappears as the cold sets in and more layers of covering
must be added to bodies: thicker sweaters , heavy jackets, fleece-lined boots. The land scape
studded with stark trees. The first
becomes monotonic: brown hills
socks , ski sweaters, leotards,
snowfall results in heavier
a successive layering and
loden coats, parkas universe freezes over
bundling as the whole
kind of equality among
until there is a
the same figures, all
men: all girls have
are the same width .
boys' shoulders
ingly forever and it
This lasts seemnecessity:
is a fashion ofpeople wrapped like
and bulkiness,
able commodities.
so many perish -

ashion

There is a brief time in
There is no spring.
and the Inferno when there
between the Ice Age
Spring never really happens,
is a great deal of mud but
dandelions and only the grass gives
no flowers bloom, except for wild
a sense of rebirth. As soon as the temperature goes above freezing, the lovely ladies are
sprawled on the grass, behind the fences and in the pastures, to offer their bodies to the
potent Sun. Fashion again involves sex rather than survival. When there is fashion of allure ment, fad again becomes a factor - there is more freedom of choice. So bermudas with pat terns on them are Out, wearing tennis sneakers without socks (which causes a substance
known as Sneaker Butter to form on the inside of the sneaker) is In and sunglasses are
always In, especially if you are very, very cool and wear them indoors. Stickball is In, sitting
on the patio is In, and girls have figures again.
Fashion is change and represents what is happening in a formal sense.

���LUNCII

Boston Bean Soup w/
Saltines &amp; Melba Toast
Broiled Filet of Sole w/
Leraon Butter or Tartar Sauce
or: Sweet &amp; Sour Pork w/
Giblet Gravy
Parslied Whole Potato
Oriental Spinach
Glazed Hubbard Squash
Mexican Carrot &amp; Raisin Salad
Large CUrd Cottage Cheese

en ·Bowl
Tossed Lettuce Salad w/
Choice of Dressing
Chinese Chews
Glazed Strawberry Gelatin
Whipped Topping or
Shredded Coconut
Black Forest Cherry Torte

Fresh Fruit
Freshly Baked I1onk•s Bread
Creamery Butter
Coffee, Tea, Milk
Punch

w/

�21

�����������'(

���Leasure

��Pleasure is that which causes temporary stability and suspension of the senses and causes
the mind to focus on one thing. This is a debatable definition , and may, in fact, not be a
definition at all. However, he who only will learn of pleasure through dry definition is beyond
any human repair. Pleasure involves living and being conscious of that fact. It may involve
doing something well, in sport or scholarly pursuit, or it may involve abandoning ~e self
and merging it with something else - losing yourself in a crowd which is for the most part
focusing its individual consciousness (es) on .the winning of a game, or the acting of a play.
Pleasure is making sweet love far from the maddening crowd - lying still in a meadow aware
only of silence and the eyes of the other. This is a pleasure not mentioned in college catalogues or even in most yearbooks, but it will be mentioned here, because it lurks in the backs
of all our minds, in that part of the consciousness no reserve article can touch, no tutor can
penetrate.
Pleasure is walking by yourself when the weather is warm or in a crowd when it is cold. We
perceive that cheerleaders are doing something pleasurable when they cheer; friends are
doing something pleasurable when they lose an hour in the snack bar talking about anything of importance or unimportance. It is pleasurable to hear a_ good lecture; it is also
pleasurable to look out the window during a bad one, especially if the snow is "carefully
everywhere descending."
A good panty raid is a pleasure of some magnitude, but there rarely is a good one. Pleasure
is not measurable and covers the entire spectrum of GOllege experience: writing a good
paper and knowing it, eating a good sandwich, watching a good-looking girl who is not aware
that your glazed eyes are upon her, being aware that a good -looking girl is watching you,
discovering that the textbook you despise 1s factually wrong and writing incisive marginal
comments. It is pleasurable to walk
midst the trees after a snowfall, to
see that your mail box is full ,
to get high and , as a conse quence, hear yourself
say profound , wonderful,
witty, and tragicomic
things you never thought
yourself capable of.
Any number of bars
give pleasure, of
sorts.
For the desperate . eating fifteen
cent hamburgers
might give pleasure,
but not half so
much as playing
football on the
mall on a lazy afternoon. There is
great pleasure to be
had on a lazy afternoon if one is aware
that it is precisely
that type of afternoon.
Merely to sit and talK,
to lie on the grass and
hear people around you
talk, to direct your sensory
apparatus to the perception of
the everythingness of a large blue
sky, is pleasurable. For some, making a social club is pleasurable, not merely for itself but
for the promise of future pleasures. The same holds true for the acquisition of a car.

leasure

One can have pleasure at a patio dance by suppressing all possible inhibitions, but declaring
one's major is never pleasurable - there is too much commitment for there to be real
pleasure. True pleasure must be unbridled and if deep commitment is involved, then great
disillusionmen t and harm is possible. If one is uncommitted to whatever pleasure is at hand,
then one can't possibly be hurt 'by it, although the pleasure is not as great. That is why
Humphrey Bogart could not be easily hurt by a babe, because he was disengaged.
Pleasure is that which causes temporary stability and suspension of the senses and causes
the mind to focus on one thing.

��eee

35

�·
·
,
·-::-.:=~
- ; ::::
.
I
"";:,.......
-

•

1

1

36

��38

�39

�������.

presenting
harpur follies

�������·.·.·

............::&gt;&gt; .
: : ::.:

. . . .-.·.&lt;· -:-:-:-.

.·.·
.·.·

��TENNIS

TRACK

1964

1964
Harpur

Harpur Opp.
Union
Hobart
l 'tica
Hamilton
Hartwick
A(fred
Ithaca
Oneonta

GOLF

5
2
9
3

6
7
9
9

RPI
Hamilton

4

7
0
6
3

LeM~)me

Hartwick
Oswego
Brockport
Cortland
Ithaca

2

0
0

BASKETBALL

1964

20 1/2
20 112
47 12
30
100

87 1 ?
73
971/2
115
45
84
82
115

14
14

26
1965
Harpur

Harpur
60

Hobart
Oswego State
Utica
Oneonta
Ithaca
Cortland

SOCCER

2
2112
14 112
4112
3112

CROSS COUNTRY

0
3
5
4
0
0

1
2

SWIMMING

20112
7
6112
12V2
22112
23112

Opp.

5

45
35
40
30
30

61

Opp.
62

83
94
73
62
61
53
75
61
67
59
60
53
44
55
63

75
97
79
54
64
89
95
102
6-1
60
75
60
74
69
54

1965

3

7
Oneonta
Hamilton
Union
St. Bonaventure
Wilkes
Oswego
Hamilton
New Paltz
Geneseo
RPL
Buffalo

1964
Harpur

Oneonta
Ithaca
Union
Hamilton
Hartwick

I

Opp.

1964
Harpur

Brooklyn
Wilkes
Utica
Bap. Bible Sem.
Hobart
Hamilton

Utica
Hobart
Alfred U.
Union
Geneseo
Hamilton
RPI
Plattsburgh
Hartwick
Utica
Stony Brook
Wilkes
Drew
Albany
Oneonta
Maritime

Opp.

Opp.

18
22
18
20
38

55

Harpur

Opp.

23
64
39
27
59
45

72

56

57
41

:J2

23

31

56
68

36
50
39
38
53
63
72

���\fark Bassin Bob Brogan Stt&gt;w Davis Mike Freedus
Neil Wilensk} Barry Winkler John Wojcio.

Larry Gainen

Bob Vogel

�Larry Kavana Keith Marcin Bill Matros :\1ikc Rice Mike Tillcs
Shimkin Ken Bloom Dave Lcnorovitz Coach Frank Pollard.

M~rs. Barrv

�Swim Team
Ed Avery
John Berlenbach
Ken Blatt
Jerold Bogartz
Ed Carroll
Bob Cronin
Charles Dayton
John Devlin
Richard Greenberg
David Goldman
David Graubard
David Hammack
Leslie Handelsman
Gary Hinaman
Lobert Holzhaur
Todd Horwitt
John Hudock

Coach Thomas
Russ Keeny - co-capt.
Magnus Lakovics
Dan Mahoney
Elliot Lieberman
Doug Lowin
John Mahoney
Steve Ramme
Stuart Rossen
Steve Saltzman
Phil Schecter
Paul Schulster
Val Sakowsky mgr.
Steve Treistm an
Rich Walter co-capt.
Art Tobias
Rich Van lnwegen

..

-·

�Tennis Team
Albert Benderson
Joel Cohn
James Friend
William Gassman
Joel Goldsholl
David Goldstein
Burt Kahn

Coach Pollard
Dennis Kibler
Peter Lederman
Melvin Maskin
John McKee
Barry Meadow
Rodney Soltis
David Weiner

�Baseball Team

Coach Affleck

Mathew Coppola
Stephen Davis
Paul Deitchman
Paul Feurstein
Allen Israel
Richard Liss
Robert McCulloch
Lance Pelter
James Reif
Christopher Rossi
Barry Schneider
Edward Sntder
James Spring
Stewart Rubin
Lowell Tanzer
W1ll1am Tuminello

�Track and Cross Country
Teams
Coach Lyons
Howard Burdick
George Brun
Charles Craig
Michael Doehring
Bruce Denker
James Doig
Ronald Ehringberg
William Falla
Ronald Faigin
Robert Gelerter
Gerald Gold
Alan Hardy
Ronald Hawley
Gerald Hathaway
John Hudock
Robert Kalinich
Harold Koenig
Bruce Molnia
David Juir
Stephen Ostrander
Harold Rabinowitz
George Rogers
Peter Rowlands
Stanley Schantz
Philip Schecter
James Schultz
Jack Sherman
Edward Vavra
Dennis Wayne
Charles Weidig
Arthur Westcott
Ira Wolf
Golf Team
Coach Schum
John Goddard
Arthur Kaelin
Russell Keeney
Stephen Klimow
Howard Levinton
Gary Robbins
Jeffrey Rothman
Jerry Wager
Neil Wilensky

�Soccer Team

Coach Schum

Bob Booth
Walt Bulawa
George Contemanol1s
Andy D1N1tto
Roy French
Bill Hackman
Al Hamlin
Bob Kurtz - mgr.
Dave Lenorowitz
Fred Peck
Andy Pierce
Bill Powell
Sarge Russell
Jim Schultz
Al Shulkraut
Rod Soltis
Don Walford
Phil Washburn
Ross Williams
Joe Wolfer
Paul Za1acegkowsk1

�...r•

rll

~- "

�CLUB DIRECTORY
Pi ntopplers
Progressive Socialists Society
Services For Youth
Ski Club
Spanish Club
Student Christian Association
Students for a Democratic Community
Students for a Democratic Society
Students for Peaceful Alternatives
Synchronixed Swim Club
Women's Recreation Association
WRAF
Young Americans for Freedom

Alpha Phi Omega
Civil Rights Club
Debate Society
Folk Dance Group
French Club
Friday Club
German Club
Harpur Dance Group
International Relations Club
Jewish Fellowship
Math Society
Methodist Fellowship
Newman Club

n
College Choir
College Orchestra
College Wind Ensemble
Jazz Workshop
Madrigal Singers
Men's Glee Club
Pep Band

Clarendon
Colonial News
Colonist
The Humanities Review
Toady

Adelphi
Baccacia
Demetrean Society
Dionysian Society
Endymions
Goliards

Dragon Society
Who's Who in American Colleges

l.T.K.
Odean Society
Pandorans

s.o.s.
S.T.O.
T.A.U.

Central Appellate Boards
Dorm Councils
Dorm Judiciaries
Judicial Review Board
Student Center Board
United Student Government
66

����program
colonial players

\n

1'1

aft r.' {) re(lor
D It twn of D
. ii attn
h I

Brr ol.

11 DN
/J 17 Jan
I &gt;- )I \-larch

7-9

~Im

4-5 June

"v[ur

synchronized swim
( n

1

iv

r J 1irnal

Ch01efJ[!1apherl llj t/u Cluh

dance group
f rzda

Satwd y

Feb. 5 &amp;

h

music department
!\·ol.
\,fG/'
( (Jr \!t1t'1 f,/ t Clul, 14 Dh.
r l"' H di 1 lurtt ( und. 21 .Hay, 21 }rm.
/)1 \e,on(o1d.
11 Jteb.
/J \ I n, ( 011d.
7 11 June

I Hay

l 'J June

�������HARPUR COLLEGE
DANCE GROUP

����The Colonial News

~
\

'J

�TOADY

HUMANITIES REVIEW

CLARENDON

����I
I

I

'

./
I

~

\

'-

��ADELPHI

Ronald Aronoff
Kenny Bloorn
Hal Cohen
Ethan Fishman
Bill Gassman
Harry Geller
Dave Graubard
Bernie Grossberg
Al Hamlin
Tom Hillman
Herb Kaufman
Dave Kovel
Howie Levinton
Fred Peck
Mark Perlman
Harvey Pinsky
R1ch1e Printz
Peter Richman
Bob Ro::.~
Mike Switzer
Charlie We1d1g
Barry Winkler
Scott Winokur
Charles Bob1s
ALPHI PHI OMEGA

Bob Ackland
Mickey Bassell
Vic Beenk
Michael Burke
Keith Darling
Jim Dell
Barry Ginsberg
Jim Harrington
Glenn Harvey
Harry Meyers
Bix Myers
Toni Oliven
Larry Pas1k
Larry Rabinowitz
Bill Ryall
Morns Schorr
Richard Serth
Gary Simons
LePage Spnssler
John Traz1no
Bruce Wasserman
Paul We1sshaar
BACCACIA

Lee Adlow1tz (flee)
Bill Bender (brain)
Steve Diner (editor)
Ron Ehrenberg (resigned)
Mitch Gerhardt (treasurer)
Paul Ginsburg (President)
Chuck Glass (shiv)
Marc Lumer (secretary)
Steve Menyuk (YuK)
John Novak (vice·Pres.)
Stan Shantz (chaplain)
Phil Sommers (adiourn)
Rich Stoler (pledgemaster)
DEMETREANS

Corens
Denker (vice.Pres.)
Feldman (Pres.)
Fleischman
Frank
Freyman
Goldberg
Goldstein
Gordon
Gruen
Hirst
Koch
Leaderman
Lerner
Lebowitz (Sargent·at·arms)
Mesh
Miller
Rosenblum
Schechter
S1egelman (Sec )
Snyder (Treas.)
Weiner
Zalaz~

DIONYSIANS

PANDORA NS

Rodney Alexander
Terrence Augenbraun (V.P)
Robert Boonan
Daniel Denato
Barry Forrest
Michael Frevert
Aaron Fuchs (Pres.)
Steve Goldberg (Rec. Sec.)
Roy Kaplan (Treas.)
David Keisler
Mark Konikoff
Stave Markowitz
Jack Massey
Jeffrey Rothman
Steve S1deroff
Gil Sweet

Rosemarie Ampula (Sgt at Arms)
Pat Bernstein (Historian)
Bridget Brooks (Rec. Sec )
Sharon Earnshaw
Angie Erhard
Jane Flannagan
Jackie Ford
Margie Hull
Ilse Kornprobst (Corr. Sec.)
Barbara McCoy
Dorothy Meyer
Mary Alice Northway
Barbara Petryshyn
Joyce Reaves (Pres.)
Yvonne Rogers (treas.)
Carolyn Shope
Carol Tewes (VP)

ENDYM IONS

Marvin Cohn
Ed Federman
Bernie Feinberg (Rec. Sec.)
Frank Frattalone (Corr Sec.)
Jay Goldberg
Mark Goldstein
Bill Grossman (Treas.)
Dave Kaminsky
Richard Krubel
Alan Lippel (Pres.)
Martin Mango
Paul P1yser
Matt Price
Mike Simon
Peter Wenz
Geoff Yager (Vice Pres.)
GOLIA RDS

Steve Davis
Jim Fey
Mike Freedus
Jeff Goldman
Gordy Gould
Chuck Haas (V P.)
Gary Hinaman
Todd Horwitt (Sgt. at Arms)
Jim lak
Vern Jacobs
Tom Kolvec
Magnus Lakov1cs
Harry Marten
Keith Martin
Bill Matros
Mike Matthews
Bob McCulloch (Sec.)
Jim Reif (Treas.)
Pete Rowlands
Steve Schlam
Bill St1bel
Jim Spring (Pres.)
Bill Tuminello
Don Voorhees
John WOJCIO
ODEANS

Jeff Augenlicht
Lenny Augenlicht
Je1 ry Cantor
Tommy Carles
Don Chattaway
Frank Doberman
Fred Eckhauser
Carl Friedman
Craig Hathaway
Richie Hyman
Al Kohler
Larry Kresse!
Stan Lindenfeld
Ronny Nathan
Jan Novak
Larry Ravetz
E:larry Reed
Ron Scherhofer
Jack Sherman
John Spiegel
Rick Ungerleider
R1ch1e Walter
Pledges
Bob Barnes
Gary Lemco
Steve Wallach

88

SIGMA TAU OMEGA

Sanford R Altman
Joel G. Cohn
Ben1am1n P. Erlitz
Charles J. Fisher
Matthew H Greenwald (V.P.)
Barry D. Kass
Marc. J. Leitner
Lanny S. Levine (Treas.)
Alan Lichstein
Daniel Magalnick (Pres.)
Harold Magalnick
Robbins. Gary A.
Lindsay A. Romanow
Michael Smith
Jeffrey I. Weinberger
Mark L. Wolra1ch
Jerold S. Yale

s.o.s.
Eden
Grode. G.
Grode. L.
Miller
Nanes
Reed
Sanborn
Schieber
Scott
Shapiro
Sh1mkin
Sloane
Wachsman
TAU

Harald Abrahamsen
Bob Altavilla
Jay Beniamin
Bob Benson
Bi II Broskett
Bob Brown
Frank Cerra
Carlie Dayton
Dick Flint
Gene Godin
George Hanley
Neil Henry
Denny McCudden
Jerry Palmer
Andy Pierce
Bob Sessions
Al Sturdevant
Lee Valenta
Jerry Wager
Wayne Webster
Ross Williams
Paul Za1aceskowsk1
Bob Zolczer

�T.A.U .

DIONYSIANS

�I

3

8:15
SffiING
REVIEW

1

'7:30 Convoca- J

~

/rJ

Ft43~

Final Ex.ams

/Jf

SffiING
REVIEW

/)

/1

/f"

La.st Day of

Classes

o-?/

Begin

:Vovie
11

8: 15

Concert

tions Comm.
;·ovie
"The Big Store"
8: 15 Pop
Concert

o20
7:30 Convocations Conun.

8:15 Choir

'I

Casablanca11

o/ 1 Commencemerd~

/j'

���~lLSON

EL
• •
S.D.C. Asks USG:

ean Clarifies
µnctions of levise

Registratio1i

0

EJrties Split USG PositionsJ
t .Meetina Held Tuesda
1

SUPPORTS GOALS Liberty Wins
5 Spots; SDC
SO FAR OFIHI~S.F.O.H.
llT\... II ,fiets 7 Posts
to''Pr0tect Us
All "says
110011 Gi,·etl
ro1• Goal
Dr Gordon

The present make-up of csr.,..
ves SDC 12 members (or 2/3•~
' tho!ie \Oting,) in addition
e Presidency, Liberty Party
member!!, and the Student
nion Party one member, Jean
illenbrock (First Vice Presi1nt). eletted last Spring.

