April_1988.pdf - eCommons@Cornell

22
CORNELL UNIVERSITY news New York State College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University April 1988 See back page for details and registration These young Long Islanders are eager to try their luck at clamming, courtesy of the Sea Grant program. For a look at how Sea Grant teaches youths the importance of New York's vast water resources, tum to page 9. (Photo by Robert Kent) Annual Meeting of the Alumni Association Recognition of retiring faculty Presentation of the Young Alumni Achievement Award A Special Welcome to 88 Grads from the Dean W elcome as an alumnus or alumna of the Col- lege of Agriculture and Life Sciences and congratula- tions on your up- coming plans for graduation! Agriculture and Life Sciences News is published three times a year and dis- tributed to each of33,000 alumni of the college. As time passes, and classmates scat- ter, news of your friends becomes more meaningful. As you can see in continued on page 2

Transcript of April_1988.pdf - eCommons@Cornell

CORNELL UNIVERSITY

newsNew York State College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University

April 1988

See back page for details and registration

These young Long Islanders are eager to try their luck at clamming, courtesy of the Sea Grant program. For a look at how Sea Grant teaches youths the importance of New York's vast water resources, tum to page 9. (Photo by Robert Kent)

Annual Meeting of the Alumni Association

Recognition of retiring faculty

Presentation of the Young Alumni Achievement

Award

A Special Welcome to ’88 Grads from the Dean

Welcome as an alumnus or alumna of the Col­

lege of Agriculture • and Life Sciences

and congratula­tions on your up­coming plans for graduation!

Agriculture and Life Sciences News is published three times a year and dis­tributed to each of33,000 alumni of the college.

As time passes, and classmates scat­ter, news of your friends becomes more meaningful. As you can see in

continued on page 2

CORNELL UNIVERSITY

agriculture & life sciencesnews

Nationalist China’s New President Was Graduate Student Here

Lee Teng-hui. who became president of Na

tionalist China on January 13, won honors in the classroom when he studied at Cornell University 20 years ago but shunned campus

social life.“You wouldn’t find many people at

Cornell who knew him socially,' ’ recalled Daniel G. Sisler, professor of agricultural economics, "He wouldn ’ t be out playing volleyball with the other graduate stu dents or down at a bar in Collegetown

"He was very quiet, very studious, and personally dedicated to his work and to Taiwan. Igave him an A plus in a course on research methods, and I don't give out many A's."

Lee, 65, vice president of the Nation alist government on Taiwan, was swom mas president three hours after the death | ofPresidentChiangChing-kuo,77,sonof 1 Chiang Kai-shek, leader of the Kuomin , tang (Nationalist Party) government from | 1928 until his death in 1975.

IWlt.h tKo Chiang <4yixa»ty crated, l>... became the first Taiwanese-bom presi­dent of the government, which was

driven off the China mainland by the communists in 1949. The Nationalist

i government rules only Taiwan but con siders itself to be China's legitimate regime.

Lee studied agricultural economics at Cornell for three years and received his Ph D in 1968 when he was 45 years old His doctoral thesis dealt with transfer be tween rural and urban areas of income and capital investments on Taiwan from 1895 to 1960. It was selected by the American Agricultural Economics Associ­ation as the outstanding dissertation of 1968 and was published as a book by Cor­nell University Press.

Lee, who was called "T.H.” by his professors, "was older than most of the graduate students, very reserved, and not an extrovert or a politician,” recalled Kenneth L. Robinson, emeritus professor of agricultural economics. "It’s amazing that he rose so high in a political position. 1 would have expected him to become a senior bureaucrat. He was very able and extremely conscientious.''

Bernard F. Stanton, professor of agricultural economics, said Lee demon­strated qualities that may assist him in the difficult task of dealing with mainland Chinese and native Taiwanese in his country.

‘ 'Dr Lee is not a man you are about to push around,' ’ said Stanton “His great strength was his intellectual capacity and his ideas. He was very serious, and he came to Cornell with specific ideas on what he wanted to accomplish in his the­sis. His command of English was average, but he possessed an excellent mind. He was always correct, polite, and adiligent worker "

Lee came to the Nationalist presidency with a broad international education. He received his bachelor of science degree from Kyoto Imperial University in Japan, studied at National Taiwan University, and earned a master's degree from Iowa State University

C. William Severinghaus '39 (left) receiving an Outstanding Alumni Award In August from Dean David L. Call '54. Looking on are awards chair Jane Longley-Cook '69 and ALS Aluml Associa­tion President Albert Beard '52.►

Vacation Cornell Style at “C.A.U.”Given the beauty of Ithaca in summer and the nurabor of nturvoloim trjuhrra on tho Cornell faculty, it's no surprise that Cornell's alumni and family vacation college—C.A.U.—has become the larg est, most diverse program of its type in the nation.

Now in its twenty-first season, C.A.U. will welcome some 1,000 Cornell families and friends back to campus for one of four, week-long sessions beginning Sun­day, July 10. Twenty-four seminars and workshops will be offered for adults, along with a selection of cultural, athlet­ic, and social activities. Youngsters three through sixteen, divided into five age groups and eleven interest areas, will en­joy a supervised day and evening learning and recreation program.

As always. College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, alumni and faculty will be at the center of C.A.U. activities. Naturalists Harlan Banks, Richard B. Fischer, and Verne Rockcastle will lead field seminars in botany, geology, and natural ecology. Professor Rockcastle also will be offering

Botanist Harlan Banks has been enlightening groups at C.A.U. every summer tor years. His seminar tor 1988, Landscape Evolution, will be ottered the week of July 31.

his cure for those suffering from I Uwhnnphobia-So That ’• Mow It Workc* , The Physics of Everyday Things Food 1 specialist Charlotte Bruce will lead the i Culinary Workshop and vegetable crops ! specialist Roger Kline will be offering the | Vegetable Gardening Workshop. Semi nars in history, literature, politics, music, , art, and business skills will be on tap as well.

C.A.U. also sponsors faculty-led study tours throughout the year Upcoming programs include the natural and cultural history of Utah (August); marine biology on Appledore Island. Maine (August and September); Prague, Budapest, and Vien na (September); Assateague. Virginia (October); Egypt and the Nile Valley (Oc­tober); and Antarctica (January, 1989), which will be led by President (and geol ogist) Frank H. T. Rhodes.

Detailed program information is available from Cornell’s Adult University, 626 Thurston Avenue, Ithaca. NY 14850 phone 607-255-6260.

Young ALS Alumni Award EstablishedMay 10 Deadline for two Awards Nominations for Outstanding Alumni Awards and a new Young Alumni Achievement Award to recognize out­standing alumni of the College of Agricul ture and Life Sciences are due May 10.

The Young Alumni Achievement Award is new in 1988 and will be awarded at the Alumni Breakfast on Saturday, June 11. Nominees must be alumni of the college and less than 40 years of age as of January 1, 1988As many as five alumni of the college will tie recognized at the Outstanding Alum ni Award Banquet at the Sheraton Inn in Ithaca on Friday, September 16 Since this honor was established by the Alum ni Association of the college in 1975, thirty seven alumni have been honored Last year's honors went to Norman W Allen '46,JohnW. Mellor' 54, C. William Severinghaus '39, E. Stanley Shepardson 47, and Robert S. Smith '52.

Nominees for the awards must meet at least one of the following criteria:

• Have been actively involved in, worked for, and demonstrated leadership on behalf of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

businesses, profession, or other voca I tional endeavor. Recognized success is I defined as performing a major leader 1 ship role in the chosen endeavor, such as agriculture

• Have achieved recognized success in avocational activities in areas not as­sociated with Cornell Recognized sue cess in this area is defined as having made a significant contribution to the betterment of society through involve­ment in community activities, public school systems, charitable organiza tions, and other humanitarian under­takings.

Nominations for both awards are made by friends, faculty, or colleagues of those who should be honored.

Nomination forms are available from the Alumni Office, 242 Roberts Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853; phone 607-255-7651. Ali nominations must be postmarked by May

Jane Longley-Cook '69Awards Committee Chair

Y’all Come Back!

Alumni ALScapades '88Saturday, September 17

Oustanding Alumni Banquet

Friday, September 16

All ALS alumni are invited

New Director of Metta Winter

American IndianProgram

This summer, Charlotte Heth became director of the American Indian Pro­gram after eleven years as director of the

American Indian Studies Center at the University of Los Angeles, one of the most extensive programs of its kind in the country.

Predicting her future here will be ’ ’very productive." Heth said she is "impressed with the openness to new ideas and the willingness to support them ” Under her leadership the multi-disciplinary, inter college program will continue its growth

dent support, extension, and pubh cations.

Located in Caldwell Hall, the program focuses on developing a respect for and understand ing of native world views and

WELCOME . continued from cover

this issue, we publish a full page of news items that are sent in by the alum - ni. In more detail, the News also high lights the fascinating lives jieople seem to lead after they have studied in War ren and Bradfield and Bailey and Mann Library

You may be physically leaving the campus after May 29, but we will con­tinue to remind you of your days here by sending you news of your college, your former teachers, and the bright, young people who take your place as students

We also place a high priority on re­porting alumni involvement in college functions and updating alumni informa

Agriculture * Life Science# News is published three times a year by the New York Stale College of Agnculture and life Sciences, a statutory college of the Stale University, al Cornell University, Ithaca. N Y Cornell University is an equal opportunity, affirmative action educator and employer

DeanDavid L Call

Associate DeanKenneth E Wing

Director of Alumni Affairs and Development John C Sterling

Associate Director of DevelopmentLaelC Carter

Associate Director of Alumni AffairsTina Walker

EditorJames P. Titus

WriterMetta Winter

DesignerLorraine M Beasley

their application to solving current social problems in environmental ethics, cul tural pluralism, and humane living pat terns An undergraduate concentration and a growing number of courses are offered in four of the university's schools and colleges A search for a new faculty position in American Indian studies is also under way.

More than 60 American Indian students are enrolled at the university, a signifi cant gain over the past three years. The programs student development specialist recruits from Indian oommuni­ties, acts as an advocate within the university system, and helps students in setting post graduate goals In response to Native American communities’ con cem about the "brain dram effect " of higher education, one of the program s future projects will help students who wish to reintegrate into their home com munities.

Additional activities include a Summer Teacher Training Institute in American Indian history and culture for fourth, seventh, and eleventh grade public school teachers; an extension unit that helps Native American communities solve self-identified problems, including environmental toxicology, native seed conservation, and state educat ion policy; the publication of a multidisciplinary magazine The Northeast Indian Quarter­ly; and establishment of the Indigenous Communications Resource Center, a research collection of publications and video and cassette tapes on content porary issues.

Heth was bom near Tulsa and is a vot ing member of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma She wrote herdoctoral disser tation at the University of California at

An,)..l..» ..■« the Oklahoma Chorokoo stomp dance music that she had wit nessed since childhood. As a specialist in American Indian music and dance, Heth will also teach courses as a visiting profes sor in the Department of Music ■

tion. The News is one way of keeping you up-to-date on campus research, faculty activity, student involvement, and alumni events.

We hope you will return to campus often—for our annual College Alumni Reunion Breakfast each June; and our annual college Alumni ALScapades, which is scheduled this year for Satur day, September 17. These are great times to revisit your favorite professor and renew campus friendships

If you will keep us posted on your new address (see page 3), we will keep the News of the college coming to you—forever. ■

David L. CallDean

Production CoordinatorDona S Muituie

PhotographersDonald AlbemClaude LevelJohn C Sterling

Contributing WritersMark Eyerly. Yong H Kim

Editorial AssistantJeanne Astor

Student WritersKirsten Fowles '88. Cathy Keene '88.Steve Werblow '88

Correspondence should be addressed to John Sier ling. Alumni Affairs, Cornell University. Ithaca, NY 14853-5901

Produced by Media Services at Cornell University 4 88 35 2M LL E88020507

Edward Jones Named First Uihlein Professor

Edward D. Jones, an expert In potato pathology and the culture of seed potatoes, has been named the first holder

of a chair endowed with a $ 1.5 million gift from Henry and Mildred Uihlein

As the first Henry and Mildred Uihlein Professor of Plant Pathology. Jones will continue to direct Cornell’s Uihlein Farm in Lake Placid as a center of seed potato research. The Uihlein Farm was estab­lished in 1961 following the couple’s ini­tial gift of 293 acres of their prime farmland Jones and his researchers have pioneered the use of test tube tissue cul ture to produce disease-free potato seed stocks. Their method has drawn agricul tural scientists from around the world to visit the farmSeventy varieties of disease-free seed ixitatoes arc now grown or maintained in culture ut Uw Henry UUvlcln U I jtlwvrato ry, which the Uihleins funded in 1977 Of these, eighteen varieties are field grown under contract for the New York seed potato industry.The new professorship will support Jo­nes’s work and that of his successors, with the intent, said Uihlein, of helping the seed potato industry worldwide and furthering agriculture in northern New York, where cool climate and sandy soils are well suited for seed potato production.

Dr. Jones is a pioneering innovator ui potato seed certification, ’' said William E Fry, chair of the Department of Plant Pathology. "He rapidly adopted meristem culture technology [propagat ing a plant from clusters of cells from the tip of a tuber), and was a very early chain pion of the use of molecular biology tech niques in potato seed certification. The Uihlein Farm and laboratory are consi dered the premier potato seed production facilities in the world ’'

Henry Uihlein is a member of the family that owned the Jos Schlitz Brewing Co for more than 100 years, and he is the only person to be named an honorary life director of the company. He worked ex­tensively to bring amateur speed skat ing to Lake Placid and to support skating in the Olympics As a farmer, he specialized in Uiu btci-aing of Jersey came, ana Yw> eventually developed a prize winning herd. His interest in seed potatoes began when he started growing them during World War II to help the war effort

‘ ’Whatever contributions 1 have made to Cornell have given me great satisfaction and pleasure,' ’ Henry Uihlein said. "The results, in many instances, have happily gone far beyond what I had antici­pated

Role of Land- Grant Universities Explored

Yong Kim and Metta Winter

Land-grant universities such as Cor nell face a major challenge to their research and teaching efforts in meeting

the changing needs of society According to Russell G. Mawby, one of the speakers at the Cornell Conference on Research, Extension, and Teaching held in January, the cooperative extension system will

I play an increasingly vital role in meeting that challenge

"The genius of the public university lies not in its teaching or its research, but in the creative integration of the two to serve various publics." said Mawby. chairman of the W K Kellogg Founda tion "This is particularly true of land grant institutions.' ’

But these institutions face increasingly tough times Mawby pointed to the na tion s declining financial strength as an indicator of the dwindling support land grant institutions will soon face

’ To deserve the continuing public con­fidence . and support, those institu tions simply must demonstrate their capacity to be ever more useful to so­ciety." he said. "There is a desperate need for our state universities to employ their resources more creatively in serving public interests."

Mawby mentioned many public issues that must be addressed as the nation faces the 21st century. These include economic development, job generation, biotechnol ogy and its ramifications, environmental quality, health care, competitiveness, problems confronting youths and the elderly. energy. peace, welfare reform,

\ rural and urban decay, and waste | disposal

Gilbert H. Porter, former vice president / ofresearchanddevelopmentforAgway. ' Inc. predicted that Northeastern farm I states wiij experience a falling market share for many of their products at the regional level and virtually all of their products at the national level unless they take specific actions. Among his sugges tions were intensive farming practices to boost production without expanding the size of farms or dairy herds; better region al marketing of primary food categories, such as dairy products, apples, and pota­toes; a regional regulatory structure that increases cooperation among states; and standardization of animal health inspec tion and regulation across states.

1 ‘The need has never been greater for the land-grant system to be a prime agent of change. providing key leadership in de veloping high capability and outstanding human resources to meet these objec­tives," Porter said.

State Senator John R. Kuhl, Jr , chair of the Senate Agriculture Committee, said the current state administration is * ‘more attentive to the needs of agriculture than any prior administration "He cited three examples:•The Net Farm Enhancement Program, which cuts the cost of insurance premi urns by limiting fanner’s liability;

•A proposed Governor’s Conference on Agriculture and the Environment to address the conflicting agendas and philosophies of the Department of Environmental Conservation and the Department of Agriculture,

•A Senate proposal toaddress the health and safety hazards of the agricultural industry through full delivery of health and safety services.Donald G. Butcher. Commissioner of

the N. Y State Department of Agnculture and Markets, spoke of the difficulties in promoting the state's many different agriculture products "One of the things tliat makes us strong as a state also makes us weak," he said. "We’re so diverse There are seventeen commodities in New

York State ranked in the top five na­tionally ’’

As examples of the successful promo­tion of such diversity, Butcher pointed to the Seal of Quality program. which has in creased consumer awareness of New York Stole products from 15 to 23 percent in two years , promotion of direct market ing by farmers; and a rebound in the grape industry through the state sponsored Wine and Grape Foundation

"In 1982 no wine coolers were produced in New York State," he said ' ’Today five of the top ten sellers, includ ing Seagram's, the number one seller, are product'd in New York State Much of this success is due to research at Geneva | the State Agricultural Experiment Station] ’ ’

Richard I. Coombe ’64, ranking mem ber of the State Assembly's Agriculture Committee and chair of a subcommittee on land use, addressed the issue of en­vironmental and agriculture policies.

"Agricultural enterprises are the lar gest industry and largest employer in the state and statistically the stewards of the greatest amount of land—61 percent in forestry and 22 percent in owned and operated agricultural enterprise land,"

I he said.I Coombe expressed optimism about the

rising level of concern over the environ ment among New Yorkers. He mentioned

I several common areas of interest among , regulators and agriculture, including in- ■ tegrated pest management, non-point ' pollution control. mediation as a means of 1 solving disputes, farm land preservation I in terms of value assessment, and ground I water protection.| Several Cornell faculty members talked , about the challenges of technology Ber I nard F Stanton, professor of agriculture

economics, said, "It's crucial that people | make decisions about new technology

and try to work them into what we al­ready have. You can't necessarily throw out the old. The real question is how do you combine the new ideas into a system that already exists.'' Robert L. Andersen, chair of the Department of Horticultural Sciences in Geneva, said pesticide con cems will continue to lie a major stimulus of Cornell research into human medical risks and natural biological controls And Jan Olsen, director of Mann Library, stressed the need for professionals to be­come "information literate"—educated to understand tlie importance of informa­tion and have the competence to find and use it.

Commenting after the conference, Lucinda A. Noble, director of Cornell Cooperative Extension, said extension will focus its attention on a number of issues, especially agricultural profitabil ity, economic development, food and nutrition, strengthening families, and en vironmental concerns

More than 500 Cornell faculty and staff attended the conference, which David L. Call '54, dean of the college, called "the beginning of the dialogue in which we m usi engage to start meeting the needs of the 21st century.'' a

Alumni Association Leadership 1987*88BOARD OF DIRECTORSPresidentAlbert Beard. Jr '52 (District 13 Chenango, Delaware, Otsego counties) Milford, N Y(607)647 8072 (home)

First Vice PresidentPaul Tilly'58 (District 19 Genesee. Living ston, Orleans, Wyoming counties)Lima, NY. (716) 226-2107 (home)

Second Vice PreaidentDouglas Conti 60(District 16 Monroe. Ontario. Wayne counties) Honeoye Falls. N Y(716) 624-3344 (home)

SecretaryJane Longley Cook '69 (District 22 New England) Hartford. Conn (203) 236-2786 (home)

TreasurerGeorge Conneman '62Ithaca. N.Y.(607)257 1470(home)

Immediate Past PresidentAndrew Piscione '65 (District 8 Fulton. Mont gomery. Schoharie counties) Fonda. N Y(518)853 3986 (home)

Student Representatives Patrick Spoth '88(607)257 7172 (home)

Laura J VanderVliet'89 (607) 257-2674 (home)

District DirectorsFred Frank '79 (District 1: Nassau. Suffolk counties)Calverton. N.Y (516)727-0091 (home)

Thomas Dyevich '81 (District 2 Kings. Queens, Richmond)Whitestone. N.Y (718)767-3714(home)

Marya Dalrymple '70 (District 3 Bronx. New York) New York, N Y (212)989 4155 (home)

Carl Specht '60(District 4 Putnam. Rockland, Westchester counties) North Salem. N Y(914)669 5198(home)

Robert Kaplan '69 (District 5: Sullivan. Orange. Ulster counties) Woodndge. N Y(914)434 5624 (home)

R Peter Hubbell. Jr '80 (District 6. Columbia, Dutch ess, Greene counties) Red Hook. N Y (914) 758-5274 (home)

Joseph Chuckrow '68 (District 7 Albany. Kens selaer. Schenectady counties) Schenectady. NY (518)785 7305 (home)

Thomas Hoy '70 (District 9 Saratoga. Warren, Washington, counties) Glens Falls. N Y (518)793 3520 (home)

Catherine Butts '81 (District 10. Clinton. Essex. Franklin, Hamilton counties) Peru, NY(518)643 2897 (home)

Stephen E Teele '72 (District 11 ^efferson, Lewis, St Lawrence counties) Lisbon. NY (315) 393-3067 (home)

Appointment pending (District 12 Herkimer. Madison. Oneida counties)

Rochelle Evette Woods. DVM '74 (District 14. Broome. Cort­land. Tioga, Tompkins counties)Ithaca. N Y (607) 277-3497 (home)

William A McKee ’71 (District 15: Cayuga, Ononda­ga. Oswego. Seneca counties) Syracuse. N.Y (315)488 2425 (home)

Finley M Steele'36 (District 17. Chemung, Schuyler, Yates counties) Elmira, NY.(607)732 6885 (home)

Charles Hebblethwaite '49 (District 18 Allegany. Steuben counties) Belmont, N.Y (716)268 7491 (home)

J Peter Dygert '61 (District 20. Erie. Niagara counties)Springville, NY (716)592 2263 (home)

Jay Hardenburg '79 (District 21 Cattaraugus. Chautauqua counties) Portland. N Y (716)792 9523 (home)

Aileen Merriam 60 (District 23 East Eastern Canada) Manotick, Ontario, Canada (613) 692 4455 (home)

Donald Grieve'72 (District 23 West Western Canada)Guelph, Ontario. Canada (519)824-4120 ext 3693 (office)

Glenn Dallas'58 (Washington. D C area) Alexandria Va (703)823 5081 (home)

STATE COORDINATORS Richard Baldwin '71 (Massachusetts) Westfield, Mass(413)568 4981 (home)

Denise P Meridith '73 (New Mexico) Santa Fe. N M (505)988 6565 (office)

Sand! Leigh '84 (Florida) Plantation Fla (305) 792 6651 (home)

Marian Rippy ‘79 (Illinois) Monticello. Ill (217) 762-4301 (home)

Neal E Hall M D '78 (Pennsylvania) Philadelphia. Pa (215)248 4865 (office)

Judith Cox '61 (California) Solana Beach. Calif (619)755 5964 (home)

Returned MailMail from alumni associa tion members listed below has been returned to us as undeliverable If you are among the missing, please send your current address to Alumni Affairs, 242 Roberts Hall.

Abbou, Mary landaay *GrAderhold . Elaine L 78 Akin*. Bright L M Anderaon JammD '86 Beardmorr Htrhard A Or

Borrow, Robert C S4 Bourke WiUram T 13 Bromberg. Alitor Porter St Cannon Jama F '66Edmond! Janice L 'S3 EOriton Natale MFilkina, David BFinnerty. Kathleen Luu BS Foley. MKktaei J M Frankel, Eluaa J S3Frey Kenneth J Jr Or Fnu. Richard W Sp Geany Hanan C StGrovet JohnR SGuam, Filippo 80

Kao. Henry Kao'Pa Kaaarnura Yorhin Gr Laoruture CartoaA Sp Laraen MetteP Tr Lawrmcv Samuel A S3 Lyora ChntuneC 'Or Manley. Thoma! F Jr 60 Mauhe.. Thoma* J 43 Haxian, William D 76 Montanas Angel M 83 Mortar Floyd E Jr 52 Hcaincer. Fredrx 0 'OrHninlam MkhaelG 70 Hunkenbeck Nancy W Or

Pond. Kevin R 77 Potter Albert A 50 Quay JarquelmeL 'I Rey nard Karen E St Roger* Maureen A F Roldan Kenneth M Staler MKhadF '70 Singh David D M Snyder Steve R 86 Stephmum Herten I Tanouye Leanne M VanTmaeilCurroP

Haefner Joe* ph P M Hartaough Harry L M

O Connell. Thoma.R 68O Connor, Robert H 70 PaUmen Herbert R '61

Wray, NaomiR GrYunka, Jane A 85

H.Mord livmgood, Hlaabetn gl Puzagalll. Loa A 65

Award-Winning Students Scholarship Listing Clarified

Three groups of undergraduates distin guished themselves with hard won honors this fall• The Cornell Dairy Cattle JudgingTeam

took the national title by beating 28 teams from throughout the country al the World Dairy Expo in Madison, Wis consin in September

• A group of lands< a|w an lutedure stu­dents in October was awarded the 1987 Student Award from the New York Up­state Chapter of the American Planning Association for their design of a 500 acre, barrier free recreation facil ity for the town of Otselic, NY.

• The Cornell Forensics Society. for the first time in its history,won both the California swing (University of Southern California and UCLA) and the Texas-Oklahoma Debate Sweepstakes. By mid-January the team ranked sec ond out of 320 universities participat ing in the CEDA (Cross Examination Debate Association) national tour naments.

‘ ‘The college considers these kinds of ac tivities as 'frosting on the cake' that rounds out a student's educational ex­perience here,'' said Elizabeth Oltenacu, associate director of instruction "They develop a student's ability to think dear ly, to do in depth analysis, and then present ideas in a real world situation These kinds of awards make it quite obvi­ous to people that we do indeed know something about the real world, and that's part of our students' training "

Faculty agree. “It's very helpful when students are able to work with a real client like the Chenango County Department of Planning and Development,'' said Daiuel W Krall. M L. A '84, assistant professor of landscape architecture.'‘It confronts students with the problems encountered in a professional situation, then the chance to understand them in context of an academic setting. This kind of ex-

Natlonal Cham pt Victorious over 28 teams al the World Dairy Expo was the Cornell Dairy Cattle Judging Team (left to right): Tony LaPlerre, Terry Dechow. Matt Budlne, and Steve Morrill, with team coach. Prof. David M Gallon.

perience is really great for them So is recognition from the outside world that they 'd done a good job—especially the $50,000 tlie State Legislature appropriat ed to put the design concept into a final form through a professional consulting firm ”Many years of experience put the Cornell Cattle Judging Team forty two points ahead of the runner up team from Iowa State University. "It's rare to have all team members in the top group at a national contest." said coach David M Gallon, professor of animal science.

