Larayette Alumnus - Digital Scholarship Services
Transcription
Larayette Alumnus - Digital Scholarship Services
""W" FALL '72 r * Larayette Alumnus Some students find the fence around the site of the proposed they can't resist. See page 52 for the results. Watson Courts student residences a temptation y Eafa volte Alumnus O n e of Lafayette's earliest football stalwarts, possibly "Stock" Rowland '95, is on the front cover, and the College's first gymnasium is on the back cover. ""W" FALL '72 p » Editor: Theodore V. Partlow '60 Editorial Assistant: M a r c i a C. Cupschalk Executive Committee of the Alumni Council: Wilson E. Hughes '38, president; Robert E. Pfenning '32, president-elect; Louis R. Bravm a n '54, past president; William S. Andrews '71; Robert H. Alexander '55 [Publications]; H e n r y C. Banks '27 [National Schools]; John A. Falcone '60, treasurer; Cyrus S. Fleck, Sr. '20 [Trustee Representative]; Daniel L. Golden '34 [Awards]; William E. Greenip '44, secretary; Ralph W. H a c k e t t '45 [Continuing E d u c a t i o n ] ; George M. Hoerner, Jr. '51 [Faculty Representative]; George H . H o e r r n e r '60 [Reunion] ; Frederick Hooven '42; William H. Hunscher '60; Robert E. Kusch '48 [ H o m e c o m i n g ] ; L. M a r k Michel '59 [Young Alumni C o u n c i l ] ; Robert L. W a r r e n '40; J. Tylee Wilson '53. Publications Committee: Robert H. Alexander '55, c h a i r m a n ; Michael Alber '60; Nicholas J. Azzolina '67; Frederic T . Closs '51; Cyrus S. Fleck, Sr. '20; Eric N. Rhodin '38. Alumni Trustees: Mitchel Flaum '40; Harold S. Hutchison '30; E d w a r d A. Jesser '39; William E. Simon '52. Published by the Alumni Association of Lafayette College, Easton, Pa. Issued quarterly in February, M a y , August and November. Subscription rate for members of the Association: $2 per year (included in annual alumni dues of $ 5 ) . Subscription rate for non-members: $2.50 per year. Second class postage paid at Easton, Pa. 18042. M e m b e r of the American Alumni Council. Larayette Alumnus NOVEMBER, VOLUME 44, NUMBER 2 2 About the Issue 3 Letters 4 On Campus 7 The Athletics Program: Serving Students' Needs 12 P.E. 1-2: A Paucity of Participants 14 Intramurals: Where the Students Are 16 New Facilities to Benefit Women's Program, Too 17 Lafayette's Coaches: Profiles in Success 19 'He's Devoted. That Says It All' 22 'Learning to Sing in My Own Good Time' 27 Behind the Admissions Statistics — A Regard for the Individual 29 A Friend Remembers 'Lafayette's Greatest Athlete' 32 What Else Is a Fence For? about the issue When Lafayette's Board of Trustees inaugurated the current $25 million "On Lafayette" campaign, it recognized the pressing need for a new athletics and physical education building. Now only a few months away from completion, Kirby Field House, which includes Ruef Natatorium, along with the renovation of Alumni Memorial Gymnasium, will fulfill a dream long deferred and move the College into a new era of strength. This is not to say that Lafayette is going into "big time" athletic competition or "emphasizing" athletics. Rather it means that the entire program of intercollegiate and intramural athletics, free play and physical education, which involve nearly three-quarters of the student body, will be better able to meet the needs of all Lafayette undergraduates. Like the coeducation decision, some felt that further postponement of construction would have seriously hampered the College's ability to continue to attract and hold good students. Furthermore, the new complex is being financed entirely by gifts to the College specifically designated for the new building. Other academic and residential needs had already been met with the construction of new student residences, the biology building, the library and the reconstruction of Colton Chapel and Pardee Hall. A new student health center, additional student residences and a student union are capital projects in varying stages of planning. And the "On Lafayette" campaign, which stands at nearly $19 million to date, is also adding to the endowment and providing annual operating expenses. This is certainly encouraging, but it is no time to sit back, congratulate ourselves and feel that the College is everything it should and can be. There is still much to be clone in the areas of financial aid, the arts, science and engineering to insure the future of those who will come after us. But this issue attempts to describe Lafayette's program of athletics and physical education, the philosophy behind it and some of the people who help implement it. We think it makes interesting and informative reading, and we thank Frank Claps '67, Paul Reinhard, T o m Bates and those who spent considerable time answering their and our questions. Elsewhere in these pages, there is a tribute to Charlie Berry '25, one of Lafayette's greatest athletes; a profile of a young but hardly new faculty member, Jim Crawford; and a small sampling of the poetry of one of the College's more recent graduates, Jay Parini '70. —Theodore V. Partlow '60 letters not at all necessary. It was a horrible, degrading, disgusting, and insulting letter. Albert E. Holderith, M.D. '35 A Penetrating Analysis Undeserved Stigma As an alumnus, I have enjoyed the Lafayette Alumnus magazine for years. I appreciate the new format dealing with one subject and commend the staff on a job well done. However, I must comment on the "About the Issue" segment of the summer, 1972 issue. As president of the Alumni Building Association of Delta Beta Chapter of Kappa Sigma, I feel it is my duty to point out to the editor the hardship being created to the present undergraduate leaders of our fraternity by the publicity being given to an incident that took place two years ago. My concern is that the men at the house now have to live with a situation and reputation that they are not responsible for in any way. This magazine is circulated to parents, prospective students, as well as faculty, alumni and undergraduates. How long are these men to live with this stigma? Why not be fair? Why must our fraternity's name be used repeatedly in drug-related articles? We feel that the present leadership of our house is outstanding and we, the alumni, are trying to support their efforts in operating an excellent fraternity house. Help us help them by forgetting the past and planning for the future. Raymond B. Jacoby '57 'Disgusting Letter' As an alumnus of Lafayette, I was shocked, horrified, and extremely incensed by your publishing of "An Unmourned Passing" in your recent publication of the Lafayette Alumnus. T h e publication of this letter was absolutely uncalled for and I have read and enjoyed the speech Dr. Bergethon gave at the annual alumni reunion luncheon last June 3. I found it a thoughtful and penetrating analysis of the individual and his rights versus the organization and its rights. T h e problems of this nature that confront Dr. Bergethon are not unique to an intellectual institution although the details of the issues may be. In the course of my own daily work, I spend much time in similar areas and his thoughts found a sympathetic reader. In the course of exercising my responsibility to identify and separate those who are not going to make significant contributions in the long run to the welfare of my company, I have found that usually such a separation can be done in a human manner. I have never found that an individual who was not going to "make it" with us did not have much that could be used elswhere by others with different needs and different objectives. Once we get to the positive aspects of a man's future in other fields or with other employers, the negative aspects of perhaps having failed with us seemed to diminish rapidly. No doubt the human trait of rationalization has a lot to do this. In short, then, asking people to look elsewhere for work is not inhuman unless it is done in an inhuman manner. Quite often, we in managerial capacities have done many a service though they may not see it that way at the time. I have had enough come back to tell me this to believe that there is something to it, W. F. Plume '38 A Balanced Discussion I've just read Dr. Bergethon's piece on tenure in the summer Alumnus and want to say that I think it's a beautifully goodhumored, balanced and comprehensive discussion of that issue. By the way, I hope your fem-lib types don't crusade for calling the journal the Alumnus and/or Alumna. Robert B. Heilman '27 Kudos for Fried Since my graduation from Lafayette one year ago I have had time to reflect on some of my undergraduate experiences at the College and their impact on my present training for a career in combined medical research and clinical medical practice. Here I would like to commend a particular aspect of my undergraduate education which even in this first postgraduate year has shown itself to have been of exceptional value. I refer particularly to my association with Dr. Bernard Fried for two years as an undergraduate in the Biology Department's student research program. T h e opportunity to work closely with a research scholar-educator of the caliber of Professor Fried has proven itself again and again over the past one year plus to have been the most significant educational experience of my Lafayette tenure. My current studies in the M.D.-Ph.D. curriculum at Duke University Medical School has placed me in contact over the past year with 11 other student colleagues from a cross-section of the nation's most prestigious colleges and universities. Without exception these are young scientists selected on the basis of their ability to produce original professional caliber work according to the recommendation of accomplished research scholar-educators who were widely respected as active scholars in their own fields and with whom these students had (continued on page 36) on campus Stock in 'La Fayette' When Dr. Daniel V. McLean became president of Lafayette College in late 1850, the institution perched precariously on the brink of financial collapse. Over the next four years, he raised enough money to keep Lafayette going by offering shares in the College at $100 each. These entitled the shareholder to a full, four-year scholarship for all his immediate heirs. T h e campaign, which is meticulously chronicled in David B. Skillman's Biography of a College, set a goal of $100,000, which was to be used as endowment for the then-poverty-stricken College. After herculean efforts by Dr. McLean, 1,000 of these certificates, ^ Ä (pictured below) were finally subscribed by January 1, 1854. (However, less than $70,000 of the total amount subscribed was ever paid to the College.) T h e College recently received for its archives one of those original shares (number 55 in the series of 1,000) issued on June 9, 1854, to G. W. Uhler, who evidently never presented it as payment for tuition of his heirs or assigns. Along with the certificate, Mr. Hardigg Sexton, of Oxford, Ohio, sent a letter, dated October 30, 1929, which indicated that G. W. Uhler's daughter was then contemplating designating a recipient for the scholarship. However, no one was ever named, and the scholarship, like a great many of these, was never cashed. If more of them had been redeemed, the College would probably not have survived. Although there may be some question about the legality of attempting to use any of these outstanding $100 shares in "La Fayette College" as full payment for four years' tuition at today's rates ($2,500 per year), the certificates clo recall an interesting period in the College's history. Auxiliary Outlines Plans Mrs. John Bown, campaign chairman of the Women's Auxiliary of Lafayette College, outlined at the September meeting fund-raising plans for the next two years. T h e Auxiliary has adopted as its major project fund- u. Xs /./ //' r r l / / / y V/,,/ } / / , .V///./Ar:j y'-/" • %/-//rAAf ZrA/ryr //„ j///// ^ A/'////?.J /t/t/r/ rn/t/do ' /// Jr/AA ^/"//ryr••//„/ /., //> ///• y>/r / f / f / f f / r ^ rA ////// /// /// / -//A/zr/A /•/• /Zr .Jr//.j '/ ////// ///?->/ rjtrr •/ r/f/A////'//,j//Avzv/ /r //AA /A/r /.'///-J/W.i /////• Y'/Ar ZrA/ryr . . AA/.