The following Liberty P
('tmdirlales wel'e victorious
their respectiYc dormit.o
Neil Henry
Whitney votes) over Corrine Muld
SDC, (16 votes;) Johnson
Ruth Barnes (Gl votes) o
N?rma Pera, SOS, (50 .""ote
Mal'k Levine
1&gt;1gmnn -

1

.J

'

•
Last Wednesday, one-hunCont.rovP1·sy has ugain 11risen
l
·
.
•
red seventy-eight people, a 1
regulnt1on~
att&lt;&gt;ndence
1t a few of whom were Har- over·
' r students offered to donaterelcvant to the periods just LeTh f 0 110 .·
·
f
'
"' mg
c
of blood to the Broome ore vucatwns.
.. letter has appParl'd over a
.
.
t
.
ountJ Blood Bank. Of the.,e, .
1e-hundred forty two were ac- signature pl'oportmg to bt&gt; tha
f ••s SU.• . t Gordon'"

pint

"'°

·~~~;·i~heB~~:;t ~~~t~~::~:!o

representative
n:h~f ~h:d P!:~~ti::r~:n~:
I of Lhe blood. Harpur's sev-

s· UwaNr y·

According to a

1

per cent is significantly above

Answer
soc uS&lt;i N0te
-

....._ILS, ANGER
i

In

voles) over Ira Goldman,
dependent, ( Hl votes) and
d t
I I
•
nc epen en
(,u 1ante,
Ed
votes') Bingham •
Laney (97 SvDoCtes) over
, (71 vo
\Ve1sl&gt;rod,
. b
Jeff Stem
Chenango (83 votes) over .Mark Sch
S
)
r:
ner, SDC, (u3 votes ,

and ha Wolf, Independent,
votes;) Endicott - ,Judi Si
(100 votes) over Randy Bi
Liberty, (70 votes).
1'he following SDC ca
dates. were. uuopposed: .
Ctnnpus - Barry Shapiro
Peggy Rusin"
votes)
( 44 vote;;.) There were
write-in votes. Delaw'lr(•
Terry Shortell (88 v.otcs). J

USG Supports

and

•ules Berkeley FSM

- Ordon Puts Emphasis 0
tudent &lt;ioverment Limit
~::~:-~-:,·,:~0J:.::~:::~·J5~::::

EY
.
EL
BERK
(
S&lt;i

academic freedom,
~rnor Brown's action in den) ing
ht to dt&gt;monstrate. (3) demand
relea,..e of those students \\ho
tt'd, ( l) call for the immediate
rr directives denying the right,;
_t_· _in_ politicnl ad\ ocacy on ' . _
•n_g_aJ!
_____________________
to achll'\e

u

A5k5

_ _ .._~ _ __

,

The Unite-d Studen
ernment is now ace
applic.ations for chair
Spring Weekend.
_ _ Any intereste-d

�nstruction

�-

VlRGl

.... :r

�Instruction is that which attempts to alter, reinforce or articulate our view of reality and,
therefore, make one aware of what life is, and what the world is like. It is found in many
places: in a lecture hall, in a music rehearsal room , an art studio , a teacher's office, the
theatre, in the woods where botanists search . Harpur College of the State University of New
York at Binghamton is supposed to exist for the expressed purpose of instructing and the
goal is served in various ways, official and unofficial.
We hear lectures, dozens of them, before we graduate. We take courses from about twentyfive different teachers: some alive, some pedantic, some inspiring, others stale. All these
typ~s

are found on every campus in the United States. They are our primary instructors.

But a student faced with the task of shaping beauty out of a pile of clay, of creating form
out of formlessness, is attempting to learn what the creative process is all about, and even
if he creates something, he may never understand the process. A student staring at a blank
sheet of paper, wondering how to create living, breathing human figures is faced with the same
problem. This is also true of the actor. The process of discovery is a process of instruction .
We hear lectures from those who visit and we can say that we have learned, if nothing else,
that great names mean nothing, that rhetoric is not a substitute for ideas. Has not the
Guarneri Quartet taught us something, not only about chamber music, but about beauty
itself? We have learned as much from the films shown here as from a great mass of lit.
and comp. and soc. sci. lectures. All of these things, this amalgam of experience, is
instruction .
But instruction 1s not merely

that which we receive, but which
programs of the Civil Rights

we give out. The tutoring

Youth make ·it

Club and Services for

possible

others. No one who

for us to instruct
participated in

these programs can

deny that there

was something excit-

ing about play-

nstruction

mentor, of sharledge with people

of

ing

meager know-

transmission line for the

wisdom

of the West.

We are taught by people paid to
others. We are taught by

role

are taught to teach

others; college is a
and

the

starved for any kind

of knowledge. We
legends

ing

teach us, but also

by a host of

townspeople who think we are abominable, by other students

whom we argue with, by the accumulated wisdom on men's room .walls, by crazy people.
We learn from fighting for things we feel are important (some may suggest that violins are
necessary here; this is cynical) and we learn from conceding intellectual defeat.

We learn

from getting drunk. We learn from making love.
Instruction is that which attempts to alter, reinforce or articulate our view of reality, and
therefore make one aware of what life is, and what the world is like.

�Thb I• a Cut mcua;c
unleu I • deferred char•
-.ertr ls lnd1ca1cd by the

WESTERN UNION

proper rrmb91

136

ST UOV 24

TELEGRAM
64 SY 140

SF 1201 4-00)

Ol. .. C.y Lntct

NL•N•11h1 Lrncr
LT•lntctna1lonal
L.cnu r~

Y _Ji.. $60 PD NEW YORK N Y 11 ll.5P EST
0 • m FR • ., TON
OH OX 767 Hll'.RPUR COLLhGE BINGHAMTON lIT
:TY THANKS FOR LETT ~R OF 11/19 1 '.ICH I FOUND INTER ~STING YOU
I ED MANY POINTS .,ST DI CUSSED D PERSONAL MEETING I WILL BE
G .TI'FUL IF YOU CALL COLLECT AREA 212 9249050 SO THAT WE CAN
.R NG ' TIME F'OR ME TO COME TO BINGHAMTOM AGAIN MANY THANKS
PL l S , L T ME HEAR
NICHOLAS KISBURG RESE RCH DIRECTOR INT BROTH TiLM.S7~Rs .

�THE NEW YORK TIMES, TUESD AY, DECEM BER 8, 1964.
would "SUJ&gt;port the students- OD mpt fD the l!ormltar y all term. .

JJH 1\) !
HARPUR STUDU\Pro
GET TEAMSTER AID

the ground that this Ues m with "Once tn a wldle l walk tn
lour own campaig n against Gov- and Re my NCJiiilba U,.. lttr said.
emor Rockefeller's 'back-door' Aaked wby he chose to ltwl otf
,borrowing." H e said the union campus, he replied, "~or pri·
would ''finance and adVlse the va.cy, far a Rnae ot ,enional
s tudent i; and marshal whatever freedom, for a place to think."
1
l pollt!cal support i n Albany we Harpur College's tuition ts
Union Joins Their Protest can get ."
.
$200 a trimeste r plU3 $22~ fOl'
.
.
. .
I The union ha~ long
food and '150 for a dormitor y
on Financi ng Dormito ries ~Governor Rockefel!l'r focrr iticized
issuing room. Mr. Freeston said he had
_
~public authority bor.ds, charg- read in the newspao ers a.bout,
ing that th.is was a subter fuge. the teamster .' prep?rin g to
By PHILIP BE:-1.JA'.\11:-1
The union contends t hat the bring su1t agairu;t foe state
S1&gt;&lt;c:a1 to Th• Ne• York T!am
Governo r ts ~impl y trying to bond tssu1ng authorit ies and
BINGHA MTON, N .Y .. Dec. 7 escape lntere.st and &amp;mortiza- had
written to the \llion for
.
.
tion
m the budget, and advice and help.
-The Teamste rs Union joined thus char~
present a balanced budget. Repreeen tatives
of the student.a'
today with a group of students The
student
committe e's committ ee met with Mr. Klsat Harpur College here In their chairman ls Robert Freeston, ot burg'
at the Sheraton Inn here.
tight to live off campus.
Yonkers, a bearded, 21-Ye&amp;r• Mr. Ki.burg Mid the 1'ea.mste
rs
Thf' students are not joining old senior majoring in sociology. Union
was prep&amp;rtD g to bring
the union. nor Is the union
He says It ls cheaper for him. suit acamst the State Housing
intereste d ln off-camp us hous· uto live in a.n apartme nt tha.n Finance
Agency to restrain
lng. The arrangem ent was made ~ on campus.
bom:S.-l8s
because both object to thel "It costs me $80 a month to'lssllt.n atng authorttJ es trom
method of financing dormitor y 1llve In a dormitor y, two to a As g any more bonds.
for the studeut fight, he
construct ion.
iroom," he said. "I share a threethat U\e Dorm!to ry AuHarpur. whlch Is 18 years old 1room apartmen t in town with said
tharttv and the collep, in ordu
and is part of the State UnH another student,
S8JM a (to pay off tJl• bcmd9, ~=­
versity, has a contract with thermon th, unturnt.s bed.for
Alld I IPDI! Ing ill .ttect '"to a poor
State Dormito ry Authorit y,t 1e.- for food than the •15 a li.ng-cla.q
tid. °YOU move onto
under which the college guara.n- ,week I would pay on campus.." the
campus
and pay hlg2l8r
tees U!.at revenue from its room He gets to and from the col- rent'".
rents will pay the interest and lege on a motor scatter.
S.
principal on dormitor y construe - Under the college's roles a of Utestewart Gordon, the dean
college, sald·tha t he was
tlon bonds.
male student may live ott cam- bound
The Teamate n Union ts op- pus If the dormitor ies are tull •State "by wh&amp;tevt t rules the,
universi ty set.a up iJL
posed to the authority bonds, or if there are health reasons
terms of I~ cozuract with ~
which It says COit one-balf of that requires s pecial food that j State
Donmto ry Authorit y."
·1 per cent more than bonds ls- is not available on campus. ,
'"I assume this is somethin g
sued by the state ltaelf.
Until now the dormitor ies have we will have to enforce." Dean
C-Ommltt.ee Orpatze d
been full. But next term, rol- 1Gordon ~d. "I don't parUcu•
lege authoriti es
there willjlarly relish the idea, because
The protestin g students co!\- be empty space say,
in the dormi- f lt la not an educatio nal matter.
tend that about $20 million in tortes.
but I wolfld haw to enforce
bonds have beei;t sold for dofmi- One student.
junior, ts the agreeme nt. As far u I am
8
tory
construc
tion
at
Harpur.
malntain lng residence s both on concerne d educatio n can be u
1
The Interest, they say, Is $50,000 and off the campus, paying rmt good
more than the Interest on stA1e•1n both places At the beginnin g but I in one place "'3 in another
bond.s would be, and that the of the term · he said, he wae ment." must enforce the agreecollege Is forcing them to live told by the c~llege that h could
.Mayor John J . Bums sa1d that
'ion campus so that it can payl not live off the campus. e
' thl!I tawn.lpeople were in favor
the State Dormito ry Au~nty.
"I said, 'I'll pay your room •of student.I living off-camp us
-~
~~
=~b:~t
rent,
but I'll still
In my own ·
\!e~hb~
ght l.ncreaaed
aapartme nt ' " the student
said revenu
e own.
3Q, ~ 1a ~ the 'Students' todav.
•
:
for Ott~pus Housing, who He said he had not spent al
live In their own apartmen
ts.
1
Two weeks ago they were told
by the college that they wouldl
have to move to the campus IO
that the donnitor lea wollld be
100 per cent full.
About 50 of the 1,800 students at Harpur now live off
campus. The student committee was formed last spring
when the Issue first came up,
Today, at the requei;t of the
committe e. Nicholas M. Klsburg, legislativ e represen tative
and research director of the
Teamste rs Joint Council 16 of
New York City, came~ to
disc:u• the issue.
Mr. Kt!lburg said the unlQG

I

!

=

Uve

becaUS:

�96

�tutorials and
nursery school

�����Heads:
Dept.
K Lindsay
Des Arts
S Pitcher
Belles Lettres
.
P. Weigand
•.
. Tongues. Tongues
S Levin
Germanic
Classical an d Ba 1uc

�Art

c . Eldred

s

F&lt;'rbc1
C K.1dish
l) Schneider
E. \\ ilson
1 Zupnick
f;nf!/Hh f.1/tra/urr
G Adams
P. Baumgartner
z. Bowen .
O. Brownstcm
G Burne
i\ Clcmenis
D . Colville
M. DiCcsare
\ Freimarck
L Gouheim
S. Grebstem
J Hagan_
J Hagopian
B. Huppe
R. Kroc1sch
B. Levy
P. Mauhe1scn
L. MosS
F. Newman
H. Reinhart
J Reu1c-r
Santangello
E. Schwanz
M Seidt·n
J. Walker
J Wt"ld
Crnnan Rus sian Clanics
M Bochnak
L. Duroche
v LoCiccro
J Orloff
z. Pavolovskis
E. Schick
G . Schmidt
J. C. Stephens
R . \\'c1ss
Phtlosop h&gt;·! Communicatrons
J Billings
T. P. Brown
W. Derbyshire
L. Golds1c-in
L. Larsen
R. Neidorf
W. Pizante
A. Preus
E. Roma
S Thomas
E \'as1lew
.Husl( Thratrr
A. Jackson
.\ Brooks
K Korte
p Frit'c!he1m
H. Lincoln
J . Gilfillan
R. Schlosser
p Isham
Roma11a !.anifuagn
M Jasena.\
R. Anderson
R. Keicham
C. Bachellcr
G. Kim
M Bourgeal
J. Lak1ch
c. Coaies
G DelRio
A. Marsland
R. Mignani
B Branch
K. Mintchcff
A Fischler

G.

Moral Philosop h y - J Kaminsky
Music
P. Nelson
.
D Watters
.
Dramaucs
·
A Pellegnn1
Romance La~gua~es C. Gruber
Division Cha1rma

G Gullace

�Marian Alexander
William Becker
Diane Burhyte

Rosemarie Ampula
Michelle Bloomfield
Patricia Bury

William Anton
Amy Bookshin
Carolee Caposella

Monika Bastian
Elvira Boxhill
Jcrie Cejka

Paul Beatty
Stephanie Bruno
Dolores Chapo

�Patricia Clancy
Judi th Damin

Antonina Colella
Martha Davis

Raymond Collins
Peter Davis

Susan Cooper
Andrea Diprima

Virginia Crane
Linda Eastman

105

�Llewellyn Edwards

Molly Foran
Cora Ginsberg
Jody Greenfield
Kenneth Heinrich

Judi th Eisler

Lynn Forchheimer
Jacob Goldberg
Marcia Hamburg
Marilyn Hersey

Ellen Finkelstein

Jacqueline Ford
Naomi Goldwasser
Ute Hanisch
Alice Hill

Sheila Finkelstein

Jean Foster
Marcia Goodman
Johanne Hansen
Karl Hillie

Carol Fletcher

Thomas Friedman
Lolita Gray
Elizabeth Harvey
Phyllis Hoffman
106

��Judith Hymowitz
Russell Knapp
Deenah Landau

Diane Kaelin
Ilse Kornprobst
Marion Lane

Bonnie Jane Kaufman
Sandra Koser
Stefani Levinos

Judith Kazan
Beverly Kozak
Alan Lippe!

William Kepner
Frances Kugler
Alice Lipponer

108

�George Loudon
Robert McCulloch

Susanne Louer
Nancy McGuire

Kathleen Mandry
David McNally

Harry Marten
Mehrer

J eannettc

Dennis McCudden
Jesse Miller

�Abigail Mohn
Priscilla Osovski
Michael Press

Judith Munro
Georgia Palmer
Richard Printz

Judith Newman
Marcia Perlstein
Carol Reese

Pamela Nichols
Judith Petty
Ursula Rehm

Carol Oestrich
David Popkin
Marilyn Rose

�Hedy Rollin
Susan Sheinman

Gail Satterlee
Linda Sher

Philip Schechter
Terry Shortell

Barbara Shapiro
Nancy Smith

Joan Sheeks
Susan Solomon

�Benita Somerfield
Gary Taylor
Louise Wagner

Joan Sonnanburg
Michael Tilles
Janet Warner

Ellen Stimmel
Ellyn Uram
Alice Weinstein

Evelyn Sucher
Laurie Urbscheit
Donna Wilke

Ellen Super
Elia Valenta
Claudia Wilson

�Judith Winchell
Kenneth Zimmerman

Barbara Wittenberg
Robert Zolczer

John Wojcio

James Yacapino

Frederick Young

�����Harold Abrahamsen
Terry Beital
Anthony Brankman

Mel Appelbaum
Robert Benson
William Braskett

Robert Argersinger
Andrew Bergman
Robert Brown

Jeffrey Augenlicht
James Bertan
Carol Burnham

Harvey Bayer
Charles Bobis
Susan Calkins

�Doris Caplan
Carol Decker

Thomas Carles
Brian Eden

George Cole
Stuart Eisner

Randy Cummings
Bobbie Erpelding

Raymond D'Agastino
Anna Farrugia

�Richard Feldman
Paul Ginsburg
James Harrington

Allen Frankel
Harvey Goldstein
Glenn Harvey

Robert Freeston
Eudora Gorthey
Charles Hollon

Anne Gaylord
Charles Haas
William Hynes

Mitchell Gerhardt
Alan Hardy
James Jacobs

�Ronald Jarmuth
Carol Keck

Kenneth
J 0 h nson
El
Jen Kerstem
.

Robert Kasch k
.
a
avid Kiesler

D

Lawrence Ka vana
Stephen Kl.1mow

George Kaye
Barbara K urz

�Violet Laws
Ira Makashay
Roger Miller

Fred Lawson
Mary Mallabar
Julius Mongi

Alfred Lehtonen
William Maney
Harry Morgan

Eleanor Levine
Ronald Mayers
Helen Multila

Richard Levy
John McLellen
Thomas Nelson

�Patricia Newman
Gerald Rosenblum

Mary Northway
Robert Ross

Keith Palmer
Arnold Rothbaum

Lawrence Rabinowitz
Anne Sasinek

Bruce Rogers
Deborah Schachncr

�George Schieber

John Spiegel
Samual Tambura
Peter Vietze
Susan Weiser

Barry Shapiro

James Spring
Mary Trapani
jerry Wager
Stephen Weiss

Mary Senft

Richard Stoler
Arthur Umlas
Richard Walter
Ross Williams

Richard Siegelman

Michael Switzer
Howard Verb
Mark Wasserman
Harriet Zellner

Elaine Sirota

Thomas Syvertsen
Amy Vietze
Annette Weinstein
Anne Zimmerman

12+

�����\ atrmil P/11/oso/'h&gt;
(; Schum.1cht&gt;r
Dep'l tk.1d
\\ Bauin
J Fm·h1h.ll
J Gn('r;on
S Landr\
A Muellt'r
·y Murphy
M ')chellie;
R Trumbort•
.J \\rlmolh
Ii Pmncr

C. l leckroue
Alchtm&gt;
Dcp'l I kad
G Clt•mcnl
C. Hull

S.

B. McDuffie

~adan

C. Meyers
B. Norcro"
\I Paul
E. Schncr
L. \'eihi1
Gtoloif.)
Dcp't Ht'ad
\1 Bodtn&lt;'
D Coate'
H Robt·r;on
J Sorauf
'l Simkin
Math
Dcp't llc-ad
K. Anderson

H. Huntn

J.