In cattle judging, students must give an oral explanation of their ranking before a panel of national judges. It requires a cool head, thorough background knowledge, and self confidence cultivated through extensive experience in front of an audienceSo does debate. The fifty member foren sics team is having "the most successful season since it was established in the early 1900s,” according to director Pame la Stepp, lecturer in communications ' 'With the latest CEDA wins and equally good showings in individual events, my team is known in almost every state. It's

very rewarding for students to leave Ithaca and compete against their contem [Mjraries from universities across the nation Some say they learn more doing forensics than they do in the classroom■

Metta Winter

ALS Members. CornellBeverly Britton Brenda Davis Kelly Deere Nilmini de Silva Anthony di More James Dumas Carl Henriques Laura Leasburg Mark Mellor '88 Patrick Nash

Forensics SocietyBrooklyn N.Y Fairport. N.Y Brentwood, NY Cincinatti, Ohio APO New York City Cortland, N Y Shoreham. N.Y Richmond, Va. Claremont, Calif. Lexington. Ky.

Cornell Dairy Cattle Judging TeamTony LaPiern- Steve Morrill Malt BudineTerry Dechow

Chazy, NY Herman, NYWalton. NY Cattaraugus. NY

Award-Winning Architecture ClassJohn Auterman Bruce Berrien

GregCkios Joanne Chiarenza Christine Cleveland Jonathan DiCesare Kristen Gay Sharon Gombas Peter Keenan Sylvia Kreel Kerry Lewis Marty Mankowski Lynda Schmidt Chirs Siefert Wendy Smith Paul Spaulding Young Sul« Mike Telban Mark Tessier Mary Tienken Giuseppe Volpato Floradell Wiaczek

Arm Arbor, Mich Atlantic Highlands, NJ.Rochester, N Y Syracuse. N Y Lansing, N.Y Latham. N Y Cambridge. Mass Freeville, N Y Verona, N.J Teaneck, N.J. Walkill. N.Y Ithaca. N.Y Kinnelon, N.J. Fairfield, Conn Oneida Castle, N Y Chester, Vt Flushing, N Y East Aurora, N.Y. Sodus, N.Y Pomona, N.Y. Brewster, N.Y Lawrenceville, N J

The listing of student recipients of ALS scholarships, prizes and awards that appeared in the November issue of ALS News included only undergraduates Assistantships and fellowships awarded to graduate students were not included.

This was our first attempt at listing all awards, recipients and home towns so that alumni readers would know which students were recognized, what awards are available, and the extent of the sup port available to students in our college

Certainly, the awards for graduate stu dents are equally important We will al tempt to gather the same information for graduate students for listing in our sum mer issue. ■

John C. Sterling '59. Director Alumni Affairs and Development

LOCAL NEWS

WANTEDfrom Alumni and Faculty

Do you know of news that should be inALS News9 Send us a write-up, the more complete, the better.

ALS Neus. Alumni Affairs. College ofAgriculture & Life Sciences. 242 Roberts Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853.

He sure to include your name, contact names, addresses, and telephone numbers. •

Private Support to the CollegeNew funds established since the Novem ber 1987 issue of ALSNews (as of Febru ary 8, 1988).

Sydney A. Asdell Memorial Lecture Fund has been established by son and daughter, Philip '47 and Mary K. '53, of Frederick, Maryland, along with gifts from family, friends, and colleagues. The lecture will be held annually and feature scientists working in the fields of mam malian reproduction or endocrinology The fund will also provide partial support for Cornell faculty to attend conferences in the United States or abroad, related to the various fields described above

The E. V. Baker estate has provided en­dowment funds to establish the fol­lowing:E. V. Baker Chair for Agriculture in the North Country to provide support to the chair holderE. V. Baker Student Aid Fund for financial assistance to students in the Col­lege of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

E. V. Baker Cornell Tradition Fund for support for 10 years to Cornell Tradi­tion Fellows(undergraduate students) in the College of Agriculture and Life SciencesE. V. Baker Dean's Fund to provide un­restricted support for the use of the dean of the collegeE. V. Baker Research Fund has been made possible through the proceeds of the sale of Baker's Willsboro property

Cohn Foundation Fund for Fruit

Research has been established to sup port the research and development of fruit by the Department of Pomology.

Harold L. "Cap” Creal Fund has been established by wife, Mary, family, friends, and many agricultural organiza tions and businesses in honor and memory of Harold Creal '19 The fund will provide an award to an ALS student, preferably a member of Alpha Gamma Rho, who is interested in agriculture or agribusiness. Leadership for the fund is provided by Bernard W. Potter '43, as­sisted by John W. Hicks '61

Julian M. Carter '37 Fund for Stu­dent Ambassadors has been estab lished by wife, Alberta, to stimulate and recognize leadership among students The fund will provide support to the ALS student Ambassadors, and is ad ministered by the ALS Alumni As­sociation.

Frank L. Du Mond A.G.R. Fund has been established by Mr Frank L. Du Mond '20 of Kalamazoo, Michigan. The fund will provide financial assistance for a deservingor needy ALS undergraduate student who is an active member of the Zeta Chapter of Alpha Gamma Rho and is interested in agriculture or agribusinessLeonard J. Jackson Memorial Award Fund has been established through the efforts of the Farm Credit Service of Canandaigua, N .Y ., initiated by George B Mueller. The fund recognizes Jackson's leadership for Finger Lakes agriculture and his support of farm organizations and the college. It will provide an annual

award to an outstanding student of agriculture who demonstrates both finan cial need and leadership qualities. Jack son's name has been added to the college's agricultural leaders plaque lo­cated in the display case in the foyer of Roberts Hall.

Leon Rubin Lectureship has been es tablished as a memorial to his father in law by George G. Gellert '60 of Oradell, New Jersey, as part of the Personal Enter prise and Small Business Management Program. Each year a prominent small business executive or other noted busi ness person will be invited to the campus to provide a series of lectures to under graduate students in the program.

Ram Sagi Dairy Engineering Award established as a memorial by Jordan Tark FR of Lincolnwood, Illinois, will be used

for an annual award to an outstanding student to encourage participation in dairy engineering and related areas The income from the endowment may also lx> used for financial awards or research grants to undergraduate and graduate students in the Departments of Agricul tural Engineering or Animal Science.

Funds in process of being established since the November '87 issue of ALS News (as of February 8,1988):

Leslie C. Lamb Family Scholarship endowment is being established by Mrs. Margaret Lloyd Lamb '36 as a tribute to the family of Leslie C. Lamb. The fund will help sophomore, junior, or senior ALS students (including transfer stu- •

dents) with preference given to those with financial need and those who live in or attended school in Genesec County, New York, or alternatively, live in or at tended school in western New York.

Richard L. Norton Graduate Re search/Extension Assistantship is being established to honor Richard L. (Dick)Norton, senior extension associate, who retired in December 1987 after 34 years of service to the fruit industry The assistantship will be awarded to a pomol ogy graduate student whose interest is in fruit tree rootstocks, orchard systems, or orchard management practices The fund is being supported by many of the fruit in­dustry organizations and businesses of New York State as well as friends and col­leaguesLeon Rubin Memorial Award Fund is being established by Philip Gellert 58 of Hillsdale, N.Y . in honor and memory of his father-in-law. Income of the fund will provide an annual award to an outstand ing ALS student who demonstrates a spirit of entrepreneurship, salesmanship ability, and an interest in foreign coun­tries. The award will be made as part of the Personal Enterprise and Small Busi ness Management Program of the Col lege."

John C Sterling. Director Alumni Affairs & Development

Judy P Lewis Fund Records Manager

Preserving the Metta Winter

Genetic Basis ofAgriculture

Time is running out in the race to preserve the genetic basis of Ameri can agriculture. Loss of habitat, land de

velopment, and other causes endanger one out of every eight native plant spe cies. Selective breeding of high-yield crops also contributes to the rapid decline in genetic diversity; two-thirds of Amen ca'scom comes from just six species, two- thirds of its rice from four, half its wheat from nine.

What’s needed is a reliable, economi­cal, species-inclusive method for the long-term storage of plant germplasm—

(the imbalance Uvat transmits hereditary characteristics. W ith a $462,000 gift from RJR Nabisco, Inc, agroup of the college's scientists are initiating fundamental research to further this end before it s too late.

Cryopreservation, the ultracold storage of biological materials in liquid nitrogen. is thought to be the most promising way of preserving germplasm for indefinite periods Although the idea has been around for more than twenty years, exist ing techniques have brought only limited success, says Peter L. Steponkus, the Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor of Crop Physiology, who heads the five-member multidisciplinary team.

"Cryopreservation has been used to store blood, human cells, mammalian embryos, and sperm, but techniques for plant germplasm have not been suffi­ciently reliable, consistent, or repro­ducible.”

In fact, little work has been done at all with plant materials, and then only with one species at a time. "Using the empin cal method, a researcher could spend years perfecting a cryopreservation tech - nique that works with a single species or type of tissue, yet not necessarily with any others It will be a long haul to cover the world’s plants this way!

Abandoning this method, the group will concentrate on understanding the fundamental principles underlying a nov el approach to cryopreservation, called vitrification. Understanding this process at the cell ular level will enable research ers to develop procedures for a wide range of species and tissue types by using predictive models. The savings in time and money afforded by this intensive, master the-basics-first approach, could make all the difference.

Steponkus said vitrification was chosen as the research focus because it elimi­nates a problem inherent in conventional cryopreservation techniques—the forma­tion of ice when plant tissues are im­mersed in liquid nitrogen at minus 196° Celsius. Ice formation can kill the plant's cells. For the vitrification procedure, very

high concentrations of several chemical compounds that do not freeze at ultracold temperatures are introduced into the tis­sues. As a result, they undergo a glass transformation that keeps the cellular contents from crystallizing.

Which combinations and strengths of these chemicals, known as cryoprotec tants, serve this purpose best; how to most effectively introduce then later re­move them from the plant's cells, finding the optimum rates for putting different types of plant tissue into and out of liquid nitrogen—these are among the group's specific research objectives

Steponkus, an expert in how freezing injures biological tissue, and Daniel V Lynch, assistant professor of agronomy. are the low-temperature biology special ists in the group. They are joined by three others outside the department Elizabeth D. Earle, professor of plant breeding and biometry, is a specialist in tissue cul­ture—the form in which the germplasm will be cryopreserved. Paulette Clancy, assistant professor of chemical engineer ing, will be responsible for molecular modeling and computer simulations of how different chemicals vitrify under var ious conditions. And Ronald E. Pitt, as sociate professor of agricultural engineering, will develop predictive models for putting chemicals into and removing them from different types of plant tissue.

The need is critical. Time is short. Two plant species disappear from the world every day. Present methods for germ plasm preservation, whether in seed storage facilities or tissue culture in the laboratory, can be used only with a limit­ed number of species and are not reliable over long periods of time The cost is tremendous. Take just one primary food crop—the potato. At the International Potato Center in Lima. Peru, 6,000 vari eties of potatoes must be field planted every year to maintain the genetic varia tion for their collection of 13,000 varie ties, yet this represents only one-third of all the kinds of potatoes grown in the world.

Answers to the research questions posed by Steponkus and his group could result in' one sweet little technique'' for the reliable, economical, space-saving storage of germplasm—from any plant, for any length of time. Only then would a sufficiently large gene pool exist to insure the genetic rebuilding of American agriculture after a major disaster, whether caused by insects, disease, weather, or war. Only then will plant breeders have the genetic resources needed to produce the innovative crops and products essential to life in the 21st century. ■

CalendarTuesday and Wednesday. May 3-4 College Advisory Council Meeting, campus

Thursday, May 5ALS Alumni District #10 Dean Alumni Get together (Clinton, Essex. Hamilton. Franklin counties). Catherine Butts.District Director Evening dinner; Royal Savage Inn, Plattsburgh Associate Dean Ken neth E Wing, speaker

Tuesday, May 10ALS Alumni District #16 Dean Alumni Get together (Ontario. Wayne, Monroe counties). Doug Conti. District Director Evening dinner Marvin's County Club. Macedon Dean David L Call,speaker

Sunday, May 15ALS Alumni District #15 picnic (Seneca, Cayuga. Onondaga, Oswe go counties) Chicken barbeque and dish-to-pass at Emerson Park on Owasco Lake, Auburn, 12 noon to 4 p.m. Contact Bill McKee '71, District Director. 315 424 3178.

Sunday, May 29CommencementALS student/family reception Emerson Rice lawn

Friday, June 10ALS Alumni Association orientation of new directors, 1 p.m.. Room 8,

J

Guest speaker* at the apple and cherry grower * annual meeting In Webster, N.Y. (left to right): Bruce Anderson '66. associate professor of agricultural economics, Susan Brown, assistant profesor of horticulture at the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station at Geneve; and Edward McLaughlin, assistant professor of sgricuttural economics. Th* meeting focused on new cherry varieties, products, processing, size and quality, as well as marketing developments and strategies for apples.

Roberts Hall. Cornel) University, 6 p.m , reception and dinner. 7:30 pm, board meeting

Saturday, June 11ALS Alumni Reunion Break fast?Association Annual Meeting Grand Ballroom, Sheraton Inn, Ithaca, 7 a m Details elsewhere in this issue Reservations required

Tuesday. June 21ALS Alumni District #4 Dean Alumni Get together (Westchester, Rockland. Putnam counties). Carl Specht, District Director Evening dinner, place to be announced Dean David L Call, speaker.

Friday, September 16ALS Alumni Association Board Meeting, 1 p in , 401 Warren Hall. CornellALS Alumni Association Outstand ing Alumni Awards Banquet. Grand Ballroom. Sheraton Inn. Ithaca. 6 15 pm, reception, 7 00 p m . dinner Details in August issue of ALSNews Reservations required

Saturday, September 17ALS "Alumni ALScapades '88 " De­tails to be announced in August issue of ALS News.

Saturday, September 24Freshmen Parents Weekend

How to Remember the College in Your WillSeveral alumni and friends have request ed information about how wills and be quests should be worded legally to benefit the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Bequests may take the form of a specific amount of money or property, a percentage of an estate, or the residue of an estate after you have planned and cared for your loved ones and other causes. The following wording is suggest ed for use by you and your lawyer for var ious types of bequests.

Specific bequest for restricted use

A specific amount of money (at least 110,000) or property given to support a specific purpose may be stated as follows, using the creation of a scholarship fund as an example.

“1 hereby give, devise, and bequeath to Cornell University, an educational corpo ration in Ithaca, New York, [money or property to be bequeathed) to establish the [name of the fund), the income from which shall be used only for financial aid to students enrolled in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University The income of this fund may be used each year, or if not, may be used in a subsequent year or added to the prin cipal of the fund Awards from this fund shall be designated as the (name of the Scholarship] "

Residual bequest for unrestricted useA residuary bequest of money or prop­erty. left after payment of any debts, ex­

Help! us find our lost alumni of the collegePeriodically, we'll list those ALS alumni whose addresses have been lost during moving. If you change, please

have a recent address forward it to us: ALS

Class of 1968Baker, Bruce 0 Balmsky Robert F Bartkus. Lawrence F. Beals, Richard C Bellinger. Peter M Bendis. Ina K Bigelow. Judith M Bookman. Nancy Spiegel Breslow. Brooke C. Brody, Ann B. Brownell, David F Capogrossl. Douglass L. Colbom. Leslie N Cooper. Susan L Cross. Richard H ilausman. Roger J Deports. Eugene G Jr Deyrup. Mark A Dlnitz, Nathan G Dotson, William R Dunkle). Balfour Dunn. Paul E Evans. RKhard G. Fanao. Richard L Ferrera. Kennrlh G Filkins. David B Fox. James N. Fremer Michael A George . Charles C Graham, Allan W Gulkow. Albert S Harrington. Gilbert S. Hartman Nell Hawley. David A. Hay, Thomas C. Hayes. John S Jr Hlldiu-h. Christopher D HUUs Duane F Hoffman. Renee Horowitz Hunt. Julian F Jakonda. Sulaunanu Z. Jones. Kathy Boitrek Jordan, Thomas J Kantor, Robert J Karpai Susan Felt Kasbohm. James A Kauper Thomas J Kendall, Allen B.King. Charles G Klein, Carolyn L Kmckertockcr Ds vid L Krenzer . Eugene G Jr Krueger Charles Jr Kubiak itrhard W Lange. Robert E Lehmann. Stanley A Lerner. Vivian D Leshin Jeffrey A Un, Andrew H Manfredi Jeffrey J Markham. Richard A McEnnls, Roger N McGrath. Thomae R McLaren. James B McNeil. Meredith J

Miller. David Miller, Robert E Mindlin. Rudnck Minu. Catherine Lewis Mltteer, Brian R Moldenhauer, Jcarld F Moser. Darryl K Murinchack, James T Nawojchlk. Leon Jr Nkhols. Dune Degevrgr O'Reilly. Philip G Oesau. Thomas A a. Yusuf

lhant. James J Osley Donald L Pearson. Charles S Pdbeam. Allen V Poppe. Bruce A Price Peter M Rlvkln. Harold J Robinson. Paul L Rose. William C Ruckdeschrl. lands Becker Salgo, Miklos P Sangvichien. Salsood L Schell. Paul E Segen Barbara J Shapiro. Henry J Sinclair. Charles E Singer, Steven B Sleeper. Roger A Smailman. Stephen C Stevens. Willuun F Stone, Allan G Suah, Joseph R R Tang. Charles A Taub. Edward L Temple. Stanley A Unfridit. John J.Van Der Horst. Jan Piet Vertel, Barbara Maker Vicolvi. James R Vogelfanger, Roger B Wechsler. Alene Kristal Weinstein. Howard C Westbrook. Donna

VandepoilWhitener, Robert H Wilson. Bruce K Wise David M Wolff. Richard A Yanosky, Thomas M Yih. Rosalind Y Young Philip D Zadroga. Frank

Bedell. Mark W Bcdnanck, Albert J Benton, Christopher A Box. Richard Bracht. Philip J Bulger. Cynthia Allen Bums. Garland C. Cappiello, Douglas A Cmapono, John J. Chak. Winnie W Chasworth, Tobi A Chestnut. William G Choi, Young Ja Colon. Francine B Cooper. Jeffrey A Cortada. Eduardo Covell, Nancy L Crimmins, John P Cuddy. Maureen E Dalton. Stephen M Damico. Mark F Davis. Derek E Desletanis. Paincia A. Devlin. Margery E Diercks. Amy Zoebiach Dorfman. Ellen J Dounce. Randolph C Epstein. Lawrence E Espinoza, Linda L Fagan, Barbara D Falcone, Sandra Damm Fanning. Eileen M Fanning. MarguerlU' R Farley. Violet C Favre. Jane Grewellng Favreau. Julie A Fein, Beth L Fetner. Robin F Feiuhans. Theodore A. Ferrer. Jaime P Fiori. Lawrence J Fisher. Undo L Frank. Linda A Fullan. Kevin J. Fuller. Daniel A Gartland. EUen E

. Rebecca C . Sander J.

Gomes. Nell Jacobs Gottung. Enc J Grankh. Russ D. Hahn. Kurt K Haluska. George J Hams, Deborah L Hamson. Christopher W Haynes. Jane Winslow Hedley, Jane A. Holbrook. Lionel A Hooper. Ethel Wainwright Hopkins. Nancy LuU Howard. Kathleen Carry Hughey. Barbara M Humphrey. Martha H JwrobeUis. Amy Greer Jaworowski. Eve

Class of 1978

Johnron. Cncket Johroxi. Robert E

penses, and specific bequests, may be worded as follows:

"I give, devise and bequeath the entire residue and remainder of my estate to Cornell University for the benefit of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell.

General bequest for unrestricted use

An unrestricted bequest for general pur poses of a sum of money, or a percentage of an estate for use where the need is greatest, may be worded as follows:

“I hereby give, devise, and bequeath to the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University, an educa tional corporation in Ithaca, New York, for its general purposes [. dollars] [all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate)."

All gifts to Cornell through wills are im­portant . If you have remembered the Col­lege of Agriculture and Life Sciences in your will, we would appreciate knowing about it.

For additional information about remem­bering the college in your will, about tax advantages, or about how your bequest can have the most impact, please contact John Sterling or Lael Carter, College Development Office, 242 Roberts Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853, phone, 607 255-7651 Your attorney may with to contact Antho­ny F. Parise, Esq , in ourOffice of Univer sity Counsel, phone, 607-255-5124.

Alumni Affairs, 242 Roberts Hall, Cornell University. Ithaca, NY 14853.This issue we feature the classes of 1968 and 1978.

Jonez, Linda A Jones. Peter M Joseph. David J KoraU Rosemary D Kenny. Robert S Kent David JKhachadunan, Aram Kincaid Susan J KitUc. Stephen H. Kohl. Mary E Kohm, Neal O Kuskln, Robert 6. Lampel, Alan B Lampman, George M Lang. James J Lang. Kim N.Lau, ChichiLawson. Bonnie Sherman Leekong. Garvin A Leonard, Ann Georgl Leonard, Chariei I) Levldy, Lynn J Lcwu, Evelyn J Lewis, Kenneth S Lewis, Shelley H Leyden. Gabrielle R Line*, Marjorie K Lorenzi. Erank J Loring, Steven W Ludewig. Enc A Ludewig, Joan Woitasek MacDonald, Timothy J Mahoney, Kevin O Mansfield. Darla S Maranu, Mark S Marrone, Pamela G Maxtan Mary M McClung, James A McCormick, Susan L McDermott. Annette M McElroy. Cart A McGuire. Bernadette McLoughlin. Anne M McManus. Geraldine F R Mehafley. Charles K Mendoza. Ellen Melroka. Amy E Meuger. Joseph A Miceli, Joline A Milland, LUa A Miller. Alison II Miller, Linda S.MUIcy. Christopher J Mills. Russell L Munnchack, Lee Kowalsky Murphy. Mara K Murphy. Susan Crump Murphy. Timothy R Nans. Stephanie G Nichols. Jane E Noble. Mark E Olmsted. Robb In N Parker. Joan N Paul, Deborah Norden

Your Membership in the Alumni Association Makes a Difference

To Students:•Four $1,000 scholarships to entering freshmen each year

•Funds to support judging teams and at tendance at professional meetings

•Student research programs •Attendance of 30 to 50 student ambas sadors at alumni functions in your area

•The Outstanding Senior Award for leadership and service to the college

•Outstanding Student Academic Achievement Awards •Career and job programs and services

To Alumni:•Organization of local Dean Alumni Get togethers

•Student recruitment activity in districts •Organization of local college social events

•District alumni leadership teams •Five Outstanding Alumni Recognition Awards

MEMBERSHIP FORM INSIDE ROSTER

Know Your Alumni Association Benefits

Aside from the extraordinary support and advocacy for the college that your membership in the ALS Alumni Associa

tion provides, there are tangible benefits to you For example, whenever you at tend an on-campus basketball, lacrosse, or soccer game, a wrestling match or women's gymnastics, your membership card entitles you to a $ 1 discount off the cost of the ticket. If you attend on-campus football games with a group of at least IO people, you will get $1 off each ticket You must call Athletics before the game to have the tickets set aside for you. Be sure to show your membership card when paying for the tickets.

Every member of the association can have library privileges. Just contact the ALS Office of Alumni Affairs and De­velopment. and the staff will send you a Mann Library Alumni Privilege Card This card can be used only to check out books, and only at Mann Library Keep in mind that books borrowed from Mann are subject to recall if needed by students, faculty, or staff on campus. As a library'

Scenic Prints of Cornell and IthacaA Perfect Gift Any Time

The college's alumni association is offering 10’ x 13* museum-quality color repro­

ductions of four oil paintings by Victor R Stephen, professor emeritus of commu­nications. Alumni and faculty members chose these scenes, which represent the four

seasons, as the most memorable of campus and the Ithaca countryside

Send the following:

□ Libe Slope .SpringEvenings ________ prints al $10each

□ Beebe Lake Bridge . Summer Night_________ prints at $ 10 each

□ Taughannock Falls. ..Winter Morning:________ prints at $10 each.

□ Cascadilla Gorge... Fall Afternoon________ prints at $ 10 each

□ The Four Season Set: all prints for $36.

□ Alumni Assn members, $30 a set My membership expires:_____________________

Please add $5 for delivery outside continental United StatesEnclose check or money order payable to ALS Alumni Association and mail to ALS Alumni Association. 242 Roberts Hall, Cornell University. Ithaca. NY 14853

Name ___________________________________ ________________ __________________

Address____________________________________________________________________

City______________________ State/C-ountry Zip________

This is a gift order. Please mail to above individual, and enclose a card reading

•Annual alumni reunion breakfast •Leadership by your 28 member district director board

•Leadership by alumni as state coordina­tors in more states

•Annual Alumni ALScapades•The Young Alumni Achievement Award

To Faculty:•Recognition of each retiring faculty member at reunion breakfast

•Grants to departments to support in­struction and student needs

•Involvement at alumni events

To The College:•Recruitment of high quality students •An informed alumni and an alumni college connection

•Leadership by 200 to 300 alumni of the college, for the college

TinaS. WalkerAssociate Director. Alumni Affairs

card holder, you are subject to rules and regulations governing the use of library materials.

Remember your car rental and motel discounts. They can save you from 15 to 20 percent of the rental cost at companies such as Hertz, Avis, National, and Alamo and up to 50 percent of the cost of a room at Quality Inns, depending on location. Refer to the reservation and discount number* that you received with your membership card If you do not have these numbers, notify the ALS Office of Alumni Affairs and Development.

Also, remember that you receive*<*s count on the cost of each ALS alumni event These include $7 off local events anddean-alumniget-togelhers. $ 1 off the ALS Alumni Reunion Breakfast, and $4 off Alumni ALScapades for both a mem­ber and spouse.

The Cornell Cou ntryman is one way of keeping you informed about some of the developments taking place in the college The subscription comes with your mem­bership Enjoy it ■

1987 Member Roster

College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Alumni Association

An All-Time RecordI am delighted to present the 1987 membership roster for tiie Alumni Association of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

Both membership in the Alumni Association and alum ni leadership for the college, its students, faculty, and alumni rose to all-time highs again this year

Alumni Association membership totals about 5,000, representing all 50 states, and 37 countries around the world If we have accidentally omitted your name, we apologize Please contact the Alumni Office, 242 Roberts Hall, immediately. Omissions and errors will be correct­ed in our next Issue.

ALS alumni activity occurs in every comer of New York State and is expanding in Illinois, Greater Washington, D C . Pennsylvania, Florida. New England, California: and New Mexico as alumni association state coordinators assume their responsibilities for the 33,000 alumni of the college.