} rr/Z/jA//////r!./yrm Ai/-///.. /Z /u/.i J/S'Z Z/r// A>rrf/'/t./A// u,jrrC //,/{/ ^ /rfj//r/AA Z/ /// • r///////'/?/•'/'/ w//.j / /' /// f/n r/t. // Ar// J w / / / ' / . A///JAxj. ing of the proposed new Student Health Center, which will be located at High and McCartney Streets. One highlight of their campaign will be the sale of a 14-inchdiameter black formica serving tray designed for the Auxiliary by the Couroc Company of Monterey, Calif. T h e Lafayette leopard, formed of inlaid wood, brass and green jewels on the collar and the eye, make the tray an attractive gift item. Sale of the tray will begin in November, at $20 each. (An order blank appears on page 36.) T h e Easton-Phillipsburg Chapter is conducting a mail order sale of selected items from the Lafayette Book Store. A brochure was mailed to parents of all freshmen. A theater party is also planned for the spring. A theater trip to the new show "1776" one day after it opens on November 10 is one of the Greater New York Chapter's activities. A lecture and discussion on "The New Morality" and a day at the Frick Museum are planned for the spring. T h e Mercer County (N.J.) Chapter is planning a spring event, and the Northern New Jersey Chapter will hold a Christmas luncheon on December 7 and a luncheon and fashion show on April 26. T h e Philadelphia Chapter has planned a card party and fashion show on April 11, as well as a banquet and dinner dance on April 26. Phi Tau House Dedicated Official dedication of Phi Kappa Tau's newly renovated house was held on September 16 following the Lafayette-King's Point football Bob Rossman '58 and George Kaplan 7 3 at Phi Tau game. Numerous alumni and friends of the fraternity attended, as did Dr. Herman C. Kissiah, dean of students; Dr. Earl A. Pope, associate professor of religion; and Dr. Warren J. Guy, associate professor and head of the electrical engineering department. Dr. Guy is serving as faculty advisor to Phi Tau. T h e fraternity's house, located at 718 Hamilton Street, has been extensively redecorated and modernized. Safety laws required the construction of both a fire- dedication. proof brick staircase and an outdoor fire escape. Recreation facilities include billiard and pingpong tables and several television sets. T h e fraternity is also engaged in the purchase and installation of its own laundry facilities. Further modifications include a parking lot for fraternity members and a new kitchen. T h e total cost of these improvements and modifications is estimated to be $70,000. For the past eight years, Phi T a u had been located in a house on Reeder Street. This house was vacated by the fraternity at the close of the 1972 spring semester and is currently being used as a College housing facility. Phi T a u had meanwhile purchased the Hamilton Street structure, deeming the house's proximity to the College's new athletic complex as one of its prime advantages. T h e Sphinx Society, Phi Kappa Tau's predecessor at the College, was founded in the 1920's, and its alumni include Dr. H. Keffer Hartline '23, winner of a 1967 Nobel Prize for discoveries pertaining to the eye's chemical and physiological processes. T h e Phi T a u chapter deliberately dissolved ties with the national fraternity from 1957 to 1959 because by-laws of the national fraternity at that time prohibited pledging members of minority groups. This action proved to be instrumental in influencing the national fraternity to eliminate the discriminatory clauses, and the Alpha Omicron chapter resumed relations with the national when the restrictions were removed. During the past 15 years, the Phi Kappa T a u Chapter at Lafayette has been among the top five fraternities academically, and during the last eight years, it has consistently ranked first or second in academic performance. Phi Kappa Tau's present membership includes brothers who are in the College band, Student Council, Dean's List, the staff of The Lafayette and various honor societies. Nixon Names Smith ' 5 2 Superior Court Judge Following a distinguished career in the United States Attorney General's office, Donald S. Smith '52 recently became Judge of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia. He was Judge Donald Smith '52 nominated by President Nixon in April, confirmed by the U.S. Senate in June and-sworn in on August 7. Born in New York City, Judge Smith was graduated from Westfield (N.J.) High School in 1946. After serving in the United States Army, he entered Lafayette, where he was president of the Kirby Government and Law Society, was a member of Delta T a u Delta fraternity and earned a bachelor of arts degree. A 1955 Fordham Law School graduate, he then served in the Department of Justice for three years as a trial attorney in the Internal Security Division. In 1958 Smith was appointed Assistant United States Attorney for the District of Columbia by Attorney General William P. Rogers and was assigned to the Municipal Court, Appellate and Criminal Divisions. While serving as trial attorney in the Criminal Division, he appeared as counsel in some of the most important cases in the District of Clumbia. Among them was the Hanrahan mail fraud case, which was the longest criminal trial in the District since the end of World War II. He also prosecuted a number of notorious murder cases. Attorney General John N. Mitchell appointed him in 1969 Chief of the Criminal Division, a position he held until his investiture as a Judge of the Superior Court. Judge Smith is a member of the Bars of the U.S. Supreme Court and the District of Columbia. As a member of the Bar Association of the District of Columbia, he served on the Committee on Criminal Law and was recommended by the Bar Association for appointment as Judge of the Superior Court. He has served on the Mayor's Committee on Crime and Delinquency and was a member of the Judicial Conference of the District of Columbia Circuit. During his service as Assistant United States Attorney, Judge Smith received commendations from Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and from Attorney General Ramsey Clark. In 1971, he received the Department of Justice Superior Performance Award from Attorney General Mitchell in recognition of his service as Chief of the Criminal Division of the U.S. Attorney's Office. Judge Smith and his wife, the former Lois J. Bland, have three children and reside in Bethesda, Md. The Athletics Program: Serving Students' Needs « • r * ^ - *- • • ¡mmrnt mm • mmrnm § § ul Sj ti M mm . . . •• WM jH^illfii S i i l K i i •X WM, Wife By Theodore V. Partlow '60 and Thomas F. Bates With the completion of the new Allan P. Kirby Field House only months away and the renovation of Alumni Memorial Gymnasium now finished, Lafayette College's athletics and physical education facilities are the best they have ever been. Moreover according to Donald U. Noblett, Vice President for Physical Planning and Operations, who has visited and seen plans of nearly a hundred other institutions' facilities, "When in full operation, Lafayette's athletics complex will be among the best in the East for a College of this size." How will the new field house affect the intercollegiate, intramural and physical education programs of the College? Olav B. Kollevoll, Athletics Director, said, "With the completion of these facilities, Lafayette will be able to serve the needs and desires of the entire student body." T h e College will also be "absolutely and positively" more attractive to prospective students and student athletes, said Richard W. Haines '60, Director of Admissions. In the past, many students have come to Lafayette from high schools which had far superior athletics and physical education facilities, and each year the College has lost some desirable candidates for admission to schools with better and more modern athletics facilities. These disadvantages will disappear by February or March of 1973, when the Kirby Field House, named for Allan P. Kirby '15, an emeritus trustee, and including the Ruef Natatorium, named in honor of John W. Ruef '01 and Harry H. Ruef '05, is expected to be ready for use. T h e new complex will benefit Lafayette's intercollegiate athletics program of 13 sports and release the gymnasium for free play and the extensive intramural program which the College carries out. Construction of the field house and renovation of the gym will cost $5.1 million T o meet the outdoor needs of the physical education and intercollegiate athletics programs, the College five years ago developed a 60-acre tract three miles north of the main campus. This complex, named for Dr. Marshall R. Metzgar '18, also an emeritus trustee, included 11 playing fields for use by Leopard athletic teams plus a quarter-mile Tartan track. For schools like Lafayette, the effort to conduct an inter-collegiate athletics program is not easy. T w o of the biggest problems are finances and scheduling, and they are often related. Even Francis A. March, Jr. '81 devoted several pages in his book Athletics at Lafayette College, published in 1926, to the costs of running an athletics program. Broadly speaking, the program at Lafayette is a sound one. This is entirely in keeping with the history and traditions of the College, which participated in its first athletic contest, a baseball game with the Easton Professionals played on the Jersey Flats in Phillipsburg, on November 8, 1865. Some alumni vividly recall the 1921 and 1926 football seasons, when the Leopards went undefeated and were touted by many respected authorities as the best team in the nation. Since then, however, football has become extremely expensive for colleges, and only the larger universities can afford the investment necessary for national prominence in that sport. While some alumni feel that the College should concentrate more on one sport or another, the vast majority of Lafayette's 15,000-plus graduates favor retaining the present philosophy of a well-rounded program of intercollegiate athletic competition. T h e maintenance of such a program, exclusive of salaries, along with an intramural system which involves over half the student body (approximately 51 per cent in 1971-72) and the physical education courses, last year cost about one per cent of the total College budget, according to John A. Falcone '60, Vice President for Finance and Treasurer. T h e Athletics and Physical Education Department budget, including salaries, was $363,000 (net after deducting $77,000 income from athletics) compared to the total annual operating budget of the College for 1971-72 of $8,864,000. But a college's athletics program cannot be measured only in terms of dollars and cents. President K. Roald Bergethon recognized this in his address to alumni in June of 1971, when he said, "Physical exercise is an emotional need, an antidote to the car and the boob tube and to the temptation to drugs; it teaches fair play, coordination and willingness to work with teams; it is premised on the freedom of equality and prepares us for good use of leisure time. Exclusive of coaches' salaries, football pays its own way at Lafayette, Kollevoll says "The sports program is also good for the College in a congregational sense: it brings the students together, as well as the faculty, and encourages alumni to return to campus, where they may see the students as they are in their daily life." It's evident, however, that Lafayette's football team, for example, is not going to attract crowds the way a Tennessee, Penn State cr Michigan team does. And yet, at most big schools football pays for the entire athletics program. Lafayette football does pay its own way, exclusive of coaches' salaries, according to Kollevoll. And the College realizes some revenue from basketball, despite the limited seating available for that sport in the 'We don't look only at the big guarantee in scheduling teams past. Additional revenue may come from the scheduling of big name teams in basketball. For instance, the Leopards will play nationally ranked South Carolina in basketball on January 3, naturally on the Gamecocks' floor. But the guarantee for this game to Lafayette