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�Faculty and Administration
Seniors
Commencement
Founder's Day
Open House
Index
Although every effort has been made to
assure an accurate publication, the listing of
graduates and faculty contained herein may
be incomplete. In addition, inclusion of student portraits does not necessarily guarantee
subsequent graduation from the College.
�ENVIRONMENT
����REFLECTIONS
��OBSERVATION
��INSTRUCTION
CONCENTRATION
Dan Carney
Dave Kosielniak
Pete Ziegenfelder
Russ Emery
Michelle Blue
Michelle Beyer
Pete Barclae
Colleen Carlsen
Dwayne Berger
Bill McDonough
Patti Kennedy
Lori Simpson
Terri Rusas
Bob Goffeney
Laura Vogel
John Boomer
Gay Gillesby
Becky Zurfluh
�Society of manufacturing Engineers Association of General Contractors
Diane Lauzon
James Masalskis
Chris Thompson
Stephen Parker
Russ Emery
Kevin Pazur
Byron Todman
Frank DiPonio
Sunday Jaiyesimi
Christopher Wendrowski
Richard Mills
Jim Rzepka
John Ruedisueli
Jim Miller
Eric Wright
Bob Johncox
Jim Leduc
John Jankens
Jeff Molner
Tom Kees
Norm Caramagno
Douglas Thacker
Ronald Plichta
Michael Kotlarczyck
Paul Mackalski
Ken Schoel
Rick Jakubowski
Ed Boris
Rick Chorazyczewski
William Carter
Greg Dahlin
Robin Planck
�Michigan Society of Professional Engineers
Michelle Murawa
James Tindall
Deborah Iannaci
Lou Minna
Dann Derda
John Kavanagh
Brian J. Downey
Keith Stacey
Barrie Craft
Daniel Wilcox
Gerald Wolford
Black Engineering
Student Association
Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers
Ronald Eawacki, Joanne Grubaugh. Lehman Orluck. Dale
Sorensen, Carolyn Andrek, Shawn Boozer, Ron Grobbel,
Professor Richard Maslowski, Gerald Deisinger, David Wyka.
Kim DeRusha, John Mollick, Patrick Hurley, Brian Martel.
Jay Schwartz, Don Kirkham. Greg Bernard, Wayne Milan,
Tom Straith, Bradford Anderson.
Norm Caramagno, Robert Bailce, Steve Kardel, Denise Martin, Matthew Wezensky, Dale Stollsteimer, Kevin Oyafuso, Mark A. Woloshyn, Alexander Reid, Charles Hellebuyck,
Stanley Stasko.
Gedas Vysniauskas, William Crawford, Gordan Schweiger,
Douglas Goetz, Jeffrey Molner, James Leduc, Robert L. Hughes.
Bilal Etoum, Ahmad Al-Sheyab, Dave Ulman, Bob Johncox.
Society of Physics Students
�Tau Beta Pi
Professor Richard Maslowski
Professor Robert Hatch
Dave Ulman
Eric Frevik
Gary Oleszczuk
American Chemical Society
Nancy Evans, Paul Stumpo, Alicia Easton,
Sandra Bartenbach, Carol Kocan, Delphine
Banks, Carol Zassadney, Steve Shahinian,
Marie Covert.
Tom Ciesla, Paul McNulty, James Parker,
Philip Meister, Michael Gazda, John Carlson,
Tim Frasier, Dr. J. L. Crist.
�Chi Omega Rho
Jackqulin Varady, Michelle Blue, Becky
Zurfluh, Terri Rusas, Denise Martin
Cyndi Grajek, Salena Keese, Carolyn Andrek, Patty Kennedy, Chris Mallas, Diane
Kraft, Lisa Williams, Karen Roman
American Society of Mechanical Engineers
Professor Ken Farquharson, Rick Yavruian,
Sandra Connelly, Paul Eaves, Mike Umbarger, Anne Scheer, Matt Sauer, John Williams.
Basel Elchommali, Dominic Pupillo, Redentor
Galang, David Jarrell, Joe Bucciero, Allen Klein.
Brian Radlick, Loten Baskin, Pete Duncanson, Chris Bolton, Todd Maciejewski, Frank Schymik.
�Lawrence Christian Fellowship Society of Women Engineers
Robin Scott
Deborah Iannaci
Diana Lawrence
Diane Lauzon
Sandy Johnson
Karen Wilson
Kathleen Nemeth
Rayna Handelman
Denise Martin
��Pi Tau Sigma
Amy McBride
Dr. Wayne Brehob
Loten Baskin
Herbert Seubert
Gary Rawski
Dwayne MarchioSecond Row
Professor Ken Farquharson
Michelle Murawa
John Digasbarro
Bryan Connor
Glenn Czupinski
James Tindall
Richard E. Marburger, chairman, president, and chief executive officer
G. Robert Harrington, vice president for development
Bruce Annett, Jr.
director of publc and alumni relations
Jack Armstrong, director of campus facilities
Eugenie Beall, special projects administrator
Wally Bizon, photographer/audiovisual coordinator
Cynthia S. Blank, development secretary
Shirley R. Bolla, student activities secretary
Ruth Bressler, bookstore cashier
Beulah M. Buck, registrar
Floyd W. Bunt, director of high school relations
Ann M. Cattermole-Levy, associate director of public and alumni relations
Dorothy H. Clark, admissions counselor
Gary Cocozzoli, director of the library
Oliver S. Coleman, special project administrator
Jerry Cuper, admissions counselor, lecturer in mechanical engineering technology
Frank E. P. de Hasselle, director of international student affairs
Margaret DeMarois, admissions secretary
Debbie Faes, public and alumni relations secretary
Mary Fergustrom, accounts payable
Marilyn Fullerton, registrar's assistant
Joan Geha, business affairs cashier
Kathy Gilman, admissions secretary
John Grden, manager of data processing
Stanley F. Harris, director of admissions
Marianne Hipp, Librarian
Rosemary Hodges, assistant to the president
Richard Hogan, data processing staff
Ted Holloway, campus facilities security
Elizabeth Hood, library circulation
Grace Hood, Library secretary
John F. Hurley, campus facilities security
Melvin L. Janney, director of business affairs
Glen Johnstone, assistant manager data processing
Gary Joppich, admissions counselor
Rosemary Keilholz, staff assistant, academic affairs office
Timothy Kennedy, admissions counselor
Ellenore Kent, veterans affairs coordinator
�Paul F. Kinder, director of student financial aid
Ramona Kolanek, business affairs secretary
Pomeroy LaDue, business affairs cashier
Samuel F. Lewis, business affairs accounts receivable accountant
Juliette LeZotte, registrar's secretary
Ann Liska, registrar's assistant
Patty Lukemire, international student affairs secretary
Kathleen McBroom, inter-loan and reference librarian
Caroline McCollum, part-time librarian
F. Hal McDavid, director of placement and assistant to ttte dean for associate studies
Carol Mills, switchboard operator
Judith Milosic, assistant director of business affairs
Lewis Moon, director of counseling and student activities
Eileen M. Mulhare, development officer
Margaret Mulholland, campus facilities secretary
Melissa Murray, staff assistant, office of the president
Diana Nagelkirk, graphics assistant
Janine Nassaux, bookstore cashier
Gail Nastwold, bookstore manager
Beverly Neilson, staff assistant, academic affairs office
Karen Partallis, staff assistant, business affairs office
Ramona Petro, registrar's assistant
Lawrence Reinhart, data processing staff
Winifred Roberts, secretary, office of the president
Martha Shields
Avonelle Slagle
Marlene Thornton
Dorothy Trew
James O. Trew
Judy Williams
Blanche Wilson
Roberta Wisler
�School of Architecture
�Karl H. Greimel, dean of architecture, chairman and professor of architecture
Jams Abernathy, associate professor of architecture
William S. AIlen, Lecturer in architecture
Jeane Allyn, architecture secretary
Robert A. Benson, associate professor of architecture
Harold Binder, lecturer in architecture
Robert D. Champlin, associate professor of architecture
Patrick Corcoran, assistant professor of architecture
Edward Delbridge, architecture secretary
Russell Dixon, lecturer in architecture
Leonard Else, assistant professor of architecture
Harvey Ferrero, lecturer in architecture
James J. Glachino, lecturer in architecture
Paul Goldsmith, lecturer in architecture
Richard Hall, lecturer in architecture
Donna Harris, architecture secretary
Morris Jackson, lecturer in architecture
Gary Jelin, lecturer in architecture
Gary Kecskes, assistant to the dean, lecturer in architecture
Jean LaMarche, lecturer in architecture
Harold Linton, associate professor of architecture
Kenneth Livingston, assistant to the dean of architecture
Henry Matthews, assistant professor of architecture
Keith Mickelson, lecturer in architecture
W. Thomas Munsell, assistant professor of architecture
Thomas J. Nashlen, assistant professor of architecture
Joseph B. Olivieri, professor of architecture
Robert B. Powell, lecturer in architecture
Thomas Regenbogen, lecturer in architecture
Charles Robinson, lecturer in architecture
Joseph Savin, lecturer in architecture
Roy Strickfaden, lecturer in architecture
Betty-Lee Seydler-Sweatt, lecturer in architecture
Edward Willoughby, lecturer in architecture
�School of Arts and Science
Zaven Margosian, dean of arts and science, chairman and professor of mathematics
Elizabeth C. Ager, lecturer in humanities
Neal Alpiner, lecturer in mathematics
Victor Angelescu, chairman and professor of humanities
Glen Bauer, instructor in mathematics
Charles Craiglow, lecturer in mathematics
Roy Crane, associate professor of physics
Jerry L. Crist, chairman and professor of chemistry
Wilson Daugherty, associate professor of humanities, March 3,1920-January 25,1983
Ashok Deshpande, lecturer in mathematics
Diego Enciso, lecturer in physics
Ruth Favro, lecturer in mathematics
Gary Gabel, lecturer in humanities
�Gary Gearhart, lecturer in humanities
Fay Gifford, assistant professor of chemistry
John Goodenow, associate professor of chemistry
Jerry Gutman, lecturer in humanities
Sonia Henckel, associate professor of mathematics
Gilder Jackson, professor of humanities
Karen Jones, arts and science secretary
Barry Knister, assistant professor of humanities
Thomas Lackey, associate professor of mathematics
Barbara Layman, lecturer in humanities
Esther Littmann, lecturer in humanities
George Mach, professor of chemistry
Richard Majkowski, lecturer in physics
Thomas Masson, associate professor of humanities
Larry McCollister, instructor in mathematics
Lucy Merritt, assistant professor of chemistry
Michael Merscher, assistant professor of mathematics
Daniel Mioduszewski, associate professor of physics
Elaine Mullaly, lecturer in humanities
Karen Murany, instructor in mathematics
Richard Murie, lecturer in chemistry
James Nanny, assistant professor of mathematics
Marilyn Rands, assistant professor of physics
Lillian Rauch, lecturer in humanities
�Gloria Rivkin, assistant professor of mathematics
George Resculet, lecturer in chemistry
Audrey Rudefski, director, engineering communications lab
Ray Schenkel, professor of mathematics
Thomas Schneider, lecturer in mathematics
June 23, 1921-January 26, 1983
Donald Selms, lecturer in mathematics
Katie Stanley, arts and science secretary
John Stock, assistant professor of mathematics
Frances Vallely, instructor in mathematics
Gary Vance, lecturer in mathematics
Carl Varadian, lecturer in humanities
Judith Weiner, lecturer in humanities
�School for Associate Studies
Richard E. Michel, dean and chairman of school (or associate studies, chairman
and professor of physics
John R. Bacon, lecturer in general studies
Jerry G. Beck, lecturer in industrial engineering technology
Arnold Blythe, lecturer in general studies
Bernard A. Carlen, lecturer in industrial engineering technology
Dale U. Chang, lecturer in mechanical engineering technology
Kenneth J. Cook, lecturer in electrical engineering technology
Jerry L. Coval, lecturer in mathematics
Lorraine Dempsey, associate studies secretary
Leonard A. Forrest, lecturer in physics
Eugene G. Gagnon, lecturer in mathematics
David D. Horchler, lecturer in electrical engineering technology
Robert D. Jupp, lecturer in mechanical engineering technology
George Kane, lecturer engineering technology
Stanley Korenkiewicz, lecturer in electrical engineering technology
assistant to the dean for associate studies
Edward Mielock
Phillip V. Mohan, lecturer in physics
Louis S. Noetzel, lecturer in construction engineering technology
Sylvester Noetzel, lecturer in construction engineering technology
James P. Nelta, lecturer in physics
Raymond P. Sands, lecturer in general studies
Gerald D. Skellenger, lecturer in mechanical engineering technology
Louanne R. Snyder, associate studies secretary
Manuel Spinner, lecturer in industrial engineering technology
William L. Toth, lecturer in electrical engineering technology
�School of Engineering
�Stephen R. Davis, dean of engineering, professor of mechanical engineering
James Birdsey, assistant to the dean of engineering
George Bowden, chairman and professor of construction engineering
Wayne M. Brehob, chairman and professor of mechanical engineering
Stephen Carlson, assistant professor of mechanical engineering
Clarence G. Chambers, Jr., associate professor of mechanical engineering
Robert D. Chute, associate professor of mechanical engineering
Patty Cogan, secretary to the dean
John Connors, lecturer in mechanical engineering
R. James Diegel, professor of construction engineering
Thomas Dragon, lecturer in electrical engineering
Florian Dutke, student assistant
Kenneth J. Farquharson, professor of mechanical engineering
Stephen R. Davis, dean of engineering, professor of mechanical engineering
James Birdsey, assistant to the dean of engineering
George Bowden, chairman and professor of construction engineering
Wayne M. Brehob, chairman and professor of mechanical engineering
Stephen Carlson, assistant professor of mechanical engineering
Clarence G. Chambers, Jr. , assistant professor of mechanical engineering
Robert D. Chute, associate professor of mechanical engineering
Patty Cogan, secretary to the dean
John Connors, lecturer in mechanical engineering
R. James Diegel, professor of construction engineering
Thomas Dragon, lecturer in electrical engineering
Florian Dutke, student assistant
Kenneth J. Farquharson, professor of mechanical engineering
�H. Robert Farrah, assistant professor of electrical engineering
lecturer in mechanical engineering
John Flood, lecturer in electrical engineering
Joyce Frederick, evening engineering secretary
Douglas R. Hamburg, lecturer in electrical engineering
Robert D. Hatch, associate professor of electrical engineering
Craig J. Hoff, assistant professor of mechanical engineering
David Hubbs, assistant professor of mechanical engineering
Keith Kesling, assistant professor of mechanical engineering
Lee Koshishian, mechanical engineering lab technician
Lucy King, assistant professor of mechanical engineering
Frank Koltuniak, lecturer in mechanical engineering
Linda Lauer, engineering secretary
Sue Long, lab assistant-computer graphics
Richard R. Lundstrom, associate professor of mechanical engineering
Richard S. Maslowski, dean, chairman and professor of electrical engineering
Bernard Merritt, assistant professor of mechanical engineering
Nalla Mikhaell, assistant professor of electrical engineering
Thomas Mullin, lecturer in mechanical engineering
Priyaranjan Prasad, lecturer in mechanical engineering
Gayle Schaeff, engineering secretary
George Schneider, assistant professor of mechanical engineering
Walter Schoneck, mechanical engineering lab technician
Vastupal B. Shah, lecturer in mechanical engineering
Patricia M. Shamamy, assistant professor of mechanical engineering
James Sneyd, assistant professor of mechanical engineering
Donald Tappan, assistant professor of mechanical and construction engineering
Frank Waksmundzki, lecturer in mechanical engineering
Robert Weil, lecturer in electrical engineering
Donald E. Wente, lecturer in mechanical engineering
�School of Management
Louis W. Petro, dean of management
CIeophas M. Buck, assistant to the dean, professor of management
Jennie Casai, management secretary
Gregory R. Cheek, assistant professor of management
Louis A. DeGennaro, associate professor of management
James Fraser, lecturer in management
Douglass Koch, assistant professor of management
Leland A. Lahr, professor of management, lecturer in arts and science
Ernest L. Maier, professor of management
James P. Powers, lecturer in management
Edward M. Spencer, professor of management
Thomas P. Stevens, lecturer in management
Michael Sweeney, assistant professor of management
Monica Tombers, management secretary
Funny You Should Ask
Every 8:00 a.m., any Monday approximately 1000 students labor In vain
to find one of these.
�85% of the students who bought these books in September...
. . . had to buy these books after the final.
�Visine sales soar as
L.l.T. students read
1355,226 words.
Astronomical candy
sales just go to show
that L.l.T. students
live the sweet life.
��Ali M. Abdallih, EE. ME
Sarmad Z. Abdul-Nour, CE
Walid N. Abou-Hamdan,CE
Thomas A. Adamowski
Thomas L. Adams. BA
Yasar Z. Ajlouni, ME
Ahmad K. AI-Amin, CE
Mustafa K. Al-Amin
Thaier K. AIkatib, EE
Khalid A. AI-Suhail
Loay H. AlwakeeI
Bradford C. Anderson
Carolyn R. Andrek
Dean H. Andreozzi, BA
Donald J. Andreski. BAr
Ephraim C. Anyiah. BA
Nikolaos Aravas, EE
Sally J. Armstrong. ME
Robert Q. Arnold, Ma
Thomas G. Arnold, CE
Vince J. Austin,
Barbara A. Aylesworth,
Katayoun Azadrad,
Mark C. Azzaretti
Donald D. Babicz
Jonathan B. Bada
Brian C. Bagnick
Roy G. Baker
Steven R. Banks,
David L. Baremen
Timothy A. Barlow
Carla R. Barner
Loten T. Baskin
Thomas N. Bathurst
Tuan A. Be
clark a. Beach
Alan P. Beamish
Herman J. Beneke
Brian K. Bennett
Michael A. Berardi
Kevin L. Biddison
Mark D. Bischak
Joseph A. Blackmon
Gordon L. Blake
Cynthia S. Blank
Stephen Blossfeld
Glen M. Bobnick
�Jeffrey P. Boes, Ar
Zoran Bogunovic, EE
Pierre J. Borkhoche, ME
Mark P. Bown, ET
Kenneth W. Brauning, ME
Gregory L. Brest, Ma
Bruce J. Brickman, Ar
Daniel J. Brinker, ME
Richard L. Brownlee, ME
Francis J. Bruck, EE
David W. Buchanan, ME
Ronald L. Buchbolz, EE
James A. Buggs, EE
Daniel P. Burns, BA
Frederick F. Butters, Ar
Maria M. Caicedo, BA
John H. Callaghan. Ma
Christopher J. Callow, DP
Louis J. Cardinale, IM
John R. Carley, Ar
Charles K. Carlson, Ar
Joseph F. Carnaghi, ME
Christopher A. Carnago, ME
Christina A. Casai, BA
�Frank N. Casali, M E
Colleen M. Cavanagh, BA
Wendy A. Chamberlin, Ar
Rangsan Chanyawatanakul, Ar
Julianne E. Chard, Ar
M. Samer Chebib, ME
Gregory S. Ches, ME
Tony C. Chung, Ar
Heather J. Chin, EE
Richard L. Chorazyczewski, EE
Phillip A. Church, BA
Robert J. Ciarelli,ME
Robert E. Ciborowski, ME
Dean M. Cichocki, ME
Michael J. Cislo, BAr
Randal N. Cizek, BAr
Theresa Clark, EE
Richard L. Clements, Ar
Philip A. Colarusso, Ar
Edwin L. Coles, BA
David R. Colwander, Ar
Sandra K. Connelly, ME
Joseph 0. Connolly. BA
Bryan E. Connor, ME
Robert A. Cooley, BA
Paul Corby, ME
Marie G. Covert, Ch
Barrie G. Craft, ME
William T. Crawford
John P. Crossley, Ar
Claudia L. Cruz, Ar
Mark L. Cryderman, Ar
Danette F. Czajkowski, Ar
Glenn W. Czupinski, ME
Danny D. DaDabbo, Ma
Christopher J. Daggy, CE
Robert A. Dagher, EE
Steven M. Dailey, ME
Charles E. Davis, III, ET
Benjamin G. Dawson, Ar
Paul A. Deckert, EE
James A. DeGroot, ME
Gerald M. Deisinger, EE
James T. DeLage, BA
Tyson M. Delandsheer, ME
Cynthia K. Delaney, BA
Dean A. DeLorme, CE
Susan F. DeMent, Ar
Gregg R. Denholm, ME
Dann E. Derda, ME
Neiro De Rubeis, Ar
Kimberly A. DeRusha
Steven M. Detloff
Joseph A. Dfouny
Ali M. Dib
Jenny M. Dickow
Mauro R. DiFazio, BA
John A. DiGasbarro, ME
Frank T. Di Ponie, CE
James M. Dominick
Mark B. Drane, Ar
Ckrista E. Draughn, Ma
Janes B. Dulgerian, EE
Florian F. Dutke
Edwin S. Dyjak, DP
Bruca A. Dziadzio, ME
Ivars U. Dzirnis, BAr
Gregory F. Eastman, Ar
Jeffrey W. Edall, Ma
Souheil A. Eid, CE
Fawzi M. El Assi, ME
Bachir A. El Baba
�Basel Elchommali, ME
Ali M. Eldirani. ME
Ali H. El-Hajj, CE
Omar A. EI-Kheir, CE
Russell J. Emery, CE
Susan L. Erkfritz, BA
Roberto M. Estupigan, ME
Edward A. Etchen, BAr
Michael E. Eustice
MichaeI W. Evans, BAr
Rami W. Farah, CE
Bassem M. Farhat, Ma
Kiyoumarce Faridian, ME
Robert J. Farley, BAr
Albert A. Ferrari, BA
George Fisher, ME
Kim R. Fodor, MT
Kurt R. Fogelsonger, Ar
Athony S. Fortin, ME
James M. Foss, BA
Kenneth E. Fraley, ME
Kathleen Bauer Franklin, Ar
Andrew J. Freeburn, EE
Eric D. Frevik, ME
James G. Friedline, EE
Thomas H. Fries, Ma
Gregory A. Fruehe, IM
Piero F. Gabucci, Ar
Michael L. Gagnon, CE
Gilbert Gallego, CE
Howard I. Garon, ME
Denise M. Gates, ME
John A. Gazley, Jr., BA
Gordon Gee, ME
Daniel J. Gellings, Ar
Kenneth C. Gentner. ME
Christopher A. Gerardy, ME
Ali A. Ghoul, BT
Christopher G. Gibbons, EE
Steven J. Gibbs, BA
Jeffrey J. Gielniak, Ar
Allen C. Gilbert, ET
John R. Gillan, ME
Gay L. Gillesby, IM
Ken W. Gilson, Ar
Michael A. Giovanni, Ar
Michael S. GIicker, Ar
Douglas J. Goetz, EE
�David M. Goff, ME
Robert M. Goffeney, BA
Robert S. Golembieski, iM
Mary J. Golip, BA
Daniel A. Golles, ME
Alan P. Golota, IM
Douglas P. Gonzales, BAr
Barbara E. Gonzalez, BA
David A. Grabowski, ME
James C. Grech, EE
Pamela M. Green, BA
Thomas E. Green, BA
Brian K. Gregorich, Ar
Michael C. Gris, Ma
Ronald M. Grobbel, EE
Joanne K. Grubaugh, EE
Glenn P. Gula, BA
Joseph W. Gulawsky, BA
Kevin A. Gustafson, ME
Jihad Habbouche, ME
David M. Haberek, Ma
Nabil A. Hachem, EE
Radwan T. Haga, EE
Michael W. Hagen, CE
�Patrick M. Haire, CE
Mark E. Hammond, EE
Jihad M. Hammoud, CE
Anna M. Hanninen, DP
Robert E. Hannon, BA
Charles E. Harland, ME
Paul R. Harloff, Ar
Marilyn R. Harmon, Ma
Charles C. Haskin, BA
Brenda E. Hauer, CE
David R. Hayes. Ar, CE
Raymond T. Hays, ME
Robert E. Head, Ar
Ronald J. Heck, ET
Karyl A. Heiden, Ma
Sally J. Heinicke, BA
Ronald A. Heinrich, EE
Dennis H. Heling, ME
Charles G. Hellebuyck, EE
David C. Hellman, ME
Kevin E. Hellman, Ar
David H. Henning, MT
Steven L. Henri, Ar
Joerg P. Hensel, BAr
�Thomas R. Herbel
Douglas G. Heuer
Robert W. Hicki, BA
Ali A. Hijazi, CE
Suzanne M. Hinckley, Ma
Nancy J. Hodges, BA
James R. Hoffman, Ar
Terry C. Hoffman, ME
Glenn H. Hoffrichter, Ar
Richard H. Hogan, DP
John E. Holappa, BA
Theresa M. Holzhauer, Ar
Tracy L. Honeycutt, BAr
Timothy J. Horan, ME
Jay E. Houston, ME
Robert L. Hughes, EE
William E. Hughes,
Lawrence S. Hulett, MT
Patrick C. Hurley, EE
Brian V. Hurttienne, BAr
Stephen J. Hysick, ET
Deborah L. lannaci, ME
James M. Irwin
Janis L. Jagielky, BA
�Sunday A. Jaiyesimi, CE
Walter P. Jakiela, ET
Sandy C. James, EE
Azar D. Jamnejad, Ar
Robert L. Janisse, EE
John D. Jankens, EE
Michael T. Jarman, Ar
Dale C. Jerome, Ar
Rosanne M. John, ET
Robert A. Johncox, EE
Dane A. Johnson, BAr
Kelvin Johnson. EE,
Thomas J. Johnson, ME
Kenneth D. Johnston, CE
Gregory J. Joseph, IM
Paul E. Juckno, BA
Gregory M. Jungwirth, EE
Saad K. Kakish, ME
Kyung-Pil Kang, IA, BAr
Florence S. Kanicki, BA
Mark D. Kapsa, EE
Mustapha K. Karaki, EE
Sami E. Karam, EE
David S. Karasiewicz, ME
�John R. Karns, EE
Ali Kashanpour, CE
Stephen E. Kastner, ME
Paulette M. Katikos, BA
John T. Kavanagh, ME
Thomas Kees, EE
Michael K. Kernan, Ar
Matthew R. Kevnick, ME
Ali A. Khalife, ME
Richard W. Kinnell, BAr
Kerry F. Kirsch, ME
Carol A. Kocan, Ch
Kenneth H. Kohindorfer, ME
Keivan Koleini, Ar
Konstandinos G. Kondoleon, lA
Mark B. Koppelo, Ar
George P. Korenic, Jr.. ET
David R. Koscielniak, EE, Ma
Lawrence J. Kosnik, IM
Bradley J. Koster, Ar
Michael A. Kotlarczyk, EE
Bruce J. Kresslein
Terry L. Krupp, EE
Louis L. Kulcsar, EE
�Stephen A. Kwasnik, Ar
Michael P. Kwiatkowski, ME
Gregory L. Lahr, BA
David A. Lang, EE
Deborah E. Larkins, BA
Richard J. Larys, EE
Edward M. Lash, BAr
Diane I. Lauzon, CE
Victor R. Law, CE
Stephen D. Lazarus, ME
Robert M. Lechkun, ME
James J. Leduc, EE
Raymond P. Leduc, CE
Robert A. Lelli. Jr., BT
Mark K. Lemay, CE
John W. Lemmer, Ar
Patricia A. Leonard, IA
Samuel J. Leve, II, EE
Joseph M. Lewanbowski, EE
Rachel Lewkowicz, Ar
James P. Lezotte, ME
Juliana C. LeZotte, BA
Stephen C. Li, Ar
Ann M. Liska, DP
�Edmund J. Littlefield, Jr., IM
Keith A. Logsdon, Ar
Robert C. Lorey, ME
Kathleen M. Loughlin, BA
Donna M. Lozon, BA
David A. Mac, CE
Elias P. Madi, Ar
Emmanuel 0. Maduka, BA
V. Jean Maier, Hu
Saadeddine Majzoub, CE
Cheryl L. Malinas, BA
Donald L. Malinowski, ME
Alan J. Manduzzi, ME
Evagelos Maniadakis, EE
Linda C. Manley, BA
Menelaos G. Manolis, BAr
Dwayne A. Marchio, ME
Ray G. Marantette, BAr
Kenneth R. Martek, EE
Brian J. Martel, EE
Frank A. Martin
Timothy S. Martin, ME
James S. Masalskis, CE
David G. Masko, BAr
�Enzo Mastroianni, CE
Carl A. Matisse, CE
Guy J. Mattiacci, BT
John Mayer, ET
Amy A. McBride, ME
Mary A. McDevitt, BAr
William D. McDonough, Ma
David S. McGrath, Ar
James T. McGuire, Hu
Richard J. McLaren, CE
John M. McLaughlin, ME
Mark E. McMackin, ME
James E. McMuldroch, CE
Paul J. McNulty, Ch
John P. McRoberts, CE
John A. McSorley, EE
Judith Mecham, EE
AnnMarie Meenahan, Ar
Issam H. Meheidli, Ma
David K. Meissner
Randy A. Meloche, ME
Timothy B. Melvin, Ar
Jamss W. Mero, ME
Bruco M. Meyers, Ar
�Karim E. Michael, ET
Judy A. Middel, BA
David L. Mielock, Jr., BAr
Thaier Y. Mikho, EE
Paula J. Mikolajczak, Ar
Raymond M. Mikrut, CE
Carla D. Miller, ME
Joseph A. Miller, Ar
Joseph J. Miller, CE
Linda C. Miller, ME
Mitchell E. Miller, Ar
Richard D. Mills, CE
Gregory L. Minard, ET
Luigi Minna, ME
Deirdre A. Mintus, Ar
Michael P. Miotto, EE
Peter Miskech, ME
Wayne E. Mitan, EE
Karen J. Mitchell, CE
Paul G. Moceri, ET
Robert p. Molicky, Ar
John S. Mollick, EE
Jeffrey p. Molner, EE
Michelle P. Montolio, Ma
Marvin R. Moore
Nnaemeka R. Morah
Peter J. Morgan
Paula M. Morin
�Michael A. Morris, BA
Todd W. Moser, EE
Mark T. Mullin, BA
Timothy J. Murad
Michelle A. Murawa, Ma, ME
Robert J. Murray, Ch
Michael W. Murto, ME
Richard A. Musto
Daniel W. Muszynski, Ma
Anatolij Mykolenko, BA
Fadi M. Naddaf, EE
Wllliam E. Nakfoor, EE
Frances R. Neijndorff, BA
Robert A. Neu, Ar
Glenn H. Newport, Ar
Michael P. Nicklowitz, Ar
Robert A. Nicosia, MT
Zolykha Niksimaee, CE
John G. Noetzel, EE
Charles A. Norman, Jr.. Ma
�Leslie F. Nuler, ME
Eugene C. Nwosu, IM
David B. OdiI, Ar
Gary E. Oleszczuk, ME
Anne M. Ording, CE
Lehman A. Orluck, EE
Carl J. Ostoin, EE
Frank J. Owczarek, EE
Victoria F. Owen, BA
David W. Pacifico, BAr
Emmanuel B. Palermo, ET. BA
Theodore M. Palmer, EE
James J. Parker, EE
William G. Parran, ME
Cheryl C. Patchett, Ch
Cary R. Patten, EE
Lawrence W. Patterson, BAr
Sherry L. Pearse, Ma
Brian E. Penney, ET
Ramona C. Penzien, BA
Raymond J. Perkins, EE
Gary Peters, Ar
Lori T. Peters, BA
Algis A. Petrulis, ME
�Theresa Piepszak, BA
Vittorio J. Pierfelice, EE
Claudio L. Pieri, ME
Robert S. Pietila, Ar
Gary A. Pitt, ME
Edward P. Plaza, ME
Robert S. Plue, ME
Gerald P. Pokriefka, CE
Raymond E. Polovich, Ch
Donald J. Preston, ET
Franklin L. Price, Ar
George S. Price, CE
John M. Price, ME
Keith R. Przybylski, ME
Mark S. Puddy, ET
Dominic S. Pupillo, ME
Mark E. Pustelak, BA
Kevin F. Pyant, ME
Brian K. Radlick, ME
Kamran Rafatian, BAr
Ramaswamy Raghunandhan, BA
Charles E. Rassey, BA
Gary S. Rawsky, ME
Franklin M. Ray, BAr
�Kenneth J. Redman, ME
Michael T. Reeves, EE
Alexander A. Reid, EE
David S. Reser, EE
Fouad P. Riachi, CE
Myron C. Rice, EE
Constance D. Riley, BA
Daniel J. Roesner, MT
Henry F. Rogers, ME
Ronald S. Rogers, ET
Greg D. Roller, ME
David E. Rose, BAr
Robert A. Rosinski, IM
Majid Rostami, ME
Allen M. Rubin, BA
Mary Jean Ruhlman, BA
James K. Rundquist, BAr
John A. Rupinski, EE
Michael N. Ruppert, IM
Theresa L. Rusas, BA
Denette Ryan, BA
Abdul-Karim J. Sabra, EE
Randolph Salazar, CE
Jonathon M. Sallows, ME
�Ahmad B. Salti Sweilem, ME
Jonathan L. Sanders, EE
John J. Sarnacki, Ar
John A. Sawdon, Ar
Richard M. Sayles, CE
Antonino S. M. Scavo, Ar
Martin Schall, EE
Karen I. Snell Schickel, BA
Ingo E. Schneider, CE
Kenneth W. Schoel, EE, Ma
Gary A. Schoenberg, BA
Renate M. Schoneck, 6A
Jay A. Schwartz, EE
Janice E. Schweizer, BA
James M. Scott, CE
James M. Seery, EE
Uri Segal, IM
James A. Segedy, Ar
Richard A. Seguin, EE
Gail L. Seidl, BA
Gary L. Seitz, ME
Gary R. Seleski, ET
Alice J. Selewonik, lA
Jihad E. Semaan, EE
�Michael Serdiuk, BAr
Herbert J. Seubert, ME
Sharon G. Sewell, Ch
Parviz Shahab Shahmir, ME
Ali Shamsedean, BA
John C. Shaub, Ma
Jeffrey J. Sheeran, BA
Afshin Shobair, EE
Sharon L. Shockley, IM
Adil A. Siddiqi, CE
William R. Simmons, CE
Phyllis Simopoulos, BA
Randall D. Skeirik, Ar
Joyce Slaughter, Ar
Jihad K. Slim, CE
Stewart W. Slipiec, IM
Jeffrey S. Smith, ME
Mark J. Smith. MT
Michael F. Smith, Ar
William 0. Smith. ME
Donald J. Smoltz, BA
Louanne R. Snyder, BA
Sally S. Snyder. BA
Dale A. Sorensen, EE
�Roger D. Spence, ET
Richard P. Spens, MT
Timothy A. Spitzley, BAr
Robert F. Stacherski, Ar
Keith L. Staley, ME
George J. Stanczuk, ET
Eric N. Stigleman, E
Daniel L. Strait, ME
Thomas W. Straith, EE
Gregory B. Strausser, IM
Michael G. Streiczuk, BA
Joni T. Strickfaden, Ar,IA
Dale A. Studnicka, Ar
Michael R. Sturtevant, CE
Mansoor Suhail, BA
Kelly A. Summerfield, Ar
Paul W. Swayze, lT
Ronald L. Symanski, CE
Michael E. Tabor, BA
Maria L Takemoto, ME
Esmaeil Tasoojy, BAr
Richard Tate, IM
Russell D. Templeton, Ar
Timothy A. Thane, ME
�Melvin V. Thomas, DP
Michael E. Thomas, Ar
Dennis C. Thompson, IM
Marlene R Thompson, EE
Larry 0. Thorn, MT
Paul D. Thwing, Ar
James W. Tindall, ME
Richard D. Tobias, EE
John V. Tocco, CE
Keith T. Todoroff, Ar
William L. Toth, ME
Albert J. Traczynskl, Ch
Tamar Traub, BA
Robert L. Tremonti, BAr
Dominick R. Tringali, Ar
Maria Tsakoff, BA
Victoria L. Turk, Ma
Daye A. Ulman, ME
Joseph C. Umloff, ME
William VanMaele, ME
John M. VanSlembrouck, Ar
Paul J. VanWie, EE
Roger B. Vanderklok, BAr
Arthur J. Varady, Ma
�George P. Vella, MT
Pascal J. Viel Ar
Stuart L. Vinsky, IM
Steven R. Visconti, Ar
Gedas C. Vysniauskas, EE
Roger D. Wade, Ar
Gregg A. Walker, ME
Luke W. Walsh, Ar
William G. Walsh, ME
James M. Webster, Ma
Roberta Weidendorf, BA
Mark K. Weidle, ME
Debra Weisberg, Ar
Anthony N. West, Ma
Arthur F. Westman, ME
Paul D. Whitman, EE
Karen L. Widmar, Ar
Ronald J. Wiegand, EE
Daniel S. Wilcox, ME
John M. Williams, ME
James E. Williamson, BA
Kim J. Wilson, BAr
Mark J. Wilson, Ar
James T. Witman, CE
�Glen G. Wodnicki, ME
Gerald T. Wolford, ME
Mark A. Wolosnyn, EE
Richard D. Worth, MT
Kenneth P. Wozniak, EE
Eric B. Wright, EE
Mark D. Wrona, BA
Gary K. Wuerfel, CE
Edward G. Wyborski, EE
David A. Wyka, EE
Jo Ann Yocom, BA
Georges E. Younes, Ma
Bernadine L. Young, BT
Charles G. Young, BA
Edgar L. Young, EE
Paul T. Young, Ma
Michael S. Youngerman, ME
Brian A. Zabowski, IM
Khaled Zahalan, CE
Robert M. Zak, ME
Mohammad K. Zein-Eddine, CE
George D. Zentz, BA
Mark A. Zielinski, EE
Cynthia G. Zink, BA
Mark Zolna
Ronald M. Zonca
Qamar Z. Zuberi
Andrew T. Zundel
�Commencement
Graduation from college happens only once in a lifetime and symbolic ceremonies of this
sort do possess a certain significance. Commencement 1983 featured 840 graduating
seniors. This was the largest graduating class in LIT's 51-year history.
The day began with a breakfast honoring the seniors. Caps and gowns were donned amid
the heat of the beautiful afternoon. And promptly at 2:30 p.m. the graduates marched into
the Michigan State Fair Coliseum looking to see if any of the thousands of waving hands
belonged to a friend or family member. Shortly thereafter, honorary doctorates were
conferred on John H. Brems, Donald H. McPherson, Joseph Gilbert, and John C. McCabe,
along with the presentation of the alumni achievement award to Lewis C. Veraldi. The
commencement address was delivered by John C. McCabe, President, Chief Executive
Officer, Chief Administrative Officer of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Michigan.
Then came that significant moment — the degrees were conferred and for each graduate
the flinging tassle and cap became the only concern.
�
�Commencement
Address
Remarks presented by John C. McCabe
Dr. Marburger. . . members of the board and
trustees , . . honored guests of Lawrence
Institute . . . graduates. . . ladies and
gentlemen.
I am deeply grateful for the honor bestowed
on me today. Especially so. because of the
opportunity it gives me to join you in
celebrating Lawrence Institute's Golden
Jubilee Anniversary.
I like to think that my career as a
professional manager has embodied L.l.T.'s
motto, "Theory and Practice." In the field of
health care financing, there are many
theories. Some deserve to be forgotten, others
are productive. But all are interesting, and so
is the process of testing them against daily
reality. That's really what management is all
about. If L.I.T. has taught you to blend theory
and practice . . . it has taught you a great
deal.
Commencement speakers have often
frightened graduates by telling them the world
is theirs. If I were to say that, and you had an
opportunity to answer, you would probably
say, who wants it? And, above all, who wants
the job of saving the world from itself?
Some people apparently relish the
challenge.
There's an amusing story about former
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, a man
who was never famous for humility. It seems
that Kissinger attended a Washington dinner
party just after returning from a triumphant
round of shuttle diplomacy in the tense Middle
East. At the dinner, a woman seated near
Kissinger turned to him and said, "Mr.
Secretary, thank you for saving the world.''
Kissinger replied modestly, "You're
welcome."
Now, Lawrence graduates have not been
trained for diplomacy. But over the next fifty
years of your working lives, you will help
" s a v e " the world, or at least improve it, by
working on the solutions to its problems. As
you begin your professional lives, you will feel
certain that once a problem is solved, it is
solved for good, and you can go on to another
challenge.
Rarely is that true. History shows that
inside the solution to every problem lies the
seed of another. As we all know. Secretary
Kissinger's success in the Middle East has
not been lasting.
I was reminded of the relationship between
solutions and new problems on a recent trip to
Egypt where I viewed the Aswan High Dam.