A new benefit package (for members) provides for select­ed discounts at Cornell athletic events; a Mann Library privilege card, reduced rates at college alumni functions on or off campus, Cornell Countryman subscription, among many others

Most of all, local ALS alumni activity helps us to maintain contact with classmates and keeps our diplomas up-to- date by remaining close to the college and its faculty

There could be no better time for me to serve as president for ALS alumni, or for you to become a member of your college’salumruassociation. Details aboutjoinmgareon page 6 of this insert It's a small investment for the con nection. Our leadership and involvement is one way to return the help we received as students ■

Albert Beard 52, PresidentAIS Alumni Association

AlabamaAuburnMullen. Gary R GrMullen. Jacqueline Kupec GrNubaum .Kenneth E 72/hrmrnpkumCorwith LynneS T7IhraMstoWWIock Gerald C OrMfcKUeBuech Charles 0 'SIB’MumpkoCorey Margaret Marie, 80

HvmerCheney. WUlumli SOTunoiuAlabfc* . Judith Hall 76

Dodfe. Nancy H Jr Or Leiner Roacann Hartir 81

NeUon Margaret A 82 Schneider. Jennifer Petal '63

AlaskaAncAoruprBr«a Roland C 57Mom. France. J 87fcm.Gr^ryD W

/□irtonAjI Harvry.JudMhB M

Arlioaa

Bumu.SuphenG *NQatar. EtaaG 32SrvO**Pamh . Truman A M

Pooto Noonan H » Robinaon , Robert H 38

Smith. Harold 0 38TWaonDaugherty lew.. S 62Hart, Gilbert B 28

ArkansasGreenlandScanlon lame. A 'OrMrt*Beasley Harry F. 48Mom tonHaye., Ann Wilhelm 84

< alitor.!.

Fnehling JayP 76 Hoo.AnnaF OrArtesiaUn ChlashanS 86 fta*~VieldCoons. Robert A OrZoller Robert R ’48Hownla

| Wright. Gavin R '86

HertsMyBaker. BnanP GrClaiton. Susanne Ravage 38Oosa. Karen Weiner MKo. Marina B '87 Bremer. Marjorie 88Bn-riylhU.Dranlch Irving 41AmeMyChu. Chang Chi Or BrownnstoHarrUon , Leslie A '85Burnu/hrkAberrwlhy, Roberts 81

Fairchild Aiea M 88laawntoBoak.RuihA 26 Evans. Gordon E 68CorlrtadSiellng Hall) 62Ch.noFouler Marvin R 66

OlltoVlMdGonsales. Jerry Jr 'STClorevnonlKuwahara. Steven S 62Cleona Del MorKonauer John SI esmuPalace. Robert L '67Dams UsBower. Jacqueline Pretlwe 73AnuDutcher. Roger D 'OrKrupp. JoanneR MLeland. Stuart E 83Middleton . Scot C 88Rubatsky. Vincent E 66Sutlrfl. Thomas D S3DtomoadBorLocker AUla '87FmrfatChambers. Eileen M TOArmourAckrrman. James R 83

Bredderman. Rudolf A 86Cooper Georges u 48AereoTubbs OlHoedE 66Gortlem.tarn JasaseL 88GilroyTakemoto Anna 8 OrHay Um BayClarke. Richard t> '77HopnontBenjamin Lynn Greenusld 70Hrmurto flracASchoenfeld. Barry H 78Gunnmto-BnoAWeinthal Becky Moore 86LalMsoCollier Boyd D OrLancuurrtango. LowaeF '84LongAocABradley Benjamin O 34

Deceased During 1987Allyn, Mr. Frederic B '31 Barnes, Mr David M. '50 Bly, Mrs Lauren E '38 Bromley, Mr Albert W '35 Chase, Miss Dorothy C '29 Creal, Mr Harold L.' 19 Denton, Mr. Clarence S. '18 Glasgal, Mrs. Isidor '25 Grande. Mr OddT 'GR Hering, Mr Chalmers B '37 Jones. Mr. Evan L. '37 Kaku, Mr Hiroki 'GR Kidder, Mr Norman C '32 Lawless, Mr Edward J. Jr. '23 Lawry, Mr RollaC. '10 Lutz, Mr. Edward A. '31 McNair, Mr Leon M. '37 Miller, Mr Ward F. '40 Peck, Ms. Kristen J. '86 Perrine. Mr. S. Alden '20 Reed, Mrs. Hugh D. '16 Schumacher, Mr. August '28 Sellers, Mr W Oscar '30 Smith, Mr Robert Q '42 Taylor, Mr Perry C. '52 Woollen, Mr J Sellman 14

LotAlamUotBochoff . J*m« K 85h* AllotChung. Kimberly R Or

Aaronwn. Gtenn H 19Jean M *67

GeM-bwind Benjamin J 85Hovcfl.HddlF 85Reader Nancy E M Kopcfow. Alan J *71Renn.R Scott 86 UDrtch.JoanR OrViera. Hector 83WunAolMnfimcAGofle, Gretchen E 87Manna Def MllierFelKiaB 88Pete non , Stacey M MAfewtoAirAKaplan Heidi B GrMxfcataRKv.JohnV »MonXanjWagman. Bruce A *78

AA-nXrreyBoyle. Patricia Jonca *75MorufoCoUaao. Andrea *86

0^3^2*88

Schmidt Karen L 87Ten Hagen . John D Jr 88 fMuryfwkTwyman. David F 83AbrtA Hollywood Mandelbaum, Miriam B *32GoAlondBeerc. David? Or Hainadeh.OhalebA GrThomas, JuB«F Or(JreanndeHooker. Daniel L 88OWNutting. Lewie M 32

Blount . J Freecou 38 Goctfrtod Toby Fnedman MPolo AltoCoger. Fran Rosenberg 76 Davis. Jennifer A OrHayes. Thomas P 86 Lamb. L Cedi *60Merker. Harry '61 Slew an. EUxabeth A *86

Kubas, Cynthia M 78 McInerney.WUUam0 85

Hofeline. HoUm Ftahetaon 75AaofeCushman. J»UR 73PImmMmMetier Rogrr M UJWdemdo BmcALaw Judy L H

*77

Tarbell Barbara J *77Wddemar.MxhcUeM 87

So’TTAlfred M 26Smith Allyn I) 60SramemoKomar . Judy A 83SUtmuFMpe Sandra F 83

Pedersen Albert* 39

SfinFtw* Ceppi Michael '73

Hernlwh KtmD 87

Risks Diane E 73

Johnson. Bart R 87SURnm-ai*Tabcoky. Extra HanwrFaR.VupeDavis. Pamela L *85VisohoColbert John L *74 WolRu/OwiLee. Karen H *87B«rmi*uKTWiley . F Roger 58 Woodland HUUMortck. Sheldon F *M FudaCtaiUwls. Chart-M '48

83

Colorado

Caln, Margaret M "4 McClelland. Mart E '71 MamdoSpnngrDethadenedes GuyB '61

Burkholder. John J Jr '68 Carruth. Gordon B 69Glick. Sydney Cohen 84Hamch.EUeenC 77Loin, Philip '44 Muller. CharleaL 48Smith. Waldo 0 33Talbot. Ed ward J ’Gr

AxtCbUrwGilbert. William A 16Meter. AlbertO 64 Htchardton JamesC 87 Golder.Cotme Nancy L 82HoarAAsmRrWoyski Matthew K Ur LutMtmOram0er. Andrew R '78LonpwtonrConklin, low rate. R 48Houma.Hale. Betaey DonneRy MAspmiSpmMMoore. JoaephB 33

Cann ertlewt

rbnonnIzfTlngnell Ethel Cole 26

Meed . Raymond B '21 Towbin Rachel Rekh '74 Yip. Chee Pheng'OrIManduBrant,Judiths 84DanburyPrice, James E 86Ralhjen Gerald A 29ShM. Meluaa 87 ftareraItava. James E 87Morae.JohnB 86

GranbyBoardman Edwin L 87 Davu, Foevesl H 84G—wwA Gotehman . Lawrenca w 88 HeUlnger.OaryL.'61Lynch Ronald P 88 Ra.eUoot Renee M 88OuH/redBuhop, KeilhB 77 Pinchbeck William W 84Serge nt Maud 34 Scranton. Oliver L Jr '73SMey.PredC 66HaddamMarshall. Virginia Lucie '81HarywCartuccto. LeedaM. 'Or Longley Cook Jane Blauvelt »t MakhoO. CarlD 72Mener Katharine M Holden 33HarusatonCaltablano. John P 83LnAmtlleSchmidt DuabethLebanonSherman. Michael P ‘87LudVUIdMlkakhua. Laura A '86A/anrArotorPmeo Stacey H 87Hea«M< DepotBrand. John Ph 86MeridenSowek, Judith Bokx 63anMusotonDeals George M '80 Favroth. Feledal C '87Silkin Irwin J 82MHfanlCununlnga. Mary-Lynn 87Nrv/lriuiinWaaaeman. Waller N 86Abu CanaanHe.gr n William H 88 Kuehner, Paul J '87Noauand. Scott D S3 Wagner. Warren E 'WNru/faMiFun Enull L 79 Hartnett . Kathleen A 82Kasha. DanB 88 Thibodeau . Lee L 16Tobin RobertG '80Nru-PrestonGorra, Ferris 0 '64Nor/MWUson. Colin F '63AbriA Haren Culhney. Thomas W OrhbnvordMagnarelll, Loula A OrAbruoUDarner. Steven J '87 Kennedy. Paul J Jr 48 Perham. Randolph M 83 Schneider. Bruce 0 '78ftdWWIdPinchbeck. Joeeph H '63 Rodgers. Nancy Boyle 82 Rodgers, Nathan L 82

‘Thorpe. l.ykM 38 Wollina/rtol Hardy. Robert E 86 WmAingtoePotter Frawnrk A '42 H'olrvfruryDawson. Sandra J '76

H'oarrfbrdCheo. Dorothy Ober 81 H'olrvtouwW ilson I toMtlasC Or HMOnnrtpVan Valkenburgh Karl J '61 WeekmMoat Armstrong. Susan MM 76 Salts Richard E 73BMportForbes Virjinla Richmond '37Oromman. Emily 87 Vandenbrink, Elisabeth A M

BritonWilhami ClirUUne Curran 76

£rt^"*illun.M 'll

DUtrier orColambla

Aldridge EUabelhM 86 Blair Matthew W 87 Bondareff Father Schill'37 Chilton Sarah J 83 dark. H Lawrence Or Cooke FranrolaA S3 Dalrymple. Dena0 64 Davis. True4l Donovan. W Graeme Or Erwm. Kathleen R 66 Fuher Manellen 85 Foeeum M Trumann 40 Franco, Amend A '32 Graham. Lucile E 28 Khaital. Fsdhil H 63 Nebon. Gary L 66 Rothwell Naomi Dorogar * Ruaaell. Donovan W Gr Saulnlen. Susanne Smith 66 Schwarts, Debra A 78 Stoller Lawrence B ’86 Ssadek . Stephen A 70Zkxh .SuaarM '81

DelawareandprrelleRader. Robert r Jr'83DorerShaw , Robert H 62Wlanl. Matthew J 64WoMe. Johaana Hopkins 86 /VitonRicotta. Angela C '86GeorpatotonBurna, JohnL Jr 86HootesainTnmberger George M '66LeuwaBntUngham Henry L 70AVurmkSammdwio. PaulH '66Crenn RlutoIde. laurence E 32

lleaaeltine Wtlliur R 44M'llowngtowDurham, AralrewC 'Or Gnminger. Carroll C 24 Jonro. Mary Bowler 78

Florida/lu-o RatonClinton. Gerard R U Fam EdwaKW OrGowen Dear W 86 Prague Ronald 1 86Wilson. Ronald D 36 Zrrnel Robed M 66DtynacnllauALowe.JeronwA ’34U miberg Theodor. W 62DrodentonFabian Darrel B '78 Hoagland Donald 30

Diets . Herbert J 82/IrooksivUeHowei.EarlD '41 Wikos.RKlwdH 34OaorwilevWoodward. GulUotdK '41

Ct»gshall . Millard V 37

rremDrocAStdea EveratL 34O»ul<xi4kuGonsalez AdaE 87ZtadeCUy larger LeoP 40Oaptomi«~rABurkr, James D Gr Cobb . Howard I '30 Ranous. AhUinetteL '«

Merrill EarlD '21

Du Bole Clarence W 36 Dwrr/mdBrocADonhauser. Howard L 69

King. Ralph E 38

Moaota FbuIA M£u*tuWitoon.RobertW 39FPOUiamiHorben . LJoydC Gr Moorv.MKhmlE *7tMj-t/xiudMaie Ch twin Gcocgr 41Shomon.RkhartS 87

BciUmy W Deiwr 98 Horton . Paul N 42 WeMerveli. Earl A 40Furt WaltonH^My Hetar Brttta'M Higley PhibpI M

Brant, OeraMP 5TAmHaRdAr*Kramer.FmdCw ■*»

College of Ag & Life Sciences. CU

Alumni Association Membership

Haines CupHannon. Chancellor I 'OrHbUpucodFrank, Hiram J '79HimrastrodAlger.JohnL '81/ndiokinnaiCornell. Marjorw Dean 39 Green. Amy A 'S3JoeAannwHeAllen . John J Jr nComehua . Kotwrl L 41 Henry, LeuroC *79 Jones Owen H 'to Wagner DevldH MJensen B~. AOtho. Joeeph L Jr OrZMwAUVadWllaon. William C 49LotoBretASenches hmMR 87Tanrey Joseph* 32LaJttaKdMaltose. Anthony 49 Shepardson. Francis 0 40 Young. James Alan '40Lam>Jordan. John Jr 29 Rockower. Robert K 19LoukiaoaLink. John J'60

LoashurpNewman. Paul E 'Or Pringle, George 33 Robinaon .Olenn F/xAipA Acres Obuhanych. William 81 Schempp, John A '40/enpA ArmMartin. Hanley V '41

UmphoalKeySundhermer Stephen M '81 WolcoU Arthurs 49LuapubodSchutt. Ralph C Jr '41 uenataiolLee JohnE 33ATOswuBruckheua . LorlS 83 Idem Benjamin'46 Lapomte.StephenL '78 Rernach. Judith Fischer 63 Troner. Michael B 84MaiMNeocAPosner. Tracy L '83Mownl fkauClark. Everett H '27 Jorgensen Kenneth F 43 Williams, M O Buster

LnurHDev* Karen L *87Mem* AiryIVxbhout Carol Zimmerman 79BwrthoMt Craig A 78

Ixmh ErieD St

Woodman.br Graaf 17/Wry >UUKeeolmg. Robert L 83

Ladd RobrrtD 4J

Martin Cynthia Paella 84

8Uke JohnS Jr 46

Kuamr Juanita Vai 33SUNT ^1X0Hama Oartl 65MalUtwi Margaret E OrRurfikW PrtrrM 64Rumeii Helen E K Ruaarli. Ixmiuc M MSacco. JoeeyhM *76 Sampeon Deborah A 84 Schulman. Joan Wehberg 47 Strogact. SuaanMaldon 66SWtUArbomTowaon A Lee Jr ‘30 Toweon laabelieThroJr 31Sparta Gincot Enaor. Edvard B *83HafmiMlnFarmer Sally A 86Lamb. Leroy D *30

ArtovCaponera.DartdJ ‘81 Kaegrbrin E Witham 44StoaieUmM *87A matteryMalna. Claude V OrAmAmtAuattn UaeM 83BoMourt Alfred W *38 Fang. Jean 87Sayer Winifred Drake 37AedotwJobraon Jane Wakrtey M

79

flrmuVHazard. Evan B 51Blue EarthOgburn . Harold D Jr 44BumrvOJrJoo. PUjuKim GrGonfroOryScullin. Michael 67/undMromNleber.JohnL Or

Corbett Laurence W 34 Gnrmberg Norman A *76 L^.RxtartR ftl Maiartee V alert. A 84 Snyder Robert W 63 Zuckerman MeOieL MAtKAmmrNeei.H Hryanltl 6Z Romocid. Robert E *77.'M.iU/'nu/Calta. Cathryn M 87 Hueg William F Jr 48 Kupervnith DavidS ’84 Tabok. Virginia L '87SpnnpftiraRodet MeRmmD 84

MlaalaelpplBUonHolbein J P 60OdumteaGddM Ray Y Jr *48JaokaoeHoban. Charite J *66SUinU-u'WAiken. Charite R OrNehon .LyieE GrStaArCoUeprHynct.JohnO 84

Phillipa Richard E M

CORRECTION

The chart illustrating growth of the Alumni Association, which appears on the second page of the membership roster, was reversed inadvertently during printing. The correct chart appears below.

Alumni Association MembershipCollege of Ag & Life Sciences, CU

Membership(Thousands)

1983 1984 1985 1986 1987

landls Carolyn Preaa *6Wrate.rnar* 71

Ritter Judith A 73

Faaaulare RKhsrtD 73ScMith OenML «3torfrti.tGoaa Margaret Trambanilo 83 IWmro Jcauine Wu 7* Srkoani. CarolTulrj '81AmlanrfCullinane. Unda Gunarimann «0

Pettendorf PaulF Wfta^aaSimplon Barbara I. *3

Monehar JblllllpH Gr kulArr/ordJcaeph.JamaaJ MTram Karen A «7SaddtelhierFeudl CalhenneE S3 Gould Paul A 47StotrA PlanuStar Lawrence S '67SarnixmFl>nn. Sharon 67Shore HrU.Domr,JamoiM 64SmurwlGoodman. Seymour D 60 SwomllrReynold. Kellie J 673ouUlAa.aU>Carbone Donna Smith 77■Sy-AvvwdNorton. BonrueL 81 ^ngfieidDiamond . Dorraid 46SmnmmiFsrtranra.ABtoonA '86 l>andau . Phyllis S 66Schneider OctoE Jr 66Trn^flyPoucher LynnQrThompson. David D 43TVrwioaAtkinson. David R 60 CrowsU. Victor L Jr *24UntouCUyPesesk) IrawrencvE 78Vakdon . Arnaldo *87M'aynrEckert . Kstth 06Wagner Grace Hughes;«HrwmaAPistilli. August D 40WenfleldGa/boraki. Knsun M '86Wunderte Robert E GrNaafteoodDukart Gary 76RussoMichael J *07Nfera House Jfctftow

Bartocel Edward G Tfi

Caron. Gall Frlman T1WoodMcnmRichman Chartea I) ‘26W'kcto//GeDert.Roberts *03

New MexicoAlamogordoMatthews . Richard I 52AlbutfwrvwBurdick. Richard W 69 Drennan. JamesC Jr *67 Herrington.B L 'OrJeroen. Mary Webb Or Koater WiMamJ *31MarneU Lorraine Hoffman *73Newiander Harold A 40 Oaks WendaUR 76South LawrenceS '40 Stephens. Robert F 48Thacher Alja Purgaiha 63ArtecRamakka . James M 69f.taaarwwDavM. Linda HMcheil S3UiQtoUNI. Karoo Bucher 70U* AlamosGalke Wanen A 09JbraMoGsebttx. Robert J ‘61.SaatoFeMendiUi. Denisr P *73Redly Philip M 62 Young. HaroW 4?atoerCMpLoad Roger W 67

New TertAmrUheidet < hmtaphrr W 87KeMrr. Wayne F 02

Greene Dw^uH 71 Morehouse. FMipD 76 Murray. Roger E 01Nuflrr Gerald C 43 Overton Richard M *43Fupe RonaMJ WPbpe WiRw 61 Shetaudora. Juhs A M Whaeman DunaMC 39AWifTuOafcrLs Fevre Robert H 67 Porter DavtdO 66Rrad AlanG *78AddssowWeak DurtandR 44AA»Secrest. FranctoC 40AkronE« Mon John I 44FMh DavtdW GrPerry Mario HRrorlk RkhardJ 34 Stone Keith W 7|

Balky John • VBauer Gerald P 33Brnmnan . Nadine E 76Bratk Judy Am'82

Diamond Mdtori 47 Fadak.UvernaEarW Gr Francn William G 85 Frvderxk. PvterJ 85 Harrison Shelby F 86 Jack. John W 62 Jack Kevin E 86 Jones Richard D W Marrone, Vtnent N 83 Sami Legrr Judy A 87 Schwartj Steven 0 86 Singer Ma belie A 86 Sumner Artinc Sroka 65 W Niger Bruce W 61 Writfit Robert L *83Albrrtstwi Goktetem Steven J 74 Miller , Laurence C 86 Silvey Alvin '47AlktowBennett. Wilbam A 69 Dudiey HughG '58 Hakre Wilson A 38 Hamngton.WUfrtdD 52 Kirby Dennis F 66 La Mon 1. Roger E 64 Lamont. GcorgrF '67 Lamont Roger E Ixxkwood. Douglas H 50 Long.John W 66 Narburgh Donald M 67 Navarra. Vincent J ‘77 Nesbitt Calvin R 54 Nesbitt Donald R 40 Poeima. Arthur J '37 Raymond. Albert C 60 Southcot t, Michael W 81 Tbrodorakos James T 73AtdewFuran. Robert L 85 Pettit William A 70Alexandria Bay Campany. Richard F 79A(frniStolton Stephens Conner L 60Wtetgrefc Walter H 54AUeponpBockmler. James R 65 Newman. T Paul MAlmondKiemaaewski, Joseph L '86 AipriwGaige.GaryH 69 Rhodes Karen E 82 Richards Charter A Richards. Rexford L Sibley Virginia Allen 29AUamonlAbbruone James M 86 Husek.VemonP '06AmopanarciAngulo. Jody M *83 Kabiack. Mark A S3Amemo Sepe.PetcrA *73 Strauss Julian M 68ArartenfomArnold, R Philip Banket . PetcrS *07 Conklin GaryW *71 Krohn . Mary B 84 LaJeunewse GrorgaC 61 Satowm CartS Of’74 Omitn.OleruiL *04 stachnlk Susan L 07 Tse. Betsy L *86 Wood David R 03

Faber. Marforte 70AncramdutoMcCarthy. LesterG 06AndocerBuctwalter Robert D Jr GrKent Thomas E *71ApalachinBrothers. ChnstmeC 04 Gaynor. Paulette M 85 GUckstem LlsaJ 87AppMoaKeough James H *87

Corwin . Douglas H 80 Corwin. Uoyd W Jr *66 Young. Avery E ‘63ArcadeMiller Russell G *61Oriel DcnnuD 63Vadney . Frank R 60

Lufkin.DianeL 87Randles. Joseph L Jr 43AroumkDab. John J 63Gober. BreU H *87AskMlleFairbank A Joseph 48

Albright Thomas W 38AUuoBertoido. Gerald R '74 Spencer Edward R '70AubvroBod) Robert H Gr Can. Donald O 34Dugan Patrice A *81 GaDo. Joan Klink 74GaBo . Rohm R Gr Kosfowski Alan P 71 Kukiete.MaryA 86 MacLaury Kenneth H 59 Mosher. Ralph A 39O Hara. Ted W 67 Ora* . Paid J S3 Rtford Thoma. B 87Sholes Stuart F 47 Wasserman. WsherC 67 White Andrew P 69AuroraBrtu. Janet E 78 Morehouse David G 69 Taknu Richard R 66AusWarcup Robert TAtwntf/brkEvanro Rudolph M G< Jennings. David L *77 Ostrander, Robert E 66AwesFoa. ThomasL 73 Puard.Terry I* Or Reppm . DsnklC 67AuraBurke AlbertBurke. ThomasC S3 dart JohnM 80 Coyvw GeraMM ST

Coyne . Malachy K 84Coyne Rk hard TCoyne Thomas K 56 Danielsm KrtsT 79IkBnnr lialrH 64Fraser JamesH *49Lelrber. David L *81 Pbray. Maynard < 40Tompsett J Wm 69/tabptoaBrnneU. Martha A 86 Cored. Thomas E OrD onofrio. Ralph A 86 Lanigan Edward F Md 48 Morrow Maureen A 85 Schoeberi. Karl L 87BmabndgrCrouch. Clifford W 67 HmMry Charles F 60Hyatt J Edgar 25Ives Albert G 60Ives. David C M l/xke Steven J 76Schlater . DsniriE 72Wickes Brenda L 65baldenO Uary Robert W 87 Richardson. George L *39 Solomon Robert M 87BoldMvnnvUrBus. Mart W Gr Crego.Earl8 49Crego Stephen E 85Edgbert Leander G 63Fenu. Daniel J '72FeniJ Richard N 54Foster Eart C 26 Foster. GibbsC 52(Mbm. Richsrd D *71Lowum Susan E '80Markert LindaS 86Porter. BrucrR 62Porter Dorothy Smith 27 Sleight James A 63SoDsctto. James R 76 Thomas. Walton E 61Ward . Debra Davis 76 Weichert. Wendy S 87BaUMonLaiuHillig Karl W 85Lurodu. Valerie A *83Martmo . Joseph A 84 Schwarung. Deborah Kren 77H.UUtofiSpoJensen . David A 86 l^ndwy lhancj 85Mather Howards 36Stephenson Marilyn Cassidy 77 Wests B Evereu 68BarkerAtwater . Richard J 72BKtner.JamesJ 80/iarwneidBliss. Kathleen M 86 Du Biel William W *67Kuchler . Alfred C *39Ruffrage. Cart F 61Bo^sllrRobmaon. Aaron I 70

Baicheilor, John R *70Call. Peter H *79Call. Philip R 81Call Richard C 62Call, Robert V Jr 60Catl StovenT 87Fairbank. ThomasE 69 Hanson. Arthur H 66Harris. Ruth Morse 56Hawley . R Stephen 43 Mulcahy . Marte Prole Jr 36Pray. RaymondS *69Sade Roger W 47 Sobczak Judith E 84Stone Kenneth W 42Terry. Parker C Jr ‘31HathComaire Louis P *67 Gardner. LaurenceC 40Haight. Gary E 05 Kahabka. John J *43Kuczma Robert MMarkham, Theodore W 44 Murray Garth A *64Reseiman . John 41 Whalen . Linda Bums 82Winnett. Richard G *73Bop ShoreNordhausen. Patncia L 87BuW.xiBuah.H Ronald 66BroomHuso Ru Rang GrBraver £k)RURhodes. Hubert L 39BraterAbBsBrown Nathan F. 43BedfordCartoon. Byron V 82 Ortcchio. Lucille Mucon 80 Zimmerman. Thomas A ’75BryduDrdnck laurence A 38Bcllei’ilUGreene. Arthur E 60BrllmorrFnu Robert Jr 73 Hammond Jeffreys 84Hrams. MkrheUe L 87 Hoiraager . JodiE 87Hussein Shakir GrKlein. Daniel E 87Rau DonnaC *87Rosm .JayS 87Sapuror Karen 87Snyder JOIS 86Woodward. Unds M 78BrUportlar.g* r Ruth Birnbaum 60BrtmcmlHebbtothwaite. Charles W 49 Miller. Linda M 86BemusAnntLawrence. Reginald PBerprwCanon BrureH 77BrrkahrrvAlbrecht Joseph KBrrhnlUcardl Alberts 65Bernardi BayWhite David G B 81MrthpaprKaehler. Alram 87 SartJtocwskJ. Joseph W ‘87