will not only cover the team's travel expenses to South Carolina but will bring in as much as $3,000 more than expenses, Kollevoll indicated. A similar situation exists with the game at West Virginia. "We don't look only at the big guarantee when we schedule such teams," Kollevoll pointed out. "We check with our players to see if this is a team they would like to compete against. There is also the recognition we receive from playing such teams." One of the biggest problems facing Kollevoll in scheduling, particularly in football, is finding enough opponents whose philosophy of intercollegiate athletics is similar to Lafayette's. All aid given to student athletes at Lafayette is based on need. Each applicant for aid must file a Parent's Confidential Statement. Not enough schools follow such a policy, and when such factors as traditional opponents and periodic games in a variety of geographic locations are added, it makes the scheduling job even more difficult. Lehigh, Bucknell and Colgate operate their athletics and financial aid programs much the way Lafayette does, so they will continue regularly on the football schedule. They are also traditional opponents, as is Gettysburg. However, Lafayette played Delaware for the last time this fall, and Rutgers will go off the schedule within a few years. Penn will remain on the slate, and Columbia comes back on shortly. Kollevoll is continually looking for new opponents to balance the schedule. One source is the Yankee Conference teams. "We like to play in New England, because we have a strong alumni group there," lie said. After considering the schools in the Middle Atlantic and New England areas, Lafayette must turn to the South or to the Midwest. These involve greater travel distances and the ensuing greater costs. Kollevoll noted that Lafayette, Lehigh, Bucknell and Colgate are comparable in financial aid, recruiting and other areas of athletic costs, although each school makes its own interpretation of a student's financial need. Lafayette keeps a careful check on the fin ancial aid it awards. Each year the College reviews the student's family income and adjusts the amount of aid granted him (usually downward) accordingly. Richard K. Watson, Director of Student Financial Aid, estimates that approximately one fourth of Lafayette's current aid budget of $740,000 in grants goes to student athletes. Last year, 28 per cent of the student body participated in varsity, junior varsity and freshman sports, Kollevoll reported. Recruiting is one area of intercollegiate athletics that has come under close scrutiny in recent years. At some large universities it has been blamed as a major cause in the rising cost of such programs, but at Lafayette relatively little (about $7,500, Kollevoll saicl) is spent on recruiting. In an effort to halt the cost squeeze, athletics administrators have discussed limitations on recruiting and the awarding of scholarships. For the past two years the NCAA has proposed that all its members award financial aid to student athletes based on need, as Lafayette does. Lafayette will again support this position at the NCAA conference in January, 1973. Some coaches say they can't live with such a method, that it would hamper their recruiting efforts. For the most part, Lafayette has made the system work, although the College is at an admitted disadvantage when it competes against schools awarding full athletics scholarships. T h e record of Lafayette's athletic achievements over the past five years speaks for itself. Seven of the varsity sports have a winning percentage over this period, and two others, basketball and soccer, are just one game shy of the .500 mark. Eight of the sports—football, cross country, basketball, wrestling, baseball, tennis, track and field and Penn (ouch) will remain on the football 10 schedule. golf—have had their best seasons in 15 years during this five-year stretch. Recent Leopard football teams have virtually rewritten the school record book, and the excitement of last year's N I T basketball team still lingers. T h e baseball team has won the Middle Atlantic Conference's West Section for the past two years. Just about every school record in both swimming and track and field have been set in recent seasons. T h e quality of student athletes at Lafayette is also reflected in the fact that four of the last seven Pepper Prize winners have been outstanding student athletes. In each of the past two academic years, a Lafayette student athlete received an NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship of $1,000: Bill Sprecher '71, a football tackle, and Jay Mottola '72, basketball co-captain. Last spring, 56 varsity athletes, including 12 captains or captains-elect, were named to the Dean's List for the second semester. As have all departments and offices at Lafayette, the Athletics Department has had to tighten its budgetary belt in recent years, but not to the extent that it has significantly affected the intercollegiate program. T h e baseball team, for example, financed its trip to Florida last spring partly through special contributions from alumni for that purpose and by operating the refreshment stands during all home basketball games. Team members also contributed The EC AC now says women may with men in all varsity sports compete personally a share of their own expenses. By offering 13 varsity sports, Lafayette hopes to fulfill the needs and desires of nearly every student, both male and female, who wishes to participate in intercollegiate athletics. For the most part, participants are rarely cut from varsity teams. T h e junior varsity and freshman team program encompasses 10 of the 13 sports. Last year 444 different men students participated in Lafayette's intercollegiate athletics program. Kollevoll called the 28 per cent (based on male enrollment of 1,600) a "very high level" and pointed out that it compares favorably with previous years, when more men were enrolled. In 1970-71, 471 competed; in 1969-70, 502; in 1968-69, 516; in 1967-68, 487; and in 1966-67, 455. Kollevoll explained that the relatively recent change in the makeup of sub-varsity intercollegiate teams came about in the 1970-71 seasons as a result of a recommendation by the Faculty Committee on Athletics, the Trustee Committee on Athletics and Students Affairs and the members of the athletics staff. When the College decided to permit freshmen to participate on varsity teams, except for football and basketball, these groups recommended replacing freshmen teams in eight intercollegiate sports with junior varsity teams. This change now makes it possible for a student who is an upperclassman and who can not make the varsity squad to participate on an inter-collegiate level for four years. Last winter, the NCAA, ECAC and MAC, one after the other, approved the use of freshmen on all varsity teams, including football and basketball. (In deference to Women's Lib, the ECAC has since allowed women to participate with men in all varsity sports.) Lafayette has still not decided whether it will allow freshmen on the varsity football and basketball teams. Intercollegiate athletic contests have been by far the biggest entertainment attraction on the Lafayette campus, especially when there have been winning teams. Kollevoll pointed out that over half the student body regularly attended the varsity home basketball games last year. Students began lining up at 8 a.m. for the noon door opening on the day of the Delaware game last February. Kollevoll has also tried to take into account the fact that home athletic contests, particularly in football and basketball, are focal points for social weekends on campus. After experimenting with Saturday afternoon basketball games over the past few seasons, he has shifted all Saturday home games to the afternoon. Increasing attendance at the afternoon games was also a factor in the switch. With a seating capacity of 3,400 for basketball in the new Kirby Field House, the 1973-74 season might well find the Leopards playing before more fans than they have ever had before. Against ]acksonville in last year's NIT. P.E. 1-2: A Paucity of Participants By Frank Claps '67 In the two and a half years since Lafayette College students have not been required to take physical education, the program has felt both the best and the worst effects of the non-structured college curriculum. On the one hand, William L. Lawson, physical education instructor and swimming and lacrosse coach, reports, "Because they don't have to be there, the kids we get are really interested in learning." Conversely, however, Lawson admits, "I guess our weakness is lack of participants." Nevertheless, Lafayette's physical education program has taken significant strides since the days when it served as the dumping ground for those who, for one reason or another, managed to escape the clutches of compulsory ROTC. Until 1965 R O T C was a command performance during a student's first two years. Phys ed was offered as an alternative requirement for freshmen and sophomores excused from military science because of "advanced standing, physical disqualification, non-citizenship or religious beliefs," according to the College Catalog of 1964. Not many students had legitimate excuses to avoid R O T C , and thus, except for a smattering of transfer and foreign students, the average gym class consisted of students who were something less than athletically endowed. Probably as a result, the instructors were something less than enthusiastic. Written tests, which amounted to a contest of who could fill in the blanks fastest, were administered following units in archery, gymnastics, wrestling and Softball. From 1965 through 1968, R O T C was required only during the freshman year, but physical education was required of all frosh and sophomores not enrolled in R O T C . T h e n came 1969, heralded by students as a momentous year in Lafayette's history: R O T C was no longer compulsory. Students who did not desire "spit 'n' polish," however, were required to take an equivalent number of physical education credits in its place. first semester, and the number grew to 464 the next semester," Kollevoll said. "We went to 630 the next year, and there was still nothing we could clo. Most of the students were just standing around watching the others, and nobody got anything accomplished." Classes met twice a week and students received one credit toward graduation each semester, the same number they woidd have received for successfully completing ROTC. Students began feeling that the physical education requirement for graduation, like R O T C , was a collegiate "Catch-22." T h e program became voluntary in 1970, and enrollment immediately slipped to a more comfortable and workable 100 to 125. Between 50 and 60 were enrolled at the start of this year, but another 40 to 45 will sign up for skiing when that season begins, Kollevoll said. Since he took over as athletics director in 1965, Kollevoll and his staff have attempted to change the emphasis of the physical education curriculum. Suddenly physical education became extremely popular: more than 400 freshmen and sophomores signed up. "There was no way we could accommodate all those kids," recalls Athletics Director Olav B. Kollevoll. "One instructor can't teach 40 students how to swing a golf club. We could handle about 250 the Frank Claps '67 is a reporter for the Bethlehem and a frequent contributor to the A lumnus. Globe-Times The ski bus is usually full. Students felt the physical education requirement was a collegiate 'Catch 22' Courses in soccer, basketball, softball and the like have been replaced with instruction in golf, modern dance, tennis, swimming, handball, squash, badminton, volleyball, skiing and other carry-over sports. "We emphasize skills the students will use when they get older," Kollevoll said. "They can play things like football, basketball and softball on their own." T h e physical education department divides the year into four quarters, and students may choose from a variety of courses in each quarter. T o enroll all the student has to do is to show up