When completed in 1970, this massive project
was seen as the answer to Egypt's need for
electrical power and the irrigation of 2 million
square miles. Indeed, over half a million acres
have been reclaimed from the desert, and
Aswan's 12 turbines will generate 10 billion
kilowatt hours of electricity in a year. I
intentionally use the word "will" because
only half of the turbines are working. But the
high water table behind the dam has proved
harmful to the balance of nature along the
Upper Nile. And the quality of the farmland
along the banks of the Lower Nile is
deteriorating. The dam prevents the annual
flooding which, for thousands of years, has
deposited layers of rich topsoil.
There are other examples, closer to home,
of solutions giving birth to new problems.
After the Great Depression and World War
II, my generation and that of your parents
and grandparents rebuilt the American
economy. That meant everything from
regulating the stock market to ensuring that
retired people would have an adequate income
and medical care. Now we're struggling to
keep Social Security afloat, and figuring out
how to maintain a decent level of benefits in
Medicare, in the face of costs that are now 16
times the estimates made when the program
began.
Forty years ago, we destroyed a fascist
conspiracy to dominate the world. We did it
with superior weapons, including the atom
bomb. Now we're laboring under the financial
burden of a global military role, and at the
same time trying to control and reduce nuclear
weapons, in the face of threats from other
dictatorships.
Pesticides have enabled us to double,
triple, and quadruple food production, but
some have badly degraded the environment in
some areas. Penicillin was a stunning medical
advance . . . but it has given rise to resistant
bacteria more deadly than those we set out
to destroy.
It is your generation that will have to solve
those problems and dozens of others I could
name. The problems don't mean your parents
and I failed. But you are challenged to do
better than we did . . . and perhaps, to
�exercise more foresight. If you don't, it may
mean that we failed to prepare you
adequately. But I don't think that's the case.
One sure thing — and this is critical —
whatever field you enter, you will be dealing
with limited resources. The days when we
Americans fantasized about such things as
three cars in every garage . . . of limitless
resources, of wells that would never run dry,
figuratively speaking . . . are over.
Medical care Is a prime example of what
I'm talking about. It was reported recently
that, thanks to improvements In health care,
the average life expectancy in America has
risen from 73 to 74 years. That's good news
for those of us who enjoy life. But the average
Medicare bill In Michigan every year for each
elderly or disabled member is almost 2,500
dollars. An additional year of longevity adds
that much more to the health bill we pay
through taxes or supplemental insurance
programs. Few people realize that fully a
quarter of the federal budget, 218 billion
dollars a year, is spent on people over 65 —
and in forty years, that will grow to half the
budget.
We can only hope that development in
technology and computer science will enable
us to stretch our resources further than ever
before . . . just as, earlier in this century, the
mechanization of agriculture allowed us to
produce more food on fewer acres with fewer
workers.
In all of this, your position as Lawrence
graduates is especially interesting. You are
graduating from a scientific and technical
Institution at a time when some of the major
problems facing us are scientific and
technical. I've mentioned a few of them.
But how will you apply the skills and
knowledge you've acquired to the more
mundane problems of every day existence . . .
and at the same time, make a living?
I'd like to suggest some answers from my
perspective as a businessman deeply involved
in health care — a field that is highly
scientific, but involves the most profound
questions of human values and use
of resources.
You may be a bit surprised that there are,
in the health care field, applications for every
discipline embodied in L.l.T. majors.
Let's review them briefly, starting with the
School of Management. If your major was
accounting or finance, business systems, or
human resources, you should be aware that
good management is one of the most urgent
needs in health care today. Hospitals used to
be notorious for poor or mediocre management, which showed up in duplication of
services, ill-advised procurement practices,
poor control of supplies, and Inefficient use of
personnel. All of this results in higher and
higher costs. A tremendous money squeeze Is
now forcing all hospitals to revamp
management practices for greater efficiency.
With good management and good design, a
hospital can deliver excellent care and not go
broke doing it.
But hospitals are not the only ones needing
your skills. There's an explosion of health
maintenance organizations, or HMO's, which
deliver care for a predetermined amount of
money per member. They have to be efficient,
or they go bankrupt. We own and operate
seven HMO's around the state, and have
found that the secret is good management,
both business and medical.
And not only hospitals, or clinics or HMO's.
A single physician's practice can have the
cash flow of a small industrial complex.
Computerization of the office Is just one aspect
of this growing field. The purchase of costly
diagnostic equipment and other supplies Is
another, and so is the management of the
office complex — personnel schedules,
communications, and so on — especially in
group practices.
If you majored in manufacturing, you may
be concerned about the decline of our heavy
industries. But one of the healthiest sectors of
the economy today is the manufacture of
precision medical instruments and high technology instrumentation. For proof, we
need only look to wall street where the stocks
of such companies are highly favored by
investors.
Marketing provides one of the fastest
career tracks In health care these days, a fact
which surprises many people. The usual
assumption is that there's nothing to sell
because people either need health care or they
don't. But where and when they get it, from
whom, and in what setting, and at what price,
are all Increasingly the subject of competition.
Hospitals establish satellite clinics. Doctors
organize group practices and compete with
hospitals. HMO's compete with both hospitals
and independent physicians. Blue Cross and
Blue Shield compete with over 340 other
companies selling health coverage in
Michigan.
Competition is a fact of life In the health
field. A positive byproduct Is the constant
striving for Improvement of performance at all
levels.
If you doubt it, I would refer you again to
the Wall Street Journal which reported that
some doctors are attending marketing
seminars and paying consultants as much as
$6,500 to study their practices and make
recommendations.
To build their practices, those doctors are
sending flowers to patients who refer others to
them, holding free jogging clinics, setting up
early morning, evening, and Saturday hours,
and even . . . believe it or not. . . seeing
patients on time.
Another article told of hospitals trying to
lure patients with steak and champagne
dinners.
How about engineering? The modern
operating room and even the modern doctor's
office is a showroom of mechanical and
electrical engineering skills applied to the
alleviation of suffering. Developments in
diagnostic technology are occurring daily.
In very few years, we've gone from plain
X-rays to CAT scans to Positron Emission
Transaxial Tomography, and the latest. . .
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Scanners.
The artificial heart that kept Dr. Barney
Clark alive was a triumph of engineering
which even now is being refined and
developed further.
The only question is whether we can afford
the miracles you engineers will design for us
in the future.
Construction engineers have a major
responsibility In health care. All modern
medicine is practiced In buildings which,
along with salaries, are a major component of
health care costs. Any medical facility that is
built produces costs. If a hospital or clinic or
medical arts building Is poorly designed and
built, a major investment either falls or is
burdened with unacceptable costs. Good
materials, quality workmanship, cost-effective
construction work — all contribute to more
moderate health care costs. And cost-saving
innovations are as badly needed in medical
construction today as in residential.
As for architecture — and I know yours Is
the biggest School of Architecture In the
country — many of today's hospitals are still
basically 19th century institutions of massive
size, long halls and small rooms. Sticking a
three-by-four atrium with a few tulips off the
lobby doesn't change that. Not only are such
hospitals impersonal. they are often Inefficient.
They are like airports; wherever you are is a
long walk from where you want to be.
The medical profession is coming more and
more to believe that a patient's mental and
�emotional state have a great deal to do with his
or her physical well-being. The hospital of the
future will have to incorporate this understanding in designs that uplift and encourage
. . . while accommodating new technology,
being energy-efficient, and helping employees
do their jobs. A challenging order, indeed.
If you were an arts and science student
majoring in chemistry, physics, math, or
computer science, you are probably already
aware that your disciplines are at the heart of
health care science. The bio-sciences are
fundamentally chemical and physical. It is in
these areas that the great discoveries will
come, almost certainly the cure or cures for
cancer. Mathematics is the language of both
chemistry and physics. And math makes
possible computer applications which have
become indispensable in all the basic
sciences.
Finally, the three of you graduating with a
degree in humanities may feel a bit displaced
in a high-tech institution and a world
dominated by technology.
Such is not the case. You studied political
science, communications, and psychology. All
scientific advance depends on, and flows from
the health of those disciplines in our society.
In nations where they are dominated by the
state, scientific and technical progress lags
badly. The Russians put people in space, but
only last year introduced the electric toaster to
consumers. Even in military applications
where they concentrate their money and
talent, they must steal our electronic
technology to develop modern weapon
systems.
In health care, those of you in humanities
will have the task of helping the rest of us
answer questions the scientists and
accountants and engineers aren't equipped to
deal with professionally. Ethical and moral
questions, such as the right of a terminally ill
person to die without heroic medical intervention. Political questions, like the relation of
the government to the private sector in the
financing of health care. Social and economic
questions, like whether health care should be
rationed, as it is in some countries today, or
whether all who need it should have it,
regardless of cost.
And, of course, whatever I have said about
the relevance of your particular discipline to
health care would apply as well to many other
fields. You certainly need not worry about
getting your careers started. Lawrence
Institute of Technology graduates will be
snapped up quickly by employers eager for
the skills you've acquired here.
In that, you are fortunate and privileged.
Of course, there are still those problems to
solve . . . the ones I mentioned at the onset
that you are inheriting from another
generation. I would restate the plea I've tried
to weave throughout my talk — be sensitive to
the limits of resources and their intelligent,
efficient use, and as an extension of that, be
well aware of their cost.
No one can foresee what you face in life
during your professional careers, but keep in
mind something that John Gardner, former
Secretary of HEW said, "You will find
tremendous opportunities brilliantly disguised
as insoluble problems."
I am absolutely confident that you will help
solve many problems . . .
. . . but equally confident that you will
leave just as many new ones to the next
generation graduating from Lawrence in the
year two thousand five.
Thank you very much.
�Founder's Day
��Open House 1983
��Index
Key to degree abbreviations
Key to activity abbreviations
Ar
BAr
BA
BT
CE
Ch
CT
DP
EE
ET
Hu
lA
IIVI
IT
Ma
MT
Phy
ABS
ACI
ACS
ACSA
Architecture
Bachelor of Architecture
Business Administration
Construction Engineering Technology
Construction Engineering
Chemistry
Chemical Technology
Data Processing
Electrical Engineering
Electrical Engineering Technology
Humanities
Interior Architecture
Industrial Management
Industrial Engineering Technology
Mathematics (and Computer Science)
Mechanical Engineering Technology
Physics
Association of Black Students
American Concrete Institute
American Chemical Society
Association of Collegiate Schools of
Architecture
Association of General Contractors
AGC
American Institute of Industrial
AIIE
Engineers
American Marketing Association
AMA
American Production Inventory
APICS
Control Society
American Society of Civil Engineers
ASCE
ASME
American Society of Mechanical
Engineers
African Student Organization
ASO
ASP
Alpha Sigma Phi
American Society for Personnel
ASPA
Administration
American Society for Training and
ASTD
Development
Chi Omega Rho
COR
DTS
Delta Tau Sigma
EKN
Eta Kappa Nu
Engineering Society of Detroit
ESQ
IEEE
Institute of Electrical and Electronic
Engineers
IEEE-CS Institute of Electrical and Electronic
Engineers - Computer Society
Interfraternal Council
IPC
Industrial Management Society
IMS
Lawrence Christian Fellowship
LCF
LIT
Lambda lota Tau
Michigan Solar Energy Association
MSEA
MSPE
Michigan Society of Professional
Engineers
National Society of Professional
NSPE
Engineers
NAA
National Association of Accountants
Organization of Arab Students
OAS
Phi Kappa Upsilon
PKU
PTS
Pi Tau Sigma
SAE
Society of Automotive Engineers
SC/AIA Student Chapter/American Institute
of Architects
Students in Free Enterprise
SIFE
Society of Manufacturing Engineers
SME
SP
Sigma Pi
Sigma Phi Epsilon
SPE
Society of Physics Students
SPS
SWE
Society of Women Engineers
TBP
Tau Beta Pi
Tau lota
�Abdallah, A.
Abdul-Nour, S.
Abou-Hamdan, W.
Adamowski, T.
Adams, T.
Ajlouni, Y.
Al-Amin, A.
Al-Amin, M.
Alkatib, T.; EE, IEEE{2)
Al-Suhail, K.; ME
Alwakeel, L.; CE
Anderson, B.; EE, Ma, EKN(1), IEEE(1)
IEEE-CS(1)
Andrek, C.
Andreozzi, D.; 6A
Andreski, D.; BAr
Anyiah, E.; BA, AS0(2)treas.
Aravas, N.; EE
Armstrong, S.; ME, ESD, ASME, BESA
Arnold, R.; Ma, SME(1), Intra, bwlng.(l)
Arnold, T.; CE
Austin, v.; ME
Aylesworth, B.; ME, SWE(2)sec.
Azadrad, K.; Ma
Azzaretti, M.
Babicz, D.
Bada, J.
Bagnicz, B.; Ar, SC/AIA(1)
Baker, R.; BAr
Banks, S.; Ar, SC/AIA(4)
Bareman, D.; Ar
Barlow, T.
Barner, C.
Baskin, L.; ME, ASME(4)
Bathurst, T.; lA
Be, T.; EE
Beach, C.
Beamish, A.: EE
Beneke, H.; Ar
Bennett, B.; BA, IMS(1)
Berardi, M.; ME, MSPE(1)
Biddison, K.; Ar, SC/AIA(2)
Bischak, M.; Ar
Blacha, J. : BA
Blackmon, D.; IM
Blake, G.; EE, Dean's List
Blank, C.
Blossfeld, S.
Bobnick, G.
Boes, J.
Bogunovic, Z.
Borkhoche, P.; ME
Bown, M.; ET
Brauning, K.; ME
Brest, G.; Ma
Brickman, B.: Ar
Brinker, D.
Brownlee, R.: ME
Bruck, F.; EE, IEEE(1), NSPE(1)
Buchanan, D.
Buchholz, R.: EE
Buggs, J.
Burns, D.; BA
Butters, F.; Ar
Caicedo, M.: BA
Callaghan, J. ; Ma
Callow, C.
Cardinale, L.
Carley, J. : A r
Carlson, C.
Carnaghi, J. ; ME
Carnago, C.
Casai, C.
Casali, F.
Cavanagh, C.
Chamberlin, W.: Ar
Chanyawatanakul, R.; Ar
Chard, J. . ; Ar
Chebib, M.; ME
Ches, G.; ME, ASME(1), Golf Team(4)
Cheung, T.; Ar, SC/AIA(1), Dean's List
Chin, H.; EE
Chorazyczewski, R..
Church, P.; BA, SME(1), Dean's List
Ciarelli, R.
Ciborowski, R.
Cichocki, D.
Cislo, M.
Cizek, R.; BAr
Clark, T.
Clements, R.; Ar
Colarusso, P.
Coles, E.; BA
Colwander, D.: Ar
Connelly, S.: ME
Connolly, J. ; BA
Connor, B.
Cooley, R.: BA
Corby, P.
Covert, M.; Cfi, ACS(4)pres.(2), LIT(2)
Craft, B.; ME, ASME(2), MSPE(1)
Crawford, W.; EE, IEEE(1), lEEE-CS(l)
Crossley, J. : Ar
Cruz, C. ; Ar, SC/AIA(3), TBP(2)
Cryderman, M.: Ar
Czajkowski, D.; Ar, SC/AIA
Czupinski, G.; ME, ESD, ASME, NSPE, TBP
DaDabbo, D.; Ma, Dean's List
Daggy, C.
Dagher, R.; EE
Dailey, S.: ME
Davis, C.
Dawson, B.; Ar
Deckert, P.
DeGroot, J. ; ME, SAE, ASME, TBP
Deisinger, G.: EE, IEEE(1), Intra.pool(2)
DeLage, J. ; BA
DeLandsheer, T.: ME
Delaney, C.
DeLorme, D.: CE, ASCE(2)
DeMent, S.: Ar
Denholm, G.: BA
Derda, D.; ME, MSPE, TBP
DeRubeis, N.: Ar
DeRusha, K.
Detloff, S.
Dfouny, J. ; CE
Dib, A.; CE, ASCE(1), ESD(2)
Dickow, J. ; Ar, SC/AIA(1)jr. rep.
Di Fazio, M.: BA, APICS(I)
DiGasbarro, J.
DiPonio, F.; CE
Dominick, J. : Ar
Drane, M.; Ar
Draughn, C.
Dulgerian, J. : EE
Dutke, F.
Djyak, E.: DP
Dziadzio, B.: ME
Dzirnis, I. ; BAr
Eastman, G.; Ar, SC/AIA(1)
Edall, J. ; Ma
Eid, S.; CE
El Assi, F.; Me
El Baba, B.; EE
Elchommali, B.; ME
Eldirani, A.: ME
El-Hajj, A.; CE
El-Kheir, 0.: CE
�Emery, R.
Erkfritz, S.; BA, Dean's List
Estupigan, R.; ME
Etchen, E.: BAr
Eustice, M.; CE, ASCE(2)
Evans, M.; BA
Farah, R.; CE
Farhat, B.; Ma
Faridian, K.: ME
Farley, R.; BAr
Ferrari, A.
Fisher, G.; ME, SAE(3), SME(1)
Fodor, K.; MT
Fogelsonger, K.; Ar
Fortin, A., ME
Foss, J. ; BA
Fraley, K.; ME, ASME(3)
Franklin, K.; Ar
Freeburn, A.
Frevik, E.
Friedline, J.; EE
Frier, T.; Ma
Fruehe, G.; IM
Gabucci, P.; Ar
Gagnon, M.: CE
Gallego, G.; CE
Garon, H.; ME, TBP
Gates, D.; ME, ASME(3)
Gazley, J. ; BA, Intra. ftbl.(4), lntra.bsbl.(5)
Gee, G.
Gellings, D.: Ar
Gentner, K.; ME, TBP(4)
Gerardy, C.
Ghoul, A.: BT
Gibbons, C.
Gibbs, S.: BA
Gielniak, J . ; Ar
Gilbert, A.; ET
Gillan, J.
Gillesby, G.
Gilson, K.; Ar
Giovanni, M.: Ar
Glicker, M.
Goetz, D.; EE, IEEE(2)
Goff, D.; ME, SME{1), PTS(1)
Goffeney, R.
Golembieski, R.: IM
Golip, M.: BA
Golles, D.; ME, Intra, ftbl.(3), Dean's List
Golota, A.: IM
Gonzales, D.; BAr
Gonzalez, B.
Grabowski, D.; ME, SME{1), ASME(1)
Grech, J. ; EE
Green, P.: BA
Green, T.; BA
Gregorich, B.: Ar
Gris, M.
Grobbel, R.; EE, IEEE(3)pres., IEEE-CS(2)
Grubaugh, J. ; EE, IEEE(2)
Gula, G.; BA, Ski Club(1)
Gulawsky, J. ; BA
Gustafson, K.; ME
Habbouche, J. : ME
Haberek, D.: Ma
Hachem, N.; EE, IEEE(2), TBP(1)
Hage, R.: EE
Hagen, M.; CE, ASCE(2), Intra. sftbl.(2)
Haire, P.; Ce, ASCE(1)
Hammond, M.; EE
Hammoud, J. ; CE
Hanninen, A.; DP, Tl
Hannon, R.; BA
Harland, C.
Harloff, P.; Ar
Harmon, M.; Ma, BESA(1), Intra. sftbl.(2)
Haskin, C.
Hauer, B.; CE
Hayes, D.; Ar, CE
Hays, R.; ME
Head, R.: AR
Heck, R.; ET
Heiden, K.
Heinicke, S.: BA
Heinrich, R.; EE
Heling, D.; ME
Hellebuyck, C.
Hellman, D.: ME
Hellman, K.; Ar
Henning, D.; MT, Dean's List
Henri, S.; Ar
Hensel, J. : BAr
Herbal, T.; IM, AGC(3)pres.(1)
Heuer, D.: BT
Hickl, R.; BA, Open House(l)
Hijazi, A.; CE
Hinckley, S.: Ma
Hodges, N.; BA
Hoffman, J. ; Ar
Hoffman, T.
Hoffrichter, G.; Ar
Hogan, R.: DP
Holappa, J. ; BA
Holzhauer, T.; Ar, SC/AIA(4)
Honeycutt, T.; BAr, SC/AIA, Yearbook staff
Horan, T.; ME, SAE, SME
Houston, J. : ME
Hughes, R.
Hughes, W.; ME
Hulett, L. ; MT
Hurley, P.; EE, IEEE(2), IEEE-CS(2)
Hurttienne, B.; BAr
Hysick, S.; ET
Iannaci, D.
Irwin, J. : IM
Jagielky, J.; BA
Jaiyesimi, S.; CE, AGC(2), ASCE(2)
Jakiela, W.: ET
James, S.; EE, NSPE(2), SWE(2), IEEE(2)
Jamnejad, A.: Ar
Janisse, R.; EE, TBP, EKN
Jankens, J. ; EE, IEEE(4), EKN(2)vice pres.
Jarman, M.: Ar
Jerome, D.
John, R.; ET, IEEE(2), IEEE-CS(2), SWE(2)
Johncox, R.
Johnson, D.
Johnson K.; EE, BESA(2)
Johnson, T.; ME, SAE(3), ASME(3)
Johnston, K.: CE
Joseph, G.; IM, SME(1), Dean's List
Juckno, P.; BA
Jungwirth, G.; EE, IEEE(3), EKN(2)
Kakish, S.; ME, TBP(1)
Kang, K.: I A, BAr
Kanicki, F.; BA, ASPA(2)vice pres.(l)
Kapsa, M.; EE
Karaki, M.
Karam, S.; EE
Karasiewicz, D.; ME
Karns, J. : EE, IEEE(1)
Kashanpour, A.; CE
Kastner, S., ME
Katikos, P.
Kavanagh, J.
Kees, T.
Kennedy, P.
Kernan, M.
Kevnick, M.; ME, SAE(2)
Khalife, A.; ME, ASME(2)
Kinnell, R.; BAr
Kirsch, K.; ME
Kocan, C.
Kohindorfer, K.; ME
Koleini, K.; Ar
Kondoleon, K.: lA, ASID(1)pres.
Koppelo, M.; Ar
Korenic, G.: ET
Koscielniak, D.
Kosnik, L; IM, Intra. sftbl.(4). Intra. ftbl.(3)
Koster, B.
Kotlarczyk, M.
Kresslein, B.; CE, ASCE(1), AGC(1)
Krupp, T.; EE
Kulcsar, L.; EE
Kwasnik, S.; Ar, SC/AIA(2)
Kwiatkowski, M.; ME, Dean's List
Lahr, G.
Lang, D.: EE, TBP(3), EKN(2)
Larkins, D.
Larys, R.; EE, TBP
Lash, E.; BA
Lauzon, D.
Law, v.; CE
Lazarus, S.; ME
Lechkun, R.
Leduc, J.; EE, TBP(2) EKN(1), IEEE(1)
Leduc, R.; CE, AGC(2), ASCE(2)treas.
Lelli, R.; BT
Lemay, M.; CE, ASCE(2)
Lemmer, J.; Ar
Leonard, P.
Leve, S.; EE
Lewanbowski, J.; EE
Lewkowicz, R.; AR, SC/AIA(1)
Lezotte, J.
LeZotte, J,
Liska, A.; DP
Littlefield, E.; IM
Logsdon, K.
Lorey, R.
Loughlin, K.; BA, ASPA(3)pres., IMS{1)
Lozon, D.; BA, Dean's List
Mac, D.; CE, ASCE(4), Intra. sftbl.(2)
Madi, E.; Ar
Maduka, E.; BA
Maier, J. ; Hu
Majzoub, S.; CE
Maljnas, C.
Malinowski, D.; ME
Manduzzi, A.; ME
Maniadakis, E.; EE
Manley, L.; BA
Manolis, M.; BAr
Marchio, D.
Marentette, R.; BAr
Martek, K.; EE, TBP(2), EKN(1), NSPE(2)
Martel, B.; EE, IEEE(2)
Martin, F.; EE
Martin, T.; ME
Masalskis, J.
Masko, D.; BAr
Mastroianni, E.
Matisse, C.
Mattiacci, G.; BT
Mayer, J. ; ET
McBride, A.
Mc Devitt, M.; BAr
McDonough, W.
McGrath, D.; Ar
McGuire, J. ; Hu
McLaren, R.; CE
McLaughin, J . : ME
McMackin, M.; ME
McMuldroch, J. ; CE, ASCE(2)
McNulty, P.; Ch, ACS(4)
McRoberts, J. ; CE, TBP
McSorley, J. ; EE
Mecham, J. ; EE
Meenahan, A.
Meheidli, I.
Meissner, D.; ME, MSPE(1)
Meioche, R.; ME, ASME(2)
Melvin, T.; Ar
Mero, J. ; ME, SAE(1)
Meyers, B.; Ar
Michael, K.; ET
Middel, J. ; BA, APICS(I), ASPA(1), SME(1)
Mielock, D.; BAr
Mikho, T.; EE
Mikolajczak, P.; Ar
Mikrut, R.; CE, ASCE(2), AGC(2)
Miller, C.
Miller, J. : Ar
Miller, J. ; CE
Miller, L.
Miller, M.; AR
Mills, R.; CE, ASCE(1), AGC(1)
Minard, G.; ET
Minna, L.; ME, MSPE(1)treas., ASME(1)
Mintus, D.; Ar
Miotto, M.
Miskech, P.; ME
Mitan, W.
Mitchell, K.; CE
Moceri, P.; ET
Molicky, R.: Ar
Mollick, J. ; EE
Molner, J.
Montolio, M.: Ma
Moore, M.; BA
Morah, N.; Ar
Morgan, P.
Morin, P.; BA
Morris, M.: BA
Moser, T.; EE, SAE(1), lEEEil)
Mullin, M.: BA
Murad, T.; Ar
Murawa, M.
Murray, R.; Ch
Murto, M.; ME
Musto, R.; Ar, SC/AIA(1), Intra, bwlng.(l)
Muszynski, D.; Ma
Mykolenko, A.; BA
Naddaf, F.
Nakfoor, W.; EE
Neijndorff, F.
Neu, R.: Ar
Newport, G.: Ar
Nicklowitz, M.; Ar, ASCE(1)
Nicosia, R.; MT
Niksimaee, Z.; CE
Noetzel, J. ; EE, IEEE(2), lEEE-CS(l)
Norman, C.
Nuler, L.: ME
Nwosu, E.: IM
OdiI, D.; Ar
Oleszczuk, G.
Ording, A.; CE, ASCE(1), TBP(2)
Orluck, L.; EE, IEEE(2), lEEE-CS(l)
Ostoin, C.
�Owczarek, F.; EE
Owen, v.: BA, NAA(1)
Pacifico, D.; BAr
Palermo, E.; BA, ET
Palmer, T.; EE, IEEE(1)
Parker, J.
Parran, W.; ME, Intra. bwlng.(4)
Patchett, C.
Patten, C.
Patterson, L.: BAr
Pearse, S.
Penney, B.; ET
Penzien, R.; BA. LIT(1)
Perkins, R.; EE, TBP(2), EKN(2)
Peters, G.: Ar
Peters, L.; BA
Petrulis, A.; ME, SAE(1), Golf Team(4)
Piepszak, T.: BA
Pierfelice, V.; EE, IEEE(1)
Pieri, C.
Pietila, R.: Ar
Pitt, G.; ME. SAE(1)
Plaza, E.; ME
Plue, R.; ME, Dean's List
Pokriefka, G.: CE, ASCE
Polovich, R.: Cti
Preston, D.; ET
Price, F.: Ar
Price, G.; CE, ASCE(3)sec., AGG(2)
Price, J. ; ME, TBP(1)
Przybylski, K.: ME
Puddy, M,; ET
Pupillo, D.
Pustelak, M.; BA, Intra. bwlng.(3)pres.
Pyant, K.; ME, BESA, Student Govt.
Radlick, B.; ME, ASME(3), ESD{3), SAE(4)
Rafatian, K.; BAr
Raghunandhan, R.
Rassey, C.
Rawsky, G.; ME, SME(1), PTS(1)
Ray, F.; BAr
Redman, K.; ME
Reeves, M.
Reid, A.
Reser, D.; EE
Riachi, F.; CE
Rice, M.: EE
Riley, C.
Roesner, D.: MT
Rogers, H.; ME
Rogers, R.; ET
Roller, G.; ME, SME(1)
Rose, D.; BAr
Rosinski, R.; IM, APICS(2), IMS(2), SME(2)
Rostami, M.; ME
Rubin, A.; BA
Ruhlman, M.
Rundquist, J. ; BAr
Rupinski, J. ; EE, IEEE(2)
Rusas, T.
Ryan, D.; BA, ABS(2)
Sabra, A.; EE
Salazar, R.; CE
Sallows, J. ; ME, Golf Team(2)
Salti Sweilem, A.; ME
Sanders, J. ; EE, IEEE(1), lEEE-CS(l)
Sarnacki, J. ; Ar, SC/AIA(4)
Sawdon, J. ; Ar
Sayles, R.; CE, SPE(4)vlce pres.
Scavo, A.; Ar
Schall, M.; EE, IEEE(1)
Schickel, K.: BA
Schneider, I.
School, K.: EE, Ma, EKN(2), TBP(2)sec.
Schoenberg, G.; BA
Schoneck, R.; BA, AMA(2), Dean's List
Schwartz, J.
Schweizer, J. ; BA
Scott, J. ; CE
Seery, J. ; EE
Segal, V.; IM
Segedy, J.
Seguin, R.: EE
SeidI, G.; BA, DTS(4), SPE(Golden Heart)(3)
Seitz, G.; ME
Seleski, G.; ET
Selewonik, A.: lA
Semaan, J. ; EE
Serdiuk, M.: BAr
Seubert, H.
Sewell, S.; Ch
Shahab Shahmir, P.: ME
Shamsedean, A.; BA
Shaub, J. : Ma
Sheeran, J. ; BA
Shobair, A.: EE
Shockley, S.; IM
Siddiqi, A.; CE, ASCE
Simmons, W.; CE
Simopoulos, P.; BA, SPS(2)sec.
Skeirik, R.;
Slaughter, J. ; Ar
Slim, J. ; CE
Slipiec, S.: IM
Smith, J. ; ME
Smith, W.; MT
Smith, M.; Ar
Smith, W.; ME
Smoltz, D.; BA
Snyder, L.; BA
Snyder, S.; BA
Sorensen, D.; EE, IEEE(2), IEEE-CS(2)treas.
Spence, R.; ET
Spens, R.; MT
Spitzley, T.; BAr
Stacherski, R.: Ar
Staley, K.; ME, SAE(1), MSPE(1)
Stanczuk, G.; ET
Stigleman, E.; ME, TBP(2), SAE(4)
Strait, D.: ME
Straith, T.; EE, IEEE(2), Student Govt.
Strausser, G.; IM
Strelczuk, M.; BA, IMS(2), ASPA(1), Open
House, LIT Scholarship (4)
Strickfaden, J. ; I A, Ar
Studnicka, D.
Sturtevant, M.; CE
Suhail, M.: BA
Summerfield, K.
Swayze, P.; IT
Symanski, R.; CE, ASCE(2)
Tabor, M.; BA
Takemoto, M.
Tasoojy, E.; BAr
Tate, R.; IM
Templeton, R.
Thane, T.
Thomas, M.; DP
Thomas, M.; Ar
Thompson, D.; IM
Thompson, M.
Thorn, L.; MT
Thwing, P.; Ar
Tindall, J .
Tobias, R.; EE, TBP, EKN
Tocco, J. ; CE
Todoroff, K.; Ar, SC/AIA(2), ASID(1)
Toth, W.; ME, SME(1)
Traczynski, A.; Ch
Traub, T.; BA
Tremonti, R.
�Tringali, D.: Ar
Tsakoff, M.: BA, SME, APICS
Turk, v.; Ma, LIT
Ulman, D.; EE, TBP(2)vice pres.
Umloff, J.: ME, ASME
VanMaele, W.: ME
Van Slembrouck, J.
Van Wie, P.; EE, Tl
Vanderklok, R.; BAr, SC/AIA(3)
Varady, A.; Ma, IEEE(4)
Vella, G.: MT
Viel, P.; Ar
Vinsky, S.: IM
Visconti, S.: Ar
Vysniauskas, G.; EE, Ham Club(1)vice pres.
Wade, R.: Ar, Open House(3)
Walker, G.: ME
Walsh, L.; Ar
Walsh, W.; ME, PTS(1)
Webster, J.: Ma
Weidendorf, R.: BA
Weidle, M.; ME, PTS(1)
Weisberg, D.; Ar
West, A.; Ma
Westman, A.; ME
Whitman, P.; EE, IEEE(2), Ski C!ub(2)
Widmar, K.; Ar
Wiegand, R.; EE, IEEE(2), EKN(1), MSPE(1)
Wilcox, D.; ME, MSPE{1), NSPE(1)
Williams, J.: ME, ASME(1), SAE(1)
Williamsen, J.; BA
Wilson, K.; BAr
Wilson, M.: Ar
Witman, J.
Wodnicki, G..
Wolford, G.: ME
Wolosnyn, M.; EE, IEEE(2)
Worth, R.; MT
Wozniak, K.; EE
Wright, E.; EE, TBP(2), EKN(1)
Wrona, M; BA, Dean's List
Wuerfel, G..
Wyborski, E.: EE
Wyka, D.; EE, IEEE(3)
Yocom, J.; BA
Younes, G.; Ma
Young, B.; BT
Young, C.
Young, E.: EE
Young, P.
Youngerman, M.; ME
Zabowski, B.; IM
Zahalan, K.; CE, AGC(1)
Zak, R.
Zein-Eddine, M.: CE
Zentz, G.; BA
Zielinski, M.; EE, SPE(2), Ham Club(3)
Zink, C.
Zolna, M.; ME, LIT Scholarship(4)
Zonca, R.; CE
Zuberi, 0,; ME, SME(1)
Zundel, A.; EE
�The Presidents Club of
Lawrence Institute of Technology
The high quality of education offered by you- College both today and in the future
reflects on students and graduates alike. The Presidents Club of Lawrence Institute of Technology plays an important role in achieving, maintaining and expanding your College's tradition of excellence. The Club also recognizes those
alumni, corporations, and other friends who, by their high level of interest and
private financial support, are committed to the continuing development of L I T ' s
teaching programs, facilities, and campus.
We wish all of you in the Class of 1983 the best of success in meeting your life
objectives. We hope you'll help assure that L I T students to come will enjoy the
same academic opportunities.
�Lawrence Institute of Technology
Alumni Association
Congratulations a n d w e l c o m e . . .
Dear G r a d u a t e :
Congratulations! W e l c o m e t o t h e L a w r e n c e I n s t i t u t e o f
Technology A l u m n i A s s o c i a t i o n .
You may n o t realize i t , b u t y o u ' r e s o m e o n e s p e c i a l ! O f
the billions o f p e o p l e w a l k i n g t h e e a r t h , y o u ' r e o n e o f
only s o m e 10,000 w h o h a v e g r a d u a t e d f r o m LIT since it
opened in 1932.
All of us have s h a r e d u n i q u e e x p e r i e n c e s — w e ' v e
survived t h e r i g o r s o f d e m a n d i n g c u r r i c u l a a n d o b t a i n e d
a highly r e s p e c t e d d e g r e e . It is t h i s " u n c o m m o n e s s "
that helps t o d r a w LIT m e n a n d w o m e n t o g e t h e r in a
special a n d l a s t i n g w a y . G i v i n g e x p r e s s i o n t o t h i s special
bond is t h e A l u m n i A s s o c i a t i o n .
Your A l u m n i A s s o c i a t i o n e x t e n d s a c o m p l i m e n t a r y o n e
year active m e m b e r s h i p t o all g r a d u a t e s o f t h e Class o f
1983. Thereafter, a y e a r l y c o n t r i b u t i o n t o t h e C o l l e g e ' s
program for a n n u a l g i v i n g w i l l k e e p y o u r m e m b e r s h i p
active a n d a l l o w y o u t o p a r t i c i p a t e in t h e v a r i e t y o f
special p r o g r a m s w e s p o n s o r t h r o u g h o u t t h e year—social
activities as w e l l as services such as a m e r c h a n d i s e
discount p r o g r a m , g r o u p t r a v e l a n d m o r e .
Please a c c e p t o u r s i n c e r e b e s t w i s h e s f o r y o u r f u t u r e ,
and our h o p e t h a t y o u ' l l m a k e t h e LIT A l u m n i Association
a part o f y o u r life. L e t us k n o w o f a n y c h a n g e s in y o u r
address, status, etc. so t h a t w e can k e e p i n t o u c h .
Sincerely,
Roger E. Avie, I M ' 6 8
President
Alumni A s s o c i a t i o n
�Acknowledgements
L-Book 1983 is presented through the efforts of the following most distinguished
individuals and businesses:
Frank Mardeusz, Lynn Chambers, Wally Bizon, Debbie Faes, Ursula Marinelli, Bruce Annett,
Phenomenews, Meteor Photo, and Taylor Publishing Company.
A hearty and heart-felt thank-you is extended to all who helped in this undertaking. Special
thanks to Mr. Sam Slis, our Taylor Yearbook representative.
Diane Nagelkirk
editor
�
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Title
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LTU Yearbooks
Alternative Title
An alternative name for the resource. The distinction between titles and alternative titles is application-specific.
The L Book
Subject
The topic of the resource
University Yearbooks
Description
An account of the resource
Lawrence Technological University, formerly Lawrence Institute of Technology yearbooks from 1935-
Creator
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Lawrence Technological University
Source
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Lawrence Technological University
Publisher
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Lawrence Technological University
Format
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pdf
Language
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English
Type
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Yearbooks
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Lawrence Technological University
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
L Book 1983
Alternative Title
An alternative name for the resource. The distinction between titles and alternative titles is application-specific.
LTU Yearbook 1983
Subject
The topic of the resource
College yearbooks
Student government
Society of Manufacturing Engineers
Greek letter societies
Michigan Society of Professional Engineers
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
American Chemical Society
American Society of Mechanical Engineers
Society of Women Engineers
College student newspapers and periodicals
College presidents
College teachers
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Lawrence Institute of Technology's (now Lawrence Technological University) 1983 yearbook, includes index.
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Lawrence Technological University
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Lawrence Technological University
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1983
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Lawrence Technological University
Black Engineering Student Association
Founders Day
Lawrence Christian Fellowship
Open House
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�Senior Class of Lawrence Institute of Technology
Presents
the 1953
L Book
Editor - Stan Kukawka
Associate Editor - Bill Mullaly
Business Manager - George Hanovich
�DEDICATION
"There are, generally speaking, two kinds of students and, therefore, eventually, graduates; on the
one hand, those who do just enough to get by, and, on the other hand, those who do more than the
minimum required".
Earl W. Pellerin, architect, and head of the architectural engineering department since the founding
of Lawrence Institute of Technology in 1932, unceasingly expounds to students the above axiom.
Certainly, in his own life, Mr. Pellerin early realized the consequence of that axiom.
His extensive
studies and travels in the interest of his selected profession; his wonderful execution of ecclesiastical,
residential, educational, and commercial buildings; his awards in architectural competitions; his many
varied other activities and ofFicerships of organizations, all are evidence of a continuous, untiring effort
to "do more than the minimum required".
But to those of us who are close to Mr. Pellerin, we are mostly impressed by his wanting to do his best
for the student.
Long, late hours are kept in the classrooms, at the meetings of the architectural
groups, in creating projects for the school, and in helping students solve their varied difficulties.
You have shown us, the Class of 1953, for these several years the merits of working dexterously for
good things, Mr. Pellerin. You have taught us the rewards that con be ours for "doing more than the
minimum required".
As we prepare to leave our beloved Lawrence Tech, we see the challenge offered by the world. Those
of us who possess what you teach will respond, meet the challenge, and do our best for a better world.
In appreciation for your great efforts and accomplishments in educating us, we, the graduating class
of 1953 humbly dedicate this yearbook to you, a great educator, a great architect, and a great man.
Earl W. Pellerin.
��Many eloquent words have been used to describe the merits of a college education.
volume of these words would be an easy task indeed.
lost few years?
To compile a
However, what really has transpired in these
What changes have been experienced?
A poem by Rudyard Kipling, entitled IF, enumerates some of the prerequisites to becoming a mature individual.
Each of these is a hurdle that must be surmounted by all. To instill these require-
ments into their students is the aspiration of all institutions of higher learning.
Lawrence Tech has realized this aspiration!
Our short stay here has shown us how to meet our
challenges unflinchingly and with determination to see them through. What was our gain? Simply
this; we have become men and can confidently say, "Ours is the Earth and all that is in it".
Editor
IF
If you can keep your head when all about you
are losing theirs and blaming it on you;
If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,
but make allowance for their doubting, too;
If you can wait and not be tired by waiting.