Smith WiBiamT 2nd*38

/hnphomtoaHarter O Cleon *«Botend FrancuJ GrCushing Karen M MDerry. Michael D 86FWtrher . EHonJ 41 lianik. Michael W 71 Hovancik Knsurw Kushner 84LangMtMein James J 84Manran. Deborahl. 85Schmidt Robert J 37Sowka Joseph W 85 Tynewsy Dolocei M 87W r<ht . Kathleen M 76

Bartolotu Edward B 86Haff. Floyd R Jr 59McCormack. Paul J

Jervu HetonUoyd 29Walsh . Carta I. 86IkxmviUrEmery Mark F 74 ftmckitlUBrink Garth E 62 BroarAportWUkes.JamreS 60Wilkes. Ralph 8 34BrantWinters Jon C *66BroahnghumNostrant Barbara Orman 61Brmru.«dSuUi.an NainyM MSullivan Timothy J ‘87

lhX« Frvdn. k k 76

Schwaru Mary TuthlU 76tPvuUifJ UanorBlack. David W 84Keniwdy .MaryL 86Margin . Jamie J *84 Yanagnawa George K GrBndprAamptowLudlow Arthur R 73

Kruysman. Jane Shelton Jr 62

lhlb?walterG 49

BnrrHdlLowery. Vernon A 87BrrxkpuetKuss . Sarah M 85 Sykes. Gerald K 67 Tierney . John P 62 Wagner. Donald P 60BroctonLapp. Julie A ’tt Travis. Harald E *30BronxAifaUa. Celia'81 Barbs. Wilbam M Burton . Kenneth W GrChin. Alfred 85 Clarke. Regnall 86 Dcjesui Dennis 84Owkstein. Georgs 86 Earnest . Allen J 47 Fischer Bruce E 85 Hara. Celestine M Itavsy.HrvcwM 07Kosiin. Samuel H J?Lcbnght Tracy B 84 Luckow. Scott *75 Masurovsky. Edmund B M McIntyre David C 84Murph UraM 84 Plnsteer . Leonard R 84 Plrane . Pascal P 29 Puotl. Anne Liss *87 Terach. EMcenS 97 ViUalona.RMaC *86BrooVUldSnow Cleave T 81BrookAown Btrd.RusMBC 76 Robmaon . Robert H 60BnxiklynAdams Jonathan M 85 Aprile George A 66 Bfoomquist Michael A 86 Brody Jane E 62 Brown Jeffrey S *87 Buxbaum Charles A 87 Chui . Met Lmg 67 Coutts Steven E 87 Cummings Lorraine M *80 Dresner. LaaS 81 Duah.EricN *87 Fahey. Cotteen M 86 Frtdmger. Susan F 84 Ferraro. Fred J 86 Frank. MeimaC *85 Grupp.DMiME 86Hanson. Anthony D 86 Helt , Rochelle J 87 Hindtn. GaryS 84 Huey Howard E 79 James. Amy *87Jucha. Peter 82 Jung . Jean *85 Kane . Linda D 84 Klastortn, Robert J 60 Korn. Hetaine'88 Kremer.JohnM tl Lee. Km M *76Lieberman Sharon B *82 Maldonado Ehrin 85 Metter. EkttabrthC M d *83 Ogrubene . Josephine A ‘61 Ong.JentferS 86 Pesner , Scott J *87 Phillips. Janet Couens *Gr PfoeU .JohnL 86Roke. Celia E 81 Rothman . Neal H 86 Saie . Arnold J '59 Shcrrow Keith I 83 Smith Jonathan D 86 Smith. Robert 0 74 Spn-ack. Robert L *76 Sullnan. Thomas J '85 Tyos Maylin M *86 Wdhams Tracwy C 86BngAUmdaleGutcnmann Walter H '59 Krogte.JoaC 78 Lawrence * Mason 38Brou-ni-tlkPond EugmeE *44BuffaloAroruca Susan M *87 Bakahi . Rohn 86Bartel. Eikem a 86 Battista, Robert V Gr Brown. Sharon J 87 Crandall Curtis M 62 Fabry Kathleen E '84

Green. MitchellK 87Higgins Thomas P MHobbw JvhnH 26Ifogan David B MHuffman Russell F 8-5Jobson . Stephen L GrKurts Ann M 84Landel Carlisle 0Lehde. Herbert E 43Limner, Gerald P 58Loral WUMareJ 29Luc howskl. Alicia T 87Mayer Karl‘36 McCarthy. Renata Upok '83Mewr Steven R 87Merwin. Walters *36Meyers . Theresa A 86 Murphy. Maureen E 07Nathan . James A 55Nelson. David E 87Noble . Anne M '86 Norwalk. Mary Beth P 86 Pranlkoff. Kevin 07 Pundt. Leanne S 80Seidd PisotoPkcttfo 86 Slawwnski Michael J *87 Stroman. Ruth Monin 49 Wdson Marilyn A ‘83 Yetten Loretta Krtegrr 62BurdenGates. John W *06 Wkkham Lindsay K 85BunuMUsOhgny BoanT 86BurtMukah> John J ‘60BuakirAMoraky Roger N 62t^UdontaDearcop. William L 63 Halpin Ted W Jr '81 Rodwin. Stanley 60OdkcoraRrkhmann Bruce L 71 Tories Mary Anderaon 83 Wootan. Madeleine M 86CahurtonFricke. Darnel II 62 Hulse. Irving H 20 Semel.Maurle 49QsmbndgrClark . James A 84Farrell Mary E 87 MarAuley AKonF Jr 66 Wrhmann. Gilbert H ‘28

^htt^vldM 70

Forward. Michael F 81 Simpson. DavidS 52CampbeUHaurysk). Thomas B 80Campbell HaUBaldwin. Jay L 79Lord. Kathleen 85Skouko ChnstineE *84QiiMUDAoneRobinson Robert E 38Smith Noel A ‘69

Bigham WdhamA *44 Boor . Anne L 86Bouchard Gregiry J 73 Carr. Chrtstme M 66ifcwUo Heidi K 87 Her. Mare C 66Maloney. Richard E 79 Miller. John E Jr 03Morrison, Emily RNice. Glenn D 41 Outhouse. Harold E 42Payne. Thomas E '85Spence. Byron 26Treuer . David J *70 White Arvin H *43(anosrrupuObver.CharfesD 64CunaitotoBenson . Waiter E 39 Caldwell. Robert CDow BrendaL 85fuuradraBabbitt Martha L *86QaaUtooBosaard. JackC 68 White. Norman P 23QntoraField. George C *47Huntley Daniel L 82 Lyndaker, Kermit L 60 Norton. Shirley Sager *62Petrw BrucuS *67Rode*, wilham L *67(^pe Vincmi Faulknham R Dennis 71

CannotBreer Cheryl Kuttenkuler 76 Me Quire. Paul V 87Montone, VincentR ‘87 Schappach Jennifer J 87GortAugrHaxen. Bruce H *70 Howe . Robert C 51Watkins Henry S 49CamadagaKotar. JohnE 70CauvilUTkytor.GlennA *87QuftkDe Oolyer. CalvinS Jr 44 De Goiyur, Willard T *09 Popp Richard H *01Robinson DonaldG Sr *41 Robinson Robert D 70f iutletow On WudsoaDuprey. Maryonr Mosher Duvtd J 80CatoKuck. Ronald A 73(dutollBentley JohnM 36 Meadow. Judith Hagen 82 Mrudow. Rkhard H 82 Poplock . Paul J 84CaUarnagai hektao. Barbara McClusky 48Kempksty. Lira Harvey 84 Van Deusen Roeamonde Hi<Wo Schwarang.WinardG 66Wilde Wendy L *87<aaew«voCurtis. James R 71 Edick, Glenn E 40Lucas. David S 84 Mu.UweUyn8 44

Sears. Robert D 62Stafford David F 85Teltsch MananT 84OwtovAforerAraAndersen Brian D *74 t'miereathGlbbWM Mother P 85rkwranrxtWroon Robert J 87Cmtmi SquareHyxie Jeffrey H 87

Phelps. Msurkv K(happaquaBulmari. Richard D 56Gellert Joseph H 60Kljak. Joseph 65Stratton Betty Oahman 60Waldeck Tom B 60OotAaraArnold. David W 76 Doyle John H Jr 67 Light Deborah E TtCharyGore. Pater II Gr (heektoungaFeinman MxheleS '85Chenango Dndpr Taylor . Mary Woulfo MChenango ForksSchoeler. Vicky L 84Chewy OunkMarquart Henry J 33OMtorDowd Kathleen M 87 McNeill. Ldlrai Rabe '24

r<guk<l.«g<ton AdrtanCLargdon. Cynthia L *87 Layer. Paul C 66

Durfee Msryfouire Vanliethou 78 Hatch. David A 78Hatch. Elaine Tannenbaum 78 Kirech WiUiamJ 61Merritt DonaldG 66ChurrhitUcCsymmek Kart J 86 Ireland WmereD *36WUcm.O Hams 43nrrkitlkAyres. KrratnM 87OarenoeKepner.C Ivor Jr *63 Kreher.KurtH 74Clarence CentorGrove. Roger W 61 Krlkmberg, Andy C *86Spoth.JohnK 86Clark MUb Webster HeatkiahG Jr 36ClaytonGrrene Kingsley L 60 Hood. Mary Hale 03

GdbmJohnL Jr 73t^Uton Bari Gimbrone.ChartosJ *60Harter. Richard L 63Hilts. Roxanne M 86 Korts, Gilbert R Jr 72 MacKenrte . Murdo M 57PtockeUi. Mark M 73Rog» Timothy A 81 weary Aray A 70

Dalrymple Jesse E 37 Dalrymple Wfllmmj 74Ingis Burton F 40 Kareaes .JohnW 66Mueller George B 54Mueller John H 86Scrub. Steven A 06 Strube. Donna Snyder MYoung. Barbara Snider 76 Young. Wilbam W 74ChntowChambertam.JamcsL 48 Frans. Wayne R 83Hurd JohnP 81CUetowCorwm Ashton James E GrKlaus, Cathanne Robuuon *38 Mdler.DwigitS ’llTeter Dawd R 66ClintondaleEngk . Robert A 62Hurd, Jerome R 36ClymerThompson, ScouT 85CvbbnkiUBehling Ann Mane 59 Black, Kathy L 87Qark. Waiter J 50Forsyth TerryA ‘77Hughes Terry R *76 Lamb. Stuart D 63McGuire. Robert M 58 Nissen. Arae 63Olcott, Kenneth W 52 Pendergast. H Joseph 38Sidney . Howard 41Vroman. Harold B 48 W right Anita Decker 75Wright.BrucrR 76 Zuchoraki. Edward J Jr 69Cohocton0 Brian, Lynn A 87CohoesColaruototo.Chartcar Jr 87 Tottin.NancyJ *87CbldSpnng Harbor McClintock Barbara 23ColdmFoUman Roy J 66

CommackAlexander. 9uanneM 85 Foater . Conrad'Or Grambow. WalterF Jr 87 Login. Sbeny R *87 Popper. Richard E 86t^mgmEauck Linda E 87Lesneweki . Cheryl A 84ConUableviUeMarkham. Bruce S 49 Wadkms. Christine Kcool 86

Duvte. Letter H Jr 61CorfuCol. Nathan F *70 Nmt. Alien D 66 Robwx> EJran Hrnyamin 65 (’ArmingHogan Diane K 86CoplandAlexander. DavidC 78 BUit lraH 43Connelly Stanley J *62 Coombs Seth A 33 Dumas, Thomas A 87 Dvorak. DenntoD 74 Elliou GeorgrB 44 Foote. Delores J *T3 Frary . Milton K 65 Hurst. StepbenS 87 JasuJ. Harpndrr S Gr KMls. David W 60KMU Rebecca J 84 Lathara William H 39 Maloney Thomas R 74 Nelson . Edeen Oistad 78 Otoon.LynnM 86 Penoyer . Oscar A Pover OraMK 68 Rahcier Raymond C '47 R^d. Donald P '62 Spence. Alexander P Gr Tripp. DaleE 86 Underwood, Arthur E 41 Whittleton. John R 60 Wnght. Dennis W 69 Young. Gerald O 44 Young Stuart £ 71

Concoimo. Gennaro J *86Coopentou-n Addrton.KatthE '09Bartlett. Stephen A 87 Fetnman EartS Gr Harrington. Elaine By 41 Huntington. PeterL 56 Netoon.JohnA 58 PhflMps. Jeffrey J 83

OunMlkD»vr Robert A 28Outow Hudson Orehaner ThorWOtww/btalGunnison Albert F 36 Gunnram HughF 50

Bennett David R S3( uddebactoilleCuddcbad. Warren D 61rutchogueLewis. Burt 6 *31 Wickham. JamreP 60CaptorSutton IJoydtiYoung. Ernest W 60 Young, Martin L 60Dann-OtoKelly Wilbam F Jr 43 Kemp. Joel M 61Putney John C 76 Stout, Chartea D 66DrRuyierBames Cedric M Jr *66 Moseley Charles H 44 Wood. Calvin E 66DeerparkCohen Douglas E *87 Graff BnanH MMaur, Laura Y 86 McCrystal Hilary J M Meiodia ToruannP 86BeleicmMathew. Guy L MZkM.Clark. TewiA 67 Kraka .JohnA SO McFarforai DonaME 62 Stevenson DonafoG Jr 56tobnar Ctoy,Manuer82Dalrymple. Daniel M *27 Davis Mary H 87 DeB. Joseph 40Fessenden. Daruri J '87 Hawley Bruce R 66 HoBey. Rkhard H ‘73Lynk Robert E 54 Mdier . Rowena Jupiter ‘Or Place Alfred R 69Seymour. Wilbam E Gr Zimmerman Paul F Jr ‘78DrpomKrUrll MnC Jr 1Z Hiu«.jm*>j 3eOrMrMm.OmUH '» Ue CteaurH MDidanm CrMrr rrooptr CharinJ 87UoNaFnnUna Sunu*.Sharon A Sama MOounutillrEttm.ThrodoroH 41

BaU«y. William G S3 Barbano, David M '70 Banleu . Frederick R «1 Baurte UanljnOtaen W Baurle. Waller M 48 Bobnick. JameaE Bl Carpenter . Jean Albnjht '41 German, Gene A Or Good George L Gr Halermate. FranceaGalpln 38 Jacobron Robert J «3Mare Brian 11 Gr Payne. Donald W S6Pearce,CartR W RehkusW. Gerald E ST Rummy Gary L. ‘GrSlocum Roberts '77 Smith, DavidT 62 Smith. Smart F Gr Str-a an Randall K 13 Tnvia.VanC Jr «0 While. William R Jr SI Willlama. Fred A Jr '» Worth. William E 62DwdaeCrusade. Ann Cam '78 Pierre EurnrF «7 Rugae Amy L '87 Whilehead. Ralph H '41DunkirkCentner . Harry A '70 SarlOr Richart W 46 Walldorf! Henry G ’66DurbaantUeDurant. Becca Richmond 81Eopt. aw LaboauOe. Anne UGapieandpr Andrew George M 86

’67

MdSjaamJ 10’70

Agk James H 66 Agk WUltaanM 64 AMten Robert T 76 OGtopper. JotaR 62 FtMtey.WdlMM A 63 Henn. Harold W Henry Walter J 48 bUkhoff Kevin R 74 Mmekimt Richard E 67 Doe! Paul H 64EdiMtonReidhcad PartaW Jr 68 Vunk.JohnF *74

Kanieaia.TadrmS 70Torrey John E 78Y anker, Cart'44 Yunker, Craig* 72Etbndpe iMcr Floyd C 70Karftk.ToddE 87

Sundtelm.JohnC 6tKuhlmann Robert H *68ElluburyWhitey JoelB 87ElmaMomm. Catherine Bamberacr 43 Smith Robert B 56Wiuek. Matthew W 86ElimraCarter. James E *60Carter. Jeffrey L *86Case . Donato F 54Chadderdon WUson H 62 Getger. David B ’83 Jackie John J *87Kauer Sharon Ditmara 82 Novidor. Beatrice Carpenter 37 Strek HnleyM 36Supp Pamela Lustig Gr TuthlD.FrsdA Jr 38EnduouAlluadl. Ruth Hubbard 82 Cctos.OeoegeL 38 Comrunos. Barbara J 67 Demo. Terrance M 86 Uflroy,Daniels 86 Woodward HowardB 40EnrrateCuney DundP 66PteSMTsytor.SueMerrfl *83FoirMnewMaum Robert J *87/terpenDnrtk Alton R 43Gifford Terry V TOHancock. David H 71 LJoyd.JohnW 49Nsteau Donald L 56Randall WiteamE 65Sim. Joseph F Jr 60 Stortra Arthur H Jr ’62Turner. Paul E 40ZatomevKimtell StrptenN ’70 FortectemapCohn Samuel S 58 Rogofl JayH 69 JtewuuftoairBuchwaM Adnmnr 79Frtohman. Austin M *63Rives. James V 78 /tewagkmBrown MteeF 61Marti tewwJ *68Page SkeptenieUnigrr 85Fumtm.teAtfir ITurtraG »Baran. Water 44Dimon ErwmW 48 Modem ChnstlanB 67 Starr Jamas H 44White Nathaniel E *41PWngairBatmteff Barry 67Ste Tracey P 87»uruftaAButeh CoOeen A 86 Btenton TYmothyW 86AOraoraSwdee CeytonR 38

temt G Harvey 68

Hural Air*tteyk MrteelP 90 IkrifuM to-udd h I Hugte* WOtera p M McKeon, Thoma* M M Mened , Richard D 87 Schneider WdtemR W Srhwewr ChnauneM 86 HiutoagBauman Andrea L M Breferman.BrureF M Better . Vance W 87 Bloch Paula Kuihner Hl Dmo.LeeteT M Chent BeayT 86 Carte. Nancy B M Danu Seymour 43 Duran.Roberts 88 Dyetich Thomas 8 81 Epaiein. Alien N 59

GlertaM MFunt Kelly 87 Garter Beth Mxhaeto 76 Glick Jeffreys 84 GoMbrrg Richard E 84 GramerudM Zane 78 Handel. David L 87 Hanli.MarcA 66 King. Bertram 42 Letov tc. David M M Lou MaryT 82 Loa, Slate V *86 Ryan DevdrrE 84 Schneeraon.Moma 44 Schaeuer WdiumE 77 SUvcm.LonY 86 Simon Joanne M T9 Smith Sunk) W so Tenorx. Mary L *86 Tockanhewaky Ma/itarvt A 86 Unfer Kenneth F 81 Warner AtoeC 86 *Hu LmR 85/teidaAdami.Johns 49 Kim* Herbert R 36 Kling John L *39 Mini JohnN 72Planone Andrew J *66 Truman Robert W 60/teTAaaGiteon. Philip H 61 /telEduunfKuamert Theodore T 84 Matochlk John A 64 Retd DarartG 46/tel FloraArmiutead Thomae E 72 Keeney Bruce I ’68 Kkraroc. Jon A *74 Ncilta. Chrtacine King'86 Water. Jay H 66AuaA/'*’Watah. Robert 82Hu SquareRabtn Jacqueline A 86 Reh RobenG '73AunAhwiteWngK.LnmE Jr *60 Wright. RKhardO *87Ardi/RioBenton. Allen H 48 Bonitert. Peter P T1Otoor, Robert L *62Joy Anthony F 43Manhr Duugu/ll “iO McPherson Gordon W 83 Rak. Dennis J 80 Whitney . Thoma. J *87

AvudomBorer. AmoMT Jr *42AwporfAdler . Amy J 86AwntteBache.CarlA 68 Beck. Martin G 20Beck . Robert M 64 Beck. Ronald L 61Beck Russel) M 86 BrntoaU OladnJ 78 Brannon. Warren F Gr Buchwald Cteence R Jr 66 Carey . Margaret P 86 Chadwick. Donald L *66 Church. Ricterd A 64Coeu Dales 69 Conner, Fred L *H Earie.BnanO *67 EatoUe. Gerald I 44 Johnson, Mary Mullen 85 Miter. Jay P ’79 Mitchell. Eluabeth A 80 Sadd, Artene NuUaD 32 Space. Ronald W *63 Waag. Chnsune M *87 Warhobc Donald T Gr Warner. Frederick B Jr 54 Whitney Andrea Foster 86

AwwdxAipKester. Robert A taler. JohnS

Dsrtmg Hereto* 44AitemnteO Dockerty .MKhseiA 63Gobnrt* teavut WiUmaA *39

Matey James K 89Matey JeromeF 7|Me Netl. Helens Schnrtder *84 McNeil James L 84GwteevDstoy. Justine A 86GaasROOrtAroold R WayneGurdewOwCampbel Howard H 26 Destoteio Raymond J 72 Even . Maureen P 84 Garibaldi. John A 85Khin .CMtemeM 84MuAooly ClainrM 86GoxpurtHerendeen. Nathan R 64 WMker.JohnRGranuAhewi.Oaorgr8 OrBraun. AJvlnJChapman LaurenceE 62Hrvuman .DakM 66UghUooto RodnryS 40MacNeil. Dot^asC 73Morse Richard D 60Nietom MarotentSRotenson.JohnH 83Soper MillunG 43 Steadman. Eva Stora 67

GenoaOaterhoudt CharieeR 63 «**»*»*Dunham. Marton Bronwm 27 Evani DougbaE *72GermoMtowRCarpenter. Water J g 61GrteaUeKunert.JameaE 80GAeurCaahen Anthony B ’67 Kurt ria Scutl A 86GHtertereffeKeene Beth E 87 teune . Richard E *57GfenCteuBrora ItorudJ 86 Jay Rotate PltUurt 41Seeeduke. John Jr 82 Wagner. Jacqueline a 87 Walter Kunterty A 86Gtou/faadFrank Frederick R 78 Grau. Maureen E 87OtowmoraLatumer Everett C 34 McCord. Mandy P 87 Phthppo JohnW 66Gfe*u/tebAnderton Stanley M 49 Colwell Karen S 86Creel . DonaldS 30 EUaworth WdharnS Ge French. Edward B 64 Hoy.ThofMaL 70 Linehan, Marcta Fogel *78Mraun William P 78Suffer LreteG 43 Ocomwr. Harold J 86 Snyder. Peter J 60 Trrriw FrancuA ’61

Alvarenga Jeanette h AftGiOMvaMteStewart Ralph E 64GoaAeaHute . Douglas * 72 Patch Margaret E 82Samoa. John J ’86GtwwrwwrKrater. JaraeaL 42 McNamara Carolyn V 83 Monroe Timothy J ’73 Sipher, David E 69 Sipher ErtonW 43Siptier. Zelda Moten 43White. RichardL 86GouondaCrouae. DennisG Jr 86 Ditienhofer Carol A 87GruAomnnteCoombe. Dwight W ‘86 Coombe. Philip Jr 68 Coombe. Richard I 64 ManeU.JlUA '87Menge* Thoma* H 72Reataino. Barbara Zimmerman OrGrand GorpeReuter . Michael J ’87Grand bland

Gramvte□y. Roscoe J 61Great Ate*Levy.JaneR 73 Kenner Maureen J *87Raffs Mane L 87 Saffron. Tamb*L 86

Meister. Donald F *42GrwntouwGoldberg. Howard E 87 Wltoy . Jennifer M 85GrarautoAKimball. WilhamC 70 Rymph, Donato E 63GrotonBaker. Robert Cart 43Bancroft LmaR 87 Barry. Manon McElhsny 34 BasendcO. 6cott A 83 Cotes. Michael G 86 Gatnes.JohnA 6<h*87Onffin . Bradley L 61Hallatead Enc 86Kirby Keith M M Mobno. Carmon J 68Nretect. Gordon R *49 Pbumon.JameaE *41 Sherwood. ToddT 86Tregaskis Dav id W 72GMkfertortoIrwin, WgtemL '68GmldrrtowdCrMier Kleeberg. Margaret A 84NopamaRJaffe. Anita B 85liallRobson.JohnO *61/famtergChartap Henry N 53 Clark. George ALockwood Marry J *62 Lockwood. Suphen B 86 Lyon.KteuE 87Masgaj David K *83 Mmnlck Wilbur C 26NSRMteRrVkrreon Lucius A 30 Nebon . Douglas J *81MmhaAustin. James I 39 Habgood Ted J 73MsmmomfHadlock. EdwinC 58/MmmoBdsportMadigan An. M 87Hampton Ztaia Mom. L8ten Baamn *35HaanacrvuTruesdell. Laarie J 83HlRRltelSmMh.OartA 86 Woodruff Gerald A 41Young Dale H GrIhrf • |Threspson Kenneth P *86JfarpumxteCtam. Frankiyn P Jr *48Eggleston J«t«L 6ft Newby. Gerald B T3

Wm*or AlanP 86Wmaor Ralph E 67MrrtotekKali UndaH 87 taiack Debra A 87 Senter. Jerome 47HortwviMurdock. Robert HTrdetco Connie Itee 76Heupto-prBaron. Jacquelyn I. 87 Kaplan TemJ 86 McConnell Janet J 50

Schneider JutrphC 66Hanttonv•arvet. Marti. 86 ’aytor ChartaaP 80/tetorDavta. Irving A 43HadMt James R Jr 80 lUiiat. Jerome V 60 PreMan JaraeaC 60 Wickham . Don J 24ItepiteConroy Dorothy C 8?Elba Faith A 86Eapoaito laabete b ard 42 <»akou» Marianna am Krull. Steven B 7V Kushner Steven MtMartiny Julianne M 80 Smith. Willard F 48Wong Macy C 86 Ziv<xo(ik> Dora *66/fewfevumBatea Stanford C »MraneteBurnt, John C 66Snyder Rrhard J MMmtemarK<»tary Char lea A MPaul) Gordons 61HrutwitoaPutman. Clark A 86MnUMTudda Peter F//uAitnteDubner. Wayne J 87Eh rhardi Karen M 86 Romn DoniTroyanU) 46 Roaenthal Albert 64Tobin . Matthew 8 86 Warhett. Margery Weener '84 Wong. Cynthia W 87 Zareraaky David 87//ipMandHuth. Jeffrey G 76Jacoba. Calhenne Atechuter 44 Prochaaka. Earl R *66Wadreorth Robert A 86/hltetokBeneke . George 67 Getert. Philip D 68 Detect .William A 83MltonHedges. DouglaaW *73Hilton H Bruce 61MoterrLamport Frank F Rkh. WallacwM 61J*r*i*aburp Cook. Solomon *42/JutoroteChto.Sufen *7 SMuJamai ~ttIKAmit,

HwnW » KHMBle, Tb«M> W TS nxiu.CruhHJ «7 Sub). Allan W Weubx-k.JunHR MHUbndAunuCbWn ChirtuL 54 Ouom .»1H*rdE <0HoUryHurt UUndC lahninf Henry H M MarHuur, Suun Hurt' 44 MaUm. Rkhart A MHollouxtlu Ambnne.tMtrJ TOMnaerAltao. Harley M Or Barrell Ralph J 34Hull GrtrteH 41 Kleber Deborah A M Lonergan Thomaa J Race Robert C M Rlehlman ludahF SO Robinaon. Donald0 Jr M Weddle. Wdlum > 11 Wikua.DouglaaD 'S3MonropeMcCracken.WendyS S3 Page Lorraine A fltknnyiFalU Bnmsaeuer .rrankH S3ConU DouglaaT «0 Hobda, SaaanL ST Marun. GeorteH *4 Mraraek.AnnM «7 Smah. Richani A «•Hooawk Fall.WyMcU Jay D S3