Kent

H. Bc-ard
0 Bdl
B. Clin'!'er
G Craft

D.
B.
F
A
H
C.

Hall

Lcrcht'r
\\ rie;ht
Zeiber
Kronk
Houe;hton
A !';horb
Ph)'Sl(f
R Hart
Dcp't Head
K Chune;
B. Goss1ck
N Grecnbrre;
W. Kalyan-Masih
F. McGar
R. Penfield
C. Stannard
Psy&lt;holozy
W Heyman
Dep't Head
R. Burne;ht
G. Deane
H Fagin
J H.ll'hardson
A. Slrouthcs
J Ranney

\\' \ andamem

�Dennis Barek
Robert Bernstein
Charles Dayton

Gail Bradbard
Susan Bullowa
Mary DeGillio

Hannah Bernhard
San to Casella
Daniel Denato

Allan Bernstein
Frank Cerra
Arthur Diamond

Ira Bernstein
Donald Chattaway
Mary Dietrich

�Frances Duda
Michael Freedus

Angela Erhard
Wesson Gaige

Carmen Farr
Albert Galante

Edward Federman
Robert Gelerter

Bernard Feinberg
Barry Ginsberg

131

�John Goddard

Ronald Gruen
William Iak
Maxene Klein
Stuart Lerner

Morton Goldberg

Dana Harri
Howard Ka tor
Mark Konikoff
Enid Liss

Andrew Goldstein

Stephen Hiller
Frank Kearly
Richard Krubel
Robert Loewinger

Mark Goldstein

Charlotte Hood
Virginia Kelsey
William Kwalwasser
Carol Connolly Lucey

Blake Gordon

Donald Hood
Elliot Kinberg
Stevan Leiden
Mary Ann Lynch
132

��Hana Machotka
Roger Nanes
Berl Nussbaum

Keith Martin
Carl Nelson
Norman Obst

Russell Miller
Karen Nezelf"k
Anna Papa

Mona Milstein
Ginit Nevin
Karen Perlman

Andrea Moore
Norma Nichols
Barbara Petrychyn

�Michael Radzikowski
Warren Rottmann

Lawrence Reed
VictlJr Saks

Leon Reynolds
JoAnn Samson

Louise Robinson
Barbara Schonwald

Yvonne Rogers
Marilyn Schuman

�Barbara Schwanz
Louis Smith
Dennis Wayne

Billie Sherris
Robert Strohschein
Joseph \\ebs1er

Barry Shimkin
Rov Sundick
Joel \\.'eingartncr

Carol Shonsleeves
Carol Tewes
Jean Willenbrock

Michael Simo n
Richard l ' ngcrleidcr
Barry Winkler

�senzors not photographed

Eugene Woloszn

Harvey Zalazneck

Marcia Zetren

Susan Zimmerman

Judith Zipp

Susie Adler
Johathan Balk
Mary Boburka
Allen Breit
Alexandria Bahuniak
Sharon Brewer
Arthur Costas
Samuel Delorenzo
Ben Franklin
Ronald Green
Barbara Grinder
William Hackman
David Hicks
Rita Hogan
Marilyn Huie
Thomas Kolvek
Richard Mandych
Melvin Maskin
David Ross
Leonard Sachs
David Sambora
John Taylor
James Teneglia
Sanford Tyndale
Paul Zajaceskowski

Carol Angell
Patricia Anzideo
Robert Baron
Marcia Burnett
Marvin Cohen
David Douglas
Susan Frady
Frank Frattalone
Ernest Giodani
Marlene Goodwin
Barbara Hazilla
Michael Hertzberg
Jutta Heygel
Giles Hoyt
Regina Jumbeck
Howard Kelly
Daniel Kim
Dennis K1mmage
Karen Kleven
Rima Lunin
Wanda Matacia
John Mc Kee
Wayne Olsen
Daniel Pierce
Sylvia Tewes
George Tomara
Frank Vangeli
Robert Witney
George Varnes

Alan Baker
Nelson Condon
Robert Cukier
Roy Fergurson
Dennis Kibbler
Douglas Patchen
Constance Platt
Anne Sasinek
Steven Smith
Roy Subitsky
Robert Weiner

�etc.

�"What

Hop?"

1s

lht flip jldt o( Dann&gt;· &amp; /ht }rs' At The

..---•.,.
·••
n•

C.I'. ()

• ..1

..:
I

" ! wen/ lo Dmvu for 2 day.r a11d thm I wtnl for I day lo
Rochtslrr a11d Ihm for 3 da}'l I wmt lo New YorA and
lhtn In Great Brllam. ··

�''ltm'rr met''

"CSE"

"II'r u m11 lhr I ' ..

etc.
"lour mo/ha ..

" / tnl({hl rur"

137

�ENTRAL APPELLATE BOARD
&gt;an Canavan (Clerk)
~on

Denc1to

01bmo Kriegsman (Rec. Sec.)
anet Kurz

larci'1 Pei l••ein (Choir.!
.\argorct Slock
m;rie Thcilheimer
uc V/achs
'nm Wolfson

:II/IL RIGHTS CLUB
yccutivc Comm.:

Jonny Domofl
Jim Jacobs
ike Kc:sper
~ito

Levit;:

11y 1-.lordwind
Comm. Chair.:

John Evonsohn
ilob Freeston
obert Holl
Pat Jahmtone
CLARENDON
Sharon Moyberry Anton
Sheryl Bellman
Paul Bresnick
Susan Wile Cooper
Jean C zoprock i
Marcia Greenstein
Kori Hillie
Steven Kellman
Ellen Krcindcl
Lorry Krc,.el
Jonathon Plutnick
Ellen Schustcrson
Bruce Scrlen

Roy Sniffen
Ke11 Stern
Debbie Tonnen
Alon Vcrte1
Donn&lt;• Wilke (Edi to•)
Stephen l.A'intcr

Arlvi!.ot: K1ochth

COLLEGE CHOIR

'·

Soprano:

Co1CI Anthony
Virginia Baker
Millicent Conklin
Jone Fried
Malit&lt;i Frogate
Anne HothCJway
Alice Hill
Sydell Horowit:
Miriam Houghton
Koy Kusimki (Lib.)
Beverly Ko=ok
Ri to Kromnicz
Cathy Penta
Bell)' Robbins
Alice Stitelamn
Kathy Ze&gt;&lt;lov•ky
Alto:
Sond1 ...1 Boum901 tner

Simonf&gt; Buel to

Sue Bernhardt
Eloine Bolton

Jcrie Cejkc•
Mortho Oovis

C;·nthio Gilchreisr
Koren Goodmcm
Mc11garet Jockson

Ellen Leinwand
Cm0I McAvoy
Pomelo Sto11

Cynthio Sto~ (Accon1poni1tl
Tenor:

John Benne thum
Horvey Bornf ield
David Crowe
Be11jomin Erl itz
Roy Gordon
Alan Hardy
Zone Kalter (Lib.\
Doniel lippine1
John Taylor
Boss:
Jomes Baldwin
Bruce Choddock
Poul Darnell
Jeffrey Gin1prich
Seth Kosten

Michael Pawlicki
Al Sturdevant
Ed Vavro
Peter Wenz
Robert Whitney
Director: Nelson
ORCHESTRA
Arr Abrohams
Robert Bein•lein
Henry Bl ouser
Debbie Cohn
Robert Cuk ier
Frnnces Duda
Candy Duncan
Johri Evomohn
Paulo Fenimore
Anne Gaylord
Kathy Gruber
George Grupsymth
Joy Al Ian Horolds
Heddo Herzog
Margaret Jackson
Chri• Livingstone
Lonny Levine
Jahn McClellan
Abigal I Mahn
Irene Powozek

Stuart Rosen
Caroline Sharp
Anita Walls
Steve Walker
Su5CH' Zimmerman
.l\dvisor: Wollenberg
WIND ENSEMBLE
Art Abrahams

Lee Adlowitz
Jomes Baldwin
Marlene Bo"
Sondrn Boumgortner
David Crowe
Candy Duncan
Joseph Freedman
Mery Gornevilus
Ed Ginsberg
Gene Godin
Al Hardy
Joy Horolds
Pot Jedrek
Fronk Kearly
Douglas Kendc•ll
Al Kenien
Lindo Koenig
Steve Lt! iden
Lonny Levine
Gory Lovejoy
Chesle• Lupton
John Mele II on
Carol Martin
Betsy Postow
Gory Ravert
Ellen Reid
Steve Rosenberg
Lee Sharp
Don Welford
Wayne Webster
Art We1tcott
Ira Wolf
Advisor: Nelson
COLONIAL NEWS
Editorial Boord:
Albert Benderson
Sony Blirsrein
Bob Cronin
William Hyne• (Edirori
Rid1ord Levy
Michael Orgil
MClrcia Perlstein
Bi II ie Sherrls
Mory Trapani (Mong. Ed.)
Edi toriol Stoff:
Mm·gic Srohom
Ben Erlitz
Sill Fozio
Mitch Gerhardt
Ronald Jormuth
Harvey Landress
Ron linden
Mon.. Loomer
Rode• ick Meeme
Doug Novarick
Kole O'Hare

Peggy Rushworth
Ed Subitsky
Dennis Wayne
Eloine Weyuker
DEBATE SOC IE TY
R0&gt;emory Bc.ker
Sharon Bannon
R&lt;;ndy Birch
Candy Cohen
Margaret Divel
Pc1t Drown

Philip Feldberg
Morcio Fisch
Stu Fleischmon
Lou Gurmon
Steve Kellman
Richard Levy
David Lorton (Pres.)
Poul Peyser
Lorry Roik in
Bruce Rogers
Non Rou
Alice Sardell
Corl Sh:&gt;olmcn (2nd V. Pres.)
Bory Simons
Stephen Weiss
Al Wildstein
Steve Young (Isl V. Pres.)
Advisor: Vosilew
COLONIAL PLAYERS
Koy Hoban IV. Pres.)
Mory Beth Hobnn
Hoffman (Treas.)
George Loudon (Sec'y)
Steve N..wman (Pres.)
DANCE GROUP
Mndon Alexcmder

Christine Bon1)ey
Corol Brei tbort
Tino Corl ino
Setty Enos
Anno Farrugia

R0&gt;e Feit (Pres.J
Jody Greenfield
Rick Hoffman
Phy II is Joeg.:&gt;r
Alice Jelline
Jill Koplon
Rita Karp
Marsha Korol
Deenoh Londou
Eleonor Levine
Rito Pollot..
Pat Newmon
Ruth Reichek (Sec.)
Morthn Sch\'/ortz
Benito Samerfiuld
Kenneth Stern
Ca&gt;"Olyn T1ocy
Fronk Frottalone
DRAGON SOCIETti'
Joe 8ress
Sue Calkins
Susan Wile Cooper
Anno Farrugia

Andy Goldstein
Jin Jacobs
Bonnie Kurz
Richard Levy
Bob McCulloch
Jim Spring
Eilen Super
Richie Wolter
Ross Williarns
John Spiegel
Jeannette Mehrer
Edword Federman
Andrew Bergman
Barry Sli&lt;1piro
Horvey Zolaznick
Alon Hardy
FOLK DANCE CLUB
Chris Bcnzoquin
Cluis Bonney
Mmgie Braham
Sondra Cohen (Sec'y)
Jeff De"hin
Richc•rd Fried (Pres.)"
Barrie Goldman
Kathy Grube1
Morcio Greenstein

Allon Rubenstein
Jock Sperling
Roy Sniffen
Jomes Tenaglia
Eylond Washington
Advi50r: Filley
JAZZ WORKSHOP
Dove Crow
Chuck Gloss
Gene Godin
Doug Kendall
Al Kenien
John Pork
Nick Pawlicki
Stu Roso11
Alon Sturdevant
Ben Tittler
Woyne Webster
JoAnn·Sinovoi
Art Westcott
Lisa Sohr
Advisor: Lockwood
Carol Srusn
JEWISH FELLOWSHIP
Ann Steven•
Sue Auerbach (Sec'y)
Sherry Teitelbaum
Sandy Stern (Treas.)
Sylvia Wolf
Joyce Warshaw (Sec'y)
FRENCH CLUB
Coro G iruberg (Pres.)
Morion Al~xcnder (Pres.)
David Groubord (V. Pres.)
Poul Anderson
JUDICIAL REVIEW BOARD
Nancy Coplon
Kathy Annabel
Sob Cohen ( Treos.)
Jim Jacobs
Vicki Doub (Sect.)
Berl Nussbau&lt;n
Jock Ellen
.Joel Soffin
Susan Krebs
Susan Solomon
Dick Levy
Jim Tenogl ia
Rilo Pollock
MADRIGAL SINGERS
Bi 11 Schee ter
Alice Hill
Bmboro Shapiro (V. -Poe•.)
Pamela Sta&lt;r
Ellen s~per
John Taylor
Ruth Trv~hin
Bob Whitney
Barbaro Wit tc1~&gt;erg
Advisor: Lincoln
Advisor: Coates
MATH CLUB
THE FRIDAY CLUB
Marilyn Boker
Hedda Herzog
William Barker (Sec'y-Trees)
Carol Spccto1
Stephen Bu.sewil:
Naolo Gersten
Douglas Causey
Suson Wachs
Peggy Cosgrove
Deborah Zwecher
Ken Elstein
Craig O'Neill
Sue Fulton
Adeline Levine
Dennis Geller
Sonnie Wortman
Margaret Haywood
Elaine Gulker '
Burt Holland (Pre&gt;.)
Hone Machotko
Dorry Kiken
Chris Ben~oquin
Nichoel Kroposki
Mory Hendershot
Barbaro Lasker
HISPANIC CLUB
Stephen Levi tos
Leonard Breeze
Lindo Lyon
Ronald Heller
Borboro McCoy
Robert Klplitz
Fessi Metter
Morgore t Lourie
Alison Nosh
Georgia Palmer
Pahicio Olmste&lt;&gt;d
Arlene folonker
Lindo Seger (V. Pres.)
Charles Wognct
Barbaro Simpson
Kenneth Zimmerman
Carole Tucke•
Advisors: Anderson, de IR io
Maddy Webster
HUMANITIES REVIEW
Barbaro Weins
Andy Bergman
Advisors: Kronk / Beard
David Lorton
MEN'S GLEE CLUB
Bill Mason
John Benne ihum
Morcio Perlstein
Roy Brown
Nancy Lee Smith
Poul Darnell
Susan Solomon
Ben Erlitz
Cl&lt;Judia Wilson
Roy Gordon
Advisors: Newman, 8oumgortoor
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB Williorn Grossman
Ronald Gruen
Jerome Block
Alon Hardy
Mork Bouji~ian
Stephen Hiller (Pres.)
Deena Brown
Zone Kai ter (V . -Pres.)
David Crowe
Michael McMullen
Ed Delahey
Michael Pawlicki
Andy DiNitto (V. Pres.)
Michael Stvrgeon
Irene Durham (Sec'y)
Jo~n Taylor
Kenneth Elstein
METHODIST STUDENT FELLOWSHIP
Jone Freemon
J. Chris Conero (Treas.)
Ira Gold1T1on (Pres.)
Kenneth Johnson (Pres.)
Michael Hanken
Dow no Lombard (Sec'y . )
More Leitner
NEWMAN CLUB
Dione Levy
Gene Godin (Treas.)
David Mortin
John Gollcent (V. Pres •.1
Elisabeth Menne• (T1eos.)
Stephanie Miranda (Pres.)
Richard Mermey
Anno PCJpo (Sec'y.)
Rosol ie Mewberg

Al Hardy
Hedda HcflOIJ
Judy Hirt
Deborah Kane
Susan Krebs
Do11ald Macleod
Hone Mocholko
Jessi Metter
Alison Nosh
Betty Nordwind
Kole O'Hare
Croig O'Neill
Dogmoro Poilovs
Lynn Posmentier (Treas.)
Sus Rosenberg
Martha Schwartz
Roberta Silverstein

Ruth Olsen
Mike Orgill

�����PEP BAND
Art Abrahams
Lee Adlowitz
Merli Boss
Dove Crowe
Al Hardy
Steve Leiden
Lonny Levine
John Mclellan
Jahn Park
Gary Ravert
Lee Sharpe
Al Sturdevant
Wayne Webster
PINTOPPLERS
Harold Abrahamsen (Pres.)
Mickey Bassel
Harvey Bayer
Deon Belniak
Dove Bernstein
Howard Blitzer
Bob Boonim
Bob Brawn (Treas.)
Earl Campbell
Mike Doehring
Richard Feldman
Rick Freyman
Dr. Fischthal
Al Fronk
Barbaro Gura
Jim Gustafson
Ike Heir
Dr. Hull
Mr. Ives
Ron Jormuth
Ken Johnson
Steve Kl imaw (Sec'y)
Russ Knapp
Ron Kach
Solly LaSalle
Mork Lamer
Steve Menyuk
Harry Meyers
Stets Newcomb
Rob Niles
George Parker
Richmond Porker
Andy Pierce
Deon Porter
Dr. Schumacher
Joel Saffin
Dick Sowden
Bill Standish
Dr. Trumball
Janice Tuller
Grant VonHaesen
Fred Valkwein
Dr. Weigand
Mork Weiss
Poul Weisshorr
Bill Whittaker
Dr. Wilmoth
Phil Wyde
Harvey Zal azn ick
SENIOR KEY COMMITTEE
Michelle Bloomfield
Bonnie Cohen
Judy Domin
Anna Farrugia
Carol Goldstein
Jody Greenfield (Chair.)
Maxene Klein (Sect.)
Marcia Perlstein
Amy Supton
Nancy Thompson
Alice Weinstein
SERVICES FOR YOUTH
Executive Board: Laurie Billig
Charles Bobis
Wolter Gern
Neale Gersten
Joy Goldberg
Barry Goldman
Jeff Goldman

Craig Hathaway
Marlo Levine
Jesse Miller (Chair.)
Felice Mc 11 ick
Diano Ralph
Robert Ross
Jim Spring
Jim Yacopino
SKI CLUB
Marcia Fisch (Sec.)
Lynne Marmareck (Pres.)
Marshal I Mosesson (V. Pres.)
Ronnie Steinglass (Treas.)
STUDENT CENTER BOARD
Joe Bress
Bi II Cooperman (Treas . )
Ron Ehrenberg (Chair.)
Sue Horan
Charney Nemoy (Co-Choir.)
Mike Simon
Mork Wasserman
Roz Benjamin
Vicki Goldman
Marcia Greenstein
Fran Masse (Sec'y)
STUDENT CHRISTIAN ASSOC.
Caryn Gettler (Sec-Treas.)
Judith Keene (Pres.)
Ellie Maticko (V. Pres.)
STUDENTS FOR DEMOCRATIC
COMMUNITY
Bill Barker
James Barnes
Chris Benznquin
Judy Bernstein
Sue Calkins
George Cole
Bill Crepet
Steve Derse
Ben Erlitz
John Evonsohn
Jone Fried (Vice Choir.)
Tom Friedman
Gail Greenbaum
Marcia Greenstein
Bill Hynes
Ron Jormuth
Carol Keck
Bonnie Kurz
Robert Lebman (Sec 'y-Treos.)
Elly Levine
Fron Mazze
Stephanie Mirando
Arnie Rothboum (Chair.)
Alice Sordell
Seth Segall
Barry Shapiro
Terry Shortell
John Spiegel
Stan Tish
Steve Trosty
Claudio Wilson
Advisors: Eberts, Horowitz
STUDENTS FOR PEACEFUL
Al TERNA TIVES
Nancy Coplan (Sec'y)
Pete Davis
John Evonsohn
Ayn Fox
Tom Friedman
Pot Johnstone
Victor Saks
Mork Levine
Mike Kasper
Lorry Kresse!
Wayne Olson
Ellen Schusterson
Helaine Selen
Debby Tannen
Mike Tillis
Advisors: Beall, Sterling
SYNCHRONIZED SWIM
Rosemary Breister
Linda Eastman

