Musketeer 1964 - CORE

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Xavier University Exhibit Xavier Yearbook Xavier Journals, Publications, Conferences, and Proceedings 1964 Musketeer 1964 Xavier University - Cincinnati Follow this and additional works at: hp://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/xavier_yearbook Part of the Higher Education Commons is Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Xavier Journals, Publications, Conferences, and Proceedings at Exhibit. It has been accepted for inclusion in Xavier Yearbook by an authorized administrator of Exhibit. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation Xavier University - Cincinnati, "Musketeer 1964" (1964). Xavier Yearbook. Book 31. hp://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/xavier_yearbook/31

Transcript of Musketeer 1964 - CORE

Xavier UniversityExhibit

Xavier Yearbook Xavier Journals, Publications, Conferences, andProceedings

1964

Musketeer 1964Xavier University - Cincinnati

Follow this and additional works at: http://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/xavier_yearbook

Part of the Higher Education Commons

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Xavier Journals, Publications, Conferences, and Proceedings at Exhibit. It has been acceptedfor inclusion in Xavier Yearbook by an authorized administrator of Exhibit. For more information, please contact [email protected].

Recommended CitationXavier University - Cincinnati, "Musketeer 1964" (1964). Xavier Yearbook. Book 31.http://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/xavier_yearbook/31

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Xavier University • Musketeer • 1964 • Cincinnati, Ohio • Editor Bob O'Brien

REV. PAUL J. SWEENEY, SJ.

Dedication

. . . to a rare man

and a true teacher

Now, rather than later when words emptily echo, it is for us now to say what we feel, not what we ought to say. We who learn, who teach, who all in our proper spheres gladly shoulder the burden of Truth here at Xavier, must now pay tribute to one who has struggled more gladly than any of us that men should come to understand the truth, and in understanding, participate. However often that struggle has gone against him, so often, we know, has he refused to be crushed by the weight of teaching—teaching, a very stone that will, rolling, bounce to the level and rest, im­mobile! . . . unless the teacher who would see his charges become men strains against the hard fact, discourager of so many, that few ever are men at any time in their lives. But he who would stand at the base of the mountain and idly click pebbles or, perhaps, shuffle file-cards cross-indexed to scholarly nothings, deserves himself the nothingness he is, but with which he cheats his students, some hopelessly eager for a stray spark. He is rare who instead shoves shoul­der to the rough stone and strains at the burden of a Soc­rates or a Seneca, strains it higher, though in its inert weight the stone begrudge him each inch, until at last this rare man, this true teacher, stands at the peak and is glad. And, ceasing for the time to be unwittingly of stone, we may look at these high sights, only because he has pushed, because only he knew how to show them to us. And, after we have seen, we can look back down into the valley, at the small man clicking a pebble, calling "mountain" what is actually a grain of sand from someone else's beach, and we can wonder, "Is it a would-be Demosthenes, or is it a frog?"

Let cranes someday fly over the mountaintop we stand with him. They dip into the valley, as myth would have it, and spear the silly pebble-clicker, who croaks out furious that his king does not save him, his appropriate king, a log rotted now and with no life in its leaves. But our teacher sees in the cranes not fear, but their beauty, and reads from their swept leaves the letters of old truths, resurrected each year in an inauspicious classroom, resurrected with a shrug of the shoulders more eloquent against false values than any demolition, however well reasoned, more eloquent of age's wisdom than any well-published foolscap. For wisdom is not profligate with words. Its few, that stu­dent will best understand, who can grasp the look of joy, dim in an eye. Leave to others endless trudgings in ratio­cination's musty press. Leave them their dregs. But this true teacher has chosen the better part ; leading those of

us who know him whither he will, even the failing of his sight more clearly shines a beacon we may trust, than any brittle crystal, however brilliant. His sight yet shines the glow of a brighter fire, struck with no damp lees, but pure with the purity of a wine which pours sparkling white in the full sun. From the skin smoothed with use, wine; and the constant sun . . .

Would that reason were often thus joined with inspiration, an inspiration that flows from his pen a poetry the more genuine for being so often left to ripen in an applauseless dresser-drawer, and, once brought to light, so often slighted by its very author! And were his humility alone all he could claim, still how much more noble than most were he! But God has blessed him over and above his humility, growing in the hearts of those who know him a devotion that does not, drying, crack apart with separation, but rather be­comes more firm with time and distance.

Yet how can a eulogy impart to those to whom he is a name and nothing more an idea of the force for good he has been? We have been moved by him, and cannot tell others how. And it is a sad truth that the reputation of the good cannot fly so far, or so fast, as that of the bad: the pleasing fool, or arrogant, is more apt to be on everyone's lips than a shy man who quietly does his good works. It is not the good man who is ubiquitous, but the fool, who, participat­ing in a broader company, is not so held back by solitary cautions and cares—rather.

Like DePorres, everywhere at once; Men miles apart may be the selfsame dunce.

The fool is thus faceless, and may be speared indiscrimi­nately; the wise man, a God-like human being, alone and unique, is not to be summed up in a pat formula of praise.

You who do not know him, try to understand. Have faith that there is a greater reality in the man, above what words try to say. Remember, if all we can do is furnish another symbol for the uncommunicable uniqueness of a good man, remember the Theban seer, who received wisdotn for the loss of earthly sight . . . and also, remember the boy who through necessity held his hand, leading his steps as the seer himself led others' souls. The boy, who has done as much as lies within his powers, receives of the seer priceless words. Let the boy now repay the priceless in poor coin. To Father Sweeney, then, priest, teacher, and man, do we dedicate this Musketeer, and may it please him.

A. M. G.

A Tribute to the Man . . .

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A copyright entry. A title-deed, and a bill for a tun of first-rate Spanish wine. A cryptic will bestowing upon a sometimes-seen wife the second-best bed of the household. From these and other scraps of lawyers' jargon we try to piece together who the man was who lies behind the screening mist of three and a half cen­turies. But Shakespeare refuses to be summoned out of the past; he remains a name, a myth, thirty-seven plays.

Who was the man we seek to praise now? We cannot know. Nor can the myth, patched together from town gossip badly remembered and worse reported, re-form Shakespeare's soul for us. We must spread open the plays, hoping that an artistry so consummate that the personality of the author is often wholly transcended and abnegated will allow us sporadic glimpses into the soul of genius.

Let us look. It is a Jew, not exorcised by fiat, but fully malig­nant with the accretions of a millenium's bitterness; but he is no Gothic villain, no Jew of Malta who goes about of nights and sometimes poisons wells. Even in Shylock there is that at which we may laugh. Nor do we laugh at a stock stage Jew, but at a man, real though not actual. And this is the art, the genius, to create "this or that man (who) is comic, but only on the con­dition of being ignorant that he is so." (Charles Baudelaire, De ressence du Rire).

And at the Fool of Lear, we cannot merely laugh. We must also cry. For Shakespeare has not created for us a catalogue of char­acters, but rather a world, that is not aware of itself as we be­hold it; it is not a true world on this ground alone, but in the short space we have, we must recognize this supreme insight that can stand outside of the world in re-creating it, a supreme insight that can also stand outside itself, looking into its own soul, Shakespeare's, and see a marvel greater than Cerberus of Orpheus: human being.

So it is not fatuous to look for Shakespeare in Shylock. Shake­speare was not Shylock, but within Shakespeare's soul there was that greatness that could comprehend a Shylock without actually being one, and hence could create a Shylock more real for being a creation of the poet.

And we may look for Shakespeare in the other supreme charac­ters he created. True, from this we will not be able to recon­struct his taste in doublets, or his income for 1594. We will only know that he could both be a character, and at the same time stand outside and observe something more than most men are given as their part. This is the poet's part, however; this is Shakespeare's. It is all we really need to know about him.

Sketch of Shakespeare's Globe Theatre.

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A Tribute to the Men Who Remember . . .

This new stage at the Stratford Festival The­atre still retains the basic principle of close audience-actor relationship.

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Stratford Shakespearean Festival Theatre, Ontario, Canada

Scene from a modern dress version of Timon of Athens, 1963.

John Vernon, on right, as Austria, battles Christopher Plummer, as Philip the Bastard, in King John, 1960.

Stratford, Ontario

After many trials, tribulations, and financial worries, the Stratford, Ontario, Shakespeare Festival opened the doors of its original tent theater for the first time on July 13, 1953. From the outset, Stratford was big news; the first company had Alec Guinness in the title role of Richard III. Stratford added, year by year, more and more to its festival schedule. The second year, 1954, saw the first art exhibitions; 1955 had the first non-Shakespearean play, Oedipus Rex by Sophocles, as well as the first musical produc­tions. Each successive year saw more and varied events. 1956 had two Shakespeare plays, a musical production, jazz concerts with Dave Brubeck and Duke Ellington, and the art exhibitions. Stratford is the foremost exponent of Shakespeare the world over.

Assassination scene from Julius Caesar, 1955

Scene from Taming of the Shrew, 1962; John Colicos and Toby Robins

Douglas Campbell as Othello strangles Frances Hyland as Desdemona, 1959.

Romeo and Juliet, 1960. Tony Van Bridge and Ju­lie Harris

Edgecliff Founded in September of 1961 by David Barrie on the campus of Our Lady of Cincinnati College, the Edgecliff Academy of Fine Arts presents the Cincinnati Shakespeare Festival each summer. The first three-play festival in 1961 was an immediate success, with each suc­ceeding year drawing ever larger audiences. Mr. Barrie, the artistic producing-director of the festival, has created a definite cultural as­set for Cincinnati. Cincinnatians have shown their interest and appreciation through their attendance. This year the festival has expanded its program to include, as a celebration of Shakespeare's 400th anniversary, the Four Great Tragedies Hamlet, Macbeth, Othello, and King Lear, as well as the yearly summer Shakespeare Festival.

Jay Erlicher as Prospero in the Academy production of The Tempest, 1962.

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Scene from Taming of the Shrew, 1963.

David Sabin as FalstafT, Henry IV, 1963.

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Scene from Taming of the Shrew, 1963.

Xavier Masque Society

In 1957, the Xavier University Masque Society, under the direction of Mr. Otto Kvapil, became the first Cincinnati area drama group to do Shake­spearean productions on a regular basis. Since then the Masque Society has done more Shakespeare than any theatre group in Cincinnati. Foremost of the classics presented have been The Taming of the Shrew, Richard III, Julius Caesar, Twelfth Night, Richard II, Henry IV, Part I, and Measure for Measure.

Each summer the Theatre Classics Workshop offers a practical application of acting, directing, set de­

sign, make-up, and costuming, selecting the drama and the technique of farce, comedy, romance and tragedy in the framework of the Elizabethan and Shakespearean theatre. Graduates of the workshop have gone on to college theatres, summer stock companies, professional and amateur companies all over the country.

In the Masque Society's "Four Year Plan," a stu­dent is able to attend at least four great productions of William Shakespeare, gaining a greater appre­ciation of the humanities and receiving a valuable introduction to the theatre.

10

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Theme 4

Administration . . 14 Seniors 68

Events 44

Faculty 24

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Sports 164

Organizations. 114 Undergrads. . . 192

Military 154

Advertisements .210

13

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VERY REVEREND PAUL L. O'CONNOR, S.J.

President

16

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REV. VICTOR B. NIEPORTE, S.J. Executive Vice-President

EDWARD P. VONDERHAAR Assistant to the President

Director of Public Relations REV. EDWARD J. O'BRIEN, S.J.

Assistant to tfie President

17

President's Council

MR. ROGER C. BECKJORD

Cincinnati Gas & Electric Co.

MR. ROGER H. FERGER

Cincinnati Enquirer

MR. HARRY J. GILLIGAN

Gilligan Funeral Home

MR. REUBEN B. HAYS

First National Bank

MR. ALBERT E. HEEKIN JR.

Heekin Can Company

MR. WILLIAM S. ROWE

Fifth-Third Union Trust Co.

MR. CHARLES SAWYER Attorney

MR. J. RICHARD VERKAMP

Verkamp Corporation

MR. RICHARD E. LeBLOND

LeBlond Machine Tool Co.

MR. WILLIAM L. McGRATH

Williamson Company

MR. JOSEPH B. REYNOLDS

Benjamin D. Bartlett & Co.

MR. WILLIAM H. Z IMMER

Cincinnati Gas & Electric Co.

18

Academic Council

REV. JEREMIAH J. O'CALLAGHAN, S.J.

Dean of Faculties

REV. JOHN W. MALONE, S.J.

Assistant Dean, College of Arts and Sciences

PAUL W. HARKINS, Ph.L., Ph.D., LL.D. Professor of Classical

Languages

REV. FREDERICK P. MANION, S.J.

Dean, Milford College

REV. JOHN N. FELTEN, S.J.

Professor of Classical Languages

REV. RICHARD T. DETERS, S.J.

Dean, Evening Division

THOMAS J. HAILSTONES, Ph.D.

Dean, College of Business

JOSEPH E. BOURGEOIS, Ph.D.

Chairman, Modern Languages

REV. VINCENT C. HORRIGAN, S.J.

Chairman, Theology

J. KANEY HAYES, Ph.D.

Chairman, Manage­ment and Industrial

Relations

WILLIAM J. LARKIN I I I , Ph.D.

Chairman, Mathematics

RAYMOND F. McCOY, Ed.D.

Dean, Graduate School

19

PATRICK H. RATTERMAN, S.J. Dean of Men

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•fsit4U&iit>-' k I REV. FRANCIS WILSON, S.J. Assistant Cliaplain

A Word of Thanks . . .

As the assistant university chaplain in charge of freshman counciling, Fr. Francis Wilson, S.J. spends a great deal of time in his office on the third floor of the Alter Building, Fr. Wilson, also Chaplain of the Evening Division, pre­viously held the post of Director of the Youth Retreat House in Milford.

One of the hardest working members of the Jesuit com­munity is Rev. E. J. O'Connor, here seen sitting at his desk in Bellarmine Chapel. Besides his office hours and con­fession schedule, Fr. O'Connor instructs the non-Catholic students' Theology classes. Fr. O'Connor is also a member of the Xavier Athletic Board and always accompanies the football team on its road trips.

REV. EDWARD J. O'CONNOR, S.J. Chaplain

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Jim Wall "willingly" gives Ruthie Strauss a hand in gathering material from the li­brary stacks.

REV. ROBERT H. BASSMAN, S.J.

Treasurer and Father Minister

IRVIN F. BEUMER Business Manager

LT. COL. JESSE H. BROWN

Director of Placement Service

J O H N T . GINGERICH

Placement

ROBERT J. LaMONTE Student Activities

MRS. WILLIE LAPPIN

Food Service

LEE JAMES F. MARTIN Director, Institute of

Business Services

MRS. MARGARET MOORE Library

CHARLES ROEDER Buildings & Grounds

EDWARD J. SMITH Public Relations

THOMAS J. STADTMILLER

Business Office

MISS R U T H N. STRAUSS

Library

EDWARD P. VONDER HAAR Director of Public

Relations

22

PAUL BURKHART Accountant

REV. J. PETER BUSCHMANN, S.J.

Director of Admissions

FRANCIS E. KURLEMAN

Director of Alumni Relations

Assistant Registrar, Fr. Orrin Wheeler, gives an unfortunate senior the bad news —"According to our records, you still need one hour to graduate."

JOHN A. MOSER Director of Development

MISS MARGARET MURNAHAN

Bursar

REV. EDWARD J. O'CONNOR, S.J.

University Chaplain

JOHN A. PFAFFINGER Business Office

LEO H. MEIROSE Assistant Librarian

CHARLES T. WEBER, JR.

Assistant Director of Development

REV. FRANCIS M. WILSON, S.J.

Assistant University Chaplain

JOHN W. WINTZ Bookstore

ALBERT J. WORST Librarian

23

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Graduate School

RAYMOND F. McCOY, Ed. D. Dean

THOMAS H. HANNA, Ed.D. Assistant Dean

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Graduate Fellows in Chemistry, TOP ROW: Tom Kress, Jim O'Connor, Bill Broxterman, Francis Schmidt, Marty Bellersen, Clark Flake. BOTTOM ROW: Bill Compton, Jim Gleeson, Helen Cronin (secretary) Michael Ernst, Bill Lonneman, Tony Wolterman, Bill Fichteman, Danny Ng.

Graduate Fellows: Left to Right: Tom Welter, Mathemat­ics; Dan Ribar, Mathematics; Mike Becker, Mathematics; Frank Vilardo, Psychology; Dave Hellkamp, Psychology; Roger Overberg, Psychology.

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Graduate Fellows in History, Top to Bottom: Glenn Kist, Henry Chambers, Charley Dorenkott.

XVi

27

^

REV. JEREMIAH J. O'CALLAGHAN, S.J.

College

of

Arts and Sciences

Dean

REV. JOHN W. MALONE, S.J. Assistant Dean

28

College

of

Business Administration •A', "*^=*»-

T H O M A S J. HAILSTONES, Ph.D

MR. RUSSELL J. WALKER Assistant Dean

29

ROBERT ALBANESE Ph.D.

Management

ALBERT ANDERSON Ph.D.

Education

WALTER F. BEHLER, M.B.A., C.P.A.

Accounting

REV. CLIFFORD S BESSE, S.J., Ph.D.

Chairman, Economics

VYTAUTAS J. BIELIAUSKAS, Ph.D Chairman, Psychology

MSgt. GILBERT P BLANKENSHIP Military Science

JOSEPH E. BOURGEOIS, Ph.D.

Cahirman, Modern Languages

REV. EDWARD A. BRADLEY, S.J., M.S.

Physics

WILLIAM H BRANNEN Marketing

REV. EDWARD B.

BRUEGGEMAN, S.J. S.T.D.

Theology

i^^i.'^v > W. THOMAS BRYAN

Ph.D. Management

BENITO J. CERIMELE, Ph.D.

Mathematics

30

ROBERT F. CISSELL, M.S.

Mathematics

WALTER J. CLARKE, Ed.D.

Psychology

REV. BRIAN W. CONNOLLY, Ph.D.

English

REV. GEORGE A. CURRAN, S.J., Ph.D.

Philosophy

JAMES A. DELANEY, B.S.

Mathematics

S.F.C. JACK W. DeVAULT

Miltary Science

No caption needed here—we all know what this means!!

31

EDWARD A. DOERING, S.J.D.

English

LAWRENCE I. DONNELLY, M.B.A.

Management

HARVEY A. DUBE Ph.D.

Chemistry

RICHARD E. DuMONT, Ph.D.

Philosophy

JOSEPH P. EBACHER, M.A.

Modern Languages

JEROME F. FATORA, M.A.

Finance

LT. COL. VINCENT F. FAZIO, B.S.

Chairman, Military Science

LOUIS A. FELDHAUS, M.A.

English

REV. JOHN N. FELTEN, S.J., S.T.L.

Classical Languages

THOMAS C. FISHER B.S.

Physics

32

H

Chrysostom Scholar Does Summer Research in Europe

Dr. Paul Harkins is seen here amid the ruins at Delphi, one stop on his four month tour of Europe last summer. He toured continental libraries classifying Greek manuscripts of St. John Chrysostom. Dr. Harkins' long-range object is to edit the Greek Father's Commentary on John.

The climax of his trip came at Oxford, where he reported on his research to the fourth Quadrennial International Conference on Patristic Studies. This meeting brought scholars from all over the world to historic Christ Church College where they exchanged ideas and discussed their personal research into the works of the fathers of the Church. Dr. Harkins was honored to address the Confer­ence twice, outlining his research and presenting a study of a recently discovered manuscript of Chrysostom's in­structions to his fourth century catechumens. He recently published an English translation of the newly found text, together with a commentary on its contents.

All his hours were not spent among the dusty ninth to thirteenth century manuscripts; there was time to see the sights and monuments of France, Switzerland, Italy, Greece, Austria, Germany, Holland, and Belgium.

33

DAVID C. FLASPOHLER, M.S.

Mathematics

REV. DANIEL P. FOLEY, S.J., Ph.D.

Psychology

REV. THOMAS J. FOLEY, S.J.

Theology

S.F.C. RICHARD J. FOREST

Military. Science

RICHARD J. GARASCIA, Ph.D.

Chairman, Chemistry

BERNARD A. GENDREAU, Ph.D.

Philosophy

JAMES A. GLENN, M.A. English

JAMES R GLENN, A.B. English

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"Cogito Ergo Servo.'

EDWARD J. GOODMAN, Ph.D.

History

MAJ. JOSEPH K. GRIFFITH

Military Science

SIDNEY W. HALE, Ed. D.

Education

PAUL W. HARKINS, Ph.D.

Classical Languages

CAPT. STEPHEN R. HARRICK, A.B. Military Science

J O H N B. HART, M.S. Chairman, Physics

THOMAS R. HAUSER, M.S.

Chemistry

J. KANEY HAYES, Ph.D. Chairman, Management and Industrial Relations

REV. WILLIAM P. HETHERINGTON, S.J.,

Ph.D. Chairman, Classical

Languages

JOHN B. HINNI, M.S. ALVIN F. HOLMAN, M.A.

Modern Languages

REV. VINCENT C. HORRIGAN, S.J., S.T.D.

Chairman, Theology

35

C. LESLIE HOWARD, M.A.

Classical Languages

REV. FRANCIS D. JOHNSON, S.J., Ph.D.

Political Science

CAPT. RICHARD B. JOHNSEN

Military Science

ROBERT G. JOHNSON, Ph.D.

Chemistry

J. EUGENE KANGAS, M.B.A.

Marketing

REV. W. HENRY KENNEY, S.J., Ph.D. Chairman, Philosophy

4 JOSEPH J.

KLINGENBERG, Ph.D. Chemistry

SGT. MARSHALL E. KRATZER, JR. Military Science

EARL J. )NENBERGER,

Ph.D. Psychology

O T T O A. KVAPIL, M.A. Communication Arts

GLEN A. LaGRANGE, M.A.

Education and Psychology

WILLIAM J. LARKIN, I I I , Ph.D.

Chairman, Mathematics

36

JOSEPH LINK, JR., Ed. D.

Business Administration and Economics

REV. MAURICE E. LINK, S.J., M.A.

History

GILBERT C. LOZIER, Ed. D.

Education

CAPT. JAMES E. LUNDY, A.B.

Military Science

Psychology Chairman Traveled European Continent During the

Summer on Speaking and Pleasure Tour

During July of 1963, Dr. Vitautus J. Bieliauskas, Chairman of the Xavier Psychology Department, traveled through Europe on a visiting and speaking tour. While in Toulouse, France, he delivered a paper on "The Psychological Aspects of Mascu­linity and Femininity" to the International Catho­lic Congress on Medical Psychology and was elected a member of this exclusive group. He then crossed over to Munich, Germany, to visit the Uni­versity of Munich where he had been a faculty member until 1948.

While in Milan, Italy, he addressed the Interna­tional Congress on Group Psycho-Therapy on "The Shifting of Guilt Feelings in the Processes of Psycho-Therapy." During his stay in Italy, Dr. Bieliauskas recorded a speech over the Vatican Radio in Rome for world-wide broadcast. Perhaps the only disappointing aspect of the trip was that he was not permitted to visit his parents in Soviet-occupied Lithuania.

Dr. Bieliauskas in the studios of the Vatican Radio in Rome.

37

—a

THOMAS J. MAGNER, M.A.

Philosophy

MAJ. EDWARD S. MAJ. Military Science

HARRY R. MALY C.P.A.

Accounting

^£f^ WILLIAM

MARCACCIO, M.S. Physics

JOHN MARR, Ph.D. Psychology

ALVIN C. MARRERO M.A.

Philosophy

Mr. Ebacher instructs one of his perplexed students on the intricacies of the French language.

BERNARD L. MARTIN M.B.A.

Chairman, Marketing

JOHN G. MAUPIN, M.A. Communication Arts

CAPT. GREGORY P. MITCHELL

Military Science

CAPT. PAUL L. MUNIER, B.S. Military Science

ROBERT J. MURRAY, Ph.D.

Classical Languages

RICHARD T. O'NEILL, Ph.D.

Chemistry

REV. FRANK M. OPPENHEIM, S.J., Ph.D.

Philosophy

REV. JOSEPH J. PETERS, S.J., Ph.D.

Chairman, Biology

BORIS PODOLSKY, Ph.D.

Physics

REV. RUDOLPH A. PRICKRIL, S.J., S.T.B.

Sociology

39

GERALD QUATMAN, M.A.

Psychology

EDWIN RABE, B.S. Business Administration

REV. THOMAS G. SAVAGE, S.J., M.A.

(OXON) English

HOWARD G. SCHULTZ, Ph.D.

Economics

Fr. Foley Returns to Xavier After Doctoral Studies in Rome

Fr. Thomas J. Foley, S.J., after two years study at the Gregorian University in Rome, returned to Xavier this year with a doctorate in Sacred Theo­logy. Much of the research for his thesis, "Inter­communion in the World Council of Churches," was done at the headquarters of the World Council of Churches at Geneva, Switzerland. While in Geneva, he worked with Dr. Lukas Vischer, Re­search Secretary for the Faith and Order Com­mission, and met Dr. Visser 't Hooft, Secretary-General of the World Council of Churches, who opened the archives of the Faith and Order Com­mission to Fr. Foley.

The most impressive event that Fr. Foley remem­bers of his stay in Rome was his standing in the piazza of St. Peter's Basilica watching bishops from all over the world enter the Basilica for the opening of the Second Vatican Council on October 11, 1962.

While in Europe, Fr. Foley visited many places of historical interest including Omaha Beach in Nor­mandy, St. Michel, and Lyons, the place where many of the past Church councils were held.

One stop on Fr. Foley's tour through Europe was the medieval town of Carcassonne in France.

40

r

JACOB W. SCHWEIZER, M.B.A., P.A.

Accounting

REV. ALFRED E. SCHWIND, S.J., M.A.

Theology

JOSEPH H. SETTELMAYER, LL.B. Business Administration

REV. PAUL J. SWEENEY, S.J., S.T.L.

English

REV. WILLIAM J. SHANLEY, S.J., S.T.L.

English

REV. W. EUGENE SHIELS, S.J., Ph.D. Chairman, History

PAUL SIMON M.A.

History

WILLIAM E. SMITH, M.B.A., M.Ed., P.A.

Accounting

CLARENCE A. SOMMER, Ph.D.

Education

SGT. CHARLES E. STEVENS

Military Science

REV. PAUL D. SULLIVAN, S.J., Ph.D.

English

41

JOHN F. TAFURI, Ph.D. Biology

REV. THEODORE C. THEPE, S.J., M.S.

Chemistry

REV. HARKER E. TRACY, S.J., M.A.

Philosophy

REV. JOHN J. TRAINOR, S.J.

Psychology

MATIAS G. VEGA, Ph.D. Modern Languages

REV. LEO J. VOLLMAYER, S.J., M.S.

Physics

REV. GEORGE E. Von KAENEL, S.J., S.T.L.

Theology

THOMAS G. WACK, Ph.D.

English

A study in contrasts.

RUSSELL J. WALKER, C.P.A.

Assistant Dean, Business Administration

S.F.C. RUDOLPH P. WEBSTER

Military Science

KARL P. WENTERSDORF, Ph.D.

English

FREDERICK G. WERNER, Ph.D.

Physics

JOHN J. WHEALEN, Ph.D.

History

CHARLES F. WHEELER, Ph.D. Chairman, English

EDWARD F. WILZ Accountant

WILLIAM H. WILLER, Ph.D.

English

GEORGE A. WING, B.S.B.A.

Business Administration

43

1 ; - ^ Jf^

^ ^ M ^ : ^

. JV 'IBiJ

*

• . . * « * . . . . - . • : . : / ^* -*'' P

The interest and response of the men of MANRESA exemplified the high level of decision and realization which the freshmen achieved.

Manresa

"Now is the hour of the laity. We are in the front lines of the battle of good and evil. We have to make a commit­ment regardless of the cost. Youth is not for pleasure but for heroism."