Fam riuhelt. Wdllam A M Hopewell Juacrum Bonner Tina M 'B« HoraeuBoaaari, WtibaaiW 44 Dewey, Jeffrey A T4 Scagltone. ThomaaJ SO Sluirman. Daniel T 'STJtorartart.Bochin ke Robert A H Galuaha. Neal M SI Laaorauon. Paler 3B Miller, ChartraM U Mean Michael A 76 Khodeo . Thomaa W «3 Whiunore MatlhrwP 7« Youngman Stanley O 64 /tovearjnwSmalley Ralph R SOMudamaAllen. Joel W M Rraaakamp LrxaaH « Cmwklln . Peter R M Genhberg. Emily A 84 Hmallng John 0 44 Jahnaon MerrOlK M KrtaarEmiMa.K,rer JanwaF TO Rater Andrews 43

Suck let RctertH 60//mtarafalbNewton. ThomaaV 62Matevtu.Pluilpa Mamie H 23HuntnRood.Vtr^niaP 86 rtuaheptowCoatteCameA 86GuuM.Chrtatmel 87 Jordan, JacqurhneF 86 Kohm Thoma. S 64Murn Gerard J 87 Nkhlenhauier Dav el 86Senft tewnT 84

ten.uem Rim A M Bmg Arthur Gr Grom Cindy,. 86Madenterg MeteaaE 86 Mewrwr Rr hardS 86Puleman Thoma. T Bl 86 Santoro DrnyacJ 87 Saqurton.RabrrtJ p 87 St Clair . Gregory T 87 Vondraark Georgr 44JterleyBr.gjufkH.atoE 61Hater Heather F 87/NtertokmHauler Robert A 61 Bradley Ruaorfl H 42Ferrand. Raymond H Jr 41 Hantiu Aame A OrKnight JohnN 44 McKrv JametH 62Schmidt Dirateth A 86 Turner. Cleaoon N *31Van Riper Jerome A 63MtnpkmMarcua .PauIC USoong Grace J 85Woiff Erica S^dnrr 7V/rtipCaplan. Anne E 87M*±ean . ChnauCacttoW 86Mactaan . David C 84/tAocuAbrama. BarbaraThomaa GrAdam* Lev F ID GrAdams Patncta A 86 Aldndgr JohnS 60Atee David J 63 Ame* . Robert J 38Anderson Bruce L 68 Aronson. Esther R 36Aubie David C 60Awa.NJokuE OrBabcock Monroe C 30Banks. Richard W nBarnaba Eugenia M *75 Bames. Katherine E 41Barrow» Staven A '76Bates. David M 69Beer Steven V 65Bement Elisabeth M 81 Benner. Amy B ’86Bond. Maurice C OrBooker David M 86Brenner . Paul A *78 Brewer Herbert D 62Broad well, George J 53Brown Harolds 2»Brown. Stuart M Jr 37 Brown. W Dale X Brawn, Womna Or Bruckner Linda M 7S Bruner, Beetrwe Chnaman 34 Bruaaer SuaanHoyt tJ Burgau Donald C M Burna Derwood G W Butler Karl D GrCain.LindaM 43 Call. Dark! L 44 Call Mary Gentry 44 Camp Pamela Sharp Jr Gr Cano Donald A 52 Cartoon Cheryl A '83 Carnevale. Joyce M 44 CarrU BeUiE 87 Caaler. George L 50 Catlin, Krtouna A 83 Clifford. Karen N 87 cime Marlu,Cobb. Edward D -73Cobb.SluartE '41 CoOman W Ronnie Gr Coffer. LauneS U CoUlna MlchealA 87 Compton . Stephen A 34 Conklin Gordon L 48 Conklin. Howard E '37 Connrman, George J Jr '52 Cook. Allied P 37 Cowan. David W '37 Cramer. Roger W '34 Cnapell.CartA SO Dandacm Joeeph H 84 Oavto HoOtoR '37 Death, Murray A 47 Degnl Janice C 47 Devoe DeuF. '87 Dewey JamnE 40 Diver, Jeffrey A 48 Oubrotr. Marcy 84 Duffy Gary C 74 Dunn Percy L 19 DvuweUer Michael W 72 Earle .Wended G Ge Eauu.. Edward O Gr Egpealon Keith L '82 Edner. Joan Rooa Gr EUlot.J Murray'Or EHckaon . Nancy A 84 Enkaen.JohnH 41 Eachner Andrew K 87 Euinger JewraR 87 Evant, How art E 44 From. Jeffrey C 82 remandci David M 78 Pucher Gregory C 87 nacher.KarvnM 56 Foote. Robert H Or Porter. OtanDFooter. DaryieE 72 For Julia R S3 Foa. Raymond T '47 Freeman Cheater II » Fry WOliamE Or Fuem.WUliamF Jr 39 Fuller. Cindy J '78 OiRwn. Claire Kelly 37 Gilbert Michael H -87 Gimenet Steven J 79 Gorton . Ann E Or Gorwg.CaHF '52 Graham Wendy F '77 Graham Du, KaUtenne Graham Or Grainier, Bradley R 79 Gramgrr. Mary Muon 79 Grant Roberts 34 Heine Margaret L 45Hall Barbara M 43 Hamgl Joan KendaH '44 HaaMlun . William J Jr M

Hanarl toiBiam GrHargrave Pranria H r 32 Hartman Marga/ri teckwond Gr Hen ion James G 70 Hem Paula Spatter V, Herrag MtchartJ 84Hicks.JohnW ’61 HUI Carman B 49 HiM.GeraMH Gr Hill J Darari 68 Itetop MitenE 36 Hlotshwayo Thabrale a Or Hodneu RusaellC 47 Hoffman Heitn KaUenbrrg Gr Hoffman MchmB OrHolley Hv«h A 40 Homa John Jr 76Horn Pamela A 86 Iknighu-. Jean A 62 How R Bnan Or Hou . JeanS Or Huckte David G 78 Humphrey . Jon H *77 Jacteoon Jay S 55 Jewett. Donald L 60 Katete Edward L *6T Kabeiac . Undo Prarve 68 Krae Sybil E 87 Keane, William R 38 Keeton Barbara OrouM 56 Kennedy texte A 87 Kennedy W K-.th Gr Keyser Rrhard A ’71Klam Carolyn 7! Khne Roger A 63 Klinger Aten J 85 Kohn PsuIR 85Krook Nancy Klapproth '74 Lafrance. Ronald Ur Lamb Mama D 86teihwrll Rhonda S.ater 75 Lawrence JaneE 86 Levine. GJbert 4M Uebrrman. Arthurs 62 Loomis ClrftonW 37 Lowe Donald W 69 MacDonald Harry A Gr MacNeti HughS 6!Mahaney Kevin 86 Mai. William F Gr Man warren . TrennaL *86Mape» Barth E 49 MaraM< Susan Samtrx. M Marrero. Caroline E 86 Martin RumeU D » MatKt Howard* 39 McGonigal Jane Wig>ten 50 McLaughlin Margaret A 86 McNamara Thomas M 80 McddleUM. MarkT 86Meek. Meek Alexandra G MemU William G Gr MeMinger Linda M 86 Meu Joseph F Jr Gr Miccinaii. Jeannette Nadeau Or Miller. Ene J O 76Miller . Ene J Jr 46 Miller. Gail Warner Gr Milter William F D 42 Minor. Barbara A 81 Mi*h RuaM *85Moorman Eteen R 87 Moms Fred B *22Mom*. Gregory D I 87 Momaary Chariocte Sheridan Or M x*r Mary Ann 87 morae.nogerA 40 Mower Roberto 64 Mo, Itatmu 97 Mueller Glen C 73 Mullan, VWa Henry M MuUer. Irmgert S3 Munger Henry M 36 Murpl.y EdwertO 84 MuUoeU Ellen RobUuon 44 Nagy. Stephen M 45 Nartl Michael T 31 Newhall, Alton G Or Newton. Tammy R '8T O'Connor Audrey Harkneu 35 Otoon ChnauneL 85 Oaadcitey.BruceJ '61 Oaadchey, Shawn M ST O Shaushnnay. Diane V 84 Oauander Charlei E 41 PiSe.J Cuyler'33 Palm Charier E OrPathare, AthwinV 'ST Pendleton RKhard F 42 Phillipa. ElmerS 32 Puualed. Robert L 50 Pouer. Norman SO Preu Arthur J 24Freeton Louie A 43 Purcell DanMO '87 Quick. Bernard H 35 Raynor. Scot A 54 Regentlrin Joe M 5b Reynulda. Lauren Diana Doyle M Reynotda. Richard E M Ribanch Cynthia A MRiley Michael P 87 Robinaon Kenneth L Or Rothermlch . Dona Lehmann 44 Rowehl Karen M '87 RuaaeO Amy Tobey 33 Ryan , Dona A 84Saunden Helen M 44 Schano, Edwart A *51 Schauffer Emen F Jr te Schempp. Unda Wlkoa '85 Schmidt. Waiiam F 38 Searie ShaytaR Or Seeley.JohnO *Or Selden Gordon E 38 Shaplry S Reuben 28 Shepardaon. E Stanley '38 Shipman. Kay 54 Skellle.KlmS 87 Stock Samuel T lie Slade. Sara Barnard .-.Smith.ChnaS 84 Smith. Edward H Or Smith. Margaret R 64 Smith. R David'63 Smith Roberts 42 Spencer. John F 54 Spencer Leland 13 Stamp. MayaCa.eU 41 Stanton Bernard F 49 Sranton MmgamA it Sum David G 70 Sterling JohnC S» Stem. Andre J '87 SUnaon. Harty T JrStummer. Margarel R 84 Swan.JohnC '43 Sweet Harold B 35 Sweet. Robert D Gr Saabadl OlathaJ Or Teal. Howard E 41 Thompwm John F Gr Thoaapeon, Regina MacHaia *42 Tuaour Marty S 84 Tnmbergee George W Or Tufford.E Peter 69 Tuffort.laurd Miller '89 Turco Orlando P 64 Turk. Kenneth L Or

Turkish Nreman 56 Vandrrvnrt . Jnhn 23 Uakrley Alirv Cartoon 23W anner Robert L 4J Wanner Robert L IIW apnrr. Susanne E 86Ware W Bartow 47 Warner RrhardG GrWarner Taau Aaai 3!Warren Stanley * ZTWrUrr Thomas C GrWrkh CalherwirC 83Welch JMS 86 Whaley Mr ha* 4 J 87Wiles Patrick K 84 Wilkins Bruce T 62Wmg Kenneth E 58 W.dlnry GwrndnlinM 8'. *<xrfv RncheteE 74Woodward. HmuW GrYadhn. Yoram 86 Yasuda Cheryl T 86Zucefiino Lori Or

Liu. Jenny 87Yrp. Jacqueime 84Ji»rlw.NiVllrJordan . WtUtamK 46.AjanaicuAlton. Kimterley F K7 (Banco, Jody 5 77Bnmev Arlene 76 Funk Richard 79Ha/wirlman Ron 85 Kmg John J 87Landau . CraM J 87Lea MrluaaJ M tew a Merv in 41Ldly Percy S GrMartin Amanda Haynes 84 Sotomayor. Melinda 87 Theodule. Krepiing A ‘84 Tmi. Chen Chang 85Van Name Christopher K 85 Voters ViuutasG 28 Wnsagold David J 86JammtoMWBrown Lawrence E ‘57 Cheney Moms M *72 Kilburn Steven D 85Schnsn. Jody L 86JummssHrCoyr. Donald W 42 lira David R 86 KeUy George T 60Lagua Selina T 86 Saunders Carol A 87Jcmu V.ftopr HaUbauer Walter C 69JeX/mowtateWhite. AlanS 82 *h.tr RotxnJarte 82JrrxchoGieicter. Robertas *86 Kamhi.EBenS 73 Levy. Todd M 87 Nackman. Louie J 87

JAaamfY/pCroswell RobertO 86 ltex Joseph GrGnetaer FaMhE 87MacKellar, Bruce W 83McCann. Julia A 84Amaaeni.llrHamllloo JohnM ST ArnuammFagan. Andrew O 84Long IJatOww I, 84HM.WUlardL hiSubik Ann M 57

Perry Allen W 47Rkkard Alton S '23 Wilcox. Lyman JAolonoABliUer Suaan Rockfort 44 Samuel. Barry C 68 Thompaon. Bruce K 43KmdallEmenwem Raymond J 44Kranady Carpenter Robert M *70KralBannuter.LeRoyD 42 BannlMer Roger D '81 Narburgh KlrkW 87KeehonkaonCavanaugh Wendell E '68 Davta. Philip H SO Loreffce. Alan C 85 Morgu. Am Davb 4*KfukaPanMnanritr Helen Fulkeroon 43A.nterAoo*Hadtort StrphenE 82 Hemingway. Roaahe Welaa 43 Samaacou. Ronald A '74K.ayFmy Bradley Roger EButum.A DU 54Cummin*. Gordon J 48 FOaeenden EdwtnD 54 Ftwnden Johns 84 Fewenden Mariano Roeae '84 Torek. Frank A Jr 70ATaps AirkAmUer LotaaH 70 Vaimberg MartL '84A-.apUm.Davenpoei Robert O SOEhraan.Beatrices 88 Miller. Wayne T '74 Mitchell. OrayvonB 43 Palmer, WUham H 40 Skura, Peter W MLoForpetaUeShlmel .LaeJ *71LoFenrueBuck Robert J 41 Evfflngham Robert I Sr *41 Nocek.JameaE *74 Palmer Melarue J '80lodmapaaUr Hiuman JohnRIWGitepe Hollenbeck Robert H 33 W'alldorff Etaabeth K 84lokellrwSpitUrr Donald J 40LoJertUrMaoaon. AmyO 87

Fairtenk Keith R 69 Remara.JohnT 66LavrAaunUAaron Chnaune Shannon 82

| Mrtam«1 M Mkchad 6» Ng.CtaudteSS Shrtb Suita Newman 43LtMtem ftaitey BwH *74 Rryk.Mary E 85 Hopper . NetaonF ‘37 Neilton Dontad H Pederven. Ronald W 81

LounN Seneaar. Andrew F ‘GrZ-awnnu MaUMon. Keith B 38laurrvrSuaon . Alan B «

Carhart Kevin B *7® Heywood. Chartet E 53 Matting!> Kenneth A 70 Schalk. WiRtan K *87 Sovorod. Wilbur J 60Zx>te*7n.$pnn<p Koepp. Clarence E Lather. ChnaUre A *85//vwMuacareUa. Andrew T *83LevUkmw Levine Bruce A *76 PhytaU Donald E *81 Smith France*C 86 Waiter*. KeUyanne 87LewuhmKraft.MeUaaaG 87

Grant. Kart L 34 Wide Earle A *60LimaGotoik. France* Swanton 68Havcan. Stephen MTlBy.PaulF *68tindmhuorDakd. WUbam A '78Lomoc .JohnP 84UauotCMorgan, Ralph D 29LubonRuneU.DonE *73Staff.Miter E '67 Tevta. Stephen E 72 Walker. Scott M MLuUtF&mHyta Thoma. F Read. David J 78Uah ValUy CampbeD . Wilbam E '64Stevenson VcnmteC 37LrierpoXEvan.. Gene R 84 Huaubke. Caroline J 86LonghouM. David A 85 Lyon . Charie. W » Patutata Richard 83 Potter. Scott F 86 Sa wacke. Nktetaa M bO Thoma. DmlteK 84 Ward Marton 30

DUnnhLewuS *7|ZAUgMateKrSmith. WtffredF *83

Aahlry Stephen B 63 MorreU. Raymond S 40Sloane DetanaL *71LotteM«a.i Mark B MPteehen. Kenton8 *71 Smah. Cheryl Senecai 66 Whaley. SuvenH 78 Whiteman . Charlo. F 63IxjckpuetBender. Bruco R 64 Coulter. Jarae* W 4® Craaa. Maryann M 87 Small CyrlG 28 VuUo WendiR 86Well* Marte Call 42

Burdin. Arthur F 38Fata. Shannon R 86Rudkn UMiieP Jr 76LtmpfiMcADunn. Abda M GrSouth. Pau! T 87temp h!a*d CVpUm. Young U 86Zacharopouto* Thotuar 83

Zxm-ieltaBrodie. DougtaaS *66Hanno Robert M 83Jone. . Brun A 86 Lormore. Michael J 87 Matusaoak . AlknW 72 0 Connor. Harry P 66ZdmbwokAimUn.BMhL 86 Bunutein.UaaC 86Granet. Irving ‘35 Hohlman Karen Mumoto '77 Uxnaaky Steven J Tl

pJZteTchariteE *81

Buchanan. Earl 62 Dudley RuaaeUE »Kotvu Alien D *73MotedoeBay DunaMM 66 Emeat. Suaan Heagle Jr *MFoi Donald R 67 RothhMB.OraG Jr 62Spailer.JameaM ‘86 Wickham. WilUam S 86 Wuritar E Gordon 4®MtuteoaDrPuy David A 64GwM.Penctapefbch '72State Joeeph 23MadndCrump Gerald W M Fahr, DuvbdM 84

AteJ KenW 36GoMatetn Richard 8 86 Kmbngrr Kathryn A '87 Mullaney Karan M 86 Steiner . John V 86

MarneMcGregor Garth V 34

Mate*Child Alien KChWI StatertA 36

MamoronecA Granny.MarkM 84 Taylor. Seth 86 Yaagur, Samuel S 63WiHtowt Dadounan Stephen!) 85 Oru. Pamela C 85Shendan PauiN 87 Vachrta. Chrfotopher A 86

Agor. Norman H 38 Doughty Jeffrey8 86 Fndtnti John I *71 MacEachron. JameaL ‘33 Mapitone. Mark E 86 Mapetone Peter L *87 Mathis. JoaephC Jr 68 O'Brien. George W 47 Sarkua. George N *61 Saul.Chartea F Jr '54 Schulte SuMnne J 83 Smith, Schuyler R *60 Stefano Roea W 77Zkon. Rebecca P 84MowonGlrLee Jung M 86Rafftaer Kathleen M *86MoroUoaHarvey Lew E 14 Morse. Bert 8 61MoweUuiMaynard. Jame. J 63 Munro. Stanley E *23 Ramaden Ronald D *67 Smith. Charles M 68ManteaAcktea. HoytS 23 Bouck Dunford J 66MarwnMiteheil . Stuart J 66 RamMy Carol Cnaa *66 RumtU. Itavld N M Stell. Maryortc Meuger 82

Auatin George W 84 O’Connell. Daniel F 63IfrwitaJuneau.JameaS 86

Mr/rvwltaBach Frederick W TT Cora. William L Gr Dvorak . CharieaF Jr Gr Haight. John A 49 Kapral. Richard L *65 Lynch Edward J 6® Vaughan. John A 4®

MouiUKucdHeymafteM Steven B Or Porter WUeuR Jr *48 Spina . Lauren A M

Mount Morn* Ace RuaaeUB GrMount SinaiDrewea. Frederick W 68Mount ( paowSprruteta Thcrvaa A 87Mount VemonLotwta Jenniief M 87 Manning Carol M 86 Plrone. Dominkt J 67Mount FtteonKennedy Paui A 85Mowntein/tateLunger Arlene Winard '47MunnmnlkWtdger.CarlE 36

Goidtorb . Michael B 86Hu. Edna I 86Un.UndaY *87SmtJuwC 84

Cone.JameoF Jr *61 Cone.KaranE 86

Abraham. Georgr 39 Abraham K Mehlenbacher 43 Bomholdt Richard C 47 Brnhm JohnH Bl 64 Widmer. CarIC *61.SUMQUBirnbaum Sandra D 70.VeuAtarliRNewbold. Mark W *72AincffvmamIMaoidt . Loren £ 86AeuOtvCropwy. JamesW 50 Dnatch.BrtanJ 83Ginter. JaeonN MItaliano. Peter A 86 Jonea Suaan J '87 Roth . Pamela H 87Maurrr WHbam 67.^ru 7far(/(XrfEaatman. Phillip T *64 Krohn Ralph L 18Nubie AnnB 66Mrv //uiv’iRank Jeffrey V 66Neu J/tefo/UrA Pappaa. Diane M ‘86Paxtr EllaabeUiK 85 Wurman. Bvbvsl- «T

Bano-,lk-«l>»F « Conner .JaanCamall « Conner . JuhnT Sr M Cornwell Harry B »» Di«en . George M IB SI Ferrante. Paler J 19 Goodrkb

Hanan Vanvalkentrurgh Monelk. AnUxatyJ Oconnor AmyF. M Scbwaru AlanE SHNmArAallaAlber. Johanna Ceau SS Bwnenauck . KtnaeU A IB Fwklr EUenr TtFural Janet lenne 7S Oelland.DebraJ SS GnUMein.JayA M Jewell Cheryl D M Klugman. Barbra T V Klugman. Robert A M StwlU Sle.rnL S6 WlUuna ScouS M Wood.. Mary E SIMna/ortAdaBKn. Laurel A 7?Albnghi Johanna M «7 Amuuong. Robert E IB '67 Armauong Sandra Shepard U1 S6 Aaal. Woodrow W GrAuerbach. Wendy M S6 BachKh.MKhadJ 71 Bandkr NedW Jr '4» Barnau . Jill R 91Beer. Jacqueline Sb Belonaky GallM S2 Beteky .AlanD IS Brrgenon Louue Scar S3 Herky William <5 Bernard. Peter J 78Bernard. RuaaelS 80 Blaler . Cynthia E 80 Blau. Frederk R Jr 80 Bloom. Steven 0 86Bragin Lua 86 Brode David M Brode. Suaan E 86 Buck Lorraine M '86 Bumcrol David A '84 Burke Margaret M « Burkr . Patrick C S3 Buuon.DianneL 87 Calo. Aurora violanda'Gr Calo.LMoL ‘Or Carey. David W M Cameco babel C 86 Carrol. Lawrence S 66 Chan KalhyY H Chins. Thomae W 86 ChbholmCha.1 Alexandra L 87 Chndl.AndreaB 84Choi. Joan 87 Chu. Stella B Gr dark Penelope A 87 CoOan, Kueten A 86Cohen.BeuyA 86

Or

MaU.KartE 66Maki Raymood L 68 Merrill. David E Gr Palmer DavrdS 62Si Prerro Janet lamb 86 Walarm. Richard N 64 Werner Janb Mullen S3 Whurorob.JohnG '87 Wilder. Joaeph S M

a

CoUuu. C-arolyn Klmpel 66New . Helen Sharp «’ Saraent trorvlr A »Turrell Richard E 3»<Morw>Albright Allen J '44Albmghl. Stephen B 6»____llelenbrook. Kathleen 0 Donnell 83Herrmann. Edward » 87OMonoGrwbwRanaley. Rexford A '31

OoweTOuryKrMentuum Gerald L 66Van Houten Janwa B 66<ArAord«lrtBrown noydE 62DavU.MeliaaaJ 87Rowley. Jean r 64Weal. Suaan 66

•ar

Join 5,000 Other ALS Alumni Today!I If you aren't listed with our 1987members .1 there is no better time to join the fastest growing college of agriculture alumni association in the country1

Name.

Alum?.

Address

ID/.

Class year.

.Faculty?. 'riend?.

If ail address change, former address

Telephone (home).

Occupation

Personal news

.(office).

Use separate sheet of paper if necessary

Ea>E

Duet:

2 year membership.

Spouse_____ $ 141

.$20 4 -year membership.

Spouse---------- $25'

.$36

Life membership___

Spouse______$175'•30% discount on spouse tor joint spousal memberships only

.$250 3-year installments$90year-3 years$66/year—3 years (Spouse)

Make checks payable to ALS Alumni Association

Mail to Office of Alumni Affairs and Development. 242 Roberts Hall College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Cornell University. Ithaca, NY 14863-6901.