Angie Erhard
Lindo Fishkin
Ellen Frey
Ann Gordner
Ann Gaylord
Andrea Hamilton
Linda Herman
Fran Kugler
Thea Marks
Mally McGinnis
Pam Moore
Sandy Parker
Dagi Poilovs
Laure Safar
Mory Ellen Schutt
Joan Sheeks
Nancy Smith
Joyce Strozzabasca
Ellen Super
Joann l.Jgenti
Lorraine Walch
Bonnie Werthman
Advisor: Walling
THE TOADY
Albert Benderson
Amy Bookshin
Nancy Coplan
Robert Cohen
Catherine Curtis
Carol Decker
Patricia Ferrara
Thomas Friedman
Joel Goldsholl
Elaine Gulker
Judy Hymowitz
Lorry K resse I
Cressido Leoche
Rima Lunin
Ellen Schusterson
Richard Wolter
Elaine Weyuker
UNITED STUDENT GOVERNMENT
Ruth Barnes
Sue Calkins (Corres. Sec'y)
Ed Deloney
Ben Erlitz
John Evonsohn (Advocate)
Neil Henry
Carol Keck (Rec'd. Sec.)
Bonnie Kurz (2nd V. Pres.)
Eleonor Levine
Mork Levine
Peggy Rushworth
Barry Shapiro
Judy Shepps
Terry Shor tel I
Judi Siegel
John Spiegel (Treas.)
Jeff Steinberg
Jeon Willenbrock (Isl V. Pres.)
Claudio Wilson (Pres.)
WHO'S WHO IN AMERICAN COLLEGES
Andy Bergman
Pot Buty
Bonnie Cohen
Susan Wile Cooper
Peter Davis
Anna Farrugia
Anne Gaylord
Marilyn Hersey
Candy Hykin
Jim Jacobs
Bonnie Kurz
Richard Levy
Jeonne!te Mehrer
Jesse Miller
Barry Shapiro
Terry Shortell
John Spiegel
Ellen Super
Jim Tenaglia
Richard Walter
Mork Wasserman
Claudio Wilson

WOMEN'S RECREATION ASSOCA TION
Marney Boron
Mory Lou Dietrich
Ellen Frey
Ann McGovun
Anne Gaylord
Gail Greenbaum
Barbaro Lashes (Sect. - Treas.)
Solly Langmuir (V.-Pres.)
Midge Lourie
Andrea Moore
Sally Ross
Lourie Sajor
Joanne Sharpe
Joan Sheeks
Bi 11 ie Sherris
Coren Spronk le
Ellen Super (Pres.)
Diena Yehnert
Advisors: Godfrey, Chandler,
Averdorf, Walling
WRAF
Jacklin Adison
Lee Aldowitz
Ginny Boker
Don Baty
Vic Benck
Poul Block
Joe Bress (Gen. Mong.)
Dole Bryant
Dove Cooper
Bil I Cooperman
Irene Durham
Judi Ellerman
Charles Fis her
Al Horris
Dove Jekel
Mike Jasefsberg
Zane Kolter
Harvey Kaplan
Cobert Kap Ii tz
George Kaye
Bill Kwolwasser
Al Mcinnes
Jerry Miller
Pot Owens
John Pail
Irwin Romane•
Bob Sage•
Steve Schwartz
Mike Simon
Ed Subitsky
Richard Welter
Robert Wordwel I
Tony Zodin
Advisor: Vosilew
YOUNG AMERICANS FOR FREEDOM
Robert Argersinger
Eleonor Block
Elaine Bolton
J&gt;eggy Cosgrove
Julie DeTor
Sue Fulton
Harvey Goldstein
John Hagle
Alon Harris
Suzanne Hayword
Denr.is Hoerner
David Horrocks
Al Kenien
Bill Kepner
Rita Kromnicz
Fred Lawson
Rick Longhurst
Brion Morse
Mike Nichols
Bruce Nissin
Wayne Schriever
Carol Wendi
Robert Winthrop

���ROBERT E. BERNSTEIN

BETTE JO BUNDY

36 26 211 St .. Bayside

1275 Conklin Rd., Conklin

Science

CAROL HYKIN BURNHAM

JAMES A. BERTAN

2532 Woodhull Ave.. Bronx

104 Rotterdam St.. Schenectady
Poilt1cal Science
Dean's List

Sociology
Dean's List
Senior Honors: Who's Who m American Colleges:
S.D.C., C.R.C.·Exec Tutorial Program Chair:
U.S.G; Senior Key Comm.; Academic Affairs
Comm., Chair : l.R.C .. Gallery Comm.

MICHELLE BLOOMFIELD

164 Allen St., New York
English Lit
"I helped set the fire alarm m Whitney our fresh·
man year."

MARCIA L. BURNETT
401 Carl St., Endicott

Humanities
CHARLES BOBIS

2825 River Ave., Oceanside. L.I.

DIANE ALICE BURHYTE

Business Enterprise. Accounting
Soccer; Adelphi S.F.Y.

6 Kirkland Ave., Clinton
English Lit.
Ski Club: German Club; Colonial Players.

MARY A. BOBURKA

43 Lydia St., Binghamton
Social Science

PATRICIA BURY

910 Stark St.. Utica
Enghsh Lit.
Dean's List
Who's Who in American Colleges; Debate Club·
Pres .. Newman Club; German Club; Orientation
Advisor.

AMY LOIS BOOKSHIN

Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn 30
French Lit.
Junior Honors
C.N.; Outing Club; Issues Comm. Today; French Club.

Chairman;
SUSAN LEE CALKINS

118 Aletha Rd Needham, Mass.
Sociology
C.R.C.·Exec. Comm.; U.S.G.-Corres. Sect.; S.D.C.:
Student Counselor; Orientation Chairman.
··1 was one of a Vigilante Group who put up the
LIBERTY sign on the C.A. building. I have also
thrown cherry 1am out my window and 1t remained on the window sill below for many
weeks."

GAIL SUSAN BRAOBARD

79 Bobolink Lane, Lev1ttown
Psychology
Dean's List
WRA; Pintopplers; Jewish Fellowship; Dorm Coun·
cil.

ELVIRA M. BOXHILL

453 Lynn St., Staten Island
Spanish
Dean's List
Counselor; Cheerleader: Light
Council.

CAROLEE CAPOSSELA

Chorus:

100 Rice Ave.. N. Tarrytown
General and Eng. Lit.
Colonial Players

Dorm

DORIS SUE CAPLAN

166·05 Highland Ave., Jamaica
Socia logy
Dean's List
Harpur College Survey Comm.-Chair.; Colonist;
Pmtopplers.
"In one semester, I collected a service for ten of
Slater dishes and silverware. I now have the ini·
tial distinction of being the last of the original
Odean·ettes."

ANTHONY C. BRANKMAN

Essex
History
Newman Club·Treas.; USG committees.

SHARON BREWER

144 Roosevelt Rd . Hyde Park
Social Science

THOMAS STEPHEN CARLES
WILLIAM F. BROSKETT

170-38 84th St .. Jamaica
Political Science
Dean's List
Odeans
"Let's have lower admission standards, stop im·
maturity: and stop the robbing cradles and let in
older, more stable students."

93 Kettering Dr., Kenmore
Social Science
ROBERT L. BROWN

Box 356, Edwards
Georgraphy
TAU

SANTO CASELLA

251 E. 10 St., New York

STEPHANIE A. BRUNO

Psychology
Dorm Council; NSA Comm.; Cafeteria Comm.:
Debate Club; Drama; Softball.

2214 Pinnacle Dr.. Utica
Humanities
Colonist

JERIE JOY CEJKA

SUSAN EMILIE BULLOWA

9 Price St.. Dobbs Ferry
Biology

146

2 Cranberry Dr., Islip
French Lit.
Choir; Light Chorus; WRA.

�RAYMOND ROBERT D'AGOSTINO
8 McClelland Dr., Auburn
Po!it1ca Science
A.P.O.·V. Pres.; Newman Club.

FRANK B. CERRA
26 Chase St . Worcester

Science

DOLORES J. CHAPO
94 Grant St., Tonawanda
Humanities

JUDITH A. DAMIN
R.D. # 2. St Johnsville
Humanities

DONALD R. CHATTAWAY
318 Sixth St., Greenport
Mathematics
Odeans, Band; Counselor

MARTHA ANNE DAVIS
RFD # l, Westport
English Lit
Dean's List
Counselor. Light Chorus-Treas.;
Council·Treas.

PATRICIA ANN CLANCY
36·50 Corp. Kennedy St., Bayside 61
EngLsh Lit.
Dean's List
1.R C.. C.R.C.

Band;

Dorm

PETER DAVIS
71 Village Line Rd.. Babylon
English

MARVIN STUART COHN
27 Van Nl!ss Rd.. Binghamton
Science

CHARLES W. DAYTON
Church St., Alexander
Biology
TAU; Sw1mm1ng, Tennis; Dorm Judicial Board.

GEORGE SHERMAN COLE
92-30 56 Ave., Elmhurst 73
Economics
Dean's List
Jr Honors; l.R.C.: C.R.C.

CAROL LYNN DECKER
Hobart
History
Dorm Council; Counselor
"I proposed the dawn dance here at Harpur. In
my sophomore year a bat got in my room. and
was there for two nights."

ANTON INA COLELLA
4706 Church Ave. , Brooklyn
Humanities

RAYMOND DOUGLAS COLLINS
79 Syracuse St., Baldwinsville
English

MARY A. OE GILLIO
245 Main St.. Cooperstown

SAMUEL P. DELORENZO
l2 Livingston St . Binghamton

NELSON RAYMOND CONDEN
R.D. # 1 Owego
Science

History
Y.A.F.·Pres. Newman Club.

SUSAN WILE COOPER
85-54 148TH St .. Jamaica
English Lit.
Who's Who in American Colleges: Dance Group;
C.RC.; Clarendon-Ed.
"I was one of the few to get caught sneaking
back into a dorm after curfew."

DANIEL R. DENATO
113 Lexington Pl . Utica
Chemistry
D1onys1ans· Treas.: WRAF
" I do think, because of the increasing size of the
school, that there should be a committee of pco·
pie, since 1t 1s too much for one person, to hold
regular hours (9·5) in the Snack Bar."

ARTHUR L. COSTAS
Hawleyton Rd .. R.D. # 2, Binghamton
Social Science

RICHARD M. DEUTERMAN
10 Rathburn Ave.. White Plains
Science

VIRGINIA M. CRANE
Star Route. Whitney Point
Humanities

--

ROBERT I. CUKIER
820 West End Ave.. New York
Science

ARTHUR H. DIAMOND
840 E. 17 St.. Brooklyn
Science

MARY L. DIETRICH
504 Fairway Dr • Lewiston
Science

RANDY CRAIG CUMMINGS •
109 Hazel Dr.. Vestal
Accounting

147

�ANDREA LEE DIPRIMA

EDWARD JOHN FEDERMAN

2966 Ave S , Brooklyn
General Lit.
Dean's List

2318 Avenue P, Brooklyn
Math
Dragon Society
Track: Endym1ons·Soc1al Chair. and Pledge Mas·
ter; C.N.·Sports Ed.: Colon1st·Bus1ness Manager.

DOUGLAS, DAVID C.
20 Conklm Ave.. Binghamton
Human1t1es

BERNARD FEINBERG
1117 Pelham Pkwy N., New York
Science

FRANCES ANNE DUDA
308 Kasson Rd., Camillus
Biology
Orchestra

RICHARD M. FELDMAN
515 E. 14th St , New York
Accounting; Pre·Med.
Dorm Council: Pintopplers·V. Pres.; Demetreass
Pres.

LINDA FORD EASTMAN
438 Argyle Rd.. East Meadow
Art History
Dean's list
Jr. Honors Dorm Judicial Board-Chair.; Appellate
Board; Synch. Swim Club; Colonist-Ed. Bd.
"I never belonged to a woman's social club. I
don't play cards, never play Guggenheim, etc. I
caused a great envy by having Senior Key as a
junior-must confess I didn't use 1t enough (every
night). Pulled ftre alarm in Whitney during abor·
tive (as usual) panty raid in freshman year."

ROY A. FERGUSON
Smith Rd.. R;D. # l , E Syracuse
Science

ELLEN FINKELSTEIN
577 E. 94th St., Brooklyn
Philosophy
Dean's List
Counselor; Dorm Council; Toady, Carnival.

BRIAN B. EDEN
437 Hathorn Court, Elmira
Social Science

LLEWELLYN CLIFFORD EDWARDS

SHEILA FINKELSTEIN

R.D. # 1. Avoca
Literature
Wind Ensemble; C.N.

226 30 Manor Rd., Jamaica
Humanities

JUDITH A. EISLER
888 Cleveland St., W. Hempstead

CAROL L FLETCHER
Rotterdam Rd., Sodus
French

Human1t1es

STUART H. EISNER

LYNN A. FORCHHEIMER
136 10 72 Ave.. Flushing 67

111 Thornbury Rd., Scarsdale
Social Science

Humanities

DENNIS R. ELLSWORTH

JACQUELINE NELSON FORD

512 Main St., Johnson City
Humanities

522 Davis Ave., Endicott
Engltsh Lit.
Pandorans·Sec.

ANGELIKA ERHARD
89 H1lls1de Ave.. Suffern
Biology
Dean's List
Pandoran Society; Synch, Swim Club; Counselor.

JEAN ROSALIE FOSTER
Riverview Rd.. Selkirk
Gen. lit.
Transfer·Fash1on Institute of Technology, Interior
Design.
U.S.G.·Corr. Sec.; Choir; Light Chorus.

BOBBIE S. ERPELDING
147·25 Northern Blvd., Flushing
Politteal Science
Dean's list
Honor Roll; Dorm Council; l.R.S.·Sec.

SUSAN K. FRADY
Humanities

CARMEN JUANITA FARR
17 Lincoln St.. Gloversville
Geology

AUEN BARRY FRANKEL
2896 West 8th St., Brooklyn
Social Science

ANNA FARRUGIA
7 Park Ave., New York
Soc. Sci. and Theatre
Who's Who in American Colleges
" I helped set off the fire alarm in Whitney our
freshman year."

REV. BEN FRANKLIN
289 Front St., Owego
Social Science
148

�FRANK J. FRATTALONE
548 South 16 St.. Binghamton
Humanities

BARRY HOWARD GINSBERG
24·77 Collier Ave., Far Rockaway
Chemistry
Dean·s List
A.P.O.

MICHAEL S. FREEDUS
79 Sheridan Ave.. Mt. Vernon
Science

CORA A. GINSBERG
45-54 215 Place, Bayside
Literature
Jewish Fellowship, Pres.; S.C.B., C.N.-Ed.Bd.; On·
entat1on Advisor: Follies: C.R.C.: Blood Drive.
"In an attempt to promote good clean fun, folk
singing, outdoor camping, and lots of etcE!tera, I
organized 2 campfires on Bunn Hill and a third
at Ross Park. The first attracted healthy American youth, the 2nd, the Vestal Police Dept .. and
3 fire trucks (a whole engine and ladder com
pany), and the third, the local Park Dept.
officials.

ROBERT JOSEPH FREESTON
856 Palisade Ave., Yonkers
Sociology
C.R.C ·Chair.; S.D.C.; Academic Affai rs Comm.;
SFOH.
"I looked most idiotic in 1964 Raft Race; was
called intellectual slob by woman over WENE ra·
d10; get a "D" in statistics simply because I was
obnoxious in class; made worst pies at Martha
At. Spaghetti Festival; before he left, Dr. Marz
shook my hand."

PAUL B. GINSBURG
1590 Metropolitan Ave, New York
Economics
Dean's List
Baccacia·Pres.; C.N.·Exchange Ed.

THOMAS EDWARD FRIEDMAN
33-43 166 St., Flushing 58
English and Gen. Lit.
Dean's List
C.R.C.; S.D.C.; P.S.S.; S.P.A.; Colonial Players.
"I liked Bio. Sci. so much I purposely failed it so
I could take it again; Slater gave me a whole year
of free meals when I lived off campus; student
with lowest cum. average ever to take Jr. and Sr.
Honors (failed 11 credits); unsuccessful Toady
candidate for Sec.; evicted from apt. 3 times in
one year."

ERNEST C. GIORDANI
28 Riverside St., Binghamton
Humanities
JAY S. GOLDBERG
40 Harvest Lane, Levittown
Humanities

WESSON ELWYN GAIGE
R. D. # 2, Bi ngha mton
Math
Dean's List

MORTON GOLDBERG
46-10 61 St, Woodside 77
Math
Dean's List
Track; Cross-Country; Math Club: Demetreans.

ALBERT A. GALANTE
2 Avon Rd.. New Hyde Park
Science

ANDREW LAWRENCE GOLDSTEIN
175 Dolphin Dr.. Woodmere
Chemistry
De&lt;jn's List
Cross-Country; Debate Team; Ski
Demetreans; Cafeteria Comm.

ANTHONY GANCE
R.D. # 2, Richford

HARVEY GOLDSTEIN
410 Clubhouse Rd .. Binghamton
'History
Dorm Council; Geology Club; History Club; Outing
Club; C.N.; Y.A.F.
"I have spent more time at Harpur than anyone:
freshman in 1956. I am the noted and most vocal campus conservative. also ex-Army sargent."

ANNE ELIZABETH GAYLORD
10 Brown Sq., Ontario
Geography
Anthro. Assistantship
Dean's List
Who's Who in American Colleges; Synch. Swim
Club; Counselor; Orientation Advise•; Orchestra:
Methodist Student Fellowship.

MARK NEIL GOLDSTEIN
929 E. 28th St.. Brooklyn
Biology
Dean's List
Tennis; Endymions.

ROGERT ERIC GELERTER
226·30 Mentone Ave.. Laurelton
Math
Track; Cross-Country.

MITCHELL B. GERHARDT
24 12 Healy Ave., Far Rockway
Accounting
Dean's List
C.N .. Bus.Mgr.: Baccacia·Treas..
Council.

Club-Pres.;

Men·s

NAOMI RUTH GOLDWASSER
338 Hart Ave . Staten Island
Eng. Lit.
Dean's List
Social Regulations Comm.; O'Conner Jud1ctal Bd.;
S.C.B.

Dorm

149

��CHARLOTTE A. HOOD
705 Delano Ave., Vestal
Science

HELEN KAPLAN
1 Lancaster Dr , Endicott
Humanities

DONALD C. HOOD
969 Little Whalenec, N. Merrick
Science

HOWARD I, KATOR
24 Metropolitan Oval. Bronx
Biology

GILES R. HOYT
62 Evans St.. Binghamton
Humanities

KAUFMAN, BONNIE COHEN
16 F Centre Ave., New Rochelle
Humanities
Counselor; S.C.B.

MARILYN JEANN HUIES
Glenmere Homes1tes, Florida
Social Science

ROBERT J. KASCHAK
145 Crestmont Rd., Binghamton
Social Science

WILLIAM A. HYNES
563 Beach 68 St., Arverne
Span./ltl. Social Science
C.N.·Editor-in·Ch1ef; Newman Club; P.S.S.; S.D.E.:
Hindustani Study Group.
"I would like to see a more lively and opinionated
newspaper.·'

LAWRENCE D. KAVANA
9 Forbes Ave., Rensselaer
Social Science
GEORGE THOMAS KAYE
10 Meadow Dr., Troy
Sociology
Dean's List
S.F.Y.; C.N.

