A PUBLICATION FOR ALUMNI, PARENTS AND FRIIE -:TSBURGH Vol. 16, No. 1 Pittsburgh, Pa. Spring 1984 Alumnus wins national heroism award John Russell Lee, CAS '70, BUS '73, who is vice president of operations for Diversified Chemicals and Propel- lants Co., a subsidiary of Interlake Inc., recently received the Carnegie Hero award. The Frankfort, Ill., corporate execu- tive was recognized for rescuing a neighbor from her burning home, an incident which happened more than a year ago. The medal is awarded to per- sons who risk their lives to save, or at- tempt to save, the lives of others. but my lungs were full of smoke and I couldn't breathe anymore, so I crawled back out and gave the flashlight to (a county sheriff's deputy) and told him, 'She's in the room straight ahead. Go get her.'" Lee filled his lungs with fresh alr and waited for the deputy to appear with the woman. The policeman's at- tempt, however, was also unsuccess- ful. Lee struggled back into the home for the second time and dragged the John Russell Lee and Marie Ruane Lee, HRP, '77, '70. with children John Jr., Jennifer and Elizabeth. Two become University trustees WE. Bierer William E. Bierer, BUS '54, presi- dent, chairman and chief executive of- ficer of Equibank, N.A., and Equi- mark Corp., and Mary-Jane Mitchell Page, E DU '48, '53, principal of Cres- cent Elementary School, were elected and appointed, respectively, members of the University of Pittsburgh Board of Trustees at the Board's winter meeting on February 15. On the recommendation of the trustees' nominating committee, Bier- er was elected a term trustee after hav- ing served four years as a Common- wealth Trustee. Chairman of Equi- bank and Equimark, he has been president of Equibank and Equimark since 1973 and 1974, and chief execu- tive officer of both since 1975 and 1979, respectively. Prior to joining Eq- M.J. Mitchell Page uibank in 1968, he was a vice president of Mellon Bank. Bierer has served as a member of the University's Annual Giving Fund (AGF) board and co-chairman of the AGF Charter Council. He was desig- nated distinguished alumnus by the School of Business in 1978. Page was named to the post of Com- monwealth Trustee by K. Leroy Irvis, LAW '54, speaker of the House of Representatives and a trustee of the University. In 1953, she joined the Pittsburgh Board of Education, teaching in the Soho, Forbes and Madison Elementary schools. In 1970, she became principal of Madi- son Elementary and for the last eight years has, been principal at Crescent Elementary in Homewood-Brushton. Leadership service recognized The father of three entered the burning structure twice, and, on the second attempt, was able to drag the unconscious woman to a place where others could reach her. Several persons at the site of the fire had made unsuccessful attempts to rescue the woman before Lee arrived at the scene. Dense smoke and intense heat, combined with total darkness in- side the house, made it impossible for the would-be rescuers to locate her. Lee obtained a flashlight, and, recalling the fire safety lessons taught by his son, then five years of age, crawled through the smoke-filled house and up to a second floor bed- room where the unconscious woman was lying under a bed. "It was pitch black and the smoke was so dense you couldn't see your hand in front of your face" Lee said af- ter the rescue. "I crawled around on my hands and knees screaming for her, but every time I screamed, my lungs would fill up with smoke. "Then I heard her breathing and I crawled toward the sound. The flames were within a foot and a half of her at that time. I pictured picking her up, woman's limp body to a landing on the stairs where others reached her and pulled her to safety. Although badly burned, the woman recovered after a long period of hospitalization. Her left foot and right toes had to be amputated. Lee, who did not know the victim before the fire, said at the time that he didn't feel much like a hero He deeply regrets not being able to get her to safety sooner. The Carnegie Hero Fund was estab- lished in 1904 by Andrew Carnegie af- ter the Harwick mine disaster near Pittsburgh killed 178 men and boys. The victims included an engineer and a miner who entered the collapsed and burning mine in a courageous attempt to rescue their fellow workers. Their sacrifices so moved Carnegie that he set up a $5 million fund to recognize persons "in peaceful vocations" who are injured or lose their lives in at- tempting to " preserve and rescue their fellows." Lee joined Interlake Inc. as su- perintendent of its Chicago plant in 1977 after eight years with J&L Steel (Continued on Page 2) The alumni-student leadership dinner on March 21 in the William Pitt Union recognized the contributions inguidancemade by al umni and students to each of the University's schools. Present to pay tribute to Pitt's top volunteers were, seated left to right: MaryAnn Nandor, president, Engineering Student Cabi- net; Dr. Mildred Trice, guest; Joan Smith, alumni trustee; (standing left to right) Dr. Jack Freeman, senior vice chancellor for Adminstration; John Cald- well, member, AGF board; Thomas Welsh, president, Alumni Council; Helen Sawyer, member, dinner committee; Dr. Wilfiam Trice, member, AGF board; Margaret Bruno, chairman, AGF board; Dr. Dennis Donham, assistant vice chancellor, Student Affairs; and James Say, master of ceremonies. Provan Goehring EDU CAS Charles Grottenthaler, EDU '67, '57, became the new school superinten- dent for the Ramapo Central School District (New York) in March.'Grot- tenthaler was the school superinten- dent for Abington, Pa. Nancy A. Jackson, EDU '81, NUR '65, is an associate professor of nurs- ing at West Virginia Wesleyan College in W Va. Jackson recently presented a research paper on "Satisfaction of Job Related Needs of Nursing Faculty" to the Sixth Annual Nursing Research Symposium at the Michigan Sigma Theta Tau Research Consortium in Lansing, Michigan. James A. Kimbrough, EDU '80, has been appointed to the council of the Indiana University of Pennsylvania council of trustees. Kimbrough is the manager of education support serv- ices at Allegheny General Hospital and a leader in providing service to the blind. Janice R. Kraus, EDU '75, has been initiated into Pitt's Omicron Phi Chapter of Kappa Delta Pi honor soci- ety in education. Jacqueline H. Mikell, EDU '83, PBH '75, has been named associate ad- ministrator- of patient care of Kane Regional Centers, Pa. Mikell, a special- ist in both nursing education and adult aging, will direct over 900 nurs- ing personnel who make up the Kane Regional Centers' nursing component. Kerry L. Moyer, EDU '77, is the direc- tor for research in the State System for Higher Education, Harrisburg. Moyer also serves as the assistant director for the master of government administration degree program at the University of Pennsylvania. Mitchel A. Nickols, EDU '83, '77 is the pastor of the Bibleway Christian Fellowship Church in the New Ken- sington area and teaches in the New Kensington-Arnold School District. Nickols was recently named to the 1983-84 "Who's Who in the East." Ernest D. O'Neil, E DU '74, has been named education chairman at the University of Texas of the Permian Basin. For the past five years, O'Neil had assisted the Bolivian government in improving rural education. Becky K. Peterson, EDU '74, is an as- sistant professor in the department of business education and administra- tive office management at Western 11- linois University. Peterson is the recip- Caurpenter Bijur CA S CA S Marjorie Bell Provan, E DU '5 1, has been producer and hostess of WPCB TV's "Focus on the Iss ues" for over two years. She is also public affairs director for the Pittsburgh station. Before joining Channel 40, she had served two terms as the first woman president of the Allegheny County Sportsmen's League and was the re- cipient of awards from Allegheny County and the state for her work in conservation and preservation of Con- stitutional freedoms. A columnist for Outdoor News, Provan was selected "Woman of the Year" for 1980 by Pennsylvania sportsmen. Elizabeth Puskar, EDU '74, is the new assistant chancellor for academic af- fairs in student support programs and faculty development, University of Southern Carolina College. Puskar joined the faculty in 1974 and is an as- sociate professor of psychology. Theresa Rossi, EDU '74, has been named deputy meteorologist in charge of the Pittsburgh Weather Forecast Office. Rossi is the first wom- an to hold the post. Rita Silverman, EDU '77, is assistant professor of educational psychology in the graduate school of education at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N.J. James D. Thorne, EDU '73, has been named acting chairman of the depart- ment of education at Grove City Col- lege. Emma Watson, EDU '81, NUR '72, '70, was appointed vice president and executive dean of the Center-North campus of the Community College of Allegheny County. She previously served as dean of instruction and as- sistant dean of nursing at the College. Ron Zaccari, EDU '67, is the dean of the College of Education for South- eastern Louisiana University. Zaccari has taught on the faculty of Pitt, University of Colorado, and Edin- borough College. COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES Peter 1. Bijur, CAS '64, has been named president of Texaco Oil TrYad- ing and Supply Company, N.Y Bijur was previously vice president of Texa- co Inc. Joelle M. Caplan, CAS '72, a clinical psychologist, was appointed team leader ofVtheBerwI K Me Tal Heal H. Glenn Carpenter, CAS '52, has been named senior vice president and general manager of the Pittsburgh of- fice for Executive Manning Corp. Pri- or to joining Executive Manning, Car- penter was the vice president of Gulf Oil Trading Co., in London, England. Carpenter holds the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Marine Corps Reserve. Christine E. Cornelius, CAS '78, is a consultant to the world Bank for eco- nomic project appraisal analysis in East Africa agriculture. Barbara Donley, CAS '7 2, a lieutenant commander in the U.S. Navy, is cur- rently an instructor with the Navy ROTC unit at Penn State University. Mark S. Fuhrman, CAS '83, has been appointed sales and marketing representative for the Pittsburgh Maulers, one of six expansion teams in the U.S. Football League. Jeffrey M. Gautney, CAS '83, is work- ing in the mental health program at Brandywine Hospital and as a sup- port analyst with Burroughs Corp. Richard 0. Goehring, CAS '76, of Buck Consultants, Pittsburgh, has received the designation of fellow in the Society of Actuaries, an interna- tional organization of mathemati- cians who evaluate risks and set costs of benefit programs. Michael D. Herman, CAS '79, was promoted to lieutenant JG onboard the USS Oliver Hazard Perry, where he is serving as communications offi- cer in the ship control department. Jerome J. Martin, CAS '52, has as- sumed the position of chief, liaison of- ficer to military staff committee for the U.S. Mission to the United Na- tions. He had been chairman of the business administration department at Valley Forge Military Academy. William F. Nandor, CAS '64, has been appointed vice president of sales and marketing for Fanny Farmer Candy Shops, Inc. Nandor will coordinate all of the company's marketing func- tions, product development and plan- ning, and advertising and sales pro- motion. Richard J. Pastor, CAS '68, has been appointed the director of the Depart- ment of Environmental Resources secretary's office of policy. Pastor was the former management administra- tion chief in the federal Environ- mental Protection Agency office of policy and management, Region I II, Philadelphia. ina-ImondellimPrzcasI,CS Philip G. Roberts Jr., CAS '61, is serv- ing as president of the Centre Co. (Pa.) Medical Society. Raymond Rizzo, CAS '54, has been named chief pilot/manager of flight operations for General Motors' Air Transport Section, Mich. He joined General Motors as a copilot in 1962 and later held several positions in the flight department. Kenneth J. Ryan, CAS '51, is manag- er of residential and mirror glass sales for PPG Industries in Pittsburgh. Pri- or to this appointment, Ryan had been manager of sales and marketing for in- dustrial glass products since 1982. Philip T. Schavone, CAS '72, has been named director of development at The Catholic University of America. Prior to this appointment, Schavone was the director of development at Gal- laudet College for two years. Robert J. Schneller, CAS '80, has received the Lawrence F. Brewster Fellowship at East Carolina Universi- ty Department of History. He has as- sisted in excavations of prehistoric sites in Mississippi, Kentucky, Penn- sylvania and North Dakota. Bart M. Schwartz, CAS '68, has been named associate U.S. attorney for the state of New York. Prior to this ap- pointment, Schwartz was a prosecutor in the Southern District from 1972 through 1977, during which time he was deputy chief of the criminal divi- sion and chief of the official corruption and special prosecutions unit. Terrence J. Scott, CAS '68, has been appointed vice president of Alexian Brothers Health Management Inc., Elk Grove Village, Ill. Ronald B. Sobel, CAS '57, was award- ed an honorary doctor of humane let- ters degree by Long Island University. John E. Solomon, CAS '55, is a mate- rial and process engineer with McDon- nell Douglas Astronautics Co. at the Kennedy Space Center. He is current- ly working on the Delta program which launches communication and weather satellites from Cape Canaver- al, Fla. Mark Vernallis, CAS '75, has been ap- pointed manager, financial planning for Industries & International, West- inghouse Electric Corp., in Pgh. Tom Waseleski, CAS '7 7, received the silver gavel award for his work on the six-part Beaver County newspaper se- ries "Drunken Driving: An Open Road." Waseleski has now joined the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. 