And.non. w.ndy A tTGuU> .HentyR MMMn.JoUnuC M

•3

C< Carty. M M <«*M Dnap TO

WakrIMI WUlUmH U »»lkr Allan J W WdteiM *ms 71 Wood. Thomas N 67

Hogan. HaroM J 64 Howe. JameaE sjVo ugucxl Bradley. Robert C 34 South WgttaiaH '675b«»«aA Everhan. Bert E Foster. DarrrU A 86 Jackson. Dale R 64•VsteteCuppa, Lam M 87 Craen. Edward C 85 GrpM Faye Gcttfer'76 Gordan, Bruce L 44 Greene. JoyceHermann. Corinne R '66 Jensen. Mary Wilber Gr KorngoM. Jaate S 67 Krsuiter Alfred H 66 Lowenfeis AianC 66 McKenna. John F 66 Itesnkk.GeneD 70 Walsh. Deleon *27'kAapAftroke Alien. GroegtE 72 Allen Norman* 44 Borden, Sion A *41 Czub James? 62 Johnson. Edward R BJ Johnson, Raymond E 64SrArewctta* Brown . Lyle A 64 Chuckrow. Joesph I 68 De Meo. Joeeph A Jr 64 Dumiak Walter 45French, Jay '54 Geabo, Jamas J Hahn. Judith A 87 Holman . Willard K 60Kahre.JamesH 67 Moses. Joel E 85 O'Hare. Shannon T 67 PamkowsM. Peter J 74 Parts Ingrid T 86Pna Philip 86 Rhce.G YuB Or Torre. James A 86 Weiaa. GaiiB 86ScAenevuiTauael. Chniunc Redmond 74 Veraweyvrid, Jacqueline 87.SrAoAomeBrueck .Frederick L 68 Guernsey Floyd A ID *87 Tripp. H Frederick 44 Westphal. Karl E 64ScAuyter PulU Thomas. Everett D Or.fcAuytenvte Fooler. Robert L '37 King. David D 86 King Edgar A 60JtsoBoyce Maynard 38Sapso Grater Redmond. Richard E 62SoottariUe

Or

•SelkirkHanneU.WUtemH '60inuraOaUrCarruth. Alvin F 63 Smrthhng ThomasH 67Sn^ofaU*Bar Mund Edgar E 60 Hannan Jerne B Jr *61 Holden. Herbert H 63Kuney. DonaldE *38 Kuney.KelbyW 68 Kuney . Lynn L *74Lawson Jean Asseisune 69 Noxxotto . Michael F *73 Shipley. Anne Marie *86 Thompson. Donald A '46 Vafou William A 01 *76 Wysxkowikj Richard J *73-'AarowApnnp.FalaareUa Mary Lb *87 Parsons. Kenyan A '48 Washburn. Name K 45SUrii Osscnt. Robert D OrSulurhMStrongin Eduard I *31 ShermanHotchkiss. Olin E 49

Adams. Kerry Crowell *76 Payne WeafeyT '61Saltier. Robert *62 Walbom . Curtis M 76Zonnevllle. Duane *47

Bowne.GeraldN '43SUiwQteStebbinsSchuyler C *60

Dubtei. Edward A *40Weaver. Constance Robinaon *66

StoMMlrimBuck. Andrew L 87 Elbert. Gordon H 32 Feako. George Grambow . Bonn* J '84 Joy. KcAneth S Lee Byron B Jr 41 May wall Roxane E M Patrick. EdwinD 38 Ramage Clare Richards. Brenda J 85 South. Kevin M 67 Stty DmMJ 71Van Order Robert A 36SkaMrimFhtti Nightengale Heidi A Or

/brings Welch Janet A 85Sbagrrtaete Bentley. WAianiG 49 Hittings. Mart E 83Swam Beth Suwon 73y.ainn<ilirHooter Patrick M H

CoMJBdrirN 86StettltoUiMts Vekntino.UxteW 84

SmyrnaHays. James B 74&dMBuerman. Gary G *77 Butts RogrcH 34 Detlhyn.KrvtnJ 83 Dwyer. John A 64 Spiers.PauIR 41

Auerbach Sandra Belsky 76 Ng Verna W 87

Cummings Damri J 77SouiA Fotebury Bretky Um M 87Strauss. Fkrence Cohen *37S^iAAormpkfAdams JohnR 60SouiA Loan ayA seen Ra>nondM '* Cleveland. Sidney C 60 Cook. Thomas J 76Flinn Mary Quick 60 Gregory. Lua H 85Hardie . David 49 Lewis Burdette D 43 Prehuman La Verne L 36Scoftrtd, Kenneth E 71 Shulman Matthew I! GrSnyder. Arthur R *76 Stevens. George H 62 WiUiamson Ralph L GrJhuAWateBlab. Michael W 81 O'Dea Kathleen A 86Reed. Paul I) 66SouiA W**rloPalmer Leonard M 32

Sh^WdtemO 87

SoulAoidZitek. William E 56

Bossard, Kemttl L 63 Deuechte LynnP 60 Efthtauou Eric D 83Heatop. Edward H *81 Rauune.ArvoA 69Usack. Lynr A gigbotb 86

Colby Ml WColby. lUhudU *nHU> Jun« F Msy«on*Wikoi. David A 78^ealrvjMace.Roberts 58SpnapioifeyKroman . Lonnie H 79Kmover. Rhoda L 86Zinn.JackH 87SpnnpriUeAckley . James C 60 Bocae . Richard A 68Dygert J Prior 61 Etoenhard Carl L '66Irish, Stephen L 72Johnston. Clyde E *34 Lawrence Edmond L 44Nachbar. Scott G 87RuaacU. Harry S MSmart . R DaMel 63

Paine Robin M 86AeoitewpMarcus. Frederick G 61SHZTordMoulton Stephen P '80VanhooA.CharieeT 86StaJsVberfADen, Frederick R 44Cariey David 0 *67Hall.AlbertO 40AoR/oedislhRunch. Michael J *87AonteyHolden Wendy S 87 Rogan. Karen Horgen '77Wickham. Dcnald I 66StertmtePalm . Charts. E 80Staten/standIseihart. Kenneth J 86Kocan, JoenDalheun 63 Lottos. Nkk 66Rath WtliiaraC '70Revsnaon . Michael F '87Sasso. Constance M 86Sherman. Jrifrey W 84 Ward. Qare Capeweb'37AcyAentounKoepp. Arthur F5hbuoterGriflen. Philip C *57Aon/MdprAvery.LeannsM 86Aony ffrtx*Roth Busan A *72Schiff. Leebe A *86Shea. Carolyn A *87

Guraaer. Kenneth I 43AWtewGold waawr Lon J *86Hirsch.GeraMP *69Palmer . James T 87Petty Shawru Lee H *86 Rotntetrovsky Richard A 87AmnLoteMarshall. Gad S 74

Blumenthal Jennifer *86 Ferber Alan I '67 HuDey Andrew J 80 Krapcs .MorTU 40

Alvord Robert W *37 Avery Jan* E *87 Ball MuhaelA '87Barmmb ItenBeM 66 Bamee . Donald 43 Burdick . Wendy A 83Butler EUenM 85 Calpeter Lynn A 86 CapeUa. Frank G 85 Canakhari. James T Jr MCtfarana.CMrieeC Or dark. James H *87 Coombs . Kathmrw P 86 Curry. The—J 36Dauaman. PaneU Hendnck* *78 DrieroB JoanM 85Edwards. EarteC 66 Fntcherlc. EBeen A UFisher . David F 76

Furte Rm hardS W Forward Stephen A 72 Gallagher Tsmnvs I M. Garman . Harold W 67 Garrett. Brian J M Garrett. Paul A 57 Gilmartin Robert J 86 Uimky Sluder.t Griffin IhaneM 7« Hobrvttrr . David * 7R Jordan. Helen Smith 26 Keib. Mary Metesa W '87 King. Jeffrey M 84 Lawrence Steven J 87 Uttebaan John H *81 McCurn Cherry Solar 46 McKee.WMtamA 71 Miner Paula M 86 MitthcO. Brian E 86 Morabito. Robert P *77 O Rourte ThomasC Or Pariorek MxhariJ >4 Peres Gail M 86 Pert Robert N 86 Qumn WdhamM 44 Iteevr. Stanley J 48 Riley.ChartesH Jr *38 Schempp Paul A 66 8mnh Ralph D 39 Thon . Danube V 86 TuwnirruJ J Iklward WalMey. Frank A 43 Widaowaki. Dentel V *85 Williams. Edwin F III 82 Zaokewycr. Debra H 78

Castellano Peter M *81 Rockower Gregg R 87Tte^aoMwHerdt Robert W 61 Turkhmmer . Sue A *87ThMlbStein, Linda Atlas 64TTloemmodPranas. LawrenceG 66 Marton . Edmund M 34ToiwwtajCrego. Scott A '86 Feiman. James S 86 Hendenon JoanM MMott.JonR 63TVitesMU Thoaveon.DeYtdA 807VvpCipperly. Michael 66Moskowitz Donna 79 Pade.JohnW '72 Prout. James E 83Traver. Lee A 64 Wagner. PrierS 80 Wasuta Scott J '82TVumaiuburpAkins. Peter H 69 AUen Joseph J *74 Applebee, Glenn J *73 Baines. Winton M 41 Burr.CharissE Jr Gr Cham. Earl A Or Coots. Warren L 44 Cone. Judith LHolland . Robert F 36 HuckM. Gordon H 62 Jenninm Norman R 60

McConkey JohnC *87 Northrup . Dante H 87 Ochs , Mart A 78 PreMon Cynthia M 79 Rkw.JamceE Jr 30 Schaefer Francis H Jr 29Smka. Charles F 697>ur«mDemuth, CharieeC 72 Gotie, Robert F 69Pouer. Bernard W 43Potter Jans Zautner 60 Potter. Willard H 53TtetuMarkham. Robert W *39Samuelson. Brian R 60Thomas. O Neil 76/AadiltaEart. James C 43 Prokop .William J *76lAuow S^iriMps Oliver, Peggy M 80Young. Gerald D 78 Zippel. ChristopherB 63

Crager. John H '52(AkoCarey. EUeenV 85 Caruso. Michael R 66 Fkchl, Regina M 88 Monroe.JohnW Jr *74 Rankin Duncan A '67Rye. WdhamG *78VgtetteAkers, Edward B 43 Du Boia. Laurence V 58 Robinaon . Glen A Sweet. Theodore K Twemyman .MartJ 73PabtaltaMagenheimsr. Suaann A *85Vaitey.SriromCarrara. Dante A *41 Ceeca.JoniV M Greene. Allan 8 89 Halbert Michael 72 Hotstem LmbB 87Landsman Jonathan M 81 Rauch. Karen Q *87 RMln.JayE '87SchwajU ManJyn A 87

Damaske JohnD 70 M*<>rrgor Sandra I. * Seovey MrhrileL W Warner M. Ann M 78 Wiley. Frank L 44VoovteunrileElltei Marvw.B 65Huth. Joseph E 53 P«arce. RonaMC *6? Sevennghaus. Charles W 34 Trit Eyck. Peter (I II 60W-addir^CosLoomis. Mary 0*Hoeo 78Wddinp AlievAllen Bruce D 69WoisantaHand Albert C Jr 53Hataet.Crtst. Edward HCriM .JarossR 54Hecht. Norman J 42 Hoyt. Mart W 84WalUnUQuinn.SeanP 86WatamDenton Catherine Duuwnd'36 Eldertm. John C 66MerriU . Duans R 67Moore . Margot J 86WolueteADavis WalterG *68Reviiie Dovtd E 69WatuofkChmDnna'87Outer Edward B 86 Hammond. Jan Wysocki 86Lau.AngleC *87Ng.SandraM 86 Shaffro.JlUC 86Vota DoneC 36

Otoe. Robert A Pataoni.ltasM 87SmMh.GtennC *60War«auOrove.DevtdD 40Kunse HansR 82 O'NelB. Motra *87Stoll. GsorgeO 29 VanSplunder Larry J 86 Wegner.JohnC 67WoniteiAdams . Joseph W 69 Ccke.ScottG 83Gottlieb Martin 67WaaAiwpConvtlfeAkers. LeslieHopkins. Roger M 38 McCuUom. MkhrieD 87WmsmcWhiteford John H Jr 36

cJmKrulM U

CoMh.IbchardC SO Kraszewski. Susanne '87Water/ordDemarco David M *76Matey Mettses E 87Oonk. Mary McCabe '85 Oonk. Timothy J 86Patesar. John T Jr *68 Weboter William E *7PRatertooBingham. Audrey Bishop 63 Bcetlted. Hemtan P 27 Houghton Doru Baldwin *67 Pass 1 egri. Frederick A 74 Redick EartP 66Schoenacter.CariE 40Tarr John A 63BoterportBrown Robert R 11*77Watertou-nBeliinger . Raphael L 37 Boice Robert A 66Doyte Kathleen M 85 Feagles. Gab E 86Murray. Douglas L 49 Phillips Usa L 84Purcell . Colin P 87 Robbins . Jan W 69Sawyer Donald H 61 Smith. AllenL '64 TrredwwU.JohnH Or Trowbridge .Craig D '81Woodruff . George E 62WaxrnvlfeBrouibetie. JohnP 86 Hughes J Richard 69WottatisGfenBanner Lynn F '39 Brubaker. John M 59Love .Thomas J 43Sgrecci.DanaL 86

Paul . Frederick F 64

ierteteBudd. Roberts

P<hl . Chester L 51Verwos Outer Foreythe Robert C 42 Noatea.HaroML 34FewMVanbeohout. Patrick M 86 Whitney. William L 49 Wiltoan. Gilbert R *73Wtaahip. Robert F 37HotelChlao. MankaL 87 Hates. Tern L 86 Walsh. James F 86IVterBandnwr, Herbert L 51

DMe. Edith L 85Dickinson . Jane Peck 41Digregono, Barbara Galbreath 66 Dirk. George R 49 Kujawa Henry J 63WsnlspunWhitman. StertmgT 25WritevUteGilmore JohnE *24WmrAtUsBirMand John A Jr 43Hte/fewneooGardner Piner V 57Goodermote. Bethany L *86

B'esr/sttpMusumeci Grace M GrPurshall. David M *63

WmlA^ootCohen RuaseUD 86Commms. Stephen D 84BeWOMtettaButter AlvemHd '42B'te Stand LotaSekeilick Judith A 87

WestStoiteUrAbrams Tbve Haaeelrtts 66 Sandilands. Dame M *78

Brer B tnffrtaBurto . Bradley P 42ColUng. Frank 35Elbworth . WardR 32Huxtable. JaaaseF >7Iretand CraewteiD 57Ireland. Rebecca L '87Pugh David H 86Ranger . Robert W *69Smith LoweU E 86

Aranov Ethan 85Captain. Diane S '85Hkka Alfred H 62 Hkks Edwin W 30Novick Ed-.nl M UNovick PhilipRudm.MemUS 86Schorr Neil M 87Simpkin. Nancy G MWalsh. Theresa L 86Zakartn. Marshall E 66B'mterststtrSchattenberg David AB*M(/teMBaran. Steven 54 Dfodato. Anthony J 30 Fehon. Richard E 67Hagm Mart R 75Naeser Michael G '65NUton. Alastair 44Nixon Peter G 75Wilson Warren H 44

Bar.te Kenneth L 66BWtte Plain.Aterrex Neuter Jr '63Cohen . Anted D 60Lew.Coiloe«t*86Silverman Marvin T 51Specht Barbara Frimon'66WkiteAattYule. Patricia L 84BAureboevHteblin Thomas D GrJamrosx Gregory F 84Martham . Burton H 41Randall . RUandF 44BAttneg AntaJonm. William A 39B’ltaanucmBatey. Charts* P Jr *84Bttek. Mary South '64 Dyer Roxanne Galtanda *76 Palmer. W Lorenxo 32PhlUifM Eme.t E 46Reiss . Debora J 87 Vanderburgh Emmet B 62 Verbridge Gerald H Gr WUbor. Kathy A 86WiUukmhvkEnterunann. Kenneth J 86Lattimore Melu** A 55MitcheU. Samuel U *63WiltedMulbury Marcel F 39

MM^DavtdJ 59

WolcottCahoon . Thomas M 86Cahoon. William CW after Kathy H *81WoodburyAfexanderson Judith Friedman '66Ganeles, Ronald 66Taylor. Rhonda L '87BoodmereAuerbach. Joy A 86WoodndprKaplan Robert L *66

Moriarty. Kerrin A '87»y«inda»KASchulman David J *76

Chamteriain. David R M Moms Emeu H Jr 73 Schwytser WltaamH 63YontereBarr David Samuel 77 Donnelly. Maureen J 83 Hyman. GaryS '64 Mann Audrey R '87 Orta Suzanne M 87 Perron. William J *73Rtey . Kathleen 78 Twyne. AlkeE 86ForLsAirvDatey. Peart Sly 36Smith , S MSmith. SteveM 35ForttouwMrtpMr Colucci. John P 87Robinaon , Stepharue 86Youi&ow*Boardman JameaH Jr *78

North Carette*AjmxShertx Robert D Gr

French. Williams 36CarrboroGerber. Ann M 86GarySoo Hoo Theodore P 77(tadar MountainHeimer. Earie W 38Otaprt/httDy. Ruth Chen OrJack , Karen E 86Schillingw. Teresa J 84Schoenfeld. Emest 63OtarfoCMKinney. Patrick C 86Kittle. Robert W 54CoHconfDidier. Alberts 37DurhamGemperb Cramer. PtaGempcrti 84Mater Lm A 86Mkx» Joseph L 87Walsh. Catherine M 87DurhamRumeU MartW 86AfeteoaPhillips Harriet Flannery Or

Hkka Loretta A GrGastoniaHoerning Edward F 63GrwmaboeoHendrickson, Herbert T 62 McLai^ilm.JohnC Gr Wetaatock. Lewis *77MnonmvteWdto ChartesH 87PleaAurarAdams Morten 33 Rowland. Michael C Md 88

Cameron Charles W Gr

fcw.kr NuMfiC 86 Durfee Arthur E 40 Gallagher JsckG B4 Ktrklazsd Elisabeth *86 Kramer David A HI Kramer Marta Galh> M Ritchey. James F MWright PsulM M5»lrr < irwIMcan I'airvuE 87

Gilbert. Mita hdJR 76Th.ro.Naah Hw 44U'lfrwlRfftmH«t> L#«Mj 71WtaaCm AhtemSullivan. Edward F Jr Gr

North DakotaFaqyi* Robert M 71Grand AiKelly JanrrM Gr

86

HO

60

<»hlofksuhMpGnwn Taytor williams 50BucyrusSprang Valerie Semcl *76Ca4i>MMcDougall Wallace W ‘SOCtarumaitCobey. JahnG. *66 tnltan Kathleen L a 86 Finke Linda R Gr Gryson.KarmA *36 Jaaun. Heather A 87 Levy Jody Ehnch 83 Spence . Uaaann M Storey. Arm L *86(iMiandHogomolny MarkL 84 Brandt. Mark H 86 Browne. Mary M 87 Browne Michael J 66 Cvetic, John E MGreen Lalana Janiekha *77 Utkoviu Robert J 87Izmc Heidi 85Marais LrxaM 87 McGowan. Michael J 88 Ruth . Cullen A 86(MumbusHartman. LauraL 87 Johnson '-x>cgrR 3fi Phillip* Lawrence E *87 Scagrr ManiaL '84 Walek Roman M 37ZtagbmMcDcmurf Isabelle Richanfe 41 Torvlk CarIF 83/k"*rWalter. ScvUF '83

Dake . Me mils L 24Young PMilR *10

79

Packer Albert II 53/famiUos*CopeUnd William J 4Bltetes..>Maddy OtennK 40

JbtJtefftsrk Morton Mama Stedman 81•drtute Hone ChnatophrrP QrflapmUe Rahman Mitchell I. rixupyJ*. Frasier Vicki L *86 Dallas Thomas James C Jr />»u ntnyVni-nItadd Margaret Katkofd 70 Ihylrib'UnMonk James A 86 (JrrariHlUHayner MarkH 72 Speciale John‘60 f>uiA<wrHemhury Ranald W «7 Ea*r BradyWiMendrr BnsraW 71 FusCttroudsburpLubeck JotrphG 78 EamraSeipt Donald A TO

AngMadt Dhhiuu G *76 Hah-. Charlr.R 51 Manning. Robert L 58 ErtonGlitter. Sandra L 81 Gettyaburp Bishop. CraM A 78 Paddock Daniel A *33 Whitman Thurlow E Jr 43Glmutde CoUins.LynfoedL 64 Huhtarwn. Chartea N 40G'nwtn<»7Graham Ed ward <• 00

Grunden. Larry P Gr /fomwdoteO'Neill. Kelly M 87

Bvtoa.KalhtafiH 86 HunliutpU* Vallry Berg. Hratnce Hay uk 26 JratnHie az Edward G 81JenkinluunMalrki. Dordaneh F 86 Ron. Alta Matthias Gr WcderMMn. Aaron J ‘87 ^AasSmewDority Linda A M

0wtaTc!br»l T 67

ZxiamrtrrEbel. Wilbam K Jr *64 Hood Robert M *33 Lon P Alan 64 Paten Charles H 37 langtewvw Durph. Carolyn;

StrankmKalikc Monk-all 83Xpnnv/louarVan Reed Charles F. 44State ColtaprBrewer. Thomaa A 53FOwfer.H Seymour 41Friedman Richard 8 87 Grave* Robert E 65 Paato. Jerotnr K ‘38•WrouditaurpVan Camp, Kenneth E 81SuarthmarrNorth MaryC 42Savef ValleyMasse Robert F. 78

Adelman Douglas J 87 TtaMlAaanaARre JameaH 40H'umugloaStrawn Terry L 82WnfChmterFrancis. Robert F. 67 Howley LauraJcr Vantmr 70 Lathrop. Glenn R *87 Shor.AaronL 44Silva, ChnaUne A 85WAiteAallMaae. Richard S 84Fork llrytey Anne Sack 67 lounguvodKilllira. Nancy J Gr

Rhode 1.1.ndCheyne ArtW'igsten. Paul B Jr *60East Orwikv AFinn. Mark G *81/fornmUrHurd . Amy A 82Oster Kurt A 83

Pullano Frank B 86Vantoek Bruce A 86Vanrrk Sally Zaulner Jr 66Vanwrk. V James Jr 66AMtimou/AChaves. Robert J ‘63PTOildrwrCrooks. Kevin J 86DeLeon. Benjamin 34 FcnvuFeUxlOStamp. Ann Speicher 84 Stamp WdlunM *84Wdte/wldDy kura Janet IVklgatr 76

Soeth Carollaa

*81

Young Mar>*»r WiUto 24ControlQugliclmone. Karon V 86Haah.J Aiea GrrhuiteUoR(^«gW w litem r: mWad. HarcW 4V

Crook. Lynne I 85Meknchr Jonathan E 62

OrwiwteteGreen BhailaM 87JAiam HradhlaudEmanuetoon. Dwight II 66Ouen Martin B 70hrmonBlahop. John H 46AiAiuMtandMiller Edwin M 36/Uutefc4/»XandDollnar ElaabetliM 65AtemawJolly David C 41Tow-wUeTurk Donald F. *63

Soeth Dakota/hcxAinpiEmbry Lawrence B Or

Drake. Sylvia Walters Gr.S>»rA>AKam Franklin F M

OklahomaTtoteaNichote . Fred Eugene M

O Meara Richard C 80

Ucy. Kam. Clark *78Rubin Gerard J 44Rubin. LnahPatiky 46 Schmidt. Kart F 34Walu Barbara E 81 Zucronl .PaulJ 62

EfAsanRoberta Charles R *38Goh«mBurnett Laura J M

Rowehl Edward R 64HcnutanGmnhalgh Manon L 76 Maloney Robert M M Manley Mindy L 85 Scruton Wilson. JohnC Or Van Damn Janet I. 86HumGaluaha Newton C Jr MlLa/WtrKiMoyte. Storm E *77Lukbw*Clawson Laura Musteo 86 Grave* JamraW ‘63MrABraHn«>..ki William C 62Betfrted Edward B 72

llamaon. France* Young 48PldiaoDunn MKhde Oliver 84 Taylor. Hubert 0 71

Herbert DunaMoty.ks 56 McCaleb Stanley H GrSum Antanu,Hamman RhhardK W Reynold* AbceK 80 Ruffing. Nocat ipuUa 73WarnMauldin Mildred Pted*’I 2»WfUbomMerte*. Phebe Ladd 81

Utah

Capener Harold R GrMid.otaH«*op ltenryD 74Sait Lata (StyByrne. Jazuce Bair *73 RougclM Carol Schuette Ml Yanowiu Betty Berman 63

Merntl Jhor*L 74

ftaMtaaooguGuBey GinaA 86CUhmaUrJones. Lynn A 66/AcAvmHoimea. Frank F 38 (ialhnburoBartley . Clayton E *64 JorkaoaFurter. Janet Schnader 80 GaaoN^ie. Oayton E *47 Anomite ftanyon.PlUMiaJ 86Mctr/AuHash . John A Jr 80

AHmgtmtKranwy . Karen Jub 77AustinBrlady Petra H 87Muller MarkT »BanderaMcHard JeanOUoJr 63

BeteM Burton 0 '78Fata. Patrtaa Mabee 64CrrflrtF Statu* Mryvr Mart M 86Tobin Tammy C *86Victor , Donald M OrItaltatBbaa David 0 66Bnuing .SaraL TT Dorga.CarolL *76Gillard PauJE 85Goergsa Frankie Culpepper 30 Hamitam Alfred C Jr 61Keane Roger J 38

VlrglalaAbtnpdteiPeek. Gordan L 62A/toaVan Daman. Cart E *81Almudna Abd.MarunE 56 Dallas. GlennT 68 Ferguron Donald S *68 Fink Gail E ‘85 Kaidrzi Mindy A 86 Newell Wilbam F *67 O'Connor. John J 40 Oaterhoudt . Frank H 50 WUhama Derek 87Anmss^aMAbd. Lawrence J 64 Grrnbergrt. Frank M 61 Artmgton ,Chiavetta. Michael L *77 Conroy . John H 42 Goldberg. Ltea E 85 Gruber Paul J SOHanton Lorvtie Pkctano 76 Hcnrvhan, John F 71 Laman na Cart 36Miller Andrews 84 Murphy. PatnnaA Gr Nurwx.JrausL 84 Nyberg Albert J Gr Saunders Beth Snrlbaker 81 Schncidrr Jody 8 86 Scofield William H 36 Sferra. Kathleen V a 83 Silver Margaret H 76 Stem CartaaD GrWhite Chnaune Gr Young. Alberta Francti 34 BerryitlteHuffman. JosephC Gr BtarkaburpBovard.K P 50 Frame Ann Will* GrMiller KrvmW 86 Norton Gaarga* T1Riatey ChadR 86OumaUrBartell Harold T *66-hoc k<te»i liteCorey . Frederick P 48 F jton Roland G Je gr Kitaea Jan»T 66

fWraopeokrMuuk. Laura Urevah S3 Schrtmhrrg Gerald D *68Ahiz/a<Bathrkk David D Gr Dwr Itartl 61 Lamlnaae Thoma. J *67 Pteu David ‘84FoUMhurrA llranchr EartC 32Konan Mildred M..rwn Gr Palmer ItaaldF '52 Stafford Thomas H GrWiner Harold '32

AemmMer. Jerryanne Taber 67FUhrmaJfeV true Andre MAumr Itadgro William L 62FhnferKkaburvTMuv Stanley J 54ZdrwAltenRamsry Roberts GrOrrol FoilsDavit. UoydH 42/tamjiTon Alter. SuranE M/xnagtonSmith Naomi Leith 53/xwtowHrwea Happy R 86 Hucktrn (WartteA GrMrtutem Sa&4Faulkner. Donald M Jr 66Ml OiAeumlte Goudnuugh Margery Townsend 41Mr ZaunManrtafci. Jaarph A 66

McManus KathJecnP 86UuUoUuanGrkovta* W Duke 66MmtrrnsGay AlbmnJ 78

Richmond IwbelteL *66GhAtonRusaeU Donald A St /taRMington (tapCam. Paul S *53avtswu/ulALapintky Anthony 8 *83

Cueoe.GaryE 67 Cordaro. John B Gr DnaraU. JammP *87 Prabudy .NorvaJS m Gr Shufrt. Jana‘84

archiySheUte.StonwynG 66

Z.MumivZteFleteher Kenneth W 72VtewwoH«Mg. W GiOucd 31 Veddrc LmwsngS 21Z-tcufT ftehwdt 73Itagite BrarAAllen.JameaW Jr 00 Crral. DunaldS Jr 50 Hein ken . Ronald W 84 WiUuvfuburySegUn Letter L 53 HiacActfrrBdwn Manon G 70 Huehn WilltemG 63 Putnam Lloyd A *44WooibndgrDana. Steven J 86

WashlagloaBellowRothschild Harvey J B 63BrUiiykomH<«an. William 65BnMtrCrane FranotG 38FVtatagMteborWaMron Robert E 68 XtmtmcAAllen Crawford John C Gr ArmMarkham. Edwin W *42laCowrHedhn. Elisabeth Koudal Or

Brodmck Peter M 82

Jolly. WilhamC 64OmakHanks. Richard L 66/HaterMother. Terrance P 78 Ophardt David R 73/•ullmonHiller. Larry K GrAralBcEHU. Cartton C 76 Focwhmtedt Rtehmiel 26 Gilbert. Bandy D 88 Hitart. Andrew G Gr Jones OainA bf> Unial. Maxine L 65 Prexyna.AnnE *73Warne Eleanor L.•RotateJost , Alexander OrBoodtaralteMonroe R £ *63YakimaHamam Victor J 46 Btaaom.JohnM Jr *16

WaatVIrgtata(ksldaitebPotan Robert J 76

/fwahnobMTannenbaum Mirttert G 76Miifi/inU’unLnnghoim Alfred 0 37MaewrU Robert H Gr

Greene Rolwrti W GrWhitt Sulphur Sprint*

JodithL 74

UlKonils/teta/teld Uguori Stephen J 'TT&fenHodorff Linda K«*ne 77FurtAlkiitatmNicholt ChnstopherJ *81JsnrasllrErikM- Daigles g 61/LataUHb DmnagtJ'iteD'** Wakeman Alden H ’36itadiu*Am«*l. Stephen L Gr Ballute William J 71EHiworth ItevtdS n6 Jackson Lsurm Simon 84 PanneUi laaaKorfhagr kA PaUmon. WiUuun H 80Pnce.Jeostel 53 Sprunger . Susanne A 86 Troua Elisabeth S 87 Ztobro UraA 63

Sheryl A *87

Own Slum lull Or Dirwrte CarIH '66Mnulan lawrenw* M

K. briri Catrxrmr Rr» *M

WyrmlaaOdpTnMarl JamnO GrLararmaKarehar CmradJ 'Or

Anuralu

Bain Mr Rubart Addron Or lUrlirr

Mn Anna Mam HunlHoa Sp

Braail

Soma Mr MaRubrn 'M

SanjuanFuerte* Uxww> 42 Valdes Jorn A *82 Vivaldi JoteL Gr

Villa Sn amHuykr Roberto Gr

Singapore

Ho Mr Edward Rih Hwa Gr

Sp.1.