Charles Keating, national founder of the Citizens for De­cent Literature organization, presented this challenge to 125 incoming freshmen who participated in the first MAN­RESA program.

MANRESA, a fast-paced workshop in practical Christian­ity, was held in the X.U. Armory from September 7 to 10. Rev. Frank Holland, S.J., former director of the Xavier Sodality, was primarily responsible for combining the Spir­itual Exercises of St. Ignatius and the techniques of group dynamics.

All the students attending remained on campus, bivou­acked in the Armory. Their days were filled with every­thing from Mass and lectures to an occasional "hoote-nanny." They were all impressed with the idea that the most difficult MANRESA would span both their college years and beyond.

Speaker, sportscaster, and sheriff, George Ratterman.

>1

u

46

.The First Few Days

For the freshman, the first few days spent on Xavier's campus tend to be exciting, the first flush of college life; imposing and confusing —the new set of laws under which he must dress, eat, sleep, work, and enjoy; boring and confusing—registration. For the "sea­soned upperclassman," sophomore though he may be, there is a familiar face, perhaps, in the beginning of this—his year of com­plaining. The junior returns with thoughts of the future—^all of which will synthesize to antitheses ad infinitum—and begins to work to get out rather than to work to stay in. The senior—still synthesizing—comes back seeking the final polish but first must digest the final boredom—registration.

" . . . But my eyebrows were singed off when I tried to rescue the fifth out of my burning car."

Mass of the Holy Spirit

47

Peter Yarrow

Peter, Paul, and Mary

On October 2nd, Xavier University played host to Peter, Paul, and Mary. There was a sell-out crowd of students and adults from all over the town.

They started the show off with a presentation of some of the songs which they have made famous over the radio and on record albums.

After a brief intermission they came out individ­ually and performed solo routines. Peter Yarrow had the audience join in a hootenany opposing the " In" Group against the "Out" Group. Next Paul Stookey, a combination of Jonathan Win­ters, Bob Newhart, and all the other top comedi­ans rolled into one, performed. His impersona­tions and sound effects ranged from a Birming­ham, Michigan, ladies tea party to a Volkswagen entry at the Grande Prix. Last, but far from least, blond Mary Travers performed. After several encores, a most enjoyable evening was ended but not soon forgotten.

The trio hams it up a bit.

Paul Stookey

Mary Travers

Photo by Dan McKain

Mexican Trip

On June 3, 1963, Rev. Charles Ronan, S.J., left Cincinnati for a 3,200 mile trip into southern Mexico. With Fr. Ronan were Xavier students Thomas Helmick, Craig Kinzelman, John Strat-man, and Cliff Wasco, from Marquette Univer­sity. The purpose of the trip was to build a medi­cal dispensery for the impoverished Tzotyil In­dians in a small village near the town of San Cristobal. A Xavier student from Panama, Jose Garcia deParedes acted as official interpreter for the group. The trip was financed with funds pro­vided by the Xavier student body, private organi­zations, and individuals in the Cincinnati area. Living conditions that exist in small towns such as the one in which the X.U. students were work­ing are all but squalid. Roads were frequently blocked by horses, cattle, goats, and other domes­tic animals. The houses were little more than mud huts with inhuman sanitary conditions. Their project completed, the weary Musketeers packed up and headed for home.

»

Fr. Ronan at a convocation held in Kelley Auditorium during November. The g r o u p took this opportunity to tell the student body of their trip.

Siesta time on the job.

49

Pictured with Edna are the Homecoming Queen candidates. From left to right are: Martha Bolte, Judy Oser, Edna Tekuelve, Mary Lou Spencer, Sandy Boehm, and Nancy Higgins.

»

Homecoming

Campaign

"What have I done to deserve such a fate?" winces Freddy Bernstein. The Homecoming Queen candidates appear to have some score to settle with the "Dear Freddy" col­umnist of the X.U. News.

Judy Oser campaigns on University Drive.

*..

Edna One day in late October, there was heard a tumult and shouting on Xavier's campus. People in classrooms went to the windows, passersby stopped to look, and bridge games in the rear of South Hall were even stopped. All this was the beginning of a chain of events which were to show one person what a university thought of her. All too often kindness goes unnoticed. In a rare gesture, of sincere appreciation, a bureaucracy stopped to say "Thank You"—it couldn't have hap­pened to a nicer person.

Col. Fazio of the R.O.T.C. Department officially bestows the rank of Hon­orary Cadet First Sergeant upon Edna.

Edna, perched on the seat of a 1903 electric Oldsmobile, is serenaded by a group of spirited students who pre­sented her with a bouquet of flowers donated by Father Hetherington.

"What do you mean," yells Edna at the Homecoming Game as the ref walks off a penalty against eleven of her "boys."

51

. \

Queen Judy

Homecoming

A hundred and thirty thousand more and we're finished.

This year's winning float, built by a small, spirited group of off-campus students, depicted a typical scene during the "Roaring Twenties."

w-""^i

Weekend

HMMSMi fiPl. wyiK1Es

r TRME

Queen Edna

"I wonder what Rudy is offering us now?'

Activities

Week In October, Student Council sponsored Activities Week. Under the direction of the Social Chairman, the various clubs on the campus were requested to set up a booth in Alter Foyer. The displays pro­vided the students with the opportunity to see, first hand, the purposes and activi­ties of each club. As an added incentive, Student Council offered cash prizes to the clubs with the best displays.

Denny Chalk inspects the Clef Club's display.

54

Leadership

Conference

Eight universities were represented at Xavier's Fifth Annual Leadership Confer­ence held in November. The conference brought leaders from various campuses to­gether to exchange new ideas and concepts through the medium of speakers and group discussion.

At the first session. Dr. Bielauskas spoke on the concept of a college student. In the second session. Dr. Vygantas spoke on the difTerences between an American and Eu­ropean student. Dr. McCoy, Dean of the Graduate School, spoke on the role of the college student on campus.

The final speaker was former Ohio State Supreme Court Chief Justice Carl Wey-gandt, who gave an after-dinner address in the Blue Room of the cafeteria.

Dr. Bieliauskas, speaking to people about people, is cast in his proper role as a psychologist; and Paul Fisch­er, Chairman of the Leadership Conference, seems to profit from the cathartic effects of the talk.

Kp'ilS' •HH^^H

Ml' J ':§ jJliiHiiiiiil

Dr. Peter Vygantas, President of Pax Romana.

Jim Pelikan carefully develops his line of thought—but Doug Bedore seems to be thinking along "other lines."

55

^r**

The

Precious

Young Ladies

Dramatis Personae

Lagrange Thomas Ellerbrock Ducroisy Richard Benner Gorgibus Dante Vannelli Magdelon Marie Anne Moeddel Cathos Carolyn Maher Marotte Roseanne Humbert Almanzor Kevin Hunt Mascarille Terrence Osterman Jodelet Thomas Brinson Off Beats . . Jon Perrella, Tom Muelleman

Nancy Kayser, Diane McMahon Poet Russell Young Truth Fraquar Casimir Szynal Bartender John Tedeski Cab Driver Russell Young Joe James Luken

"Sex kittens"?

J***

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• jg»w>-

^xoHBiUr,'

"The stink of my cigar has more culture than your friends!'

'There is a time and a place for everything . . ."

57

PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY

May 29, 1917—November 22, 1963

There was a sound of laughter; in a moment, it was no more. And so she took a ring from her finger and placed it in his hands.

There was a wit in a man neither young or old, but a wit full of an old man's wisdom and of a child's wisdom, and then, in a moment it was no more. And so she took a ring from her finger and placed it in his hands.

There was a man marked with the scars of his love of country, a body active with the surge of a life far, far from spent and, in a moment, it was no more. And so she took a ring from her finger and placed it in his hands.

There was a father with a little boy, a little girl and a joy of each in the other. In a moment it was no more, and so she took a ring from her finger and placed it in his hands..

There was a husband who asked much and gave much, and out of the giving and the asking wove with a woman what could not be broken in life, and in a moment it was no more. And so she took a ring from her finger and placed it in his hands,

and kissed him and closed the lid of a coffin.

A piece of each of us died at that moment. Yet, in death he gave of himself to us. He gave us of a good heart from which the laughter came. He gave us of a profound wit, from which a great leadership emerged. He gave us of a kindness and a strength fused into a human courage to seek peace without fear.

He gave us of his love that we, too, in turn, might give. He gave that we might give of ourselves, that we might give to one another until there would be no room, no room at all, for the bigotry, the hatred, prejudice and the arrogance which converged in that moment of horror to strike him down.

In leaving us—these gifts, John Fitzgerald Ken­nedy, President of the United States, leaves with us. Will we take them, Mr. President? Will we have, now, the sense and the responsibility and the courage to take them?

—Senator Mike Mansfield

58

A Pictorial Remembrance . . .

Inauguration, January 20, 1961.

The President.

A n:ian besieged on many sides.

The Commuter.

A good politician

The President in Cincinnati.

The Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces.

The Personable Man.

61

Sharing a laugh.

Well-loved by many

Exemplary Americans.

62

The Family Man.

On the Honey Fitz. 1

An active couple.

^^'^"

1

The Long Christmas Dinner

The Ugly Duckling

Tom Brinson, Director of The Ugly Duckling.

Participants in the Dean's Speech Tournament are from left to right: Mr. John Maupin, faculty co-ordinator; Mic Tallarico, fourth place; Dick Asimus, second place; Ron Marchione, first place; Ken Kuratko, third place; Jerry Laughlin, fifth place; and Mr. James B. O'Donnell, Xavier Dad's Club President. Rear is Rod Flughes, Master of Ceremonies.

Dean's Speech Tournament

The Dean's Speech Tournament, co-ordinated en­tirely by John Maupin, provides an excellent oppor­tunity for aspiring speakers. The finalists speak ex­temporaneously on a chosen aspect of a current is­sue. Held each semester, the topic for the first se­mester was "Today's Social Challenge; Emotion or Reason?".

Sophomore, Ron Marchione, winner of Dean's Speech Tournament.

66

"Well, here's to the next tw o million.

Groundbreaking

In a unique ceremony held on December 12, 1963, ground was officially broken for the new stu­dent center which is scheduled for completion in August, 1965. Members of Student Council, rep­resenting the students of Xavier, turned over the first spades of earth at the site of the new center between Brockman Hall and Bellarmine Chapel.

The student center will contain a spacious cafe­teria, a modern theatre, a snack bar, an activities center, lounges, a game room, the placement bu­reau, and the offices of the President of the Uni versity.

Freddy seems to look upon manual labor with disdain.

1- '

•i^^? 3 > ^

SENIORS

J. PAUL ACKERMAN

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Economics)

Dean's List 3-4; Rifle Club 1-2; Economics Club 3-4; Manage­ment Society 3.

THOMAS E. ACOMB

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Biology)

Rifle Club 1; Sailing Club 2-3; Biology Club3-4.

GERALD T. ADAMS

ClarendonHills, Illinois

B.S. (Economics)

GERARD T. AFFELT

LaSalle,Illinois B.S. (History)

Jazz Club 3; Spanish Club 3.

THOMAS E. ALBERS

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Tennis 1-4.

TERRENCE P. ALBRIGHT

ChicagOjIllinois B.S.B.A.

(Marketing) Dean's List 3 ; Chica­go Club 3-4; Market­ing Club 4, President 4.

J O H N T. ALTER Toledo,Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

Jazz Club 4 ; Toledo Club 1-4; Marketing Club 4.

NICHOLAS H. ALWINE

Greensburg, Pennsylvania

B.S. (Psychology) Dean's List 1; Psy-cology Club 3-4, Sec­retary 4 ; Psi Chi 4; Family Day Commit­tee 2.

HOWARD A. ANNEKEN

Park Hills Kentucky B.S. (Biology)

Dean's List 2-3; Biol­ogy Club 3-4.

THEODORE C. ANNIS Columbus, Ohio

B.S. (Physics) Rifle Team 1-2; Physics Club 1-4; Sky Diving Club 1-4.

GEHL P. BABINEC Fort Lauderdale, Florida

B.S.B.A. (Economics) Clef Club 1; Economics Club 1-4; X.O.M.M. 4.

KARL N. BABL Detroit, Michigan

B.S. (History)

70

MICHAEL A. BAILEY

Indianapolis, Indiana B.S.B.A. (Gen. Bus.)

Tennis 3-4; Indianap­olis Club 1-4; Man­agement Society 4; X.V.News 1-2; Men of Xavier 1-2.

EDWARD F. BATTREALL

Indianapolis, Indiana B.S.B.A. (Economics)

Indianapolis Club 1-4, President 4 ; Eco­nomics Club 3-4; In­vestment Club 4; Sailing Club 4 ; Ac­counting Society 3-4.

E. MICHAEL BAUER

Evanston, Illinois B.S.B.A. (Economics)

Economics Club 2-4; Chicago Club 1-4; Pre-Law Society 3.

J. CHRISTIAN BE INS

Toledo, Ohio JB.^. (Physics)

Clef Club 1-2; Phys­ics Club 1-4.

DAVID P. BEIRNE Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Marketing) Economics Club 3-4; Investment Club 3-4; Marketing Club 4; Rifle Team 3.

RICHARD V. BENNER

Owensboro, Kentucky

B.S. (English) Dean's List 4 ; Masque Society 4 ; Mermaid Tavern 4; Philosophy Club 4.

ALFRED J. BERGER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Chemistry)

Rifle Club 1; Alche-myst Club 2-4, Presi­dent 4.

BARRY R. BERNS Park Hills, Kentucky B.S. (Biology) Cum

laude Dean's List 2-4; Biol­ogy Club 3-4; Rifle Club 1.

JOHN H. BERNINGER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Biology)

Dean's List 2; Inter­racial Club 1; Alche-mystClub 1-2; Biol­ogy Club 3-4.

71

FREDERICK L. BERNSTEIN Springfield, Ohio A.B. (English)

Dean's List 3 ; Buckeye Club 1-4; French Club 3-4, Treasurer 3-4; Campus Student Association 3-4, President 3-4; X.U. News 3-4; Student Coun­cil 4 ; Musketeer 4 ; Young Democrats 3.

PATRICK C. BLACKMAN Westlake, Ohio B.S. (Biology)

Cleveland Club 1-4; Sailing Club 4 ; Biology Club 3.

JOSEPH C. BLANK Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Marketing) Marketing Club 4.

ROBERT J. BLASER, JR. Smoke Rise, New Jersey B.S. (Political Science)

Chairman, Board of Elections 4.

GERALD V. BLESSING Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Physics) Dean's List 4 ; Radio Club 1; Sodality 1-4; Physics Club 1-4.

LOUIS F. BOEH Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (History)

HENRY B. BOLLWERK

Fort Wayne, Indiana B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Accounting Society 3-4 ; Clef Club 2-4; Pershing Rifles 1-2; Ft. Wayne Club 1-4.

STEPHEN B. BRAUN

Bay Village, Ohio B.S. (English)

Dean's List 3 ; Home­coming Committee 3, Co-chairman 4; Jr. Prom Chairman 3, Knights of Columbus 3-4; Dorm Council 2; X.U. A^ «;.f 3 ; Cleve­land Club 2.

FRANK M. BONIFACIC

Chicago, Illinois A.B. (History) Cum

laude Dean's List 1-3; Jazz Club 1-2; Pre-Law Society 4; Dorm Council 3.

JOHN F. BRADY Wilmette, Illinois

B.S.B.A. (Economics) Sailing Club 1-2 Economics Club 3-4, Secretary 4; Invest­ment Club 3-4; Sen­ior Class Gift, Co-chairman; Pre-Law Society 4.

WILLIAM A. BRAMLAGE

Park Hills, Kentucky B.S. (Biology)

Summa cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Biol­ogy Club 3-4.

ROBER J. BRANDNER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Mathematics) Magna cum laude

Dean's List 1-4; Mathematics Club 1-4, Secretary 4 ; Pi Mu Epsilon 4.

DALE B. BRINKER Cincinnati, Ohio

B.A. (Psychology) X.O.M.M. 4 ; Per­shing Rifles 1-4; Treasurer 3-4.

MICHAEL F. BRISLEY

Maysville, Kentucky B.S. (Economics)

Dean's List 3 ; Ken­tucky Club 1; Eco­nomics Club 4 ; In­vestment Club 4.

ROBERT D. BROERING

Covington, Kentucky B.S. (Economics)

Economics Club 1-4.

72

JAMES F. BROGLE St Petersburg, Florida

B.S. (Psychology) Cum laude Dean's List 1-4; SodaUty 1-4; Football 1-4; Stu­dent Council 2; Student Review Board 3 ; Psy­chology Club 3-4, Treasurer 4; Psi Chi 4, Alpha Sigma Nu, 4.

BRUCE J. BROWN Brodhead, Wisconsin

B.S. (Biology) Band 1-3; Sodality 1-3.

THOMAS M. BROWN Norwalk, Ohio

B.S. (Economics) Sailing Club 2-4, Commodore 3; Mardi Gras, Co-chairman 4; Cleveland Club 2-4; Economics Club 4; Campus Student Association 4.

Finance majors, John O'Shea and Walter Bryniarski, insist on their rights when the coke machine doesn't "pay off'," and Marg gladly punches up the temporary loss.

JOHN W. BURRIDGE

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Chemistry)

Rifle Club 1.

WILLIAM E. CARBONNEAU Chicago, Illinois

B.S.B.A. (Management)

Management Society 1-4.

JOHN A. BRUNING Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Economics)

Cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Musketeer 2-4, Asso­ciate Editor 3, Editor-in-Chief 1963; Hei­delberg Club 3-4; X.U.. News 2-4, As­sociate Editor 3; Athenaeum 3-4;

J. VINCENT CAROTENUTO Cleveland, Ohio

H.A.B. (Classics) Cum laude

Dean's List 1-4; Mer­maid Tavern 1 -4; X.V.News 1-2; Mus­keteer 3, Assistant Editor 3 ; Clef Club 3-4; Athenaeum 1-4, Assistant Editor 3-4; French Club 1-2; Young Democrats 3.

WALTER G. BRYNIARSKI

Chicago, Illinois B.S.B.A. (Finance)

Football 1-4; Chicago Club 1-4; Economics Club 3-4; French Club 3-4.

GERALD A. CARTER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

Pershing Rifles 1; Marketing Club 4, Vice President 4.

73

CARMEN A. CATANESE

Steubenville, Ohio B.S. (Physics)

Summa cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Phys­ics Club 2-4, Vice President 3, Presi­dent 4; Sigma Pi Sig­ma 3-4.

ROGER P. CHARLEVILLE Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Biology) Magna cum laude

Dean's List 1-4; Biol­ogy Club 3-4; Rifle Club 1.

J O H N A. CIOK Wyoming, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Marketing) Jazz Club 1-4; Mar­keting Club 4.

JACK A. COLLOPY

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (History)

Football 1.

JOSEPH F. CONTADINO

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Dean's List 2.

BERNARD HENRY CORNILLIE Grosse Point,

Michigan B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

Detroit Club 1-2; Marketing Club 4 ; Economics Club 3-4; Management Society 3-4.

THOMAS F. CUNNINGHAM Chicago, Illinois A.B. (History)

Chicago Club 1-4; Pre-Law Society 4.

BERNARD P. CZERWINSKI Chicago, Illinois

B.S.B.A. (Accounting)

Jazz Club 1-3; Chi­cago Club 1-4; Rifle Club 1-3.

LARRY R. CONOVER

Milford, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Management)

KENNETH J. CZILLINGER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (English)

Magna cum laude Dean's List 1-4; So­dality 1-4; SodaHty Council 2-4; X.U. News 1-4; Sports Edi­tor 2-4; Musketeer 3-4; Sports Editor 3-4; Baseball Manager 1-4; Alpha Sigma Nu 4 ; Who's Who 4.

74

ROBERT M. DANNER Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Chemistry)

Rifle Club 1-2; Chemistry Club 2-4.

ROBER J. DEDERICHS Detroit, Michigan

B.S. (History) Detroit Club 1-4; Pre-Law Society 3-4; Rifle Club 1,2.

PATRICK H. DEEGAN Cleveland, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Economics) Student Council 1-4; Economics Club 3-4, Vice-President 4 ; Cleveland Club 1-4; Co-chairman Junior Prom; Co-chairman Senior Week; Who's Who 3.

JOHN B. DEHAN Wilmington, Ohio B.S. (Psychology)

Psychology Club 3-4; Psi Chi 4 ; Rifle Club 1.

RONALD J. E. DENICOLA

Cincinnati, Ohio A.B. (History)

JAMES A. DETERS Ottawa, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Economics) Buckeye Club 1-4; Sailing Club 2-4; Economics Club 3-4; Investment Club 4 ; Flying Club 3-4.

JOHN A. DiBENEDETTO Long Island City,

New York B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

Economics Club 1-3; Marketing Club 3-4.

MICHAEL A. DICKTER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Economics)

Economics Club 3-4; Marketing Club 4; International Club 3 ; Senior Class Gift Committee, Co-Chairman.

EDWARD F. DISKEN

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (History)

Dean's List 3 ; Man­agement Society 3-4; French Club 4.

DOUGLAS A. DOENCH

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (English)

WCXU 3-4.

JOHN A. DOBRADENKA

Leechburg, Pennsylvania

A.B. (Biology) French Club 2-3; Bi­ology Club 1-4; Al-chemyst Club 2; Foot­ball 1-3.

JAMES L. DOEPKER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Management) Rifle Club 1; Eco­nomics Club 4.

CHARLES V. DONOHOE

Astoria, New York B.S. (Economics) Magna cum laude

Dean's List 1-4; Eco­nomics Club 3-4; Campus Student As­sociation 3-4, Vice-President 4; Student Tutoring Society 4.

Dean's Club 2.

List

ERNEST F. DuBRUL Cincinnati, Ohio H.A.B. (Biology)

1; Biology Club 3-4; International

FRANCIS X. DUDA Aberdeen, Maryland

B.S. (Political Science) Cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Heidelberg Club 2-4, Secretary 4; Political Forum 2-3; Student Directory Editor 4 ; Poland Philopedian Debateing Society 3-4; Secretary 3, Vice President 4 ; Parliamentarian of Student Council 4 ; Football 2.

THOMAS R. DUNNE Chicago, Illinois

H.A.B. (Mathematics) Cum laude; Dean's List 1-4; Math Club 1-4, Vice-President 4; Basketball 1; Student Tutoring Society 4; Pi Mu Epsilon 4.

75

DANIEL G. D U T R O Cincinnati, Ohio

A.B. (Economics) Football 1; Economics Club 4.

DOUGLAS A. EDWARDS Lakewood, Ohio B.S. (Biology)

Sodality 1-4; Biology Club 3-4; Jazz Club 1-2: Cleveland Club 1-4.

JOSEPH K. EISAMAN Greensburg, Pennsylvania

B.S. (English) WCXU, 1-4.

Physics major. Carmen Catanese, in view of Bob Moeller's "plan, meditates, "So let him shoot and ruin the insight of the Century."

0i

THOMAS C. ERHART

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Dean's List 3-4.

Ill - * • * - % • % •

1 PAUL H. FISCHER Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (History) Leadership Confer­ence Chairman 4.

J O H N D. FITZPATRICK Chicago, Illinois

B.S.B.A. (Marketing) Knights of Columbus 1-2; Chicago Club 1, 2,4; Management Club 3; Marketing Club 4; Investment Club 4.

JOHN F. FLYNN Chicago, Illinois

B.S.B.A. (Accounting)

Elet Hall President 4; Dorm Council 3-4; Student Council 3; Sailing Club 2; Rifle Club 1.

KEVIN M. FOLEY Middletown, Ohio B.S. (Chemistry)

Dean's List 1; Alche-myst Club 3-4; Band 1.

MICHAEL K. FOLZENLOGEN Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting)

Accounting Society 3-4.

76

THOMAS E. FREPPON Highland Heights, Kentucky

B.S.B.A. (Economics) Basketball 1-4, Tri-Captain 4; Economics Club 4 ; Homecoming Committee 3.

LAWRENCE E. GAICHAS Chicago, Illinois H.A.B. (Latin)

Dean's List 3-4; Athenaeum 2,4; Musketeer 2 ; Marion Hall President 3; Dorm Council 3.

KEVIN E. GALLAGHER Chicago, Illinois B.S. (History)

Chicago Club 1-4, President 4; Pre-Law Society 3-4; Spanish Club 2,4; Senior Class Gift Com­mittee ; Sky Diving Club 1,

CHARLES H. GARTNER

Fort Thomas, Kentucky

B.S. (Biology) Magna cum laude

Dean's List 1-4; Band 1-4; Jazz Club 3-4; Secretary 3-4; Biology Club 3-4; Rifle & Pistol Club 1-2; Pis­tol Team 2.

DOUGLAS V. GARNER

Batavia, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Pershing Rifles 1-4; Accounting Society 2-4; Flying Club 4.

JOSEPH L. GEIGER Waterford, New York

B.S.B.A., (Economics) Basketball 1-4; Tri-Captain 4 ; Economics Club 4; Homecoming Committee 3.

PETER E. GELPI Dublin, Ohio

B.S. (History) Economics Club 3-4; Buckeye Club 1-4.

EDGAR N. GENOVESE, JR. Bacto, Maryland H.A.B. (Classics)

Athenaeum 1-4, Edi­tor 4; Cheerleaders 1-4, Captain 2-4; Mer­maid Tavern 2-4; Dorm Council 2; WCXU 1-2.

THOMAS P. GIBSON

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Biology)

Magna cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Biol­ogy Club 3-4; Heidel­berg Club 4.

ROBERT P. GILLARD

Detroit, Michigan B.S. (Economics)

Detroit Club 1-2; Knights of Columbus 1; Economics Club 4.

PAUL R. GOEDDE Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Economics) Management Club 3-4 ; Economics Club 3.

RAYMOND C. GREIS, JR.

Norwood, Ohio A.B. (History) Cum

laude Dean's List 3-4.

77

JOHN E. GREULICH

Cincinnati, Ohio A.B. (History)

Band 3 ; Economics Club 4 ; Pre-Law So­ciety 4.

MARK W. GROTE Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Economics)

Economics Club 1-4.

ROBERT J. GRUBER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Philosophy)

Sodality 1-3; Knights of Columbus 1-4; Per­shing Rifles 1-3.

LOUIS W. GUTZWILLER, JR.

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Accounting Society 3-4.

DON D. HALL Fort Wayne, Indiana B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

Ft. Wayne Club 1-4; Marketing Club 4.

RICHARD W. HARDING

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Industrial

Relations) Band 1-4; Accounting Society 1-2; Manage­ment Society 4.

THOMAS G. HARE Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Management)

Rifle Club 1; Man­agement Society 3.

DAVID A. GRZESZCZAK

Toledo, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Economics)

Economics Club 2-4; Management Society 2-3; Toledo Club 1-2; Pershing Pifles 1-2; Pre-Law Society 4.

BERNARD C. HARGETT

Maysville, Kentucky B.S. (History)

Summa cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Po­litical Forum 2-3; Young Democrats 3; Student Tutoring So­ciety 4; Fine Arts Committee 4; Pre-Law Society 4.

1 ^ * i L , . " • • " ' ' " * • - • •

•^•pii *#''

78

TIMOTHY P. HARMON Wyoming, Ohio A.B. (History)

Homecoming Co-Chairman 3-4; Jazz Club 1-3, Treasurer 3 ; WCXU 2-3; X.U. News 2; Pre-Law Society 3-4; Rifle Club 1.

MICHAEL F. HARTINGS Cincinnati, Ohio

H.A.B. (Classics) Cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Sodality 1-2; Band 1-3; Clef Club 3-4, Business Manager 4 ; Psychology Club 3-4; Psi Chi 4; X.O.M.M. 3-4.

WAYNE J. HARTMAN Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Marketing) Marketing Club 4.