10 -- AlumnIlTimastSpring 1984 SOCIAL WORK Elaine Brody, SSW '45, a senior re- searcher at the Philadelphia Geriatric Center, has won the 1983 Donald P Kent Award for her work in document- ing the critical role of women and the family in providing long-4erm care for the elderly. Brody has published more than 85 books and articles about the long term care of elderly people in in- stitutions and in their own homes. Lee J. Kauper, SSW '61, has been ap- pointed associate director at the Vet- erans Administration in Martinsburg, VWa. Ellen A. Ruffolo, SSW '80, has been named director of social services for Warren General Hospital in Warren, Pa. Prior to this appointment, Ruffo- lo was the executive director of the Warren Forest Mental Health Serv- ices, Inc. Jeffrey A. Shaw, SSW '8 1, has been promoted to probation officer I I in the Erie County Adult Probation Depart- ment. Shaw has worked for the Coun- ty since 1978 as a correctional coun- selor and as probation officer I. Richard M. Stein, SSW '63, CAS 161, is president of the Business and Insti- tutions Group, Interstate United, Chicago, Ill. Stein has been active in the National Automatic Merchandis- ing Association for more than 20 years. William Tremitiere, SSW '63, has been named associate executive direc- tor for programs in the division of church and community services of Tressler-Lutheran Service Associates, Camp Hill, Pa. Tremitiere is on the board of directors of York Hospital and the York City Human Relations Commission. Karen Walkney, SSW '81, is the direc- tor of "Beautiful Hands," a group for the deaf that performs songs in sign language. Walkney teaches a four- credit course in sign language at Pitt. She has -also been named Miss Deaf Pennsylvania. Sara-Alyce P. Wright, SSW '5 1, E DU '45, is the executive director of the Na- tional Young Women's Christian As- sociation., N.Y. Wright is a board member of the National Center for Voluntary Actions and is an elected member of the house of delegates, Council on Social Work Education. HEALTH RELATED PfAt0RFESSIONS 00 Alice S. Gibson, HRP '76, has joined the staff of Suburban General Hospi- tal in Bellevue. Gibson spent three years at Children's Hospital, Pgh., to further her pediatric specialty. Jeanne W McKelvey, HRP '67, has been admitted to the Bar of the Com- monwealth of Pennsylvania. A 1983 graduate of Dickinson School of Law, McKelvey is a director of Windber Hospital and the Cumberland Valley Humane Society. Suellen M. Rainey, HRP '78, has been promoted to the position of executive director for Highlands Professional Standards Review Organization. She has been associated with the High- lands PSRO since 1978. Sue Reitz, HRP '72, has joined the faculty of the Waynesburg College de- partment of nursing. She had been an assistant professor at Duquesne Uni- versity School of Nursing. Carla R. Thomas, HRP '83, has grad- uated from the Air Force administra- tive management course at Keesler Air Force Base, Miss., and is serving with the 32nd Tactical Fighter Squad- ron at Camp New Amsterdam Air Base, Netherlands. Joseph Tomaro, HRP '83, is currently employed as a physical therapist with Sports Medicine Services, Pittsburgh. In addition to a BS in physical thera- py from Pitt, Tomaro has completed the requirements needed to take the certification test for athletic training. LAW James F. Allmendlinger, LAW '77, has been appointed staff attorney for the 7,000 member National Education Association-New Hampshire by the Association's executive board. Prior to this appointment, Ailmendinger has served as general attorney at the National Labor Relations Board in Washington, D.C. Stephen W. Cody, LAW '83, is law clerk for Judge D. Richard Eckman, Lancaster County, Pa. Thomas L. Cooper, LAW '62, is the 1984 president of the Allegheny Coun- ty Bar Association. Chester C. Corse, LAW '65, CAS '62, has been elected president of the Schuykill County Bar Association. He is also the solicitor for Palo Alto borough, Pa. RobertV. CrTs,AWT'67,1A C A '6, i * 4a'WM AA Tremitiere Fischer SSW LAW George G. Heiney, LAW '72, CAS '67, has been elected to the board of trustees for West Nottingham Acade- my of Coora, Md., and will serve on the Academy's development commit- tee. Linda H. Jones, LAW '77, GAS '72, has become one of two newly appoint- ed assistant attorney generals to the Attorney General's Antitrust Divi- sion in Maryland. For six years prior to her appointment to the attorney general's staff, Jones was an associate with the firm of Titus, Marcus & Shapira in Pittsburgh. Joseph Lavelle, LAW '82, has been awarded a license to practice before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Washington, D.C. Leslie E. Perry, LAW '82, is a practic- ing attorney for the Neighborhood Le- gal Services of Aliquippa, Pa. Perry was recently presented the Aliquippa chapter's Annual Community Service Award. Thomas J. Pooley, LAW '75, has been named senior litigation counsel, head- ing the department of litigation for Ashland Oil, Inc., Kentucky. Pooley joined Ashland in 1975 as a staff at- torney. Joseph A. Richardson, LAW '52, has been elected senior vice president, general counsel and secretary for Pittsburgh, PNC Corp. Prior to this position, Richardson was executive vice president of Provident National Bank and Provident National Corpo- ration, with responsibility for Real Es- tate, International Banking, Person- nel and Administration. Marc R. Rosenwasser, LAW '73, CAS '70, has been appointed to a two-year term on the Children and Youth Serv- ices Advisory Board for Allegheny County. Robert Rade Stone, LAW '54, CAS '5 1, is the new president of the Pitts- burgh City Council. For the past four years, Stone has been the Council's fi- nance chairman. Joseph H. Widmar, LAW '61, ENG '56, is director of the U.S. Justice De- partment's Antitrust Operations. He has been associated with the Opera- tions since his graduation from law school here. Helen M. Witt, LAW '69, is the first woman member of the National Medi- ation Board since its formation in 1934. Witt has been serving as a con- sultant to the board, which handles collective bargaining disputes for the airlines and railroads, since her nomi- Martin Tadepalli CAS PHA G. Edward Yurcon, LAW '59, has been elected vice president of law for the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad Company, Pittsburgh. Yurcon will be responsible for directing all legal, claims, real estate and labor relations activities and continue to serve as as- sistant secretary for PR&L.E. MEDICINE David F. Altman, MED '71, has been appointed associate dean for student affairs in the School of Medicine at the University of California, San Francis- co. A researcher as well as clinician, Altman's work has focused on chron- ic hepatitis and its treatment and AIDS research. Richard J. Dobies, MED '57, was elected a fellow of the International College of Surgeons. Dobies is the As- sociate Clinical Professor of Ophthal- mology at Wright State University School of Medicine. Alvan G. Foraker, MED '39, has left active pathology practice and retired to Lexington, Mass. He is working on "the great American pathology novel" and continues to contribute essays to professional publications. L. Stephen Gordon, MED '65, has been re-elected to the council of the Calif. Pre-Natal Assoc. and listed in "Who's Who in California." Norman M. Heyman, MED '64, has been named the 1982-83 Teacher of the Year by residents in Somerset's Family Practice Residency Program, New Jersey. An orthopedic surgeon, Heyman was selected from the 250- member medical medical staff for his dedication and excellence in teaching. Daniel Kohn, MED'74, has been cer- tified by the American Board of Emer- gency Medicine. He is a full-time staff physician in the Emergency Depart- ment of Memorial Hospital, Mary- land, and department director. Robert Levin, MED '77, has joined the staff at Ohio Valley Hospital, Sewickley, Pa. Levin has worked as a diagnostic radiologist at St. John Hospital, Cleveland, and St. John and Westshore Hospital, Westlake, Ohio. Mary Ann Michells, MED '75, CAS '71, is chief of the clinical diagnostic immunology laboratory at Hacken- OBITUARIES LAURA FRUCHS Laura Fruchs, LAW '24, EDU '20, a member of the American Bar Asso- ciation for the last 50 years, died in De- cember at her home in Ingram, Pa. As an attorney, Miss Fruchs specialized in mortgage and deeds. She was a member of the Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania, The Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation, the Western Pennsyl- vania Conservancy and the American Association of University Women. C. HERMAN GROSE C. Herman Grose, EDU '40, '27, an honored administrator in the field of education died at age 87 in January. Mr. Grose's career spanned over 62 years, and he had served as superin- tendent of the Ambridge, Mt. Leba- non and Erie School Systems. A former president of California State Teachers College, Mr. Grose would later ser.ve as first deputy superintendent of public instruction, where he was responsible for the operations of the 14-member state col- lege institution here in Pennsylvania. As head of Pitt's Teacher Place- ment Division, he was responsible for developing and directing the careers of new school administrators. Over the years, Mr. Grose had been awarded the doctor of pedagogy (art of teaching), doctor of laws, doctor of education and doctor of learning de- grees from both Pitt and Allegheny College in Meadville. He received Pitt's Distinguished Alumnus Award in 1968. ALBERT HILKO Vice Principal of Baldwin High School Albert Hilko, EDU '60, '57, died in February. He was 59. Mr. Hilko was the first president of the Baldwin-Whitehall American Fed- eration of Teachers Union. During World War I I he served as a sergeant in England and later served in the Korean conflict. HARRY S. BROWN Harry S. Brown, CAS '5 1, director of 'customer services for the U.S. Post- al Service in Pittsburgh, died Friday, January 10, 1984. He was 60. He served in World War 11 in the Pacific theater as an Army staff ser- geant. JEAN McCRUM Jean McCrum, GAS '42, a high school educator for 45 years, died in February at age 85. Miss McCrum taught mathematics at both Fox Chapel and Aspinwall High Schools; she was head of that department at Fox Chapel when she retired in 1966. One of the first elected into the Aspinwall Hall of Fame for achieve- ments in sports, she coached the Fox Chapel high school rifle team to a state championship in 1958. Miss McCrum was a member of As- pinwall's United Methodist Church and College Club. GILBERT "GIBBY" WELCH Gilbert "Gibby" Welch, BUS '28, former University of Pittsburgh All- America died in February at age 79. Welch's sports career as a student at Pitt still impresses after 50 years. As All-America in football Welch set Pitt's record for 4,108 total yards gained over a three-season career. This record would not be broken until the late 70s by Pitt's Tony Dorsett. He is third in the unive rsity's record book in yards gained behind Dorsett and Dan- ny Marino who