Or, being lied about, don't deal in lies.
Or, being hated, don't give way to hating,
and yet don't look too good, nor talk too wise;
If you can dream, and not make dreams your master;
If you can think, and not make thoughts your aim;
If you can meet triumph and disaster
and treat those two imposters just the same;
If you can bear to hear the truths you've spoken
twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools.
Or watch the things you gave your life to, broken,
and stoop and build 'em up with worn-out tools;
If you can talk to crowds and keep your virtue,
or walk with kings—nor lose the common touch;
If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you;
If all men count with you, but none too much;
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
with sixty second's worth of distance run—
Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it,
and—which is more—you'll be a Man, my Son!
Rudyard Kipling
�Lawrence Tech is now entering the third decade of its existence. This is true because a courageous man of high ideals realized that a school was needed which would
teach not only the theoretical aspects of engineering but would give the student an
opportunity to see the practical side of this wide and essential field. During these
twenty-one years since its founding, the"phrase "Theory and Practice" has become a
byword of Lawrence Institute of Technology.
The man was Russell Ellsworth Lawrence. The year was 1932, the depth of the
economic depression. Determination and extreme belief in his convictions no doubt
motivated this man to found a school when almost all economic and educational
activity was dormant. Surrounded by a group of men whose ideas paralleled his.
Dean Lawrence embarked on the long road of recognition and renown.
The early years were extremely difficult. Hours were long and compensation small
If at all forthcoming. Gradually, as the need for this type of institution was realized,
enrollment took an upward swing. New courses were offered, the faculty was increased, and new and better laboratory facilities were made available.
Three short years after the founding, in 1935, Russell E. Lawrence was suddenly
stricken and passed on. The loss was keenly felt but his job was finished; the future of
Lawrence Tech had been assured.
Very few of the graduates of this institution have had the honor of knowing Dean
Lawrence personally, but all have been profoundly influenced by his ideals and
philosophy. His is a lasting monument; the Lawrence Institute of Technology.
�DEAN RUSSELL ELLSWORTH LAWRENCE
FOUNDER
1889-1934
�PHONE TOWNSEND «-7778
LAWRENCE INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
COLLEGE
1S100
O F ENGINEERING
WOODWARD
DETROIT
3,
AVENUE
MICHIGAN
Dear Seniors:
I t i s d i f f i c u l t t o w r i t e a l e t t e r of goodbye to a c l a s s
such as yours. Classes come and go with the years but we
remember c e r t a i n ones more than the others. The C l a s s of 1953
s h a l l always remain a pleasant memory to me* I t has been a
p r i v i l e g e to serve you and to know you as a c l a s s and as i n dividuals.
I n the years ahead, i t i s my s i n c e r e hope that you w i l l
f i n d the time to maintain your contacts with those of us a t
LIT who are your f r i e n d s . I t gives us r e a l pleasure to be of
s e r v i c e to otir alujnni - to help them i n every way p o s s i b l e .
I n a c t u a l p r a c t i c e , i t i s u s u a l l y j u s t the reverse - the
graduate eidvises and a s s i s t s the College, Such are the processes of good alumni-college r e l a t i o n s .
S e v e r a l years from now when you pick up t h i s book and
read t h i s l e t t e r , won't you do t h i s f o r an old f r i e n d s i t
down and w r i t e a l e t t e r to L I T , I t w i l l be appreciated.
S i n c e r e l y , that f r i e n d of yours.
CHARTERED
IN 1932 UNDER
THE G E N E R A L
L A W O F THE STATE O F M I C H I G A N
AS A NON-PROFIT
INSTITUTION OF
��GEORGE A. HENDRICKSON
Dean of Engineering
MURRILL K. WOOLFORD
Director of Guidance and Testing
William Burke
Genevieve G. Dooley
Walter Good
James W. Hobson
Edward Jositas
Donald Ridler
Marion Rogers
Harold B. Vanbussum
���HELEN M. COOPER
Assistant Librarian
MARY C. LANDUYT
Librarian
CLAUDE BREAM
Bookkeeper
DOROTHY LEE ESTES
Secretary to President
JEANNE PRESTON
Veteran's Secretary
MARGARET R. DALE
Receptionist
Josephine Shoop
Virginia Lucik
Ethyl Lighitner
Emma Hassinger
Martha Karl
Luise Hanke
���A number of years have gone by since a group of students v/ere adorned
with the distinguishing beanie of a Freshman at Lawrence Institute of Technology.
Now a portion of this original group are about to become Bachelors of Science in various fields.
The mortality rate of this class has been unusually high. This was probably
due in part to the unsettled world situation and the selective service. Some
succumbed to the lure of high wages of industry; still others found the
curriculum too difficult. At any rate, many who started did not finish.
Much credit is due those who make up the Class of '53, therefore, the following section is devoted as a standing monument to their achievements.
These men are members of a select group chosen by the age old method
devised by nature; the survival of the fittest.
Humanity will take note of
these men in the future for their place in the world will be a noted one.
�SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS
Gerald Larson, Wallace Hansen, George Hanovich, Clayton White.
Bernard Banash, Clifton Briner
�MECHANICAL
ENGINEERING
PROFESSOR HANS G. ERNEMAN
BURTON S. GARRELL
IRVING J. LEVINSON
EUGENE A. KIFFNER
James S. McCoy
Leonard V. Reaume
�CHARLES VRANIAN
CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES
EARL M. ASH
DONALD L CARRIERE
�ROBERT G. COLDWELL
Alpha Gamma Upsilon
Tech News Reporter
S.A.E.
EDWIN M. FAHEY
Kappa Sigma Kappa—President
RUSSELL R. FILIPOWICZ
STEVE C. FILUS
S.A.E.
HERBERT A. FRIESEN
S.A.E.—Chairman
PAUL H. GERISCH
George H. Hanovich
Duane A. Hopkins
�JAMES L. HOWE
WILLIAM D. INNES
S.A.E.
JIMMIE JAMES
S.A.E.
RAYMOND JEANGUENAT
�RALPH D. KLANN
Alpha Gamma Upsilon—Pres., Sec.
Varsity Club
Band
S.A.E.
S.D.E.
STAN J. KUKAWKA
Lambda lota Tau
L-Book Editor
Rho Delta P h i Pres., V-Pres., Sec.
Tech News Photo Editor
Student Council Member
A.C.S. Detroit Section Chairman
S.A.E.
HOWARD E. LANG
Lambda lota Tau
Kappa Sigma Kappa—IPC
Fencing
S.A.E. Chairman
S.A.M.
Tech News
ALFRED W. LAWSON
Kappa Sigma Kappa—Chaplain
Roy T. Lewis
Arthur R. Livermore
�JOHN I. MANECKE
ROBERT D. MARX
WILLIAM F. MULLALY
Rho Delta Phi—Pres., Treas.,
Rec. Sec.
Lambda lota Tau
Student Council Member
L-Book Associate Editor
Tech News Sports Editor
Freshman >'"lass V-Pres.
S.A.E.
ROBERT MURRAY, JR.
Kappa Sigma Kappa-Pledgemaster
S.A.E.
JULIUS A. NEIDERT
Previous Degree-B.S.E.E. at LIT
Phi Kappa Upsilon
CONSTANTINE NELLAS
Kappa Sigma Kappa
�JOSEPH M. NUNEZ
Tech News—Rewrite
James H. Orrick
FRANK POSLAJKO
WALTER PROWALNY
S.A.E.
CHARLES E. QUINBY
Freshman Class President, NS
LEONARD V. REAUME
Kappa Sigma Kappa
S.A.E.
Robert H. Robertson
Rqy W. Sevakis
Richard C. Sharp
Richard D. Smith
�CHRIS SPASEFF
Alpha Gamma Upsilon—
Editor—Frat Paper
CHARLES M. STRACHAN
Phi Kappa Upsilon—Historian
S.A.E.
�ELEODORO G. TAVORA
WALTER H. THIELMAN
Phi Kappa Upsilon—Pres.
S.A.E.
GAY TOM
STEVE TOTH
Phi Kappa Upsilon—Pres., Warden
ROBERT A. TROIANO
S.A.E.
LOUIS WEBERMAN
Kappa Sigma Kappa—Sec,
Dir. of Pub. Relations
Student Council—Judicial Chairman
Fencing
Tech News—Business Manager
Lambda lota Tau
S.A.E.
�EDWARD F. J. WIECHA
ROBERT E. WILLIAMS
S.A.E.
JOHN H. WILLIAMSON
Phi Kappa Upsilon—
V-Pres., Treas.
S.A.E.
ROBERT E. WILSON, JR.
CLAYTON H. WHITE
Junior Class Secretary
Senior Class Secretary
FREDERICK J. ZINK
Varsity Basketball—Center
�ELECTRICAL
ENGINEERING
PROFESSOR ARTHUR D. HART
ELWYN D. HANCOCK
LEROY S. FOLTZ
GEORGE W. GIBSON, JR.
�JAMES J. BUTERA
Rh(3 Delta Phi-Treas., Soc. Ch.
S.A.E.
HOWARD R. CLEMENTS
Kappa Sigma Kappa
S.A.E.
JOHN R. DEAN
Tennis Team Coach and Captain
S.A.E.
DOMINIC D'ONOFRIO
ROBSON M. EAMES
Double E Club
ROBERT J. GREEN
�NORMAN R. HALLMAN
Kappa Sigma Kappa
ROBERT H. HARRISON
Lambda lota Tau
Rho Delta Phi
V-Pres., Sgt.-at-Arms
Junior Class Treasurer
J-Prom Committee
S.A.E.
Donald Jewsbury
Charles Kaufman
George Kreiner
LEONARD F. KOSNIK
�JOHN W. KWASNIAK
Kappa Sigma Kappa
PAUL MARBERG
Alpha Gamma Upsilon
Rifle Club
PATRICK R. MOORE
S.A.E.
ALBERT T. O'CONNOR
Alpha Gamma Upsilon—
Sgt.-at-Arms, House Mgr.
Double E Club
S.A.E.
ARTHUR C. PAYNE
NORMAN R. POLLOCK
�RUSSELL PRIVALOFF
Kappa Sigma Kappa—President
Double E Club
WILLIAM E. RILEY
EDWARD L. SORENSON
Kappa Sigma Kappa
ROBERT STUART
Lambda lota Tau
Rho Delta Phi—V-Pres., Rec Sec.
Student Council Member
Tech News—Night Editor
S.A.E.
S.A.M.
STANLEY TARAS
JAMES THOM
Phi Kappa Upsilon
A.I.E.E.
A. E. WETTER
HAROLD S. WILSON
Math Club
FRANK K. YESH
S.A.E.
Twice a year the Electrical Engineering Department arrages a tour through a branch of the electrical industry to show
the student how his "book learning" is applied. The place chosen most frequently is the Nela Park experimental laboratories of General Electric in Cleveland. Because of its many exhibits and interesting experimental projects, the Nela Park
trip never wants for participants as evidenced by the above picture.
INDUSTRIAL
ENGINEERING
Professor Lloyd C. Bagby
William F.S. Dowlding
Charles Gottschalk
Bernard F. Banash
Robert O. Brandau
Earl K. Dedoe
Larry P. Deidrich
�JAMES L. DONAHUE
Fencing Team
Varsity Club
S.A.M.
FRANK S. DRAVESKI
Peter Garritano
Frank Gessler
Wallace H. Hansen
Richard A. Hardesty
�S.A.M.
S.A.E.
Theodore R. Hayman
Charles D. Koti
�ROBERT F. METTLER
Previous Degree B.S.M.E. at LIT
S.A.E.
JOHN M. MILLER
EDWARD MORAN
S.A.E.
S.A.M.
FRANK J. NOWIK
Phi Kappa Upsilon
S.A.M.
ROBERT J. PARKER
Alpha Gamma Upsilon—Pres.
Student Council President,
Member at Large, S. C.
S.A.M.
S.A.E.
GERALD C. ROLL
Kappa Phi Sigma—Treas.,
Charter Member
Student Council President
Member at Large, S. C.
Freshman Class Pres.
Sophomore Class Pres.
Math Club
�CALVIN R. SCHMIDT
HARLEY M. SELLING
ALBERT STONE
Phi Kappa Upsilon—Treasurer
S.A.E.
S.A.M.
RAYMOND B. WILSON
CAMERA SHY
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
ROBERT F. DEAN
PAUL V. JEFFREY
ANDREW KSZYCH
ALEX MAYORCHALK
STANLEY PARTEL
ARTHUR A. BURR
ROBERT B. ECKEL
BRINTON E. FREEMAN
WALTER LOHRER
SAMUEL McSEVENY
FREDRICK MAY
MICHAEL MICHAELS
��INDUSTRIAL
MANAGEMENT
PROFESSOR EDWIN O. GRAEFFE
EDWARD JOSITAS
WILLIAM C. BURKE
WALTER GOOD
George Adam
Frank Barnes
Eddie W. Edwards
Ernest W. Kostyo
Joseph F. Pine
Herman Pett
Darrel G. Talley
��CIVIL
ENGINEERING
Professor William E. Menzel
George R. Bingham
John H. O'Keefe
Donald W. Beattie
Raymond Breederland
Robert E. Calleja
Richard L. Castle
William E. Chlopan
Charles C. Hellman
��HAROLD LAMPCOV
FRANK LOUKINEN
HENRY LYBECK
Alpha Gamma UpsilonCorr. Sec.
S.A.E.
IFC Chairman
RUSSELL D. MURPHY
Kappa Sigma Kappa
C.E.S.
S.A.E,
CAMERA SHY
CIVIL ENGINEERING
RICHARD KRYGIELL
FRANK R. SCARLETT
NORMAN BOUTIN
BERNARD K. DRANE
GERALD HALLECK
ALFRED PETRILLI
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
HAROLD K. LAUER
WILLIAM J. LOMAS
OSCAR MITTELSTAEDT
LEROY N. HANSEN
OWEN O'DONOGHUE
AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING
CARLTON B. AMBLER
BASIC ENGINEERING
HAROLD E. KUNKEL
WARREN J. WISSNER
�CHEMICAL
ENGINEERING
EDMUND J. DOMBROWSKI
PROFESSOR GERALD P. CONNELL
ARTHUR C. LITHEREDGE
A.C.S.
Astronomy Club
JIMMIE HARVIN
MOVSES MOVSESIAN
A.C.S.-Pres., Sec.
Junior Class Sec.
Detroit Section A.C.S.
Raymond A. Buckman, Jr.
Gerald R. Halleck
Harry D. Hook
Harry P. Kall
Emile C. Mortier
�ROBERT J. NAMPA
Architecture Club
DONALD F. WHITE
Architecture Club
A.I.A.
�ARCHITECTURAL
ENGINEERING
PROFESSOR EARL W. PELLERIN
James B. Hughes
Doris A. Smith
�AERONAUTICAL
ENGINEERING
PROFESSOR GEORGE P. MARTIN
HAROLD DE MINK
Kappa Sigma Kappa
S.A.E.
I.A.S.
Glider Club
Clifton F. BRINER
ROLLIN R. GRAY
Kappa Sigma Kappa—
Pledgemaster
Student Council Member
Fencing Team
Glider Club
I.A.S.
GERALD M. LARSON
JAMES B. LEPLEY, JR.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
Lambda lota Tau
Student Council—
LIT Comm. Chairman
Sophomore Class V-Pres.
Senior Class Pres.
S.A.E.
S.A.M.
I.A.S.
Glider Club
Kappa Sigma Kappa—
Treas., I.F.C.
Fencing Team
I.A.S.
Glider Club
One of the most outstanding achievements of the Aero Department was the construction of the experimental racing plane,
the Chappy. This project testifies to the prowess of the men of the Aeronautical Department and the head man, George P. Martin.
�CHEMISTRY
DEPARTMENT
ROBERT J. KAMPHAUS
PROFESSOR HAROLD C. BOOTHROYD
MATHEMATICS
DEPARTMENT
HURST E. J. WULF
PROFESSOR HENRY W. NACE
CLEO H. NEVEU
�ENGINEERING
DRAWING
DEPARTMENT
GEORGE E. ALLISON
PROFESSOR JOHN S. RACKWAY
PHYSICS
DEPARTMENT
PROFESSOR GAIL P. BREWINGTON
JAMES L. VAN VLIET
ENGLISH
DEPARTMENT
PROFESSOR HERBERT G. WILLIAMS
���INDUSTRIAL TECHNICAL
INSTITUTE
William Burke
MILDRED I. BRIGHT
Registrar
LILLIAN McKINLEY
Secretary
Herman E. Kranz
GEORGE CLARK
Director of Refrigeration
and Air Conditioning
GEORGE SIERANT
Drafting Department Head
�I. T. I. FACULTY
WILLIAM BARTOLOMEO
ARNOLD BLYTHE
GEORGE BUTTS
JAMES CLIFFORD
ROGER COMPTON
GEORGE DUMAS
MYRON ETENGOFF
OWEN ELLISON
JAMES GEIGER
WILLIAM JARRATT
G. HARVEY KNIPPLE
NORBERT RATALSKY
JOHN SAFFER
JAMES ULRICH
JAMES WALKER
�The graduating class officers ore Treasurer James Maciag, V-President Harold Boultinghouse, President Keith Ball,
and Secretary Walter Zwolinski
FIRST GRADUATING CLASS
OF THE
INDUSTRIAL TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
The Technical Institute was founded three years a g o to meet the ever increasing demand for technically trained personnel.
The programs offered closely parallel the engineering college curricula but more emphasis is placed on
applied and practical, rather than theoretical study.
The technician's job is a vocation requiring skillful application of a high degree of specialized knowledge together
with a broad understanding of operational procedures.
It requires sound judgment under diverse and sometimes
adverse situations and frequently leads to supervisory positions.
The Technical Institute offers the following courses and the graduates are a w a r d e d a diploma of an Associate Engineer in these fields: Automotive Technology, Building Construction Technology, Electrical and Electronic Tech.,
Industrial Supervision Tech., Mechanical Tech., Production Tool Design Tech., and Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Technology.
On the following pages are pictured the men who successfully completed the Institute's curriculum.
They comprise
the first graduating class of ITI and on their shoulders lies the task of establishing a good reputation for their alma
mater.
In future years, the Technical Institute will no d o u b t be as well known in its field as Lawrence Tech is in engi-
neering circles.
John P. Adams
Keith R. Ball
Fred E. Bialas
Harold J. Boultinghouse
Jack Brunner
Leroy F. Bullock
��ROBERT W. CHAPLEN
A.E.A.C.R.
GORDON COOK
A.E.M.T.
ELMER C. ERTMAN
A.E.A.C.R.
ALFONSO B. FIGUEROA
A.E.E.E.
Charles V. Frizzell
ROBERT HUGHLETT
A.E.E.E.
Edward H. Larkin
James Maciag
A.S. Marczak
Charles R. Mimms
William F. Moore
Joseph Parus
Gordon Patton
Jalmer S. Raisanen
John Rubacha
Frank E. Schmid
Albert G. Smith
George Sobol
Donald B. Stewart
Raymond P. Toquigne
���BRUNO URBAN
A.E.M.T.
JOSEPH F. WALTER
A.E.LS.
CAMERA SHY
RICHARD BUIT
A.E.M.T.
E. L. DIETZ
A.E.A.C.R.
MORRIS KRAUSE
WALTER R. ZWOLINSKI
A.E.I.S.
�STRICTLY CANDID
When this book is picked up in years to come and the graduate looks at
the portraits of the professors in the various departments, he will in all
probability remember these men only as the calculus, the mechanisms, or
the thermo prof he had as a senior. Most of the distinctive mannerisms,
witticisms, and facial expressions that make the difFerence between the
man in the portrait and the very definite personality this man is will be
forgotten.
The purpose of this feature is to capture and present the expressions and
actions of some of these men as seen through the eyes of a student.
The yearbook staff, in printing this feature, hopes to repay these men in
some measure for the small portion of their personality that leaves with
each graduate. We hope to do this by rekindling their memories in the
mind and heart of each graduate that opens this book.
Professor Rackway enjoys a stogie
so Q is the amount of heat necessary to keep the
cabbage cold in the refrigerator.
����SENIOR STAG
The Senior Stag is the last get-together of the Seniors before each
goes his way after graduation. A
dinner, entertainment by instructors, and an evening of beer and
cards usually makes up the program.
Arrangements for the Stag were
made this year by Chairman Jerry
Roll and President Gerry Larson.
Attendance was heavy and an enjoyable evening was spent by all.
With the help of the pictures on
the following pages it is hoped
that the '53 Senior Stag will long
be remembered.
Mr. Erneman and Mr. Pellerin congratulated the graduates on their
accomplishment.
�Mr. Rackway and "Doc" Graeffe
entertained with some of their very
humorous stories.
���COLLEGE DAZE
The names of Gropp, Wasek, and Lewis have become quite familiar at LIT. Cartoons
that these men so proficiently drew have appeared in the Tech News at regular intervals
and have added much to the general good feeling around the campus. In this respect
we, the students, have been rather fortunate.
So that some of these gems of college life would not be lost, the L-Book staff made
use of the Tech News morgue and picked out the best cartoons that were printed during
the years of our undergraduate work. They are presented on these three pages to
remind thfe owner of this book of his gay college days.
�"No, Penelope, I MUST do my homework"
"Of all the fools! I had 8 7 % until I took it back to
Prof. Menzel to check a correction!"
"Beely." "Here!" "Boswell." "Here!" "Colder."
"Here!" "Chipsom." "Here!" "Drane." "Here!"
"Humphrey." 'Here!"
"Hey, Pinetop! Wonder where Bagby goes during
our tests? Not that I mind, of course . . .!"
"Wait a minute, will ya!! Prof. Menzel wants these
drawings in by tomorrow!"
�"There, there, there . . . the hell with Thermodynamics"
"The soup's cold, Bentley! You want a hamburger instead?'
��The old adage beginning "All work and no play"—is one adhered to at
Lawrence Tech.
quent.
For a college as small as ours activities are many and fre-
Some are sponsored by the administration and many by clubs,
classes, and organizations on campus.
As a result, there is no want for
social activity.
Among the activities that headline the school year is the Freshman Initiation and the Frosh Fling that follows.
enjoys heavy attendance.
The J-Prom is another dance that
Founder's Day is always a big afFair whether it
takes the form of an open house or an all school picnic.
Sports tournaments
sponsored by the Athletic Department are eagerly awaited and the school
band offers an interesting diversion from study for musical students.
Among the more technical lines the professional societies are numbered.
SAE, SAM, CES, and ACS with their technical and dinner meetings offer
many chances for social contact.
In this group are also found the "EE"
Club, Soaring Society, the Math Club, and the Architectural Club.
For students that are politically inclined, the student council and class officer
groups are made to order.
These organizations make up the student
government.
Not to be forgotten as a dominant source of social activity are the fraternities.
Since there are five such organizations on campus, they warrant a
section of their own which will be found further in this annual.
�JUNIOR PROM
According to tradition, the biggest affair of the school year
at Lawrence Tech is the J-Prom. In keeping with this precedent, the Junior Class of '53 outdid themselves in putting over the best J-Prom anyone could remember.
It was held at the beautiful Latin Quarter and the
swing and sway was supplied by Don Bari and
Orchestra.
A surprisingly large attendance made the
Prom a lively one indeed and a date
hard to forget. During the intermission
President Lawrence presented Lambda lota Tau and Alumni Achievement awards to deserving men.
To the men at the helm of
the Junior Class, now
Seniors, Lawrence Tech
can say, "A good
job well done."
Wallace Hansen and George Hanovich
look over the sign in the main hall.
As with all affairs of this type, much preliminary work must be done in order to insure success. Advertising,
tickets, and favors had to be prepared. A good band and a nice location were of prime importance.
Credits for these jobs go to the following men of the J-Prom Committee: Gordon Gerlitz and Jerry Roll,
Publicity; Norm Hallman and Wallace Hansen, Tickets; Robert Harrison and Stan Kukawka, Favors; and Stan Kedzior, Band.
rs were assembled by Stan Kedzior,
Weberman, Bob Harrison, Stan
and Jim Butera.
�Lambda lota Tau keys
were presented to Gerald Larson, George Hanovich, Stan Kukawka,
Ernest Kostyo, and Louis Weberman.
Junior Class President
Ray Buckman, Vice-president Stan Kedzior, and
Treasurer Robert Harrison received class ofRcer keys from President
Lawrence during intermission.
Alumni Achievement
awards were received by
Wesley Wojtowicz, Benjamin Shiller, John Winter, Victor Basso, Wayne
Buell, William Sheldon, Ray Shillum.
��The Grand March led by the class officers.
�MACARTHUR Visits LAWRENCE TECH
The Lawrence Tech campus was g r e a t l y honored
in the spring of 1952 by a visit f r o m the g r e a t general a n d national hero, Douglas MacArthur.
A large c r o w d was on hand to welcome the general a n d gave him a loud ovation after his short
speech.
The school was decorated in a regal fashion with
a huge Ame r ic an f l a g d r a p e d over the front a n d a
large sign r e a d i n g " W e l c o m e General M a c A r t h u r " .
��GOV. WILLIAMS SPEAKS
At the June 1952 commencement exercises the principal speaker was the Governor of the State of
Michigan, G. Mennen Williams. His interesting talk was accepted with enthusiasm by the graduates as
well as by the relatives and friends present.
Just before President E. G. Lawrence conferred degrees on the graduating class, he presented the
Governor with the mantle of an Honorary Doctor of Humanities.
�Founder's Day Picnic
Founder's Day chairman, Jerry Roll, made himself
very popular by distributing the food and drinks.
Observance of Founder's Day took on a different form this
year. Instead of the usual display type open house affair, a
student and faculty picnic idea was realized. Bloomer State
Park was the chosen site.
The baseball diamonds were in continuous use as interfraternity and interclass Softball tourneys were staged.
As an added incentive for exceptional play, a new Softball was
offered for each home run scored.
A dismal day weather wise affected attendance slightly but
did not dampen the spirits of those present.
���Coach Bazylewicz looks over a score c a r d as th e golfers w i t h l o w scores a w a i t the final results.
GOLF MEET
Among
some
of the sports t h a t
all
students can p a r t i c i p a t e in is the a n n u a l
golf
meet.
The meet held last spring
was d u b b e d the Lawrence Tech
Open
G o l f Tournament a n d t o o k place a t the
G l e n O a k s Country C l u b .
This event was b r o u g h t a b o u t t h r o u g h
the d i l i g e n t efforts of Walter Bazylewicz
a n d w a s e n j o y e d b y a g o o d share of
Tech's students a n d f a c u l t y .
�Mr. Woolford was the official starter.
A mighty swing was in the offing when Mr. Pau
stepped up to the tee.
After the long walk a snack was in order.
Ah yes, the fabulous 19th green!
�With tooth brushes and
water, freshmen Steve Seiner
and Jim Prosser help the
DPW of Highland Park keep
the city clean.
FRESHMAN INITIATION
The years of 1952 and '53 saw a revival of a custom that became dormant during
the years when ex-GI's were a predominant element in the school enrollment. This
custom is the traditional "Frosh" Initiation.
With an unusually active Sophomore Class as the administrators, Lawrence Tech
witnessed the most hilarious initiation of many a year.
This fall the Frosh were identified by certain distinguishing marks. They wore the
time-honored beany, a name card, and had their right pant leg rolled up to the knee.
Their duties were to show respect to the upperclassmen, to carry matches for cigarettes,
and to have a supply of nickels for the coke and candy machines.
On Friday of Frosh Hell Week a Kangaroo Court convened to deal with breaches
of the Sophomore Law. Each accused Frosh was defended by one of his peers and
prosecuted by a Sophomore. If the verdict of the jury was "Guilty", the defense
attorney shared in the sentence of the Frosh defendant, this being his punishment for
not presenting a convincing case.
The sentences meted out by the court and the results thereof can be seen in the
pictures on the following pages.
�Bob Wulbrecht, Art Jankowski, and Herman Pett helped decorate the tree.
CHRISTMAS TIME AT LIT
Getting into the yuletide spirit, Henry Lybeck, Russ Murphy, Ken Jarvick, and
Ray Breederland eat their
lunches in the shade of
the ol' Christmas Tree.
�HOMECOMING
AND
BUILDING FUND DRIVE
This year Lawrence Tech's Homecoming was combined with the building fund program. This fund raising drive, under the direction of Don
Ridler, was started several weeks before in an effort to raise $25,000
for the new school. A raffle was the means chosen to raise this amount
and the drive was to be culminated on Homecoming night. So a basketball game, dance and raffle drawing were on the agenda for this event.
First on the program was Lawrence Tech vs. Hamline, a fast moving
game ending in victory for the Blue Devils by a score of 74 to 56. This
victory was followed by dancing to Ralph Marteri's orchestra and intermission entertainment by the Ravens, a well known quartet.
At midnight, all gathered around the bandstand as Mr. C. M. Bauervic,
of Arlington Motors, drew the lucky tickets that made 25 winners very
happy.
Displays were put up by the active organizations on campus for the
benefit of the alumni and others present. Much special efFort was put
forth which proved very rewarding since the affair was a huge success
and the anticipated amount for the building fund was exceeded.
�PRE-DRIVE RALLY
The day before the building fund drive started a
series of rallies was held in the cafeteria to acquaint
the students with the facts and to get them into a
selling spirit.
Some spoke, many listened. Here is some of what
was said. "Pops" Fahey—"Now I'll tell you how to
sell these raffle tickets; hit them in groups." "Doc"
Graeffe—"I'll flunk any student who doesn't sell at
least one book." Jerry Roll—"We need this new
school so get out and push." Don Ridler—"Let's all
get behind this one hundred percent." Hal Haupt—
"Someday you'll be proud to point and say, that's
our new school—the big one over there."
���REMEMBER
�WHEN..
. . .
we had a baseball team.
.
. . this was our starting five.
.
. we stood in line.
���Dance
Band
The fall of 1952 saw the resumption of an activity that was
discontinued during the last W o r l d W a r along with most of
Lawrence Tech's extra curricular activities. The reorganization
was the idea of E. D. Hancock, an EE department professor. He
put out a call for musically inclined students and the result was
the formation of an easy to listen to dance bond.
The pictures shown on these pages were taken during rehearsals in the student lounge. Regretfully, a sound track cannot be included, however, these men promise to be a familiar
sight a t many of Tech's dances.
BANDMASTER E. D. HANCOCK
Strains of well known dance tunes echoed through the halls when the full band sat in rehearsal.
��The Student Council officers are Jack Korb, corresponding secretary. Jack Nicholson,
recording secretary, Jerry Roll, president, George Critenden, vice-president, Louis
Weberman, judicial chairman, and not pictured is Ernest Kostyo, treasurer.
STUDENT COUNCIL
Student government at Lawrence Tech is evidenced by the working of the Student
Council. The bimonthly meetings serve as a sounding board for student and organizational problems. During the past school year the Council has been headed by
President Jerry Roll.
Heated discussions are the rule rather than the exception at these meetings. However, in a true democratic spirit, minority yields to majority and in harmony the work
is carried on.
Any student organization must have a close liaison with the Administration to be
successful. The 1952-53 Council has chosen Mr. Hurst Wulf, of the Mathematics Department, as the Faculty Advisor. Mr. Wulf's comments and suggestions hove proven
invaluable when important issues had to be ruled on.
The committee chairmen are Hal Haupt,
social, Larry Kiselas, election, Donald McKinley, activity awards and election, Dick
Marshall, Founders Day, and Jerry Larson,
Lambda lota Tau.
�. . whereupon Jerry introduced the other new officers.
At the annual Student Council Banquet, retiring President Robert Parker passed the gavel
and his congratulations to incoming President
Jerry Roll . . .
Mr. Lawrence said a few words . . .
while the members and guests listened attentively.
After the formalities, an evening of cards
and beer was enjoyed by all present.
�L-BOOK
The purpose of an annual is to record the activities and
events of a certain year pictorially. The 1953 L-Book
staff decided that the best way to achieve this goal was
through the printing of an extra large book with many
large and comprehensive pictures and a minimum of copy.
It is our opinion that this "fruit of our labors" has served
its intended purpose quite well. However, you, the reader,
are the final judge.
Because of the ability of the men on the staff few were
needed. Art work the cover design was done by Bill Mullaly; the financial end was handled by George Hanovich. Bob Harrison and John Turchan did most of the layout in their respective sections and pics were supplied by
Stan Kukawka and his Speed Graphic. Planning and layout was done by mutual assent, and thus the 1953 L-Book
came to be.
�STAFF
�the Lawrence
TECH
NEWS
The news at and about the campus is brought to the students by the Tech News, a biweekly publication. Under the able direction of Stanley Kedzior, the editor in chief, the
paper has been both informative and interesting.
A member of the Associated Collegiate Press, the Tech News has enjoyed high esteem
this year as in previous years. The high ACP rating is a compliment to the prowess of
the newspaper stafF.
STANLEY KEDZIOR
Editor in Chief
DON McKINLEY
News Editor
LOUIE WEBERMAN
Business Manager
Bob Priebe
Hal Haupt
�The reporters are John Turchan, Bob Raymond, Dick Mitchell,
Robert Kaphengst and Jay Montgomery.
GENE FALENDYSZ and RICK KOZLOWSKI
Circulation
�CLASS
OFFICERS
The Day School Junior Class Officers are V-President Harold
Haupt, President Jerome McKinley, Treasurer Jim Kohls,
and Secretary Rudy Gengenbach.
The Day School Sophomore Class Officers are V-President
Neville Pack, President Don Johnson, and SecretaryTreasurer Don Dancey.
�The Day School Freshman Class Officers are Secretary-Treasurer Clyde Lemke,
President Andrew God, and V-President Bill Doty.
The Night School Junior Class Officers are Sectary-Treasurer Milford Olsen, President Jack Korb, and V-President Reed Abt.
�ARCHITECTURAL
CLUB
The Architectural Club is a student branch of the Detroit Chapter,
American Institute of Architects. The purpose of this organization
is to stimulate and develop the interest in archiecture of each individual member, through active participation.
Architecture Club activities are many and varied. They are open
to everyone interested in architecture and include lectures and exhibitions. Activities open to members only include monthly A.I.A.
lectures and field trips to places of architectural interest in the
Greater Detroit area as v/ell as throughout the nation.
The Club's contribution to the Homecoming Display testifies to its
activity and proficiency. The centerpiece of the display was a
scale model of the proposed new campus. The model was located
in a setting of a modernistic room and was surrounded by Architecture Club officers are Secretary Richard Pierron, Vice-president people throughout the evening. Aerial views of the campus
site were also shown.
Alfred Petrilli, President Emile Mortier, Treasurer James Smith,
and Activities Chairman John Yanik.
MATH
CLUB
On the 27th of May 1952, twenty-four students and three
faculty members met in the Student Lounge to ratify and
sign the Constitution of the Math Club. This event culminated five months of organization and planning under
the chairmanship of Richard Marshall and the guidance of
Professors Bagby, Nace, and Haire.
The organization was founded for two purposes: to provide the means for carrying the study of mathematics
further than the regular curricular program; and to promote a greater interest in mathematics throughout the
school.
The activities of the past year have consisted of monthly
meetings highlighted by reports given by student members
and speeches given by members of Lawrence Tech's
faculty. The meetings have all been quite interesting and
the members have gained much knowledge about the history of mathematics and about those subjects of mathematics that are covered only slightly in the college texts.
The Math Club officers are Nathaniel Carr, vice-president, and
Richard Marshall, president. Mr. H. Nace acts
as the Faculty Advisor.
In the future the Math Club intends to bring in guest
speakers from other colleges and from industry, and to
obtain motion pictures for school-wide meetings.
Also
slated for the future is an award program for graduating
seniors who have been outstanding in their work in mathematics during their college career.
�SOCIETY FOR THE
ADVANCEMENT OF
MANAGEMENT
Today, students; tomorrow, leaders in industry. This prospective outlook
applies to all Lawrence Tech students. The Society for the Advancement of
Management constantly strives toward the fulfillment of this goal.
The LIT student chapter of S. A. M. was founded four years ago and since its
inception has helped spread the benefiis of scientific management.
This year in particular, students have ben attending meetings held by the
Detroit Chapter of S. A. M. at the Rackham Memorial Building. The topics
under discussion included union activities, labor relations, personnel problems,
and various phases of industrial engineering.
The S. A. M. chapter at Lawrence Tech is another example of the broad
background available through "Theory and Practice".
S.A.M. ofFicers are night school Vice-president Jesse Filak, Secretary Bill
Walters, President Ernie Kostyo, Treasurer Donald Payne, and day school Vice president, Wallace Hansen.
SOARING SOCIETY
Earl last fall six LIT students undertook the project of reorganizing the Soaring Society. With the help and counseling of
Professor G. P. Martin, the Society advisor, materials were obtained and the construction of the fuselage was begun.
Lawrence Tech has been known throughout the past years for
its aeronautical achievements. These included the building of
several sailplanes and the racing plane, "Chappy". The members of the new Soaring Society are determined to live up to the
noteworthy precedent that has been set.
Along with being a hard working group the members of the
Soaring Society are also quite philosophical. They have chosen
for their motto the old and truthful saying, "Keep thou thy flying
speed lest the earth come up and smite thee."
Gathered around the framework of their sailplane are the
Soaring Society ofFicers. They are Vice-chairman Gerald Larson,
Chairman Kenneth Kuhn, Recording Secretary James Lepley,
Treasurer Richard Gray, Secretary Harold DeMink, and Membership Chairman Kent DuPont.
�SOCIETY OF
AUTOMOTIVE
ENGINEERS
The Student Group of the Society of Automotive Engineers is by far t
largest group of its kind on campus. To odd to this distinction, it is als
recognized as the second largest Student Group of the SAE in the natioi
This organization was founded in 1938 and under the able direction oj
the Faculty Advisor, Dr. Gail Brewington, has accomplished much.
Activities of the group include field trips, guest speakers from industry
and joint meetings with the senior chapter. In these classifications wen
included a trip to the Ferguson Tractor Plant, a speaker on jet engine
from Chrysler, and a dinner-meeting at the Ford Motor Co. In the fall o
1952 the Senior Chapter sponsored a model engine contest. The problen
was to rebuild a two-cycle mode! engine for maximum rpm. The engira
entered by the LIT group placed fourth in a field of six.
SAE officers ore: Secretary Roger Brown, Chairman Howard Lang,
Treasurer George Dzenzel, and Assistant Chairman
Dave Reichard.
��It would seem that no other college activities bring out the school spirit and
enthusiasm in a student as much as varsity sports.
The keen spirit of
amateur competition transplants the spectator into the uniformed figures on
the playing area and so inspired the team often tastes the sweet fruit of
victory.
At Lawrence Tech basketball is king of all the varsity sports.
The Blue
Devils are well known throughout the nation and have held many enviable
season records.
Fencing and Tennis share the second place honors.
The LIT swordsmen
held the State Championship in past years and fared quite well this past
season.
The tennis team promises a full season with a crew of veteran
netters taking to the courts.
As Lawrence Tech grows in size new varsity sports will no doubt be added.
Following the example of the netters, fencers, and cagers, these new athletes will assuredly bring more honor to "Dear o l ' LIT".
Athletic Director Don Ridler looks over the basketball schedule with
Blue Devil Coach Walt "Scottie" Maconochie while
Assistant Coach Sam Smith looks on.
1952-53 BLUE DEVILS
Standing: Coach Walter Maconochie, Victor Yezbick, Arthur Jankowski, Edward Kovach, Ray Tomich, George Adam, Dillard Ross and Herman Rett.
Seated:
Farrand Page, Stanley
Rapaski, Bob Wulbretch, John
Basilico, Werner Killen, Fred
Zink, Bob Kozaren, James Westbrook and Joe Auer.
����TENNIS TEAM
Among the active varsity sports at LIT is numbered the Tennis Team, or as
they are more commonly called, the Racketeers.
The Tennis Team v/os reorganized several years ago by Ralph Emig, an
active participant of the game during his student days at Lav/rence Tech. Up
until 1952, Mr. Emig also coached the team and attained the enviable record of
45 wins and 33 losses.
Last year the job of coach and captain was given to John Dean, Mr. Emig
being on leave. With only two men left from the previous squad, John went
to work and whipped up a noteworthy team. Some of the better known netters
these Tech men we;e matched against this season were Adrian, Tri State,
Bowling Green, and Ohio Northern.
An experienced team will take to the courts next season since all but one
man will return. Because of this an overwhelming balance for LIT is expected
in the win and loss column.
JOHN DEAN
Captain
Team members were John Dean, John Grindrod, Ernie Kostyo, Tom Solaka,
Rod Sambrook, and Karl Hamilton.