WILLIAM J. IAK
406 Duane St.. Hornell
Science

JUDITH GRACE KAZAN
10 Gale Ave., Baldwin
French
U.S.G.; C.N.; Orientation Advisor: French Club;
Orchestra.
"I too was in the group who pulled the fire alarm
in Whitney."

JAMES B. JACOBS
356 St .. John's Pl., Brooklyn
Political Science
Who's Who in American Colleges; Dean's List;
Honor Roll.
C.R.C.; P.S.S.; S.F.Y.; J.R.B.
"I hold the longest record for living in a con
demned apartment - 9 months; member of the
1964 Grass in their stunning game against the
Renaissance All-Stars. I would like to have been
Miss Wilson's informer."

FRANK EDGAR KEARLY
87 Walter Ave., Tonawanda
Physics
Band; Orchestra; Brass Sextet; Spring Review:
Track.

RONALD EDWIN JARMUTH
230 W. 79th St., New York
Psychology
WRAF-Chief Engineer; Ski Club-V.Pres.; C.N.-Ed.Bd.; Founder of Opera Club; Cafeteria Comm.:
Cross-Country: Swimming; S.D.C.
"'I was a spy for the C.N.; possessor of a cattle
prod for the cattle who live on my floor; orga·
nizer of "Year-end" - competition supplement of
"Colonist": only frosh to avoid getting red "H"
for not wearing beanie, by jumping off esplanade
many times when apparently trapped; organizer
of coed-social club whose charter was refused;
leader of the opposition to the Dawn Dance: one
of the two publications staff members to "crack·
up" the F.S.A. wagon (the other was Barry Shap1·
ro)."

CAROL ANN KECK
West Main St .. Eastport
Political Science
Dean's List
W.R.A.; Newman Club; C.R.C.; Band; S.D.C.; C.N.Ed.Bd.; U.S.G.-Rec. Sec.
HOWARD RICHARD KELLY
liberty St., Whitney Point
French Lit.
Goliards
VIRGINIA ANNE KELSEY
318 Oakridge Dr .. Schenectady
Math
Wind Ensemble.

KENNETH DOUGLAS JOHNSON
Shore Dr., Tomahawk Lake, Blooming Grove
Accounting
Dean's List
Counselor; Methodist Student Fellowship-Pres ..
Pintopplers.

WILLIAM C. KEPNER
3853 Lake St., Wilson
Humanities

REGINA JUMBECK
Humanities

ELLEN RAE KERSTEIN
67·07 Fresh Meadow Lane, Flushing
History
Spring Review: Synch, Swim Club; Debate Club.

DIANE MARIE KAELIN
1008 Green St.. Utica
Languages-German, French
Dean's List
Winter and Spring Weekend-Co-Chair.; U.S.G.;
Cheerleader; Orientation Advisor; German Club.
"I was one of the many who helped to pull the
fire alarm in Whitney our freshman year."

DENNIS FRANCIS KIBLER
2170 Clover Ct.. East Meadow
Math
Dean's List
Tennis; Fencing

151

�FRANCES JOY KUGLER
35-07 147th St., Flushing 54
Art History
Colonist

DAVID J. KIESLER
46 Hufton Ave.• Nanuet
Business Enterprise
Dean·s List
D1onysians·V.Pres.: Soccer.

BARBARA ANNE KURZ
183-20 143 Ave., Springfield Grove
Sociology
Who's Who in American Colleges Undergraduate
Assistantship; Orientation Advisor: Cheerleader;
S.C.B.-Chair., Counselor; U.S.G.-2nd
Chorus;
V.Pres.
"Had I been here one more hour, I would have
worn dungarees."

DANIEL KIM
Rosbury
Humanities
DENNIS A. KIMMAGE
224 Hillside Ave., Yon kers
Humanities
ELLIOT J. KINBERG
5 Charles St .. Ellenville
Math
MAXENE KLEIN
1480 East 22 St., Brooklyn
Mat h
Dean's List
C.N.: W.R.A.: C.R.C.; Sr. Key

WILLIAM DAVID KWALWASSER
2167 Cruger Ave .. Bronx
Chemistry
Dean's List
Cross-Country; WRAF.
DEENAH LANDAU
3339 Hull Ave., New York
Humanities

Comm.

MARION S. LANE
Box 27, Mt. Tremper
Humanities

KAREN L. KLEVEN
164 Poningo St., Port Chester
Humanities

FRED 0. LAWSON
Social Science

STEPHEN KLIMOW
19 Seymour St .. Binghamton
Accounting
Pintopplers-Pres.: Golf

VIOLET K. LAWS
129 West End Ave., Binghamton
Social Science

RUSSELL G. KNAPP
96 Linwood Ave., N. Tonawanda
Humanities

ALFRED A. LEHTONEN
60 Seventh Ave., Huntington Station
Political Science
Dean's List
Cross-Country; Ski Club: J.R.B.

THOMAS JOHN KOLVEK
39 Laurel St .. Johnson City
Social Science

STEVAN H. LEIDEN
710 Wyngate Dr., E. Valley Sream
Physics
Dean's List
Band; Brass Ensemble; Orchestra.
' 'This school has been very good to me - I've
met many fine people and naturally some rats.
I treasure the f ine people. About the rats .

MARK A. KONIKOFF
44 Euclid Ave., Troy
Biology
Dean's List
Dionysians
I would have organized the UN AWARE APATH
ISTS, but I missed the first meeting."

STUART ALAN LERNER
11 1-50 76 Rd., Forest Hills
Biology
Dean's List
Demetreans: Dorm Council.V.Chair.

ILSE J. KORNPROBST
57 Ardsley Rd .. Binghamton
Gen. Lit. ·German Lit.
Dean's List
German Club-Pres.: Pandorans-Corrs.Sec.

ELEANOR S. LEVINE
2775 Kingsbridge Te.. Bronx
Sociology
U.S.G.; Orientation Chair.: Social Regulations
Comm.-Chair.
" I was a member of the Vigilante Group that
wrote LIBERTY HALL on the C.A. building."

SANORA G. KOSER
651 West 24 St., New York
Humanities
BEVERLY A. KOZAK
11 Merritt Dr., Schenectady
Humanities

STEFANI KATHERINE LEVINOS
308 Academy Dr.. Vestal
Languages - Latin and French
Dean's List; Jr. Honor
Newman Club.

RICHARD CARL KRUBEL
1305 E. 18 St .. Brooklyn
Chemistry
Orientation Comm.; Dorm Council; S.C.B.

152

�HOWARD LEVINTON

RICHARD H. MANDYCK

16 Shepherd St .. Rockvtlle Center
Accounting
Adelph1·Pres.; Soccer; Golf: S.F.Y.; S.C.B.

119 Odell Ave., Endicott
Social Science

WILLIAM KENNETH MANEY
RICHARD LEVY

1040 Euclid Ave .. Syracuse
Social Science

ALAN C. LIPPEL

1780 Eastburn Ave.. Bronx 57
Human1t1es

ALICE C. LIPPONER

172 E. Lakewood St .. Patchogue
Gen. Lit.

41 Rogers St., Johnson City
Political Science
Newman Club; Pintopplers.

HARRY P. MARTEN

3544 Dekalb Ave., Bronx
Humanities
KEITH L. MARTIN

108 Taxter Rd., Irvington
Math
Basketball; Goliards

ENID M. LISS

MELVIN MASKIN

3 Major Court, Rockville Centre

75 Lasalle St .. New York
Social Science

Science

RIMA LUNIN

13 Taylor Ave., Peekskill
Humanities
ROBERT J. LOEWINGER

1069 E. 7th St., Brooklyn
Chemistry Dean's List.

WANDA MATACIA

Rhodes Rd , Apalachin
Humanities

RONALD BURTON MAYERS

Upper Lisle Rd .. Whitney Point
History
DENNIS J. McCUDDEN

GEORGE WALLACE LOUDON

504 Allen Rd., N. Syracuse
Gen. Lit.
Colonial Players-Pres.

183 Murray Ave.. Goshen
Humanities

ROBERT H. McCULLOCH
SUSANNE LOUER

12 Huntley Pl., Lancaster
Eng. Lit.
Dean's List; Jr. Honors; Dorm Council.
CAROL CONNOLLY LUCEY
11 North St, Binghamton

Science
MARY ANNE LYNCH

Social Science

'~~
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.

,-~

..

2555 Soper Ave., Baldwin
Spanish Lit.
Baseball; Basketball; Goliards.
JOHN B. McKEE

234 Flower Ave., Watertown
Humanities

JOHN H. McLELLAN

R.D # 2, Pre· Emption Rd .. Phelps
History
Wind Ensemble·Pres.: Light Chorus: Glee Club:
Harpur Trio; Spring Review; Binghamton Symph.;
Orchestra: Pintopplers.

HANA M. MACHOTKA
-.·

313 Grant Ave., Endicott
Biology
Fol kda ncers· Pres.

DAVID R. McNALLY

204 Ridgewood Dr., N. Syracuse
English lit.
Men's Dorm Council-Sec.

IRA NORMAN MAKASHAY

435 Ocean Parkway, Borrklyn
Economics
Dean's List
MARY ELIZABETH MALLABAR

6 South Sconondoa, Vernon
Sociology
Band; W.R.A.; Methodist Student Fellowship.
KATHLEEN ELIZABETH MANDRY

1209 Catherine St.• Utica
Gen. Lit.
Colonial Players; J.R.B.; Central Appelate Bd.:
Spring Review

JEANETTE S. MEHRER

68 Lincoln St .. Babylon
Art
Who's Who in American Colleges: Dean's List:
Drdgon Society; Art Studio Assistant Colonist
1965 Editor-in-Chief, 1964-Associate Editor;
C.N.: Friday Club: Gallery Comm.: J.R B.: Onen·
tat1on Advisor: Sundry U S.G. Committees
"One of the few not to get away with cutting
got called into Dean Richardson: up for two
beauty (?) contests at Harpur and lost both. I
pulled the fire alarm in Whitney."

�JESSE ALAN MILLER

GINIT SUE NEVIN

14 Tarence. Rockville Centre
Eng. Lit
Who's Who in American Colleges; Dean's List;
S.F.Y. Pres.; C.R.C.; l.R.C.: S.O.S.; S.U.P.·Pres.

418 Franklin St .. Fayetteville
Science

JUDITH E. NEWMAN

1720 University Ave., Bronx 53
Spanish Lit.
Dean's List
Spanish Club.

RUSSELL LOWELL MILLER

76-40 167 St. Flushing 66
Biology
Dean's List
Math Club·V.Pres.; C.R.C. tutor.

PATRICIA ANN NEWMAN

99 22 64 Ave. Forest Hills
Science

16 Asbury Court, Binghamton
Anthropology
Cheerleader; Spring Review; Dance Group: Outing
Club.

ABIGAIL K. MOHN

NORMA A. NICHOLS

133 Fayette St. Ithaca
Humanities

1 R1tton St .. Sidney
Science

JULIUS (FREDERICK KIFAI) MONGt

PAMELA S. NICHOLS

MONA T. MILSTEIN

53 Fountain St., Clinton
Humanities

Marangu Mauwo, c/o Kibo Postal
Agency, Moshi, Tanganyika
Eonomics
C.N .. Photographer; Soccer

MARY ALICE NORTHWAY

Wilcox Place. Jamesville
Anthropology
Newman Club; Pandorans.

ANDREA J. MOORE

4 Clinton, Potsdam
Chemistry
Dean 's List
Chorus; S.C.A.

BERL EDWARD NUSSBAUM

315 Central Park West, New York
Biology
Dean's List
Soccer; Swimming; C.R.C.; U.S.G.: Counselor.

HARRY WILLIAM MORGAN

R.D. # 1, Woodcrestway, Conklin
Sociology
Newman Club

NORMAN P. OBST

798 E. 34 St., Brooklyn 10
Math
Dean's List
Math Club; Chess Club.

HELEN LENORE MUTILA

324 Ithaca Rd., Spencer
History
Dean's List
Chorus; S.C.A.

WAYNE H. OLSEN

13 Rd. 1, Bainbridge
Humanities

JUDITH ANN MUNRO
PRISCILLA A. OSOVSKL

46 Normandy Dr.. Northport
French
W.R.A. V.pres.; Student Christian Ass .. Sec .. Treas.;
Counselor.

Main St., Newark Valley
Humanities

GEORGIA R. PALMER
ROGER NANES

801 Magnolia Dr., Franklin Square
Spanish
Dean's List
Spanish Club; C.R.C .. Orientation Advisor: C.N.;
Colonist.
"I helped pull the fire alarm in Whitney our
Freshman year. I promise to be on time for
graduation.''

1437 E. 17th St., Brooklyn 30
Chemistry
Dean's List
S.O.S. Treas.; Band: Counselor.

CARL W. NELSON

610 Bassett Ave., Endicott
Science
KEITH L. PALMER
181 Achley Ave., Johnson City
Accounting
lntramurals

THOMAS J. NELSON

610 Bassett Ave., Endicott
Social Science

154

�•

ANNA CAMILLE PAPA
225 83 St.. Brooklyn
Math
Newman Club-Pres.; Or•entat1on Advisor.

CAROL REESE

tiii'tl. .;...
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DOUGLAS G. PATCHEN

\.

Fifth Road, North Rose
Science

KAREN ELAINE PERLMAN
1020 Lyd1g Ave .. Bronx
Biology
Counselor; Jewish Fellowship

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572 Fletcher St.. Tonawanda
Humanities

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URSULA A. REHM
132Thompson St , Poughkeepsie
General Lit.
Dean's List
Counselor; C.R.C.; S.C.B

LEON M. REYNOLDS
210 Mam St.. Penn Yan
Science

MARCIA H. PERLSTEIN
60 Knolls Crescent, New York
Eng. Lit
C N.-Culture Editor; Central Appellate Board;
J.R.B.; Humanities Review Ed. Board; Colonial
Players. Chairman One Acts Comm.

LOUISE R. ROBINSON
3824 Walso Ave., New York
Chemistry
Dean's List
C;N., C.R.C.; and vanous spaghetti sauces.

BARBARA ANN PETRYSHYN
120 Webster Ave., Yonkers
Math
Newman Club; Pandorans; Colonial Players.

BRUCE D. ROGERS
1520 Shendan Ave., Bronx
Political Science
C.N. Asst. Ed.; Debate Club; U.S.G
Comm; Frerich Club, Jewish Fellowship.

DANIEL PIERCE
20 Front St .. Binghamton
Humanities

CONSTANCEL.PLATT
58 Clinton St., Binghamton

Finance

YVONNE A. ROGERS
Dr.. Lancaster

Science

2 Huntley
Science

DAVID SEYMOUR POPKIN
324 Beach 59 St., Arverne 92
English Lit.
Dean's List; Jr. Honors
Pintopplers.

HEDY ROLLIN
119 Travers Ave., Yonkers
Eng. and Gen. Lit.
Chorus: Light Chorus; Orientation Comm.; S C.B.

MICHAEL PRESS
1579 Metropolitan, Bronx
Social Sc1ence/ Ph1lo.
Honor Roll
Debate Team; C.N.; U .S.G. Seminar on "Automa·

GERALD JAY ROSENBWM
26 Pine Dr., Woodbury
Accounting
Dean's List
Demetreans-Pres.; J.R.B.; Dorm Coun1l-Treas.

t1on ."

RICHARD LAWRENCE PRINTZ
25 W. 81 St .. New York
English Lit.
Honor
Sophomore Class Pres.; Adelph1-V.Pres.: J R.B.:
Colonial Players.

ROBERT DAVID ROSS
729 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn
Business Enterpnse
Adelphi: S.F.Y.; Radio Workshop; lntramurals.

DAVID ROSS

LAWRENCE MICHAEL RABINOWITZ
11 Balsa Dr., Hicksville

Mitchell Ave • Newburgh
Humamttes

History
A.P.0.-Treas.; Soccer; Jewish Fellowship.

ARNOLD ROTHBAUM
234 Sycamore St., West Hempstead
Social Science

MICHAEL RADZIKOWSKI
63 Greely Ave.. Sayville
Science

WARREN LEONARD ROTTMANN
2118 Alan Dr.. Seaford
BtoloSY

LAWRENCE S. REED
154 N. Little Ter. Rd., New York
Science

155

�LEONARD M. SACHS

BARBARA R. SHAPIRO

867 West 181 St., New York

3030 Surf Ave., Brooklyn

Social Science

Humanities
Counselor; French Club-V.Pres.

VICTOR HAROLD SAKS

2675 Creston Ave Bronx 68
JOAN SHEEKS
Post Office Rd., Barrytown
Humanities

Matt-

JO-ANN SAMSON
1601 Butternut Dr., Vestal
Biology
ANNE LISA SASINEK
4 Edna Ave., Binghamton
History
Dean's List
French Club

SUSAN SHEINMAN

63 61 Yellowstone, Forest Hills
Humanities

LINDA HELENE SHER
35 Tudor Rd., Hicksville
Spanish
U.S.G.; Dorm Council-Treas.; Spring Wk. Comm.;
Orientation Advisor; Counselor.
"'I , too, was one of those who pulled the fire
alarm in Whitney."

GAIL PATRICIA SATTERLEE
R.D., Coxsackie
Literature
W.R.A; M.S.F.

DEBORAH ELLEN SCHACHNER
150 Corbin Pl., Brooklyn 37
History
C.N

BILLIE STEFANI SHERRIS
1184 Grant Ave., Bronx
Math
Dorm Council; Math Society-Pres.; C.N.; W.R A.

PHILIP SCHECHTER
105 Knight St., Oceanside
Spanish
Dean's List
Track Mgr., Cross-Country Mgr.; DemetreamsSerg.at-Arms.

BARRY EDWARD SHIMKIN
853 Empire Blvd., Brooklyn
Biology
Winter/Spring Wk.·Chair.; SOS Treas.; Basketball; S.F.Y., Senior Class Comm.

GEORGE J. SCHIEBER
2946 Murdock Rd., Wantagh
Social Science
BARBARA G. SCHONWALD

24 Cabrini Blvd., New York

TERRY ANN SHORTELL
443 Elizabeth St., OnP.ida
Art History
Who's Who in American Colleges
U .S.G.; F.S.A.; S.D.C.; Newman Club; Colonist;
Orientation Comm.
"I, too, was one of those vigilantes who put LIB·
ERTY on the C.A. bldg."

Science

MARILYN SCHUMAN

192 18 48 Ave., Flushing 65
Science

BARBARA SCHWARTZ
36 Regina Rd., Farmingdale
Math
Dean's List
Colonist; W.R.A.; Bowling; Jewish Fellowship.
"The most worthwhile thing I have gotten out of
this school 1s one lovely diamond ring anci a
gold band to come.·'

CAROL SHORTSLEEVES

168 Circular St , Saratoga Springs
Science

RICHARD JAY SIEGELMAN
163-18 Willets Point Blvd., Whitestone 57
Sociology
Dean's List
C.R.C.; Math Club; Cross.Country; Tennis; Demetreans-Sec.
"I went the way of all flesh, from science to sociology."

MARY LOUISE SENFT
7 Westview Ave., White Plains
Anthropology
Dean's List
Light Chorus
BARRY MICHAEL SHAPIRO
1555 Unionport Rd., Bronx
Political Science
Honor Roll; Dean's List: Who's Who in American
Colleges.
C.N.-Ed ; Demetreans-Pres.; Dorm Jud1c1al Board;
C.R.C., 1.R.C.; S.P.8.; U.S.G.
"I was the only C.N. editor 1n history whose recommendation for new editor was not accept-

ed"

MICHAEL R. SIMON
4 Dawn Lane, Hicksville
Biology
Dean's List
S.C B., Convocations Comm.; Spanish Club; Calendar Comm.; Endym1ons-Corr. Sec.