at the allotted time. T h e first quarter runs from the opening of school until October 27, with tennis, swimming and modern dance offered then. Both tennis and modern dance are fairly popular with women students, Lawson reported, and some men are enrolled in the modern dance course. Tennis classes meet twice a week, modern dance once. Since there are only ten swimmers, they set up their own schedules with Lawson. T h e second quarter runs until December 8 and contains more swimming, modern dance, handball, squash, skiing and personal defense. T h e latter consists of judo and karate and is also popular with women. "We no longer give tests," Lawson said. "Since the classes are now voluntary and students receive no credits toward graduation for them, the kids wouldn't show up for tests anyway." Swimming, personal defense, handball and squash will carry over into the third quarter, Lawson said, "and we might add volleyball and badminton." Activity will again move outdoors for the fourth quarter, with tennis, archery and golf. Swimming programs will continue. While the new Kirby Field House and nowrenovated Alumni Memorial Gymnasium may attract more students into the physical education program, the fact that the course offers no credit apparently keeps many away. All freshmen are notified about the offerings by mail during the summer, and notices are sent to all living groups prior to each quarter during the academic year. Has the Greek ideal (usually expressed in Latin: mens sana in corpore sano) of a sound mind in a sound body gone completely by the boards? "They'll come out so long as it doesn't interfere with other things they want to do," Lawson said of Lafayette undergraduates. In the meantime, Kollevoll indicated he may petition for credit status once the program is fully organized. "I don't think we would ever offer a physical education major," Kollevoll said, "but what I'd like to get, as the program grows, is something for the student who thinks he might like to go into high school or college coaching. Some states require a special certificate to coach, and I'd like to see Lafayette someday able to offer such a program." Intramurals: Where the Students Are Of the entire physical education and athletics program at Lafayette College, one aspect which affects more students than any other, but about which alumni hear very little, is the intramural program. In the past ten years, the program has expanded under the very able direction of the senior member of the Athletics Department staff to the point where it now includes 13 sports and involves over half the student body. • When George L. McGaughey, Assistant Director of Athletics in Charge of Intramural Sports, took over the-intramural program in 1962, a group of students came to him and asked if volleyball, paddleball and billiards could be added to the ten other sports then being contested. With an openmindedness that is characteristic of the man, McGaughey consented immediately. One of the most popular men on campus because of his concern for students, his quiet, soft-spoken mien, his ready smile and his willingness to help, McGaughey first came to Lafayette as assistant football coach in 1937. Head coach E. E. "Hooks" Mylin and he guided the 1937 and 1940 teams to undefeated seasons. During that time, McGaughey also headed the intramural program. A Bucknell graduate, McGaughey left Lafayette in March of 1942 to enlist in the U.S. Navy. After his discharge, he taught for a year at Wabash College and for two years at New York University, before returning to Lafayette in 1950. He has been here ever since. His last year as a football line coach was in 1963. Sports in which anywhere from three to 31 teams compete annually in intramurals include: cross country, flag football, tennis (singles and doubles), basketball, bowling, swimming, volleyball, wrestling, pacldleball (singles and doubles), Softball and track. Foul shooting and billiards are also popular forms of intramural competition. There were a total of 673 different contests in the various sports last year, with 813 of the 1,600 men enrolled participating, most of them in at least two different activities. Athletics Director Olav B. Kollevoll has had consistently high praise for McGaughey and the IM program, which has regularly involved between 50 and 60 per cent of the student body. Much of the lively program is conducted at Metzgar Fields, but during the fall numerous fraternity and dormitory floor teams can be seen practicing daily on just about every grassy area of the campus. In the spring, softball games fill the quadrangle and other open fields. Last year 229 men formed 31 basketball teams and competed in 96 contests. But, for sheer numbers, flag football is the most popular sport, with 452 competing last year. Flag football replaced touch football about nine years ago, McGaughey said. Its main distinction from touch is that players wear a special belt with three strips of colored cloth tucked into it, one at each side and one in the back. T o stop the ball carrier, the opposing team must simply snatch one of the flags from his belt. "This keeps injuries to a minimum." McGaughey said. "In touch football players were occasionally hurt when they were pushed a little too hard by an over-enthusiastic defender." Each team fields a seven-man squad, and most of them have an offensive and defensive unit. Each fraternity, social dorm and dormitory floor as well as those who live off campus and are independents, are eligible to field a team. T h e contests are hard-fought, and teams are divided into two leagues, with the Coach McGaughey gives his student referees some winner of each league meeting in the finals. Basketball and volleyball are the most popular winter sports, and last spring 23 softball teams, involving 340 players, had 63 contests. In all sports Students are paid to officiate. T h e only restriction placed on participation is that a student who lettered in a sport cannot play on a team in that sport. Last year Student Government discontinued giving out the traditional all-campus trophy to the living group which amassed the best total record, so McGaughey and his IM Council, consisting of students from each group which enters a team in any of the 13 sports, has decided to award an "All-Year Trophy" to the team with the best overall record for the year. One concommitant result of the strong IM program is the number of students who can be seen daily in the gymnasium during "free play" hours. All three cross-court basketball playing areas are normally filled, with pick-up teams waiting their turn to play. Between 3:00 and 3:30 p.m., students start to arrive, with games usually going strong until 5:00 p.m. or later. Other students use the indoor track, wrestling and weightlifting rooms, pool and other areas. In the past, and this year until the Kirby Field House is opened, during the basketball season some students have complained that the gym is not available to them enough of the time. advice. When the field house is completed, in late February or early March, the gym will be released for more free play. How have the much-discussed "new student lifestyles" affected participation in unstructured and intramural competition? "At times I think student attitudes are changing," McGaughey said, "but then a new season will roll around and the students' enthusiasm will dispel any doubts I may have had. They don't view intramurals much differently now from the way they have in the past; competition is still strong." As an example, he cited the spring of 1970 "student strike." "While there was some forfeiting of games in some sports, that was a small minority. Most of the students then, and now, for that matter, value the chance to participate whether they have a chance of winning or not. I didn't cancel the program, and I was under no pressure by students or others to do so," McGaughey stated. Typical of the respect in which students hold McGaughey was a recent incident at one of the flag football playoff games at Metzgar Fields. Some students were cheering excitedly on the sidelines. One of them lapsed into shouting some pretty salty epithets at the opposing team, and another student said, louder than he had to, "Watch your language! McGaughey's over there!" George admitted he has the reputation of a strict disciplinarian and said he had recently called a meeting of his IM Council to have them pass the word that obscene language would not be tolerated at the games. T h e word apparently got around. The women's basketball team gets some quick energy from orange slices at half-time. Coach Sharon Mitchell is at right foreground, with the glasses. New Facilities to Benefit Women's Program, Too After the first season of women's sports in 1970-71, the then-coach and women's physical education instructor, Mrs. Elizabeth Walker, said lack of space was the greatest handicap to the volleyball, basketball and field hockey intercollegiate teams. March Field has since been turned over to the field hockey team, tennis and golf have been added and the completion of the Kirby Field House will free Alumni Memorial Gymnasium for more use by women's volleyball and basketball teams, as well as the intramural program. In addition to those sports, the women's IM program offers indoor track, tumbling, badminton and free exercise. About 70 of the first group of 150 women participated in intercollegiate and intramural athletics. Last year, under the direction of Mrs. Sharon Mitchell, physical education instructor, the intercollegiate program involved over 80 women in the five sports, with another 50 or so participating in the IM program. A "PowderpufT Football" game between Lafayette and Lehigh women sparked a great deal of interest on both campuses. Calling the intramural program for women "only moderately successful," Mrs. Mitchell pointed to three problems: lack of space, limited equipment and limited interest among women. "Women at Lafayette tend to prefer non-competitive intramurals," she said. This is in sharp contrast to the men students' IM program. As a result, she instituted the "open gym" concept, allowing women to utilize the facilities as they desired during regularly scheduled hours. When the men's winter intercollegiate sports season started, however, the gymnasium was seldom available. Completion of the field house and natatorium will obviate some of these drawbacks, and as the number of women on campus increases to the 450 to 500 projected by 1973-74, the percentage as well as the number of women participating in both organized and unstructured athletic activity should increase. Lafayette's Coaches: Profiles in Success By Paul Reinhard It is generally accepted that today's college athlete is more educated, more sophisticated—and often more talented—than his predecessors were. Sacrifice for the sake of sacrifice is a thing of the past; no longer will an athlete run through the proverbial brick wall simply because the coach tells him to. Because he is a product of a society which is becoming increasingly aware of everything going on around it, the collegian today must know for himself that athletics can provide for him more than just a Big Man on Campus tag. He questions the role of an athletic program in relation to his world; and he sometimes finds he cannot fully commit himself to a regimented system which will demand that he compromise some of his beliefs about himself and where he is headed. When the athlete reaches the point where he questions his athletic participation, his final decision sometimes is dependent not only on his own conscience but also on the aid of his coach, the man who recruited him as a student athlete with the hope that the youngster might succeed not only in the classroom but that he might also add something to the success of the athletic program. T h e role of the coach has changed drastically in the last decade. When the dream of virtually every youngster was to be the next Jim T h o r p e or Babe Ruth, the coach had little trouble getting his way. After all, the best way to attain such a goal was to accept the teachings