����Fraternity—what m e a n i n g does this w o r d i m p a r t to a n i n d i v i d u a l not knowing about one.
He m i g h t look into W e b s t e r a n d f i n d t h a t f r a t e r n i t y means
" s t a t e of b e i n g brothers; a b o d y of men associated f o r the common interest".
To a f r a t e r n i t y man this d e f i n i t i o n o n l y scratches the surface of the m e a n i n g
he attaches to this w o r d .
His f e e l i n g c a n n o t be expressed in mere w o r d s
f o r its runs much d e e p e r t h a n this.
A new member i n v a r i a b l y finds t h a t a n
atmosphere of f r i e n d s h i p a n d c o o p e r a t i o n prevails.
A helping hand and
a k i n d w o r d is there w h e n most needed a n d so a d e e p f e e l i n g of b e l o n g i n g
develops.
Interfraternity
competition
is
keen
because
of
these
sentiments.
Overt
examples o f this a r e the e x c e p t i o n a l exhibits put o n b y the fraternities a t
a f f a i r s like H o m e c o m i n g a n d Founder's D a y .
Each tries t o o u t d o the other
a n d the results a r e pleasing to a l l .
This is also true of i n t r a m u r a l sports
such
football.
as
basketball,
baseball,
and
This
competitive
spirit
b r o u g h t still closer t o home w h e n p l e d g e seasons come a r o u n d a n d
tempts
are
made
to
influence o u t s t a n d i n g
is
at-
men t h r o u g h the medium
of
mixers.
These, t h e n , a r e some o f the feelings a n d aspects of f r a t e r n i t y life.
It is
a n t i c i p a t e d t h a t the pictures on the next f e w pages w i l l give a still more
comprehensive v i e w of this d o m i n a n t p a r t of campus life.
�The IFC members in the front row are Jim Lepley and Edwin Fahey from KSK, Henry Lybeck and Chris Spaseff, AGU, and
Stanley Kedzior, RDP. In the bock row are Sam Radulovich, PKU, Rudy Gengenbach and Jim Kohls, KPS,
Don Holzer, PKU, and Fred Houser, RDP.
John Dean, John Grindrod, Ernie Kostyo, Tom Solaka, Rod Sambrook and Karl Hamilton.
INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL
The Interfraternity Council is composed of two representatives from each fraternity
and was organized to deal with mutual fraternity problems. The main function of the
IFC is to establish rules and dates for rushing, pledge mixers, and pledging.
Chairmanship of the council rotates annually and during the last school year Henry
Lybeck of Alpha Gamma Upsilon served in this capacity. Jim Lepley of Kappa Sigma
Kappa served as Secretary.
An interfraternity picnic was the big social event sponsored by the IFC this last year.
Camp Dearborn was the chosen site and the excellent sport and picnic facilities were
put to good use by fraternity members, their families, and friends. Some of the scenes
of this affair were captured on film and appear on the following pages.
In conjunction with the fund raising program for the new school the IFC put up a
trophy for the fraternity that raised the most money through the sales of rafFle and dance
tickets. This trophy was presented to Kappa Phi Sigma by Chairman Henry Lybeck on
the night of February 14th. The KPS members edged out Kappa Sigma Kappa by only
a small margin and Rho Delta Phi placed a close third. Without a doubt, the part the
fraternities of Lawrence Tech played in the Building Fund Drive did much to make the
drive a success and bring the new campus closer to reality.
LAMBDA
IOTA
TAU
The Lambda lota Tau Honor A w a r d was instituted by Dean
Russell Lawrence in 1934, only two years after he founded
Lawrence Tech. These awards have been made annually
to deserving men since that time and have become the
most coveted of all keys.
Students who stand out in academic work are not too unusual, nor are those who lead in campus organizations. The
unusual is achieved when students can combine both successfuly. It was the contention of Dean Lawrence that this
latter group should have recognition. This feature of combining scholarship with extra-curricular activity makes the
Lambda lota Tau Honor Fraternity unique among honor organizations.
Looking over a candidate's qualifications are Lambda lota Tau committee members
Wallace Hansen, Chairman Gerald Larson, and Jack Nicholson.
George Hanovich
Robert Harrison
Stanley Kedzior
Ernest Kostyo
Stan Kukawka
Howard Lang
Gerald Larson
William Mullaly
Raymond Sevakis
Louis Weberman
Robert Parker
Robert Stuart
�ALPHA
GAMMA
UPSILON
In 1933, with the help of Mr. Kenneth Mead, head of the Physics Department at Lawrence Tech, the Epsilon chapter
of Alpha Gamma Upsilon was founded. Epsilon grew rapidly in size and in September of 1934 a fraternity room
was built on the 4th floor. In the summer of 1937 a house was purchased in Highland Park and AGU became the
first fraternity on campus to own a house. In 1942, however the obligations concerning the chapter house became
too great. The house was sold and Epsilon again reverted to the 4th floor room for meetings.
Epsilon made the first step in the formation of an Inter-fraternity Council in March of 1940. A letter was sent to
each fraternity on the campus and a meeting was held at the Epsilon house. In May of that year, the constitution
was passed and the IFC became an official organization of LIT largely through the efforts of AGU.
On the second evening in May the members and alumni from eleven Alpha Gamma Upsilon chapters were the guests
of Epsilon for the climax to the 1952 social season—the twenty-seventh National Convention. .The kickoff for this
three day event at the Tuller Hotel was a tremendous stag party. The following morning the team from Epsilon
emerged victorious from the fraternity wide bowling tournament. That evening at the Ball in the Arabian Room,
Jerry Dauth of lota chapter reigned as queen over a court of nine other chapter sweethearts. At the banquet on the
third day, Epsilon was the recipient of the hard earned bowling trophy.
The AGU officers are House Counselor Carl Ortolf, President Ralph Klann, Pledgemaster
Vince Miller, Rec. Secretary Norman Miller, Corr. Secretary Edward Keagy, V-President
David Stack, Treasurer Richard Brehmer, House Manager Albert O'Connor, and Sgt.
at Arms James Stewart.
R. Brehmer
R. Klann
V. Miller
J. Smith
R. Coldwell
H. Lanthier
A. O'Conner
C. Spaseff
L. Diedrich
H. Lybeck
R. Parker
D. Stack
H. Hook
G. McCulloch
W. Siefert
J. Stewart
E. Keagy
N. Miller
R. Sharp
R. Ziehm
�KAPPA
PHI
SIGMA
Kappa Phi Sigma is the youngest fraternity on the campus. Since its inception in January 1951, Kappa Phi Sigma
has grown to more than four times its original size. This development is due to the warm feelings of sincerity and
congeniality that is shared by all of the brothers. The main functions of Kappa Phi Sigma are to provide the bonds
of true brotherhood for men who desire to be more than "just friends", and to provide a wholesome extra-curricular
program.
in the field of campus activity. Kappa Phi Sigma has become outstanding. The fraternity was awarded the RED
CROSS Blood Drive Trophy and the Intramural Basketball Trophy in two school-wide competitions. In other phases
of campus life, Kappa Phi's have been elected to positions of honor and leadership.
The past year has seen Kappa Phi Sigma conduct two very successful pledge sessions, and maintain a full social calendar. The highlights of the social season have been—the annual Halloween Party, New Year's party, two Barbeques
and two Dinner Dances held at Tassie Tavern.
We, of the Kappa Phi Sigma, ore especially proud of maintaining the association of our alumni brothers. W e find
the renewal of brotherhood at social events very stimulating.
With the coming of commencement. Kappa Phi Sigma will lose many of its active members. To these men, we bid
farewell, and may your future hold in reality that which is in your dreams today.
The KPS officers are Treasurer Don McKinley, Corr. Secretary Bill Sheppard, V-President Rudy Gengenbach, Social Chairman Gil Mack, Faculty Advisor William Burke, President Dick Marshall, Rec. Secretary John Yanik, and Chaplain Jerry Roll.
J. Auer
R. Auer
J. Czech
D. Dancey
M. Dietz
B. Drane
V. Foster
R. Gengenbach
J. Grindrod
S. Gronkiewicz
H. Haupt
J. Kohls
E. Kovach
G. Mack
R. Marshall
D. McKinley
B. Morrison
D. Pickett
D. Reitzel
R. Rola
G. Roll
B. Sheppard
R. Wilbrecht
J. Yanik
D. Beattie
G. Dzendzel
B. Hunley
M. Marshman
B. Calleja
E. Fahey
H. Lang
R. Murphy
W. Chlopan
G. Falendyez
G. Larson
R. Murray
C. Christo
R. Gray
J. Lepley
C. Nellas
H. DeMink
T. Hysen
R. Levulus
N. Pack
�W. Price
D. Reichard
L. Weberman
STATE FAIR CONCESSION
��PHI
KAPPA
UPSILON
The Alpha and Delta chapters of Phi Kappa Upsilon have, as always, taken a prominent place in the fraternity life
on the campus during the past year.
Social activities are a must among the members as are contributions to the general betterment of campus life.
Outstanding among the recent events that Phi Kappa Upsilon took an active part in were the Blood Drive, Dinner-Dance, and wholehearted support of the building fund drive.
The Delta chapter officers are Robert Black, president. Bill Brown, v-president,
Al Fahrner, warden, Dick Niegebauer, secretary. Ken Jarvick, M. of R., Al Stone,
treasurer, and Bill Agy, chaplain.
�The Alpha chapter officers are President Francis Bell, Recording Secretary Jack Nicholson, Corresponding Secretary
Jack Korb, Pledgemaster Larry Kiselis, and Chaplain Earle Sterling.
R. Black
R. Darbyshire
P. Boudreau
G. Dip
B. Brown
A. Fahrner
G. Crittenden
F. Hansen
M. Dabich
D. Holzer
�K. Jarvick
J. Nicholson
D. Junttila
M. Olsen
W. Thielman
J. Korb
S. Radulovich
E. Mortier
R. Raymond
A. Stone
R. Neigebauer
E. Sterling
RHO
DELTA
PHI
"To develop a high standard of morals and character, encourage scholarship, and develop honor and loyalty among the students
of the Alma Mater" is the purpose of Rho Delta Phi Fraternity.
Rho Delta Phi was chartered at Lawrence Tech and incorporated under the laws of the State of Michigan in March of 1939. Since
that time it has expanded into three active chapters. Alpha representing night school. Beta representing day school, and Alpha
Omega, boasting a membership of over 200, representing the alumni. A Supreme Council, composed of representatives of all
chapters. Is the coordinating body of the fraternity.
Activities of RDP ore many and varied. The fall pledge season of Beta began with a pledge mixer at the home of Bob Harrison.
Alpha held theirs at the home of Harold Veitch. The following week fourteen "Brats" embarked on the strenuous rood to membership. During this period a hayride-weiner roost was held. Alpha sponsored a dinner-dance, and Alpha Omega held a Stag Party.
All pledges survived the informal initiation and were present at the Presentation Dinner at Huyler's L'Aiglon to receive their pins
and certificates. With the subservience of pledgeship over, the new members challenged the old members to a bosktboll game
and in retaliation for the discomforts endured beat them decisively.
Nine men began wearing the tie and pledge pin of Rho Delta Phi Fraternity after the spring pledge mixer held at the home of Rod
Sambrook. Besides the usual ceremonies, the spring schedule will include a golf meet at Belle Isle at which these pledges will serve
as caddies. This pledge season will be climaxed with the annual Presentation Dinner-Dance.
Beta chapter officers are President Richard Mitchell, Vice-president James Butera, Secretary Stan Kukawka, and Treasurer Bill Mullaly.
�The Alpha chapter officers are Treasurer Ed Priebe, Corresponding Secretary
Bob Priebe, President Harold Veitch, and Vice-President George Gravilla.
Not pictured is Recording Secretary Robert Stuart.
����The Homecoming exhibit this year was the idea of Bob Harrison.
Bill Mullaly drew up the plans and engineered the project. The whole
membership pitched in on the construction and the result was the best
looking exhibit at Homecoming. The "Future" section featured the
proposed floor plan and perspective of the Rho Delta Phi fraternity
House. This was the work and design of Don Schaening.
��Other activities included intramural as well as intrafraternity
basketball and stag parties.
C. Adams
M. Beamer
R. Bethke
R. Breederland
R. Buckman
J. Butera
G. East
G. Hanovich
R. Harrison
F. Houser
R. Jackson
S. Kedzior
S. Kukawka
R. Mitchell
W. Mullaly
A. Olsen
E. Priebe
R. Sandbrook
R. Sawyer
D. Schaening
G. Stein
H. Strasler
R. Stuart
L. Thomson
J. Turchan
H. Veitch
C. Weiler
�The spring pledge season "brats"
„r w o r e ho\ tor
and an informal initiation.
�ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
PORTRAIT P H O T O G R A P H Y -
METROPOLITAN ART STUDIOS
CANDID P H O T O G R A P H Y -
STAN KUKAWKA
COVER DESIGN A N D ART W O R K -
WILLIAM MULLALY
DEDICATION-
STANLEY J. KEDZIOR
LITHOGRAPHERS—
t i l e ART
905 H E N R Y S T . .
I N C O R P O R A T E D
D E T R O I T 1. M I C H I G A N
COVERS
BECKTOLD COMPANY of ST. LOUIS, M O .
BINDERS
TRIANGLE BOOKBINDING COMPANY
ATTENTION,
CONGRATULATIONS
LAWRENCE TECH
GRADUATES!
UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITIES
AT CONTINENTAL MOTORS
Engleside Tool
Continental Motors Corp., and its subsidiary Continental A v i a t i o n & Engineering Corp., offer unusual opportunities to
mechanical engineers interested in any of
the several phases of Continental's operations. These companies are in need of
capable, ambitious young men for w o r k
on gas turbine power plants, radial engines for helicopters, and air-cooled 2and 4-cycle industrial engines. T o the
right applicants, they offer:
& Mfg. Co.
SPECIALISTS
AUTOMOTIVE BODY
DIES AND
IN
PAY
E Q U A L L I N G OR E X C E E D I N G
T H A T IN COMPARABLE WORK
FIXTURES
ELSEWHERE
JIGS
COMPANY-PAID
INSURANCE
VACATIONS W I T H SALARY
LIBERAL RETIREMENT
PENSION
PLAN
ORGANIZED RECREATION
6100 E a s t Davison
Graduates and prospective graduates i n terested in joining an organization w i t h a
record of more than 50 years' steady
growth^—and going places w i t h it as
horizons continue to expand—are invited
to w r i t e or phone W . G . R A V E N , V i c e
President, at V A l l e y 2-1500.
TWinbrook 1-2165
D E T R O I T 12
rontinental Motors rorporation
12800 Kercheval Avenue
Detroit 14, Michigan
156
�Manufacturers
National Bank of Detroit
Compliments of
MILLER-SELDON
ELECTRIC CO.
W O O D W A R D A T MANCHESTER
Highlcmd Park, Afichigon
l930McGRAW
DETROIT
Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation
CONGRATULATIONS. TECH
SPAULDING ELEC'I'KIC
COMPANY
o n a 20 year record
from the pioneers of
FLUTED GUIDE
Power Apparatus Specialists
RATE-OF-FLOW
MEIERS
and
Application — Installation — Maintenance
Repair — Motors — Generators — T r a n s f o r m e r s
Switchffear — Substations — Speed Reducers
Couplings
SPECIAL T E S T I N G E Q U I P M E N T
Commercial Research laboratories,
Incorporated
1350 Michigan Ave.
WOodward 2-6200
20 Bartlett Avenue
H i g h l a n d Park 3, M i c h i g a n
D E T R O I T 26, M I C H I G A N
Manufacturers of
COX
INSTRUMENTS
Established 191?
157
�N. 1. TIMCO
Member L 1 T. Alumni
DeLUXE DIE WORKS
20201 HOOVER ROAD
DETROIT. MICHIGAN
KOESTLIN TOOL & DIE CORP.
STAMPING SPECIALISTS
NO WORK TOO LARGE
Complete Body Die Facilities
Humboldt and Magnolia Aves.
TA. 5-1490
�Congratulations
On Your Graduation
Detroit
Electrical
Contractors
Association
CONGRATULATIONS!!
TO
THE
FACULTY AND STUDENT BODY
OF
LAWRENCE INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
ANCHOR
DESIGNERS
STEEL
AND
CONVEYOR
MANUFACTURERS
6908 KINGSLEY AVE.
DEARBORN, MICHIGAN
COMPANY
�It's the Ferguson System
Congratulations to
That Makes the Difference!
Lawrence Tech on past achievements and
. . . and Sound Engineering
Played Its Part.
best wishes for future success
HARRY FERGUSON, Inc.
ECLIPSE COUITERBORE CO.
Founded 40 years ago
3639 E. Milwaukee Avenue
Detroit 11, Michigan
M A N U F A C T U R E R S OF F I N E E N D
Plant and Engineering Laboratories
C U T T I N G TOOLS
12601 S O U T H F I E L D
FERGUSON TRACTORS
1600 Bonner Avenue
Detroit 20, Michigan
AND
FERGUSON SYSTEM IMPLEMENTS
THE
CHAS. A . STRELINGER
STUDENTS
CO.
Many members of your alumni, as outstanding American citizens, have set high
standards in a profession which has done
so much to make this country of ours a
world leader.
149 East Lamed Street
Detroit 26, - Michigan
W O . 2-7474
W e need more and more engineers Hke
that who can think straight and act vigorously to keep American the land of opportunity.
M A C H I N E TOOLS
You gentlemen have the equipment for
that leadership. W e are depending on
YOU.
C U T T I N G TOOLS
I N D U S T R I A L SUPPLIES
Serving Industry Since 1884
CHAS. T. BUSH, President
NATIONAT. BROACH
& MACHINE CO.
5600 St. Jean
11801 M A C K A V E N U E
Detroit, Mich.
D E T R O I T , M I C H I G A N , U , S. A .
160
�THE STflnOflRD TUBE CO
''STAN DARD''
ROUND, SQUARE AND SPECIAL SHAPE
Welded and Butted Steel Tubing
Fabricated Tubular Parts
Upset Tubes and Forgings
Stainless Steel Tubing
24300 Plymouth Road
KEnwood 1-9300
Best Wishes for the Success of All
Graduates
COMMERCIAL
S T E E L TREATING CORPORATION
Metal Treating Specialists
DETROIT, MICHIGAN
6100 TIREMAN
161
�tuiationd
III
M r . Graduate
FISHERBODY takes the occasion to offer congratulations and best wishes to
this year's graduates of Lawrence Tech.
A great many of you have put i n years of hard w o r k to prepare
for a career i n engineering—and now you are ready for opportunity.
yourselves
M a y we suggest that you give particular thought to the wealth of opportunities to be found i n our highly diversified engineering operations.
Fisher Body is one of the world's greatest employers of engineers—and, because
of its far-reaching plans for the future, Fisher Body has a vital interest i n capable
young engineers.
W e can extend to you opportunities to meet your ambitions, i n the fields of product engineering, production engineering, experimental engineering, mechanical engineering, research and related fields.
For young men w i t h sound training, initiative and imagination, advancement
comes more rapidly at Fisher Body than w i t h many organizations—because the
extent and complexity of the various engineering programs require the services of
many executive engineers. I t is a long-standing policy of Fisher Body to build its
executive staff f r o m w i t h i n its own organization.
Then, too, since Fisher Body is a division of General Motors, you benefit by the
generous policies of the Corporation designed for the well-being and security of a l l
employees.
Fisher Body wishes each of you the greatest success i n your plans for the future
—and invites you to schedule an interview w i t h Fisher Body as the first step i n working out your plans.
FISHER BODY DIVISION
CENTRAL EmmERim
ACTIVITIES
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
162
�The Wayne W a y
GOOD
Progressive Industries Co.
MANUFACTURING - PROCESSING AND
DESIGNING OPTOOLS - GAUGES
DIES AND F I X T U R E S
8770 Linwood
PRODUCTS PLUS GOOD SERVICE
Metal Working Lubricants
B u s t Preventives
P a s t e Solders
C h e m i c a l Specialties
Wayne Chemical Products
Company
T Y I e r 7-7550
E s t a b l i s h e d 1899
CopeTand Street & M . C. R. R.
Detroit 17, Michigan
S I E W I K
T O O L
ANDERSON BROS.
C O .
Engineers and Manufacturers of Precision Parts
2862 E A S T G R A N D
1113 W . Philadelphia
BLVD.
D e t r o i t 2, Michigan
Detroit, Michigan
T R i n i t y 1-0072
MORSE CHAIN COMPANY
" I W a n t to B e Y o u r M i l k m a n "
H. A . M C D O N A L D
CREAMERY CO.
7601 Central Avenue
A Borg-Warner Industry
LOCAL — FRIENDLY
Milk — C r e a m — I c e C r e a m
TOwnsend 8-5250
9700 O a k l a n d
Mechanical Power
Avenue
Transmission
John E . Green Plumbing &
Heating Co., Inc.
INDUSTRIAL
Detroit 10, Michigan
Products
Compliments of
U N I O N TWIST DRILL
COMPANY
PIPING — PLUMBING
HEATING
1625 E. M c N I C H O L S
DETROIT
220 Victor — Highland Park
T O . 8-2400
163
�Compliments of
Industrial City Boring Co.
EXTRUSTION
TOOLS
FULLER TOOL CO,
JIGS, F I X T U R E S A N D GAGES
4000 11 Mile Road
11474 E. 9 Mile Road
Van Dyke, Michigan
JO 4-6708
Compliments of
Compliments of
Lawn Equipment Corp.
Production < Equipment Co.
&
1534 Trumbull Avenue
" E V E R Y T H I N G FOR T H E L A W N "
518-520 W . 11 Mile Road
Detroit 16, Michigan
w o o d w a r d 2-7135
SCHMIEG INDUSTRIES
Royal Oak, Mich.
Gregory Mayer & Thorn Co.
ENGINEERS A N D M A N U F A C T U R E R S
23930 Sherwood
Berkley, Michigan
E N G I N E E R I N G SUPPLIES
Centerline, Michigan
41 Cadillac Square
Detroit 26, Michigan
Phone JEffcrson 9-1030
w o o d w a r d 1-9330
W. T. A N D R E W C O .
M. N. DUFFY & CO.
R A D I O A N D E L E C T R O N I C SUPPLIES
P L U M B I N G SUPPLIES
15815 Hamilton Ave.
2040 Grand River Ave.
Highland Park, 3, Mich
w o o d w a r d 3-2270
TUlsa 3-2000
Compliments of
Huron Forge & Machine Co.
Burton Abstract & Title Co.
350 East Congress St.
DROP
Detroit 26, Michigan
w o o d w a r d 2-9800
9041 Alpine
-
FORCINGS
Detroit 4, Michigan
Compliments of
Compliments of
Eaton Manufacturing Co.
Modern Industrial Engineering Co.
14230 Birwood
Detroit 26, Michigan
9771 French Road
Detroit 4, Michigan
Detroit 13, Michigan
W A l n u t 1-5820
WEbster 3-7280
164
�WAYNE OAKLAND BANK
Royal Oak
-
Berkley
McINNES DESMOND
Highland Park
-
-::- F U N E R A L DIRECTORS -::-
Clawson
Stephenson Highway at 11 Mile Road
TOwnsend 8-4798
Resources Over $59,000,000.00
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
16111 W O O D W A R D at P U R I T A N
CHECKER CAB CO.
R. H. McMANUS & CO.
RADIO DISPATCHED
CONTRACTING ENGINEERS
WO.
DETROIT
3-7000
CINCINNATI
Detroit, Michigan
PEORIA, ILL.
ENTERPRISE
Michigan Boiler & Engineering
MACHINE PARTS CORP.
Company
"Tool Makers Since 1 9 2 0 "
Home of Empco Products
4124 W E S T J E F F E R S O N
DETROIT
2731 Jerome
MEYER EM6INEERING CO.
DESIGNING
- -
1-7900
Congratulations and Best Wishes
DOUCIAS & LOMASON CO.
ENGINEERS
Established
Twinbrook
1935
5836 Lincoln Avenue
241 Chene Street
Detroit, M i c h i g a n
Detroit 8,
L O 8-1840
165
Michigan
�T O M ' S NORTHWOOD M A R K E T S
NAVARRE DIE Cr TOOL CO.
T H E FINEST FOODS A T MICHIGAN'S
FINEST MARKETS
12811 Woodward A v e , cor. Glendale
906 No. Woodward cor. Catalpa Drive,
Royal Oak
T O O L S — DIES
and our new location at
888 Orchard Lake R d , in Pontiac, Mich.
13864 Elmira
C O N V E N I E N T PARKING A T A L L STORES
Detroit. Michigan
E N D MILLS, COUNTERBORES, REAMERS,
FLAT A N D D O V E T A I L FORM TOOLS,
CIRCULAR, F O R M R E L I E V E D M I L L I N G
C U T T E R S , SPECIAL T O O L S , B O T H I N
CARBIDE A N D H I G H SPEED STEEL. (Ask
for Catalog.)
SEE O U R P O S I T I V E , RIGID
T. L DRIVE.
ACROMATIC TOOL CO.
Manufacturers of
SPECIAL HIGH SPEED AND
TIPPED CUTTING TOOLS
FALCON TOOL C O M P A N Y
p. O . Box 4605
CARBIDE
21150 Coolidge Highway
Detroit 34, Michigan
Oak Park, Michigan
J O 4-6677
20771 R y a n Road
W i n t e r Brothers
CONGRATULATIONS
Stamping C o .
from
SIMPSON MANUFACTURING CO.
DIE AND STAMPING
LITCHFIELD, MICHIGAN
7351 L Y N D O N
DETROIT,
MICHIGAN
Detroit Electric Hoists are built i n capacities of
to
15 tons. They are made i n various designs for practically
every kind of material handling problem.
Congratulation
Ask for illustrated Bulletin with interesting
on many types of Detroit Electric Hoists.
Mechanical Engineering Service Co.
DETROIT HOIST & MACHINE CO.
21 Henry St.
EST. 1905
Detroit, Michigan
GEORGE LEGCATT
8222 M O R R O W
Also
R. C. FAIRCHILD
ST., D E T R O I T , MICH.
Manufacturers
Air Hoists
of
and Cranes
�CONGR/iTOIATIONS
DYNA-FLYTE
"THE ORIGINAL BALL BEARING DISTRIBUTOR PLATE"
R E N B E R L E S PRODUCTS
18606 F I T Z P A T R I C K A V E .
DETROIT-28-MICHIGAN
CONGRATULATIONS
L. I. T .
FROM
WAYNE FOUNDRY & STAMPING CO.
Detroit 10, Mich.
MANUFACTURERS
OF SHORT RUN AUTOMOTIVE
& AIRCRAFT
STAMPINGS
�W. p. JATKOE MACHINE TOOL
ENGINEERING COMPANY
1809 K. Grand Blvd.
WA
H E T T C H E MOTOR SALES
Detroit
FORD SALES — SERVICE
2-1320
2475 West Grand Boulevard
STEEL
SCAFFOLDS
and
Steel City Testing Machines, Inc.
STEEL
BLEACHERS
FOR SALE or RENT
Manufacturers of Machines f o r Testing
the Physical Properties of Metals
Safway Steel Scaffolds
57
EAST
8817 L y n d o n
CANFIELD
W E b s t e r 3-3500
TEmple 3-0420
CADMET
Detroit 21, Michigan
KEUFFEL & ESSER
COMPANY
CORP.
EST
PRECISION CASTINGS
LOST W A X M E T H O D
Drafting, Reproduction, Surveying
Equipment and Materials
J E 9-2220
20801 R y a n Road
Slide Rules
Detroit 34. M i c h i g a n
Measuring Tapes
37 W. Palmer
PRODUCTION MANUFACTURERS
of
SPIRAL - FORMATE - ZEROL
C O N I F L E X - SPUR GEARS
Transmission and Starter
Gears, Sprockets, Spline
Shafts, Automotive Parts
M O L D E D P R O D U C T S CO
PLASTIC
MOULDING
Detroit Bevel G e a r Company
8130 Jos. Campau
1867
21831
Detroit 11, M i c h .
DEQUINDRE
HAZEL PARK, MICH.
T R i n i t y 2-5856
�MOTOR PRODUCTS CORPORATION
11801 MACK AVENUE
DETROIT, MICHIGAN. U. S. A,
CONGRATULATIONS
TO THE GRADUATING CLASS OF 1953
LAWRENCE TECH.
from
FEDERAL SCREW WORKS
DETROIT
�Complete
COMPLIMENTS
BUILDING
OF
SERVICE
HOWARD-ELECTRIC
COMPANY
Industrial & Commercial
Contracting
Engineers
CAMPBELL CONSTRUCTION CO.
9301
Michigarv
Detroit
Tiffany
6-9000
DETROIT
10, Mich.
CONGRATULATIONS
Gorham Tool
Best Wishes
C o .
CHICAGO
14400 Woodrow Wilson
RAWHIDE
MANUFACTURING
Detroit 3 , Michigan
�Congratulations
and
Best Wishes
ON YOUR
GRADUATION
The GEAR GRINDING MACHINE CO.
_
DETROIT, MICHIGAN
CONGRATULATIONS
Detroit Broaeh
20201
Detroit
GUSTAVE VON REIS,
Pres.
Company
Sherwood
34,
Michigan
�CONGRATULATIONS ON THE GROWTH OF
LAWRENCE TECH
DANLY
J'rlend
MACHINE SPECIALTIES, INC.
1549 Temple Avenue, Detroit, Michigan
DANLY DIE SETS
DANLY ADVANCE
DIE MAKERS
DESIGNED
SUPPLIES
PUNCH PRESSES
TOOLS
- DIES
- JIG A N D FIXTURE
SPECIALIST
Manufacturers of J. S. Radial Relief Grinders
29800 Stephenson H w y .
Ajax Steel & Forge Co.
Royal Oak, Michigan
Royal Oak Tool & Machine Co.
TOOLS
DIES
JIG A N D FIXTURE
SPECIALIST
STEEL
205 Adair Street
Manufacturers of J. S. Radial Relief Grinders
FORCINGS
Detroit 7, Michigan
LOrain 7-0755
29800 Stephenson H w y .
Royal Oak, Michigan
�DETROIT TORCH & MFG.
COMPANY
PRODUCT ENGINEERING
Tool, Die and Special Machine Designers
W o o d Patterns and Models
Graphic Engineering
1625 East Grand B l v d .
Detroit 11, M i c h i g a n
BRANCH
12057
DETROIT,
Brass o r Bronze Castings
7633 E . Davison, Detroit, Michigan
1203 E . Lincoln A v e , , R o y a l O a k , Mich.
R o u g h o r Machined
RAY ENGINEERING CO.
from
Specify
I. T. W E D I N C O R P .
1221 East 9 Mile Road
MICHIGAN
OFFICES
19185 Conant, Detroit, Michigan
Congratulations
CARDONI
RAY
2867
Ferndale, M i c h i g a n
E. G R A N D
O I L BURNERS
BLVD.
TR
4-0471
D E T R O I T 2, M I C H .
Compliments of
SMITH, HINCHMAN & GRYLLS, INC.
Saratoga
ARCHITECTS
800
MarqueHe
General
Hospital
BIdg.
15000 Gratiot
Detroit,
Michigan
HIGHLAND PARK
L U M B E R CO.
Efficient Engineering Co.
Registered
Professional
LA. 6-5100
DETROIT
Engineers
BUILDINGS
SUPPLIES
Designers of P r o d u c t s , Tools, D i e s , J i g s , F i x t u r e s ,
Special M a c h i n e s , D i e C a s t i n g a n d
Plastic
1040 West F o r t
15853 H a m i l t o n A v e .
Equipment
TO
Detroit, Michigan
H i g h l a n d Park 3, M i c h .
8-8246
�Complimenh of
THE MOUNT CLEMENS
METAL PRODUCTS CO.
WELKER
MACHINERY CO., INC.
Production Stampings, Clinch N u t
Assemblies and Metal Specialties
413 New Center BIdg.
OILITE Division
1 5 S. ROSE STREET
4
1 9 4 Livernois
92
Mt, Clemens, Mich.
Avenue
Taylor - Thompson
Machinery
Co.
WELTRONIC COMPANY
WISHES
19500 W E S T 8 M I L E
ROAD
L A W R E N C E INSTITUTE OF
TECHNOLOGY
SUCCESS F O R T H E F U T U R E
DETROIT
19, M I C H I G A N
K E 2-2800
s05
89
Livernois
Detroit
4,
Michigan
�A Recognized
QUALITY
Manufacturers of
SOURCE
AIRCRAFT AND A U T O M O T I V E
for
PARTS
DIES
THOMPSON PRODUCTS, Inc.
TOOLS
Factories in Cleveland, Detroit and Los Angeles
JIGS
Subsidiaries—
Thompson Aircraft Products Co., Euclid Ohio
FIXTURES
Toledo Steel Products Co., Toledo, Ohio
Thompson Products, Ltd., St. Catharines, Ont.
RICHARD BROTHERS
A L L I E D PRODUCTS
DIV.
CORPORATION
Detroit and Hillsdale
ESSEX
INDUSURIAL WIRE CLOTH
WIRE
CORPORATION
PRODUCTS CORP.
Magnet Wire
Industrial Wire Cloth Products
Automotive Wire
and Cable
14310 WOODWARD AVENUE
3927 Fourth St.
Wayne, Michigan
HIGHLAND park
�DAVIS BROTHERS, Inc.
PLUMBING AND HEATING CONTRACTORS
INSTITUTIONAL
INDUSTRIAL
COMMERCIAL
POWER PIPING
T A 52552
D E T R O I T 16
Congratulations...
GRADUATES AND FACULTY
LMEIE iSTimE O T C IO Y
F EH G
L
to the
of
CARBOLOY
DEPARTMENT
OF GENERAL
ELECTRIC
D E T R O I T 32, M I C H I G A N
COMPANY
" T H E HOME OF CREATED-METALS"
C E M E N T E D CARBIDES
ALNICO PERMANENT MAGNETS
HEVIMET
THERMISTORS
�Monitor Engineering Conpany
4646 Lawton Avenue
Detroit 8, Michigan
TYler 7-7110
f.jlvM»CHlllED-GI)OUN0/y?
Monitor Machine Tool (]onipany
7350 Central Avenue
Detroit 10, Michigan
TYler 8-3700
ENGINEERS, DESIGNERS, AND MANUFACTURERS
JORDAN
4-6060
1100 WOODWARD H E I G H T S
FERNOAtE
OF
BOULEVARD
HIGH P R O D U C T I O N MACHINERY
20.MICHIGAN
AND T O O L
CONGRATULATIONS
S. S. KRESGE CO.
CLASS O F '53
Woodward at Sears
KELSEY-HAYES
and
Woodward at Ford
5c, 10c, 25c and $1.00 STORES
Bendix Power Brakes - Truckstell Conversions
Wheelbase Changes - Carburetors - Magnetos
COMPLIMENTS OF
Fuel Pumps—Diesel Injection
Specialized Truck Equipment
E. & L TRANSPORT CO.
14201 Schaden
KNORR-MAYNARD INC.
DEARBORN
5743 Woodward Avenue
COMPLIMENTS OF
U . S. D R U G S
8721 V A N D Y K E A V E N U E
Phone: W A . 1-4533
LUzon 1-7770
�The^
CONGRATULATIONS
L . 1. T .
Hill-Maclntosh
GRADUATES
Company
Jensen & Keough
"Takes great pride in the part played
by us in the construction of the
BLESSED S A C R A M E N T C A T H E D R A L "
ARCHITECTS
15875 James Couzens Highway
U . of D . F I E L D HOUSE
STONE SETTING CONTRACTORS
Detroit
CONGRATULATIONS GRADUATES
C. W. SMITH
Research Designing Service
ENGINEERING
DESIGNERS A N D M A N U F A C T U R E R S
of
SPECIAL M A C H I N E S
DESIGNERS O F TOOLS, JIGS A N D
TOOLS
FIXTURES
- JIGS - FIXTURES
-
DIES
DETROIT
23745 Mound Road
66 East Forest Avenue
Centerline, Michigan
Detroit Phone: JEfferson 6-8248
Detroit 1, Michigan
T E . 2-7662
�Waterway Construction
CONGRATULATIONS
TO
'53 GRADUATES
Company
UNDERGROUND EXCAVATING
CONTRACTORS
HYDE
&
BOBBIO
ENGINEERS
Sewer, Water and Gas Main Installations
Box 162, Redford Station
Detroit 19, Michigan
REdford 1030
328 West Lafayette
COMPLIMENTS OF
N. A. W O O D W O R T H COMPANY, Sales Division
ENGINEERS
1300 EAST 9 MILE ROAD
DETROIT 20, MICHIGAN
PRECISION G A G E S
C O N E - L O K JIGS
DIAPHRAGM CHUCKS AND ARBORS
PRECISION PARTS
�Compliments of
Detroit Stamping
Company
THE READY - POWER CO.
Manufacturers of
GAS-ELECTRIC POWER
Established 1915
UNITS
For Electric Industrial T r u c k Operation
MANUFACTURERS OF
READY-POWER
Pressed Metal
Parts and Products
Medium Size and Smaller Stampings
" D E - S T A - C O " Toggle Clamps
Arbor Spacers, Shims,
Packaged S h i m Stock
GENERATORS
Dependable, Independent Electric Power
For A l l Purposes
READY-POWER
350 M I D L A N D
ENGINED
REFRIGERATION
AVENUE
Highland Park Station
DE-l-HOIT 3, M I C H I G A N
TOwnsend
ENGINE
Gasoline, N a t u r a l Gas, Butane or Diesel Powered
A i r Conditioning or Refrigeration
8-5080
Plants: 3826
Grand
River
Avenue
and
11231
BRUCE
Compliments O f
F r e u d Avenue,
PRODUCTS
Detroit
CORPORATION
Manufacturers
Turchan Follower
Buffing C o m p o s i t i o n s — B u f f & P o l i s h i n g Wheels
D r a w i n g L u b r i c a n t s — G r i n d i n g Compounds
Machine
Spray B o o t h Coating — Non-Rust Oils
Company
Soldering a n d T i n n i n g Fluxes
Trade BRUKO
8259
Mark
Livernois
Detroit S a l e s O f f i c e
6519
Detroit 4 , M i c h i g a n
G r a n d River
TY. 6 - 4 5 9 4
Plant & G e n . Offices
Howell, Mich.
1090
�Desi
choice for the future?
Which
It takes all kinds of engineers to design, produce and distribute
SQUARE D'S broad line of electrical equipment.
Throughout its years of expansion Square D's prime source of
engineering talent has been schools such as yours. Not only electrical
engineers. Mechanical and industrial engineers, too.
Would you like to know more about Square D and the opportunities we offer?
5QUHRE D CDMPHNY
SQUARE D COMPANY CANADA LTD., l O R O N r O • S O U A R S D lie MEXICO, S.A., MEXICO CITY, D.f.
Are you still using slow uphill hand methods that keep
your assembly department in low gear and labor costs in
high? Discard them and get on to the rapid straight-away
of speedy, inexpensive production offered by D.P.S. powerdriven machines.
DETROIT POWER
SCREWDRIVERS
DETROIT POWER NUT DRIVER
A revolutionary new machine that drives nuts with amazing
speed, either semi-automatically, or it can be adapted to
full automatic operation entirely eliminating the manual
handling of nuts. Capacity: nuts, W min. to "At" max.
across flats.
Drive screws as fast as
one a second—all types
of screws—no marring of
heads or stripping threads
—all screws driven to uniform tension—Hopper-fed
-SCREWS ALWAYS IN
SIGHT OF OPERATOR-3
models, one to fit your
requirements.
THE HOPPER UNIT
Motorized—Highly Adaptable—A selective feeding
device whereby production parts are selected,
oriented and fed in a
given position for primary
and secondary operations.
SPECIAL
ASSEMBLING
MACHINES
For light assembly operations using Hopper Units
to feed component parts.
DETROIT POWER SCREWDRIVER CD.
2801-B W. FORT ST.
DETROIT 16, MICH.
�TELEVISION COMES OF AGE . . . WITH
THE
Bendix "21
TELEVISION'S
CROWNING ACHIEVEMENT
W i t h the sensational new B e n d i x * "21" comes a new
standard of picture realism. Now, at last, television
looks as you always hoped it would.
T o see the Bendix "21" picture is to fall i n love with
it. I t ' s so rich i n d e t a i l . . . so sharp i n focus . . . so
free from interference . . . so easy on the eyes. Here,
indeed, is the finest picture science has ever produced.
See it and compare.
* R E 6 . U. S. PAT. O F F .
THE VIRGINIA-MODEL 21K3.
Rich, hand - rubbed mahogany
finish console. Giant 2 1 " picture.