156

�ELAINE SIROTA
1230 Avenue Y. Brooklyn
Social Science

ROBERT JOHN STROHSCHEIN
10 Rowley Dr.. Northport
Chemistry
Dean's List

LOUIS H. SMITH
3109 Bums Rd .. Vestal
Chemistry
Debate Club-Pres.

ROBERT STUCKART
2 Knight Ave , Endicott
Science
EDWARD SUBITZKY
36 Central Pkwy, Mt. Vernon
Science

NANCY LEE SMITH
Moriah Center
Philosophy
Dean's List: Jr. Honors
Synch. Swim Club: Counselor; Humanities Review.
"I would have liked to organize a Let's·sit-down·
and-discuss-th1s-rationally-and.cons1der·
BOTH-s1des-of-the-quest1on Club."

EVELYN F. SUCHER
11 ft. George Hill. New York
Humanities
ROY STUART SUNDICK
976 E. 13 St.. Brooklyn
Biology
Track, Cross-Country; Outing Club; C.R.C

SUSAN EUEN SOLOMON
139 Rosedale Rd., Yonkers
English Lit.
Dean's List
J.R.B.·Ch1ef Justice; Summer Wkd.·Co·Cha1r.
"I went the whole summer trimester without
crossing the esplanade."

ELLEN RUTH SUPER
73-24 194 St., flushing
French
Dean's List: Dragon Society; Jr. Honors-French;
Who's Who 1n American Colleges.
W.R.A.·Pres.; French Club: Jewish Fellowship:
Couselor; Synch. Swim Club; Dorm Judicial
Board; Senior Class Comm.

BENITA SOMERFIELD
67 05 186 Lane, New York
Humanities
JOAN SONNANBURG
114·86 225 St., Cambria Hights
Eng. and Gen. Lit.
An unofficial co-chairman of the publicity commit·
tee of the flagrantly unsuccessful student-facul·
ty coffee hours; C.R.C.

MICHAEL HOWARD SWITZER
326 W Waukena Ave., Oceanside
Accounting and Business
Dean's List
Adelphi-Treas.; Counselor; freshman Class Treas.

JOHN FRANKLIN SPIEGEL
105 Arden St., New York
Political Science
Dean's List; Dragon Society; Who's Who in Amen.
can Colleges.
Colonial Players; Soccer: U.S.G.-Treas.: Counselor;
Convocations Comm.; Odeans.
"I recommend the following new courses: lnterd1·
visional Science and Humanities: Body English
101, Theology 101: Upservice, and Dance 301
(lst graduate course): Bump and Grind."

THOMAS H. SYVERTSEN
1610 Highland Ave.. New Hyde Park
Social Science
SAMUEL MICHAEL TAMBURO
9 Easterly Ave.. Auburn
Sociology
Dean's List
Newman Club; Baseball: Counselor.

JAMES H. SPRING
Qtrs. 6 Fort Schuyler, Bronx 65
History
Dorm Council; Goliards-Pres.: Baseball: Newman
Club: S.F.Y.

G~RY

ELLEN SUSAN STIMMEL
56-07 218 St., Bayside
Spanish
.
Jr. year at Facultad de Filosofia y Letras, Umver·
s1dad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico,

JOHN TAYLOR
300 Church St., New Milford, Pa.
Social Science

CHARLES TAYLOR
204 E. William St .. Bath
Enghsh and Gen. Lit.
Gohards·Sec.: lntramurals.

JAMES MICHA TENAGLIA
30 Carmen Dr.. Nanuet
Social Science
Who's Whom American Colleges.

o.v.
"Psychological Counseling Services, Or. Ellen
Stimmel, LSMFT; Or. Susan Weiser. LSD; Dr.
Jo Hanssen, TNT; Correctional Therapy in Rela·
tions of all natures."

RICHARD C. STOLER
438 Beach 122 St .. Rockaway Park
Anthropology
Dean's "other " list
Baccac1a-Sec.; C.N.-Sports Ed.
"I was given a special award foe being the only
one to pass out at the C.N. "Open Woods"
orgy this summer. HAIL HELIOS . . . FARE·
WELL MORPHEUS."

CAROL TEWES
7205 Star Route Auburn
Science
Dean's List
Dorm Council; lnterdorm Council; C.N.-Circulation
Ed.; Pandorans: Or1entat1on Advisor; German
Club

157

��ALICE JOAN WEINSTEIN

JOHN P. WOJCIO

2845 Un1vers1ty Ave., New York 68
Art History
Jr, Honors; Dean·s List
Sophomore Class-Sec.: Senior Key; Colonist-Ed.
Bd.

Box 104, Lake Katrine
Spanish
Gohards; Basketball.
EUGENE J. WOLOSZYN

195 N. Broad St., Johnson City
Physics

ANNETTE HELEN WEINSTEIN

114 Standish Dr., Syracuse
Biology
Dean's List
Debate Club: Jewish Fellowship

JAMES DAVID YACOPINO

252 High Ave., Nyack
Philosophy
Dean's List
Husband
"I would hke to have organized a Thursday After·
noon Club in rivalry to the Monday Afternoon
Club, here at Harpur, to add to the local col·
or."

SUSAN MARIAN WEISER

1479 Cromwell Ave., Bronx
Sociology
U.S.G.p Dorm Judicial Brd .. Social Reg. Comm.
S.DC.
"Psychological Counseling Service Inc .. Dr Susan
Weiser, L.S.D.; Dr. Ellen Stimmel, L.S.M.F.T.;
Dr. Jo Hanssen, T N.T; Correctional Therapy in
relations of all natures."

GEORGE F. VARNES

19 Proctor St .. Binghamton
Humanities
FREDERICK ARTHUR YOUNG

STEPHEN F. WEISS

51 Logan St., Auburn
German
Assistantship m German
S.D.C. Chair.; German Club.

1430 Parkchester Rd., New York
History
C.N.·Photographer; Colonist
ROBERT C. WHITNEY

PAUL D. ZAJACESKOWSKI

661 Palisade Ave., Yonkers
Human1t1es

Star Route. Hagaman
Social Science
HARVEY ZALAZNICK

DONNA GRAHAM WILKE

Pine Plains
English Lit.
Jr Honors
Clarendon ·Ed.

18 Park St., Ellenville
Chemistry
Dragon Society
Demetreans-Pres.: U.S.G; C N ·Sports Ed.; Pres1·
dent's Council; Baseball.

ROSS JOSEPH WILLIAMS

MARCIA RUTH ZETREN

49 Prince St., Red Hook
Economics
TAU; U.S.G., Dorm Council; lntramurals.

160 Sweetf1eld Cr•• Yonkers
Biology
Dean's List
Chorus; Ski Club; C.N.
"What a privilege to have a key; I can stay m the
lab ·till 2 or 3 A.M."

CLAUDIA MARIE WILSON

2257 University Ave., New York
English Lit.
Honor Roll: Dean's List; Jr. Honors; Who's Who in
American Colleges.
S.D.C.-V.Cha1r.; Dorm Council-Pres.; C.R.C.; Hu·
mamt1es Review: U.S.G.-President.
"I ne1ped write LIBERTY ON THE C.A building;
was a memoer of the Delaware Hall &lt;.;ounc1I for
Revolution."

ANNE S. ZIMMERMAN

136 Grove St., Albany
Social Science
KENNETH JAY ZIMMERMAN

2421 Cedar Ave., New York 68
Spanish
Dean's List
Orientation Comm.: Academic Affairs Comm.

JUDITH I. WINCHELL

133 William Rd., Massapequa
English Lit.
Jr. Honors; Dean's List
Freshman Class-Sec.; Sophomore Class-V.PrP.s.;
S.C.B.; Cheerleader.

SUSAN JANE ZIMMERMAN

1575 New Scotland Rd., Shngerlands
Math
Dean's Ltst; Honor Roll
Orchestra: C.R.C.

BARRY STEVEN WINKLER

JUDITH MIRIAM ZIPP

1928 19th Lane, Brooklyn 14
Biology
Dean's' List
Adelphi; Basketball.

44 Ocean Ave., Islip
Psychology
Dean's List
Colonial Players

BARBARA LIBBY WITTENBERG

1055 Jerome Ave., New York
French Lit.
Dean's List
Counselor. Dorm Council-Chair.;
Pres.; C.R.C.

ROBERT L. ZOLCZER
38 Susan Lane. Cheektowaga
German Lit.
Dean's List
TAU; German Club, Soccer.

French Club·
159

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were on your right and left.

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i• puld for" mi•flt produced hy our ln&lt;llcutur. ~1 r. Pro·
pach will vi~lt all the principal cities to ocwn Bl(&lt;'nrir•.
JnRf'ilJmn~iblt· p~trti...,, wn11H-d e,·crywhcr e. ::'\. B.-1'h£"
d icutor is 11800 by all t he principal dre8smakct'I! in N. Y.

1t1•eNl tong, • oz.. weight,

For the old, th~ young,
1

'l'uudet, lhc ~t echnnic.
No "lui ns. 1'\o trouble.

E. &amp; HT. ANTHONY
&amp; co.,
X. Y .
$10 n11ct
upwurd. Our 1tpparnt.11s
is •upcrior to nil others
tm/&gt;rovcm ents. Our
nt &amp;1.nw pril·1•, hn\'i11g patented
0
J 11~tru&lt;·t ou book !rco wltll
plotee nrc :l1:tc&gt; the ht·~t.
euch t'(lUl~1mc11t. '' Send for price-li•L
Broa dwR ~··

1;91

Rq11ipow111~,

IS-LA ND

~'J.'ATEN

We~t

NEW.

L. SHA W,

14th St., n e ar 6th Ave ., Ne w York.

N

Bentley's Art Needlework
ESTAB LISHME NTS,

SOi Bro1dn"a 7. X. Y

P bf1!lolans reoommen d them on BCC&lt;
raUve p roportlee. 'Ibey fur nlah a wo1
f or S1nf.lca::m , Hen cunou , Ccnn :I Del
llheu1!11Lct1 and Pan!yt's. their eaoct bet
to t he weare r. Prtce(acco rding to tho1
lated platealf S&amp; $ 12eaoh: abdomina l,
t or d eecrtptive clrcular . For &amp;ale by le

THOllSOI, LAllODOll A C0. 1 "· Y., SCLE t

-_,,,kl yn.

•

~~nrl

\\ llll lite 1'crfccllvl l.
Llldk-s cannot fail to oht&lt;en·e, otonce, the wonderful lv
narnral effect nf t he Water Wave in the above !liust11ition. ,-r o ohtuin t he.· ge1111ine urti&lt;'le tht'Y shonlrl Cllll nt
my "M•hll•hm ent. wh,•rP lht•Y "ill t\nd, ns w..it. \\'l
Switdwe, Unmnn Brni&lt;h". GrPC'iHn Knott1 CliifP
(.;urltt, &amp;\.,All Of the tinc!{l q11111ity o( h11m1111 I

Tbo remn

1

ve nle n &lt;!l", com
' d ed ln1vro v e•
n hJ t·n~n- "

Gnly nntl white hnir A
00&lt;lo(i8 wn1 runr~I ft~ rcprl'tlClllt"&lt;i or mon-:·
Attt"ntion i• •l•o cnlled to a full line of

mo~I un i~tlc clc.o1lgntl.

"eNlty "t.o I
\ll•lt VI tht:ti
&gt; th1&gt;1:•e wt.

from the celcbratt'd P11rfu111er le "&lt;.'apil•
A. SlllO:\'SOX. :H Eost 14th St.. nu·
!!.ole Age nt for the C

~itdv~~i'i~h~cr~:~~f,, f?,r;~r,a;t~;:r~~i
E~tRhli~ht"fl

I ~i4

For &lt;" 1n

llJIH !'lfAllY HI N 'I
P.O. Box 16,';

PhoteH!rnph~

SiOO

33

fc1r ArtAlhuuH o:,.
'\ft~hln it t on

ho.. e IOT\·I
\\1lt1wt.r

Advertisers
and
Patrons

i_~Jlr'~t01tLCII.

me11L.

;,t ,, ,

curly h1
·&gt;nc sr

,,,_... n

\ 1!3 1:'11

•ins an
1DllK&gt;rU

,. ftl\d'
(I t o

&amp;

' e a-ant
•

&gt;'.l-4 Cft11

6Cllt,C.O. D

LflditR' D1·t.~-tl'K, CihakA. Uubts, d:c.• of all falJrttR, and

! ully M.'itltout .,.fppin.11

A t&lt;•

t.cmat17.t'&lt;l a11Pw every dcp1u1mc nt of our bu,.inCNl, we

c 111 cout1c1cntly promise t11c he!!t ret'oults, and unul'ually
p rompt return of goods. Correspon dence lnvlt~'&lt;.I.
Good• re&lt;:eived amt relllmed by cxpre..s and by mall.
DAICR E'J."J " NEPHE WS&amp;. co.,
____ ____ _s_ aud 7 .J"obu St. , N. v.
1

THE

WOVEN CORSET.
TAU kt'r1r a wtr.Hll Ctwttl.
ma.de in on1 ,Ji'ttt, t:tndai 1u'fll'
100 Done• """'"' diaronall y ;,.
flu h«i.}' ef f lu cqrsd, retain• It.I