RUDOLPH C. HASL—Cincinnati, Ohio—H.A.B. (Lat­in) Dean's List 1; Student Council 1,3, 4; Student Review Board 3, Student Council 3 ; Presi­dent of the Student Body 4 ; Sodality 1-2; W C X U 2 ; H e i -delburgClub 3-4; Political Forum 3, Who's Who 4.

JAMES J. HEISELMANN Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (English) Dean's List 3-4; X.U. News 2-4, Associate Editor 3-4; Campus Student Associations.

CHARLES W. HAYDON

Springfield, Kentucky B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

Football 1-2; Market­ing Club 4.

JOHN J. HAYES Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Economics)

Dean's List 4 ; Foot­ball 1-3; Economics Club 4; French Club 4 ; Baseball 4.

GEORGE J. HAZEL

Cleveland, Ohio B.S. (Biology)

Cleveland Club 1-4; Biology Club 3-4.

A

RICHARD A. HELMICK

Cincinnati, Ohio A.B. (History)

Magna cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Per­shing Rifles 1 -4; X.O.M.M. 3-4, Presi­dent 4; X.U. News 4 ; Pre-Law Society 4 ; Musketeer 4; Rifle Club 4.

HERBERT B. HERBERS, JR. Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting) Accounting Society 2-4; Management Society 3-4 ; Economics Club 4.

THOMAS V. HERBORT Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Political Science) Rifle Club 1-4.

WILLIAN G. HINNENKANP Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Chemistry)

Alchemyst Club 2-4.

"Lets rely on an authority to get the job done," Harry Rabe smirk-ingly pleads with two other accounting majors, Mike O'Hara and Bob Wilkins.

79

STEPHEN W. HORGAN

Bridgeton, Missouri B.S. (Chemistry)

Dean's List 2-3 ; So­dality 1-2; Pershing Rifles 1-2; Alchemyst Club 2-4.

PAUL J. H U T H Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting)

Accounting Society 2-4, Vice-President 4; WCXU 3-4, Business Manager 3-4.

DAVID H. HORNBACK

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Football 1; Rifle Club 1; Accounting Society 4 ; Homecoming Field Decoration Commit­tee 2-4.

THOMAS J. HOUNIHAN

Chicago, Illinois Cum laude

Dean's List 3-4; Knights of Columbus 2-4.

JAMES A. HUSK Waynesburg, Pennsylvania B.S. (Physical

Education) Football 1-4.

FREDERICK B. IRWIN

Cleveland, Ohio A.B. (English)

Sodality 1; Basketball 1, Manager 3-4; Dorm Council 1; Clef Club 2; Student Council, Athletic Chairman 3; Pre-Law Society 4 ; X.U. A ez«;5 4; Cleve­land Club 4 ; Who's Who 3 ; Rifle Club 2.

LEONARD J. JACKO Lakewood, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Economics) Band 1-3; Economics Club 2-4.

WCXU 1-3; cil President ant Coach 4.

STEPHEN H. JOERN Council Bluffs, Iowa

A.B. (English) Pre-Law Society 2-4; Dorm Coun-3 ; Football 1-3; Freshman Assist-

JOHN F. JOHNSON Norwood, Ohio B.S. (English)

David Schmid confidently tickles his "buddy," as if to say, "We know two chicks are heavier than one," while fellow biology major Tony Lazar sets the scale and Jack McDonough hopes his chick is a solid one.

80

ROBERT G. JOSEPH

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Economics)

GARY A. JUENGLING

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) X.O.M.M. 3-4; Dis­tinguished Military Student 4.

JAMES R. KAIN Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting)

Football 1-4; Ac­counting Society 4.

ROBERT E. KAMMERER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Economics)

Economics Club 3-4.

JAMES R. KATHMAN

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Economics)

GARY H. KAUP Hamilton, Ohio B.S. (English)

Dean's List 1,3; Pershing Rifles 1-2; Pistol Club 1-2; Pre-Law Society 2-3; Buckeye Club 3.

MICHAEL A. KEEPER

Delaware, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Dean's List 2; Ac­counting Society 3-4, Secretary 4; Buckeye Club 1-4, Secretary 3; Golf Team 1-2.

PATRICK T. KELLY

Cincinnati, Ohio A.B. (English)

Cum laude Dean's List 1-4.

JAMES L. KEINER Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Management)

Economics 4 ; Man­agement Society 3-4, Secretary 4.

J O H N W. KEMBLE, JR. Augusta, Georgia

B.S. (Biology) Dean's List 3 ; Dorm Council 2; Biology Club 3-4; Sailing Club 3-4.

RICHARD S. KIJOWSKI Berwyn, Illinois B.S. (Biology)

Dean's List 3 ; Biology Club 3-4; Rifle Club 1.

THOMAS F. KILCOYNE Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Industrial Relations) Management Society 2-3.

81

CLIFFORD A. KNOPF

Louisville, Kentucky B.S.B.A.

(Marketing) Kentucky Club 1-2; Marketing Club 4; Jazz Club 2.

JOHN R. KOWALSKI Toledo, Ohio

B.S. (Biology) Clef Club 1-2; Biol­ogy Club 3-4.

RAYMOND E. KREKE

Hamilton, Ohio B.S. (Political

Science) Sodality 1; Pre-Law 4.

THOMAS J. KIRK Toledo, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Finance) Investment Club 3-4, Secretary 3, Treasurer 3-4; WCXU 2-3; Junior Prom Committee 3; Account­ing Society 2; Management Society 2; Toledo Club 1-4; Economics Club 2; Young Republicans 3.

JOHN M. KISPERT Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Management) Clef Club 1-3.

PHILLIP M. KLEESPIES Goshen, Ohio

B.S. (Psychology)—Cum laude Dean's List 1,2,4; Sodality 1-3; Heidelberg Club 2; International Club 2; Psychology Club 3-4; Psi Chi 4.

GERARD M. KYSELA

Chardon, Ohio B.S. (Psychology)

Dean's List 3; Jazz Club 1; Sailing Club 2-3; Psychology Club 3-4, Vice President 4; Psi Chi 4; Student Tutoring Society 4.

WILLIAM B. LAIB Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting)

Accounting Society 3-4; Band 1; Pershing Rifles 1.

EDWARD T. LAIOS

Washington, D.C. B.S.B.A. (Finance)

Band 2; Internation­al Club 3-4; Invest­ment Club 3-4; Eco­nomics Club 4; Pre-Law Society 3-4.

ANDREW T. LAMB, JR.

Cleveland, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Marketing) Cleveland Club 1-4; Marketing Club 3-4, Secretary 4; Sailing Club 4.

MICHAEL H. L ARM ON

Chicago, Illinois A.B. (History)

Dean's List 1,2,4; Chicago Club 1-4; X.O.M.M. 3-4; Pre-Law Society 4.

PAUL E. LAUDICK

Indianapolis, Indiana B.S.B.A.

(Management) Management Society 2-4, Treasurer 4; Indianapolis Club 1-3; Economics Club 2-4; Accounting So­ciety 2.

82

ANTHONY S. LAZAR Gary, Indiana

B.S. (Biology) Summa cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Student Council, Athletic Chair­man 4; Biology Club 3-4; Alchemyst Club 2-3; Dorm Council 4; Who's Who 4.

KENNETH E. LEHMANN Louisville, Kentucky

B.S.B.A. (Economics) Football 1-4, Co-Captain 4; Economics Club

JOHN B. LEHRTER Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Political Science) Pershing Rifles 1-4; Flying Club 4.

3-4.

WILLIAM J. LEUGERS

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Accounting)

Accounting Society 3-4; Economics Club 4.

JOHN F. LORENZ Cincinnati, Ohio

A.B. (Political Science)

Cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Pershing Rifles 1 -4; X.O.M.M. 3-4, Vice-President 4.

ROY J. LIPSCOMB Chicago, Illinois

H.A.B. (Classical Languages)

Dean's List 1,4; So­dality 1-4; Rifle Club 1; Dorm Council 3.

F. GERALD L U C K E T T

Lebanon, Kentucky B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Cum laude

Dean's List 1-4; Ac­counting Society 1-4; Management Club 3-4; Economics Club 2-4; Pre-Law Society 4.

ROBERT H. LITMER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Marketing) Marketing Club 1-4, Treasurer 4.

DENNIS J. LONG Cleveland, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Economics)

Clef Club 1-2; Who's Who 3 ; Economics Club 3-4; X.V.News 2; Cleveland Club 1-4, X.O.M.M. 4 ; Student Council 1-4; Senior Class President 4 ; I.D. Chairman, Senior Week Chairman.

THOMAS A. LORDEN

Rockford, Illinois B.S.B.A.

(Economics) Investment Club 3-4, Vice-President 4 ; Chicago Club 1-3; Flying Club 4; Pre-Law Society 3-4; Eco­nomics Club 4.

THOMAS P. LUNING

Chicago, Illinois H.A.B. (Latin)

Magna cum laude Dean's List 1-4; So­dality 1; Student Tu­toring Society 4; In­ternational Relations Club 4; Pre-Law So­ciety 4.

JOHN L. LUTZ Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (English) Cum laude

Dean's List 1,2,4; Campus Student Asso­ciation 3-4; X.U. News 3.

83

DOMINIC A. MACEDONIA Steubenville, Ohio

B.S. (Biology) Cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Biology Club 2-4; Dorm Council 3.

DAVID M. MARSHALL Cleveland, Ohio B.S. (English)

Dean's List 1,3; Pre-Law Society 3-4; Cleveland Club 1-4.

WILLIAM C. MARTIN Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Physics) Cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Physics Club 1-4; Satellite Club 2-3; Sigma Pi Sigma 3-4, Vice-President 4; Rifle Club 1.

DONALD L. MATTCHECK Cincinnati, Ohio

A.B. (Economics) Jazz Club 2.

GERALD E. MASTERSON

Seattle, Washington B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Magna cum laude

Dean's List 1-4; Pershing Rifles 1-4; Accounting So­ciety 3-4.

R . M I C H A E L

M C C A F F R E Y

Zanesville, Ohio B.S. (English)

Cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Clef Club 1-4, Secretary-Treasurer 2; Buckeye Club 1; Student Tu­toring Society 4 ; Knights of Columbus 2-4; Pre-Law Society 3.

M I C H A E L F .

M C C A R T H Y

Toledo, Ohio B.S. (Psychology) Magna cum laude

Dean's List 1-4; Heidelberg Club 1; Rifle Club 1; Political Forum 1-2; Psycholo­gy Club 3-4; Psi Chi 4; Toledo Club 1-4; Treasurer 2-3, Presi­dent 4; Knights of Columbus 3-4; Pre-Law Society 3-4.

CHARLES J. McCLAIN

Harahan, Louisiana H.A.B. (Classics) Summa cum laude

Dean's List 1-4; Mer­maid Tavern 1-4, Host 4; Alpha Sigma Nu 3-4, President 4; Cheerleaders 2-4; Athenaeum 3-4; Pre-Law Society 4.

THOMAS R. McCOY

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Physics)

Magna cum laude Dean's List 2-4; Rifle Club 1-2, Secretary 2; Sigma Pi Sigma 4, Secretary 4; Physics Club 2-4.

J O H N J. McDONOUGH

Rockville, Maryland B.S. (Biology)

Cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Bi­ology Club 3-4, Presi­dent 3-4; Alchemyst Club 1-2.

LARRY N. McGINNIS

Owensboro, Kentucky B.S. (Philosophy)

Philosophy Club 4.

DAVID J. McGONAGLE Bluefield, West

Virginia A.B. (Latin)

Dean's List 3-4.

84

Senior Physics major and sky-diving buff', Ted Annis, packs his chute for another free fall jump under the watchful eye of a grim and worried little friend.

JOSEPH H. McGRAW Norwood, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Management) Economics Club 4; Management Society 3-4.

JOHN B. McHUGH Evanston, Illinois B.S. (Economics)

Heidelburg Club 1-4; Economics Club 2-4; In­vestment Club 4.

JOHN A. McKIERNAN Fort Wayne, Indiana

B.S.B.A. (Finance) Knight's Manor President 4; Economics Club 3-4; Accounting Society 3-4; Knights of Collmbus 2-4; Pre-Law Society 3-4; Investment Club 4; Family Day Committee 1; Ft. Wayne Club 1-4.

DAVID H. McMAHON

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Philosophy)

Dean's List 2,4; So­dality 1-4; Pre-Law Society 3-4.

JEROME E. MERSHON

Cincinnati, Ohio A.B. (Psychology)

Cum laude Dean's List 1,2,4; Band 1-4; Pyschology Club 3,4; Psi Chi 4.

JEROME M. MEZUR

Cincinnatio, Ohio B.S. (Physical

Education) Baseball 1-4.

JOHN J. MICHAELS, JR. Godfrey, Illinois A.B. (History)

Cum laude Dean's List 1,3,4; WCXU 1-2; Political Forum 2-3; Young Re­publicans 3 ; Clef Club 3-4; Athenaeum 2-4; Heidelberg Club 3-4; International Club 2-3 ; Cheerleaders 3-4; Toledo Club 1-3.

JAMES D. MEIHAUS

Fort Mitchell, Kentucky B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Dean's List 2; Ac­counting Society 3 ; Rifle Club 1; Eco­nomics Club 1.

THOMAS J. MILLER

Detroit, Michigan B.S. (Biology)

Biology Club 3-4; Stu­dent Directory Co-Editor 4.

85

JEROME B. MOEDDEL

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Dean's List 2-4; Ac­counting Society 2-4; Management Society 4.

JOSEPH M. MOLLMANN

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Dean's List 2; Foot­ball 1-4, Co-Captain 4; Alpha Sigma Nu 3-4, Treasurer 4; Student Council 1-3; X.O.M.M. 3-4; Eco­nomics Club 3 ; Ac­counting Society 3.

BRIAN L. MOORE Steubenville, Ohio B.S. (Psychology)

Dean's List 2; Psy­chology Club 3-4; Economics Club 4; Dorm Council 2; Campus Student As­sociation 4.

RICHARD J. MOORMAN

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

Marketing Club 4.

RAYMOND J. MUELLER

Fort Wayne, Indiana B.S.B.A. (Economics)

Basketball 1-4, Tri-Captain 4; Econom­ics Club 3-4; Home­coming Committee 3-4.

Apparently, Al Pantle has read something unintended into the state­ment of fellow psychology major Mike Hartings.

86

ROBERT D. MUELLER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Physics)

Magna cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Phys­ics Club 1-4; Sigma Pi Sigma 3-4, Presi­dent 4.

STANLEY X. MUNAFO Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Marketing) Rifle Club 1; Marketing Club 4.

MERRICK E. MURPHY Rocky River, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting) Accounting Society 1-4; Sailing Club 1-4, Treas­urer 4; Cleveland Club 1-4; Marketing Club 4 ; Management Society 4 ; Junior Prom Commit­tee 3 ; Senior Prom Committee 4; Investment Club 4.

THOMAS R. MURRAY, JR. Piqua, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting) Accounting Society 1-4; Buckeye Club 1-4, Presi­dent 4; X.O.M.M. 4; Dorm Council 3 ; Student Council Comptroller 4; X.U. News 2; Rifle Club 1-2.

J. GORDON MYERS

Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

Cleveland Club 1-4; Sodality 4; Econom­ics Club 3-4; Market­ing Club 4; X.O.M.M. 4; Man­agement Society 3; Buckeye Club 3.

NICHOLAS R. NEIDENBACH Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting)

Management Soci­ety 2-4; Accounting Society 3-4.

KENNETH F. NEIHEISEL

Cincinnati, Ohio A.B. (History)

Pre-Law Society 3-4.

JAMES H. NIEHAUS

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Management)

JOHN F. NIEHAUS Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Mathematics) Cum laude

« Dean's List 1-4; Math Club 1-4; Pi Mu Ep­silon 4; Student Tu­toring Society 4.

LOUIS J. NIEHAUS

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Band 1-4, Vice-Presi­dent 4; Jazz Club 2-4; Accounting Society 2-4.

EUGENE P. O'BRIEN New Oxford, Pennsylvania

B.S.B.A. (Accounting) Football 1-2; Accounting Society 4.

ROBERT E. O'BRIEN Fort Lauderdale, Florida

B.S. (English) Dean's List 4; Jazz Club 1-3; WCXU 1-3; Radio Club 2-3; Sodality 1-2; Pre-Law Society 3; Table Number One 3-4, Vice-President 4; X.U. News 4; Flying Club 3-4; Musketeer Editor-in-Chief 4.

JOHN S. OBRINGER New Haven, Indiana B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

Ft. Wayne Club 1-4, Treasurer 3, President 4; Economics Club 4; Marketing Club 4.

WILLIAM E. NIEPORTE

Norwood, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting)

DENNIS J. NOLTE Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Economics)

Radio Club 1-4, President 2.

GERARD M. N O T T O L I

Grays Lake, Illinois B.S. (Political

Science) French Club 1-2; Math Club 1; Chi­cago Club 1-4; Eco­nomics Club 4.

87

NEIL J. O 'CONNOR

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Sodality 1; Account­ing Society 3-4, Leadership Confer­ence Co-chairman 4.

JOHN D. O'SHEA Toledo, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Finance) Clef Club 1-4, Treas­urer 3 ; Toledo Club 1-4; Investment Club 3-4, President 4; Young Democrats 3 ; Who's Who 3.

JAMES B. O'DONNELL

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Management) Rifle Club 1-2; Man­agement Club 3 ; Economics Club 3; Family Day Commit­tee 3.

MICHAEL A. O'HARA

Chicago, Illinois B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Dean's List 1,2,4; Accounting Society 3-4, Treasurer 4; Chicago Club 2-4; Musketeer 3 ; Student Tutoring Jociety 4.

MELVIN C. OHMER

Milford, Ohio B.S. (Physics)

Dean's List 3; Sigma Pi Sigma 3-4, Treas­urer 4.

TERRENCE J. OSTERMAN

Chicago, Illinois A.B. (English)

Cum laude Dean's List 1-4; WCXU 2-4, Station Manager 4; Dorm Council 1; Masque So­ciety 3-4; X.O.M.M. 4; Junior Prom Com­mittee 3 ; Student Tu­toring Society 4.

CLEMENT A. PATER, I I I Hamilton, Ohio A.B. (History)

Dean's List 2-3; Pre-Law Society 3-4, Vice-Presi­dent 3, President 4 ; Hamilton Club 3-4.

JOSEPH A. PEDOTO Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting) Dean's List 3 ; Football 1-4; Accounting Society 3-4; Economics Club 4; Buckeye Club 3-4.

JAMES A. PELIKAN Parma, Ohio

B.S. (Psychology) Dean's List 1-3; Mermaid Tavern 1-4; Psychology Club 3-4; Philosophy 1-3; Psi Chi 4; N.S.A. Co­ordinator 3; X.U. News 1-2.

THOMAS J. O'SULLIVAN

Chicago, Illinois B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

Chicago Club 1-4; Marketing Club 4; Baseball 2; Econom­ics Club 3-4; Sky Diving Club 4.

JOHN P. OWENS Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Physical Education)

Rifle Club 1.

ALLAN J. PANTLE Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Psychology) Summa cum laude

Dean's List 1-4; Psy­chology Club 3-4, President 4 ; Musket­eer 3-4; Associate Editor 3; Psi Chi 4.

, ' < * ^ ^

% ifj 0L 88

STEVEN V. PETIX Birmingham,

Michigan H.A.B. (Latin—

History) cum laude Dean's List 1,2,4; Sail­ing Club 2-4, Secre­tary 3, Commodore 4 ; Political Forum 2-3; Masque Society 1; Detroit Club 1-2 Athenaeum 1; Pre-Law Society 3,4.

WILLARD M. PITCHFORD

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Marketing) Rifle Club 1-2; Mar­keting Club 4; Eco­nomics Club 4.

JOHN W. POYNTON

Lake Bluff, Illinois B.S. (Political

Science) Political Forum 2-3; Chicago Club 1-4; Pre-Law Society 3-4; Spanish Club 2; Fly­ing Club 4.

THOMAS C. PRICE Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Chemistry)

Dean's List 1; Al­chemyst Club 1-4; Heidelberg Club 2; X.U. News 3.

JAMES J. PROCTOR

Cleveland, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Economics)

Dean's List 3; Eco­nomics Club 4.

PAUL C. PRINZ Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting)

Accounting Society 4.

Senior Philosophy major, Phil Romito, stares in shock and disbelief as Dick Romanes screams "I've found Truth!"

HARRY B. RABE Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting) Cum laude Dean's List 1,2,4; Management Society 3-4, Vice-President 4; Accounting Society 3-4; Sailing Club 3.

FRANK J. RADNOCZI Gary, West Virginia

B.S. (Physical Education) Dorm Council 3.

FRED J. REHERMAN Hardinsburg, Kentucky

B.S. (Physical Education) Economics Club 3-4; Football 2-4.

89

J O H N M. REISING Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Psychology) Dean's List 2 ; Psychology Club 4.

RONALD A. REISZ Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting) Dean's List 4 ; Football 1; Accounting Society 4.

JOHN C. REITZ Portsmouth, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting) Buckeye Club 1,2; Accounting Society 3,4; Mardi Gras Committee 3.

WILLIAM R. REVELLESE

Yonkers, New York B.S. (English)

Magna cum laude Dean's List 1-4; WCXU 3,4; Man­agement Society 3,4; Dorm Council 3,4; Student Review Board 4; X.O.M.M. 4 ; Eastern Club 1-3.

THOMAS A. RILEY Cleveland, Ohio B.S. (English)

WCXU 3,4; Cleve­land Club 1-4; Sail­ing Club 1,2.

JAMES A. RIZZO Cincinnati, Ohio

A.B. (Psychology) Psychology Club 3,4; Psi Chi 4.

GERALD R. RISCH Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Marketing) Marketing Club 4 ; Accounting Society 2.

JAMES L. ROBINSON

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Physics)

Physics Club 1-4.

CLIFFORD A. ROE, JR.

Vermilion, Ohio B.S. (English)

Who's Who 3 ; Knights of Columbus 3,4; Student Council 3,4; Social Chairman 4 ; Pre-Law Society 3,4; X.U. News 1,2,3.

THOMAS C. ROEDERSHEIMER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Accounting Society 3,4; Rifle Club 1.

LEO H. ROLFES, JR. Harrison, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting)

Band 1-4, Treasurer 3, President 4; Ac­counting Society 4.

RICHARD W. ROBERS

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Industrial

Relations) Senior Gift Commit­tee 4; Rifle Club 1.

RICHARD J. ROMANOS

West Hartford, Connecticut

B.S. (Philosophy) Dean's List 3,4; Knights of Columbus 1-4; WCXU 1-3; Pre-Law Society 3,4; Phil­osophy Club 3 ; Clef Club 1; Musketeer 4; Table Number One 3, 4 ; Spanish Club 1,2; Eastern Club 1-4.

90

PHILLIP E. R O M I T O Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Philosophy) Cum laude Dean's List 1,3,4; Political Forum 2; Athenaeum 2,3; Mermaid Tavern 2; Philosophy Club 3,4; Table Number One 3,4; Vice-President 2.

RONALD M. ROSNOSKY Youngstown, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Economics) Football 1-4; Economics Club 2-4; Buckeye Club 2-4.

PAUL S. ROTTMUELLER Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Marketing) Management Society 3,4; Marketing Club 3,4.

FRED J. RUNK, JR. Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting)

Accounting Society 3,4.

CHARLES J. ROUSE

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

JAMES A. RUPEY Chicago, Illinois

B.S.B.A. (Finance) Football 1-4; Chicago Club 1-4; Mathemat­ics Club 1; Invest­ment Club 3,4.

CHARLES E. R U P R E C H T

Ludlow, Kentucky B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Accounting Society 3,4; Management Society 3,4; Rifle Club 1.

WILLIAM R. RUSS Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (History) Sodality 1,2; Rifle Club 1; Interracial Society 1.

JOHN G. RYAN Chicago, Illinois

B.S.B.A. (Marketing) Marketing Club 3,4; Flying Club 4 ; Chi­cago Club 1-4.

BRUCE G. SATZGER

Norwood, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Pershing Rifles 1,2; Accounting Society 2-4.

JAMES W. SATZGER

Norwood, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Pershing Rifles 1,2; Accounting Society 3,4.

KENNETH T. SCHACHLEITER Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (English)

WCXU 4; Pre-Law Society 3,4.

RONALD E. SCHEFFER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (History)

Cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Pre-Law Society 4 ; Inter­national Club 4.

91

JAMES H. SCHEPER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Dean's List 2; Ac­counting Society 4; Management Society 3,4.

NORBERT J. SCHEPER

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Dean's List 2; Rifle Club 1; Accounting Society 3,4; Pre-Law Society 3,4.

GERALD L. SCHICK

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Biology)

Dean's List 1; Biol­ogy Club 3,4.

THOMAS J. SCHLINKERT Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Economics)

^

"The question is," says Dick Helmick, "whether the smoke is enter­ing or leaving the magician mouth of Butch Wenz." While Ray Greis sits ready to extinguish the fire in case of a catastrophe. This is another question these historians can't answer until the event is long passed.

ROBERT A. SCHNEIDER

Cincinnati, Ohio A.B. (German)

Magna cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Heidelberg Club 3,4, Vice-President 4.

DAVID A. SCHMID Cincinnati, Ohio' A.B. (Biology)

Magna cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Po­land Philopedian De­bating Society 1-4; Vice-President 3, President 4; Alpha Sigma Nu 3,4, Vice-President 3,4; Sodality 1-3; Biology Club 3,4, Secretary 3; Student Review Board 4, Chief Justice 4.

ROBERT J. SCHRAGE Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting) Band 1,2; Jazz Club 2; Accounting Society 3,4.

Musketeer 4.

DALE P. SCHUBELER Cincinnati, Ohio A.B. (English)

ROY J. SCHUMACHER Bellevue, Kentucky B.S. (Chemistry)

Dean's List 2; Alchemyst Club 4.

92

HOWARD J. SCHUTTE

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Dean's List 2; Ac­counting Society 3,4.

RICHARD G. SCHUTTE

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

Marketing Club 4; Management Society 4.

JAMES D. SHAW Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Political Science)

Summa cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Inter­national Club 4; Eco­nomics Club 4.

DONALD E. SIEBERT

Norwood, Ohio B.S. (Psychology)

Dean's List 4; Biology Club 3,4; Physics Club 1,2; Psychology Club 4; Psi Chi 4.

JOSEPH M. SILLS Maysville, Kentucky

B.S. (Political Science)

Economics Club 3,4; Political Forum 2,3; Kentucky Club 1,2.

THOMAS K. SIMPSON

Port Huron, Michigan B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

Dean's List 2; Dorm Council 2,3; Knights of Columbus 2-4; Economics Club 4; Marketing Club 4; Detroit Club 1-3.

MADHAV SINGH Udaipur (RAJ)

India B.S.B.A. (Finance)

Dean's List 1; Rifle Club 1,2; Invest­ment Club 3,4; Sail­ing Club 1.2; Market­ing Club 3,4; Ac­counting Society 2,3; International Club 1,2.

JAMES A. SLIFE Lakewood, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Industrial Relations)

Cleveland Club 1-4; Management Society 3,4; Jazz Club 1,2; Masque Society 1,2; Mardi Gras, Co-Chairman 3 ; Sodality 2; Junior Prom Com­mittee.

E. GILMORE SLINEY, JR. Elgin, Illinois

B.S.B.A. (Marketing) Basketball 1; Chicago Club 3,4; Sailing Club 3.

ALLAN D. SMILEY Cold Springs, Kentucky

B.S. (History) Dean's List 3 ; Rifle Club 1; Pershing Rifles 1,2.

DENNIS J. SMITH Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Management) Satellite Club 1,4, President 4; Management Club 3,4.

JOHN D. SOMMER Batavia, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Economics) Physics Club 1,2; Economics Club 4; Knights of Columbus 3,4.

93

WAYNE J. STAPLES

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Industrial

Relations) Senior Gift Com­mittee; Economics Club 4 ; Interracial Society 1,2.