IMZolorU Mr Mari Sp

Swlorrlaad

NMrr, Ml ObabMNaM 7»

ThalUad

Adamr Mr MkhariT 81Lratf Mr Tor. Sa>l.a*r r

Tan<lron«MMr Mi NrwUHlrP 87 Varrabhaja. Mr TSavrar '86

•'..tllUlM

AUe>nr .l>r I'al.-n PMnr» Or HarrKharaa. Or Harm Sal Or THonuor, Mr Gregory Dinar 86

Rapabbr =r thin.Wro Mr Mm* Cha Or

CalaaMaArab Mr Horooo loaqum 'Or Bailout. Mr AnUnor Chama Or Ona* Mr Philip Min MUrlh lron.ro.. i'.< l^iyui Claus* M« Lauro ’Or

Coosa Steatteiindo l^gn Dr Joee J Hr Kott. Mr* M n-rei/a Da Sites Or Rojas Mr Carta* Manuel fl 02

EeaadocLmOreUano,

Mr Juan Bernardo 'Or

Gaatrmala

Amlradr Mr Hector Fra/uteco Gr

Haiti

Ptefra Luu* Mr Raoul 76

Iceland

Zube.Mrs Unda Sullman *74

lot a nraia

Fathudm Mr L'tep'GrRauKhk.4b Mr Jay Warren 71

Keaya

Mauba Mr Raymond David 86 Wrnwr Mm LtndaHamilton 68 Zulberti Mr Cartas Alberto Gr Zulberti. Mrs Eater Costanao Gr

Sosth Korea

Chiang. Mr YunHwan Gr Han Dr InKyu GrOh. Mr Kyiohft Gr

Lebanon

BmtmM Ur Baamm Itmatl Gt

Mnlar.U

Salro Mr Rob® A »S

IMIa

Bualrral.Mr AmKr*r«A 8T lb. Mr MnUnMolran Or Kruhnamoratrb' Mr llpprnr Gr

Philippine

Cartoa.Mr SalMorl. M Sar.ua Mr OrtendoO Gr

Belrnnh Mm loubr Maria 76 Harrows. Mr VinamP Or

Pahlalaa

lUMinini Mr Amiri Akbu MU. Mr MokamadS 78

Iron Mr KaulD Or

Napal

Thro.ro, Mr fjtrolM Gr

l.rulYonah Ma RulhannH 81

Pera

Bandr Mr Haire 'Or Couu. IK WaHrr 'Gr Scurrah. Mr. ManaM Or

endian*Bro.r. Mr Noel K 78 evam Mr Ibrhard Baad'66 Ooidmaa Mr IMumll' 87 hear.Ur ban.Manin Or

Mnrrocn

tnr.no Mr Jeffie. R Gr

Jamair.

Kawb. Mr AnhurC 70

4a*aa

Endo Mr Shuytro SpNanu. Mr KikJu GrShlbahau. Mr NctmUau 87 Tops Mr Um, Or

Ho.lko.a

Ciieun* M. Calhanne Waun* 78Ton*. M. CandA '87Tun*. Mr MarkY 87

Nlfpria

Atenora. Mr Michael E<h<m GrOnunk.o Mr Chnnoprxr ■B.Wi*..

Or(hakwe Mr Joaeph Nnanaeka M

Pro.®.

Chaaam sunlej Ernanud SpSrdu remandn Hr Menakn SO

P.UM

PlenlaMrMr Stephro Aleunder Or

■uno.

rruopnabuM.ru l Allredo V S7

ArnmAUl Vtrpi.MoM, radda OanhanS Gr Tratmm KteiT M

ftnW<roavH>MiC«gn>.e John A 86

AeAadnuComro.AmM '87

Canada

Barreu.Mr Michael R 71 B^ln.Mr JowphB *7 Broman. Mr ArnunL Or Bradkr Mr DarrjIH 86 Campbell. Mr William Rmd 82 Comeau Hr Andre Or Cumming. Mr Ooxge While SI Ihgremmu M. lima Bemmlru. M Dllkm.Mr Mkh*IJohn Or IJodtl. Mr Donald Gilbert S3 txmefcr Mr Eugrne 66 Emald.Mr Jo. Oregon 84 STynn. Mr John D Or Gmvc.Mr Donald Girot Or Honman. Mr edmund 37 HoOmga.Kth Mn ArrolhaWy *7 Imartu Mr Maruur '62 InrUK Mr Robert Oouma> Gr Jenkin. Dr WdlumAngu.Gr Krng. Mr JohnnyChmg Win Gr Liem Mr Til'OrUu.M. Sandra A '86 Loverutg. Mr Jamre Herten Or Mam. Mr Thoma, ilroart 84 Mather. Mi Hannah Mary 88 M.iur. Mr Louts 48Merra-r Mr Enrol Or Mrrrum Mn Aiken Bauon W Milk. MmHonoral Sp Mok Mr Gary Oertxrt'68 Mora . Mr DandNami Or Perron Mr Camille Arthur 67 Ithoadn.Hr Tommie Rtriurt Sp Kro Dr Ja*eC 70Ro> SorurtietKleik J r Sdueffirr Mr Lawrenre R Or Smith.Mr GeraldBnan7l Smith.Mr TrerorKenl Or Sternberg. Mn Conroe Taller Or Stem,Ml JohnBnae Gr Sweeting M> Martha Palncu S3 Trorwrret Mr JanroSkeorh Or Wood Dr Peter William Or

Alumni Leaders Make the Difference

Moro than 200 alumni of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences serve on district dt'eXuowwg Umn' LeadcrshlpTcams W h»'e many responsibilities, including

•Local ALS alumni activities•Dean alumni get togethers•Student recruitment and contacts•Membership in the College Alumni Association•College representation in their area

Leadership teams for an Area or District are represented by two or three alumni per county for New York, and 5-6 alumni geographically placed in areas of states Each team is headed by either an area captain, if in a state, or by a district director if in New York State

We appreciate their leadership and their involvement on behalf of the college, its students, faculty and alumni

Egypt, New York, was the sotting tor a meeting of the District # 16 leadership team, which represents ALS alumni In Wayne, Ontario, and Monroe counties. The team was making plans fora dean-alumni get-together In May Seated clockwise, beginning In front: Doug Conti '60. district director, Valerie Cole '60, Newark; Frank Wiley ‘44. Victor; Peter Gerdner 57, Henriet­te; James Welsbeck '59. Holcomb; Kathy Cattleu '75, Rochester; Ted Mullen '55. Phelps, Sue Gerdner, Peter's daughter. Corneil Class of '89. and Kathey Helanbrook '83, Ontario, N.Y.

ALS Alumni Association Leadership Teams

District #1 Hama HomtUu-n District 18District Director Fred Frank 79

Jody Angiulo '83 Adrienne Buchwald '79Mary O'Neill Johnson '76 Thomas SKohm'54 Maune Seme! 49Ellen M Talmage '82

Glen HeadAmagansett Farmingdale SetaukctHuntington Riverhead Riverhead

District Director

District # 2District Director Thomas Dyevleh '81

Kenneth Unger '81 Phil DILemia '81

Whitestone Whitestone Brooklyn District » 9

District H 3 District Director

District Director Marya Dalrymple 70Penelope Clark '87 Karen A Travis'87Michael Gerling '76 Joanne H Dalton 76William Rath'70 Steven D Garter'76

New York New YorkNew YorkNew York New York Siaten IslandNew York

District * 10District Director

District » 4District Director Carl Specht 60

John Daly'63J J Parker'41William Eberle 47Barbara Specht '59 George Briggs 44 Bill Perron'73Tom Waldeck '60Johanna Costa Asher '85

North SalemArmonk Yonkers Palisades White Plains North Salem Yonkers Chappaqua Pelham

District # 11District Director

District # 5District Director Robert Kaplan 69

Philip H Davis 60Wayne Kelder'63

Earle A Wilde '50AlanS White‘82 Tyler A Elzel. Jr '78 Milton E Men 39Robert 0 Davenport '50

District #12

District # 6District Director R. Peter Hubbell 80

Warren Wigslcn '50 EmUKruar'SP Paul Poplock 64 Mary Cary 75 Jim Mackerer 70 DaveTctor'65Phil Gellert‘68

District # 7District Director Joseph Chockrow 58

Robert Wright '83 Valeric LuzadU'83 Peter Wagner '80 David W Tarbox '81 Richard Jones '69 Dave Mosher '80 Ertenc Sumner '65Manuel Choy'82

Woodridge Kerhonkson

Newburgh Kingston

Bed HookPleasant ValleyHudsonCatskillPine PlainsHudsonClinton CornersHillsdale

Schenectady Albany Ballston Lake Troy Troy Loudonville Castleton Albany Delmar

District Director

District » 13District Director

District # 14District Director

Tompkins County

Cortland County

District #15District Director

ALS alumni attM In atudant racrvltmant. DMrtct »19 •lumnl leaders recently bald a " Cornell/ALS Studant-Parent Night ' at the Avon Inn to help recruit etudents from New York a Geneaea. Livingston, Orleans, and Wyoming coun- i‘e» In top photo, Thomaa C. Burke 83 (left) of Avon dla- cuaaee plane with John P. Freeman 84 of Caledonia. In bottom photo, prospective students and parents listen to a presentation about the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences

District # 16District Director

Andrew Fiaclone 65 FondaNick Kling '72 FondaGary W Conklin '71 AmsterdamJohn Adams '49 FondaPaul Van Denburgh '84 JohnstownGarrUt Sammons '84 JohnstownKathy L Black '87 Mr A Mrs James Barter

Cobleskill

'79/79 MiddleburgDavid Leverett '79 Carlisle

Thomaa Hoy'70 Glens FallsPeter Hanks '70 SalemAlbert Lounsbury '55 Saratoga SpringsDr John A Matochlk 54 Fort Ed wardJoAnn Peck 84 Galway

Catherine Britts '81 PeruElaine Newcomb '64 PeruRobert Galllnger '56 Peru

Stephen Teete 72 LisbonShirley Norton '52 CantonWilliam Rodce‘57 CantonErton Sipber '43 GouvemeurDonald Whiteman '39 AdamsArthur Greene'50 BellevilleDouglas Brodie 66 LowvilleDavid Porter 58 Adams CenterBruce Jones '86 Lowville

VacantEdSlusarczyk *49 Remsenftol—n W Ranaer t,U Paul A Cindy Gallagher

W «•< Winfleld

82/83 SangerfleldDave Currey '65 EnevilieBill Carr'67 MorrisvilleDuane Sidney '73 Herkimer

Albert Beard. Jr. '52 MUfordRichard E Keene'57 GilbertsvilleJohnW Ball '76 MendaleRobert L Marshman '68 OxfordRichard E Turrell '39 OneontaAllan 0 Smith'60 East MeredithSteven J Locke ‘76 BainbridgeEariS Felnman '67 CooperstownJohnA Koaka 50 DelhiVictoria L Gregory '85 New Berlin

RocheUe Woods 74 Ithaca

Captain. Bussell Martin'39 Ithaca

Kay Barnes'41 IthacaRobert Ploss 59 TrumansburgMary Grainger'79 IthacaRichard Church‘64 FreevilleLinda Schempp‘86 IthacaKay Shipman 54 IthacaRobert Baker '43 GrotonGerald Rrhkugler 57 DrydenEugenia Barnaba '75 IthacaArlene Sadd 32 FreevilleRonald Beck 61 FreevillePatrick Wiles 84 IthacaJean Houghton 62 Ithaca

Captain. Judith Rlehlman'80 Homer

Thomas R Maloney 74 CortlandEileen Nelson '78 CortlandDorthea Dehart Fitzsimmons

'76 CortlandArthur Underwood ‘41 CortlandJane Potter 60 Truxton

William McKee 71 SyracuseDebra Ward'76 BaldwinsvilleJoan Gallo '74 AuburnLynn Kuney ‘74 Seneca FallsMr & Mrs Scott Potter'86 LiverpoolMr A Mrs John Fessenden

'85/84 King Fern1Stanley Reeves 48 DewittRaymond Ferrand ‘41 InterlakenQuentin Silsby '68 JordanMark Mead 68 LockeMichael Forward 81 CamillusKenton Patthen'71 Locke

Douglas Conti o Honeoye FalkDouglas Hedges'73 HiltonFrank Wiley 44 VictorDavid Lyon '60 MarionKalhalcen Caltteu 76 George A Kate Abraham

Rochester

'39/43 NaplesValerie Cote '60 NewarkPeter Gardner'57 W Henrietta

Theodore Mullen '55Kathleen Helenbmok 83 James Weisbeck '59

Phelps Ontario Holcomb

District t 17District Director

District » 18District Director

Steuben County

District #19District Director

District # 20District Director

District #21District Director

CaliforniaStale Coordinator

Soothe rn/I.A

Northern

FloridaStale Coordinator

Area Captain

Area Captain

New MexicoState Coordins Cor

IllinoisState CoordlnaK

Finley Steele 36 WUsonChadderdon 52 Elaine Dalrymple ‘73 Ri< hard Bornholdt '47 Neal Galusha '51Joseph Donahoe '59 Warren Giles 50

ElmiraElmira Montour Falls Watkins Glen Horseheads Penn YanPenn Yan

Charles Hebblethwalle '49 Belmont Cey lon Snider 38Connor Stephens 50 Walter Wietgrefe'54 Fred Morns '37 Maynard Boyce 38

Captain Ted Markham 44 Valentine Pratt '32 Daniel Stutzman '67 Gary Haight '66 Jeff Dewey '76 Durland Weale 44 Larry Gardner '40 Gerald Read '52 Jack Bossard ‘68 Robert Nichols '74

Paul Tilly '58 Floyd R Haff, Jr 69 Daivdl. Lefeber 81 Craig Yunker‘72 John Clark ‘80Thomas Burke 83 Wilson Hakes 30 Charles Malone'76 Robert 1. Pask‘52 Hans Kunze'82 John P Freeman '84 Roger E Lamont. parent Jerome F Marley '71 Bruce C Penman'72 Raymond Rappold 69

J. Peter Dygert 61 Sandra Joy Sworts '84James J Butner 80 Richard E Minekime 67James C Ackley '60Nathan R Herendeen 64 R Daniel Stuart '63

Jay Hardenburg 79 Larry Brown '57 William Cam pbell'51 Dennis Rak 80Rosamonde Van Deusen '57 Michael Walker '75LasaH Kempisly 84Richard Felton'57

Judith Cox ‘61Glen Dake '87Karl Raker 62

Richard Mathewson '55Jeb Kocrber'87Gary Maiura 85

Bruce Norton'77

Saudi Leigh 84Sieve A Colleen Parker

'84'84Carol Ingold '76 Bette II Zrppin '68Jean Gowen '85

Don Robinson. Sr 41 Robert Wingert '42 Clarence W DuBoU '35Millard Coggshall'37 Joseph Hartwig ‘54James Veeder 42 Gerald Brant 57

Hanley Martin 4 William C Wilson '49 EvereueA Sargent 3# Paul N Horton '42

Denise PMerldilh 73Bob A Gerry Stephens 48Hal A Dons Young '47

Marian Blppy 79Betsy Meyer'60Patricia Richmond '75

Fillmore Alfred Station Alfred Station CubaSdo

BathPainted Post HornellBath HornellAddison Bath PratUburg Canisteo Lindley

Lima Bliss Avon

Caledonia Albion GainsvlUe Batavia North Java

Springville Middleport

Springville Gasport Springville

Portland Jamestown Little Valley FredoniaCallaraugus FalconerCallaraugus Westfield

Fullerton

Redwood City

Plantation

West Palin Beach Plantations Lauderhill Fl Lauderdale

Leesburg Brooksville Glenwood Clermont

Frost proof

Lehigh Acres Lake AlfredNaplesNorth Fort Myers

Santa Fe Albuquerque Santa Fe

MonticelloChampaign Decatur

Alumni Notes

Ernest Mercier, MS '44, PhD '46. Quebec, Canada, has been working part time in agricultural develop menial the provincial, federal, and international levels since his retire­ment in 1979 In his spare time, he wrote four publications on genealo gy and the history of Quebec

EarleH. "Duke" Regnier MS’41 Urbana, 111 .was honored by the Ur bana Exchange Club in September 1987 for his long career of working with mid western youth.

10 Paul R. Young 16, writes | from his retirement community in Elyria, Ohio, where, he says, "the activities keep him interested, ac tive, and in good health " He en joyed his 70th reunion in 1986, and is looking forward to number 75 in 1991.

20V Willard E. Georgia 25, Charleston, SC, has been a buyer of fruits and vegetables for seven years, after retiring as the N Y SDirectorof tlie Farm and Home Administration, where he worked for 35 years

Albert Hostek.29 Setauket.N Ywas honored by the Three Village Historical Society for his work in promoting and building local hor ticultural projects and preserves The honor follows his work in plan ning an arboretum and securing a * 10,000grant to help protect red ce­dars on the site

'in**** Alfred W. Boicourt .38.Amherst, Mass , a professor emen tus at U-Mass, is looking forward to his 50th reunion this summer, when he can visit two grandchildren at CornellEverett C. Randall 39. Carson City, Nev . lias retired after 40years to aoils and resource development with the Department of Agriculture and the Interior.Julian D. Silverman '38. St James. N Y . celebrated his 10th wedding anniversary on September

, 4.1987 He hopes to attend his 50th class reunion this summer

Robert H. Body 43. Au burn. N.Y , left farming in 1972 to become director, secretary, and manager of the Cayuga County Farmer'slnsuranceCo In 1986, his company joined four others and formed the Midstate Mutual lnsur ance Co., of which he is assistant treasurer and directorWarren I.. Comb 19. a Trumans burg, N Y real estate broker, serves his community as a legislator in Schuyler County.

Tilbert Flint '40, is theSuperinten dent of schools in the Salem. N.Y school district, where he had been a Vo-Ag teacher for 28 years

John Stuart Grim 48, Rhinebeck. N Y , owns and operates an aquariil ture facility, where he raises fish in ponds, as well as in climate controlled recirculating systemsArthurH. Kanter 49, MS '50, PhD '52, Baton Rouge, U , visited Cor nell with his wife last summer for the first time in 10 years, and enjoyed seeing his old Ag Ec professors The Kantners also keep in touch with Cornell Ag Ec. grads in Louisiana

James L. Kraker 42. Gouvemeur N Y , a retired Ford LincohVMercu- ry dealer, says he ’ s " up to his ears'' in excitement as chairman of the De velopment Authority of the North Country

Carrolle Markle. r»hD '40, Ash field, Mass , was honored for her *"k. “ chairperson of Shelburne Falls Bridge of Flowers Committee when the town declared Saturday October 10.1987. "CarrolleMarkle Day Markle spent 41 years teach ing botany and zoology at colleges across the U.S.

David Auble '60. Ithaca, two time national wrestling champ at Cornell, gold medal winner in the 1959 Pan American Games, and fourth place wrestler in the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo, was named assistant coach for Ithaca College's wrestling programFrancfaC. Berdine 69, Pine Bush, NY .has spent 15 years as technol ogy representative for the ProTurf division of 0. M Scott and Sons, working with golf courses in the mid Hudson, Northeast Pennsylvania, and Northern New Jersey areas

Carl A. Crispell '62, Ithaca, is a Regional Cooperative Extension Agent for Tompkins, Tioga. Che­mung, and Schuyler Counties, specializing in farm business man­agement

Donald Danila 69, East Lyme, Conn , is a senior scientist at North east Utilities Environmental Labora tory. where he works on fishery related projects After work ing as a marine biologist, he received an M S from Rutgers

Tik L. Idem, PhD '65, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, is an associate professor of education at St. Francis Xavier University and the author and illus­trator of /nifilations to Science In­quiry, a science text

James Munger 67, Mexico, N Y . is in his 21st year of teaching life science at the Mexico Middle School and puts his Cornell Glee Club ex­perience to work singing in local choirs

Ernest Schoenfeld '63 is the as sociate dean of the School of Public Health at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Robert D. Sears 62. of Cazenovia. N Y . is vice president of feed serv ices for Agway, where he has worked since graduation.Susan Maldon Stregack '66. Sil ver Springs. Md .is the president of

i Gotta Dance' Inc . a company deal I ing In dance wear, theatrical sup

plies, and leisure wearFred E. Winch, III '64 was named

i foreign service officer in the U S I Diplomatic Servk-e last March. after

a long career in African agriculture He is currently in Uganda with the Agency for Inti Development, writes his father. Fred E. Winch. Jr. '37 of Bradford. NH, who has re tired from forestry consulting. Winch. Jr , has taken a leading role as a director of the Cornell Club of New Hampshire, which raises money for equipment for the John M Kingsbury research vessel at the Isle of Shoals

50 Walter A. Bruska '50. Kalamazoo. Mich , is vice president for administration of the John E Fet zer Foundation, which supports research, education, and service in the field of holistic health, wellness, and progressive medicine

RobertH. Body'42, Auburn,N Y . has served as commissioner of the Cayuga County Civil Service Com mission since 1951, perhaps the longest term of a N.Y county com­missioner

RichardC. Call '52. Batavia, N Y . was elected vice chairman of Agway in October. 1987, a post he held from 1982tol986 In addition to his duties on tile vegetable processing and forage farm he owns with his brother Robert 50, Call also serves on the board of directors of H P Hood, Inc , an Agway subsidiary

LewisS. Daugherty '52, Tucson, Ariz . a retired fighter pilot, serves as a research specialist at the Univer slty of Arizona and teaches farm management. Daugherty has eleven grandchildren

Arthur J. Donunen '55, Bethesda, Md , is an agricultural economist for the U.S. Dept of Agriculture and serves as economics editor for the World Agriculture quarterly Robert Duval'59. Wheeling, W V , assumed the position of vice presi dent. secretary, and general counsel ol the Wheeling Pittsburgh Steel Corp.

Richard L. Haner -53. M Ed '64 Clifton Park. NY . is the N Y State supervisor of occupational education and a 25 year member of the Nation al Ski Patrol

David A. Morehouse 59. Aurora, N Y . owns Morehouse Bait Fanns' an aquaculture operation, and serves as director of the N Y.SAqua culture Association, the Northeast Regional Aquaculture Center of the USA. and the Finger Lakes Fishery Advisory Board He also is vice presi dent of the Power Resources De velopment Corp

Bill Piefiln '56, Avon, Conn . represents Allstate Insurance on the Governing Committee of the As signed Risk Insurance Plans in New England He, his wife, Kathleen (ILR '59), and their daughter, Knstin. en joyed the dean/alumni gathering m Springfield last May. where he met a fraternity brother he hadn't seen in over 30 years

Leonard Prager 59, MS '61, Port Jervis, N Y . has been the director of guidance in the Port Jervis school district for the past 10 years and a real estate agent for the past eight A son is a junior in Cornell's College of Human Ecology

Paul E. Steiger 54, of Ithaca be came vice president for personnel at Agway last September. He began his career at Agway asafield engineer in

John W. Mellor 50, MS '51, PhD _54, director of the International rood Policy Research Institute, was noted in the October 18. 1987 New York Times as one of 11 to receive the Presidential End Hunger A ward at the White House

60 Stephen B. Ashley '62. MBA 64. president of Sibley Corp a mortgage banking firm, was named to the Genesee Brewing Co boarrlof directors last year

Jon C. Keagle 78. Ithaca, is in dis tribution management with Dean co,an electronic distributor

Kevin R. Malchoff '74, Eden.N Y , is the national sales manager for Rich Products Corporation, a food manufacturer in Buffalo.

William P. Mason 78. Glens Falls N.Y , is theownerofTakundewide Management Group, which main tains, leases and manages properties on Lake George

Felipe Pietrini 72 lives with his wife and two children in Cuajimalpa. Mexico, where he is an associate professor at the Universidad Ibero americanaBarbara Z. Restand 79 recently- purchased a 60 acre farm in Gra hamsville, N.Y . where she lives with her husband and two children She is doing consulting work as a landscape designer.

Aaron Robinson 76, Barryville. N Y .operates a manufacturing faal ity that sells products regionally and worldwide

Donald P. Schwartz 77 is working on water quality with the Indiana Natural Resources Department in Indianapolis

Sylvia A. Walters '78 owns her own public relations firm in Pierre. SD

Bradley L. Ward 75 was recently appointed assistant vice president at First National Bank of Cortland (N Y).

William Webster 79. Waterford. N.Y . is currently the district sales manager for Dekalb Pfizer Genetics, covering New England and Eastern New York.

Dale H. Young. MPS 77, Hannibal. N Y , is a Cornell Cooperative Exten sion agent for Oswego County-

70 Judy Hall Alaback '75, Juneau Alaska, is a scientific writer and environmental archivist She is about to publish a flora/field guide to plants of Southern Alaska

Noel Bower '79, Plant City, Fla recently returned from the U K where he helped set up the inter national Division for Triad Systems Corporation He is currently their sales manager for the Southeastern United States.