W I RE G AU Z E

Non-Explosive

OIL STOV E.
01
~~~
;Jii, 0Ulfr. b~·1~.
on the

/.

~rvolr,

prioclple or the Sia Hew

h~~~~:rt· :t:~
r:i:;1~~~~
:'\'on-Ex plo.lve.

s hapo nnder all cU.,um 1tan; ce1, al flu " "' " fim1 ~/dinr to all t !t1
!;/) moti.tm.s if Jiu 'ftMa rw . 1Air 11 Jiu "" '7 t'tw•

sd m an11/actu r1d Ilia/ t:an m nke rot&gt;d tliis c/.oi111..
JI is a 1U"'W 1'1tflnl/11m '!/'

lutely
wm nnt iunoJ..e \\ heu placed lo

THE NOVELTY CORSET WORKS, N. Y.

o. drou11ht, Reservoir ftolshe&lt;I lo
Imitation n[ Scotch Or t.cite

EVERY LADY WHO HAS E VER WORN
ONE, OR DESIRES A SHAPEL Y FIGURE,
WILL ASK FOR A ND
In1ut upon h&amp;Ting the

1-"'ROlfTS. And man\· other

valunble im1lrnYPmf'nt~. HEND
FOK CA.TAJ,OG~E.
'tG THI
J r TOQ' 1"~1" OUR Jl.S .t. CTI P"UL CJ.ROS 1Lt.OSTR~Tll
PO!IT.t.CK.
E 10 1n W o:ico&amp;R.S o r Tit s WORLD, SE~D SIJ: rKNTS

Tbe Adam• &amp;
~ Summer St .. B°"t0n.
96L&amp;lce St., ChlC"'fo.

'\Ve •tlake Mflr. Co .
'·~I Ile&lt;'kmAo St., N. Y
7 E. Fourteenth lit .. N. Y.

I

uB

The Largest Establishment i

GASTRIJ

Reme&lt;ly for ltlliiqatin n and Dr•P'1
oupleftpan t feellnKs aft&lt;•r eating. R
..,..,U:lcntM . Sold hy Drug~lstl&lt;.
DEPO'I ', 59 l'lurray

~l 1 Pl~ Rl~J,\ TOL' S

1'Jme. Julian• • S pecltle 111 t:
remedr, for removrng rndicnlly and
aunoy.ug dl•6&amp; u r c n1e 11t• from
Chin, Arm~. &amp;c., without iniuring t
mny addreas :Mme. JULIAN, ~o. 4$ ll

who ar1 t'!r so/1 tftat1 11/ 1u/urt'rs.

B~:: 1~~E~,St&lt;s~~~s1m.y~~;~
CHu• ~CY

J

11
11
,.1
]tandard Pianos of

DOUBLE HIP PEtrECT rITTlNa Warerooms: Steinway Hall

ADAM S &amp;. )VEST LA Kt-:

the

1
~-·

I

oT I 4tt

o r the most .. bhon•te •tyles, clellncd o r d)·cd eucc&lt;!t!sOTH BRV..
R ECA R!&gt; l"OR 'lr••

Grn

~oio.1 ou .

OFFICES

Gentlc..·men'!'I. Gnnncntt' rVantd or d11td tcholt.
Curt,1111s, \\'lndow - Shadrs, Tahle - Cowrs, CarpeL•,
&amp;r. , cit'"""'' o r d)'ed. Employi11g the best attal11tthlc
ekill ~nd Dl&lt;"t lmpro\'l!d appiiancee , and hnvmg sys·

M~~:~
"WJ

lhl• chur
rnment ti\'

111

&amp;

oo.

O'f'lllN G NE"' Ell tha n Storks and C'at.-tnile
cau be found at most of t he roncy work Buaan!,
liut N&gt;metbiug eloe may alwaya be &amp;eeo a t

8lze

ll!l9 Brot\dn"t\J , nenr 29 th St., X. Y.
279 Fu lion St•• Brooldyr1.
47 :\'or1h Eh; h(h S t., l'hlla delpl1la.
JlO West Baltimore St., Balllmon.
Dye, Clean, nnd Rrjit1iRh Drees Goods nnd Gttrmen t11.

H.0. 1'.K OOB &amp;

No false, wig-like •ppearanc e (like all other waYeto)
made of u•tural \\avy hair, nnd faateued on the hcaa
"ithout a single hair pin. From ~ to $10. Speci•I
•hntlcs extrs.
G HA Y AND WHITE HAIR A SPE CIALTY .
Ill11•tra1ed price-HM f ree of ch•rge.
Goo&lt;ls •en t to all parw of t he couut ry, C.O.D., witlt
prl\'ilege of returuloi:. _ _

ESTABLISHMENT, SEND $ 1. 50 for ••mnle do7.en
FANCY 5DYEING
7 ;John St. , Ne w Vork.
om ce,
.uhject• &lt;;oru: Pll OTO&lt;h
o,·er

BRANCH }

Our price• are lower than those of a
ln tbc city.
Orden by llla ll PrompU7 .ltter

L. Shaw's MariB AntoinBttB wavB. i

~

f orl1ulic!:ln11&lt;1gcn 11cmeu,
for t he Protc~m·, the
S1111!enl the Arti~t. tlie

Honiton and Irish Point Er

U nc•qu a lle d for c onve nie n ce and
comfort , impro\•lt1g thu loo ka of
• youn&amp;" and o ld charmingl y.

SOLD BY DRUGG ISTS.

PHOTOGRAPHY MADE EASY.

$4

SOMETHI~G

RO,T
"hlch rendcre the teech ""t11T1t, th e .rum•
r c m o vc.e

._nd Us e bre atb ~"'EFT. It thoro u1rh t31
a.rtar from th e t eeth and pre ' e ou decay.

REAL DUCHESS LA CE VESTS Al\

No acid refined Chinese lrnlr nor worthle.., Italian Comblng11ut\&lt;!d,11&lt;&gt; detriment al to heAlth. The h•lr we u~r I• prepared
on our prcmi•cs. Cut from Jh•e, healthy
French or o~rm811 pe886DU, and warrautcd a• such.
s 'v 1·rc 11 ES, all long hair, 2Srluch

54

SO ZO DO NT ,

8pan ish and Guipurc
Scarfs an&lt;
Bead F
and
le
Chenil

HUMAN HAIR.

Cll A IR di Ile~ Crom al thP otlwr ~l:ltimrnrY or rt."&lt;"lln·
ing chairt' in thtH it ,.._ \)P tt e r , !oof t"OU f: ... r • und Qlnti&gt;le r ; i!'\ rulnptNI to the l1&lt;H1~t.·, Lawn. porcf1, or cArnp,

am! i~ jUSt churk full Of QUil't COlllfort llllcl hl&lt;"•'•'&lt;I ref&lt;!.
It Is fur tlttpt·rior to the 1lammnck in t•\·er~· way, and
can he pnt up t"\O ns to he ah\l\YS in tht• ~luull' .
. The c h 1'11 pe~ t ll nd th&lt;' I&gt;&lt;'•! Arti&lt;'l c In th e
world f o r the e njo) nu.~ ut o f fr&lt;""-h n l r.
lt 11~sun11·~ and cnn bt• tt!:'lt.."&lt;I in uuy po~ition . from l'h·
occu·
tin~ up to lytngdow n, without any t•'(ertlon of the
panr. and :tupport~ n11d rt 1 !'11"" OH' lmtly in whRh'\'t•r po1o1f.
be
to
ns
'v
lion tt is phtcet1,,vh tle th e prlt't&gt; 1., so Jo
· within the r ench of 0 \ 1 e r y one . Frlce. $ 4 .00.
Sold In •II h1ri.:e 1Mrk~r•.
G OODEL L CO. , An trim. X. H., Jta nufacture rs.

BEA.CT I,

For the complexio n . Prodncet! a heoutlful transparency. It Is r..commcu ded by phy&amp;iCi¥t18. Price, $1
per box.
t:nrivalled Yli:LOUTI:'\E FACE POWDER S, OOC.
and $I per bnx.
~ly CO~I PLE:XI0:-1 MASK, pat~nt&lt;'d Sept 4, lSiT,
Price, $2,
~o highly reeomm~nded sud unsurpol!l!Od.
Complete. Beware or lmitsuona .
,
HOUGES
FACE
and
LIP
NE
SAr'FOLI
Indtl!ble
$1 atHI :tl.00 per bottlr.
INSTA~DYEING
Cor
'E,
sADOm:\
!llnrshall'
F. F.
1'ANEOt. :SLY the hair, the beard, the ~y!'11ro"" and
eydu•he&amp; light brown, brown, o r bt..ck, "It bout "()il!ni;
the skin. No lellllen hue or redcll•h tluL $USO per
lloL Applied on premise• if t1 ...lrcd.
.lOE:\'TS WASTED F.HRYWJ IERE.

JTA l\LUOC

llf0 t::oi1' AI ~

9F

u r-

K\J c:.

DOUBLE RIP PEBFECT FITTING
PRICE,

ti

s;n

WOVE N CORSE T.

Fgnaub.}'al1 ~~~1i11t!u, .lf !f. ~"7ma i4

SHO PPIN

In all branch~J. hy t rained and exp
AcldrCM AMEtdCA N PURCUA SI
196 Broadway , New York City. CaL
our RubberPr lnti
J \f M ITT&amp;... .t

pies free.
IT PAYS toscll

h andM&gt;n
r,•BD COLLECTOBS.-A
... _
,... T"+
'
• ·•

·-··-

�Best Wishes to the Yearbook
Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Abrahamsen
Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Abrams
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Adelman
Mr. and Mrs. Chester R. Ainslie
Rev. and Mrs. T. Howard Akland
Mrs. Isidore Alexander
Mr. and Mrs. Morns Alstadter
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Allen, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs H. W Amidon
Mr. and Mrs. Boley Ampula
Mr. and Mrs Dorr Anderson
SFC and Mrs. D. R. Andrus
Mrs. Agnes Anthony
Harold and Felicia Anton
Mr. and Mrs Angelo Anzideo
Mr. and Mrs. George Appelbaum
Mrs. Katherine Argersinger
Mr. and Mrs. Nat Augenlicht
Dr and Mrs. Morris Axelrod
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Baker
Mr and Mrs. Warren Baker
Mr and Mrs. Frank C. Balcom
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Barek
Mr. and Mrs. Jay D. Barnes
Solomon Barnett
Mr. and Mrs. Morns Bassin
Mr and Mrs. F. Bastian
Mr and Mrs. Walter J. Baumstein
Miss Mallory Be1tal, Abraham
and Sophie Be1tal
Mr and Mrs. Nathan Bellman
Mr. and Mrs Edward W Bender
Mr. and Mrs Jacob Benderson
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Beniamrn
Benza's Barber Shop
Mr and Mrs. Wilham Berkowitz
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Bernhardt
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Bernstein
Mr. and Mrs. Jospeh M Berstein
Mr. and Mrs. Selig Bernstein and Bruce
Mr. and Mrs. L. Besser and Family
Mr. and Bertram J. Black
Mr and Mrs Lloyd J. Blair
Mr. and Mrs. Merle R. Blauvelt
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bl1tstein
Sol Bloomfield
Mrs. Mary E. Boburka
Mr. and Mrs. Bartel G. Bonney
Mr. and Mrs. M Bornf1eld
James J. Bou11k1an
Mr and Mrs. Thomas F. Boylan
Mr and Mrs. James Breeze
Mrs. Lewis Bresnick
L. N Bress
Morns and Anne Brier
Abraham Brinn
Mr and Mrs. Stephen A. Bruno
Mr and Mrs. James Bullowa
Mr and Mrs. Isadore Burdick
Mr and Mrs. Kenneth C. Burhyte
Mr. and Mrs. Perrin Burke
Vincent Burr
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Calvin
J. Loring Campbell
Mr. and Mrs. Mott Campbell
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cantor
Mr. and Mrs. Wilham Capalbo

Mrs. Am1el Caolan
Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Caplan
Mr. and Mrs. E. Carles
Mrs. Ralph B. Carhart
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carl1nd
Mr. and Mrs. R. H Carson
A. J. Case
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry J. Ceika
Mr. and Mrs. John Chapo
Dr. and Mrs. Rudolph J. Cherkauer
Christine Livingstone
Mr. and Mrs. W. Clancy
Mrs. Robert W. Coburn
Dr. and Mrs. Albert Cohen
Mr. and Mrs. Barnie Cohen
Lottie and Samuel J. Cohen
Mr. and Mrs. Philip H. Cole
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Collins
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Conner
Mrs. Dorothy S. Conte
Mr. and Mrs. Wilham T. Conway
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Cooke
Dr. and Mrs. N. V Cooper
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cornelius
\.1r. and Mrs. David L. Coveney
Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Cronin
Robert D. Cronk
Crystal Tea Room
Michel F. Cuk1er
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Edward Damin
Mr and Mrs. A. L. Daub
Mr and Mrs. Charles C. Daucher
Dominick A Daversa
Mr. and Mrs. Sol David
Mrs. Betty Davis
Dr and Mrs. H. R. Davis
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Garry DeBoer
Mr. and Mrs. David W. Decker
Mr. and Mrs. Earl F. Decker, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip I. De1tcham
Mr. and Mrs. Edward V. Delaney
Samuel and Diana Delrn
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick M. Dell
Mr. and Mrs. Carmen Denato
Mr and Mrs. Mortimer Denker
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Detweiler
Albert deVilleneuve
Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Devlin
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Diamond
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Dick
Mr and Mrs. Otto A. Dietrich
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond D1Prima
Esther Dakerman
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Doig
John Donovan
Gertrude Dorr
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Dragan
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Driller
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Dronsick
Mr. and Mrs. John P Drown
Mr and Mrs Joseph Duda
Rev. and Mrs. Wilton J Dubrick
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Dupler
Josephine Durham
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Dwyer
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Edelson

Dr and Mrs. A. Edelstein
Mr. and Mrs. David Effel
Mr and Mrs. Jack Ehrenberg
Mr and Mrs. Samuel Eisner
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Elrauch
Mr. and Mrs S. Ehrenberg
Mr. and Mrs A Ellenbogen
Paul D Elste1n
Leonard and Selma Ellerman
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Epstein
E. C. Erbstoeszer
Mr. and Mrs. H. Erhard
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Etkin
Mr. and Mrs. J. Evansohn
Solomon and Ada Fernberg
Mr and Mrs. Irving Feingold and Famtly
Mr and Mrs. Irving Fe1rstern
Mr and Mrs. Richard Fenicchia
Mr and Mrs. Horace C. Fey
Mr. and Mrs. Harold P. Fink
Mr and Mrs. Bernard Fisher
Mr and Mrs. Harry Fischer
Mr and Mrs. Vincent Fletcher
Mr and Mrs. Charles Flom
Mr and Mrs. Herman Forman
Mr. and Mrs. Jolian Forrest
Mrs. Muriel Fox
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Foyt
Mrs. David Federman
Mr and Mrs. Gerson Feit
Manuel Finkler
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron A. Fleischman
Mr. and Mrs. Burton Fraleigh
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Frank
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Frankel
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Frattalone
Dr. and Mrs. B. J . Freid
Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Fried
Mr and Mrs. Ben Friedman
Dr. and Mrs. Morris Friedman
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Friedman
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Frieman
A Friend
Mr. and Mrs. Adolf Frey
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan A. Garnen
Mr. and Mrs. Umberto Galante
Morris Garber
Abraham I. Gartner
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Gaylord
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Geller
Mr and Mrs. Geo. Georgopoulos
Martin Gerhardt
Mr. and Mrs. J. Gettler, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Giambalvo
Walter and Ruby G1lchriest
Dr. and Mrs. I. 0. Gimprich
Mr. and Mrs. Irving Ginsburg
Mr. and Mrs. Lester L. Gittelson
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Glunts
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Goddard
Mrs. Althea Goldberg
Lillie and Jack Goldberg
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Goldberger
Mr. and Mrs. Goldman
Mrs. Ira G. Goldman
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Goldman
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Goldsmith

�Mr and Mrs. Nat R. Goldstein
Mr. and Mrs. Rubin Goldwasser
Mrs. Jean D. Goodfned
Mr. and Mrs. Howard W. Gordon
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Gordon
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Gothelf
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Gottlieb
Edgar Grant
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Grant
Mr and Mrs. Henry Greenfield
Emanuel Greenstein
Mr. and Mrs. Milton M. Grey
Mr and Mrs. David Grossberg
George Grun
Mr. and Mrs. Robert F Haa s
Mr and Mrs. Paul R. Haines
Raymond. Mary and Michael Hall
Mr and Mrs. S. Handelsman
Mr and Mrs. Leon Handfinger
Mr. and Mrs. Ench G. Hanisch
Mr and Mrs. Duane Hardy
Mr. and Mrs. Hartman
Mr. and Mrs. LOUIS Harolds
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Harvey
Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Hayward
Luke Hazilla
Richard and Enka Heller
Mr. and Mrs S. Heller
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hellman
LOUIS Henken
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Henry
John Herold
H1 Ball Bar and Gnll
Mr and Mrs. Russell Hill
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hillie
Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Hoerner
Mr. and Mrs. Irving Hoffman
Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah Hollon
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin L. Holzer
Mr. and Mrs. Murray Holzman
Mr. and Mrs. David Hood
Milton A. Horowitz
Louise Hosking
Mr. and Mrs. George Hoyt
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph K. Hoyt
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Huberman
John P. Hudock. M.D., F.A.C.S.
Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Huebner
Mr. and Mrs. C. Max Hull
Mr. and Moms Hyman
Mr. and Mrs. William Hynes
Mr. and Mrs. George Wayne lak
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard J. lantosca
Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Izzo
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jacker
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Jacobs
v. Jacobs
Barnet Jaffe
Henry and Dorothy Jakel
Mrs. Sylvia L. Jarmuth
Dr. and Mrs. Henry JaStk
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jelline
Mr. and Mrs. W. Kenneth Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Judd
Mr. Gerald E. Kalen
Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Kalter
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kaplan
Mr. and Mrs. Solomon H. Kaplan
Mr. and Mrs. Jack D. Karp
Mr. and Mrs. Sol Kasten
Mr. and Mrs. Adam Kasupsk1

Mr Nat Kaufman
Mr and Mrs. Lawrence Kavana
Mrs. Ruth Kee
Mr and Mrs. Russell B. Keeney
Mr. and Mrs. Ernst Keller
Mr and Mrs Patnck J. Kelly
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kendall. Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Kera
Mr Leo J. Kern
Mr. and Mrs Paul Kerstein
Mr. and Mrs. R. K1ken
Mr and Mrs. Andrew E. K1mmage
Harry Kirchner
Mr and Mrs. Nathan Klein
Mr. and Mrs Wilham C Klem
Willis H. Kleven
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Khban
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Khmow
Mr. and Mrs Sidney Koch
Mr. and Mrs. Harold H. Koenig
Mrs. Isabel Kogel
Mr and Mrs H . Koren
Mr. and Mrs. S. Koser
Rose Kovel
W Kowalski
Mr and Mrs Walter J. Kozak
Mr. and Mrs. Sol Kramer
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar P. Kroposki
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W Krubel
Mr and Mrs. Robert B. Kurtze, Sr.
Dr. M. Lakov1cs
Mr. and Mrs. J. Lamond
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm L. Land
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Landau
Mr. and Mrs. J. Landress
Mr. and Mrs. Burton R. Lane
Mrs. Woodrow W. Lawson
Mrs. V1v1an Leblang
Dr and Mrs. M. Lebowitz
Mr. and Mrs. Murray Leitner
Mr. a:id Mrs. Bert Le1bow1tz
Mr. and Mrs Milton Levine
Mr and Mrs. Richard Levine
Mr. and Mrs Sidney Levine
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lev1nton
Mr. and Mrs. Ephraim D. Levy
Mr and Mrs. Milton W. Levy
Mr. and Mrs. Sol Levy
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Levy
Mr. and Mrs. Al Lichtenberg
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Lieberman
Mr and Mrs. S. L1ppel and Carolyn
Mr. and Mrs. Rudy L1pponer
Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Lipson
Mr. and Mrs. Rubin Literman
Paul H. Loewmger
Mr. and Mrs. George Loudon
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E Loren
Mr. Virgil G. Lorenzini
Mrs. Alma M. Lovejoy
Henry Lowin
Mr. and Mrs. George Lubow
Milton and Nettie Lunm
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Manheim
Mr. and Mrs. James P Manouse
Mane's House of Sportswear
Albert L. Mark0w1tz
Mr and Mrs. Joseph R. Martello
Mr and Mrs. Arthur P. Martin
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Massey
Mr. and Mrs. J Mat1cka

Mr. and Mrs. Donald H. Macleod. Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Rodenck MacRae, Jr.
A. McGovern
Mr. and Mrs. Jos. A. McCudden
Mr. and Mrs. Robt. McCulloch
Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. McGuire
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Makashay
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mandel
Mr and Mrs. William K. Maney, Sr.
Dr. Nathan R. Margolies
Mr. and Mrs. Franklyn C. Martin
Mr. and Mrs. L. Mash
Mr. and Mrs. Matros
Barry Goldwater Mehrer
Mrs. Harry K. Mehrer
Dr. and Mrs. Ernest Mendels
Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel Mesh
Fred Meyers
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mick
Mr. and Mrs. Michael M1Gliore
Edna and Arnold Miller
Mr and Mrs George Miller
Mr and Mrs. Louis Miller
Lt. Col. and Mrs. A. C. Miller. Jr.
Dr and Mrs. A. Milstein
Mr. and Mrs. John Miranda
Mr. and Mrs. Isidore Molhck
Mr and Mrs. David S. Molnia
Edward J. Monahan
Mr. and Mrs. Norwood C. Moore
Bernard Mosesson
Mr. and Mrs. Simon Moss
Mr and Mrs. Gordon Muck
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Nagy
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Nanes
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Nash
Rith and Julius Nash
W S. Newcomb
A. Neher Honig
Mrs. Laurette E. Newman
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney B. Newman
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur N1sselson
The Nordwrnd Family
Mr and Mrs. Harry Northway
Nicholas Noviello, Jr , Esq.
Dr. and Mrs. Jacob Nussbaum
Mrs. James W. O'Dea, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl W. Oestnch
Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Olener
Dr. and Mrs. Gaspar A. Oliven
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Olmstead
Evelyn O' Neill
Mr. and Mrs. John Onysyk
Mr. and Mrs. Orloff
Mr and Mrs. Charles G. Owens
Mr. and Mrs. Pasquale Paglia
Ethel Pankratz
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Papenn
Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Pass
Mr. and Mrs. M. Pawl1ck1
Mr. and Mrs. I. Pearl
Mr. and Mrs. John Pera
Bernard Perlman
Philip A. Peters
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Petryshyn
Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Pinsky
Tarqurny C. Pironti
Dr. and Mrs. Has Pollak
Mr. and Mrs. Abe Polsky
Mr and Mrs. Samuel Popkin
Mr and Mrs. David Poris

�Milton and Sophie Posment1er
Mr. and Mrs. C. Wesley Powell
Mr and Mrs. A. T. Preston
Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Price
Pridmore
Dr. and Mrs. J. James Printz
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Rabinowitz
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Rabinowitz
Carmine Raffaele
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rabinowitz
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rappaport
Mr. and Mrs. George E. Ravert
Mr. and Mrs. Julius Reader
Lionel and Frances Reed
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph S. Reese