both set their records over four seasons. In 1925 as a sophomore Welch played in the first game ever played in Pitt Stadium. He would lead the Pitt Panthers in their first bowl game: the Rose Bowl, January 25, 1928. Talented in other sports as well, Welch also set a record in the javelin as a member of Pitt's Track Team. IN MEMORIAM Clarence Morgan, DEN '12 Sara S. Hawk, EDU '14 Ralph C. Zindel, ENG '16 John K. Bibby, CAS '17 Myra S. Grosh, LIS '17 Helen H. Hodill, CAS '17 Floyd L. Morse, DEN '18 Charles M. Corbit Jr., E NG '20 Laura Fruchs, EDU '20 Lois Cranston Grubb, EDU '20 Jesse L. Baker, DEN '21 Russell T. Bouch, PHA '21 Louis Markowitz, DEN '22 Stewart P. McConnel, LAW '22 Holmes T. Miller, DEN '22 Mrs. William T. Nichols, CAS '22 H. Ralph Sauers, LAW '22 Katherine M. Clement, EDU '23 Janet Duncan Couch, CAS '23 Rolin G- Engle, DEN '23 Charles S. Storer, DEN '23 Katherine McNamara Clement, EDU '24 Harold B. Haines, DEN '24 S. Pearl Wall, EDU '24 James B. Barnhart, DEN '25 Bertha Brindley, EDU '26 James A. Fraser, ENG '26 John A. Lash, PHA '26 George B. Moreland Jr., CAS '26 John C. McCormick, BUS '26 George L. Reade, LAW '26 Mary L. Stevenson, GAS '26 Harry M. Cohen, DEN '27 John L. Humphreys, MED '27 Mabel Watts Lovelace, EDU '27 Madalon Hatfield Rhodes, EDU '27 Carl H. Shaffer, ENG '27 Harry M. Deibler, DEN '28 Charles A. DerdA, PHA '28 Jacob C. Grauer, DEN '28 LeRoy K. Henry, CAS '28 Gervis Gardner Hill, EDU '28 Emily G. Irvine, GAS '28 Benjamin Kurtz, DEN '28 Cuthbert Hope Latta, LAW '28 Abraham Laufe, EDU '28 John D. (Mugianis) Manners, BUS '28 Charles L. McNamee, PHA '28 George R. Moke, DEN '28 Louis Schramm, DEN '28 Arthur Hays Shaffer, DEN '28 Kona Simon, M.D., CAS '28 William F. Speer, ENG '28 Louis Voelker, PHA '28 Gilbert L. Welch, BUS '28 Thomas Ewing Jr., LAW '29 Paul F. McQuigan, MED '29 Eugene Ford Wassam, PHA '29 William G. Penn, PHA '30 Abe 1. Podolsky, CAS '30 Paul L. Schultz, BUS '30 Lewis Evan Smith, ENG '30 Grace Wilson, EDU '30 Stephen Grayson, PHA '31 Raymond P. Kent, BUS '31 Nancy Ann Matthews, LIS '31 Edward J. Mulroy, DEN '31 John Orr, GAS '31 William Schiller, GAS '31 Roger W. Blaisdell, MED '32 Eugene C. Fletcher, CAS '32 Emil T. Graf, CAS '32 Thomas B. Hartford, MED '32 Edward J. Hirshberg, CAS '32 Harry M. Ludwick, GAS '32 Ernest A. Machim, DEN '32 John W. McWilliams, LAW '32 Adam L. Sanders, LAW '32 George J. Dambach, GAS '33 Donald M. Early, CAS '33 Ralph Gaudio Sr., BUS '33 Jane W Waugaman, EDU '33 Morris F. Cohen, LAW '34 Carroll T. Mellers, BUS '34 Stella K. Scheidhauer, EDU '34 Genia Sidransky, GAS '34 Alfred S. Stevenson, MED '34 George Lewis, BUS '35 Jennie A. Norton, EDU '35 Harriet A. Powell, EDU '35 Karl C. Randall IL, MED '35 Elsie M. Simmen, EDU '35 Helen Hotham Bacon, EDU '36 Vilma Slater, GAS '36 James M. Thorn, LAW '36 Edward F. Allen, DEN '37 Elizabeth 1. Griffiths, EDU '37 Thomas R. Neely, CAS '37 H. Halleck Singer, EDU '37 William S. Wyke, DEN '37 Lois V. Anderson, EDU '38 C. Earl Conway, GAS '38 R. Drexel MaeTavish, GAS '38 Richard Harlan Mock, ENG '39 Robert L. Neff, BUS '39 Lawrence H. Smith, ENG '39 Edna Mae Sparrow. EDU '39 Louisa G abbert Cielan, CAS '40 John R. Dean, EDU '40 C. Herman Grose, EDU '40 Joseph R. Kristufek, CAS '40 Elliott Waters Montroll, GAS '40 Gladys Moorhead, EDU '40 Galia M. Null, EDU'40 James B. Reed, GAS '40 Carlton Davies, DEN '41 Lloyd J. Hamashin, BUS '41 I. Franklin Hand, EDU '41 Lynn H. Huff, MED '41 Harry R Koury, EDU '41 William J. McCloskey, ENG '41 Harry H. Sakal, EDU '41 Esther Doody Blank, GAS '42 Darrell W. Davis, DEN '42 Alfred E.C. Ihlenfeld, GAS '42 Jean McCrum, GAS '42 Sr. Miriam Grace Solomon, GAS '42 William B. Clemmer, CAS '43 Charlotte P Olson, LIS '43 Lloyd F. Rumbaugh, EDU '43 Paul J. Mahla, ENG '44 George D. Rise, EDU '44 Benjamin F. Baker, EDU '45 George V. Lupinacci, EDU '45 Elizabeth S. McCann, EDU '45 Rocco J. Perry, EDU '45 Kathryn Kerr Todd, GAS '45 Pierre P Charrance, BUS '46 Jean Cleveland, SSW '46 Margaret A. Clinton, CAS '46 Eugenia Luty O'Brien, CAS '46 Earl George Schulz, CAS '46 Ralph D. Bluebaugh, EDU '47 George E. Cramer, MED '47 George R. Lewis, GAS '47 Mary C. Curran, EDU '48 Mary Walsh Groutt, EDU '48 Anna Herr Hoover, EDU '48 Elmer J. McGibbeny, EDU '48 Donald Emerson Boyer, BUS '49 William F. Kittka, ENG '49 Richard M. Mack, BUS '49 Melvin A. Miskiewicz, CAS '49 George Albert Ashbaugh, BUS '50 Emma 1. Byers, EDU '50 Maria Clark, GAS '50 Erika Lefton, BUS '50 Leslie Reggel, GAS '50 Malvin G. Sander Jr., DEN '50 Ralph G. "Jack" Williams Jr., ENG '50 Harry S. Brown, CAS '51 Nancy Gould Casabona, GAS '51 R. Randolph Karch, EDU '51 George Philip Kountz, BUS '51 Ralph T. Schmidt, ENG '51 Marion Anderson Wilson, CAS '51 Theodore Woodward, EDU '51 William R. Adams, GAS '52 Isabelle R. Boothman, EDU '52 Sylvan B. Jacobson, BUS '52 Russell L.V. Morgan, EDU '52 Inabel Burns Lindsay, SSW '52 Isadore Turansky, EDU '52 James W. Kinter, EDU '53 G eorge L. Seth Jr., B US '5 3 Edna Teplitz, EDU '53 John Victor Bowser, LAW '54 Wallace E. Fields, EDU '54 Ernest Knapp, EDU '54 Elizabith Jane Lardin, EDU '54 Valerie Lenore Bernstein, CAS '55 James I. Dick, ENG '55 Charles V. Baltic Jr., MED '56 Virginia Geddes, EDU '56 Robert A. McNamara, EDU '56 John M. Arras, CAS '57 Marjorie Dimond Gates, EDU '57 Albert Hilko, EDU '57 Victor V. Zike, EDU '57 Barrett M. Sakol, DEN '58 Adrian E. Wasserman Jr., ENG '58 L. Verall Debor, EDU '59 Olive M. Fullerton, EDU '59 Robert L. Johnston, BUS '59 Barbara Lee Aupke, CAS '60 Harry S. Miller Jr., BUS '60 Donald L. Spencer, CAS '60 Harry T. Bowman Jr., MED '61 Judith S. Mausner, PBH '61 William A. Reesch, BUS '61 Robert Oneal Bowles, PIA '62 Herbert Brownlee II, CAS '62 Francis Hodge, EDU '63 Suzanne Burton Toth, EDU '64 Claude Henry Marks, EDU '66 Jonas R. Hood Sr., EDU '68 Dale E. Alden, EDU '70 Robert Charles Blanner, GEN '70 V. Diane Briceland, LIS '70 Milton Michael Goldberg, GEN '70 Bruce Alvin Roberts, CAS '70 Robert George Engel, GEN '72 Robert Columbus, GEN '72 Leon S. Owoc, EDU '72 John H. Healy, PBH '74 Doris Ann Tomsho, EDU '74 Robet B. Dott, CAS '75 Robert J. Pinkos, DEN '75 Alexis M. Butler, SSW '76 Walter W Shostek, EDU '76 William Raymond Kemeny, EDU '77 Mary Yurkovich, NUR '77 Mary Ann Yaworski, HRP '78 Lily Irmina Mosha, UIS '79 Richard J. Jurchenko, ENG '81 Shakeel Ahmed Saigol, GAS '82 12 - Alumni Times/Spring 1984 Corporate AGF Program underway John Caldwell, left, general chairman of the Corporate AGF Program for the 1983 fiscal year, welcomes Thomas Bigley to the chairmanship for this year's campaign at the ki ckoff luncheon held in February. Fifty-six volunteer chair- men are coordinating the drive at area businesses. The campaign goal is $404,000, about half of which will come from alumni contributions with there- mainder being corporate matching gifts. Career-planning workshop held Over 100 students attenc',ed a two- spoke on job opportunities in their day career planning workshop which particular areas. was presented by the School of Li- In the second day of the workshop, brary and Information Science Alum- students were given an opportunity to ni Association in cooperation with have their resumes critiqued and to go -several student organizations. through a mock interview set up by Representatives from local corpora- employment specialists from local cor- tions discussed employment opportu- porations' personnel departments. nities in the first-day sessions. Speak- The workshop was co-chaired by ers during the morning meetings Valerie Ryder, LIS '70, manager of reviewed techniques for interviewing WRD Office & Information Re- and resume writing, career planning sources, Westinghouse Electric Corp., and job hunting strategies. and Lana Kelley, LIS '78, telecom- In the afternoon sessions, manage- munications specialist, Westinghouse ment personnel from academic, cor- Electric Corp. porate, medical and library sectors UPG holds first phonothon Twenty-five volunteers, faculty bel, president of the club, stated the members and students from the Uni- reasons behind it: "As alumni of Pitt versity of Pittsburgh at Greensburg and residents of the Westmoreland Co. (UPG) traveled to the Oakland cam- area, we're proud of UPG's excellent pus on February 21 to participate in reputation. This phonothon presented the first UPG phonothon. a way of expressing our pride while The results of their efforts netted helping to assure that the quality of $3,000 in pledges to the Annual Giv- the program is maintained through ing Fund, and plans are underway to the funds raised by our efforts." hold a second UPG phonothon during UPG Dean of Administration, Guy the fall months. Rosetti, Ph.D., expressed thanks on The idea of the fund-raising event behalf of UPG President George was initiated by members of the West- Chambers, Ph.D., to those who made moreland Pitt Club's board. Joe Greu- the evening so successful. April grad heads for Oxford Eric Klopfer of Gibsonia, Pa., is one Kingdom for a period of at least two of 30 U.S. students to win a presti- academic years." gious Marshall Scholarship for two Candidates must apply to study a years of study in England. specific discipline at a specific institu- Klopfer, who is an April graduate tion; Klopfer was awarded his scholar- with both a B.A. and M.A. in history, ship for the study of modern English was chosen from among a field of 1000 history at Oxford. candidates for this year's awards. In addition to the Marshall scholar- The Marshall Scholarship program ship, Klopfer was in March awarded a was established in 1953 by the United $1,000 scholarship from the Fort Pitt Kingdom as an expression of British Society of the Daughters of the gratitude for the Marshall Plan, under American Revolution. He was the first which economic assistance was pro- winner of the DAR awards program vided by the United States to help which will present an annual prize of British (and European) recovery fol- that amount to the most outstanding lowing World War I I. The British Em- undergraduate studying American bassy in Washington, administrators history at Pitt. of the program, states that its purpose is "to enable citizens of the United HERO (Continued from Page 1) States, both men and women, who are Co., Pittsburgh, and was promoted to graduates of the United States' col- his present position at the Interlake leges and universities, to study for a subsidiary in 1982. degree of a university in the United After attaining his bachelor's de- gree in 1970, he entered the manage- Corre tionment training program at J&LUs Pitts- n burgh works, where he had worked the We extend apologies to Bernard H. night shift during his senior year at Cobetto, MED '47, for omitting his Pitt. He progressed through a variety name from the Member of Distinction of positions at J&L, from project en- list which appeared in the Honor Roll gineer to assistant to the superinten- of Contributors, dent of the Aliquippa coke plant. Win, Pitt Union f und tops $1 million: Alumni say 'yes' to endowment program In the first four months of the fun- draising drive for the new William Pitt Union, alumni have pledged toward endowments that will net the Univer- sity a potential $1,670,000, Develop- ment and Alumni Affairs officials re- port. Drawing the greatest interest are the plaques which will be posted honoring the donors or their families. Some donors chose to have the plaque serve as a memorial for their mother or father. One individual, a university employee, chose to have her plaque honor two people - her father and a university co-worker who mentored her and worked at the union for many years. A Washington, D.C. couple, Jim and Deborah Kennedy, chose to have their plaque honor their young daughter. Some alumni have been sparked by the idea of having a plaque in a stu- dent activity area where they were ac- tive as undergraduates. For this rea- son, offices in the Pitt News, WPGH radio, the College of General Studies and Student Government have sold well. A former feature writer for the Pitt News elected to endow the editor's of- fice. At 27 years of age, she had to pledge only $19.61 a month to give the university $25,000. While many ife insurance plans re- quire ife-long payments, such is not the case with the university's fund- The Kennedy plaque raising drive. After only six years, all payments are complete. So our 27- year-old donor will pay only $1,400 over the six years, and her gift will ul- timately be worth $25,000. That's another reason donors are signing on: Their money is