OFFERING E V E R Y T H I N G YOU'VE ALWAYS
DREAMED OF IN A TELEVISION RECEIVER
REFLECTION-FREE PICTURE!
Bendix picture tube and safety glass are o p t i cally engineered t o eliminate annoying room
light reflections . . . and resulting eyestrain.
EXCITING NEW TONE FIDELITY!
Whether you're listening t o a commentator o r
a symphony, the skillfully crafted Bendix sound
system brings you glorious naturalness of tone.
DISTINCTIVE RICHNESS IN STYLING!
WHATEVER your taste in cabinet style and color,
you'll find a Bendix... in light or dark w o o d ,
in modern or period d e s i g n . . . to " f i l l the bill."
AVIATION
AMAZING FRINGE-AREA RECEPTION!
The Bendix ultra-sensitive tuner helps these
sensational new receivers bring in a top quality
picture, even in remote fringe areas.
••Ar SET-IT-FORGET-IT OPERATION!
No need to keep getting up and down to adjust
focus, brightness or sound. Exclusive Bendix
circuits keep picture perfectly adjusted.
PLUS A HOST OF OTHER
YEARS-AHEAD FEATURES
CORPORATION
�A
WINNING
COMBINATION
Spline Gages
Stampings
Gears
Gear Pumps
Plating
The facilities of Vinco and its Industrial Stamping
& M f g . Co. division offer a more widely diversified
service to metal product manufacturers. Both
organizations have built their reputations on quality
workmanship, and this will continue to be the
foundation on which the future will be built.
Vinco Corp., 9111 Schaefer Hwy., Detroit 28, Mich.
Assembly Work
Measuring Equipment
Mass Production of Parts
INCH
FOR
SALE
�A REAL OPPORTUNITY?
As a young graduate engineer of one of the
country's leading e n g i n e e r i n g schools, you
undoubtedly desire to start your professional
career with a firm offering a real opportunity
to get ahead. Pioneer offers you that opportunity in the industrial engineering field,
# Your desires, naturally, are to obtain a firm
start, to get practical engineering experience,
to increase your k n o w l e d g e by working in
many phases of engineering, an opportunity
to advance to the top rungs.
As the largest and today the most progressive
company in the industrial engineering field.
Pioneer offers you all of these.
# A leader in the independent engineering industry since the 1930's, Pioneer has developed
its present r e p u t a t i o n t h r o u g h its proven
capability to handle every detail of the most
complete program. Highest calibre production
engineers have j o i n e d and r e m a i n e d with
Pioneer because the firm has eliminated the
high peaks and deep valleys of employment
by consistently cutting for industry both cost
and time of re-tooling, improving of product
design and devising of new techniques. At
Pioneer variety is substituted for repetitiousness, challenges for stagnation.
Pioneer officials will be glad to tell you personally of the opportunity they can offer you.
19669 JOHN R STREET
ENGINEERING
& MANUFACTURING
CO., INC.
DETROIT 3, MICHIGAN
T h i s A n n u a l Lithogr
ART
INCORP
90i HENRY ST.. D E T R O I T
�LAWRENCE INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
�
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LTU Yearbooks
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The L Book
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University Yearbooks
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Lawrence Technological University, formerly Lawrence Institute of Technology yearbooks from 1935-
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Lawrence Technological University
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Lawrence Technological University
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pdf
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Yearbooks
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L Book 1953
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LTU Yearbook 1953
Subject
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College yearbooks
Student government
Cartoons and comics
Greek letter societies
Homecoming
Advertising
MacArthur, Douglas--1880-1964
Society of Automotive Engineers
Proms
College sports
Description
An account of the resource
Lawrence Institute of Technology's (now Lawrence Technological University) 1953 yearbook. Features story on the visit of Douglas MacArthur to LIT in 1952.
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Lawrence Technological University
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Lawrence Technological University
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1953
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July 23, 2015
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©2013 Lawrence Technological University. These images may be used for personal or educational purposes. They are not available for commercial purposes without the explicit permission of LTU.
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LTU-YB1953
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Lawrence Technological University
Founders Day
Freshmen initiation
Industrial Technical Institute
Math Club
Senior stag
Soaring Society
Yearbooks
-
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PDF Text
Text
�GOING TO COLLEGE; THE RESULT...
Today's f r e s h m a n , u p o n e n t e r i n g
college, has been i n d o c t r i n a t e d w i t h
the importance of task consciousness
in a w o r l d t o r n b y strife a n d political
dissensions. He came to college i m bued w i t h an idea of the seriousness
of his place in the w o r l d . Frequently,
this indoctrination causes h i m to lose
sight of the f a c t t h a t e d u c a t i o n has a
two-fold purpose in life: 1—subject
l e a r n i n g , a n d 2—social a d j u s t m e n t .
We, the g r a d u a t i n g class of 1 9 5 1 ,
h a v e f o u n d t h a t these t w o f e a t u r e s of
college life must be h a r m o n i o u s l y
pursued so t h a t in g a i n i n g the status
of a p r o f e s s i o n a l r a n k i n g , w e can
reflect the ideals placed by the w o r l d
on the p r o f e s s i o n a l m a n . This w e feel
has b=en a c c o m p l i s h e d . It is true t h a t
at times w e slipped a n d d i d not S
"the forest f o r the trees," but now v
can look back w i t h p r i d e , secure
the sense of accomplishment a
commencement.
For most of us, professional life
b e g i n n i n g . W e must m a i n t a i n t
s t a n d a r d s t h a t society has placed <
o u r d i p l o m a . W e are r e a d y .
�Professor George Martin—With deep a p p r e c i a t i o n f o r his
u n f a i l i n g a i d a n d u n d e r s t a n d i n g , w e d e d i c a t e this b o o k .
�1951
L-BOOK
CONTENTS
Scenes
4-7
Tech News
8-9
Registrations
10-11
Frosh Initiation
14-15
Fencing
17
Basketball
20-37
Tennis
38
Administration
39-41
Dept. Heads
42-43
Faculty
44-46
Student Council
47
Founder's Day
48-50
Senior Class
51
Senior Stag
81-82
Interfraternity Council
83-84
Alpha Gamma Upsilon
85-86
Kappa Sigma K a p p a
87-90
Phi Kappa Upsilon
91-93
Rho Delta Phi
94-95
Advertisements
96-114
Autographs
1951
Professor Carl M. Einhorn, f a c u l t y sponsor of the L-Bo(
a n d the Tech N e w s .
115-116
L-BOOK'S COVER
This
year's
cover
was
L-Book
designed
by Skip Drane.
Associate Editor Skip Drane, Editor Wally Croll, Associate Editor Jim Saunders of the 1951 L-Book sta
���What's new?
��TECH
This p a g s
A n o t h e r issue f i n i s h e d .
H e l p i n g t h e l i n o t y p i s t p r e p a r e t h e Tech N e w s .
Editor
Marcum, Lee, Cromwell,
Leo Berlin
a n d Chuck Gibson pasting t h e n e x t issue.
�m
�REGISTRATION
HERE IS WHERE you receive your I.B.M. registration cards.
With the introduction of the new
and modern International Business
Machine methods of student registration speed and accuracy of class
scheduling are foremost. Put into
operation by Mr. Hobson and his
assistants the students now pick up
cards for each class they wish to
enroll.
After choosing their schedule
from the Registration Issue of the
TECH NEWS a n d p r o c e e d i n g
through the card table the students
then are interviewed by members
of the faculty who check and
double check their programs and
pre-requisites. In this w a y the sections are filled with a predetermined number.
The cards when processed by the
I.B.M. equipment provide the professor with a complete list of
students for each class that he is
teaching.
THE FACULTY ASSISTS the student with his class scheduling.
The long wait for the report
cards at the end of each term is no
longer a months wait but is reduced in time to that of only t w o
days from the time the faculty turn
in their grades to the registrar.
�The study h a l l is t u r n e d
into a processing d e p a r t ment d u r i n g r e g i s t r a t i o n
period with designated
sections f o r each e n g i n e e r ing major a n d level of
work.
�CLASSES and GROUPS
o p h o m o r e s l e a r n e d t h e t r u e m e a n i n g o f " T h e o r y a n d Practice."
A series o f
S.A.E.
technical
lectures w a s
presented
by
the
��"FROSH
INITIATION"
To the new freshmen entering college, the day is
filled with golden opportunities. The opportunity of
attending classes and gaining k n o w l e d g e that he
never k n e w e x i s t e d . A
large part of "going to
college" is the attitude that
the new student has towards the activities which
are provided for him by
the more initiated students
of Lawrence Tech.
O n c e each y e a r t h e
Sophomore class members
provide the Freshmen with
a chance to be of service
to every student in the college. During Freshmen Initiation W e e k , or b e t t e r
known as "hell week", the
freshie is directed to do
certain acts w h i c h must
measure up to the requirements of the upper classmen.
If the frosh takes the attitude of not caring he is
sure to end up as one of
those students who carries
with him only a degree in
his respective engineering
major. But if the new student can take the experiences of i n i t i a t i o n cjnd
pledging a fraternity with
a sense of humor he has
gained much in the knowledge of getting along with
his fellow men.
In any event there is
more to "going to college"
than attending classes and
religiously d o i n g h o m e work. A large part of "going to college" is getting a
well rounded education in
human nature.
Of course all this extracurricular fun is taken in
good stead and usually
turns out for the best if not
slightly well worn.
�Emerging victorious f r o m the Freshman Class
elections were President George Hayter, Secretary-Treasurer Tom Worden, a n d Vice President
Dick Neigebauer.
A special Kangaroo Court w a s held f o r every
cooperate f u l l y d u r i n g t h e i n i t i a t i o n .
S o p h o m o r e President J e r r y Roll " s e i z e d u p "
t w o helpless Frosh f o r t h e f u l l t r e a t m e n t .
Frosh
who
f a i l e d to
The d a y o f r e c k o n i n g a r r i v e d f o r the Frosh w h o
d i d n ' t t a k e the i n i t i a t i o n seriously.
The "Frosh C h o i r " w a s g i v e n a n o p p o r t u n i t y to present t h e i r r e n d i t i o n
.P^ " D e a r O l d l-^l-T."
�Pictured a b o v e are the Square
officers f o r the 1950-51 school y e a r .
Club
The Institute of A e r o n a u t i c a l Sciences
was represented by the a b o v e officers.
The Square Club's largest social f u n c t i o n w a s the a n n u a l d i n
A n e w a d d i t i o n to the aero lab w a s the w i n d t u n n e l ,
�The members of this year's fencing team are Leon Yulkowski, Dick
Paul Salazer, Dick Sharp, Jim Lepley, Jim Donahue and Howard
Dick Sharp parries as Paul Salazar attempts a chest cut during te
practice at Bela de Tuscon.
�Soph prexy Jerry Roll and Secretary.
The engine looks like this.
CLASSES
and
GROUPS
To make college life of real
value, learning must be achieved
in the classrooms. But at Lawrence
Tech, faculty and students know
that college life begins, in many
instances, in the halls, offices, and
multiple outside activities that
make these years the happiest in
our lives.
We find out how to use it.
The smiling faces of the Junior politicos: Tom Limperis, Bob Alfather, Chuck Henry, and John Calvert.
ACS leaders: Chuck Henry, Stan Kukawa,
Moves Movsesian,and Dale Boyd.
�THE MYSTERY OF 1ng iclentities v / c i o solvod UIKI.M
watchful eye of Mr. Bray.
LEARNING THAT THE d r a f t s m a n ' s most i m p o r t a n t too!
the eraser proves q u i t e a task.
�WALT BAZYLEWICZ
A&sistant Coach
BASKETBALL
1951 proved the predictions of
many sportswriters v/ho said that
L.l.T. is one of the top basketball
pov/ers in the nation. Led by Don
Ridler, rotund Athletic Director and
DON RIDLER
Head Coach, the "Blue Devils" took
Athletic Director and Head Coach
of their games and wound up in
the National Invitation Tournament
at Madison Square Garden in New
York. The following pages show
the tense moments in several of
the big games and the
relaxed
jubilation of the victory parties and
dances after them.
CARL CAMPBELL
Freshman Basketball Coach
FRESHMAN TEAM
VARSITY TEAM
First Row, L. to R.—George Woods, Art Jonhowski, Frank Occovetti, Richard
Boomer, Stud. Mgr., Bob Wulbrecth, Robert Loch, Zelma Hines
Second Row, L. to R. Frank Anzeto, Joe Auer, Ben Zabowski, Carl Campbell,
Coach Warner Kellan, Carl Schulte
First Row, L. to R.—Roger Adams, Roy Schrieber, George Adams, Herman, Pett,
Sam Smith, Ray Mawhorter
Second Row, L. to R.—Gene Khoury, Blaine Denning, Barney Petty, Bill Wagner,
Ken Burrell, Ray Chojnowski
Third Row, L. to R. Richard Boomer, Stud. Mgr., Walt Bazyiewicz, Coach, Ralph
Okie, Lee Houtteman, Jim Stepler, Bob McManamy, Don Ridler, Coach, Charles
McCarthy
�Again this year Coach Don Ridler presented well known dance bands to augment the basketball'
program at the Coliseum.
The Homecoming Game with the University of Delaware was snowed out. When played the score was
L.l.T. 62, U. of D. 58.
���They w o r k e d t o m a k e it a success.
��This y e a r ' s tennis t e a m includes Marv Smith, Lee Cromwell, Don Brehmer, John Dean, John Grinrod, Carlo Corte,
Ed Larson, John Swiecicki, Don Ryder, a n d Coach Ralph Emig.
John Swiecicki tries a b a n k h a n d a n d it looks like
strike o n e .
Coach Emig directs the t e a m during a practice
session a t P a l m e r P a r k .
Marv Smith perfects his c a n n o n b a l l .
�PRESIDENT E. GEORGE LAWRENCE
�JAMES HOBSON, President's Aide
ADMINISTRATION
One of the advantages gained in attending a smaller
college is the close association that is developed between
the student and the administration. Here at Lawrence Tech
we are especially proud of our record in this field.
MISS GENEVIEVE DOOLEY, Registrar
President Lawrence has extended his open door policy
throughout the college and the student knows that his
problems, whether personal or not, will be handled with
care and understanding. We, of the graduating class, have
made many lasting friendships with the administration and
feel that this association
appreciatively.
GEORGE A. HENDRICKSON, Dean of Engineering
has furthered
our education
�WILLIAM BURKE, E m p l o y m e n t Director
NICKOLI TERBOJEVICH, A d m i n i s t r a t i v e A i d e
�PROFESSOR GERALD P. CONNELL
Chemical Engineering
PROFESSOR HANS G. ERNEMAN
Mechanical Engineering
PROFESSOR GEORGE P. MARTIN
Aeronautical Engineering
DEPARTMENT HEADS
PROFESSOR WILLIAM E. MENZEL
Civil Engineering
PROFESSOR LLOYD C. BAGBY
Industrial Engineering a n d Mathematics
PROFESSOR LEONARD E. FISCHER
Electrical E n g i n e e r i n g
PROFESSOR EARL W. PELLERIN
Architectural Engineering
DR. EDWIN O. GRAEFFE
Social Science
�PROFESSOR JOHN S. RACKWAY
Engineering Drawing
DR. GAIL P. BREWINGTON
Physics
�FACULTY
George G. Allison
Mechanical Drawing
Kenneth J. Baune
Civil Eng.
Irving Appleblaff
Mechanical Eng.
Harold C. Boothroyd
Chemistry
Theran H. Bray
Mathematics
Edmund J. Dombrowski
Industrial Eng.
Emmet J. Donnelly
English
William F. S. Dowlding
Industrial Eng.
Carl M. Einhorn
English
Ralph C. Emig
Mathematics
John R. Fawcett
Mathematics
�Burton S. Gorrell
Mechanical Eng.
Robert H. Garmezy
Electrical Eng.
George W. Gibson
Electrical Eng.
Charles F. Gottschalk
Industrial Eng.
Edwin Haire
Arthur D. Hart
Electrical Eng.
James B. Hughes
Architecture
G. Harvey Knipple
Chemistry
Irving J. Levinson
William Mann
James S. McCoy
Henry W. Nace
Cleo H. Neveu
Lloyd L. Paulson
Theordore W. Ponrte
Robert Shirley
George W. Sierant
Jose M. Torres
James L. Van Vliet
Donald R. Warnick
Robert W. Wright
Hurst E. J. Wulf
�FACULTY
�STUDENT COUNCIL
JUDICIAL CHAIRMAN LOU Alward clears up a legal
point for the Student Council.
THE STUDENT COUNCIL officers are: Judicial Chairman
Alward, President John Lauer, Treasurer Carlo Corte, Fa
Adviser Mr. Woolford, and Secretary Skip Drane.
�The judging committee inspects the Electrical Department's exhibit.
FOUNDERS DAY
Each year a few days are set
aside in memory of Dean Russell
E. Lawrence, who founded Lawrence Tech in the lean days of 1932.
His foresight is held in evidence at
this time by msn who, since graduation, have become leaders in industry throughout the nation.
Exhibits, set up on a competitive
basis by departments, classes,
Professor Erneman explains thi 3 Hansmobile to Dean Hendrickson
�m
ihs 6.A.t.
clubs, and fraternities, were judged
on Founder's Day. The departmental winner was the industrial
Engineering Department. Their exhibit consisted of plant layouts,
safety displays, and on actual time
and motion mechanism, in the organizational
judging, the first
place plaque was awarded to the
Phi Kappa Upsilon Fraternity. The
fraternity displayed a fully automatic slide projector which depicted the advancements
made
"hotrods" built a test track and raced their midget jet cars.
since 1701 in housing, communication, lighting, and transportation.
Another highlight of the celebration was the attendance of Governor G. Mennen Williams and other
notables. The Governor was very
Impressed by the many fine exhibits and was completely absorbed
in the technical nature of them.
Ths Hansmobile seemed to arouse
his interest and he asked Prof.
Erneman to bring it up to Lansing
upon completion.
An S.A.E. speedster prepare
a trial run.
The Architectural Club designed and built this ultra modern room for
the judging.
"The winner!"
�Professor Lloyd Bagby of the Industrial Engineering Department receives first prize from
Student Council President John Lauer.
The Board of Trustees and invited guests attended the annual
Founder's Day Luncheon.
The Physics Department's exhibit is explained to the
Judges by Norbert Ratalsky.
'51
�SENIOR CLASS
Day School Officers are Treasurer Edward Hamperian, Secretary Dick Cotter, V.P. Carlo Corte, President Clayton Baker
Night School Officers are V.P. Bob Gould, Treasurer John S. Remski, President Earl Ogger, secretary Opperthauser
�CANDIDATES FOR degrees
ABEND, Donald, B.S.E.E.
Double 'E' Club
S.A.E.
ALWARD, Lewis, B.S.B.A.
Judicial Chairman, S.C.
President Rifle and Pistol Club
Manager Rifle Team
Secretary Varsity Club
AMARANTIDES, John, B.S.Ar.E.
President Arch. Club
A.I.A. Member
ANATONICH, Peter, B.S.C.E.
ARMSTRONG, Jerry H., B.S.B.A.
ASADOURIAN, Michael, B.S.B.A.
BACKSTRAND, Henry, B.S.M.E.
V-President, A.G.U.
J-Prom Committee
Camera Club
S.A.E.
S.A.M.
BADARAK, Kenneth M., B.S.B.A.
Manager Pistol Team
Varsity Club
S.A.M.
�CANDIDATES FOR D G E S CONT'D
Bak, Edwin
BAKER, Clayton, B.S.I.E.
President Senior Class
Student Council Chairman
TECH NEWS Staff
Varsity Club
Rifle & Pistcl Teem
J-Prom Committee
V-President, S.A.M.
BARAN, Thaddeus, B.S.C.E.
Rho Delta Phi
Astronomy Club
S.C.E.
BARKLEY, Thomas, B.S.B.A.
S.A.E.
S.A.M.
BARNES, Joslyn T., B.S.C.E.
Chairman C.E.S.
BECKMAN, Joel Jr., B.S.E.E.
Chairman Employment Comm.
Double 'E' Club
S.A.E.
BELAVICH, John, B.S.B.A.
Rho Delta Phi
Chairman I.F.C.
S.A.M.
BERKLICH, Louis W., B.S.Ar.E.
�BERKLICH, Walter J., B.S.M.E.
Kappa Sigma K a p p a
S.A.E.
BERR, Robert, B.S.E.E.
D o u b l e 'E' C l u b
BETTS, Douglas, B.S.I.E.
BIELECKI, Anthony, B.S.B.A.
Rifle & Pistol C l u b
Varsity Club
BLIVEN, A r t h u r R., B.S.Ar.E.
Arch, Club
A.I.A. M e m b e r
BODENHORN, Glen, B.S.B.A
BOGDAN, Edward A., B.S.Ar.E.
Arch. Club
A.I.A. M e m b e r
BOUND, Keith C, B.S.M.E.
A.S.T.E.
�BOWLING, John C, B.S.I.E.
A l p h a G a m m a Upsilon
S.A.M.
S.A.E.
BROOKE, Lee H., B.S.I.E.
Rifle & Pistol C l u b
Varsity Club
BRYNIARSKI, Stanley, B.S.M.E.
BUDOWICK, John, B.S.B.A.
BUSH, Donald R.,
B.S.I.E.
Rho Deiti Phi
S.A.E.
CACICEDO, Emilio R.,
B.S.B.A.
Basketball Team
Varsity Club
CALALUCA, Alex M., B.S.M.E.
Astronomy Club
CANNON, Thomas, B.S.B.A
�CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES
CARMICHALE, Alan, B.S.C.E.
CERVI, Carmine, B.S.M.E.
Astronomy Ciub
Camera Club
S.A.E.
CHAMNES, Ralph J . , B.S.M.E.
CHIAVEROTTI, Aldo, B.S.B.A.
CLANTON, Jack M . , B.S.M.E.
Rho Delta Phi
I.F.C.
Square Club
S.A.E.
CLARK, James E., B.S.M.E.
S.A.E.
CLIFFORD, Eugene T., B.S.I.E.
Kappa S i g m a K a p p a
S.A.E.
COHEN, Irving H., B.S.B.A.
Baseball T e a m
Varsity Club
S.A.M.
CONTI, Girard N., B.S.B.A.
COONS, Joseph D., B.S.Ch.E.
COOPER, Jack E, B.S.B.A.
S.A.M.
COREY, Ralph I., B.S.M.E.
CORTE, Carlo, B.S.M.E.
V - P r e s i d e n t S.C.
T r e a s u r e r J u n i o r Class
S.A.E.
COTTER, Richard, B.S.E.E.
S e c r e t a r y Senior Class
A l p h a G a m m a Upsilon
D o u b l e 'E' C l u b
S.A.E.
COZZARIN, Edward C, B.S.M.E.
S.A.E.
CRAMER, Victor R., B.S.Ar.E.
Secretary Arch. Club
A.I.A. M e m b e r
�
CROLL, Wallace J., B.S.B.A.
Rho Delta Phi
Editor TECH NEWS
Editor L-Book
Student Council
I.F.C.
S.A.E.
S.A.M.
J-Prom Committee
CROMWELL, Lee E., B.S.M.E.
Lambda lota Tau
President K.S.K.
Bus. Mgr. TECH NEWS
Varsity Club
Tennis Team
I.F.C.
S.A.E.
CROWELL, Lee, B.S.Ar.E.
Arch. Club
A.I.A. Member
DAVIS, Kenneth, B.S.Ar.E.
Arch. Club
A.I.A. Member
DEAN, Robert F., B.S.M.E.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
Rifle Team
Varsity Club
S.A.E.
DeBUCK, Morris, Jr., B.S.B.A.
DeFRAYNE, Garry, B.S.Ch.E.
A.C.S.
DENOLF, Henry V., B.S.E.E.
Double 'E' Club
DIAMOND, Hugh, Jr., B.S.E.E.
Social C o m m . Senior Class
Secretary D o u b l e 'E' C l u b
DITON, Irving, B.S.E.E.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
Double 'E' Club
S.A.E.
DOERFLINGER, Kenneth E., B.S.B.A.
DONOVAN, Joseph A., B.S.E.E.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
Double 'E' C l u b
DOW, Lawrence F., B.S.B.A.
S.A.E.
DOWNEY, James A., B.S.B.A.
DURRETT, Charles D., B.S.M.E.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
DZIATKOWSKI, Richard V., B.S.I.E.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
S.A.E.
EFTHEMIOU, Raymond W., B.S.Ar.E.
Arch. Club
A.I.A. Member
EISENMANN, John H., B.S.E.E.
ELWARD, Dean, B.S.C.E.
C.E. Club
FABA, Eugene J., B.S.Ch.E.
Rho Delta Phi
A.S.E.
A.C.S.
FARLEY, Richard R., B.S.M.E.
FERGUSON, Edward J., B.S.C.E.
C.E.S.
FIDZINA, Frank, B.S.Ch.E.
C.E.S.
FIELD, Frank E., B.S.E.E.
Double'E' Club
S.A.E.
FINAZZIO, Mariano,
B.S.B.A.
Phi K a p p a Upsilon
S.A.E.
FLOOD, Francis R., B.S.I.E.
Rho Delta Phi
FOLEY, Douglas
Secretary K.S.K.
S.A.E.
FORGIONE, Joseph, B.S.M.E.
A l p h a G a m m a Upsilon
FUHRMAN, Helma, B.S.Ar.E.
GARVEY, William A., B.S.E.E.
D o u b l e 'E' C l u b
S.A.E.
GERSELL, William D., B.S.B.A.
S.A.M.
GIANNETTI, Mario P., B.S.I.E.
Rho Delta Phi
S.A.M.
S.A.E.
GIERATOWSKI, Arthur, B.S.M.E.
GIETZEN, Joseph, B.S.M.E.
S.A.E.
GILGALLON, Carl, B.S.M.E.
Rho Delta Phi
GODOSHIAN, Masis, B.S.C.E.
S.A.E.
C.E.S.
GOHL, Harry J., B.S.E.E.
S.A.E.
GOLEC, Thomas Jr., B.S.M.E.
Secretary P.K.U.
V-Chairman S.A.E.
GONIEA, John S., B.S.Ar.E.
Arch. Club
A.l.A. Member
GOOCH, Joseph M., B.S.E.E.
Double 'E' Club
GOULD, Robert E., B.S.M.E.
Phi K a p p a Upsilon
V-President S.C.
GRAF, Ernest H., B.S.M.E.
Secretary A . G . U .
GRIBENAS, Richard A., B.S.E.E.
HALL, Lloyd C , B.S.I.E.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
S.A.M.
HAMPARIAN, Edward, B.S.M.E.
Treasurer Senior Class
Rifle T e a m
Varsity Club
S.A.E.
HARRISON, William Lee, B.S.C.E.
Treasurer V a r s i t y C l u b
L-Book Staff P h o t o g r a p h e r
HART, Benjamin F., B.S.Ae.E.
Phi K a p p a Upsilon
Square Club
S.A.E.
I.A.S.
HART, Robert J., B.S.I.E.
A l p h a G a m m a Upsilon
F o o t b a l l Team
.S.A.M.
S.A.E.
�HEBERT, Russell B., B.S.Ae.E.
Secretary l.A.S.
S.A.E.
HEINS, Edward J., B.S.Ai-.E.
Arch. Club
A.I.A. Member
HEINTZ, Robert E., B.S.AA.E.
A l p h a G a m m a Upsilon
Lensmen C l u b
S.A.E.
HEMAN, George H., B.S.Ch.E.
S.A.E.
A.C.E.
HIBBINS, Fred W . , B.S.M.E.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
S.A.E.
HODGES, William W., B.S.E.E.
V - P r e s i d e n t Senior Class
Student Council
Radio C l u b
HOLLINGER, Joseph B., B.S.B.A.
HORKAVSON, Daniel R., B.S.B.A.
S.A.M.
HUEBNER, Melburn E, B.S.M.E.
S.A.E.
HURST, Ralph, B.S.Ae.E.
JAKIMOVICH, Anthony, B.S.E.E.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
D o u b l e 'E' C l u b
S.A.E.
JAKUBOWSKI, Robert J. , B.S.I.E.
S.A.M.
JARAMILLO, Gilberto, B.S.Ar.E.
Arch. Club
A.I.A. Member
KAHN, Harold Z., B.S.Ar.E.
V-President A r c h . C l u b
KARGETTA, William, B.S.M.E.
KAYAHARA, Koji, B.S.Ar.E.
A r c h . Club
A.I.A. Member
�KELLER, Harry W., B.S.M.E.
KENNEDY, Alfred C, B.S.B.A.
Treasurer S . A . M .
KERANEN, Reynold, B.S.E.E.
Rifle & Pistol C l u b
Varsity C l u b
KING, Robert B.S.M.E.
A l p h a G a m m a Upsilon
S.A.E.
KIRKENMEIER, Milton, B.S.I.E.
Treasurer S.A.M.
S.A.E.
A.S.I.E.
Rifle Team
KIRSCH, Kendall E., B.S.B.A.
Square Club
S.A.M.
KMIEC, Leonard F., B.S.E.E.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
TECH NEWS
Double 'E' C l u b
S.A.E.
KNOTH, Marvin C, B.S.M.E.
Phi K a p p a U p s i l o n
S.A.E.
KOEPKE, Frederick Jr., B.S.M.E.
S.A.E.
KOSSAREK, Edward L., B.S.B.A.
Basketball Team
Varsity Club
S.A.M.
KUDER, Del A., B.S.E.E.
D o u b l e 'E' C l u b
S.A.E.
KUHN, Theodore E., B.S.Ar.E.
Arch. Club
A.I.A. Member
KURI, Edmundo, B.S.Ar.E.
Arch. Club
A.I.A. Member
LARSON, Edward V., B.S.B.A.
Student Council
V-President V a r s i t y C l u b
Tennis T e a m
LAZAR, John W., B.S.I.E.
A l p h G a m m a Upsilon
S.A.M.
S.A.E.
LEITH, Charles R., B.S.M.E.
S.A.E.
�CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES CONT'D
LEPRI, Frank A., B.S.M.E.
LIMBURG, George M., B.S.M.E.
President P.K.U.
S.A.E.
LINDH, Delwin A., B.S.B.A.
LOPEZ, Joseph M., B.S.E.E.
Double'E' Club
S.A.E.
LOUNSBERY, George N., B.S.M.E.
S.A.E.
L-Book Staff
LOVALENTI, Sam, B.S.E.E.
Double 'E' C l u b
S.A.E.
MALSTROM, John C. , B.S.M.E.
MANCE, John J., B.S.M.E.
President P.K.U.
President J u n i o r Class
MARCINKOWSKI, Alex, B.S.B.A.
President Varsity Club
Football
Track
MARCUM, Edwin, B.S.M.E.
Treasurer Soph. Class
President Junior Class
Editor TECH NEWS
Student Council
MATUSZEWSKI, Stanley, B.S.M.E.
S.A.E.
MAWHORTER, Raymond, B.S.B.A.
Basketball Team
Baseball Team
Varsity Club
McCALDEN, Arthur G., B.S.M.E.
Phi Kappa Upsilon
S.A.E.
MCCARTHY, Charles L., B . S . B . A .
Student Mgr. Basketball
Varsity Club
McCOSKEY, Walter F., B.S.M.E.
Alpha Gamma Upsilon
S.A.E.
McDONALY, Jesse T., B.S.I.E.
Golf Team
Varsity Club
C.E.S.
McLEAN, William E., B.S.M.E.
s.A.e.
MEYER, John, B.S.M.E.
MICHAELS, Michael, B.S.M.E.
Kappa S i g m a K a p p a
S.A.E.
MILEK, Theodore, B.S.M.E.
A l p h a G a m m a Upsilon
S.A.E.
MORRIS, Wingfield , B.S.C.E.
C.E.S.
MOORE, Robert, B.S.I.E.
MORRISON, Grant A., B.S.M.E.
Phi K a p p a U p s i l o n
S.A.E.
MULLER, Arthur J., B.S.Ch.E.
A.C.S.
NICKELSON, Thomas S., B.S.M.E.
O'DELL, Theodore L., B.S.I.E.
OGGER, Earl G., B.S.M.E.
L a m b d a l o t a Tau
President Senior Class
Phi K a p p a Upsilon
Secretary J u n i o r Class
Student Council
S.A.E.
OPPERTHAUSER, Calvin, B.S.E.E.
Secretary Senior Class
OSTLER, Donald R., B.S.E.E.
Double'E' Club
S.A.E.
PARKER, Donald H., B.S.M.E.
Secretary P.K.U.
President J u n i o r Class
Student Council
PARKER, Kenneth L., B.S.I.E.
S.A.M.
PATERSON, David, B.S.M.E.
PATTON, Richard E., B.S.E.E.
Rho Delta Phi
Double 'E' Club
S.A.E.
PAVER, Donald F., B.S.E.E.
Glider Club
Double 'E' Club
PAYNE, Edwin, B.S.Ch.E.
Square Club
PELAMATI, Jack R., B.S.E.E.
Rho Delta Phi
Lambda lota Tau
TECH NEWS
Double 'E' Club
S.A.E.
PENOZA, Frank J., B.S.I.E.
Rho Delta Phi
PERFETTO, Gino, B.S.M.E.
Phi Kappa Upsilon
S.A.E.
PERRONE, Michael J., B.S.E.E.
Alpha Gamma Upsilon
Double 'E' Club
PETRAK, Henry N., B.S.M.E.
President A.G.U.
�POCHERT, Gerald, B.S.B.A.
POLESCHUK, Nicholas Jr., B.S.M.E.
S.A.E.
POMPEII, Phillip, B.S.M.E.
Treasurer A . G . U .
S.A.E.
PRECHT, Gordan, B.S.B.A.
PREVOST, Alvin R., B.S.Ar.E.
President A . G . U .
V - P r e s i d e n t S.C.
A.I.A. Member
PRICE, Richard F., B.S.I.E.
S.A.M.
S.A.E.
PRUSAITIS, William, B.S.Ar.E.
Phi K a p p a Upsilon
Arch. Club
PRZYBYLSKI, Edward, B.S.I.E.
S.A.M.
S.A.E.
Puiewski, Robert
Reid, Richard
Remski, John
Richardson, William
Riley, Thomas O.
Roller, Donald
ROMANOWSKI, Edward, B.S.Ch.E.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
A.C.S.
RUNYAN, Thomas F., B.S.M.E.
Rho Delta Phi
S.A.E.
RUPINSKI, John L., B.S.B.A.
L-Book Staff
TECH NEWS Staff
Student C o u n c i l
Student M g r . B a s k e t b a l l
Varsity Club
S.A.E.
SALAZAR, Paulino, B.S.Ar.E.
Fencing T e a m
Arch. Club
SCHENKEL, Roy W. , B.S.E.E.
Phi K a p p a U p s i l o n
Double'E'Club
l.R.E.
SCHMIDT, Carleton C., B.S.E.E.
Double'E'Club
S.A.E.
SCHOENHEIT, Albert, B.S.Ae.E.
Phi K a p p a Upsilon
I.A.S.
S.A.E.
SCHUELKE, George, B.S.I.E.
SCHUR, LaVerne, B.S.B.A.
SCHUTZKY, Alex H., B.S.M.E.
�CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES
SCHWARZE, Karl H., B.S.M.E.
S.A.E.
SKELLY, Jerome L., B.S.B.A.
SLIMAN, Fouad A. , B.S.B.A.
SMITH, Marvin M., B.S.E.E
Tennis T e a m
Varsity Club
SOLSKI, Frank A. , B.S.M.E.
SPILSBURY, Maxwell, B.S.M.E.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
S.A.E.
STAPLETON, Clarence, B.S.M.E.
STEIN, Leo I., B.S.Ae.E.
Arch. Ciub
A.I.A. Member
STEINBERGER, George, B.S.E.E.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
Double'E'Club
STENBERG, Paul J. , B.S.Ae.E.
Rho Delta Phi
I.A.S.
STUART, Clark D., B.S.B.A.
Phi K a p p a Upsilon
Secretary I.F.C.
SUCHOSKI, Anthony, B.S.M.E.
S.A.E.
SWIECICKI, Adolph, B.S.I.E.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
Tennis T e a m
Varsity Team
S.A.M.
TACEY, Wesley J., B.S.Ch.E.
A.C.S.
TAMANGE, Henry J. , B.S.M.E.
A s t r o n c m y Club
S.A.E.
TEAMOR, Jeffrey, B.S.B.A.
S.A.M.
�THOMAS, Stephen D., B.S.I.E.
Kappa Sigma Kappa
TILLEY, Robert J., B.S.E.E.
Student Council
Double 'E' Club
TOBIAS, Charles M., B.S.Ae.E.
I.A.S.
S.A.E.
TOMAC, Anthony, B.S.M.E.
S.A.E.
TRACZYK, Richard, B.S.Ae.E.
I.A.S.
ULRICH, Glenn, B.S.M.E.
S.A.E.
VAGNETTI, John D., B.S.M.E.
Phi Kappa Upsilon
S.A.E.
VALENTINE, Donald, B.S.M.E.
Alpha Gamma Upsilon
S.A.E.
VAN LEUVEN, William C, B.S.M.E.
WAGAR, Richard A., B.S.B.A.
Rho Delta Phi
S.A.E.
WEBER, Howard L., B.S.M.E.
Rho Delta Phi
S.A.E.
WHEELER, Clarence, B.S.E.E.
TECH NEWS Staff P h o t o g r a p h
Double'E'Club
S.A.E.
WILHELM, R.
WISE, Joseph, B.S.B.A.
S.A.E.
M a n a g e r , Baseball
WOLCOTT, Lyle A., B.S.E.E.
S.A.E.
YULKOWSKI, Leon B., B.S.Ar.E.
L a m b d a lota Tau
Fencing T e a m
A r c h . Club
Varsity Club
A.!.A. Msmber
' '
�SENIOR
STAG
A college loses most of its value if it does not have
several individual traditions to make it unique among
the number of institutions of higher learning in the
United States. At L.I.T., one of the things each senior
looks forward to is the date, during the last term of
his college life, that is set aside for the SENIOR STAG.
As the following pages show, this is the time when
the administration, faculty, and seniors let their hair
down in a night of fun, friendship, and frolic. It's one
night that none of us will ever forget.
�SENIOR STAG Cont'd
Early in the evening we posed
Even the frat pledges are allowed to eat
Austerity reigns
�INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL
The Interfraternity Council is composed of representatives
of all four fraternities and acts as a forum for the discussion of mutual problems. The two main functions of the
council are to establish uniform pledge seasons and to
maintain a standard scholastic level for all pledges. The
council also regulates the social calender of the fraternities
in conjunction with the Student Council.
The two social ativities sponsored by the I.F.C. are the
annual Interfraternity Dance and the Founder's Day Dance.
The Chairmanship of the council rotates annually and
during the past school year John Belavich of Rho Delta
Phi acted as Chairman and Clark Stuart of Phi Kappa
Upsilon was Secretary-Treasurer.
Chairman John Belavich
�ALPHA
GAMMA
UPSILON
Epsilon C h a p t e r , of A l p h a Gamma Upsilon,
has completed a full s e a s o n of social activities
during the past school y e a r . The social highlights
included t w o p l e d g e seasons a n d the
national
f r a t e r n i t y convention w h i c h w a s held in T o l e d o ,
Ohio.
Each
pledge
season
was
marked
parties held f c r the m e m b e r s
and
by
The
Alpha
the t r a d i t i o n a l
Gams
and bowling
A.G.U.
sponsored
by
by the
"hazing
several
the
pledges
The A l p h a G a m m a p l e d g e s a r e a l w a y s
w i t h their gold bricks a n d b o w ties.
distinguisha
day".
hayrides
parties w i t h the other L.l.T.
fra-
ternities.
The n a t i o n a l convention w a s a t t e n d e d by most
of the Epsilon
members and
proved
to be
a
great success. A t the Formal Ball George Hendrickson
had
crowned
the
pleasure
"Fraternity
of
Queen."
seeing
his
Epsilon
Chapter
is to be host for the convention next y e a r
plans
are
olready
under
way
to
date
make
and
the
e v e n t successful.
The
fraternity
Founder's
Day
participated
program
and
in
won
the
annual
honorable
mention in the o r g a n i z a t i o n a l a w a r d s .
The A . G . U . officers a r e Bob King, Kieth Edwards, C. Ortolf, Al Prevost, Hank Backstrand,
Larry Diedrich, Don Brewster.
H. Backstrand, D. Brewster, R. Cotter, J. Forgione, E. Graf
W. Holzer, C. Henry, W. Hietala, R. Klann, R. King
J. Lazar, W. McCosky, C. Ortolf, R. Parker, L. Pinchek
P. Pompeii, A. Prevost, R. Sharp
�ALPHA GAMMA UPSILON Cont'd
�KAPPA
SIGMA
KAPPA
Eggs a la "Greek".