Dick Company 79 has taught voca honal agricuiture Alexandna NY, for the past eight years He received his M A T last May and stays active with adult education. r*A, Cornell Cooperative Exten sion, and 4 HNoel Cooperberg 79. New York uity, is a manager in the manage iticnt information consulting divi- &XAnh"r •M

Mary Robinson Darling 79. hves in EastChatham, NY, with herhus band Thomas Darling(ILR 77) and daughter Allison and ls a purchasing officer for New York Stale in Albany

Ned Dorman 77 and his wife Ellen I T (Hm Eco*°® ’77) live in

whereheis vice presi dWoffood service for Dorman Roth Foods.

80 w 1111am Barba' 82, Bronx.NY, graduated from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and is currently in his secondyear of / Christopher K. Van Name general surgery at Albert Einstein 1 ............. ...........College of MedicineNancy Brown '87. Cleveland, is playing for the Satzenbrau basket ball team. which is a Guiness Brew ery team in Europe She averages 25 points a gameScon T. Carhart 84 is a naval aviator stationed at U.S. Marine Corps Air Station at Tustin, Calif where he is flying a Sea Knight helicopter

Allison A. Co wen 85 has been ap pointed regional organization direc­tor by the New York Farm Bureau She coordmates Farm Bureau acti v i Ues in Chemung, Schuyler, Steuben Tioga, and Tompkins Counties Molly Cummings 81, Ithaca is managing editor and co anchor of Cable NewsCenter 7.

David G. Cunningham PhD '84, Middleboro. Mass , was recently promoted to senior analytical chem ist with Ocean Spray Cranberries

Lucia Grace Da Corta '82, Yonkers, NY. was awarded a fel lowship for dissertation research from the Educational Foundation of the American Association of Univer slty Women She is spending the first part of her fellowship year in Southeast India and will return to England to complete her doctorate at Oxford University

Julie Fox '83. Ithaca, works for Cable NewsCenter 7whereshewas promoted recently to director of local programmingLisa H. Gregory '85, Lansing, NY. manages an equine facility for Cornell, where she deals with toxi­cology testing of horses

Michael R. Grogan '81, New York. N.Y , is manager of marketing com munications for the agricultural products division of Pfizer Interna tional. IncLoretta A. Hicks '84, Gamer, N C , works at IBM Corporation in Research Triangle Park. where she is an "information developer

Mary Mowell Martens '82. Penn Yan, N Y . is a research support specialist in the grape breeding pro gram at the N Y State Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva. She and her husband, Klaas, are part of a large dairy and crop farm

Michael May 81. Ithaca, recently joined the law firm of Adams and Theisen as an associate attorney

Betty Patch '82, Goshen, N.Y , is teaching science at Manisin Valley High School in Orange County.

Noreen Pazderski '84 graduated from Cornell' s College of Veterinary Medicine in May 1987 and is a small animal practitioner in North Tona-

I wanda, N Y.

I Keith II. Pierce '80 lives in Ogdens\ berg, N Y , where he w tn partner

ship with his wltc ano parents on a 220 cow dairy farm He and his wife have two children

I an account executive at Walter F Cameron Advertising in Jericho,

Matthew Wiant '84. Dover. Del works as a research engineer for General FoodsJan A. Wysocki-Hammond '85 Warua^. NY. was married to

S Haramoi'd ’84 in October 1987 She works for a mortgage banking firm on Long Islamd, and ^^supervisor for Postal

Connie A. Young Kuhlman '82 S’.h ri “ I “ idairy farm Spector with Crowley Foods of Binghamton. NY She married Mark Kuhlman a dairy farmer, in 1986

*trst™ M Fowles ‘88 fe «

*5.000 from Trout Unlimit­ed for Cornells Adiron­dack Fisheries Research Endowment Fund Is presented to the protect director. Professor William Youngs, Department of Natural Resources at Cor­nell (center). Making the presentation la Frank Vadala, Syracuse, commlt- tee member for the Cornell Fishery Fund end Trout Unlimited Regional Vice President (left), and Jeff Root, N.Y.S. council chair­man for Trout Unlimited. Eleven state chapters con­tributed toward the gift to Cornell

Flies One Day, Dogs the Next

Ellis Losw as you would see him and, on the computer monitor, as a honey bee might see him. The bee actually sees In color, though In colors humans can’t see, and the squares on the monitor are enlarged for effect.

On Monday, Ellis Loew, associate

professor in the Section of Physiology. may work with a litter of puppies. On Tuesday it might be honey bees, or biting flies, or even fish. What makes these animals interesting to Loew is that they all use vision to perform tasks necessary for their species to thrive. Yet each’sees" the world quite differently. As a

visual ecologist/physiologist, he wants to . tiiwl out why this is so.I The process ot answering Oils tun I damental question takes Loew in circles

"You spend a lot of time looking at animals from a particular environment, assessing their visual capabilities, then going back out into the environment to see what it is in that place that makes it adaptive for an animal to have a particu lar visual system,' ’ he said

' ‘ We know from observation that hon ey bees are very good at recognizing dif ferent kinds of flowers, that’s their job, what they really want to do. ” The role of the bee’s color vision system accomplish ing this task is one focus of Loew's current work.

To find the right flower, bees must have what Loew calls a "search image' ’ of that particular flower—a set of characteristics about the image that makes it recogniza­ble Color is one characteristic, but bees don’t see color like humans do

Loew explains the difference like this:' Imagine that you are a bee artist and you

had a palette and wanted to mix colors. You’d have pigments in your color vision system that would correspond to ultravio­let, a region we just see in black and white It would be analogous to taking a blue pigment and a green pigment and mixing them to get cyan. If bees were painters they could mix an ultraviolet and a blue pigment together and get the same kind of range Yet wehumans have no ap­preciation of this, we can't name these ’colors,’ can’t see them, don’t know what they are But flowers have colors in this range, which can be appreciated by a bee yet do not exist as far as our color space is concerned.”

To investigate the role that this ultra violet color range plays in a bee's search image. Loew, who has a background in physics and engineering, designed a camera that enables a human viewer to look at the environment within the same context of color that a bee does. He takes this camera into the field and. with a

bee’s eye view. ’' tries to figure out why it is advantageous to the bee to perceive the world in the way it does.

Film from these field experiments was

Metta Winter

made into a television program ’ ’Through Animal Eyes," produced by the natural history unit of the British Broadcasting Corporation. When the program was shown here on "Nature" one and a half years ago, Loew received a surprising number of fan letters.

Among the most ardent were those from sjiorts fisherman who wanted him to train his camera on their favorite lure. ’ Tell me how a bass sees it," they asked This requ<*5i led to some serious th In king about fish

' ’It turns out that some recent work has shown that certain fresh water fish have an ultraviolet sensitivity the same way bees do. They have a separate receptor ceil system, separate visual pigments and so theoretically they are capable of distin - guishing things on the basis of their ultraviolet ’color' In that case, we have no appreciation of what there is to see in the water in the ultraviolet range '' With a grant from the United States Navy, Loew is designing an underwater version of his camera to take a look

Another fan letter, this one from a Michigan resort owner, got Loew inter ested in the visual system of biting flies In contrast to his other work, there is a matter of economic importance involved here.

' One of the big problems in the north in tourist season is biting flies, '' wrote the camp owner. "I’m sure that you know that alsynite [corrugated fiber glass roof­ing] is very attractive to stable flies, and here's a piece of it. Why don’t you look at it with your camera and find out why it's so attractive to them. ’ ’

As it happened, Loew had not been aware of the research done at U.S. De partment of Agriculture pest manage men t centers on the use of alsynite to lure stable flies away from cattle. Apparently these blood sucking animals will fre­quently pass up a good meal, be it human or animal, in preference for this sub stance Beginning again with the visual system of the biting fly, how they "see" the alsynite, and going from there, Loew hopes to discover the reason behind this seemingly counterproductive behavior. The ultimate goal is to build a more reli­able fly trap.

As for the dogs, Loew does diagnostic vision assessments for researchers and clients in the College of Veterinary Medi cine. In the process, he's conducting research on the effects of vitaminE defi ciency in dogs This may shed light on age related eye conditions in humans too But that’s another story. ■

Sea Grant

In New York, the second most populous

coastal state, more than 600,000 chil­dren between the ages of six and fifteen

go fishing More than eighty percent of all five to nineteen-year olds swim, and thirty percent boat, mostly in the ocean or along the shores of the Great Lakes

Many of these avid coastal recrea tionists do not know where their drinking water comes from, why a certain species of fish thrives while another dies, or the implications of a disaster like a large oil spill into a major river system That’s where Sea Grant comes in.

This twenty year old, federally funded program takes children’s enjoyment of water sports as an opportunity to teach the wise use of this essential resource

"Water is probably the one thing we can’t do without,” said David Greene, regional Cooperative Extension specialist in charge of Sea Grant youth programs “We want kids to understand its impor tance so they will be able to make in­formed decisions, to be better stewards, both now and in the future. Otherwise, we’re condemned to repeating past mistakes ."

Instead of trying to work directly with the nearly four million school children hv ing in the coastal areas of New York State, Sea Grant uses the “teach the teachers" approach It provides programs and help to youth education organizations such as 4-H, BoyScouts, Girl Scouts, other youth clubs, and teachers’ groups in science, outdoor education, and marine edu­cation.

Fossils, pollution, water quality, ship­ping on the Great Lakes, sport fishing, lake levels, and the biological life of specific fish species are just a few of the topics Sea Grant offers in its workshops for public school teachers It also publish cs Coastal Educators News for more than 200 school districts

In its help to youth organizations. Sea Grant has made good use of the popular icy of sport fishing. Greene has developed aquatic education programs using indus try funds and equipment, such as the American FishingTackle Manufacturers' donation of 1,000 fishing poles.

"We engage kids in the sport, then while they're fishing, we hit them over the head with the science behind it—why the fish are there, and why they may no longer be there if not properly managed More than 100 volunteers from the

Master Anglers Program provide the in- stnirtion

Cornell Cooperative Extension agents also are instrumental in carrying on the work of Sea Grant Since the lieginning of level funding in 1980. agents with exper tise in aquatic education have acted as consultants to youth groups or have presented programs themselves Suffolk County offers a full fledged marine edu- cation extension program using two former Sea Grant specialists on its staff One of them, Robert J Kent, offers a course on coastal birds through a4H pub lie school program, he has already reached more than 2,000 children

Helping with research in aquaculture is another way Sea Grant is educating young people on coastal issues A group of junior high school students heljied Sea Grant principal investigator Joseph Butt ner. of the State University of New York at Brockport, in a project to raise bull heads in cages It was the first freshwater aquacult ure project for youth in the state

A similar projec t on Long Island took students to the Marine Science Center at Stony Brook where they helped devise a method to raise blue mussels and hard clams that would protect them from [>ol lution and predators in the water. The Board of Cooperative Educational Serv ices and the Cornell Cooperative Exten sion Extension Association of Suffolk County picked up the program, expand ing participation to adults and to the clam industry.

What started as a project with ten kids could be the catalyst for rejuvenating a failing industry "Often we can ’t change the behavior of adults," said Green, "but seeing kids do something differently gives adultsthechancetorealizeit’sO.K Then they're more likely to give it a try them selves."

Sea Grant relies on teenagers’ open ness to new ideas as a means of teaching responsible resource management "It’s much more practical to start with the young. Eventually. you can change the attitudes and behaviors of a whole socie­ty that way.”

Sea Grant is administered by the Na tional Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration It comes to New York through a consortium of the State Univer sity of New York and the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. ■

Faculty NewsDavid K. Bandler professor of food science, is the recipient of the Interna tional Association of Milk. Food and En vironmental Sanitarians' 1987 Educator Award. The award, which includes a $1,000 cash prize, is "in recognition of outstanding service to the public, the In temational Association, and the profes sion of the Sanitarian. " It recognizes Bandler’s excellence "in all three areas of responsibility—teaching, research, and extension " A member of the faculty since 1965, he is an authority on milk quality control.

Dale E. Bauman has received the 1987 American Cyanamid Award for his work on use of bovine growth hormone to in­crease milk production. The citation called Bauman s work, which demon strated a milk yield increase of 40 percent during one 188 day period, a major breakthrough "A treatment effect on milk production of normally fed cows of this magnitude is unprecedented in research history, ’' it said Bauman is the Lilierty Hyde Bailey Professor of Animal Science and a nutritional biochemist.

E. Walter Coward Jr., professor of rural sociology, has been appointed direc­tor of Cornell’s International Agriculture Program A faculty member since 1973, Coward has conducted research and writ ten extensively on rural development in Southeast Asia The program prepares students to work in agriculture education, research, and rural community projects

' in other countries. It cooperates with overseas institutions and is currently working in the Philippines, China, Guatemala. Brazil and Africa. Coward, whose appointment was effective De

cember 3, succeeded Edwin B. Oyer, professor of vegetable crops, who com pleted a five-year term and retired to half time status.

David M. Gal ton an animal scientist, has won the 1986 Purina Mills Teaching Award for "his outstanding leaching of undergraduate students in dairy science." An associate professor of dairy management, Gallon was recognized for a dairy management program, which he began in 1984, that is "unique and in­novative in its interdisciplinary approach to teaching and its balance of basic and applied aspects of die subject.

John E. Kinsella lias won the 1987 Babcock-Hart Award from the Institute of Food Technologists for his research con tribulions to the improvement of public health. Kinsella is the Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor of Food Chemistry, the Gener al Foods Distinguished Professor of Food Science, and director of Cornell’s Insti­tute of Food Science His most recent ci tation said the results of his research have been "widely used in the (food] industry for new food product formulations, calorie reduction, and labelling pur poses "A specialist in lipid biochemistry, Kinsella in recent years has focused his research on fatty acids, including the omega-3 fatty acids found in fish oils He and his research group are now working on a method to extract the health promoting omega-3 fatty acids from fish oils.

Robert W. Langhans, professor of floriculture, is the 1987 recipient of the Society of American Florists' Alex Laurie Award for Education and Research. I jui

ghans has been a member of the faculty since 1956 and is recognized intemation ally for contributions to his field. These include cloning chrysanthemums and carnations and doubling the yield of greenhouse roses in winter with high intensity discharge lamps.

James P. Lassoie. associate professor of forest science, has been appointed chair of the Department of Natural Resources. A member of the faculty since 1976, he is a specialist in forest tree physiology and nonindustrial forest management Cur­rent research includes collaboration with scientists at the Boyce Thompson Insti­tute for Plant Research on a major study assessing the impact of acid rain on forest trees l^assoie succeeds Ray T Oglesby, professor of natural resources, who returned to teaching and research

Daphne A. Roe, professor of nutrit ion al science, is the recipient of the 1987 American Medical Association s Joseph B Goldberger Award in Clinical Nutri- tion The award is presented to a physi cian for contributions to clinical nutrition A member of the Cornell faculty since 1947, Roe has written extensively on aspects of nutrition of interest to a wide variety of health care providers, from family practitioners to geriatricians She is currently developing a nutritional sur veillance system for the frail elderly in New York State

Ari van Tienhoven, professor emeritus of animal physiology, has been elected a Fellow of the Poultry Science Associa tion. He was honored for his “ profession al distinction and contributions in the field of poultry science.” An authority on

animal physiology, van Tienhoven’s research has focused on endocrinology and neuro endocrinology of reproduc tion, control of thermoregulation, and the effect of intermittent photopenods on egg production. Recently, he gained nation al attention for his work on improving chickens’ living conditions in poultry houses.

Seven faculty members of the Depart ment of Agricultural Economics were ho nored in August at the annual meeting of the Amencan Agricultural Economics As­sociation Daniel G. Slsler, the Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor of Agricultural Economics, was elected a fellow for his contributions to the profession Six others shared an award for directing the national dairy herd buyout extension program committee- George L. Casler, Eddy L. LaDue, Wayne A. Knoblauch, An­drew M. Novakovic, Harry Kaiser, and Stuart F. Smith.

Faculty Deaths

During a ywr In the Andes Mountains of Peru. Deborah Rablnowtlz compart notes on potatotes with a Tungasuran farmer.

W«rd Miller during a tractor driving claw In 1981

I Melvin B. (Peter)Hoffman, professor emeritus of pomology, died Feb 21 at his home in Ithaca at the age of 84 Hoffman graduated from Clemson College in 1923, earned an M.S. degree from Michigan State University in 1926, and a Ph D. degree from Cornell in 1934. He was an extension instructor here before becom ing a professor and associate head of the Department of Pomology in 1944 and head of the department in 1960 His research on photosynthesis in apple leaves lead to the development of im­proved fungicides, and his work on soils suitable for fruit production resulted in the orchard location service becoming an extension activity. His work on these and other areas of pomology lead to numerous honors, including election as a Fellow of the American Society of Horticultural Science.

Ward F. Miller who managed more i than 700acres of Ithaca campus farmland from 1957 until his retirement in 1986, died October 18 at his home. He was 68' In addition to overseeing the growing of com and hay for feeding livestock on cam - pus. he directed the teaching of a farm techniques course taken by hundreds of students during his tenure In a 1978 in terview .Miller commented on how much he enjoyed teaching these students, many of whom were bound for teaching and research jobs in underdeveloped countries. From 1946 until 1948. Miller was an agricultural extension agent for Erie and Cattaraugus counties He worked his family ’s farm in Conewango Valley, near Jamestown, from 1948 until coming to Cornell

Gerald W. Olson, associate professor of agronomy. died last fall Before his death he was elected a fellow of the Soil Conser vation Society of America The honor

(recognized his contributions in soil science and international land-use plan ning Olson was an authority on soil sur veys and interpretations He joined the faculty in 1962 and wrote widely in his field, including two books.

Carl S. Pederson, a microbiologist at the N.Y. State Agricultural Experiment Sta tion in Geneva from 1925 until his retire ment in 1967, died September 2 at the age of 90 He was known for his pioneering work on fermented foods, including find mgs that standardized the production of sauerkraut and pickles and are consid ered classic in the field He also made ex tensive contributions to improving the production of fruit juices Pederson was bom in South Milwaukee. Wise and earned bachelor’s and master s degrees from the University of Wisconsin He received a doctorate from Cornell m 1929

Deborah Rabinow itz professor of ecol ogy and systematics, died August 18 at the Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester. A faculty member since 1982, Rabinowitz was an authority on the mechanisms that allow rare species of grasses to maintain their populations Her research was fundamental to under standing the ecology of rare and endan gered plants. On a recent rip to Peru, she explored the genetic interaction between wild plants and domesticated plants as an important element in crop evolution. In February, she was posth umously elected a fellow of the Amencan Association for the Advancement of Science at its annual meeting.

Three Courses for Hands-On LearningOperating Small Businesses"It's not surprising that four of five new businesses fail within the first five years when the owners are untrained, unpre- jiared. and the only know how conies from the school of hard knocks, ’' says Sam Seltzer '48, president of the Allison Corpo ration and driving force behind Cornell ’s Personal Enterprise and Small Business Program Established in 1986. the pro­gram gives students a taste of what it's really like to operate a small business.

There are two opportunities for juniors and seniors to work closely with small bus mcssowner/operatorsonaday today ba sis: a summer internship and a course in which students act as counselors But first they must take an overview course titled Personal Enterprise and Small Business Management. David Koliland EncOester- le, visiting professors in agricultural eco­nomics, teach the course and supervise the field experience.

’The idea is for students to take the bus iness plan they develop in the course and apply it to a real operation,'' Oesterle said "In so doing they can identify- problems the business is having and then. with the operator's cooperation, develop strategies or techniques to solve them This process enables students to identify their own strengths and weaknesses, areas where they need more preparation to cope with the challenges of the real world. Then, as first or second semester seniors there's time to do additional course work if they need it.”

Sue Henry '88, from Plano, Texas, an agricultural economics major with a con­centration in business management and marketing, spent last summer working for Sam Seltzer’s automobile accessories Imanutactunnttfirm Durinaherlwo and-

— .Uky ahc wrote Job deacrip-

tions for more than eighty non-factory positions; tested computer soft ware in the import purchasing department; put together an employee orientation pro­gram, and wrote procedures for the traffic department.

’’It was an opportunity to see that I could use my knowledge from school to contrib­ute to a real life corporation,” Henry said. ' ’1 even went to corporate board meetings.

and my ideas were used for a new product line That was very exciting."

Dale Casler '88 from Ithaca, an applied economics and business management major, took the plunge through the Coun seling Small Businesses course In the fall of 1987 he and a teammate acted as advi sors to EMS Systems, a small electronics firm Like Henry. Casler learned the value of diplomacy in the midst of the hectic pace small business operators live with "Things were changing all the time." Cas lersaid. "Every week we’d go down there and the owner would have different plans for us. The real world exposure was much more helpful than just reading about bus iness management in a textbook ''

Confidence building, developing inter personal and business skills, and overcom ing the difficulties in setting and achieving goals were just a few of the gains these stu dents site in an experience they would recommend to anybody thinking about go­ing into business for himself or herself. En thusiastic response from students across the university has doubled the enrollment each year in the interdisciplinary pro­gram, which is housed in the Department of Agricultural Economics

Communication PlanningThere’s a lot of good-humored carping when students talk about how hard they worked in Communication Planning and Strategy, a public communication course where they must design, execute, and evaluate a communication plan for a local non-profit organization "This should have been a ten credit course. " said Mar garet McHugh '88.

Nevertheless, McHugh and her class mate, Denise Filler ’88, from Staten Is­land. NY, are going to continue their work wktH Metter Housing for Tompkins County for a second semester as an in dependent study.' 'We made a real impact in the community by increasing the pub lie's awareness of housing for low- and moderate-income families available through Better Housing,” said McHugh. "In the independent study we hope to organize the office better and create a strategy and back-up system for referrals when people call the agency ’'

Students in the course assume the posi tions of a typical public relations agency account supervisor, account executive, and directors of research, communication, creative and editorial services As a mini PR firm, they analyze the public commu nications needs of the organization—be it image awareness, fund raising, member ship enrollment. or whatever—then make press kits and releases, public service an nouncements and news spots, brochures, posters, slide shows, whatever is needed to achieve their goal

Better Housing for Tompkins County had averaged an inquiry call a month un til a press release McHugh wrote resulted in a front page story in the Ithaca Journal That next week there were fifteen calls ’ ’ll was tlie best feeling when we found out that we 'd had a real affect,” McHugh said "1 felt like I had become part of the we' of Better Housing."

"They did a lot of work but the value of the experience continues after they gradu ate," said Carroll J. Glynn, assistant professor of communication and instructor of die planning and strategy course "Stu dents come back after a couple of years in the working world and tell me how much they got out of it. After all, it’s what life is going to be like when they're out on the job."

Agribusiness trip

Instead of addressing the problems a bus iness or organization has. a third hands on experience for the colleges' undergrade ates takes quite a different tack—it offers a close-up look at highly successful busi­nesses, with an eye to why this is so. Over

the fall break, Wayne A. Knoblauch, as sociate professor of agricultural econom ics, conducted a study trip for ten students who completed his, or an equivalent, course in farm business management. Using the first allocation from the Stanley W Warren Teaching Endowment Funds, the group spent five days touring (welve outstanding farms and agribusinesses in the Columbia River basin in the State of Washington Among them was the Cow Palace. an eighty acre dairy farm that sup ports 3,500 head.

"The farms and agribusiness were selected because their owners or o| icrators used sound management tactics. Al) kept records that gave them an excellent com­mand of their financial |x>sition Conse­quently. they could make the right decisions to meet their own goals and ob­jectives. Through first hand discussions with them, students learned what busi­ness management strategies worked best for that [(articular type of operation

In addition to seeing these strategies at work, taking New York State students to another part of the country enabled them to see a very different agricultural produc tion system than is found in the Northeast. ' The Columbia River Basin is a relatively young and highly diversified agricultural region Production techniques, size of the farms, and types of crops are different Students saw agricultural enterprises they’d never seen before.

Only half the students who applied were selected to go "1 think it was a tremen dous trip for learning because it’s so differ ent out there,” said Matt Budine '88. an animal science major with a minor in agricultural economics from Walton. NY

The diversity also appealed to Sheryl Church ’89, an animal science major from Freeville, NY. "We saw so much varia tion, fruit orchards, dairy farms, grain. All the irrigation techniques were a big part of it too because I wasn't familiar with those at all. Many of the farms were vast, yet many of the management techniques could be applied to operations in other parts of tlie country The experience really expanded our horizons.' ’ ■

Metta Winter

New York State Youth Volunteers

£ t *j|#hen teenagers participate inW truly meaningful volunteer

activities, substantial benefits go both ways—to young people and to their communities," said Stephen Hamilton, director of the New York State Youth Volunteers Project Hamilton is associate professor of human development and family studies in the College of Human Ecology.

All too often, as children reach early adolescence, they drop out of 4-H and

other youth organizations that provide opportunities for taking responsible roles in which others are dependent on them Young people then lose the chance to develop their own talents and the com­munity loses the needed services these teens can provide

To address this situation the W K Kel - logg Foundation of Battle Creek. Mich, awarded die university an $88,000grant to develop materials for training youths to be effective volunteers in three settings:

youth organizations such as 4-H, after school care programs for elementary age children, and community improvement projects. The purpose of the materials is to give step-by-step instructions for an approach that organizations and agencies can take to incorporate any type of community volunteerism in their youth programming.

One way these twin objectives are met is through "give-and take" sessions, whch are structured get-togethers in which young people talk with their peers about how the volunteer experience is go­ing. ’ ’While it’s rarely done in youth pro­grams," said assistant project director Stephen Goggin, an extension associate in human development and family studies, "this reflecting together makes the difference between having an ex­perience and having an educational ex perience It gives young people an opportunity to look at how they fit into the job and how they might do better by correcting problems they have.' ’

The experience is enhanced by the leadership of a volunteer adviser who is someone other than the "on the job" su­pervisor. The entire training, volunteer, and give-and-take session series is designed to last 10 to 15 weeks.

One manual is written for settings in which teenagers are care givers of youn­ger children, and the other is applicable to a range of community improvement projectssuch ascleaning-up parks, build­ing playgrounds, helping to preserve

town archives, buying food for needy senior citizens, preserving a town monu­ment, and establishing youth services such as drop in centers Each is accompa­nied by an 11 * by 17* table chart sum marizing the training and follow-up activities

The project also produced a nine and one -half minute video tape titled ’ Canng for Kids: Three Approaches ’'

“It's harmful to young people when they see themselves only as beneficiaries of community services, as is the case in many youth programs." said Hamilton ' ’We believe instead that teens are valu able resources to their communities There is important work for them to do, and they have an obligation to do it. ” The New York State Youth Volunteers Project manuals were created to show the way.

The supportinggrant was part of near ly $1 million awarded to land grant universities in twelve states through the National 4 -H Council, as part of the W K Kellogg Foundation's $2.5 million, Volunteers for the Future program

The ’ 'Youth Volunteer Materials can be purchased from Media Services Distri­bution Center, 7 Research Park, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, 14850 Each manual is sixty pages and each table chart is twenty to twenty five pages The cost is $20 per manual and chart, $ 15 for the video. Video rental, through the Department of Human Development and Family Studies, is $6. ■