of men who had devoted their lives to a particular sport. However, the coach of the 1970's must be wary of his approach toward his athletes. He knows that the rigid disciplinarian can find himself in constant conflict not only with his athletes but with himself as well. While the coach must try to maintain his philosophy of any sport, he has found that he must sometimes compromise himself with relation to his players. T h e athletic programs at some colleges and universities have suffered for one of two reasons: the coaches are unwilling to give in at all on their principles of discipline; or given that unwillingness, the coaches can not recruit enough athletes who still believe regimentation is a prime requisite for success in sports. Mr. Reinhard, a graduate of Moravian College, has been a sportswriter for the Call-Chronicle newspapers in AUentown for 12 years. He's covered Lafayette athletics for the past four years. Basketball coach Tom Davis being interviewed last year's NIT victory over Virginia. after Lafayette has been extremely fortunate in acquiring the type of coach who gains the respect of his athletes while at the same time teaching his sport in a manner which brings with it success and satisfaction for the athlete, coach and College. One of the best illustrations might be the coaching career of Norm Gigon, a former major leaguer who took over the Lafayette baseball team after the death of Charlie Gelbert, a man who had made quite a name for himself at the College because of his success. Without Gelbert, some people said, the program would certainly begin to slide. After all, they asked, who is Norm Gigon? Gigon took over as head coach in 1968, and because he had a good bit of returning talent, he directed the Leopards to a 15-7 season which included a runnerup spot in the Middle Atlantic Conference. It was a successful start, to be sure. T h e untimely death of Gelbert cost Lafayette an entire recruiting year, so Gigon's second and third years were spent rebuilding, with the baseball team going 8-14 and 11-9. But the fruit began to ripen again in 1971, when Lafayette went 19-5 and won the championship in the MAC's Western Section. And this past spring, Lafayette compiled a 17-9 record and repeated as West Section champion. Proof of Gigon's success is the fact that a number of his players have caught the eyes of major league scouts, have been drafted and have signed professional contracts. Gigon's formula has proven successful over a period of years, but other Lafayette coaches have come into the program and made their marks in a single season. Take the case of T o m Davis, the energetic young basketball coach. When Davis was selected to succeed the departing Hal Wissel, the Lafayette program was on the move. Davis had a strong nucleus of experienced players, and it was his responsibility to make them jell as Lafayette followers expected they would. It was a challenge Davis will never forget, and one he met head-on and conquered to the satisfaction of all concerned. T h e Leopard cagers compiled a 21-6 record in Davis' first year, making him one of the most successful first-year coaches in the country. T h e mark was good enough to get the attention of the National Invitation Tournament committee and get Lafayette a spot in that prestigious postseason tournament. Lafayette and Davis showed their mettle in the opening round by eliminating Virginia, and the Leopards then played well against a Jacksonville squad which far outmanned—and finally did defeat— them. Two players, record-setting Tracy Tripucka '72 and playmaker Jay Mottola '72, were drafted by the professionals; and that has to speak well for the program. Neil Putnam, who came to Lafayette from the Neil Putnam Norm Gigon Ivy League, had perhaps the toughest task of all, having to install a new football system and get to know more personnel than Gigon and Davis put together. But the go-getter coach spared none of his energy in preparing for his first season and then pulled a couple of shockers to boot. T h e 1971 Leopards had their ups and d o w n s the ups were very good, some of the downs were very bad. They finished a challenging campaign with a 5-5 record which included 'super" wins over the likes of Rutgers, Columbia and Pennsylvania—the latter coached by former Lafayette coach Harry Gamble. Injuries took their toll during the season, and the loss of valuable recruiting time in the first year may put Putnam in the same boat as Gigon in his early years. But like Gigon, Putnam has a quality about him which makes you believe that his day will come; it's only a matter of time. T h e coaches of the "big three" sports should be proof enough that Lafayette has succeeded in giving its athletes the best possible tutelage, but the story doesn't stop there. Success has come, too, to the likes of Bill Donahue, Bill Lawson, Art Statum, Gary Williams, George Davidson '51 and Steve Schnall. Donahue's cross-country and track teams have virtually re-written the Lafayette records and have been championship threats in the Middle Atlantic Conference; Lawson's swimming team has reset nearly all the school records; Statum's wrestlers had a 10-3 record—the best in 15 years—in his first year as coach; Williams' soccer team had a winning season in his first year, and he was also instrumental in the success of the basketball team; Davidson, the long-time basketball coach, has turned his attention to golf and has continued his success; and Schnall has worked hard at instilling a winning spirit into the Leopard tennis team. T h e merits of a college like Lafayette will not rise or fall on the basis of the won-lost records of its sports teams, but it is good to know the school is blessed with the type of coach who can make the college experience a lot more than a 1,000-word term paper or a final examination. Because that's really where it's at . . . a well-rounded, well-grounded four-year experience. 'He's Devoted. That Says It All' In the tradition of Francis March '81, James Tupper, Danny Hatch '01, Beverly Kunkel, Sam Pascal '27 and other teaching greats at Lafayette, a number of current faculty members are influencing today's students as profoundly and positively as their forerunners ever did. In an attempt to recognize and pay tribute to some of these teachers and scholars, the Lafayette Alumnus will feature a faculty member in each issue. The series begins with a student-written profile of Dr. James P. Crawford, associate professor of mathematics, who, in his 15 years at Lafayette, has come into some sort of contact with most of the nearly 6,500 alumni and undergraduates who have entered and left the College in that time. By Judith E. Thomson '73 On Dr. James P. Crawford's staff biographical form the following statement appears: "Lafayette College has been my only full-time employer." T h e statement is far more than literally true. Indeed, it is a blatant understatement when considered in light of the activities of this associate math professor. Jim Crawford is in a unique position on the faculty. He has taught at the College for 15 years, yet his age is only 37. ("But in faculty and pick-up basketball I find out how old I am!") He has been tenured since 1968, yet his age places him in a position to identify with younger, untenured faculty members. "I can well appreciate the pain of not receiving tenure," he states. "Yet it is necessary protection for less cutthroat competition. One needn't be constantly looking over one's shoulder. One can be a critic. Petty considerations can be eliminated." There are three main areas which occupy his time, and he is no mere spectator in any of them. Crawford is the faculty resident at McKelvy House —the home on High Street of the McKelvy Scholars Program. He just happened upon the house while out walking one day and was captivated by its "Rhinelike" beauty. At that time the McKelvys still lived there but in 1960 the program was established. He started attending its meetings and when, in 1967, a third faculty resident was being sought, Crawford was chosen. "I think it wasn't so much that I was In a sense, Dr. Crawford has matured at Lafayette, and he is quick to say as much. Only 22 when he began teaching here as an instructor after graduating from Grove City College, he says, "I have seen a lot of changes in the College since then, but my own personal changes have been greater." He feels coeducation has been a tremendous boon to the College—"And I'd say that even if you weren't interviewing me!" Students are more independent today, he feels—brighter, and more of them are conscientious. They are more willing to articulate than they were 15 years ago doubts as to why they are here. "What previously appeared as graffitti is spoken about today." This he sees as the next most marked change at Lafayette. Diversity best describes Jim Crawford's interests. Judy Thomson is a senior English major from New Shrewsbury, N.J. A Dean's List student and a non-resident member of the McKelvey Scholars Program, she transferred to Lafayette from Monmouth College. Editor-in-Chief of the 1972 Melange, she has been active in the Maroon Key Club, Easton Tutoring Program, the Riding Club, the Lafayette, the Sub-Freshman Day Planning Committee, a representative of the Young Alumni Council and a member of the Alumni Association's Long Range Planning Committee's sub-committee on undergraduate relations. Professor James P. Crawford exceptionally qualified," he says, "but that I am single." He concedes to having had some difficulty at first adjusting to life with some of the liberal McKelvy members—"I tend to be straight morally and religiously"—but acknowledges that Lafayette has mellowed him. His fear for the program is that the house as "a nice place to live" is a primary consideration in peoples' interest. His role with the Easton Tutoring Program dates to 1964. At that time, a group from the Trinity Episcopal Church—concerned about the burgeoning racial problem—instituted a study-hall type of group tutoring for kids who couldn't study at home. Expecting a small group of 10-15 kids, they were happily amazed when 105 showed up. This grou-> tutoring approach lasted about four years, when one-to-one tutoring took over and the leadership moved to the College. A group of college students had expressed an interest in tutoring, so together with Dr. Louis T . Stableford (biology) and Mrs. Marcia Lusardi (wife of associate professor of English James P. Lusardi '55), Crawford began directing the program. He feels the value of the program lies in acquainting and associating students with the town (especially South Side) and in the tutor-tutee relationships which form beyond actual tutoring. "Lafayette has need of the program. It's the tutors who gain more," he believes. Crawford has been active in theatrical productions since his undergraduate years. He claims it helped him build confidence, especially for teaching. "If I could pull off being another person in front of 1,000 people I could surely be myself in front of 25." He has been involved in some capacity with the biennial Faculty Show for the last ten years (he played Machiavelli in the most recent show), has acted in the College's Little Theatre (J.B., Macbeth), and has performed with the Pennsylvania Players in Bethlehem (Murder in the Cathedral, / Never Sang for my Father). All of this does not mean mathematics is subordinated. Three Lafayette math professors have cited Crawford in the footnotes of their doctoral dissertations, a fact Crawford is proud of but chalks up to the fact that "I talk a lot." No one in the department is a specialist in probability and statistics, so Crawford recently attended a summer seminar to become better acquainted with that field. His Ph.D. thesis was concerned with functional analysis and summability. This, as are most thesis topics, is very specialized, and he regrets that original research of this sort so often is unrelatable to the classroom— especially in view of its time-consuming nature. As he puts it, a senior math major with whom he worked for a year might understand the thesis. "I try to keep