JAMES J. STEIGERWALD Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Chemistry)

Alchemyst Club 2-4; Rifle Club 1.

PHILIPP A. STOEBERL

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Economics) Dean's List 3 ; Eco­

nomics Club 2-4.

WILLIAM N. STRATMAN

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Economics)

Economics Club 2-4, President 4; Manage­ment Club 3-4; X.O.M.M. 4; Rifle Club 1.

ROBERT C. STROSAHL

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Biology)

Sodality 1-4; Biology Club 3,4.

DALE C. STUBENRAUCH Cincinnati, Ohio

Cum laude Dean's List 2-4.

WILLIAM L. SULLIVAN

Dubuque, Iowa B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

Marketing Club 3,4; Football 1-4; Invest­ment Club 3,4; Chi­cago Club 4.

EDWARD J. SULLIVAN

Chicago, Illinois B.S.B.A. (Economics)

Dean's List 2,3; Chi­cago Club 1-4; Eco­nomics Club 1-4; Knights of Columbus 2-4.

EDWARD H. SUNDERMANN,

JR. Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Marketing) Marketing Club 4; Economics Club 4; Investment Club 3; Rifle Club 2.

JOSEPH M. SWEENEY Arlington Heights, Illinois

B.S.B.A. (Accounting) Dean's List 3 ; Chicago Club 1-4; Dorm Council 3 ; Golf Team 1-4; Accounting Society 3,4.

STEPHEN G. SZUCS Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting) Rifle Club 1,2, Treasurer 2; Accounting Society J,4.

JOHN R. TEDESKI Chicago, Illinois

B.S. (Economics) Dean's List 4; Chicago Club 1-4, Vice-President 4; Economics Club 3,4; Masque Society 4.

94

ROBERT W. TELZROW

Cleveland, Ohio B.S. (Biology)

Cum laude Dean's List 1-4; Knights of Co­lumbus 2,3; Biol­ogy Club 3,4; Cleve­land Club 1-4.

HOWARD G. THOMAS

Cincinniti, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Accounting Society

3,4; Management Society 3,4.

CARL S. T O M O F F Oak Park, Michigan

B.S. (Biology) Dean's List 1,4; Ten­nis Team 1-4; Sailing Club 1-3, Treasurer 1-2, Rear Commo­dore 2-3; Clef Club 1-3; Biology Club 3, 4; Psychology Club 3 ; Philosophy Club 4.

NORBERT J. TOPOLEWSKI

Detroit, Michigan B.S. (History)

Sodality 1-3; X.U. Band 1-4, Vice-Presi­dent 3, Drum Major 1-4; Jazz Club 1-2.

DAVID V. TREXLER

Wilmette, Illinois B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Accounting Society 2-4; Economics Club 4 ; Management Club 4.

DONALD W UEBBING

Cleveland, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Marketing)

Clef Club 2,3; Cleve­land Club 1-4; Mar­keting Club 4 ; Senior Gift Committee.

ERNEST L. VAGEDES Piqua, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting) Dean's List 2,4; So­dality 1-4, Sodality House President 3, Sodality Council 3 ; Alpha Sigma Nu 3,4, Secretary 4 ; X.O.M.M. 3,4; Who's Who 3; Accounting Society 4.

WILIAM B. VONDERHAAR Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S.B.A. (Accounting)

Accounting Society 3,4, Vice-President 4.

95

DANTE S. VANNELLI Birmingham,

Michigan B.S. (English)

French Club 1-4, Vice-President 2, President 3,4; Masque Society 1-4; Pre-Law Society 3,4; Political Forum 2,3.

THOMAS F. WALDRON Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Political Science) Dean's List 2-4; Poland Philopedian Debating So­ciety; Masque Society 1,2; Economics Club 3,4; Political Forum 2,3; Pre-Law Society 3,4; Fine Arts Committee 3,4; Student Tutoring Society 4.

DALE L. WALTERS Cleveland, Ohio

B.S. (Psychology) Clef Club 2; Economics Club 3,4, Secretary 4 ; Knights of Columbus 1-4; Knights Manor, 4; Psy­chology Club 3,4; Cleveland Club 2-4.

F. THOMAS WEBER Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Biology)

Dean's List 2-4; Biology Club 3,4; Pershing Rifles 1,2; Sodality 1-4.

JAMES L. WELLINGHOFF Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Economics) Economics Club 4; Marketing Club 4; Rifle Club 1.

PAUL F. WENKER Cincinnati, Ohio

B.S. (Political Science)

Cum laude Dean's List 1,2,4; Hei­delberg Club 1-4, Treasurer 2-3, Presi­dent 4; Pre-Law Soci­ety 4 ; X.U. News 3, Associate Editor 3 ; Musketeer 3-4, As­sistant Editor 3, As­sociate Editor 4; Senior Gift Commit­tee ; Political Forum 2-3.

RONALD A. WEIGAND Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Biology)

Dean's List 2-4; Rifle Club 1-2; Biology Club 3-4.

ROBERT J. WEINKAM Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (Chemistry)

Alchemyst Club 2-4; Sodality 1; Rifle Club 1.

WILLIAM D. WEITZEL Bridgeville, Pennsylvania B.S. (Biology) Cum laude

Dean's List 1-4; Radio Club 1-2, Secretary 2; Knights of Columbus 3-4; Biology Club 3-4, Sec­retary 3; Clef Club 2; Homecoming Committee 3.

MICHAEL R. WEST

Chicago, Illinois B.S.B.A.

(Management) Dean's List 3-4; Management Club 3-4; Economics Club 4; Investment Club 3-4.

EDWARD F. WENZ Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. (History)

Clef Club 1-2; Rifle Club 1.

ROBERT C. WILKINS

Dayton, Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Cum laude

Dean's List 1-4; Ac­counting Society 2-4; Sodality 1-4; Student Council Comptroller 3 ; X.O.M.M. 3-4; Radio Club 3-4.

WILLIAM L. WILL Cristobal, Canal Zone

B.S. (Economics) Clef Club 2-4; Eco­nomics Club 3.

PATRICK J. WILLIAMS

Milford, Ohio B.S. (Physics)

Dean's List 4; Phys­ics Club 2-4.

JAMES T. WOOD Cleveland Heights,

Ohio B.S.B.A.

(Accounting) Baseball 2-4; Basket­ball 1; Cleveland Club 1-4, President 4; Accounting Society .4.

MICHAEL E. YOUNG

Cincinnati, Ohio B.S.B.A. (Economics)

Economics Club 4; Rifle Club 1; Invest­ment Club 4; Man­agement Society 4.

RUSSELL N. YOUNG

Chicago, Illinois B.S. (History)

Dean's List 4; Masque Society 1-4, Vice-President 3-4; WCXU 1-4; Knights of Columbus 2-4; Student Council 2.

96

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XAVlEHmMlW COAT OF ARMS

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112

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Freshman Class Officers: Dick Schmitt, S e c ; Joe Trauth, Pres.; Tony Ratterman, V.P.; Phil Schmidt, Treas.

Sophomore Class Officers: Bill Keck, V.P.; Joe Rouse, Treas.; Ron Mensik, Pres.; Jerry Duwel, Sec.

Junior Class Officers: Dave Cook, Treas.; Bill Mas-terson, Pres.; Tom Smith, V. P.; Denny Doyle, Sec.

Senior Class Officers: Fred Bernstein, Sec.-Treas. Denny Long, Pres.; Pat Deegan, V.P.

116

Student Council

Student Council is the principal agency of stu­dent participation in university government.

Its purpose according to Rudy Hasl, President of the Student Body, is "to provide the optimum opportunity for the student to develop himself athletically, socially, spiritually and academically. Athletically, the Student Council sponsored the intramural program, pep rallies, and presented awards to outstanding athletes.

Socially, the Student Council sponsored the an­nual Homecoming and Mardi Gras festivities. They also brought such singing groups as Peter, Paul, and Mary to the campus. Spiritually, the Student Council, with the Sodal­ity and the Spiritual Welfare Committee, spon­sored a leadership retreat and other beneficial programs.

Academically, the Student Council sponsored the magazine subscription drive, the Leadership Con­ference, teacher evaluation, and a Fine Arts pro­gram.

I

Rudy Hasl, President of the Student Body.

In the field of human relations and civil rights; members of Council participated in a national conference in Washington, D.C. In December, a group of ten students went to Jackson, Mississippi to observe first-hand the racial conditions. While there, Rudy Hasl invited Governor Ross Barnett of Mississippi to speak at Xavier. The adminis­tration's decision to withdraw the invitation re­ceived nationwide coverage and resulted in a stu­dent demonstration protesting the decision.

Tony Lazar, Athletic Chairman; Kip Roe, Social Chair­man ; Mike DeFazio, Academic Chairman.

FIRST ROW: Bob Blaser, Chairman, Board of Elections; Tom Murray, Comptroller; Tony Lang, Sodality Prefect. SECOND ROW: John Schaal, Human Relations Committee; Frank Duda, Parliamentarian; Pete Galicky, Assistant Social Chairman; Gerry Pater, Assistant Athletic Chairman.

'•f^ 1

117

Richard Grupenhoff, Wil­liam Revellese, D a v e Schmid, Craig Kinzelman, Joe Diersing, David Bird.

Student Review Board The Student Review Board represents a sincere attempt on the part of the students to assume a share of the university's responsibility for student conduct. Heading the Board was Chief Justice David A. Schmid.

Student Tutoring Society

The newly-formed Student Tutoring Society was founded to provide free-of-charge tutoring to aca­demically troubled students who wish to improve their scholastic standing. The major number of tutors were from the fields of mathematics and the sciences.

FIRST ROW: David Flaspohler, Moder­ator; Joseph Evans, Bernard Hargett, Mi­chael Buerkle, Vice-President; Richard Hentz, Jack Niehaus. SECOND ROW: Charles Donohoe, John Murray, Mike Kiefer, Mike Marchal, Anthony Cianciolo. THIRD ROW: Dan Steible, Patrick Dun­ne, Roger Brandner, Tom Dunne, Tom Tuning.

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Edmund Burke Society

Dedicated to prudent, dispassionate deliberation on political issues of monumental import, the august thinkers who compose the Edmund Burke Society shun the notorious radicalism which plagues so-called political "action" groups. Re­solving a crisis through an impromptu caucus outside parking attendant Gene Noble's watch-tower, are cabinet members Hon. Richard Ro-manos. Peerless Foreign Minister; Hon. Thomas Waldron, Glorious War Minister; Hon. Bernard Hargett, Supreme Chief Justice; and Hon. Robert Ryan, Most Exalted President.

Campus Student Association

Founded in 1963, the newly-formed Campus Stu­dent Association strives to provide the Xavier stu­dents with various services pertinent to campus life, as exemplified by the bookmobile and the gala Mardi Gras weekend.

FIRST ROW: Michael DeSarno, Sec ; Brian Moore, Tres.; Fred Bernstein, Pres.; Charles Donohoe, V.P.; Tom Murray. SECOND ROW: Richard Schmitt, Jim Hannigan, Jim Col­lins, Jim Burnor, William Hackman, Jr.

SODALITY: SEATED: Ernie Vagedes, Jim Reesing, Bill Lessner, Bob Woelfel. SECOND ROW: Marv Hackman, Dave McMahon, John Ward, Bob Wilkins, Bill Masterson, Roy Lips­comb, Al Fowler, Bill Wood, Carlos Balma, Bill Schlaudecker, Bob Strohsahl. THIRD ROW: Gerry Blessing, Gerry Pax, John Stratman, Gordy Myers, Kevin Hunt, Bill Walchli.

CANDIDATES: SEATED: John Tromans, Kevin Riordan, Bill Walsh, Bob Schmidt. SEC­OND ROW: Phil Schmidt, Bob Koch, Dick Schmitt, Jim Haban, Paul Fellinger, Denny Coyne, Steve Mazrimas, John Downey. THIRD ROW: Mike Berkery, Bob Weber, Hank Coors, Dan Gardner, Dan Kruse, Clem Sako.

CANDIDATES: FIRST ROW: Art Lyons, Bill Hale, Jim Izanec, John Bell, Pete Plesinger, Don Romer. SECOND ROW: John Bertoni, Dave Stefek, Steve Weber, Ted Handrop, Char­les Penner, Greg Stratman.

120

Sodality

Sodalists of Xavier are dedicated to a self-de­velopment which has as its central feature "Christ-development" in themselves. The pro­gram only begins here, for, as Christians, that de­velopment must manifest itself in a dynamic pro­gram of Catholic Action.

This past year the Sodalists continued their Operation Christ during the summer, spoke at local high schools and out-of-town colleges, and worked at Longview State Hospital. Manresa, a three-day workshop for incoming Freshmen, was a major project this year. Held in the X.U. Ar­mory, MANRESA combined the Spiritual Ex­ercises of St. Ignatius with the techniques of group dynamics.

Tutoring at St. Mark's grade school and a proj­ect at the Bob Hope House for juvenile delin­quents were included in their plans.

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Joe Evans, Councilman; Terry Rohen, Councilman; Ken Czillinger, Councilman; Craig Kin­zelman, Vice-Prefect; Tony Lang, Prefect; Joe Nesselhuf, Councilman.

John McKiernan — President of Knights Manor Alice Seward — House Mother Tom McLaughlin — Deputy Grand Knight Knights of Columbus

The Xavier Council of the Knights of Columbus once again directed its many social and apostolic activities from its headquarters on North Crescent Avenue. The council annually sponsors two picnics for orphans and helps to staff Xavier's Operation Youth.

Active in campus life, the Knights have sponsored the winning Homecoming Queen for the past four years.

Left; John McKiernan, Rory Lenihan, John Mawby. BOTTOM ROW: ON STAIRS: Nick Conflitti, Mick Clouse, Kip Roe, Mark Cianciolo, Dale Walters, Bob Pierce, Mike Maxian. TOP ROW ON STAIRS: Jim Convell,'

Hugh Miller, Gary Personette, Steve Braun, Hohn Mur­ray, Tom Hounihan, Tom McLaughlin, George Doyle, Mike McCoffrey, Bill Bruns.

Alpha Sigma Nu

Alpha Sigma Nu, the National Jesuit Honorary Fraternity, initiated additional members from the Junior and Senior classes last January. The honor is conferred on students who have proven their excellence through scholarship and service to the university. This year marked the fiftieth anniver­sary of the fraternity.

Officers were Chuck McClain, President; David Schmid, Vice-President; Ernest Vagedes, Secre­tary; and Joseph Mollmann, Treasurer.

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SEATED: Chuck McClain, President, Rev. George Curran, S.J., Moderator, Dave Schmid, Vice-President. STANDING: Ernie Vagedes, Secretary; Henry Chambers, Graduate Student, Francis Schmidt, Graduate Student, Joseph Molmann, Treas­urer.

SEATED: Ken Czillinger, Jim Brogle, Bill Eastlake, Mike Mullen. STANDING: Craig Kin­zelman, Tony Lang, Howard Charbeneau, Gary Mappes.

123

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BOTTOM ROW: Mohan N. Sutaria, India; Dr. B. J. Cerimele, Moderator; Antonio G. Bernas, Philippines; Livinius Amanz'e, Nigeria. SECOND ROW: Bernard Ikezuagu, Nigeria; Irwin L. Jose, Philippines; Papan Devnani, India; David H. Falk, U.S.A.; Godwin Ngan-wuchu, Nigeria; TOP ROW: Albert Dilorio, U.S.A.; Jose A. Arruza, Cuba, Edward T. Laios, U.S.A.

International Relations

The International Relations Club is composed of both domestic and foreign students. The func­tions of the club are directed towards the ex­change of cultures, customs, traditions, and ide­ologies among the countries represented. The or­ganization also serves to promote the reception, orientation, and integration of the foreign students on campus.

Bill Forssander, Livy Amanze, Godwin Nganwughu.

124

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Spanish Club

The Spanish Club, under the guidance of its moderator Dr. Vega, has continued its study of South American culture. This year the Spanish Club has combined with the other Spanish clubs in the area, participating in academic and social activities, which included a program of Spanish Christmas traditions presented at the Area Lan­guage Club's holiday festivities.

Biology Club Bill Keck, Ned Green, Pres., Tom Fiehrer, Fred Reister.

The Biology Club is an academic organization whose members participate in seminars, in field trips, in discussion of faculty and student research projects, and in other similar activities.

BOTTOM ROW: Don Birmingham, Bob Schreck, Pat Stokes, Patrick Perkins, Curtis Pantle, C. H. Gartner, Bernard Lemieuz, Dominic Macedonia. SECOND ROW: Tony Thomas, John Wilhelm, Ken Burman, Jack Voll-man, Craig Voegele, Robert Weber, William Eilerman, G. L. Schick, John Kowalski, Michael Schaeffer. THIRD ROW: Pat

Noonan, Robert Pellarin, Mark Imwalle, Wayne Milos, William Westendorf, Jarry DeMarco, Joseph Glassmeyer, Doug Edwards, Bill Strohsahl. TOP ROW: R. C. Glueck, Joe Bifano, R. E. Rolfes, W. R. Holton, Thomas Miller, John Dobradenka, Larry Hulefeld, President.

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Musketeer Band

Under the able direction of Constantine F. Soriano, the band performed in notable style, easing the half-time tensions of many followers of Xavier's athletic fortunes.

There were many firsts undertaken by the band this year. They sponsored the Catholic Boys' High School Music Festival held in April and joined with the Clef Club to give a memorable concert during Family Weekend.

•V . .

Norb Topolewski, Xavier's Drum Major for the past four years, shows his now famous form.

126

k

Constantine Soriano receives a request from Little Sparky.

Austin Towle, William C. Martin, Vice President; Thomas R. McCoy, Secretary; Rev. Edward A. Bradley, S.J., Robert D. Mueller, President; Frederick G. Werner

Faculty Moderator; Melvin Ohmer, Treasurer; Carmen A. Catanese.

Sigma Pi Sigma

Sigma Pi Sigma, the national honorary physics society, is both an honor conferred upon noteworthy physics students and an organization for promotion of interest in physics.

Lectures given by Dr. Aharonov of Yeshiva University and Dr. Brill from Yale Uni­versity, who need no introduction in their field, absorbed the 4000-7800 Angstrom band during two meetings of the fraternity.

Psychology Club

The Psychology Club has attempted to keep pace with the increasing number of students majoring in psychol­ogy. During the past year the club had some forty mem­bers as compared to ten or fifteen in past years. The club held meetings with such features as a human elec­troencephalograph demonstration, films presenting re­search, and noted speakers from Xavier and other uni­versities.

Officers for 1963-1964 were Allan Pantle, President; Gerry Kysela, Vice-President; Nick.Alwine, Secretary; and Jim Brogle, Treasurer.

BOTTOM: Harry Hosey, Gerry Kysela, Alan Pantle, Pres.; Nick Alwin, Sec ; Jim Brogle, Ray O'Connor, Ray Bowen. SECOND: Mike Hardings, William Rohlfs, Don Siebert, Rudy Silver, Tim

Jefferys, Brian Moore, John Dehan, Jack Linn. TOP: Bill Mer-sel, Dennis O'Connell, Bruce Halliman, John Rohls, Marv Hack-man, Nick Redella, Mike McCarthy, Bill Eilerman.

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Sailing Club The Xavier University Sailing Club offers an opportunity to all undergraduates to learn the skill of sailing, to participate in intercollegiate sports, to travel, and to meet students from col­leges throughout the Midwest.

This year the X U sailors participated in twelve intercollegiate regattas, tw o of w^hich w^ere hosted on its home w^aters—Lake Cowan.

STANDING: Rusty Felter, Tom Mathy, John Schlaug. SEATED: Tom Brown (Executive Committee Chairman), Patty Watts, Secretary; Steve Petix, Commodore; Tom Grogan, Steve Schultz, Coach.

129

Gathered around the piano, the members of the Heidelberg Verein sing a few choruses of a lusty German drinking song.

Heidelberg Verein

Gemutlichkeit is the byword of the Heidelberg Verein. During the past year, the club initiated many of the customs and practices of a typical German student fraternity. Not neglecting social and academic goals, the club offered lectures and films and joined wdth other area language clubs in various social activities.

Dr. Bourgeois, moderator of the Heidelberg Verein, lent his invaluable assistance to all the club's endeavors.

Left to right: Dr. Joseph Bourgeois, moderator; Pat Perkins, treasurer; Paul Wenker, presi­dent; Bob Schneider, vice-president; Frank Duda, secretary.

130

STANDING: R. T. O'Neill, Tony Steimle,

George Powell, Don Bruser, Paul Schmidt,

Eugene Wesseler, Tom Price, Bob Weinkam,

Al Berger. SEATED: Al Haas.

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FRONT: John Westendorf. Others, left to right: Bob Summer, Rich­ard Fuchs, Dan Steible, Bobby Danner, Bernard Scheve, Kevin Foley.

Alchemysts

The Alchemyst Club, in its role of supple­menting classroom learning, conducted monthly meetings, each ending with films or talks by prominent chemists. The club sponsored symposia with other universities and put on displays for the students of Xavier during the course of the year.

Staffers Mike Kennedy, Linda Oldham, and Denny Chalk enjoy a brief respite from the office routine.

Paul Wenker and Carol Zerhusen take over the

editor's desk—temporarily!

Dick Helmick and Tom McDonald.

MUSKETEER

The Musketeer staff was not at the starting line when the race for the deadlines began, but they were not dis­qualified from the race. Rather it meant only a making up of for lost time and an extended forces march to de­cide on a theme and a cover for the yearbook, as w ell as to meet the first inevitable deadline. The task was to come up to and even surpass the product of the year before, a product which had deservedly won such wdde acclaim.

The sagging w^alls of the South Hall "paradise," the office headquarters of the yearbook, cried out at three and four o'clock in the mornings before the deadlines, in keeping with their own fate, "You'll never make it." But somehow the staff did finish the race, and it remained for the stu­dents of Xavier and the "critics" to look at their photos of the finish and to determine what place had been w^on.

'^

Bob O'Brien Editor

Chief photographer Gerry Wolter and his assistant. Bob Ryan.

Ronnie Bleh Special Assistant

to the editor

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Th^vieir^eius CINCtNNATI, OHIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBEK 26, 19Q

PRESIDENT MURDERED Dallas Sniper Mortally Wounds Kennedys-Leftist Assassin Slain As Nation Watches

Executioner Arrested;

Johnson Takes Office

by a sniper's bullet.

JOHN FITZGERALD KENNEDY

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A mourning nation witnessed Oswald's murder over a live national television broadcast.

The 46-year-old Chief Executive was parading in a a open car with Texas Governor John Connally and their wives when the assassin struck. Mr. Kennedy was mortally wounded at 12:31 p.m. (1:31 p.m. EST) .

He died at Parkland Hospital about one-half hour later* His wife, Jacqueline, cradled the bloody head of her

husband in her arms during the frantic but futile dash to the hospital.

Governor Connally was wounded in the right shoulder and is in satisfactory condition after surgery.

Lyndon B. Johnson was sworn in as the Stith President In a somber ceremony about an hour and one-half later. The swearing in took place aboard the presidential plane. The oath was administered while Mrs. Kennedy stood to tha left of the new President.

In the rear of the plane was the bronze coffin in which the fallen Chief Executive lay. The presidential plane ar­rived at Andrews Air Force Base near Washington a t 5:58 p.m. EST. ^

The fatal shot came from a sixth floor window of tha Texas School Book Depository Building along the parade

A Mauser rifle was found on the sixth floor. Three empty shells were nearby.

Oswald was arrested In a movie theater where he fp i with two Dallas policemen in pursuit. Oswald shot and killed one of the policemen before he was subdued,

Oswald was a former pro-Castro marine who onca sought citizenship in Russia. He was chairman of a group called "The Fair Play tor Cuba" Committee. He denied any knowledge of the assassination and remained mute to hia

The tight-lipped accused assassin fell mortally wounded to • «ingle .38 caliber revolver shot flred by Dallas striptease nightcluii operator Jack Ruby, who was described as a "hot-tempered devotee" of the slaia President.

(CoQtiQued on page S>

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Associate editors Zerhusen and O'Brien do

some "co-editing."

"It was anarchy! I definitely believe we should drop sports," asserts Associate Editor Jim Heiselman to a shocked Sports Editor, Ken Czillinger.

134

Xavier News

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"To comfort the afflicted and to afflict the com­fortable.''

To Editor-in-Chief Bob Ryan and his staff, Wil­liam Randolph Hearst's definition of a newspaper's highest duty is not a flowery aphorism, but the very root of the editorial policy practiced in the columns of the Xavier News.

For this year, as perhaps never before, the News has been just that—a Tzg-it jpaper. Pulling no punches in their news and editorial accounts, the editors probed inequities in bookstore prices, allegedly reckless spending by Student Council student disciplinary practices, and discoordination in registration procedures. They defended the ad­ministration's speaker policy, crusaded for in­creased emphasis on individual student responsi­bility, and proposed sweeping changes in every­thing from dormitory regulations to the theology curriculum.

Weekly coverage was comprehensive; accounts ran the spectrum from routine club meetings to racial demonstrations, near-riots at drinking brawls, fatal accidents, and speaker bans. Forty-eight hours after the bullets struck in Dallas, the News had an unprecedented 16-page "extra" on the streets covering every aspect of President Kennedy's assassination.

"We can't afford to be timid," Editor Ryan reflected. "It is always the unreadable that occurs. If nothing else, we've given Xavier a news staff around the clock . . . Hard work is its own reward."

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Editor-in-Chief Ryan

Circulation Manager Dan Mechley literally "laying

down" on the job.

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Associate Editor Hugh Gardiner and

Managing Editor Dave Cook make up

the paper in the News's annex—

Dana Gardens.

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< S j WCXU Staff, STANDING: Terry Osterman,

Charley Walker, William McGowan, Joe Eisaman,

Ken Scha"h!citer, Terry Mahoney, Ted Deucher.

KNEELING: Tom Muelleman, Ray O'Connor,

Mike Malone, Bob Desautels, Harry Grupenhoff,

Mike Sullivan.

Production Chief, Ken Schachleiter and Station Manager, Terry Osterman.

WCXU 1964 marked a change in situation for Xavier's campus radio station WCXU. It moved from the old location into new studios provided in the base­ment of the Alter classroom building. Continuing its normal mode of programming, in accordance with the tastes of the Xavier student body, WCXU moved into its eighth year with renewed interest and participation.

136

Mermaid Tavern

Mermaid Tavern is designed to provide a forum for mutual criticism to those students interested in the art of writing. More truly though. Tavern is a tradition which is within, and at the same time transcends, the mere bounds of the university. It is a proud, sometimes haughty tradition; one of men enamored of beauty and the pur­suit of artistic worth, who, through a rich history, have felt joy in the fellowship of kindred spirits.

Tavern Host: Chuck McClain.

Members of the French Club, STANDING: Charles Penner. Robert Nock. Al Dilorio. Jim Hahn, Fred Reister, David Lawrence, Bill Bruns. SEATED: Thomas Fiehrer.

French Club

As one of the most active clubs on the Xavier campus, the French Club provided its members with a varied program of both social and academic events. Sponsors of the annual book-bill raffle and soiree, the club also joined with the area French clubs for combined meetings. Once again the president was the Buoyant Dante Vannelli; the moderator, Mr. Ebacher.

French Club President Dante \'anelli confers with

M. Ebacher.

French Club Officers: Fred Bern­

stein, Treasurer; Ray O'Connor,

Vice-President and Social Chair­

man : Dee Arnet. Secretary;

Joseph Murphy, Assistant Social

Chairman.

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Political Forum left to right: Poakash Chandani, Tom Bissmeyer. Rudy Hasl, Paul Wenker, Gerry Pater, Thomas Waldron, Chair­

man, Paul Simon. Assistant Moderator; Frank Bonifacic. Frank Armstrong, Frank Duda, Dan Vannelli.

