Photo provided by Thomas Hanrahan.
By Alexandra Gonzalez â23, staff writer
The buildings on LVCâs campus each house a rich history.
The names of former presidents, longtime faculty and staff and financial supporters don the faces of these buildings. This tradition immortalizes these figuresâ legacies at LVC of years of work, commitment to its mission and donations that have kept it alive and competitive.
LVC Gymnasium
In the early 1900s, an alumni campaign funded the construction of LVCâs first gymnasium.
The gymnasium was located below the Presidentâs Office in the basement of the Humanities Building. It occupied what is now the mail room and the Presidentâs Office. The gym contained a basketball court and a balcony above it as well as locker rooms.
âThough dancing was technically not allowed on campus during the first two decades of the 1900s, the students often ignored this edict,â Thomas Hanrahan, director of campus communications, said. âFinally, according to legendary Professor S.O.G. (Soggy) Grimm, then-President George Daniel Gossard (1912â1932) gave in one night in the 1920s while the students held a dance below his office (Wallace, p. 185).â
In 2003, LVCâs current gymnasium opened on North Campus. It was named in honor of Louis A. Sorrentino, LVC class of 1954.
âCoach Lou, as he later became known, was a three-sport athlete at LVC who signed minor-league contracts with Major League Baseball and the National Football League,â Hanrahan said. âAfter coaching high school football for a few years, he returned to his alma to coach four sports and serve as athletic director for nearly 60 years. In 2012, the Middle Atlantic Conference (MAC) created the annual MAC Sorrentino Award in his honor.â
Carnegie Building
A fire destroyed LVCâs original, Civil War-era Administration Building.
âDespite the holiday, then-President Hervin Ulysses Roop (1897â1906) went to New York City to meet with steel magnate Andrew Carnegie and convinced him to donate $50,000 if the College could raise a matching $50,000 (itâs still common today for charitable foundations to offer matching gifts),â Hanrahan said.
Over the years, the building has been administrative offices, classrooms, a library, a bookstore and a snack bar. In 1992, the building became LVCâs Admission Office. Â
Yuhas Commons
âThis building was named in honor of Dean Rosemary Yuhas, with whom I had the pleasure of working with for 14 years until her retirement in 2011,â Hanrahan said.
Yuhas retired as the dean of student affairs but served as an administrator, coach and mentor to generations of students during her almost 40 years at LVC.
âShe was the womenâs lacrosse programâs first-ever coach (1975), coached womenâs basketball, and was a nationally rated womenâs basketball official,â Hanrahan said. âShe still returns to campus when her former players are inducted into the LVC Athletic Hall of Fame.â
Neidig-Garber Science Center
It was named in honor of Dr. Dale Garber Hâ59, a successful science alumnus, who was a financial supporter for the original science center, and Dr. Anthony H. Neidig â43, Hâ04, late professor emeritus of chemistry. Dr. Garber would have graduated in the class of 1918, but World War I interrupted his education.
âDr. Neidig started one of the nationâs first small-college student-faculty research program at LVC in 1949 when he returned to his alma mater after earning his Ph.D,â Hanrahan said. âToday, the Collegeâs top academic honor for a graduating senior is named in his honor. Coincidently, his wife celebrates her 100th birthday March 15.â
Kiyofumi Sakaguchi â67 Mathematical Sciences Suite
It was named in honor of Kiyofumi Sakaguchi.
âI believe it is the only campus space named after an international student/alumnus,â Hanrahan said. âKiyofumi went on to become president and chief executive officer of Prudential Financial in Japan.â
Allan W. Mund College Center
It was named in honor of Allan W. Mund, longtime trustee, who also served for a short time as interim president.
Bertha Brossman Blair Music Center
It was named in honor of Betha Brossman Blair, a major regional philanthropist, who also was a successful businesswoman in the area.
Frederic K. Miller Chapel
It was named in honor of Dr. Frederic K. Miller, class of 1929, LVCâs 12th president, who served from 1950-1967.
Edward H. Arnold Sports Center
It was named in honor of Edward H. Arnold, a longtime trustee and currently an emeritus.
â[Edward H. Arnoldâs] family has served and supported LVC for more than seven decades dating back to his parents (Arnold Stadium) and continuing through today with his wife, Jeanne Donlevy Arnold Hâ08, with the recent Jeanne and Edward H. Arnold Health Professions Pavilion,â Hanrahan said.
Heilman Center
It was named in honor of the late father and brother of Suzanne Heilman Schrotberger Hâ96, who also helped found the Suzanne H. Arnold Art Gallery.
Maud P. Laughlin Hall
Maud P. Laughlin Hall became LVCâs Alumni Office. It was named in honor of Maud P. Laughlin, a longtime professor and house mother, who directed the building during the time period that faculty and staff lived with students. From 1946-1957, Maud taught political science, sociology and history as well as other commitments.
âThere is an excellent chapter on the history of many of our buildings in the Collegeâs 150th anniversary book,â Hanrahan said. âIt is chapter 14, âThe Mute Stones Speak: A Brief Architectural History of Lebanon Valley College,â by G. Daniel Massad, LVC artist-in-residence.â