current and alive in my general field," he says. In last year's facility play, Crawford (center) played Machiavelli. If, then, whatever he does he does enthusiastically and with dedication, teaching is no exception. Students comment: "Both he and the material are so alive." "He's obviously interested in the material." "He makes sure he knows all there is to know about what he's teaching." "He isn't even aware the period is over he loves his material so much!" "He recognizes effort and his exams test understanding—not specifics covered." "He's better than anyone else in the department at teaching an understanding of the subject." "He has an uncommon ability to make difficult concepts understandable." "I appreciate his availability. As my advisor this is important." "He's virtually always there for help." "He's devoted. T h a t says it all." Crawford has served on several Alumni Committees—most recently on the Long Range Planning Committee's sub-committee on Alumni-Undergraduate relations. He feels there is definitely a need for, and a value in, alumni-undergraduate interaction. He expresses his respect for the alumni with whom he has worked and feels they return to Lafayette not for selfish reasons but only for satisfaction. He doesn't feel an involved alumnus "just hasn't grown up" but he can empathize with the alumnus who simply has found new interests which supercede those connected with his Alma Mater. In fact, this is his own situation. Having always lived on campus is one reason Crawford attributes to his close identification with the College and its identification with him. He lived in the Faculty Club for two years, Gates Hall for seven, and McKelvy since then. Though quick to dismiss the idea that he perhaps approaches being a "Mr. Lafayette" ("Too many traditions have disappeared— the students are just too diverse any more"), Dr. Crawford is certainly a ubiquitous figure on campus. In reflecting on his time-consuming interests, Crawford says that in retrospect graduate work occupied much of his time when he was first here. "I've just been more available for projects since 1966" (when he received a Ph.D. from Lehigh). At times it seems as if three people could hardly be as involved as Jim Crawford is. Coeducation has been a tremendous boon to Lafayette; and I'd say that even if you weren't interviewing me." 'Learning to Sing in My Own Good Time' By Theodore V. Partlow '60 It's a long way from Scranton, Pa., to St. Andrews, Scotland. But, it's an even longer way from winner of the MacKnight Black Poetry Prize to "poet." Jay Lee Parini '70 has successfully made both the physical and the metaphysical journeys. Jay Parini had been trying to write poetry from a very early age, but the first poem in which "things started to come together" for him was written during his senior year at Lafayette College. He recalls: "I was walking with Professor George Heath one afternoon out near his 100-year-old farmhouse north of Easton on Delaware Drive when I noticed a gravestone in the middle of a field overlooking the river. Professor Heath told me the story of the young boy, whose marker it was, who had drowned in 1958 or 1959, near that spot. I was so intrigued by the story I began that day to write 'Boy of the Delaware.' "Although I'd written lots of poems, some of them quite bad, before that spring day in 1970, I had no faith in my poetry until 'Boy.' " Since then, Jay Parini has been "In my own good time . . . learning to sing." His first book of poems, Singing In Time, was published earlier this year in Scotland, where he is a teaching fellow at the University of St. Andrews ("the Oxford of the North") and where he expects to receive his Ph.D. in June "if all goes well." His thesis is on American poet Theodore Roethke, who taught at Lafayette from 1931 to 1935. Whoever describes himself as poet must withstand the scrutiny of other writers and of time. Richard Wilbur, Robert Lowell, Stephen Spender, William Stafford, David Wagoner, Alastair Reid, W. H. Auden, Graham Greene, Donald Payne and others have read Jay Parini's poems, delighted in them and encouraged him to continue writing. After reading Singing in Time, which is going into its second printing, Richard Wilbur wrote to congratulate Jay and even went so far as to single out two of tire 30 poems in the slim, 60-page volume as his favorites, "Poet Among the Birds" and "A Dead Pigeon Fell Out of the Sky." As an undergraduate at Lafayette, Parini was a McKelvy Scholar; served on the editorial board of The Marquis, the literary magazine; was in the Stephen Crane Society, the Band and Glee Club; won a British Student Travel Fellowship to Russia in 1969; and spent his junior year abroad (at St. Andrews). He was also active in the campus undergraduate move to have student participation in R O T C made voluntary, rather than compulsory, and spoke out in favor of calling off classes during the "student strike" of the spring of 1970. During the "strike" he debated a classmate, Rob Natelson, who favored holding classes, on a local television station and at a student-faculty gathering on campus. Of his activist days he said, "Times and tactics change: where demonstrations may once have been useful ways to effect needed changes, they have become somewhat meaningless today; what we need now is non-violent action. I would be greatly disappointed if students became apathetic about the College and society." But, it is his poetry that now motivates his life. Singing in Time, which is dedicated to Jim Lusardi '55, associate professor of English at Lafayette College, is divided into three sections. T h e first, called "The Ground Where Innocence Is," contains poems written while at Lafayette; "A Music of the Mind" consists of poems "about language, about love and about music"; and the last section, "A Separate Country," contains what he considers his best poems. Of the middle works, Parini said, "A poet experiments with words to surprise people: It's as though he is inventing language. Language, to a poet, is an essential thing." T h e "Separate Country" poems are really about no geographical place, though the imagery is Scottish and British: the landscape, birds and growing things are peculiar to Britain. " T h e medieval town of St. Andrews, with its rocky coast facing the North Sea, its ruined castle, the wind whipping the flowing black gowns we wear in crossing cobblestone courtyards on our way to meeting our students—it's all very romantic and poetic in itself," he said. There is a correspondence of the outer and the inner landscape of the poems in this section. But, "A poet lives in the country he creates in his imagination," Parini said. "Our sensibilities are affected by travel and coming in contact with the life assumptions of different people." In addition to his travels in Russia and other communist countries, Jay has been to Italy, Spain, France, skiing in Austria, and last summer spent a month in Seattle, Wash., going over the 217 notebooks and correspondence of Roethke. In the past two years, Jay received the Francis A. March Graduate Fellowship from Lafayette, in addition to a small stipend from St. Andrews. He hopes to travel for a year in Europe after completing his Ph.D. and will then look for a teaching position in the United States. But, whatever else he does, this bright and dedicated young man is a poet. BOY OF THE DELAWARE For Jim Ingham Sixteen years the river was his, as a child rollicking, running the moss banks wild, cliffs spread with bluebells and brown leaves. In all seasons the river was his, yet summers he possessed it fully. Leaving his small farm home each day not long after morning glittered gold over grass, he would swagger off through the wet woods and sit alone by the Delaware, watching the river descend his valley, charging rocks and shattering into foam, swirling bits of broken branch along, a river strong, robust and hurling. He would watch through the pale green shadow-dappled maples, struck beside the water's sure and swelling motion. He would dream of Vikings, vandals. He, the Norseman warrior, the brave, the fierce— a man above all men he dreamed, so glad beside the Delaware. He was glad for summer, for the squirrels scurrying in small, grey blurrs up chalky barks, squealing at sparrows, blackbirds, larks, all raving for supremacy on top of overhanging branches shadowing the Delaware. While mother tended the steaming meals, and father raked the fields with his plough, the boy would ramble, swing from tree to tree; he'cl yell like a raucous bird, riding the air as light as a finch in the summer of skinny knees. And so his clays were spent like leaves until one June morning he came home, running, darting, fox-footed, through thick, dark woods, and shouting, excitedly, "Mother! Mother! There's a sailing boat, abandoned, rushing down the river! It's upstream half a mile, I think. It's nearly sunk! Could it be Mr. Hanson's? It's empty. Could you come along and watch? I want to go after it, pull it up along the shore. Is that all right? Will you follow? Quickly!" Reluctantly, the mother sped behind her blond son through the trees toward the river; over the bank she stood and watched part of her deepest self swim happily, with confident strokes, to the center of the murmuring river. T h e sun bore its fierce yellow fire into the mother's eyes; she could barely see at all; Jay Parini '70 for days the rain had piled incessantly, swelling the water to unusual bulk. T h e mother strained and saw her boy, now paddling the craft to shore and smiling, splashing, shouting—his white shirt like a radiant sail, flapping as wind gust suddenly caught the valley and bristled waves. T h e n the world spun madly out of the waiting mother's mind. "Help!" a boy's cry rankled the air. "Help!" She stumbled and fell against a rock. God, what was happening? She winced, while her son, already far down the river, struggled to tear his shirt off and swim against the river's wall of water, tremmelling the life out of his young and nearly naked flesh. Before the mother could believe the shouts the river was again calm, unblemished by the boy, her boy. There was no one in sight. T h e Delaware took her son and kept him, though issuing some few, cold, insignificant remains, an empty cloak of lifeless flesh, on the following morning, miles from where the boy had been taken. But that is nothing. T h e boy is with the river forever, the boy is with the Delaware, burgeoning out of the distance daily, underneath rocks where a mother's heart's blood once dreamed and where his ashes were put to the soil. Then come the rains, the month of June, the mother thinks of her blond and bold Olympian boy who ran beside the river once, the father stops in his fields to sigh, the Delaware files its course to sea. A DEAD PIGEON FELL OUT OF THE SKY A dead pigeon fell out of the sky and was thoroughly ridiculous. It looked stuffed, wood-winged, with painted eyes, and the eyes stared out unmercifully. It could easily have fallen from a parlour wall or toppled from a mantelpiece, landing in a similarly graceless state. My day had been otherwise easy, the spring air loose and lively about me, the morning enchanted, when this bird just dropping breathless and landing, oddly, a dead, ridiculously tumbled from the sky, as a stone, in a clump of crocuses— washed-down bird. Its bird-frail, delicate breast of ribs cracked, once. There was no last gasp. I looked up. T h e embarrassed sky smiled broadly, its pink lips frothing with clouds. T h e sun's fat tongue licked over my face. I was left, awkwardly squinting at the sky, afraid that another ridiculous pigeon might follow a lover, perhaps, insane with its bird-grief, dashing itself, a featherball martyr in a crocus patch. I was strangely unsettled, thinking of that pigeon. Could it just have fallen from the sky unwished? Is it possible that its wings were so wooden? How do you close a pigeon's eyes? POET AMONG THE BIRDS For Alastair Reid Living as you do, among the haunting images of many birds, familiar and strange, yours is a bird-world, there are birds on your branches. T h e