Political Forum

Founded in 1961, the Pohtical Forum attempts to bring speakers to the Xavier campus to lecture on not only current political problems but also on problems in closely related fields. The Forum believes that every student should formulate his ow n views after all sides have been heard, and thus it tries to present a well-balanced program of speakers. The moderator is Rev. W. Henry Ken-ney, S.J., and the assistant moderator is Dr. Paul Simon.

Marketing Club

The aims of the Marketing Club are to establish a broader understanding of the principles, theories, problems, and conditions inherent in marketing, and to develop awareness of job opportunities, and to keep abreast of the new developments in the field. Regular meetings provide the members with an opportunity to meet prominent men in the field of marketing.

Marketing Society, BOTTOM ROW: James Fuller. David De-wald, Don Uebbing, Fred Kappus, Jim Bonahoom, Jack Krohn. SECOND ROW: Dick Metz, Gene Jordan, George Powell, Robert

Bigham, Thomas Reese. TOP ROW: Michael Bartley. Bud Cor-nillie. Robert Hellwig, Tom Simpson, Trustee: J. Gordon Myers, Terrence Rohen.

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Jim Barrett and Al Haas change sets for the

next play.

Tom Ellerbrock, Edna, Mary Dooley, and Mary Lynn Tekulve relax after a long rehearsal for The Long Christmas Dinner.

Tom Muelleman, the man behind the

scenes.

140

Diane McMahon and Judy Beineke.

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Masque Society

The Masque Society, under the facile direction of Mr. Otto Kvapil, had one of its most successful seasons during the past school year. Three pro­ductions were presented this year: the first. The Precious Young Ladies, was a modern adaptation of Moliere's Les Precieux Ridicules, adapted and directed by Mr. Kvapil; the second was a pair of one-act plays, The Long Christmas Dinner by Thornton Wilder and The Ugly Duckling by A.A. Milne, directed by Russ Young '64 and Tom Brin­son '65, respectively. In celebration of the quadri-centennial of Shakespeare's birth, the major pro­duction of the year was the bittersweet comedy, Measure for Measure, directed by Mr. Kvapil, and presented in the dress and style of the Edwardian period. A welcome addition to the Masque Society was Rev. Weaker J. Kapica, S.J., who serve as moderator.

Otto Kvapil, Director

Masque Society Officers. SEATED: Carolyn Maher, house and business mgr.; Tom Brinson, president; Roseanne Humbert, sec­

retary. STANDING. Tom Muelleman, stage manager; Russ Young, vice-president; Rev. W. J. Kapica, S.J., moderator.

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SEATED: Bill Forsander. STANDING: Jack Krohn, Jim Bonahoom, Don Miller, Tom Meyer, Charley Gartner, Mike Stumph.

Jazz Club In the true sense of the phrase, the Jazz Club members may be called patrons of the arts. They promote jazz as a legitimate art form that is distinctly xA.merican. They again sponsored the Battle of Jazz in which local jazz musicians are given the opportunity to say, musically, what they have to say—in open forum.

Chess Club

Last year, a small group of avid, dedicated chess players banded together to form the Xavier Chess Club. Besides playing an occasional match with one of the other teams of the Parkway Chess League, the club is known for the tendency of its members to settle down for a game anytime, any­where on campus. The three disciples of Steinitz and Nimzovitch shown here are Dave Cook, Jerry Steinker, and Dick Meninger, president.

142

Debators

The Poland Philopedian Debating Society dates from the beginning of Xavier University in 1831. The Society meets in weekly debates and travels all over the nation in intercollegiate competition. David A. Schmid, recognized as one of the fore­most intercollegiate debaters in the country, was President.

Since 1956, the Society has been host for the annual Xavier-Marx Invitational Debate Tourna­ment endowed by the late Robert S. Marx.

David A. Schmid

Bernard E. Ikezuagu, David A. Schmid, Frank Duda, Charley Penner, Francis Wagner. Missing from picture: Thomas Beatle Conway.

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FIRST ROW: Dr. Larkin, George Hejny, Dr. Cerimele, Mr. Cissell, Jim Delaney. SECOND ROW: Jim Behne, David Flaspohler, Dan Ribar, Jack Niehaus, Dave Cook. THIRD

ROW: Tom Dunne, Roger Brandner, Tom Bruggeman, Mike Becker, Ken Hunt.

Pi Mu Epsilon In its second year at Xavier, Pi Mu Epsilon, the national honorary mathematics fraternity, initiated sixteen new^ members in ceremonies held late in November. The fraternity, in co­ordination WTth the Math Club, promotes and stimulates interest in mathematical procedure.

Who's Who Who's Who Among Students in American Uni­versities and Colleges is a national publication honoring outstanding students or campus leaders. Xavier lists thirty-three each year, each one receiving a certificate of recognition and a write-up in the annual Who's Who.

SEATED: Mike Mullen, Joe Nesselhuf, Gerry

Pater, Pete Galicky, Bill Eastlake. STANDING:

Dennis O'Connell, Paul Schmidt, Bill Masterson,

Tony Lazar, Tom Brinson, Tom Smith, Tony

Thomas, Harold Thornton, Dave Cook.

144

Clef Club

The Clef Club spreads the name of Xavier Uni­versity across the country through its yearly con­cert tour. During the first semester, the members devoted their time principally to preparation for the concert season. In addition to the concert tours made to Louisville and Chicago, the Clef Club performed at many local high schools and colleges in the second semester. Also, Mundelein College Glee Club, from Chicago, joined the club to present a concert on the Xavier campus. In its final appearance of the year during Family Weekend, the Clef Club gave a joint concert with the Musketeer Band.

4

Jay Michaels escorts Edna, sponsored by the Clef Club, down the aisle at the Homecoming Dance.

Officers are: Mike Hartings, Business Manager; Jay Michaels, President; Tim Joos, Treasurer; John Winkworth, Vice-Presi­dent.

The Clef Club in action.

145

SEATED: Rev. Harker Tracy, Moderator; Jack Flaharty, Sec­retary; Stokes A. Baird, Vice-President; Clem Pater, President; Dan Beckman, Treasurer; David Ryan, Mr. Jerome F. Fatora, Moderator. FIRST ROW: Steve Petix, Gerry Peter, Ed Laios, Ken Meiser, Tom Schmidt, Don Massa, Francis Wagner, Jim Hannigan, Kip Roe, John Murray, A. Frank Portman, Joe Joyce, Jim Stenger,

Frederick Wray, Gerald Benzinger. SECOND ROW: John Greu-lick, William Tepe, John Schmitt, Lew Kemp, Dennis Riley, Al Di lorio, Gary Peltier, Mike Meyers, Ron Scheffer, Ken Bressler, Tom Hiltz, Gary Kaup. THIRD ROW: Hank Coors, Harold Posch-mann, Michael McCarthy, Patrick Dunne, Scott Aultman, Robert Dederichs, Tom Tuning.

Pre-Law Society The purpose of the St. Thomas More Pre-Law Society is to foster interest in the law profession, to help students reach a deci­sion about a career in law, and to guide them in their choice of a proper law school.

Guest speakers representing many law schools throughout the country discussed possible careers in law and counseled stu­dents in their preparation for law school.

Physics Club Affiliated with the American Association of Physics Teachers and the American In­stitute of Physics, the Physics Club offered its members a varied program with films, lectures, and student discussion of indi­vidual research. The president was Car­men Catanese and the moderator was Rev. E. A. Bradley, S.J.

FIRST ROW: Gerald Blessing, Melvin Ohmer, Robert Jim Robinson, Donald Hooper, Carmen A. Caranese, Presi-Mueller, Tom McCoy, Rev. Edward A. Bradley, S. J., dent; Richard Hentz, Vice-President; Charles Messerle, Pat Moderator; Siegfried Hausladen, Dave Westerkamp, Robert Williams, Secretary-Treasurer; J. Christian Beins. Herrmann, William Martin. SECOND ROW: Joe Evans,

146

Flanking Chief Genovese are Donna Galvin, Pattie Watts, Bob Deters, Pattie Reilly, and John Michaels. Michaels said he "couldn't stand it anymore," and went hori­zontal.

Pattie Watts, suspended from the shoulders of co-cheerleaders Donna Galvin and Pat­tie Reilly, hobbles from the field during the Xavier-Ohio University football game.

Cheerleaders

As the main bridge between the student body and the football and basketball teams, the Xavier Cheerlead­ers, led by Captain Nick Genovese, shoulder the ter­rific responsibility of maintaining the student spirit during the games. Ably aided by a bevy of vivacious Xavier Evening Division Co-eds, the Cheerleaders were always on hand and in full voice to revive the students' sometimes flagging spirit during the many "close calls" the Xavier teams experienced during the season.

147

Psi Chi Psi Chi, the national honorary psychology fraternity, was initiated on Xavier's campus in 1962. Its purpose is to advance the science of psychology and to en­courage, stimulate, and maintain scholarship of the individual members. Throughout the year, Xavier's chapter sponsors guest lecturers and annually holds the Student Research Convention in which outstand­ing student research is presented.

Jim Brogle presents the results of his research at the Stu­dent Research Convention.

BOTTOM ROW: Dave Hellkamp, Vice-President; Frank Vilar­do, President; Maria Zaldivar, Ruth Hosty, Margaret Braun, Mar-cia Maugle, Roger Overberg, Secretary; Dr. Bielauskas, Modera­tor: SECOND ROW: Dave Skeen, Mike Kessler, Denny Ky-sels, Joseph Poruier, Simon Mirando, Jim Johnson, Chris Klima,

Fr. Foley. THIRD ROW: Allan Pantle, James Brogle, Norman Berg, Joe Gleese, Michael McCarthy, Dick Scherger, Jim Rizzo, Don Sibert. FOURTH ROW: Dick Nordloh, Nick Alwine, Joe Magyar, Robert Jones.

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In the FRONT ROW to the left are: Larry Kues, Joe Wehlen, Tom Hack; BACK ROW left: Jack Niehaus, Roger Brandner, Tom Dunne. FRONT ROW: right are: Rev. Iseneck-er, Dan Ribar; BACK ROW right: Mr. Flaspohler, Moderator, Mike Becker, and Jim Kenkel.

Mathematics Club

The main interest of Xavier's Mathematics Club is the promotion of scholarship in mathematics. Regular meetings were held two or three times each semester presenting speakers in the field of mathematics. The club also provided its members with a weekly problem-working session.

Investment Club

Founded in May of 1963, the Investment Club, already has a waiting list of eager potential mem­bers. The club studies market trends and cur­rent investment practices. Dues are invested in stock and dividends are split among the mem­bers. John O'Shea was president and Dr. Harri-man was the faculty moderator for the past year.

The members of the Investment Club hold a stockholder's meeting at a local tavern.

149

The Athenaeum

The Athenaeum is Xavier's literary quarterly. Poetry, short stories, essays, and plays submitted by students and professors are its livelihood. Man­uscripts which pass the evaluation of the Editorial Board favorably reach its pages and thereby pro­vide a medium of publication for worthwhile en­deavors.

Nick Genovese, Editor

"What barber scalped you?" asks Howard Charbeneau of Larry Gaichas as Vinie Carotenuto attempts to light a cigarette.

Staff members listen attentively as possible selection for the next issue is presented.

Economics Club As the largest academic club at Xavier, the Eco­nomics Club furthers the scholarly interests of the students majoring in economics and allied fields. The club brings speakers to the campus to talk on current topics of interest to the students. Guiding the club was President Bill Stratman and the energetic Moderator, Rev. Clifford Besse, S.J.

Officers of the Economics Club: Dale Walters, Corresponding Secretary; Fr. Besse, Moderator; John Brady, Secretary; Robert Joseph, Treasurer; Bill Stratman, President; Pat Deegan, Vice-President.

Members of the Economics Club lis­ten to a guest speaker at a dinner-meeting.

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Fort Wayne Club

Cleveland Club

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Captain Johnson and his elephant gun.

S. F. C. Forest, the 'Mr. Clean' of the ROTC Depart­ment, rejects another one.

"Well, now that you no longer outrank me . . . " sug­gests Cadet Major Dick Helmick to former Honorary Cadet Colonel Elaine Fisher.

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ROTC

The primary mission of the Reserve Officers Training Corps at Xavier is the selection and production of junior officers for the U.S. Army Reserve or the Regular Army. The interest in and dedication to this purpose by the detachment is evidenced by the increasing number of career officers which are being produced each year from among the military students at Xavier.

Besides producing future officers, the R O T C program makes a significant contribution not only to the country but to the university and the individual student in par­ticular. The ROTC program helps to foster and promote patriotism, good citizenship, gentlemanly conduct, esprit de corps, and an appreciation of the traditions of Xavier and the founding spirit of the Society of Jesus.

John Lehrter gives th^ camera a cynical smile as he pre­pares to demonstrate to the other students how to prop­erly execute a crash landing.

Yes, Major, that's very interesting, but how do you get a fix on an ICBM?

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The Very Rev. Paul L. O'Connor, S.J., congratulates Miss Janet Hornback, newly crowned Honorary Cadet Colonel for 1963-64, at a special ceremony held in lieu of the postponed Military Ball.

Elaine Fisher formally turns over the duties of Honorary Cadet Colonel to Janet.

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Members of the Xavier Order of Military Merit are: BOTTOM ROW: John Lorenz, Dale Brinker, Richard Helmick, President; Terry Osterman, Gehl Babinec. SECOND ROW: William Revel­

lese, Thomas Murray, Michael Larmon, Ernest Vagedes, Michael Hartings. TOP ROW: William Stratman, Gary Juengling, Rob­ert Wilkins, Dennis Long.

X.O.M.M. The Xavier Order of Military Merit is an honor­ary organization of Advanced Course Cadets who are selected for membership because of their lead­ership qualities on and off the drill floor, high military and academic grades, and relative stand­ing in the Cadet Regiment.

The organization is in charge of arrangements for the annual Military Ball, the selection of the Hon­orary Cadet Colonel, and other ROTC social functions and events. The President of X O M M for 1963-64 is Richard A. Helmick and the mod­erator is Captain Paul L. Munier.

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Cadet Richard Helmick and William Stratman calcu­late the proper quadrant elevation, fork, and charge to drop a round on Mount St. Joseph and O.L.C. This in­formation was requested by "Dear Freddy."

159

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Pershing Rifles

The Pershing Rifles, Honorary Cadet Colonel Janet Hornback, and Honorary Cadet Captain Mary Flanneily show off the tro­phies which were won by Company G at the Fifth Annual X.U. Invitational Drill Meet.

The Pershing Rifles is an honorary mili­tary fraternity. Xavier's Company G-1 is one of the most active organizations on campus. Besides producing "crack" drill teams for competition in meets through­out the country, the PR's provide their members with comradeship and instill in them military discipline and a sense of pride. This organization also serves as the official University representative at all public parades and other military-univer­sity functions. John C. Corson is Company Commander and Major Edward S. Maj and SFC Richard Forest are the modera­tors.

160

'You boys will have a goood time here this summer.'" This past summer, a tradition was broken; the Advanced Course class of senior cadets went through a rigorous six weeks of training at Indi-antown Gap Military Reservation near Annville, Pennsylvania. In previous years, the cadets have gone to Fort Sill, Oklahoma, for instruction at the famous artillery branch school. But this past year, the Department of Defense, in an effort to turn out a more versatile and well-rounded offi­cer, ordered that all R O T C cadets, regardless of branch, take their summer training at military science camps.

At IGMR, recognized as probably the finest camp of its type in the U.S., over 3000 cadets received training in individual weapons, machine guns, recoiless weapons, mortars, maps, first aid, signal communications, chemical, oiological, and radiological warfare, and small unit tactics. Rounding out the six weeks training were a field problems test, a physical combat proficiency test, and a field training exercise.

161

Radio Club

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Backed by 1000 watts of power, K8WBL broadcasts to stations located in Europe, Asia, and South America. The radio club also offers a message handling service for the student body. To faciliate this service, K8WBL is a member of MARS and several other radio nets. Fred Tromans is President of the club and Captain Richard Johnson is moderator.

Harry Horstman and Fred Tromans show that true "hams" can enjoy a joke even in code.

Members of the Xavier ROTC Rifle Team are: BOTTOM ROW: James Gutzwieler, Philip Wesley, Gary MacNamara, Fred Hoff­man. TOP ROW: Captain Paul L. Munier, Officer in Charge;

William Sontag, Deane Wiethe, Peter Muceus, Elmer Wahl, Dennis Chalk, SFC William Sanns, Team Coach.

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Rifle and Pistol Club Founded for the purpose of promoting individual marksmanship with rifle and pistol, the X.U. Ri­fle and Pistol Club offers its members free ammuni­tion and the use of modern small bore firearms on its sixteen point range, one of the finest in the Midw^est. The rifle team, under the guidance of Captain Paul Munier, fires in the Ohio R O T C Rifle League. The Pistol Team, with Captain Richard Johnsen as moderator, competes in the Midwest Pistol League. Both teams are coached by SFC William Sanns. The club annually spon­sors the well know^n Walsh Invitational Rifle Match.

James Butler, Rifle Team Captain

Members of the Pistol Team are: BOTTOM ROW: Martin Moderator; McTighe, Henry Willig, Team Captain; Donald Sandru, Kimener. Joseph McDowell. TOP ROW: Captain Richard Johnsen,

Richard Higgins, David O'Toole, Michael

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Walt Mainer, sensational sophomore halfback, drives for yardage against Kent State. Mainer gained 744 yards

rushing in 120 carries during the season and was se­lected as Xavier's Most Valuable Player.

COULD HAVE BEEN BETTER

Xavier 7 0 Quantico Marines 0 0 Place: Xavier Stadium Attendance: 12,106

Xavier 0 0 Miami 0 12 Place: Miami Field Attendance: 10,457

Xavier 7 0 Kent State 0 7 Place: Xavier Stadium Attendance: 7,844

Xavier 0 6 Cincinnati 6 14 Place: Nippert Stadium Attendance: 25,500

Xavier 7 0 Dayton 0 7 Place: Baujan Field Attendance: 15,000

Xavier 0 12 Villanova 0 0 Place: Xavier Stadium Attendance: 7,884

Xavier 7 7 Ohio University 0 0 Place: Xavier Stadium Attendance 9,271

Xavier 14 3 Texas Western 0 0 Place: Xavier Stadium Attendance: 8,281

Xavier 0 0 Detroit . 0 6 Place: Titan Stadium Attendance: 12,315

Xavier 7 0 Bowling Green 0 6 Place: University Stadium Attendance: 5,500

167

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BOTTOM ROW: Fred Reherman, Jim Brogle, Rich Scolio, Jim Rupkey, Jim Kain, Frank St. Charles, Co-Capt. Joe Mollman. SECOND ROW: Bill Tepe, Bill Eastlake, Sam Salvo, Sam Forn-sagho, Paul Kenny, Mike Burns, Dick Bosticco, Walt Mainer,

and Tom Brennan. TOP ROW: Mitch Dudek, George Wilson, Joe Coyle, Terry Clark, Bill Brummer, Mike Walsh, Tom Quin-lan, Mike Bonnano, and John DeFazio.

MUSKETEER FOOTBALL TEAM-1963

Coach Ed Biles and 1963 co-captains Ken Lehmann and Joe Mollmann.

BOTTOM ROW: Co-Capt. Ken Lehmann, Walt Bryniarski, Bill Sullivan, Jim Higgins, Ron Rosnosky, Bernie Austing, Ed Smith. SECOND ROW: Joe Pedoto, Vince Eysoldt, Joe Wyzko-ski, George Powell, Roger Thesing, Jim Korb, Pete Boylan, and

John Dankert. TOP ROW: Jim Stofko, Mike Junker, Jim Evans, Terry Hughes, Mike Wirth, Terry Brown, Ray Dankel, Hank Brinker, and Jim Barr.

FOOTBALL COACHING STAFF: Chief Scout Bob Von Holle, Backfield Coach Dick Selcer, End Coach Jim Mullen, Head Coach Ed Biles, Line Coach Art Hauser, and Fresh­man Coach Irv Etler.

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A press box view of the Homecoming Game between Xavier and Ohio University. The Muskies blanked the Bobcats, 20—0.

"All I want for Christmas is my two front teeth and the Gov­ernor's Cup" kids Ken Lehmann. Coach Ed Biles, Lehmann, Joe Mollmann, and the Very Reverend Paul L. O'Connor, President

of Xavier University, accept the Governor's Cup, after the Musk­eteers dumped Dayton, 15—14.

170

"I want 3 Big Boys, 2 orders of french fries, and a coke. Fll be over in 15 minutes." Actually quarterback Joe Wyzkoski is chat­ting with two members of the coaching staff situated in the press box.

"We were just a thin line away from having a great year—the type of year we were hoping for." Coach Ed Biles made this comment to some 450 persons who attended the annual football ban­quet.

Coach Biles enjoyed his second consecutive win­ning season, as the Musketeers compiled a 5—4— 1 record. Xavier had an excellent opportunity to receive a post-season bowl bid, until Detroit and Bowling Green slapped the Muskies with losses in the final two games of the season.

The 1963 football team established four new school records. Sophomore halfback Walt Mainer set a record for the most yards ryshing in a single game with a 192—yard outburst against Texas Western.

Sophomore fullback Mike Junker established a record for the most kickoflF yardage for one sea­

son. Junker rambled 278 yards with 10 kickoflF returns, easily breaking the former mark of 243 set by Terry Meyer in 1957.

Two punting records were also erased. George Wilson punted for an average of 38.6 yards per boot, smashing George Potts' 37.9 mark. The 38.6 punting average was a team record too.

Ouantico's Marines handed Xavier a 9—1 set­back in the season's opener at Xavier Stadium. The Muskies scored the first time they had pos­session of the pigskin. X U marched 40 yards in 13 plays with Walt Mainer cracking over from the one for the touchdow^n. Ray Dankel's con­version made it, 7.—0. Quantico tallied all of its points in the third quarter.

The Musketeers stormed from behind in the fourth period to chalk up a 21—12 win over Miami at Oxford. After Ernie Kellermann had guided the Redskins to a seemingly comfortable 12— 0 lead that stood up for three periods, Walt Bryniarski scored two touchdowns and Jim Korb one for Xavier in the fourth quarter.

A very high-spirited Kent State team held loose-playing Xavier to a 7—-1 tie at Xavier Stadium. The Muskies missed numerous scoring chances. Walt Mainer got XU's touchdown. In the fourth quarter Xavier missed two field goals, one of which came with just 38 seconds to play.

Sparked by the dazzling generalship of quarter­back Brig Owens, the Cincinnati Bearcats crushed Xavier, 35—22 at Nippert Stadium. Owens, who was a first-team selection on the Missouri Valley All-Conference squad, gained 133 yards running and passing. He sneaked for one touchdown and passed for another. UC's vic­tory snapped a three-game Xavier win streak against the Bearcats.

A spectacular two-point conversion play provided the Muskies with a 15-—-14 victory over Dayton. Trailing 14—13 in the third quarter, Ed Biles decided to go for broke. X U lined up for an ap­parent one-point try on the conversion. However, Mike Burns took the snap and raced around left end. When Burns was about to be hit short of the goal line he lateraled to placekicker Ray Dankel who sped into the end zone for two points.

Walt Mainer's 7 7-yard scamper in the first quarter helped the Muskies register a 27—0 vic­tory over Villanova. Mainer added another touchdown in the third period. John DeFazio and Walt Bryniarski also scored for Xavier.

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"Anything you can do, I can do better. I can do anything better than you" remarks Little Sparky, the fire dog, to Xavier's Band Director Constantine Sor-riano. This scene formed part of the half time ceremonies at the X.U.—Kent State contest. "Fire Prevention" was the theme of the festivities.

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"Get in step. Get in step or I'll give you two demerits" hollers X.U.'s Joe Mollmann to a Quantico Marine ballcarrier. Mollmann, an Army ROTC student, is obviously dis­pleased with the Marine's inept drill performance.

"An unsuccessful rally?" Xavier students participate in a pep rally on the night before the annual intra-city

clash with Cincinnati. Twenty-four hours later the Bearcats smashed the Muskies, 35—22.

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Mike Bonnano, X.U.'s sophomore guard, moves in on Ohio U. halfback Jim Albert. X's Bill Eastlake and two Bobcats view the action. The Musketeers held the Bobcats to their lowest rushing total in history—22 yards.

Xavier's rugged defense held Ohio U. to its low­est rushing total in history, as the Musketeers de­lighted a Homecoming Day crowd with a 20—0 triumph over the Bobcats. Ohio U. managed to accumulate only 22 yards rushing and the Bob­cats had a minus 28 yard rushing figure in the second half.

Texas Western became Xavier's third straight shutout victim, when the Miners fell to the Muskies, 24—0. Walt Mainer set a new single game rushing record with a total of 192 yards. X U used a "box top" play to register a touch­down on the first play from scrimmage. While the Miners were still in their defensive huddle, Joe Wyzkoski walked up to the pigskin, grabbed it and flipped it to Mainer, who was perched be­hind nine Xavier players, ten yards to the left of the line of scrimmage. Mainer raced 77 yards for the six-pointer.

Detroit's Titans broke a Xavier shutout streak which had lasted for 14 quarters and a total of 194 minutes and 21 seconds. The Titans turned the tables on the Muskies, zeroing XU, 6—0. Fred Beier's second period plunge from the one-yard stripe was the lone touchdow^n of the game. The loss dimmed Xavier's bowl hopes.

In the final game of the season, Bowling Green destroyed any bowd possibilities for the Muskies. Aided by a hotly-disputed oflficiating call, the Falcons rallied in the last quarter for a 26—15 victory. With Xavier ahead, 15—14, George Wil­son faked a punt and ran what appeared to be an X U first down. However, an official reversed his decision and ruled that a fumble by Wilson on the same play had occurred before, and not after the whistle. The Falcons gained possession deep in Xavier territory and quickly pushed across the winning touchdown.

173

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Xavier's award winners at the football banquet sponsored by the Musketeer Club. BOTTOM ROW: Bill Sullivan (Most Improved Player), Walt Mainer (Most Valuable Player), Joe Wyz­koski (Most Improved Player), and Ken Leh­mann (Most Valuable Lineman and Legion of Honor) . TOP ROW: Tom Brennan (1964 co-Captain), Mike DeFazio (1964 co-Captain), and Joe Mollmann (Legion of Honor) . Sullivan and Wyzkoski shared the Most Improved Player award.

"Don't come near me. Doc." This is what sophomore tackle Joe Coyle seems to be thinking, as he glares at trainer Ray Baldwin and team physician Dr. Jerome

Jansen. Notice Coyle's bandaged right hand. Evidently he has already had too many aspirins taped to it.

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BOTTOM ROW: Ron Chimenti, Tom Palmer, Tom Ryan, Ted Bacigalupo, Herb Murray, Carroll Williams. SECOND ROW: Dick Eroshevich, Jim Louder, Rick Sasala, Steve Bailey, Nick Hahn, Tom Tepe, Denny Caponi, Jim Barrett, Mike Lam­bert. THIRD ROW: Irv Etler, Coach; Jim Ostry, Dave Torlina, Jim Davis, Ron Ritz, Clem Sako, Dan Abramowicz, Pat Grady,

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Clifton Jones. FOURTH ROW: Dave Gooding, Mike Butz, Bob Doran, Phil Belmont, Bill Young, Mike Foster, John Sanderson. TOP ROW: Bill Hagen, Jim Hoenninger, Jim Wiles, Jim Husk, Assistant Coach; Bob Plum, Steve Joern, Assistant Coach; Ray Guye.

Fresh Football

Coach Irv Etler's freshman football team posted a 2—3 record. "I think the season was successful in that the boys learned good basic football," Etler commented. "I received complete respect and co­operation from the team."

Ed Biles praised Etler for his handling of the frosh eleven. Coach Biles remarked: "I am really

pleased with the progress of the freshmen. Coach Etler did a tremendous job in his first year of collegiate coaching."