multiplied. They apparently like the idea that while $19.61 a month has a certain amount of power to get things done, $25,000 has quite another effect. The program, university officials say, is showing alumni who could never af- ford to give the university $25,000 in cash how they can still make a gift larger than they thought possible. One of the first areas to be sold for the program was the on-air studio for WPGH, which, incidentally, will begin broadcasting at 98.5 on the FM dial by the end of September. A university employee who "supports free radio" sponsored this endowment. Some individuals have chosen to put their name and year of graduation on their plaque as an acknowledge- ment of their time spent at the univer- sity. One such donor, a successful Phil- adelphia retailer, used his plaque in this way. He is acknowledging that the university enabled him to advance Yes, I want to join other alumni in supporting the new Union. Send me your illus- trated brochure explaining low-cost, life insurance giving and areas available for endowment plaques. Name Birth Date Address city State Zip Code Work Telephone Home Telephone Please mail this coupon to: William Pitt Union Endowment Campaign, Gardner Steel Conference Center, Pittsburgh, PA 15260. to the position he holds today. An en- dowment is his way of giving some- thing back to Pitt. The program's tax-deductibility has helped persuade many donors to participate. University officials are working closely with the building's architects to insure that the plaques are posted in highly visible areas, in the main- stream of student traffic. And while more than $1 million in endowments have been sponsored, there are still many fine endowment areas available. For more information, call the Development and Alumni Af- fairs at (412) 624-4087 and ask about the William Pitt Union endowment program. AL-4LUMNI @TIMES Volume 16, Number 1 Spring 1984 The Alumni Times (USPS 763-800) is published quarterly for alumni, par- ents and friends of the University of, Pittsburgh by the Office of Develop- ment and Alumni Affairs, University of Pittsburgh, Gardner Steel Conference Center, Pittsburgh, Pa., 15260. Second class postage paid at Pittsburgh, Pa, 15129. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the Alumni Times, Gardner Steel Conference Center, Pittsburgh, Pa., 15260. 2-Alumni Ti mes/Spring 1984 Alumna archer is Olympic contender ALUMNI EVENTS CALENDAR April 23 - Friends of the Library program April 25 - Dental sophomore party April 27 - Central Pennsylvania Pitt Club meeting in Harrisburg April 27 - School of Social Work luncheon April 28 - East Hills Pitt Club Monte Carlo night May 2 - Faculty of Arts & Sciences dinner May 5 - South Hills Pitt Club dinner/dance May 16 - School of Education Masoner lecture May 19 - School of Pharmacy annual dinner June 6 - School of Education annual meeting June 15 - College of General Studies annual meeting September 15 - Volunteers Day (Pitt vs. Oklahoma) October 22-27 - Homecoming Week with Pitt playing Navy on October 27 ALUMNI TOUR TO SWISS/BAVARIA August 12-20, 1984 Price per person: $399.00 + 15% services (double occupancy) Includes: " Round-trip jet transportation " First-class hotel accommodations for 4 nights in Davos at the Belvedere or Kongresshotel " First-class hotel accommodations for 2 nights in Augsburg at the Augsburg Hotel * First-class accommodations for 1 night in Zurich at Movenpick Hotel " Inter-city transfers via motorcoach " Welcome arrival get-togethers in Davos and Augsburg * Informal briefing in both cities, explaining their sights, shopping and customs * Optional dining programs - two meal options available Optional extension: 7 days & 7 nights in Innsbruck and Zurich - additional $299 + 15% Optional: 350th Anniversary performance of THE OBERAMMERGAU PASSION PLAY - $199+ 15% (Only for passengers taking the 15-day, 14-night vacation.) ALUMNI TOUR TO LONDON/BRITISH ISLES Sept. 6-14, 1934 - $89900 + 15% tax & services I (double Oct. 25-Nov. 2, 1984 - $349.00 + 15 % tax & services occupancy) Includes: * Round-trip jet transportation * Superior first-class hotel accommodations 7 nights at Tower Hotel in London * Welcome arrival party in London * Complimentary half-day sightseeing tour of London * Optional tours available * Optional dining plans available Optional 6-day extension - additional $249.00 + 15% - Includes: * Transportation from London to Glasgow via British Rail train (includes lunch) " Superior first-class hotel accommodations at Glasgow Holiday Inn " Full-day sightseeing tour of beautiful Edinburgh * Transportation from Scotland to Ireland via Northwest Orient Airlines * First-class accommodations for 3 nights at Limerick Inn in Ireland Ruth Rowe, a 1969 graduate with a degree in biology is today a top con- tender on the 1984 United States Olympic Archery Team. In June of '83, Rowe placed first at the Pan American Games T1rials and executed a gold medal performance at the National Sports Festival. She also set four records for women in archery at the Pan American Games'Prials. But, Ruth Rowe's archery career did not begin as that of a child protege's. As an undergraduate at Pitt she en- rolled in an archery class to meet her physical education requirements. At the end of that semester, she "Couldn't put six arrows on a four-foot target at 20 yards." She realized her handicap was in- adequate equipment. Her 6'" frame needed a larger bow than she had used. With this adjustment in equip- ment, Rowe gained a 100-point im- provement. From there her track rec- ord in archery competition is history. In 1969, as a contender in the Out- door National Championships, she finished 26th; the following year she finished second. In 1972, at 24 years of age, Rowe claimed the title of National Champi- on plus both field and target titles at the Championships of America. She followed through with her win- ning stride by setting a world record for a Single FITA Round in 1973. In 1983, the National Archery As- sociation awarded her the Clayton Shenk Award for her high perfor- mances at both the National Indoor and Outdoor Target and Field Cham- pionships. In an interview with the Washing- ton Post, Rowe stated that, "I tend to be one of those who shoots well in com- petition but not #1." Rowe, however, proved herself wrong. She claimed the #1 position on the 1984 National Archery Team, thus demonstrating her ability as a prime competitor in the Olympics to be held this summer in Los Angeles. Seminar held for law students REQUEST FOR BROCHURE & RESERVATION COUPON Mail to: University of Pittsburgh Development & Alumni Affairs Gardner Steel Conference Center Pittsburgh, PA 15260 Attention: Betty Manes or telephone (412) 624-4037 Name(s) Street Address City State Zip I am interested in additional information on: Swiss/Bavarian London/British Isles Walter J. Blenko Jr., LAW'53, discusses patent law with students Jacque- line Canter and Nader Sheybani. Approximately 125 law students participated in the second annual seminar on "The Realities of Practice" held at the School of Law in February. More than 20 local law firms, staffed with from 8 to 20 attorneys, were represented. Dean John E. Murray Jr. met with the attorneys over lunch, after which the attorneys met with the students in small discussion groups. Following the discussions, everyone gathered for an informal reception. This annual program was designed by the Law School's placement office in order to provide the law students with a first-hand look at the operation of a law firm. The program also pro- vides local practitioners with the op- portunity to visit the Law School and to judge the quality of its students. Alumni Times/Spring .1984- 3 Education doctorates invited to join DAE The Doctoral Association of Educa- tors invites all Pitt alumni holding a doctoral degree from the School of Education to participate in their or- ganization. The purposes of the Doc- toral Association are to promote educational research, contributions to theory and practice, and other profes- sional concerns. For information con- tact the association president, Robert Paserba, Ph.D., Assistant Superinten- dent, Hampton Township School Dis- trict, 4482 Mt. Royal Boulevard, Alli- son Park, Pa., 15101, (412) 486-6000, or Charles Gorfnan, Ph.D., Director, Office of Research and Evaluation, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa., 15260,.(41,2) 624-5104. 1984 football tickets now available Contest winners acclaimed The reception for the winners of the Friends of the Library Student Book Collectors' Contest was held on Febru- ary 15. At the reception the winning collections were displayed and their owners presented with certificates and prize money by Oxanna Kaufman, chairperson of the contest committee. During the brief, formal program, Alex Strasser, president of the Friends, introduced Kaufman, who ex- plained the bibliophilic purpose of the contest and introduced the judges and special guests. Wendell Wray, a professor in the University of Pittsburgh's School of Library and Information Science, shared some remarks on behalf of the judges. The other judges were Cather- ine Marshall, managing editor of the University Press, and Dennis Lam- bert, librarian of the Darlington Col- lection. First prize undergraduate division winner Ray Janicko, in accepting his award, thanked the Friends for spon- soring the contest. As his collection of Whitman Adventure Books grew, Janicko said, his father joked about having to reinforce the floor of his room to sustain it under the collec- tion's weight. He said that now he could come back with "But it's a prize- winner, Dad!" Nancy Harris, second prize, under- graduate division, was accepted by Steve Swope, a close friend who shared Harris' enthusiasm for fanta- sy literature. Her collection consisted of books by and about J.R.R. Tolkien, whose works include The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. Penelope Lytle won first prize in the graduate division for her collection of books by Thomas Merton. Upon re- ceiving her award, Lytle handed the check to Ann Schiff of the Thomas Merton Center, an act symbolic of her support for Menton's ideals and her intention to share the prize money with the Center. Richard Pleak's Dmitri Shostako- vich collection won second prize, graduate. Pleak's introduction to Shostakovich came during his high school days, when he played bass in the school's orchestra. The orchestra was learning Shostakovich's Fifth Symphony at the time, and Pleak was intrigued by the imaginative bass ine the composer wrote. Spatz named dental assistant dean Sidney S. Spatz, DEN '45, has been appointed assistant dean for clinical affairs at the University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine. He is currently professor and chair- man of the School's department of oral and maxillofacial surgery, a posi- tion that he has held since 1971. Spatz is chief of the department of dentistry and the division.of oral and maxillofa- cial surgery at Montefiore Hospital and chief of oral surgery at Magee- Dental doings Alumni elected The following dental alumni have been elected 1984 officers by the West- ern Pennsylvania Section of the American College of Dentists: Joseph P. Adamchic, '45, president; Ruth S. Friedman, '45, vice president; Robert S. Runzo, '52, secretary-treasurer, Kay F. Thompson, '53, director; Charles E. McDermott, '65, director. Class of '84 dinner The Dental Alumni Association sponsored its annual dinner for senior dental students on February 28 in the ballroom of the William Pitt Union. According to Richard Cribbs, DEN '61, chairman, over 125 alumni, stu- Womens Hospital. Among his many honors, he received the 1979 Alpha Omega Mai- monides Award for leadership and out- standing participation in the health pro fessions. A member of the University's base- ball team during his student years, he was the recipient of the Pitt Varsity Letter Club award of distinction in 1974. Season tickets for the 1984 Pitt Football season can be ordered now through the Pitt Ticket Office at Gate 1 of Pitt Stadium. The 1984 Panther home schedule is one of the finest home slates in recent memory. Besides playing arch-rival West Virginia here, Pitt will host Brigham Young and Oklahoma at the stadium. The expanded six-game schedule also includes East Carolina, Navy, and Tulane. Season ticket holders are guaran- teed the best seats for all home games and will receive first priority in order- ing additional tickets for games with Brigham Young, Oklahoma, and West Virginia - all probable sellouts. New this season will be an endzone season ticket package that can save you $18 off the regular season ticket price ($78). Endzone season tickets will cost only $60. That's a mere $ 10 per game. (The regular single game ticket price will be $13 per ticket.) For fans who want to catch all the Panther football action and save money at the same time, the endzone season ticket pack- age is for you. Season tickets are assigned on a first-come, first-serve basis, so the Pitt Athletic Department suggests that Pitt fans put their orders in as soon as possible. There is also a priority sys- tem for sideline season tickets. Please call 624-4601 for more details on this plan. With 15 starters and 45 lettermen returning from last year's surprising Fiesta Bowl team, the Panthers should again be one of the top teams mn the nation and provide some of the most exciting football you'll ever want to see. Why not make reservations for six super Saturdays at Pitt stadium this fall with the purchase of Panther football season tickets? Soo0-a.L sche& e-a ..