cycle of seasons has found you strong since first as a boy you stretched your limbs to the sun, and they filled with excited singers. Poet among the birds, your soul is a tree with roots enough to hold your swaying beyond yourself for separate weathers. A host of soarers hover in the skies above you, waiting to flood your moments in a rush of movement with wild, rich sounds. T h e owl is yours, priesting the night with ghosts of tone; and the manic rook whose raucous language livens the tree. Yours is the starling, faking the world with postures, tricks, and a bag of voices. Your tree is singing. You are full of birds. May you always gather your words as you do, culled from a silence, startled into song; yours is a bird world, there are birds on your branches. TO MY SLEEPING LADY Morning becomes you, curled against these sheets. You huddle in your dreams against the dawn. A slow, familiar quiver takes your lips— I fear your sleep may falter. Lady, sleep on. Your innocence of day deceives me quite, forgetting how the evening fell cold and how we strained against each other's will. You seemed, in such hard weather, broken, old. Yet mornings, with your gathered smell of musk, your presence overwhelms me, I confess. Sleep soundly, lady, keep your inward gaze. Your eyes may open only to distress. Sleep softly, keep your tender attitude, indifferent to everything I've said. T h e light of day may gall your waking face, and bitter legends may resume your head. Parini, reading his poems at a meeting of the Stephen Crane Society on campus in September. (The following poem does not appear in Singing in Time. Jay wrote it when he learned through the pages of the Alumnus of the death of his friend and former teacher at Lafayette. It is only fitting that it first be published here.) IN MEMORY OF GEORGE K. STRODACH Undisturbed by fears and unspoiled by pleasures, we shall be afraid neither of death nor of the gods. —Seneca It could have surprised no one that he translated Epicurus. A gentle man, he knew how joy was good. A simple man, he kept his spirit spare. I remember watching him, curiously from the back corner of a classroom. He called but scant attention to himself, unfolding the layers of a universe like tapestry, then holding this up for all to catch a glimpse before he would put it back with the smiles only Puck could conjure up. He played the polemical tempter when he could, taking the snakeskin on to waltz with those young Eves in jeans. He could crack a leathery whip of wit that a few would hear. But when, alas, he told his truth, it was the truth of love. And so I think of him, the image of a frail and generous man, riding the long day out along the old river road, pedalling his bike in time with a slow, impulsive rhythm, the seasons changing about him, the river turning in his veins. Beyond words or wishes, lie rides home to dark, towards that swell, imperishable calm at the heart of night. So I think of him, that final thing, a man at ease with his joy. He could ride the long way home without fear. He could bless the last sun even as it fell. Behind the Admissions Statistics - A Regard for the Individual Of the 3,379 students who applied for admission to Lafayette's current freshman class, 1,495 were invited to enroll. Of these, 555 actually marticulated. What motivated them to do so? Perhaps more important, what motivated the other 940 students to turn down Lafayette's offer? In an effort to answer these questions, each summer for the past five years the Office of Admissions and Student Financial Aid has conducted a survey of all students offered admission, both those who decided to enroll (hereinafter referred to as "matriculants") and those who declined the Lafayette opportunity ("withdrawals"). This year's survey elicited a 71.2% response (82.6% from matriculants and 64.0% from withdrawals). T h e results appear in 94 very revealing mimeographed pages of charts and prose commentary distributed to the faculty and administrative officers in September. If there is a common thread running through the report, it is confirmation of what Admissions Director Richard W. Haines '60 refers to as the "collegiate pecking order." According to Haines, "With very few exceptions, given several offers of admission by colleges he is financially able to attend, a student will choose the one which he believes has the greatest prestige. Often he will do so against his better judgment, choosing an Ivy League university over Lafayette, for example, even though he may feel strongly that Lafayette would be better for him. Further, for most eastern students and parents, the stratification of colleges according to prestige is quite clear. Disregarding cost, it reads, from the top: Ivy League universities; established selective New England colleges plus a few similar colleges elsewhere; solid upper-middle types such as Lafayette, Bucknell, and Colgate; less selective and less prosperous private liberal arts colleges in the East; similar private colleges elsewhere in the country; state universities; state colleges; private junior colleges; public community colleges." For example, the survey shows, of applicants offered admission by Lafayette and Ivy League schools, 32 chose Lafayette and 119 opted for the Ivy League. Lafayette suffered its worst defeats at the hands of Harvard, 9-0, and Princeton, 24-2. A student who chose Cornell commented: "I almost wish that I had not been accepted at Cornell, because this would have made my decision much easier. I was very, very impressed with Lafayette. I chose Cornell merely because it has a somewhat better Dennis Kain '73 tells freshmen what to expect at Lafayette. 2.1 "You need more girls" engineering reputation and somewhat better curriculum. If I find Cornell not to my liking, I hope that I will be reconsidered for reacceptance as a sophomore at Lafayette in 1973." A Dartmouth matriculant was candid: "I wanted to go to an Ivy League school and I only 'used' Lafayette as a back-up. Once I was accepted by the Ivy schools it was only a matter of choosing which one." T h e roles are reversed when Lafayette is in competition with good colleges regarded as less prestigious than Lafayette. Overlap with Clarkson, Drexel, F&M, Gettysburg, Hobart, Ithaca, Muhlenberg, Susquehanna and Ursinus yielded a return which favored Lafayette by a lopsided 116 to 22. At what many may see as "Lafayette's level," the competition with Bucknell ended in a 35-35 tie, while the Leopards avenged recent football losses by defeating Lehigh in the admissions game, 72-44. Among the 23 specific questions included in the survey were two which were designed to measure reactions to coeducation at Lafayette. Following are the questions and a tabulation of the responses: Question: "In what way were you influenced by the 75% men: 25% women coeducational ratio projected for Lafayette College?" Answers (figures given are percentages) : Male Matriculants Female Male Female Matriculants Withdrawals Withdrawal; 34.0 3.4 2.0 33.3 "Very Favorably" "Somewhat 18.5 41.6 39.2 18.7 Favorably" 14.0 26.9 16.8 29.9 "No Effect" "Somewhat 42.6 10.4 49.5 8.3 Unfavorably" "Very 3.4 0.0 3.4 2.2 Unfavorably" Question: "If your response to the above question was either 'somewhat unfavorably' or 'very unfavorably' which of the following ratios would you most prefer? Answers (figures given are percentages) : Male Matriculants 100M:0W 70M:30W 60M:40W 50M:50W 40M:60W 30M:70W 0M: 100W 0.0 2.8 32.7 57.5 5.6 1.4 0.0 Female Matriculants 0.0 18.8 62.5 18.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 Female Male Withdrawals Withdrawal; 0.9 0.9 27.2 62.3 6.5 2.2 0.0 0.0 18.7 50.0 31.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 Of all those who responded to the first question, 34.2% reacted "favorably" or "very unfavorably" to the currently projected ratio, while 26.4% recorded a neutral or "no effect" response and 39.4% reacted "unfavorably" or "very unfavorably." Not surprisingly, favorable reactions from women (74.1%) were far more common than favorable reactions from men (21.6%). Of the 493 respondents to the second question, none favored an all-female enrollment plan, and only two (both male withdrawals) favored an all-male institution. An impressive 89.0%, given seven options, expressed a preference for either 50M:50W or 60M:40W. Many students, appended prose comments about coeducation. Some were lengthy, but most could be summed up by this comment from a male matriculant: "You need more girls." Haines does not feel these reactions were surprising. "When Lafayette became coed in 1970," lie explains, "it was considered a big step forward to have any girls at all. Furthermore, the novelty of our coed status was for many an attractive feature, but that was two years ago. Now, Lafayette is compared not with other newly coed schools, but with colleges where coeducation has been an established feature for many years. In that context, our ratio seems unreasonable, and students consider it a drawback. Two years ago, students came here because of coeducation. Now, many tell us that they are coming in spite of inadequate coeducation, or going elsewhere to find a more equal ratio." Many other subjects, too numerous to cover here, are examined in the admissions survey. For example, among the factors which emerged as influences in favor of Lafayette where the curriculum, campus facilities, size, alumni, admissions office contacts, Lafayette students and sub-freshman day. Negative factors included fraternities, cost and lack of sufficient financial aid. One important factor which was not measured statistically but which showed up repeatedly among the hundreds of comments was Lafayette's regard for the individual. As one student remarked: "One of the things I found at Lafayette, and not at any other college, was the way that everyone reached out to the individual. Everything was personalized (letters, interviews, talks) and put me in a comfortable position. This unique situation influenced me very favorably." Perhaps, behind and beyond all the statistics, what this student has sensed is what Lafayette must maintain if future generations of students are to be attracted here. A Friend Remembers 'Lafayette's Greatest Athlete' By S. Parnell Lewis "Charlie Berry was the greatest athlete Lafayette ever produced," declared Vic Anckaitis '25 in commenting on the death of his classmate on September 6 in Evanston (111.) Hospital. " T h e proof of this is that Charlie became a national figure as a professional football and baseball player and later as an official in both sports in the major leagues. When he retired as an official, Charlie became an aide to the president of the American Baseball League and to the commissioner of the National Football League," Anckaitis added. Berry suffered a stroke in late June in his Phillipsburg, N.J. home. Two days after he was flown to Evanston for rehabilitation, he underwent a gall bladder operation. He succumbed to a heart attack five weeks later. Funeral services in Easton's First Presbyterian Church were attended by many friends, including some national sports figures. Berry was life president of the Class of 1925, but because of his deep involvement in sports as a player and then as an official, he S. Parnell Lewis, an associate editor of the Easton Express and an Easton native, is a 1935 graduate of the University of Pennsylvania. The brother of Robert C. Lewis '39, Parnell has been an avid follower of Lafayette for many years. "I first saw Lafayette football in Berry's freshman year," Parnell said, "but my dad didn't take me to the celebrated Pitt game that year because he thought he wouldn't be able to sneak me in for that packed-house performance." counted on Anckaitis to conduct the business of the class. "Charlie traveled all over the world and probably to every state in the union during his sports career," Anckaitis said. After an outstanding high school career at Phillipsburg High, during which lie was named an All-State end, Berry "immediately made the Lafayette football team in his freshman year," Anckaitis said. "From then on, he improved and made the