Quarterback Carroll Williams, end Dan Abram­owicz, fullback Mickey Foster, and center Jim Louder were some of the more outstanding frosh players.

'63 RESULTS X U OPP.

7 Dayton 21 20 Marshall 6 10 Miami 27 0 Kentucky 27

19 O h i o U 13

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"This is the way it's to be done, men." Coach Ruberg gives his team some valuable pointers during a timeout period.

Don Ruberg: Mr. Optimism

In his first season as Xavier's basketball coach, Don Ruberg was tagged as the nation's most op­timistic coach. Before the 1963-1964 season began, Ruberg predicted a national championship for his ballclub.

"Are you kiddin' me?" hollers Coach Ruberg who is obviously upset with the way the ballgame is pro­gressing.

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BRYAN WILLIAMS 6'5", Sophomore Danville, 111.

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Joe Geiger, 6'7" senior from Waterford, N.Y., sinks a left-handed jumper against Tennessee. Tri-captain Geiger's sparkling play was one of many optimistic features of the 1963-1964 season.

TED ROMBACK 6'7" Sophomore Tiffin, Ohio

178

Steve Thomas leaps for a field .goal in the Muskies' victory over Canisius. Thom­as, a 6' junior guard from Cincinnati, rewrote numerous individual game records during the campaign.

JIM BOTHEN 6'4" Junior Hamilton, Ohio

RAY MUELLER 6'4" Senior Ft. Wayne, Ind.

179

JOHN STASIO 6'4" Junior Buffalo, N.Y.

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Bob Pelkington, 6'7" senior from Ft. Wayne, Ind., smashed all XU rebounding records during his career.

Tom Freppon, 6'4" senior from Highland Heights, Ky., was one of Xavier's tri-captains for the 1963-1964 season.

JACK WAMBACK 6'2." Sophomore Chicago, 111.

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JOHN GORMAN 6'8" Sophomore Chicago, 111.

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Bryan Williams fouls Louisville's John Reuther on an at­tempted field goal.

Joe McNeil, 5'8" backcourt dynamo from Erlanger, Ky., plays a little jumping game with two befuddled Canisius players. McNeil contributed plenty of hustle and determination to the XU team.

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On the bus ride to Louisville, Coach Ruberg dreams of the national championship that he forecast for ms Musketeers.

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"Let's get this picture over with, we want our fish," says reserve guard Jack Wambach. Xavier travelled to Louisville on Ash Wednesday. Manager Fred Irwin was unable to procure a dispensation for the team.

The Basketball Beatles, consisting of XU's Joe Geiger and Bob Pelkington, together with Louisville's Judd Rothman (13) and Ron Hawley (12) sing "I Want to Hold Your Hand" for the Freedom Hall fans.

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Part of Xavier's "Seventh Man" which turned out in record numbers to root for Coach Ruberg's squad. Ruberg often praised

the student body for the tremendous spirit and enthusiasm they displayed.

Don Ruberg's First Season Coach Ruberg's Musketeers sped to a 101—77 opening game victory over Marian. Steve Thomas gave an indi­cation of later scoring feats with a 35 point performance.

Xavier made it two in a row by dumping Tennessee, 69— 57. A crowd of 4,187 witnessed the hard-fought struggle in which X U pulled away in the final minutes.

Central State pinned the initial loss of the campaign on the Muskies. The Marauders, who eventually were rated among the top small college squads in the nation, with­stood a last ditch Xavier rally to win, 76—69.

Despite a 37 point outburst by Steve Thomas, St. Bona-venture rallied in the final half for an 87—82 triumph over Coach Ruberg's five at Buffalo.

Xavier returned home and smashed Villa Madonna, 102 —66. Steve Thomas again was the big man for X U with 42 points.

The Musketeers posted their first road win of the season by nudging St. Joseph's of Philadelphia, 76—75, on a jump shot by Steve Thomas with just six seconds to play.

DePaul whipped the Muskies, 86—80, to take first place in the Queen City Tournament at Buffalo. Xavier earned a spot in the finals by edging Miami of Ohio, 69^—68. DePaul defeated Canisius, 102—79, in their first round contest.

X U downed Tulsa, 83—71, for their sixth win in nine outings. Two nights before facing Xavier, Tulsa had lost to Cincinnati, 54—52.

Steve Thomas tossed in 28 points, as the Musketeers crushed the Dayton Flyers at Dayton, 103—94. It marked only the second time in the history of the X U - U D basket­ball rivalry that Xavier had won in Dayton. X U set an all-time record for field goals in one game with 47.

In one of the greatest games ever staged at the Fieldhouse,

Xavier toppled Detroit, 121—113, on January 6. Steve Thomas cracked three individual scoring marks. Thomas clicked for 50 points, hitting 18 of 34 field goal at­tempts. Xavier's All-American set single game records for the most points, most field goals made, and most field goals attempted. Bryan Williams chipped in with 27 points.

Bob Pelkington broke XU's career rebounding record, as the Muskies nipped Marquette, 83—81, in Milwaukee. Pelkington surpassed Dave Piontek's record of 995 re­bounds.

A turn around jumper by Bob Pelkington with 54 sec­onds remaining provided the Musketeers with an 80—79 come-from-behind victory over the Louisville Cardinals. Louisville had led by nine points at halftime.

Villanova spoiled Xavier's hopes of a Top Twenty nation­al rating by winning a 90—88 thriller at the Fieldhouse. An overflow audience of 5,386 watched a sensational battle, which wasn't decided until Joe Geiger's last second desperation shot bounced off the backboard.

Willie Somerset swished through a record total of 47 points to propel the Duquesne Dukes to an 83—76 conquest of Xavier in Pittsburgh. Joe Geiger was XU's top pointmak-er with 25.

Record-breaking efforts by Steve Thomas and Bob Pelk­ington featured the Muskies' 104—84 triumph over Can­isius. Thomas tallied 42 points, including 16 for 16 at the foul line. He set two new single game free throw marks. Pelkington grabbed 30 rebounds to erase Comie Free­man's one game record of 28.

Joe Geiger's layup with 14 seconds to play was the basket that resulted in Xavier's first season sweep over Dayton in fifteen years. Geiger converted a perfect pass from Steve Thomas for an 82—81 X U win. The decision was the fourth that X U had won by one point.

184

Miami's hot-shooting Redskins spilled the Musketeers, 97— 85, at the Fieldhouse. Joe Geiger had 29 points in a los­ing cause for XU.

Catholic U. bowed to the Muskies, 86—73, Joe Geiger notched 33 points and 20 rebounds to spark the Xavier attack. Catholic U. held a 41—36 halftime bulge.

Louisville increased its chances for an NCAA bid by post­ing a 97—91 victory over X U in Louisville. The defeat was Xavier's eighteenth consecutive loss to the Cards in Louisville. Down by as many as 17 points in the second half, Xavier rallied brilliantly to forge ahead, but U. of L. rebounded to gain the triumph.

Joe McNeil tossed in a field goal as the final buzzer sound­ed to enable the Musketeers to gain a 114—112 win over the Detroit Titans in Detroit. Joe Geiger pumped in a ca­reer-high total of 36 points. Steve Thomas added 30 and Bryan Williams 23.

The Musketeers dropped three of their final four contests and did not receive a bid to either post-season basketball tournament after a convincing setback at Miami, XU'S N.I .T. hopes were revised, when the Muskies ripped Mem­phis State, 99—86, at Memphis a crowd of 11,615 watched the U.C. Bearcats outlast Xavier, 94—92 at Cincinnati Gardens. Steve Thomas tallied 45 points for X.U.

Marquettes Warriors pulled a stunning upset in the seasons finale by nudging XU, 98—95, in Xaviers lone locally tele­vised contest of the campaign.

Coach Ruberg's first Musketeer team was an exciting ball club to watch and more than 25 individual and team rec­ords were established.

Steve Thomas was selected as the teams most valuable player at the basketball banquet. The words "All American Steve Thomas" were engraved on the trophy which was presented by the Xavier News.

Joe Geiger was chosen as the most improved player and Jim Hengehold received a trophy as the outstanding frosh player.

Tennessee's A. W. Davis commits a personal foul, as Steve Thomas tries a layup against the Vols.

VARSITY RESULTS

Opponent . . 77 . . 57 . . 76

Xavier 101 Marian 69 Tennessee 69 Central State 82 St. Bonaventure 87

102 Villa Madonna 66 76 St. Joseph's (Pa.) 75 69 Miami of Ohio 68 80 83

103 121 83 80

DePaul 86 Tulsa 71 Dayton 94 Detroit 113 Marquette 81 Louisville 79

88 Villanova 90 76 Duquesne 83

104 Canisius 84 82 Dayton 81 85 Miami of Ohio 97 86 Catholic U 73 91 Louisville 97

114 Detroit 112 116 St. Francis (Pa.) 99

85 Miami of Ohio 96 99 Memphis State 86 92 Cincinnati 94 95 Marquette 98

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BOTTOM ROW: Dave Lynch, Walt Allen, Tony Zych, Carroll Williams. TOP ROW: Les Holbrook (Student Manager), Jim Hengehold, Jim Hess, Bob Einhaus, and Stu Vaughan.

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FRESHMAN RESULTS

Xavier Opponent 122 Aeronca 74 93 Kentucky 116

133 Cincinnati Gas & Electric 63 91 Central State 66

102 Bellarmine 92 92 Villa Madonna 83 77 Dayton 95

112 Coca Cola 77 76 Louisville 85

116 Armco 79 87 Morehead State 86 82 Dayton 93 82 Villa Madonna 86 77 Miami 71 98 Stautberg Insurance . . . . 83 80 Louisville 87

114 Coca Cola 81 72 Miami 68 89 Cincinnati 89

110 National Cash Register . . 82

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Coach Joe Hawk gives some valuable tips to co-captains John Nebel and Jim Gruber.

BASEBALL

Coach Joe Hawk was very optimistic about the 1964 baseball season. In his second year as XU's diamond men­tor, Hawk had seven regulars returning from last year's club which split even in eighteen ballgames.

Jim Gruber, John Nebel, Steve Smith, Jack Loeffler, Bob Nock, Tom LaBuda, and Ray Katzenberger were the starters who were back for the 1964 season.

Gruber led Xavier in batting for second consecutive year in 1963 with a .338 average. Nebel hit .308.

Top newcomers on the squad were lefthanded pitcher Ken Schneider, one of the best pitchers in the local Class A amateur league, and catcher Dave Lynch.

Five doubleheaders were listed on the Musketeers' sched­ule. Twinbills were scheduled at home with Central State, Indiana Central, and Morehead; and on the road with Hanover and Morehead.

Ohio State, Bowling Green, Ohio University, Miami, Cincinnati, Dayton, and Eastern Kentucky were some of the other teams X U faced.

188

Student manager Pat Dunne reviews the batting averages for Xavier hitters Steve Smith, Jim Burnor, and Jack Loeffler.

Bob Nock, John Nebel, Tom LaBuda, and Jim Gruber played regularly for Coach Hawk's nine.

BOTTOM ROW: Bob Thornton, Ray Katzenberger, Ken Schneider. TOP ROW: Dave Lynch, Joe Stecklow, Jerry Mezur.

1963 AVERAGES

AB Wood 12

*Gruber 68 *Mezur 3 *Nebel 65 Scherer 13

*Smith 55 *Nock 55 ^Katzenberger 51 Callahan 11

^Loeffler 71 *Burnor 13 *LaBuda 59 *Muth 10 Albers 42

^Thornton 11 Dittoe 35 Fatzinger 6

*On 1964 Team 1963 Record: Won 9 Lost 9

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AVG All .338 .333 .308 .308 .291 .291 .275 .273 .254 .230 .220 .200 .190 .182 .143 .000

GOLF With five of last year's six letterwinners returning, Coach Ray Balwin looks for a "much improved" Xavier golf team this spring. Last season's youth­ful linksmen posted four victories in fourteen matches, and placed thirteenth in the Ohio In­tercollegiate Tournament, the highest Xavier fin­ish in over four years. Cincinnatians Roger Ruhl and Greg LaLonde will team with senior Mike Sweeney and juniors Jack Martin and Nick Wat-ters to lock up the squad's first five positions. But the sixth spot is up for grabs as the Musketeers prepare for another stiff schedule.

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Sophomores Greg LaLonde and Roger Ruhl were two of the five letterwinners who returned to this year's golf team.

TENNIS Coach Jim Brockhoff welcomed back sen­iors Tom Albers, Carl Tomoff, and John O'Donnell and junior Mike Mullen.

Despite the loss of last year's captain, Al Dohan, Coach Brockhoff had hopes of a bright tennis season.

Matches with Cincinnati, Dayton, Miami, and Villa Madonna were scheduled.

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BOTTOM ROW: Stephen Dennis, Patrick Cannon, Patrick Sibler, Donald Sandru, Richard Hodge. SEC­OND ROW: Patrick Macedonia, Thomas Saltsman, Robert Sasena, Vincent Foken, John Gundy, John Rul-lell. THIRD ROW: Paul Regensburger, Kenneth

Smith, Richard Arenas, James Boschert, Nicholas. FOURTH ROW: James Blaznek, Charles Penner, Mi­chael Wenning, James Van Lanen, John Macel. TOP ROW: Michael McCarthy, Tenence Mahoney, Dennis Blaznek, Thomas Bellman, Charles Walker, Eugene Allen.

BOTTOM ROW: John Frazer, Thomas Conway, Jack Esselman, John Morgan. SECOND ROW: Alan Kunsemiller, Michael Amdrini, Michael Howard, John Flanigan. THIRD ROW: James Bell, Robert Mauk, Gary Peltier, John Lisk, Michael Lander, Leonard Bearne, FOURTH ROW: Willian Montwieler, Thomas Rave, Michael Schwartz, Richard McCormick. TOP ROW: Thomas Sopke, Timothy Luken, Robert Spencer, Kenneth Milles, Frank Ward, Stuart Vaughan.

BOTTOM ROW: James Kalla, William Ingersoll, Martin Busier, Paul Fellinger. SECOND ROW: Thomas Mathy, Ron­nie Diersing, William Hummel, Alan Paxzkowhki, Joseph Glassmeyer, Robert Luck. THIRD ROW: Thomas Kaylor, Daniel Welcy, John Loughrey, Robert Schutte, Dennis Dobies,

Robert Manfredi, Jay Jones. FOURTH ROW: Walter Allen, Martin DufTy, George Ferrie, William Kuhlman, Herman Seiser, John Gundy, John HoflFman. TOP ROW: Joseph Thier-auf, Timothy Hogenkamp, Robert Biebel, Arnold Stiens, James Koch, Edward Kilbane, Robert Weierman.

194

BOTTOM ROW: JefTrey Westbrooke, Ronald Trentman, Rich­ard DeBlasi, Bregory Barnes, Daniel Haglage. SECOND ROW: Theodore Watkins, Paul McKnight, Dennis Forrest, Law­rence Efkeman, John Young, Roland Bergamyer, Brian Redding. THIRD ROW: Michael Lambert, John Gardner, Kenneth Byrne, James Kissel, John Deppen, Richard Rodgers, Theodore

Bacigalupo. FOURTH ROW: William Tait, Paul Kamphaus, John Brinck, Bernard Scheve, Philip Bermont, James Wiles, Thomas Hunter. TOP ROW: James Koehne, John Beno, John Hengehold, David Kipp, William Franks, John Marien, Paul Piening.

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BOTTOM ROW: Thomas Wilcox, John Getz, Michael Stumph, John Kirby, Joseph Seflfe-rino, Edward Steiner. SECOND ROW: James Penney, Frank Armstrong, Jerome Schuer-mann, Daniel Gardner, Donald Buchanan, Roger Feist. THIRD ROW: Ronald Palumbo, Richard Fuchs, Peter Borchelt, Richard Bernstein, James Jurgens, David Bertke. TOP ROW: Martin McTighe, William Walchi, Willian Lessner, Michael Walsh, Mark Stuhlreyer, Tom Broxterman.

BOTTOM ROW: Robert Van Bergen, Peter Heile, Ronald Ritz, James Camoosa, Carl Packard, Lawrence Hiltz. SECOND ROW: Carl Huster, Donald Massa, Gregory Solomon, Joseph Acito, James Sanderson, Michael Kiefer, David Bird, Bro. Thaddeus WyclifF, C.F.P. THIRD ROW: Thomas Connor,

Richard Berg, Edward Dowd, Bro. Daniel Buelterman, Frank Jancura, John Ferdikins. TOP ROW: William Sontag, John Mayer, Bro. M. Paduk, Ronald Kathmann, Bro. D. Duggins, Lawrence Dreyer.

BOTTOM ROW: Paul Ranville, Robert Alerding, George Lei-cht, John Beal. SECOND ROW: Kenneth Kramer, Richard Walker, Thomas Lankenau, William Froschauer. TOP ROW: Wayne Hudson, Stephen Deeruester, James Duffy, Joseph Tra­uth.

BOTTOM ROW: Herbert Murray, William Weber, Camillo Cartisano, Joh Eroshevich, Harry Schneider, Dennis Coyne, James Whitehourse. SECOND ROW: Thurlow Childs, Gary Henry, Carroll Williams, Daniel Lautermilch, William Gilardy, Carl Demarkowski, James Lauder. THIRD ROW: Thomas

Hoeing, Gerald Klekamp, Daniel Halpin, John Kramer, Thomas Armstrong, Richard Mutchler, Thomas Besanceney. TOP ROW: Robert Welch, Gregory Stumpf, Lawrence Murtaugh, Timothy Holly, James Hess, Robert Schmidt, Daniel Abramo­wicz.

196

BOTTOM ROW: James Hunter, Leonard Rodriguez, Vincent DeFabio, Gregory Oswald, Frank Margello. SECOND ROW: Robert Meyer, Thomas Dahmann, George Schwegman, Donald Weinkam, Ralph Mello. THIRD ROW: Tonv T,^ne W-'^'^m O'Connor, John Gallagher, Griffin Murphy, Stanley Schuiz,

James Sauerbrey, Robert Hettesheimer. FOURTH ROW: John Ploscik, William Zouhary, David Stefek, Hermut Kowat-sch, Norman Mick, John Tromans, Stephen Slania. TOP ROW: Mark Bartlett, John VoUmer. Thomas Tepe, William Bradley, Philip Anderson, William Phillips, Ronald Ostmann.

BOTTOM ROW: Thomas Hughes, Donald Valmassoi, John Hackman, Richard Hogan. SECOND ROW: Charles Grosser, Stanley Koch, David Torlina, Tony Zych, Michael Thomas, Frederick Henninger. TOP ROW: Michael Loewenstine, Joseph Johnson, Gerald Halvorsen, Michael Sullivan, Edward Hu­bert, Robert Nardi-

BOTTOM ROW: Robert Moeddel, Donald Kleir, Wayne Grimme, Joseph Schickling, Ronald Broerman, Edward Babey, Kevin O'Brien. SECOND ROW: Laurence Wulker, Richard Trautman, Douglas Kent, William Bernard, Dennis Casano-vas, James Ferrara, Daniel Van Tiem. THIRD ROW: Norbert

Trapp, Paul Hugenberg, Robert Duncan, Martin Sullivan, Patrick Grady, Joseph Galli,- Bernard Heiler. TOP ROW: David Gooding, John Holton, Patrick Blake, Robert Eck, Robert Plum, Thomas Schutte, Eugene Flanagan.

197

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BOTTOM ROW: Ronald Kay, Samuel Matthews, Joseph Sommer, David Freudenberg, Albert Witt, Alfred Bonamoom. SECOND ROW: David Rolfes, James Gutzwiller, Robert Bes-sler, Irwin Young, Bruce Carson, Donald Romer. THIRD ROW:

Thomas Reed, Eugene Oberjohann, Gary Mentrup, Michael McDaniel, Henry Strict, Stephen Small, Peter Zaums. TOP ROW: Frank Purcell, Alan Lange, Godfrey Hammel, Charles Patmann, Elmer Wahl, Barry Wilker, Joseph Krizsa.

BOTTOM ROW: Peter Crane, Nestor Martimez, Robert Carovillano, Richard Pendery, John Feeser. SECOND ROW: Kenneth Lysaght, John Ken-nelly, John McDonald, Michael Malone, Thomas Aubrey. THIRD ROW: James Cusack, Thomas Lonneman, Robert BertoUi, John Cracchiolo. FOURTH ROW: Thomas Brodbeck, Nicholas Hahn, Clifford Johnson, Lloyd Mattson. TOP ROW: Robert Moynahan, Robert Geis, Robert Smith, Theodore Romback, Ronald Aylward, Leo Poinsette.

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BOTTOM ROW: Robert Murphy, Robert Honkomp, Robert Glueck, Gregory LaLonde, Louis Woycke, Jerome Steinker. SECOND ROW: Gary Pellman, John DeFazio, Franklin Shep-pard, James Maratta, Gregory Graf, Kenneth Burman. THIRD ROW: Thomas Palmer, Samuel Fornsaglio, Anthony Lazar, Stephen Thurmann, Robert Herrmann, Peter Tsai.

FOURTH ROW: Joseph Fiandach, Michael Zales, Walter Zuberbuhler, Albert Portmann, Patrich Dunne, Harry Horst­man, Edward Menkhaus, Gregory Stoeger. TOP ROW: Cordell Williams, Richard Schell, Robert O'Connor, Jerome Lutte-negger, William Young, Charles Keil, Frederick Wray.

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BOTTOM ROW: Robert O'Brien, Thomas Kitch, Kenneth Kuratko, Livinius Amanze, John Mayer, Bar­bara Stanczak. SECOND ROW: M. F. Killeen, Albert Dilorio, Frank Toadfine, James Byrne, Michael Mor-rissey, Donald Morgan. THIRD ROW: Michael Muer-

kle, Raymond Zwolinski, Richard McDuffee, William Frye, David Long, Joseph Moormann. TOP ROW: Mark Regensburger, Michael Martley, John Stasio, Al­bert Rebold, James Smith, Donald Miller.

BOTTOM ROW: Thomas Wasserman, Ronald Chimenti, John Steinbach, Robert Wilkins, Thomas Murray, Paul Prinz. SECOND ROW: Willian Cooney, Robert Hellwig, Michael O'Callaghan, Howard Schutte, Charles Gartner, Patrick Gannon. THIRD ROW: Francis Lachmann, Jerrold Arszman, Stokes Baird, James Thyen, Paul Selzer, De. Trautmann, Kevin O'Shaughnessy. TOP ROW: Robert Ollendick, Bernard Cornillie, James Stofko, William White, Harry Rabe, Pate Bender, Edward Krause.

BOTTOM ROW: James Shaw, John Quinn, Charles Duffy, Robert Reis, Michael Reilly, James Schoeny. SECOND ROW: Andrew Chwalibog, Walter Koral, Thomas McDonald, Francis Wagner, Thomas Mayer. TOP ROW: James Hoff, Daniel Kruse, John Ruppe, James Huelesman, Sidney Conley, John Hoernemann.

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BOTTOM ROW: Charles Ruroy, Raymond Dankel, Vincent Montelisciani, Daniel Mechley, Stephen Mor-rell, James Manzi, Andre Niebling, Donald Felling. SECOND ROW: Patrick Mooney, Gregory Ernst, Tho­mas Ortman, William Lampeter, Peter Jordan, John Timmers. THIRD ROW: Ronald Marchione, Paul Laemmle, William Brown, David Myers, Robert Ryan,

William Armacost, Robert Riesenback. FOURTH ROW: Richard Higgins, Allen Haas, James Mignerey, Dennis Miller, Joseph Menkhaus, Donald Beckmeyer, Hugh Ham-berger. TOP ROW: John Mountain, Edward Geiser, An­thony Steimle, Harold Poschmann, Thomas Schmidt, John Vollman, Henry Schulhoff.

BOTTOM ROW: Donald Schneider, Robert Schreck, Raymond Ringenback, William Ger-mann, William Beebe, William Keck. SECOND ROW: James Ruff, Richard Hassett, John Wilhelm, Richard Kijowski, Kenneth Bressler, Edwin Franz. TOP ROW: William Kramer, Thomas Alt, James Hoenninger, David Lynch, Ronald Darragh, Richard Hentz.

BOTTOM ROW: David Kesterson, Eugene Castillon, William Hale, James Izanec. SECOND ROW: William Walsh, John Ryan, Wayne Dydo, Andrew Deak. TOP ROW: John Jones, Stephen Weber, Thomas Hermes, The­odore Handrup, John Cowens.

BOTTOM ROW: Jerome Kohake, Frank McEIwain, Edward Cahill, Joseph McNeill, James Schlueter. SECOND ROW: Ed­ward Vonder Brink, Patrick Deegan, Richard Laib, Richard Scolio, Richard Hollo, Kevin Foley. THIRD ROW: Paul Sch­midt, Michael Buchart, Carl Tomoff, Roy Schumacher, Louis Capella, John Fitzpatrick, Stephen Thomas, Joseph Wyzkoski.

FOURTH ROW: Cliff Knopf, Cyril Weber, Robert Litmer Gordon Myers, Edward Laios. FIFTH ROW: Gerald Risch' William Sweeney, John Seelie. TOP ROW: Charles Haydon' Thomas Lorden, John Brady, Gerald Adams, Thomas O'Sul-hvan, Richard Schutte, Robert Kammerer.

O V n P m / A ^ ' ^T"'. ^ " ' ^ ^ " ^ y ' ^ 1 ^ - Barkan, James David, Anthony Vaccaro. SEC OND ROW: Albert Sencich, Edward Jerge, Robert Zuniga, Ronald Prickel, Michael Foster

P r ? t ^ n . T ' X . " " " ^ ^ ' ' ' ^-^-^ ^""^ ^ ^ ^ • " P^^^^^^ « ° - ^ ^ d , Alfred Mayer, Carl Pratt, David Lawrence, Harry Flanigan, Jose Arruza, James Settelmayer.

202

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BOTTOM ROW: Bobert Nock, Thomas Izzo, John Schlau­decker, William Rohlfs, Rudolph Silver. SECOND ROW: James Goldcamp, John Young, Richard Brockman, Samuel Salvo, John Schmitt, Richard Dietz, Robert Michel. THIRD ROW: Lawrence Schneider, Andrew O'Gorman, Thomas Wuersig, Robert Deters, James Barrett, Robert Sander, Tho-

.W.*.-."!***??

M

mas Quinlan. FOURTH ROW: James Luken, Robert Bresford, Richard Ryan, Scott Prescott, Fred Foster, John Manton, Dennis McGuinness. TOP ROW: Joseph Stolz, James Mallon, Timothy Quinlan, Randall Eibel, Paul Weaver, John Vernon, Arthur Spilker.

BOTTOM ROW: Richard Angst, Robert Harr-mann, Robert Malec, James Clear, Martin Koet-ters. SECOND ROW: Michael McMillian, Kurt Meier, Robert Schaub, Edward Schaar, Al­fred Martin, Jerome Joseph. THIRD ROW: Dennis Riley, Thomas Ramstetter, James Stanton, Michael Hopf, Robert Kissel. FOURTH ROW: Thomas O'Donnell, Norbert Hehman, Michael Legeay, Dennis Caponi, Patrick McKeown. TOP ROW: Paul Keller, Peter Muceus, Michael Jor­dan, Francis Berliner, Timothy Shannon, James lasillo.

BOTTOM ROW: Thomas Conlon, Charles Beck, Charles Rouse, Neal Bechant, Gary Macnamara, William Hagen, An­thony Borgese, William Bobo, Raymond Hafner. SECOND ROW: Donald Farwick, William Hagedorn, John Kracken-berger, Robert Miedlar, Jay Dillon, Robert Hahn, Edward Ham-man. THIRD ROW: Scott Aultman, Paul Krampe, Terence

Clark, John Ackerman, Howard Otto, Brian Otten, Francis Bernhardt. FOURTH ROW: Thomas Hogan, John Hornung, David Mooter, Eugene Connell, Paul Hancock, Bruce Gobright, Michael Fanning. TOP ROW: Kenneth Hunt, Joseph Buerger, Stan Seger, Michael Humbert, Terence Hughes, James Barr, Henry Bergman, Thomas Ryan.