Kappa Sigma Kappa, a national fraternity, is represented at L.l.T. by the Michigan Beta Chapter. The
fraternity had its origin at the Virginia Military Institute shortly after the Civil War. At first the fraternity was
extended only to southern colleges and universities but has since expanded on an international scale.
The outstanding social event of the past school year was the "Sweetheart Ball". This gala event was held
at the Veteran's Memorial in the Grand Ballroom. Formal initiations took place at the Leland Hotel and the
Van Dyke Club. "Operation Skitski", an all pledge function, was held at Plewa Hall. The annual spring outing
was staged at Homestead Park.
The Kappa Sig national convention met at Indianapolis and was attended by several Beta members.
�KAPPA SIGMA KAPPA Cont'd
�KAPPA SIGMA KAPPA Cont'd
W. Berklich
R. Calleja
M. Cardon
E. Clifford
R. Crawford
L. Cromwell
R. Dean
I. Ditton
J. Dovovan
R. Dzaitkowski
R. Ferrari
D. Foley
G. Gray
F. Gessler
L. Hall
F. Hibbins
A. Jakimovich
R. King
L. Kmiec
J. Lelpy
�KAPPA SIGMA KAPPA Cont'd
H. Lang
D. Leech
M. Spilsbury
Ed Shayamski
M. Michels
G. Steinburg
A. Swiecicki
S. Thomas
R. Wilhelm
�PHI
KAPPA
UPSILON
The officers of Delta Chapter a r e Jack Ferrel, George Limburg, Bill Pursaitus, a n d Tom Golec.
N e v e r a p e a c e f u l moment
for the Phi K a p p a p l e d g e s .
Alpha Chapter politicos a r e , Don Parker, John Mance, Bob Gould, a n d George Crittendon.
The activities of A l p h a a n d Delta C h a p ters, Phi K a p p a Upsilon, w e r e
many
v a r i e d d u r i n g the past school y e a r .
chapter
and
Delta
held t w o pledge seasons in
day
school. S e v e r a l h a y r i d e s a n d b o w l i n g p a r ties w e r e s t a g e d w i t h the other f r a t e r n i t i e s .
The social e v e n t of the y e a r
annual
dinner
dance
held
was
at the
the
Forest
L a k e C o u n t r y C l u b . Phi K a p p a p a r t i c i p a t e d
in this y e a r ' s Founder's D a y p r o g r a m
and
w o n first prize for the o r g a n i z a t i o n s . A l s o ,
the f r a t e r n i t y w o n first prize in the " R a t
R a c a " at Founder's D a y .
�PHI KAPPA UPSiLON Cont'd
D. Bain
F. Bell
L. Brenz
N. Boracus
G. Crittenden
O. DeClercq
L. Esch
A. Fahrner
J. Farrel
R. Geshwender
T. Golec
R. Gould
M. Hackewicz
M. Harris
G. Hutzel
J. Kmiecick
M. Knoth
C. Lazar
J. Lauer
G. Limburg
�PHI KAPPA UPSILON Cont'd
S. Lutz
J. Mance
A. McCalden
G. Morrison
F. Nowik
J. Nickelson
E. Ogger
D. Parker
W. Parker
G. Perfetto
R. Pniewski
W. Pursaitus
J. Saunders
J. Sobieraj
A. Schoeniet
C. Stuart
P. Thompson
T. Todd
J. Vagnetti
J. Williamson
�RHO
DELTA
PHI
Rho Delta Phi Fraternity is represented at
L a w r e n c e Tech by A l p h a C h a p t e r in night
school a n d Beta C h a p t e r in d a y school.
The Rho Delta Phi officers a r e Stan Kukawka, Bill Mullaly,
George Jamgochian and Jim Butera.
Pledge Master George Jamgochian a n d his " w a r d s " w e r e v e r y
a m i a b l e at the pledge m i x t u r e .
Rho Delta is p u r e l y a social f r a t e r n i t y
w h o s e p r i m a r y function is the promotion
of good f e l l o w s h i p a n d f r i e n d s h i p . The
f r a t e r n i t y a l w a y s t a k e s a n active part in
college a c t i v i t i e s , student g o v e r n m e n t , a n d
publications.
The highlights of this y e a r ' s social season
w e r e the Fall a n d S p r i n g Presentation
Dances that w e r e held at the Lee P l a z a .
The f o r m a l initiation d i n n e r s w e r e staged
at Huyler's. O t h e r social events included
t w o p l e d g e s e a s o n s , a golf meet a n d several hayrides and bowling parties.
The A l p h a C h a p t e r officers
�RHO DELTI PHI Cont'd
Belavich, John
Bush, Donald
Chaldekos, Wm.
Croll, Wallace
Donaldson, Clare
Flood, Francis
Giannitti, Mario
Harrison, Robert
Jamgochian, George
Kuzel, Edward
Mullay, Wm.
Patfon, Richard
Pelamati, Jack
Penoza, Frank
Richardson, Wm.
Solomon, Michael
Rupinski, Dorn
Wagar, Richard
Weber, Howard
Wheeker, Richard
\ e s , s t e e l m a k e r s m u s t be s t u d e n t s ! T h e y m u s t s t u d y c o n stantly w a y s a n d m e a n s to m a k e steel m o r e u s e f u l . T h e y m u s t
HIGH-TENSILE
Steel is u s e d i n
Stran-Steel framing members frame
m a n y m o d e r n apartment houses.
continue to i m p r o v e today's p r o d u c t s . . . m u s t m a k e better
products for the f u t u r e .
N-A-X
v a r i o u s p a r t s of m o s t a u t o m o b i l e s .
Stran-Steel Quonset
buildings are
used throughout A m e r i c a for all
B e t t e r autos . . . b e t t e r t r a i n s . . . better b u i l d i n g s . . . better
kinds
housing—all d e p e n d o n i m p r o v e m e n t s
industrial buildings . . . for housing
i n the s t e e l t h e y ' r e
of
storage,
commercial and
farm machinery and livestock.
made f r o m .
T h a t ' s w h y the m e n at G r e a t L a k e s S t e e l c o n s t a n t l y w o r k a n d
study to m a k e better steel f o r better p r o d u c t s t o m o r r o w .
More and more
F L O O R S
cars, trucks and trailers.
GREAT LAKES STEEL C O R P O R A T I O N
Ecorse, Detroit 29, Michigan
NATIONAL STEEL
N A I L A B L E
S T E E L
a r e b e i n g i n s t a l l e d i n freight
Offices in Principal Cities
CORPORATION
PRODUCER
OF
HIGH-TENSrLE
STEEL
�TO THE LAWRENCE GRADUATE
FOUR t r y i n g years are n o w behind y o u . F o u r years of hard
study and the anxieties and hopes for the future.
College
graduates, especially y o u n g men i n the technical branches, are
faced w i t h the uncertainties of both civilian and m i l i t a r y life.
For the second t i m e w i t h i n our generation America is called
upon t o assume the leadership of free peoples everywhere.
America is challenged t o mobilize and furnish leadership f o r
industrial supremacy. Development of future talent and leadership i n the Materials H a n d l i n g Equipment Field must come
f r o m the y o u n g graduates of our Colleges and Universities.
Management, seeking new and improved ways t o step up production is t u r n i n g t o Materials H a n d l i n g Equipment t o solve
v i t a l production problems.
Conveyors — as one of the oldest, yet newest, of production
aids — n o w take on greater importance than ever before t o
speed up production i n industry.
OPPORTUNITIES I N T H E CONVEYOR
ARE
ENGINEERS
WESTMINSTER
—
&
FOUNDERS
G . T. R. R.
—
FIELD
UNLIMITED!
MACHINISTS
—
STEEL
FABWICAXOWS
DETROIT
12
M I C H I G A N
�KOESTLIN TOOL & DIE CORP.
Stamping Specialists
NO W O R K TOO LARGE
*
Complete Body D i e Facilities
*
/
Humboldt and Magnolia Aves.
T A . 5-1490
FALLS SPRING AND WIRE
Division of
STANDARD STEEL SPRING CO
8635 Conant Road
—
Detroit 11, Mich.
�It's the Ferguson System
Metal Working Machinery
That Makes the Difference!
. . . and Sound Engineering
Played Its Part.
RIORDAN
MACHINERY
HARRY FERGUSON, INC.
3639 E . Milwaukee Ave.
COMPANY
Detroit 11, Michigan
Plant:
12601 S O U T H F I E L D
213 Curtis Building
Ferguson Tractors
Detroit 2
and Ferguson System Implements
AJAX S T E E L &
FORGE CO.
SPAULDING ELECTRIC
COMPANY
Power Apparatus Specialists
F O R G I N G
Aoplication — Installation — Maintenance
Repair — Motors — Generators — Transformers
Switchgear — Substations — Speed Reducers
Couplings
1350 Michigan Ave.
205 Adair
LOrain 7-0755
WOodward 2-6200
D E T R O I T 26, MICHIGAN
�DAVIS T O O L AND
E N G I N E E R I N G CO.
Manufacturers
National Bank of Detroit
Tools, Dies and Special Machinery
S.D A V I S S T A M P I N G CO.
W O O D W A R D at M A N C H E S T E R
Sheet Metal Stampings and Assemblies
Highland Park, Michigan
Member Federal Eteposit Insurance Corporation
IJVDUSTRIAL W I R E
C L O T H P R O D U C T S CO.
19250 Plymouth Road
Detroit 28, Mich.
V E r m o n t 5-6000
ESSEX WIRE
CORPORATION
Magnet W i r e
-k
Automotive Wire
and Cable
Industrial Wire Cloth Products
v
14310 W O O D W A R D A V E N U E
HIGHLAND PARK
?927 Fourth St.
Wayne, Michigan
,
�CONGRATULATIONS
Huron Forge & Machine Co.
J. Alex Gordon & Co.
DROP FORCINGS
Materials — Handling Equipment
810 Stephenson Buildingr
Detroit 2. Mich.
TKinity 3-8600
9041 Alpine
Congratulations from
Paul A. Willsie Co.
Academic Costumers
1437 Randolph
I. T. Wedin Corp.
WOodward 5-0078
Gregory Mayer & Thorn Co.
ENGINEERING SUPPLIES
w o o d w a r d 1-9330
41 Cadillac Sq.
DETROIT
CONGRATULATIONS
Hudson Tool & Machine Co.
ROYAL OAK, MICHIGAN
Cadmet Corp.
PRECISION CASTINGS
LOST WAX METHOD
15515 Tnller
Detroit
1221 EAST 8 MILE RD.
Perndale,
Michigan
Compliments of
Piston Service Co., Inc.
4430 CASS AVE.
Detroit 1,
Michigan
Progressive Industries Co.
MANUFACTURING - PROCESSING AND
DESIGNING OP TOOLS - GAUGES
DIES AND FIXTURES
8770 Linwood
TYler 7-7550
Detroit Flame Hardening
Company
Flame Hardening Spot and Surface
Hardening of Iron and Steel Parts,
Gear-Teeth, Rails, Wheels, Cams, Dies
and All Wearing and Cutting Edges.
116 Manchester
TOwnsend 8-2925
M. N. Duffy & Co.
Brooker Electric Co., Inc.
RADIO and KT.F.CTRONIC
SUPPLIES
2040 Grand River Avenue
WOodward 3-2270
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS
962 East Congress Street
DETROIT 7, MICHIGAN
Compliments of
Congratulations to the Graduates and Faculty
of L. I. T. on Their Past Endeavors
Lawn Equipment Corp.
518-5P0 W. ELEVEN MILE RD.
Royal Oak. Mich.
LI. 2-1721
"Everything for the Lawn"
Ask for illustrated Bulletin with interesting
information on many types of
Detroit Electric Hoists
Detroit
Hoist and Machine Co.
8201 Morrow St.
Detroit, Mich.
Thompson Products, Inc.
CLEVELAND
DETROIT
"I Want to Be Your Milkman"
H. A. M C D O N A L D
C R E A M E R Y CO.
LOCAL — FRIENDLY
Milk — Cream — Ice Cream
TOwnsend 8-5250
9700 Oakland Avenue
�HIGHLAND P A R K
L U M B E R CO.
W. T. ANDREW CO.
15853 Hamilton Ave.
15815 Hamilton Avenue
H I G H L A N D P A R K 3, M I C H I G A N
PLUMBING
SUPPLIES
T U l s a 3-2000
Best Wishes to
McINNES DESMOND
Lawrence Tech Students
-::- F U N E R A L D I R E C T O R S -::-
MORSE CHAIN CO.
TOwnsend 8-4798
Division of
15941 W O O D W A R D
BORG-WARNER
ENTERPRISE
MACHINE PARTS CORP.
"Tool Makers Since 1920"
Home of
EMPCO
2731 Jerome
PRODUCTS
TWinbrook 1-7900
CORP.
John E . Green Plumbing &
Heating Co., Inc.
INDUSTRIAL PIPING — PLUMBING
HEATING
220 Victor — Highland Park
T O . 8-2400
The Wayne Way
F E D E R A L MOGUL CORP.
r BRONZE
GOOD P R O D U C T S P L U S GOOD S E R V I C E
Metal Working Lubricants
Rust Preventives
Paste Solders
Chemical Specialties
Wayne Chemical Products
Company
Established 1899
11031 Shoemaker
W A . 1-0750
Copeland Street & M. C. R. R.
Detroit 17, Michigan
�GOOD
LUCK
to
WO. 1-4806
LAWRENCE TECH
C H E C K E R CAB COMPANY
T E C L A CO., INC.
Experimental W o r k
woodward 3-7000
Detroit
Michigan
1507 Cass Ave.
S. S. K R E S G E CO.
Detroit 26, Mich.
K E U F F E L L & ESSER
COMPANY
Est. 1867
14551 W O O D W A R D
Drafting, Reproduction, Surveying
Equipment and Materials
Slide Rules
5c - 10c and 25c Stores
Measuring Tapes
37 W. P A L M E R
Wayne Oakland Bank
ROYAL OAK
BERKLEY
HIGHLAND
PARK
CLAWSON
Resources Over $43,000,000.00
UNION TWIST D R I L L
COMPANY
5527 Woodward Ave.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
DETROIT
Tom's Woodward Markets
SMITH, HINCHMAN
& G R Y L L S , Inc.
The Finest Foods at Michigan's
Finest Market
ARCHITECTS
12811 Woodward Avenue, Cor. Glendale
— Convenient Parking —
906 No. Woodward Cor. Catalpa Drive
800 Marquette Bldg.
Detroit, Michigan
Lincoln 3-5504
Royal Oak
�Bendix Power Brakes
Truckstell Conversions
Wheelbase Changes
Carburetors — Magnetos
Fuel Pumps — Diesel Injection
Specialized Truck Equipment
Knorr-Maynard, Inc.
5743 Woodward
Congratulation
Efficient Engineering Co.
Registered Professional Eiigineers
Designers of Products, Tools, Dies, J i g s , F i x t u r e s ,
Special M a c h i n e s , D i e C a s t i n g a n d
Plastic E q u i p m e n t
1040 West Fort
and Best Wishes
Paramount Engineering
Company
PRODUCT
Douglas & Lomason Co.
Detroit, Michigan
ENGINEERING
T c o l , D i e a n d S p e c i a l M a c h i n e Designers
Wood P a t t e r n s a n d Models
5836 Lincoln Avenue
Detroit 8,
Michigan
1625 East Grand B l v d .
Detroit 11, Mich.
Michigan Tool Company
H E T T C H E MOTOR SALES
FORD SALES —
SERVICE
CONE D R I V E D I V I S I O N
SPEED REDUCERS — GEAR
•
2475 West Grand
Boulevard
7171 East McNichols Rd.
D E T R O I T , M I C H . , U . S. A .
Ecclestone Chemical Co., Inc.
C H E M I C A L S
B a s i c a n d Specialized
Paramount Rubber Co.
F o r the M a n u f a c t u r i n g a n d I n d u s t r i a l T r a d e
L a r g e Stocks C a r r i e d
Prompt Delivery
Synthetic Rubber a n d Plastic Engineers
and Manufacturers
The Ecclestone Chemical Co.,
Inc.
2669-79 Guoin St.
LOrain 7-4650
10401 N O R T H L A W N
AVENUE
Telephone WEbster 3-3050
DETROIT
4, M I C H .
�STUDENTS
N. I . TIMCO
Member L . I . T . Alumni
Many members of your alumni, as outstanding American citizens, have set high
standards in a profession which has done so
much to make this country of ours a world
leader.
We need more and more engineers like
that who can think straight and act vigorously to keep America the land of opportunity.
DeLUXE D I E WORKS
You gentlemen have the equipment for that
leadership. We are depending on YOU.
20201 Hoover Road
DETROIT, MICHIGAN
NATIONS T, BROACH
& MACHINE CO.
5600 St. Jean
ROSS OPERATING
VAT.VE COMPANY
Detroit, Mich.
T,. .1. L O R A N G E R
John Sainsbury
WISHES Y O U SUCCESS
120 East Goldengate
DETROIT 3, MICH.
�Congratulations on the Growth
of
LAWRENCE TECH
THE MOUNT CLEMENS
METAL PRODUCTS CO.
D A N LY
Machine Specialties, Inc.
1549 Temple Ave., Detroit, Mich.
Production Stampings, Clinch Nut
Assemblies and Metal Specialties
145 S. R O S E
DANLY D I E S E T S
DIE MARKERS
SUPPLIES
DANLY ADVANCE
DESIGNED
PUNCH P R E S S E S
STREET
Mt. Clemens, Mich.
Compliments of
THE READY-POWER CO.
WALWAYCO.
METAL
STAMPINGS
Manufacturers of
GAS-ELECTRIC POWER
UNITS
For Electric Industrial Truck Operation
READY-POWER ENGINE
GENERATORS
Dependable, Independent Electric Power
For All Purposes
READY-POWER ENGINED
REFRIGERATION
Gasoline, Natural Gas, Butane or Diesel Powered
Air Conditioning or Refrigeration
19270 West 8 Mile Road
Plants: 3826 Grand River Avenue
DETROIT, MICHIGAN,
U . S. A .
and
11231 Freud Avenue, Detroit
�W h e n a J o b Calls for P r e c i s i o n ,
Call for VINCO
GEARS
T h e a b i l i t y f o r a c h i e v i n g a c c u r a c i e s of v e r y h i g h
d e g r e e h a s b r o u g h t V i n c o into t h e field of h i g h
quality a n d c o m m e r c i a l gears. J e t engines a n d
radar equipment are two modern
developments
that r e q u i r e g e a r s a c c u r a t e i n a l l e l e m e n t s to
.0001 o r .0002. V i n c o - p r o d u c e d c o m m e r c i a l g e a r s
are m o r e a c c u r a t e a n d h a v e a finer finish t h a n
generally found i n this gear classification. T h a t
is w h y V i n c o s h o u l d be c a l l e d w h e n good g e a r i n g
is n e e d e d .
GEAR ROLLING INSPECTION FIXTURES
T h e f i x t u r e , s h o w n a t t h e left, i s d e s i g n e d f o r
i n s p e c t i o n of g e a r s b e i n g m a d e i n q u a n t i t y p r o d u c t i o n . I t p r o v i d e s a fast, a c c u r a t e c h e c k of
concentricity, backlash, a n d rolling action. F i x tures are m a d e for e x t e r n a l or internal gears a n d
w i l l a c c o m m o d a t e a n y tooth f o r m . . . spur, helical,
spiral or w o r m .
PRECISION PRODUCTION PARTS
T h i s g r o u p of p r e c i s i o n - m a c h i n e d p a r t s i s t y p i c a l
of t h e w i d e v a r i e t y of w o r k p r o d u c e d b y V i n c o
i n t h i s field. M a c h i n i n g o p e r a t i o n s p e r f o r m e d o n
these p a r t s i n c l u d e l a t h e w o r k , m i l l i n g , s l o t t i n g ,
bobbing, broaching, thread grinding, surface grinding, e x t e r n a l g r i n d i n g , j i g g r i n d i n g a n d lapping.
M u c h of t h i s w o r k w a s p e r f o r m e d o n s p e c i a l
equipment designed a n d made b y V i n c o .
SPLINE GAGES
V i n c o p i o n e e r e d i n t h e d e v e l o p m e n t of s p l i n e
gaging and created inspection a n d m a n u f a c t u r i n g
equipment w h i c h n o w m a k e s possible the absolute
c o n t r o l of a l l e s s e n t i a l e l e m e n t s of s p l i n e gages
d u r i n g production. V i n c o is n o w the accepted
l e a d e r i n t h e field of s p l i n e gages. T h e i r i n v o l u t e ,
serration a n d straight sided spline plug a n d r i n g
gages s e t t h e p a c e f o r a c c u r a c y . T h a t i s w h y m e n
who " k n o w " call V i n c o w h e n e v e r they need spline
gages o r s p l i n e d p a r t s .
VINCO CORP.
M
I
L L I
O
N
T H S
O F
A N
9111 Schaefer Highway
Detroit 28, Mich.
I N C H
F O R
S A L E
�ENGINEERS
TO DESIGN IT
ENGINEERS
TO TOOL IT
ENGINEERS
TO GET PRODUCTION STARTED
ENGINEERS
TO MAINTAIN QUALITY AND EFFICIENCY
PIONEER ENGINEERING & MANUFACTURING CO.
ENGINKERS — CONSULTANTS — DESIGNERS — PRODUCTION ENGINEERING SPECIALISTS
TOOLS — DIES — SPECIAL EQUIPMENT
19669 JOHN R
DETROIT 3, MICH.
�Tied with a
White and Blue
You receive i t proudly,
You've graduated.
Ribbon
of course.
But isn't there a deeper
reason
w h y you feel your chin go up as you reach f o r
y o u r d i p l o m a ? Isn't i t the fact that you've
received i t f r o m an American
school? Where every
student has an equal chance not just to " l e a r n " . . .
but to l e a r n undistorted truths? Where every
student has an equal r i g h t , not just to do
j
'
"good e n o u g h " . . . but to excel...
on the athletic
field,
i n the classroom,
i n activities of a l l kinds?
For that is the strength of A m e r i c a . That is why
i t is . . . and w i l l continue to be . . . a great nation.
f
MARATHON
rHON|
THE
OHIO
Producers
OIL
of Petroleum
COMPANY
since
1887
�Shop Equipment of Every Description
'
Machine Tools
C u t t i n g Tools
Industrial Brushes
Industrial Supplies
Grinding Wheels
Screw Products
Electric Tools
Electric M o t o r s
Abrasives
Drills — Reamers
Taps — Dies
T r u c k Casters
Fire Extiguishers
Power Transmission Eqpt.
M a t e r i a l Handing E q p t
Industrial Safety Eqpt.
Precision Tools
Drop-Forged Tools
Industrial T r u c k s
A i r Control Eqpt.
Gear and Speed Reducers
Hydraulic Power Tools
W i r e Rope and F i t t i n g s
H o m e W o r k s h o p Eqpt.
A i r Compressors
V-Belt Drives
,
v
CHAS. A. STRELINCER co
149 E. L a m e d St.,
CHAS. T. BUSH, Pres.
D e t r o i t 26. M i c h . — W O . 2-7474
C H A R L E S E. A L L I N G E B , Sec'y-Treas.
�METROPOLITAN ART STUDIOS
Official
Pfiotograpfiers
for the
"L"BOOK
and the
Graduating Class of 1951
SERVICE ENGRAVING COMPANY
Engravers for the ''L"
Book
FOREST PRINTERS
Printers for the ''L'
Book
TRIANGLE BOOKBINDING COMPANY
Binders for the ''L"
Book
BECKTOLD COMPANY of ST. LOUIS, MO.
Cover for the ''L"
Book
,
��
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LTU Yearbooks
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Photographs
College sports
College presidents
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Lawrence Technological University
Founders Day
Frosh initiation
Senior stag
-
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PDF Text
Text
���TABLE OF CONTENTS
ADMINISTRATION
AND FACULTY
CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES
UNDERGRADUATES
FRATERNITIES
ORGANIZATIONS
SPORTS
�15100 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Michigan
�'Dedication
The student-teacher relationship is essentially an employer employee relationship where our tuition pays the instructor to
teach us the required subjects for a degree. If we learn the subject and pass the course, the teacher has done all that we can expect of him. Like any other employee, the teacher is entitled to
go home to his family, to the golf course, or wherever he wishes
when his day's work is done. But when he labors long hours for
us and with us over and beyond the obligations of his position, he
earns a friendship, a respect, and a gratitude which is hard to
repay in any way and impossible to repay with a few printed words.
We are a big class. We would like to dedicate this book to
a man with a big personality, a big sense of humor, and a big heart
—Professor Hans C. Erneman of the Mechanical Engineering Department. We are proud of Mr. Erneman and as the years roll
by, we sincerely hope that he will be proud of us.
The mechanical engineering courses are not easy. "Hans"
has the thankless job of teaching us how to think. Most people
don't like to think; it's hard work. It's harder work to teach the
student to think clearly. The long list of successful engineers
that are Erneman-trained bear witness to the rare ability of this
educator.
Engineering theory is fresh in our minds now. W i t h the high
degree of specialization in industry, we may use only a portion
of what we have learned here. We will forget much in time, but
by his example and his patience and his qualities as an instructor,
Hans Erneman has taught many of us how to think and this we
will never forget—and we will never forget Hans Erneman.
����We at Lawrence Tech are proud of the close relationship
that exists between the faculty, administration, and student body.
President E. George Lawrence set the key note for an informal
approach to student and faculty problems when he announced
that his office was always open to any student or teacher on
campus who had a problem. This attitude has been reflected
down through the departments of the school.
The faculty and administration of the school have always felt
that one of their major functions was that of guidance. Guidance
not only in the curricuiar field, but in any phase of public or private endeavor where the knowledge and experience of the faculty
and administration can stand the student in good stead.
It has long been recognized that the mere technical grounding of a student in the rudiments of his profession is falling far
short of the training which a college can give a student. The
faculty of Lawrence Tech are picked men who have proven their
ability to f i t the student in the best possible manner for his role
in society.
We shall long remember the example of the staff of this
institution and we hope that we have carried away not only some
of the technical knowledge but some of the ideals of the profe
sion and the school.
��E. GEORGE LAWRENCE
President
�EDMUND JOSITAS
GEORGE A. HENDRICKSON
Dean of
Engineering
MARION T. ROGERS
MISS GENEVIEVE DOOLEY
Registrar
�Philip M a r k u s
Harold VanBussum
William Burke
Lawrence E. Long
Murriel Woolford
Bruce Lyon
James Hobson
Richard Frederick
Nicholi Terbojevich
�PROF. LLOYD C. BAGBY
Mathematics
I n d u s t r i a l Eng.
PROF. GAIL P. BREWINGTON
PROF. HENRY L. BYERLAY
Electrical Eng.
PROF. GERALD P. CONNELL
Chemical Eng.
If
PROF. HANS G. ERNEMAN
Mechanical Eng.
PROF. EDWIN O. GRAEFFE
Business A d m .
PROF. EARL W. PELLERIN
A r c h i t e c t u r a l Eng.
PROF. JOHN S. RACKWAY
Engineering D r a w ' g
PROF. GEORGE MARTIN
A e r o n a u t i c a l Eng.
PROF. MORDICA M. RYAN
Chemistry
PROF. WILLIAM E. MENZEL
C i v i l Eng.
PROF. HERBERT C. WILLIAMS
English
�George G. Allison
Kenneth J. Baune
Harold R. Bell
George J. Bery
Harold C. Boothroyd
Theran H. Bray
James C. Brookes
A. F. Collier
John Calder
Lester Davies
Edmund J. Dombrowski
Emmet J. Donnely
Carl M. Einhorn
Ralph C. Emig
John R. Fawcett
Leonard E. Fisher
Robert H. Garmezy
Burton S. Carrel
George Gibson
Charles F. Gottschalk
Edwin Haire
Elwyn D. Hancock
Arthur D. Hart
Herbert Hunting
�Alexander M. Karcheon
C. Harvey Knipple
Fritz Kramisch
Herman F. Krantz
Irving J. Levinson
John C. Lockin
L. Broas Mann
William Mann
James S. McCoy
Charles R. McMillian
Robert W. Medler
Raymond L. Moy
Henry W. Nace
Cleo H. Neveu
Harold A. Nichol
Russel Nobel
Theodore W. Pohrte
Arthur J. Reynolds
Deo Forest Reynolds, Jr.
Robert Shirley
George W. Sierant
Clarence A. Stern
Robert Tate
John B. Thompson
�Jose M. Torres
James L. VanVliet
Donald R. Warnick
Maxwell Wright
Robert Wright
Hurst J. Wulf
Tony Parrafin
Paul Rissman
Donald Ziegler
�DORIS R. BECKER
DOROTHY ESTES
VIOLET EVANOVICH
EMMA HASSINGER
HELEN HOGAN
MARY LANDUYT
VIRGINIA LUCIK
JEANNE PRESTON
EDALENE RINK
JOSEPHINE SHOOP
PAT TALBERT
DONNA M. TULLY
ALICE WOODS
�oi mo
The experts can be w r o n g !
Throughout the colleges and universities in the nation, we
the class of 1950, half a million strong, have proved them wrong.
A n overwhelming majority of the male students graduating this
June attended college under the "CI B i l l " and Lawrence Tech
was no exception . . . W e were the " W a r Babies." W h e n we
enrolled in surprisingly large numbers in 1946, the experts said
that the ex-serviceman would be a miserable flop as a student;
yet here we are, cap and gown, diploma, and a big grin for the
experts who didn't t h i n k we had the goods.
W e are the largest class in Lawrence Tech history, three hundred twenty-one strong, but this is a distinction that we do
not wish to keep. W e want to see Lawrence Tech continue to
grow and we feel confident that it w i l l . W e are proud of our
school and just a little bit proud of ourselves. The Freshman
Class of 1946 had an enrollment of one thousand men. W h o can
blame us if at graduation we bust a little at the seams w i t h pride.
For a big class, we have been surprisingly close as a social
group and in our class endeavors. W e have had four class presidents in the day school section and it would have been d i f f i c u l t
to choose better men. Joseph Ouellette led the class in 1946,
William Haddow in 1947, John Erickson in 1948, and Gerard
Burke was our Senior Class President. Gerard Burke and Robert
Miner, the Night Senior Class President were largely responsible
for most of the Senior Class functions and we the Senior Class
would like to say "Thank Y o u " for a job well done.
��DAY SCHOOL OFFICERS
President
Gerard Burke
Vice-President
Joseph Ouellette
Secretary
Treasurer
Leff to Right:
Gene Kaczmar,
Richard Yasenchak,
Joseph Ouellette,
Gerard Burke,
Richard Yasenchak,
Eugene Kaczmar
T h i s year's Senior Class is the largest graduating class in the history of the school.
Approximately 3 2 0 men will receive degrees from the College of Engineering and the College of Business Administration.
W h i l e the class was too large for the students to get to know all of their classmates
intimately, the class functions were well attended and the class was a more tightly knit
body than would have appeared possible. T h ' s was largely due to the splendid work of the
two class presidents and their staffs of officers.
Gerard Burke was the president of the day school senior class and Robert Miner was the
president of the night school senior class.
Class activities for the year included a Senior Stag, a Senior Prom, Senior Class meetings,
and the publication of the L-Book.
N I G H T SCHOOL O F F I C E R S
President
Robert Miner
Vice-President . . . Stewart MacMillan
Sec.-Treas
Frank Sullivan
Night School
President
Robert Miner and fellow
officers.
�First Row Across:
Harold Adkins
Donald Aivc
Joseph Anderson
Theodore Anderson
Edmund Arbs
Third Row Across:
George Bergland
Richard Bernard
Robert Bernard
Thomas Berry
Raymond Bertsman
Second Row Across:
Raymond Babcock
Wayne Basiley
Richard Baker
William Bartolonum
Harold Bell
Fourth Row Across:
Frederick Beyer
Roger Blodgett
Victor Bliemeistei
Thomas Bodner
David Booth
�First Row Across:
Lloyd Bowden
Richard Borowski
William L. Bozgan
Walter Brandau
Frederick Brauning
T h i r d Row Across:
Robert Brunner
Charles Bryant
Gerald Buerge
William Beckingeh
Gerald Burke
Second Row Across:
William Brennan
Walter Broker
Gerald Brown
Edward Brown
John Brown
Fourth Row Across:
William Bushor
Richard Buttor
Gerald Calladine
Thomas Campbell
Carl Campbell
�First Row A c r o s s :
Robert Carlson
Louis Castagna
William Causey
Joseph Chalk
Veral Christensen
T h i r d Row A c r o s s :
Robert Crepin
Herbert Cromwell
Arthur Dahike
Theodore Daubrasse
George Dawson
Second Row A c r o s s :
Lillord Cobb
Robert Collins
Bernard Colton
Jack Cooley
Manuel Costa
Fourth Row A c r o s s :
Robert Decker
Ronald Denecour
Douglass Denton
George Derisley
Robert Diederish
�First Row Across:
John Dinan
Donald Dustin
Richard Elkins
Benjamin Esch
Russell Falkenburg
Third Row Across:
Harold Foster
Thomas Fraser
Malcolm Gardener
Eugene Gaska
Richard Gavin
Second Row Across:
Donald Fedrigon
Anthony Ficorelli
Bertol Feldt
Dudley Fiscus
Benjamin Fisher
Fourth Row Across:
Joe David George
Nichollas Gilbert
William Gohl
John Gorman
Donald Grant
�First Row A c r o s s :
Carl Gropp
Richard Green
Robert Greene
William Griberas
Donald Griztinger
T h i r d Row A c r o s s :
Robert Hamilton
Herschel Hammack
Jack Harlow
Clarence Harris
Hartley
Second Row A c r o s s :
Peter Gurski
Richard Hafer
George Hagenau
Russell Hall
Richard Hall
Fourth Row A c r o s s :
Harold Hayter
Richard Heitman
Harold Helms
George Hill
Richard Hinds
�First Row A c r o s s :
Leo Hobas
George Hoffman
Charles Holoychak
George Hopkins
Thomas Howell
T h i r d Row A c r o s s :
Leonard Jankowski
Raymond Jengen
Arden C. Johnson
William Johnson
George Johnson
Second Row A c r o s s :
Russell Howland
Alexander Hucul
Robert Huggett
Osie Jackson
George Jamison
Fourth Row A c r o s s :
Robert Johnson
Eugene Kacymar
Clyde Kammerer
Edward Kennedy
George Kermizian
�First Row Across:
Edward Kesslering
Henry Kettlhut
John Kinne
Louis Klei
Richard Klock
Second Row Across:
Richard Larkins
Walter Laiski
Richard Lant
William Lenn
Louis Lepri
Third Row Across:
Ralph Kohilitz
Robert Koskeia
Robert Koyenski
Robert Kuzak
John Landis
Fourth Row Across:
Dominic Leo
Walter Linteru
Calvin Lipski
Walter Lobur
James H. Logergren
�First Row Across:
Richard Loosvelt
Robert Land
Robert Lyghtel
Richard Lystal
Richard Macan
Third Row Across:
Burton Marshall
Burl Martin
Robert McCellan
Theodore McCulloch
Lawrence McGrail
Second Row Across:
Robert MacShara
William Makuch
Eugene Malik
Theodore Malpass
Robert Markovich
Fourth Row Across:
James Nichols
Robert Mclntyre
Bruce McKay
Harold McMenenemy
Stewart McMillan
�First Row Across:
Kenneth McNabb
Thomas McNichol
Walter Melenofsky
James Mickel
Angelo Nicotra
Third Row Across:
Thomas L. Momence
Benjamn Monast
Morris H. Moore
John Moran
William Morrison
Second Row Across:
Robert E. Miner
Richard Mich
Frank Moderacki
Eugene L. Moderacki
Clarence Mogridge
Fourth Row Across:
Walter E. Mowry
Philip Mulligan
Earl Muuteau
Stephan Nastas
Julius A. Neidert
�First Row Across:
Richard Nicholas
Richard Noel
John Olson
Raymond Osip
Donald Osterman
Third Row Across:
Edward Pawlak
Richard Pearsall
Raymond Peusak
Robert Peoples
Bruce Polkinghorne
Second Row Across
Joseph Ouellete
William P. Pad
Robert E. Pangburn
George Pasgual
Fourth Row Across:
George Pope
John Pratt
Harold B. Price
Donald Rasinin
Alvin Ratuch
Constantine Pavlakis
�First Row A c r o s s :
Martinus Ris
Harry Robertson
Jesse Robison
Sol Rockowitz
Alexander Romauow
Fourth Row A c r o s s :
Rufino Salinas
Alfredo Sauches
William Schiffer
Dallas Schuabel
Theodore Schoensee
Second Row Across
Lawrence Roselt
Edward J. Rozmary
Walter Ruffer
Alexander Rymar
Austin Sadlocke
Fourth Row A c r o s s :
Robert J. Schoof
Everett P. Schumaker
William Seeto
William Selter
Richard Shalogian
�First Row Across:
John H. Sheldrick
Albert Shobe
Adam Shostak
Edwin Shaffer
Louis Sibal
Third Row Across:
William Stairs
Richard Stangel
Austin Stasyanski
William Stetler
Thomas Steward
Second Row Across:
Therell E. Sipe
Robert Skupny
Wilfried Smolenski
Richard Sinko
Fourth Row Across:
jerry M. Straug
Carl Strauss
Nicholas Taffoli
David Talbert
Bruno Tassone
�First Row Across:
Robert Tata
Avic Tavolatte
Robert E. Teeghman
Wallace Terius
Richard Theisen
Third Row Across:
Walter Trapo
Edwin W. Travis
Richard Treudley
Albin H. Tunia
Raymond F. Tygrelski
Second Row Across:
Richard Thorwald
Robert W. Tomasyewski
Richard Tomaszewo
Arthur Tomasynski
Charles Toulaine
Fourth Row Across:
Wallace Uteg
Emilio Vartunian
George VesselIs
Martin Villa
Lawrence Vincent
�First Row Across:
Edwin Wojciechowski
John Wallace
Michael Wrskul
Michael Waypa
Ralph West
Third Row Across:
Milton Wingall
Richard Wood
Edward Wormhowdt
Richard Yasenchak
Adren Yoder
Second Row Across:
Ken West
Kenneth Wharff
Wesley White
Edward WilkowskI
Bobbie Williams
Fourth Row Across:
Art Zakers
Casimier Zakrzewski
Haig Zerowyi
�Every first and third Thursday of the month a familiar call rings forth from
the old library. "The meeting will please come to order." The Lawrence Tech
Student Council is in session. Although the student council never makes any
earth shaking decisions, the precept of self-government is fostered at Lawrence Tech.
The President of the Student Council is usually a graduating Senior. This
past year Richard F. Larkins served the student body as their president.
The major concerns of the Student Council are Lambda lota Tau Awards, to
seniors, Tech News and L-Book publications, Activity Awards, and relations
between students and faculty and administration members.
The council of '49-'50 became deeply embroiled in these items. Many of
the meetings were hard to miss as arguments became heated. Some of the
orations would have been a credit to a "Thomas Paine."
The best remembered incidents of the year were few but spirited. Perhaps
the greatest achievement was the re-institution of Founders' Day which drew
a capacity crowd to Lawrence Tech for this open house affair. The other business items that the council handled in fine fashion were library donations,
student placement, accreditation efforts, and allotment of student activity
funds.
���T h e one day of t h e year w h e n t h e clubs, o r g a n i z a t i o n s , and
e n g i n e e r i n g d e p a r t m e n t s get t h e i r chance t o s h o w o f f t h e i r c o m p e t i t i v e s p i r i t is Founders'
Day.
T h i s year t h e m e n r e p r e s e n t i n g t h e various e n t r i e s w o r k e d
t o t h e t h e m e of " S t u d e n t P a r t i c i p a t i o n " as set f o r t h by Founders'
Day C o m m i t t e e C h a i r m a n , John Lauer.
For t h e f i r s t t i m e in t h e h i s t o r y of L a w r e n c e T e c h t h e n e w l y
a p p o i n t e d Board of Trustees t o u r e d t h e m a i n b u i l d i n g j u d g i n g t h e
extensive and i n t e r e s t i n g e x h i b i t s .
In t h e f i n a l b a l l o t i n g i t was Mr. Earl Pellerin's A r c h i t e c t u r a l
d e p a r t m e n t ' s n e w c l u b r o o m ; designed, c o n s t r u c t e d , and f u r n ished by A r c h i t e c t u r a l s t u d e n t s , w h i c h w o n t o p honors f o r t h e
engineering departments.