*84 soome K2 i0?ONEN' -M Sept I.s 0--,LAHC-V-A .:) $-;29 Temple 2-HA so!)t 29 WEST VIl"x-N-A A 1) av, 6 K~ 1AS7' CA-Tr-4-NA 83 ? M Dc-, 13 soutF2rd eI:-? Qc? 2C Nclaml *28A Cc-,27 *NAVYM Nov. 3 Sy!-acuso 3)? Nov, 10 *~LAK.:()MM Nov , 2 . e~stw:e : 1984 Pitt Football Ticket Application Name Phone( Address City & state dents and guests attended the event. Nathan Stark, senior vice-chancellor of the University's Health Sciences, James Smudski, DEN '52, dean of the School of Dental Medicine and Car- mine Durzo, DEN '57, president of the Dental Alumni Association, offered their congratulations to the newest alumni. Sophomore party slated The Dental Alumni Association will sponsor a party in the Faculty Club on April 25 for the Class of 1986. According to Robert Verklin, DEN '47, this will be the final event of the Alumni Association's student pro- gram for this academic year. Regular season (6 games) Season tickets, End zone Price $78 $60 Zip No. Total Season tickets, family plan: Adult $60 Youth (limit of 2) $18 (Youth must sit with adult) Pitt football guide Postage/handling $1 Total remittance Mail to: Pitt Ticket Office P.O. Box 7436 Pittsburgh, PA 15213 Payment options: Elicheck enclosed, payable to University of Pittsburgh [Ocharge my VISA card Elcharge my Master card Card expiration date: $5 Signature as it appears on card: For ticket information, call (412) 624-4601 4Alumni TimestSpring 1984 Fmmst prize winner Ray Janicko with LIS Pro- fessor Wendell Wray. ENGINEERING Kenneth R. Balkey, ENG '80, senior engineer with Westinghouse Electric Corp.'s Nuclear Technology Division, was the recipient of the 1983 George Westinghouse award, the corpora- tion's highest engineering achieve- ment recognition. Ronald J. Davis, ENG '76, is sta- tioned at Kelly Air Force Base, Texas. Davis is an electronic engineer with the Air Force Electronic Warfare Cen- ter. Roy T. DebsKi ENG '60, has been pro- moted to planning and requirements analyst for Pratt & WItney's Govern- ment Products Division in West Palm Beach, Fla. Debski is responsible for identifying market requirements and opportunities for present and future GPD products. He has been with Pratt & Whitney for 21 years in both the Florida and Connecticut offices. Milton Friedman, ENG '51, has joined Lancy International Inc., in Zelienople, Pa. as purchasing manag - er. Prior to this position, Friedman worked for Dravo Corp. in Pittsburgh as senior buyer. Stephen J. Garcia, ENG '77, is the new superintendent for the AMAX Coal'Co. Wabash Mine, Keensburg, Ind. Garcia joined AMAX in 1981 as assistant superintendent and prior to that position, was associated with Re- public Steel's coal mining division in West Newton, Pa. James C. Jensen, ENG '8 1, has been appointed manager for the Ashland Chemical Company's new business center in Columbus, Ohio. Alexander Kalin, E NG '6 1, has been appointed oil country tubular goods manager for Huntington Alloys, Inc., Huntington, VVVa. Kalin is employed in the company's St. Louis sales office and is responsible for the commercial promotion of oil and gas well tubing for the high-nickel alloy manufacturer. Richard Kopka, ENG '66, '62, is the chief of technical resources for the De- partment of Defense Electromagnet- ic Compatibility Analysis Center in Annapolis. Kopka is an Air Force ma- j or on active duty. He was the former research program manager with the Air Force Office of Scientific Research in Washington and has taught com- puter programming courses at Pitt, Northeastern University and Lowell Technological Institute. Joseph F. Lagnese, ENG '51, was named an honorary member of the Water Pollution Control Federation. Lagnmese is an adjunct assistant pro- James H. Leonard, E NG '6 1, '60, '58, has been elected vice president of tech- nology for Bethlehem Steel Corp., Le- high County, Pa. He had been the gen- eral manager of the hydroturbine divi- sion of Allis-Chalmers Corp. Frank Lydick, ENG '42, has been elected senior vice president at The Peoples Natural Gas Company, Pitts- burgh. He joined the first in 1958 as public relations director, and in 1968 was elected vice president, adminis- trative and a director of the company. Michael J. Masters, ENG '83, '74, is the new project engineer for the DeVil- biss Health Care Ca, with responsibil- ity for research and development. Douglas R. Mechler, ENG '77, has been promoted to senior project en- gineer at the specialty film division plant of 3M Co., Decatur, Ala. Bruce Zukauska, E NG '82, has been appointed program manager for Nu- clear Metals, Inc. Zukauskas joined the company in 1982 and has been in- volved in a key project for its large cal- iber penetrator programs. NURSING Amy M. Ertter, NUR '80, has been promoted to captain in the Army Nurse Corps. at Weed Army Hospital. Barstow, Calif. Michele J. Ferguson, NUR '77, is a general practice resident at Sacred Heart Hospital, Allentown, Pa.L Fergu- son is arecent graduate of the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine. Maryann F. Fralic, PBH '82, NUR '72, has been appointed senior vice presi- dent, nursing, Middlesex General- University Hospital. New Brunswick, N.J., and clinical associate dean, Col- lege of Nursing, Rutgers University, N.J. Mary Freliga, NUR '59, has joined the Visiting Nurse Association of Metro- politan Detroit management staff as district office supervisor for the Agen- cy's Southeastern District Office. Margaret Huth Meeker, NUR '69, is the director of nursing, OR/RR, at Ohio State University Hospital, Columbus, Ohio. Ethel M. Richards, NUR '5 1, has been appointed division chairperson of al- lied health technologies at Stark Tech- nical College, Ohio. Daw-n Sche;ik,MNUR '74,1qhaaben GENERAL STUDIES Timothy J. Carson, GEN '78, has been promoted to supervisor, of materials control for Allegheny Power System, Greensburg, Pa. Prior to this position, Carson was the lead materials control analyst for the Allegheny Power Sys- tem. Paul B. Dunlevy, GEN '70, hag been promoted to the position of corporate manager-systems for the Cyclops Corp., Pittsburgh. Prior to this posi- tion, Dunlevy was director of systems and data processing for the Univer- sal-Cyclops Specialty Steel Division. He joined the company in 1961. LeRoy P. Lucas, GEN '74, has grad- uated from the FBI National Acade- my in Quantico, Va. He had been em- ployed L-s office director for the Penn- sylvania Department of Revenue in Harrisburg. James B. Parker, GEN '68, has been promoted to vice president, market- ing, for Syracuse-based Crouse-Hinds Co.'s electrical construction materials unit. David Schade, GEN '78, has been pro- moted to safety engineer of adminis- tration at U.S. Steel, Pittsburgh. Schade is a school director, member of the Library Board and Democratic committeeman in Brentwood. Janice Butcher Sedaka, GEN '68, has produced a documentary for public television about three infertile couples entitled, "Tobgether Alone." The film is the winner of numerous film festival awards. Sedaka is a former instructor of non-fiction writing at Pitt and the former editor of Pittsburgh Magazine. Vincent Sommariva, GEN '78, is the new mill representative for Armco, Inc. In this position, Sommariva serves as a liaison between the mill and customers on product claims and requests for assistance. GRADUATE ARTS & SCIENCES Theodore M. Benditt, GAS '71, is the dean of the School of Humanities at the University of Alabama in Bir- mingham. Helen M. Berman, GAS '67, is the director of a research laboratory at the Fox Chase Cancer Center's Institute for Cancer Research in northeast Philadelphia. Donnelly GAS lip. Dunlevy GEN Alumni Times/Spring 1984 -5, Zukauskas Kalin ENG ENG John J. Burke, GAS '67, CAS '57, has been appointed general manager of Stauffer Chemical Co.'s agricultural chemical division in Conn. Constance M. Carroll, GAS '69, is the president of Saddleback College South, in Calif. Carroll was the form- er provost of Indian Valley Colleges. Martha E. Church, GAS '54, president of Hood College in Frederick, Md., has taken a leave of absence for a three- month study trip to China. Verna L. Cowin, GAS '80, is the direc- tor of the Pittsburgh Cultural Re- sources Survey for the Carnegie Museum of Natural History. Cowin has worked for the PPG Industries Foundation, documenting bottles found at the new PPG site that have historical value dating from 19th cen- tury. Alice Sapienza Donnelly, GAS '83, GEN '74, was elected president of the Wilkinsburg chamber of commerce, the first woman ever to achieve that position. She is also vice president of Wilkinsburg Development Corp., a non-profit group working with the state's enterprise development pro- gram which has targeted the borough as one of seven areas in Pa. to receive aid for revitalization. Lloraine Blissell Gapp, GAS '47, member of the board and chairman, publications committee, Crawford County Historical Society, Meadville, Pa. is supervising reprinting, market- ing and sales of Atlas of the OilRegion of Pennsylvania, originally printed in 1865. The volume includes 38 rare maps from parts of Venango, Craw- ford, Warren, Mercer, Clarion, Arm- strong, Butler and Forest Counties, from actual surveys conducted in the early 1860's. James C. Hayes, GAS '74, is director of the material department, 7th Army Combined Arms Training Center in West Germany. This department is responsible for conducting logistics training for U.S. Army-Europe. John G. Keane, GAS '66, has been ap- pointed director of the U.S. Bureau of the Census by President Reagan. Keane is the president of his own con- sulting firm in Barrington, Ill. Keane was a former American Marketing Association President. Arnold J. Kreisman, GAS '72, has re- turned to the U.S. after directing a regional planning project for the O.A.S. in the Dominican Republic for the past five years. (Continued on Page 8) A ACF Industries, Inc. AMF, Inc. ARA Services, Inc. Abbott Laboratories VA.S. Abell Co. Foundation, Inc. Abex Corp. Aeroglide Corp. Aerojet-General Corp. V The Aerospace Corp. ,/Aetna Life & Casualty Aid Assn. for Lutherans V'Air Products & Chemicals, Inc. Airco, Inc. AKTion Associates, Inc. AKwright-Boston Manufac- turers Mutual Ins. Co. Akzona, Inc. /Albany International Corp. *Albertson's Inc. Alco Standard Corp. Alexander & Alexander Alexander & Baldwin, Inc. Allegheny International, Inc. Allegheny Ludlum Steel Corp. Allendale Mutual Insurance Co. Allied Corp. VAlhis-Chalmers Corp. Allstate Insurance Companies VAluminum Co. of America VAMAX, Inc. Amerada Hess Corp. American Airlines, Inc. American Bank & Trust Co. of Pa. American Brands, Inc. American Broadcasting Cos., Inc. American Can Co. American Cyanamid Co. *American Electric Power Company, Inc. ./American Express Co. American General Corp. American Hoechst Corp. American Home Products Corp. American Hospital Supply Corp. oAmerican International Group American Medical Interna- tional, Inc. American Motors Corp. American Mutual Insurance Cos. American National Bank American National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago American Natural Resources System American Optical Corp. American Standard, Inc. american States Insurance American Sterilizer Company American Stock Exchange American Telephone & Tele- graph Co. American United Life Insur- ance Co. AmeniTrust Co. Amfac, Inc. Amstar Corp. Analog Devices, Inc. Anchor National Life Insur- ance Co. Arthur Andersen & Co. The Andersons Anheuser-Busch