Walter Camp AllAmerica team in 1924. T h a t was Charlie's last year at Lafayette and the last team selected by Camp. Camp's team was then T H E team." Anckaitis characterized Berry as a "campus hero" during his undergraduate days and said he Berry in December, 1971. will always remember Berry's spirited play in the 14-13 loss to Washington and Jefferson College at the Polo Grounds in New York City. "We took a 13-0 lead at the half and spent halftime talking about how big we could roll up the score," Anckaitis said. "W & J tied it in the second half and lined up for the extra point attempt. T h a t was the first year the rules allowed a forward pass or a rush for the extra point. Few in the crowd of 50,000 had ever seen anything but a kick after touchdown, and the Lafayette team had never experienced a pass or a rush up to this point. Well, W & J got off a successful pass despite a tremendous rush by Charlie. "That unbelievable extra point opened the way for W & J to go to the Rose Bowl. We had both gone into the Polo Grounds undefeated for the season and with long winning streaks. Up to that time Lafayette was in line for the Rose Bowl bid. T h a t day Lafayette gained more yardage and outplayed W 8c f in everything but the final score." Berry was also an outstanding catcher on the Lafayette baseball team. After graduation, he played for Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics, the start of a 13-year career in the major leagues. Not content with being a one-sport athlete as a professional any more than he had been as a collegian, he also played with the Pottsville, Pa., Maroons in 1925, when he was the National Football League's all-pro end. In that season he also topped the loop's individual scorers with 108 points. His lifetime batting average in the American League was .267. In 1932 with the Boston Red Sox, he hit .302, his best year. In the late 1930's, he was pitching coach for Connie Mack, who made him manager of the Athletics' Wilmington, Del., farm team in 1940. Berry, passed up a promising career as a manager to become an umpire. One of the interesting aspects of his career in baseball was when he directed Connie Mack's A's in opposing the Lafayette varsity in a game at Fisher Field in the late 1930's. Berry caught for the visitors in what was his first appearance in an athletic uniform on that field. All his collegiate exploits had come on March Field. Berry's umpiring career in the American League lasted 21 seasons. He was also a head linesman in the NFL for 24 years. Charlie retired in 1962, after having officiated in five World Series classics, six All-Star baseball contests, 14 NFL championship games and nine college-pro football all-star contests. Seemingly indefatigable, he once umpired a doubleheader baseball game at Comiskey Park in Chicago, showered and changed uniforms and was the head linesman that night at an All-Star football game at Soldier's Field, also in Chicago. Berry was one of two Lafayette men selected by Walter Camp on his first teams. T h e other was Frank "Dutch" Schwab '23. T o recognize this, Anckaitis said the Class of 1925 is planning to place a painting of Charlie in his Maroon uniform in the new Kirby Field House. Vic says he hopes the Class of 1923 will join the Class of 1925 so that pictures of these two top Lafayette AilAmericans will grace the dandy facility that is expected to be ready for use in late February or early March. Young Berry as an All-America football player in 1924. A Rule for All of Life "Charlie was dedicated to making the right call and acting correctly," said Bill McGinley, veteran Lehigh Valley baseball umpire. Bill grew up in Phillipsburg with Charlie. They were warm buddies to the end. Now a retired Easton mail carrier, McGinley was a local sports official before Charlie decided to become an umpire. Later, Bill says Berry helped "a lot of us" to become better umpires. "I was at Yankee Stadium the year Roger Maris broke Ruth's home run record," Bill said. "Charlie was behind the plate as umpire-in-chief when Maris hit long fly to right. T h e first base umpire looked up at the drive. Without running toward right field to watch it land, he ruled it a homer. " T h e n the fireworks started. A1 Lopez, Chicago's manager, rushed onto the field claiming a fan had prevented his right fielder from making the catch. A lengthy argument ensued around the first base ump, until Charlie got things quieted down and the game resumed. "After the game, I was in the umpires' dressing room—illegally, incidentally. Charlie called a meeting and raised hell. He told the first base umpire that he had not been in position to make the call Lopez had protested. T h e n he told his colleagues, 'We have to be honest with ourselves; so let's be in position for any play in the second game.' " Berry had a rare sense of humor, McGinley discovered on a trip with him to officiate a Chicago Bears-Redskins game in Washington, D.C. "We were on a train platform in Philadelphia," Bill said. "Charlie was reading a newspaper, the other officials were talking and we missed our train. We had to wait an hour to get another one to Washington. "Early in the game the referee called a 15-yard penalty against the Bears, and the Chicago team hit the ceiling. Charlie talked to the referee, the ref returned the ball to the original point of play and stepped off 15 yards against the Redskins. Well, those fans were fanatical at the call. T h e resultant boos were the most sustained I've ever heard. They continued for the entire first half. "In the officials' dressing room at half-time, Charlie did the talking. He said, 'We deserved every damn boo that we got out there—the fans were right; we looked like bush leaguers. Imagine the indecisiveness in marking off a penalty. Let's go out there this half and prove we are professionals.' Charlie was generous in saying 'we' because it wasn't his call that caused the booing. On the train coming home he looked at me, laughed and said, 'Maybe we should have missed the later train, too.' " Berry once said, "One qualification for a good sports official is that he does not call plays too quickly. Instead of anticipating the play, he lets it happen, follows it intently to its completion and T H E N makes the call quickly. "I think that's a rule that can be followed in all walks of life." When Prince Was King Next to Charlie, the most popular figure on campus was his dog, Prince. Prince followed Charlie everywhere and became the mascot of the Class of 1925. Charlie and Prince lived in the Phi Delta Theta fraternity house. "Prince even went to class with Charlie," recalled Dr. George "Bud" Moore, football trainer under Jock Sutherland in Berry's early undergraduate days. "All the students were friendly with Prince," Dr. Moore added. "I remember one night when the wrestling finals of Dr. Harold Anson Bruce's athletic carnival were being held in the old gym (near where Kirby Hall of Civil Rights is now). Dr. Bruce was the referee. "Meanwhile, the wrestlers went right on with their struggle, paying no attention to the commotion." " T h e gym was crowded and Charlie and Prince were in the front row of seats, close to the mats. At one point Dr. Bruce had to get down on all fours to see if there was a fall by a contestant. In doing so, he stepped on Charlie's dog. "Prince barked but didn't bite Dr. Bruce. Being quite an actor, however, Dr. Bruce rolled over and hollered that the dog had bitten him. Charlie ran to the medicine cabinet, got a bottle of iodine and poured it on the good doctor's ankle while the students roared with laughter. Charlie and Prince. What Else Is a Fence For? Photo Essay by Theodore V. Partlow '60 The fence in question surrounds Clinton Terrace and McCartney the site of the proposed new Watson Courts, bordered by East Campus Street. You can nail things on it. . . The east side of Pardee Hall is reflected in a piece of aluminum from this student-designed collage. Drive, Use nature and natural symbols... To get a point across arts letters (Continued, from page 3) directly worked. This is a criterion of selection that has been shown over the past ten years at this medical center to be highly predictive of future professional achievement. It is because of my association with Professor Fried at Lafayette that I was fortunate to have gained a place in this program of extraordinary opportunity. I cannot commend Lafayette highly enough for maintaining an excellent undergraduate program with the opportunity for students to work with accomplished professionals of the caliber of Professor Fried. I have enjoyed my Lafayette Alumnus over the past year and look forward to hearing of future accomplishments at the College. R. Marshall Austin '71 . . . And M o r e for Fine I am writing for the express purpose of offering my most heartfelt appreciation to Lafayette College. It is most gratifying that my son Philip David Pulaski '74 has applied, and been accepted to the School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University for the five-year medical program. I feel this great honor of being accepted to a school of medicine such as Johns Hopkins after only two years of college, would not have occurred or been possible if not for the teaching staff at Lafayette College. permanent member of the Lafayette faculty. Sheldon Pulaski I wish to single out one instructor who stands out not only as a teacher, but as an inspiration to Philip: Dr. Stephen Fine. I have had the pleasure of meeting Dr. Fine during my visits to Lafayette, and I completely share Philip's regard for Dr. Fine. Dr. Fine has traits which are uncommon in this day and age: he commands and receives respect and he communicates with his students. Dr. Fine's office has always been open to his students who seek his help. Philip has told me that Dr. Fine has at times spent over an hour answering his questions. The Lafayette Alumnus is a quarterly publication published at Lafayette College, Easton (Northampton C o u n t y ) , Pa. 18042, f r o m business offices located at Lafayette College. T h e publisher is the Alumni Association of Lafayette College and the editor, Theodore V. Partlow, both of Lafayette College. It is owned by the Alumni Association of Lafayette College at Easton, Pa., and there are no known bondholders, mortgagees or other security holders. In accordance with the provisions of statute 39 U.S.C. 3626, permission has been requested to mail the Lafayette Alumnus at the reduced postage rates presently authorized by that statute. There were 19,500 copies of the last single issue published prior to the filing date and an average of 19,500 copies of each issue published during the preceeding 12 months. I certify that the above statements are correct and complete to the best of my knowledge. Theodore V. Partlow, Editor In conclusion, I wish to state that instructors of the calibre of Dr. Fine are few and far between. Dr. Fine should without question receive tenure, hence becoming a STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION (As required by the U.S. Postal Service under the Act of August 12, 1970: Section 3685. Title 39. United States Code.) Women's Auxiliary of Lafayette College is offering to alumni, parents and friends of Lafayette College this quality Couroc tray especially designed for Lafayette, the "Lafayette Leopard." T h e proceeds will go toward the proposed new Student Health Center. T h e 14" diameter "Lafayette Leopard" tray, price: $20.00. Name Address Please send me _ _ @ $20.00 each "Lafayette Leopard" Couroc tray(s). Check payable to: Women's Auxiliary of Lafayette College and mail to: Mrs. John A. Bown 116 David Lane Norristown, Pa. 19401 Pa. residents add 6% sales tax. Out of state, add $1.00 for mailing. T h e Lafayette tray is a one-of-a-kind creation by a member of Monterey Bay's world famous art colony for Couroc. Each element of the design is painstakingly hand inlaid, then permanently fused into a phenolic resin material under heat and pressure. Boiling water, alcohol or cigarettes cannot harm the finish. This is a detail of the "moon litter" painting shown on page 35.