Gertrude and Philip Richman
Sarah E. Rinker
Mrs. Clara B. Risk
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ritchey
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Rogers
Mr. and Mrs. Werner Rogers
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Romaner
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rosen
Mr. and Mrs. Willa rd Rose
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Rosen
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rosenberg
Mr. David L. Rosenberg
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney S. Rosenberg
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Rosenblum
Mr. and Mrs. Abraham M. Rosenfeld
Mr. and Mrs. H. Rosenstreich
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Ross
Mr. and Mrs. Carl F. Rossel
Arnold Rothbaum
Ann and Isadore Rothman
Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer Rothschild
Ben1am1n Rot k1n
Mrs. Irene Rottmann
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Rowlands
Mr. and Mrs. David Russell
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Sadik
Laddie and Mary Sajor
Mr. and Mrs. Aksel Salo
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Sanders
Mr. and Mrs. L. Sandler
Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Sargent, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John Satterlee
Mr. and Mrs. N. H. Sauberman
Richard D. Schaeffer
Mr. and Mrs. David Schapira
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Schattner
Mr. and Mrs. B. R. Schecter
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Schechter
Mrs. Harriet Schieber
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Schierman
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Schildkraut
Claire Schneiderman
Mr. and Mrs. G. Schneiderman
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Schonwald
Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Schottke, Jr.
Mrs. Milton Schriever
Mr. and Mrs. William Schelster
Mr and Mrs. Michael Schuman
Mr. and Mrs. Emile C. Schurmacher
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Schwadron
Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Schwam
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Schwartz
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Schwilrtz
Mr. and Mrs. Israel C. Schwartz, Stuart
and Marilyn
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Schwartz

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Scimeca
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Scott
Ned M. Seidler
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Seligman
Benjamin Selsby
John B. Sepenoski
Mr. and Mrs. Finley Serlen
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Serth
Mr. and Mrs. George Shapiro
Helen and Gus Shapiro
Mr. and Mrs. Max Shapiro
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Shapiro
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Shapiro
Richard N. Shaw
Mr. and Mrs. Mack E. Shea
Barbara I. Sheeks
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sherhofer and Family
Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Sherris
Mr. and Mrs. George Shope, Jr.
Robert Shortsleeves
Mr. and Mrs. Otto L. Shortell
Mr. and Mrs. S. Siegel
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney J. Simon
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sinclair
Mr. and Mrs. J. Sinovo1
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Small and Family
Mr. and Mrs. Bird J. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A. Smith
Frederick and Grace Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald S. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Harold P. Smith. Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Smaller
Edwin Sonnanburg
Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Sowden, Sr.
Tawel A. Spakovsky
Mrs. Mollie Spatz
Mr. and Mrs. David G. Spencer
Frederick J. Spiegel
Capt. and Mrs. Arthur J. Spring
Estelle Starke
Mr. and Mrs. Michael M. Starr
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Stein
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Steinfeld
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Steinglass
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Stimmel
Moses D. Stivers
Mr. and Mrs. G. Strazzabosco
Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Strohschein
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Strumpf
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Subitzky
Alfred and Greta Sucher
Mr. and Mrs. Philip G. Sundick
Paula Super
Mr. and Mrs. H. Sussman
Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Sweetgall
Mr. and Mrs. Leon R. Switzer
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Sykora
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel T. Tamburo
Samuel J. Tascione
Mr. and Mrs. K. Tauber
Mr. and Mrs. A. Tenaglia
Carol Tewes
Mr. J. Tish
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Tomaski
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Trapani
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Trazino and Family
Mr. and Mrs. Julius B. Treistman
Mrs. Mae Trosty
Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Tucker
Mr. and Mrs. L. Gerald Tuller

Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Turner
Harry Ungerleider
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Urgo
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Valenta
Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Vanlnwegen
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel H Verb
Mr. and Mrs. Irving Verter
Mr. and Mrs. Enc Vietze
Mr. and Mrs. William Vogel
Madeleine P. Voorhees
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Vrooman
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Wack
James and Mary Wagner
Mr. and Mrs. Murray Wagshel
Lee F. Walker
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Walls
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Walsh
Mr. and Mrs. David Walter
E. Elizabeth Wardwell
Isadore J. Warshaw
Mrs. A. J. Washburn
Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Wasserman
Mr. and Mrs. Rubin R. Wasserman
Mr. and Mrs. Howard S. Webster
Weeks and D1ck1nson
Mr. and Mrs. Kurt We1d1g
Mr. and Mrs. Lauri Weinberg
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Weinberger
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Weiner
Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Weingartner
Dr. and Mrs. Irvine Weinstein
Mr. and Mrs. Morry Weiss
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Weissman
Mr. and Mrs. Irving Wenz
Mr. and Mrs. Marx Weyuker
Mr. and Mrs. Milton C. Wiesing
Mr. and Mrs. Morns Wilkes
Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Willenbrock
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe L. Williams
Mr. and Mrs. George H. Wilson
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Wilson
Mr. and Mrs. Wi lliam Winchell
Mr. and Mrs. Al Winkler
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Winokur
Mr. and Mrs. Irving Winston
Ozmun F. Winters
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Wittenberg
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Wo1tanowsk1
Mr. and Mrs. Jackson T. Yager
Dr. and Mrs. Harold Yelhn
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar S. Young
Mr. and Mrs. George Zackin
Mr. and Mrs. Andie Za1aceskowsk1
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Zeitlin
Louis and Mary Zelizer
Mr. M. M. Zellner
Mr. and Mrs. Herman M. Zetren
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Zimmerman
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Zipkin and Alan and
Jerry
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver K. Zipp
Mr . &amp; Mrs. L. Zolczer
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Zusi
Mr. and Mrs. John Zygmunt

�Clinton Mill Ends

Congratulat ions
from

99 Clinton St.

BARBAR A MOSS
Fashwn with a Flair

22 Court St.

Binghamton , N.Y.

Complunenls of

MONTG OMERY WARD

Binghamto n

RA3-8297
Fabrics for Every .Need

GOOD LUC K
TO THE
1965 GRADUA TES

36-38 Mazn St.
MacLenna ns Florist
B inghamton
Your one-stop shopping center

Binghamton

499 Upper Court St.

BEST WISH ES TO THE CLAS S OF 1965

PHOTO &amp; REPRO DIVISION

GENER AL ANILIN E &amp; FILM CORPO RATION
140 WEST 51 STREET , r'\JEW YORK, NEW YORK 10020

Mrs. Muriel Baron
Mr. and Mrs. Wilton Baty
Richard Benzaqutn
Mr. and Mrs Max Bradbard
Mr. and Mrs. John Broban
Mr. and Mrs. Wilham Dean

Mr and Mrs. Charles Freedman
R M. Horrocks
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Kanef
N . T. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. A V. Mandry
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Miller

Mr and Mrs. Carl Nelson
Dr. and Mrs Jospeh Obst
Mr and Mrs. Julius Parker
Mr. and Mrs. LOUIS Perlman
Mr. and Mrs. Casper Reaves

Mr and
Mr. and
Mr and
Mr and
Mr. and

Mrs Samuel Sade
Mrs. Herman Schaffer
Mrs. Samuel Turan
Mrs. Bernard Uram
Mrs. Harold Wager

�VAUGHN'S CLOTHING INC.
Congratulations
Men and Boys

TWO STORES

SEARS, ROEBUCK &amp; CO., INC.

"Vestal Plaza"
&amp;
Endicott (Union Dist.), N.Y.

174 Court Street

"Formals Rented For All Occasions"

'"fornmy

J-Jair

1

s

Studio Book Shop
104 Court Street
Binghamton

Sty Jists

78 Court Street

RA-·l-086b
AIR CONDITIONED

TELEPHONES 723·5457

723-5458

SENTRY
COLONIAL MOTOR INN
DINING ROOM
&amp; COCKTAIL LOUNGE

RA 9-4901

BINGHAMTON'S FINEST ACCOMMODATIONS
Private Tile Baths - Steam Heat
Room Phones
21 0 Rooms - Baths

AIR CONDITIONING

3 SWIMMING POOLS

3 Miles West of Binghamton On Highway 17
Nearest to the Harpur Campus
Member of American Express &amp; Diner's Club
AAA

Hilton Carte Blanche

AMHA

�Comp liment s
of

THE SHORT LINE BUS

CO~

Austin Robbi ns, owner

The Star Dry Clea ners
73 Nonh Ave,

72 1 Harn· L. Dri \ c

Comp liment s of your

Owc~o. :'\c'~

Johns on City, N.Y.

VIC TOR Y SUP ER MAR KET S

York

\ 'c tal Parkw ay

Vest.II,

NC\v

York

RL-4 -2444

MU-7 -3550

Best wishes to the class of 1964
from your campus insura nce agency.

COUPER-ACKERMAN-SAMPSON,
INC.
63 Carol Street

NRY'S

Bingh amton , N . Y.

163 Main St., Binghamton
Phone : 772-1 444

George F. High""a)', cndweJI

�BEN'S CLOTHES SHOP
Main and Willow St.

Johnson City, New York.

(fi1n9hamton Optical
DISPE NSERS · IN C.

"Clothes of distinction for
dad and lad."

130'J ,\ fonror Street
E11d1coll

17 ,\1a111 Sim t
8111ghamton

OLUM'S
Ins ta nt R adio ...

Complete Home Furnisbings

WENE

114 Clinton St.
Binghamton, N . Y.

... dial 1 130

222 Main Street
Johnson City, N. Y.

Congratulations to the Class of 1965

ENDICO TT TRUST COMPAN Y
M E M B ER

OF

F E D ER A L

D E P0 SI T

I N SU R A N C E

C 0 R P 0 RA T I 0 N

4 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
MAIN OFFICE

:

EN DWELL

35-41 WASHINGTON AVENUE

:

3225 EAST MAIN STREET

VESTAL

:

WEST CORNERS

148 VESTAL PARKWAY EAST

:

WEST CORNERS PLAZA

PERSON TO PERSON BANKING SER \'ICE

�THE

~ittQe

9hop
l MAIN STREEl
BINGHAMTON NEW YORK

I elephOllL RA

Con1.patulations to the Class of 1965
from

Your Yest al Carvel Stand

J· I 8uJ

Compliments

of

Compliments of ...

MUSKA'S TA VERN
I 19 Harry L. Drive

REED'S FOOT\\.'EAR
~laine

Trotters

"Outsta11d111f!, Charin Bus

Salllce"

H eadquarters for Old

Johnson City

Congratulat1ons lo
the Class of 1965

from

the CAMPUS
BOOK
STORE

TRIPLE CITIES T R ACTION CORP.
Air-Conditioned
Lavatory
R adio-P .. \ . Svstcm

Card Tables
.\ ii Ri de

R \-2-2391
375

~tatt·

Street

Bin!.{hamton . .:\. Y

�Harmo ny in the home can't be
found in family jars-

SPECIAL IZING IN CUSTOM MADE
LSTERIN G S£R\llC£
0RAP£RI CS, SL PC0\1£RS ANO REUPHO

i

Weeks
Dickinson

Exn Sno P
"Jal,.", J,,. /' 1, 111 J /,,,.,/

CLI.: \TO'\ .\In,L

99 CLINTO N STREET
BINGHA MTON. N Y

RA 3.8297

Than k you

~

Binghamton, N. Y.

34 Chenango St.

OW L TA XI -

Class of 1965

Come back and see us again

ME TER ED CA BS

The Binghamton Card Center, Inc.

124 Cour t Stree t

CARDS - GIFTS - PARTY GOODS
29 Court Street - RA 2-74 97 - Binghamton

72 -2-3447

CO NG RA TU LA TIO NS
TO TH E CLA SS OF 1965

ALWAYS
A
STEP
AHEAD

�=aRAe lD

DELIVDIY$£/lYICE'

4
RA2 -7S8
RA :Z·S217
OR

CORNER OF HAIN &amp; FRONT
10 MAIN ST. BINGHAMTON
"No Parking Problem When You Phone" .••

YOUR NEW
PET
SHOPPING
CENTER AT
THE VESTAL PLAZA

PARADISE AQUARIUM

Mid-Way Recreation Inc.
"For the Best In Bowling "

VESTAL LANES
48 Modern AMF Automa tics
213 Jensen Rd.,
VESTA L, N. Y.
RA 9-3538

FRANKIE and JOHNNIE
SNACK BAR

MAN OR HOUSE LANES
24 New AMF Automa tics
Bingham ton Plaza
West State St .,
BINGH AMTON , N. Y.
RA 4-1366
Cocktail Lounge -Snack Bar
Caterin g to our Harpur College Friends
both in Regular Leagues and
Open Bowling

Down The Road From The
New Campus

�RUSSELL

complunmls rif

CAB

ROGERS

COMPANY
ST 5-3335

smart clothes for men and women
I 07 Co urt St reet

Best Wishes to the 1965 Gradu a tes

IDEAL LAUNDRY

Bingham ton

Harmony in the home can't be
found in family jars-

&amp;

W eeks
Dickinson
-.)

AND CLEANERS
34 Chenango St .

Binghamton, N. Y.

There is no final stage in edu cation; it is an unending search for
knowledge and the continuing development of wisdom. Through them
we can recognize and develop opportunities to the fullest extent. Together they are the formula for individual and world progress.

INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION

�What's
•
In
your
future?
Whatever your goal in life, it's wise to
back up your future plans with a steadily increasing savings account. Money in the bank is one of
the surest roads to security we know ... it will
help you achieve what you want for your future.

' l ' I I F:

62-69 Exchange Street

Binghamton, N

Y

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

�co111/1funrnt.1

o/

H ESSE M USIC COMPA:"JY

SCHOOL OF DANCE
Member: Dance Ed ucators of A merica

389 Harry L. Drive . .Johnson Cit'

Phone
R A9-4430

34 Broad St.
Johnson C ity

SAFETY SERVICE LUBRICATIO N • W ASH Joss
P OLISHING • P ICKU P AND D ELIVERY •

.

Pa rlor C ity Shoe C o.
ROGER DOOLITTLE

H-46 Court Street
Bin~hamton, Ne'' York

ATLANTIC SERVICE STATION
I OPPOSITE COLONIAL MOTEL l

VES T AL PAR KWAY EAST
V ESTAL. N Y.

"Fmo footwear for the

/i11111h"

6 A M . . 11 PM DAILY
PHONE: 797.5537

ELK'S BAKE SHOP
"Best Baited Goods in Town"

110 Washington Avenue
Endicott, N. Y.

com/1liments of

LARAWAY JEWELERS
70 Court S t reet

- ST 5-2051 -

R esnicks
Compliments of

down town Bin15ham ton and Vestal Plaza

LlnLE VEN ICE
RESTAURANT
22 Chenango St.

''First cho1rr for co-rds"

Carrulli Brothers

�Howard's Florist and Gar den Center
Vestal Parkway East
P I-8-8774
"F/own.1

/iJr

all orcasion.i"

TOM'S TEXACO SERVICE
VESTAL PLAZA
Minor Repairs
Mufflers

797-514:?

•

Lubrication

•

Tailpipes

Lifetime Guarantee
Firestone Tires
Goodyear Tires
Trml )'011rulf lo the

1•er)

brs/.

Guys and Dolls Beauty Salon

Reduced Prices for Students

ror appointments dial

RA-3-4310
138 Washington Street
Binghamton

MARINE

MIDLAND

TRUST COIVIPANV
OF SOUTHERN NE\N YORK
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

�EDWARD L. NEZELEK,
INC.
CONTRACTORS
Builders of:
Broom e, C h en a n go, and D ela wa re D orms
Newing H a ll a nd t he Greenhouse

JOHNSON CITY, N.Y.

�SALL STEAR NS

HUB DELICATESSEN &amp;
RESTA URAN T
137

\ \ashin~ton

/hf /1111 1/011

fm

111111

mu!

B i n~ h a m ton's

Street, Bin!{hamton

" \'\'e spccia liz(' in kosher corn beef. pasu,uni, salam i,
ton~ue. smoked \\ h it(•fish. smoked salmon and sable plMc."

)'1111111?

m111

La rge, t
R :\-2-7780

ll Court Street

nationally adv&lt;."rt ised

EMPIR E COIN COMP ANY

J c\',1el

D iamonds
A ppliances

\\'atches
R adios

Cum/1/u11mt~ o(

T. \'.

BALI N'S
JEWELERS

JOHN SON CITY,

238 MAIN STR EET
JOHNSON CITY. N

NEW YORK

Y

MORRIE BALIN
PHONE RA 9 4 431

JEWELER

C01u~ralulal 1011s

and BtSt iVi.1/11 1

To the Clrns of 1965

From

MER IN STU DIO S OF
PHO TOG RAP HY
Official Photogra phers to the 1965 "COLON IST "
All portraits appearing in this pu bli cation
have been placed on file in our Studio and
can be duplicated a t any time.
Write or ' Phone us for Information.
W Alnut 3-0146
0147
0148

1010 C hestn ut Street
Phi ladelphia 7, Pa.

�''Hello
There''
"I'm the fellow who tries so hard to keep yOtJ
interested in the latest, most vital news . . .
I try to bring a smile into your life with the
cream of the comics ...
I want you to feel that I am the friendliest newspaper you've ever read, 'cause I really am."

"Your Fri endly Hometown Newspaper"

EVERYONE READS THE PRESS (almost)

and WIN R TV-RADIO

�HOME DAIRY
Cm1l!,rat11lat 10m lo
the Cla.11 ?f 1965

Bakery - Delicatessen - Sandwiches (to go)
Vestal Plaza
Cafeteria - Bakery - Delicatessen

~\\~

FEDERAL ELECTRONICS INC.
Wholesale Distributors

EMBERS
Vestal, N.Y.

Vestal Parkway
SUPPER CLUB
56-58 Court Street

Than!. Fou

Clnss of '65
comp/mun/~

of tht

COME BACK and SEE US AGAIN

ENDICO TT FLORIS T

HYKUR'S

754-2424
119 \..\'ashington Street, Endicott

Feminine Apparel

Binghamton

The Fairview Press
·Printi n ~

Compliments of

BENNER WHOLESALE
COMPANY
Endicott, New York

Commercial and Social

·Pictures
·Framin q
·Art ist Supplies
·Rubbn Stamps
Binghamton .
12 Henr\' Street
phone RA-2-777 l

~

CHENA NGO STUDIOS
Bin~hamton ,

:'\cw York

Campus Esso Service
\'cstal Parkwa\ East

candid
portraits
commercial
identificatio n

"the f111est

in

photol!,rn/&gt;hr"

R \-9-9491

opposit\' tlw Colonial Motor Inn

Y.

�HOW BANKS HELP YOU TO

we've enioyed your friendship
To the departing 1964 graduates. the Vestal Parkway Office
of First-City National Bank says "thank you" for your friendship and patronage during your stay at Harpur College. We
hope your association with us has helped you learn the value
of bank standing.

VESTAL
PARKWAY
OFFICE

FIRST-CITY
NATIONA L
BANK

MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

�HILKIN S JEWELERS
Good Luck Class of

HO\\',\ RD

' G"i

JOH~SO'.';'S ~tOTOR

Keepsa ke Diamonds

LODG E

Our lllth 't c,11

V t•sta l. :'-1 .Y.

Route 17

Your e.ood llt'lf!.hlwr 111.1/ dou•11 flu l11e.lu,•&lt;1)'

46 Washington Avenue

New York

Endicott

1204 WITHERILL STREET, ENDICOTT, NEW YORK

CONT RACT ORS

Hugh John son &amp; Co., Inc.

Lo uis N. P1 cc1 AN 0
and SO N
TEL. Rl 4-2222

HEATING
VENTILATING
AIR CONDITI ONING
INDUSTRIAL PIPING
PLUMBING
SPRINKLER
FABRICATING

FOWLER,
DICK &amp; WALKER

Mem bers
New York Stock Exch ange
Per so n,d In q•st nwn t Sen ice

Stocks

Bonds

\1 utual Funds

GENNARELLl'S
For
Flowers

Bingha mton, New York
Properly
Delivere d-Select ed

We salute
the June Gradua tes of
HARPU R COLLE GE

Clustered- Presented

I I I Court Street

May Success
Always Be Yours

RA 2-7666

RA 3-3658

�In .\fmwrr ol Dnl'lfl Gordon

KINNEY'S
Barnes Flowers and Interiors
6 Mam Street
Bm[?hamton, New Yori..

i ·estnl Pln::a, Vr1tal

Ral eigh Square

Kinney Kaper
Flings

RA-4-4326

Joe Lapchu/..

Stuart I l olmn

goo d I uck ,
CLASS OF 1965!
Slater School and College Services wishes to tha nk
the members of the graduating class for the ir
patronage-to say farewell, good luck, and good health.
Your school's administration realizes that classroom
performance often depends on planned nutrition.
Through ARA Slater, they hove wisely invested in
quality food , prepared and served in friendly style.
We hope you have enjoyed Slater meals and servicethat mealtime provided a pleasant social break in
the day's busy ro utine. From all of us, good luck
and good health in the years ahead!

SLATE R SCHOO L AND COLLE GE SERVIC ES
PHILADELPHIA 46, PA.
Slater Now Serves More Than 220 Schools In 32 States and Puerto Rico

�6~

Co urt St.

CONG RATU LATIONS
TO T HE CLAS S
OF '65

Bingha mton, N. Y .

t he yo u ng lookt he DAY JDS look

Britts

IOC111 Discou nt T o l la r p u r S tude nts

on a ll Repairs a nd Mercha ndise

DEPARTMENT STORE

R a ppapo rt J ewele rs
20 Chenantto St1eel
B mglwmlon

VEST AL PLAZA

RA -2-7873

Ca nn y Trucking Co .
Inc.

6-18 SPRING FOREST AVENUE, BINGHAMTON . NEW YORK
PHONE RAymond 4-1357

TERMINALS:

New York City
99-109 Jane Street
CHelsea 3-1360

Clifton, New Jersey
GRegory 1-1696

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                  <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>
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                  <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>
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                  <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>
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                  <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>
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