Companies, Inc. Appleton Papers, Inc. Arachem Corp. *Armstrong Rubber Company Armstrng_ World Industries B BASF Wyandotte Corp. The Badger Co., Inc. Badische Corp. The J.E. Baker Co. Ball Corp. Bancroft-Whitney Co. " Bangor Punta Corp. Bank of Boston Corporation Bank of California, N.A. Bank of Maine, N.A. The Bank of New York " Bank of the Southwest BankAmerica Corp. The Bankers Life Bankers Trust Co. " Barber-Colman Company BarclaysAmerican Corpora- tion C.R. Bard, Inc. Barnes & Roche, Inc. Barnes Group, Inc. Barry Wright Corp. The Barton-Gillet Co. Baxter'1Travenol Laboratories, Inc. %/Beatrice Foods Co. Bechtel Power Corp. A.G. Becker Paribas, Inc. Becktold Co. Becton, Dickinson & Co. Beech Aircraft Corp. *Bell & Howell Co. Bell Federal Savings & Loan Assn. Bell of Pennsylvania Bell Telephone Laboratories V Bemis Co., Inc. V The Bendix Corp. The Bergen Evening Record Corp. Best Products Co. Bethlehem Steel Corp. *Bigelow- Sanford, Inc. Bird Cos. Charitable Fdn., Inc. Bituminous Casualty Corpo- ration Blount, Inc. Blue Bell, Inc. The Boeing Co. Boise Cascade Corp. Borden, Inc. v'Borg-Warner Corp. Boston Edison Company *Bowater North America Corp. The Bowery Savings Bank Brakeley, John Price Jones Inc. Bernd Brecher & Assoc. Inc. Bristol-Myers Co. Brockway Glass Co., Inc. Brown-Forman Distillers Corp. V Brown Group, Inc. ,/Brunswick Corp. Buckbee Mears Co. Bucyrus-Erie Co. Buell Industries, Inc. Buffalo Color Corp. Bunge Corp. V/ Bunker Ramo Corp. Burlington Industries, Inc. V Burlington Northern, Inc.. Burroughs Wellcome Co. Business Men's Assurance Co. of America Butler Manufacturing Co. C " CBI Industries, Inc. CBS, Inc. C.E. Lummus Co. " C.I.T. Financial Corporation Carter Hawley Hale Stores, Inc. Carter-Wallace, Inc. Castle & Cooke, Inc. Catalytic, Inc. Caterpillar Tractor Co. VCelanese Corp. Centel Corp. Centerre Bank, N.A. Central Illinois Light Co. Central Life Assurance Co. VCertain-Teed Products Corp. Chamberlain Manufacturing Corp. Champion International Corp. Champion Spark Plug Co. The Charter Company v'The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. ./Chemical Bank Chemtech Industries, Inc. Chesapeake & Potomac Tele- phone Cos. The Chesapeake Corp. of VA Chesebrough-Pond's, Inc. Chessie System Railroads Chicago Pneumatic Tool Com- pany Chicago Title & Trust Co. Chrysler Corp. Chubb & Son, Inc. Chubb LifeAmerica Church Mutual Insurance Co. CIBA-GEIGY Corp. CIGNA Corp. Cincinnati Bell, Inc. Citicorp & Citibank, N.A. Cities Service Co. The Citizens and Southern Corp. Citizens & Southern Georgia Corp. Citizens Fidelity Bank & TPrust Co. Clark Equipment Co. v'The Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co. Cleveland Electric Illuminat- ing Co. Cleveland Trust Co. v'Clinton Mills, Inc. The Clorox Co. Clow Corp. Coats & Clark, Inc. V/The Coca-Cola Co. The Coleman Co., Inc. Colgate-Palmolive Co. Collins & Aikman Corp. Colonial Bancorp, Inc. Colonial Parking, Inc. Colonial Penn Group, Inc. Columbia Gas System, Inc. The Columbus Mutual Life Ins. Co. Combustion Engineering Inc. Commercial Credit Co. Commercial Union Insurance Cos. Commonwealth Energy Sys- tem, Inc. Comnwat Life Insur- ance Co. Communication Satellite Corp. Connecticut Bank & Trust Co. Connecticut Mutual Life In- surance Co. Connecticut Natural Gas Corp. Connecticut Savings Bank v'CONOCO, Inc. *Consolidated Edison Co. of N.Y. Inc. v'Consolidated Foods Corp. Consolidated Natural Gas Co. Consolidated Papers, Inc. ~Consolidation Coal Company Container Corp. of America vlThe Continental Corp. The Continental Group, Inc. Continental Illinois National Crompton and Knowles Corp. Crown Central Petroleum Corp. Crum & Forster, Inc. Cummings Engine Co., Inc. *CUNA Mutual Insurance Group VCustomized Computer Sys- tems, Inc. *Cyclops Corp. D Dana Corp. ,/Daniel International Corp. Dayton Malleable, Inc. Deere & Co. DEKALB AgResearch, Inc. Del Monte Corp. Deloitte Haskins & Sells *Delta Drilling Co. voDeluxe Check Printers, Inc. Deposit Guaranty National Bank Detroit Edison Company A.W.G. Dewar, Inc. O'The Dexter Corp. VDiamond Crystal Salt Co. Diamond International Corp. Diamond Shamrock Corp. A.B. Dick Co. Dickson Electronics Corp. Difco Laboratories Digitan Equipment Corp. Dillingham Corp. Donaldson Co., Inc. Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette V/R.R. Donnelley & Sons Co. Dove-Knight and Associates, Pa., Architects The Dow Chemical Co. Dow Corning Corp. Dow Jones & Co., Inc. Dravo Corp. V Dresser Industries, Inc. Wilbur B. Driver Co. *Dry Dock Savings Bank Duke Power Co. VDun & Bradstreet E EG&G, Inc. *ESD Corp. V Eastern Gas and Fuel Associ- ates 1Eaton Corp. *Jack Eckerd Corp. "*Economics Laboratory, Inc. Educators Mutual Life Insur- ance Egan Machinery Co. The El Paso Company Emerson Electric Co. Emhart Corp. Ensign-Bickford Foundation " ENSTAR Corp. Envirotech Corp. Equipmark Corp. V/Equitable Life Assurance So- ciety of the United States Equitable of Iowa Cos. Ernst & Whinney Esmark, Inc. v'Ethicon, Inc. Ethyl Corp. v,'Ex-Cell-0 Corp. v'Exxon Corp. FMC Corp. Factory Mutual Engineering and Research/Service Bu- reau Fairchild Industries, Inc. Farm Credit Banks of Spring- field Federal-Mogul Corp. Federal National Mortgage Association Federated Department Stores, Inc. Ferro Corp. ol Videlity Bank Fiduciary Trust Co. Y1 Field Enterprises, Inc. -'Fireman's Fund Insurance Co. The Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. First & Merchants National Bank VFirst Bank System, Inc. First Boston Corp. First Chicago Corp. First Hawaiian Inc. First Interstate Bank of California First Interstate Bank of Ore- gon, N.A. First Interstate Bank of Washington, N.A. *First Maryland Bancorp VFirst Mississippi Corp. First National Bank in Bart- lesville First National Bank in St. Louis The First National Bank of At- lanta VFirst National Bank of Min- neapolis First National Bank of Penn- sylvania The First National Bank of St. Paul *First Union Corp. aFirst Valley Bank, Inc. First Virginia Banks, Inc. FirstBancorp, Inc. Fleet National Bank /Fluor Corp. Ford Motor Co. Ford Motor Co. of Canada, Ltd. Foremost-McKesson, Inc. Foster Wheeler Corp. /The Foxboro Company Franklin Mint Corp. ,/Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. H.B. Fuller Co. Funderburke & Associates, Inc. GATX Corp. GK Technologies, Inc. E. & J. Gallo Winery Gannett Foundation, Inc. The Garrett Corp. Gary Energy Corp./Samuel Gary Oil Producer/The Pi- ton Foundatioon Gast Manufacturing Corp. Galtes Corporation/Gates Rub- ber Co. General Accident Insurance Company of America General Dynamics Corp. General Electric Co. Y'General Foods Corp. General Foods, Inc. General Housewares Corp. v'General Mills, Inc. General Public Utilities Serv- ice Corp. General Reinsurance Corp. General Signal V General Telephone & Electron- ics Corp. The General Tire & Rubber Co. GenRad, Inc. Getty Oil Co. Gibbs & Hill, Inc. Giddings & Lewis, Inc. Gilford Instrument Laborato- ries, Inc. The Gillette Co. Gilman Paper Co. Girard Trust Bank Goldman, Sachs & Co. Goldome The BFGoodrich Co. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. Gould, Inc. ' Gould Pumps, Inc. Government Employees In- surance Co. Grace Foundation, Inc. v'GrandMet USA, Inc. Alexander Grant & Co. The Graphic Printing Co., Inc. Great Lakes Carbon Corp. Great Northern Nekoosa Corp. 'Great West Casualty Co. Greenwood Mills, Inc. Gregory Poole Equipment Co. Grinnell Mutual Reinsurance Co. Grumman Corporation 1984 Matching Gift The dollar value of your gift to the Univ, doubled, and perhaps tripled, if you wo listed here. All of the companies will match your coi and those that are checked will contribu match. What do you have to do to get this bonus Complete the appropriate form which is personnel or community relations offic4 check, to the University of Pittsburgh. It's as simple as that. And the increased will support American's greatest natural ,-' greater than 1 to 1 match 0companies added since last year The Guardian Life Ins. Co. of America Gulf States Utilities Co. The Gurin Group, Inc. Hackney & Sons, Inc. V H alliburton Co. Hallmark Cards, Inc. Hamilton Bank Hammermill Paper Co. The Hanna Mining Co. Harper & Row Publishers, Inc Harris Corp. Harris Trust & Savings Bank Harsco Corp. Hart, Schaffner & Marx The Hartford, Insurance Group Hartford National Bank and TPrust Co. The Hartford Steam Boiler In- spection & Ins. Co. V Hawaiian Telephone Co. V H.J. Heinz Co. Y' Hercules, Inc. V Hershey Entertainment & Re- sort Co. Hershey Foods Heublein, Inc. Hewitt Associates Hewlett-Packard Co. Hill Acme Co. Hobart Corp. Hoffman-LaRoche, Inc. Homestake Mining Co. /Honeywell, Inc. The Hoover Co. Hoover Universal, Inc. Geo. A. Hormel & Co. Houghton Mifflin Co. Household International Houston Natural Gas Corp. V Houston Oil & Minerals Corp. Hubbard Milling Co. Harvey Hubbell, Inc. J.M. Huber Corp. Huck Manufacturing Co. Huffy Corp. Hufsey-Nicolaides Associates, Inc. Hughes Aircraft Co. Hughes Tool Co. IBEC, Inc. IC Industries, Inc. ICI Americas, Inc. IU Internatioonal Corp. V Illinois Bell Telephone Co. V Illinois Tool Works, Inc. Indiana Bell Industrial Indemnity Co. V Industrial Risk Insurers Ingersoll-Rand Co. Integon Corp. Intel Corp. V Intelligent Controls Interlake, Inc. V International Machines Corp. International F1 Fragrances Inc. International Mi Chemical Corp. VInternational Mi Corp. s/ International Paper International 'Ibleph egraph Corp. Y'InterNorth, Inc. Interpace Corp. Inter-RegionalF Group, Inc. V Investors Diversified Inc Irving Trust Co.' Itek Corp. J JSJ Corp. Jamesbury Corp. Jefferies & Co., Inc The Jefferson Mills, Jefferson-Pilot Bra~ Co. Jefferson-Pilot CorF Jersey Central Pc Light Co. VJewel Cos., Inc. John Hancock Mu Ins. Co. VJohnson & Hign /Johnson & Johnson S.C. Johnson & Son, Johnson Controls C Jones & LaughlinrSi Josten's Inc. Kaiser Steel COrP. Kansas City Southe: tries, Inc Karmazin Products Kearney-Nationial I: Keebler Co. /Kellogg Co. M.W Kellog Co. Kemper GrouP The Kendall Co. Kennametal, IXc Kennecott COrP. The Kerite CO., Kerr-McGee CorpD. Kersting, Brown & i Walter Kedde & Co. Kidder, PeabOdY &I Kimberly-CI&rk Cor Kingsbury Machi Corp. The Kiplinger Wa Editors, Inc. Richard C. Knight:j AgenCY, Int. 6 - Alumni Times/Spring 1984 184 ifts Program E University of Pittsburgh can be ('ou work for one of the 966 firms our contribution dollar-for-dollar, ntribute at a greater than 1 to 1 bonus added to your contribution? hich is available at your company's s office and mail it, along with your Lirgh. reased benefits of your partnership riatural resource: mindpower. aontrols, Inc. ric. nal Business ls Corp. nal Flavors & ,es Inc. nal Minerals & I Corp. nal Multifoods al Paper Co. 31 Iblephone & Tel- Orp. Inc. orp. onal Financial ne- iversified Services, t cb" Corp. Co, nc. Dn Mills, Inc. ilot Broadcasting ilot Corp. Airal Power and Inc. ock Mutual Life Higgins Johnson n &Son,Inc. mntrols Co. ughlin Steel Corp. 1 Corp. (rSouthern Indus- I. Iroducts Corp. itional Inc. 2,Ca~ DUP I Ca~ 1, Ix "orlx Co., e Corp. rown & Co. de & Co. ibodY & Co. Inc. ,lark Corp. rMachine Tool iger Washington Inc. Knight Insurance Int. Koehring Co. H. Kohnstamm Co., Inc. Koppers Co., Inc Rtalph Korte, Inc. L The Lamson & Sessions Co. Lanier Business Products, Inc. The Law Company, Inc. Leesona Corp. %eLehigh Portland Cement Co. Lever Brothers Co. /Levi Strauss & Co. The Liberty Corp. Eli Lillyl and Co. Lincoln National Corp. Thomas J. Lipton Co. Little, Brown & Co. Loews Corp. Lone Star Industries, Inc. Louisiana Power and Light Co. ,/Lubrizol Corp. Ludlow Corp. Lukens Steel Co. Lutheran Brotherhood Lutheran Mutual Life Ins. Co. M MCA Inc. MSI Insurance M&T Chemicals, Inc. MTS Systems Corp. Mack Trucks, Inc. MacLean-Fogg Co. *R.H. Macy & Co., Inc. Maguire Oil Co. Malinckrodt Inc. Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. Manville Corp. v/Marathon Oil Co. Maremont Corp. The Marine Corp. Maritz, Inc. *Mark Controls Corp. The Marley Co. Marsh & McLennan Cos., Inc. s/,Martin Marietta Corp. Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins. Co. Mattel, Inc. The Maytag Co. McCormick & Co., Inc. McDonald's Corp. McDonnell Douglas Corp. /McGraw-Hill, Inc. McQuay-Perfec Inc. The Mead Corp. Mechanics Bank Medtronic, Inc. Mellon National Corp. s/Menasha Corp. Merck & Co., Inc. Meredith Corp. s/Merit Oil Corp. Merrill Lynch & Co. Mesa Petroleum Co. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. s/Northwestern National Life Mettler Instrument Corp. Michigan Bell Telephone Co. Michigan General Corp. Middle South Services, Inc. Middlesex Mutual Assurance Co. Midland Mutual Life Insur- ance Co. Midland-Ross Corp. Midlantic Banks, Inc. Miehle-Goss-Dexter, Inc. Milliken & Co. sMilton Bradley Co. Minneapolis Star & Tribune Co. Minnesota Mining & Manu- facturing Co. Inc. The Minnesota Mutual Life Ins. Co. MITE Corp. The MITRE Corp. V/Mobil Oil Corp. Mohasco Corp. Monarch Capital Corp. Monroe Auto Equipment Co. Monsanto Company V Montgomery Ward & Co. Monumental Corp. Moog, Inc. Moore McCormack Resources, Inc. Morgan Construction Co. Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. of N.Y Morrison-Knudsen Co. Inc. Morton Thiokol, Inc. Motorola, Inc. Mountain States Mineral En- terprises, Inc. v'Murphy Oil Corp. Mutual Benefit Life The Mutual Liffe Ins. Co. of N.Y Mutual of Omaha N NCR Corp. NL Industries, Inc. NRC, Inc. s/Nabisco Brands, Inc. SNalco Chemical Co. National Bank of Detroit s/National Can Corp. *National City Bank /National Distillers & Chemical Corp. s/National Energy, Inc. National Gypsum Co. *National Health & Welfare Mutual Life Ins. Assn. National Life Insurance Co. National Medical Enterprises, Inc. National Steel Corp. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co. /Natomas Co. Nepera Chemical Co., Inc. New England Electric System Cos. New England Merchants Na- tional Bank New England Mutual Life In- surance Co. New England Petroleum Corp. New England Telephone New Jersey Bell Tlephone Co. New Orleans Public Service Inc. *New York Bank for Savings s./New York Telephone Co. The New York Times Co. The New Yorker Magazine, Inc. Newsweek, Inc. Nordson Corp). Insurance Co. Norton Co. WW. Norton & Co. Inc. e Norwest Bank Minneapolis, N.A. John Nuveen & Co. Inc. 0 Oakite Products, Inc. Occidental Petroleum Corp. Ohio Bell Telephone Co. " The Ohio National Life Insur- ance Co. Oklahoma Gas and Electric Co. Old National Bancorporation Old Stone Bank Olin Corp. Oneida Ltd. " Openaka Corp., Inc. V Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. Owens-Illinois, Inc. Oxford Industries Inc. P PHH Group PPG Industries, Inc. sPQ Corp. PACCAR Inc. Pacific Mutual Life Ins. Co. Pacific Resources, Inc. Pan-american Life Insurance Co. v'Panhandle Eastern Corp. V Parker-Hannifin Corp. Ralph M. Parson Co. The Paul Revere Life Cos. Peabody International Cor- poration Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co. Peavey Company Pechiney Ugine Kuhlmann Corp. *The Penn Central Corp. J.C. Penney Co., Inc. s/Pennsylvania Power & Light Co. V" Penwalt Corp. ,Pennzoil Co. Peoples Energy Corp. PepsiCo., Inc. PET Inc. Petro-Tex Chemical Corp. Pfizer, Inc. sPhelps Dodge Corp. Philadelphia Manufacturers Mutual Insurance Co. v'Philadelphia National Bank sPhilip Morris, Inc. V/Phillips Petroleum Co. Phoenix Mutual Life Insur- ance Co. Piedmont Aviation, Inc. s/'The Pillsbury Co. The Pioneer Group, Inc. s/'Pioneer Hi-Bred Internation- al, Inc. Pitney Bowes Inc. Pittsburgh National Corp. ,Pitway Corp. Plainfield Cytology Labora- tory, Inc. Plante & Moran, CPA's Playboy Enterprises, Inc. *Pogo Producing Co. sPolaroid Corp. Porter Paint Co. Potlatch Corp. Preferred Risk Mutual Insur- ance Co. Preformed Line Products Co. Prentice-Hall, Inc. Price Brothers Co. vs/Quaker Chemical Corp. s/The Quaker Oats Co. Quaker State Oil Refining Corp. R *RKO General, Inc. Ranier National Bank Ralston Purina Co. Rand McNally & Co. ArthuraD.Raybin Assoc., Inc. Raytheon Co. s/Reader's Digest Foundation " Reading & Bates Corp. Redlands Federal Savings & Loan Association Reliance Electric Co. Reliance Insurance Cos. Republic National Bank of New York Republic Steel Corp. The Research Institute of America, Inc " Research-Cottrell, Inc. " Revlon, Inc. v'Rexham Corp. v'Rexnord, Inc. ,/R.J. Reynolds Industries, Inc. Reynolds Metals Co. Richardson, Gordon & Asso- ciates Richardson-Vicks, Inc. Riegel Textile Corp. Rochester Germicide Co. The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Inc. Rockefeller Center, Inc. Rockefeller Family & Asso- ciates The Martha Baird Rockefeller Fund for Music, Inc. Rockwell International Corp. Rohm & Haas Co. ROLM Corp. Rorer Group, Inc. Ross, Johnston and Kersting, Inc. Rospatch Corp. Royal Insurance Rubbermaid Inc. Rust International Corp. RYCO Division, Reilly-White- man, Inc. S sSCM Corp. SKF Industries, Inc. SPS Technologies, Inc. 1,'SAFEC0 Insurance Cos. Saga Corp. St. Joe Minerals Corp. sSt. Paul Cos., Inc. sSt. Regis Paper Co. Salomon Brothers Sanders Associates, Inc. Sandoz, Inc. Santa Fe Industries, Inc. Santa Fe International Corp. Schering-Plough Corp. Schindler Haughton Elevator Corp. Schlegel Corp. Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. Scott, Foresman & Co. Scott Paper Co. ~Seaboard System Railroad Seafirst Corp. ,,'Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc. Sealright Co., Inc. G.D. Searle & Co. Seattle Trust & Savings Bank Security Benefit Life Insur- ance Co. Security Pacific.Corp. *Smith InternationaL Inc. SmithKline Beckman Corp. VSonat, Inc. Sony Corp. of America Soo Line Railroad Company South Carolina National Corp. Southeast Bank, N.A. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co. s/Southern New England Tele- phone Co. The Southland Corp. Southwest Forest Industries Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. Southwestern Life Insurance Co. Sperry Corp. s/Springs Industries, Inc. The Square D Co. s/Squibb Corp. The Stackpole Corp. Stanadyne, Inc. *Standard Coosa Thatcher Co. Standard Insurance Co. s/'Standard Oil Co. of California, IChevron USA, Inc s/Standard Oil Co. (Indiana) /The Standard Oil Co. (Ohio) sThe Standard Products Co. STANHOME, INC. s/The Stanley Works State Mutual Life Assurance Co. of Am. s/State Street Bank &'Trust Co. Stauffer chemical Co. Steel Heddle Mfg. Co. Steigler Tractor, Inc. s/Sterling Drug, Inc. J.R Stevens & Co. Inc. Stone & Webster, Inc. s/Suburban Propane Gas Corp. Summit Hill Laboratories s/Sun Co., Inc. Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada ~The Superior Oil Co. SWANK Inc. Swiss American Securities, Inc V Sybron Corp. Syntex Corp. T TRW Inc. Tandy Corporation Tech/Ops, Inc. Tebktronix, Inc. s/Teledyne, Inc. s/ Tennant Co. C. Tennant, Sons & Co. of N.Y Tenneco,Inc. VTesoro Petroleum Corp. s/The Texaco Philanthropic Fdn. Inc. Texas Commerce Bank s/Texas Eastern Corp. Tebxas Gas Corp. Tebxas Instruments Inc. Texasgulf, Inc. s/Textron Inc. Thomas & Betts Corp. V/J. Walter Thompson Co. v1J.T. THorpe Co. V Ticor s/Time, Inc. The Times Mirror Co. Times Publishing Co. & Con- gressional Quarterly s/The Toro Co. The Torrington Co. Total Petroleum, (North Amer- ica) Lt. Towers, Perrin, Forster &Cros- by, Inc. Townsend & Buttum, Inc. *Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc. Union Camp Corp. Union Carbide Corp. Union Commerce Bank Union Electric Co. Union Oil Co. of California s/Union Pacific Corp. Union Trust Co. Unionmutual Insurance Co. United Bank of Denver, N.A. United Brands Co. V United Energy Resources, Inc. United Engineers & Construc- tors, Inc. United Mutual Savings Bank United Parcel Service US Air United States Borax & Chem- ical Corp. ~'United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. United States Gypsum Co. sUnited States Leasing Inter- national Inc. United States Steel Corp. United States Tobacco Co. United States Trust Co. of N.Y. V/United Technologies Corp. United Telecommunications, Inc. United Telephone Company of Indiana United Virginia Bank The Upjohn Co. v' Urban Investment and Devel- opment Co. Utah International Inc. Utica National Insurance Group V Valley National Bank of Ari- zona V Varian Associates, Inc. Victaulic Co. of America Vulcan, Inc. V/ Vulcan Materials Co. W The Wachovia Bank & Trust Co., N.A. V Wallace-Murray Corp. The Wallinigford Steel Co. Warnaco Warner-Lambert Co. Warner & Swasey Co. SWarren-King Cos. Washington National Insur- ance Co. sThe Washington Post Co. SWaste Management, Inc. Watkins-Johnson Co. Wausau Insurance Cos. C.J. Webb, Inc. Welch Foods, Inc. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. West Point-Pepperell, Inc. Western Electric Company Western Publishing Co. Inc. Westinghouse Electric Corp. Westvaco Corp. Whirlpool Corp. Whitaker Corp. v"/John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Willamette Industries, Inc. Williams & Company The Williams Cos. Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc. The Wiremold Co. e Wisconsin Electric Power Co. Wisconsin Telephone Co. Wolverine World Wide, Inc. W.Yman-Gordon Co. X sXerox Corp. Alumni Times/Spring 1984- 7 m tIM,AmA Am"Wanelo Cak BUS BUS ]Edward Lawry, GAS '67, is an associ- ate professor of philosophy at Oklaho- ma State University, Okla. Lawry is developing an interdisciplinary course under a grant from the National En- dowment for the Humanities on the appreciation of the arts. Donald McKim, GAS '80, professor at the University of Dubuque Theologi- cal Seminary, recently presented a pa- per entitled, "The Renaissance of Sys- tematic Theologies" at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Religion and the Society of Biblical Literature held in Dallas, Tex. Michael O'Keefe, GAS '68, has been named president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Bernard Plogman, GAS '51, is an as- sociate professor of art at the Univer- sity of Dayton, Ohio. Plogman has had 18 one-man shows in various cities throughout the U.S. and a one-man show in Europe in 1982. Frank G. Pogue, GAS '73, has been named vice president for student af- fairs at the State University at Alba- ny, N.Y. Mark Stevenson, GAS '83, has joined the staff at Chatham College as assis- tant professor of drama. His first production, "My Sister in this House," was staged recently. Harold E. Swift, GAS '62, manages the alternate energy research and chemicals technology areas at the Gulf Research and Development Co., Pittsburgh. He is the author of more than 150 U.S. patents and technical publications in the areas of hydro- carbon processing, chemicals, and catalysis. Milton Wolpin, GAS '58, '52, is an as- sociate professor of psychology at the University of Southern California. Wolpin is past president of the Ameri- can Association for the Study of Men- tal Imagery. PHARMACY Edward R. Bennett, PHA '64, is the director of Pharmacy for the Lebanon Valley General Hospital in Lebanon, Pa Bennett has been employed by the hospital sine 1969. I A - U?&A: Burley Grande BUS PHA Bob Grande, PHA '72, has been pro- moted to district manager of the northern region for Gray Drug Fair Inc. In this new position, Grande directs the operations of 13 northeast Ohio Gray Drug stores. Gary R. Kincel, PHA '72, has been named division director of operations systems and procedures for Gray Drug Stores, Ohio. James E. Lamport, PHA '58, is the new administrator of the pediatric department for Temple University Medical School. Before the appoint- ment at Temple, he was an active duty army officer serving as administrator at Army Hospitals in the U.S. and abroad. Ethel M. Ritzman, PHA '58, was hon- ored with the "Pharmacist of the Year" award from Summit County Pharmaceutical Associates. Thomas R. Sinwell, PHA '74, was dec- orated with his second Army Coin- mendation Medal while at Fort Sam Houston in Texas. He is a pharmacy officer with the U.S. Army Health Care System Support Activity. Anjaneyulu Tadepalli PHA '72, has been promoted to research scientist IV/senior pharmacologist at Bur- roughs Wellcome Co. in North Caro- linm Tadepalli j oined the firm in 1980 and is a resident of Durham, N.C. Cindy Tomich, PHA '83, is a pharma- cist with the Revco Drug Company, Mount Pleasant, Pa. PUBLIC & INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS David L. Donahoe, PIA '79, EDU '71, is the director of the Western Division of the Pennsylvania Economy League. John A. Golden, PIA '79, EDU '59, is director of Hill House Community Services Inc., Pittsburgh. Prior to this appointment, Golden was a human re- sources development specialist in the Pittsburgh regional office of the De- partment of Community Affairs and worked directly with Community Ac- tion Pittsburgh. Louis Grumet, PIA '71, has been ap- pointed New York State Developmen- tal Disabilities Planning Council executive secretary. The 24-member council is intended to ensure compli- ance with federal laws governing serv- ices to the disabled. Charles J. Jenkins, PIA '79, is the per- sonnel manager of Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp in Delmar, New York. Prior to this appointment, Jenkins had been