204

BOTTOM ROW: Henry Willig, Richard Green, Bruce Halli­man, William Wood. SECOND ROW: Dennis Binder, Kerry Konrad, Patrick Collins, Ray Bowen, Daniel Beckman, Edward Bradley. THIRD ROW: John Heinen, Robert Flanigan, Charles Blase, Harry Buckel, Bro. Conrad Schauer, C.F.P.; Joseph Maxwell. FOURTH ROW: Roderick Hughes, Michael

Kennedy, William Fischer, Richard Bosler, Michael Buerkle, William Noonan. FIFTH ROW: Theodore Deucher, David Heskamp, Louis Yungbluth, Ronald Bailey, William Brink-dopke, Edward Groh. TOP ROW: Thomas Weisbrod, William Tepe, Larry Hulefeld, Richard Brupenhoff, Michael Schaeffer, James Satzger, Joseph Coyle.

BOTTOM ROW: Charles Ketteman, Joseph Murphy, James Kennealy, William Cahalan, Michael Uhl, Hamel Bell, Ralph Huller. SEC­OND ROW: Walter Borchelt, Harold Felter, Thomas Ryan, Michael Kogut, Dennis Ma­her, Robert Goggin, Gregory Tierney. TOP ROW: John Dobrozsi, Michael Berkery, Albert Drukteinis, Lawrence Foley, Robert Einhaus, George Clark, Robert Doran.

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Foertsch, Douglas Borders, Lucian Rego, Robert Desautels, Joseph Evans, Thomas Grogan, John McKevitt. TOP ROW: Kenneth Brewer, William Laib, Gary Derethik, Edward Krom-mer, William Bruns, John Higgins, Anthony Sparadlglioni.

205

\ Evening Division

The Evening Division's first Student Council: Pat Woracek, Sec.; Frank Posinski, Vice. Pres.: Bill Broerman, Pres.; Joan Providenti, Tres.

REV. RICHARD T. DETERS, S.J. Dean, Evening College

Eileen Murray and Diane Bissonette, two Xavier co-eds, register for second semester classes.

206

This year's January graduates from the Evening Division: SEATED: George Karwisch, William Eha. STAND­ING: John O'Connell, Norbert Menke, Hank Ausden-more.

The Evening Division, in operation since 1911, is primarily concerned with educating the people of Cincinnati who find it impossible to attend full time day college.

This year the evening division held its first elec­tion of student council officers. The affairs of student government are handled by the four elec­ted leaders and a panel of voluntary representa­tives.

The highlight of the social year for the night stu­dents is the annual semi-formal spring dance. Traditionally, at this time, an evening division co­ed, chosen by popular vote, is named Lady of the Evening College.

Under the dean. Rev. Richard T. Deters, the Even­ing Division offers courses in the arts and sciences and business which lead to Bachelor and Master degrees.

Fr. Deters is seen here conferring with Carole Zerhusen, the Evening Division's sole source of rapport with the day school.

207

fii

Even Dr. Doering, a member of the older generation, seems to be enjoying the change of scenery.

Summer School

What a welcome change from the regular school year: Xavier's campus brightens up for three months each year as it goes co-ed for the summer. This year was no exception one way or the other. One noticable difference between summer classes and those of the regular sessions is the minimal number of cuts that are taken by the students. This could be due to either more interesting lec­tures or more interesting classes—but that is a judgment too subjective to be made here. There was also a noticable lack of "angry young men" around campus during the summer—^could it be

that they found another outlet, both more satis­fying and more profitable, for their energies?

The summer session is intended to be an available complement to a student's normal school year. At Xavier, it is this—and more—a welcome comple­ment to his social life (part of a liberal education, you know); and may we compliment the admin­istration on its liberal attitudes towards summer education. May they soon fully complement their policy in the summer to a full complement of "Muskie-ettes."

208

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There were many more smiles to be seen in South Hall—and many more reasons.

The Muskies slowed down, in their rush from Alter Hall, long enough for a short hob-nob.

209

BURGER ^^^^^.^„™™™v.,,„,^

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CINCINNATI, AKRON, OHIO

Whenever folks get together for a good time you'l l find

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things go

Cotee TRADE>MARK«

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An extension phone all your own! It's the

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thing better would be a Princess on your

own telephone line with your name in

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You probably can pay for it yourself!

PHONE 381-1106 SECOND AND PLUM

C. A. SOUERI & CO. WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS OF

CHARLIE SQUERI, '51

We Serve Xavier

AMITY ADVERTISING d LETTER SERVICE INC. • 224 E. EIGHTH STREET • CINCINNATI. OHIO 45202 • PHONE 421-6689

217 East Eighth Street Telephone: 241-6273

PREMIER PRESS COMPANY PRINTERS . . . PUBLISHERS

NEWSPAPERS - ADVERTISING - CIRCULARS - BROADSIDES

CINCINNATI 2, OHIO

Printers of Xavier University News

French Bauer the Milk

with the

Delicious DiflFerence

in Taste.

It's vacuum processed!

WIDELY KNOWN AS THE BEST!

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CASTINGS

Gray Iron — Semi-Steel — Alloys

Machine Tool and Sewer Castings

Stoker Parts

Machine Shop Service

1237 WEST SIXTH STREET

Phone 241-6550

HARRY B. WEBER COMPANY

HOTEL AND RESTAURANT

EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES

118 WEST THIRD STREET CINCINNATI, OHIO

JOHN F. SCHOENY CO.

GROCERIES - FRUITS - VEGETABLES

Phone 721-5503

415 PLUM STREET CINCINNATI, OHIO

THE AMERICAN LINEN SUPPLY CO.

2114 READING ROAD CINCINNATI, OHIO

Phone 241-1922

YOUR EDUCATION IS NOT COMPLETE

UNTIL YOU HAVE HAD A POST

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FUN AT

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PERKINS AND GEOGHEGAN INCORPORATED

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CINCINNATI, OHIO

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Whether you're buying or selling

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SI REALTOR MEMMSR

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Displayed by — and ONLY by —

accredited members of the

CINCINNATI REAL ESTATE BOARD

THE 1964 MUSKETEER COVERS

are

SMITHCRAFTED

by

THE S. K. SMITH COMPANY

2857 North Western Avenue

Chicago 18, Illinois

LEOG. KUHLMAN,'11

Wadsworth Electric Co.

Covington, Ky.

FRED C. LAMPING

Tri-State Building

Cincinnati 2, Ohio

DR. JAMES J. CLEAR

4966 Glenwoy Ave.

Cincinnati, Ohio

CHARLES J. HARDIG, '52

The Hardig Paint Co.

n i l Harrison Avenue Cincinnati , Ohio

ANTHONY ELSAESSER,'13

Carrousel Inn

Cincinnati, Ohio

JEROME N. JANSON, M.D.

3215 Linwood Road

Cincinnati, Ohio 1

DAVID B. WOOD, '29

ATTORNEY AT LAW 1

Tri-State Building 1

Cincinnati, Ohio 1

THOMAS J. BALL, M.D., '24 1

4642 Glenway Avenue 1

Cincinnati, Ohio 1

'lO^^a^mi w^//J And may all your fondest hopes and ambitions come true

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Our 97th Year

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GOLDEN CREME DONUTS

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Open All Nite — City Wide Delivery

7116 Blue Ash — Silverton — SYcamore 1-9945

We Serve Xavier

BUILD WITH LUMBER

OVER 95 YEARS OF SERVICE

1869—1964

THE J. B. DOPPES SONS

LUMBER COMPANY

1250 Gest Street

Cincinnati, Ohio

LAWRENCE H. KYTE

ATTORNEY AT LAW

Citizens Building

HARRY J. GILLIGAN, A.B., '12

J. H. DORNHEGGEN, M.D.

2006 Madison Road

1 Cincinnati, Ohio

1

1 CYRIL E. SCHRIMPF, M.D.

2500'Clifton Avenue

1 Cincinnati, Ohio

DR. JOSEPH G. CROTTY

l i s Wi l l iam Howard Taft

WILLIAM L. DOLLE, '25

1375 Thomwood

Cincinnati 24, Ohio

DR. GEORGE A. MEYERS

448 East Fifth Street

Cincinnati, Ohio

LAWRENCE A. POETKER

ATTORNEY AT LAW

Cincinnati, Ohio |

Compliments of

THE BESL TRANSFER CO.

5550 EsTE AVENUE ELMWOOD, OHIO

Phone: 821-6544

WALLINGFORD COFFEE

COMPANY

IMPORTERS AND ROASTERS OF

FINE COFFEE

Cincinnati, Ohio

Est. 1901 Phone 621-2284

R. E. KINDEL CO., INC.

OFFICE AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES

1 WRITING INSTRUMENTS

1 RAYMOND A. BENZA, President

1 Kindel Building

1 326 East Third St. Cincinnati 2, Ohio

1 SECURITY BANK, INC.

1 PIKE AT NINTH

1 COVINGTON, KY.

1 •

1 Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

KING MFG. CO.

CINCINNATI

BURLAP and COHON BAGS

Mrs. Thomas J. Mussio i

Proprietor

COFFEY'S PHARMACY

Prescriptions Our Specialty

2500 CLIFTON AVENUE I

Phone 861-8642 1

COMPUMENTS OF •

MARTIN G. DUMLER, President fl

THE CHATFIELD & WOODS SACK 1

COMPANY 1

Arbor Place — Hyde Park H

Cincinnati, Ohio ^M

ADRIAN'S FLOWER SHOP I CLIFTON AND LUDLOW UNiversity 1-1101 fl

DURBAN'S GREENHOUSES •

533 MCALPIN AVENUE UNiversity 1-7866 1

SCHWARZ POULTRY MARKET

Herman Jaeger

3945 Spring Grove Avenue

Cincinnati, Ohio 681-6930

"WE SERVE XAVIER"

CRAWFORD'S PHARMACY

(FORMERLY VESTER'S)

1 PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS

FIFTH AND BROADWAY

Cincinnati 2, Ohio Phone 421-0482

JAS. P. BOLGER COAL COMPANY

"Super Fuel Since 1895"

1012 ENQUIRER BUILDING

CINCINNATI, OHIO

ROSE BRAND

BUTTER-CHEESE—SALAD DRESSING

THE MERCHANTS CREAMERY

COMPANY

Distributors of

ANDERSON-CLAYTON SHORTENING

Cincinnati, Ohio

DAREL HOME SHOPPING SERVICE

THE HAMBURG TEA COMPANY

2238 Quatman Avenue

Norv/ood 12, Ohio

531-7272

DENNEMANN'S HOME BAKERY

WEDDING, BIRTHDAY AND PARTY CAKES

3073 Madison Road

Cincinnati, Ohio

871-4555

AUFDEMKAMPE HARDWARE CO.

2000 Central Parkway

Betv/een

Mohav^k and Findlay 1

Cincinnati 14, Ohio 381-3200

WILLIAM D. KUHLMAN CO.

GOAL, GAS AND OIL HEATING 1

AIR CONDITIONING 1

Alfred and Coleroin Cincinnati, Ohio 1

Call 681-3737 1

"WE SERVE XAVIER" 1

•y-M ..^^m^m^m

photographers for the MUSKETEER!

Some Things We Have Seen . . .

224

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This Also We Have Seen.

Student Index Abramowicz, Daniel S. 175,196 Acito, Joseph F. 196 Ackerman, J. Paul 70 Ackerman, John R. 204 Acomb, Thomas E. 70 Adams, Gerald T. 70,202 Affelt, Gerald G. 70 Aboers, Thomas E. 70 Albright, Terrence P. 70 Alerding, Robert J. 196 Allen, Eugene 194 Allen, Walter C. 186,194 Alt, Thomas R. 201 Alter, John T. 70 Alwine, Nicholas H. 70,128,148 Amanze, Livinus A. 124,200 Angst, Richard J. 204 Anneken, Howard A., Jr. 70 Annis, Theodore C. 70,85 Arenas, Richard A. 194 Armacost, William J. 201 Armstrong, Frank W. 195,139 Armstrong, Thomas R. 196 Arnet, Dee 138 Arruza. Jose A. 124,202 Arszman, Jerrold H. 200 Asimus, Richard G. 66 Aubrey, Thomas E. 199 Aultman, Scott G. 204 Ausdenmoore, Hank 207 Austing, Bernard J. 169 Aylward, Ronald G. 199 Babinec, Gehl P. 70,159 Babl, Karl M. 70 Bacigalupo, Theordore T. 175,195 Bailey, Michael A. 71 Bailey, Ronald H. 205 Bailey, Stephen A. 175 Baird, Stokes A.. IV 200 Balma Carlos 120 Barkan, Alex G. 202 Barnes, Bregory W. 195 Barr, James N. 169,204 Barrett, James R. 175,204,140 Bartley, Michael T. 139 Battreall, Edward F. 71 Bauer, E. Michael 71 Beal, John A. 196 Bearne, Leonard G. 194 Bechant, Neal R. 204 Beck, Charles V. 204 Becker, Michael 144 Beckman, Daniel E. 205 Beckmeyer, Donald J. 201 Bedore, Douglas E. 55 Beebe, WilHam E. 201 Behne, James R. 144 Beinke, Judy 140 Beins, J. Christian 71 Beirne, David P. 71 Bell, Hamel 205 Bell, James J. 194 Bell, John E. 120 Bellman, Thomas J. 194 Belmont, Philip J. 175,195 Bender, Peter G. 200 Benner, Richard V. 71,137 Beno, John P. 195 Beresford, Robert L. 204 Berg, Richard J. 148,196 Bergameyer, Roland A. 195 Berger, Alfred J. 71,131 Bergman, Henry W., H 204 Berkery, Michael J. 120,205 Berliner, Francis A. 204 Bernas, Antonio G. 124 Bernhardt, Francis E. 204 Berninger, John H. 71 Berns, Barry R. 71 Bernstein, Frederick L. 50,67,71,116,

119,138 Bernstein, Richard K. 195 Bertke, David C. 195 Bertolli, Robert L. 199 Bertoni, John M. 120 Besanceney, Thomas W. 196 Bessler, Robert W. 199 Biebel, Robert J. 194

Bifano, Joseph N. 125 Bigham, Robert O. 139 Binder, Dennis J. 205 Bird, David P. 118,196 Birmingham, Donald J., Jr. 125 Bissonette, Diane 206 Bissmeyer, Thomas A. 139 Blackman, Patrick C. 71 Blank, Joseph C. 71 Blase, Charles K. 205 Blaser, Robert J., Jr. 117 Blaznek, Dennis S. 194 Blaznek, James J. 194 Bleh, Ronnie 133 Blessing, Gerald V. 120 Bobo, William M. 204 Bonahoom, Alfred J., Jr. 199,139,142 Bonanno, Michael F. 168,173 Bonifacic, Frank M. 139 Brochelt, Peter J. 195 Borchelt, Walter J. 205 Borders, R. Douglas 205 Borgese, Anthony 204 Boschert, James E. 194 Bosler, Richard F. 205 Bosticco, Richard J. 168 Bothen, James M. 179 Bowen, Ray F. 128,205 Boylan, Peter O. 169 Bradley, Edward C. 205 Bradley, Bro. V. de Paul, C.F.P. 202 Brady, John F. 151,202 Brady, Michael P. 205 Brandner, Roger J. 118,149,144 Braun, Stephen B. 122 Brennan, Thomas W., Jr. 168,174 Bressler, Kenneth L. 201 Brewer, Kenneth W. 205 Brinkdopke, William J. 205 Brinker, Dale B., Jr. 159 Brinker, Henry J. 169 Brinson, Thomas C. 65,141,144 Brockman, Richaed A. 204 Brodbeck, Thomas R. 199 Broerman, William 206 Brogel, James F. 73,123,128,148,168 Brown, Bruce J. 73 Brown, Theron B., Jr. 169 Brown, Thomas M., Jr. 73,129 Brown, William P. 21 Broxterman, Thomas J. 195 Bruggeman, Thomas 144 Brummer, William J. 168 Bruns, William J. 122,205,138 Bruning, John A. 73 Bruser, Donakd M. 131 Bryniarske, Walter G. 73,169 Buchanan, Donald E. 195 Buchart, Michael P. 202 Buckel, Harry 205 Buelterman, Bro. Daniel 196 Buerger, Joseph L. 204 Buerkel, C. Michael 118,205 Burman, Kenneth W. 125,199 Burnor, James J. 119 Burns, Michael G. 168 Burridge, John W. 73 Busier, Martin L. 194 Butler, James E. 163 Butz, Michael C. 175 Byrne, James F. 200 Byrne, Kenneth L. 195 Cahalan, William L. 205 Camoosa, James J. 196 Cannon, Patrick D. 194 Capella, Louis M. 202 Caponi, Dennis F. 175,204 Carbonneau, William E. 73 Carotenuto, James V. 73,150,137 Carovillano, Robert W. 199 Carson, Bruce J. 199 Carter, Gerald A. 73 Cartisano, Camillo S. 196 Castillon, Eugene H. 201 Cantanese, Carmen A. 74,76,128 Chalk, Dennis J. 54,162,132 Chandani, Poakash 139 Charbeneau, Howard B. 123.150,137

Charleville, Roger P. 74 Childs, Thurlow, S. 196 Chimenti, Ronald C. 175,200 Chwalibog, Andrew J. 200 Cianciolo, Anthony F. 118,122,205 Ciok, John A. 74 Clark, George W. 205 Clark, Terence J. 168,204 Clear, James T. 204 Clouse, Michael P., Jr. 122 Collins, James M., Jr. 119 CoUins, Patrick J. 205 Collopy, Jack A. 74 Conflitti, Nicholas G. 122 Conley, Sidney M. 200 Conlon, Thomas J. 204 Connell, Eugene F., Jr. 204 Connel, James E. 122 Connor, Thomas J. 196 Conover, Larry R. 74 Contadino, Joseph F. 74 Conway, Thomas J., Jr. 194 Cook, David W. 116,142,144 Cooney, William D. 200 Coors, Henry P. 120 Cornillie, Bernard H. 74,200,139 Cowens, John W. 201 Coyle, Joseph J. 168 174,205 Coyne, Dennis P. 120,196 Cracchiolo, John A. 199 Crane, Peter J. 199 Cunningham, Thomas F. 74 Cuasck, James J. 199 Czerwinski, Bernard P. 74 Czillinger, Kenneth J. 74,121,123 Dankel, Ray A. 169,201 Dankert, John H. 169 Danner, Robert M. 74,131 Darragh, Ronald G. 201 David, James W. 202 Davis, James E. 175 Deak, Andrew J. 201 DeBellis, Frank D. 195 Dederichs, Robert J. 74 Deegan, Patrick H. 74,116,151,202 Deerwester, Steven J. 196 DeFazio, John V., Jr. 199 DeFazio, Michael J. 117,168,174 Dehan, John B. 75,128 Deitsch, Clarence R. 205 Delaney, James 144 DeMarco, Lawrence T. 125 Demarkowski, Carl J. 196 Denicola, Ronald J. 75 Dennis, Stephen M. 194 Deppen, Sohn H., IH 195 Derethik, Gary M. 205 Desarno, Michael J., Jr. 119 Desautels, Robert E. 205,136 Deters, James A. 75 Deters, Robert H., Jr. 147,204 Deucher, Theodore E. 205,136 Devnani, Papan 124 Dewald, David G. 139 Dibenedetto, John A. 75 Dicker, Michael A. 75 Diersing, Joseph F., Jr. 118 Diersing, Ronnie F. 194 Deitz, Richard M. 204 Dilorio, Albert V. 124,200,138 Dillon, Jay W. 204 Disken, Edward F. 75 Dobies, Dennis R. 194 Dobradenka, John A. 75,125 Dobrozsi, John J. 205 Doench, Douglas A. 75 Doepker, James 75 Donohoe, Charles V. 75,118,119 Dooley, Mary 140 Doran, Robert E. 175,205 Eowd, Edward J., Jr. 196 Downey, John P. 120 Doyle, Dennis M. 116 Doyle, George A., Jr. 122 Dreyer, Lawrence D. 196 Drukteinis, Albert 205 Dubrul, Ernest F. 75 Duda, Francix X. 75,117.130.139

Dudek, Mitchell R., Jr. 168 Duflf, Martin J. 194 Durry, Charles E., Jr. 200 Duff'y, James F. 196 Duggins, Bro. D. 196 Dunne, Patrick M. 118,199 Dunne, Thomas R., Jr. 75,118,149,

144 Dutro, Daniel G. 76 Duwel, John J. 116 Dydo, Wayne E. 201 Eastlake, William B. 123,168,173,144 Edwards, Douglas A. 125,76 Efkeman, Lawrence P. 195 Eha, William 207 Eibel, Randall A. 204 Eilerman, William J. 125,128 Einhaus, Robert 205,186 Eisaman, Joseph K. 76,136 Ellerbrock, Thomas E. 140 Erhart, Thomas C. 76 Ernst, Gregory L 201 Eroshevich, John R. 175,196 Esselman, John F. 194 Evans, James W. 169 Evans, Joseph W. 118,121,205 Eysoldt, Vincent P. 169 Falk, David H. 124 Fanning, Michael J. 204 Farwick, Donald L. 204 Feeser, John T., II 199 Feist, Roger H. 195 FelHnger, Paul W. 120,194 Felter, Harold G., Jr. 205,129 Ferdikins, Hohn 195 Ferris, George P. 194 Fiandach, Joseph R. 199 Fiehrer, Thomas M. 138 Fischer, Paul H. 76 Fischer, William H., Jr. 205 Fitzpatrick, John D. 76,202 Flanigan, Harry M. 194 Flanigan, Robert C. 205 Flynn, John F., Jr. 76 Foertsch, Donald V. 205 Foken, Vincent C. 194 Foley, Kevin M. 76,202,131 Foley, Lawrence L. 205 Folzenlogen, Michael K. 76 Fornsaglio, Samuel A. 168,199 Forrest, Dennis E. 195 Forssander, William P. 124,142 Foster, Fred J. 204 Foster, Michael E. 175,202 Fowler, Alan E. 120 Franks, William M. 195 Franz, Edwin L. 201 Frazer, John J. 194 Freppon, Thomas E. 77,180 Freudemberg, David L. 199 Froschauer, William E. 196 Frye, William G., Jr. 200 Fuchs, Richard M. 195,131 Fuller, James L. 139 Gaichas, Lawrence E. 77,150 Galicky, F. Peter 117,144 Gallagher, Kevin E., Jr. 77 Gannon, Patrick J. 200 Gardner, Daniel R. 120,195 Garner, Douglas V. 77 Gartner, Charles H. 77,125,200,142 Geiger, Joseph L., Jr. 77,178,183 Geis, Robert J. 199 Geiser, Edward A. 201 Gelpi, Peter E. 77 Genovese, Edgar N., Jr. 77,147,150

137 Germann, William J. 201 Getz, John R. 195 Gibson, Thomas P. 77 Gilardy, William H., Jr. 196 Gillard, Robert P. 77 Glassmeyer, Joseph S. 125,194 Glueck, Robert C. 125,199 Gobright, Bruce R. 204 Goedde, Paul R. 77 Goggin, Robert C , Jr. 205 Goldcamp, James P. 204

228

Gooding, David B. 175 Gorman, John F. 181 Grady, Patrick J. 175 Graf, Gregory W. 199 Green, Richard M. 205 Greis, Raymond C. 77,92 Greulich, John E. 78 Grogan, Thomas J. 205,129 Groh, Edward G. 205 Grote, Mark W. 78 Gruber, James J. 78 Grupenhoff, Harry 136 Grupenhoff, Richard L. 118,205 Grzeszczak, David A. 78 Gundy, John M. 194 Gutzwiller, James A. 162,199 Gutzwiller, Louis, Jr. 78 Guye, Raymond J. 175 Haas, Allen J. 201,131,140 Haban, James J. 120 Hack, Thomas J. 149,205 Hackman, Marvin R., Jr. 120,128 Hackman, William H. 119 Hafner, Raymond F., Jr. 204 Hagedorn. William E. 204 Hagen, William A. 175,204 Haglage, Daniel M. 195 Hahn, Robert W. 204 Hahn, Hames A. 138 Hahn, Nicholas D. 175,199 Hale, William C. 120,201 Hall, Donald D., Jr. 78 Halliman, Bruce M. 128,205 Halpin, Daniel J. 196 Hamberger, Hugo J., Jr. 201 Hammann, Edward J., Jr. 204 Hammel, Godfrey J. 199 Hancock, Paul F. 204 Handrop, Theodore B., Jr. 120,201 Hanningan, James E., Jr. 119 Harding, Richard W. 78 Hargett, Bernard C. 78,118,119 Harkins, Patrick G. 137 Harmon, Timothy P. 78 Harrmann, Robert M. 204 Hastings, Michael F. 78,86.128,145,

159 Hartman, Wayne J. 78 Hasl, Rudolph C. 79,117,139 Hassett, Richard J. 201 Haydon, Charles W. 79,202 Hayes, Hohn J. 79 Hazel, George J., Jr. 79 Hehman, Norbert C. 204 Heile, Peter W. 196 Heinen, John S. 205 Heiselmann, James J. 79 Hejny, George J. 144 Hellwig, Robert R. 200,139 Helmick, Richard A. 79,92,156,159.