T h e most recent o r g a n i z a t i o n on t h e
T e c h campus, t h e Double EE C l u b , received t h e p e r p e t u a l t r o p h y
f o r t h e clubs and o r g a n i z a t i o n s .
A n e s t i m a t e d c r o w d of 1 0 , 0 0 0 people v i s i t e d t h e campus t o
w i t n e s s t h e e n g i n e e r i n g a p p l i c a t i o n of " T h e o r y and P r a c t i c e . "
T h e e v e n i n g was c l i m a x e d by a free dance at t h e
Field House sponsored by t h e I n t e r - F r a t e r n i t y C o u n c i l .
Hackett
�Mr. Bagby shows o f f his " P l a n t L a y o u t " project w h i c h was featured d u r i n g Founders' Day.
w i n n i n g A r c h i t e c t u r a l club room w h i c h t o o k f i r s t prize.
Below is the prize
�On the next few pages are pictured those who aspire to the accolade and
robe of future graduation. First, we have the Juniors—accutely aware of their
coming responsibilities as school leaders; next, the Sophomores—whoaresure
they know it all now but are willing to wait two more years; and finally, the
Freshman—who will be proud to show the incoming students all "the ropes."
To these men we leave the feeling of pride in being students at Lawrence
Tech and carrying on the traditions of character, scholarship, and interest
which we formed here. We promise them all our support and wish them the
best of luck.
T h e Sophomores
Skip Drane
had
an
under
eventful
fhe
year
leadership
with
of
Sophomore
activities.
T h e inter-class ballgames w h i c h the Sophs won
t w o o u t of three proved t h e i r superiority over the
Juniors at sports.
Bob Alfather, Skip Drane and Keith Edwards discuss Sophomore class p r o b lems d u r i n g the Founders' Day c e l e b r a t i o n .
The Junior Class featured Art Mooney at
their
J-Prom held at the Masonic T e m p l e .
Corsages were handed o u t t o all t h e dates and
dancing continued u n t i l 1 o'clock.
Junior Class President Edwin
t h e c o m i n g Junior P r o m .
Edward Marcum
gives the class the old rah rah
for
��Stan Kukawka, Jerry Roll and Bill Mullaly were the officers of t h e Freshman class. President Roll addresses t h e class.
A f o r t u n a t e group of Freshman pose for the photographer.
were the rage of the campus.
During
Freshman
Initiation
Week
the
��The school year 1949-1950 was highlighted by many varied social activities. They ranged from little card games in a student's basement to " b i g name"
band dances at the Coliseum. In the center of all these events, providing the
initial spark, are the fraternity men of Lawrence Tech.
These men also form
the background for serious w o r k here at the college. For one of the many aims
of all fraternities is to make constructive contributions to the general wellbeing of the college itself.
Fraternity life is the spice in a college education.
It builds up a circle of
acquaintances for member students.
It provides group discussion activities,
i t educates in the art of social graces.
It instills the principles of brotherhood,
comradeship, and humility. These influences make college students better c i t i zens and better professional men.
��President E. G. Lawrence and Mr. Victor Basso receiving Lambda lota Tau Certificates
from Chairman John Lauer,
The highest possible award that any student at Lawrence Tech can earn is the coveted
Lambda lota Tau key. This heart-shaped key, emblematic of membership in the Lambda
lota Tau Honor Fraternity, marks a student w h o has combined scholastic proficiency w i t h
leadership and active participation in extra-curricular activities.
Dean Russell Lawrence, the founder of Lawrence Institute of Technology, was the g u i d ing hand in the institution of this honor award. Lambda lota Tau was originated in 1934,
just two years after the school was founded, and awards have been made annually every year
since, w i t h the single exception of the war year of 1945 when extra-curricular activities
were virtually non-existent on campus.
To be eligible for election to the honor society, a student must have completed his
sophomore year, must have completed six terms w i t h a m i n i m u m of " B " average, and must
have amassed a prescribed number of activity points w h i c h varies directly w i t h the number
of terms that the student spent at L I T and inversely w i t h his scholastic average.
This year for the first time in the fraternity's history two honorary memberships were
voted to two men in recognition of their splendid efforts in the fields of Lawrence Tech
educational and extra-curricular functions. President E. C. Lawrence received one of the
awards and the other w e n t to Mr. Victor Basso, the president of Lawrence Tech's first Student Council.
Joseph Anderson
Arthur Dahike
Osie Jackson
Robert Fontaine
Victor Bleimeister
Leonard Jankowski�
John Gardner
Stewart McMillan
George Lagergren
Richard Nicholas
Robert Minor
Richard F. Larkins
Edward Pawlak
�Frank F. Moderacki
�Harold B. Price
William Stairs
Robert Williams
Kenneth West
Richard Sinko
Edmund Wojciechowski
�OFFICERS
Albert Ratush
President
Edward Kennedy
Vice-President
Recording Secretary
Corresponding Secretary
Everett Petrak
Henry Backstrand
William Daniels
Treasurer
Sergeant-at-Arms
....
House Manager
Philip Pompeii
Charles Henry
Epsilon Chapter, of Alpha Gamma Upsilon, was founded in June 1933, here at Lawrence Tech.
Since that time. Alpha Gamma Upsilon has obtained t h e status of a national
organization through the founding of its tenth chapter.
As in the past, A.G.U. members strive t o participate in many of t h e extra-curricular
activities.
A f e w of these activities include, student government organizations, S.A.E.,
A.C.S., and S.A.M.
Several men of Epsilon chapter have shown their ability in sports, par-
ticularly in the fencing and rifle teams.
The fraternity's social calendar has never had a dull moment throughout the past school
year.
Bowling matches, " s t a g " parties, dances and baseball matches against other clubs and
organizations are b u t a f e w .
The high spots of the f r a t e r n i t y for the past year include Alpha Gamma Upsilon Founders' Day celebration held at the Club Eagle, October 8, 1949, t h e annual Fall Frolic and the
presentation of the " m o s t valuable player" award of Tech's basketball team.
The members of Alpha Gamma Upsilon have worked t o stimulate the increase of student participation in the student government and other various activities of the school.
�First Row Across:
Henry Backstrand, Thomas Berry, Walter Brady, Don Brewster, Gerry Burke, Robert
Coldwell.
Fourth Row Across:
Edward Mish, Leslie Mollon, Carl Ortolf, Joseph Ouellette, Roger Pasqual,
Robert Petts.
Second Row Across:
Richard Cotter, George Henrickson, Charles
Henry, Edward Kennedy, Charles Lindberg,
Al Loosevelt.
F i f t h Row Across:
Larry Pincheck, Alvin Ratush, Dallas Schnabell, Robert Schoof, Richard Shays, Louis
Sibel.
T h i r d Row Across:
Robert Lund, Richard Macan, Matthew McGrail,
Larry Mclntyre, Don Mallock, Harold McMenemy.
B o t t o m Row Across:
Richard Vart, Wesley White.
��OFFICERS
President
Vice-President
Lee Cromwell
Lorne Hemelberg
Secretary
Douglas Foley
Treasurer
Michael Michaels
Peter Gindice
Kappa Sigma Kappa, represented on the Lawrence Tech campus by the Michigan Beta
Chapter, is the second of three national fraternities that sprang f r o m the Virginia Military
Institute during the expansion period f o l l o w i n g the civil war. The three chapters in the
order of their affiliation are: Alpha Tau Omega in 1865, Kappa Sigma Kappa in 1867, and
Sigma Nu in 1869.
During the first half century of growth. Kappa Sigma Kappa confined its expansion to
southern colleges and universities. However, since then, the fraternity has expanded on an
inter-national scale. A f t e r eighty-three years, it now has forty-six national chapters and
four inter-national chapters. The foreign chapters are represented in Canada, N e w Zealand
and Tasmania.
Some of the outstanding social events of the past year were the Halloween party and
dance held at the V/ings A i r p o r t , t w o formal initiation banquets at Vannelli's and Thomas'
Edgewater Inn, a big get-together w i t h our brother chapter, Michigan Alpha of the Detroit
Institute of Technology, and many other well-attended functions.
Kappa Sigma Kappa has always taken a large role in school functions and this year won
the second prize for organizations in the Founder's Day Celebration.
�The Wittnauer Choraleers have nothing on the mellow voiced offerings of this mighty ensemble of Kappa Sigma Kappa
Pledges.
Since their concerts were given during the noon hour,
LIT has come to regard the group as the creators of the finest
dinner music available on any campus.
�As t h e school year o f 1949-50 c o m e s t o a close, t h e m e m b e r s o f Phi Kappa
Upsilon can look back o n a year o f success and progress. Both A l p h a and Delta
Chapters had banner years b o t h f r a t e r n a l l y and socially. T w o pledge seasons
were c o n d u c t e d w i t h t w e n t y - o n e n e w m e m b e r s c o m i n g i n t o t h e Delta C h a p ter and a s i m i l a r n u m b e r e n t e r i n g t h e n i g h t school A l p h a Chapter.
In a d d i t i o n t o t h e f o r m a l degrees c o n d u c t e d by t h e f r a t e r n i t y , many social
f u n c t i o n s w e r e h e l d ; i n c l u d i n g t w o pledge m i x e r s , a hayride, a w e i n e r roast, a
H a l l o w e e n Dance, several stag parties, picnics, and t h e A n n u a l D i n n e r Dance.
T h e past year saw t h e f r a t e r n i t y m a k e great strides w i t h its b u i l d i n g p r o gram. T h e Board o f D i r e c t o r s had received t r e m e n d o u s cooperation f r o m t h e
m e m b e r s h i p and t h e plans w i l l be i n f u l l s w i n g in t h e near f u t u r e .
OFFICERS
ALPHA CHAPTER
Alpha Chapter Officers (Left to Right): J. Crowley, J. Mance, E. Ogger, C. Crittenden,
A. Treciak, C. Hopkins, R. Gould, W. Celgota and W. Thielemann.
President
Thad Treciak
Vice President
Paul Jocham
Secretary . . . .George Crittenden
Treasurer
George Hopkins
Chaplain
John Mance
Warden
William Celgota
Master of Rituals. . . Robert Gould
Correspondence Secretary
Earl Ogger
Entertainment Chairman and
Editor . . . .Walter Thielemann
Student Council Rep.
George Crittenden
I.F.C. Rep
John Crowley
Pledge Chairman
Ralph O'Conner
�President
Bruce R. Polkinghorne
Vice-President
Lawrence C. Clifton
Secretary
William R. Stetler
Treasurer
Thomas Fraser
Chaplin
Master of Rituals
Warden
Pledge Masters
Bruce R. Polkinghorne
Walter Foglia
Calvin Trestrail
Ben Hart
Robert Skupny and
Donald Grant
Thomas Fraser
Donald Grant
Robert Skupny
William R. Stetler
�Row O n e : Wm. Agy, Stan Anvcinski, Frank Dimijian, Jim Felhberg, John Ferrel, John Fontanesi.
Row T w o : Tom Fraser, Don Grant, Robert Henderson, Lou Klei, George Limberg, Cornell Lazar.
Row T h r e e : Donald Lumley, Art McCallan, Gene McDarci, Grant Morrison, Chet Ogar, Geno Perfeto.
Row Four: Bruce Polkinghorne, Robert Pope, Wm. Prusaitis, Bob Skupny, Terry Soiberay, Bill Stetler.
Row Five: James Saunders, Terry Todd, Lou Valente, Russ Vaillancourt.
�A L P H A CHAPTER
President
Edward Kuzel
Vice-President
Carl Gilgallon
Rec. Secretary
Joseph Capello
Corr. Secretary
Treasurer
Pledgemaster
Charles Zyla
Matthew Hunter
Richard Larkins
Left to Right: Edward Kuzel, Matthew Hunter, Charles Zyla and Richard Larkins.
Rho Delta Phi Fraternity was founded in September of 1938 by a group of night school
students at Lawrence Tech. Ten years later, the Beta Chapter received its charter and this
second chapter was made up of day school students. In 1949, the Alpha Omega Chapter
was formed w h i c h is the alumni chapter of the fraternity.
Rho Delta Phi is purely a social fraternity and its primary function was and still is the
fostering good fellowship and friendship and the fraternal spirit of its brothers. The fraternity, however, has always taken an active part in any movement or activity which furthers
the interests of the student body, the staff, or any other group in the college community.
BETA CHAPTER
President
Jack Pelamati
Vice-President
Michael Kendall
Rec. Secretary
Richard Wheeker
Corr. Secretary
Treasurer
John Kono
William Patton
Sgt.-at-Arms
Donald Bush
Pledgemaster
John Belevich
Left to right: Edward Kuzel, Matthew Hunter, Charles Zyla and Richard Larkins
Left to Right: William Patton, Richard Wheeker, Donald Bush,
John Belevich and John Rono, Jack Pelamati, seated.
�Rho Delts w i l l be
found in the SAE, the
SAM, the ACS, the EE
Club, the CES, the Student Council, the Tech
News staff and the L-Book staff. Rho Delt took
a leading p a r t in the
founding of the Interfraternity Council and the
Rho Delts pride themselves in the cordial relations which they maintain with the other
fraternities on campus.
The fraternity maintains an inter-chapter bowling league throughout the winter months
along with a regular agenda of social affairs, both "stag" and "drag". On the more serious
side, the fraternity has initiated a building fund to be used for a fraternity house on the new
campus.
Rho Delt loses many members with the current graduating class, but it wishes them and
their classmates the best of luck as they leave Lawrence Tech to take their place in society.
�Interfraternity Council Chairman Lee Cromwell poses with his delegates for the 1949-50 school year.
The Inter-fraternity Council at Lawrence Tech was formed for the express purpose of
promoting harmony between the four fraternities on the campus. The council is made up
of two representatives from each member fraternity, Alpha Gamma Upsilon, Kappa Sigma
Kappa, Phi Kappa Upsilon, and Rho Delta Phi.
Meetings are held monthly to discuss problems that have arisen that are of a fraternal
nature and to plan inter-fraternity social functions.
The most ambitious undertaking of the body is the sponsoring of the annual Inter-fraternity Dance. Last year's dance which was the second such affair since the forming of
the group, was held at the Shangri La Club. All who attended had a good time and an even
larger affair is planned for the coming year.
On the serious Side, the IFC is charged with the responsibility of setting up and enforcing the rules and regulations governing pledging activities and pledging periods. All prospective fraternity men are investigated by the council to see that their scholastic averages
are up to par.
The chairmanship of the IFC rotates annually and for the past school year, Lee Cromwell of Kappa Sigma Kappa acted as chairman, with Harold Price and John Belevich of Rho
Delta Phi serving as secretary-treasurer.
�Just as the fraternities are the spice i n college life—the organizations are
the variety. Whether large or small, there is an organization which will interest each and every student on the T e c h campus.
Some are large and others are small. Some do big things and others do little
things. The Aero Club designed and constructed a midget racing plane, which
was in active competition at the Nation's A i r Races.
W i t h o u t organizations college life would be dull and mostly uninteresting.
To the students who take advantage of the organizations by participating in
them we say "stay active." T o those students who do not belong to organizations and reap extra-curricular knowledge we say "become active."
��A.C.S. OFFICERS
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Douglas Denton
Walter Melenofsky
Charles Henry
Harold Bell
Left to Right: Harold Bell, Charles Henry, Douglas Denton, and Walt Melonofsky.
The Chem Club here at Lawrence Tech is an inobtrusive organization. It doesn't haze
its members in the hails or wildly publicize social events or meetings but it does promote
chemical education and it does have its share of social activities.
The club furthers education in chemistry in four major programs. Three of them are
in the field of visual education methods. Movies on an endless variety of subjects are shown
at each meeting. The motion pictures presentations range from simple measuring devices
to the complex forms of manufacturing in the chemical industry.
The club owns a slide film projector. V/hen a subject arises that merits a full treatment, the project is transferred to slide films for best possible results.
The third program takes in the display cases in the vicinity of the chem office. This
service not only aids Chem Club members but also presents the material to the student body
as a whole.
The final program features informative lectures by men who are prominent in the chemical field. It is here that the latest improvements and methods are revealed to students in
training.
The club's social activities are of the usual variety and are spaced throughout the year.
�Pictured are the officers of the CES for the
1949-50 school year.
Prominent in the minds of the Civil Engineering students is the year 1947. A t that time
a Civil Engineering Society was formed and also the C.E. curriculum was greatly improved
and enlarged by Professor William Menzel.
Operating in close conjunction w i t h the department, the club helps all concerned in
keeping up to date w i t h " t h e o r y and practice."
A not too scant existence is maintained through the acquisition of dues f rom C.E.S. m e m bers. Other revenue is obtained by doing outside w o r k for local concerns. During the past
year this extra money was used to purchase books for the Tech library.
The Civil Engineering Society is one of the smaller organizations on the campus but is
also one of the more active.
�T h e EE C l u b is one o f t h e n e w e s t a n d fastest g r o w i n g o r g a n i z a t i o n s o n t h e
campus.
I t was o r g a n i z e d N o v e m b e r 4 , 1949 by s t u d e n t s i n t h e electrical e n -
g i n e e r i n g c u r r i c u l u m here a t L a w r e n c e T e c h , under t h e sponsorship o f Mr. Alan Warnick o f t h e EE D e p a r t m e n t .
T h e purpose o f t h e o r g a n i z a t i o n is t o encourage and broaden t h e engineering experience o f t h e s t u d e n t beyond t h a t o r d i n a r i l y e n c o u n t e r e d in f o r m a l
c u r r i c u l a r a c t i v i t i e s . T o a c c o m p l i s h t h i s purpose, t h e c l u b has p r o v i d e d guest
speakers; t o u r s t h r o u g h i n d u s t r i a l p l a n t s , factories, a n d research laboratories;
and has a f f o r d e d t h e s t u d e n t m e m b e r an o p p o r t u n i t y t o c o n s t r u c t various types
of electrical apparatus.
A n o t h e r major o b j e c t i v e o f t h e c l u b is t o establish t h e i r o w n research laboratory o n t h e n e w campus site o f t h e college.
T h e EE C l u b h e l d i t s f i r s t e l e c t i o n o f o f f i c e r s o n N o v e m b e r
1 1 , 1 949, and
these o f f i c e r s served u n t i l A p r i l 19, 1 9 5 0 . Below are t h e o f f i c e r s f o r t h e t w o
terms of office.
WINTER TERM
William Bushor
John Gorman
SPRING TERM
Chairman
C h a i r m a n o f t h e Board .
Anthony Jakimovich
William Bushor
Louis Lepri
Board M e m b e r
Harold Adkins
Anthony Jakimovich
Board M e m b e r
John Scrimshire
Robert Tilley
Sec reta ry-Treasu rer
Mr. Warnick
Faculty Sponsor
Lawrence Vincent
Mr. Warnick
��OFFICERS
President
Secretary
Thomas Campbell
Albert Schoenheit
Treasurer
Left fo Right: Adam Shostak, Tom Campbell and Albert Schoenheit
Adam Shostak
The purpose of the Institute of Aeronautical Sciences is the advancement and dissemination of knowledge of the theory and practice of the aeronautical sciences.
Activities of the Lawrence Tech student branch of the IAS include the presentation of
motion pictures and lectures of various aeronautical subjects, the holding of field trips, and
attendance at meetings and discussions given by the Senior Detroit Section of the IAS.
Members of the student branch of the IAS are permitted to utilize most of the services and
the facilities of the senior section and they may take part in any of its deliberations.
The Senior Section sponsors competition among the student chapters in the State of
Michigan, usually in the form of a technical paper which is prepared and presented by one
of the student branch members at one of the senior section meetings. Lawrence Tech has
been quite successful in the past in walking off with more than its share of the student
awards.
One of the highlights of the past year
was a trip by plane to Cleveland, to tour
the N. A. C. A. flight propulsion laboratories.
The Lawrence Tech student branch is
under the faculty sponsorship of Professor George Martin, the head of the aeronautical engineering department.
�OFFICERS
President
Vice-President
Osie E. Jackson
Robert E. Henderson
Secretary
Jack W. Cooley
Treasurer
Walter J. Misko
Faculty Advisor
Lloyd C. Bagby
standing (Left to Right): Walter Misko, Jack Cooley and Robert Henderson.
Seated: Osie Jackson and Mr. Bagby.
During the 1947-1948 school year. Professor L. C. Bagby presented the idea that the
Masonic students f o r m a club. M r . Otis E. Bower did much of the ground w o r k for the
formation of such an organization by contacting Masonic students to ascertain their interest
and opinions.
Several meetings were held during the year, at w h i c h qualifications for membership and
various other phases of organizing a club were discussed. There was little social activity
during the early stages of the organization.
The 1948-1949 school year saw the actual formation of this Masonic club which was
named " T h e Lawrence Institute of Technology Square C l u b . " On January 2 0 , 1949, the
Student Council was petitioned for campus recognition w h i c h was denied, because the cons t i t u t i o n did not conform t o the prescribed regulations. The necessary changes were made
and on March 17, 1949, recognition was extended. Professor H. L. Byerlay was the faculty
advisor during the first year the Square Club was in existence.
In token of appreciation for the use
of college facilities, a set of chimes was
presented and installed in the college library to indicate the changing of classes.
During the past t w o years many social
activities such as, card and stag parties,
and dinner dances, have been enjoyed by
a membership larger than any other club
on the campus.
Professor Lloyd C. Bagby is the faculty advisor for the 1949-1950 school
The Society for Advancement of Management
President
Ted Malpass
Vice-President
John Lauer
Secretary
Robert Decker
Treasurer
Al Kennedy
Corresponding Secretary
Milt Kirkenmeir
COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN
Permanent Committees
Gerard Burke
Membership Committee
Edward Kennedy
Publicity Committee
James Nicholson
Arrangements Committee
Leon Moleski
Program Committee:
Kendal Kirsch, William Hagen
�President Ted Malpass receives the official charter
presentation was made October 27, 1949, during a
Memorial Building.
from F. S. Dowlding, National Director of SAM.
The
special meeting held in the Rackham Educational
The Society for Advancement of Management is the recognized national professional
society of management people in industry, commerce, government, and education. It represents no special interests but is motivated by a selfless zeal to spread the benefits of scientific management whenever management is required.
Professor Lloyd C. Bagby, faculty sponsor, organized a student chapter at Lawrence Tech
in June of 1949. The charter was awarded on October 27, 1949, by the Detroit Chapter of
SAM. The student chapter here at Lawrence Tech is sponsored by and holds its meetings
w i t h the Detroit Chapter.
The SAM meetings are held three times a month at the Rackham Educational Building.
The members participate actively in all meetings, discussions, and social functions.
In
addition, the student chapter holds meetings in the school to keep the members informed
of the management advancements made in industry.
Membership in the society is open to everyone w h o wishes to w o r k into the management side of industry. The only requirement made by the student chapter is that the student candidate for membership be of sophomore standing or better.
�The year 1938 saw the introduction o f the Society of Automotive Engineers
to Lawrence Tech. Night school lays claim to the organization of the S.A.E.
on the campus. However, little was done in the way of student activities until
after the war.
In 1946 w i t h an unusually large day school enrollment, Faculty Advisor Dr.
Gail Brewington and the student chairman Albert Nash displayed their leadership by signing a new group of students to increase the membership to more
than 150. W i t h an organization of this size, Lawrence Tech applied for a student section charter which was granted A p r i l 11, 1947.
Al Nash supervised an efficient g r o j p of officers which provided the students w i t h interesting speakers and technical movies. Tours through industrial plants and research laboratories proved popular. The student section also
had a g r e a t deal to do w i t h organizing the first "Student-Senior Joint
Meeting."
The Society, along w i t h S.A.E. members from the University of Michigan
toured the University's pet laboratories. A n inspection of the Detroit Tank
Arsenal also took place.
The S.A.E. is not an organization interested solely in the manufacture of
automobiles. A t one time, however, i t was dedicated t o automotive production procedures but has now spread t o the aircraft and gasoline fields. Because
the three go hand-in-hand, they combined and are now under the same study
procedure in the society.
Since almost a classification of engineering position may be found in the
automotive, aeronautical, and fuels field, i t is to your advantage t o become
affiliated w i t h the S.A.E.
�The Lawrence Tech Varsity Club began its organization in the spring of 1938 by A t h letic Director Don Ridler.
The club was f i r s t composed of 1 10 letter winners w i t h Lou Jelch, football, basketball, and baseball letter winner, the first president.
Functions of the club include awarding letter sweaters; supervising Varsity sport affairs
such as Homecoming games, dances, and sports banquets.
Distributing Varsity identification cards and Varsity pins; and presenting awards to the graduating seniors.
To be eligible, a student must have won a Varsity letter from one Lawrence Tech A t h letic sport activity. He must also be accepted by the club as a whole, the membership committee, and the Athletic department. The student's personality, leadership ability, and
sportsmanlike conduct are the points considered.
A t present the club is composed of 85 members f r o m the sports provided at the college.
Total membership is 500.
�LAWRENCE TECH
NEWS
STAFF
News Staff
Editor-in-Chief
Wallace Croll
Associate Editor
Jim Nicholson
Feature Editor
Richard Larkins
Feature Writers: Bud Kuzel
Division Heads:
Clubs and Organizations. . .Clayton Baker
Department Heads
Karl Wilsman
Reporters: Bob Coldwell, Dale Boye, Court
Holliday, Roger Saunders, Charles Riglay,
Herb Krauer, Cornell Lazar, and Billy Mullaly.
Rewrite: Ed Marcum.
Photographic Editor
Business Manager
Leo Berlin
Herbert Cromwell
Circulation Manager
Osie Jackson
Circulation Staff: Malcolm Gardner,
Ken West, Martin Vila, Lee Cromwell, and
Leonard Kmilc
Faculty Sponsor
Mr. Carl Einhorn
During the past school year the staff of the TECH NEWS published 176 pages of copy
for the undergraduate students of Lawrence Tech.
Under the leadership of Editor Wallace Croll the staff put together t w o issues w h i c h
were outstanding in newspaper make-up for college newspapers.
For the "Homecoming"
game last year the staff formulated the idea of running t w o colors.
The "BEAT
IOWA"
in large blue type w i t h the Blue Devil superimposed over the front page must have brought
the basketball team good luck.
For they w o n this game, f r o m a Big-10 college 54 to 49.
�During the open house at Founders' Day a 16-page issue of the TECH NEWS was
handed to incoming guests; providing them w i t h a complete history of the college plus floor
plans of the building directing th e m t o the e x h i b i t s .
W i t h the help of the Assistant Editors, Richard Larkins, Philip Mulligan, Jim Nicholson,
and the able cartoon efforts of Carl Groop the TECH NEWS was a source of interest t o the faculty, administration, and students of Lawrence Tech.
�
L-BOOK STAFF
Editor
Associate Editor
Sports Editor
Art Editor
Harold Price
Richard Larkins
Richard Sinko
Roy Lewis
Photo Editors:
William Harrison, Stanley Kukawa
The publication of a college annual requires the taking of a few pictures, a little writing
ability, a little bit of editing, and an awful lot of leg work.
Stan Kukawa and Burton Harrison took the pictures; Dick Larkins and Dick Sinko did the
writing; Harold Price did the editing; and everybody that we could beg, borrow, or beat over
the head, did the leg work.
Many members of the Senior Class who had nothing to do with the actual writing of the
book nevertheless had a major part of the work and responsibility for the publication of the
book. Gerard Burke, the president of the Senior Class, was of invaluable assistance in too
many ways to mention here. John Erickson collected much of the raw information until
illness in his family forced his retirement from the staff. Irene Salvatore designed our cover and Roy
Lewis did most of the interior art
work. Frank Moderacki, Ed Pawlak, John Gorman, and Ed Smolenski
did the departmental leg work; and
Wally Croll made the arrangements
with the printers.
DICK SINKO, Sports
Editor
�This year's L-Book staff was fortunate in having two very fine photographers in the persons of William
Harrison and Stan Kukawa,
Between the two, they shot over ninety
percent of the informal shots appearing in the book.
STAN KUKAWA
WILLIAM HARRISON
�SPORTS—the realm of rah-rah boys and big wheels on campus; common
phrases used by those who haven't played the game, the non-participators.
But, what of the athletes and the games they played!
To those that played the game, the "rah-rah" isn't there but in its place are
memories and pride. Not so much of games won and lost but the pride in
knowing that they had the energy, stamina and that extra something to see
the game through. The pride that goes with wearing the varsity uniform and
being a "BLUE DEVIL IN ACTION."
The lessons learned through true competition in sports are invaluable lessons in the game of life and as the years slip by—look to the athlete for that
extra something, that spurt of energy. It will still be there—TILL THE VICTORY IS WON.
��Don Ridler
Athlstic Director
and Head Coach
Walter Bazylewicz
Carl Campbell
Freshman Coach
�Front Row, left to r i g h t : Petty, Polance, Talbert, Smith, Adams, and Mawhorter.
Second Row, l e f t to r i g h t : Coach Ridler, Trainer McCarthy, Maconochie, Denning, Cacicedo, Knurek, Trainer McCarthy,
sistant Coach Bazy.
Third Row, l e f t to r i g h t : Jones, Khoury, Stepler, Houtteman, Zinc, and McManamy.
Talbert, Stepler, Ridler,
before game t i m e .
Finishing up the 4 9 - 5 0 season w : t h 21 wins against
10 losses the Blue Devils played the outstanding teams
of the country.
H i g h l i g h t i n g the year for the players was the t r i p to
Ssit Lake City, Utah were they met the p o w e r f u l U n i versity of Utah and Utah State teams.
A total of nine games were played in the State Fair
Coliseum w i t h big name bands playing for dancing a f t e r wards.
Denning, Petty, and Maconochie
����Lawrence Tech's freshman basketball team went through
an eighteen game season without a defeat against the finest
competition that the athletic department could provide them.
In posting the first perfect season ever enjoyed by an LIT
frosh basketball team, the freshman beat four unbeaten
teams, three of whom finished their seasons with Lawrence
Tech administering their only defeat.
The fine offensive and airtight defensive play of the freshman squad served notice on the holdover varsity men that they
had best look to their laurels, because several of the members
of this freshman team are cinches to clinch regular positions
on next year's varsity.
The splendid showing of the freshman squad was a tremendous personal accomplishment for Freshman Coach Carl
Campbell, who was coaching his first year in collegiate competition. Carl was one of the all-time high scorers at LIT in
his playing days and he has definitely proven that he can make
the grade in the coaching profession. His team's work on
defense called forth praise from many rival coaches.
His team held high-scoring St. Stanislaus to 83 points in
two ball games, which is about what they were accustomed
to getting in one. The frosh journeyed to Buffalo to play
Niagara University's frosh and surprised the Easterners with
a 67-43 shellacking. Another outstanding upset was the win
over the Windsor Sterlings. This was a team that was good
enough to play the Harlem Globe-trotters.
�
�1950 BASEBALL T E A M
Back Row (Left- t o Right) :
Walt Bazylewicz—Coach . Richard Sharp —OF, William Hane — C a p t a i n , -IB,
Richard Sinko — I B , Edmund Wojciechowski — O F ,
John Fontanesi—OF, Raymond Schrieber—P, Roy Ferrari—3B, Julius Nemeth — P , Chuck Cacicedo—OF.
Front Row
Charles Singer—C, Jack Strunk — P , Don Harlow — C , Irv Cohen — 3 B , Bill Bartholomeo — P , Ray Chojnowski—SS, Micheal Paraschak — P , Lillord Cobb — A s s t . Coach, Ray Mawhorter — P .
It's an old saying, " T h e sophomore year of coaching is the hardest." To Coach Walt
Bazylewicz, this baseball season may well have been his hardest, but by no means the least
forgettable to himself or to Lawrence Tech. Bazy's squad compiled a record unequalled by
any previous Lawrence Tech nine, 14 wins against only five losses.
Early in the season. Coach Bazylewicz instilled in his team a w i l l to w i n , and w i n they
did. The veteran squad won nine straight games before losing to Hillsdale College on a
road trip.
Highlighting the season were wins over Bowling Green University, University of Toledo,
Findlay College, Ashland College and Defiance College; all good baseball schools.
The 14-5 record of the team is even more significant in view of the fact that the Blue
Devil squad played only four of the nineteen games on their home diamond. A n d inclement
weather necessitated all of the games being played w i t h i n a thirty-day period.
�
SENIORS —
RECEIVING
Walt Bazylewicz — C o a c h , Lillord
Ed Wopciechowski, Dan Harlow, Bill
and Chuck Cacicedo.
THEIR
CAPTAIN BILL HANE
Bill ranks as one of Lawrence Tech's
outstanding b a s e b a l l p l a y e r s . N o t
only f r o m the standpoint of ability b u t
in popularity, a real team-mate.
Nicknamed "Buster" for his homerun production w h i c h totaled up to
? It seems as though the w i n d
always turned against his long balls??
�WINTER TEAM
Bill Hane. 2b
Dan Harlow, c
Dick Sinko, l b
Chuck Cacicedo, If
Ed Wojciechowski, c f . . . . . 67
45
Mike Pershak, p
20
26
12
28
Dick Sharp, rf
Julie Nemeth, p
7
3
Don Winters, p
3
Chuck Singer, c
Herman Rett, p
3
3
Jack Strunk, p
LAST INSTRUCTIONS
Cobb — Ass't Coach, Bill Hane — Captain,
Bartolomeo, John Fontanesi, Dick Sinko,
W h a t a set of tonsils? A n d could he
use them, fiery Dan Harlow provided
spark and strength behind the plate.
Noted for his mimicry of Leo Durocher and N e w York Giant tactics,
Dan (Martha) g u i d e d h i s t e a m
through 19 strenuous ball games.
��Left to Right (Standing): James Donahue, Dick Stickly, Leon Yulkowski, Tom
Howell, Al Petrilli, Paul Engle and Louis Klei.
Dick Sharp and Dick Yasenchak.
Kneeling: Tom Howell, Al Petrilli, Paul Engle, Louis Klei
Lawrence Tech's fencing team enjoyed a very successful season, this year, winning five
out of six matches against some of the toughest competition in the middlewest. The team's
only loss was at the hands of Big Ten Champion, University of Illinois, by the close score of
141/2-121/2.
LIT won victories over the University of Cincinnati, Fenn College, Case Institute of
Technology, Tri-State College, and Highland Park Junior College.
The team climaxed the season by winning the Michigan Inter-Collegiate Fencing Championship over strong teams from Wayne University, University of Detroit, and other teams
throughout the state.
Five of the team members are lost to the squad via the graduation route. The greatest
loss will be the departure of Dick Yasenchak, one of the finest fencers in Lawrence Tech
history. Dick posted winning percentages for his bouts in all four years of competition and
in his final two years he amazed midwestern fencers, winning 38 bouts while losing only
one.
Louis Klei, one of the mainstays of the strong saber squad, receives his degree in June
along with Dick Stickley of the saber squad. Paul Engle, the best epee man on the squad,
is another loss which will be hard to fill. Tom Howell, another epee man rounds out the
list of graduates.
A t the close of the regular season, Dick Yasenchak and Leon Yulkowski fenced in both
the Regional and National Inter-Collegiate Tournaments and both carried off medals.
�Left to Right (Standing): Captain
Bob Crawford.
Bob Dean, Lew Alward, and Dick Macan.
Seated: Clayton Baker, Bob Hamparian and Bob Crawford
The Lawrence Tech Rifle Team is one of the most active organizations in the college.
It is a result of a student's idea that some means to obtain a school letter be made accessible
to night school students.
A notice appeared in the TECH NEWS in October 1937, stating that a meeting for the
formation of a rifle team w o u l d be held on the 17th of that month.
The rifle team was o f f i c i a l l y started w i t h 15 members. The Blue Devils hold shoulder
to shoulder matches w i t h big name colleges t h r o u g h o u t the United States.
During the past year Robert Dean was Captain of the team assisted by Lew Alward as
team Manager.
.
�standing (Left to Right): Art Wasek, Jerry Pozzick, Ken Badarak and Lew Alward.
Seated: Willie Wilhelm, Bill Belecki,
and Ed Wonciar.
The pistol team is one of the newer sports offered to Tech students who wish to compete in inter-collegiate competition.
Willie Wilhelm and Lew Alward have undertaken the job of building up a team that
can represent the school both in postal matches and field matches.
During the past year the pistol team fired a series of postal matches and traveled to
Chicago for the Midwest Pistol Shoot.
Left to Right (Back R o w ) : John Landis, Don Ryder, John Calvert and John Swiecicki.
Smith, Ted Malpass and Coach Ralph Emig.
(Front R o w ) : Lee Cromwell, Marvin Smith, Ted Malpass and Coach Ralph Emig.
Lawrence Tech's tennis team woun(d up their 1950 season w i t h an even break for the
year, five wins against five losses. This is n o t quite up to the records posted by the teams
of the previous years, b u t the schedule was an ambitious one and the crippling loss to the
team of their number one singles man, John Landis, kept the team f r o m once again going
over the .500 mark.
This marked the f i f t h year for Coach Emig and he has seen his teams w i n 34 and lose
22 over the five year span.
�
Call for VINCO
GEARS
The a b i l i t y f o r achieving accuracies of very h i g h
degree has brought V i n c o into the field of h i g h
q u a l i t y a n d c o m m e r c i a l gears. Jet engines a n d
radar e q u i p m e n t are t w o m o d e r n developments
that r e q u i r e gears accurate i n a l l elements to
.0001 or .0002. Vinco-produced commercial gears
are more accurate a n d have a finer finish t h a n
generally f o u n d i n this gear classification. That
is w h y V i n c o should be called when good gearing
is needed.
GEAR ROLLING INSPECTION FIXTURES
The fixture, shown at the left, is designed for
inspection of gears being made i n q u a n t i t y prod u c t i o n . I t provides a fast, accurate check of
c o n c e n t r i c i t y , backlash, a n d r o l l i n g action. F i x tures are made f o r e x t e r n a l or i n t e r n a l gears and
w i l l accommodate any tooth f o r m . . . spur, helical,
spiral or w o r m .
PRECISION PRODUCTION PARTS
This group of precision-machined parts is t y p i c a l
of t h e w i d e v a r i e t y of w o r k produced b y V i n c o
i n this field. M a c h i n i n g operations p e r f o r m e d o n
these parts i n c l u d e lathe w o r k , m i l l i n g , slotting,
hobbing, broaching, t h r e a d g r i n d i n g , surface g r i n d ing, e x t e r n a l g r i n d i n g , j i g g r i n d i n g a n d l a p p i n g .
M u c h of this w o r k was p e r f o r m e d o n special
e q u i p m e n t designed a n d made b y V i n c o .
SPLINE GAGES
V i n c o pioneered i n t h e development of spline
gaging a n d created inspection and m a n u f a c t u r i n g
equipment w h i c h n o w makes possible the absolute
c o n t r o l of a l l essential elements of spline gages
d u r i n g p r o d u c t i o n . V i n c o is n o w t h e accepted
leader i n the field of spline gages. T h e i r i n v o l u t e ,
serration and straight sided spline p l u g and r i n g
gages set the pace f o r accuracy. T h a t is w h y m e n
who " k n o w " call V i n c o whenever they need spline
gages or splined parts.
9111 Schaefer Highway
Detroit 28, Mich.
I N C H
F O R
S A L E
�ENGINEERS
TO DESIGN IT
ENGINEERS
TO TOOL IT
ENGINEERS
TO GET PRODUCTION STARTED
ENGINEERS
TO MAINTAIN QUALITY AND EFFICIENCY
PIONEER ENGINEERING & MANUFACTURING CO.
ENGINEERS — CONSULTANTS — DESIGNERS — PRODUCTION E N G I N E E R I N G
TOOLS — DIES — SPECIAL
19669 JOHN R
SPECIALISTS
EQUIPMENT
DETROIT 3, MICH.
�— SIGN
— SYMBOL
AND
OF
FOR
LASTING
SUPERIORITY
SHOWROOM
SUCCESS
SATISFACTION!
L e a d i n g m o n u f a c l u r e r s off finished p r o d u c t s f i n d t h a t p r o d u c t s b y L. A . Y o u n g ,
included
in them, a d d greatly
t o their
successful
showroom
acceptance.
Your use of a n y of the f o l l o w i n g — r e s e a r c h d e v e l o p e d a n d q u a l i t y f a b r i c a t e d
b y L. A . Y o u n g — • w i l l g i v e y o u r p r o d u c t s g r e a t e r S h o w r o o m S u p e r i o r i t y a n d
lasting satisfaction:
For Automotive:
S p r i n g Units (Including
O-Lotor'
Padding
Famous A d i u s t a b l e
" S e l e c t - O - S e a t " Units) a n d " F l e x -
S u p p o r t s f o r S c o t a n d Bock Cushions . . .