industrial relations super- visor at Owens-Corning at Anderson, South Carolina. Theo Kotjarapoglus, PIA '74, has been awarded the Heart Association's prestigious "Jerry Bruner Memorial Award" for exemplary contributions to the American Heart Association and to his profession. He is the execu- tive vice president of the Heart Asso- ciation, South Western Pa Chapter. Richard W Lyles, PIA '72, is an assis- tant professor of transportation en- gineering and planning in the depart- ment of civil engineering at Michigan State University and the principal of Richard Lyles Associates. William J. Page, PIA '60, is one of the executive directors for the Council of State Governments in Kentucky. Page became director in 1978, following 20 years in public administration at the state and federal levels of government. Prior to joining CSG, Page was the secretary of Florida's Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services for three years. John Parrott, PIA '78, is an Air Force Captain newly assigned to the Penta- gon in Washington, D.C. He recently returned from a tour of duty in Ger- many where he served at Ranstein Air Base. Alberta Thompson, PIA '78, HRP '73, has been elected to the office of chairperson of the Pittsburgh Oppor- tunities Industrialization Center Women's Auxiliary. Thompson is em- ployed by the Urban League of Pitts- burgh as day-care director. Willis T. White, PIA '73, has been ap- pointed to the Governor's Commis- sion on Black Affairs for Oregon. White is a member of the NAACP, the Urban League4 the National Business League, the American Public Works Task Force on Equal Opportunities and various ad hoc committees estab- lished to address Affirmative Action and equal employment opportunities. BUSINESS Nicholas S. Amatangelo, BUS '58, has been appointed to the post of presi- dent and chief executive officer of Bowne of Chicago, Inc. He is also the president of Bowne of Houston, Inc. Carl F. Billhardt, BUS '71, is the prin- cipal research scientist at the Engi- Jack L. Burley, BUS '74, has been ap- pointed controller for Heinz U.S.A., a division of H.J. Heinz Co. Prior to this appointment, Burley was the general manager for financial planning & con- trol/USA, with Heinz. Frank A. Charles, BUS '64, has been appointed branch manager of Corro- Flo Engineering Inc., Pittsburgh. Pri- or to this appointment, Charles was a district sales manager with A.0. Smith-Inland Inc. Craig R. Fitz, BUS '76, has been named a vice president at First Na- tional Bank of Maryland. J. Roger Glunt, BUS '60, is president of Glunt Building Company, Inc., Pittsburgh. Glunt is a member of the Builders Association of Metropolitan Pittsburgh and serves on the adviso- ry committee of the Bernard Hankin Professorship of Residential Con- struction, Penn State University. James J. Hayden, BUS '61, has been appointed president of Rexnord's Electronic Products Division in Mil- waukee. Hayden Will continue to serve as the vice president of planning and diversification for Rexnord. Willard R. Hoel, BUS '60, has joined the sales staff of the Laclede Steel Co. in Memphis, Uenn. David L.S. Katz, BUS '75, CAS '74, has been named vice president at Security Pacific Mortgage Corp., Houston, Tex. Samuel A. McCullough, BUS '60, is the chairman of the American Bank and Trust Co., Reading, Pa McCul- lough is also the president and chief executive officer of Meridian Bancorp, a financial holding company. He was named a Distinguished Pennsylvani- an in 1982. Donald A. McMullen, BUS '72, CAS '71, has been appointed senior vice president in Mellon Bank's Trust and Investment Department. McMullen joined Mellon Bank in 1972 as a man- agement scientist in the Trust and In- vestment Department and was named an assistant investment officer in 1974. In 1980, he was named vice president of the Investment Analysis section. McMullen is a member of Pittsburgh Society of Financial Analysis. Arlene Neff, BUS '81, GLEN '75, hits joined the Pittsburgh office of Parker- Hunter Inc. as an account executive. Andrew F. Newton, BUS '64, is the new pnlant managrer for Armstrnog 8-Alumni, Tmes/Spring 4984 DENTAL MEDICINE Scott P. Arbit, DEN '76, was elected secretary of the Milwaukee Chapter of Alpha Omega Dental Fraternity and vice president of the Wisconsin Soci- ety of Dentistry for Children. Carmine A. Durzo,,DEN '57, CAS '53, has been appointed by Governor Richard Thornburgh to California University's Council of Trustees. Dur- zo, a Monroeville dentist, will be a member of the council until January 1987. Raymond M. Juriga, DEN '75, has been honored with the fellowship award from the Academy of General Dentistry. Charles W Longenecker, DEN '62, received the Academy of General Den- tistry's Fellowship Award in Toronto. Samuel H. Millstone, DEN '57, retired from the faculty of the University of Detroit's school of dentistry after 10 years' teaching. Charles D. Pagano, DEN '71, is treas- urer of the East Suburban (Pitts- burgh) Dental Society, chairman of the law enforcement committee of the Dental Society of Western Pa. and is a member of its ethics committee. Michael Sterchak, DEN '52, has been named chairman of the board of direc- tors of St. Joseph's Hospital, Carbon- dale, Pa. Sterchak, a retired Forest City dentist, has been a member of the board for the past eight years. William B. Trice, DEN '53, presented a paper, "Electrosurgery, the Univer- sal Modality for You", at the scientif- ic session of the national meeting of the American Endodontic Society in Anaheim, California. Trice had been awarded the degree of Honorary Fel- low and Fellow of AES in previous convocation ceremonies. Douglas Vrudny, DEN '58, is chair- man of the Dayton Society of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons, on the staff of Kettering Medical Center, St. Eliza- beth Medical Center, and Good Samaritan, Grandview and Greene Memorial Hospitals. LIBRARY & INFORMATION SCIENCE Patricia B. Aughinbaugh, LIS '78, CAS '72, has joined the staff at St. Francis College in Loretta, Pa., as an Danuta Obojski, LIS'61, is the assis- tant reference librarian for the Floral Park Public Library in Floral Park, N.Y Oboj ski was formerly a part-time reference librarian at the Jericho Pub- lic Library and the Glen Cove Public Library, N.Y Anne Stobbe, LIS '66, is the president of the Benton Harbor-St. Joseph Branch of the American Association of University Women in Michigan. Stobbe is director of the Maud Preston Palenske Memorial Library, St. Joseph, Mich. Janet L. Templer, LIS '82, is the head librarian at the Cranberry Public Li- brary, Butler County, Pa. Ibmpler had been employed by the Law Library at Pitt. Lynda J. Wills, LIS '76, has been ap- pointed assistant director of the North Reading Public Library in North Reading, Mass. She had been with the Somerville (Mass.) Library for six years. Richard Wood, LIS '79, CAS '68, is an associate professor at Slippery Rock University in the library department and serves as head of the circulation and faculty reserve department. Over the past two years, he has also served as coordinator of user services. PUBLIC HEALTH Clifford H. Boon Jr., PBH '59, execu- tive director of Aliquippa Hospital, is serving as chairman of the board of' trustees of the Hospital Association of Pennsylvania. Lawrence M. Coco, PBH '74, is radia- tion protection officer for the Westing- house Nuclear Service Integration Di- vision in Spartanburg, S.C. Claudia Detwiler, PBH '80, SSW '69, CAS '67, is the new administrator of the Zoar Home in Shaler Township, Pa., a residential maternity program and child development center. Detwil- er has seven years of professional ex- perience in administration in social service and health care settings. Richard P. Frey, PBH '79, is serving an internship at Lancaster Osteo- pathic Hospital. Robert G. Graves, PBH '74, was ap- pointed associate administrator at Vanderbilt University Hospital in Nashville, Tenn. Valerie J. Hackenberg, PB H '78, has been named a principal partner in the firm of Herman Smith Associates, Ill. HakebegisthAIre c -f1l1cin Pecic PBH Ralph Hingson, PBH '70, was ho- nored by the U.S. Jaycees in Pitts- burgh as one of the 10 Outstanding Young Men of America for 1984. Hingson helped establish the De- partment of Socio-medical Sciences at Boston University. Margaret Klecha, PB H '82, has been named Wilkes-Barre General Hospi- tal's full time risk manager, a position concerned primarily with accident prevention in the hospital. Klecha will review pertinent reports and docu- ments to identify potential risks. Maria B. Ortiz-Morales, PB H '82, is associate professor of community health and nursing leadership at Flori- da A&M University's nursing school in Tallahassee. Jan Peter Ozga, PB H '70, is the direc- tor of health care, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Washington, D.C. Prior to joining the government, Ozga was an independent consultant to several governmental agencies, professional associations and publishing compa- mies. Bogdan Pecic, PBH '73, has been ap- pointed assistant executive director at Parkview Hospital,'Toledo, Ohio. Prior to this position, Pecic was the assis- tant administrator, clinical services, at Cuyahoga Falls General Hospital, near Akron. George J. Pogan, PBH '66, has been promoted to acting associate execu- tive director of Ohio State University Hospitals. Pogan will oversee capital equipment acquisition, cardiology, clinical laboratories, material sys- tems, neurology, occupational thera- py, pharmacy, physical medicine and physical therapy. Jennifer Riseon, PBH '73, has been promoted to deputy secretary for planning and quality assurance in the Pa. Department of Health. Prior to this appointment, Riseon was assis- tant director of Presbyterian- University Hospital in Pittsburgh. William H. Scouten, PBH '69, was promoted to full professor of chemis- try at Bucknell University, Lewis- burg, Pa. After completing his PhD at Pitt, Scouten won a postdoctoral fel- lowship to State University of New York (SUNY) Stony Brook, from the National Institutes of Health. Theodore R. Torkelson, PBH '66, is the occupational health associate with Dow Chemical Co., Mi. Torkelson is a member of the AIHA and the Society of Toxicology and has had over 28 papers published on his toxicological 1adocuptinalhalthkresarh.1 Bemnat EDU EDUCATION A. Nelson Addleman, EDU '40, '36, '34, '32, has been elected to serve a two-year term on the board of direc- tors of the Pa. Retired Public School Employees Association. He is also a director of Region 7, encompassing Pittsburgh and the counties of Al- legheny, Fayette, Westmoreland, Washington and Greene Addleman is the 1982 distinguished alumnus of the East Hills Pitt Club. John Altdorfer, EDU '80, has been named associate editor at "National Glass Budget," a news magazine for the glass manufacturing industry. He joined the magazine after serving as an English teacher at the secondary school level in Pittsburgh. Edwinna Bossler Bernat, EDU '53, has been appointed senior vice presi- dent of New Mexico Banquest Corp. in Santa Fe, N.M. She will direct the company's communications and mar- keting,group. Joseph Burgo, EDU '26, was named citizen of the year in the Forest Hills suburb of Pittsburgh. The retired edu- cator was chosen by citizens' ballot and the editorial board of Gateway Publications. Emmett C. Burns, EDU '74, is profes- sor of political science at the Universi- ty of Maryland and associate minister at Trinity Baptist Church, Baltimore, Maryland. Burns has taught in both elementary and senior high schools in Virginia and Mississippi and was aca- demic advisor and chairman of Gradu- ate Council of Students at the Univer- sity of Pittsburgh. James N. Donaldson, EDU '66, is sales director of the trust and estate group of Chemical Bank in New York City. He is responsible for marketing and developing trust services within the group with special emphasis on will appointments. Violet C. Eash, EDU '67, CAS '66, is an assistant professor of counseling and rehabilitation at Marshall Univer- sity at Huntington, W Va. E ash was presented the Outstanding West Vir- ginian Award in 1983 by Gov. Jay Rockefeller and was selected the Inter- national Handicapped Professional Woman of the Year. William Gaskins, EDU '73, '70, '51, has served for 13 years with the PSEA Association and is currently working on a school improvement process designed to improve the "Q uality of Worklife" in schools for teachers, stu- dents and administrators. Avlgn IpoIP14 - I X-= --pI Nandor Addleman CAS EDU