132 Hengehold, James D. 195,186 Henry, Gary G. 196 Hentz, Richard P. 118,201 Herbers, Herbert B., Jr. 79 Herbort, Thomas V. 79 Hermes, Thomas J. 201 Herrmann, Robert B. 199 Heskamp, J. David 205 Hess, James E. 196,186 Higgins, James M. 169 Higgins, John P. 205 Higgins, Richard 163,201 Hiltz, Lawrence T. 196 Hinnenkamp, William G. 79 Hisk, James 175 Hodge, Richard M. 194 Hoeing, Thomas H. 196 Hoenninger, James R. 175,201 Hoerneman, John W. 200 Hoff, James F. 200 Hoffman, Frederick L., Jr. 162 Hoffman, Richard J., Jr. 194 Hogan, Thomas P., Jr. 204 Hogenkamp, Timothy R. 194

Holbrook, Leslie A. 186 Holly, Timothy J. 196 Holton, William R. 125

Honkomp, Robert J. 199 Hopf, Hichael J. 204 Horgan, Stephen W. 80 Hornback, David H. 80 Horning, John G. 204 Horstman, Harry L. 162,199 Hosey, Harry A., Jr. 128 Hounihan, Thomas J. 80,122 Howard, Michael J. 194 Howard, Patrick J. 202 Hudson, Wayne M. 196 Huelsman, James B. 200 Hughes, Roderick P. 66,205 Hughs, Terry A. 169,204 Hulefeld, Larry C. 125,205 Huller, Ralph F. 205 Humbert, Michael B. 204 Hummel, William A. 194 Humbert, Roseanne 141 Hunt, Kenneth T. 204,144 Hunt, Kevin J. 120 Hunter. Thomas C. 195 Husk, James A. 80 Huster, Carl W. 196 Huth, Paul J. 80 lasillo, James P. 204 Ikezuagu, Bernard E. O. 124 Imwallie, Mark D. 125 Ingersoll, William R. 194 Irwin, Frederick B. 80 Izanec, James J. 120,201 Izzo, Thomas V. 204 Jacko, Leonard J. 80 Jancura, Frank J., Jr. 196 Jeffreys, Timothy C. 128 Jerge, Edward W. 202 Joern, Stephen H. 80 Johnson, Clifford C. 199 Johnson, John F. 80 Jones, Clifton J. 175 Jones, Jay V. 194 Jones, John R., Jr. 201 Joos, Timothy J. 145 Jordan, Gene A. 139 Jordan, Michael D. 204 Jordan, Peter J. 201 Jose, Irwin L. 124 Joseph, Jerome E. 204 Joseph, Robert G. 81,151 Juengling, Gary A. 81,159 Junker, Michael G. 169 Jurgens, James L. 195

Kain, James R. 81,168 Kalla, James R. 194 Kammerer, Robert E. 81,202 Kamphaus, Paul 195 Kappus, Alfred J. 139 Karwisch, George 207 Kathman, James R. 81 Kathmann, Ronald J. 196 Kaup, Gary H. 81 Kay, Ronald J. 199 Kaylor, Thomas A. 194 Keck, William C. 116,201 Keefer, Michael A. 81 Keil, Charles T. 199 Keiner, James L. 81 Keller, Paul J. 204 Kelly, Patrick T. 81 Kemble, John W., Jr. 81 Kenkel, James L. 149 Kennealy, James A. 205 Kenny, Paul W. 168 Kesterson, David M. 201 Ketteman, Charles H., Jr. 205 Kiefer, Michael M. 118,196 Kijowski, Richard S. 81,201 Kilbane, Edward J., Jr. 194 Kilcoyne, Thomas F. 81 Killeen, M. F. 200 Kimener, Michael J. 163 205 Kinzelman, Craig J. 118,121,123 Kipp, David 195 Kirby, John B., Jr. 195 Kirk, Thomas J. 82 Kispert, John M. 82 Kiesel, James R. 195 Kissel, Robert P., Jr. 204

Kitch, Thomas E. 200 Kleespies, Phillip M., Jr. 82 Klekamp, Gerald A. 196 Knopf, CliflF A., Jr. 82,202 Koch, James J. 194 Koch, Stanley R. 120 Koehne, James J. 195 Koetters, Martin J. 204 Kogut, Michael H. 205 Kohake, Jerome J. 202 Konrad, Kerry A. 205 Koral, Walter M. 200 Korb, James A. 169 Kowalski, Hohn R. 82,125 Krackenberger, John H. 204 Kraemer, John P. 196 Kraemer, Kenneth R. 196 Kraemer, William M. 201 Krampke, Paul M. 204 Krause, Edward A. 200 Kreke, Raymond E. 82 Kremer, Kenneth J. 196 Krizsa, Joseph 199 Krohn, John C. 139,142 Krommer, Edward L., Jr. 205 Kruse, Daniel A. 120,200 Kues, Lawrence J. 149 Kuhlman, William H., Jr. 194 Kunsemiller, Alan R. 194 Kuratko, Kenneth D. 66,200 Kysela, Gerard M. 82,128 Lachmann, Francis X. 200 Laemmle, Paul R. 201 Laib, Richard H. 202 Laib, William B. 82,205 Laios, Edward T. 82,124,202 Lalonde, Gregory T. 199 Lamb, Andrew T., Jr. 82 Lambert, J. Michael 195 Lambert, Michael T. 175 Lampeter, William H. 201 Lander, Michael J. 194 Lang, Gordon A. 117,121,123 Lange, Alan J. 199 Lankenau, Thomas C. 196 Larmon, Michael H. 82,159 Laudick, Paul E. 82 Laughlin, Jerome R. 66 Lautermilch, Daniel J. 196 Lawrence, David A. 138,202 Lazar, Anthony S., Jr. 80,83,117,199,

144 Legeay, Michael T. 204 Lehmann, Kenneth E. 83,168,170,174 Lehrter, John B. 83,157 Leicht, George P. 196 Lemieuz, Bernard J. 125 Lenihan, Rory J. 122 Lessner, William J. 120,195 Leugers, William J., Jr. 83 Linn, John P. 128 Lipscomb, Roy J. 83,120 Lisk, John E. 194 Litmer, Robert H. 83,202 Long, David E. 200 Long, Dennis J. 83,116,159 Lonneman, Thomas R. 199 Lorden, Thomas A. 83,202 Lorenz, John F. 83,159 Louder, James F. 175,196 Loughrey, John R. 194 Luck, Robert J. 194 Luckett, Francis G. 83 Luken, James B. 137,204 Luken, Timothy P. 194 Luning, Thomas P. 83,118 Luttenegger, Jerry F. 199 Lutz, John L. 83 Lynch, David A. 186,201 Lyons, Arthur F. 120 Lyons, Paul J. 205 Lysaght, Kenneth L. 199 Macedonia, Dominic A., Jr. 84,125 Macedonia, Patrick H. 194 Macel, John A., Jr. 194 Macnamara, Gary L. 162,204 Maher, Carolyn 141 Maher, Dennis J. 205

Mahoney, Terrence D. 136,194 Mainer, Walter C. 167,168,174 Malec, Robert L., Jr. 204 Mallon, James J., Jr. 204 Malone, Michael J. 136,199 Manfredi, Robert A. 194 Manton, John P., Jr. 204 Manzi, James C. 201 Mappes, Gary W. 123 Maratta, James J. 199 Marchal, Michael H. 118 Marchione, Ronald C. 66,201 Marien, John W. 195 Marshall, David M. 84 Martin, Alfred B. 204 Martin, William C. 84,128 Martinez, Nestor A. 199 Martlem, Michael 200 Massa, Donald M. 196 Masterson, Gerald E. 84 Masterson, William F., Jr. 116,120,

144

Mathy, Thomas R. 129.194 Mattcheck, Donald L, 84 Matthews, Samuel B. 199 Mattson, Lloyd R., Jr. 199 Mauk, Robert J., Jr. 194 Mawby, John E. 122 Maxian, Paul M. 122 Maxwell, Joseph W. 205 Mayer, Alfred J. 202 Mayer, John F. 196,200 Mayer, Thomas 200 Mazrimas, Steven J. 120 McCaffrey, R. Michael 84,122 McCarthy, Michael F. 84 McCarty, Michael J. 128,148,194 McClain, Charles J., Jr. 84,123,137 McCormick, Richard A. 194 McCoy, Thomas R. 84,128 McDaniel, Michael J. 199 McDonald, John F., I l l 199 McDonald, Thomas W. 132,200 McDonough, John J. 80 84 McDowell, Joseph J. 163 McDuffee, Richard J. 200 McEIwain, Frank A. 202 McGinnis, Jarry N. 84 McGonagle, David J. 84 McGowan, William J. 136 McGraw, Joseph H. 85 McGuinness, Dennis J. 204 McHugh, John B. 85 McKeown, Patrick C. 204 McKevitt, John N. 205 McKiernan, John A. 85,122 McKnight, Paul W. 195 McLaughlin, Thomas D. 122 McMahon, David H. 85.120 McMahon, Diane 140 McMillan, Michael J. 204 McNeil, Joseph W. 181,202 McTighe, Martin L. 163,195 Mechley, Daniel A. 201 Meier, Kurt J. 204 Meihaus, James D. 85 Menke, Norbert 207 Menkhaus, Edward D. 199 Menkhaus, Joseph J. 201 Menninger, Richard E. 142 Mensik, Ronald S. 116 Mentrup, Gary A. 199 Mersch, William G. 128 Mershon, Jerome E. 85 Metz, Richard A. 139 Meyer, John 205 Meyer, Thomas H. 142 Mezur, Jerome M. 85 Michaels, John J., Jr. 85,145,147,194 Michel, Robert J. 204 Miedlar, Robert E. 204 Mignerey, James J. 201 Milar, Robert B., Jr. 205 Miller, Dennis P. 201 Miller, Donald J. 142,200 Miller, Hugh M., Jr. 122 Miller, Thomas J. 85,125 Milles, Kenneth P. 194

229

Milos, Wayne E. 125 Moeddel, Jerome B. 86 Mollmann, Joseph M. 86,123,168,170,

172,174 Montelisciani, Vincent A., Jr. 201 Montweiler, William J. 194 Mooney, J. Patrick 201 Moore, Brian L. 86,119,128 Moorman, Richard J., Jr. 86 Moormann, Joseph C. 200 Mooter, David P. 204 Morgan, Donald R. 200 Morgan, John R., Jr. 194 Morrell, Stephen C. 201 Morrissey, Michael J. 200 Mountain, John E. 201 Moynahan, Robert B. 199 Muceus, Peter L. 162,204 Muelleman, Thomas P. 136,140,141 Mueller, Raymond J. 86,179 Mueller, Robert D. 86,128 Muerkle, Michael 200 Mullen, Michael J. 123,144 Mulvaney, James J. 202 Munafo, Stanley X., Jr. 86 Murphy, Joseph M. 205,138 Murphy, Merrick E. 86 Murphy, Robert A., Jr. 199 Murray, Eileen 206 Murray, Herbert L. 175,196 Murray, John M. 118,122 Murray, Thomas R., Jr. 86,117,119,

159,200 Murtaugh, Lawrence E., Jr. 196 Mutchler, Richard J. 196 Myers, David A. 201 Myers, J. Gordon 87,120,139,202 Myers, Michael S. 205 Neidenbach, Nicholas R. 87 Neiheisel, Kenneth F. 87 Nesselhuff, Joseph E. 121,144 Nganwuchu, Godwin O. 124 Niebling, Andre A. 201 Niehaus, James A. 87 Niehaus, John F. 87,149,144 Niehaus, Louis J. 87,118 Nieporte, William E. 87 Nock, Robert J. 138,204 Nolte, Dennis J. 87 Noonan, William P. 125,205 Nottoli, Gerard M. 87 Oberjohann, Eugene P. 199 O'Brien, Eugene P. 87 O'Brien, Robert E., Jr. 87,133,200 O'Bringer, John S. 87 O'Callaghan, Michael V. 200 O'Connell, Dennis M. 128,144 O'Connell, John 207 O'Connor, Neil J. 88 O'Connor, Ray K. 128,136,138 O'Connor, Robert W., Jr. 199 O'Donnell, James B. 88 O'Donnell, Thomas G., Jr. 204 O'Gorman, J. Andrew 204 O'Hara, Michael A. 79,88 Ohmer, Melvin C. 88,128 Oldham, Linda 132 Ollendick, Robert W. 200 Ortman, Thomas H. 201 O'Shaughnessy, Kevin S., Jr. 200 O'Shea, John D. 73,88 Osterman, Terrence J. 88,136,159 Ostry, James E. 175 O'Sullivan, Thomas J., Jr. 88,202 O'Toole, David J. 163 Otten, Brian L. 204 Otto, Howard E., Jr. 204 Owens, John P. 88 Paskard, Carl D. 196 Paduk, Bro. M. 196 Palmer, Thomas E. 175,199 Palumbo, Ronald J. 137,195 Pantle, Allan J. 86,88,125,128,148 Pater, Clement A., I l l 88 Pater, Gerald L. 117,139,144 Patmann, Charles R. 199 Pax, Jerome C. 120 Paxzkowski, Alan 194 Pedoto, Joseph A. 88,169 Peliken, James A. 55,88,137 Pelkington, Robert V. 180,183 Pellarin, Robert D. 125

Felling, Donald 201 Pellman, Gary C. 199 Peltier, Gary F. 194 Pendery, Richard C. 199 Penner, Charles F. 120,138,194 Penney, James J. 195 Perkins, Patrick J. 125,130 Personette, Gary E. 122 Petersen, Gayle E. 202 Petix, Steven V. 89,129 Peining, Paul R., Jr. 195 Pierce, Robert J., Jr. 122 Pitchford, Willard M. 89 Plesinger, Peter 120 Poinsette, Leo J. 199 Portmann, Albert F. 199 Poschmann, Harold E. 201 Posinski, Frank 206 Powell, George 131,139,169 Poynton, John W. 89 Pratt, Carl E. 202 Prescott, Scott 204 Price, Thomas C. 89,131 Prickel, Ronald A. 202 Prinz, Paul C. 89,200 Proctor, James J. 89 Prost, Albert L. 205 Providenti, Joan 206 Purcell, Frank 199 Quinlan, Thomas R. 168,204 Quinlan, Timothy B. 204 Quinn, John C. 200 Rabe, Harry B. 79,89,200 Radnoczi, Frank J. 89 Ramstetter, Thomas A. 204 Ranville, Paul E. 196 Ratterman, Emmett A. 116 Rave, David M. 194 Rebold, Albert F. 200 Redding, Brian J. 195 Redella, Michael J. 128 Reed, Thomas 199 Reese, Thomas J. 139 Reesing, James H. 120 Regensburger, Paul A. 194 Rego, Lucian C. 205 Reherman, Fred J. 89,168 Reilly, Michael J. 200 Reis, Robert J. 200 Reising, John M. 90 Reister, Frederick T. 138 Reisz, Ronald 90 Reitz, John C. 90 Revellese, William R. 90,118,159 Ribar, Daniel 144 Riesenbeck, Robert H. 201 Riley, Dennis L. 204 Riley, Thomas A. 90 Ringenbach, Raymond M. 201 Risch, Gerald R. 90,202 Ritz, Ronald W. 175,196 Rizzo, James A. 90,148 Robers, Richard W. 90 Robinson, James L. 90 Roe, Clifford A., Jr. 90.117.122 Roedersheimer, Thomas C. 90 Rogers, Richard C. 195 Rohen, Terrence M. 121,139 Rohls, John 128 Rohlfs, William T. 128,204 Rolfes, David J. 199 Rolfes, Leo H. 90 Rolfes, Robert E. 125 Rommanos, Richard J. 89,90,119 Rombach, Theodore F., Jr. 199,178 Romer, Donald J. 120,199 Romito, Phillip E. 89,91 Rosnosky, Ronald M. 91,169 Rottmueller, Paul S. 91 Rouse, Charles J. 91,204 Rouse, Joseph P. 116 RufT, James J. 201 Runk, Fred J., Jr. 91 Rupkey, James A. 91,168 Ruppe, John M. 200 Ruprecht, Charles E. 91 Ruroy, Charles 201 Russ, William R. 91 Ryan, John G . 9 Ryan, Richard M., Jr. 204 Ryan, Robert A., Jr. 119,133,201 Ryan, Thomas G. 175

Sako, Clement A. 120,175 Saltsman, Thomas J. 194 Salvo, Samuel A. 168,204 Sander, Robert E. 204 Sanderson, James A. 196 Sanderson, John S. 175 Sandru, Donald R. 163,194 Sasala, Richard L. 175 Sasena, Robert C , Jr. 194 Satzger, Bruce G. 91 Satzger, James W. 91,205 Schaar, Edward R. 204 Schaal, John E. 117 Schachleiter, Kenneth T. 91,136 Schaeff'er, Michael T. 125,205 Schaub, Robert J., Jr. 204 Schauer, Bro. Conrad, CFB 205 Scheffer, Ronald E. 91 Schell, Richard A. 199 Scheper, James H. 92 Scheper, Norbert J. 92 Scheve, Bernard J. 131,195 Schick, Gerald L. 92,125 Schlaudecker, John P. 204 Schlaudecker, William H. 120 Schlaug, John R. 129 Schlinckert, Thomas J. 92 Schlueter, James B. 202 Schmid, David A. 80,92,118,123 Schmidt, Paul J. 202,131,144 Schmidt, Philip J. 116,120 Schmidt, Robert H. 120,195 Schmidt, Thomas J., Jr. 201 Schmitt, Richard C. 116,119,120 Schneider, Don G. 201 Schneider, Harry T. 196 Schneider, Lawrence B. 204 Schneider, Robert E. 92,130 Schoeny, James M. 200 Schrage, Robert J., Jr. 92 Schreck, Robert S. 125,201 Schubeler, Dale P. 92 Schuermann, Jerome H. 195 Schulhoff, Henry L. 201 Schultz, Michael R. 129 Schumacher, Roy J. 92,202 Schutte, Howard J., Jr. 93,200 Schutte, Richard G. 93,202 Schutte, Robert L. 194 Schwartz, Michael R. 194 Scolio, Richard R., Jr. 168,202 Seelie, John F. 202 Seflferino, Joseph R. 195 Seger, Stan S. 204 Seiser, Herman E., I l l 194 Selzer, Paul C. 200 Sencich, Albert A. 202 Settlemayer, James W. 202 Shannon, Timothy J. 204 Shaw, James D. 93 Sheppard, Franklin P., Jr. 199 Sibler, Patrick T. 194 Siebert, Donald E. 93,128,148 Sills, Joseph M. 93 Silver, Rudolph J. 128,204 Simpson, Thomas K. 93,139 Singh, Madhav 93 Slife, James A. 93 Slines, Edward G., Jr. 93 Small, Stephen 199 Smiley, Allan D. 93 Smith, Dennis J. 93 Smith, Edward O. 169 Smith, James W. 200 Smith, Kenneth H. 194 Smith, Robert W. 199 Smith, Thomas W. 116,144 Solomon, Gregory L. 196 Sommer, John D. 93 Sommer, Joseph D. 199 Sontag, William H., Jr. 162,196 Sopke, Thomas C. 194 Sparadiglione, Anthony 205 Spancer, Robert E. 194 Spilker, Arthur D. 204 Stanton, James P., Jr. 204 Stanczak, Barbara 200 Staples, Wayne J. 94 Stasio, John J. 200,180 Statman, David 137 St. Charles, Frank J. 168 Stefek, David A. 120

Steible, Daniel J., Jr. 118,131 Steigerwald, James J. 94 Steimle, Anthony R. 201,131 Steinback, John R. 200 Steiner, Edward C. 195 Steinker, Jerome R. 199,142 Stiens, Arnold M. 194 Stoeberl, Philip A. 94 Stoeger, Greg M. 199 Stofko, James A. 169,200 Stokes, Patrick R. 125 Stolz, Joseph L. 204 Stratman, John E. 120 Stratman, Paul G. 120 Stratman, William N. 94,151,159 Striet, Henry J. 199 Strohsahl, Robert C. 94,120,125 Stubenrauch, Dale C. 94 Stuhlreyer, Mark S. 195 Stumpf, Gregory C. 196 Sullivan, Edward J. 94 Sullivan, Michael W. 136 Sullivan, William J. 169,174 Sullivan, William L. 94 Summer, Robert A. 131 Sundermann, Edward H. 94 Sutaria, Mohan N. 124 Sweeney, Joseph M. 94 Sweeney, William M. 202 Szucs, Stephen G. 94 Tait, William P. 195 Tallarico, Dominci B. 66 Tekuelve, Mary Lynn 140 Telzrow, Robert W. 95 Tepe, Thomas M. 175 Tepe, William R., Jr. 168,205 Thesing, Roger F. 169 Thierauf, Foseph M. 194 Thomas, Anthony J., Jr. 125,144 Thomas, Howard G., Jr. 95 Thomas, Stephen M. 202,179,185 Thornton, Harold 144 Thornton, Robert J. 137 Thumann, Steven G. 199 Thyen, James C. 200 Tierney, Gregory P. 205 Timmers, John C. 201 Toadfine, Frank 200 Tomoff, Carl S. 95,202 Topolewski, Norbert J. 95 Torlina, David E. 175 Towle, Anthony 128 Trauth, Joseph L., Jr. 116,196 Trautmann, Del N. 200 Trentman, Ronald H. 195 Trexler, David V. 95 Tromans, Frederick A. 162 Tsai, Wei-Ling P. 199 Uebbing, Donald W. 95,139 Uhl, Michael J. 205 Vaccardo, Anthony L. 202 Vagedes, Ernest L. 95,120,123,159,205 VanBergen, Robert P. 196 VanLanen, James L. 194 Vanelli, Dante S. 95,138,139 Vaughn, Stuart M., Jr. 186,194 Vernon, John G. 204 Voegele, Craig L. 125 Vollman, John H. 125,201 Vonderbrick, Edward J. 202 Vonderhaar, William B. 95 Wagner, Francis X. 200 Wahl, Elmer F. 162,199 Walchli, William J. 120,195 Waldron, Thomas F. 95,119,139 Walker, Charles A. 194,136 Walker, Richard L. 196 Walsh, John M. 168,195 Walsh, William G. 120 Walters, Dale L. 95,122,151 Wamback, John R. 180,183 Ward, Francis J. 194 Ward, John D. 120 Wasserman, Thomas E. 200 Watkins, Theodore 195 Watts, Patty 129 Weaver, Paul R. 204 Weber, Cyril R. 202 Weber, F. Thomas 95 Weber, Robert D. 120 Weber, Robert W. 125 Weber, Stephen J. 120,201

230

Weber, William M. 196 Wehlen, Joseph A., Jr. 149 Weireman, Robert J. 194 Weigand, Ronald A. 96 Weinkam, Robert J. 96,131 Weisbrod, Thomas W. 205 Weitzel, William 96 Welch, Daniel T. 194 Welch, Robert J., Jr. 196 Wellinghoff, James J. 96 Wenker, Paul F. 96,130,132,139 Wenning, Michael D. 194 Wenz, Edward F. 92,16 Werner, F. C. 128 Wesley, Philip A. 162 Wesseler, Eugene P. 131

West, Michael R. 96 Westbrooke, Jeffrey H. 195 Westendorf, William A. 125 White, William T. 200 Whitehouse, James L. 196 Wiethe, A. Deane 162 Wilker, Barry J. 199 Wilcox, Thomas A. 195 Wiles, James M. 175,195 Wilhelm, John L. 125,201 Wilkins, Robert C. 79,96,120,159,200 Will, William L. 96 WilHams, Bryan D. 178,181 Williams, Carroll E. 175,196 Williams, Cordell D. 199 Williams, Patrick J. 96

Willig, Henry P. 163,205 Wilson, George W., Jr. 168 Winkworth, John M. 145 Wirth, Michael A. 169 Witt, Albert R. 199 Woelfel, Robert L. 120 Wolter, Gerald C. 133 Wood, James T. 96 Wood, William K. 120,205 Woracek, Pat 206 Woycke, Louis D. 199 Wray, Frederick A. 199 Wright, John J. 205 Wuersig, Thomas R. 204 Wycliff, Bro. Thaddeus, C.F.P. 196 Wyzkoski, Joseph F., Jr. 169,171,174,

202 Young, Irwin R., Jr. 199 Young, John J. 195,204 Young, Michael E. 96 Young, Russell N. 64,96.141 Young, William F. 175,199 Yongbluth, Louis A. 205 Zales, Michael J. 199 Zaums, Peter M. 199 Zerhusen. Carole 207,132 Zuberbuhler, H. Walter 199 Zuniga. Robert A. 202 Zwolinski, Raymond J. 200 Zych, Tony S. 186

Photo Credits GERRY WOLTER: Pages 4, 21 bottom, 22 top left, 27, 31 bottom right, 34 bottom left, 38 bot­tom right, 42 bottom right, 49 top right, 52 mid­dle, 53 top right and bottom, 55 top and bot­tom, 56 top, 66, 67 middle and bottom, informal shots on 73, 76, 79, 80, 86, 89, 92, 98, 107, 110 top, 116-118, 119 bottom, 120, 121, 123, 125, 128-113, 132 bottom, 133 top, 135 top right, 136, 138, 139 bottom, 144, 145, 148, 150, 151, 167, 171, 173, 174 bottom, 177, 178 left, 180 top left and bottom right, 181 top right, 182-191, 195 middle, 198 top right, 206 middle and bottom, 207-209.

BOB RYAN: Pages 23 top right, 48, 50 middle and bottom, 51 bottom left, 52 top left, 53 mid­dle, 61 top. Color shot on pages 104, 105, 108, and 112. Pages 110 bottom. 111, 126 left, 127, 133 bottom right, 134, 135 middle and bottom, 142 bottom, 147, 170 top, 172, 198 top left and bot­tom, 203 top and bottom right.

PAT McKENRICK: Pages 2, 16, 20, 26 top, 28 top, 29 top, 55 middle. Color shots on pages 97, 100 and 101, 109. Pages 132 top, 206 top left.

ROB PARIS STUDIO: All faculty and senior portrait shots and group photos in the Under­graduate section; pictures on pages 17, 26 bot­tom, 28 bottom, 29 bottom, 54.

TOM KITCH: Pages 50 top right, 67 top, 122, 142top, 146, 152, 153.

JOHN BRUNING: Pages 10, 11, 47 top right, 51 bottom right, 64 top left, 65 top right, 85, 103 top, 132 middle, 137, 140, 141, 166, 179 top, 181 bot­tom, 203 bottom left and middle right, 224.

CAPT. STEPHEN R. HARRICK: Pages 51 top right, 64 top right, middle, and bottom; 65 top, middle, and right bottom; 156-163.

ED BAPST PHOTOGRAPHY: Pages 52 bot­tom, 56 bottom, 57 top, 168, 169, 170 bottom, 174 top, 175, 176, 178 top right and bottom, 179 bot­tom left and bottom right, 180 top right and bot­tom left, 181 top left.

PUBLIC RELATIONS: Pages 18, 19, 46, 47 bot­tom.

PETER SMITH: Pages 5 bottom, 6, and 7.

KAZIK PAZOVSKI: Pages 8 and 9.

STRATFORD SHAKESPEAREAN FESTI­VAL: Sketches on all division pages taken from festival programs.

FRED STRAUB: Picture on page 226.

GEORG TELEMANN HELMHOLTZ: Page 119 top.

BY THE EDITOR: Page 133 bottom left.

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Acknowledgements Our thanks to: Captain Stephen R. Harrick, Photographs for the Military and Masque Mrs. Ruth White, Public Relations Mr. Carl Vorpe, American Yearbook Company Mrs. Carl Vorpe, for helping the editor find her husband on numerous

occasions Mr. Pat McKenrick, Rob Paris Studios Mr. Jack Cherry, Athletic Publicity Director Mr. Edward P. VonderHaar, Public Relations Director Mr. Fred Straub, Cincinnati Enquirer Mr. Bob Ryan, Jr., WKRC-T.V. and Xavier News Miss Margie Shriner, University of Cincinnati Mr. Jack Karr, Publicity Director, Stratford Shakespearean Festival The English Department All teachers, secretaries, and others who contributed in so many ways

to the quality of this book. And to Mr. & Mrs. R. E. O'Brien, Sr., without whose cooperation this

whole masterfuge could never have knoxified.

To the reader: plied me with pictures of events that I had to cov-All through the year, I have refused to take this er in the book which had already occurred, Pat whole thing seriously. This is, no doubt, evident McKenrick, who gave me both moral support and throughout the whole book too. This was proba- excellent pictures. Ken Czillinger, who took bly a reaction to walking into an empty office at charge of the entire task of setting up the sports the beginning of October with no previous experi- section. Dr. Doering, who spent many hours lis-ence in any phase of yearbook editing, no photog- tening to my troubles, Paul Wenker, Mike Ken-rapher, no idea of where to look for the informa- nedy, Denny Chalk, and the rest of my staff, who tion I would need, and 232 pages to fill. At that all put up with my insufferable authoritarian man-time, I had seriously considered a beautifully ner, Gerry Wolter, who went on probation taking bound, 232 page autograph book. But, due to the pictures for the book, and my pharmacist, who encouragement of people like John Bruning, last sold me tranquilizers and pep pills at a 35% year's editor, who spent many long nights tutoring discount, you have the 1964 Musketeer. me in the intricacies of the art. Bob Ryan, who sup- —Bob O'Brien

Musketeer Staff EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Bob O'Brien, Jr. ASSOCIATE EDITORS Mike Kennedy

Paul F. Wenker Bob Ryan, Jr.

SPORTS EDITOR Ken Czillinger ASSISTANT EDITORS Dennis Chalk

John Bruning CHIEF PHOTOGRAPHER Gerry Wolter PHOTOGRAPHERS Tom Kitch

Bob Ryan John Bruning

GENERAL STAFF: Tom McDonald, Don Farwick, Karen Brumm, Fred Bernstein, Casimir Szynal, Richard A. Helmick, Carol Zerhusen, Al Dilorio, Linda Oldham, John Wright, Al Pantle, ,Georg Philip Telemann Helmholtz.

SPECIAL ASSISTANTS T O T H E EDITOR Ronnie Bleh Dick Romanes

FACULTY ADVISOR Dr. Edward A. Doering

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