G a r n i s h M o u l d i n g s — D e c o r a t i v e Trims . . .
Precision M e c h a n i c a l S p r i n g s — S u c h A s V a l v e , Clutch a n d B r a k e S p r i n g s . . .
Instrument Dash P a n e l S t a m p i n g s . . .
For Home Furnishings:
I n n e r - S p r i n g Units f o r M a t t r e s s e s . . .
Bed S p r i n g s o f V o r l o u s Designs . . .
F l e x - O - L a t o r P o d d i n g S u p p o r t s f o r B e d d i n g o n d Furniture t n d u s t r l e t • • •
For Appliances:
R e f r i g e r a t o r Shelves a n d Baskets . . . O v e n Racks
for Apparel:
S t o r Service A l l - W i r e & P a p e r - S t r u t
Hangers
L. A . Young Specialists in Design and Fabrication of Superior Springs and
Metal Products Will Be Glad to Consult With You On BeHer Product Applications.
I. A. Y O U N G
SPRING
&
WIRE
CORPORATION
GENERAL OFFICES: DETROIT 11, MICH. . . . IN CANADA: L. A. YOUNG INDUSTRIES, LTD., WINDSOR, ONT.
�Shop Equipmenf of Every Description
Machine Tools
Cutting Tools
Power Transmission Equipment
Gears and Speed Reducers
Air Control Equipment
Industrial Brushes
Grinding Wheels
Wire Rope and Fittings
Screw Products
Electric Motors
Home Workshop Equipment
Drills — Reamers
Bronze Bushings
Casters
Industrial Supplies
Material Handling Equipment
Safety Equipment
Goggles — Helmets — Respirators
Abrasives
Electric Tools
Metals
Steel Shelving
Hydraulic Power Tools
Precision Tools
Taps — Dies
Drop Forged Tools
Trucks
A i r Compressors
THE CHAS. A. STRELINGER co
149 E. Larned St., Detroit 26, Mich. — W O . 2-7474
Charles E. Allinger, Secy.-Treas.
Chas. T. Bush, Pres.
SPAULDING ELECTRIC CO.
Power Apparatus Specia ists
Application - Installa+ior - Maintenance - Repair
Motors - Generators - Transformers - Switchgear
Substations - Speed Reducers - Couplings
1350 Michigan
Avenue
DETROIT 26. M I C H I G A N
w o o d w a r d 2-6200
�Best Wishes
L. J . LORANGER
Detroit Harvester Co.
DETROIT.
MICH.
«
Wishes you success
Dura Co., Division
TOLEDO.
PRODUCTO - MASTER STANDARD - SPECIAL DIE SETS
CONGRATULATIONS
ON THE
GROWTH
OF
LAWRENCE TECH
DANLY
M A C H I N E SPECIALTIES, INC.
1549 T E M P L E A V E . , D E T R O I T ,
OHIO
MICH.
Dowel Pins
O v a l W i r e — Square W i r e Springs
Socket H e a d C a p Screw
Socket H e a d Set Screws
Semi-Setel — Steel Bolster Plates
Punch Holder Remover
Socket H e a d Stripper Bolts
H a n d Tapping Machines
Utility Press
Modern Machine Vises
Foot Presses — Pry Bars
Send for our C a t a l o g
DANLY DIE SETS
DANLY ADVANCE
DIE MAKERS
DESIGNED
SUPPLIES
THE PRODUCTO CORP.
P U N C H PRESSES
3017 Medbury Avenue
TeL W A I n u t I - 3 I 0 I
Detroit 11,
Michigan
�Waterway Construction
THIS BOOK PRINTED BY
Company
Equipment Renta s
^^^B
^^^B
Graessle • M e r c e r H
company
H
SEWER. WATER & GAS MAIN
INSTALLATIONS
Box
162, Redford Station
MICHIGAN
DETROIT 19.
REdford
ESSEX
1030
WIRE
CORPORATION
Magnet Wire
•
SEYMOUR, INDIANA
INDUSTRIAL WIRE
CLOTH
PRODUCTS CO.
Automotive Wire
and Cable
industrial Wire Cloth Products
•
•
14310 WOODWARD AVENUE
HIGHLAND PARK
3927 Fourth St.
Wayne, Michigan
�FRANK O. STORER
Presents
FINE
PHOTOGRAPHS
By
D. D. SPELLMAN
STUDIOS
OVER 50 YEARS O F SERVICE
WEDDINGS
GROUPS
PORTRAITS
4838 W O O D W A R D AVE.
TEmple I-0010
NEAR W A R R E N
PARKING IN REAR
Compliments of
BEST WISHES
MOWBRAY-FINCH INC
1950 (L) Book Boosters
FORD DEALER
Sales and Service
Burton-Abstract
12401 Jos. Campau
TW. 3-1000
E & L Transport Co.
Industrial City Boring Co.
George A. Gloor
John Schmieg
Efficient Engineering Co.
Hugh Dean
Paul A. Denzig
Precision Spring Corp.
Fred Sanders
Bendix Power Brakes
Truckstell Conversions
Wheelbase Changes
Carburetors — Magnetos
Fuel Pumps — Diesel Injection
Specialized Truck Equipment
KNORR-MAYNARD INC.
5743 Woodward
�IT'S THE FERGUSON SYSTEM
THAT MAKES THE DIFFERENCE!
. . . AND SOUND
WALWAY CO.
ENGINEERING
PLAYED ITS PART
METAL STAMPINGS
HARRY FERGUSON, INC.
3639 E. MILWAUKEE
DETROIT II.
•
MICHIGAN
PLANT
12601 SOUTHFIELD
19270 WEST 8 MILE ROAD
DETROIT. MICHIGAN. U. S. A.
Ferguson Tractors
and Ferguson System Implements
COMPLETE
BUILDING
INDUSTRIAL
.
SERV CE
COMMERCIAL
CONTRACTING ENGINEERS
FACTORY MAINTENANCE
™
CAMPBELL CONSTRUiCtJON CO.
TAshmoo 5-2710
MOUNT
CLEMENS
METAL PRODUCTS CO.
•
AND ALTERATIONS
3255 Goldner Detroit 10
THE
Production Stampings, Clinch Nut
Assemblies and Metal Specialties
145 S. ROSE STREET
Mt. Clemens. Mich.
�Manufacturers
Bundy Tubing Co.
National Bank of Detroit
•
•
W O O D W A R D AT
MANCHESTER
Highland Park, Michigan
BUNDYWELD STEEL
AND MONEL TUBING
•
w
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
8109 E. JEFFERSON
DETROIT, M I C H .
•
/^ Recognized
M e t a l W o r k i n g Machinery
QUALITY SOURCE
for
RIORDAN
MACHINERY
COMPANY
• DIES
• TOOLS
• JIGS
• FIXTURES
213 CURTIS B U I L D I N G
RICHARD BROTHERS
DETROIT 2
ALLIED
PRODUCTS
DIV.
CORPORATION
Detroit and Hillsdale
�HAWTHORNE
DALZEN
TOOL &
M F G . CO.
M e t a l Products Company
ROYAL OAK.
MICHIGAN
Manufacl-ures
•
STAMPINGS
Tropic Breeze Hi-Boy
and
G a s Furnace
S T A M P I N G ASSEMBLIES
•
S. W . Cornell
13650 10 Mile Rd. E.
Detroit 5, Mich.
S, Cornell
B. Cornell
F. Cornell
Compliments of
N. 1. T I M C O
THE READY-POWER CO.
Member L. 1. T. Alumni
Manufacturers of
Cas-Electric Power Units
For Electric Industrial Truck Operation
•
Ready-Power Engine Generators
Dependable, Independent Electric Power for all Purposes
DeLUXE DIE WORKS
Ready-Power Engined Refrigeration
20201 HOOVER ROAD
Gasoline, Natural Sas, Butane or Diesel Powered Air
Conditioning or Refrigeration
DETROIT, M I C H I G A N
Plants: 3826 Grand River Avenue and
11231 Freud Avenue, Detroit
�STUDENTS
Compliments of
Many members of your alumni, as outstanding
American citizens, have set high standards in a
profession which has done so much to make this
country of ours a world leader.
WELKER
We need more and more engineers like that who
can think straight and act vigorously to keep America
the land of opportunity.
M A C H I N E R Y CO., INC.
You gentlemen have the equipment for that leadership.
We are depending on Y O U .
•
•
413 New Center BIdg.
NATIONAL
BROACH
OILITE Division
&
MACHINE
CO.
19924 Livernois Avenue
5600 St. Jean
Detroit, Mich.
AJAX
STEEL Cr
FORGE CO.
ROSS OPERATING
VALVE
COMPANY
John Sainsbury
FORGINGS
•
•
120 EAST GOLDENGATE
205 Adair
Lorain 7-0755
DETROIT 3. M I C H .
�DAVIS TOOL AND
ENGINEERING CO.
Tools, Dies and Special Machinery
DAHLINCER-KAY,
INC.
FORD SALES A N D SERVICE
Genuine Ford Parts
#
Complete Mechanical Service
12530 Hamilton Ave. at Highland
TOwnsend 8-8444
•
DAVIS STAMPING CO.
Sheet Metal Stampings and Assennblies
MAYSON
MANUFACTURING
CO.
4332 Horatio
•
Export Divn.
19250 Plymouth Road
2111 Woodward
Detroit 28, Mich.
DETROIT
VErmont 5-6000
CONGRATULATIONS
Compliments of
CLASS
UNITED
PLATERS, INC.
"1 Want t o Be Your Milkman"
H. A . M C D O N A L D C R E A M E R Y C O .
LOCAL — FRIENDLY
Milk —
TOwnsend 8-5250
Cream —
Ice Cream
9700 Oakland Avenue
Ask for illustrated Bulletin with interesting
information on many types of Detroit Electric Hoists
DETROIT
HOIST A N D M A C H I N E
8201 Morrow St.
1950
V . J . B. A R C H I T E C T
CORDON
& KINNEY,
INC.
Materials Handling Equipment
410 Stephenson Building
Detroit 2, Mich.
TARNOW
ELECTRIC
Trinity 3-8600
SUPPLY CO.
Wholesale Electrical Supplies
CO.
45 E. MILWAUKEE
Detroit, Mich.
Compliments of
Congratulations
P I S T O N S E R V I C E CO., I N C .
INDUSTRIAL
4430 CASS AVE.
Detroit 1,
Michigan
CASTINGS CO.
8955 THADDEUS
�ENTERPRISE
MACHINE PARTS CORP.
"Tool Makers Since 1920"
S. S. KRESGE CO.
14551 W O O D W A R D
•
Home of Empco Products
2731 Jerome
Twinbrook 1-7900
HETTCHE MOTOR SALES
G o o d Luck
to
FORD SALES —
Lawrence Tech
CHECKER GAB
WOOD
5 c - l O c a n d 2 5 c Stores
SERVICE
•
COMPANY
2475 West Grand Boulevard
3-7000
Detroit - - - - Michigan
NAVARRE DIE & TOOL CO.
TOOLS —
DIES
THE
FREDERICK POST CO.
561 East Jefferson, Detroit
Michigan Branch
13864 Elmira
, Detroit, Michigan
TOM'S WOODWARD MARKETS
The Finest Foods at Michigan's
Finest Market
12811 Woodward Avenue, C o r . Glendale
Convenient Parking
904 No. Woodward Cor. Catalpa Drive
Lincoln 3-5504
Royal Oalt
W O . 2-8484
A BETTER C A R
FOR YOUR MONEY
C A S H FOR YOUR
BERT
CAR
BAKER
WEbster3-58l5
9800 Grand River at Livernois
Detroit 4, Michigan
�"You Will Find It At"
DUDCO
FROMM'S
PRODUCTS CO.
SPORTING GOODS
Hunting and Fishing Supplies
Photography, Drafting Supplies, Tools
•
HYDRAULIC EQUIPMENT
PUMPS AND MOTORS
Hazel Parle,
1796 East 9 Mile Road
You Will Enjoy Shopping at
FROMM'S
13975 WOODWARD
Michigan
Open Friday and Saturday Evenings
For Your Convenience
FLAVORS
W. T. ANDREW CO.
PLUMBING SUPPLIES
15815 HAMILTON AVENUE
Tulsa 3-2000
^y^aJe
ike JProduceri
of
FAMOUS MELLO-"D" MILK
IRA WILSON & SONS DAIRY CO.
5255 TILLMAN AVENUE
HIGHLAND PARK
LUMBER CO.
15853 HAMILTON
EST. 1867
Drafting, Reproduction, Surveying
Equipnnent and Materials
Slide Rules
Measuring Tapes
37 W. Palmer
TYLER 5-6000
"Knight Kote"
Production Small Parts
KNIGHT PLATING CO.
3143 Bellevue Ave.
HIGHLAND PARK 3, MICHIGAN
KEUFFEL & ESSER
COMPANY
•
WA. 3-6100
Detroit. Mich.
U. S. A.
Compliments of
MILLER-SELDON
ELECTRIC CO.
l930 McGRAW
DETROIT
�Phone W E 3-3500
STEEL C I T Y TESTING
MACHINES INC.
Congratulations
Manufacturers of
HUDSON TOOL & M A C H I N E
CO.
TESTING M A C H I N E S — H Y D R A U L I C
TEST STANDS & POWER UNITS
ROYAL OAK,
MICHIGAN
J O H N G A U L D , Gen Mgr.
8843 LIVERNOIS AVENUE
DETROIT 4, M I C H .
DETROIT
HARDENING
PAUL A W I L L S I E CO.
FLAME
COMPANY
Flame Hardening Spot and Surface
Academic Costumers
1437 RANDOLPH
WOodward
5-0078
Hardening of Iron and Steel Parts,
Gear-Teeth, Rails, Wheels, Cams, Dies
and A l l Wearing and Cutting Edges.
116 Manchester
TOwnsend 8-2925
GREGORY MAYER & T H O M
M . N . DUFFY fir CO.
OFFICE
Radio and Electronic Supplies
2040 Grand River Avenue
WO
3-2270
SERVICE CO.
AIR C O N D I T I O N I N G
ROAD
Perndale,
41 Cadillac Sq.
DETROIT
A U T O M A T I C TEMPERATURE A N D
CORP.
1221 EAST 9 MILE
OUTFITTERS
1-9330
JOHNSON
Congratulations from
1. T . W E D I N
WOodward
CONTROL
230 E. Alexandrine Avenue
DETROIT 1, M I C H .
Michigan
CANTEEN
EPWORTH
CO.
MANUFACTURING
CO.
CO.
" A t Your Service"
FOR SERVICE C A L L
Custom Built Machinery
J O . 4-6573
1350 Academy
FERNDALE 1, M I C H .
HURON FORGE & M A C H I N E CO.
BROOKER ELECTRIC CO., I N C .
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS
DROP
FORGINGS
962 East Congress Street
9041 Alpine
Detroit 7, Michigan
U N I O N T W I S T DRILL
COMPANY
C A D M E T CORP.
PRECISION CASTINGS
LOST W A X
METHOD
15515 Tuller
5527 Woodward Ave.
Detroit
DETROIT
Compliments of
LAWN
Compliments of
EQUIPMENT CORP.
THOMPSON
518-520 W . Eleven Mile Rd.
Royal Oak, Michigan
"Everything for the Lawn"
LI 2-1721
7881 Conant
PRODUCTS CO.
Detroit
�FALLS SPRING AND WIRE
DIVISION OF
STANDARD STEEL SPRING CO.
8635 CONANT ROAD
DETROIT I I . MICH.
KOESTLIN TOOL & DIE CORP«
STAMPING SPECIALISTS
NO WORK TOO LARGE
*
Complete Body Die Facilities
,*
Humboldt and Magnolia Aves.
TA. 5-1490
�STANDARD
TUBE
CO.
"STANDARD"
ROUND, SQUARE AND SPECIAL SHAPE
WELDED end BUHED STEEL TUBING
FABRICATED TUBULAR PARTS
UPSET TUBES and FORGINGS
STAINLESS STEEL TUBING
24300 PLYMOUTH ROAD
KEnwood 1-9300
MOTOR PRODUCTS CORP.
Automotive Parts Manufacturers
11801 MACK AVENUE
Detroit, Michigan
�Detroit Stamping Company
Established 1915
Manufacturers of Pressed Metal
7
Parts and Products
Mediunn Size & Smaller Stampings
"DE-STA-CO" Toggle Clamps
Arbor Spacers, Shims, Packaged Shim Stock
350 Midland Ave.
Highland Park Station
TOwnsend 8-5080
DETROIT 3. M I C H I G A N
Congratulations L. I. T.
Michigan Tool Company
CONE DRIVE DIVISION
SPEED REDUCERS
GEAR SETS
717! EAST McNICHOLS ROAD
DETROIT, MICH., U. S. A.
�STEEL
GOES TO SCHO
•
N - A - x H I G H - T E N S I L E steel is used in
various parts of most automobiles.
•
Stran-Steel framing members frame
many modern apartment houses.
•
Stran-Steel Quonset buildings are
used throughout A m e r i c a for a l
kinds of storage, commercial and
industrial buildings . . . for housing
farm machinery and livestock.
Yes, steelmakers must be students! T h e y must study constantly ways and means to make steel more useful. T h e y must
continue to i m p r o v e today's products . . . must make better
products f o r the f u t u r e .
Better autos . . . better trains . . . better buildings . . . better
housing—all depend on improvements i n the steel they're
made f r o m .
That's w h y the men at Great Lakes Steel constantly w o r k and
•
study to make better steel f o r better products t o m o r r o w .
ORiAT
UNIT
OF
lAKES
M o r e and more N A I L A B L E S T E E
are being installed in freight
cars, trucks and trailers.
FLOORS
STEEL
Ecorse, Detroit 29, ^Aich.ga^
N A T I O N A L STEEL C O R P O R A T I O N
�Red^ White and Blue
You receive i t proudly,
You've graduated.
Ribbon
of course.
But isn't there a deeper
reason
w h y y o u feel your chin go up as you reach f o r
y o u r d i p l o m a ? Isn't i t the fact that you've
received i t f r o m an American
school? Where every
student has an equal chance not just to " l e a r n " . . .
but to l e a r n undistorted truths? Where every
student has an equal r i g h t , not just to do
"good e n o u g h " . . . but to excel...
on the athletic
field,
i n the classroom,
i n activities of a l l kinds?
For that is the strength of A m e r i c a . That is why
i t is . . . and w i l l continue to be . . . a great nation.
MARATHON
THE
OHIO
Producers
OIL
of Petroleum
COMPANY
since
1887
�AMERICA
IS GOING
PLACES . . . ON BOWER
BEARINGS
In y o u r w o r k t o w a r d a better p r o d u c t at l o w e r cost, y o u c a n ' t o v e r l o o k
t h e i m p o r t a n c e o f m o r e d u r a b l e , m o r e p r e c i s e l y m a d e b e a r i n g s . That's
w h y it w i l l p a y y o u t o j o i n t h e m a n y l e a d i n g m a n u f a c t u r e r s w h o
o n B o w e r b e a r i n g s f o r t h e i r p r o d u c t s . T h e y k n o w t h a t n o other
can m a t c h t h e m f o r r u g g e d n e s s a n d d e p e n d a b i l i t y .
Bower
and
bearings
lower
BOWER
are
Spher-O-honed
operating
costs. Specify
ROLLER
BEARING
for
greater
Bower
COMPANY
•
The r e a s o n is t h a t
precision,
bearings
for
DETROIT
BOWER
R O L L E R
B E A R I N G S
insist
bearing
longer
your
14,
life
product.
MICHIGAN
�A r c h i t e c t ' s mode/ o f n e w D e a r b o r n d e v e / o p m e n f n o w uncter c o n s t r u c t i o n a t Birmingham,
• The first two units of a multi-million
d o l l a r expansion, engineering and
research program by Dearborn Motors
are illustrated above from the architect's model. Costing in themselves three
million dollars, these buildings provide
a complete modern research laboratory,
a huge parts warehouse and the company's general offices.
DEARBORN
National
The continuing research activity of
Dearborn Motors, i n the laboratory and
in field testing throughout the country,
has already produced important advances i n design, quality control and
precision manufacture of farm machinery. Completion of new and expanded
research facilities w i l l permit this work
to go forward at an accelerated rate.
MOTORS
CORPORATION
Marketing Organization
for Ford Tractors
Dearborn Farm
Equipment
D E T R O I T 3, M I C H I G A N
and
FARM EQUIPMENT
MEANS LESS WORK...
INCOME PER ACRE
MORE
�BEE
comwf
D E T R O I T I E , MICHIGAN
E N O I N E E R S A N D MAN
COt^VEYOH
S V S T C M S FO
S T c e u MILL A U X I L I
POWER TRANSMITT
SPEED REDUCERS
OIL W E L L E O
MASS P R O D U C T I O
STEEL BRIOOES. eulLD
The G r a d u a t e C l a s s
Lawrence I n s t i t u t e o f T e c h n o l o g y
D e t r o i t , Michigan
Gentlemen:
The s t & l i o f y o u r i n s t i t u t e has l a b o r e d w e l l t o d e v e l o p
y o u r c u r i o s i t y , y o u r c o n s c i e n c e and y o u r c o m p e t e n c e .
Now y o u can
aspire t o i n t e g r i t y , the greatest of a l l q u a l i t i e s .
Integrity,
as a w o r d , has m e a n i n g so broad as t o r e q u i r e c o n s i d e r a b l e s t u d y
and, as a develox>ed
q u a l i t y , c o n s t i t u t e s an i n t a n g i b l e b u t c o m p e l l i n
torces e s s e n t i a l t o a l l p r o g r e s s .
The w i s e s t among men r e a l i z e how l i t t l e t h e y know o n l y
when t h e y have l e a r n e d a g r e a t d e a l and t h e d e g r e e o f t h e i r h u m i l i t y
i s i n d i r e c t p r o p o r t i o n t o t h e d e g r e e o f t h e i r k n o w l e d g e . Thus do
t h e y f i n a l l y a t t a i n i n t e g r i t y w h i c h stems f r o m an e v e r i n c r e a s i n g
passion f o r the t r u t h .
I n t e g r i t y , w h i c h means n o t h i n g i n t h e mass, i s a p e r s o n a l
t h i n g and i s t h e p r i m e i n g r e d i e n t f o r c l e a r t h o u g h t .
Healthy respec
f o r e x p e r i e n c e i s a l s o e s s e n t i a l b u t m a i n t a i n and use t h e knowledge
t h a t r e a r r a n g e m e n t o f p r e j u d i c e s does n o t c o n s t i t u t e t h i n k i n g .
The f u t u r e o f t h e w o r l d and t h e p l a c e s we w i l l occupy i n
i t w i l l depend on t h e t h i n k e r s o f i n t e g r i t y .
S t r i v e w i t h your utmos
t o be numbered among t h e s e f o r as anch y o u a r e and m i l l be s o r e l y
needed.
For
s u c c e s s i n your
v e n t u r e s we a r e
Yours
sincerely,
PALMER-BEE COMPANY
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
LTU Yearbooks
Alternative Title
An alternative name for the resource. The distinction between titles and alternative titles is application-specific.
The L Book
Subject
The topic of the resource
University Yearbooks
Description
An account of the resource
Lawrence Technological University, formerly Lawrence Institute of Technology yearbooks from 1935-
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Lawrence Technological University
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Lawrence Technological University
Publisher
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Lawrence Technological University
Format
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pdf
Language
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English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Yearbooks
Rights Holder
A person or organization owning or managing rights over the resource.
Lawrence Technological University
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
L Book 1950
Alternative Title
An alternative name for the resource. The distinction between titles and alternative titles is application-specific.
LTU Yearbook 1950
Subject
The topic of the resource
College yearbooks
College presidents
College teachers
Student government
Greek letter societies
College sports
Advertising
American Chemical Society
Society for Advancement of Management
Society of Automotive Engineers
Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences (U.S.)
College student newspapers and periodicals
Description
An account of the resource
Lawrence Institute of Technology's (now Lawrence Technological University) 1950 yearbook.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Lawrence Technological University
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Lawrence Technological University
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1950
Date Created
Date of creation of the resource.
Lawrence Technological University
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
©2013 Lawrence Technological University. These images may be used for personal or educational purposes. They are not available for commercial purposes without the explicit permission of LTU.
Format
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pdf
Language
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English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Identifier
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LTU-YB1950
Rights Holder
A person or organization owning or managing rights over the resource.
Lawrence Technological University
Civil Engineering Society
E E Club
Fencing Club
Founders Day
Pistol Team
Rifle Team
Senior stag
Square Club
Varsity Club
-
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PDF Text
Text
copyright 1935
Wm. S. Shade, Editor
John S. Ellis, Business manager
The L Book
Russell E. Lawrence
E. George Lawrence
Lyman Ellsworth Lawrence
Catherine Graeffe
Genevieve G. Dooley
Curtis L. Bates
Harold C. Boothroyd
Glenn R. Bushyager
George F. Ashley
Curtis L. Bates
Henry J. Beam
Harold C. Boothroyd
Gail Paul Brewington
Edw. A. Brushaber
Glenn R. Bushy Ager
Henry L. Byerlay
J. Calvin Callaghan
Edmund J. Dombrowski
Genevieve Dooley
Edwin Greffe
John Hackett
William H. Hawkes
A.R. Hellwarth
George A. Hendricksen
Adolph Lovoff
Fred J. McRoberts
Louis A. Offer
Earl W. Pellerin
Thomas Seller
Elliott J. Stoddard
John Taylor
Harold VanBussum
Henry L. Wolfenden
Myron Zucker
Sydney Leese
John Ellis
William Shade
Robert Baldock
Michael Bifano
John Buss
Roque Carbonell
Ralph C. Conlan
Sylvestor Dragor
Robert B. Edgar
John S. Ellis
Robert J. Ford
Ford Grant
Vincent Kesheshian
Loren Edison King
Allen D. Krugler
Edward Laske
Sydney E. Leese
William MacDonald
Phillip A. Muller
Stanley Newberg
John Osis
Ivan Parish
Alfred Quigley
Matthias F. Reese Jr.
William S. Shade
Leonard L. Singer
Walter Theriault
Raymond L. Urban
Dante Peroni, Frank Cassel, Thomas Fitzgerald, George Frater, Louis Forman,
Jack Tarnow, Anthony Saulino, Frank Stella, Harvey Humphries, Alfred Mansfield, Leo Katz, Russel Porter, Emile Daehl, Eugene Pieronek, Henry Blum, Wayne Buell
Roger Crassweller, George Butzier, Herbert Speck, Roland Landa, William Besenick,
Stanley April, Abram Nissley.
Herbert Speck
Leo Katz
John Matyas, James Stephen, John Semple, Russell Popp, Raymond Krokos,
Leo Zaikowski, Walter Buell, Stephen Implom, Kenneth Court, Carl Eisen, Winthrop Roser,
Abe Kutlov, Albert Balk, William Besenick, Alvin Weisse, William Finlayson,
Nathan Mills, Gus Landa, Curtis Bates, Edward Zwolak, Floyd Sussman, Anthony Shimkus,
Stanley Stelmos, Peter McAlpine, Nevill Geake, William Cogsdill, Marvin Schaar,
Charles Csizmansky, Ronald Groves, Stanley Sosnowski.
Kenneth Court
Floyd Sussman
Ronald Groves
Nevill Geake
Natale Bifano, Roy Meyer, Frank Vlasic, Alton Stroup, William Hund,
Edward Beitner, Kenneth Johnson, Philip Sparling, Raymond Neilson, Wesley Wojtowkcz,
John Winter, Lidio Bertoia, Perry Slumpff, Roger Marce, Arthur Valbusch, Horace Mosher.
Charles Sortman
Ben Bregi
Elwood Zavitz
Stanley Smith
Charles Berg, Edward Linder, Sidney Goorman, Elwood Zavitz, Ben Bregi,
Stanley Smith, Falconio Carrier, Jack Laister, John Kapszyk, Leo Valmassy, John Hart,
Herb Leedy, Raymond Shillum, Leonard Youngblood, J. Calvin Callaghan, Merrill Skilling,
Frank Wisniewski, James McAlpine, Harry Wills, William Dowlding, Nick Hatalsky,
Conrad Hohmann, Francis Kinney, Harold Ginzler.
Alva Hartz, Perry Slumpff, George Thompson, Bruce Hopkins, Frank Vlasic,
Kenneth Johnson, Fred Folsom, Earl Lawtizke, James McAlpine, Harry Wills,
Robert Jefferson.
Robert Martin, Edward Terry, Donald Crampton, William Slattery,
James DeClaire, George Manoleas, Kenneth Krum, Francis Reha, Fred Folsom,
Ellis Haskell, Bert Nett, Alex Jablonski, Henry Shabluk, George Geddes, Jack Loprete.
Warren Kellogg, Norman Lewandowski, Thomas Longley, Emerson Wallace,
Layton Bedford, Wilson Lorne.
Joseph Hoffman
Emerson Wallace
Frank Crossland
Arthur Woehrlen
Edward Mouranie
John Blair
Owen Williams, James Bonnington, John Blair, Edward Mouranie, Arthur Woehrlen,
Frank Crossland, Donald Urquhart, Sidney Goorman, Sam Dicello.
Clarence Mattson, Kenneth MacKay, Christen Michelsen, Thomas Gleason, Hans Radtke,
Bernard Reckman, Michael Pinto, W.G. Kinmont, Walter Vahlbusch, Donald Wedlick,
Harold Christensen, Charles Kocher, Samuel Williams, Carl Beuthin, Franklin Bates, Herbert Lozen, Leonard Bieschke, Wendell Wheeler, Clarence Fichtner, Robert Clave, Clarence MacLean.
David Davis, Michael Fernandez, William Osis, Robert Sweeley, Elmer Januzzi,
George Mankowski, Richard Parsons, Martin Berman, Dale Bliss, Joseph Pawlik,
Randall Chapman, Ellis Haskell, Rodney Campbell, Floyd Kantz, George Dalton,
Paul Schultz, Layton Bedford, Joseph Cervenka, Harry Thomas, Leo Kurzweil.
Harold Benson, Anton Joen, Stanley Sagan, William Sheldon, Glenn Mead,
Larry Long, Milton Kraska, Edward Closser, George Ranger, Euguene Cousineau,
Ted Benachowski, John Toiko, Xavier Okon, Albert Kochanski, Alvin Blodgett,
Earl Callahan, Theodore Ford, John Diamond, Fred Schwartz, Henry Mika,
Leo Katzman, Domonic Alice, Max Moiseev, Jonsie Weitlauf, Francis Mulier, Nelson Miller,
Robert Pearce, Martin Willhahn.
John Helmore
Fred Schwartz
Louis Kastely
Glenn Mead
Frank Recor
Frank Kirsten
Earl Daniels
Frank Maloziec
Homer Randall, Elmer Zook, Leo Katzman, Anton Joen, Louis Kastely, George Krust.
Domonic Alice, Robert Walke, John Helmore, William Bowman, Alvin Blodgett,
Glenn Mead, Elmer LaPointe, Edward Ziarnko, Eugene Cousineau, Walter Binder.
Melvin Clarke, Jack White, Earl Danies, Stanley Grossbert,
James Frew, Fred Armour, Walter Meckl, Thomas Glover, Francis Robinson, Milton McLaughlin,
Leo Grace, Joe Warobec, Ervin Pakizer, Wray Ormes, Leon Sitrin.
Frank Maloziec, Edgar Sitter, Vern Hanneman, Emil Kosky, Brown Ewing,
Alton Cooley, Robert Repp.
Carl Safronoff, Jack Press, Alfred Sands, Gerald Porter, Arthur March,
Joseph Cauchon, Francis Gardner, William McGreevy, James Nelson, Frank Recor,
Robert Blair, Robert Mauck, Milton Evans, John Ewing, Freeman Sussex, Alfred Healy,
Frank Streberger, Frank Kirsten, William Dawson, Nick Nicula, Leo Geronetta, Fritz Eisen,
London Morawski, Al Stocki, Harold Berry.
Ray Wetherby, Andrew Mull, John Lorenz, Henry Domanski, Nick Wasche, John Shade,
Douglas Davey, Jack Densmore, Arthur Melford, Henry Leho, John Zibkowski.
Cogswell, Savoy, Brendle, Etter, Jamman, Prudon, O'Farrel, Swart,
Wise, Rykowski, Goodell, Bellary, Laidlow, Ries, Coltone, Deeg, Gorman,
Herzman, Rockholt, Maclean, Grego, Orcutt, Beyer, Fehr, Burdock, Wallinas, Colby.
Hugh Laidlow
Thomas Davies
Edward Krause
Clarence Etter
Smeltz, Marion, Simpson, Owen, Avattaneo, White, Klippstein, Linderman, Walsh,
Volz, Schock, Floto, Harding, Oliver, Collins, Versote,
Murt, Lyons, David, Bergeron, Triola, Simmons, Hamil, Lenard, Holcomb.
Genius, Kibby, Hathaway, Allison, Ruhleman, Kautz, Schultz, Krause,
Miller, Hess, Maple, Burke, Knierim, Kazmarek, Dick, Wise, Hayes, Adams,
DeVantier, Carroll, Duke, D'Onofrio, Bragg, Miller, Wesoloski, Davies, McGihon,
Goodrow.
Elwood Zavitz, Frank Crossland, John Matyas, Ralph Conlan, Ben Briegi,
Curtis Bates, Joseph Hoffman, Charles Sortman, Arthur Woehrlen, Frank Recor,
Abram Nissley, Hugh Laidlaw, William Hund, Sydney Lesse, Jack Ellis, Rudolph Radnetter.
Ben Schiller, Elwood Zavitz, Floyd Sussman, Layton Bedford, Leo Katz,
Alfred Mansfield, Ford Grant, William Dowlding, Matt Reese, Leo Hulyk,
Edward Laske, Arthur Woehrlen, Ralph Conlan, William Shade, Robert Morley,
Michael Bifano, John Kaspazyk, Frank Stella, Frank Maloziec, Sidney Goorman,
John Osis, Roger March, Sydney Leese, Robert Martin.
Charles H. Weeter, Jr.
Richard Couch
Basso Marce
Roger Marce
Rudy Radnetter
Matt Reese
William Shade
Schiller
Ellis
Conlan
Osis
Reese
Ford
Edward
Zavitz
William Shade
Ben Schiller
Ralph Conlan
Robert Ford
Elwood Zavitz
Jack Ellis
John Osis
Michael Bifano
Jack Laister
John Buss
Duane Krugler
Ernest Chattaway
Walter Theriault
Frank Stella
Roger Marce
Roque Carbonell
Charles Morris
Professor Callaghan
Natale Bifano
George Franke
Arthur Woehrlen
Ben Bregi
Raymond Shillum
Joseph Pawlik
Fank Vlasic
Perry Slumpff
Wesley Wojkowicz
Johnny Matyas and Lawerence Techtonians
Edward Laske
Russell Porter
Duane Krugler
Art Campbell
Wm. Cogsdill
Art Kantzer
Steve Wagner
Goerge Polleyfet
Roy VanAssche
Ralph Conlan
Ben Bregi
President Lawrence
John Hackett
Sydney Leese
Professor Curtis Bates
John P. Hackett
Matt Reese
Alfred Quigley
Bob Sals
Al Kochanski
Pete Miscisin
Ed Bar
Gus McIntyre
Nick Willerer
Jack Taylor
John Simonenko
Bob Wolfe
Harry Wills
Larry Cherfoli
Bill Blattery
Roger Crassweller
Joe Willerer
Ken Johnson
Frank Wisniewski
Howard Zieman
George Diamos
Rudy Stimac
Sam Dicello
Homer Kyros
Jim Hagan
Bill McBreevy
Dale Bliss
Nelson Miller
Nick Hatalsky
Henry Hoppe
Mike Bifano
Roger Crassweller
Howard Zieman
Al Mansfield
Wayne Aikens
Harry Wills
Max Zeder
MIchael Fernandez
William Osis
Frank Vlasic
Robert Sweeley
William Besenick
John Osis
Doctor Graeffe
Alvin Blodgett
George Ranger
Bert Nett
Richard Parson
Besenick, Blodgett, Boettner, Burke, Cousineau, Fernandez, Fichtner, Gikkas, Hart, Katz,
Kutlov, Maltby, Morris, Nett, Osis, Parsons, Ranger, Roser, Sweeley, Vlasic.
Larry Cherfoli, Michael Bifano, Roger Crassweller, Sydney Leese, Coach Hackett,
Howard Zieman, William Hund, Kenneth Johnson, Sam Dicello, Rudolph Stimac,
George Butzier, Arthur Campbell, Roger March, Raymond Urban, Horace Mosher,
Alfred Mansfield, Stephen Implom.
Robert Ford, Michael Bifano, Phillip Muller, Professor Bates, Frank Stella,
Ford Grant, Falconio de Carrier, Ralph Conlan, Frank Cassek, William Putnum,
Leonard Singer, Richard Sharpe, Floyd Sussman, Roland Landa, Frank Vlasic,
Jack Laister, Gus Landa.
Curtis L. Bates
Kenneth Court
Ben Bregi
William Hund
Raymond Neilson
Dante Peroni
Stanley Sosnowski
Stanley April
Lidio Bertoia
Malcolm Blue
Ben Bregi
Wayne Buell
Joseph Cervenka
Ralph Conlan
Kenneth Court
Robert Edgar
Robert Erskine
Robert Ford
Neville Geake
George Geddes
Ronald Groves
William Hund
Sydney Leese
Leno Lolli
Roger Marce
Nathan Mills
Raymond Neilson
Bert Nett
Dante Peroni
Winthrop Roser
William Shade
Charles Sortman
Stanley Sosnowski
Herbert Speck
Luther Swaney
Donald Urquhart
J. Calvin Callaghan
J. Fred McRoberts
Morgan B. Smith
Kenneth A. Meade
Rudolph Radnetter
Hugh Laidlaw
Freeman Sussex
Clarence MacLean
Howard C. Baity
James L. Barnette
Harold M. Berry
John Blair
Robert J. Braun
James Carrol
Joseph R. Cauchon
Harold Christensen
Robert Clave
Alton Cooley
Roger Crassweller
Frank J. Crossland
John Czelusniak
Earl E. Daniels
Carl G. Eisen
James T. Fitzgerald
Francis L. Gardner
Charles Gergle
James F. Gillman
Dr. E. Graeffe
John P. Hackett
Joseph F. Hoffman
Arthur Kantzer
Frank Kirstern
Hugh Laidlaw
Herbert Lorenz
Virgil Lyons
C.F. MacLean
Robert J. Mauck
John W. Matyas
Arthur Milligan
Robert Morley
Edward Mouranie
Abram Nissley
Arthur E. Woehrlen
Earl J. Orcutt
Ivan W. Parish
Russell Popp
R. Radnetter
Frank J. Recor
John L. Redfern
Max Sadowski
Howard Scheer
Raymond J. Shillum
E.A. Sitter
Perry Slumpff
James Stephen
Freeman Sussex
Arthur R. Valbusch
Leo Valmassy
Albert Wagener
Wendell Wheeler
Elmer Zook
William Putnum
Glenn Mead
Randall Chapman
Jack Laister
Professor Bates
Charles Csizmansky
Wayne Buell
Jack White
Homer Randall
Jack Ellis
Leo Katz
Eddie Laske
Robbie Edgar
Robert Benny
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
LTU Yearbooks
Alternative Title
An alternative name for the resource. The distinction between titles and alternative titles is application-specific.
The L Book
Subject
The topic of the resource
University Yearbooks
Description
An account of the resource
Lawrence Technological University, formerly Lawrence Institute of Technology yearbooks from 1935-
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Lawrence Technological University
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Lawrence Technological University
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Lawrence Technological University
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Yearbooks
Rights Holder
A person or organization owning or managing rights over the resource.
Lawrence Technological University
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
L Book 1935
Alternative Title
An alternative name for the resource. The distinction between titles and alternative titles is application-specific.
LTU Yearbook 1935
Subject
The topic of the resource
College yearbooks
Student government
College student newspapers and periodicals
College presidents
Greek letter societies
College teachers
College verse
Debates and debating
College sports
Student newspaper and periodical editors
Orchestra
Advertising
Description
An account of the resource
College yearbook for Lawrence Institute of Technology [now Lawrence Technological University] for the year 1935.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Lawrence Technological University
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Lawrence Technological University
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1935
Date Created
Date of creation of the resource.
June 5, 2015
Rights
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©2013 Lawrence Technological University. These images may be used for personal or educational purposes. They are not available for commercial purposes without the explicit permission of LTU.
Format
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pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
LTU-YB-1935
Rights Holder
A person or organization owning or managing rights over the resource.
Lawrence Technological University
Founders Day
Industrial Executive Club
Soaring Society